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..................
MEMORIAL
. DAY 2002
.

.

Middleport High

alumni award ·
scholarships
IY C.WU. HoiNcM

11tlm.~~ll~llNtt.tOM ·

DMths
Phyllis Joachim. 86
Homer Bills. 83 ·
Marion MB:irtv. 77
Darlene Curry. 64
John Ridenour. 55
Do~.talas Hoffnian. 45
Maruyn watson
D...... AS

Hlal:l: 80S. Low: 60S
Dttiiii,Q

Pomeroy Legion
honors war dead
Cotnmunity
turns out to
celebrate
Memorial Day
IY CHAIH.IMI HOINCM
HOEFI.lCHeMVDAil.VS!NTINEl.,COM

Consumer
confidence

lncha hlp•r
NBW YORK (AP) Consumer
confld nee
edaed up In May,. though
not quite us much as ann·
lysts expected, sugge!ltlng u
s1ow onomle recovery In
the months ahead.
The New York-bused
Conference Board uld
Tuesday that It Consumer
Confidence lndelt rose to
I09.8 this month from 11
revised I08.5 In April.
Anulysts were eltpectlna 11
reading of II 0.0.
The Industry · group's
Index Is closely wutched
becuuse consumer confl·
dence drives consumer
· spendlna, which nccounts
for about two-thirds of the
nation's eeonomJc activity.

Ohio

Pick S: 3·5oo0
Pick 4: 2·6·0·9
luckeye 1: 1·5·16·21·28
Pick s nllht: 1·3·6
Pick 4 nljht: 2·6·7-4

·Wtst V111lnla

Dally S: 3·0·5 _
Dally 4: 2·4·6·9
Cllh 21: 1·2·5·12·20·24

lndu
:lloctlon• .. 1:1 Plpl

Calendar
AS
Classlfleds
83·S
Comics
86
Dear Abby
AS
Editorials
'A4
Movies
A3
Obituaries
A3
Sports
81·3
Weather
A2
o 2002 Ohio Valley Publl1hln1 co.

MIDDt.liPORT
Rewgnhlon of reunion
classes and the oldest gradu·
nteil, nlong with awudlng of
ft\'e $(;()() schol~hips !fum
the Susnn 0 , Plll'k
Schoh.trship Fund, were
highlights of the l002
Middleport High S~hool
Alumni
Assodntlon
reunion,
AbOut l50 grnduates and
guests atttnded lhe bnnquet
and thmce held Snturd~ty
night In the Meigs Middle
Sdmol nudltorlun\ decornt·
ed In ornnge ni\d bluck, the
s~hool's l.'Oiors, The ban·
quet wa~ followed by a
dttnce emceed by 'fum
Pnyne.
· Pnul Oernrd, alumni presl·
dent, conducted the recognl·
tiM of classes and recognlted Frunces McCiurt
HolTman of Dunbar, W.va.,
of the dass of 1927, the oldest gruduute attending,
Susnn
0,
P11rk
Scholarships were 11warded
to children or grandchildren
of Middleport High School
gruduntes as follows:
Megun lillwbeth Hnrrlson
of Clleshlre, granddnughter
of Roscoe C. Wise, n MHS
grudunte of 19~ I, with a 4.
OPA. She plans to ml\lor In
crlmlnul ju. • I . .

Tyltr Little of Radne,
grandson of Lora Maltine
Herrmann Little of the dass
of 1~, with a 4. GPA, He
pl11ns lt) lUtend Ohio State
Univet'shy and study either
engineering or law,
Ttevor l&gt;aul Buck of
Chillicothe, grandson of
fred Hoffman, class of
19~0. with 11 Hil GPA, He
plllns to attend Ohio
Uni\'ersity with a major in
pre-dentistry,
·
·
Chad Lee Mourning of
Middleport, son of James 0,
Mourning, class of 19~6.
with a GPA o( 3, 71 and
plum; to attend Ohio
University where he will
!"~\lor In electrical englneer1ng
Nickolas
Adam
McLaughlin of Middleport,
grandson of Kenneth
Ye11uger of the MHS class of
19~6. He will be attending
Ohio University to study
mechanical engineering.
Graduates attending and
the cl11sses In whlcli they
graduated are as follows:
1927, Frunces McClure
Hot'titmn, Ounbar, W.Va.
1934, Edna Mrutltle Hayes
Gaskill, Middleport,
1936, Robert V. King,
Middleport: Mary Hennesy
Harris, Columbus: t.ols
Diles Bush, The Plains:
1937, How11td Wallace

POMEROY · "We
ure here to hon,or our
heroic dend und reflect
on the thousand bnttlu
they fouaht on the lund
nnd sen nnd In the ulr,
This Memorial Day we
gather to give th m·
llllutiiiAiiiM•I.AI
alory for their vullant
deeds,"
said
Fritz
·
.
.
.
LIAIMNG THI Mupl- The .honor au I'd of Drew Webster
Ooebel.
The · c 0 mmnnde r 0 f · Poat 39, American Leaton, led the Memorial Day par cla
Drew Webster Post 39, throuah downtown Pomeroy, Pictured front from the left art
American Lealon, wus Georae Harrla, Georp Neaaelroad, Ken -H rrta and Bob
s pen ke r
at
the Burton, (Charlene Hoeflich)
Memorial Dny service
--.:lie'~~---~~-~~~-...,
held
In
down-town
:::Pomeroy Monday morn ·
Ina. Ooebel called for
remembefill&amp; those who
huve been lost flahtlna
for their country,
"When peril threat·
ened und their country
called, they left their
paths of pence to sprlna
to arms. They fouaht
for us; they fell for us,
IY IRIAN J. ROD
und nil the world.
llREEO@MVDAILVSENTINEL.COM
because of what they
CHESHIRE ~ Onllla·Melgs Community Action Agency
aave, Is debtor to
will use a new grunt to fund an educutlon program designed
fhem," he Sill d.
to prevent und reduce second·hund smoke lli'Ound children.
In conclusion, tho
Trlsh McCullough, CAA's executive director, announced
. speuker culled for u
lust week the ugency has received part of 11 grant awarded
renewal to pati'lotlsm
to the Toborg Institute In Washington, D.C., from the
by usklna his llstenen
Amerkun Legucy Foundation to lund the progrum,
to st•nd with bowed MIMORIAL WRIATH - Navy vetarana l.annle Jewell, John
As purt of !Agncy's $21 million grunt program, the
heuds In solemn mem · Wetka and Jim Gilmore, left to rlaht, placed 11 wreath on the
Thbill'g Institute was selected to Implement a se~ondhand .
· ory of th e heroic dead. Ohio Alvtr In tribute to the war dead as part of the Memorial
smoke prevention progrum In three sepurute communities
Joe · Struble, emcee Day Strvlct In Pomeroy Monday. (Ch rlene Hoeflich)
In the mountuln nnd hill country of the Appnluchlun region,
Including Oalllu nnd Mells counties.
for the service spon·
Buncombe County, N.C., and Mingo County, W.Vu. were
aored by the Amerlean
ulso selected.
Leaton Post, described truck
owned
by Hurold Bluckston, post
About 26.2 percent of uduhs In southenlltem 'Ohio smoke,
Memorial Day 2002 118 Richard McDonald of chupluln
nnd
Jim ·
"u duy with a new N IKonvllle, Howard Souhby led singing of
liompnred to n lB/ercent rule for udults In the whole
country. An estlmnte 119JOO children In the southeustem
mcunlna, because we Mullen In his DARE the Nutlonul Anthem .
are at wur ugaln.
portion of the stute are regulurly eltposed to secondhand
cur, und fire equip· ounty offldnls were
smoke In their homes.
"We ure once more ment from Buhnn, Introduced .
Exposure to secondh11nd smoke Is nssodnted among
Tuppers Oludys
wltnesslna . aoldlers Chester,
Cumlnas
lnt'unts with Sudden lnfunt Death Syndrome, McCullough
Middleport, broulht grectlngdrom
pluclna tfiemulvos In Plaln8,
said, und cun cuuse und nagruvute usthmu.
nnd the eafon Auxlllury
harm's wuy o that we New . Hoven
Exposure ulso lncrease1 the number und frequency of
might be safe. This Pomeroy were lnelud · und r ad "In Flanders
•
resplrutory
Infections among babies und toddlers,1ncludlng
Fields."
·
day we remember ull ed.
those who huve died The ' flaa at the stuac The program eon· / prieumonfu, bronchitis and colds, und eur Infections.
Mlchuel 0 . Meyer, pre~ldent of the Thborg institute,
for the cause of free· was ralui:l ~Y Pomeroy eludlld wltll Nuvy vet ·
e~tp,lulned
the purpose oT the grunt.
·
dom."
boy cout8 118 bualcr oruns Lennlll hwell ,
'We
ure
seeking
to
develop
un
etl'ectlve
fumlly·based
The parade through Karen Orlfflth pluyed Jim Gilmore und John
Intervention to protect little children from the henlth conse·
d6wntown
Pomeroy "Cull to the olors." Weeks
plul:lng · u
quences
of breuthlng tobllcco smoke," Meyer said. "Not
w.us led by the po t's Crulf
Dupnn
und wreuth on the river In ·
only
will
our three partner ugencles, Including the
honor auurd. A flout Puul ne Br ekles on memory ut' the wur
Oulliii/Melgs
CAA, deliver this heulth educutlon program
by the Rocksprings nee ord Ion 8ll ng "01od doud, und u ~un sulute
Raiders 4·H Cfub, a Bleu America Aaulll ," by Pollt 39 8 honor
1916 antique pickup pruyer Wll8 liVen by uurd .
PIHH M1 CAA, AI

Grant to address

nd
.smoke problem
CAA to administer
educational programs

Wttlntlllay. Mn. 29
1:00 • 4:00 pm • HMC French 500 Room
Proclamation Cnmoox • 1;30 pm
Public encourag~ to attend. Stop by and rock for this
worthwhile cau11l For mort information, call Todd Tucker at

I

I

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover tlte Holzer· Difference
www.holzer.org
•

740 446·9160
\~

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I

7
•

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�The Daily Sentinel
Ohio weather

•

Wadlls--.lltyll

PageA2:

Ohio

..

'

Budget plan headed for House floor
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Bob
administration and House
Speaker Larry Householder finally have
come to an agreement on how to plug a
$1.7 billion hole in the state budget.
The solution carne after 1 week of
meetings . at which Householder
scratched for ' enough votes 'to ge\ a
package to the House Door. The House
Finance Committee voted to recom·
mend the bill for passage at about 5 a.m.

~--,

•111¥1

Rainy and warmer
BY THE .t.SSOCI.t.TEO PftESS

Showers and thunderstorms will return to the Mid-Ohio
Valley, the National Weather Service said T\lesday.
.
But the weather will stay wann. High temperatures for the
next few days will .be in the upper 70s to low 80s, with
overnight lows in the upper 50s to the 60s.
Sunset today will be at 8:5 I p.m. Sunrise Wednesday will be
116:06 a.m.
·
Weather FC!recast
Thnight ...A chance of an evening shower or thunder·
storm...Otherwise partly cloudy with areas of fog developing
after midnight. Lows near 60. South winds 5 to 10 mph.
Ch~nce of rain 30 percent.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy. A chance of showers and' thunderstorms in the afternoon. Highs in the mid 80s. Southwest
winds S to 10 mph. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Wednesday night ...Partly cloudy. Lows near 60.
Thursday... Partly cloudy. Highs in the lower 80s.
.
. Thursday night. .. Partly cloudy with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Lows in the lower 60s..Chance of rain 30
percent.
.
Friday... A chance of showers and thunderstorms during the
day ... Otherwise partly_cloudy. Highs near 80.
Extended Foreeast
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 50s and highs in
the upper 70s.
·
Sunday...Partly cloudy; Lows in the mid 50s and highs in the
upper70s.
·
.
Monday... Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and thun·
derstorms. Lows in the upper 50s and highs in the upper 70s.

Akron ·cries foul as
political ~r shlftt
to Mahonlng Valley

. Saturday.

'

The full House will vote on the bill
T\lesday.
The committee vote ended a two-hour
hearing whose debate was reflected In
the straight party-line vote, with majority Republicans prevailing.
The bill would raise Ohio's cigareue
tax by 31 cents a pack, on top of the cur·
rent 24 cents. The decrease from a 50cent.increase the Senate approved eatli.
er in the week.was intended to attract
votes from antitax conservatives.
Enough of them . budged to give
Householder S2 votes- two more than
needed for passage, he said.
Householder said conservatives and
moderates in his caucus worked hard to
reach a compromise.
"Everyone was trying to come up
with ideas to make this work," he said.
The bill also raids the state's rainy day
fund of its last $600 .million, increases
the tax on trusts - that provision ends
in 2005 - and borrows another $165

leads to accusations of
police chief in New Miami

Burgla
plot to
NEW MIAMI (AP) Police officers were questioning a juvenile about car and
home burglaries last month
when they began to hear a
much different story.
· They were told, authorities
say, that teen-agers had been
plotting since Janul!?' to kill
the palice chief in th1s south·
west Ohio villa~~ of 2,500.
"They had 11 all worked
. out," said Chief Duane.
Pelfrey. "One of them was
aolng 10 shoot me as I got out
of my car at the ,station and.
others· would be positioned
around the parking lot to fin·
ish me off, with a final shot to
the face. They also talked
about bombing my car."
A 19-year-old and three
boys have been . charged.
Police confiscated two stolen
sawed-off shotguns they
believe were pan of the
alleged plot.
Samuel Harrison, of New
Miami, is charaed with con·
sp.lracy. to commit murd~r,
sa1d Bnan Ooodyear, an assls: tant Butler County prosecutor.
J.P. Whicker, 16, and Joe
Grabel, IS, both of New
Miami, .and John Gregory, ~6.
of~anulton, are charged With
dehnquency count.s of conspiracy to comm1t lnurder.
Prosecutors asked that th~y be
tried as adults, but a JUdge
rul~ last w~k that the cases
·a~amst ~~~k~r an~ Grabel
w1ll remam m JUVemle court.

AKRON (AP) - When crime."
U.S. Rep. James A. . ''They read our complaints
Traficant's territory was and are now using them," said
carved up In redistricting, res· Binning, a valley resident
ldents saw it as yet lftlother who has followed northeast
setback for their struggling Ohio politics for decades.
economy.
·
. Voters In the valley which
Northeast Ohio's Mahoning stretches about 30' miles
Valley was scattered among along the Mahoning River,
three congressional districts: complained about redistrict·
the 6th District; represented lng, but then did something
by Rep. Ted Strickiand from about it. They voted. About
southern Ohio; the new 17th 30 percent turned out in
represented by a fellow Trumbull and Mahoning
Democrat, Rep. Tom Sawyer counties compared with 16
from Akron; and the 14th petcent in the Akron area.
District, home of Republican
Rep. Steven LaTourette of
northeast Ohio.
It seemed the valley, which
lost thousands of jobs when
its steel mills closed in the
late 1970s, was destined to
lose its voice in Congress.
"People were disheartened
by a lot of things. The whole
Traficant trial .:. compounded
by the division of the dis·
trict," said Bill Binning,
chairman of the political scl·
ence
department
at
Youngstown State University.
Health Care Coverage for
•"People weren't really in a
good mood."
Ohio's Working Fa~lllea
But the area has become a
major power in two of the
three districts.
It makes up the largest pop·
ulation center In the 6th,
prompting Strickland to move
his campaign headquarters
Healthy Start offers no-cost or low-cost health
from southern Ohio to the
northeast.
care coverage ,for kids (birth to age 1~)
'"They are more likely to
and pregnant women.
vote for Democrats than the
•
voters in my current district
- .by far greater numbers of
Healthy Famlllea offers no-cost healfl care
organized . labor," said coverage for the entire family· parents AND kids.
Strickland, of Lucasville.
"The challenge for me is to
reat.:h out to those folk&amp; and
Healthy Start lc Healthy Famlllet Covert:
let them know who I am."
In the 17th district, a valley
· Doctor Vlalt.
Vlelan Service•
resident and former Traficant
Dent.! Care
staffer, state Sen. Tim Ryan,
Haaplt.ICare
defeated the heavily favored
Ment.l Health
Immunization•
Sawyer in this month's pri·
And Much Morel
. Sublt.n~ Abuse
mary.
Preecrlptlana
Now, Akron Is crying foul.
Mayor Don Plusquellic said
after the election that the diviaion of his city "borden on a

"In the long run. it will benefit Ohio.
taxpayers," Grendell said. .
,
. Householder said the income-tax pro-,
vision would cost the state about sn,
million the firSt year.
· :
The Senate plan was turned down by·
conservatives who are opposed 10 ahy'
increases in taxes and want to cut.
spending instead.
·
They cite their opposition to the cisa:'
rette tax, to a plan to raise $119 milhon
by taxing income In Ohio-based trusts
and to a plan to delay a $175 million tax
break for businesses created by
President Bush's economic stimulus
plan.
·
· .The new plan also would end the
increase in the trust tax in 2005.
·
Left out of the budget negotiations.
were the House's 40
Minority Leader Dean
Parma Democrat, said Taft
obtain a few Democratic votes, but
unable to do so. ·
Democrats on the
taft's senior tiudget
Hicks, had worked
Householder in an area next to S~[ourld&gt;
ing room. but were nowhere to ...
once the hearing started.
"When it became time for the minori-:
ty to ask questions, they disappeared,"
said Rep. Ed Jerse, the committee's
ranking Democrat.
.

A hearing is pending for
Gregory.
·
Police Sgt. Patrick Fackey
sajd the suspects implicated
themselves and each other.
Relativr~s, however, deny the
allegations.
·
"My baby has never been in
trouble except for some
fights, and he swears up and
down that he has nothmg to
do with any plot," said Anita
Whicker,
of
~~~~~
Cincinnati. ··rouce p1

him inti) saying what they
wanted to hear."
Pelfrei said the motive
might have been revenge
because the youths have been
in trouble before.
.
He also said some of the sus·
peelS may have resented his
efforts to break Uf a group of
"gang wannabes, teens who
have been trying 10 organize a
gang under the name 007.
lfe wouldn't elaborate on
the past offenses or tl)e ~~;ang.

•

"What really hurts, is that I
have tried to help these kids in
the past,'' Pelfrey said.
·. Pelfrer. 36, has been a police .
officer m New Miami sinc.e :
1993. and beca~ chief of the ,
eildtt-member force last May. ·
'the financially depressed:
villa~e, about 20 miles north .
. of Cmcinnati, is mostly resi-:
dential except for a dmer, a'
party supply store, a few tav- ·
ems, churches and some
small car reoair businesses.

doubiP Y,OUr comfort &amp;sav~!
Right now you c1n bring home 2of your

•

Darlene CUrry

.

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~MEROY- Darlene Ann Curry, 64, Pomeroy, died at her

residence on Sunday, May 26, 2001.
She was born in Toledo on July 1,1937,daughterofthe late
Francis John Yates and Helen Marie Byers Engel.
She was employed by Meigs Association for Retarded
Citizens and was a past president. She was formerly employed
at Pomona Valley Pre-School and was a volunteer at Carleton
School. She attended Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church.
Surviving are her children, Jerry Curry of Reynoldsburg,
Su.e Retzloff of Pomeroy, Bob Curry of Racine, Dale Cuny of·
Mmeral Wells, W.Va., Mary Jane Curry of Pomeroy and
Martha Hall of Pomeroy; a stepson, Eugene Cuny of West
Virgillia; and seven grandchilcfren and six great-grandchil·
dren.
She was also preceded in death by her brother, Francis
Yates.
Graveside services will be held at 3 p.m. Thursday in Beech
9rove Cemetery, Pomeroy, with Pastor Paul Taylor officiat·
mg.
·
There will be no calling hours.
Arrangements are under the direction of Fisher Funeral
Home in Pomeroy.
·

Maltlyn ·Watson
MINERSVILLE - Marilyn Watson, Minersville, died
Monday, May 27, 2002, at her residence.
.
Arrangements will be announced by Fisher Funeral Home.

John Buel Ridenour

.

Phyllis Joachim

i... POMEROY- John Buel "J.B." Ridenour, SS, of Pomeroy,

· died at his residence on May 26, 2002.
; He was born September 13, 1946, in Gallipolis, son of
, Mildred Pauline W1ckham Ridenour of Chester, and the late
)'luel K. Ridenour.
· He was the · owner and operator of Ridenour Supply in
·
Chester. He was a graduate of Eastern High
School. He was a 3S-year member and pres·
ident and assistant chief of the Chester Fire
Department. He was a member of the
Gallipolis Elks Lodge. He was a veteran of
the Vietnalh Conflict and was a member of
the Chester United Methodist Church.
Surviving, besides his mother, are his
wife, Karen A: Riggs Ridenour o.f Pomeroy;
two sons and daughters-in-law, Jason B. and
Natasha Ridenour of Pomeroy, and Jared
Ridenour
and Jaime Ridenour of Fleming; a grand·
daughter, Abbie Lynn Ridenour of
Pomeroy; a brother and sister-in-law, James L. and June
Ridenour of Chester; brothers-in-law and sisters-in-law:
: · Roger and Helena Riggs of Rutland., Rpdney and Carol Riggs
·of Pomeroy, and Sharon Rij!gs of Rutland; his mother-in-law,
Betty Musser of Rutland; h1s aunt, Opal Wickham of Chester;
· several nieces, nephews and cousins; and special friends,
·· Charles and Jeanette Radford of Pomeroy.
' Besides his father, he was preceded in death by his aunt,
· Thelma Ridenour; and his uncle, John Wickham.
Services will be held at 11 a.m. on Thursday, May 30, 2002,
·at Fisher Funeral Home In Pomeroy, with the Rev. David
Wiseman officiating. Burial will follow at Chester Cemetery,
· ; :And military services will be conducted graveside.
: · : friends may call at the fulteral home on Wednesday, May
::29, 2002, from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. SeJYices will be conducted by
: Elks Lod'e No. 107 at 8 p.m.
, : Memonal contributions may be made to the Chester
: • Volunteer Fire Department, attention:.Larry Cleland, P.O. Box
131, Chester, Ohio 45720.

favorite La·Z·Bor Jtyles for 1great low prlcel

MIDDLEPORT - Phyllis M. Joachim, 86, Middleport,
died Friday, May 24, 2002, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
She was born Sept. 19, 1915, daughter of the late John P.
and Stella Price Joachim. She was employed at the former
Home Laundry in Middleport. which was owned by her par·
ents. In later years, she was employed at the former Bookstore
in Middleport.
Surviving arc her sister, Elizabeth Burkett of Middleport;
and her brother, J. Phillip Joachim of West Palm Beach, Fla.
She was also preceded in death by ~er brother-in-law, Eddie
Burkett.
Burial will be on Wednesday, May 29. 2002 at Highland
Cemetery in Fort Mitchell, Ky., beside her parents. There will
be no calling hours or services.
Local arrangements are by Fisher Funeral Home in
Middleport.

Marion ·McCarty .
APPLE GROVE, W.Va. - Marion "Pen" McCarty, 77, Apple
Grove, died Sunday, May 26, 2002, at his re~idence.
He was born June 7, 1924,1n Mason County, W.Va., son of the
late John McCarty and Mattie Kinniard McCarty Dunn. He was
a farmer and a veteran of the U.S. Marine Corps during World

•a

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.

Surviving are two sons and daughters-in-law, Earnest and Kay
McCarty of Point Pleasant, W.Va., and Roger and Debbie
McCarty of South Point; two daughters and a son-ln-law,Jo Ann
and Earl Hicks of Roanoke, Va., and Barbara Sears of Apple
Grove; a brother. Clarence McCarty of Apple Grove; eight sis·
ters, .Bdna Holcomb of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., Kay Spurlock of
Lesage, W.Va., Martha Ball of ApPle Grove, Catherine Brown of
Frame, W.Va., Gertrude Simpkins of Pleasantville, and Hilda
Fisher, Virginia Pickens and Betty Rlmrney, all of Point
Pleasant; and eight grandchildren and IS great-grandchildren.
Services will tle 1 p.m. Thursday In Deal Funeral Home, Point
Pleasant, With Max Spurlock and Pastor Charles Moses official·
in$. Burial will be in Barton Chapel Cemetery, Apple Grove.
Fnends may call at the .funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Wednesday.
Full mihtary graveside services will be conducted by
American Leg1on Post 23, Point Pleasant.
.

DoualasE.
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Pomeroy, Ohio. Seconcl-clatl
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Plidll PootiiiO!'·
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(740) 992-2217 .

EMS runs

. UNIONPORT - Homer &lt;;iwles Biggs, 83, of Unionport,
. 'died Sunday, May 26, 2002, 10 Akron HO&amp;pital in Akron.
He was born October 23, 1918, in Chester, son of the late
· Alban and Fanny Deicer Biggs.
He was retired from Weirton Steel after 33 years of service
·and was a veteran of tbe U.S. Army during World War D. He
was a member of the Christian Church of Unionport. the
Hopedale American Legion, Post 682, Amsterdam VFW.
· Disabled American Veterans of Chester and the Knights of
Pythias.
.
•, · He was a 32nd degree Mason and belonged to Unionport
Masonic Lodge No. 333. He was a member of the Scottish
·Rite of Steullenville, Wheeling Shrine ·Club and Unionport
.. order of Eastern Star. He was also a member of the Unlted
'Steel Workers' 25-Year Club.
· · Surviving are his wife, Helen Markle Biggs of Unionport;
.·knd two cousins, Nathan Biggs of Pomeroy and G()ldie
·Frederick of Chester.
Friends may call at the Blackburn Funeral Horne. 324 High
·Street, H~pedale, ~ednc:S&lt;!ay, May 29, 2002, from 2-4 and 7·
9 p.m., wllh Masomc serv1ces at 8:30p.m.
· · · Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. on Thursday, May
30, 2002, at Blackburn Funeral Home, with Pastor Hubert
· Granger officiating.
.
·
.· Friends may also call Thursday, May 30, 2002, at Ewing
. Funeral Home in Pomeroy from 7-9 p.m. Funeral services will
be conducted at 11 a.m. Friday at the funeral home, with bur·
.• ialto follow at Chester Cemetery.
·

.

I

LOCAL BRIEFS

Homer Bias

·

million from tobacco posts rather than vote for the Senate
settlement money set version.

aside for school
buildings, bringing
the total borrowed to
$345 million. It also
authorizes Taft to
make . an additional
$230 million in
spending cuts, · but
liins any cuts In aid
(or local govern·
ments.
The bill was needed to lllllce up for a
shortfall in the amount of state revenue
anticipated when the $45 billion, twoyear budget was put together last spring.
taft wanted' Householder 10 move the
bill through his chamber before the
Memorial Day weekend ended.
However, taft understood that a few
House members had commitments they
could not break, so he agreed to the
Tuesday vote, said Brian Hicks, his
chief of staff.
Householder allowed conservatives to
put ·an amendment into the bill that,
beginning in 2005, means workers'
cost-of-living pay increases won't automatically put them into a higher income
tax bracket
That provision won over tWo of the
more hij!h·profile Republican holdouts,
Reps. T1m Grendell of Chesterland and
Mike Gilb of Findlay, both of whom
had offered to · resign their committee

· The Dally Sentinel • P~~ge A 3

www.mydaillyMntlnet.com

Obituaries

'IU•d•y..., 21. 2~

Taft's

eiCah«&lt;t

Tueadey, Mlly 28, 2002

.New• Department.

,

The main number II 982·21&amp;e.

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1111111
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OntheWib

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· POlNT PLEASANT, W.Va.- Douglas E. Hoffman, 4S,
Point Pleasant, died Saturday, May 25, 2002, in Pleasant
Valley Hospital. .
Born Nov. 24, !9S6,ln Belvidere, Ill., son of the late
Eugene R. Hoffman, md Rosemary Hale Hoffman of
Belvidere, he was a truck driver and .-etired from the U.S. Air
Force.
He was also preceded in death by his paternal grandparents,
Clarence and Myrtle Hoffman.
Surviving in addition to his mother are his wife, Stephanie
K. Hoffman; a dau~hter, Crystal A. Hoffman of Point
Pleasant; a son, Cednc E. Hoffman of Point Pleasant; two
brothers, David and Bill Hoffman, both of Belvidere; and two
sisters, Karen Hoffman of Belvidere, and Carol Hoffman of
Orand Prairie, Ill.
Services will be 1 p.m. Thursday in Fogelsong-T\lcker
Funeral Home, Mason, W.Va., with the Rev. Mike Martin offi·
dating. Burial will be in Letart Evergreen Cem~tery, with mil·
itary service by Smith·Capehart American Legion Post 140
and Stewart-Johnson VFW Post 9926. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 6·9 p.m. Wednesday.
·

POMEROY- Units of the
Meigs Emergency Service
answered 12 calls for assis·
lance over the Memorial Day
weekend. Units responded as
follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Sunday, 7:25 a.m., North
Front Street, Donna Powers,
Pleasant Valley Hospital;
8:29 p.m., Ohio 143. Terry
Harper, Holzer Medical
Center; ·
Monday, 11:30 a.m., Scout
~&amp; ROl!d, Luella Fick,
7:06 p.m., Point Lane,
Rhonda .Stover, PVH.
POMEROY
Sunday,
12:11
p.m.,
Lincoln Street. Steven Call,
HMC;
8:57 p.m. , Gold Ridge
Road, Darlene Curry, dead on
arrival.
·RUTLAND
Sunday, 8:04 p.m., Gold
Ridge Road, Bernie ·Evans,
PVH;
Monday, 12:28 p.m., West
Main
Street,
Kenneth
Cordell, PVH.
SYRACUSE
Monday, 12:48 p.m.• West
Main
Street,
Vincent
Laudermilt, PVH;
8:08 p.m.. Front/Pearl
Street, Nicholas Sowders,
Children's Hospital;
10:04 p.m., Ohio 124,
M~rilr.n · Watso.n, dead ·on
amva . .
TUPPERS PLAINS
·Monday,
8:20
p.m ..
Barringer Ridge, James
Stump. Jackson General
Hospital.

Road closed
HARRlSONVILLB
According to the Ohio
Department of Transponation
. (ODOT), Ohio 143 at the
junction of Ohio 684 in
Harrisonville will close for
14 days, beginning on
Monday, for a culvert
replacement.
Motorists are advised to
use Ohio 684 to Ohio 692 to
Ohio 143 as . an alternate
route.

Lodp meets
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge 411 will
meet Saturday at 7:30p.m. at
the hall. Work will be in the
B.A. degree. Refreshments
will be served. Master
Masons are welcome.

· Plan revival

~ RUTLAND - Revival
services will be held at the
Emmanu~l
Apostolic
Tabernacle, located on Loop
Road off New Lima Road at
Rutland, Thursdfay through
Sunday at 7:30 each evenin~.
Evangelist Freddy Harns
from Durant, Okia., will be
the guest speaker. Pastor
Marty R. Hutton invites the
pubhc.

.

TUPPERS PLAINS ElStem Local Band Banquet
will hold a potluck on
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at
Royal Oak Resort. Families
are invited. Membm of the
woodwinds are to bring a
covered dish or salad; percussion, two two-liter bottles of
soda and chips and brass. a
dessen.

Tester found
POMERO't - A diabetes
blood/sugar tester in a black
case was found along Ohio
124 n Syracuse over the
weekend and can be picked
up at the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department.

File suits
POMEROY
Civil
actions have been filed in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Home
National Bank. . Racine.
against Brady Huffman Jr.,
Racine, and others, alleging
default on a mortgage agree·
ment in the amount of
$4,798.70; Beneficial· Ohio
lnc., Elmhurst, Ill., against
Robert D. Williams Jr.,
PC?mero.y•. and others, alleging
default m the amount of
$45,336.17; and Crown
Bank, Casselberry, Fla.,
against Russell E. Powers.
Syracuse, and others, alleg·
ing default on a promissory
note in the amount of
$39,179.81.
Personal injury lawsuits
have been filed by Melinda
Stanley, Pomeroy, against
Mary Evans, Middleport, and
others, and Rhonda K. Smith,
Pomeroy, against Leona T.
Taylor, Columbus.
.· A complaint for quiet title
has been filed by Frederick.
M. Burton, Albany, and oth·
ers, against CarolyQ L.
Smart, Albany, and others.

Licenses Issued
POMEROY - Marrla'e
licenses have been issued m
Meigs County PrObate Court
to James Ray Wheeler, 31,
and Angela Sue Clark, 20,
both of Southside, W.Va.;
Douglas Jay Huston, 41, and
Teresa Jean Hoschar, 43, both
of Mason, W.Va.; Tomas
Joshua
Lynch,
21,
Middleport, and Jacynda
Nichole McKamey, 22,
· Cincinnati; and Joshua
Daniel Weaver. 20, and
Rebecca Jean Bing, 35, both
of Syracuse. ·

Is 1111 End oflilt World
Comlllgt ·
Wlltrt art yo•
Gol11g1o Btt
fnllll's Going ltJ H!lppfll t
Ar1 Yo11Saft1

Alllblelti4J 1R
UaeBookof

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Studag Juae 5~
Wedaeaday ~ Evealn1

7:00P.M.

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Pomeroy, Ohio

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t11 CcMt St., Pomll'or&gt; Ohio
140-182-atse • Fu: 1._.2111
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
DtnDickel'eon
Publl.twr

Dear

\
01.-Kt~YHIII

Abby

COntrollel'

ADVICE .
otnlsslon. 'hll Y&lt;*f tblldm\ their
111111&amp; wast\'t nonnal - and
- arill. wp them 10
c:oun·
ael !II•
The followlna sips of u abusive
pt,rtner hl'ie btin ~ with ~
misalon hom the Prolect for
Victim&amp; C)f Family Violence hi
ttevlllo. Ark.:
.
. PUSHES FOR QUICK
OLVBMBtm Comes on
strona, tlalmlng "I've never felt
lovetf like this by anyone." An
abuser prusures thO new partner for
an uc:luslve mmmltment almost
lmmedilteJy.
·
(2) JBAtOUS: Bltcessl'lely pos·

!
NATIONAL VIEW

Undercut
:· Jimmy Carter~ trip to Cuba
hasn't accomplished much

HENTOFF'S VIEW

US. hqs sold out.those souls in siavery·in the·Sudan

• The Philadelphia Inquirer. onftmllt-r PN!sid(mt Ctlrl~r's
On Sept..6.~.,President Bush uppolnted ·
development It\ Sudnn, snld tlmt If th11
·
former Sen. John Dunfortl\, nn
·Btwhus nmendment be&lt;:am~ luw, "I
. He holds no portfolio from the Bush udministrntion. Nor
.
·
1
11
don't
think n!l)'bodY
could
atlot'tlnutttt
I
I
·~ Ep scopn 11111 nun ster, .lis 11 SI).CC a
hnve lll.'lleSS
In the u.S,
\jllpltttlmtu·kel,
· ever will where Cubu is ~oncemed.
·
envoy_ to Sudan to e1.plore wuys ot· end·
No nsset is worth thnt."
: But ex.president Jimmy Curter, representing the Curter
: Center in Atiuntu. vi~ited Cubu curlier this month. He's the
lng the suffering
civil wurInund
the attendltllt
The Btle~us amendment
grievous
thot country.
.... WtiS strll}lltld
1 h
first current or former president to visit Cubn in 74 ye1trs. He's
Danforth's
report,
out
of
th
Sud11n
nzllCe Act n I •
111reudy presented
his own man in Huvunn. And he really dislikes our country's
to the president, consists ol' umorphous,
Senate, nlthouah Ktln tiS Sen. Sunl
Cubu policy. . .
1
·
;al
th
Brownbnck nnd other RepubUcuns hud
h k
Caner is in his third decude us worldwide rover for peuce
pie·in·t c-s YdiPIomttt c proposa s 111
come out strongly for 11n end to shtverY.
depend on tl\e trustworthiness of .the
in Sudml, and .me "llbel'lll" DemOilruthl
, und justice. He' · done much good.... Where some interpret
· Mr. Cuner's missions through the yeurs us udmirubly princi·
Kliunoum government In the north. His
S"nllt'" lend·-hl" W"" •llent. Justus ltlt
foiled mission ensures the continued
""' 'UMNIS:J'
.. "
'""• " "" •
: pled, others view them us undercutting the foreign·affoirs pol·
enslavement
of
black
Christhms
ltlld
v\110
·
Ql'llllnizcd
protest
by black minl~tet'!l,
: tcy of the sitting president.
.
animists
in
the
south
of
Sudan
by
mill·
Conaressmen,
ev"nllelicltls,
und ·olltl)r
· · Nor is his own Cubu record spotless. His eft'ons in I \180
N
ti
1
rsl
i
humnn·rlahts
advocates
was
undllrwlly,
I
ed
th
b
8
helped lead to a tlood of more thon 120.000 Cubuns; many of
~g~e
r':f:~t In Ythee n:rt~~~~Al:bu~~ otlons, us Dun forth proposes, over Sept. 11 ended the mo~entum.
·
them criminul!i, in the notorious Muriel boutii".
· Republlcun Rep. Spencer Buchus, who 0P(}
. Ilwt1eer-idshs~ur·i·n· g, ..ren~oernth~~·~htltlltrolnm~n~t~~. Dur!na his cumpnl11n · or the pro~ Iden·
But, even though Mr. Custro is n dictutor ond thug, Mr.
h
1
lv
d
in
flndln~
o
l),. ''
• •
•
cy, Georae W. Bush sad thut when ~'On·
h
bee
d
. Caner is right when it comes to our Cubu policy. While the
ns
n eep Y nvo e
foreian o I developers t1re more likely to fronted b~ dil'llcult decisions, he would
· embargo - a creaky, droolin$ relic of the cold wur - hus
solution for the traalc human rights v O· venture Into Sudnn If there is peace und nsk whnt "~u· would do. He sho.uld u~k
lotions in Sudan, commented on thll
1 bill
1 h f t
"" •
: trapped Cubu economlcully. 1t ,hus ulso impoverished the
Dun
forth
~ro""sals to Philip Dine of the po1ill en stu ty ... 8 s eer on usy. the question ' now. In nny event, thl~·
· Cuban on the street.
,...,DI sputc h:
Enormous~rofits
ore belna( made
Louis ost·
·
i S
b Tull
f C011right
ndn) compn•slonll"'
•
~ oonservntlve - if lle I~
· And it's hypocritical throu~h and through, since we regular· ' St."He
says
the
government
of
Sudan
now
n
u
an
Y smun
to
be true to liis instincts and principles
ly !&gt;lay footsie .with humun·rtghts disasters Saudi Arubiu und
hus killed 2 million people. He confirms und other oil panners or Khanoum."
- will reject the Dnnforth Report ut\\1
Chmu. If Cubu had scuds of oil, or n billion-plus entrepreneurs
And
thnt's
why,
ns
the
St.
Louis
Post·
In fuvor of the resurrec·
8~ofstronlly
and consumers. its U.S. relulions would be us sweet us Cuban
the slave tmde; th e government goes Dis"otch reported, "Dnnlel Flnhcrty, ton
th"' "chus llJnendmcnt ns Dlek
down to the south, kian~s people und 1 ,.
ld
f h
1 1F 1
" "
.coffee.
entII o· t e nutf onuIll ore
an1 Armey, Hanry_
Hyde, and other mem·
v ced pres
h
I
I
h
puts
t
em
nto
s
avery.
rNt
e
recog·
Tr
c
tlo
"
: The reul renson the Cubun embargo persists? Politics 1111
11
nizcs ihe hideous situation, und then lie
e nunc •" aroup u Jnu no
bers of the Rouse uRked fnt.. ll •ltl be
· whut else? Rich und powerful. the Cubun emigre community
roposes
thut
we
mnke
on
urrunacment
companies
thnt
.trade
and
·
invest
over·
ueted
on by the Scnnte Just numth.
P
:in Florida (about 800.000 strong) wants the United Stutes to
h1 1
i .,
seus. praised Dunforth's report for not Meanwhile, the Wushin~tun Post'~
:keep the screws on Fidel Castro. President ufter president, . w~h\~es i~· ~~:r:~·Donforth did get the seeking to prevent forei~n businesses . and The New York 111nes' om•nttllsllc
' Republican und Democrut. hus crumpled under thts group's . government to ugree to plcd11c it .would from Investing in Sudan.'
mulpructice on coverlna ullun Wll~
passionate political pressure.
·.
stop
Intentional
mostly
uir
uttuc:ks
on
Thut
meuns
free
murkcts,
but
not
for
continued
b~ Dun Rather on CBS's "C!Il
: The Bush administration is no different. On Muy 20 (in · blnck clvilinns In the south. But, Jon slnves,
Minutes 11' u1td Mny 15! with tl\iii'C
:Miami, of course), President Bush will deliver a forelgn·poll·
Suwyer hus reported in the St. Louis Lust year, Bucchus proposed the only questionobly sourced stores uf "fnke
· cy address iri which he's e~pe~ted to propose ·new measures
Post·Dispatch:
. reullstlc wuy to end the kllllnas. theeth· sluves" belna. used by slnve u·ndi!t'S·to
:against
Cubu.
including initiatives to u1d Mr. Castro's domes·
.
' .
"The
Khartoum
government
did
nnt
nlc clennslna, tho slavery, uni.lthe lllln&amp; · collect redemption money. But Dun
; ltC oppoSitiOn.
agree to the ban on clvlliun ouucks until ropes of bluck women tuken in Slnve Rilthor did not himself, on that IJI't)grum,
ufter killing 24 civil ions In on ussuult in rnlds: tin amendment to tho Sudun Peuce 110 to Sudan und interview - wi!l1 hi
Februory on on unarmed U.N. food·pro· Act.
own translator - uny former sluveH1
grom site, for example. Its urmy is now This amendment - pmed by tho vlllaae chief•, black cleray, OJ' th~ fumi·
enguged in whut humon·rights groups House by 0 vote nf 422 to 2 - would lies of liberated slaves.
•
huve called the systematic displacement have btllTed forelan firms from rl\lsing The American Antl·Slavery Oroup
:
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
of civil ions who live neur lmportont oil· oapltul or liatina ·ita secu.rltles in and Solidarity International, who J'C~cue
: Today is Tuesday, May 28. the I48th day.of 2002. There are
exploration sites In south·central America capital murkeu so long 118 the slaves, have not been duped.
· 217 doys l~t't in the year.
.• Sudan.''
foreign company Is Involved In on and Dan Ruther was duped.
. . Today's Highlight in History:
·
Nina Sheu, of the Center for &amp;tiS cfevelopment In partnenhlp with the
· On May 28. 1934, the Dionne quintuplets - Annette,
Religious Freedom, und Freedom Khanoum government.
·
(Nat Htntoffls a nationally I'I!IIOWIII!J
:Cecile. Emilie, Marie and Yvonne - were born to Elzire
House, emphusizes: "Khortoum will At the limo, James Buckey, helld of authority on th1 First Amemlm111Jt tJm1
:Dionne at the fu'mily farm in Ontario, Cunudu.
never conduct sood·folth 'peace neaoti· Talisman 011, 11 m~or inveator In 11 the Bill of Rlshts.)
: On this date:
: In 1533. Englund's archbishop declared the marriage of King
Henry VIIJ to Anne Boleyn valid.
In 1863. the first black regiment from the North left Boston
WASHINGTON TODAY
. to fight in the Civil War.
• In 1892, the Sierra Club wus organized in San Francisco.
· In 1937, President Roosevelt pushed a button in Washington
l signaling that vehicular truffle could crosH the just·opened
·,
· Golden Gate Bridge in California.
In 1937, Neville Chamberlain became prime minister of
1v Wtu. LIITIII
the same week "could create a lot of The O,tnocrats dllemma comes to thl~:
Britain.
.d
.
WASHINGTON
Democrats
wor·
enlhusium
for both political parties."
• Convene In July, choo80 u nomln~~~e
: In 1940, during Worto War II, the Belgian llrrny surrendered
ried
about
money
and
momentum
t1re
Republican
Chairman
Mlii'C
Racicot
111\d
lfthey decide to accept fcdeml ctull·
:to invading German forces.
.
conslderinj .whether to &amp;ehedule their said simply: ''That Is the decision· Terry puiJn money, stllrl spendlnalt six w llkil
: Jn 1972, the Duke of Windsor, who had abdicated the
2004 national convenlion helld·to·helld will have to make.". Some Republicans berore the OOP convention.
· English throne to murry Wallis Wurfield Simpson, died In Paris
with the Republicuns' aatherina In late privately 1U11est Democrats could • Or .walt awhile, possibly until the
at age 77.
·
August.
encounter the kind of problem thut OOP Republicans meet, to try to shol'o public
In 1977, 165 people .were killed when fire ruced through the
Althouah
lldmittedly
a
gamble,
some
nomJnee Bob Dole faced in 1996, When attention wlth the OOP cl080r to the •lee:·
Beverly Hills Sup~r Club in Sou1hgute, Ky.
think
II
could
provide
an
lntriaulng
t.wlat
he lacked the money to match 11 barruae lion and start the 11eneral election cmn·
; In 1985. Dav1d Jacobsen. director of the American
to the presidentllll JX1lltlcal Huson.
of pro·Del)'locratic lids throuaho11t tile paljn on n stronger flnancltll bu~IH,
• Universlt,Y Hospital in Beirut, Lebanon, was abducted by pro.
Representatives
of
several
Democratic
summer.
Democrats ·initially . e~~opc~ted
: Iranian ktdnappers (he .wus freed 17 months later).
presidential
hopefuls
plun
to
meet
with
In
2000
Bush
did
not
u110
federal
Republicans
would have their convcntlun
: Tn 1987, Mathias Rust, u 19·year·old West German pilot,
party
veterans
to
discuss
timing
options
matchlna
"iunde
for
the
prifnlll')'
~~euson,
In
rnte
July
or
eW'ly August. Thr ~Jilnultu·
landed a private plane in M(lscow's Red.Squure.
.
and· make their own recommendations. .which let tifm raiN as much money as he neous conventions Idea nroHe when
Ten years ago: The United Stutes offered $\l million in aid to
Several
options are beina considered, wl1hed, but he acoepted the government Republicans announced they would ~~111 •.
victims of the tlghting in former Yugoslavia. The House of
each
with
Its own 11et of problems.
~_!lCY # anthd fund·ra1 sina tire•tr1ctmions II vene In late sutpmer, setting th AuauKt
. Representatives voted to lift the government's bun on using
Leadina
possibilities:
.
c
.....es .or e aenera1e1ec on c0 pa1gn. date this week.
: aborted fetuses for tissue transplantation research, but the tally
• Keep their Initial dates or July 19·22, A repeat of that formula would let
Both pnrtlell ore very conscious or the
: fell short of a veto-proof rnl\iority.
·
six
weeks
before
the
Aua.
30-Sept.
2
Republlcuns
spend
money
Bush
rulscd
2004
Summer Olympics In AthenH
: Five years ago: In Denver, Timothy McVeigh's attorneys
Republican
convention.
The
conventions
for
the
primary
seoson
all
through
the
Greece
which will atnrt Aua 13 run jUKl
· rested their case in the Okluhomu City bombing trial. President
.w.ere sepurated only by a couple of weeks sum~r until the convention, then have over two weeks lind dlatruct ~tbi lc uttcn·
Clinton paid tribute to the 50th anniversary of the M11rshall
in 2()()(Y but have been u month or more the fildcrlll lorpsN to waae a short gen· . ~Jon from ~lltlcs
Plan with a speech in the Netherlands in which lie urged
apart ~~everal timeA in recent decades.
era! Clllllpalgn
p bll
·, h
1
. today's leaders to revive economies in the former S?viet bloc.
• Movc'to eurly Auausl. But that would Bush ralsect' a record·settina $100 mil·
u c nterest n t e CUIIIJ'lll!liK huH
· One year ago: President Bush honored Amertca s veterans
leave the convention still fur ahead of the lion for a contested prlm!ll'Y In 2000, and dennltellt fallen over tho yeurs, unll telc:·
: with the Memorial Day signing of' lc~islm.ion to construct a
Republican convention, and the mid· ml1ht ral110 mucb more than that without vlalon v ewershlp of the convcntl~ns Is
: World Wur II monument on the Nuttonal Mull. U.S. Rep,
·A tOI picsoo ibly
lddlmln pri'"""' opposition In 2004. New cam· halfwhatltwJUin I~.Therolcof· ~ull·
:Joseph Moakley, D·Mass., died ilt age 74.
.
is~~ ee:'crats'i~~act wou
• paiait''nnunce laws have doubled the ventlons hll8 evolved. over the last lmtr.
: Today's Birthdays: Actress Carroll Buker is 71. Actor John
• Hold It over the same four days as the 51,000 un Individual donor could give to century from IJOiectfon of the no1nlnce to
Karlen is 69. Basketball.lWI&lt;.of·Famer Jeri'}' West is 64. Singer
Republican~. This could give Democrats a campalan. After the convention, the provldlnsa 8Crlpted four-day lnlumct'l:lul
Gladys Knight is 58': Singer Billy Vera Js 58. Singer John
o chance to blunt the OOP's edge of hav· Bush cam~ill could choose to take Its for tho likely nominee an41ils pur1y.
: Fogeny is 57. Country singer Oary Stewart is 57. A.ctrcss·
ing the last word but ml1ht illso 1lve allotment of federal money for the aener· Politic•! &amp;elentlst Byron Shafer of till!
; director Sondra Locke is ss: Sin_gcr Roland Gift is 40. Actor
them less of the public's attention than if al election.
University of WI8COn81n·Modlsun suid
: Brandon Cruz {TV !!Cries ''The Courtship of Eddie's Father')
they were on their own.
. · In 2000, presidential nominees for both the etTect of duellnJ convention" on Clllll
·is 40. Country singer Phil Vassur is 40. Rapper Chubb Rock ts
"Right now we ore In the process of panicsaot almost $70 million, but fuced patans could be haiti to J)redlct. .
34. Singer Kylic Minogue is 34. Actor Olenn Quinn ("A.ngel")
talking to puny leadership and others restrictions.on spendina privately raised "lt would be a hlah·stoke8 move:;· 1111\1
is 32. AcU'Css Monica Keena is 23. Actor Joseph Cross ts 16.
roncemed about this," suid PIU'IY spokc11- money.
Shafer, who ha8 wrlf,ten oxtcttslvcly
woman
Mnria
Curdtmu.
"We
ure
not
In
For
their
part,
the
Democrats
probnbly
ubout the conventions. It chon11c:Mti~ IH\:
Thought for Today: "Time does not become sacred to .us
umil we have lived it, until it has passed over us and taken wJth
uny hurry to make a decision." ,
will raise less money for the piimurles, dynamics In ways that ore hurd tu ~~Ct."
Democratic National Chairman Terry much of which will be spent on their light (Will Ulttr covm Pf)lltlcN tmd pniiiiiH
it a part of ounelves." - Joh(l Burroughs, American author
McAuliffe says holding the convention to chooHe a nominee.
for The Msoc/ated P111N8.)
.
and natural lit( 1837· 192 I). 1
.
trip lfl Cubtl: He's nm our mnn in Huvunu.

Nat
Hentoff

°

.

:TODAY IN HISTORY

°

Democrats look to dueling conventions for advantage
.

I

I

wssi'Vel tails to~~ tantly or vlslh me llfiiiY," lnstsd of: "IIUTianary," ~entless Yetblll abuSII.
~ly; prevent$ yo~~ from or~ "You'~ h11rtlna me by not
(l l ) RIOlD SEX ROLES:
aolna to wort ~au~ ')oo mlaht dol.na whatl tell you."
liltpt!Cts you to serve. obey, remain
meet aomea~~e"; thceks !tie mlhllat
(8) HYPERSENSITIVITY: b lit home.
on your tar.
.
ea$lly In ulte&lt;l, tlahnina hurt feel•
(13) SUDDBN MOOt&gt; SWINGS:
(3)
· CONTROLLING: . lnp when he or she Is ruiiY 11\ld. Swltche$
frOm $wee\ to violent In
ln~ates . yo~~ Intensely (espe- Ruts t!loot the lnjustltts o( things
mlnutts.
~Ially lf yo~~'re late) aboUt whOm that are .lust a ~rt of life.
yo~~ tatlled to and ~ yo~~ wt~re;
1'9) OUJ&amp;L1'Y TO ANIMALS . (l4) PAST BATmRlNG: Admit&amp;
beps all the lllOI\ey; Insist$ you a k .AND CHll.DRBN: Kills or punish· to hitting a mate in the past, but SI)'S
~"lon 10 ~ anyw~ or ck! 11s animals brutally. Also1 may the penon "made" him (or her) do

\lllptet ehlldren 10 do thlnas Ulllt.are
'4) uNiuw.ISTIC BXPBt'l'A· ru btwncl their ability (whips a 3·
n NS: Bltpete&amp; you to be the per- ~r-ok:l far wtttiJI&amp; • dilaper), or
feet mate arid meet his or henmy l.lllY tease them until they cry.
need.
Slxty-ftve pen:ent of llbusers who
(5) lSOLATlON: '1\ies to c:ut yo~~ beat their partOO will also libuse
oft !\am ftlmlly 11ncl rri.l\ncla: •~uses children,
oeoote who are ~r supptJrtm of · (10) "PLAYFUL" USB OF
"tauslna trouble. ' 1'1111 llbuser may FORCE DURING SEX: Enjoys
deprl\le you of a phone or tar, or try throwing you down 6r holding you
to Jlrewnt you tmm holdlliR.I.iob. down aaalnst YQUr will during Sll~;
(6) BLAMES OTHER'S l'OR ftnds thi ld111t ofn1pe 11xtltlng. .
PROBLEMS OR MISTAKES: It's
(11)
VERBAL
ABUSE:
always someone else's fault If Constantly trltltles or says bla·
· ~thlna aaes wrona.
tantly cruel, hurtful things;
(7) MAlCBS OTHERS RBSPON· deQnlde.!.t curses, c:alls you ualy
SliU.B FOR HlS OR HBR PBBL· natlllls. rnls may also involve sle~~p
lNOS: The abuser says, "You make deprivation, waiting you up with
l1_11, __ . . .

Sensitive to poison ivy?

'

•

'• Qlltltlont lltl\ow that sum-

.Family Medicine

mer lmptoachlna because l
have aon Ivy qaln. As a
' child had aevere reactions 10
lt. ~ eyes would be swollen son Ivy reduclna both the h·
shut I'd have bllatert on ~ quency and severity of
• hand&amp; and arms and ranerally episodes you o~tl'lerionce.
· bean Tl,atra
. lobnle,. ~mowall .~~ P t
Polson Ivy ud Its close rei·
1•
.......111
··- tha11 atlves, polson 01k and polson
quickly hellla. I think tllllt this sumac1 cause Itch&gt;' blisters I"
may be because I eat cashews. ~about 115 percent of those .who
l' ve retd that they cont11ln are e~tposed to them. So, your
small amounts of an oil simi· llfe·lona untl-iendly relation·
~ lar to the n~sh-caualna oil In ship wltl\ polson Ivy Is actual·
polson Ivy. Thua, ut1na the ly not that unconunon. To get
.. nuta bullda up my Immunity. 1 little more technical, fue
. ~altepwtllcreal w~~~:n.~~ ton:~~a. ~ rash Is actually caused by
e~tpoaure 10 1 !Jlant chemlctl
: rernidlea, thlnka I have leaa called uruahlol. This ''natural"
trouble now bec:auae I ql!lnd chemical Ia the 1tlcky aap
leaa time In the woocla. What found within polson lvfa
do you think? .
leavea, ateml ana root&amp;.
., · Auwtrt J''le been happily The hu1111n Immune a~atem
married
than few
30 """lilrea
a ~rim•""
e~tpolure
yean udfor
havemore
leamecla
••,
-.~
thlqa about relatlonlhlpa In to an otren na allerpn -In
, thla time. When rny wlfo thla caae uruihlol. Thla f\nt
' hi k
thl [' 11id 11 expoaure doean 't produce a
· 1allly,
n •l lome
Ill ve1 do thl1 l'lllh, but It prepare• the
pay attention.
· for two aooct reuona. Plrati Immune ayatem to reapond to
. ahe underatanda the way aubaequent expoaurea. The
•. analy1e a problem. Second, next ''bNih" with the plant
lhe 1\la a aood head on her brlnaa about a profound allel"'
ahoulden iild, .therefore, 1he glo reaponae tllat you clearly
may hive fl1ured out aome· remember tram your child·
thln1 I've mliaed. That 11ld J ·hood polaon Ivy eplaodea.
think ~our apouae probab\y Bach additional expoaure, If It
• hla a valid point abOut your occun relatively soon after
. dlmlnlahed txpo1ure to pol· · the prevloua one, will reault In

a similar or a more dmmatlc

n1sh. The alleralc response of
Is Mllnerally more
ltuen=at It is In adult~. By
thiHI · l would exptct you
6 hav~
ewhat less trouble
w than you did u decode or
ugo.
Also, ~our immune system
mtl)' have become less "tria·
aer h11ppy," since you have
gone sevetal years without n
large outbreak. of polson ivy
n1sh.
Cashews do contain an oil
that Ia almllar to uruahlol.

chlld~n

lffltr Abby Ill WWIII.D.!arAbby.COIII
or P.O. Box 69440, Los An~tlts, CA
90069.)

MEIGS
CALENDAR

ltlm, Seven11 yean ago 11 well·
known ntltuml fo()(h advoo11te
Community Calendar RACINE - Racine Al'll
1\ltommended eatlna three
Ia publlehld ee e ,.. Community Organization
polson Ivy leaves ev11ry we~~k
aervtce
to non-profit will hold a meeting and
stlll'tlng tram the tlni~st buds
groupe
"!llhlng to dinner lor acholarehip win·
In the spring amd continuing
announce 11111tlnga and nere and their parent• at
as the plant grows. Thus the
apeolel eventa. The cal• the Racine American
person was consumlna pro·
enclar
11 not ·deatgniHI to Legion Tue.aday at 8:30
llfllSSively lllrQe doses of
promo• ea111 or fund· p.m.
urushiol. By the Ume summer · rtlaert
of any type.ltema
Is In full ·swing the lllt'J!II
are printed only ae apace Wedneadey, May 21
leaves were suppose!! to pro·
perrnltl and cannot be MIDDLEPORT - OH·
vide Immunity to poison ivy.
guarantied to bl printed Kan
Coin
Club,
Didn't world Instead, lt
1 epeclflo number of Wednesday, 7 p.m. Trolley
caused lots or misery for poi·.
daye,
Statton, .
Middleport.
son ivy sut'fllrers.
.
Metting
followed
by auc·
The only good prevention
Tueedey, Mey 21
lion.
Public welcome.
for polson ivy Is to keeJl the
urusblol ol'f your skin. This
can be done by avoldlna the . r---=-----=-----::----':"---.,

!f3~~~:~~~~~::'c~~~n; g/~r~ln~Yort~~P~Vn~~ecJ~~~

reaction to eatlna thee nuta.
Typically, a "caahew alleray"
piOduoe• a raah around the
mouth 11nd may c:auao an
upaet atomach.
Entlna
ouhewa can even trluer
uthma In aeverely aenaftlve
people.
.
There 11 no medical evl·
dence that conaumlna amall
arnounta of an allera1c aubatance produces deaenaltlza·
don to that Item In the way
alleray ahots do. Instead, it fs
more Ukelr, to aenshle (that
Ia, "rev up') the immune aya•

lble protective llarrier cream
when your rlak of exposure Is
high. Promptly waahlng with
aoap and Wiler after expo1t1111
al1o deorea1ea the rlalt that
yilu will •ctually pta polaon
Ivy r111h.
("Family Medlclnr" I! a
weekly colultm. 7b ~ubmlt
~11tlor11, writ• to John C.
, D. 0., Ohio Unlvmlty
Co 1111 of Omopathlc
M1dlcln1, Po 0. BOJt 1.1 0,
Ath1111, Ohio 45701. Pa1t
.columns al'f available online

lltl

, Many people can't walt until they
retire. They tlilnk of retlrina 11 a siJnlll·
cant life e~ent. In reality, lnatead of 11.
1peclflc occurrence, It 11 more of a
proceu that re!Julrea plannlna and
adjuatment to a life ataae that can fa1t for
1everal yoara.
· .
Even thou;h retirement Ia a very lndl·
' vldualled experience, moat wortcen ao
throuah varloua phate1 11 they retire.
The flrat ataae Ia known aa "pre·retlte·
ment." Dul'lna thla time, employ_eea •tart
· to detach themaelvea from their work· were worklna. Travel Ia usually top prl·
place. They bealn to "wind-down," u orlty for the people who chooae this
wellaa conalder how they will be •pend· path.
ln(_tlielr new·found time.
Some people take . the Immediate
The aecond period Ia lhe actual retire· retirement routine when they retire. They
. ~ ment when they are no lonaer belng paid continuo to. bo buay with many of the
• tor their work. Robert Atcllley, wl\o haa extra-curricular activltiea they were
Clone extonalve reoarch in thl1 area, enaaaed In prior' to retirement.
'• notea that mt1ny new retireea follow one · Otllon chooae the reat and reluatlon
of three retirement path1: the hone~· option. Thlal1 when formerly ve~ buay
.., moon option, the Immediate retirement employee• decide to live a life or ea1e
routine or the reat and rela11atlon when they retire. They don't become
llfeatyle.
Involved In ·community actlvhlet nor try
The honeymoon choice Ia when new hobbloa. However, uaually after
.: retireea act laU there are alway&amp; on vaca· they have been retired for awhile, their
· tlon. They are '"tremely buay dolna all amount of outalde actlvltlel lncrem.
of the thfnaa they have been wantlnato There are people who may e"pericnce
. do, but never had .the Jime while ihey a period of dlaenchantment after they

Becky
Baer

1111

at wwwJhradlo.o"B/jlll.)

retire. They have trouble adjustlna to the
audden innctlvhy and non·produetlvlty.
They feel their self·worth decreaae
because they nre not gAinfully employed.
Thla phue may become more pro· '
nounced If the penon move1 or lose&amp; n
8pouse.
FollowlnJI the dlsenchuntment or the
rest and relilxatlon phaae, retll'llea may
need to 10 through a reorientation stage.
Durin~ thll time, they tend to "take
stook' of themselves and discover how
they can enjoy their retl~ment better.
They may_ decide to becotllll Involved In
1t new interest or leisure actl vlty, volun·
teer In the community or move to an area
better auited to their new lifestyle.
AI people become comfonable In
their retirement, they aet.lnto u routine.
For some this may occur almost immedl·
otely followlna rlltlrement; for others It
can takea many yeara.
When people plan for retirement they,
of course, .will want to make aure they
cun afford their aolden . years. But In
order to fully_ enjoy thla 1taac of life,
they ahould alao carefully conalder how
they will be spendlna their time.
(IJtcky Baer I~ an agenl with 1he M«lg3
Coumy Exttl~~tlon Strvlce.)
.

_,

in th• Sentinel ...

1 ""dllulol101&lt;111('1"•\qo

'•mlly

Looking ahead to retirement

.,•

it.
(15) THREATS OF VIOLBNCB:
S1ys thillll$ like, "['II break your
neck," or "I'll kill you," and then
dismisses .them with, "Everybody
talks thllt way," or "I didn't really
mean it." lf the libuse hils gone this
l'llr - it's time to get help or att
outl The toll·free number fOr the
domt!5tit; 11.buse hOtline i5 (800)'7997233,·
(Pauline Phillips allfl her da1111t·
rtr Jetmltt Phillips ~ltart the pstll·
dtmym Abigail \4tn Burtn. M-Wrt

II

Monthly

AMUIUy

I 1'1

'II II

HOUrlY

1

$17,720 $1,477 $8.51

2

$23,800 $1,110 $11.57

3

$30,040 $2,1504 $14.155

4

$31,200 $3,017 $17.154

15

$42,310 $3,1530 $20.52
lrr•. rrrr •d

111

llnrrr•.llrPrl

I llddi!•H 1\, 1'11•q1r.ul!

'amttv
1111

Annuetty

t•,n

Monthly

I PI

HOurly

1

$13,210 $1,101 $8.44

2

$17,110 $1,413 $8.88

3

$22,530 $1,878 $10.12

4

$27,1150 $2,213 $13.11

15

$31,770 $2,148 $15.40

llirl!l'.'ll&lt; rl ( hdolrrrr (lip I" 1\qr • 1'1)

.,..

)I HI

11'1

'•muy

. Annually

1

$8,880

$731

$4.21

2

$11,840 $1115

$5.71

3

$115,020 $1,252 $7.21

4

$18,100 $1,1501 $8.77

5

$21,180 $1,7155 $10.21

Monthly

Hourly

992·2117

''
'

•&lt;1"

•

.

.MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today • 992-2156
~-..-.......i

'

�1\112 .. - - -

Srinra. l'rucaoi'
~~ ~
Shld&amp;; Ric.hud lt. ~
: Dua
R \\\!bum.. Salem. ~ FnDr.es ~
Y~. Qiftm. W. ·
·~ C'lrltol ~ 1'aaDtl\ill.. llaO s-t

Alumni
.......,

,...............,
81

~931. .Howud Wallace RllSSell, ~~~u!'~:i·orN::..I~
~~~ Hed:ett Pideos. MK~d.luton. Jean Smut Sidclall. Cinc-inoa~: tsy
1940, Charle
Ent minaer. ~th Sallllden t;lwtCol~blas: Dc!ri' M:~

Olarttstoft,. W.

: Mildrtd Asbury Mosely, Colemla,. J

' ~driua&amp; Milt$ M-.

, ~. 'h.; \Yalbam 'IUior.

l&gt;llnllu w:~

1941: Biit Diles. Albens.
.1942, Henry Oatworthy.
Middlepolt:
Bvblil
Hackett Mullen, Fort
Mytrs, Fla.: Kenneth
McElhinny. Middleport,
Joseph Youns. S•.lesv.ilte.;
Jobri W: Call. Long Bottom.
Marion Rife, ~ton.
1943. M;ary Si:tnes Mitch.
~ling._ W.Va.; Marjorie
Diles Mttc.hell, At~ns:

r.o~rtR~~~~~.::~: .

Syracuse; Ro~na Wam:n
Young, Salesville; Patricia
De'vUl Kloes, Bidwell.
1944, J~anne .Young
Le.mons, Syracuse.
1946. Allh:d Sc:ll'bercy,
Gallipolis; Richard and
Doris .Barker Bailey.
Middleport. and Martm
Carson Richmond
1947: James M.' Amold.
Johnson City, Tenn.;
Mildred Oblinger Bailey.
Lebi~h Fla · Joan Karr
Moms.' Pomeroy; Robert
Fisher. John Fult1. Cl11ra
Gilmore Riley, Middleport;
Madeline Johnson Derring,
Grove City: Roy A. Evans,
Canal Winchester; Wilma
Herrmann Parker, Long
McLIIIJtlllll Bottom; John KauiT, Point
Pleasant: Virginia Wise
Betz. Hillard.
1948, Dorothy Miller
Roach and Doroth Chase
Anthony,
Mi~leport;
Lorraine Riggs Neff
Ravenswood,
W.Va.~
Charles Dyer Baltimore·
H
Featherstone,•
arry
Wooster.
1949, Katheri~te Bachtel
Dallus, Agoura Hills, Culif.;
Moumlna
Hazel Hawkins Ginther,
Upper ArliniJIOn; Robert
Mills; Pomeroy; Jane
Custer Hilliard: David
Diles ' Athe·ns· 'Virginia
Gro~nn Holman' and Gerald
.
Ant ony, M,lddlepon, and
~~:~~ore Gilkey.
Byer,
19SO Robert Richards
Columbus; Donna Russeli
J.{,yath, Wellston; Charles
IIICk ·
Stobart, Columbus; Fred L.
Hoffman
Ru mond
Walburn Norma Jean Cusier Mary dllmore
l :lddl
'
8 rewer, M
eport.
.
. .
19S 1, Don Payne, Dayton; 8.111 Swisher,
Myron Duffield, Roscoe Wise, all of
Middleport· Clara 'liylor Sanborn and James
•

2002 SE DISTRICT TRACK CHAMPION

ColllmiM&amp;s;

~IV lftmiiiiDII Thoma.s.. c:hes~We; ~

RIWlini~ MISOII,,W.'h.; ~l.lt.et-Oul. Pl:ailll
PI~•· ~ axmalell\, £)'.; ~
Willll!'" Wal
• · ~~U; Harold ~·
. Artadi•, F)l.; Ju ~ Mib:h ~- MlnQQ:
Cuolyn Pien:e ,Litdlflelcl. Nnt Plel.wlt;

R~tth q.ue Jenkins. Thlll'lllll\; W.,ne: Wood.
·Knox. ville.
•
.
1953. Arlene Bowles. Kill(. Brooll, N.Y.: .
Mary Bfldley Stmton. MUiettl; M!Uiuet
~ ~uemann. Syn.cuse N.Y.: Williii.D E..
19s4. R':·Mill Gwiudo~,Middleport.
Carl Taylor, Col~tmbus.
,
19SS, Yvoone Haekc:tt ,Sc~.s=:
Rooald L. Fl~. Westerv
. ille;
W~Y
Pomeroy; Sheila Stover Hu~ , aster.
)9S6, James G. Mournlllll.. Ma~~;
Uam
. a. Chauncey Stoban, Col~tmbus, Jllllllll
Hawkins ~a.lker, Patuka.la; Larry ~p..
Col~tmbus. Marlene KniPP. Yeauger, ~
Winchester; ~ K. Lewas. Bellefoowne;
Betty ward Field, Ttotw_ooct.
.
19S7,l.arry Baker. Rachard Hovatter, Gail
Stllmbo Hov~uer, all of Middleport, Junes f.
Bo":les._ Pomt PleaSIDt: Robert Henne&amp;)'.
This arant is part of ~_y•s Priori!)'
Galh~~· Bubua Captetna Mon., Pomeroy;
Jlqlulalions
whicll Will provide •
James •lson, Sandusky.
totll of $21 ~ over three years to •
19.58, Phyllis Stanley Baker. ~eannette
brOlCI ranac of oraaniDtioos th&amp;l employ
CrooksW~mas, Judy ~d, Mtddl~:
effecti~ and lnnovati~ approachei to
James t~s~, Slllldusky, C~ B~ .Oiler.
lkcrease tllbitml llse in clisadVIIItq,ecl c:am:.
Stockport. Malton Wayla~d. Bag Praine, June in their communiqes, but we also will dow· munitl.es.
'
Edwards Thomas, Clteshue.
.
ment with rescudt how effedi~ thO effort is,
No~bet 1001, LeaKy
19S9. Noonan H,. Manley. Columbus; so it em be reprodueed in .other communi· liRt round a~ $J'O.S
Hersth\)1 KnBP.P· Sabma.
. . · ties."
to 32 cqlnintions in 18 ·
1960 ·Denms Walburn, .Bev~lv: Ohvua
The Thborllnstitute isa reseuch and oval· &amp;QIIs t'br this pnt pn11r11n ue
Bo~les Lockett, Shaker Heaghts, J~n Houck. uation linn ihat ~sand cvalutes clitferof tobac«&lt; use and
Lexmgton. N.~.; Carter French, Maddleport. ent techniques. for heilth education. This pro- awueness
unona
the
priorit.Y J)OIIIllatiOM
~9~1. Dons Rice '.'f•lburn, Beverl)': gram will include presentations 10 pueraiS IOIIJ been tvrted by the tabrt«o Industry.
Wilham Stobart, Canal Wanchester. .
. about seconclhlncl sriloke in a vuiety Of comThe Amenct.n uaa.c:y. Foundation fs a
1962, Charlene. Davis Dilley, Maddleport, munity qcnc:ics.
.
nationaJ,
i~t ]IUblic health fowlcla·
the Rev.. Oeraldme Hupole, Penns•ulten,
Chelyl Healton, Lep:y's president and tion in Washinaton,
tMted by ,1M
N.!.; James R~. qurott; Helen Taylor Poll. chief execuli~ oflk:ei, praiseCI the Tobora November J998 D.C.,
Master
Settlement
Malford Center, Nacbolas "flllbum, ~ortb Institute and CAA for coinmitment to muc- A~t.
Fort M~rs. Fla.; Coleen Watson Ohhnaer. i~ and preventing tobacco use.
The foundation collaborltos with orpnlaZanesvalle; Sandra Hysell Woodyard,
We are pleased to offer this arant and~
tions
that are interested In decreasina tOba«o
Pick.ertn1Jton;
.
Ba.....':"'ra
"
.Jones Heg Icr. expand auort&amp;
~•
_.. uce exposure to
to .....
• coriSIImf!liOII MIOIII all aJOS and populations
Lex.m1Jiovn. S.C;;. Make Shafer. Kenm:~w: hand s.moke 1m0111 the children ofGallia and nationwtde and has establishecl pts 10
Ga .•. Be erly Pemn D.lx.oo, ~l~~rkston: Mac~. . Melas eounties,"liealton said. "Leaacy is reduc:c youth tobacco use, cleclellse ex~
Pamela Lowery St.em. Ma~dlcport, DIVIC ~itled to worldna with oraanfutions to secOndhand smoke, 11\C~Use s~KCCssl\11
Hoyt, East Lansang,. Mtcb.; Manni~&amp; who em do .the researCh that must be clone guit rates and reduce clispuitios in access 10
BauMIJardner, Powell, Texanna While and Identify, approach anchddress their com· prevention IOd .cessation services and l.n
WehruniJ. Pomeroy: Pete Walburn. munitics' nee&lt;fs."
exposure to secondhand smoke. .
Jacobsburg; Don Roush, Gallowa)l.
1963. Jeanne Bowles Gross, Gahllllna. ·
1964, Lillian Slavin, Columbus; Cinda
Sauer Harris, Sandy Ohlin1Jer lannarelll,
Carolyn Nicholson Fiench, Mlddl~port.
I
I
196S, Manha Nicholson, Nashville, 'Ien'!·i
Al~n ~allace, F?rt M)'er, Va.; Davtd
Vujak~ija, Reeds valle; Judy Kerns Well:
Shade, Suzanne Bradbury Sayre, Racine,
Diane VnnCooney Lynch. Paul Gerard.
OUR REPORT CARD .
Middleport. ·
.
1966, John Blake, Middlepqrt
1967 Rose Marie Hackett LexiniJton Ky.
.j FROM THE PROS
IN .•.
K h M' Elhi M Ill and' M • H' :•
at Y ~ nn)' u ns,
araae ams
Blake, Maddleport.
.
·

Is

WE'RE WAITING ON YOUR INPUT.

CA~ITOL HILL

..... TT\1/Wf,

""".....

GQ(f/Jigtvt Liated
tHE LEOlSU.TOR
at Capitol Hill ••
amons the beat
new counea in
America.
Golf Afagnzint
readera save THE .
.
JUDOE at Capitol
Hill a 6 out of 5 ratins. A Golf Mt!g~Uint ranked Grand
National in Auburn/Opelika and Cambrian Rldr in
Greenville aa &amp;mOI)I the Top I00 Couraea in America
A Golf Dip.Jt nam.d
the Trail aa one of
the Top 50 Tripe in
the world. A Come
aee for younelf wh,y
Frtquenl FiY~r Alngn·
%ine liatac:l the Trail aa
one of the Top 10
Tripe in the World I

AI.A-

II
FLAIR
NAME FURNITURE AT DIICOUNT PIIICIII"

IIT.I

OALLIPOLII I'IIIIIY
WV2H11

•

'

in the Sentinel ...

~·f•

ap."

I

11U ~~~r."
·
Sm Wlsttlltlft, J~l~ Blldhl'\tt, lind
PR.OCTOR.VILL£ Oallha Bri11nn11 JtlhnliM nil brouaht hom\\
Academy's ISO points were easily 11\dMdulll tltltll · fw CllliUn, ~WI~mnn
~h to win ltle 200l Division n cruised ta wins hl both tllv I,600-n\t:ter
Soutl*\st district .atrls trncli ilnd fleld 111\d 3,l00.m\\ter runs, Wl~11n nnthamplonshlp on S&amp;turduy.
l~td ll full ll llttQnd~ 11hel\d of tilt
Wh~ersbura l:llnli1 dw;est to the serond runner In the 1,600, J100tlna 11
Blue An;els :w1th 8S points ii,~ Oilllla time of $:24.0. In the 3,200, s~ ~~~m\\
won Its se11011th swlaht district title.
wlthhl 20 n'lttt~ of lllpplna the sw·
Melli,&amp; tlnl~ed ninTh with 211 Pf!lnts. ond-plnee runner with nn ll :42.9.
River -vt\1\ey's alrls finished tlild tw Boolmtr Ill\~~ liS district cllnmpl·
lith with 23 ~fnts.
on lntllv 300..mem hurdlllS (49.0) 11nd
For Melas, Brooke Bolin ildvllnwd w11s seeond In the 1OO.mcttr hurdles
In both hunlle events, tllklng fourth In lll\d third In thtlong .lump.
the IOO's anti the 300's. Shonnon Johnson Wllft tho l!OO..mettnun by 11
Soulsby flnlshed fourth In the 400 full six llttQIIds fur the dlstri~t title.
(1:03.11)
her season.
· Johnson, who wns nlso llll·distrltt 1t1
The Me s 4ll200 tnm (Bolln1 wlleybnll 1111d btlsketbnll, mn n 2:l·tS
Cassie L , Meglln Ollrnes anu for~ new Onllln Attldemy rerortt. Htr
Soulsb)') 11lso lltfvnneed, flnlshina Stllndard broke the m11rk s~l by ~1\
fourth (I :53.$).
NellUs In I (2:23.0).
''Th11t 4lt2.00 Is quite .llllllCOOmpUsh·
The Anaols 11lso lollll.Ctl points by
ment," suld Meigs conch · Mike wtnnlnl! the 4l400:meter reluy
Kennedy. "I think tbnt's their PR. time. (3:3 L8), the 4l 100 (~ 1.6), the 4:d!OO
The)'hnvebeenlooldngfurwardtothls relay (10:17.3) Md tuklna soeond In
l't DAM Poi.O'fll

LOS ANGELES (AP) Kevin Brown wns placed oo
tho IS-d~Y diSilbled list with
·discomfort in his riahl elbow.
It w11.~ tho seoollff time th11t
tho Lmi Anples Dadaers' nee
has aune oo tho Dl..; &amp;!nee
undefaolna SUflti'Y last Sept.
21 to repnfr 1.\ tom flexor mus·
cle, Brown left SundftY'S gl.\me
111 Arizonu lifter just 20 plll:h·
es. ln his previous outlna, he
threw 11 8ell.8011·hitb 106.
Brown, 38, h11s"been on the
dlsobled list five times since
the beglnnlna of last suson,
ond siX times since slanlnan
seven-ye11r, $lOS million
conti'IICt In December 1998.
He Is 2·3 with 11 4.06 ERA In
nino sturts.

Cook Jumps In
, r1nklnp

PHONE (304) 875·1371

"ll~~D

Marauders advance

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) .
- Honds down, the strength
of U.S. soccer Is aoolkeeptna.
Americans mil)' not put tlie
ball Into the not very often,
but they sure do keep it out.
Too b11d Kasey Keller 11nd
Brad Friedel can't start In
aoolut the some time.
They 11ro different, yet they
ore the sume. It's tho position
U.S. co11ch Bruce Arena wor·
rios 11bout the lenst, which is
why he is conslderlna split·
tina the flrst two anmes of the
World Cup between thorn.

AUIUIII.oH&amp;.IKA,

.

Wins
boys' title

position

ALABAMA'S

FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN

II

1t p~lk11per

'

'1'1111 DILIVIRY
''1111 eiT·UI'
'1'1111 PARKIHQ
'1'1111 LAYAWAY

W~Burg

u.s. Socctr d11p

GNAND NATIONAL

HIPS

NEW YORK (AP) - John
Cook didn't win the Memoriltl,
buthe got " smllll consolation
prize • un exemption to the
U.s. Open ut Bcthpnue nnd the
British Open 111 Mulrfleld,
where he nearly won the claret
jua I0 years qo.
The world ranking was the
deadline for the top SO players
to receive a free pMs to both
Opens.
While Cook come up two
shots short of victory 111
Muirtlcld Vllloae, routlds of
65·69 on the weekend cnmod
him 11 tie for fourth ut the
Memorllll und enabled him to
climb 21 spots In the mnkin11.
to No. 42.
Nick Fllldo, mellllwhUe, will
huve to rely on. s~cllll invito•
lion from the U.S. Oolf
Assoclutton or ao through u
36-hole qualifier next week ln
order to pluy ln his 60th con·
secutlve millor; the lonaest
ucttve·Rtrcllk In aoif.

OI'OI.t~~~l'ffiiiiiUNI.~

totijmle

m

t~ &lt;blOO (I :~l.l).

More thttn 11 hllndf\llllf mil~ Ana-e\~
plnte\1 In the mp fuur m ttdVIIOC"e m
~1\e~dt~Y'S

~lt1n11l

m~t

ill

Mei\OOWbi'OOk Hiih Sehool. Sttph1ml
Jllhnson (who also nm oo the ~1\~r
An».tl reluys) took ~tttmd In the lOO
~1:\l), 111\d IA.~IIe Sie"l~. fullowhli
btxllmer, helped the A~ls to 11 (lilt·
two flnlsh In thll 300 hurtlles t'M),
t.lndSI!Y Ct~ldwell Wll~ ~tttmd ln the
.400 (I :UHl.
Mealin Humphreys w11s serond In
the pOle v11ult fur tl\c Angels, d~ruina
sevm1feet In her t'll'llt ytnr In tht twnt.
Nikki M~Kinnls finished thlrtlln the
I00 to 11dv11n~e. whH~ Courtney
St1rtlael w11s rounh In too hUih jump.
1'w6 lAdY Rnld~~ posl\lJ top·l'ilur
lndlvldu111 l'lnls~s to ndv11n~ ttl th~ ·
reulonills. RV's Hllft\1011}' Phillips qunl·
ltloo fur her ~'tlnd rtl!lonul m~t by
1'11\lshlftllhirtlln the dlstus by unltmd·
Ina n tlirow of 110 f-eet, tcru ln~hts,
IIIIIHaa ... AIM~~noll

Robinson and Roberts claim All-American honors ·
STA"' ."!POAT

OLATHE, Kttn. - A polr of Rio
Grande junio~ eamed the NAIA's
highest honor for 11 Stlldent·athletc In
the field of competition, .Ill\ All·
Amerit:un oward. Jim Robinson nnd
Ashly Roberts onrnlld the honors lit
lhe NAtA Notional Outdoor Meet
over the weekend.
Robinson, from Lakeview, Ohio
finished sixth In tho men's $,()()().
meter rnce w11lk with n time or

23:08.63. It WIIS the seeund strulght
yanr thllt Robinson nthleved the
honor tlurlnu thll outdoor seMon.
Roberts, 11 f:whlltlOn, Ohio nntive
stored 11 sixth plu~e finish In the
. women's dlse11s with 11 hetwe of 140
feet, 8 lnchts.
·
Roberts nlso plnoed In the shot put,
flnlshln~ elllhth, mensurlng 43·3.
Thill ellort eclipsed the 42· 7 effort
which wrote her nnme in the Rlu
Ornnde record bonks ut the Rio

lnvltntlonQI, S.he finished 12th In the
hnmmer throw With II throw Of 1-41!•3.
Senior Amy Kline (l.ol!nn) ll""'
nel'l!d n I.Oth pl11ce finish In the
womon't hummer thruw. Kline men·
sured ISI·II.
. On the men's side, Mutt Boyles
('fuppel'll PlniM, OH) was 14th In the
~.000-meter run with n time of
I$:24.34. He wns disqunlll1ed in the
5k rn~e wnlk, nn event he WI\S
frtvot\ld to win.

. Dllt to Robtru' pert'ottlllln(e the
Redwomen scored four points nt .the
m~~et to tie for 43rtl place with Siena
Hlliahts (Ml) nnd Sterlln~ . (KS).
Doalie (NB) wns the women's
Nntionlll Champltll\,
Robinson et~rned three points for
the Redmen. The Rio me11's tenm tied
for 62nlt with ll11st Cctltral Unl ve~lt.y
(OK) und Windsor (ON). Asuza
P11clt'lt (CA) won th~ mtn's title.

Wild Things debut Friday . Cubs eclp Pirates, 3·2
WASHINOTON, . Pn.

(AP) .....;

Boeuus11 they eun't tup thu mt\lor
tulunt pool. · lntlopcndent
lelljues rely on plnyers with little or no
1\tture In orannlud bu~ebull. 'l'hnt mke~
IIWIIY on of the minor leuauo btiMebull's
ll'lldltionul dmwh'lt cW'ds _ the opportu·
nlty to watch plnyel'8 us they ust:end to
the ml\lors.
With few ldentlnuble pn)5J*Is, . the
Independents find It dlffieult to tnnrkel
the quulhy of piny. S1:0ut~ any it Is
below thilt of oraonlzlld Cln!lll A bu5e·
bnll, whil!h reuturcs top prospects In
lholr early yeiii'S or development. ·
Also, many lndependcnt8 move fre·
quently, wltl1 three of tho Frontier
Leuauo's 12 tenms rclotutlna uf\c.r lust
season. Only one of the fQ..yem··old
lcuaue's o~alnnl membel'8 • Chillicothe,
Ohfo • still has " tenm.
The Wild Things nre promoting n 1\Jn
niahtllt the bllllpttrk thnt cosl8 nTumily
orfour little more thnn on Plrnt s box
~~ent. A fnmlly with two -children under
the oae of 12 cnn P11Y $311 for four aen·
eral ndmlsslon tickets, rour hot dOM8,
four sol\ drinks, u pmarnm nnd pllrklna.

WC8t0l'tl Pennsylvm\lll will get its lounh I Ujlues'

1nlnor lcti&amp;UO bosebtlll t'rnnohisc when
.tho Woshlnaton Wild Thlnus debut
W tlnosday fn the Independent Frontier
League.

The bla question Is: Will. the Wlltl
Things milke the turmtlles sing?
With Wa8hlnaton locntcd allolf·hour
from" Plttsbufllfi, and with Whcellna,
W.Va. nnd Morann town, W.Vn. not
much fwther nw11y, executives think It
should be one of tho teuauc's bctter-

llltended franchises.

·

Still, there nro m'l)or obstucles to
long·tmn sucoess os the Wild Thlnas
beain ploy In 3,200-IIC!ut Fulconl Field, 11
bi'IUld·new SS.6 million bollpark locAted
ni011Jslde lnterstute 70 nelll' u 8hoppina
mall.
The stuble Clll88 AA fr11nchlses in Brie
(Detroit 1laen) and Altoona (Pirate1)
nre mt\Jor-leque amllatcs lllld receive.
steody supp!y or prospects. But
Waahlnaton will play In the indcpendenl
Frontl~r L.oaaue, 11\ona with the tilready
e&amp;tabllsh\)d JOhnstown Johnnies.
·

PITTS.BUROH (AP) - Murk Prior hus hud tverythhl[!in his nrst
two stttrt~ fur the Chh:lll!O Cubs.
A l'ustbullthul hit 99 mph on the l'lldur IIUII. ti)(~\\llt!nt ~tltnntnnd. ·
fixeeptiolllll polK\\ Ulld thll kind of tonndt!nce expected i'n!m ohe ol'
the best collclJc pltchell!i.
Everythh\11• thutls, 1.\)(~ept whllt the Cubs httve lncked nil senson _
nnmely, timely hlttlnll !'rom n hll!h·prleed otl\:nse thut hus big Mmes
but certainly isn'tll~tthlll enouah bill hlu. _
.
Prior wtts c~trei\Jlly 11111 up by munuaer Don Buytor to lace llghl·hlt·
tlnl! Plttsbu11h In his t1m two career stllrts, nnd he wus just M el'fec·
tive Monday ns he wns In benthl'l! the Plrntes 7·-4 Wednel!tluy.
But the tiut~ome • Plrutes 3, Cubs 2. In I0 lnnlnus • was f11r different, und for thut Prior cenulnly wt~sn't respon~iblc .
.
The Cub~ t1ounl.lered for dut~h hlt5 all ni[!ht btfore gettinl! late•
lnnlnt! homers from Corey Pnuerson and Bobby Hill, only to hnw thl!
seldom•used Keith Oslk deliver ugume·winninll RBI pinch sln111e off
closer Antonio Alfon!lllcu (0· 1),
The Cub5 WMt~d scorin11 chtln~~* In the t1rst, ~econd, tlt\h and
shtth befol'l! Prior was lined trulllnll 1·0· following Crall! Wilson's
broken·bllt RBI slnule In thet~etontl.
Pntte~on tied It 111 I with his third htllilcr. 1111' Mike Fetters In the
ell!hth, und Hill Ued It uguln In the ninth with 11 hulller on·Williams,
yet the Cubs lltlll didn't win.
Alfonsecu (0·1) rt!tlred the t11'8t two batters In the lOth btfore walk·
Ina Juck Wilson, illld Briun Olles ~lnaled him to thlltl. Oslk, hitting
,I38 und O·for-6 us u pinch·hitter, won It with u solid single to ten on
u 3·2. pitch.
.

�www.mydallyaentfMI.com

Mark Redman has Cleveland's number
aJiVB.AND (A.P) • Just one week
· Mft R~ ...s 'Mnkss in 2002,
~ a cam COft!i!k:te aame and had
allowed I'UliS tt\i $MSOII INll any
pitd'tet in the AL
Notany-.
Two staru ..UW the Fttble Cleveland
lndiihs haw llxtd the left.tlander's problems.
Redman pitd&gt;.ed a 1001-hittet and beat
the llldiw fur the second time since May
21 on Monday, leadina the Detroit 11aerS
to a._t \ll&lt;by oV« Cleveland.
,.~ make him look like Cy x~."
Indians manaaet Owtie Manuel wd.
'"And be 1Nkes liS look like a minor
1eaaue club ar somedlina."
If~ ~had never d\rown a com·

Dleteaame
.be ~tthedistancein
his lft\liOOs start, lllowina 10 hits in a
1~ 1-p\lch outina qainst the Indians.
Ori Sunday, he was even better in gettina &lt;:ol'l'lplete aame No. 2 with 120 pitch·

es.

•

off Danys Bae&amp; (4--4}
the 1iam homen llld five RBI .
Si\llltled.· Cleveland'S lbree-pme winning "That ~o~.ilo we got," said a frustrated
sttiak.
Manuel, who last season had K~nny
Redman alloWed ju t Ellis Burts' sec- Lofton, Juan Gonnlez and Marty
ond-inni~ homer, a two-out inate to Cordova roamina the outfield in Jacobs
Ricky GutierTe&amp; in the fifth and a pair of Field. "We just can't genente any
harmless in&amp;les'in the ninth.
o~!'
Redman Walked one. lfUCk out four
Jackson's fii'St homer since A~. 2711ast
and got 16 outs on grounders, including season fur San Diego t~ave the 1\gtn a 4two double plays.
I lead in the fifth.
·"Redman had 111 exceptional change- Rnmon Santiago beat out an infield sin·
ll'p;" Indians third baseman 'JTavis Jle with one out before Jackson, who was
Fryman said. "His location was better 1n a 3-for-JS (.ll8S) slu!!JP. hit a 1.0 pildl
today than it was last week, and he from Baez over the wall m left.
pitclled inside eerlier in the count."
"I was just h~,Y to get the barrel of the
It also helped that Redman was facina a ba1 on the ball, • Jackson said. "It was a
Cleveland team more closely resemblina fastball and he (Baez) supplied all the
the Triple-A Buffalo Bisons than the power. My first time up, he threw a fastdefending AL Central champions.
ball inside and I said I was 1101 goinato let
. Wanting to load up his lineup with it happen qain."
right-handed hitters against a lefty, Burts came in battinajust.l61 (10-forManuel started an outfield. of Jolben ~~) since ~ur:ning from a . hamstring
Cabret-a, Bruce Aven and ChrisM~ lliJury that s1debned him fur e~gbt games
_ a trio batting a collective .IS I Wtth no and hurt his !imina at the plait.

MAJ

Nets edge

? J ts . . . . . . . ._ _ _111

.....

.....11--1)......... ~

~=~~;:•.-.
~
.._.,_ ... , -~·cu a .._

.... _......._ ........

' .

'

ss

{25-S"W..Cin.

IE

DIYIIIONI

Clatlrl•••

o.•

. W oll&lt;:ltllo M ....... In -.I.W.. t.a.

a.turday, "•- I
9am

. .......,.. "••• 2
9am

lifnecaharyl

.
. DIVISION IR
.
AU Rtglonal Flnall It Semifinal 11tH, Sa~, 1 p.m.
· At C.rl "Ducky• lchraecllr, U.UIIon
: ;·ElYria Clth. (14-5) va. Cia. VASJ (12·12), Friday, 2 p.m.; Waruen JFK

'a::'

· LAungln, Slnpm, S4crtlarlal, ~Stab,
Couches, Straight Badt, Rod!"""

Mill

Round, R~. Calf., o..rbtd,
Eaam, Nighhlan&lt;h

Ia's

me

I • • II

I

I

- Shannon Shipley, seventh,
discus; Juke Bodimer, seventh, pole vault; Justin North,
sixth, long lump; Kyle
Jenkins, seventh, long jump
and sixth, 1,600.
.
RIVER VALLEY - Chris
Nida, elahth, shot put; Brodie
0111, elshth, I,600; Jeremy
Wolfe, seventhi 3,200 . .
ALSO OF NTERBST Wellston senior Brad Youna
advanced to the realonala in
two distinctly different
eventa. He placed fourth In
the shot put and fourth In the
I00 to earn the right to compete this week .... Wheelera·
burg won the team title
despite
competina
In
Dlvlslon Illlut aprlna ....The
'Bura'a Jared Chamberlin and
Belpre's Jeremiah Reamea
placed one-two l.n both hur·
ille races, reapectlvely.
Chamberlin also won · ilie
lona jump .... Wheeleubura
athfetes scored polnll In
every event except the pole
vault ... ,South Point sprinter
Donte Pennlnaton won the
I00-meter crown (11.1) and
finished aecond In the 200.

•

Daily
Sentinel

Nat l8'f"'"&amp;lbio far acc:ldtnt&amp; or lou ol f'IOI*'Ir·
•11 purchall&amp; mull be reono..d off.&amp;lle

P\111110 NotiOI

Sunday, Junt 2.

THI IYII:IIACINI
IIWI" DIIT.. tCT
WILL.
ACCIIIIT
IIAL.ID IIDII'O.. A
t ..1 CHIVY I· 10
lltCIC·UF &amp; · CYI.•
MANUAL T"ANI.
AU IIDI MUIT II
IIICIIVID IV THI
DIIT..ICT NO LATIII
THAN 1 'M JUNI
17TH aooa.
THI T"UCIC WILL
II IOL.D AI II. NO
WAIIIIANTY
u'"IIIID 011
IM .. L.IID IV THI
IIWI" DllntiOT,
T..UCIC MAY II
INII'IOTID AT THI
TfiiATMINT 'L.ANT,
VILI.OWIUIH
IIOAD,
DU .. INQ
IIIOULA" IUIINUI
HOUIIIIAIHtiO,M,
WI "IIIIIVI THI
IIIQHT TO .. IPUII
ANY 011 Al.l. IIDI.

Rolmhment&amp; will be avalloblt.
I ' I I I' •I • Ill I I, I II , ' 1 t I

Claaalfleda

I, ,.

I

, ouppllto provldodl Aulh
•~

9111!11od Envt!Optl
P.O. Box 1~, MtiOen,

lll3l'011·t43B. Sla~ lmmoalatolyl

PrH Suppllol, Potllgtl
Start lmrntdltltlyl

Oonulnt Opponunltyl

'

(7401 446 -5 347
,

(7401 379-2720

AT WTII Elay 8ulintll1 ~~~~~ PJH,
NOT MLMII lond nt!M l I-IIIo
Alclgt ln&lt;IUIIrltt. Ino.. P.O. Box tl13:1~
Choltln001f, TN 37'11 or

1· ~----~---

DISH!
hill liM

lwilll·-···.
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lw12 .....,..... ,.10
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~-• 1 MaaWllfl . . . . . • t4
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. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1111 ..

S22'l'l
IIIII

IUV 'OIIOLOIUIIIII

'

:: AATTINCI-Yklro1 ~1•. 1471 londl,
; lin 'r111011001 .11101: ICJetko, lin !!!tgo,
~NI: IGmolldl, II. !.ollie, .1111 lloll,
ChloiiiO~I lolvw, o\ltnniL.~~I
' LMr. I
I .lUI l.OMtiiiOI r"Ktnalt

....

,

• I'IUNI lloil. ~· ._., llonclt. 1M
; ,,.noiilci, 411 ~ ,._,~~~~ l.o\llt, &gt;101
j
Htftdn, ootorec10t : YKI!V, Montrlll. 11:
'· l'ltlrt, 0010~1 N: lplvey, M1- M:
' ,lava, l'lol1dl, ••
' 1111 -......,..,. HOIIIIan 47; HIIIDtl,
: Colotado, 41; VQUerNIO,

MOnirt'ii,

441

• .....,., MIIWIUI!f!IJ 41: lnQfllnl 1.01
' AngtiH, Jl;
Montrttll 11:
: . l~monlle. 11. Lovlt, Ill: LWall1tr,

v.. ro.

· , Cololldo. N.
,
·
• HITI - vtdro, Mol!lrell, 701 "-11,
' ~lorldo, Hi l'lorrt COlorAdo, 14:
; Vlluo"oro, MontrNI, 13; Lcatclllo,
, 'lorldl, 13; l'lotllnt. Phil~, 12:
• CJonoe, Aatntt, 12; VIlli, II. l.oull. ta.

• 001111.18 -Lowe!~.~. 23: llolllno,
: PMidlfphfl, 17i vfdlo, MontiMf, 11:
~

lplvef, Artzonlt 11; ward, Houlton, 11:
JlnkN, MlhuautfM, te: Vfnl. ec. L.otM.
• =IS
•IIogwtlt, jiO(jli(ln, 11.

:•

M.. "'UN!-SIIoll, Clllo!_go1 18;

,•
•· lin r'ranoll001 11: ..,.m•~.
• "Houit0f'1 17: h•eon, Milwaukee, 14:·
• Burro~~, Phlladllphla. 1m: HllfOII.
c:olofN&gt;, u: v~. Mon!NII, ta:

.,,

lllllflln. 1.01 Angtiii.J.I(,Ioyd, ,....,

.

949·2734
Refreshment

Stand Open

hiaopenlnga, 1&amp; yr.

s:::'

uptrltnCI, Ctrtlflld

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: ...A. l.lklfl II BIOramanto, TBA,
,.uneo1111ry
•

::
. .• NLLuden

Spacee Avail.

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MaglawgQd Lalst

llltdtvllle, . Ohio 4i In Melga, Athanaand
'l'fa 11 1ooeptlng bldt Waahlngton counllta, ' '-~:!:
for 1 72 Pllltngtr · Open 24 hours .
bua.
.
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lpeolfiottlonl for . 7 Days per week
(177·353·7023)
bu1 o•n bt ollt1intd St. Rt. 7 Tuppers
Call for mo/'1
by utflng lilt
Plains OH
tulltf'lnltndtnt't
•
111/ol/rtt 19llmall
olflot at '1'40·te7· c:ALL 667-6329
WY031256
1071. OuoiH w?ll bt
op1ntd In tilt
trtltUrtr't offlot II ~ .-~~~~-- 1"':----':--'"""l:"'\
noon on l'rlllly June
GIBSON
lire IOU ltl'tM7
7, aooa. The bolrcl 1 GRAPHICS
Cell now fw yeur
l'tlti'VII the right to
1'11101 lillY or 1ny PlrP w. -11111
- rour . """''
or the 11111 licit
""q '''""'ahoulcl lit i1lltlad
"l!d for lollool lui" ....., 1M our l1llf 1111'
ancl malllcll8t
rau .. 1=11111 r••
laatern · Lonl
""
rar.
.
lohool Dtllrlol, · Our•- IHII•

.: •
Iunday, June a
••
Boaton at New JerMy, TeA, II

~ ~iiiOtlllry

May 31 • June 1

Connie's
Child CARE

L.ooat

:::1 ~:':~•

.' .

I

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. . . p.m.

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lid lOr ?lilt

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' 8oaton at New Jeraey, 9 p.m.
Friday, May 31
.~tw Jtraty at Bolton, 7 p.m.
Sacramento II L.A. Laktre, 8:30

BIIIPeroonaVAuiOIMOr1gagt
. Bod Orodll OK!
Sllrt•UI)Il Co·tignlll OK

Publlo Notloe

For Fret lnlormllllon,
C.ll TOll FrH:

-

.

Business Services

And MUCH MOIII

•• :
Tuladay, May 28
: f..A. Lekera at Saoramenlo, 9
• p.m.
·.
'

$8.00 co.lumn lnc:h wttkdlya
$10.00 column ln&lt;lh Sundaya

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' •

Conftranot finale
Sunday, May 1t
: New JerMy 104, Boaton 97
Monday, May 20
:Sacramento 98, L.A. Lakers 80
••
Tu11day, May 21
Bolton 93, New Jeraay 88
•
Friday, May 24
••
)aoramanto 103, L.A. Lakera 90
Saturday, May II
Boston 94, New Jeraay 80
Iunday, Mey H
L.A. L•k•r.!,) 00, Sacramento
~ aa, aenaa '""' 2·2
;
Monday, Mly 27

2 Avg. Size Rooms Cltlntd

Aystilnawr • Marlin VJashnw•.15149

.. (1&amp;·7) vs. CuyahoQa Falla CVCA(18-8), Friday, S p.m.
·
At Filii Cltv Mamorllil Jlllld, Findlay
Huron (t3·7l va. Hamler flatrlck Henry (23.,.). Friday, 2 p.m.: 01111
{15·1t) va. Doylestown Chlppew1 (23·2), Friday, 5 p.m.
·
At lllllelonllllll Hlalllollool
Cola. Grandview Hta. (20.9) va. Vtr~elllit 124·1), Friday, 2 p.m.; Cln.
. Summll Country Day (19-6) va. Cln. Mldt 1'1 121-61
• ·
Al VA Memorial Stadium, Chlllllolftt
Minford 120.5) va. Hea~~~6-2), Friday, 1.1 a.m.; Chillicothe Zane ·
J'raca (2$-4) va. Sugarc Garaway 120-8), Friday, 2 p.m.
·
DIVISION IV
.
,
· •·
All R11Jional Fln111 It StmHinaleltH, Satunhly, 1 p.m.
· ·
At lllvera Fltld, LlnoMter
.l-eesburg Fairfield 121·5) va. Toronto (21-8),) Fridly, 2 p.m.;
· Reedavllfe Eaatem (111__.1 va. Newark Clth. (23-6 , Friday, s p.m.
.
At l!d.Sancly llltld l!llcltl
.
Bet1avtlle flli-11) va. Tal. Ottawa Hula (18·8), Friday, 2 p.m.;
Rlageway Rlclgtmont
va. Ecton (1 5·91, Frtdey, s p.m.
•
At
rge Dly Flllcl, ltyrta
·
·Windham (15-5) ve. Sandusky St. Mlry'e {1S·8), Friday. 2 p.m.;
Cortland Maplewood {13· t 3) va. Bertin Center Wlallm Aeaerva {21·
6), Friday, s p.m.
At Jim Harrlaon Fltld, Huber Hltahll
S. Chartaatan SE (17-9.) va. St. Henry (21-8), Fridiy, 2 p.m.; Ruaala
. (14·12·1) va. Ft. Loramfe {26·2), Friday, II p.m. .
I

Everything MUD Goll
o.lrHIIIHupt...
310
a......
NIU. OWe

·
.

DISTRICT TRACK RESULTS

sao

· UPI

-lima-

Jessica Kerns took home Individual
crowns In the . I 00 hurdles, the high
jump, and the long jump for the
~edwomcn .... Just five girls compt:ted in
the first·ever pole vault competition at
the district levei ....Every member of the
Gallin 4x800 and 4x 100 relay teams
pluced in individual events .... Gulliu hus
had a ut leust one relay team take firlit
place at the district meet every year
since 1996.
·

••

tas-D

WI ltart at 11:00 p.m. Julll 1111
!laid
IM, SS ""llttf llnllll ot blinQ vour own
mallttf. FIIIG Palnt ~ Filla paint .- be
Diablo ~~~ue.
c:nt. $20, 1000 c:nt. S3S
Gra.nd Opanii'IQ. Ju111 1st Doot prina
IWaldld (SIICI'I at: Paint, And ntW
palntba. ""rl&lt;tf In lilt bolt. &lt;ftwlng . ..be
held •:oo p;m. c:a• MMta Of se1-e3u

u.x.

.

er, Ty Simmons, placed third
in the I00-meter dash to
advance.
Brown's fellow Raider,
senior John Ollli finished
third in both hurd e races to
return to the regional competition.
·
A trio of Oallla County
runners advanced in the 800,
as Oallla Academy's Ryan
Hudson and Roush and RV
freshman Charley Nibert fin·
!shed two·three-four In the
race.
Nibert's time (2:03.5)
ahaved almoat elaJ!t aeconda
off hla own previous RV
achool record.
•
Sayre thlnka that Nibert's
pt!rformanca wu Indicative
of a succeuful day for the
Ralden.
RV'a own Roush, freahman
Chris Rouah, placed fourth In
the 3,200-meter to advance
for the Raldera.
RV'a D.J. Frazee alao
advanced to the realonala in
the hlah jump, clearlna 5
feet, 10 inchea.
Othere placing at the dis·
trlct meet: GALLIA ACADEMY

Pad WI
mw•as._ I.IIIM

~

W&gt;ur place for sports

All Ra~l flnlla It llmllltllllltM, taturae~ 1 p.m.
,
At HelM Pli1l, Gillon
: 8ay Vlllalll lily {14-13) va. LaxlniiiOn (20-7), Friday, 2 p.m.; Nl.r.
, SVSM (18·11) va. Dlllara (~rlday, S p.m.
·
At c.M
ttniiMi'l
Poland Seminary (18-4) "'·
~4Friday, ap.m.; c:an. s.
. {23·21 va. Chlgnn F1ill Kanaton 111-71. Flldl • 5 p.m.
At Xenll Hlalllltlool
. Hamilton Bldln (21·7) va. Cln. Mclftcholaa fl&amp;-101~, Friday, 2 p.m.;
: 'Cola. DISalll 118-9) va. Sprl~ (1M), Prlday, o p.m.
.
At Glint MUIIIOI!!!II 8tlitlui11, Zlntlvllle
.
: Cola. Watteraon (27-2) va. Sttubeuwtlll 118-5), Friday, 2 p.m.;
.. Grtenflald McClain (1lj.4) va. Aklhmond Edtacn (t8-8), Friday. s
, -p.m.

as many points as possible
wasn't the Devils' main goal.
"We could have placed
facwn ....._11
hlghe!t he said. "Run Josh In
rwa•
the lw, runTy (Simmons) in
·
·the 200 and some different
Brown says thbt Ptrry looked things It we tried to load up.
back and smiled at him dur- we could score more points,
~~ .~~
.
I
Both Pet~ and Brown shut but our aoal and purpose n
coming here was to try to
I1 down eilt Yan d cru l10d In . advance
kids as far as possl·
to the nnlsh.
ble llld to the next level."
"I Just didn't want lo run
Oallla also won the team
18
that :WO
hll!'d as I could title In the 4x800 and 4x400
bocauae there waa no point In -l•r.•· The Blue Devils r111 a
It," ..ld Petty.."lknewJ wu ••
aolna to place bec.1auae no 3:3 .8 for their crown with·
one waa really with mo and out tho aervlcea of their beat
Dunham and Brown.''
400 runner, Perry, who, like
~!mY • Who allo won the Brown, wae exr.erienclna
zoo-meter title (22.2) • wu . bllaten llfler runn na on the
aectlnd . In the race (50.11). Fairland Hlah School track
IUrfiCe.
Brown WU third (.5 1.0),
Daniel Rouah, Tom Boae,
. While the 200 crown wu Cody Caldwell, and ry
Ptny'a flnt title In D•II, the Slmmona comprhed that
Ienior hid WOn the 200 It laat championship s~uad which
year'a Division 1 meet.
ill .-..
1 1
"l klnda backed off In the w ...vance to t e rea ona s
. tour to take thlt home with at
Meadowbrook
on
me," allld Petty.
Wednesday. ·
Devlla . fin·
Brown advanced in both
· AlthOIIah
lehlcl fourth coach Tony ::id~~. and the 400 for the
Thompaon al!d that tallylna . Another Blue Devil sprint·

.

u't'u

•

: '

I OWN YOU - Tlaers pitcher Merl&lt;
Redman pitches a&amp;alnst the lndlens In
the alihth 1nn1na Mondey In Cla\'eland.
Redman pitched e complete game In the
4·1 wln o\'er the Indians. {API

Junior RV sprinter Knrl Beth Taylor
finished third ln the 200 to advance.
Thylor was also sixth In the long jump.
Oallla junior Sarah Russell placed In
both the shot and the discus, but did not
advimce. She was sixth In the discu&amp; and

0

All RlgiDNII'Inllllt llmlltnlil ..... ~ 1 p.m.
At Dullllll Coltlu~a~=lltiUI
~ Mount -....non ~~ ve.
Alllr
(29-81, F1lclay, a p.m.;
• Dublin Scioto
~ 1-5), fitdiy, s p.m.
·.
At
Stltl ~ OIVIOii
W. Chaettr Llkola w.-(19-10) va. Falrh!d (1&amp;-11), F1lclay, 2 p.m.:
· •Mlllanl (21-5) va. Cln. St. XaYilf (17-10), f11!1aY, s p.m.
: '
At c.ltllll Llonl Plaid
. · 'rbl. Start {22-1) va. Mlnalllld Mallllon (14·12), Friday. 2 p.m.; Cll.
: St. lanatiut (2~-3) VI. N. Olunatld (14-8), ~. S p.m.
• At Tfiurman.Muneon Memorial Stadum, c.nlan
·
· CuyahoQI Falla {18·11) va. ShaQI Hta. (17-8), ElklaY. 2 p.m.; c.n.
•GluinOik (111-10) va. Young~. Boarllinan (2&amp;-3), FridaY. s p.m.

• ' ~· high ac:hooiiOUmatMnt.
. DMitDNI

Allainst the rest of the m~ors. he's 1319 With a 5.05 ERA.
'"Theit's 1'10 reason to change ~ a~me
n\111 until they prove they can b1t me,"
~edman said. "You make yo}ll' pitches,
.and ~ can get ~~~cybody out. The funnu- .
lals our defense. I threw it over the plate, ·
and thl!y made the plays."
·
Damlan Jackson hit a two-run homer ·

......

ll\,_ ..

Dftc:lloMl sa. Rt. a. ""' of Q\a.-w
to ...... RcL to 0111 ..... to
wtlll'aLMI
.

, ln 1\\s iast two starts, Redman bas
alloWed the Indians just one earned run
and 14 bits. And in nve career Stilt$
~~t Cleveland, he's 4-1 with a 2.27

Advance
,.
,

lt'l,..
.....
....,.,...

r*rinc11 for the 2002 boya

the~.

the shot.
Others placing at the district meet:
0ALtiA - Lexxl Rees, t1flh, 100 hur·
dies; Katlln Maher, seventh 1,600;
Tiffany Sanders, sixth, 800; Kari
Adkins, eighth, 200.
RIVER VALU:Y - . Stacy Rankin,
eighth, high jump: Beth Moore, eighth,
800: Sally t\ttar, fifth, 3,200.
MEIGS - Games, fifth, 400.
AlSo Or INTEREST ...,. Rock Hill's

._

k._,_.-..

atl-.aiSS

REGIONAL BASEBALL
PAIRINGS
I

~UMBUS {AP) • Reglolwl toumiiMIII

Mi:lting SOine. slow\ breaki"" pitches in
with his fastball, Redmll'l eas1ij handled
the IUtbt-hlltina Indians, who ll&amp;w scored
just tfw runs wfllle losina rour straiaht to

SE

Mt.-..-.

Uttourtul
lpilt proflill

Tlllntntl

,,., lnfol

TAX ~IVIIW IIIIYIOI
Waula you lllll .lo rtOIIvl
IS% ol your 10001 IIXtl biOI!?

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Top Dnoss Pustunos with Sulfur
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11 ~-c.. -··· for bum5 , pens, cages, &amp; lruilcn

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Ill 311, l~l~~·· LOll

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IPrMdl,

I

~II

OI~Mt, . beG•
IIIII, NIOI

",..,taot

• ClothMil lltotrto
Logl, kll.

Miriam Alllton 11m11y 1111,
• 111 111111n1 Dr., Qilllpalil,

MIIV 11011\, lilt, ~unt Ill, I·
'· ltdnlOI!I luht Alloclvnt

1-'" llkt, Ill TV, llkt,
, • IOIId 1'111 Glt11 Ool!tt
Tlblt, Air Condlllonttl,
CMI\1 1111- Htlltra,
CIOII\InQ• VtriOUI 11111,
IIWinQ Mlohlnt I 011\tr
• milO, lltml.

daya.

.

~'R~

Self·Storage

4359St. Rt. 180
Galllpolll, OH 45831 .

.J3795 Hillnd J/J.
Pomll'll)o Ohio

'

Houra

(740) 446·1044

7:00AM • 1:00PM

Mond•y·Frlday B·5PM • Saturday B-2pm

I.ICHNSED M....IAGE
THERAPIST

HighBl Dry

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR

to 10'X30'

Kris
Kanleckl
10

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In:

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Delivered
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Health Problema?
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LIMITED OPENINGS

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81:.:11 S'lC10'

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•

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUaiON

Hill's
0.6 Ctvi.C I Gravely
' (10'x10' 610'1120'1 Self Storage
MIIIIV Fargu1on
Ba1han Road
' (740) 992·3194 ' 29870
Parte &amp; Servlct
Racine, OH 4577{

SIAVIN&amp;THI
TAl-COUNTY

740·742·3411 . .,,...,,

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Luve name I No.

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oonaldtratlon,
I+ lOrN 1111 II, II!, 114 with
40'd0'•1?' biiOit lluildlno,
t4'll. llicltnl - · ••, Ill'
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dalllt, •• 011111111 11001 with

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Now Open
11 a.m. • 8 p.m.
Mondaythru
Situ relay
Cloald Sunday
100 Wfd llllln St.

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Ptlllllllll
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T~N

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mo. pd.

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I

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per tonl8 to 10
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dill1Ia. Call:

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�• •

Pege I 8 • The Dally StntiMI

TUIIdly, May 28, 2002

www.mydlllly.entlnel.com

ALLEY OOP

PHILLIP

ACIIO..

ALPER

• MoriiOidl

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· What's Inside

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41 'unny
41

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U TV llltutllt 3 Port11111111
tooalt
lady
14 CampoHI'
ICimbtck
33 11n1
4 HHhMoad
- lllrtak 41 Klndll34 TIM.
buy
IS l'artent
~~-

No'rlh South

Nu.tlll

17

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t&gt;t•l•r. Nonh

V~lnulblt :

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11 laatuclt
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7 L.A. hou11 30 Hltm poelMtalca
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37 Gn or oil .
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Occosionully, u
40 lien
at Cava
reuc.ler writes to say
acoomplkle l 4
d,~ltr
41 .... 1
41 Cuthlon
FRANK &amp; EARNEST
that 1 huvon' t men•.
42 Mlrchan· .I t MlttiOilollt 43 llgn olllfe
tioncc.l u point in a
oF-!tr-o~..,.,..deal.
Usually,
that
Is
T ..e fi.Ol.LINO fTO/IIef . Alrf
~ 6fl.eAT···ANOT ..efl.
becou~c I overlooked
_ ..,.,.~ "ANTiovef
IM it, but sometimes I
601NO ON TOlJfl.
just run out of space.
Cv,. / fi.OAI&gt;ftiOw."
AGAIN. '- ,~ ..
However, like my
.,.__.,
reuc.len, l urn sur·
prisec.l when another
columnist is guilty of
a sitnllur omission.
Arter studying to·
day'A diugrum, does
anything strike you?
Not thut this is the
key point. but I dis·
ul!.ree with South's
lnntiul three-club response. Muke u
~trong-jump-shift re·
spouse wlth u two·
suilcd hund only
when purlner opened
in one of those suits.
CELEBRITY CIPHER
South should have
by Lull Clmpoa
slurletl with u quiet
Ctltbnty Clphtt oryptogramoatt crt~lod !rom quolallona by,.,....,
two clubs.
- " · Pllllnd proHnl. Each lelttr In tho olphtr 111nd1 tor ln:thtr.
Let's move to the
Todly'l clue: W IQUIII R
nluy.grluy, though:
•JCAZOWOTQPCA
PO
QP'D
l:!nsi'R double of six
Thut waR a
c. II C C N LPAO
0 AD U H
~H'I' DO t M.WP.,'&lt;~ c.tT ~T~ clubs.
Lightner Slam Oou· ·
Wtrl-1 TtJ.e
CNtTTAAT~ . hie, usklns purtner for
. T I I·
a C C N.'
TAN
.
Tfl!. &amp;.C&gt; v.Jf\E£.1•."'!' an unusual lead. Nor·
.many, the t.loubler has
P'PQJ,JCJa
WDN
u votd somewhere;
UOTIO - UTaO . OP'CW~
und if in doubl 1 part·
'I CAll
ner usually ,picKs the
!'ZOO.'YCP'A
IYXXCJI
:
first suit bid by the
dummy.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Maybto they wtll Ntw York drama.
You will have no·
orhlcl.' - TtnnttHt Wlllllmt on btolng mugged In Florida ~
ticed thut six clubs
WOU
makes comfortably
OAMI '
unless West lcuds a
Apodc. Out when he
does, the slam Is
down at Irick two, the
•
spade ruff and dla·
•
mondacebeinalnthe
0 0 US l. T . ,
defensive bag.
~~
That'sclear, butthe
. . . . .
Lightner suffers from ~:=;~::;:~~~~
a major drawback f G.U B E o
•
•
1.. ~~~ · that is relevant here. lr-r-.,.
. ....,._,'t::',-i
""
Having been warned : 1. - 1. 1. 1.
that Bast is aettina a ~:;;~:;:~~~
aunt arr.ved unexpectedly
quick ruff, presuma· · 11· w 0 R c 0 /:::;:: tor
. ~ I left a m11aage·Qn
bly in spades, South .
.
your machine." she said.' dad' .
PEANUTS
should 6eat a retreat
j
explained that we didn't have am ·
to six no·trump. With ~~·~~·;:;=;~·;:"':..,answering machine. "Well," She
'' IN 1066,NAf'OLEOH CRO'SiO
11LL BET THE TEACIIER
the diamond ace on· ,.
laughed, "I hope the pereon 1
TilE Ml5SISSI"'I RIVeR''
loiAS FUN COII.II.IC'TIN&amp;
side, this alam Is un·
C RE H 1 S
called'dldn'lhave a M•••••• I'~
'tOIIIl TES'T PAf'IU, SUt.
beatable. Declarer~o I I 11 -1 I
Comploto tho chucklo quotod ~
collects three spades, . . . . . .
by filling In rltt mlulng wordo •
three hearts, one dia·
you dovelop from 111p No. 3 bolow. :
mond and five clubs.
Perhaps
East
• shouldn't double, be·
· cause he cannot han· I
die a run·out. For this
reason, West proba·
ICIAM-LITI ANIWIII
bly should fihd the le·
Dtft{y • Jumpy· Prove • Bought· YOUR OOIJ
.
thai l'ead against six
A t~rge dog followed my friend Into my houee. The .
clubs undoubted.
dog jumped on my 1011. Aatonllhed I yelled, "Can't you
,control your dog?' 'My do9,' my friend exclaimed, 'I
thought It wa1 Y'OUR DOG I

.-....--mr-

.

Reds top Marlins, 11

•••

I

ITUESDAY

f

.

I I I li

I'' I

Ie

MAY28I

..
Wednc•dQf., May 29, W01

You will have tubttanlial
oppollunitleo In the year
· ahend to funher your aim1
and obje,nivel, but you woo't.
do •o unaided, Scveraf people
will pladly milt your climb
up the ladder •• une runs at •
lime.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
• Normally1 you are far more
enJrull~ted tn ynur latett brll·
liant idea than about what
othen may think about ·yuur
~K:tivlnie•. However. fm what·
ever reuAOn, upproval nf oth·
· e11 ml11ht be important to you,
. Oeminl, treat yvurselr lo a
birthday Mift. Send for your

Atlm·Ontph prediction• for
tiN! yeur ahead by mallinJ SZ
and a SASilto Astro·Oraph,
c/o tlli• """"•P•J!C!r, P,O. Do~
I ,8, Murray Hill Station,
New York, NY 10"6. Be .
sure 111 Alate your zodiac 1i1n.
CANCilR (June 21·1uly 22)
• Outwardly, you may appear
euuoin1 to other~, but you
never take your involvemntl
too liJhtly. You may demon·
olrlle thi• to othert by your .
word• lkedt and ao:tiortl,
. ·LEO (July 22-AUI. 22) ••
When II"""""' to financialaf·
faitt. the more ttriottJ tide of
. you will emcr1e and take

•

over. Your ea•Y·JOina and
nonchulanl auhudc will be pl!t
P~lde until you accomph•h
youruim•.
VJROO (Aujj. 23·Sepl. 22)
•• Thit will not be one or
thole days when you want to
work In solllude. You will
·need people whu •hare your
lnteres11 around you to work
with you on your latelt 'en·

deavor.
LIBRA (Sept. 2J·Oet. 23) •
• Chance• are you'll be in an.
lnduJtriout mood and 1hu1
have tiN! capablltniea to ~~,:.

eompllah much more than you
would on any avcrase day.
Now i1 the time to l~~:kle biJ
pro]ectJ,

•

S'CORPJO (Oct. 24·Nov.

22) •• Spendinl time with a
friend who it in need or en·
couri!Jement and 1upport
won't be a day orr. If any·
thlnJ, you may view it •• a

duly call and a roberinJ expeo
rienu,
SAGITTARIUS (Nov , 23·
Dec:, I 9) ·' NothinJ will be u
lmpottanl 10 you 11 t~ndinJ
time with your familh or
loved onet, However uty
you 11e, you will make lime
10 lhoW Rlllllm! for their If·
fllrs lrld lnternu.

(

B1

CAPRICORN (Dec. lO·Jan.
19) •• The mlout di1cuulon
you've wanncd to have with
un tmponant perron can nake'
plll4!c if you lake the initiative; :
All will work out btller than •

you thouaht.
· •
AQUAlUUS (Jan. 20~Ftb.
19) •• Because tiN!ro may be
several impmlanl ncedt on
your •hoppinJ Jilt• you may
1pcnd more n~an you usual. II
won't be (rlvolout( thoUJh.
You'll be mana1 na your •

budaet_prudently.

PISCES (Peb, 20-Mareh

"

"..........,..•

Sacred·
Heart
honors
·Heinz

Pomeroy H.S.

alumni 'ather
for reun1on
Bv CHAIII.INI Hom.teH
HOEI'IJCHOMVDAilVSENTINEL.COM

· POMEROY - Pom~ruy 1-lll!h Schtl&lt;.ll ~ruduatcs t'rotn
ncross the country retunu:d 1\cl'll u\'er th~ M~mmhtl l)u~
w~ken\1 l'or the ltmunul reunion t)t' th~ llomct\1\
llltnnt
Assoclution held In the Mcil!s 'Hil!h SdHl\11 · ;:ul\!tl'riu
Sutmduy nil!ht.
N1mrly 300 l!rtldumes nnd l!Ut~ts cnjuycd u htlll\(Uet ut
tublcs decontted in the purpl~: und whit~ ctilm'll nt' aheir ulmn
muter, remlnl~~'lld ror u time, nn\1 tlwn dunt'l!d th~ night
uwuy to the Oll!ttn music or ll~:~.ltl!~ Hull.
Joe Struble em~:eetl th.- pm~tmm. whkh. l~·uturod the
l'ilcognltlon ol' reunion cl11sses und the olde~t 1!t'11liu11tcs. und
the tiWtlrding of scholm'llhips to l!rlm\lt:hlldrennf PHS !!.nltl·

IV CHAIILINI HOI1'LICH
HOEFLICHtlMYDAILYSENTlNEL.COM

Deaths
Gladys Weddle, 77
Marilyn Watson, 69
Dlltall1, AS

'

I

Camp June

•

1111110

44VIIt

1 Till
47 Utl.lilllllli '
4 """' • ""' ., Calllaftiad

't• .

•

Baa bum-Brown

REA Cro11word Puule

llliDGI

.

.

Weather
High: eosl Low: 60s
Dlltalll, A2

Levy's death

nllecle

· homicide

POMEROY - More than PRIUTHOOD CILIBIIATID - The Rev. Father Walter E.
30 priests were in Pomeroy Heinl's 40. years In the priesthood were celebrated Sunday at
Sunday to participate In the Sacred Heart Church with the Most Rev. Gilbert I. Sheldon,
40th unnjvcrslll'y celebrution bishop of the Steubenville Diocese PfesldlnJ. Heinl, center,
of the priesthood of the Rev. has been pastor of the locet church since 1990. At his left Is
Father Walter E. Heinz. pastor the bishop, and on his rt&amp;ht Is Monalanor Donald Horak. a
of Sacred Heart Catholic Pomeroy nett'il. (Charlene Hoeflich)
Chur:ch.
The Rev. Oilbcrt 1. Sheldon, ments on faithful perfor· . Sucred Heurt In 1990.
bishop of the Steubenville munce b)' the bishop, u recep· His years In Miilgs Coumy
·Diocese, presided at the celc· tlon and cUnner purty wus held hnve not only been u time ·fur
brntion, which Included 11 In the sociul hun for the visit· servin11 the needs of his
Muss of Thunksglvlng.
ing priests, parishioners and church und Its purishionct·s.
Brother Anthony Motto was guests. A locnl burbershop but of' contributing to th~
muster of ceremonies for the quurtet entertained during the comnmnnlty.
celebration, which included evening.
He serves on the bollrd of
numerous musicul selections Heinz was orduined on Muy the Meigs Cooperutlve Pu!'lsh.
by the choir, readings of 26, 1962, by Bishop John un ecumenicur outre11ch pro·
scripture by Sister M11riel King Musslo 111 St. Peter's grum for the disudvuntnged
Kreuziyer, 11 homily by the Church in Steubenville.
and Its Ood's NET youth cen·
Rev. James Dunfee. prayer of His llrst ministry was os on tor. He hus ulso served on the
petitions by Oeorse Cohollch, instructor nnd vice principul bonrd of the Meigs County
' itAI presenlulion of gifts by of St. John Centrul Hiyh Mentully · Retarded und
Katie and Jennie Fritsch.
School in 8clluire. Aner thnt. Dcvclopmentully Disabled
Semln11riuns Anthony Butt . he held scverul udminlstrutlve here und Is involved In the
und Seth Wymer served com· positions nt high schools, prison ministry at the
munlon nt the altl.ll'.
olong wllh pasturing several Hocking Correctionul Fuclllty
Followlny closing com· churches before moving to In Nelsonville.

UliiCS,

. Presented $800 Bob Robcn1 s S~holl\1-shlps ft\!m .thc 11lum·
ni ussuclutiun were Au~tln TyiN l. lttlil ol RttCIII\\ 11 j!rudu·
ute of Smnthilrn High Sd\Oul who will he uttendlnl! Ohio
Stutc University where he will 1mijm In cnglneerlnl!:
Ruchel Murshnll of R11dne. u l!l'lltluut~ of St,uthcrn Hl~l1
School, who will be uncndin11 Ohio University 111 llll~llt' ln
speech und heurinl!; 11nd Mt!!lllll E. Htll't•boll, lll!nttluuhl llf
River Vulley Hll!h Sd111ui who will be uttcndh111 Ohlu
NO!'thern Unlverslty with 11 tt1t\ior In ct'itHitml jus ake. •
All three til' the rodpients hull I!I'Ude polnn uvcrul!cs ot -1.
Little 11nd Mnrshnil quullficd l'ot• sd~ul!trshlps tht·oui!h
their lltllndmother, P111sy Shl~llls RudiOI\1. 11 19-lt) PHS
l!r11duute: while H1uTi~on t)Uullllcd thi'Oul!h her l!l'.undnmth·
or, Mury Scott Wlse,u1Sl5ti gruduuu:, uml h~r l!l\liii·I!I'Un\1·
mother, Kunh leon Soon, u 192~ l!ruduute.
Recoanlzcd und. presented 11ow~rs wct'll Knthlc~n Scntt
nf Rucillll, who gruduuted in the ~luss of 192 ~ tmd Nonl!ll
Roberts of the cluss of I927 the uld~st ntcmbcr ol' ttn:unlon
cluss.
·
·
.
· Others t'CCo!!nl~ed und l!iven 1!11\s wcl'c nhc only do~tor
jli'CSClll. Millon Lumbert. duss or 1957: th~ youn~CSI cluss
presldcnn, JudQC Robert Buck, IliM. th~ uiumnl, who trt!Y·
clctl the t'ut1hcst, Wllilum A. S111l1h ul O~cnns1t.k. Cnlnl ..
I \1!52: the youn11~s1 cluss secrenury. Donnu Cul't', ll)M: the
ol\lest cluss pl'ilsidcnt, Jn~k Mutst&gt;n, I\)4:\.
Spocinl t'CCOI!IIitlon wus given tu 1w11 n~w ultmlnl mean·
bcrs, Enrl Denny Jr. und Ouldo Olroluml, bonh ot' whom
were druftcd Into the U. S. Army bc flll·~ they ~:~rudullte.d
t'rom high. scb.oul. TlmJul!h spcciuiJ~I!islutiun In Ohlu Ihey
were DWilrded dlplomus Ft·lduy nlgfit' nl tho Meigs Hlllh
School commencement (lrtJI!I'tun.
Officers for the 2003 reunion WCI'il electllt!· Thcyut·~ Dun
Mo1·ris, president; Judy Wehi'Uill! Si~son, llt'st vke presl·
dent; April Shustcen Smith, sccomt vkc Pl'esl&lt;-l~nt: und
enrol Strauss Kennedy, SCCI'eiUI'Y •II'C USUI'cr.
Pla11t 111 Pomaroy, At

•

MODESTO, Calif. (AP)
- Only hours ufler her
death was ruled a homi·
clde, Chundru Levy wus
memorhllized in her home•
·town as a bubbly and compassionate young . "\Y.Qm,un
with an advemurous spirnt.
"She wus lrustins, con·
. siderate and kind. She was
every father's daughter,"
said Paul Katz, un uncle of
the 24-year·old woman
whose ske letal remains
were found last wee" In a
purk in Washing!on, D.C.
· In Washington, medicul
c"aminer Dr. . Jonathan
Arden ruled the death a,
homicide Tuesday but said
he did not have enough evi·
dence 10 sdy conclusively
how Levy dted, or wfiether
she was killed in the park
where the remains were
found.

NIW IQUIPMINT - Pomeroy VIlla&amp;• Council accepted a bid tor new playaround equipment at
Waterworks Perk on East Main Street durin&amp; Monday's re&amp;uler meetlna. The new yellow/red
equipment, pictured here In en artl1t'1 renderln&amp;. was funded throu&amp;h 1 Natureworka &amp;rant and
donations from area buslneuea and private Individuals. (Tony M. Leach)

Lotteries
Ohio
Pick 51 0·2·8
Pick 4: 3·9·0·2
luckey• 51 8·18·22·27·37
Mlp MHIIom: 6-21·22·29·32

M... llll:24
Pick J nllftt: 9·0·9
· Pick 4 nllftt: 7·8·6-4

West Vlr1lnl1

POMEROY

.

New equipment coming "
to WateiWorks Park
·.

lht(ly :II 1• 7•5
lhtlly 4: 1· H·O · ·
Cllh 25: 2·7·10·18-20·22

Bv TONY M. LuoH
TLEACHOMVDAILVSENTIN!L.COM
POMEROY - A bid for new
playsround equipment at
Waterworks Pal1c Wll8 accepted
during Tuesday's regular meetingofPomeroyVlllageCouncil.
· After opening and exarnlnlna
:a
~ 12,.,..
eiaht previously submitted bidi,
Calendar
A3
council acce~ 11 bid of
.Ciassifieds
83-5
$24,079.56
frOm Universal Play
comics
86
Syatema for new playaround
Dear Abby
A5 . equipment
at Watenvorks Park
Editorials
A4
on East Main Street.
Movies
A3
Councilman VIctor Youna
Obituaries
A3
m said 75 percent of the new
Sports
81·3
equipment'• eo~t will be fund·
ed
by a $19.000 NatureWorlaJ
Weather
A2
arant the villaae received l118t
o :1003 0111o v•lltv """"'"'"~ eo.

Index

••*•••

20) •• Your time will be lm·
ponant to. you, becaute you
won't want to wute time with
frivolou• acnivitiel. You
won't allow OIIN!11 to lmpote · .
them&amp;elvet on·you' unlen it't

yeur throuah the "hurd work
·of
former
Pomeroy
Councilman John Musser."
"The remainina 25 percent
of the cquipment'H cost,
which 11 around $6,000, has
already been donated by busl·
nesses and private Individuals
In both Middleport und
Pomeroy," said Youna. "We
would like to say 'thank you'
to all tholjC who have donuled
their time and/or money to the
Waterworks Park project.
Thlt i1 a clear indication that
both villages have invested in
the interest• of their children
and community."
The new yellow/red play·

~round
equipment will
1nclude two slides, several
play tunnels, u woll ploy·
wheel, u ~nakc and clove .
climber, und three covered
"fon" look·outs.
Young ~uid the new equip·
anent will tuke four weeks !o
be delivered und two weeks !o
UNDIRIIA ADVINTURI - Members ol the Syracuse
be inswllcd. ·
.
Nazarene ·Church recently finished palhtlnl an undersea
Council approved !he pro·
mural at London Pool as part of the or&amp;anlzatlon'e commu·
motion of PriHcillu Riddle
nlty beautification project. Bri!Jhtly colored dolphins. mer·
from purt·time pollee dis·
melds, burled treasure end a huge. purple octopus will keep
· putchcr to full ·timc: uarec~
ewlmmers
entertained as they keep cool during the hot
!o the plucemen! of n drult
,
monthl
of
summer. Front row. from left. Lindsey Smith,
beer cart on the Pomeroy
head life auard: Bobbl Hill , pool manager: second row,
Purkiny Lot durin&amp; !hree fes·
Brltteny Fortune, Aahloe Hill, back row. Amber Hill, Wendy
tivals that will 111ke place in
Hill. Kim 'Wolfe and Lori Kimes. (Tony M. Leech)
·
the vlllaac over the •ummer.

c ..,
$porllol.d locofy hy Ho&amp;a M«&lt;kal

important.
·
ARIES (March 2l·Aprlll9)
•• AlthouJh you like totlltOIIf
11ound to bOunu of! hint, It
miJht become etuntlal·to retire to a gulct piKe and clear
up any. TooH endt In your

c.m.r

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