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PEANUTS
THE NATIONAl.

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ENOOWA\ENT Fo-.
TilE AltTS 14A5
WITIIOAAWN
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TI:IE'( SAIO M'(
WESTnN PAINTIN65
AllEN'T WE5TEitN
ENOU&amp;H •••

RIR SALE

WESTERN
EASTERN
NORTHERN
SOUTHERN
Wl\0 CARES ?

Southern board acts
on personnel matters .

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I:

I MONDAY

JUNE31

1'11e~~uy,

June 4, 2002
Nollccnblo lmprovament8ln
your flnonelol pffalll uro
likely In tho ~011r aheud. AI·
thuuph the con~hloM will be
there for tbc tukln11. 1111 up to
~ou 10 p111 follh the nece~~~•ry
effort on~ tln1o to brina ubout
your 11dvuncemcnt.
Of!MINI (Muy 21-Juno 20)
., Ju~t bc&lt;:au~e thlnaR hove a
chun~o ur turnhll Detter for
you ~ncs not moun you
~h1&gt;uld 110 out and blow your
money . Continuo tli be pru·
dent ubout how you ullll&amp;e
yuur fnnd~ ttltluy, TrylnJ to
putch up a broken romance?
The A~tm·Oruph Matchmaker
can help yuu under~land what
to dn In make the rolatlnn~hlp
work. Mull $2.73 to Mntch·
mukcr, clo thl8 ntWJJliP.0!
P.O, lluK I67, Wickliffe, On1
440\12.
CANC~R (June 21·July 22)
.. If ~uu Jeo that 1 cumpan·
lnn'a suucRtlonul'tl uparior
111 your~. d11n'ltnke It pa11un·
ally and think lllho IR puu1n1
you down, ~mhrnco the ldeaR
nnd be upporllvc, not ani'CIIR·
tic.
LllO (July 23·AuJ. 22) ..
Don't lei a prcv\ou~ ml~un·
dcr~tun~lna wllh .~omeona ea·
tubllsh the IIUlltld rules for
tho way you trout ·him/her.

Yestonlll)' wo~ :ttltt!dll)', Todty Is tooay. 'Start t fiesll
score ~ul'll.
VIROO (Aot. U·Scipt. 22)
• You ulrolllly ~~as •~ry. .
thlnt you neid \o muko o a~
~en of thlnts .. don't rely
llpllllll\ltlldt dn:Oil131Uili.'CS Ill
lmptllYO your pualtlon In nro.
Be enltfPrlalng and lnduairi0\lltocl~y.

LIBRA (Scipt. 23·0ct. 23) •
• Perctl~• taCIII)''a dutloa aa
opponunhlttllther thon burdana and 1011' II draw 10011
thlnaa toward -you. Ootwud
appear•n~oa may turn Into •
bu full ortutk}', breaks,
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·No~.
22) •• Su~tns could be d..
nled you today If youul'tl too
lllltrtlve or llll'tllllve when
you ahould De cllplom1tlo,
Thtl'tl Ia • tlmt to push tnd
aheve and a time to 01'1 1nd
fall b10k. Rtco?nln tht cllf·

'"'not, ·

·

SAQJ,nARIUS (Nov, 23·
Dec. 21) .. In dtvtlopmonta
whel'tl you can curry out COil•
atructl va chaneea, by •11
muna do ao today. Con·
voracly, don't try to forcibly
ahlft around Immovable ob·

)WI!,

CAPRICORN (Deu, 22·Jun.
19) •• ShoUld you fHI an ••·
.j

&amp;114:1ltt b llolna thllll' h1
Wil)'l thlat ~'\111111 dismdlf Y®&gt;
rttrettlbl)' h mllln be - ·
wy !'of )'00 10 ,wlthlhw yQijt
. &amp;IIJipOO 11nd ~lillian wltll
tllfa pemln t~.
AQt!~RIUS IJilll. 21)-Jteb.
19) • IF Yllll tllh1l ooly of
yourt~tlf when )'OIIM:t, lkln't
UpiCt tl\11111 to filii too
amoolhly. Vour ~bllltlt$
fill dttlllblt m11lta lnertue
when you IMl11de othm 111
your thlnkllll.
PISCI!S (Fob. 20-Milrcll
20) .. A~old tokln1 an tile
miiDIIICIIIOIII of other IIIII!Plo'I
funds tod~ If 11.1 11.11 Jioulblt.
Not only mil)' you be bltlna
orr mort 1h1n you ~•n (htw
but If thlnaa ao awry, you'll
be held ICCO\lntablt,
ARli!S (Much 21·AIIril Ill)
.. Don't hllahutt to ot~era up
on their offera to handle a
eouplt !lf eompllcated 1111111·
menta for you .. ann i:ltl ..
11tt them If need bt, It yo11
fry to ~0 IVtrytMna Oft your
own you may ovtl'tlxttnd
yountlf.
TAURUS (April 20·May ,
20) •• Bt careful not to ~lew
problema as btlna mtil'tl &amp;l·
aantlo than they actually all.
Onoe you ltan to '" on top
of thlnaa toduy, you Ureollae
you were warrylna need·
leuly.

MEDICAL CENTER
DiSCtltl\:!r tlte Holl('t' Otfkt~tK¥
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LaR--~ .,.,~=. lhe high sd•IOI. inftllnoed the
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b01anhh~~t~lhe$(hool
Ddlllie AIJt8, -~ p1toou and studalts' ttU

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Be~ Al~. c~odiaD;
~edenith Mills. c:ootlcusto-

LOCAL STOCKS
Pw•v~NM -

&amp;11

Roc:imal- 21.45
Rodly lloc* - 6.15
RO Shell - SU$
$Mia - 58.'IS
tNM Mlrt - 53.1&amp;
Wendy~ - 37.16
\'lluo tiiiQiolo - 1S. 15
Oily lllodl ..........
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The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
CorrectiOn Polley

&lt;»main COIIOe!ll In .. _... II
to
lfyou ~~now &lt;:A Ill
tmM'Inallor\\ O * I N - al (7&lt;40) 882~15$.

be-·

This Father•s Day.
Send the World•s Greatest··Dad
on Golf's Greatest Road Trip.

..... DlplilbiNntl

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Mllln numbtl .. Wl!-2158.

o.p.- ·-11011&amp; ,,.:
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Eld. 12
EICI. 13
EICI. 14

Dl'

Give Dad what he really wants this ~ ...a trip to the Trail. One
phone c~U ro our «nttal Reservations number gets you a gilt
certilk~re he can pend on some of the most-praised golf on this planet. Gc&gt;!f Magazi~
~ntly ran~ The judge Course at ~itol Hill as one of the to courses in the country
\\\)t\hy of hosting the US Open. A.nd people who've played the
ALABAMA'S
tr.a\1 call it the number one value· in
world~ a golf
'
dt$tination and number 8 in the ~rld fot quality ovtt .31 major golf
dcmnation~ around the world... GoLF DIGEST SUII.\lliY
8qJinningjuly I, D~d (-aud Mom) t al\ play 3 consecutive da~ of unlimited
golf fur just '99 a person (add 'tO to each :g~ns fee at Capitol Hill.) Hotels,
cam and tax not included. Ot gi~ Dad the Summer Sampler ror $99 and let
him play 161 holes of golf :at Hampoon Cove, Silver L4kes, Cambrian
R.idgc: and Highland Oaks. ,
www.rtjgolf.com
This Father-s Day,givt Dad what he reaDy 'Mnts, golf on Alabama's )
1.800.25?.3465
incredible Robert '1\-ent jones GolfTrail.

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-.myct.IYM"Itlltl·com

Mlllllllllalalon
~ MttOI *"' $27.30

21- .

$113.82

52 w..h
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ct•n; Ruby ~mo.: cook: -- -..bouiC\'a' they WUL
St:-cha
The•~
~;
Aftl:r~ the m:ancr,
Ki~ lee.~~ thebolllldapteto...,~lhe
Pyles. .uJ.:; J~lta Pted~rid: phone if it ts not wed enough
Hensler. · a_itte; Bchnct. to pay fur itself.
Adams. a1de;
Beverly
A sommer sdlool prog~am
ColliliS.. aide;_ Marilyn ror rowt11 snide studCnls -..tlo
Cooper, custod_tan; Ca_rol did not pw the fuwth gnc1e
Sellers, c:us1~an; Bnan proficiency lUis was also
~~. cuS1od1an; Becky lppi'Oved by the boud after
Ball, aide~viewing lhe bud&amp;d·
Supplementlll c:ontracts
The SIIIIUDel' sChool pro~ aPfll'?ved f« the fol- gram will I~ four 'weeks
lowtng c:emt}ed personnel far and, depending on lhe the ~-03 sdiOOI year: Kim amoon1 ol' eligible studeniS,
Romme, yea_rbook and lide will Rquire the hiring of two
IX c:omphance offic:er; ~eaehers.
Gvroun Fisher.
p~;
The board adopted. a reso. Jeane_tte Oldaker, marc:hmg llltion authorizing Southern
band and. pep band: Ryan High School and Southern
Leml~y. htg'!' school student Elementary's membership
council advtsor and mervc into the 2002-03 Ohio High
boys blsketball coach.
School Alhleuc Association.
The boanl also: .
.
The board approved the
• accept~ the res~gn:mon following mission statement
of ~usty 'R~'!Ws fot: the fol- for the Southern Local
I&lt;_&gt;WIIIg pos•t•ons: F1fih •!'d School District: ..Southern
SIX!}! grade teacher, varstty Local Schools, with commuassiSiant baseball c:oach and nity involvement will prehead varsity f~ball ~oach;
pare our sludents t~ meet the
• D.RI'CICCIIO htre Damel ~o challenges of 1omorrow by
and M.ary Leach as spectal modeling excellence and
education teac:hers for !he teaching fundamental skills
200~-03 ~hool y~r•.pe~ng today."
centrteatlon. Absuumng 1. m
The mission slalemenl,
the vote was "n:easwe~ lfd_l;
which is required by the stale
• agreed to htre Apnl Kmg Depanmenl of Edudition
as a Spanish teacher for !he was created by Southen:
2002-03 ~chool year, penchng l.oc:al staff and members of
cenlficatlon:
..
thec:ommunity.
• approved the hmn5 &lt;_&gt;f The board also:
R:yan Lemley as the ath cue
• approved numerous polidtrector and reserve basket- cy revisions, replacements,
ball cQach for the 2002-03 new/additions, and the
school year: ·
..
accompanying administrative
• agree,d to postlhe pos1t1~n guidelfnes as recommended
ofaeen•fied 7-12,Grade sct- by NEOLA:
·
ence teacher, phystcal educa• approved Brogan-Warner
lion 1eacher for Sout~ern as the agent and Guarantee
Elementary and combt~ Life Insurance Co. as the till'·
K-6 .
.
physrcal rier for the studenl accidental
educauon/mustc leacher for deathldismembennent benethe 2002-03,school year.
fit and accidental medical
h~
busmess
matte':~• benefits (student insurance)
Venzon . ,
_Pub.hc for the 2002-03 school year~
Commumcah~n sent a nouce • accepted a rate increase
to S~ulhem Htgh School con- for both dentaVvision insurcernmg a Jli\Y phone located ance.
. in a . hall at lhe school.

Vlalet tL SlaniDn
NBWHAVEN,WNa. - VtolCtH. StantOn. 89. :'\c" Ha' ·n.

died Sunday, June 2., 2002., :at ~t Valle} H\}.~pita L
Born M:ay 27, 191 3. she was the &lt;!aughter of the IJte
William P. Hi\-ely and Ro.unne Pauly Hl\-el~.
AJona with ber parents, she was prettded m d&lt;-Jth h' a $istel. Wiila Sc:ites: and a brother. William Hi--ely.
She is SW'Vived by :a son and daughter-in·l:m . R~n .md
Edidt Stllnlon of Monroe. La.; t\\-'1:1 gmtlddaughters: and *' ·
eral nieces and nephews.
Services will be 11 a.m. Wednesday in Ander.sun Full&lt;'ml
Home. New HaYI:II. with dte Rev. Greg Blair ,,flic1atmg.
Visitation will be one hour prior to dte funeml t:r\'i.:e. Bur.al
will follow al Kirkland Memorial Cemetery.

PROUD 10 BE APART
· OF YOUR LIFE.
7Jit DGil)&gt; St""*l

SIINcribi!Odczy • ,992-2156
IVW'Il~ilystlllilull.com

James Belushl (" Ac·c'llr&lt;hng '"
Jim" ) joined thr high·srh&lt;l&lt;&gt;l
drama club Ill mcc·t ~ ;rl s . hut n
teacher pe rsuad~.·U h1m tn at' l 111

. a play.

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�~~e_Da_ily_Sen_tin_~e_I- - - " the
The Dally Sentinel

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DEAR A81Y: I write a monthly

colllJm ~led "Abilities," for
pie with disabilities, whlcb
111 die San ~ Unioft·Tnbwie. In
1t I uy to enligtlteil artd ~­

....:::S

P&lt;tttliiNI\a CO.

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~With mel without disabilities.

V&lt;lll Were right to advise
'tb'lfu~ in ~ston, N.Y.." to
leyel with her
about the cruel
CO!IIIIteftt his fiancee made about
~ dub foot. which atused Iter to
bow oot of the wedding \)MtY·
However, the tnlth is that life ts too
short \o waste time uying to right
eV«J wrong. I don't ignore rude
renWb lie the one fea~ in that
le'(1er, but in most instances, I consider the~.
Abby, thete ate tnany battles to
fight in life, but litis type of bal.tle is .
tl&lt;lt Ofle I choose to tacltle ..I believe
that each of us has the right to

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5

ATIO

AL VIEW

Debating the What ifs' of .
Sept. 11 serve no purpose

. . .=:· c:

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KONDRACKE~S

VIEW

Fonner Racine

•n•uthon
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II: M mud~ .as 1M . . . .
lh M, It aftMlt rum back

book

.•-RACINE - Brooks-Grant

the iCb:k. R~ of-.;M heW~ '"-..!here is lli.llhi~ that Qll ~thee~ of Sq!t. II !Mid dtelr impact oo -.:s
w the -.:oo.J.. 1hal ~'t mean that we !Mid ~ ~
Qll't Uti from ~ has ~ !Mid do wbat we an to
~l:~ :slmibr ~in the fublre..
Thi:s is lhe be!l ~ ~ put intu ~\'e lhe 11e\'elatioo~ ~ BwJI Mid moei\'llid llllell~ -'!~g$ tmr
to Sept. II lh:at Osama bin Udell w.as ptmni~ to hijicl( jetlihet$. That. ~ with lhe di~ dat FBI ~ts la.'lt
summer ~sed ~s oabroot Middtt ~men~~~~
U.S, ft~t $dlools., ba.~ hised pa.inful q~ aboot wl¥edlef
Sqlt. II OJUld bia\'e been ~~
It's ~n~ ~llltion. ~-~~~ oo '"\t.Jbat iiS". OOiy ~
the ilctl\'e mfll Mlgdlrecttil l~lllilltOOS of ~hlt~
rists. Ddvi~ into a politlal biMJe ~ will ooly
to
divi&amp;i~ :actin.g ~ ~ M\lthtr ~ ll~ of\\&gt;Mt ter-rorist&lt;&gt; lu\'e dOOle to us already.
.
Yet. son~oe nlel'llbtls of~ quickly ~1:«1 oo the l1evdatioos to politically ~t the BwJI l.d'lninistrlltioo fuf ·
lltl( doing eoough to (R\'ellt the disa.~. ...
M~h we had l)rec;Oit~t !l«&lt;lsl&lt;Mntd to suicide boolbtrs.,
no 0111e a'll\l'lt(:H the dots oo -nmp of ham!r to get In lhe
~ or tumi:!nijao.::lttd jttlintfS into mis:sllts.. Thtre wel1e
indKatioos as
as eight years ~.gt~that sametbin.g li~ IMt
w.IS ~doemi
y terrorists. In 11194, Muslim hij~
planned .to blow ue an Air F'rnnce jetliner O\'ef lhe Eiffcl
Thwer. In 1995, PluliP.{line authorities w:ll'llell lhe U.S. of a
terror plan 10 fty a jethner inlO lhe CIA headquarteN. 6\'en
thoo!h \\'e had a111eady su~ from lhe angry depravities of
TinliJiby Me Veigh and a p11evioos at~mpt to bomb the ~d
Thlde Center, AmeriCII.n~ Wid their ltaders still had an attitude
of imjngnnbility W\11 inwlnernbilicy.
A handful of al-q:tida llm'arists changed that on SepL II .
The challe~ oow ts to learn, carefully nnd ftarlessly uam·
ine the eVl:llts and evidence at hand before that day, and ask
q~~t..~tions and setk answers as to how we can be better pl1epared, how we c:an be smarter.
Befare politicians uy to lay blame solely on the White
House, it's fair to point out that prominent l&gt;cinoonits as Calif.
Sen. Dianne Feinsll!in, a member of the Senall! Intelligence
Committee, had received much of the same information as the
President. It's also pertinent to note that lhe warnings didn't
result in inaction. A memo outlining a course of llttlon ~~galnst
bin Laden was ready ror lhe President Sept. I0. Airlines had
~n wamed of possible hijacking&amp; focused on fureign flights
last summer. A privall! alert also went out to law enroooement
ncies. Fedei'al officials did anest lhe so-called "20th
cker," Zacarias Moussa.oul in August
· one of litis was enough, however, and lltere are ~rious
questions that must be answered about the job done by U.S.
inll!lligence aa,encies. House and Senate Intelligence committees are investtgating these shortcomings. It's not just a mat·
ter of not gathering lnformatlon but of ~~&lt;K~r communication
and coordination among these agencies. There is also 11 con·
cern as to whether these agencies have the manpower and
resources to do a better job.....
· Continued investiglltion is needed, ~haps by n nonpartlsnn
commission, as proposed by Sens. John 1\llcCilln and Josaph
Liebermnn. It's better to leam and correct than to blame.

Camp Sons of Union Veterans

Gtthe Civil War held its re~­
lar meeting recently With
J:lroes Cline, fonnerly of
heine and now of Beverly,
aflbe ~for the e\lehing.
,:,-cline has published a new
Mole on Capt. Reuben S.
Mason, who served in
Cootpany D, 63rd Ohio
\blunteer Infantry, Wid Inter
. ~' l white officer in.the SSth
U.S. Colored Troops.
Mason was an avid writer
and kept journals of his Ci vii
Wit experle11ces piBMing to
three boOks on his
Mason died
completed them.
Mason
. of the
area has
his war
intact
to pub:
with their fmlln·
the 63rd OVJ, a

.

~~~~~~~~;~:~:~~f~many

WASHINGTON TODAY·

,_,

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Despite grnmbling, Bush~ conservative support strong;,~.

IY Wlu. LD'IIII
WASHINGTON - OccWlionlll arum·
bling b_y some P!Ominent c;onservatlves
aboUt President Bush !&gt;Ometlmes overshadows his elttremely solid support
among stlllwan Republicans and conserv·
atives lll'IJUnd lhe counlry.
Many Republicans and Democrats
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
, seem 10 agree that support by itself does
Today is Tuesday, June 4, the I55th day of 2002. There
not tilt lhe 2002 elections toward lhe
are 210 days left in the ~ear.
·
. OOP. Some, however, !lily it could offset
Todny's highlight In htstory:
.
. . · the gains the pany out of the White Hou~
On June 4, 1942, the Battle or Midway begun during
- Democrats, In this case- historically
World War 11.
hill made In midterm elections.
.
On this date:
"The aoneral backdrop · has shifted
In 1.812, the Louisiana Territory was renamed the
away from lhe Democrats · over the IWlt
·year to where we have a level plQylng
Missouri Territory.
field," said Whit l&gt;:ftes, a OOP pol)ster In
In 1892, ·the Sierr11 Club was incorporuted in San
Atlanta who works with Republlc1111 cun·
Francisco.
'
1 ·
dldates.
.
ln 1939, the SS St. Louis, carrying more than 900 Jewish .
The
Sept.
II
uttw:ks
also shifted the
refugees from Germany, was turned away from the Florida
politicul
landscape
from
domestic Issues
coast.
favoring Democrats to national security
In 1940, the Allied .military evacuation from Dunkirk,
and lhe war on terrorism, which favor the
France, ended.
OOP.
.
· In 1944, the U.S. Fifth Army begun liberating Rome durDemocrats ncknowled~t: the president's
Ing World Wnr II.
·
·
strel)gth,
but question Whether that will
In 194~. the House~f Reptesentntiv·es overwhelmingly
carry over 10 other OOP candidates.
approved the Taft·Hn'hley Act.
''The president has put his powllll'lty on
ln 19.54, French Premier Joseph Laniel and Vietnamese
lhe line in these ~-ongreulolllil' midterm
Premier Buu Lac initialed tr.entie in Paris accordlna
elections," said Michael Meeh1111, a senior
"complete independence" to Vietnam.
strategist nt the Delfiocrntlc National
. In 1986. Jonathan Juy Pollard, 11 former Nuvy IntelliCommittee. "What remains to be seen Is
gence unulyst, pleaded guilty In Wushlngton to spyin11 for
whether the Intensity or the conservative
Israel. (He Is serving u life prison term.)
·
bose translates from the president to the
In 1989, hundreds, possibly thousands, of people died as
candidates who i1re on the ballot."
Chinese urmy troops stormed BeUi ng to crush a proMeehun Sllid polling duw he hus seen
indicate th!! elections are much more likedemocracy movement.
ly to be decided on the bWlls of lndlvldunl
In 1998, a federal judge sentenced Terry Nichols to life
candidates and locul cwnplllgns.
in prison for h'i s role in the Oklahoma City bombing.

TODAY IN HISTORY

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,,

,.

,,.

Some conservallves have grumbled
about the Bush White House handling of
s.,endina, steel tariffS, the Midwl and
other Issues.
.
"Within the conservative leadership,
there is Increasing restlessneas 11bout
!lOme of the Bush's iloli\Ciitlt pt!llcy decl·
slons In lhe last few months.' said Steve
Moon:, president of the Club ror Orowth,
a conservative antl·lllX aroup.
Democrotlc strategist Jini Jortllln dismls~s such compfalnt5 Wl "strlcl\Y a
debate among the WWlhlniJlOn elites."
Polls do not supt discontent ~
some conservative aQ.tivlsu has s
oot51de Washington.
"Bush wins overwheln\inl! ml\lt&gt;rlty
support from nil Republitlllls and with
strong Republicans it is nil but unanl·
mous," snfd Thomas Riehle, president of
lp!&gt;Os·Rcld public al'flllts, which conducts
n tracking poll ror the Cook Political
Re~rt.

health care, education and other luuea, lit
lllld
· "·'
The lliealclent can.do thlt ~ tollowtflf
~li on luuea he r.AMMI*"'d on lirta
"make them a realliy"ll:-rai'd Dlallf'
Underwood, ~lltltal director of U.·
Republican National Co,mmltl.
Democrata lillY that OOP ~· '
many domestfc illlllell filii ahoit and
underfunded.
• ~~ ,
Jordlln, eltec:utive director of llif
Democratic · Senatorial • Cantpefln
Committee said money_should not bli"f·
decltllna fllCtot. "We Will not IOie a Selllll¢·
!'lite beCause of 111ack of 1'1110urte8,"•te
lllld.
• "'
A re(lO!'t this week tmm lhe Fedeilll;·
Elec:tlon Commlasion sua&amp;ellted the par.i•:
ties' money raising illld speridlng for COI\o'
~ulonal races hM been relatl~ly evelf."·
Jordan llllld he hu seen little evlden\!1
·that Se1111te races wUI be a refetellduni.DJL
lhe president. Polling on volenl' preferenc:e for Republican or Den\OCI'itfc con•
plllllonal clitldldates h111 cotlllstentl~
Shown votmare fairlY evenly divided. ·
COnaervatlvt loyafty 10 Buah coul4
give Republicans liddeclleeWity to moVi
to the center on tome domestic lu11111 !'"II
excludlna tOp OOP Issues like taliea llllil
abortion! silld conaervatlve lllllyllt
Mlll'lhal Wittmann of the Hlldlon
lnstlwte.
·
''8ullh ended lhe Cllnton&lt;lore re1m
and he delivered for them on taxes/'lilcl
WlttmlUII'I. "He ~~eems to have a connec.
tlon with con~~e~;YatiYH that I~ lllmost 1'1011·
verbal.''
.
(Will Ltstl!f covm pol/tits and polling .

' At this point in any president's first
tenn, you would expect to hnve alienllled
some Faction of your own party, but that Ia
not the Clllle with Oeorge Buah."
Added OOP pollster Matthew Dowd:
"It gives you an opportunity to reiiCh out
10 constituencies."
, Bush's job approval rating omona
RepubllcWls Is In the low 90s and a brt
higher . among strong RepubllcnM,
IICcordlng to un lpsos-Reld poll and oth·
ers.
Georgia Republican Chalnnan Ralph
Reed Sllid most conservatives he talks to
i1rtl quite content "the bnU Is clearly movlngln the right dlre&lt;:tlon." That gives the
OOP the latitude to reach out more on for The i.ssoc:/attd P,~t.)

Dear

Abby
ADVICE
choose whom we wWlt to include in
our lives. Cultivating WU..LING
friendships is far more gratifying
than struggling to salvage those that
weren't meant to be. - MARlLYN
SALISBURY, SAN DIEGO
DEAR MARILYN: While I
agree that one cannot force friendships, let's not forget that there was
alrCady a well-established friend-

ship •• that of the groom and the
woman who wrote to me.
When a couple plllll their wedding, they ustaally d1seuss and agree
upon who 1\leir attendWlts will be. If
die bride-to-be had WI objection, the
person to whom sbe should have
voiced it was the groom - which
would have saved a lot of hurt feelings. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: As a professional
wedding coordinator, I must
respond to "Confused."
Last year I worked on two weddings held only a month apart. I'll
never forget them. The first could
have been a layout in a fashion
magazine. The bride and groom
were gorgeous, their clothing perfeet - all five bridesmaids were
petite and stunning, and the male
attendants looked like modC:ls.

Meigs Notebook

McCain takes up battle for mndidate broadcast time

the
----;;
9oril!lth· The realment
a 67 I)III'Cent
rate one.of the hl.llhell the
Civil Wat, lncludTn&amp; aeveral
Mtlaa County aoldlera.
Maaon contracted mumpa,
meaalea 111\d amall pox l)ut
iW'YIYedall three deadly dis·
eaaea durlna his aervlce.
,, Aa an oftlcer of a colored
11nlt, he waa captured and aent
to lhe Infamous Andenonvllle
priaon. He waa able to keeJ:)
the Confederate&amp; unaware of
Wa association with colored
troops due to hia knowledae
of events while servina In the
63rd OVI. This saved him
from eltecution as It was a
Confederate requirement to
execute all white officers of
l!Oiored units.
Cline said that Mason
described the miraculous
eruption of Providence ~prlng
in ihe Andersonvllle Prison
tllllt saved many Union prisonersl'rom the puttlfied water
lti!IY had been drinking.
,. ~e pointed out lltat proba·
~y, the n\O&amp;t Important revela·
llOn of the Mason writings
wu the trUe reason for tl\e
nlon lon of at lite Battle of
rice'&amp; Crossroads. Thla Is in
rect oppoaltlon of lhe "off!~ll" records of the Union.
11 .He said that Confederate
•plea have purpoaely set up a
J!,lrty and aot Union Gen.
it.liraess drllnk as he often
was. It was this dnutkenness
· 1.\la~ resulted in the lou. Oen.
S~Antess was court·manlaled
Ol)..ifils charae, but none of his
st.~bordlnitei would testify to
~e. true facts. Though he was

~

Page AS

honorably discharged from
the service, Oen. Orilnt would
have dishonorably discharged
him had testimony born out
the drllnkenness.
In other camp business,
Michael Trowbridge and
David North of Oallipolis
reponed their work on locat•
ing Camp Carrington, a Civil
War training camp at
Oallipolis. They believe lltat
they have determined the
location the camp's hospital,
where Confederate Private,
William Z. Wickline, ancestor
of tbe Meigs County Wickline
family, died as a prisoner in
the hospital.
A review of another new
Civil War book on a local unit
was given. It features a history of "Blazer's Scouts." The
book was recommended for
reading.
lames Oiler, camp commander, reported on the
recent findina of 17 Civil War
soldiers burled at' Temple
University ~~ Phlladelpliia.
Forensic atudy ia beina conducted to determine the valid·
lty of the chiitn. He alao

include Herbert Dawson and
Ralph Dawson of Cram,
W.Va., · Jack Dawson of
Columbus, and Charlew
Dawosn of Huntington on
their common ancestor, Pvt.
Charles Barnell of Company
B,
213th
Pennsylvnia
Volunteer Infantry.
They also welcomed their
first mtemational member,
Lyle "Andy" Anderson of
Westminster,
British
Columbia, Canada, on his
ancestors, - Pvt.
Phillip
Quiggle of CompWly L, 1st
Minnesota Heavy Artillery,
and Pvt. Henry Bragg of
Company C, 2nd Minnesota
Volunteer Infantry.
Keith Ashley reported on
the recent chartering of the
Capt. John White Spencer
Camp No. 9 of Spencer,
W.Va., due to the efforts of
members of Brooks-Grant
Camp. A chartering ceremony
will be held later this year.
Gerald Crawford of Letart
Falls was voted as a delegate
to · the. upcoming Ohio
Department enc·ampment in
Allllnce, Ohio. Past commander! Myron Jones, was repon~
.
reponed Ben
that televlalon
I*" ed 11.
aonallty,
Stein, donated
money to help aave a
TeMeaae battlefield.
Commander Oller re~ed
on attending the . !40th
annlvenary re-enactment of
the Battle of Shiloh in south·
ROCKSPRINGS - New
em Tenneaaee. He waa able to officers were elected at a
aee the orlalnal Confederate recent meedng of the Rock
submarine, lhe CSS Hunley, Sprin&amp;a Better Health Club
and the fabled sold coin car: which celebrated its 66th
rled by Ita captain. The U.S. anniversary In May. Tbe club
mint Iiiia duplicated the aold waa Clfillnizated In May 1936.
coin in ita damaged condition Officers elected for 2003
for sale to Civil War enlltual· were elected: Fry, president;
uta.
Dorothy Jeffers, vice presi·
A report wasalso given on a dent; Morris, secretary and
recent assianment of curent reporter; and Ooeglein, treacadeu from lhe U.S. Army surer.
Military Academy at West
Phyllis Skinner hosted the
Point to a Civil War re-enact- meeting which opened with
ment so that they could learn the Lofd's Prayer and pledge
the hiStory of the army. The to the American flag. rry
cadets repOrted that they were Have . devotions
titled
surprised' to find It so educa·. 'Welcome is a Word of
tiona! Wid interesting.
Love," "Heart Gifts," and
The commander reported a "Little Sermon."
successful Decoration Day
Officers' reports were
ceremony at the Middleport given, and donations were
all-wars memorial with Judae given to lhe club by Lenora
Steven Story as speaker on Leifheit and Marge Leonard.
the Bill of Riahts. A report
A thank-you note was
was also made on the s\ICcess- received from Sadie Carl for a
ful Appomattolt Day bean Christmaa tray.
dinner In April hosted by
Fry introducted the pro·
James Moununa.
gram:
"Vitamins
and
, The camp passed, a resolu· Supplements" by Frances
lion asking tliat thetr national OOellein; "Picture Snapping
organization seek free admis- Pilla by Skinner; "Once a
slon to U.S. · Park Service Week Works" by Fry; "Does n
.Civil War piU'ks upon .the pre· Disease Run In Your
&amp;entation of a valid member· Family?" by Nancy Morris;
ship. cllt'd. Since the federal and "Are You Taking Iron for
aovemment recognizes . the Fatigue" by Dorothy Jeffers.
Sons of Union Veterans of the
Jeffen wlll host the June
Civil War. as active national meeting, with the program by
guard unit, the meniben felt Skinner and contest by Fry.
this request was proper.
The contest given by
The camp welconied sever· Oocglein was won by Fry,
a! new members. These Moms and Jeffers.

Club elects
offlcen

. However, the behavior of lite wed·
ding party at the rehearsal and ceremony showed that they valued
appearance above all else. I later
fou!14 out that the couple had hired
people from their health club to
serve as their attendants to assure
the pictures would look good.
.
I couldn't help but compare the ·
e1tpe~ence with ~ ne1tt weddin$ I
coordmated. The bride sat down With
me before the rehearsal and told me
that her cousin, a bridesmaid, was in
a wheelchair and very ill. The bride
wanted to be sure everything would
be handled with sensitivity. We discussed the procession, ceremony and
reception in detail, with the bride's
focus on her cousin's comfort. It
turned out to be a glorious day. Their
love and caring radiated to everyone
in attendance. Sadly, one month later

her cousin died.
- Need I tell you which wedding
was more beautiful? More meaning·
ful? It had nothing to do with physical appearance.
The 11room whose fiancee did not
want h1s friend with the club foot to
participate in their weddin~ should
take a long, hard look at hts brideto-be. She is either too immature or
too selfish to understand what their
ceremony should· really celebrate.
...:.JUDY IN TUCSON
·
DEAR JUDY: r agree. The most
important ingredient in a wedding
should, above all, be love.
(Pauline Phillips and her daughter Jeanne Phillips share the pseudonym Abigail Van Buren. Write
Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com
or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.)

MEIGS CALENDAR
Community Calendar
IT publlehed •• a tree
eervlce · to non-profit
groupe wlehlng to
announce mHtlnge and
apeclal evente. The cal·
endar 11 not deetgned to
promote 11lee or fund·
raleerT of any type.
Item• are printed only 11
apace pennlte end can·
not be guaranteed to be
printed a epeclflc num·
ber ofdaye.

County Artisans will meet
at the home of Harry and
Janet Leffle on T~Jesday at
6:30 p.m. All artisans are
welcome and the public Is
invited. · Information Is
available by calling 992·
6777.

at
6:30
p.m.
Wednesday
at
Pageville Town Hall.

on
the

HOBSON - Brotner
Larry Lee· to speak at
Hobson
Christian
Fellowship, Wednesday, 7
p.m.

ROCKSPRINGS
Salisbury
Township THURSDAY
Trustees, Tuesday, 6 p.m. TUPPERS PLAINS
at the township building on Tuppers Plains VFW
Rocksprings Road.
L:adies Auxiliary, 7 p.m.
Thursday at the hall.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Masonic Lodge
RACINE Racine
Middleport Community will hold a regular meeting
Association will meet at on Tuesday at 7:30 at the Grange to meet Thursday,
8:30 a.m. at Peoples Bank Masonic Lodge with work 7 p.m. at the hall .
In Middleport.
in the Masters Masons'
FRIDAY
Degree.
POMEROY - Meigs
ALFRED - . Orange
County Chapter PERl
Township Trustees will . WEDNESDAY
meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. REEDSVILLE - Ohio Friday, Meigs County
at the home of the clerk, University College of Senior Citizens Center.
Osle Follrod.
Osteopathic
Medicine Lunch at noon, program to
Childhood Immunization follow. Pam Learman of
POMEROY
Program will provide free The Ohio Consumers
Childhood Immunization Immunizations for children Council to speak.
Clinic, ' Meigs . County throu~h 18 years of age at
RACINE - Revival and
Health Department, 1 to 7 · Reeds Country Store In
p.m. Bring shot recorda. Reedsville on Wednesday Youth Evangelism with Tim
and Melinda Mannes,
Children must be accom· from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m.
penled by parent or legal
Mount Moriah Church of
guardian.
PAGEVILLE - Scipio God, Racine, Friday and
Township Trustees will Saturday at 7 p.m.,
MINERSVILLE - Malga hold their regular meeting Sunday at 9:45 a.m.

J

Healthy Start
Healthy Fa1nilies
Health ·Care Coverage for ·
Ohio's Working Families

Healthy Start offers no-cost or low-cost health care coverage
for kids (birth•to age 19) and pregnant'women.
Healthy Families offers no-cost health ~are coverage for the
entire family · parents AND kids.

992-2117
1-800-992-2608

Pat Newland named to lead.
Eastern footpa/1 program
See Butch Cooper's story In today's sports section ... 81

..

�Th~ Daily Sentinel

Nation • World ·

Inside:
Diamond Rolllllhlp, Page B2

--

\

WASHINGTON (AP) -The heads of America's •
unions
are a well-paid bunch, raking in salaries lhat far OUIWeigll many of
their rank-and-file members.
The Labor Department posted union financial reports on the
Internet for the first time Monday. The Associated Press examined
the latest repats for I0 labor groups, including the labor federation
AR..-CIO. All paid their presidents six-figure salaries. Among
them: the Teamsters and uruons reptesenling teachers, firefighters,
pilots and postal and government workers.
Union presidents' salaries may seem high compared with what
their members make, but a better barometer is the pay of corporate
exec\ltives, said Teamsters spokesman Brei Caldwell.
·
''There's just no com~son," Caldwell said, "Corporate salaries
an: so bloated that they re beyond reason."

.Powel pledges d"iplomaty p;as
WASI-!INGTON (AP) - Secretary of State Colin Powell is
sending his deputy to South Asia and pledging "a fuU-rourt diplomatic press" to avert war between India and Pakistan.
• Curbing Pakistani Islamic extremists from infiltrating disputed
Kashmir and attacking Indian soldiers is the first priority of Deputy
Secretary of State Richard Annitage and Defense Secretary Donald
H. Rumsfeld, who are traveling separately lei India and Pakistan in
coming days.
The next step would be to urge India to reciprocate, presumably
by withdrawing hundreds of thousands of troops from the frontier
with Pakistan, Powell said Monday. ·
.
.
From there, Powell hopes to move India and Pakistan into faceto-face negotiations over the future of the Himalayan territory they
both claim.

Amendments would boost cost of Senate bill
WASHINGTON (AP) - President
Bush says the Senate's $31 billion
counterterrorism bill is too expensive,
but that's not stopping lawmakers from
proposing extra money for farmers,
c&lt;~s h-strapped states and others.
The Senate planned to resume debat·
ing the legislation Thesday in a batde
expected to last at least a week. At issue
are amendments - many having little
to do with the Sept. II attacks - to a
bill already crammed with money for
the military, intelligence, local emergency a~encies, New York's rebuilding,
and simalar programs.
The underlying bill is already more
expensive than the $27.1 billion proposal Bush sent Congress in March. Its
chief author, Senate Appropriations
Committee Chairman Robert Byrd, OW. Va., has said the White House sought
too little for efforts to combat bioterrorism and bolster security at nuclear
facilities, water systems and other
areas.
.
"No lon11er is the enemy onlr on a
faraway dastant foreign ·shore,' Byrd
said Monday. "The question for all the
leaders of this government is, can we
adapt?"
The House approved a ·$29 'billion
package May 24.
No Republican senator spoke during
Monday's brief debate on the measure,
called a supplemental spending bill

11

because it would cover tbe last four cut CongteSS enac:ted earlier this year.
months ·of tbe federal fisc:al year that That cut reduced revenue for st~
ends Sept. 30. But last week, Bush whose tiX systems are linked to federal
again warned the Senate against P!'o: law.
ducing a costly bill, thouab he aVOided , -Sen. Conrad BUJ'IlS, R-Mont., plus
direcdy threatening a veto.
to seek nearly $1 billion to help farmers
"The supplemental ought to focus on bit by recent drought conditions.
emergency measures, measures that are · .-Sens. Jesse Relms, R-N.C., ud
needed to fight the war, to button up tbe Bill Frist, R-Tenn .. will seek to ick1
hoJDeland,'' Bush said. ."The supple- $400 million to the · $100 milli6q
mental shouldn't be viewed as an a!Ieady in tbe bill to fight AIDS abroad;
opportunity to load it up with special Sens. Richard Durbin, D-111., and Arl~n
projects."
Specter, R-Pa.; prefer a $600 milli~n
As wrilten, the measure contains addition.
·
· '.
strikingly fewer projects designed for
-Sen. James Inhofe, R·Okla., would
individual lawmakers' home districts add SIS million to restore the l.nterstate
than usual for a bill of its size. It does 40 bridge over the Arkansas River that
include $3 million for the Interior was destroyed by a barge on May 26,
Department to drill five water wells in killing 14 people.
•
Santa Fe, N.M., and $16 million to help
The bill may also be used to resol~
Northeastern fishing ·interests hurt by broader issues resulting ftol'n
legal restrictions on' fishing.
Congress' failure to approve a budJP:t
Byrd and Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska, for the coming fiscal year.
. :
the ~ppropriations panel's top . If ~ngoinj! budget talks between the
Republican, · are expected to oppose two s1des y1eld an agreement, the mql·
many add-ons unless they are pa1d for sure may eventually set an overall
with cuts in other programs.
spending level for 2003, renew expir•
Even so, likely amendments include:. ing laws used to enforce tax and spend·
-Sens. Ben Nelson, 0-Neb., and ing targets, and extend the governSusan Collins, R-Maine, want to give ment's borrowing limit, which the Buill
cash-strapped states . $8.9 billion for administration says will otherwise be
Medicaid and a new social services breached by June 28.
.
block grant. The effort seems likely to
Without a bipartisan agreement, the
fail. But if not, it would restore some bill may become a battleground for
funds states lost due to a business,tax some of those fights.
•

WASHINGTON (AP)- The dangers posed by Iraq's nuclear
·ambitions will be a topic of discussion when Defense Secretary
Donald H. Rumsfeld visits allied nations in the Persian Gulf, but he .
will not be seeking support for a U.S. invasion, a defense official
said Monday.
.
·
"We're not at the stage w~ere we're Boing llfOI!lld soliciting allies
for something like that," swd the officaal, who discussed aspects of
Rumsfeld's,trip on condition that he not be identified,
The secretary, meanwhile, said Osama bin Laden does !lOt seem
ORLEANS (AP) -An attorney for fonner Gov. Edwin
to be fonmally directing the ai-Qaida terror network, although llie Edwards is asking an appeals court to throw out Edwards' extortion
organization remains active worldwide.
·
conviction, saying the trial judge wrongly dismissed a juror who
"My guess is, if he were active, we would know it- we would ap~ to be the lone holdout for acquittal.
have some some visible sense of i~ which we haven't seem to-have
"This judge was heU-bent on removing this juror,'' attorney Alan
had, for some reason," he told The Washington Post in a story for Dershowitz told the three-judge panel of the 5th U.S. CiJcuit Court
Thesday editions. He added he did not know whether bin Laden of Appeals on Monday.
·
was simply lying low or was ill or dead.
The judge had no choice in light of other jurors' complaints that
he was refusing to deliberate, Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephen
Higginson argued. The juror also lied about moving notes outside
the deliberation room, and there's no such thing as a "minor lie" to
WASHINGTON (AP) - The CIA received vague intelligence a judge, he said.
·
·
about Zacarias Moussaoui in spring 2001, but from an infonmant
The court gave no indication when it would rule on Edwards'
who knew the Frenchman only by an alias and the !lgency didn't appeal.
link the two names until well after Sept. II, government officials

.

•

Making a splash

\
Ex-govemorfiles appeal · .
kw

•

~

•
••

..

Moussaoui info surfaced ealfy

Entertain11tent mogul dies

sa~ CIA's original ,background check on Moussaoui -

now
charged as an accomplice with the hijackers - carne up empty
after he was arrested at a Minnesota flight school a month before
the suicide anacks, the officials said.
U.S. investigators never heard of Moussaoui under his true name
before Aug. 15, one inteUigence official told The Associated Press,
speaking only on condition of anonymity.
That official said that in April2001 a CIA informant mentioned
a man by a different name lhat he had met in 1997 during a gathering of Islamic extremists.

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP)- Even after he lost control of
his entertainment empire in the 1990s, the tall man in the large
black eyeglasses reported every day to his office in the sleek, black
tower that symbolized the power and respect attached to the name
Lew Wasserman.
He was the last of the old-time movie moguls - a man who
changed the talent agency business and built Universal into a studio that nurtured the careers of Steven Spielberg and other groundbreaking filmmakers.
.
.
Wassenman died Monday at his home in Beverly Hills. He was
89 and had suffered complications from a stroke.
·
"He was a force for good, the likes of which we will never see
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) - A judge delayed Winona again," the family of President Lyndon B. Johnson said in a stateRyder's hearing on shoplifting and drug charges after the actress ment released Monday. "His sage counsel, loyal friendship and
suffered an apparent arm injury as she pushed through a throng of steadfast caring were a bulwark of strength from which to draw."
reporters after a lunch break.
Ryder, 30, had arrived late for Monday's hearing, in lime for only
brief testimony by a store security offiCial before a lunch break.
When she returned from lunch, her attorney Mark Geragos was
COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) - Families of patients who mysteriat her right side as she walked through the crowd of reporters. ously died at a Veterans Affairs hospital a dec•de ago ex~sed
Television footage showed a sheriff's deputy appearing to collide hope that murder·charges against a former nurse at the hospttal will
with a cameraman, who feU into the diminutive actress from the fmaUy bring them justice.
·
left. As the deputy stumbled, Ryder suddenly winced in pain..·
Richard A. Willlllins was arrested Monday and charged in the
Ryder was Cradling her left elbow after emerging from the group deaths of 10 patients in 1992. More than 40 patients at Truman
of fellOrterS at the courthouse door, leading prosecutors to raise Memorial Veterans Hospital in Columbia died lhat. year while
quesuons about wliich arm was really hurt, said Jane Robison, a under Williams' caie, authorities said.
district attorney spokeswoman.

, ·
. OUCH, THAT HURTS- Shawn Sullivan prepares to make a bl(
splash Into Fanning Springs In the belly flop contest at the 7th
annual Red Belly Day In Fanning Springs, Aa. Sullivan, a flrittime competitor, took first place In his division. Competitors
were judged on the angle of their bodies to the water, the
height of the jump, the sound, and the splash. (AP)
.,.,
•

HEALTHY START

Rich got richer during the '90s; poverty rates dropped

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~---------------------J"•.
"'

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. The Sponing News, one of
the nation's oldest and most
respected sports publications.
announced it's 2002 preseason All-America teams as
well as their preseason Thp
25 on Monday.
MarShall is ranked 14th in
the preseason poll, the highest preseason ranking ever
for the Thundering Herd.
"It is exciting for us to. be
ranked in the top 25 of so
many preseason polls," Herd
coach Bob .Pruett said. "We
thought that we had a chance
to be in the top 20 or even top
15, but it is not where you
start, it's where you finish
that matters."
In addition to the preseason
poll, the . publication also
announced it's preseason AllAmerica teams. That group
included junior receiver
Darius Watts on the first
team.
"This is the third of five
guys who could be fii'St team
All-America in some presea·
son magazine," Pruett said of
Watts' selection. "We are certainly excited about that and,
at this point, I really don't
know of any other AllAmericans in the state of
West Virginia."
In addition to Watts, offensive lineman Steve Sciullo
was named to the Playbpy
AU-America
team.
Quarterback Byron Leftwich
has also been mentioned on
several preseason teams and
punter Curtis Head and
defensive back Chris Crocker
•• 'an:l both receiving preseason
recognition.
Below is the complete preseason top 25 as well as the
Sporting News All-America
teams.

•

Texas; 4. Miami (Fla.); 5.
Georgia; 6. Washington State; 7.
Tennessee; B. Flo~da; 9.
Colorado; 10. Ohio State; 1t .
Nebraaka; t 2. washington; 13.
Louisville; t4. Marshall; 15.
Michigan; 16. Penn State; 17.
LSU; 18. USC; 19. Auburn; 20.
Oregon; 21. VIrginia T!!ch; 22.
Purdue; 23. Michigan State; 24.
N.C. State; 25. Oregon State

Blue J~s fire
Buck Martinez
TORONTO (AP) - Buck
Martinez, who was hired as
manager of the Toronto Blue
Jays without any coaching
experience on the minor or
major league level, was fired
in his second season.
'rhe Blue Jays, off to their
worst start in two decades,
made third base coach Carlos
Tosca the manager for the
rest of the season.

and battered

•

6~!~

Marshall No. 14
In lSN poll

.•
•.

•

Dowl•tCI Ctll.ollluu.a . . . _
IN8ulwa AGENcY

BY 8un:H Cam a:

.u.s. World Cup

••

ndna

HIGilllGHIS

. •.''
•

MONEY, MONEY, MONEY - Justin Moore, head brewer at
Jarre Creek Ranch Brewery, stands next to his brewing equip.
ment In Castle Rock, Colo. The economic prosperb of the
1990s gave a financi~jl boost to Americans who wer\ already
doing well, prO,duclng fatter paychecks and more colle&amp;e
degrees, Census 2000 figures show. The figures released
today also showed many industrial suburbs struggling as res~
dents left to get farther from cities and closer to new jobs In
sprawling office.parks. (AP)

'I'lm&gt;AY'S

THE SPORTING NEWS PRE·
SEASON TOP 2S
1. Oklahoma; 2. Flo~da State; 3.

Fonner nurse atreSted ·

WASHINGTON (AP) - chance of surviving."
The .economic prosperity of "It's pretty clear that, as
the 1990s gave a financial always, ~owth occurred in
boost to Americans who were places wath' the most vibrant
already doing well, producing . economies," said derno~aph·
fatter paychecks and more er Martha Farnsworth Riche, a
college degrees, Census 2000 former head of the Census
figures show.
Bureau. "That is the character
Still, many less fortunate of our economy - people
Americans were unable to move where the jobs are."
escape poverty.
National figures suggest
Tifat's the message from the that the prosperity before last
complete state-by-state data year's recession was enjoyed
taken from long-form ques· mostly by more affluent
tionnaires. The statistics show . Amencans, "modestly by the
that poveny rates remained middle class, and not very
highest in rural towns in the' m.uch by persons below the
South and Midwest and poverty line," said John
incomes stagnated in urban Logan, a sociologist at the
counties in California and the State University of New Ydrk
Northeast.
at Albany.
.
The
figures
released
By Tuesday, all 50 states
Tuesday also showed many will have received their first
industrial suburbs struggling wave of detailed data from
as residents left to get farther questions asked on the 2000
from cities and closer to new census long fonn. a survey
jobs in sprawling office parks. distributed to 20 million
A suburb of Denver, American households that
Douglas County, Colo., was covered topics from income to
the fastest-growing county by education to commuting.'
population ·over the 1990s.
Data released last year rovThe county's median house- ered questions asked of all
hold income of $82,929, mone Americans during the last
than $40,000 over the median head count.
..
income for all U.S. houseSome hi~lights frorri
holds, topped tbe nation in national
data
released
1999.
Tuesday:
"I grew up on the East Coast -The
percentage of
and was ready for a change of Americans living below
lifestyle," said Justin Moore, poveny level decreased
who opened Iarre Creek slil!htly from 13.1 percent in
Ranch Brewery io the thriving 19B9 to 12.4 percent in 1999,
suburb of Castle Rock, apart while the median household
of Douglas County, in 1997.. income went up from an infla"The mone people there are, lion-adjusted $39,008 to
the m~ a business has a $41,994 during the !Jecade.

The Daily Sentinel

tea111 blqpcl up

SEoUL, South Korea (AP)
- The United States has
been aching for four years to
show the world it's no longer
a last-place team. Now, on
the eve of its World Cup
opener, the United States is
just plain aching.
.
Captain Claudio Reyna has
a strained right quadriceps
and star attacker Clint Mathis
has inflammation in his left
knee going into Wednesday's
game against Portugal in the
Seoul suburb of Suwon .
Reyna is unsure either of
them will play.
In other World Cup news,
each player on the U.S. soccer tellm would get a bonus
of at least $118,478 if tbe
Americans advance to the
second round of the World

Cup.

IICOOPERWIONlYT111811NE

TUPPERS PLAINS - It'll probably be one of the
smoothest tnnsitions for a .new high school head .
coach football.
When tbe 2002 season gets into full swina come
August. there will probably be little change as well.
Pat Newland, who bas spent the past two years as
an assistant at Eastern under Scott Christman, takes
over as the new Eagles' head coach.
Durin&amp; those two years, the Eaales have earned
state playoff berths. becomin&amp; the ol the top DIYi ion
Vl programs in the region.
"There's not goill$ to be a lot of changes,". said
Newland. "We're gomg to try and keep all the coaches back on staff and we're just goin&amp; 10 try and add a
little more excitement."
One of those coach will be Chrlstmtlll, who wilt

head

1-.._

switch roes with Newland, jOinina ament IS!Ii~lll ....---------~----,
David Hawthorn. Brian Bowtft, Brytn Dwst and J.E,
- . _ ...............

Kirlcplltriclt,
"Coach Christman just had some stuff in his ptt...
sonal life he Wlllte&lt;IIO at with, and bei~ a tiead
coadl takes • lot of time. He still loves Elsteln,•• said
Newland. "We all just felt th:tt the best thing WM to
o
keep Eastern tough was 10 keep the staff ~tiler ••...••-PGitlbc
because tbe staff worts togetber lUI well. It's going ........Is II
lO be hard lO duplie~~te what.Coach Christn.lllll hils
done durin&amp; his tenure, but we've~ 1 good man on
•••
tbe staff and he decided to stay on.
Newland has S{lCIIt the past two years leilrning from
7 I
ltlt-Ort' t D.......
Christm:tn whllt 1t takes to be 1 head coach.
• 200().()1 - ,, I liD Mairt'
He knows tbe ch11llenges that await him.
"It's just 11101 of work," said Newland. "I'm glad 1
• 2002 -lllllted BIIMn head I
·
PI till IH NewlaatL IS

•

•••-o •a-•-;::••:..••1
2

··--•-•o.·•

··--·-be' ....

2

I

t

Larkin still

battling the ·
offensive ·blahs
CINCINNATI (AP) . B11rry Lurkin is still struggling at the plate. Tile
C i nc i n n ut i
Reds short·
stop is hoping
that his ~nme-winning hit on
Sunday 1s n sign of better
things to ~o:ome.
The 11 -time All-Star is bat·
ting .227 - 72 points below
his cnreer average.
His buses-loaded double
with two outs in the seventh
inning on Sunday drove in
three runs und enabled
Cincinnati to win, 5-i. and
avoid n sweep nt the !J'nds of
the Atlanta Bruves.
"Thnt felt really, · reully
good," Llll'kln said.
He bud entered the game
with 14 runs batted in, ranking eighth on the teUJn.
The win allowed the firstplace Reds to stuy two gum~s
uhend of the St. LoUIS
Curdinuls in the Nutionnl
League's Central Division.
Both teams were off
Monduy. St. Louis opens u
three-game series Thesduy
ni§ht in Cincinnati.
You wunt to win the
series," Lurk in said. "Two out
of three is definitely the gonl.
I cun tell you we 'II be ready."
. His at-but on Sunday came
.at a cruclul juncture, after
Sean Casey hud pinch hit und
struck out. Reds starter Elmer
SWMPINQ lARRY..;. Cincinnati's Barry Larkin, making the play on defense against Florida Dessens scattered six hits
last week, has been struggling on offense, only hitting .227 - 72 points lower than his over seven shutout innings to
career average. (AP)
·

Red5

pick up his fourth victory tkis
season.
"Elmer pitched great, we
got some tremendous defensive plu~s ..• and L.nrkin 's hit
'cupped It off," munuger Bob
Boone said. "We really needed thn\."
Reds catcher Juson LuRue
twice threw out buserunners
trying to steul, und center
fielder Ken Gritli:y Jr. threw
out Atluntu 's Andruw Jones at
the plate in the fifth.
Casey hud left Saturday's
~ume with tightness ·tn his
nght hamstrin¥. He was kept
out of Sundu_y s sturtingline·
up before gomg in us u pinch
hitter In the seventh.
The Reds will decide on
Thesduy whether Casey is fit
to sturt against St. Lou as.
He hud pulled the humstring lust month 1111d wus
sidelined. ,It doesn't feel us
bud this 11111e nround, Casey
s11id. ·
"I just kind of aggravated
it," he suid.

·Tonlaht's .
.Ga. .

• St. Loula Cardinali
(Simontacchl 3.0) at the
Clnolnnatl
·Aeda
(Hamilton

p.m.

3·2), 7:10

0 Clnergy Field ·

.,
'

NFL veterans hit
by wave of cuts
'

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

· The second phase of free agency began Monday as
some of the most productive NFL players of the past
decade were cut to create salary cap room.
·
Among the casualties were wide receivers Antonio
Freeman of Green Bay, Derrick Alexander of Kansas
City, Henman Moore of Detroit, and Keenan McCardell
of Jacksonville; running back Jamal
Anderson of Atlanta; offensive tackle John
of Buffalo; and linebacker Hardy
I Nickt!rscm of the Jaguars.
Charlie Batch was also released · by
Detroit, putting a relatively young quarter:
on the market. Washington cut defensive end Marco Coleman, signed cluring owner
Daniel Snyder's spending spree two years ago.
Pittsburgh cut linebacker Mike Jones, the defensive
hero in the St. Louis Rams' Super Bowl victory over
Tennessee. Jones ·stopped Kevin Dyson a yard sflort of
the tying touchdown on the game's final play.
None· of the cuts was unexpected ·- all the players
already had been told they would be released. And most
of the released players, especially the wide receivers, are
likely to end up elsewhere.
·
"If there was no salary cap, I can assure you he prob·
ably would be on our team,'' Washington coach Steve
Spurrier said after cutting Coleman and savlnf $3.5 million. "He's a sood player and a good person.'
These late cuts result from the sect1on of the league's
labOr agreement that allows teams to release players ·
after June 1 to absorb cap hits over two years Instead of
one. Jacksonville, for example, saved $6., million by
cuuing McCardell and Nickerson.
•
Some of the teams need tbe money saved to sign draft
choices; others will go after free agenta, including those
cut this week.
•

PREll TIME New Jersey Nets
guard Jason
Kldd talks tP
reporters be(ore
. leaving for Los
Ahgeles
Monday. The
Nets, winners cit
the Eastern ·
·
Conference. will
ptay the Los
Angeles Lakera
In the NBA
finals. (AP)

Laken
LOS ANGELES (AP) The two-time defending
champion Los
Angeles
·
L~kers
took
Monday off rather than begin
preparations for the New
Jersey Nets, and who cim
· blame them?
Most everyone believes the
real NBA Finals ended
. Sunday in Sacramento.
So much time, so much
energy went into Pl,ltting away
the Sacramento Kings that it

NBA

pre-finals break
might be difficult for the say they'll be ready.
Laker&amp; to gear up again so . And who's to doubt them?
quickly. Tlte Finals begin They've been here before .
Wednesday night at Staples
"What day is today'/"
Center.
Robert Horry asked after the
The Lakers are no dum- Lakers beat the Kings 112·
mies, they know what's going I06 in overtime in Game 7 of
the Western Conference
on.
If they're not aware they final~ . "Sunday'/
have been established as 9-1
"What day to the Finals
~
'te · th ·
t t th start'/ Wednesday?
avon s tn e1r CJ,Ues or e
"Oh, we got enou~h gus ..,
second three-peat an franchise
history, they'll soon hear The Lakers, in t e Fin~ls
about it .
But the battle•tested Lakers
PIHH HI Lakin, II.
I

�•

The Daily Sentinel

Twins not surprised by Cleveland resurgence ·

AROUND

THE

UNNEAPOUS (AP)- When \hie non· in lhtre.
C~\~land Indian · v.ere ·lumping
"The\· re :a good lellm."

DIAMOND

........ ...
•-•" •
--•
•
....... • • •

their \\'&amp;)' lhrou&amp;h
'•'· the
MinnesoQ Twins v.-.eren't fooled.
ow, the AL Ctoual le.ters get
another diiDce to ched out their
dlief division riQI v.ilen a threegame seties begins Tuesday at the
Metrodome.
And &amp;1ICSS wh3t? Just as lhe 1\r.ins
haw: suspttted aJI along, lhe lndiuns
are again playing lil-e a ~tender.
"As somebOdy sa1d to me.
Clc:\'tland is lying in the v.'tc:ds."
Minnesom ll\lllaget Ron G:lnlenhire
said. "Well, if they're lying in the
weeds. they' w: ~ bazookas and can-

aw
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The Indians ha' bten one of the
mo t u~nd-dov.n tc:um. in the
m~ this seasoo. Elpe..'ttd b\
liW\Y to slide bet 10 the middle of
the pack bthilld the 1\\in and
Chicago aftt:r k&gt;sing SC:\ em stars
fronl rast yev' . lineup that \\'00 lht
Cc:ntr:ll and '1\'&amp;S a 11•me a\\~' from
the. At.CS. C~\~land started 11-1 indudiDI! a four-game: sv.~p of
Minnesota at Jacobs Field.
Then cumc: l5 losses in 34 gwries.
And then came: un 11•2 tretch to
bri~ the Indians oock to where
they re at now - 28-211. 3 112 l!llmeS

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dominating efforts when the Lal'ers had Ma&lt;:Cullocb Sllid Monday before the NQHT 10 '"IP\111 \:~IQ.MOO
to have them in Ciumes 6 and 7 of the Nets new to Los Angeles. "You haw: to AHY OR au IIIIlS. -r:': .., 10 , 11 .
1
conr~ finals.
11\lke everylhing ll little tn(W diffitult
1lll'M"111nd rlgll..
Janoring his pGlnfuhrthritic riaht big for him.
·
~l lllQt
ot-w~~ve ot ..-t. All
toe and fatigue, O'Neal bnd 41 points . "We haw se\'ernlgUY$ that will take ~«. lllQt
11011 (IIIII&amp; Ul .,.Ill
and 17 reboUnds in 44 minute FridlQ' . turns and move it around a little 011 him. --....,.--- IMll • all lMI\ 1011•
11
night in al06-102 victory and 3S points But he's a dominating fon:e. We just
Public Motte.
no~•
ani:l 13 tebound less than 48 hours toter · ha\1\1 to try to limit how touch he can - - - - - - ••~rlptloll 11 ...,.
inSI minutes inGame7.
dominate.l'mjust@Ointtotrytodothe IHIIIIR'&amp;IAI.aOI' 0t1 a ttttd •u,.,.y (1)-,1001
And he made free throws the WJIY lhings I did well against him last year."
MAL ntaTt
~-------..,
Rick BtiJT)' u ed to: 13-of- 17 and 11-ofIn O'Nea.l ~tnd Kobe Bryant, the 'nltSwtutONo.
15 in the: last tWQ games. That's 24-of- Lakers ha\1\1 perhaps the NBA's two best
.....,. Cowt!J.
32 and 75 percent - fnr ahow: his typi· players. And the supportin&amp; ttiSt, led by
CAM NO..
cui output.
· Harry, Rick Fox mid Dettk Fisher, htiS
"Over me last ~-ouple of yem now, plaY1:d its purt.
oteym
when l've needed to hit them, I've hit
"We've b.:cn pluying together tar live
Nor1ll Amllllllll
them," O'Neal said.
·
years," Horry said. "If we don't under- McMtt... campera-,.
The Nets don't figure to be nenrly ns stand what to do by now, somelhin&amp;'s
~"'""
~uipped to deal with O'Neal as the wrong."
. .
.
Kmgs were.
LalWs cooc:h Phil Juckson hus won u
However, New Jersey's Todd record 2~ strui,ht P.loyotT ~~es. Shoo~ Jae~tlt 1.. 'YIIelm4la1111,
MacCulloch, the backup to Dikcmbe . he muke 11 24, 1t will n1ulte nme champt· II at, Dtfal dMtlt
Mutombo in Philadelphia last senson, at onships ns a head COIIch to tie Red
In Jllll'&amp;ll- Of In
least has some eKperience gunrding Auerbllch's record ttnd 156 postsenson 0n1tr
ot .... In IM
O'Nenl in the Finals.
victories •• one more Ihun all-time IIIICI~ anlhlacl ae!lon,
"You have to try to make him take leader Put Riley.
1 wtll ollw 1w 1111 11
shots n little t'ilrther out than usunl and
"We still hnve the heurt of u chumpi· Jlllbllll lllflliOn at IM
CoutiiiOIIII
In
make him work for everything he gets," on," Fox suid..

:\

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•

1111111 n.llillll'lofe

I

~

Minneapolis includtng tbrc:e straiJhl
from 1952-54-andeightsince movmg
19 Los Angeles in 1960.
: The Nets, a lonery team ju t last year, .
ate in the Finals for the first time.
:A mismatch?
On paper, maybe.
·
, The Lakers have uppelU'ed vulnerable
at times during the playoffs, but they
survived . a remarkable series with
Su.crnmento nnd said afterward there
~liS never itdoubt .
·"They felt it was their time," Shu~uille
O'Neol said. "Jt was .not their time. •
:Said Horry: "We got u lot of people
stying we couldn't do it, we couldn't do
it in Sncmmento's house. We . stayed
calm nnd did it."
:On~ of the main reasons the Lokers
won WtiS O'Neal, who came up with

Die II .. ~._ ... ,
OJII?nd4,
I

w.t.,

et Q.. W

.._tl*t

rOr the: 21st timt, are seeking their 14th
championship - the)' won fiw: titles in

Jose Cruz Jr. homered twice as host Toronto beat Tampa Bay
for its fll'St win under new manager Curios Tosca.
The Blue Jays, who swept Detroit over the weekend. fired
manager Buck Martinez before the game..
.Cruz, who entered the game in a I0-for-61 slump, led oft' the
fourth with a homer off Tanyon Stunze (0· 7) nnd added a
three-run shot in the fifth .
ORIOLES 4, YANKEES 3
At New York, Mike Bordick hit an RBI double: in the: ninth
inning as Baltimore beat Ynnkees closer Muriano Rivera
again;
·
·
Gary Matthews Jr. singled with one out ~gainst Rivera ( 1·2)
and stole second with two outs. Bordick bit the next pitch
down the left-field line for an RBI double.
Rivera (1-2), buseball's best closer, fell to 1·7 with u 4.47
ERA in his career against the Orioles. No other team has beat·
en Rivera more than twice.
·
wu.n: Sox 4, RoYALS 0
.
Jon Garland (6·4) pitched four-hit ball into the seventh
. inning as host .Chicago snapped a seven-game losing streak.
MARINERS 4, A1'ULE11CS 1
Freddy Garcia took a shutout into the eighth inning to win
his third straight start as Seattle won at Oal{land. .
Garcia (7·4) John Mabry hit a solo home run with one out in
the eighth. Knzuhiro Sasaki pitched the ninth for his 13th save.
A's rookie Aaron Harang (1·1) allowed two runs and .five
hits in six innings .
ANGI!LS 51 RANGERS 2
,
Ramon Oniz overcame Alex Rodriguet.'s AL·leading 19th
home run in the first inning and beat visiting ThJtas for the
eighth time in nine career decisions . .
Oniz (6·5) allowed two runs, four hits und four walks while NOT TODAY - Boston rillht fladler Trot Nixon can't make the catch on tha home tun hit by
striking out five.
Detroit's Ramon Santiago In the seventh Inning Monday In Detroit. (AP)

l':·.

Daily Sentinel
Classifieds

992·2155

•

~~~lnHIII
namacl Co\lnty, ~====~~~;:;:;:::::~
•
on '"' 11111 aar Iii
Htlp Wanted
.luly, aooa. •• 10:00
a.m., !Ill IOIIOWlnt
IIMI~

~Newland

.the one: of the top linemen in
the l'ri-Vulley Conference ·
lnst.yenr. .
.
'
"Obvious!~, we've lost a
. fruwn Pip 11
lot of tnlent, • said Newland.
"We've lost n ton of tnlent.
got u chance to be an assis- Uke I told the seniors, we
tdnt under Conch Christman, . still have so.fte talent here, so
bl:lcause the thing he taught l'm not goin~ to give up and
. me is oil the work you hnve suorlfices thetr senior se11son.
to put into it. You hnve to do
~e things in the off-season.
lfs just n · never-ending
process. You've got to put the
hburs in to be suc;cessful."
·For Newland, this is a
dream job. He graduated
from Eastern in 1996.
:He spent two years ~laY,lng
fQr current West Virgmia
University head conch Rick
R:odriguez ut Glenville State
bbfore transferrlns to Rio
Orande.
·
Before coaching at Eastern,
he was an assistant at
Sputhern from 1996-98 and
SOtpt, Aromalhorapy,
at Cordington Lincoln in
· 01•. Bam an&lt;! BOdy
~II Nalural Htrbt.
1999.
OROER
ON-LINE
:This will be his first hend
0111100
AVIlllblt
conching assignment.
1800·788·2489
"It's my fi-rst opportunitr,
kalhyahlrbt.com
und I'm glnd it's at BI!Stern,'
said Newlnnd. "I played here
and coached here nnd now
I'm the head conch here. It's
II ke a dream come true when .
something like this happens."
Newland's main focus right
off the bat will be on defense.
"We're going to try and
emphases defense and ~et
back to the good, hard hittmg
Ens tern defenses that we've
hnd in the past," said
Newlnnd. "I told the kids in
our first meeting that: we had
that I'm more worried ri'-ht
now about defense. They ve
been asking, What are we
going to do on offense? Are
we going to throw the ball,
H:JO.OH IS HEREI
are we going to run the
LMIIQ
Cant CIIVtlh~ Wtltr.
oall ... 7', and I just told them
Aopolro DNA.
right now, we're going to
(Human, Animal, I Pltnl)
focus more on defense. I
Sttklng Help WOI'Idwlclol
:believe that's what winvour
Llolt'n
lhon
championships for you.
.
Defense becomes more of a
IUV PORCLOIUR£11
concern for the Eagles with
UtoourSISI
8plll prolllll
the loss several key offensl ve
T•olniiiQI
layers to graduation, lnclud·
~rttlnlol
r.ng the starting quarterback,
thiee running bacb with con·
sldcrable playing time, and

.

l'&amp;ur place for

"We're not going to hnve
the speed ond one mun taking
over 11 gume. We' i:e going to
hove to hove more or a team
concept and we're going to
have to play defense and
keep gomes close with
defense and try to be mentally tough."
·
Eastern's season begins

Aua. 23 as the Ellgles play
hostto South Galll11.
.·
The Eagles also have two
new opponents on the 2002
schedule Meigs and
Belpre; both members of the
TVC Ohio Division.

cltlorlbacl 1111 .......
alhllttcl In tilt
County of Mitt• and
llatt at Olllo, 1nd In
1111 Tawntlllp at
llaiOto to wll:
IIIUI!Id In lactiOn
all, T. 71 "· 14, IOipiO
'lbwnonlp, Mtlga
County. Ohio end
batna
more
plftlaulerly ciMorlbad

aaiOIIowa.
Comm111otng 11 an
Iron pin 111 liorlng
1011111 747.11 IMI end
Weelltl... !MIIrom

munlly · Action Is seeking a
PlannatiGrtnl Wrllllr to seok out, pnipare
and submll propos81S lor grMt lundh)g
opportunities. Excellent writing. ruseurch
and orgenlzatlonal skills noodlld. Degrt~e
In marketing, administration, business or
related field. Experience In n non·pmlll
prtl&amp;rred. Send resume nd lhrno
rttertncea to:

Ptennat/Grent Wrlttr
Community Aollon
Box 2?2, ChHhlro, OH 45820..
Cioaln date ll/7102·EOE

tlla Nartll1111 oarntt
Ol IIOIIOn 30, IIIII
point lltlng the
II'OlNT
01'
IIIIINNINQ;

tllenae,

lo.uth 0

"
' ' " t1 mlnutta
41"1100nd1
Will I
dl111noe ol 471.11
fill to 1 point In
'lbwnalllp llotd 13,
p1111tno en Iron pin
Ill It '10,11 ftll;
thenoe, fallowtnl
eald .lloed, North I
degro11 30 mlnutea
17 IIOOndl WMt I
dltlanoe of 171.31
ta1t to 1 paint,
thtnoe; North It
dttro11 11 mlnule•
40 11oand1 W111 •
dlattnot ot t 07.11

!"""'' !"'p.m.,~ppll&lt;ttiOoll Mondly, Wto.lnndft)'. hld~y
ftlursdl'(

p.m.

IUI'!Illlt provldtdl Ruth
ACIGirtlt,td Sllmpad Erwtloptl
4, P.O. Box 1438, f&lt;nlloch,
1·1438. Slart lmml&lt;llalelyl

•

Sttutdly 1\!nt 1it •nd miV.lthiultr

a.m.• I :I p.m.

Num Aides,
Pert10nal Care
Aides, State Te1ted
Nune Aids
Vullcy

- ~lcusunt

l'rlvute

lo
uccopllna upplrcutlnns
for prlvalc duty home
cure uu••• to provide
hourly tlll'll to cllenls
who 111sldc In Mawil.
Mcla•. Onllla, Alhens
Counlle• and JnckRnn

reduce puyments up
to SO%, lowe•· interest.
Nonprofit, licensed,
bonded.

• Co1npetlllve mle
• FlokiblciiOhedullna
• Mlleaae
rehnbunement
• Health lnsumnce

• rncontlvc plnn

Ulllmoll Monty Mokor It no1 MLMI
a Brand New lytlom 01110&lt;1 EMMI --..!ffi.U!R\9.;!!m-'lt!l!l:fi9J!L._
up 10 IOk Wtokly aolng tlmplt IUkll
· TAX RIVIIW IIRYICI
. Would you llko 10 rtOII"
·
28'11
of your 200011oxtl baok?
LOSE MONEY AGAIN In
TAY EMMIII'I N!W, II'o HOT, jjJ ___--l::lU:fii:g L- - ·11
•PA'rsuolo I10K WIEKLYI No Stlllngl
SIIUNIICURIO LOAN....
Into 1·871-1108·0323.
1'11/PtroanoVAulo/Mortgtgt
lid Ortdh OKI
SII"•UPI I Co·olonart OK
1•317·1113·3450

$2,000 Sign on Bonus
Plcusunt Vull~y Hnspilul '' ~ lll'l'l' lllly
ucccpllng resu1ilcs fur II •' uti tlnic • Fltlnt
• Pediatric Nur!K!. Ailplknnls 1nm1 huv~
u current Wcsl Vlrglnlu lkcnse.
Fle~lb l c Schedule. cx~cllcn1 snlui'Y·

holldoys, health lnsurun~c . sin~lclfullllly
plan, dcntul plan, life lnsururocc , vnl'nllnn,

long-term dlsubllity und I'C tir~lll&lt;'lll. .

.

Send resumes to:

PleGte call Debbie
Mitchell fur moro

Information or to
manae a pouonal

81iy HOMfl pBQMMOQQt
1·3 bodroom,lortoiOiurts/
lax repoatoaolona.
HUO, VA, "'lA, Prtalnlo.

0

Dlll)l

County, WV.

Interview at 740·992·
6916 or 1 · ~66·992·
6916

Plell&amp;llnt Valley Hosi&gt;ltlll
c/o Human R~Nout-c1•s
l5l0 Valley Drlw
Point Plellilllnt, WV 25551'
(304) 67~-4~40

. ~ HOLZER CLINIC
'•

Personnel Assistant

A 100+ physician aroup pnctlce is seeking a Human l{cso iii\' C~
Penonnel Aaslstant to facilitate personnel activities for
800+ emploJ.~:!.',~b~~~~~ ~1';.ul fucllilles.
Smplo~men1

Law1, ~UI"'r•lsory Polley I l'roce~urn .

Bonefill Admlnllttallon, Human Roaourco

lnfonn~ll on

Auoollle Otaree preferred, 3·! yearolfuman Meoour&lt;c «l&gt;&lt;rlcnn·.
B•collonl•ompullr 1klll1, Bxccllent communlclllon Rnd l"d''"lllr &lt;&gt;Ill;
Resume 1nd 11lary requlremanl.l to:
Holzer Cllnl~

Daily &amp;ntitieL

Human RuourtQI Departm~nt
!10 Jack1on Pike
G.alllpolla, OH 4!631
(740) 446·! IM9·• (740) 446 ·,32 FAX
IJ1 '"'' () mmmltl' I! Hutr'

•

I

_....___- .
•

--------

SyM&lt;'Itl

Rcqylwuctfl.r··

www.llllo~undiiiQ.oom

II

... ~

~- .... -II II&amp;.

~

•

BLUE JAYS 61 DEVIL RAYs 1

w
rr

.......
. ...
.............
.............
.......
..
'"..............

PRESS

AL

I

,..."
,._...
""'
'...
,,
llta•c'
...._.._$. ......
....a ". a•,, " 1_k.._..._.

behind the Tv.i llld tied v.itll the dl:nillq thleir SQSM lhu rv. Wben
struu:ling White So for sc:cond seCond ~ Luis Ri~ ret\II1IS
plk"t.
!hi v.-eck. ~ mi"-'iilli tV.&lt;l months
"We're back at .500." startin&amp; wilh u brol.--en v.TiSI. lht offense will
'tdler Chuck Fmle said. ''Maybe final! bt at full smngth. Willi
~
will gi\'C us a shot in the ann to
starters Bfld Radke and Joe MaY$
IHII _. th'
. " •
'I ..-- IIIIlS 1!01111•
~1nnesota's DennyHocld"i potnt- still on the diSllbled li t, the rotation
ed to Clc:,-eland' \'tteful presenc:c: as hMn't bten nearly as effi:ctive IS
a reasan lbr the recent turnaround .
people btlie\'td it v..'OOid bt and the
'1llat team' ~ a lot pride on it," bullpen has instead been the savior.
Hockin&amp; said. "llley loo&amp;: at their "It's till only June." said catcber
n!(.()fd and Sll)t, 'This isn't the telllll
we: assembled.' Guys start focusi"i AJ . Pienynsti. "We can't really be
con~-.erned about standings. We're
more and pia in&amp; bener."
The Twms, at 32-25, have impre~­ more co~~ u.bout getting thi
sh-ely kept a slew of injuries from teum heulthy."

The Detroit Tigers' quick strut lll!llinst Pedro Mrutiner.
\\'0\lldn't have tnc:ant anything if not for Shane: Haher'sclutch
hitting.
.
M .
. • .
. h- • . .
The 'tigers tagged arunet tor 1our runs m t e 1trst 1nnm,l!
then had to rally to beat the Boston Red Sox 7-6 on Halter s
RBI double in the lOth Monday night.
Rumon Santiago led off the 1igei'S • first with his
fillit career homer and Damion EaSley followed with
another homer. It marked the first time in his career that
Martinez gave up consecutive homers to begin a game. ·
After allowing two more runs in the first. Martinez didn't
give up anything else. But nm Wakefield (2-2) couldn't hold
a 6-41ead.
Santiago's second homer pulled Detroit within a run In the
seventh, and ~ndell Magee tied it with a two-out single in
the eighth agwns't Walrefield.
·
Detroit then won it in the: lOth. Bobby Higginson led off the
inning with a walk and pinch-runner Damian Jackson went to
second on a one-out balk
Halter's drive off the center-field wall ended the gat'l,\e, giv·
ing Boston just its sixth loss in 28 roa.t games this season and
Detroit its 21st win of the season.
·
Juan Acevedo (1-1) gave up only one hit in two inningsextending his scoreless-inning streak to 16 innin&amp;s- to end
Detroit's four-gl!.me losing streak.

...

~'*-.·,...·

11gers start fast ag~inst Pedro Martinez

1
11..
11.

14

Position-by-position look at . ..NBA

.,

�-

•

The DIIIIV Sentinel• P-. a s

www.mydlll~ntlnel.com

CLA

t

I PI

'

R
_,_ .

v:..-ur All.
'

'

fttibunt(740)446 2342 Sentinel (740) 992-2156
Of

lb(J40)UUIIIII

OfPUlb(f40)-.a1Sf

~,-.. {304)

_____.....,_....

Bedding &amp; v.g.table Flats 'UO
1o• Hanging Ba$ke1S oe.eo

675-1333

Ot hit lb(*)..,....

"Ahead Ia Service"
3SS37 St. Rt. 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 45720
Golden Jk)w 16.000Twin&lt; .................•. $18.6S
Golden lklw 9.000 Twine ..................... $16.9S
20.000 Plostic: Balerl'win&lt; ................... $15.75
Top Dr= P.wu"'s with Sulfur
... .
. 20 por toll

12 .......................................SS.OOISO lbo.
Stuff..................................... $3.99150 lbs
buns, pens, C"itS, &amp; tnlil&lt;rs

W1de AISSilflment ol He!bs, Annullll,
~In •• pol&amp; for

"'

Olllyf«Mdtl
Mornl"tt Stir Rold • CR 30 • RIICI~. Ohio

....._

I

_..,..7 949-211

Sunset Homt.
Construction
Bryan Reeves
New H~. Room Addl110f'\a,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, -Dec:ka, Kltchena, Drywall
&amp;Mon1

FREE ESTIMATES!

740.742-3411

Pllltl
All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized

Case·IH Pans
Dealers
l 000 St. Rt. 7 South
Cool\lillt, OH 45723

740-667-0363

O«h O:r.chC &amp; Gravely
YOUTH SelfHill's
Storage
Massey Ferguson
FISHING
29670 Bashan Road
Raclne, OH 45771

DERBY

8:30AM Sunday,
740.949-2217
June 9th .0 The '
Racine Gun Club · 1
s·~t1o··

Stz••
to 10'x30'

I'!IIMawonlod:Moat

ftlll, llllllllh~and many
- IIIIIl'ood,
110'111'!1-.
pntvldod
•.lfxtn
· Mlabtt. fltl'ln to
fOUiha tlandu-.

=

Parta &amp; Sei'VIce

750 East State Street Phone (740)593-6671
Athens, Ohio
·

11-~
High Bl Dry

Krls
Kanleckl

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR

Self·Storage1

· 4359 St. Rt. 160

33795 Hit.,J RJ.

Gallipolis, OH 45631

Hours

(740) 446·1044

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

Monday-Friday 8•5PM • Saturday 8·2pm

I

Craniosacral.
reOe'!olouy. Myorascial
and YOII; tlberapy Qlfi
Certlllcates Av aihtble
, $30·45 n\lnulcs

-1l

PumfrPJo Ohio

740-992-5232
fifE ISFIMAFES
SIUU 01 UHI JOISUI

SINCI1164

Delivered
&amp; Spread
$15.00 per tgn

8·10tona
llmltad area

~40) 742·7037
LHvenameiNo.

~lt!fti~~ft~ .
J.D. CONSTRUCTION . IJI:..!'
.•. .

ft!!.•.

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
"Speciulizi.ng In Log Homes

New Homes • VInyl
Siding • New Oaroae•l
; Rtplactment
Windows • Roofing
COMMiltiAL ...! IIIIIIIIIAl
FREE EiSTIMATES

740-992·7589
(NO SUNDAY

.tfl:;.
Local 1143·5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
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Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
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• Nursln11 Home

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ollm IIUilrtl

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''"trto, l'tum•tng,
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(1104) 771t-14ta
. I

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(FICtory Outlel)
All vertlell bllndo are
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our location
• Vertlcllo • Wood
• Mlnll • Ete

144 nw lvt. • •

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Haning's Construction

Ttlokhoe, lackhoe,
Unci Cteortng, Beptlc
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lhwer Lint•
lttt..Work, Pondo,

Dellvanld •
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per ton, 81o 10
tone, limited
araa call for
detaha. Cell:

Ort-•v•

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In lUred•
Filii! btliNitee
740-"2·3NI or

Owner &amp; Operu1or, John Deun

fiW:

T,lke the PAIN
out of PAINTING'
L.,t rm .k· tl kt youl

IIJ 111"'

TFN

[I!II

rj[ll

Pomeroy Eeales
BIQG02171
fuery Thursday

6 SUnday
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Early birds start
6:30

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Thursdays

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and number

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Other Accessories

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7 Dayi per weeK

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......
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111

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1110 -!1!12 .!11:18

.

HERBALIFE

STRTE STORE

Independent
Dlltributor

NOW&lt;Jptn

11 a.m.•lp.m.

I Lost 271b.
in 32 days.

Monday thru

leturday
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�-

•

The DIIIIV Sentinel• P-. a s

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CLA

t

I PI

'

R
_,_ .

v:..-ur All.
'

'

fttibunt(740)446 2342 Sentinel (740) 992-2156
Of

lb(J40)UUIIIII

OfPUlb(f40)-.a1Sf

~,-.. {304)

_____.....,_....

Bedding &amp; v.g.table Flats 'UO
1o• Hanging Ba$ke1S oe.eo

675-1333

Ot hit lb(*)..,....

"Ahead Ia Service"
3SS37 St. Rt. 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 45720
Golden Jk)w 16.000Twin&lt; .................•. $18.6S
Golden lklw 9.000 Twine ..................... $16.9S
20.000 Plostic: Balerl'win&lt; ................... $15.75
Top Dr= P.wu"'s with Sulfur
... .
. 20 por toll

12 .......................................SS.OOISO lbo.
Stuff..................................... $3.99150 lbs
buns, pens, C"itS, &amp; tnlil&lt;rs

W1de AISSilflment ol He!bs, Annullll,
~In •• pol&amp; for

"'

Olllyf«Mdtl
Mornl"tt Stir Rold • CR 30 • RIICI~. Ohio

....._

I

_..,..7 949-211

Sunset Homt.
Construction
Bryan Reeves
New H~. Room Addl110f'\a,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, -Dec:ka, Kltchena, Drywall
&amp;Mon1

FREE ESTIMATES!

740.742-3411

Pllltl
All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized

Case·IH Pans
Dealers
l 000 St. Rt. 7 South
Cool\lillt, OH 45723

740-667-0363

O«h O:r.chC &amp; Gravely
YOUTH SelfHill's
Storage
Massey Ferguson
FISHING
29670 Bashan Road
Raclne, OH 45771

DERBY

8:30AM Sunday,
740.949-2217
June 9th .0 The '
Racine Gun Club · 1
s·~t1o··

Stz••
to 10'x30'

I'!IIMawonlod:Moat

ftlll, llllllllh~and many
- IIIIIl'ood,
110'111'!1-.
pntvldod
•.lfxtn
· Mlabtt. fltl'ln to
fOUiha tlandu-.

=

Parta &amp; Sei'VIce

750 East State Street Phone (740)593-6671
Athens, Ohio
·

11-~
High Bl Dry

Krls
Kanleckl

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR

Self·Storage1

· 4359 St. Rt. 160

33795 Hit.,J RJ.

Gallipolis, OH 45631

Hours

(740) 446·1044

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

Monday-Friday 8•5PM • Saturday 8·2pm

I

Craniosacral.
reOe'!olouy. Myorascial
and YOII; tlberapy Qlfi
Certlllcates Av aihtble
, $30·45 n\lnulcs

-1l

PumfrPJo Ohio

740-992-5232
fifE ISFIMAFES
SIUU 01 UHI JOISUI

SINCI1164

Delivered
&amp; Spread
$15.00 per tgn

8·10tona
llmltad area

~40) 742·7037
LHvenameiNo.

~lt!fti~~ft~ .
J.D. CONSTRUCTION . IJI:..!'
.•. .

ft!!.•.

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
"Speciulizi.ng In Log Homes

New Homes • VInyl
Siding • New Oaroae•l
; Rtplactment
Windows • Roofing
COMMiltiAL ...! IIIIIIIIIAl
FREE EiSTIMATES

740-992·7589
(NO SUNDAY

.tfl:;.
Local 1143·5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mortaage; M~or Medical
• Nursln11 Home

JIIS !UCTRIC 6

ThE CRAFTY,

ollm IIUilrtl

BLIND SPOT

PL11ma111o

''"trto, l'tum•tng,
a11d am.rl Ho-

MelnNn•- ~otle
(1104) 771t-14ta
. I

I

(FICtory Outlel)
All vertlell bllndo are
mede to ol'li'or at
our location
• Vertlcllo • Wood
• Mlnll • Ete

144 nw lvt. • •

Drgwall,

ff!nj
A
111n:

.446-4995

Haning's Construction

Ttlokhoe, lackhoe,
Unci Cteortng, Beptlc
Tanka, Ditching, Woter
lhwer Lint•
lttt..Work, Pondo,

Dellvanld •
Spra1d $15.00
per ton, 81o 10
tone, limited
araa call for
detaha. Cell:

Ort-•v•

IIHtntnte/Fooltrl
In lUred•
Filii! btliNitee
740-"2·3NI or

Owner &amp; Operu1or, John Deun

fiW:

T,lke the PAIN
out of PAINTING'
L.,t rm .k· tl kt youl

IIJ 111"'

TFN

[I!II

rj[ll

Pomeroy Eeales
BIQG02171
fuery Thursday

6 SUnday
Doors Open 4:30

Early birds start
6:30

Progressive top line .
Thursdays

Progresslue
Couerall on SllldiiJS

Or laava nama
and number

STANDARD CENTRAL AlA
lHEATING

A IIA(C411

•Helililng

hal optnlnga, 15 yr.
••• '"' tKperlttn~. CltltHitd

\It!~

(740) 992-3987

' (740) 591·2173

• Air Condltlontora
St~er~u'Ut
• Bervlct On All lrondo
• Realdlnllall Light CommtrOIII
• 10 yr. (11111 a Labor
• Heating I Air Condlllonlng

Child CARE

,~Jf:\
_ •

Commercial &amp; Residential

Ill.!!~ Ill!~

EMCftUfiTIDG

~uee,Ohlo
Bulldozing,

Ill···

Roofs &amp; Siding

,..-.,.-.,.,.._.,..,...,...
m
LIMESTONE

Willi IDS

/If:'..

&amp; Rubber Roofs"

Guroges, Pole Buildings, Concrete

• Tonneue Cover
• Ventvlsor • Bua
lshlleld &amp; FuU Line
Other Accessories

www.amlr1oanalancllrdalr.com

'

"SALES AND SERVICE" ·
\II

WOLFE HEATING &amp; COOLING

I

'
I

'I

( /•10) 992

Driveways, Patios,
Parking/play Areas,
Sidewalks, Floors
28 yeere Experience
Fm Eallmlt11

I

frat)

I II I

~ .8 22

In MeiQe, Athen• and

Advertise R.LIIIOim

Open 14 hours.
7 Dayi per weeK

ALL TY"I OP IIAION..V

Sl. Rt. 1 Tuppart

Free ESIIIII31CS

Plalna, OH
CALL 667-6322

......
601111

111

II \ 1 M111ill1111111

1110 -!1!12 .!11:18

.

HERBALIFE

STRTE STORE

Independent
Dlltributor

NOW&lt;Jptn

11 a.m.•lp.m.

I Lost 271b.
in 32 days.

Monday thru

leturday
CIOMCIIund;z '

PLUMBING

. 401111th Strttt
New H1van, WV
•Raaklentlol

100%

lMWntMI
Pllltl'lll
112.000S

'

1\1 ' 1' 1

In this space IIIICK. ILOCK &amp; ITOHI
10-lltNI!IIHCI
, for
FREE ESTIMATE
'25 per month (304) 773·8550

naturaUGuaranteed

t..a

•

740·992•7038 .· 882·2343

I

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MIDDLEPORT

.....

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oi Nt

ick

~mon

sale successful

hut
wrote, "'Slow down,

•

mo~ too

fut."'
Taite yollf time at
tril:k on • Aaaialt
you

.Fundraiser, yard

yoor·tOIIUllttl oflhrft

BARNEY

no-tnamP.&gt; West lelllb
the spaile four ud
611-'\t pllts up the rune..
How would you pro~?

.

North should nll$e
to three no·IN~P·
Even If a tluee·dll·
mood response wuWd
be muur~~l, not a

tnmsfer bid pomislna
five or IIKn bcarts, to

show a minor indl·
cates a band that is ei·
tbet very unbalaneed,
leaving the responder
&amp;erlou~l;y concerned
11bout oo-trump. or ....
more likely •• so
strong that the · re·
spondllr is thinkina

MOVIE

MUferJM
6AU·f~Y

I"'

c... . ,....

! 1'JU:&gt;\ 1'£1\ltC&gt; t"tJi'} . &amp;.~T

'Te~,.:~~ f'UN!-1\~~T jQI'£!

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•

......_,_.

~..:::=;;:;;_..,;;;;;;;;;=-...~!

TEL.L. Wlo\OEVEII.IT IS

TAAT 1 CAN'T COME TO
THE l'llONE BECAUSE II« . :::::&gt;-..
'

I.

C106 tS SI.&amp;PIN6 OM MV
LAP. AND IF I 6ET UP,
IT WIU Dt5TUII.IIIoliM ..

I
!TUESDAY

JUNE 41

You have silt top
tricks: two spades
(aiven trick one)\ two
hearts and two ttllbs.
The other three tritks
cun come from dla·
monds, but there Is ~
potential snag. If an
opP&lt;Inent c:nn hold up
tile diamond 11\.'C 11ntn
the third round, you
will need a dummy
entry to reach the estubhshed two dia·
mond winners sitti!ll
there. And what ls the
only potential dummy
entry'? Riaht .... the
spade queen.
,
Who has the spade
kina? Since presumably West · led his
fourth-highest spade,
l!PPIY the Rule of
Eleven. Subtract the
value of the c:ard
West led •• the four ••
from 11. This tells
you there ure · seven
curds hiaher than the
four in the North,
Bust and South hands
combined. And yo11
saw them all at trick
Ulle.
West And
has the
spudeSo,king.
to
make dummy's queen
a hater entry, you
should win trick one
with the spade ace.
Then you drive out
the diamond ace and
cruise home with an.
overtrick, later playina a sP.ade toward
dummy s queen If
necessary.
If you found that
play, you ure proba·
bly feelin' groovy,

Buy, 8111 or TY1d1
• lnlht

·

- CELEBRITY CIPHER

''C
• HAN

-

PLVIDIIH .'

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In SONaltls

•
MANC

IOOPOR,

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IADIVISIL

UPA.II

IICI

OOAIR

HAL II

IICI

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IICPNitL:

O·A .I .I I 0
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Somtdat thtt',. aonnt 'Nih I .
Qlllllr, aoll !Nmpttancla

blutal9"fllutt lot fl8lllt,.. "'
Dill.'- Sonnv L.laton

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lellara ,, "'•
foij~ ecrombltd -d• below

to

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fatm follr tlmplt woH!a.

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Poww still out

Lull

The fellow epplled I job 11
an lnduatrlelapy. He was given an
envelope to deliver to the next
floor. The fellow opened the •~"~·
velopeancl found 1 note thet ..-ad:
"Report for work tomorrow. You're
our ··· · of • ··I"
...
8 Complete
the chijc~l• Qijate!j ·
by llllln' In lht 11111111111 worda
you dt¥tlop rom altp No. 3 btlow.

l

POMEROY - An tstl·
tunted I,000 Amerlenl\
Bltetrk Ptl\WI' (AEP) ~US•
ton~rs in the Ptll\ltroy lilt;\
ttre still without po~r this
mo11tlng fullowing n series
ol' hnense thunderstorms
thut rumbled through the
ttren 'T\lesd e~nlnt~.
Att:llrtllilg to un ABP
otlleittls, the storms' high
winds, hllll untl liahtnlnt~
brouaht down trees und
trte limbs, knooked down
power lines, broke utility
poles, 111\d looked out ""'"
el'lll elcc:trldty clttults .in
the Mel¥s nnd Athens
COIII\Iies.
The esthnlltetl time fur
complete power restorlitlon
in POmeroy hM been set tor
5 p.tn. todll)'.
Meias County Sheriff
Rnlph Trussell snid follow·
in_g lllst niaht's storms his
otllce received 110vernl c•lls
llbout downed trees nnd
power OlltlllleS. However,
no sianlficnnt dunu\ae
within the coutlty hns been
reported.
·
Representatives with the
Meigs County Highway
Depnrtment nlso reporte&lt;l
Incldct\ls .of fullon trees und
downed power lines und
snid no ronds were closed
becnus11 of high water.

Lottwlles
Ohio
OullnQ • Stucy • Leitve • Juttly • NECESSITY ' '
· I've noticed In 11111 feet peoed, modern world, II only
t1k11 • ahort period of time for • 1~txury to become an'
ltllolutt NECESSITY.

..
•

, Wednesday, June 5, 2002
Your opportunities and fl.
nnnclal prospocu look ruther
hupeful for the year ahead. Be
cureful to moke the molt or
cuch and every npponunlty lo .
rcop to the fullest reward1.
OEMINI (May 21-Junc 20)
• If you let y\t\11 1Xl1DV8¥Unl
whilnt dominate your spend·
Ina habltl todny, you will
have to pay the conaequancu
lt't wl~e to practice prudence
~~ all tlme1 . Oemlnl, treat
~ounelf to a blrthd&amp;): alft.
Send fur your Atlro·Oraph
predictions for the year ahead
by malllna S2 and a SASE to
Attro·Oruph, c/o this newap_a•
per, P.O. llu~ 167, Wickliffe,
OH 44092. Be aure to llate
your zodlnc •ian.
CANCER (June ZI·July 22)
·~ Situations that require prl·
orlly treaunent Ahould be
alven your undivided allen·
tlon today, Serloua career
mallen 1nould neither be
viewed Indifferently nor
ahelved until u later date. Be
rca~nalble.
.
LEO (July 23·Aua. 22) ••
When asked for un opinion
today. either say nothlna or
tell thlna• like 1hey are •• 11
dlplomoflcolly aa poulble. In·
•lncerhy could. be viewed u
nattery und reaented.

Hlah: '10s, low: 60s

.

about a slllm.

Posre~

THE BORN LOS~Il

w.ther .

22)

be
your fl.

aleo e•·
Don't

ro~lll!l~ .

10•

1ome miracle
'
ltuar.
(Sept. 23-0ct. 23) •
• Even I IIIJht deviation or a
mutuil aoar may hurt a pari·
·
nerahlp arran1ement todl!)l.
Chock ahead olllme to milk•
certain your coun111rpart Ia
readlna from the aame tona
lheet •• 1'011'
.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov.
22) • To maintain 1 produc·
tlve achedule 11 all tim.. , .
keep 1 clote eye on the clock. ·
If you hove a deadline to
make today, Once you r111 be·
hind, play!na eatc~·up will be
dlrRcult.
.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov, 23· ·
Dec, 21j·· Soolalarace! are
IIWIYI mportant, bUI today
they 11111y be vital when In the
company or tomeona other•
look up to. Be on auard and
don't do or ny any1hlnathat
can tamlth your lmaae.
CAPRICORN (Dei:. 22·Jan.
19) •• Be kind and tolerant to
thOII In your chara• tod~,
thoulh be careful notlo over·
lndufa• them. BehavlnJ In a
· manner to tlmply aaln their

upproval can bwkflre rr they
!ton thlnklna you're a puth•
over.
·
AQUARIUS (Jun. 20·Ptb.•
19) • Maklna ~ promlle to..
othor! that you· know you
cnn't deliver in hopei or rna•
nlpulatlnathom will be a dla·
amou1 maneuver today.
Thoae to whom you maka 1
commltm.ont will call lo til(
marker.
..
PISCES tPab. 20·Mart"
20) •• Avoid taklnft apecult,~
tlvo rl1k1 In unram 1111' 11111.
lnuud, try to dltolpllne your;.
111r In how you llandre alr
your material arfalrJ: al!'
make due with whll JIPI(
have, without borrowlna rrom.
01h1r1.
:
A~IBS (MII'Ch 2l·Aprlll9)
.. You'd be wlae to relY,
tolely on your own judam•lll
today rather than on the ad•
viCD or tiiOQlltll who. ICI(
Y9Ur e~~IUIO tO lhe prob!:EI
You will have a bluer hlna
on It than they .
"
TAURUS (April 20·Ma!l
201·· II' a wl•hrut thlnktna (o
be leve that lr you leave
thlna• to their own devlcui
thay will eventually wor~
themtelvet out. Squarely (au
whatever comet up today :tn4
take care of It,
•

Pick s: &amp;·8· 1
Pick 4: NI•0·8
Iucke" 1: 11·16·27-28·!!1
Picks day: 1·7·1
Pick 4 d1y: 7·2-2·!

W11t 'VIrtlnll
Dilly S: H ·8
D1I!Y 4: 0·7·2·0

.

caali :as: &amp;·7·8· 13·1 8·21

lndu
:a ltctltlftl - 1:a ,.. .

Calendar
Classlfl•ds
Comics
D1ar Abby
Editorials
Movies ·
Obituaries
SP.orts
Weather
II 2002 Ohio Vlllf'l

·

A5.
B3·5
Be
A5
A4
A3

A3
BI·3
A2

Mll1hln1 Co,
•

MilliON ACCOMJIUIMIO - Myl(ln Duftt.ld, ttllilrmlln of till! .
Middleport Coll\munl\y AUOOIIItlon 'a M~ 4 comm~, fllla Ill
the ftMIInder · of .the tl!t!wot'lla 1\tndrlllaint ltll~ on
Middleport's "T. • The QOlll of $'1.000 hila I:IMII~tiiChed. (Bflt~n
J. Reed)
.ht~ ~ollti!~t h1 Middleport.
Oil\ ~:"ertltbre~ 1\Jr nllwm
fur nut ~untmer will oo prt•
scnted II) tlrst, scrond nnd
third plllt.'l! winners. Oncy live
pltlllth~~ will beju~. Wls~
Sllld, by M~l~s County Muster
01udllni!rs, 11nd pllrtldpnnl~
must rtal~ttt prior 10 ju~Jttlng
111 Mltfdlepott Depnrtmllnt
StOre. Juty J 15 the real~tfll·
tlon dtudlh\t, Those with
question~ ubbut the wntest
ure nsked II) ~1111 Wise nt 99:1·
~m.

Josephine Smith honored at
Racine/Southern banquet
RACINE -· Specllll recoa·
nillon wns lllVI\0 to Josephine
Hobttck Smlth, 92, who grnd·
unted 7~ yeal'8 nao in the elMs
of 1927
when the
Raclne/Soulhem Hlah School
Alumni As~ocintloi\ bunquet
was hllld May 25 nt tho
sthool.
Blghte n fnrnlly members,
. includln1 son Dun nnd his
wire Donna Jenn, illona with
their children Don, Bonnie,
Pnlth, Tnm1nY Ted 11nd most
of their titmn leN were at the
banquet. All of these arlltUI•
children · and most or the
IJrent•grandohlldren lltll ulso
aradulltel
of
RIWine/Southern.
Don Smith lold ot' hls
arandmother's determln.nlon
{O arndunte from high schoql.
For her final two yelll'8 of hlah
school, she walked eiglll
mileM, from the Old Town
P1u1s nren where she lived, to
Rnclne. She would walk 10
Rnclne on Sundl\y1 Sliiy with n
Racine family tnrouah the
week, nnd then wull( bock
home on Prldoy ufler Rchool.
It was usually well after dark
when sho would orrlve home,
he suld.
Alumni Donrd membcn
who planned the reunion were
Shirley John&amp;on, Lisa Allen,
Junle Maynard, Tom Weaver
and Southern Principal

· pproved

IV TONY M, LIAOH ·

m~CftltMVOAilV!lENTINnL. OOM

RACINE - Southenl Local'~ new superintendent wns
!lft1~1nlly approved for 1.1mptoyment during the rtcent meet•
Ina or tht.\ Southern l'llnnndul Plunnlng nnd Supervi8lon
Commlst~lon.
·
.
Btlb Oruesl.\r rurmer grudunte of Southern High School
und resident of Meigs County, was un~~nittltlUsly upprov~d
for u three·yenr tuntrn~t with the Suuthern Locur School
District by members of the flnnnclnl ~Ianning cotnmlsslun.
Orueser, who officially begins his duties Augull I, will
replnue the tliH trl~ t' s former superintendent, Jnme~
Lawrence, who retlrttl in M11rch nfler hi t~ tontruut tclll~\\·ul
wus voted down by the Southern Lucul tlottrd (tf F-ducilllutl
In JMuary,
·
Prior tu be~omin11 the district's new superhlletn.lertli
Orueser wus superintendent of the Wurren t:.ncal Schoo
blslritt.
.·
.
".1 nm Vilry ex~lted nbuut remrnln~ ttl Meigs Ctlunty and •
working with. the peo~le of the S'tJuthern Lo~~l St:hool
District," ~nit! OrueMer. "I feel there Ill rent putentlnl within
the dlmlet nnd I nm looking forward lo ussumln!J my
respon~lbllltlesln Augusr."
.
In other 1\UIIIIll'll, the ~ommlsl!lon upproved the hiring of
Dobby Ord IIII th~ dl strl~t'slnterlin superintendent. Ord will
undertnke the role of nctlnll superinh!Mdent until Jut~ 31,
nt\er which, he will be rel)ht~td by Orueser.
The financial commlssfon'M next lltheduled 111eeting wlll
tnke plucil on July 16.

Center Dlabetta Support Group
mill
Sunclay, June 9 from 2:00 • 4100 pm
. at the Hoapltal'a Shelter Hou11.
Guilt SQtoktr • lb.nver Hugh11 of Tht Down Under Restaurant, who will

I diiCUII "Healthy Outdoor latlngN.
In Me!ge Cgunty: ' Thurtday, June 20 at 10:30 I\" · Malgs Senior Center

Dl•••...

June 10, 11 and 12 from 2:00 • S100 pm In the fflfiCI'I

...

-

.

•.
I

I•

,,.

' .1

.

Discouer tlw Holzel' Difference

www.holze~rg

...

•

••

NewSouthem
superintendent

The

••

'•

e1tte11ded to Reeky VnnMeter
Zusp~~n nnd t.arry 1md Patty
Cln:la wht1 ~erved liS ho$b for
the evenlna. .
. C:lll'l'Oll Cleek sJIIlke niKlut
nn effort to pl~tce a complete
set of ltnclne/South.ern yenrboob In the R11elne PUblic
Llbr11ry. Severul hnve been
collected but others are still
needad.
!)()n Weese, ~on of former
teu~ her Carl Weese, was rec·
oanlted lind thanked fur his
donation ofseveral yenriKloks
that belon111!d to hl8 futher .
Once domued to the llbrlll')',
the books muy be used for
review but mliy not be
checked out of the llbrlll')'.
THI OLDIIT OltADUATI - Cleek Mked that nnyone hav·
Joeephlne Hoback Smith, 92, Ina ylmrb11ok8 from nny year
who aredueted rrom Recine whluh they nrc willlna to
Hllh School in 1927, WII the donule oontuct hint or Shirley
oldeat arer:luate attendln&amp; the John8on. Any duplicate book5
2002 Rllllne/Southern Hllh received will be uuctloned til
School Alumni banquet. She future. bnnquet8 lind the
wee alven apeolel reooanltlon monle5 pluoed 1t1 the scholnr·
end
preeented
llfta. ship fund. The uu~tllln or
(Charlene Hoeflich)
Ohio River Beun mulle elpe·
elully for the AI umnl
Oordon Fl8her.
As8oclntlon were nuctloned
Roaer Sayre, Clm of by Dan Smith wllh the money
1965, aave the invocation and aotna to the 8choltlt8hlp fund.
the benediction und the junior D6natlon8 to the 5Chohtr·
cll\88 of Southern served the 8hlp fund have reeently been
·
received In memory of
dinner.
Lawrence Hllldore, '43, June
All araduates were recua· .
nlzed and speclul thanks were · lfliHH 111 AluMni, AI

,

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="23105">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="23104">
              <text>June 4, 2002</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="161">
      <name>harden</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="313">
      <name>hill</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5431">
      <name>stanton</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
