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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
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"Seven to II is a
4 0 , _ · 12AAA ·
27 Courllng
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huge chunk of life,
llonMI
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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
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, 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

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MILLIONS !

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

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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

'

�..

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio weather
Friday, April 21

a. . . . . . ,;··:·

Sunny Pt. ClOudy

C~

Shonrl T-tlormt

A11n

•

Fklrritl

8now

let

Mostly sunny Friday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PR'ESS

Ski•s will be mostly sunny
across the Mid"Ohio Valley on
Friday but temperatures will
continue to be below normal.
Highs on Friday will be in
the 5(!! south, the National
Weather Service said.
Thursd~y night will have
clear skies and temperatures
well below normal in the 3035 range.
Residents can expect a
fourth straight wet weekend,
forecasters said. Showers· and
tlulllderstorms are likely
Saturday and Sunday.
Sunset Thursday night will
· be at 8:20 and sunrise on
Friday at 6:38 a.ri1.
Weather Porecalt
Tonight...Mostly
clear.
Patchy frost possible towards
dawn. Lows in the upper 30..
West winds 10 mph becoming
light and variable.
Friday... Mostly sunny. Highs

near 60. Calm winds.
Friday night... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 40s.
Sati.lrday... Partly 'cloudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Highs in the
upper 60s. Chance of rain 40
percent.
Saturday
night ... Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers. Lows in the mid 50s.
Chance of rain 50 percent. .
Su11day... A chance of showers during the day. .. Otherwise
partly cloudy. Highs near 70.
Extended Foteca•t
Monday... Mostly . . clear.
Lows in the upper 40s and
highs in the upper 60s.
Tuesday... Pardy cloudy with
a chance of showers. Lows 50
to 55 and highs in the lower
70..
Wednesday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers.
Lows in the mid SO. and highs
in the mid 70..

.Businessman accused
of terrorist ties
proposes settlem~nt
COLUMBUS (AP) .;.... A
Somali
immigrant
on
Wednesday propo1ed a se~
tlement with the U.S.
Department of Treasury,
which closed his moneytransfer business during a
crackdown of financial networks suspected of funn~ling
money to terrorist organizations.
Attorneys for . Hassan H.
· Hussein Jent ·a letter to the
government w~dnesday, asking 'that it return frozen
asseu - estinuted between
S160000 to S170000 .- to

1hurldlly, April 21, 2•2

•

clienll of his Columbus
company,
Barakaat
Enterprises. Local immigrants deposited money with
Huuein's company for transfer to theit families in
Somalia.
"The goal is to get the
money back for the people
who pbced it in his trust,''
O'Brien,
said
Kevin
Hussein's attorney. "Mr.
Hussein fe~ls r~ally bad. H~
feels that he lost the money
they entrusted to him ~nd
feels it's his responsibility to
recover the funds."

will be watching this weekend huge bash but is inviting some
and will be prepared \O move friends over on Saturday. "I'm
swiftly at the first sign oftrou- 2l,and if! want to go out and
ble.
Clrink a beer on my porch, I
Individuals who don't obey · can,'' h~ said.
police orders to go inside if Up th~ street, Irwin Meram,
trouble starts will be arrested, 22; also a senior, blamed a lot of
he said.
the problems on over-reaction
· But students living in areas by the police.
near campus where: distur"The police just take it way
bances have occurred didn't too far," Meram said. "0111' litseem particularly concerned tl~ thing happens,aruithey go
about the threats of arrest and into the van and put on the
suspension.
riot gear.''
On East Norwich Avenue,
Ohio State has mailed letters
where several parties are signed by William Hall, vice
planned for this weekend, president for student affairs, to
empty beer bottles still litter 900 parent! of students who
yard!.
live on Norwich. Ads discour"People are looking for a aging parties will run in the
riot. They're expecting one. student newspaper.
And it's not a riot until the
"A student convicted of
cops come,'' said RoSJ Holt, 21, rioting can be banned from ·all
a senior who lives on public univenities in Ohio for
NorWich.
a year," the letter says. Letters
Holt said he's not planning a also went to student! in resi-

dence halls.
University President William
Kirwan said he will extend:his
"unconstrained authority" to
punish students to Hall this
weekend. That will allow !;all
to punish student! for thing;
not spelled out in the Stud~nt
Code of Conduct.
Student-affairs employees
planned to go door to door
Thursday and Friday to w~rn
students and already have p~ r­
sonally warned people who ~re
named on fliers as party hosts.
"If they get out of control;'
Kirwan said of the parties, "the
host will be suspended."
The mayor said retailers h~vc
agreed not to sell beer ln botdes and to limit keg sales . to
one per person. Coleman didn't give specifics beyond saying
the limited sales will be in a
"radius" around campus.

Senate Republicans agree on plan to balance budget
COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohio's cigarette tax would
nearly triple, to 74 cents a
pack, to help balance the state
budget under a proposal that
Senate President Richard
Finan plans to introduce today
in legislation.
The majority of Senate
Republicans reached a tentative agreement Wednesday.
However, at least four Senate
Republicans oppose · the plan,
saying they won't vote for a
tax increase. The GOP controis the Senate 21-12.
"The budget plan iJ to raise
taxes as opposed to r~ducing
the amount of growth of government," said Sen. Lynn
Wachtmann, a tJapoleon
Republican. "1 went through
all my old campaign Oim - I
' fi d
h
1
couIdn t n anyw ere
promised to mise taxes:'
GOP . senators
Kevin
Coughlin of Cuyahop Falls,
Jim Jordan of Urbana and
Scott Nein of Middletown

deficit by raising $26 million
from the cigarette tax this year
and $373 miUion next year,
said Sen. Jay Hottinger of
Newark.
The Senate also is proposing
using about $260 million of
the state's rainy day fund this
year and S170 million next
year, he 53id.
The Senate also will propose changing the state's tax
code to minimize the effect of
President Bush's economic
stimulus package on Ohio.
Without the changes to the
tax code, Senate Republicans
estimate the state will lose
$150 million next yeat under
the stimulut package. The
Ohio DepartmMt ofTaxation
said the amount is closer to
$175 million.
The plan would. ask Gov.
Bob Taft to cut $57 milJil)n

Pennsylvania (31 ce!W).
Sen. Doug White of
Manchester, the Senate's No.2
Republican and a southern
Ohio tobacco farmer, want!

the plan to restore $32 million
to Ohio tobacco farmers taken
from the state's settlem~nt
with major tobacco companies.

Through

W.cl.

tiscal yeat, beginnins July 1.
HO!dnpr 'said the 50-cent

~

ciprette tax increase was

~

=:

1

PRICE

Bars

H

-

-----

. 6.

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. -James Madison Knighting. 76, of
23,

R~venswood,W.Va., formerly of Racine, died Tuesday. April
2002, at Ravenswood Village Care 'Center. ·

He was born Dec.16, 1925, at Madison ,Va., son of the late
Charles W. and Vandora Kelly Knighting. He was a tree trimmer for Asplundh and was a veteran of tl,lc U.S. Army during
the Korean Conflict.
Surviving are his wife, Grace Httpp Knighting; two sons and
a daughter-in-law, jeffrey and Rexanna Knighting aml Terry
Knighting, all of Ravenswood, W.Va .; a brother, Charles " Ike"
Knighting of Gallipolis; three sisters, Vivian Bee kner of California, Marie Shitllett ofVirginia and Emilce Bird of Racine;
and two grandchildren.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by two si~tcrs.
Dorothy and Eva.
.
Services will be Friday, April 26, 2002, at I p.m. at C~to
Funeral Home in Ravenswood with Rev. Don W:1lkcr official.·
ing. Burial will follow at Letart Falls Cemetery with military
graveside rites conducted by American Legion l'mt 602 of
Racine.
·
Friend! may caU ·at the funeral home on Thursday fro m 6 to
9 p.m.

I '

I

~gt. Brian Rutherford

of the GaiJia-Melgs Post of the State Highway Patrol photographed damage to one of three mini·

vans Involved In a Wednesday acclder~t on Jackson Pike that sent three people to . Holzer Medical Center. Troopers said
a minivan driven by Jerome Gordon, 45, 738-1/2 Second Ave., Gallipolis, crossed Jackson Pike from Magnolia Drive to
enter Buhi·Morton Road at 1:29 p.m. and collided with an eastbound minivan driven by James C. Day. 73, 64 Deenie
Drive, Bidwell. The collision forced 'Day's minivan off the road and Into the nearby Foodland parking lot, where It struck
a parked minivan owned by Scott D. Lewis, 224 Skyline Road, Oak Hill. Taken to HMC by Gallla County EMS were Gor·
don, Day and a passenger In GOrdon's vehicle, Joseph A. Harrington, 22, Apartment 57, 381 Buck Ridge Road, Bidwell.
Gordon was cited for failure to yield, driving under suspension and driving under the Influence. (Kevin Kelly)

Training program tough
for Gallia 4-H advison

Wilkie Holman ·
MIDDLEPORT - Wilkie Holman , Middleport, died on
Wednesday, April 24, 2002, at his residcne&lt;·.
Arrangement• are undct the direction of Fisher Fum·rJI
Home and will be announced upon completion .

LOCAL BRIEFS
Revival to be

United

held

Producers
report

MIDDLEPORT
Revival services arc underway
at the Wesleyan Bible HoliGALLIPOLIS - Here "
ness Church, 75 Pearl Street, the weekly inarkct repo rt
.
.
Middleport, and will continue from United produ ce rs, Inc.
through Sunday night. The in Gallipolis:
Rev.
Charles Schnell is the
Feeder cattle
BY KRII DoriCIIII
required to h~ve a background chec.k Extension says !hey have the ethical
evangelist.
Services
will
be
. Steers: 275-415 - 90-'16;
KOOTSONOMVDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
and fingerprinting by law enforcement obligation and will do so.
held
at
7:30
p.m.
nightly
425-525 - 80-89; 550- 625
GALLIPOLIS - It's National Volun- . agencies. All current advisors will be . Dee! also added that Ohio law proSaturday,
and
at
10 - 76-85; 650-725 - 74-83;
through
vides immunity from any civil or crimteer Week and when one thinkJ about grandfathered.
a.m. and 7 p.m. on Sunday. 750-850 -.67-74.
donating Jheir time and effom to a
"All of our volunteers are screened, ina! liability that otherwise might be
The Rev..Doug Cox, pastor,
Heifers: 275-415 - 85-96;
good cause, especially in Gallia County, trained, have to meet qualifications and imposed as ·a result of such reporting
invites the public.
425-525
-- 75- 84; 550-625
one of the first · thing~' people might have to abide by rules and regulations," actions when taken in good faith, but
- 70-78; 650-725- 67-72;
said Dee!.
any person who knowingly makes or
consider is becoming a 4-H advisor.
750-850 -· 60-6ro,
Making an impact on a child's life
The three categories discussed TueJ- causes another penon to make a faloe
Fed Cattle
isn't just a noble desire but an awesome day were youth protection policy and report is guilty of a inisdemeanor of the
'b'l'
POMEROY
Marriage
Well-muscled flesh: 39-43;
respons1 1 tty.
"''idelinet, identifying sign1 of pouible first degree. .
licenses have been issued in
..35-38;
Tuesday, 'Fred Dee!, chair, extension child abuse and/or endangerment, and
He then discussed the definitions of Meigs County Probate Court Medium/lean:
Bulls:
48-57.
Thin/light:
32-35;
agent, 4~H Youth Development for legal requirements for responding to child neglect and abuse, how ro report to Presley Albert Rash . 64,
Back to the farm
Gallja County explained to advisor the suspicion o.f child abuse.
it and to whom and how · to identify . Dover, Del. and Betty
Cow/cow pair!: $315candidates just how important the
"A lot it common sense,'' said Dee!. such situations.
treatment of youth in their care is to "Advisors· are to treat arid rake care of
Josephine Wise, 58, Middle- $755; Bred cows: $31 0-S61i0;
"Voluntecrs arc the backbone of our port; Derek Ryan· May&gt;, 20,
them, the organization and to each their club members the way they would
Baby calves: $50-$260; Goatl:
child.
their own children."
organization," he added. ·"The impact Reed!Ville, and Tara Dawn ·
on youth is incredible. You will have 'Harden, 20, Reedsville; Linn S70-down.
"In an effort to be proactiv~ inttead
Accordin.,. to the policy, extension
Ke' h D
2 M ddl
Upcoming ~pecia ls: 20
· · 1990 h OSU E
·
"'
. young people remember, respect and
11
ant, 4, i eport
.
o f reacttve, tn
t e·
xten11on
personnel,
staff
and
volunteers
will
not,
d
M
h
U
1
good
COWS and calves tO SCIJ
I' , 'd
look up to you for yean."
an
ic e c Renee Pamer,
d
d
h
22, Middleport.
a opte a yout protection po tcy, at under any circumstances, discipline
next week. Feeder sale at I
Why luch hard talk? According to
Dee! ... Advisors are required to fill out youth by the use of physical punishp.m. May l. Equipment at 10
an application form, similar to a job. mentor by failure to provilje the batic statisiics handed out at the orientation,
a.m. May 4. Lamb sale at II
application where they have to list their necetsities of care, tui:h as food or she!-· in Ohio the number of"reported" child
· a.m . May 8..
experiences, references, and have to go ter. And although volunteers do not abuse and neglect cases ha s increased
POMEROY - Actions
through an orientation program.
legally fall under Ohio Revised Code dramatically from 15,114 in 1980 to
for distotution
marriage _
"They alto have to agree and sign a Section 2151.421 of being required to 79,273 in 1990.
have been filed in Meig1
Standards of Behavior that f.rovides the report knowled8e or suspicion that a
"We live by different standards now,"
County Common Pleas
guidellnes for actions of vo unteen."
.child has suffered or faces a threat of Dee! added.
Court by Samuel V. Wamsley,
Although a background check is vol- suffering .any physical or mental
'IWhat was acceptable punishment Middleport, and Tommie'
GALLIPOLIS - New Life
untary by each county extension office wound, injury, disability, or condition ytan ago is definitely not by today's Lynn Wamsley, Rutland, and Lutheran Church . in the
at this time, as of Nov. 1, 2002, all Ohio of a natllre that reasonably indicates ttandards, yet, if we have one child Carl · Douglas
Bob~, Spring Valley area will present
4-H and OSU employees will be abuse or neglect of a child, the OSU abused anywhere, it's too many."
Pomeroy, and·Trina Hannan, . the popular video series by J.
Pomeroy.
·Keith MiUer, "A Hunger for
A dinolution has been Healing," starting Sunday,
granted to Trilla D. Young May 5 at 7 p.m.
and Glen F.Young,jr.
Divorce• have been ·granted to Eric Shane Walker
from Robyn R . Walker and
Amber D. Riffle from Monte
J. Riffle.

Mantapsend
oc

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Women'• Cologne &amp; Gift

FF

LOCAL STOCKS

.. -

Files suit
"'Q

1

...

POMEROY - A civil
action has been tiled in Meigs
County Common Plea!
Court 6y Charter One Cred~
it Corp., Richmond, Va .,
against Timothy R . Ebersbach, Middleport, and others,
aUeging default on a promi~r
sory note in the amount of
S45,991 .72.

The Daily Sentipel
Reider Services

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Men• &amp; Women• 112 PRICE

Coleman loses two
.appeals, is denied demency
COLUMBUS (AP)
the 1984 ddth otWalteo,44,of He also said the circumkiller
Alton Norwood.. He also has been sunces of the crime, "as weD as.
Convicted
Coleman, scheduled ro die by COfWicte(J of three other nwr- Mr. Colenwti other exrensive
injection Friday. lost two of hit den in a muJtjvare crime spree and violent conduct," outfederal appeals Wednetday and in 1984 and has been senrenced weigfled any mirigaring factorJ
was denied demency by Gov. co de2lh in Indiana and lllinois. in Coleman§ favor.
Bob Tali.
In denying clemency,Uli uid
Oal~ Baich, a public dd'endn'
The U.S. Supreme Court no court has questioned t~epmctllillg Coleman, said he
refined ro hear Coleman's claim Coleman's responsibility fo,r was disappointed with the
dut prosecuton cho!e a racWiy w.ucm· dealh. ·
, Sups~en~e Court'J rulings and
biased jury in hit 1985 trial for
T.ati: agreed with friday'• Tali's decision.
the bearing death of Mmene urunimous rerommendation
~In the pernor's Jtaternmt
. WalteR ofsuburban Cincinnati. by the Ohio Parole Board co today. we're a lilde disappointed
The COIJI'i also turntd down deny Cofemm danency.
he did 1101: offn' hit thoughts
Colet!Uil 's appeal jnvo(ving a
~Mer reviewing the facu and pu)CP co Mr. Coleinani
serond murder conviaion, for and hisrmy of this case, I an family." Baidl added
the ~g~Jbtion of Is-year-old find no season to disagn~e with
'Wi said, ~M2y God lW the
Tonnie Srmey of CincintJali the jury's wnlia of guilt md 6mily and liiendf of Mmene
two days bd'osz Walteo was decis!oo. co impote the death W1lren and the many other
killed.
penalty." T.ati: ~
viaims of Mr. Coleman."
A feder.al appeah court had
He said JtaU and federal
On T'hunday morning. the
sent dut c.m back to the trial rourts have reviewed .and lOth Oisuia Court of Appeals
court
for
re5entencit~g, upbdd Colmun's COIWiaion in Columbus is scheduled co
Coleman's bwyert uid the and death ICI1UnCe.'"Nooe hear Colemani claim thai a
Supmnr Court thould snolve have found jny doubt with plan to pn:Mde a dosed-cimrit
th,u cate ~ Ohio arrief mpect co Mr.· Colenun i IDI1fll1iiliolr of the exoeaslion
out the ~utiorL
tupousibility 1M the violmt co rel.uives of hH viainH wiD
Coleman, 46, of W.aukqan. de2lh of Madme WalteR, the IWll hit J death inro a "ip«talll., was ~rmud co de2lh fur poemor said.
ror ~
•

James KniPtlng

Issued licenses

Prien
Good

moie fiom state spendins next

also oppose the plan. Allsup- ~~~
port fi;artber reductions in ~te entire deficit. Just tapping the
~pending and all oppose I1IJ- nearly $1 billion rainy day
lpg ~·
.
· fimd it not enough, he said.
~r~tde~t . Ftnan, • . of "We think chat it ~· to
Cmannatt, pbnned to antraffi .
"'~er
bill
today
d
be
su
ctent to p ug any
ducea bu "'&amp;
an· ho ies,"
H · ·
·
th
sat'd .
hold hearmgs e n~ two "Whether orottanger
not this is the
weeb . before a tentat"':e vote final stopgap measur~, we
fo~ the May 7 prtmary. don't know, but it's a · tiscaiJy
Mtnonty _Democrats are sound plan chat coven us for
happy chat Finan plaru hear- the immediate foreseeable
ings but are withholding judg- future:'
ment until more detaiu
Ohio's current 24-cent rigemerge, said Sen. . Gre8 arette tax is higher than
DiDoruto
of
New Indi2na (15.5 cents), Kmlucky
Philadelphia, the Senate's top- (3 cents) and West Virginia (17
ranking Oernoct':lt.
cents) but lower than
The plan would help parch Michigan (75 cents) and
the state's S1.2 .billion budget

The Deily Sentln•l • Page A 3

Deaths

CRASH PROBED

say they'll get tough
with university-area partyers · •
COLUMBUS (AP) - Out
of patience, Ohio State
University and Columbus officials vowed to crack down on
campus-area partying that get1
out of control.
"When the police say, 'Clear
the area, dear th~ area,' that's
the way it's gonna be," Mayor
Michael Coleman said at a
news conference Wednesday.
"This is not a spectator
sport. If you violate the law,
you will be arrested:'
Police arrested 26 people
during a disturbance on
Chittenden
Avenue
last
Saturday night and early
Sunday that arose out· of an
annual party known as Chit
Fest. Charges ranged from
underage drinking to assault
on a police officer. Seven Ohio
Stare students were suspended.
City
Safety
Director
Mitchell Brown said police

www.mydlllyuntlnel.com

Page~

Author~ties

•

I Monoflold lu•/81' I •

t:&lt;

Thura~e~ADrll25.2002

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_The_oa_ny_Se_ntin_ei_ _ _

Bend

PlgeA4
1hund1J. Apr!! 11. 2002

DEAR ABBY: I am mpondina to
"Be~n There in Iowa," the divorced
mother of two who convinced her U·
husband- even if he did nothing else
- to call the children once a week to
tell them he loved them.
My parents divorced when I was 3.
My sisters and I lived with our mother. For a few yeats we enjoyed regular
visits with our dad, but then visits
became less frequen1 . During my
teens, I was lucky to see him for a few
hours every dx months or so, and
there were no !etten or phone calls
between visits.
The infrequent visits I had with my

Dear

Abby
ADVICE .
father were very hud for me ento•
tionally. I felt he was only making
token appemnces - being a father
when it suited him or when his con-

sdtnO! bothered him. Som~timts I
cried when he brought me home,
never lrnowinl! if it was the l~n tinle
he'd ev.:r Yn.nt to see me.
I felt di~ppointed, angry, deeply
hurt ud unlo\-ed. At 16 I could no
longer take the emotion~! roller-coaster ride and decided he should
either be a real father and a re(J\•lar
pm of my life or stay out of it con\pletely.
For seven yem I neither IIW nor
spoke to him, but iu those yean I did
~ lot of growlog ~p. It wa n\ until
recently that I realized I didn't hate
him anymore. I \\IllS finally oble to l•t

go of !he hlll't and m~nnnent md man he was btftm, and he Wlllted the
allow myself to forgiv.: him.
ehuce for us to get to know each
I wrote my father a long letter, other apin. He Rid he lov.:d mel Hi1
explaining that there were things I letter lilted a to-ton welaht &amp;om DIY
needed to 111.y to him, pouring out all . lhouldm. We now write ltl!quently.
my ~liOIJI about the ~rent he had •- THANKFUL IN TBXAS
. betn and how it had al&amp;cted my life,
DEAR THANKFUL: Your letter
I made sure he knew I didn' hate him prows the trUth of scvtnl important
- I still lovtd hlm - and he didn't life leuon1:
. hl\"e to write back If he didn't want · · l , People can d!lllge.
.to.
2. It\ important to spl'llk !he truth
Abby, he wrote me back! H~ said because often people need to hear it,
he'd been needing to hear everything
3. The burden of hurt lnd resent•
1told him. He acceptod the blune for m~nt Is usually more demuctlw to th\!
his failings as a parent a11d apolOI!iled ~ssel that houses it thafl to the pi!rson
for hurting me. He is not the same who tlused it.

Meigs Notebook
It's been reported that mem- port High School Alllmni
bers of his audiences find Association to be lwld ~t
themselves laughing one the Meigs Middle School
minute and crying the next as on May 25 .
POMEil..OY Trevor his message is both entertainApplications are now
Thomas will · present a dnma
ing and inspintionll.
availab
le from the trmtues,
~.., at
First
Rev. Lamar O'Bryant invites Nancy R'o llcr Co le, 342 S.
Southern
the community.
Sixth Street, Middleport;
Baptist
Cind~ Snucr H~rris, 1125
Church,
Brondwny Street, Middlc 41872
port;
nnd Judy Snucr
Pomeroy
Cl Oft$
Crooks, 526 High Str~ct,
Pike,
Middleport.
Pomeroy on
•
To qualify to apply n
Saturday,
MIDDLEPORT - Sev- senior must be a direct
April 27, at
era! Susan G. Park Schol- descendant of a graduate
Tho1m11
7 p.m.
He travels arships will again this year of
Middleport
High
across America doing drama. be awarded at the Middle- · School. Applicants must

Drama at First
So. Baptist

Scholarship
1pp11 tl
lvllllble

al~o luvc 3t least a 3.5
grn du
point
3 verAge
including the first semester of the senior year using
a non - wdghted 4.0 curri culum,
Applications nlllst be
returned to one of the
rrustc.•s by May 10. In
ndditiou to thu application
form on official high
school trnnscript, n letter
of acceptance from nn
accredited college or uni versity, and n recent. photograph to be used ror
publication nrc to be
included.

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1111

_._'

~spider-Man:

MIB,' ~stuart'
give Sony colossal
clout for summer

1

LOS ANGELES (AP) Sony Pictures il 1pinning a
commanding box-office web
thi• summer, with a lineup
anchored by that blockbusterin-the-making, "Spider-Man;'
and seque!J to "Men in Black"
and "Stuart Little."
Beyond those three franchise films, the movie studio
has Adam Sandler in "Mr.
Deedt.'' a remake of the Frank
Capra classic "Mr. DeedJ Goes
to Town"; the Dana Carvey
comedy "The Master of Dis[JUise "; the Jennifer . Lopez
thriller ."Enough"; and the
extreme-sports spy caper
"XXX.'' reuniting star Vin
Diesel, director Rob Cohen
and producer Neil Moritz, the
team behind last year's aurprise
smash "The Fat! and the Furious."
"I've never seen such a
strong slate from any one ttudio in any given summer.'' said
Paul Dergarabedian, president
of Exhibitor Relatiom Co.
Inc., which tracks the movie
box office. "Everything carne
together for them this summer."
It even surpasses Sony's
1997 summer schedule, when
"Men in Black.'' "Air Force
One'' and "My Best Friend'~
Wedding" propelled the studio
10 a record box-office haul of
· $1.26 billion domtttically (or
the entire yeu.
Since then, Sony Jw been a
middle-of-the-pack studio at
best, lagging well behind
recent box-office leaden such
u Warner Bros., Disney and
Univeml. Sony has had a scattering of hits, including the
original "Stuart Little" and
Sandler'a "Big Daddy;• but
plenty of dudJ, among them
"Firul Fanwy: The SJ1irill
Within," "Ali;' "Jakob the
Lu r'' and "The Messenger:
The Story ofJoan of Arc."- •
Even some of Sony's bitt
were qual.tfied su.CUHtt.
Sony's "The Patriot;' lt::lrrlng Mel Gibton, wu expected 10 debut .u the No. 1 movie

WIIIUNGIR LIADI THE
WAY _ 'Splderman' Is one

of three potential block·
busters that Sony Pictures
will relea.ae for the summer
movie season, (Sony Pictures)
two yean ago but was
trounced by George Clooney'•
"The Perfect Stonn," which
went on to gross $182 million
compared with S113 million
for "The Patriot:'
"You always try, and we've
certainly had some hits;' said
Jeff Blake, Sony's head of distribution and marketing.
"With 'Patriot.' our only
crime was loaing the weekend
IO''The Perfett Storm," '
Sony is virtually :usured of a
blockbuster with "SpiderMan.'' one of the most anticipated comic-book adaptations
ever. The studio already il
moving ahead with a sequel,
following the same pattern as
"Men in Black II" and "Stuart
Little 2" by putting the next
film in the handJ of the same
director, Sam I:Uirni.
"Episode two is under way;'
I:Uimi said.
Opening next week, "Spider-Man" stan Tobey Ma[JUire
u the web-slinging auperhero,
with Kinten Dunst u the
romantic lead and Willem
Dafoe u the viJI;.inOUJ Green
Goblin.
The sequel il expected co
begin shooting next year, with
Maguire and Dunst signed 10

reprise their roles.
Once viewed as quick-cash
knockoffs, sequela often are
treated more tenderly today,
with srudios hoping .reunions
of thr original creative teams
can produce new installments
that match or exceed the rev. enues of the originals.
Will Srni th and Tommy Lee .
Jonea return for "Men in
Black n;• opening july 3, with
Barry Sonnenfeld · again
directing. On "Stuart Litde 2;'
debuting July 19, Michael J
Fox is back as the voice of the
rodent along with the rett of
the original cast and director
Rob Minkoff. Additions to
the voi" cast are Melanie
· Griffith and James WoodJ:
·"People have recognized the
value of se9uels commercially
for a long time.'' Minkoff said.
"But I think Steven Spielberg
("Indiana Jones;• "Jura11ic
Park") and maybe :Bob
Zemeckis ("Back to. the
Future"), they took some of
their bigger hitt and ttayed
with them, and that was the
critical element. It's not just
taking ·the tide and making
another movie, anymore, It's
about making another good
movie."
Sony also hope• itt tecondtier slate will produce some
hits, Lopez, who hu demonstrated good screen pretence
in so-so movies, could achieve
a breakout success with
"Enough,"
directed
by
Michael Apted ("The World Is
Not Enough").
"XXX" looks to have the
faJt action and youth appeal
that made "The Fast and the
Furious" a winner.
Aiming .for the lucrative
family crowd, "The Master of
DiJguiJe" fe;trures Carvey at
he did bdt on "Saturday
Night live," mimklung others.
And the rnlx of proven boxoffice draw Sandler with a
beloved Capra tak could be
an irresistible lure for audiences.

•

The Daily Sentinel

•

Trnth replaces silence between dad and daughter

.Keeping
Meigs
County
informea

WOWK

WBNS

You're no longer going to be
seeing double Bo~Jnnlnc
'

.

11

Apnl 23, Cn111tr Communlclllono will no

l..... r Ito """"' WINI 1111 Of C~"'"bUI, 011~. Duo
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CommuniGI!Iont to rtmovt tl'tl ttlfjoft from our ohiMel

new
name. new

.boss

at

-

25.2002

NYC diocese vows to release victims
from confidentiality agreements
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP) -The much to have the ability to talk with
Cttholic An:hdiocese of New victims."
York hu ~ed sex abuse victims from
Mitchell Garabedian, who has repreany legal promises they made to remain . sen ted alleged victims of priest sex abuse
silent about their cases and the priests in Boston, said, "It's a very important
they accused.
step in preventing child abuse from
"Victims are go longer gagged," said occurring in the future and helping the
District Attorney Jeanine Pirro, who victims regain some sort of dignity."
announced the decision after receiving a
He said confidentiality agreements
letter from archdiocesan lawyer James were "a way of revictirnizing the victim,
McCabe.
of silencing the victim unnecessarily and
Joseph Zwilli11g, a spokesman for the making the victim feel further guilt."
an:hdlucese, confirmed Wednesday that Jeffrey A:1denon, a Minneapolis lawyer
any victim who agreed not to talk as part who has represented victims of sexual
of a civil settleme11t in a case involving a abuse i11volving Catholic priests for 20
priest would no longer be bound by that years, said, "This would be the first clear
promise.
•
. . ind d.lfinitive relinquishment by a
"In an attempt to coopente with the prelate of the confidentiality or gag prodistrict attomeys. We have voluntarily visions in settlements."
released people from the confidentiality
Other dioceses, he said, "have suggestagreemerits," he said.
.
'ed they won't enforce them, but that's
l11 the past, the church has settled not exactly a proclamation."
some sex abuse laWsuits with payments
Elsewhere in the child-molestation
011 the co11dition that victims 110t talk scandal that has . rocked the nation's
about the case. Such agreements "pre- Catholic church:
Wilted victims from sharing any infor• Philadelph.ia District Attorney
mation about the sexual abuse and even Lynne Abraham said she wi~ convene a
.the name of the abuser.'' Pirro said. grand jury to investigate allegations of
"These are .setded cases where there has priest sex abuse and. the response qf
been a finding offault and I wanted very church o!Jicials. She said church officials
Rom~tt

Monis

annual meeting
RICHMOND,Va, (At&gt;)- ftom 66 percent two years
,For mon companle$, the ago, but still nearly double
t.nnuill no.ckholder meeting the 34.5 percent contributed
1~ a fomulity, a ehunce for by the food business.
~~~~~gemeflt to congruulate • It's also by far the biggest
md( on the yeu\1 resu.lts. player In the toba~co indus~
. !rhen ther_e:a the ?teetmg try in the United Smes,
held by l&gt;h1hp Mums.
with 51 percent uf the mu~
Jlor at least a de~ade, the ket,
shuehulders of the nation's That fact makes the com.largest tobacco company pany a ~~atural .target for
.have been greeted every year anti-imoking groups, legis.by proteuen outside and laton, regulators and prod'corporate activists inside the uct-liability lawyers.
annual meeting ~t the Ctlll\·
Among the Ullcertainties
puny's factory in Richmond. the company faces are pro. This
ynr's
tneetillg posds ill Congress to put the
promise! morl! of the nme, Food and Drug Admittistra·although .there are some tion In charge of regulatilig
dtcidlldly different hsuu.
tobacco products; 1noves in
First, Thursday's gathering the European Unioll to
was to be the last for chief tighten tobacco regulations;
executive Geulfrey C. Bible. and proposals to raise excise
Seeu11dly, it may be the last taxes on tobacco in the U.S .
time the cumpanfs share- and abroad.
holders guher u11der the
As if those were 11 't challengl11g enough, corporate
Philip Morris 11ame.
If shueholders approve the activlm continue to pursue
change, the company will cantpaigns to focus even
become AI tria Group Inc., a
1
1 · 1 i·
name that "reflects the fact more regu uory, egll at ve
· and cltlfen mention 011 the
that we have evolved into a ~ompany's policiin.
In fact, a Boston-based
. tubttantially larger, more
diverse enterprise than we
w.ere origina. Uy,," Bible said group that has participated
In eight previous Philip
In hil annual letter to &amp;hare- Morria shareholder meetholder!.
inga, b promoting a boycott
lt'a alao a name that of Kraf't't macaroni and
already bel!)nga to a mcd- cheeae and pressing public
ical•lervlces complliiY baled televl&amp;lon station• around
in Alabama, Altrla Healthcare Corp., which wun't the country to air a docu·
happy when Philip Morril mentary that looka Into
announced ita planned name Philip Morrli' bualndu pracchange laat year. The two tice• oveneu.
:Comrnnie1 aald Monday that
Patti Lynn, auociate cam~
1
~hey ve settled their differ- palgn director for lnftct,
~mcea, although neither said the group plana to ask
'would uy jult what the set- Phil$ Morris this year to
.dement Involved.
get rid o( ita Marlboro Man
; Bible, who declined to be advertblng Image. She said
lntervlewed in advance of the Marlboro Man Ia
;the meeting, announced hb deligned · specifically to
1etinment planl last year. appeal to young people, who
He'll be replaced by aenior are molt susceptible to
vice preaident and chief advertiaing as an inducement
:nnancial officer Louh C. to start amoking.
:camillerL He waa unavall·
Another group pla11ning a
:able for cumment, a presence at the meeting was
:1poke1man 1ald.
the Interfaith Center for
, Camilleri will continue to Corporate R.esponsibility.
face the aame kindl of chal- The group, baaed in New
ltnges to corporate policy York, put two &amp;hareholder
:that have plagued Bible and proposal! Oil the age11da for
;hll predeceuou.
Thuraday's meeting.
: Despite the name change
The center'i apokeaman
:and the addition of nonto- for the Philip Morri• cambacco product line• - it paign, the Rev. Michael H.
ownt Kraft Foods, Nabiaco Croaby, a monk at St. Bene:and Miller Beer - tobacco diet's Monastery in Milwau:ia stili Philip Morris' main kee, uid the purpose of the
:bu1ine11. Lut year, tobacco resolutions it to "help peo:accounted for 61 percent of ple be(ome better informed
:the company's $89.9 billi011 of the health huHdl of
·in total revenue - down 1moki11g."

Hard-pressed crews

w

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-lilt -

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In COIUIIIIIIII or

MWIIIICI 1110111, 1(111 0111

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:n 111101 01 W8NI, '""'II IlliG

••

o.• 2 now on 0111111111 10.

of homes from Colora o wildfire
BAILEY, Culo. (AP) Firefighters labored Thuraday to protect hundreds of
humes from a windwhipped wlldilre that had
mure than doubled in size in
24 hours .
Estimates of the fire aize
vuied. U.S. Forest Service
officials said 1,800 acres of
grass, brush and ponderosa
pine had burned, while the
Park County sheriff'• office
put the size of the fire .at
2,400 acrea. Only about 10
percent of the blaze wu
contained,
"We don't have enough
people, and thll wind 11 ·
making it tough on firefight•
en," fire information officer
Dave Steinke aaid.
About 200 firefighten
were at the scene overnight,
up from 160 who battled
through the day Wednesday
to protect home,, tchools
a11d other buildings. No
homes .were destroyed but a
barn and a shed burned, official• said.
Another 250 firefighters
were expected to join the
effort in Bailey, a town of
about 4,400 people irl the
foothllla 35 miles southwest
of DeliVer.
The entire town was evacuated Wednesday afternoon
.and four tchools were cloaed
when flames crept to within
a quarter-mile of downtowtl.

water.
Cool weather and high
humidity slowed the fire
Wednesday night. Humidity
was expected to stay high
Thursday. A winter drought
has left forests, farms and
ranges bone-dry.
Weary residents watched
as smoke billowed above
ridges near their homes.
"My house is right there,"
said Greg Ottinger, 37,
pointing to a plume in the
distance . "And the smoke is
corning from right there."
The fire was burning just a.
few miles north of an area
where a wildfire i'n 2000
destroyed 51 homes and
seven other buildings, and
charred I 0,800 wooded
acres.
Regional forester Rick
Cables said the blaze was the
top-priority wildfire in the

IIIOIUIIW~

....... - .. Oft Olllnntl 1141.

Most
residents
were
allowed back In their homes
by nightfall when the threat
subsided, but ' the sheriff's
department said many areas
were without' electricity or

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9:00AM - 5:00 PM

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Jane Doe
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nation. Fires were also burning in dry brush. in New
Mexico and Arizona.
A fire on the Mescalero
Apache re.ervation in New
Mexico forced the evacuation of two housing areas.
The fire was under control
Wednesday night.
A 300'-acre fire in tire
Magdalena Mountains in
central New Mexico was
about 75 percent contained
Wednesday.
Fires also burned south of
Magdalena and east of Angel
Fire in northeast New Mexico. None posed a threat to
structures.
In Arizona , about 220 firefighters battled a fire in the
Baboquivari
Wilderness
about 45 miles southwest of
1\icson. The ·1.000-acre fire
was 60 percent contained
Wednesday night.

PIGHTING FIRD - A helloopter carrlea a buoket of
water to battle a forest fire
nnr Bailey, Colo., on
Wednesday, A wlnd·whlpped
fire burned at least 1,100
ecrBI of araes and brush and
forced the evacuation of hundred• of homea In this mountain town. (AP)

DeadUne:
May lnd at S:OO p.m.

AII)IIOIIII 0.19111 2 on lilt " - ..... Jl...,p, II lilt
---.tno _ _ _

have agreed to turn over records on
priests accused of abuse, whether they
are "dead, dismissed or retired."
• In Providence, R.I. , attorneys for
victims of alleged sexual abuse said they
have asked a judge to schedule some of
their cases for trial this fall after failing to
settle with the Diocese of Providence. ·
'Thirty-eight lawsuits have been filed
against the diocese, alleging abuse by 11
priests and one nun .
• The head of the Roman Catholic
diocese in Long Island, N.Y., appointed a
former police comrnissioner to handle
sex abuse allegations against priests.
Bishop William Murphy of the
Roc~ville Centre Diocese also added
non-Catholics to two investigati"~ panels for the fint time..
• A former bishop in the Diocese of
Cheyenne, Wyo., was twice accused of
sexual misconduct with boys while he
was a priest in Kansas City in 1969 and
the early 1970s. In a written statement,
Father Joseph Hart said the allegations
-made in 1989 and 1992- were false.
Hart retired in September at age 70.
Both allegations in Missouri were handled before Rush became vicar general
of Kansas City- in 1994..
·

to save ·hundreds

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Opinion

.: The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Aprll25, 2002

1hund8y. Aprl :as. 2002

The Dilly 8tntll..e • P111 A 1

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.,'Pomeroy, Ohio
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THE PRESS

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.I

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Ch1rlene Hoeflich
Gener1l Manager

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

•

THREATENIN6

Appearing e:t~ery lhursday in lhe Daily SentiQel

TOSU~RT

Utten to tilt rtlitor arr nlciHfle, 7'1trj slwuld bt lrn than JOO word!. All lflttn
flfY s~t&amp;).ct to nllrilfl and must bt siJI.nt"d tmd lncludt addrtu and ttlrpltolft IUtlflbtT.
No lltul;~tnl Hnut will h p1dtlidtd. Uurn sltould h in mad _ltJJJI~, addnnint
iUIItS, lf61 ptnOIItJliHu.
Tilt 11plnlmu t~prtnrd In

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WHICH CANOf~TES
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•

tltr t'niMMif b1luw art tltt COitftiUIII of tltt Ohio tilllf'J
hblhlli"l Co. '.t ulltorlllf board, ultltu OllttrM'i st "fliNt.

Variety· Show

Dave Olson
.and the
Old Timers

NATIONAL VIEW

ore
Low-income moms need added
help in getting.off welfare
• The Cincinnati Post: After th~ 1996 welfare
reforms were first enacted, opponents predicted the
results would be devastating for the poor. It simply
hasn't happened. The act hasn't been a panacea,
either. B.ut welfare caseloads are half what they
were, and poverty is declining.
Comes now a study which concludes that although
the circumstances of the children in affected families
, are not worse than they were, they have not
. improved, either.
· The study took place in · just three states:
California, Connecticut ;:tnd Florida. Social scientists from four universities interviewed 706 single
mothers of preschool children over several years,
. discovering that little had changed for their children
:even after the mothers had found jobs. The mothers
·had not read much to 'their children before reform,
:for instance, and they did not read much to them
.after reform. Because they were now working, tht;
·mothers were spending less time with their children,
:an obvious negative. S.ome of those children were
. enhancing their language skills in childcare centers, ·
·however- an obvious positive.
These low-income mothers need more government
help in. getting childcare for their children, many
. maintain. It is an appealing argument. ·

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY

T~E

ASSOCIATED PRESS

· · Today is Thursday, April 25, the I 15th day of 2002. There
are 250 days left in the year.
Today's Highlifht in History:
·
On April 25, 959, the St. Lawrence Seaway opened to
shippin$.
· On th1s date:
In 1792, highwayman Nicolas Jacques Pelletier became the
first person under French law to be executed by the guillotine.
In 1859, ground was broken for the Suez Canal.
In 1898, the United States•formally declared war on Spain.
In 1901, New York became the first state to require automobile license plates; the fee was $I.
In 1945, during World War II, U.S. and Soviet forces linked
up on the Elbe River, a meeting that dramatized the collapse
·of Nazi Germany's defenses.
.
· In 1945, delegates from some 50 countries met in San
· Francisco to organize the United Nations.
.
In 1983, the Pioneer lO spacecraft crossed Pluto's orbit,
speeding on its endless voyage through the Milky Way.
In 1990, Violeta Barrios de Chamorro was inaugurated as
president of Nicaragua, ending II years of leftist Sandinista
rule.
In 1990, the Hubble Space Telescope was deployed from the
space shuttle Discovery.
' In 1995, show business legend Ginger Rogers died in
·Rancho Mirage, Calif., at age 83.
Ten years ago: Islamic forces in Afghanistan took control of
most of the capital of Kabul following the collapse of the
Communist government. An earthquake measuring 7.1 on the
Richter scale shook northern California.
·
Five years ago: The prosecution began calling witnesses in
Timothy McVeigh's Oklahoma City bombing trial. A federal
judge ruled for the first time that the Food and DruJ!
Administration can regulate tobacco as a drug - but said tt
couldn 't restrict cigarette advertising.
One year ago: In unusually blunt terms, President Bush
warned China that an attack on Taiwan could provoke a U.S.
military response. A rescue plane flew out of the South Pole
. with ailing American doctor Ronald S. Shemenski in the most
. daring airlift ever from the pole. Ousted Philippine President
Joseph Estrada became the country's first leader to be arrest·
ed for alleged corruption in office. Federal regulators ordered
limited price controls on California wholesale electricity markets.
Today's Birthdays: Country musician Vassar Clements is
74. Movie director-writer Paul Mazursky is 72. Former
·Harlem Globetrotter George "Meadowlark" Lemon is 70.
Son~ writer Jerry Leiber is 69. Actor AI Pacino is 62. Rock
mustcian Stu Cook (Creedence Clearwater Revival) is 57.
Singer Bjorn Ulvaeus (ABBA) is 57. Actress Talia Shire is 56.
Actor Jeffrey DeMunn is 55. Rock musician Michael Brown
(The Left Banke) is 53. Country singer·songwriter Rob
Crosby is 48. Actor Hank Azaria is 38. Rock singer Andy Bell
(Erasure) is 38. Rock musician Eric Avery (Jane's Addiction)
is 37. TV personality Jane Clayson (''The Early Show") is 35.
Actress Renee Zellweger is 33. Actor Jason Lee is 32. Actress
Emily Bergl is 27. Singer Jacob Underwood (0 Town) is 22.
Thought for Today: "A great many 'people think they are
thinking when they are merely rearranging their prejudtces."
- William James, American philosopher and psychologist
(1842-1910).

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

(Research' cloning .bears more investigation by feds
The issue of "therapeutic cloning,"
involving the creation and destruction
of human embryos for medical
research, presents Congress with perhaps its most difficult moral choice in
recent times.
My wife, as readers of this column
know, suffers gravely from Parkinson's
disease, one of the maladies that might
be cured if stem cells can be extracted
from days-old embryos.
· .
Even· so, l' m troubled by some of the
"Brave New World" possibilities raised
by cloning- though not the one us!Jally cited by opponents, including
President Bush at a White House event
last week.
Bush said cloned human embryos ere·
ated for research (known as "therapeutic" or "research" cloning) would be so
widely available that implantation in
women would be inevitable. "Even the
tightest regu\ations and strict policing
would not prevent or detect the birth of
cloned babtes," he said.
·
That's far-fetched. Reg lation and
·policing surely could prevent any significant number of cloned babies,
although no amount of policing can prevent a few disreputable scientists from
breaking the law.
Bush and most other opponents of
cloning - particularly in the Senate,
where the issue will be debated soonregard even days-old, microscopic
embryos as "human life," and believe
it's morally. wron~ to destroy it.
.
As Bush put tt: "Research cloning
would contradict the most fundamental
principle of medical ethics, that no
human life should be exploited or extinguished for the benefit of another."
Elsewhere, though, Bush has said
what I and most liberals and moderates
believe: Very young embryos are
"nascent human life" and not subject to
the same protections as viable fetuses or
live humans.
This is where the trouble develops for
me. If we permit the harvesting of stem
cells from 5·day-old embryos, what

M Ito
0

n

:Kondracke
COLUMNIST

cells from fertility clinic embryos. ·
Meantime, the P.rospects for both the ·
Brownback legislation and Kennedy
legislation are unclear.
Last week, the White House struck
the first blow with the President's statement, followed by the for.mal ,declaration by respected Sen. Bill Frist (RTenn.) that he's for the Brownback bill.
Also last week, 40 Nobel Prize-winning scientists signed an ad, sponsored
by a coalition of disease groups and scientific organizations, in favor of thecapeutic cloning.
.
One of the scientists, professor Paul
Berg of Stanford, told me in an e-mail
that opponents of therapeutic cloning
are using the slipJ?,Cry·slope argument as
"a smoke screen. '
Technically, the creation of cloned
embryos is termed "somatic cell nuclear
transplantation," a process by which the
nucleus is removed from an unfertilized
egg and replaced by material from a
donor.
·
Besides limiting the time embryos
can be retained; Congress should controt the development of "artificial
womb" technology necessary for "fetus
farms" to develop.
One reason for defeating the
Brownback bill is that it would prohibit
the importation of research advances
made overseas. A patient who received
cloning·derived stem-cell therapy
abroad could ]?e .arrested upon returning. ·
Vote-counters on both sides of the
issue say the outcome is too close to
call. Pro-cloning forces are hoping that
Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) wilf join
them this week.
The likeliest outcome- and perhaps
the worst - would be for Cdngress to
do nothing, leaving the field open for
therapeutic cloning without regulation
and for the cloning of babies, which
only maniacs want.

·about removing developing organs from
5-week-old embryos? Or 5-month-~d
embryos? Or 8-month-old fetuses?
The potential exists for fetus farming.
In some ghoulish future, rich people
could hire one woman after another to
donate her eggs to create. cloned
embryos for "spare parts" as a person
grew older.
Despite the ni~htmarish vision of
unborn babies bemg reduced to commodities, l hope the Senate will reject
the bill introduced by Sens. Sam
Brownback (R-Kan.) and Mary
Landrieu (D•La.), which would ban
both reproductive and therapeutic
cloning. A similar bill passed the House
last year.
The Senate should pass an alternative
drafted by Sens. Edward Kennedy (DMass.), Arlen S~ecter (R-Pa.) and
Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) that would
ban reproductive cloning but allow, and
regulate, therapeutic clonin~.
Even though there is a slippery slope
to fear, legislators surely could erect
barriers to prevent science - and
humankind- from sliding down to the
moral bottom.
And great good could be done in curing afflictions such as diabetes,
Alzheimer's disease, cancer, spinal cord
injuries and severe burns, as well as
Parkinson's.
.
Stem cells · derived from cloned
(Morton Kondracke is executive ediembryos, containing the donor's own ror of Roll Call, the newspaper of
DNA, are not as prone to rejection as . Capitol Hill.)

RYAN'S VIEW

US. ·still backward in fostering ·work{amily balance
I felt I had slipped into a wormhole
that dumped me baek in 1972. Last
week's Ttme magazine cover carried a
black-and·red banner headline, as · if
promoting an upcominR Las Vegas
fight: "Babies vs. Career.
This was followed by the remarkable
sub· headline: "Which should come first
for women who want both? The harsh
facts about fertility."
The harsh facts about fertility? How
about the harsh facts about the work·
place?
The Time story is a take-off on econ·
omist Sylvia Ann Hewlett's intriguing
new book, "Creating a Life:
Professional Women and the Quest for
Children." Hewlett conducted a nation·
wide survey that reinforced previous
studies and first-hand observations in
our own offices: The higher a woman's
~sition in a corporation, the less likely
tt is that she is to have children. Among
40·year-old professionals earning
$100,000 a year or more, for example,
49 percent of women had no children
compared to just 19 percent of men.
Hewlett's book is a wide-ranging
examination of the phenomenon, but
the message emerging from the media,
from "60 Minutes" to every major
newspaper in the country, is that women
have (once agaip) made bad choices in
their lives. They are guilty of hubris for
counting on fertil~ty ~chnology to
make them mothers m middle age. They
messed up by waiting too long, and now

''

....

they're sad and regretful.
You know why so many high-achiev·
ing women have no children? It isn't
their bodies that have betrayed them,
but their bosses.
Here we are in the year 2002, and the
.United States remains the most backward . of the industrialized nations in
fostering balance between family and
work. In 21st-century America, a place
of gaudy reverence for family values,
we still see child-rearing as an individual problem rather than a societal one.
Mason recently completed a study of
men and women who became \'arents
within five years of earning their doc·
torate degree&amp; in the sciences. After 12
to 14 years in academia, 24 percent
fewer of the women at four·year univer·
sities earned tenure as compared to the
men. In· the humanities and social sciences, the gap is 20 percent.
"We seem stuck on the idea that we
only provide help and care to the poor,
that everyone's on their own when it
comes to raising children," said Mason.
"We're not only making it difficult to
raise civic citizens, but what an incredible loss of social capital (when so many
women h~ve to leave the . workplace
when they become mothers)."
ln a study several years ago of women
who graduated with an MBA from
Harvard University between 1971 and
1981, 2.5 percent had left the workpl!jCe
entirely by.the 1990s. [o another study,
researchers looked at male and female

.

. . ·..... -

MBAs who had risen to within three
levels of the CEO position. They found
that 84 percent of the men had cHildren
compared to just 49 percent of the
women.
In many other countries, · women
don't have to choose between their chitdren and their careers .. Throughout
much of Europe, mothers receive most
of their salary during their child's first
year of life. Until the child is 8, parents
m Sweden have a · statutory nght to
work an SO-percent schedule. In the
Netherlands, workers have the right to a
four-day week. In most of these countries, the government subsidizes childcare.
Instead of talking about fertility, let's
talk (finally) . about transforming the
workplace. If women could become
mothers in their 20s and 30s without
riskjng their careers, .they wouldn't be
wailing until their 40s. But they need
maternity leave. They need flexible
hours for school meetings and home.
work. They need help with childcare.
They need the option of part-time work
~ith pro-rated benefits.
In other words, women don't need the
next generation in fertility drugs but the
next generation in workplace legislalion.
.

Wildflower
walks

•

• · The .Osbra Eye
Memorial walks hegin at
9:30 a.m. Saturday, April
27 in Kanawha State
Forest. . Participants may
meet at the swimming pool
area. The cost is $5 and $2
for those younger than 16.
A children's walk is also
available. For more information call (304) 558·
· 3500, forest office, or (304)
925-2771 after 5 p.m.

Film and
Video Festival
• Spring is synonymous
with the Athens Jntemational
Film and Video Festival.
This year l11llrlal the 29ih year
for the festival known for its
conunitment to the independent, community and alternative media arts in southeast
Ohio. More than 50 fihns
including shorts, documentaries and fearure films are
scheduled for the April 26 May 2 festival dates. Single
ticket admission to one
screening in $5.50, a five-day
pass for films and a lecture or
workshop is $25, and a pass
for all films and festival presentations is $75. Screemngs
wi II be at the Athena Cinema
and the Ridges Auditorium. ·
For more information call
Susan Green at (740) 5931886 or Ruth Bradley at
(740) 593-1330..

Leadership
• The Eastern Kentucky
Leadership is offered at
7:30 p.m. Friday, April 26
and 10 a.m. Saturday, April
27 at the Paramount Arts
Center. Call (606) 3243175;
Coming Thesday ...

Comedy
.Series
• The Paramount Arts
Center offers its annual
comedy series. 1)le comedy seri.es continues at 8
p.m. Tuesday, April 30 with
Carrot Top. Tickets are
$26.50, $25, $20 and $10.
Tickets may be purchased
by calling
(606) 324-3175.
\

(Joan Ryan is a columnist for the San
Francisco Chronicle. Send comments to
her in care of this newspaper or send
her e·mail at joanryan@sfgate.com.)

.

'

... ...

• RACINE - The ninth
unnuul RACO Flower
Festival will be held
. Saturday from I0 u.m. to 6
p.m: at Stur Mill Pork in
Rncme. .
The schedule of events is
as follows: piU'tlde 10 u.m.; .
Rock-N·Country Cloggers,
II to noon; crowning of~
queen at noon; Roc me
United Methodist Church
Choir und signing team,
noon to 12:30 ·p.m.:
Country Grass Band, 12:30
to 2 p.m.; kiddie tractor pull,
I p.m.; Mike Hemmelgrarn,
2 to 3 p.m.; Mountain River
Blue Grass band, 3 to 4:30
p.m.; Steve . and Beverly
Pottmeyer, 4:30 to .6 p.m.
The festival includes
"somethlna for everyone"
with entertainment, aames
for the kids, contests,
crafters, and flowers aalore.
Free admission, free Pl!l'k·
Ina. In the event of rain, the
event will 'be moved to
Southern High School. Call
(740) 949·2169 ask for
Jennifer Hoback.

"West Side
Story"

Southern Gospel concert
,....,. HESHIRE - National
recording artists The
Crabb Family will
appear at River Valley
High School in Cheshire on
Friday, April 26th, presented by
local Southern Gospel radio station JOY-FM.
The Crabb Family brings to the
stage a six-piece live band and six
vocalists. In just five years they have
worked thetr way to the top of
Southern Gospel music charts and
have stayed there. They are nororious
for number one songs sueh as "The
Reason That l'm.Standing", "That's No
Mountain", "Through . the Fire",
"Please Forgive Me", "Trail of Tears",
"I Sure Miss You", and "The Lamb, the
Lion, and the King", all penned by
group patriarch, Gerald Crabb. · .
They've also ~ on various
Gaither HomecomJng Videos, including the latest filmed in New Orleans.
The Crabb Family also brings to the
stage soloist Mike Bowling.
· Mike has sung with groups such as
the New Hinsons, the l.eFevres, and
the Penys. Since his marriage into the
Crabb Fwmily, he has embarked upon
a solo career that has afforded him several Top 20 hits, including "Somebody

Did Some Praying For Me", ;'No
Stranger to the Valley". and "Forgiven.
Forgotten, Forever, Amen".
Mike has just celebrated his first
number one song, "Thank God for the
Preacher." In addition to a powerful
concert, the Crabb Family also offers a·
mul~i-media presentation that has
gained a tremendous amount of posi·
ti ve attention.
, Make your plans now to enjoy a eel·
ebration of wonhip at "An- Evening
With The Crabb Family", Friday, April
26 at 7 p.m., with doors opening at 6
p.m. This is a ticketed event, with a
portion of the proceeds to benefit listetier-supponed JOY-PM radio.
According to Station Manager Randy
Parsons, only a limited number of tickets will be &amp;Old. "River Valley is a
smaller concert venue for us, 110 there's
a limit on the seating available", says
Parsons. "From all indications, this
concert will be a sellout, so make sure
to get your tickets early.
Most of our ticket outlets were flooded with calls and w8lk-ins wanting
tickets, even before we were able to get
them there." For more information on
ticket outlet locations, call JOY-FM
toll-free at 1-866-821-4726.

• The Cit~ of Huntington
Foundation s .5th Theatre
Co. presents the 45th
· annive~ary of the awardwinning musical at 8 p.m.
April 26-27 at the Jean
Carlo
· Stephenson
Auditorium in Huntington
City Hall. Performances are
also offered at 2:30 p.m.
April 28. Tickets are $10
for adults and $8 for youth
age 12 and younger. .They
may be purchased at the
Huntington Civic Arena.
Please call (304) 529-2701 .
for more information.

Award
Recital
• Cynthia Harrison presents a recital u.' winner of
the 2002 Belle and Lynam
Jackson Competition at 4
p.m. April 28 in the Jamie
Jazz Forum in the Joan C.
Edwards Center for the
Performing Aru.
The
recital is free and _open to
the public. Call (304) 6963~17.

Tour
•
Moonlight Tour.
Paddle by moonlight to a
roaring bonfire and man;hmallow roast . Hocking
Hills Canoe Livery. 1-110()2
634-6~20

�•

'

•

•

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
•

GALLIA COUNTY

rates
West
Itt MMtt H•"I'JIIM

wnnld whet wurk neu « The ;!lllle eomp~ny atroM the
MHALIJIUIIMIM'IIWI,:IMGISttfU)OM b&lt;-~ch in Mi:~nti or S~n Diego ri\'llr t::rut $17,000, Why in
POINT PLEASANT - tnt! dti&lt;'~ with plemy 4lf Ohio is it 117,000, ~ hy in VirThe probltn\ of n\tdietl n"l· nightlit\- th:~n in Wen Virgini~. · glnit is it 17,000, fur the 1111me
pnctice insunnce thlt k:~s Add .th&lt;' problem 6f nulphc- ph)l$icl~n? Are our physidttls
been ~:&amp;usi!IIJ dot::ton ro l"o\'&lt;' tie~ insurnne.-, ~nd the ll.lreody tim mud1 \\'nl'$1!? No. Are
other puts ofWe~t Vi"l!illi« is tough tuk beeot\1~1 ewu they tim tllllth better? Nn,
starting to hit M1son County. tougher.
·
They're ll. wry sillulu nux. Are
PletSllllt Vtii"'Y Hmpitill h&lt;~s "You tll.n't recruit,"~~~~ Dr. tlw l:1ws in .thmo; sbtt'S th~t
all\'tdy lost s~wnl dunors, in john W3tle, ll.ll 31lefl!Y, ear, nose much tli~rent? Yes,"
.~rt due to the probl&lt;'m, St'\1• "mt throot sped.tlist who pr~cWatle stressed thll.t he dues·
cr.ilmQre may l&lt;~aw bdor.! the tlr~!s ll.t Plell.sant VaUey, "There n't \Wilt to t:~kc li.\Wy p3tients'
tint ofthe y.-u, .aitd thosi! thll.t is wry little l't'truitins able to lcsitim~te rishts. It's the (riw·
~re staying, along with t11u go Ott. Th~ only p~t!ple th~t lnus l4wsuits and judgmctlts
hosp~t1l, are paying higher ~re willing ttl ~omc here ~r.! that he s~id h~w ttl ~ tlinli·
insunnc~ Ntes, with little \W.Y those thM how been burn na~d.
to recoup th~ high1.1r costs,
hete, ~nd for· sbme reMon
While the State oCWcst VirLut yeu 'PI~!UM\t Valley \Wilt ttl tome batk, cwn in gini~ lm created a doctors
Hospital p&lt;~irl $480,000 for the f~cc of this, And I think mnlpractice · imurance pro·
llllllpractic~ insumtcc, This th~y·re Ct'llzy."
g_ram, W~d~, Buker and
)1\!U, th~ number is expected · "Medielll malprnctice is ll Schauer Qll agree that it is roo
to top Sl\:!0,000, BecQuse nt~or obstacle," Blll Duker, costly,
insuHnce compQnies,as well as Assistant Bxccutiw Direeror "It \Wsn't designed as a pri·
gowrnntent ntedicul Rl!llncks for AdministratiVe ·Services mary insurance progratn,"
Including Mcdicnid . and soid, "The fint tlting we haw Schauer said. "It~ designed as a
Medi~are pay spt!eitic rates, to t~lk abo\tt \Vith any recruit program fnr !Ollie doctors to
the extru Sl~O,OOO in nul- is malpractice issues, Mlllprat· join if they can't find (OVct'll(!&lt;'
practice costs come oft' the tice insurance is « huge i!!u~ elsewhere. The rates arc high&gt;
hospitlll's bottom lint.
in WcstVh:ginia. Recruits read er.1'hc state doesn't ~nt to be
"That in itself is a b~d thing, in the paper and there\ tiw or in the imurance business. The
and you hcu a lot of hospitals six or sewn stAtes tbll.t how program W3S designed so doctill king ·about that incNuo," really been identified lllong ton \\&gt;Quid shop priVIItc cmi•
1bm Schauer, Plcaunt VAlley with West Virginia that hAw crs first."
Hospital's acting ~.xccutiw shown the increase in mAlSome do.:ton arc taking
director, said. "That's not been practice costs, and the unaVIIil· mottors into th~ir own hands.
the major part of our concern. ability insuren that actulllly They ar.! discul!ing the forWe expected that, and we're do the cowrnge,"
motion of a physicians ntutuAI
dealing with that. Our major Right now, Pleasant Valley program. But Schauer &amp;aid for
concern is what~ happening has malpractice itisurunce. But many doeton it won't happen
with physicians in the com- ewn the prospects of l!lltting soon enough. "W~'re hearing
munity."
insunnce - at any cost- AN If they can get that progrom
StiU, for now, the hospital is i!\ltting tougher. ~econtly, St. going It will stut in January,
doing wen financilllly. But if Paullnaurance, a national mal- 2003. I haw doeton who are
things don't change, Pleasant practice cmler, stopped writ- conting up for renewal this
Valley could join the list of inl! mlllprnctlce policioa, As a sunmter. They need o ' new
amaU eown hospitllh thllt have reault, doctors and hospitals policy in June or July. lt'a a
been forced to ahut the doon, had to acnmblc. to find ~over· timing isaue."
"from the atandpolnt of our a;e with another company,
Wade, Barker and Schauer
financial position rlf.ht now," And they turned the cold all are caUlng on the WestVIr- 1
Schauer added, "wert proba· · filets of finditW insurance, It glnla Legislature, to . do one
bly as strong M we have been often "com more ubewhcre, thin~: IlM~t nirt 1\.cfornt.
for a long time. frorit a cosh and there il no I!IIBrantee that That s legAlese for changing
atandpoint. But we opcr~~te on another company is wiUing to the way medical nulprn~tl~e
such a low margin as HmaU write malpractice coverage.
suit! a(tl filed, tried, and dam·
hot pi tal that any aigniticant Wade hu practiced in West ages ~re awarded. None of the
event hat such a huge bearing Virginia his entire profeuional men want patient!' legal rlghtl
.on us. Not having phyticiaru is life. He lovct the Mountain reduced, but all of them,.
about as tignificant event at State and he loves hil patient!. intluding the inaurunce com- ,
you can ha\&gt;e for a hoapital our He would love to practice the panle1, tay outrageout judg- r
size."
reat of his career here, but the ntentl, and a lack of capt on
In recent months, Man Ho1- apirallng . malpractice mea pain and tutl"ering In WettVlrpitalln southern Wen Virginia have him considering what ginia, are causing imurance
closed, Jackaon General il hav- was at one time the unthink· companlet to raise mte1 or
lng problems, and other 1maU able - moving his practice leave the atate.
West Virginii hotpitala are ju!t a few miles . away-acro11
"We need to have pre-!Jtigastruggllng, leaving one to ask the Ohio River where sml- tion reform with tecth."Wade
if Pleaaant Valley it in danger practice met are far more nid, "In other words, before
of closing.
friendly, .
you tile the cate, it must go ·
"No, we are not in danger "~lve generations of my through a panel that hu teeth,
oCioting the hospital," Schauer . family are from We at Virginia. Anything that'a ·legitimate
1
tald. "Unleaa we tote physi· Severalgcnerations are phy•i· need1 to get through, period.
ciana. If we lese phyaician1, we clans," Wade uid. "I love it Or the other way to handle it
don't have anyone to put peo- here. Thit l! my home state. it to have the loaer pay the
pie in the hospital beda. And My son's in WVU Medical winner's coats. And that wiU
without that, we've got no School. But you talk to my 1top this crap,"
hotpitlll."
•
medical student here, who 1 Wade blamci the lcgl!lature
'Lots of physician• is one of ·from the Greenbrier Medical for falling to p1111 tort t!.lform,
the problcnu facing Jackaon School in Lewisburg, he'1 from and the court 1y1tem for what
General. "They lou tome thil area and he i1n't thinking he said are outragcoua judg·
major pbyaiciam there, and of coming back. Not that he menu.
that'• really hurt them," doesn't want to con1c back,
"When you don't have a
Schauer added.
but becaute of the malprac- Supreme Court that suppom
For every doctor that leavd, tice."
the professional!;' Wade 11!'!.,
another one mutt be recruit- And the numben Aren't a "when you've got the legilla·
ed. Hotpital adminiltratort matter of a few percentage turc1 that don't support thi!
aci'Otf the Mountain St2te 12y points, Wade 1aid.
profe11ional1, we have very litrecruiting doctors i1 a nea~y "My cote of malpractice de tort reform. Then you've
impouible chaUenge. Doeton here la1t y~ar cost me $57,000. gut a major prQblem."

or

Coun ide cleanup
day set for May 4

MEIGS CALENDAR

BY KIVIN klu.'Y
KKtll'IWMVDAilYT'RIIIUNE.COM .

GAlliPOLIS - Saturday, May 4 will be yout
oppnrtunlty ttl mike t blow
ror ~ dcan~r G:llli~ Cnllnty.
That~ when a countywide
cleanup

coordinated by
.Keep
·
GaUia
Beautiful
and
nunterous !neal

Jtokaon

a~J~!ndes

will be
stal!'ld at the C.H. McKen•
~ic Agricultural Center
trom9 a.m. until 2 p.m.
Anyone looking to hdp
can eo1uc to the center and
volunteer to fan out along
roadsides picking up litter.
L&amp;L Recycling on Thxas
Road will be open that day
from 8 a.l\1. until noon to
accept appHmces and other
r.!cyelable materials, even
stripped-down aucomobilcs.
No tires will be accepted at
the McKell fie Cellter.
"We will provide food,
trash bags, rubber t~lows and
make assignments on ttilsh·
filled areas and dumps," said
the Rev. John Jackson of
KOB, which orpnitel the
annulll ewnt with the coopemtion of the Ollllla County Health Department, 0111-

day has been held for at leMt
a d\ltade,
A cleanup day will also be
held in Vinton on May 4,
. Mayor Dunna DeWitt said,
The event will be held from
8 a.m. until noon 3t Comnnmity ~rk.
Residents can bring itenu .
set for di~posal to the park
entrance. Tires, gll.l t:Anlu or
nlicrowaw owns will not
be accepted.
DeWitt enc:ouraJI\ld Nsidentl to clean up around
Jipolis Municipal Court, the villaJI\1, and trash bags,
Gallia Cuunty Eltten&amp;ion safety vests and glows will.
Service, G:iliit County Vi!l· be aVItilable by contacting
tot\ 4nd
Convention her at 388·8327,
Bur.!~ll, and other groups.
"As much as anything, we
"I think we'll haw a good pro\&gt;ide an avenue for agenturnout," said Joi.:kson. "The des to work together,
K~y Cl11b from Gallia Acad· where we can coordinate
cttty High School plans to and d~lll with Issues that
u;lst, and last ~ar, residents cnnfront' us." Jackson said.
of the Children's Home about KCill's efl'orts, which
deaned up 160 frosu the he stressed is voluntary.
stop light near the hospital
The annual cleanup I! one
out to Vinton."
of the group's miiJor etl"orts,
"Peuple who can't come next to participating in the
In should take ~he opportu- 1\iwr Sweep in June,
nity to clean up their own
KGB meets every third
property," he added.
Wedneaday of the month at
Initially started in the noon at St. Peter's Episcopal
1980&amp; as Keep Gallipolis · Churc:h, 541 Second .Aw.
Beautiful, the group reorganlted Into 11 countywide Jackson encoum;ed partlclorpnllatlon during the patlon.
enly t 9901 to improve Oal•
"We Nally need some
lit's appearance and lend new, young people to come
supptltt to groupa with a in for leadership roles/'
1imllar goal. The cleanup Jackson uid,

..._...
~

.,_

2002 JEEP WRIIIIUR
WII

118,210

Now$18,809

WII

121,010

COIITRY UIITED
MIAIP
131,100

.........
Now$23,278

208211111 UI1511G4

I

··::~131.831

. . . ., .....t , •••••,
121,710

QUIDCII414
XIJIJI.IIll&amp;a.llflldlll
WII

132,411

18W

27,885

·NIW $20,858

Wll

CLIICIB414
WII

122,870

Commun"y C1l1nd1r II · For Information, call 6113· 4:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. For
publlehlcl 11 1 frtllltiiiOI 7414,·
Information, 0111 11112·3722.

to non-profllgroupt wll!llng
to ennounoe llllillnt• 1nd
1peolll ewnte. 1'111 Olltllcllr

l'rlclly, Alll'll 21

POMEROY . -

lunclly, .~

clly1.

POMEROY -

Mlltlng,

•Popllr Aldg1 Flldgl FWB

Church, 81111 Aoutl 554,
TUPPEAa PI.AlNS - VFW John Elewlcii.L ll)llklt, Ellm~
P0111105a, Tupptrt Plaint, will tv ol Point PltUIIll to ling,
mHI 117:30 p.m. lllht poll ~:ao p.m .. Sundly.
Til~

Aoltl21

2t

homt, Olflclrt wltl be lltotld
lrld I IPICIII dr.wlng will be
hlld.

ATHENS - Survlvort ol
Sulcldl Suppoll Group, 7
p.m., Aft1llll C/lurCII ol Clllllt,
785 Witt Unlorl 81., Allllnt,

April 21
RUTLAND - 81111 from IN

Mondly,

MIIQI CQ~Jnty TO Clinic WIN be

aMno IIUn t111t II 1111 Rutland
Flrt ~Oeolrtrnlnl on Mond4y
lrom .do p.m. to 11:30 p.m.
8ldn t111t wt" lit reid lrom

••

THURSOW'S

HIGHLIGHTS

.Southern·droPs the Marauders, 9-2
IYSconWOLn

.:§19A38

Pro Basketball
NIA
Plllyolta ..

Wlllneatlly'lpmtt
Olltrolt 96, Tbronto 91, Detroit
lnda series 2·0
Dallas 122, Mlnn11ota 110,
Dallaa IHda unea 2.0

Totlly'a Ill""'
Phlladelphll 11 Boaton, 8 p.m.
Portland at l.aken, 10:30 p.m.

WlnterGimts
net S56 million
SALT LAKE CITY (AP)

- Tisnc to udd another
feel-good moniker to the
colorful legacy of the Salt
Lake Olympics: moneymaker.
Orgunltcrs ann.ounced a
$56 milllmt profit, crediting
early budget cuts, cust-sav!·ng mcmtres, detailed plan. ning, favorable weather and
revenue that exceeded budget projections.
The bigl!cSt benelldnry I!
the Utnh Athictk Foundation, which received $26
million and an additional $4
million nlhr tlw lnt~rna ­
!ional Olympic Committee
donn ted it! share of the Salt
Lake ·prtJilt,

Gasol named
top NBA rookie
· MEMPHIS, Thsin. (AP) Memphil Grizzlies fo'rwnrd
Pnu Gasol wo11 the NBA 's
Rookie of the Venr Award as
~ ' near unnnimoua pick,
On~ol, n nntl\&gt;e of Spain, il
the 11m European to win
top rookie honors, 1-te
received 117 of n pos!lble
126 votes from a pand of
sporu w'riten and broadcasters,
Richard jefferson of New
jcney had three voces. jason
1\.khnrdson of (,olden State,
Jamaai Tinsley of Indiana
anJ Andrei Klrilenko of
Utah each received cwo
votes.
Ga10l led the Griulles
a11d all rookies in scoring
with a 17.6 point average,
He also nvtraglld 8.9
rebounda, 2. 7 aulm, 2.1
binds and 36.7 ml11utes. He
. played In nil !l2 games a11d
started 79 for the Cidzzlles.
&lt; He .llnl!hed the 1easo11
ranked fourth In the NllA
ill field goal percentage,
shooting 51 percent. He wa•
1ixth in total blocks (169)
ahJ 1Oth in double-doubl~•
wit~ 35.

livens add
Blake to roltlr
BALTIMORE (AI') The Baltimore . Ravens
expanded their depth chart
ac quarterback co cwo, tigning ·unremicted free agent
Jell" Lllake to ,a one-year
contract ..
Lllake will serve as the
backup to Chri1 Redman,
who wat the lone quarterback on the roster after the
Raven• rdca1ed J!lvis Cirbac
and 1\andaU Cunningham.

Vettrlnl
SIIVlcl CommiNion Will mH1
•i II 1.m. II tht Vlterane Sir•
11101 011101, 111 Memorlel

Indy sooto
ldd ioft walls

flllviVIII
TUF'F'Ei=IS PLAINS 8llhtl Worllllp Cenllr, loCitld In the fupp1r1 Pl1ln1
School, will hott 1 WHk ol
tplrflull rtMWII Aplfl 21 to
May 4 at 7 p.m. 11011 dly, P...
lor Lonnll Colli. from
Flfttoratioll Chrlllllti Fellow·
lhip of Atlllnl, Will lit lht
gUlf! tpllklr lnd thtre wtn
be tptelll I'IIUIIc. FOf lniOmta·
11on, OIU Plftor AOll Salblf II
140-1167-11783.

INDIANAPOLIS (AI') The four turns at the lndl·
anapoli1 500 could be cov•
ercd with "soft" wai!J for
next month't uce - added
protection to leuen the
impact of a cr1Uh In the cor•
ncu.
If the speedwar gets perminion to imca1 the walb,
they w111 be in place by May
5, the open ins day o( practice at the Z I / 2-mile oval,
media . rtlalions director
R.on,.Oreen u ld.

POMEROY - Tht Pom.roy
II 1101 ciMignecl to promOII Church o1 Chrltt, lrH oommuIIIH or tuiickllllltt of 1ny nlty dlnntr with 111'\ilng from·
type. 1t1m1 .,. Dl'lnlld only 5:ao to 7:ao p.m. PubliO Invito
01'1111.
11 IJIIOI permftl 1nd 01n- ld.

not lit gulrtllttld to lit
ptlm.d 11pe0lllo numlltr o1

..•

Thursday. April :is. 1.002

SENTINEl CORRESPONDENt

.._'"'!'_

..

Page 11

••

WAI
120.411

WAI
127,171

.-.'-"""'

--·-

RACIN ll - llchind great pitch·
ing fron, att Ash and a solid offensive etfutl, the Southern lbrnadoes
puUed uut a 9-2 win QVCr the riVItl
Mdss Marauden Wednesday ni11ht at
Star Mill llnrk.
Southern b now 7-4 overall and 44 ill the league.
In the Hnt two inning:~ Ash mo\VCd
down the Marauden 1-2-3 with fuur
strikenuts. In the bottom of the set•
ond, Brnndon Piette singled to le~d
oil" the inning, then ndwn,ed when

Curt Crouch reached on an· error. walk in the bottom half the innin~.
Dally Hill reached on an error, and . but after a Pierce sacrifke wAs also left
Crouch was caught advancing as stranded.
Pierce came home with the first run.
Southern sctll'ed a single run in the
Aaron Ohlinger reached on a field~ fourth when Wes Uurrows singled,
erls choke, and Wes 13urrows also and Joe Cornell sin11lcd, and Uurrows
reached tln a fielder!s choice to bring came home on :m error, the scon• 6home another run. Joe Cornell had a n.
·
run-scoring 6· 3 groundout, thetl . In the fifth inning. Meigs batter
Urice Hill had an lUll double for a 5- Zach Glaze was hit with a pitch to
0 Southern lead.
lead off·the itining, and advanced on a
Meig:~ threatened with a lead-off fidder{s choice, Chris Smith singled
walk to jlmmy Smith itt the third, but to put runners on the corners, and
he was left stranded. Southern suffeNd Jacub Smith was hit with a pitd1 to
similar fate when Ash led off with a load the bases with two out. Ash

fanned the la\t hattt•r to n·tirt· the sidt•,
and thus end tlw Ml·i~ thrL\It.
SouthL'rn .1ddcJ a &lt;in~k run in tlw
fifth on back-to-b:Kk &lt;in~k' tu PiL·rn·
and Croud1 .md .1 Dally Hill tidder&lt;
choke, the scar'' 7-ll . In the Southern
sixth aftL'r Ml·igs went dow11 1-2-.1.
the Tornadoes whirled up two mnr''
runs under Co.~eh Scutt Wickline's
tutelage. ·
.
Burrows was hit with a pitdl, then
with two out,Justin Allt•n W,li hit with
a pitch, and Mart Ash was hit .with a

-

PIH•• ... Southern.

8:1

Reds out-wait Rockies for win
CINCINNATI (AP) Cleaning Cr.!W! were
sweeping out the upper
deck when Juan Encarna·
cion sent home the last
handful of fans,
Encnrna~ion's tWo· ollt
sillgle in the bottom llf the
ninth inning gave the
Cincilmati Reds n 4-3 \&gt;k•
tory Wedsmdny over the
Colorado Rockies in a
rain-delayed game that
ended at 12:45 a.m. EDT,
Only about I00 fans
were huddled in the stuids
- most of thel\\ plopped
back in their plastic chairs
when Encarnacilln
lined a single to center off
jose jimenez (0-2), the fifth
Rockies pitcher,
"Everybody was wishing
it was over," Encarnacion
said. "It Will late and we
didn't want to go back out
there.''
Austin Kearnl had a broken•bat single, was sacri·
llced co second and moved
up on Brady Clark's
groundout. After Barry
larkin was Intentionally
walked, Encarnacion final·
ly ended a game that
seemed desth1ed mr extra
inninl!ll,
"I was chinking it was
going ro be later," Reds
manager Bob Boone said.
" . . . . . . . . . . .:&amp;

WHIRl DID EVERYBODY QO? - Colorado's larry Walker (33) Is brushed back by Reds pitcher Jim Brower In the sixth Inning
of a game delayed two hours and 39 minutes by rain Wednesday. Reds catcher Corky Miller Is at right. (AP)

Mei s wins pitchers'
due over Southern, 2-1
IY lcoTT WaLI'I
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

. 'RACINE - A great pitching dual came
down to who made the least mistakes, and
Meij!llmade the fewest 111 they roiled to a 2·
1 triumph over rival Southern Wednesday
night in gid1 high tchool soflbail action in
Racine.
Southern and Mcij!ll are both now 8-6. .
Katie Jetl"en of Meigs and Southern's
Rtchel Chapman hooked up in a classic high
1chool battle that showcased two excellent
pitchers. Mel~ made one error and Southern
made four erron; that Wilt the difference in
the game.
The first of the devastating miscue; came. in

the lim inning on back-to-back routine fly
balk Janie Davis reached on an error after
Southern hurler Rachel Chapman itruck out
the 1eco~d b~ttcr of the lnMing. What would
have been the third out popped out of Southern's glove allowing the eventual fim run to
score.
Mindy Chancey then hit one to the same
!(lOt, and on a bali that 1hould have been
caught, fell in for what was Meigs' only hit.
That scored the lint of two unearned rum,
Mei1!5 leading 1· 0.
Souihern came back to tic it in the first
when Urigette IJarne1 singled, Katie Sayre
Plua -

Duel,

•:a

Clarett surprise pick in draft
COLUMBUS (AP) - sparkling career in high school
Ohio State's seniors chose in San Diego.
1ides Wednesday for Saturd:Jy's The 6ot tailback picked obviously a surpri~e ttl many
~':al Scarlet- ofhis
teammate• - wa1 Mau·
intrasquad
rice Claren, the reigning Aoolcrinunage at Ohio Stadium. ci&lt;ltcd l'n."H Mr. Football in
The firlt tailback thosen Ohio, jult five months
wun't LydeU .k.oo, who was rC!fluved from a sterling career
second on the team with '419 at Warren Huding High
yard~ ru1hing last seibOII as a School. Clarctt enrolled at
freshman.
·
·
Ohio State in January and has.
It Wa.tn 't Mauri~ H,U, who imprmed the roaches - and
taw tpot duty at taiJba(k la.tt appll(l:ntly the senion on the
ytat and led the team in kidc.- Gray tquad - with his savvy
otr murru (24) and klckolf and hit play this spring.
.
rerurn yardage (523).
Cbrctt, a bulky 6-foet, 230·
lc lllso wam'r acclaimed red- pounder who played all spring
Jhirt freshman Ja)a Riley, a with hit thumb and hand banprime recruit la.tt \~ afier a daged. Wolin 't ready ro pro-

OSU

Tribe

claim himself a! the next
Archie Griffin - or even the
heir apparent , to starter
Jonathan Wells.
.13randen Joe, vying for the
starting (ullback slot with
Urandon Schnittker, .aid the
rest of Ohio State'! backs were
shocked when Clarect's name
Wilt caUed fine by the Gray
captaim.
.
"I Wall surpri~ed and the
llther baclu were surpri~ed,' '
joe said. "But we're con6dcnt
in Maurice and what he's
thown us in just 13 practice. .
It surpriJed the pli)'m, but I
don't think it surpriscd the
coaches." ·.,.

IOOD IHOW - Chicago Dan Wright pitches to Cleveland
lndllnl blttlr Milton Bradley Wednesday. Wright threw siK
wq lnnlnp to pick up the wlh, (AP)

CLEVELAND (AP) - C.C. s~b:lthia threw hi1 glove in
di5gusc. At lu&lt;K 110 one on the Chicago White Sox hit it.
Sabathla wu duJCd in the fifth inning and outpitched by
Dan Wright a5 Chicago beat Cleveland for the fifth time this
season with a 9-2 victoryWednct&amp;y night over the Indian!.
MatJt!lio Ordonez hlu two-run homer o!TSabathia (2-2) ,
Paul Konerko had a aolo !hot and Prank Thomas hie hu lint
.rrip1e in four yean " the White Sox improved to 5-1 agairuc
the Indiana this JeiUOil.
Ocwland bas loK eigbt of nine, and it hat been outscored
40-15 in till pmes with the White So".
Tht Indians were 0-for-10 with runncn in scoring position. IIIII • iw o( thml at'f staning to feel the pres1ure.
. Wrlaht (2-2) followed a
ouhng by teammate
Todd Ri~hle on Tuesday ni t w11h one of his own,
.ao.q one earned run ~nd our singlet in ix mnins-.
The lndUn didn't put up much of .t fight ail"inlt
WtiJht, who mired 10 in ;1 row- eight on groundm atone~t.
·

"terb

�PaQ4t a 2 • The Dally Sentinel

.w ww.mydallyaentlnel;com

Eagles top
BY ScoTT WOI.FI
SENTINE.l COAAESPOND£NT'

TUPPERS PLAINS - Wedt\Mday night was pitche-rs' night across
the county as like other rival bat,des
in· the- oreo, the Eostern Eagles and
Wellston Golden Rockets locked
horns in a g~t pitching dual. East. ern came through with what ended
liP as a came~trom-behind 3-2 win.
After Wellston had scored the
tying and winning runs in the sevemh inning, Eastern with their backs
agllins th~ wall rolli~d big-time.
Myel" led ufl' the inning with a
walk, tlwn Cacy Faulk hammered a
nuHroring doubt~. With one out,
tl1~ brotherly rambinatio.n of Cody
and C:1cy Faulk t~am up far the
wm .
Cody Faulk stepped to the plate
and hit h1e tll"il Kisor pitch into left
fwld ttl S&lt;'Ote brother Cacy Faulk
with the winning nm; the top end
of 11 3-2 tally.
Eastern took the initial lead in the
tim when Ch:~rlit• Young singled and
advanc~d on a Jimmie Putman singk. putting runners on the corners.
A p:1ssed ball then allowed Young to
trot home. which far a long time

Lady Eagles jet past Lady Rockets, 5-2 :

was th~ gam~'s only run or thie~t of
a run.
Kisor and Putnl~n each pail'l!d up
in a great dual with either team
threatening here or there. The
bi-st Wellston threat cune in the
...,.
second inning when Collins and Jeffers each singled, but were left
stranded when Pum1an ended the
inning with a strikeout. After that
frame, no runners advanced past second base until the seventh.
For Wellston, Kis.or doubled to
open ~1p the seventh. With one out
Johnson reached on :m error to
·score Kisor and tie the gume. Jdfers
then.singled home Johnson for the
.go-ahead run. This Sl't the stal!l' for
the Faulk brothers' heroics.
Eastern hitters were Young and
Putman singles, Cacy Faulk a double
.and Cody Faulk a single: Wellston
hitters were Osborne, Moon, Kisor,
and Collins each singles, . and two
singles by Jeffers.
J&gt;u.tman picked up his second win
in as many nights with four strikeouts and no walks. Kisor fanned six
and walked two.

rect. Smith walked and went
to second on a wild pitch,
advanced on a 4-3 ground
out by A. Fetty, and then
from PaseB1
scored on an error at third,
was hit with a pitch, and . the score 2-1. The next batter
Rachd Chapman had a 4-3 went down as a strikeout with
ground out to score Barnes. A a great Chapman effort to
close the door.
fly out ended the inning.
Meigs went down in order · South em's Kiser was hit
in the second, but Southern with a pitch in the fourth as
threatened with a two-out. Southern again threatened,
double by Barnes. She was. but she too was left stranded.
left stranded on a 1-3 ground Chapman retired the side in
·order in the fourth and fifth
out.
"Walks come back to haunt ·innings, and Jeffers s~t down
you,'' and again Southern Southern in order in the fifth.
proved the soothsayers corMeigs threatened in the

Duel

IY ScoTT WOLFI
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

TUPPERS PLAINS
- Eastern bmke open a
close game with three.
nms in the fourth
inning to defeat Wellston 5-2 Wednesday
nisht in girls Tri- Valley
Conference
Softball
action. Eastern is now
13-1 lind 10- 1 in .the
league.
Wellston went up 2.0
in the sec.ond· when
Duuy Cremeans wil)kl'd,
tht·n with one out, Kim
Waldron r.eached on an
error to brlns home

•

her groove 11.nd pitched a Powell · doubled home:
tremendous · gune of the last two runs fon 5control softball the rest 2 EMtern le~d . Despite,
of the way. Robertson's two Robertson wulks it\.
grll.dull.tion from reserve the IMt Inning; EAstern:
ball to Vllrsity has proven pre.-1
·- ' l~d
'
~ ..
well-deserved.
She
Abby ThomM suffered'
fanned seven and Wlllkcd the loss with one strike•
four in posting 11.nother out And two w&lt;tlks. ,
Eutern hitten wen~:
win.
In the Eastern fourth,
•
Rob-ertson led off with a Sandy Powell with two·
walk, but was caught doubles, Tiffeny Biueu ,:
stealing. Morgan Weber Morgan Weber, and Oil-'
singled, and Dillon Ion singles, Mtd ·Km
reached on an. error, Lodwick a double and•
Tiffeny Bissell reached . single. Wellston had one:
2-2.
Eastern\
. Kuict don an error to bring hit, n double by ·wnl-:
·
Robertson then' got in home Webef, then SAndy dron .

Cremttn
with the
gameb flm run2
An error, passed ball,
11.nd stolen buli registered the next run by
Wllldron, the score 2-0.
·Eastern didn't hesitote
und scored quickly. Ka~s
Lodv.t~k doubltd, Nikki
Phillips wolked· 11.nd one
run came home on 11.
Morgan Weber fl~lder's
choice. JessicA Dillon
then .brought home the
next run with an RBI
single, tying the gAme at

I Ui-OU 12
.

CPU

..
Power Toola &amp;

Middleport

Supply ·

992·6611

spark th.e Thrnado bilts. ·
With one out, freshnlan
reserve player Mirinda Davis
went down 0-2 in the count
then catne back to get a solid
single between third and
short. The next Southern batter struck out and Jeffers got
Deana Pullins to hit a long Oy
to end the game.
Southern hitters were
Barnes a single and double,
Kiser a single, Chapman a single, and Davis a double.
Meigs' lone hit was the .
Chancy fly in the first inning.
Southern hosts Eastern
Monday.

E"!!ll jmlllfroVntl,ntl
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The Big W. eck strikes
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40) 992·1400
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•

low line on the track to KBin a Spot.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. said officials need to

revisit tlle yellow·llne rule·because Utere's a
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Tilt~ l

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Wi!ll'tp a time or two try Initio

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romblnatlon,'but WIWl'tabla to
dolt.
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car."

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lnhalaUon.

Was1e of dmund gas
hyan Newman drove his helll't out for

nothlns.
The mokle driver led twice f'or three laps
and kept his No. J2 Ford In the lead pack for
two-th~ of the race only to drop out on lap

37900

0001-&lt;lgfl 100,

"There's no stqpping thrw
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Tllree-tlma Craftlman Truck Strt01 cham·
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WIINITON~Ufl

1, f:rtt~ arlin, m1
:JN,
a . ~"
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I . Ul1\l alflol, ~Ia,
4. rt I utah, 1,1 I ,
1. Celt ltrn111rdt r, 1.111.
e. Jtm11111 JohnHn. 2,11a.

740-446-2002

740-992-6611
1-800-733-3334

Mon.-Sat. 8-7 • Sun 11-5

Mon.-Fri •. 7-5• Sat. 7-3

m.

Raulh 1111 1guan:llan qel' ...,_TUCK PROFILE .....

ao. Jtm~enotr, 1101.
11.~ven
man. IOI.
ii. Oavt
, 101 .
aa.
ljt
~-•"'·
a4,
flttlv1 lrl.
as. Ortin, w .

' 1i.llllllilott, 1,011.

·.

21. Jerry Nadtau1 70t.
ae.
1011"1' HamiMIII), m.
at. KIVIn HINIOk, t71 ,
110. Jall~n ltneon, 783.
31 . FlO .acrdcn, 705.
32. l&lt;tn Chrlldtr1ete.
33. Hutltr~lln, on,~ ,
34. 8IIQy compicn, .e•.
3e.lrttt8od1neileo7.
38. Jolin Andll I, 121 .
11.
AtwOOd.
38. Cuty
Buciclhot
Jon11,1187.
180.
:u.l&lt;tnny.WtiiiiOI, 583.
40, AICM Milt, 481.

II. Jirtl Mtvftllil, 115.
11. Mloh IWIHrlp, 111.

• t111
10. 11011~ UdO, 1, 114,
11. Jeff 1urtcn 1.011.

11. Mllclllclnntr, 100.

R

Hlckl,a fllrmor Marine uraeant, was
trllned In IIGII'dl·llld·llt I'IICUillld put every
bll ot hll knowltdaeto.work In IIIVIna ilolllh.
Hlekl, WM IIYM IIIII' the erath lite In Tro):

•

Q, JIIGn 1&lt;11

1.JICiciOIO~~ 1.1eo.
r, \jt41.

,

~. t-~
,01t.
4.
W llaot.J.ott.
llcolt ~-. 1•'!."•
.. i!!i..
lllflli, 1,w1.

Thonias

l

~: ~=fr1~'

Dolt center.

e.
MIIUI ~nhn, .....
10. IIciottWirnmtr,o11. .
11, John[1YIIU!!!LIOI.
12. Jlft OrHn, • •·
13. Jilt PUrvll, 181. .

Rt. 2 By, Pass
Point Pleasant, WV

•

1H::,~~"ty···

1e:IcnV AtfnN~I18.

11. Tim lauttr 18.
11 lntntH

;713.

1e: klr!')l &amp;irn111rdt, 751.

304-675-5200
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28. 'l&amp;cld IOdine, N1.
11. 1C'tvln Qrut1bJ71.

tJ,,". .
4m!GIC,'

n: =~~.

.

:

TIIUCK 1111111 ITANDIN.
1. Aobtn PrHII~ 481 .

1 a. TtdMueorM.~1 .
I I. DI'IICI 8llrt, 443.'
I 4. Alalc OIJ'MOrd, 410.
I Ulilllllth, 404. .
J I.TriVII K\IPII. 400.

:u=r:=n~.

ll:f:=~~·.

:'e

,;ool.

..

1ee.oe1 mph, April 28, 2000.
'II'ICk -IWOI'CI: Jeff Gordon,
.156.012 mph, June 22, 1897.
Otltndlna chlmjllon: Rutty Wallace
Ol'lndttlnd tilting: 92,000

0111 opeMCI: June 20, 1897

- /licit Mlnlllr

tl. lr

1a.Juon

14.IICIII&gt;Y

•

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION
736 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

illt,

8:'•, W ..

a1. 01110 ~ 112.
t7. Ml11 Crtf101._•_11.
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11. Atndv MecwoniiO, 2JI.I.
H . lraGTMIIUt,287.
11.Ttrno00olc,281 .
40. 01111 ~·· ae.
20. 81111M111. 216.
OllP)IIghtailOa CGII ,.._ 8trv'M. Oittrlbultcl by UnlvtrNI PriH I~•· (100) 28&amp;-1734. 'For rtll- thl ~ ol AJKM 22, 2002.

Mon.-Sat. 8-7 • Sunday 11-5

•

'lUck: 2-mHt oval, 14 dlgrttl benklng
In lurnt, 11 dlgfMI lrorrtttralght, 3
. dlgrtll 01) blckltrtWh.
Whirl: Fcnllr1t, Cliff.
Aaoi: NAPA ,l,uto l'lr1l eoo, Sunday.
'll'aok quellfylng NOold: Mike Skinner,

::,~~~Ne:t~,'llti.

111.JI~IOn
o.Jon w~a.1111..

.

All., dove Into tht wattr thrle tlmll bo!!bl'll he
wu 1bl1to rree Roulh rrom tht wreckQe,
draa him to the eurtace. ch1ar hlllunp 111d
lldmlnllter CPR. ·
"What a mlr.wll that 11, to have your
fl\lanllan lllfiiiiiO yardlawll); rltlhl When you
havl iJ01 to ha\&lt;a him," Smith IBid.

CAIJFOIINIA SPEEDWW

7.llrlln Aolt, IIH,

ao.
011111 """"""' "!t·
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U. •
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34.

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1rldl~

··--················-·········-----------10. Hank Ptl!llr J(:, 118.

.

pu1h Ric ins pmldent OeoiT Smith 11111d
.
Larry Hick• delorvK the r,.cop~l11on
ht't btln pttln~lbr mculna JMk
Amish Iller the team IIW!Wr'• pla111 crlloh

•

IUICH .IIIIU
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740-992·1998
740·667·6133

Spraaue will run oelected ovonll thillel·
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1,.
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Gol.. truddn'
After a1trong run a1 a: dr1ver in last week's
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taemowner Andy Potreu aayo he mr,ht take
the wheel of one or hil can In the Wlruton
Cup race ol Martlnoville thil ran.

ICII't .... wllo piMid tNt~~ In .......
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WHAT 11fEY'RE SAYING

314' revtrtlblt,

. Ru11and Bottle Gas)

Because he was first out or the race, he nn.
iahed 4ilrd, the 01me spot he would have got·

thai he'1l110 p!annlna 1o ontarra001ln
which tho truck oertea runt In col\lwu:tlon
w!.th Wlnakln Cu~
•
"I'U probably take tho truck 1o Richmond,"
heaaid.

32" Solid. Core
Storm Door

2'8" X1'8"

142 with engine failure.

l'ooono AIOIIWI)I

5

BENSON

Ucn1:10n was taken to the
track's care center wtd obset-ved for smoke

cover lnttmttionll Spttdwl'f
June I - Poooncl 100,

SorHnDoor

Jet. Rt. 35-&amp; 160
Gallipolis, Ohio

lnce was watchlng &amp;om the pit area as
Benson's wrecked car
came down pit road after
the wreck On lap 164.
When the car lx!camc
engulfed In namtl!!, lnce
keyed his twrrwny rlldto
nnd calmly told his drlv,
er what to do. "Hold your
breath, Johnny," he said.
·~nd get on out of the

June 1- MaNA l'lltlnum 400,
1r111 Over

992-5432

keep his cool - evch unctcrflro.

~gWe~ Motor 8PHdWIY

70238·
70238

228 Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
, Drive·Thru Window

JamiJs lnre, crow chtef on Johnny
benson's No. 10 Pnntloc, showed that he can

Dale Eam~ Jr. Celebrates ·
his first · · Of the season

ON THE TUBE

Mly at -

32" Lincoln Wood

Doltcentel!

91-~ ~'lA489·

1'11ohmoncllnttrnaticnt! RtCIWIV
MIY 18 - Thl WlntiOn,
.
Lowt'l Motor BPIIdwiY ·

'2999 .

Thomas

ttll._,.

May 4 - fiQntlao Exclttmtnt 400,

lr111

• Orttllr energy

Clleyy ~ Dlllll~9,11 Jr. do!rtihlitd

A LOOI&lt; AHEAD

70237·70238

Fried Chicken

Hold ytNf breath

Wlnaton Oupz NAPA Auto
Pllfl! ~: l:ill) p.m. EDT.,
Sunday on ~"'X. Pre·raco
· Ahow bi!glns all p.m. EDT.
llueh: Auto Club 000:

Tap

Featuring
Kentucky

the No. 00 Chevrolet prepared by Dale

Earnhardt Inc., but he WBS dropped
' !\'om Mh to 2lst In the flnlshlns order alter
NASCAR officials said he wenl below the yet.

Satunta~ 4 p.m.l!liYI', FOX..

$33900

to worry 1bclut

K

.

Ondlng AIOiutlon.
"Thlsls wh~t opoedway racing 11, and"" Ju•t
haw tu !llll uol!il to It," Kenny WIIUace !llld.
"'rhey'vo cltanR'!d !l(j mony rull!&lt;l !l'llncredlblo."

1r111 Hell
01111/Round

Restaurant

Talladega, Ala.
enny :Wallate had a successi\JJ run In

dot.en• or tJmMtilrotigh the yeAr! In llllellbo•t to
make racing nt tlaytonaund 'l'lllttrlop \loth laiC
nnd entortalnlng, moot drl'll!l'l! ha'll! y!vnn up on

..

Family

By RICK MINTER

!lobby LAbonte,.who aloo waslnvoiVI!d, "'ld It'•
hard to blome ony )IOl'liculor tlrlwrlbr tho oool·
denlllhBt ooour when the"""' om bunched ao
cloeely at iOO mph .
"It'; oll our fltuil that we'm out them, • he laid,

24" ...701104170208 $811.88 32" ...70208/70208 $105.88
30" ...~0207 .1102.88 36" ... ?0210170211 $110.88

Flnlah ott your next room
addition with bllutlful p1tlo
doore.

window
IYitem.
Whitt$
11437

I

Crow's

c: .m Cox News Service

lli!nllllllftor that.
"II'• aU the!ll! high ,~,11M il'llato In the ·
moo," ho •nld. "We """' thom trying tu riloo. . . .
I'm iiOI'ry \WI w.m lnvolwd In It, aM aU tho othel'll

Unit PineS 118.99 Poplar- $176.28 Oak- $207.1 0

Hll·ttorlng
3·track

I
I
1·
I

Wllllaoo niU he trloo ti:&gt; Illite a !Pill on the tl'llck.

Preflnlthld 6 P1n11

• Lower

wr.r.:

~rtl!lly let off the 11111 and doo!n'l know what hap·

24" ...?0102170103$74.88 32" ... ?01 08/70110 $78.88
28" ...7011W70101 $76.88 38" ... 70111/70112.$80.88
30" ...70107170108$77.88

.....

StorylliW: The lluSCh Series v1slllll11e Loa Angeles
ama !Or th;! sildh straight season In 2002. GM cars
hll~~t won llllllf\' Calllomia SpeedWay ·race.

1

tltetlrlv·
the
or the pllek uw onlY l bta etouilot 1moke
llltil dull.

24" ... 7007~ .......$34.48 32" ... 70080 ....... $37.48
28" ... 70078 ....... $31.48 38" ... 700112. ;..... $38.88
30" ... 70078 ....... $38.48

STORM DOORS

lu11611 ·tHank Parker Jr., 155.957 mph,
April iiUOOt.
·
Bu11611 (!UIIIfylno r:tCOfd: !30bbV HamUion Jr.,
179.198 mph, April 27,.20\li.
Otllndlna Chtlmplon: Hank F'$rkllr Jr.• Auto Club
300.
·
·

R-: Mlssouri·llllnols Dodge Dealers Ram
Tough 200 .
Gateway lnterna1ional Raceway. St.
Louis, Mo. ·
.
When: May 5, 4 p.m EDT.
Ttlevlalont ESPN
.
Dtfllndlng c111mpkln: Ted Musgrave. Ram
Tough 200.
: .
·
Cralttman TrUc:k raceracORI: Jack
Sprague: 1.13.726 mpt1 , Aug. 19, 1999.
Sloryllne: Four dlfferant dnvers have won
races at Gateway ln!emauonai Raceway, ·a
venue that joined the series In 1998.

Yellow-line violation
costs Kenny Wallace

Come 111 Flob Llwaon,
· Kevin Hudaon, 1nd Jr. Wilton

Leg1oy 01k Unit w/011lng

115°0

Fontana, 0.11.
Whln: Satu:c!f:·m EDT.

I
I

.

Fltvtrllbll LIUin Unltl

5

RICe: Autu ClUb 300
Whlrtt Callfomia. Speedway,

CRAFTSMAN TRUCKS

• Other Services Available
•
.

probi!biY the hlrdi!At hli 1el'@l' hid." · ·
Sadler orooltl!tl hla hll&amp;d.at~d·nl!tk Mtralnl
ilovloo with p~MnllnR Altrlou•Wur~
"My HANS de~ too did ilt'@At," he !ald.
Although NASCAR hllloh&amp;ngl!il the rule•

Andellmlnett
.
· tlldlng gllll
door1.
., No frOII build
up or tlr 1nd
wettr l11lclge

BUSCH SERIES

I

POST-RACE NOTES

!howlnu thAI a eruh thAt deoll'U)'Oll hundrl!lli or
thoUIIIIId! ol dOilara worth or !Qulpment tOUUin't
will@ out hi!Hnllll or humor.
muloll Salller. who Will In I)Ol!!tlonto duplllllto
htllll'OIIU !ICOIIII•PIAOO run at DtiYlona In
·
Febru~~~:~ atamml!d hor!ltnto the wall Mille block·
1tmtch.
"It tOOk my nth aY!Illl" Stoller ulil. "Thlt'l

thl probllml of

KFC

Brake Jobs • •4911 &amp; Up

•b\erlor

INSULATED
STEEL PREHUNO
&amp;·PANEL ENTRY
DOOFIS

I
I
I

WINSTON CUP

iiOOil em. New. S.rvit:r

~.

11/II((J

THIS WEEK'S ACTION ON THE TRACKS

by RICK MIN'I'ER

\nter\or

6 Panel- 30"-

110 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Phone 992·1135

Stars to shine

Reds ·

streak, and came home the
winner with seven strikeouts,
one walk, and three hit!
ftom Pap B1
agaimt him. Ash had that fire
in his eyes and his desire to
pitch, and Burrows scored on win reflected in his steUar
a run down. T~en Allen performancl!.
tcored on a Brandon Pierce . · Derrick Knapp allo pitched
· single, the score 9-0.
well for the Maraudert and
Coach Dan Thomas then with the exception of one
dug into his bag of sculligaru inning, also had control of hit
for a formula to score some pitches. Knapp was relieved
runs, and got hi; fint answer .. by John Stanley in the sixth.
when Zach Glaze singled to They combined forsix strikeliar! the frame. Jimmy Smith outs and one walk and three
singled and the runners hit batters.
advanced on a 4-3 ground
Southern hitters were
out and scored on a two-run Brice Hill a double, Brandon
single by Chris Smith. That Pierce three singles, Curt
made the score 9-2, but Ash Crouch a single, Wes Burrows
buckled down to finish off asingle, and Joe Cornell asinthe game with two ~onsecu- gle. Meip hitters were Zach
tive groundouts to preserve Glllze,.Jimmy Smith, and two
the Southern win, 9-2.
singles by Chris Smith.
Ash controlled the tempo
Southerstt is idle until it
of the game, survived a wild ; plays Eastern Monday.

Ridenour
St. At. 248

.

ahead of the catcher's sec.ond homer of the season.
The Rockies loaded the
bases
with one out in the
fromPaseB1 .
eighth, and Todd • Hol"The way itwas looking, we landswofth hit a soft fly to
were going to be here a long left fielder Adam Dunn .
time ."
Terry Shumpert lllgged from
Scott Williamson (1-0) third, and catcher Corky
· escaped threats in the eighth Miller lunged and tagged his
and ninth to get his first win left leg just before he
since Aug. 12, 2000. stepped on the plate.
Williarn·son, the NL's RookNeither starter made it
ie of the Year for · 2000, back .after the long rain
missed most of last season d 1 Th
k
because of reconstructive eay. e w,ay Mi e Hamf.ton was pitching, he woulaelbow surgery..
n't have been around for
The Rockies lost their · very long anyway.
fourth in a row, dropping the
The left-hander gave up
NL's worst record to 6- 15.
six hiu, two walks and three
A thunderstorm stopped runs in only 2 2 ~ 3 innings,
the game for 2 hours, 39
·
minmcs in the bottom of extending his April misery.
the third inning . with the . Hampton, the Rockies'
Reds ahead 3-0. The Rock- opening day starter, lost his ·
ies arc making . their only first three games by giving
trip m Cincinnati this sea- up at least six runs in each,
son, so . Mark Hirichbeck's then got a no-decision by
umpiring crew was prepared . walking six in six innings.
to wait a long time to get it
Hampton opened the
.
inning
by walking L~rkin on
Ill.
· Only about 200 of the four pitches, then giving up
original 18,000 fans were in consecutive singles by
the stands when the game Encarnacion, Sean Casey
resumed at 10:49 EDT. and Du.nn that made it 2-0.
Cleaning crews that usually Todd Walker's sacrifice fly .
wait for the last out swept drove in another. run, and
through the vacated upper Hampton went to a 3-1
deck, filling garbage bags as count on Kearns before the
the game went on.
heavy rain fell . .
'
Reds starter Chris Reits·
· Gary Bennett's three-run
homer off reliever Jim ma threw only 38 pitchesBrower tied it in the 'fifth. 23 of them mikes - and
Todd Hollandsworth dou- gave up one hit in his three
bled and Juan Uribe singled . innins-.

555 Park St

Aceessortas

Cheater

.

.Valley Lumber

Sea us for Your Stlhl"

MOvie stans and celebrities are not an l.llCOO'Imon
slle at California Speedway. wh~h is an aasy eon&gt;
mute from los Angeles. Gzammy Award·IMnnlng
performer Shezyl Crr1H wlllseM! aa h&lt;&gt;nozary
grand malsl)allor Sunday~ :ace.
·

Check ou~ll your MLB
scores on
PageB4

sixth when Chapman walked
two batters, Ch~ncey and Jeffers, with two out in the sixth.
She then got a strikeout to
end the inning. Both pitchers
deserved to get the win, but it
was the Meigs defense that
rallied behind their pitcher to
put the Marauders into position to win.
Southern threaterieg in the
sixth irining when with two
out Chapman and Kiser each
singled; but again Southern\
hopes went down the tubes
on a 6-3 ground out. Chap~
man struck out two batters in
the last inning, hoping to

252 Upper
River Rd •
Gallipolis, OH

.. -

(740) 992-5009
Larry W. Banks,

Owner/Operator •

�'I
•

&lt;

v

Baseball

The Daily Sentinel

Page 84.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

field off Jim Mecir.
Despite walking home the
tying run, Stanton (1-0) got
the win by aUowjng just one
hit over 2 I -3 innings. Mariano Rivera pitched the ninth
-for his seventh save.
Mike Magnante (0-1) took
the loss.

A trip back to Oakland
helped Jason Giambi regain his
MVP form.
Giambi hit a go-ahead, tworun double iri the seventh
inning as New York
beat the Athletics 85 Wednesday night
in Giambi 's second
game as a Yankee in Oakland.
"I caUed this place home for
so long," said Giambi, who left
the A's to sign with the Yankees
in the offseason. "( just feel
comfortable here at the plate."
Giambi struggled in his first
few weeks -with New York,
tryitig _to live up to the $120
million contract he ,signed in
December. But with two more
hits and three RBis on
Wednesday, Giambi has his first
consecutive multihit games of
the season.
He had two hits in the series
'opener Tuesday, including a
double in front of Jorge Posada's go-ahead.homer.
"It's the same thing I'm trying -to gain back there atYankee Stadium - the comfort
level," said Giambi, who won
the AL MVP with the A's in
2000 and finished second last
season.
The record crowd of54,513,
weU beyond the Coliseum's
baseball capacity of 43,662,
loudly booed throughout
Giambi's first at-bat, but he
answered with ·an RBI single
in the first inning.
His double broke a 5-5 tie in
the seventh.
"He was right on it,"Yankees'
manager Joe Torre -said. "He's
comfortable here. He won an
MVP here and almost won
another one. This might be just
what he needed."
Derek Jeter hit a three-run
homer for the Yankees, who
blew a 5-0 lead but came back
for their sixth win in seven
gaines.
With the bases loaded in the
sixth, Yankees reliever Mike
Stanton
walked
Jeremy
Giambi,Jason's younger brother, to tie it at 5.
But with one out in the seventh, Bernie Williams doubled,
Jeter walked and jason Giambi
hit a full-count liner to right

AL

- - - --

ANGELS 10, MARINERs 6

--

Eoot
w
L
13
8
11 10
11 11
10 11
B 13

Pet.

.8tg
.524

01

Son Diego 7, F'hll:::t'; 2
Clnclnn~~ll4, Ca~ 3
Sl. Louis 4, N.Y. Mota 2
Chlclgo Cube 10, $Ill Fllnc:IOCO 4

Tlluroclty'o a.Loo AfiiiOioo ( - 2-2) ot PfttiOOrgh
Florida
.476
(Fovg 2.()), 12:36 fL'm.
Phi~
.361
San Francleco L.Htrnandez • ·0) at
COotrot
~be (lltber 2.0), 2:20p.m.
w
L Pet
01
(Joneo 1·t) ot F'hl~
12
(Padilla 2·2), 3:06 p.m.
·
Plttllburgh
7 .632
12
.500
t/2 Houttoo (Roynoldo 2-2) at F1otldl (llur·
CllllllntO t1 -~76
StLoult
nett 2·2), 7:01 p.m.
.
3
Milwaukee (Quevedo 1-1) at Montreal
Houston
9
tt .450 3112
7 t2 .3611
Ct'cago
5 (Armaa Jr. 2·2). 7:06 ~m.
.
MIIWIUkH
7 14 .333
Colorodo (NoOgie 1) ot QlnclftlliU
8
~Homllton 1·1~ 7:10 ~.m.
w
01
1. Lou Ia (PM ret O.() 11 N.Y. Moll (TrlL Pet
choelt-3), 7:10p.m.
San Froncloco 13
7 .650
112 · Arizona (Helling 2·2) ot Atlanta (Maddux
Arizona
t3
B .619
13
112 2.0), 7:36 p.m.
LooAngolu
8 .819
San Diogo
10 t1 .476 3 112
C&lt;)jorodQ
Frtdly'o8 1S .266 7 1/2
loo Angeltl (Paroz 2-1) II Ch~go Cube
Tlltlday'o Oomoa
(Wood 2·1), 3:20p.m.
Florida 4, Houston 3, t2 Innings
San Diogo (Tomko 1· 1) at Plttllburgh (VII·
Montraal 5, MllwaukH 4
kJne 2·2), 7:05 p.m.
Arizona (Johnoon 5-o) 11 Flcrtda (OIHn 1).
loa ~leo g, Pittsburgh 8
Phlla phil B, San Diogo S
t ), 7:05 p.m.
Clnclnnetl 3, Cot..- 2
St. Loula (T.Smllh 0·0) at Montrtol
N.Y. MilO 4, St LOUII 3
(Pavono 2•2), 7:05 p.m.
Arizone '&amp;, A~anta 2
MllwaukiO (Ru~h t•t) II N.Y. Mill
Son Francl100 12, Ch~go Cuba 4
~:;,••oo 0-2), 7:10 ~- ·
n ,....,.... ( 11 2·1) at ClnolnMtl
-neodoy'o oomoo
(llooeeno 14), 7:10 ft.m.
Allonto 4, Arizona 3
Houlton (Ridding 1&lt;- ) 11 Atlontl (Oiavlne
Houoton 7, FlOrida 4
3· tl, 7:36p.m.
Phladtlphll (Adamo 0.2) at Colorado
Montreal s, Milwaukee 4, t5 lnnlngo
LOI Angalea 5, PlttsbtJrgh t
(Thomeon 2·2). 9:05p.m.
Atllntll

.500

2
2 1/2
3
5

'

-

AmorlcaOLMtiUO

-

l.oot

w
12
14

L
8
8
9 10
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Cintrll
w
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13
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NowTompo Boy
Toronto
Boltimont

'

Cl1lclgo
Mlnn-la

Te•••

.838

.474 3112
.-421 4t/2
.400
5

01

w
L Pct
t7
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tt tO .524
7 -14 .333
8 14 .300

01

-

Sfallle
Ookland
Anoholm

Cll

Pct
.lMj7
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•

Clr4oloild
KanuoCUy
Dotrclt

Pol.

.887

t
2
.381!
8
.200 Ool/2

.m

'IUtoclly'aOomoo

5112
g1/2
10

•

Thtlndly'a•
C~Mgo Wllllo loa ( - 1-1) ot;
CltooMMICI ( - 1-1), 1:01
M l - (L.OI\OO H) ot
Boy.
($turtle 0.2l:,!:18 p.m.
•
BooiOO (P. ~lnoz 3.()) ot Bohl..,..,
~:'"' 1·1), 3:01p.m.
,
to (Hahday 1.()) atlUU (flulbl1 ~
~- :1:01 p.m.
•
.Y. Yanl!ttt (Muolloo 3.()) II Ollldol\d;
(Zito O.t), 3:36p.m.
,

t::';p.

.

,..,,. a.m.

r,:1oon

~;:~i- 1-2) ,.. lhH (Dovt.:

1-1~ 1:011 p.m.
·
:
Bohlmort (~ 1·3) at Kanua City,
~ort 0·3), 8:06 p.m.
. •
to (CorpontorO.t) IIAooholm (Appl~
ort ·t), tO:D5p.m.
•
N.Y. Yanhll (Citmlnt 2·2) 11 SolttiO
2.0~ 10:06 r..m.
.
~ Wh • Sox Rauch 0.0) •• Olllt.•
land ( ldlt ll-3), 10:01 p.m.
•:

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

-

NL

IINIIU...
•••

Leldlil

D~:~N:

Situated In the County
of Melga, In the IIIIa
of Ohio 1nd In th1
Vlll1g1 of Mldclllport,
hlng pll111 of loll " "
e4 1nd 11 orlglnttlly
llld out 1nd pllltad by

1•

Phillip Joneli 1nd
bounded
tnd
dleoriiMNIIIIOIIOWI:
leglnnlng 11 the
north 1lde of W1lnut
lti'MI It the OOI'nlr of
W11nut 1nd ,ourth

.

0/ftoe · ~~ow--~

Pleasant Valley Hospital, a non-profil
healthcare facility, currently has open
posilions for lhe followin11: •
I) ~ Part-lime MLT/MT
for Evenings/Nights (30 hours a week
or more) Must have or be immedialely
eligible for WV license
2) ~Part-lime experienced
Phlebotomists for EvenlnJis/Nishu
(30 hour: a week or more) .
Send re1ume to:
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
c/o HUIDID Rltourett

l5l0 Vllley Drive
Point Pleuant, WV 25150

Or call (30of) 675.,f34o, Ext. 1414
Or FAX to (30of) 675-6!175
AA/!01

lt_ems

Fl1~;;;gN;:rll"6

.;

•· tiO

r:a.

-r

r

~.~:c~:~~AIIODII111,

Carry OUt permit
Q•t lor ulo, Chti101 Townll!lj),
Molgo COUnty, Hod le110ra
&lt;11 lntoroot to: Tho Dally
!ontlnel, PO Box 729·20,
llomoroy, Ohlo487119. '
Makt Earth Day 0110ry dayl
Donato to FloUulndui111H.
Storti In Athtnt lod Alba·
ny. 1·500·837-750D
w..w.rou:olndultnta.org

r
•
•

GIWAWAY

~uolrallen
•

good

IIMI

you luJtlfl

,.,,.

Wtii!Utyour
tmU., your oola,
. your loU&lt;:h, and

fOM ON 6DM, IN

wut alwor• low
you Md k••P your
'"""""Y aliwln
ourMarto.

Lo,.,

YoiU' chlldron atul

vory

VIctorian Furniture
April 28 &amp; 27 8 am to 4 prl\
8 Eut StrHI·Pomeroy, Ohio
Monkey Run) Rain or Shine

will be at
Willa'• Bible Book Store

on Friday, April 26th
2-3pm
Hope to see you there!

INOTICII
OHIO VALLIV PUBLISH·
INCI co. rooommo.N
~1 lhtl
you do bUIInHI with ptoplt
you knOw, and NOT to 11od
monoy thrDUJih lho moll until
you hovt In-ligated tho
o"aring.

j

Gl

::.:::

~~~~~t~:t =':::"'
eo"ntact~ Bow·
mon'a Homocaro, 70 Plnl

no....,_

·7

2422

t 40l+ll-

YAIID 5.u.£.

=~ :;·~:~:~~
:::r::

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-g.... dr1vlnQ
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~HI. di'UO
· 01n1or1 wtiOO!"'· 1·

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~l:l':~~~Apftt
zt.
~Holm

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qu~ICI.
( )f7fl.oiGOf
~ m111101 Willi ll1or1
diiOrljiUon or qutl'fl: "ono.
La Aroo.
lxperilr!Otd Houo:hOid

hOUH

lrom31~Y~
"':l'lf.l
304),~:J.l5482

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0:::

MIIQICO.~ICLAND

:;:..."r,.:r' '
117

r•u

I~ ~unllngton

j

P1111'1' thot enoour, r-, lroo 11011- upon
Worlcp- Dlvorlhy,
villi 304-1711-1044
DN
•
Lawn Cll'l
loiMOnl to WOrk on lrllh ~ lor _quality WO&lt;t&lt;1
routt. Mlllll bo 28, llotvo Call uo. L0C111nQ lor atoppv
cloon drlvlot , _, and 3 WO&lt;i&lt;1 Coll1111 olhotr IIUYt·
yoora commtrolol driving Llclnotd and lrlaurod. -lilY·
,,.,.,_, no CDL ro- If t:llloo Lown Clrt. 7~
(!!'lred. 21 10 40 llourt. tn•tNII
40)...m11Venlngo.
lrlrlnltev'.-111
IIIIIIGt II now ID- . ...,.- rwmo dlllng 11'111 ,..
Qllltlng , _ (d"o ~ Dllro, -ng. alliin link
510110211orpoal-l loooe.otlllom- diOka &amp;
Ill II** lor L«itton
lnfUrlnot
.,._ lndlot1t 11111011 ... 01111- ..,, ....,
your Ill llllllfviot lor, 111111 - IMfl', 'rooltti'"IIOI
to
or dtllp fill' • Cllr1ll 01· ~
rtoo 1yrt0U1f! V1111te Holl,
1'0'... 2tl,lytloull, 011. Top to lot1om Clio:nlng
IIMol, prol'ml:ool1 rtll'
PIAl T1mt ~N lor dllltltl, OIIIOt -n1ng 11
K:I'JMIII 8fGU11 , _, Call ~~rar:: (7~;
4 101' fiiOfl lno ,.;
'
NO.OO I Ill'
Htlp ....-ld OlllnO lo&lt; lltt
..,_, I10a
1
-.y, OWl! CiN141 Homl. OIIIIOol-f?.. 7t4
I1IW OIYtnamlnlmum.,.,
do IIIIWtl11tna 1n mr
111W .llhllloi' 7 - ·· 1 - Mt ihllt. Clrtllltd,

:Fe~~~i=:~~~:~ ~~
Dod~ll·

divided by
Rd. Rural
Wttor Uno alrHdy av&amp;NI•
bit. Lett or Road Frontoga.
0no Improved BuNdlng Sill
wllh lnatlllod pond, Cfroular
Drlvowa so liD syotlm,
E~lo .-_Niorng, Concrato
RV pod 30x411. 110 Dod~ll
Rd .. VInton, Ollkl, Off 81111
Routt 150. Apprtlltd
lt4t OOO Aol&lt;lng 1135,000.
SortOuo ' lnqulroa Only.
1740)1192-ZIUII or (740)474·

r

ll'rtot..

..

=~

1'0!: · -·

'r.:;~/a~~~~~=~

(304Je7H332
bedroom, 2 both, 2 0111 attachtd (lllogt, 2 aoro coun·
lly HIUng, ,... 1'01.,. Porno
ft2I.OOO. 7~

f:.::Z·

a bid oom, 1n Mlddltport,
0111 Tom Andtrton 1111r
II!IT· (740)182-1341.

112 aaroo. 1111,1100. l'ortor
..... (740)448-4814 Ullllpm
or (7&gt;40)445-:12-48 ollli' llpm
Newly Aomodolad 3 BR, 2
lA LOrge LMng l'locm, Dinlng
LOrge Wlll&lt;•ln
CIOOOII. Now ~ Olblnato
In Kltontn. '"" . . _
tt/2
. (t
lOIII ~ ltoml. flit.
n1110n Orlvo, I'Oinl ,......,.,
24 bl. tbl. ,er'IOICI boOII
with- dtoll, 1-oofoar

~-.

=· =~=·:. .lvlthoooa=

1Jiotr1o fum. 21t 7tr. llroot

Naw H1voo hl.500.
11041112•:1772 or (104,_.

a7fl

~trd "
P-"lil

New

Ill

•

0It
· -•
•
good hunting lll1d
'llrll PfWIII, ~ or
ed, own on - · ..,..
rood. food ltonl111111 on a
~~:lr.i, t ~

SPo\0:

I

•

FOR

Rmr

18, 80 oltoa, StOO/mo. 740•
882•218 7,
\ II 1!4 II \ \ ltl .., l

iiriii~~----..-,

r·u·

HOO!W.IIOIJJ
GOOD!!

For Solo: Rtoondlllont d
wolhoro dryora ond rllrla·
trl1011. .ThOmpaona Appfi.
onoo. 3407 Jaokaon AvO•
nuo, (304)878·7368 .
Good Ultd API)IIoncoa. At·
oondltlontd and Cluiron·
tooi. waahoto. Drvoro,
Rangaa, and Rotrlglratora.
Bomo lllrt 11 lge, Skaooo
Af£1•nou, 78 Vlno 81.,
( 14-48•7388
Too Couch and Blown Ro·
elinor. Fair Condlllon. Call
1740)441·0128
Bod
Toddlor Bod. Full 51"
,
E-to nlll1740)44&amp;-830e

g~~~.

M~~~r~~~~rd

:'so

i

r

111 1 01

-r-

~~~~~~~~~~
lod

Cot. llroot
lei
~
tA11IIY n,
f.~"'":'.:O 2ou iou:naca12
1 lo/0 , '~~&gt;octout 1&lt;11chen. Ofl (~} 42' oo111ng font with

•-

j

----:---::--~--:

:'"~,:~~f.:• ~r~ga~:

' ~2:.0~13)a':f'241City,

Clll(740)288-8881

Appllonou Rtoondlllontd
w.ohorl. Dryoro, Aongoa.
Rotrlgratoro, Up To 110 01y1
Guorontot&lt;ll W• Soli Now
Mo)'log Applllnctl. French
City Moylog. 740-448·7788.

2br. MobiiO Homo right
~rdtt New Maven Clrodt mOnd Whir~ El~olrlo
SChool, 1200, dapoolt 1300. SIOIIo ·
Almond Wilt·
month.
Rtloranoea.
' 175·
(304)8112•1107
lnghouu Froat Fro• Rttrlg·
or1tor. 1100. (2) Waaher I
Furnlohtd ono bedroom , Dryar M~IO~Ing ~··
oloatrlo hoat pump, wolhor - h. I
t or pm .
&amp; clllflr, no pt11, raltriiMOII (740)44e·gDOI
roqulrod, lrllh' watlr pold,
I
rt11l 1300 pluo dtppolt &amp;
AHriQtJII.S
Olootrlo. (740lt82.e882
I
APAII'I'MI!Nili . Buy , ootl. ~ ., AnU·
FOil RI!Nr
, quo• 0 1124 Eul Main on
I
I R i24 E. Pomtro)'. 740o
t •ncl 2 bedroom opert· IN•2828. Ru11 Moore.
montl, fu-11'111 untur· ow001.
,

t8

LoJI.,.
Acllr.AcE

Strltl Parking. Ova~oollo ilghta, 140. (2) outlldt
tO Clrtll lulldlng IIIIDt 11 Pork lll1d Alvtr. No 1'011, dooro.
-(t40=
Momlno ltar ltiottoo, ... UH/mo. piUI 1111-. t11o
ShoO
l'loaloo, 011 poa11 and rtltrtnou ~-=--:--::--=.:-::-:-::U
4t
loll "
lor
a roomo &amp; bltr.. Upolllro llalo.op! qulpfnont11 l'loo111,
dlviiiOil. 740-112·11012. Apor1mlol. Nowly eo-~~o Dour, llc~hot. loOollt
ed, No ,.,., Wllllf Pllcf, · Trootor lqulpmont.
111110rt 11rm olll'l12 LOon, Downtown
ClllllpoUI. (740)44to0e11
WOUicl good llunllng (7401illl-t!00
'rOIInd pool
Dlib ftOO.OOO oroolc, wollr
gr01.
'••
riQI!IIIOol-f?f.t 82l
oltO tal Avo.l __! 11'1, round, Clll 74D-IIZ..v88
1 2 t = uao Cllmo lltlf f pm,
a· N-471 111111' l!un oga .
. 740)81115--4831, =~.;;_.,.=::-:-:-I'IG. Of! OhiO tllol, 112
(I04
1.
~~~lA
c::-:r.=·(~=wtit or 111ou11 7 WIIIDf &amp;
r I
·
o:p11o olrood)' In ' lt4IIOO IIAUT1,UL
AI'AIIT• 8301 and Iol00·2t1
,
-=!~llcllng 'ahl: ~f.":lTJ::O.fN ".':: 11Dr 1,_, lltdroom luho.

S::::· ~5o~·.

"*·

=~rom2.3to

touf~ln== (740~

~

Dl~

2~'

(3CUJe7H071
111'1101 IIIOUOTIOHI 10.1
Aoroo wl1h 118Hitllw00d
1Aab11t Home Hoar GoiiiPO111. lx:ll'tnt Conclltlon .. ,.,..
~ cr:c,llf Mcl'r~i
ltoiY """' 7t Aorlllo'lltltiolo Call
lt1ll1t,
lldlng, I01t or nitt Colli 11 etrdiH)I 21
IDrH, MIIIJI C:O..otr.
11'111 11011110 · HooiOO &amp; LOrod (CIIuler I good """""' and '':,"'~·
-.1 hotll llltlf IJo, tllo
or Ollloe 1• •IIY PfWIII, motlly
~ ~rntof011J.
od. own on DOII1 t1t11t or
'::jj, "iiOolota
IOflll, rood 1101'11111' an 1

•::;s;

j

Mollohan Corpot, 202 Clark
Chopol Road. Ponor, Ohkl,
(740)446·7444 1-877-130·
8182. Frot Eallmoloa, Eaay
nnancl'\.11, go daya ~~~II
1
1• : 1
no pott, (740)8N· .

botll,111m
a -ooma.
outtorn
llurant
alftlfolpm.
lltdroom on Floulo z Olk
&amp; Olblnato,
Gil ......
ltd oron offloa
c:ocrarbullcllng,
llroot 2218,

·

Madam 1 Bedroom Aport.
monl. (740)4~5·03110

=~==~7.--::

Juol golllng olirtod7 111 ;;::~;;:;:=:,
limo homobuyoro7 No orlld· a
117 Call (7Ml)448·3570 lor
HOIJSII.S
-~
mort lnlormltlan
FOil RENT
County·PIIIIIInt
=:ngorgaoua , me.
14 70 bod· 1 •3 Bodrooma Foroololtd
bll home O IOrt
2
ro!m12 btlht•5 lolonci kltoh·
Homta From 1188/Mo., l 'llo
ho Down, 30 Yeato t1 U 'llo
•n.~~k ~:r~~~~:t~oo!: A~FI. For Uotlngo, 500·318·
rloo:clcH
&amp; 3323 Ext. 1709.
Pt. Pltaoant. 18 mlnulll 10 1 bedroom houH on 143,
Toyolo. (304)882-8840
gao 6 Wlttr lnCiudtd, pay
Mobile homo &amp;lot noor now. noll olootrllo20Dblll, ld400 t"t
R In
•• "'" month.,
tppa '
IDhoalln 10 0· 7- ····· (740)882•4183 ltlvt int•
2881
·
11ga. ·
Now 2002 14 wldt only Cllan aor. Wllhtr!Dryor
1180· ' dawn and only . hookup. Roloronoot/Oopooo
1158.42/month. &lt;:111 Klrt• 11, No Polo. (304)878-Stea
no, 740·368·787 1
t4x70 2 br. trailer, 127&amp;.00
With 101, Nloo, ~rlvatt, Hoot 1 mon. + dop. &amp; ulll. In Ho~·
pump, porchoa, voolry '~!' lord Wv 304·152-2880.
aonablt prlcod, All ID1•N·
Hartlord. (304)882·2368
2 &amp; 3 Bodroom Mobllo
Homta Rtlorancet and
FAIIMH
I Dtoooli Roqulrod Fllvor
1'011 SAI.I!
Vafloy Bohool 'c lot riot.
(740)317-De32
113 Aero Form, Boaulllul 2 bedroom mobllt hOmo 101

rlono:87:.':)1. ~~;; :/~:"~tor.r':.~ vw.on Noo. ~~)3BU30a :,~ 1=~"fr.':· \';; ~.;;m~~~~ ~=1;'! ! ~=· ~,:"f#'n;:
Lawn Cll'l

r

~-

.....I

Wt havo approxlmotoly 10
uaod homoo lor undor Now on tho Morkot. Four
12,000, oallt-800·537·3238 10 10r1 lraota aurro"oded
lor lnla.
by Bhldt Rlvor &amp;ltto For111
and only mlnutoo Irom
1888 Cltyton MOblll Homo Forked Run &amp;110 Porte. ldt·
14K70. 3 Bodroam, Rootnt· 11 lor tho au1daart lovorl
ly Romodolod, 11~ . 000 . Aok about our Clooronoo
(740)418-tg&amp;7
Salol Call Ul IOdly lor
,.'Ill
DITAILI.
A t•··MAPI
LO dI 0om
Country homoo, nloo 1011, • •-•Y n
pony,
IODtlod on At 33 botwoan Ltd.
1-100·211·1315
Pomoray/Aihono. Call 740· www.okllond.oam
m -2151 lor dlllllt.

room, family room an
:.:""~~~ ' : :..
111 1 4 bod·
I Aero, rllitr front, Brick/ vi· ~~m~tnt\~\/a ~ithl lull
nyt. 3 BR, 2 Balh. 2 FlrOPII· boNmfnt
•
on Will
ona
001, Hordwood llooro, Ap.
'
prax 2,000 0&lt;1 ft , Full 8uolu~.
,.,., lt50,000. (740)44f- Etatom LOo.t
• on
oese.
~ ,.., ~r. ;...,.. il01
Ina 8118 ODD 00 740-illll2 Bodroom, 2 ..Ill. 28' oi3:M ' . .
Bt.lllNeB
lbovo ground ~=
ANDIIuuJINGs
~-~tNiwlf 141000 New hou"' llnanolng avail·
FOR AU

I~~8111-221-412811 ::C:."e::"~~: ~-=ftd~ a

~

i't~Jcfu~t

mont Aopolrod. FrH Pickup
ood dollvll}' avalllblo. Qoll
St. Clolllpollt, OH 48831 . Milot (740)445-7804.
(71"...._7283
_,.....,.
ChHtl C:Oro Provider with 1
AN HOUSE MANACIER
rooro oxperlonco. Hu
Ohio l~nood roglotorod openlngo. Varlouo houro.
nuree lor fOD bod Link accoptod. (304)773·
tklllod nurolng IICIIII)' In S087
Pomoroy OhiO lor 7·3 111111.
·~ &amp; B~.
FIDIIIty hu 1 good ourvoy CIIOIOM Bul..ng ~·~
hll1or)l and 11 HOking a oldl- ollng. OvtrF tf.yro Ppori·
1
ltd. knowlodgaoble nurlt onoo.
'" 0111111111.
with ••Ptrllncl In hondNng Fully lnturtd.
For II your
long IDrm oaro · lnttr· homo ropatr noodl. Clll
--IDtthOulcltp- 740-112·1111 or 740-Ut·
88 t 4
pi)' to: ~~~·
HOllon Cooltr, 7119 Flooft. Cltorgoo Portoblt ...

1 Computort/lntlfntt
Ullrt Olrtc1or
al 81111 DovolopWlnted. ft500 moiPT,
mont. 140-112-8801.
EJI1tno

Zolllr. 1'1-lng"' villi
,
GAil.II'Oia
www.--ouro.oom
--tiiiiiiiiiiiio_.l Domlno'o now tailing l9flll·
1
21 and Batu, oatlono lor .....,.mont
and Ilia d - . Cllllpollt
l:t Time: and P011*0Y iOOitJOrW only.
IO·OOam 1 11 rain can• Apply In Pf11011,
Mitd ' '
Dr1vtro .mad 110 CDL. 113

!~~

7 4

gu1

r,

...

•

ForNIIoriHHwlthopllan
to buy: 4 bedroom, Iorge
kltohon • t 112 botho •
F.A.N.CI. hoat·oontrol air,
~vor vlow lrom ltrga lronl
pproh, ltall rt1trtnOOI •
dopoolt, no petl. 741).882·
110t2

••v

acooptlng
1101 S1acoy unoo •
n·
Lo8T AND
llolrf~·dl Nu ol ~~"~ ~
~- a r
.!"~~
·~-·---..
Eaot Moln Stroot
'
Cootvlllo. 011
Blrddog Found Around Now
(740-6117·3188)
"avon, WV. (740)388-8&amp;55
EOE
AVONI All A Hll To Buy or
&amp;ouod: Fomolt Bleck LOb e~ Sht..:.. ......ro. :104
"lth O!lngo Color. Togo oro - ·
·-, ..,.... • •
dono-(740)255·t8t8
8715-1429.
•
Cllmbor be
Milling: Schneuzor on IIlio 10 dr~g brull1, follow
Modlootlon. Cloy ChapeV ordtro and ohow up pn
lurnt Run Rood Aroo. Ro- Umo Valid drtvoro IIDinH,
q~2sft1Jl88-13t8 or Tr::crtotlon • muot.
·
Bl
rn Troa Strvloa.

".utD"··''
.,.,....,

....... ~.,r_

nm..------.,

m1•

=r w-

o~~- &lt;-· ,._,......
TAm ea w- onvt (:104117f-2IO'
Wil ~~
·~
from eit7 10 NU. Wellt:1
ltrOIIIf, 128, ltOJI
111011 &amp; mov!oo. Coil 7..,. ..,.._ 120. 11Dr Wllktr,
i:mllt
=JU44111
441·2111. lq"ol Houolng I t o. . . . Car ...,, 120.
Mlyl&amp;4.
~·~.~-:"::
w•
"":.
~,,oatouo Man.ulodcllng.
~101' 1111 ~ fiiiJII -·
,umlollod 2
&amp; botr. ISO. (740)44H742
1
2
=~
1111P or- =.,e~.:r~·-= t:!:0111~ =~-pm· ~ 1.:..,~
iii:io t740)14 ~=~t~_: ~.:.,~~~ ra"·~::.""rw.:::,: lroopor.-. - " • IIIIo
· '
~ :;':7, loll
(740)111 •7
1at
(740)44t.~ '!%: (740)441- 1. , '
· ,_, Coli,.,,_ Or
,. HMIII Will do LIWn mowing, Clloohlno llllld: - I t 1111 f'llmodtlod l'llnOn ~· =::;.':.:._, lltlf 'umllllod lftlolonoy, . All
(740)44t-tN2
;s:u:;-1 M~111M1011'IJII111 ..... 111110f111
......, Dl9lrllllfrt1 ~ 10 llllnllna. II'ICiolltt&lt;
jolil W lluytl ~ movinG TIVH IIGI-.
' 11'111 AIC _ . . , 2 011 IJI• Ulllltloo 'old lhotra lllh
JIT
Clll ~~.::
=it'= 1:' •.:-..!:: ixtll IIJ6.T/NOI4, .... 101' tn - -I; 1111 i1 t:r.,,~ ~,.., rogo Wltft 1111011od lllod, ltllflmo, lti - !WI: AII!ATION MOTOI'II

=:"'
111•:.:/:~:.
1

)IOU

your p,..oonu In
our llwa • .(ltltoUjJio

Tolo m 1 r k t i t r 1
wootod .. Work
lrom
Homo.. Hoi p uo ottor ......,.
""""'"
dltoounta on tholr progrom ..
Computer, Prlnlor, tolo·
phont lnd lnllr oatacotll
rtQulred .. Mult be
POlltt .. aod havt genuine
ocnoom 101 othoro. f5g ,oo
.._oil
...,... roqu 1~
·~ to roglotor
phono oa that all calla art
Dhorgod IO UI .. Ctpollt ...
luodod oftor 8 wttko.. ll In•
toroolod coli 1·600·'720·
5085 txt 2110 ltlvo nomo
and phono number or call
304·878·7077 ... lor
Jf)&gt;JNW Manager.

...A.~--~.E r

~

lfi!LPW.oom 1 rid

I

Shophon:l nuda
homo . Call

•&amp;

Include Com'plete

;:::~40~·tt05 :~::~:.~%: g~-~IU;::;~ :~ =..LO~,M~~~

ra'
il
t

sundoy Dllplay: 1:00 p. m .
Thurad•v tor Sund•v•

Nood womtn to Nvo In and
•
-~···
Dirt 1or ol"-"
_,y 11...
........ ............,. I Houo: &amp; 14x70 Trolltr on
" 7' duung
tho day. For homo and llf·
SI!RvJCI!'S
- tO+ ooroo Clallll County.
try. (304)8715-2933
• Owner wlllllnanoo w/ down
poymont &amp; olgnod contract .
Now Aoaoptlng ~ool Appll·
TU~NID DOWN ON
(740)820·1220111tr 4:30pm
oollona lor Admlulon; Con·
IOCIAL IICU~ITV 11111 :,..-..;._~=-:--::::--=-::oooolon, Monogament, and
No Foo Unloll Wt Wlnl Houo: lor Bolo_by Ownor,
LlltgUirdl lor lho Clolllpolll
t•8B8-882•3348
Good Vltw or rlvor. Out ol
Municipal Pool. Appllcltlonl
llood plain.' 3BR, lR, DR ,
may be pld&lt;od up at tho
Kltohor\, Smtll Dlnollo, 2
Municipal Building, % Rto· UFICIENTLY
NEEDED·
Full bllh, 2 Car Gorago,
raollon : Dtpartmont, 818 plaomo danoro, 11m 150 to
Front ~croh, Block Tap
Sooond Avo., Golllpolla, 150 por wuk lor 2 or 3
Driveway, 1 &amp;ItO aero, Now
OH Cortl(loallooo and work houro WHkly Call Blo Lilt
Corpol, Now Roof, 8804
pormlto oro rtQulrod whoro Pllomo So~lca, 741).882·
Slott Routt 78. (740)4415nootlllry. CHdllne lor Ap- 88&amp;1 ,
AIII'HI- -111"9 7714
pllcatlool will bo April 30,
In IIIII oowopapor Ia
HouH lor ealt In• Camp
2002
·
,::;':\::,~':;~~ conley Roulh/ Forroll Or.
Ollloa Work In Pomeroy,
,.,loll molloo Hllloplta
304-e'l8·3488
111U u
- -"'·~ 1118·18 Phont/Solta/T-·
-loo•ooy
Land homo . pool&lt;ogeo
......,. ..~,.~
viet
Work.Full/Pan Qtlt'-lla Coroor Col'-r 100 11-~•- or
·
Tlmt/Fitxlblt SOhod. POl· (&lt;:aiHro CIDH To HQ,;:) ' -·~ 00 Lond/ Homtl Lind lmprovo·
loot F01 Studaoto. Will Troln Call Tcdayl 740·44e-1381,
-ml-monto In ono law payment,
=~:t~~o::.,~~~?~=~ 1-555·874-.JOBS
1-800·214.0452,
=;;~:;::::::.
Loon _olllotrok 0 ~ ~~)i /.
tlmo or UOOO·I4100 lull· P.,.tlmt LPN lor
1110.()5•1 27~8""""'., ooy lo-ltn ID
a wot ·
tlmt. w..w.ou!lno-.oom ICF/MR group homo. Call
• motoo
oualt
lo600•5B8~780
. (740)445-4814 101 moro InMlllcll:I.LANI!
,..,_,..., lhiiDIIcnor 4 uaod hamao 1111. Muot
formation.
· .
diiNirlmlottloo."
Htl (740)44e·3870.
Aroadlo Nurtlng C:Onlor
Bo IN 1 3 br 2 112 belh
Ia now toceptlng appiiDI· Ptroon to holp Oldtr lady In Soiling momboroh~ at Roy· Tlllo - - w i l l nat
'"ll"'i..:'.ment'' 2 Dlr :
11ono lor '"II Tlmt ITNA't. Svracuao with Shopping, ol Ook Roao~. Plooee call
lloowtritlr - p t
•
Avollablt 1111~1 ora 2·t0 Choreo, Modo, and aoaklng. 740-m-288&amp; dayo or 740· - - l o r roor
raga, goa llroplaoo, Din ' 11
and 11).5. Wo ollor IXCatllnt Gr01t Opportunhy lor right 882·2711 0\ltnlnga and
oollto which It 1n
t/o, nowlr romodtled, bontllto thotlnoludo Hoolth peroan. (330)28:1-1244
,
vialotloo.,thotow.Our
range I rolrlgarolor otay.
lnauranoo, 401K, Ulo lnaurThor .,_ F "
- - hlnllr
~~~ ~d~:~::'':1="J'
anco, oampolltlvo wogaa ~= 1
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t"

CARDINALI -'• MITI 2

Pinch-hitter Eduardo Perez snapped an
eighth-inning tie with a two-run homer
off Meu ac:e A1 ·Leiter, and St. Louis
:topped a five-game losing streak.
Tino Martinez, booed at Shea Stadium
because he wed to play for the Yankees, · at Florida. Richard Hidalgo and Craig
went 3-for-~ for his fine multihit game Biggio also homered for the Ascros.
with the Cardinals. He started the eighth
Roy O:walt (3-0) extended his scorewith a single.
less streak to 18 inninjp before Charles
New York catcher Mike Piazza did not Johnson hit an RBI double in the Marplay alter straining hit left hamstring liru' seventh.
Thesday night. He's expected to be out a
DoooBJU 5, PIRATBI 1 ,
couple of dayt.
Onur Daal pit:l:hed six e~ctive inninjp
CUill 10, GIANTs -'
in _ p~ce of injured Kevin Brown .u Los
Fred McGti11'drove in four runs to lead · Angelet won at PNC Park.
Chicago over San Francisco at Wrigley
Daal has won seven straight ttarts
Field.
_
against Pittsburgh since 1998 while with
Giants star Barry Bonds did not jllay. the Dodger:, Philadelphia and Arizona•
With the temperature dropping and the
Marquis Grissom homered and had a
field wet, he JDI a day off to rest his sore sacrifice fly as the Dodgen won for the
hamstring.
sixth time in seven games. Padres 7,
Joe Borowtki won in relief, his fine vic- Phillies 2
tory in the majon since 1998 with the
Tom Lampkin ended • long slump by
NewYorkYankees.
San Diego catchers with a home run and
r.ow.u
AITaol 7, MAiwNI -'
double at Philadelphia.
"No way:• the startled Foster said. "lt.re
Lance Berkman hit his major league- ·Padres catchers were 0-for-39 at the
you kidding me?"
leading 1Oth home run ill Houston won pl.ue before Lampkin drove in three ruru.

,

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•

NL

onship series.
.
Henry Blanco, who got into 'the game
'IVhen catcher Javy Lopez left after the
second inning because of a sore left ·
thumb, singled home the go-ahead r)Jn in
the eighth.
ExPos 5, BRJ!111ERS -'• 15 INNINGS
Montreal won iu fifth straight game
when Milwaukee center fielder Alex
Sanchez dropped Jose Vidro 's two-out
line drive in the 15th inning.
· The Expo! opened a two-game lead in
the NL East before a crowd of 5,295 at
Olympic Stadium.
.
Mike Mordecai squeezed home the
tying run in the 12th, then led off the
15th with a double. With runners on second and third and two ouu, Sanchez
dropped Vidro's liner for.an error.

Can!

In One week With us
REACH OVER IIS,OOO PROSPECTS
PLUS. YOUR AD NOW
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Sentinel
1\.egister

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g::wm

Foster wins debut for ·Braves
A whirlwind day for John Foster
turned out better than he ever imagined.
Not only did he make his
major league debut, he wound
up with a win over the World
Series champions.
Called up from Triple-A before the
gaine, Foster ·pitched a scoreless inning
Wednesday night as the Atlanta Braves
beat the Arizona Diamondback: 4-3.
"I didn't expect this on my first day:'
the rookie said. "That's a bonus. It's awesome."
The Braves trailed 3-2 when Foster was
summoned for the eighth inning. He
walked his first batter, Steve Finley, on
four pitches before retiring the next three
bitten.
·"I don't know what it wat," Foster said.
"I was crying to hit my spou, but I was up
in the zone. I made adjustmenu real
quick. I Will just trying to thiOW it at the
ground."
Atlanta rallied for two runs in the bottom of the eighth, and :John Smoltz
pitched the ninth for his seventh save,
giving the win to Foster.
In other NL games, Montreal beat Milwaukee 5-4 in 15 innlnjp, Cincinnati
outliUted Colorado 4-3, Chicago dawned
San Francisco 10-4, St. Louis beat New
York 4-2, Houston defeated Florida 7-4,
Los Angeles beat Pittsburgh 5-1 and San
Diego topped Philadelphia 7-2.
Foster, a 23-year-old lefty, is in his
fourth season of pro ball. He wat 2-0
with ·a 3.60 EP.A and four saves for
Richmond, which wat playing this week
at Durhani, N.C.
. On Thesday night, Richmond manaaer
Fredi Gonzalez went to Foster's room,
pretending to make .a curfew check.
Gonulez asked whether Foster had
unpacked and when the pi"her said no,
the manager told him, "That's good,
because: you're going to Atlanta tomor-

Else

Tompo Boy
1-1) at Booton (Bur-•
koH toO), 8:0 p.m.
_
,
M l - (Rood 2•t) 11 Dotroit (COmojo,

.

PLEAS
- - " ' - - - - -- - - - - - - MEIG&amp;COUNTY,OHIO
In pureuence of· en
Order of 8111 to m1
directed from 11ld
Court In th1 1bove
entitled lotion, I will
exp011 tO llle II
publlo 1uotlon ·•t the
The Braves stopped a seven-game los- r------~=-=--------, CourthoUII
on June
ing streak to Arizona at Thrner Field,
13, 2002 II 10:00 l .m.
B.-.11&amp;1
of 11ld day, th1
including three jn last year's NL champifollowing d11crlb1d
-

We Cove
Meigs, Gall Ia, .
And Mason
.counties Like
No One

•~

Scott Spiezio had a threeBonlmont 7. Booton 8
Chi- Wlllto lox 5, C-nd 1
run double off Paul Abbott (1 Tompo Boy 6, Mlnneto114
2) in the opening inning and
Toronto2,Tuaat
•
Dotro113, Konoao City o
Tim Salmon hit his first homer
Stahlt t . Anlhalm 0
of the season as Anaheim won
N.Y. Yonllttt 2, Ooklaod t
•
at Seattle.
Wod~'tOomu
Anaheim won for the first
Kantll ~ 8, Dot 12 .
Boltlmoro , Booton 3
•
time in seven games against the
•
Chi- Whlto lox I, clo..tood 2
AL West-leading Mariners this
Tompo Bo,&amp; I, Mlnnti0\0 t
TIXIO 3, ronlo 2
season. The Angels broke a
Anlhatm to, Solttlo 8
N.Y. Ylni&lt;HI 8, Oakland 8
four-game losing streak and
ended Seattle's four-game
winning streak.
Jarrod Washburn (2-2)
aUowed three runs and six hits
in 6 2-3 innings.
f'uhlk \utkt..,ln ~I'~&lt; ~ Jili!H:I"\ ,
\
11111'
N:l
11hlll1
KBII\1
.
lldlHI'\'d Hl~hl w \uur ll!Hir.
ORIOLES S, RJID Sox 3
· Rodrigo Lopez (2-0) turnFd
•
in a solid performance in !tis
Streetl
11
lhl Walnut Sll'ltl to lh1 :
'first start in two yean, and
1outhw11t corner of pllct of blglnnlng. •
Prior lutrument
Th1 Bo~rd of lol no. 54; th1noe
Tony Batista 'had three hits as
PubliC AHIIrl of t_h l north 11ong lhl till ,.,.,.noll: Volumt 87.
Baltimore beat visiting Boston.
Vlllagl of lyrtoull, lint of Fourth 8tr11t PIQt 113 Prllptrty
Gary Matthews j r. had two
Melgl County, Ohio, (12 fill) flhy two fHt 1dd1'111: 2H Wllnut'
lnt1nd1 to llltol 1 to • 1llk1; th11101 e11t SirHt Mlddl1port, OH ·
hits and scored two runs for
olvll . 1nglnnrlng 1nd ptrllltl wllh th1 45710
the Orioles, who have won
II
OOniUitlnt
10 line of W1lnut ltrHt Apprtlud
four of five.
ropro11nt th1 11ld 38 IHI; thenCI lOuth 2 .12,000.00
bolrd In cttvelopmenl fHt 1o thl north lint of T1rma of 1111: Ctlh
Nomar Garciaparra had four
of water IJIIIm lot 14; thence tilt Rlllph 1!. Tru1HII
hits andJasonVaritek had three
lnfrlllnletUI'I dlllgn, 11ong thl north liM of Sheriff, Mtlgl County
for the Red Sox, who have lost
11te dewloprn~nt 1nd lot l)o. 154, four lut to P1lrlol1 K. llook
othtr
rel1ted lhl foundltlon of • Lerner, S1mp1on •
two straight after winning six
11rv1cn
.
Thou 11ona Will; th1noe Rothfull .
in a row.
Wllhlng lei apply ,,. elong 11ld loundiltlon 120 1! • .Fourth ltl'ltt,
DEVIL .RAYS 9, TwiNs 1
lnvlt1d to 1ubmlt 1 of 1 1tone Will 1nd lth Floor
wrllten
St11em1n1 of along eald w111 1oulh Clnclnn•ll, Ohio 41202
Ryan Rupe (3-1) limited
•Qulflflolllon• by 12 flhy fill to the north (113).241·310jl
Minnesota to one hit in seven
noon, Mly e, 2002, to line of Walnut Strtll; OH 8up Ct t001853t
lhl
SyreoUII IOird lhenoe w11terly 1long (4) 18, 25, (5) 2, •• 1(1
shutout innings as Tampa Bay .
of
Public Afflll'l, th1 north llnl of
beat visiting Minnesota.
Ann: Cltrk 8htron
Randy Winn and Ben
conrm, 2181 Third -----:-H::-e-:-lp-:-.:W-:--n'7te-d-:---8
Grieve each drove in two runs
2
SyrtcuH, OH 41771.
for the Devil Rays, who broke WHO'S GOT IT? _ Anaheim's Adam Kennedy, left, end Scott St., P.O. Box ee, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
the game open with a· seven- Spezlo go for a pop-up off the bat of seattle's Mike Cameron 4)11,18,21,2002
15)2,2002
BUSINESS IS GREAT
run fifth inning off Eric Mil- Wednesday. (AP)
ton (3-2).
.
and we need to add a used car &amp; !ruck
Publlo Notice
sales profeeslonal to handls the volume
RANGERS 3, BWE JAYS 2
Palmeiro tied Carl Yastrzem- the sixth, putting the Royals
WE OFFER
Rafael Palmeiro hit his ski for ' 25th on the career o.n top 4-2. Later that inning, SHERIFF'S SALE
SALARY 6 COMMISSION
REAL ESTATE
452nd career homer and home run list with his fifth this Mayne singled and; ,on Carlos
CAll! NUMBER
MEDICALIN$URANCE &amp;ACIREAT INVENTORY
Kenny Rogers pitched seven. season.
_
' Febles' double, scored after
01CV082
WE REQUIRE
solid innings, leading Texas
RoYALS 8, TIGERS 2
crashing .into catcher Mike 1.11111111 ,..tlon1l Blnk
CLEAN,
HONEST
SELF STARTERS, NO
11
Tru1tw
under
the
over visiting Toronto.
Brent Mayne scored on a Rivera and knocking the ball
EXPERIENCE NECESSARY, COMPLETE
Pooling 1nd Strvlclng
After Rogers (2-0) gave up a violent collision at home plate, · loose.
TfiAININCI PROGRAM
AgriM!IInl dilled
FOR ACONFIDENTIAl INTERVIEW, CONTACT
solo homer to Raul Mondesi Neifi Perez drove in three runs
Rivera stayed down on the (111181 ..,... 1etlo2
Chuck or Jerry at
in top of the first, Palmeiro hit and Kansas City beat visiting dirt for a few minutes. A train- c/o llllperlor Blnk,
FIB P..lntlff
a two-out, two-run homer in Detroit.
er went to look at him but he
(740) 592·2497
VI,
the bottom half off Luke
Perez . doubled home two stayed in the game. .
No walk·lne please
Pllrlcll Bllnkenehlp,
1111
Prokopec (1-2) to put the runs off Steve Sparks (1-2) in
SOUTHEAST IMPORTS
.,._,cllnta
Rangers ahead to stay.
COURT OF COMMON
SUPERSTORE

- - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - --

The Dally Stntlntl• Page B 5

Qtribune ~ SentinelCLASSIFIED

I

•,

AROUND THE DIAMOND
Notlonoii.Mp

www.mydallyuntlnel.com

'lhursMy. April 21. 2oq:

I

Giambi ·delivers a
big hit in Oakland

Thuraday, Aprfi2S, 2002

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•

�Pllge II• The Dally S.ntlntl
Thuraday, April 25, 2002 ·

=·

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For Oralno, OrlvtW41YI I (?ol0)441 ·3t3t
jl'"'l M
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t 1185 Hondl Mlgna \1·30
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""'-·••

'd'"'

~_:~A .......,
-;;:;""" .....
•

r.r..12..;:oo"

•

p~ante. •----._..~

,,.,; .,. c:.m.r:z

"'""&lt;10-4 . ~:.!\:::~7=
21:1&lt;1

I

I

apace

I I

I

a.::.::~

Ntw Homta • VInyl
Sldln1 • New O~raau
1 Replacenie111.

Window• • Rootin*
'N1"!WlhaU81IIIMIIAl

FREE ESTIMATES

74H92•71H
(NO SUNDAY CAU.S

'

THE BORN LOSER ..

BIG NATE

iii.!~

TFN

l1

''r'~

I

1'

I rv

tall

Put
J1111

~I

wrtt.-

. ·3

22 Nolthtr
follower
23 Soldier In
gr•y

Clf110 .
No Qltllle-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campo•
Ctllbrlty Cipher ctyptograma .,. erulld from quotations by famoua
peaplt, paet and preaent. Each letter In the cipher alanda for another.

Todsy's clue: M equals P

'T

MTAENKH

NPTN
T

ED U D0 8

OHTB

FIE

XDAK

UKODAFIEI
BTCQD

HTCMP

AK

OOJCO

BFINPOJN

N H K k

XDHN

NOCO

T

NHKK.'

KAKHXDE

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Secre1ary: a gl~ who tell&amp; the truth

or who

••r• he't In conftrenct now.'- Evan Eear

T::~:t~~Y S@~~lA-~\?.~S•

::::

~~Ito~ ~,CLAY;,~·;ro:s:LA~N~~~~~~~

O

r I I 12 I I

spades above the '":::·::·::~-~~-=~·-seven in the dummy, ~,
XL E T
.the East hand and de- 1-T-nl:"""r-..,...-,--t
3
darer's hand combined. And East has ~·::::·::::~·~-~~-~·
seen all four. West's I
F R C A S 1:::"':
suit is ready to run.
•
5
Also, from the auction West is known
to have started with
T RH E T

U

~=:::::j

PEANUTS

I

I' I I I ·

I

I' I

five or six spades. Yet
West doesn't know
who holds the spade
queen. If South began

SOMETHIN6

10 IMPROVE
VOUR6AME

Overweight man coming from
kitchen to his wife ," If it weren't for
the fact of having the television and
refrigerator so far apart, some
people wouldn't get any • .••••..
at all.'
·
1,11o Complete 1he chuckle quoled
'Iii' by Wling In the miJJing words
you develop from slop No, 3 below. .

I

L . ._ _
,___.
_ __ , _ _ . . _ _ ,

Sli66ESTEP

Ulll1 Pllllll

allllr.
2 ONII LIMI

and
Whata - - - - - ,
d'
Roarrango loffon af tho
sh ould E ast d 1scar ·
lour ~erambiod words Do•
Apply the Rule of low to form four simple words .
Eleven to the opening r--=--:::-":":""~:-::-:""""'1
lead: II minus 7 is 4. ...,._T_RT""'Y..,.,A'. -I,_R...,..._,
1
So, there are four

PRO SAID HE

1.

Notlll
1•
I NT

r:;:::==::;:------, · dummy's
ace
club back
.

T14E 60LF

T1hc 'h rc PAIN
•u' ,,f p;1INTINGI

Ya11

darer plays a club to

E

I--,,.,,,..,-"T- TT8.--;
.
.
1
1 1 1 1

e PRINT NUMBmD

2

a

with
K -Q~ X 0 f ' -;~LE~TT~E~~S~IN;;;;SQ~UA~~~E~S*=::;=:=::;:::;::::*=::;=\=~
spades, West would "t) UNSCRAMBLE LETTE~SI
1 .1 1 1
1 1 11
have to try to get East •
FO~ ANSWER
.
.
.
.
.
.
on play for a spade
SCIIAMcLETS ANSWERS
lead through declarer.
!
Assail· Weave· Gourd· Nettle. GET LOST
To clarifY matters for
From The Have You·Ever Noticed Department: Sumhis partner, East
mer
is that time of year when thousands of people rush
should discard the
out to lhe areal outdoors and GET LOST.
spade queen.

--

ITHURSDAY

for

j

•so per

Ol1veway1, Plllot,

Parking/play Artu,
SldiWIIkt, Floors

"t

100%

Advertise

naturai/Ouaranteed

In thlt apec•
for
'25 per month

740-992·7038

Uoentld &amp;

97 Beechst
middleport, OH
ur.tr &amp;t8'12fJ
(748) 992-3194
992-6635

fnlui'ICI

Health Probltmt?
W•nt More Lllaure Tlmt?

Frt:t: f Sittllall:&gt;
11 I 1!1 ' 1 II ,I

'~ ''11'1' I"'"

IIlii !1!17 111 ~111

PLUMBING
-~~~~-..
Nlw lfiiYin, wv
•Retldenllal
111

Tired of Mowing?

Not A 8Drln.a ChiCken?
UMITI!O OPENINGS

(740) 992·1536
(

~
882·2343

--

..

. . ·'
suming the role of arbitr.teor

Friday, April 26, 2002
Sevmllhlilfl&lt; chat may have
proved to be unlucky ·previously for you might be 1he
very ones whi&lt;h will otTer the
greatest bcnefi~s in the· year
ahead . De prepared co rehoe
some old ground.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) •• II docsn' t matcer that
you con't nrake up your mind
regardins a critical de&lt;isian,
just don't let an ~110date:
ntake it for you •• your lolu, tion will be bettrr. Get a jump
un life by understanding che
influen«s that'll 8overn you I
in the year ahead. Send for
your Astro-Cnpb predictions
by m•ains 12 to Attro-Craph,
c/o this newspap&lt;r, P.O. Box
f 7S8, Murray Hill S1ation,
New York, NY 10156. De
surt to trate your Zodiac sisn.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20,

• Yr11 141 Yrar CnmJII'IMIW
W1rnnty On HI!Ht M1Nftfl
YMJo:V. f/.II'I'IM&lt;\1'11.11• 11111111, ln•tnktrf
1 ll~nk t'11111t1elnK A.. tt.blt
• l'rlc• Ttl &lt;\It lllid..tl

, MANLEYS
IUILDfRS IIIC. SELF STORAGE

1' 11 I

I'

IJin

(740) 992-3987
Owner &amp; Operator, John Dean

We11
Pau

1 Flour tiCk

08lc .
47 Ll11
lute8tlll•
man
th28 Barbie4 Clptoln't
4S P1rwllky or
at ltfort, to
lhout
25 Morey
THidalt
. lllltt
5 Otadty
27 ... k.
41 Jelly
3G Fr11 ltner
I Trtnlttt
21 Mane
at Chow ,...In
32 Sffower,
7 Sh8dt 1rtt
potNUOI'S
on....,_
nutybl
I Very Nger 31 Find tilt
53 Aotlnoul
:M T....,
I JeyofTV
oum
dopotlt :
31 loho ca. 11 0ctopu1'1
33 Se1tontl 55 Otlohe't
37 Chimp'•
homt
bovortge
10celt0t'Y
homci
12 Playground 35 lUrieen
158 Move
31 Talking bird
1hout
anttiOfl8
quiCkly
o10 Tokyo,
. 13 Mil. oflt..r 3t BrOid
57 Chlc8go
formerly
17 Coup
necldltlt
lralna
42 ..., IChool
P8rtlci1J8nla 41 Conloc· IUbj.
1t Public
IUrH
.43 EX·IUfl8f•
mNtlng
44 Hurting
powt1r
20 IIIII .~ 45 Po1tnll•l
24

Yesterday,
we
looked at the Rule of
Eleven . It helped
third hand to Ond the
winning defense at
trick one . Sometimes, ·
though, it gives assistance later in the play
-- as in this deal.
After South, in an-'
swer to Stayman, denies a four-card major, ·the contract is
three no-trump. West:
leads the spade seven:
five, jack, king. De-

1/!P..

and number

BISSELL

I I I I If

1

:...l.:L.-.L.___;=---LJ

New HotneJI &amp; Remodeling
"Specializing In Log Homes
&amp; Rubber Roofe"
Garage•, Pole Buildings, Concrete
Roof• &amp; Siding
Commercluf &amp; Retldential
~

(740) 811·2173
Or leav1 name

I Lost 271b.
in 32 days.

I"

HOMI OIIOWH ~AAA- 1tf1 Clttw A11r0 VIII, I•
ou• CltiiiN MOI(Itfl
01111111 Now
Conllftlon.
,....
11oac1 lrai!N,
Tlrtt. Mutt

rhlnuteA

areal 0111 fC)r
clttllt. Cell:

In this.

A 5

dol''

I

tone, 1Imlttd

Independent
Dlatrlbuwr

c-.
T-.

VANI"
4-WDI

Craniosacral,

refle"oloa,y, Myofasc:lal
a net Yo1a Therapy Oift
Cenlflcatet Avalllble

ftftftft~~~~

AO,
Atumfn4Mn
wiiNit,
2t,HOK,
Ufle New, N700, (740)37t-

r'

J

ft~~~Cft~
111'/o,.

~~:--:--=---:::-=

2741

--11

THERAPIST

I0 Y~:ara E~pcrlencc
Sp«lalltlnli In: Deep
IT!oou•. Swedish, •hlallu,l

J.D. CONSTRUCTION

mtltt """'· (7ol0) 14:HIIa
17 CMy l-10 Lt. A411G.

"* va-

I

740-992·5232

Lteve name 1 No.

-

runrmg boatdt, IIIII
;;,;.'"""!!"-.0., naw.·:12Jooo
mlltt, lt8,ooo

a7 vtr1et1H 01 ptanta, 111 la\'OIIIIt:

Kanieckl

buggle• have been pattern telted to meet .
Aaronomy Aeooclatlon Standard&amp;

RESIDENTIAL&amp;:
MANUFACTURED .HOUSING
tllld • •• tHe TO)'OII TtllO .,..
HI·Em~leney Heat Pumpe, Air
r~,;:.,~-- Mil ::r:.~·
·14c,~
Condltlonen &amp; Furnaces
Dtlmatltn
In AKC (740,HIItl2
month
!!!p. tiiO.if:")!!?.mt 1H7 IHvortdo, old. Clll, ......,_...__ ___, ~o.;;.;.;;.;;.-.;;.;.;;....J '.I'RP.-'I'Rn I.,.,._ ( o/r&gt;rnun I:J
........ ,_ '"'atlllliltlfl.
Jrd dQclr, lrelltr packlgt
with q , a ~-. ooofjr,
• Ym I 6 I Y.. r l'•rl 'Warnnfffti
JIG q ., llbtrDWt tonntl
•rne lllalltl 'fhtrmottlltt
HERBALIFE
,.,

33795 Hiillnd Rd.
·Pw.er111, Ohio

(740) 742·7037

=-------

1oaa ClttYV 314 ton 10.000
mlltt, - UrN, dual ••
fllull, Olltlur110t luM up.
13,000. 010 (1104,171·
1113

rCI!.td Cocltttr eoooomlltl - - ~~v: Ciit~Gn, ...eob.oo (740,_
tllld
-

Self-Storage

I
I

LICENSED MASSAGE

New Fertilizer Bua;ies

'l'llvc:u
POR&amp;u

~ ~ ";,t "t'
3':!:· 3 ~.~.,0.

E-r.dl"lioo:..d

~~~
High &amp;Dry

~~~~~~,~~~~~,-,

Krls

35537 St. Rt. 7 North • Pomemy, OH 457%0
feed for lambs, hogs. 11eer1, chicken• and
rabbi II.
Seed Potatoes
I• o,nJon Sell
Pull Line of !Jufk Garden Seeds
Pertiliier Specifically Designed for Garden Crops

Delivered
&amp; Spread

1111• ,II,
~ord "
' • &lt;lovl
xLT,.,
AJC,
ltpd,
~~ tJ.OOO mllte. uooo.
(74o)44t· ~~2~~~-·~~· (0111 111M

AKC

East State Street Phone (740)593-667
Athens, Ohio .

Shade River AG Senlce
"Ahead In Service"

.

5pm
w-

.,

Retirement,

I

·r
'

I

Loui843·SU4

Hours

11118 Ford Eooort, 87,000
mlltt, co Pllyor, Bunroor,
8 IPHCI trantmllllon,
t81100. (7oi0)4&lt;18·1I04
11118 Plymouttl Nacn E•··
lk!IUIINO
PI'- 8port, txotlltnt con"·-dftlon, 32,000 mlltt, PW, PL
io~--lli""'iiiiTIAMiii--"· &amp; eunroor, Att&lt;lng ID taking
&lt;Ntr peymtnlt. 1184.00 per
Btoott. brick. _., Plflll, month, 740·1112-N78
WlndOWt, llnttll. tfO, Claude 2001 Oodgo Stoatuo RT,
Wlnttrt, ~lo Ortndt, 0H 40,000 Mllll, Z dr,. IOidto,
lfltnlr 11111. tunrool,
·CIII740-2411o5t2t .
1111.000 OBO, (7401040·
1 2501 afllr 4:30pm.
85 Chtvy Covolltr, ~our
3 p~ 1121M 112lrlt• Dcor, 47,300 · L.Ooded.
llrtV tplnltl. (rol0)4411• tv ChtV)' z.a• C&amp;Yalltr,
4t ,JOO mllft. I.Oidtcl.
7410
~~-:::-~~- (7ol0)448olltn
AKC Cttow.CIIOw ~. 111.-~~~-.,

'&lt;

1"7(,0

k. t

In 1906, during a
speech in the House
of Commons about
Chinese
laborers
working in South African mines, Winston
Churchill said, ~'It
cannot in the opinion
of His Majesty's Government be classified
as slavery in the ex- .
treme acceptance of
the word without
some risk of terminological inexactitude."
· Churchill was wellknown for his acid
observations and bit·ing ripostes, but those.
last two words per. suadcd Joseph Chamberlain to comment:
"Eleven syllables,
many of them of
Latin or Greek derivation, when one
good English word, a
Saxon word of a single syl1.1ble, would

"'8/01 .

F

\litltlkpor t , I Htio

chetH
21 Prop
23 Computer
'111m

Openlna: lead: a 1

FREE ESTIMATES!

740·742·3411

Jeutll

tNT .

Bryln RHYII
New HomH, Room Addltlona,
01r1ge1, Pole Building•, Roofl,
Siding, Oecka, Kitchen•, Drywall •
&amp;More

.740-667-0363

l:o\ IS'I

to 10'x30'

White Ltathar AtOtlntr,
•tt oo. Bawln~Machlna.
:115, Full 9lzo
POIIUr·
~ podia Ml«rno ~ .., eon. ~dillon. IIIlO, (7oiO)«jj·8253

r

Sunset Home
Construction ·

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case· IH Parts
Dealers
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

II (

'

Oealtr: Soud1
Yulnerilble: Both
I •

DOWN

11 Crumbly

• " Q'
.ICJIH

IIPOYIU
PIRtl

Ic II I If I Jl' \ ''· l

" I

Self Storage

Walr'llll Batnroom V1nlly &amp;
MttlloiM C1111ntt. 125. 0111
(304)4111-tOt1tfllr 5pm
Wolnut Gun Colllntt, Holde
8 guna· Locke lor teourltv.
lBO. Call (:J0.4) 415B•IBB? 11'
ttr 5pm
Waltrllno Spacltl: 314 200'
.PSII21.00 Par 100; I' ZOO
PSI 135.00 Par 100; All
Brill Comprtlllon Flftlngt
In Stoolt,
.liON IVAHI IHTIIIPII...
...
JIOkoon, Ohio, 1-800·
'537·8524

•

11 patho
Prunoe

11 IPflnklt

tJIIII2

992 5479

• Complete

QJ I

.QJ1tt '1

.•

10 CUI'VId

11

.
•

Aut orized AO'tnt

tGirlgll

"E

....

Jeff Warner
Ins.
h

•New Home•

_,btrw

14 Unrufflld

..... :u

lout•

... DoH oil
llln51 lmiU pet

12 "-k

""

.ALIJI "
ceIIuIar

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUaiON

~=- 5250~,:1..
Sufi ma1tar

• Kt U
t Ai •

~7!.~d~·
·
•
"·'
p .
.
ctllo3 ~etman COP·Ur.
PomtiO!f, OH
only Ht eaeht
1mpor. xcollont ond · (
....
•
.,.
)
Momln; lllr FIOIId ··CR 30 • Racine, Ohio
lion. Coli (740)448·4127 740 ...,2 5• 08
Loovo Moooogo W no on• .._ _ _ _ _ _..
owor.
.__ _ _ __
-------- •
tHetlko
25' now,
Ttlv.lSMOO.
trailer, loadj••~::::-:::::::-ilt•
td,
Coli .----.~--.
p/1
"0·1112·3-113,
;,.:.:.:.:::.::.;,;.;;;____ · CONTRAaORS, INC.
3011. Mallord travol lrollor. Aaclne, OhiO 45771
....
Vtry Good ConditiOn.
,._ .. _ ..... .,
,.
74.,..88....3.....
1304)882-22411
CONCR"'
IDLOC"'IRICK
Poor Hoa~h 2002tt. Camper
"" • rv
.
.
1110 whruck or wllhOut. , Pootert, Wollt, Step•,
1304)87~·t503
Pill Work,
Rophtcemento,. Wolke
und Drivel • Stencil
Crelc
jijjj;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
b ·
r1U
IJoMH
Frccllttlmatc;
1
Se
Oh •
MI'II0\1"'-!VM'S
rvlnil lo and W,V,
•
wv N031712
IAIEMENY

49-1405

alttr

'

Bidding &amp; Vagallble Flail
10" Hanging Baaklla 't.IO
Wide Atlortment of Htrba, Annuala,
Perennlata In 4" poll lor

1 FrH Estlmst11

~~-----

'

45 OWtrtp
47 Mind

1G Coc-·a
......

...

'

&gt;

...,-to---....-toH/1_
...
•e.eo

th R t•

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL
Roofing- Home
MaintenanceGutter•· DOwn
Spout

t 1102 Ten Bulok Llllbrt,
IOIIhtr IIIII, IOidld,
13,000.00 (740)049·t3t5
18811 Oldt Aonlovo, 85k,
127115. tll;8 Clvalltr,
t OIK, 12785. t 8118 Monll
ClrlO, 8GK, ..3t5, 11117 S·
tO, 82K, 143118. 15 ottlor
Olrt, lruokoln etock. COOk
MOTOIIII740)448·0103
tM Ponllao Qftnd Am SE,
V•ll. Air, LOaded 84,000
mlltt, M.ooo Or i'al&lt;t Ov01
P1yrnontt, (3041578·&amp;170, '
11111 Montt ·carto. 87,000
ntlltl, All powor, I DWntr.
17,800 (7ol0)4o18·2350
11118 Buo~ LtStbft Llmlll&lt;l,
l.oadtd, Everything PDWtr,
Llathtr 80111. 118.000
mllot, f8900 OBO. 10117
Toyoll T1oom1 LX, Xtra
aab, 2 w11oot drlvo, .t.T: 4
oyl .. IIC, 52,000 mlltlo. Loll
of txlrtt, 111000 OBO.
(H0l441
•11171 nlghll. dayl,
(7ol0 «t-oete

•

ihst'e Uel

===;,;:,_--:---

Super Nlnlondo wllh t 0
Qlmtt 150 E'""llenl Con·
altlon. 'can ' (304)488·1;e7
lfttr 8pm
Troy built Trtmmtr Mower
Llkt Now, 1275, Sltro ~ld:
1~ 'Mowtr IOHP Good
Shtpe, ll75, (740)2 88 •
t424
·

I

j

ACROSS

ALDER

I I
Qtlllllf;ll, ...,.....,_, LOW flrlcu
I

wheeler. Runt Groll, Look•
Rough, StOOO oao.
17,o14., . t 7t8
·
:.;._;.;.~
...;..;.~·~~--.,tllll5 Yamaha W~250 dirt
I
LI\IR&lt;n'OCK
bike, St ,500 740·3eN558.
BID
ShOwer
Chair,
It
5. Nco
Tod&lt;lllr Clr Slit, UO. 2
11198 Horlty Oovldoon
D(.;!.','!:a''
~o
end 130. 4·H end FFA Club Ploo ror Sportetor 1200 cuotom.
37
...,..,.. • ••
Oallla, Mtlge tnd Maeon 2800 m1111. 1011 or ohromo,
Camp FlrtwOOCI SIIII~ICt Clll Counilll. (7ol0)388-11033 or meny txtrat, IUOO. OBO.
T 1 o HV(Iraul~l Clltlltr, (?&amp;0)388·0178.
13~1875•81157
OH 740·1185·'~
- 7
'
BHutllul 3 year Old Goldttl tGII HartlY· Otvldton
Computor Cook wllh Chair· ~oloml no elud ponv, not Sportller. lmmaculale con·
58 lnohot tong, Ortwtrt broken to rtdo, loklng s•ao, dltlon wllh only ~300 mlloo.
Look. 1100. call (304)4f8• (7~0)742·3033 .
.
Ma';{, utraa lnoludlng 00
!1117 ahor Spm
.
FAIR PIGS
~~~~.·~;~, r;-:0)4~~.~8
Ooo KtnnOI, 1150. Woohtr &amp; $1rld by Hltmen II. $75.00
Dryer, Worko, 150· Both, toefl, 7•0·898·823t
. tOQ9 Hond.• XR 200 • Very
1740)&amp;&amp;8•3040
Good Condlllon. ~000 .Hon·
·
Llmoualno Built, 4.t8 do XR tOO, Exoallent Condl·
Dro111r, 145. AniiQut Drop monlhi, t Flogloltrod 4 lion with White Brolhtrl E
Ltll Tablt, $150. Ptt Cago, yo1re ol~. (740)448•2t 58 ttrlll htader and tllonotr.
138. Tobit, $40. Pona Pot· tvtnlnge,
(7&amp;0)448·8402
lit, $tO. Lampe, $25 oat.
Pollod Htrtlord Htlort 8 to 2000 Banohtt. &lt;lood COn·
WATE~PAOOFING
17401445.9 74 2
:.:.;;:;:::::.:.:.:.:..--,.-..,.,. 12 montha old. Call diHon . Never Raold. Noodt uncondiHonar lllttlmt guar·
Eloolrlo HoopHII Bto. E•col· 1304)882-2428 allor 5:00
rur a•lo barrlnge. 13.400. onlot. Local rtlortnelltur-·
lonl Condlllon. Mattrool tor
OBO.
1304)982·3428, I1h0 d E "'I ·• 1•• 5
btd•rlddtn.
Phone Flog. Sitek Angut BUill. 1304)882·3878
n
· lla~ tnw •• ·
yta~lno• &amp; older, out ot
Coli 24 Hre. (7ol0) 448·
(?oi0"''"-0908
:.:.:::::;..--==:;.....- - -.Chomplon Hill Wldeeproad, 78 Goldwlng tooocc Col· 0870, ~qooro Baotmtnt
PrH TrHO, w~h lho pur• Chomplon Hill EXT BDCC IICIOrt Item , Vtry Good Watorprootrng,
ahaot ol 25 auelrlan pint Trlvoltr &amp; WLC Eollpoo, Condlllon. 1304)875•1305
--:-:-:---'--..,.,-trill 0 St.OO oaotl. You genHt guorontood 11000.
"c&amp;c 0
..
get 3 lrtt trHI. 1740)258· tiCh oall 304·37N:te;.
BoATS &amp; MoroNS
onoral Hqmo malnto·
8514
'
'
mK SAIJ!
MOOI• Painting, vinyl lkl·
Rogllltrtd Angut Buill B·
lng, oarpenlry, dCOt'O, win·
Gear up lor Turkav Beaeon 82 Son, E" Son, TICIH1111h
'
dOWt. balhl, i'nobllt homo
at Sam'o Somt(VIIIt .Army Son, And Wldteprood ten t211 Soaro SomiV with trail· repair and mora. FOI trtt
Clmoutlago Store II net Coli Bill Bu~oeon. 1740)245· " · Oat • EltOirtc motore. · otlimalt 0111 Cntl, 740·082•
tN•. BatiiiiiO IIlii, ION• 81184
Filii FlndOII, tto, lt300 In· p832r3,y !ii;Mic::iT
'kit &amp; lnttallatlon. No orldlt
vttlod , Toklng otloro,
1740)U8·01tt
:oert rtQulrtd. By Sandy·.
.vlllt, WV Poll Olllet,
1211. Seort Stmi·V Aluml· , . . . .
T~N
;(304)273·8855
1IU
Al!ll»i
num Boot Soart 5 horoo "'
·(';rubO'I Pltno· Tuning '
''011 SAl,.;
gat Engln•. (304)575·t348 ~uldonlial or commercial
'FitPIIrl. Probltmt1 N'tod
.:..,.,,_..;;,--..;..,..-~ wlrtng, ntw oorvloe or II·
Tuntd1 0111 Tht ~lena Or. lliiO HOndo ClviO EX. Gooa t977 Ttlundorblrd, t85 Pllrt. Miller LlotniOd eleo·
?ol0·«8·4525
Condllion. (740)448·3 t43
Horae rnator. Runo Oooa. · trtolan. RIUtnour EltOtriOol,
11700 OBO. I"0)«8·1102t WV00030!1. 30H75·17811.
Shower Sliding 01111 11112 aMC Sonoml, Eldtrly
Ooort, Flit 80 lnoh 81th Ownld Garage Kept Fully
29870 Baehan Road
Tub, 128. Coli (304)4f8· LOidt&lt;i, 78,1100 m1111: t007
IG07 after 5pm
Monlt Corio, Fully Loadtd,
Rtolna, OH 45771
Small Enlortllnmont Conltr, 85,000 mlln, 2 door, Excel•
740•949·2217
118. C1H (304)451-t8G7 1:. lonl Condition. (740)448·
tor Spm
.::.~o4114;;;.;..._ _ _ _ __

NII:A Crouword Puaale

PHILLIP

~·
"• Cut ,•bove

Business Services

BRIDOII:

1""!!!!'1''1'!!!!'!"'-o:

p kit K 1
OC
n VII
&amp; CoiiiOtlbltl

•ucra-~

c ,.-;

Pool Parte lor Slltl 1llor re·
movtl. Slide, Diving Board, Wonii&lt;IIO buy: Uel&lt;l Mobile
VtO\Ium. POol Pump, Lin· Homo. Call ("01448·0178
111 Ladder 1 Raile eto or 304075•59415 . .
'
'
(740"'48--1

r-------.
MACK'S

The Dally Sentinel • Plge B 7,

I

ALLEYOOP

NIW AND UIID ITIIL !I'd' H.D, Troller (LI~O 07 Nl111n O.tll, loldtd, 2•11. 1088 Rlvtrl Crulotr
IIHI llama, Plpo Robar Now) wHh cm.1111. 11
ffon~reor olr, good oonal· Pon100n llolt 10 mercury
FOI ~·
Chan· Ntw 8' H.O. King CUtiOI lion, IG800, (7,0)1112·5578 mo10r, I IlliG Hooitltr troller.
nol, r•t llr,
OrltiiiQ 110• 111M Soropor, $350.
Phone (30ol)878•ol822

UIOd 0011 Cl~bl. Call
olpm. (740)44ti-Oolt7

www.mydallynntlnel.com

between rwo fritnds who are
biaving a disagreement • it will
place you in the line of fire.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -An ambitious undertaking rhat
you're working on with otb- ·
en may be hindered, because
you ma·y be competitive initead of coope r.adv.e . Work
together for the common

cawe.
VIRCO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- Avoid the critics in your
life, because you won't be in
the mood to handle challenges
to your ideas. concepti or
upiniom. You could react in
ways you wished you hadn't.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) •
- Those with whom you'll be
·involved misht noc treat you
u fairly u you would rreac
!hem. Don'c rake anything for
pntcd •• speak up and s••
your fair share.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -· If you find younclf
having to deal with someone
who is difficult co get along

Once you rea1ire you can

no longer put them off, the
thinp yolf've ignored won't

be 10 tout!h to finish. Accept
the fact that they mull be
done.
CANCER (J11ne 21-july
22) •• Think twice befort u-

wirh. don't make matters
wone by bringing up i11ues

that will bug him or hrr fur-

1

•

•

ther.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dee. 20 •• It's advioable to
keep pace wich your work,
becaure what you don't accomplish might get out of
hand and become

over-

whelming tomorrow. "
CAPRICORN (Dec, 22Jan. 19, • Failure to invite an
old friend could easily jeopardize the relationship. Those
tables on rum.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb,
19, - If you palm the blame
.,. for a failed job off onto someone else who bad nothing to
do with it, ir could tamilh
your imaae.
PISCES (Feb, 20-March 20)
-Anything you~say "or put in
wricing could be used apintt
you larer, 10 tread carefully.
Limit what you speak only to
cqmments that wouldn't be
harmful if repeated.
ARIES (March 21-Apnl19)
..... If you're nor c,ueful in
handlins your fundo, you
misJlt end up .bcing forced to
rob Pe1er to pay Paul. Do
your belt co keep your financial affiun in balance.

�'

INSIDE TODAYS SENnNfi.: PRIDE 2002

•

a1

M...a County's

Whit's lnslclt

''

HDIR.town .Newspaper

EASTERN ROYALTY .

nding

Dosl bick et OSU, 11

I\' liliAN J•. RIID

to six local govctl1tliCI1t! fot
cot'nmunity project~.
POMEROY Meigs
It\ otller business, the com- ·
County
~pply (or an tulsslotter; atJpruved a teso- ·.
additlot1ol $':1U,UOO In hous- h.ttlon tr;tnsferrlng a quartcrilig !ltcservation (unds 1111le of Colltlty Rmd 3911,
throu!,!h U.S, lt'Urnl l)evel- Deadman 8 Cttrvt'. to Sal h.. optil~lit, occottling to , !!air b(tty·lbwnship, at' tbe, request
Hollling Dlrectnr Jean or Engineer t::ugcne Triplett, .
Tru;1sdL
Comniissioncrs
tabled
Trussell cnrtductcd the fir~t action ott two bids for furnipublic hcad11g on the appli- ture for Meigs County Job
ration during . thursday's and Family Services." Ilids
rcgu lar tttectlng of the Meigs were received from AnderCtluttty Contnilssitlnets,
wt1's Furniture of Pomeroy
the funds, if approved, will In
the
an.tount
of
be med ftlr !11\all etth!tgeucy $2:1,777,79, atid .Office Scrhonlc repair~ (or hottteOWil- vke and Supply of Middleets With \lety low hiCOitles, port ill the &lt;111HlUI1t of.
h1 the past, fundln~; has beetl $25,101:1,
ll!ed to ptuvidc apptuxi- . Tlw board rctcrred bids for
nwdy $6,000 Itt ho111e bituminou• 'materiah for
repair~ fi&gt;r a dutch hollm in May fn1111 Asphalt Material•,
the ctlttllty,
Inc., Matidtd, and MiddleA waltlttg lilt of diJ!Iblc port ThrtHittal, Inc. tlf GalhotHcoWnch frotH the titmt llpoli! w 1tiplctt.
. tl'~·cnt h ousln~ rehabilitation . . Conunissioncr Mick Dav..:
IJt&lt;lgtnln will be the bads for cttport t·epotted that Jeff
the )lhJI!Wtt, accotdhtg to Thorlltoti, board Jlresldent, is
ihtssclL
a!,laltt hmpltttli~ed at St.
A !cttlttd public he•rhtg Mary's Hospital in Humiug. ot\ the appllcath:m wUI be toll, W.Ya, Thornton will
attnounced, Trussell !aid, at llkdy b~ traNsferred to a
which tlnte the ~ollttnl!!hm- N~brct!ka rehabilitation faciler! will be a!ked eo approve lty to f\ttther his recovery
the l!ftlnt npplkatiiJil,
tl'On1 a March surgery, Dav. itusselt aim alltloUticed enport said.
·
that . the county has been CotHtHI&lt;slntms also:
approved for $184,0UO 111
• Approved pay111e~t of
Cotlllllutllty beveloplllehf bills in the a111oUt1t . of ·
Ul11ok Grant fomtula fu11dS S21':1,M54.92;
· lbr 2001 , Of that rtlll'OUiit, · • Approved transfers of '
$18,000 will be set aside for fuuds attd appropriations
adndnistration and" S16,000 ac\JU•tlttetlt! . for juvenile
ftlr !~It housing nttlvltics, as Court and debt tetitel1iettt;
111atidatcd by the state, 1he • Cancelled an indoor line
rct11nlndcr o(tltc CDIK1 (or- maintenance agreement with
tt1Uia fund; will be allocated Verizon Communications.
II~Etb®M'I'OAILVSI::NTINELCOM

wm .

2002F150
#C0390

l4,538
Hlah: 60s,_ Low: 501
DetlllltAI

2002ZX2
ICOO!I6

Dow dips

below 1o,ooo

2002RANGER
SC4X4XLT

NEW YORK (AI') Lncklust~r earnings stuHed
th~ noek nmket Thursday, .
leuvln11 prlc~~ bar.~ ly
chun~~d despite mm~ wldt~
swinl!!, The l)ow jon~s
indmtrlal! dipped bdow
th~ I0,()(10 lew I for the tim

$

•

LINCOLN
AMIIIIC;.N

I.UI!UII'f'

#C0258

tim~

200 I Ford TaUIUS SE ·

2002 Chevy Silverado ~x41C027tt

......................... ~.5 To Choo-se From

1999 Pontiac Bonneville J.US7~
...... , •••• , ••••• ill.

•••IIi• .................

2001 fordF1504)Q 144840

.

s1',995'

1999 ford Mustano•aoo731

tlunUMtUfUIUUIU'' 'lt"IIU t t " u h S

.

~000 Mercury

••••IIII!IJ'!•l~IIIIIIIWIIIIIttllllll l lltllllllttt. llllt$1 0,400 ~-~.
1998 FOrd Contour- vet-43571
l ill'l l ll.ll I 11.1111 I II 111111tJ11 1 I lll iltllllli

1 1~111111

III I I

1997 Hondo Accord t.us30

2000 ford Ranoer sc .4X4 t.uaso
···~~~~~······-··················~""''''" s16,995
1998 ford F250 SC IC03831

95

lt l l tfll lltl~lfii~'IIIUI,~IIIIII!II;iii,UitUf $1 5,995 '
1997 DodQe Dakota 4X4 #44815

............. ,,. . .,•. _-•.......•.........•. $1 '1,995

' ·········11···········••••11!••-•••••11••••$1 1,995

1997 Buick ReQal IC02091

1995 ford FISO 4X4 ft:03711

.,.... ,.,~···-····· ··········~·· ··········$1 0,995
1996 PontlacGnandAmt.USG

11 ei 1111 III II •., , , . ,_ , l lp •n 111. , ·, I Ill" "II- I • t l I II I II' I

'

I

.
'

#444870

$11_,995

2-whttl $2495 4-whMI

'49~5

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

,..... ........l&amp;.ntto

.........o. ..

flllrr ......... pupte
...... DIIIIIIt,.

. ~TMINaD

TI!CHNICIAJia

;::.~=

,,
,'

FLOORMATS
Starting
at

00

1994 Hlssan SC 4X4 l+tOtl
•••••••••••••• • •• • •••• • ••• j ••

~ .~

••• • •••••

!S~,SJ()(J

••

. FORD

We feature all major brllld1: Goodyear, FlrutQnt,
General, Mlohtlln; Srldgtltone, COntlnenllll,
UNIROVAL. BF Goodrich, Mounting and balancing
may bl tlrtra,

• Service lncludoo up to &amp; quar1t 01 Mqtorcrffl 011 and n.w
Motorcrlfl oil flkor • Perlorm Mufti·Polnt Vlhlclt lniPICIJOn
• Lllbt • CI1ICk and nil ntceoury ftuldl • All In :zt mlnuttt
IHo • DltHI VlhlciH
tidra,

FORD MOTOR CO.

'""•uf.•;,,, •••••••u••u •' "' "'~•••• • ••~•• $7 ,SJ9S

We will meet or beat any
competitor'• advertlaed
price on the aame tire. .

llbQr may bt rtqulitcl on aomt ...ttlclft.

Why trust

..

TIRES·

··-----····· ·----~·-····

•1995

·

#43321

WHEEL ALIGNMENT
Check and adiuot _,and lot. A&lt;ldltlonal Pll1t lnd

.Qtiz·t...~

$7,985

1994 Ford Explorer 4X4 #COUOI

•.•.•••••••~ .••...•. ' •..•...•. ~ ............$4,995

1993UncolnTowncarK'0~1
·
•••A••••• • •••••••••••••• • •·~· ••••••~-w~;.~,SJ~!l

Mountaineer'"" aso

•.......·•••• ~ ••• ~ ....................... $20,995

.$8,995

·uJ970idS.:ii9bi'teAuroral!~i~

14,915

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~:t!i,stSt!S

'

1998 Ford TaiiNSMollllllooft.Ut.t•
'

19,995

· 2000 Ford F250 4x4 DltHt · ..

• lflllllllllllll.lfl'l••••······················' l2. ~5 L
'

ltillil.~lll.l l!fll.ll" 11 lll •fl't\llilt ..... II I • •• , J ' ""I s

f

.

BUG

starting
Sf

Motorcraft..
WIPER BLADES
Starting

at ·

s45oo

Inllllltd

SPLASH GUARDS

$1 OPalr

S1Q95

in two months before

PROM CANDIDATD - Thtat Eaatern Hill\ School aanlora l!fl! oandldtltll8 for Prom Kh11! llntl
Quttn. From left, Amanda Ytqer, dauahttr of Tim and Ellrabeth Ytlll!er of Pomeroy; Staale
Wetaon, dlulhter of DB~ and Kathy Wtltaon, CooMIItl; Jllntlt Ridenour, ti&amp;IJI!hter of Jim ana
June Ridenour of Cheater; Elaine Putman, d&amp;ughter of Gary end Dllbblll Putm11n of Ret!daville;
Jon Will, aon of D1n111 and Julia Will of Pomeroy: R,J, Glbb8, aon of Randall 11nr.t Shirley Qlbb8
of Pomeroy: end Jimmie Putman, aon of Jlmmla end Robin Putmen of Relld8vlllo, Gort'lltt Kerr,
aon of Ray and Bobble Kerr, Ia al.ao a candldatt for Prom King, but 18 not pictured. The prom
will be held Saturday 1'\llht. .(Brian J. Retd)

.Southern
honors
its top ·.··

students

Ncowrlns in IatQ cmdlns.
IV TONY M•. LIADH
Analym sold the market,
TL!ACHOMVDAILVIINTINIL;COM
which llod bet that enrnllll!l
1\ACINB- ''Star SpnHgled
\lfOWd bl.f !U'Ofl8 enoush IO
:Bxcetlc:rlec': was 1hc thllme of
tril!llcr A stock turnorouttd,
So~Jthern Local r,"Choon 15th
wAS re!lsnlns lttolf to th~ . nnnulll Aeodcmle AWArds Bon•
likelihood that 2002's
I'JIIOt, whleh was held Thul'8·
recovery will be less robust · d~y 11ventns ot Southern High
thnn hoped,
Sehot&gt;l.
The [)ow closed up 4.63,
flll!hty·nne nudentl were ..
vircuolly unehonsed, at
recol!nlzcd at the awards bail10,035.06, despite tpendil18
ql,let, which fentured guen
most of the se!!lot\ below
!pcnker Mrt. Cnmt Hatem,
10,000 ond foiling as much
1econdnry supervi!or for the
.lis 103 points curly in the
Athcns- M eig~
fldumloilnl
8es!lon.
Service Cctller.
.
Urondcr stock lndlcottm
Dllrinll her speech to parabo showed Httle chAnl!c by
etlt!, studettt! And staff of the
the er1d of the day.'f'h~ NlisSouthern Local School l)isdA&lt;1 compmite lntl~x ros~
trlct, Hatem touched on the ICHOLARIIIIP WINNIR - Shirley S!lyre, guidance counselor
0.~6 co
1,713,70, jmt
Importance
of toto! qunllty at Southarn Hllh School, prnsente 11 OM·Ytl!lr tuition sohOIIlr,
enOIJI!h tu end 11 six-mslon
tmnAiletnent and how thb ahll) tor the Unlverelty of Rio Gr!lnd!l to Southern Elementary
!using stru.k. The Standard
concept play1 an lmport~llt eiKth·irlder Bonnie Allen, daughtar of M8, Juanltll Erb lind Mr.
&amp; l'tior'1 500 ind~x ton
rotc in the tlve1 oftho1e belnl! Tliomaa Allen, during Thuraday'e Southern Local Academic
1.66, or 0,2 percent, to close
honored,
Awardl Banquet. (Tony M. LGIIoh)
AI 1,091.411.
"'Thachen
the Sollthern
·
hi nl! you 1~~rtt- wIll I''-c·IJ~·~rt
Thon1111., dlwkt
Local
SchoolInDi!trlct
em.,loy are, everyt
'
"
benefit you In 10111~ way dur· courdlnrtwr ror Rio Ol'llnde
total qua.llty mliliAI!ement lnl! your tlfeth11~,·· !Aid Haten;. Cotllt11unlty College, preNentwhen oducatlnt; our chlldren, "Life ~xp~rhm~ci ·nuy see 111 cd a one-year tultlou ~~hoiBr­
They work very hard to bring like rou14h pebbles to you ship to Southern lllcm cnrary
.Ohio
out
the belt in each and every rislu now, however, through sixth J!rRdtr t3onnlc Allen,
Pick 1: 0·5·5
one of them," nid Hatem, a1 hnrd work, determhmlon Md daugh~er or Ms. Jtutttittl lltb
Pick 4: 9·0+4
luc~e s: 1·11·:ZB·34-37
1he walked among the rows uf cducatlo11, they wltJ b~tome und Mr. thotttdl Allen, who1c
Pick 1 ciiY: &amp;·1·0
honoreet,
· beaudful jewel! you ~~~~ keep tlAt11~ wa1 al1o •~l t~tt~d ra rrtn·
Pick 4 ciiY: 4·4·4-:Z
"However, along with acad- forever."
l11Jn1 rrom r111101l~ tho!~ !tU•
enilcs and learning, there II
Following Hat~m's addr~11, d~ntl ~ttemllt1K the banquet,
Welt Vlr~lnl•
Dilly 1: 5.0·2
alto room for other character- ltudentl w~r~ lndlvlduaUy rce- Scudc11t hot1orw, by 1dwol ·
Del!f 4: O•IJ•IJ•O . .
l1tiea, such AI wladom, kind- O(!nlzed by Smubern E l ~rn~n - were :
· C•li2S: 1~14·111-:ZO.:Z:Z·:Zl
nell and gratlt11de, whleh tory JlrlneipJII Michaela KuC!•
S11uth~r11 Hlsh Sdwol wery nuden' here undouht· ma and, Southern High School (12th Grade) Mutt A!h, Cgr·
edly pnueues:• the add&lt;~d.
Principal Gordon fll!hcr.
.olyn Ucntz.joe Cornell, Sheri
"Each brain in thltgymnasi- . Medallions wer~ then pre· Cumtlllns, iYl~r L.ittlc, jtley
un1 It capable o£ genei'itcll18 3. tented to nudentl by South- Manud, .1\.Aehel Mat!hall, Kim
. :lloellon• • II ,.,..
billion ldeu. We mutt hilrneil ern Loeal l'rtuldent . 1\.0M MdJatllcJ. 'li'avan11a Monrc,
thete ideat and 1110 . them to Cammarata.
llrandot1 l11erce, Lori Sayre,
Calendar
A8
better out world and the peo- Afterward, Robert u~~gle Ut1t1Mcy Sutlth, Amy Wllsou; .
Cl111lfleds
85·7
pie who live l.n It:', she tald.
pre1cnced .a SIOO savlll~J~ bond (11th Grad~) Cty1trtl Cottrill,
Comic•
88
John Rloe, left, prUident ot tho Ealteth Looal Board of Edli'
. Hatem continued by taylng to Southern Elementary Mh- Curt Crou~ h, Mariam ELJJ.
Dear Abby
A4
oatlon, wee one of the judges for the Eastern Elementary
what ttudents learn now nlAy grader Grader !nuna Hunter, abi\Ja, . Brittany Portunc, Jeri . Sohool Solenoe Fair, held Thureday tor fifth aM sidh-grade
Editorials
A8
not 1eem important co chem, daughter of t&gt;r, and Mrs. Hill, Amy Lee, 'Thra Pickens,
Movies
. A3
students, He Is ploturrtd here with Tine Drake, whose colorbut, over time, the1e cxperl- Douglu Hunter, whute name UrRndtll1 Smith, 'fi,n1 'l'hel11i
Obituaries
A3
ful f)roJeot extlrnlned the effeote of music on study habits,
once• wUI prove to be very WAI !elected At ratulom, oil (10th
Gr~de)
llethany . ProjeQts were graded on knowledge gsined, use of soientlfSportl
81·4
benellclal.
behalf uf the Mlddlcpurc· Weather
A2
lo metnod, orlgiMIIty, presentation and other ·orlterla, (Brien
. I 2002 Ohio VIlify ,Ublifhllll CO.
"No matter what age you l)omcroy 1\otary Club.
PluM Itt lollthern, AI
J, Read)

SCIENCE FAIR .

Lotteries

lnclu

'

What Can Ho.lie Do for You!

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11 """ ot

'Prlclt include

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axtr., 1.111or not included
I

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odvocott during lhtir time of need. Plea11 caii .Holzer Hospice IF you
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I
!

�</text>
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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="22999">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="22998">
              <text>April 25, 2002</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1559">
      <name>holman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2870">
      <name>knighting</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
