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•

'In-county gol tour underway. 81

Pomerov•lllddiiDIIfl• G'Xb Dll Ohio• Point PI 111nt,. WY

SEA1TLE (AP) - A 70-year-old
man has been in jail for more than
three months for refusing to delete
from his Web site addresses and other
personal data of employees at the
retirement home that evicted him.
The jai iing of Paul Trummcl, a
native of England who moved to the
United States in 1985, has drawn fire
from national and international writers
groups that support his First
Amendment claims.
"Our concern is that he's being punished for speech on the Internet that
should be protected," said Lucy
Dalglish, executive director of the
Reporters Committee for Freedom of
the Press in Washington,
D.C.
·• .

Other groups that have questioned
the jailing include the National Union
of Jrnqnalists in London and Reponers
Sans Frontieres of Fr.mce.
Trummel was jailed indefinitely on
Feb. 27 for violating an anti-harassment orde.r by King County Superior ·
Court Judge James A. Doerty. Doerty
ruled in April 200 I that Trummel had
been abusive and stalked residents and
administrators at Council House, a
low-income retirement home in
Seattle.
Doerty ordered Trummel to remove
from his Web site the home phone
numbers, addresses and other personal
data on employees at Council House,
and imposed lines of $100 a day for

failing to comply.
Trummel also was 01'dued to remove
a picture making administntor
Stephen Mitchell resemble Osama bin
Laden.
Council House managers tiiMI :some
residents say Trummel is delusional,
obsessive and inflammatory. He was
evicted last year, partly because of his
Web
site
and
newsletter
Disconnections, a takeoff on the center's official publication, Connections.
Last week Doeny limited Trummel's
phone privileges, saying he was still
harassing residents and staff IIIIIID.bers,
and he was placed in solitary ccWioe.
ment. His incarceration is set for court
review June 17.

Frizzy hair sufferers shelling out $1 ,000
ATLANTA (AP) - Some of the
frizzy and curly haired, tired of spending
long hours with a hair dryer, are turning
to a new straightening treatment that
promises months of silky straight hair.
Getting rid of curls doesn't come
cheap, however, · with some salons
charging $1,000 for a process that will
need a touchup in a few months.
.J Available at just a few dozen salons
nationwide - including a handful in
Atlanta that are drawing customers from
·ttm:iughout the South - the process is
called thermal reconditioning or
Japanese hair straightening. It takes at
least three hours, sometimes a whole
day, as chemical straighteners are
applied to the hair, then ironed through
with a tiny flat iron heated to 350
degrees.
The result, according to those who
have tried it, is permanent silky hair far
straighter than can be had from a drugstore relaxer or a traditional salon treatment.
The process costs about $500 for most
clients, although salons in New York
and Los Angeles charge up to $1 ,000.
Some stylists add manicures and foot
massages to alleviate boredom during
~he long process, driving the price up
even more.
It's a boon to the stylists who offer the
service.
·
"All of a sudden, they're calling every
day," said Mandana Zeimaran, an
Atlanta stylist. "I've never even adver-

tised that I do this, but I'm ,$Citing people from Tennessee and Flonda."
Straight hair is a big deal to people
such as Laura Stallone, a New York City
research manager who used to be "a big
ball of frizz" on humid days. A month
after spending $500 for the treatment at
a Maryland salon, she has no regrets.
"Just the amount of time I save makes
it worth it," said Stallone,.34, who said
· she tried dozens of expensive relaxers
that didn't work. ·
Jessica Farbman, a 31-year-old ~nder­
writer for a New York bank, swd the
process changed her life.
"It's the best thing that ever hap. pened," she said. "I'll do this the rest of
my life. I used to hate going outside
when it was humid, and I really hated
going on vacation to the beach. Now I
can get ready iri 10 minutes and ,$0."
The treatment.starts with a hwr consultation to. make sure the process will
work. (It's not recommended for hair
that's been colored or recently straightened by another process; some stylists
tum away about half of the hopefuls.)
Hairdressers then work a creamy
chemical straightener through the hair,
wait 20 or 30 minutes, and rinse it out.
After drying, the hair is ironed in tiny
sections four or five times over with a
hot iron. A plastic edge prevents scalp
bums.
Clients can't wash their hair for at
least two days - they're encouraged
not to even get it' wet - and I)Jey can

Califomia judge fines ·.
tobacco company $20~
for ads targeting teens ·
SAN DIEGO (AP) -

A

Superior

Court

•

a1 .............,.,...

MllpCount(s

Jud~

Priger
fouiitl
iudae fined RJ. Reynolds Co. Ronald
l2&lt;f million Thursday for vi~ Reynolds violatCd thaC agree;.

llling the terms of the 1998
national tobacw settlement by
. running magazine ads aimed
at teen-qers.
The stall: Attorney General's
office, which filed suit against
the nation's No. 2 tobacco
company last year, asked the
judae to fine Reynolds $25
miiTion and ban it from advertising in SO magazines read by
teens.
''This is the story of a company that refused over a long
period to change its policies
and practices as regards to teen
exposure." Deputy Attorney
Oeneral. Karen Leaf said in
closing arguments last month.
''They have advertised in magazines very popular with teen·
aaers such as Motorcyclist,
Hot Rod, and Spin."
The national tobacoo settlement with 46 states makes no
specific mention of magazine
· advertising but includes a ban
on tobacco companies taking
"any action, directly or ind.im:tly, to target youth."

ment.
Lawyers for Reynolds contended that such a resttictioo
on advertising would viol.ate
the
company's
Fli'Sf
Amendment rights.
•
''They want you to hold us
in contempt and fine us $20
million for exercising a constitutional right," attorney Jeli
Charles Johnson told the judge
last month. "In this country.
that is censorship."
Attorneys for Reynolds
denied that the company deliberately t!';~Jeted teens in its
$200 milhon magazine· ad
campaigns for Camel ciga~
rettes arid other brands follow~
ing the 1998 settkment.
.
Reynolds said its intended
targets are yo':t adults.
Company policy r. ·ds ads in
magazines with youth readership of more than 25 pen;ent.
However, Reynolds lawyerS
conceded that an unintended
consequence of targeting
young adults is that some
teens ane likely to sec its ads.

never curl that hair again.
The straightening is permanent; but
clients have to come back about twice a
year to iron out the roots. In between
treatments, they use a hair dryer to
smooth the frizzy roots.
Hairdressers say the arduous process
isn't turning people off.
·
Not since the 1980s perm craze have
people been so interested in a chemical ·
process, they said.. And because thermal
I
'
hair straightening is still relatively rare,
the assets in the plan exceed
the stylists who do it are booked well in
· $100,000 or a non-ownet
advance by clients who drive hours for
employee · qualifies for the
the treatment.
plan. Therefore, the initial
flam,...DI
The treatment appeared in America
administrative expenses will
about five years ago after stylists noticed
person 40 I (k) plan. For be minimal.
it being done on women in Japan, where
The one-person 40 I (k)
example, the new tax relief
even a slight wave stands out like a
plan
savings strategy is most
act provides small business
cowlick.
suitable
for firms employing
owners with the ability to
"It changes your life. It's really that
take a loan from the one-per- only owners (shareholders,
dramatic," said Yuki Sharoni, a Beverly
son 401(k) plan. Loans are partners and sole proprietors)
Hills, Calif., stylist best known for giv· now available to sharehold· and their spouses. An experiing a hair makeover to Linda Tripp, the
ers, partners and sole propri- enced financial advisor, an
former Pentagon worker whO taped her
etors on a tax and penalty- ERISA attorney, or a retire· conversations with Monica Lewinsky
free basis as long as the loan ment . plan administration
about President Clinton. "We gel clients
amount does not exceed the · firm can analyze the suitabilfrom all over. Every,one thinks it's a
lesser of SO percent of the ity of this strategy for your
waste of money until they see it. Anlf
account balance or $50,000. firm. · .
then they want it no matter what it
(Jay Caldwell is a certified
Finally, there is nq IRS
costs."
financial
planner
at
Form SSOO filing expense
Other stylists dismissed it as a fad.
usociated with the mitial Raymond James Financial
"Unless you're extremely wealthy and
years of the one-person Services, 441 Second Ave.,
have all the moner, in the world, you're
'10 I (k) plan. The one-person Gallipolis, 446-2125 or 1not going to do it, ' said Nicole Marie, a
4-0I(k) plan is not requtred to 800-487-2125,
member
. stylist at Atlanta'.s upscale Studio Oliver.
file an IRS Form 5500 until NASD and SIPC.)

'Jay

Whars Inside

OHIO . PROFICIENCY TEST

Cou

results

BY 8tlwt J. REm

BRE~LYSENTINEL.COM

Lakers up 3-o in series, 81

Deaths
Aorence Sheets, 85
Virginia Aten, 83
.Biondeline Robinson, 80
David Lewis, 58 ·
.,...... AJ

Weather
High: 80s, Low: 60s
Details. A2

RACINE
Meigs
County's fourth and sixthgrade students scored below
the state averages in all but
one section of Fourth and
Fifth Grade Ohio Proficiency
Tests, lldministered in June.
The Ohio Department of
Education released results of
the tests on Friday, which
show the higest scores ever
. achieved statewide by founh~raders in reading. mathemat·
tcs, science and writing.
Meigs County students'
scores were below the state
averages in all but one section: Writing at the fourthgrade level.
Across Ohio, students per-

formed better than last year on
the first of the state's series of
proficiency tests. Results show
an eight-point jump. from 56
to 64 percent, in rending and
science proficiency, a six-point
jump in citizenship scores,
three points in mathematics .
und one point in writing.
Sixth graders jumped ahead
five points in writing, three in
citizenship. and one point in
mathematics.
The
Department
of
the
Education
credits
OhioReuds program, with
more thun 40,000 tutors
statewide, Summer Institutes
for Rending Intervention,
teachers' training and other
efforts with the increase in

average

reading test scores.
Meigs County students
scored as follows:
Melas Local
Grade 4, with 128 s.tudents
tested: Writing, 92 passed (72
percent): Math. 72 passed (56
percent); Citizenship, 83
passed (65 percent); Science,
74 passed (58 percent): All
Thken, with 129 tested, 39
p:tssed (30 percent).
Reading :
3
percent
advanced , 45 percent proficient, 45 percent basic, 9 percent below basic.
Grade 6, with 124 tested:
Writing, 109 passed (88 percent); Rending, 55 passed (44
percent); Math , 65 passed (52
percent): Citizenship, . 92

passed (74 percent); Science, 22 passed (43 percent); All
64 passed (52 percent); All Taken. 14 passed (26 percent).
Thken , 33 passed (27 perSouthern Local
cent).
Grade 4, with 52 tested:
Eastern Local
Writing (50 tested), 48 passed
Grude 4, with 62 tested: (96 pen:."ent): Math, 23 passed
Writing, 57 passed (92 per- · (44 pen:.'ent); Citizenship, 25
cent); Math, 37 passed (60 passed (48 percent); Science,
perct;nt); Citizenship, 27 25 passed (48 percent); All
pussed (60 percent); Science, l'Jken, 10 passed (19 percent).
28 passed (45 pen:.'ent): All
Reading: 0 advanced, 23
Thk~n. 19 pussed (31 percent). percent proficient, 69 percent
Reading: 0 advanced, 33 basic, eight percent below
percent proficient, 41 percent basic. Grade 6. with 60 tested:
basic, 26 percent below basic. Writing. 52 passed (87 perGrade 6, with 51 tested: cent); Rending, 29 passed (48
Writing, 44 passed (86 per- percent): Muth, 27 passed (45
cent); Rending, 25 pussed (49 percent}: Citizenship, 34
percent): Muth. 26 passed (SI passed (57 percent); Science,
percent).; Citizenship, 31 20 .passed (.H percent): All
passed (61 percent); Science, Thken, 10 passed ( 17 percent).

Not

NELSONVILLE

just

Bypass project·
concerns Meigs
County leaders

horsin'
around

BY TONY M. lEAcH

Summer readlna
prop•m.begins

Sentinel photos by Chllrlene HQf!lllch

POMEROY
The
Meigs County District
Public Library will offer a
. summer rending program
for adults. By reading
books, participants will be
eligible to enter weekly
drawings for umbrellas
from the library. A $50 gift
card from Wal-Mart will be
awarded at the end of the
program.
Those who wish to participate should register at
the circulation desk of any
Meigs County District
· Public Library June 3
through Aug. 31, and complete a entry/review sheet
for every book read.

Ohio
Pick s: 8-4-7
Pick 4: 0-7-7-4
SUplltallll!: 15-22·39-40-43-47
Kicker: 1·3·8·8-3-9
Pick s nlaftt: 3·9-1
Pick 4 nlpt: 6-b-8-9
'

WestVIfJinle
D•lly J: 4-4-8
D•lly 4: 3-3-4-9
l'vwlrtJall: 26-37-42-46-48 (38)
C111h l5: 5-6-11·12-17·18

Index
2 Section• - 12 .....

Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
. Movies

83·5
86
AS
A4
A3
A3
B1·3
A2

Obituaries
Sports
Weather
-e 2002 ohio volley Publlshlns co.

'

·Local horsemen take·
part in national event
'

Fun on the
Fairorounds
6
ROCK SPRINGS ·
Competition was keen in the
National
Barrel
Horse
Association open horse show
staged Saturday afternoon at
the
Rock
Springs
Fairgrounds.
There were more than a
hundred entries in the show
staged by the Nickers and

In response to the issues,
ODOT officials said they
POMEROY - A heuted will move the interchange
debate over the fate of the away from the new water
Ohio
Department
of and sewer system in the
Transportation's ~ (ODOT) Dorr Run area and Ohio 78
Nelsonville Bypass Project can remain open by placing
hus officials · in Meigs u bridge over the roadway;
· County concerned about the and connecting it to the
effects the final result will . newly relocated · eastern
have on southeastern Ohio. interchange at Happy
Steve Story, Pomeroy Hollow Road.
.
attorney and chairman of the
ODOT had previously
Southeast Ohio Regional proposed cutting off Ohio
Council (SEORC) commit- 78 at its current location and
tee, recently attended a placing the eastern intermeeting between ODOT change near Burger King.
officials and Nelsonville
However, in .relation to
stakeholders to hear ODOT other issues, ODOT said
present bypass alternatives moving the highway north
m response to issues raised of the correctional facility
during an earlier meeting.
would
impa.ct . Wayne
Groups such lis the National Forest, resulting in
Nelsonville City Council, possible fragmented lands,
Nelsonville Chamber of and additional costs for an
Commerce, Athens County already expensive project.
commissioners, Nelsonville,
The northern option is
York School Board, and outside the existing corridor
would cost ODOT an
Hock.mg C0 11ege have four and
addt'tt'onal
$8 million to
major problems with the
ODOT's · plans for the pro- complete, which, according
posed highway and have to ODOT officials, is not
passed resolutions opposing feasible considering .their
. the bypass.
budget forecasts.
The four issues stakeholdODOT sai!l the placement
ers want ODOT to resolve of a third interchange at ·
before they accept the Ohio 78 is also out the quesbypass plans are as follows: tion, citing costs, lack of
• A proposed interchange substantial traffic and safety
that would run through the concerns associated with
Dorr Run area would wipe placing two interchanges
out several homes and within one mile of each
de~troy half of the city's other as major factors for
·
their decision.
new $I million water and
Officials stressed the
sewer system·
.
• Th~ high~ay, planned to agency\ rules ?n mterrun so th of the Hocking changes do not. allow for
~
··
ld more than ·one mterchange
~~rrecttonal factl!ty, W&lt;?U _. per mile, ' therefore, there
disturb a. restdenual ne1.gh could not.be an interchange
. borhood m the Pleasantvlew at Ohio 78 and then· another
Avenue area a~d should run at 691.
north of th~ pnson ne~ the
They also said the state
W~yne. National Forest, . . could meet all of its. le,\lal
Ohto 78 nee~s to remam requirements by buildmg
open and an mterchange just one interchange for
added;
.
Nelsonville.
• An eastern mterchan~e
After listening to ODOT's
needs to be placed near Ohtq ·presentation Nelsonville
691 and Happy Hollow
'
Road.
Plllll IM U.S. JJ, AJ
TLEACHOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Neighs 4-H Club.
Jordan Windland and Lydia
Youth and adults demon- Douglas, Albany, were among
strated their riding skills the many young riders com·
.around poles and barrels com- peting in the barrel racing
peting fpr cash prizes in sepa- where speed is the name of
rate categories of pee wee, the game.
youth, junior and senior.
Year-old Garrett Rees was
Money raised at the show too young to compete, but not
and another one scheduled for to enjoy the action and ride
Sept. 21 will be used by Darla around the fairgrounds with
and Lee Boggs, club advisors, his Grand~a Mike Jones.
to take the 14 4-Hers to the
Garrett ts the son of David
Quaner Horse Conference in and Mica Jones Rees who
Columbus and provide other captured many awards in
educational opportunities horse show events over the
over the summer.
· years.

~~~~--~~~------~------~~~------~~----~

Nursing

Week

is June 6- 13

ffteGreal
Alnencan
Holzer Medical Center salutes and honors all
·of our nursing assistants duri · this
week .
•

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference

www .holzer.org

�unu

l

.

w7

The Daily Sentinel
.

Lawmakers still tJying to balance budget

Ohio weather
'n II 2 ....... 11

COLUMBUS (AP) - As !awmakers wed: to close the: ddicit, the: officit! PP
lried to balance lbe budact last month. bad_pown to SI.9 billion.
House Speaker lArry Householder and "These IIUIJliXrs lla.~ proven vay difolbers likened efforts to leiCb 1111eemenl ficult to pmlict no 1111tta wbo bas j:ft&gt;to "keeping frogs in a wheelbarrow."
dic:tec[ them, wbedw:r it's tile tax dqllrtThey might have been describing their ment, whether it's been LSC. no iJillllei
auempcs to figure out which bud&amp;e$ who." Taft Slid sevual weels ~ wileD
deficit they were ttying to fix.
the fi~ had jumped to SI. 7 billi011.
Last December, Gov. Bob Taft signed
Esnmating state revenue is IIOtoriow&gt;a bill to close a SI.S billion deficil that ly difficult, said Nict Jenny, senior pofideveloped as the recession took its toll cy analystal the Stale.University of New
on state reven~~e, generated largely from York 11t Albany's Nelson A. Rocbfelk:r
sitles, income and business taxes.
Institute of Govenunent.
On March 29, Taft announced a new · "If you change your assumptioos just
deficit had developed of S1.2- billion. sli~htly, ~pecillfy with a large state like
Budget officials scrambled to develop u Ohto, thm$,s can move around by hunplan to fill that hole, only to learn on drOOl! of rrullions of dollars," Jenny said.
May 8 that the nonpartisan Legislative As a manufacruring ~te, Ohio tradiService Commission had revised the fig· tionally enters a reccsston tarry and
ure to $1.75 billion.
leaves it late. During the most recent
By the time Taft signed legislation last downturn, however, the state's sales. tax

......
&lt;&gt;i!it••• --""
...
•

I

·~~ •"~
"~
• .,,
••. ,

~'- '~·
'

Diver dies in training class

GILBOA (AP) - A man learning to dive died during a
training class at a northwest Ohio quarry that reaches more
than .140 feet deep and is widely used for teaching scuba.
sheri IT's deputies said.
The Putnam County Sheriff's Department s.aid the. man
died Sundar when he came up tO? fast from a dtve at _G1Iboa
Quarry, whtch is used for snorkeling and canoemg. Nrtrogen
av THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Scattered afternoon showers microbubble&amp; build in a diver's bloodstream, and the body
Showers ·and thunder· and
thunderstorms. cannot dispose of them quickly enough during rapid depresstorms will become more Continued warm with highs surization.
th e area 1·n the upper 80s. Southwest. The sheriff's
didbe not release·
w1'despread. across
· familyoffice
d not
'fi1ed o· fthe
h'ts dman's
h ·s·name
.
I
h
w1'nds
around
.
10
mph.
because
his
ha
en
noll
eat
unday
on Tuesday wh1 e 1 e unsea·
sonably warm temperatures Chance of rain 30 percent. · evening.
·
·
.
night
..
.lncreasin~ . Another diver brought him to the surface, and emergency
Tuesday
will continue.
' h'tm .at
~ 'I ed.
cloudiness with scattere workers' e r~torts to revtve
·
Highs will approach 90 showers and thunderstorms.
Quarry owner Mike Williams declined to comment until
deJrees over much of the Lows in the upper 60s. the cause of death is verified.
Mld·Ohio
Valley,
the Chance of rain 30 percent.
At least two other scuba divers have died since 1996 while
National Weather Service Wed n e 5 day .. . M 0 s tl y diving at the quarry, about 50 miles southwest of Toledo. As
said.
cloudy with a chance of many as 17,000 people have visited the q~arry over_a sum·
Lows on Monday night showers and thunderstorms. mer to learn to dive, and students come m from d1fferent
were expected to be in the Highs in the mid 80s. states to take classes at the site.
mid and upper 60s.
Chance of rain SO percent.
The threat of thundestorms
Wednesday night. .. Partly
still will exist on Wednesday, cloudy with a chance of
but it will be sli~htly cooler, . showers and thunderstorms.
COLUMBUS (AP) ....:. Ohio ranks third in the nation .in
the weather serv1ce said.
Lows 63 to 67. Chance of mercury air emissions, and coal-fired JM?Wer pla~ts are the
Sunset toda~ will be at 9 rain 40 percent.
main .source, accordmg to a newspaper s analys1s of govp.m. and sunnse on Tuesday
Extended Forecast
ernment data.
at 6:02a.m. .
Thursday ... A chance · of Only Texas and Nevada released more of the toxic metal
Weather Forecast
showers and thunderstorms into the air in 2000, the latest year for which figures are
Tonight ...Mostly
clear. during the day... Otherwise availabled, The Columbus Dispatch reported.
Lows in the mid 60s. Light partly cloudy. Highs in the
The newspaper looked at information provided the U.S.
southwest winds.
upper 70s.
Environmentar Protection Agency.
·
Tuesday... Partly cloudy.
~ I'I.Qoudj Qoudj

-

T-

More storms on Tuesday

Ohio high in mercury emissions ·

Mother acquitted in deaths of children
CLEVELAND (AP) .:....
Walkina out of jail and back
Into a life put on hold for nine
months, a mother acquitted of
chupa that lhe set 1 houn
fire that killed two of her chll·
dren uld ahe doea not hold a
aructae uainat prosecuton.
"I aoftli have time for that,"
aaid Eve Rudd, 28, of
Clewland. "I have a son I
need to raise, a husband I love
and a church to attend."
Rudd was acquitted last
week of murder and aggravat·
ed anon in the June 10 fire
that killed two of her three

children, Steven Jr., 6, and
Erie!, 4.
· ·
Rudd told The (Cleveland)
Plain Dealer that she has
apent time enjoylna the little
tlllnaa since her acquittal - a
alass of oranae juice, barbe·
cue chicken, aleeplna in a real
bed and holdlna ber sole sur·
vivina son, Michael, and her
husband, Steven.
Rudd said she wants to
reclaim the life she had before
prosecutors announced in
August that they would seek
to put her to death. She was
held in a jail for nine months

without bail.
But she said a part of that
life would be missing forever
with her two chlldnln aone.
"There Isn't a day that aoea
by that I don't think, about
them," she aaid. "Every
momlna they would alve me
huas and kisses. They were
exceptional children and
loved by everybody who
knew them."
Rudd said heat and smoke
prevented her from saving her
children.
Prosecutors said they don 'I
believe her.

doubiP Y,our

.........

eldy . . . . 4 ol ..
ec.BOBI)I's t hh- wae Slmii&amp;ID April. far eu,..r. rev- from
sales taHs aot iDciU«tina c:ar sale! ••
sa mjDjnn llllo~~e esnmseu Rev • oa
IUID- sales was. $32 miUjon .tlo'le
ft'VI I

,_

-

-

wi."CS
Dtlb

em.

meres

"[ tbint tfJe sales tax sidle; pu us a
fiiSe sease of oprimiAm far tile i!!!'O!!!!t
tax Side illl this situation.~ Slid. SenNe
President Ric:llmt FUIIDISb* budF officials also, saidl IIIII.
back. ill Oc.tobet, !bey may liaw: lllllkr·
esrimptr:d die iqllcl of al999 c:h~~~p in
Ohio raw 011 stile revenue.
The ehanJe Clflted II SISO,OOO lfie
amount of WteS.D h!!fuesS bad to pay 011
its ne1 worth. The result a decrease: in
revmue from the corporate franchise
tax, a drop IDipified by a recessi'liL

It found that utilities accounted for 70 pe_a:ent of the mercury released into the air witl'l 17 of Ohto'&amp; top 20 &amp;OIIl'US
of mereury te.leaseli being coal-fueled power plants.
The top two sow:ces among utilities were the Conesville
plant in Coshocton County 0,200 poundS) and the Gen. ·
James M. Gavin plant in Gallia County (950 ~)I bclth.
of which are owned by American Electm: Po.wer of
Columbus.
The newspaper also fou~ that power ~~~Is account for
nearly half of the state's au releases of dioxms, a group of
chemicals that can cause cancer and other health problems.
About S3 grams, or 1.7 ounces, of dioxins and 11,940
pounds of mercury were released in Ohio .in 2000.

Ohioans want evolution taught
CLEVELAND (AP)- A majority of Ohioans want pub·
lie schools to teach evolution and a concept called "intelli·
gent design" when they discus~ how life ori$in~ted and
changed, according to a stateWide poll comnusstoned by
The Plain Dealer.
The poll showed that about three in five Ohioans favor
teaching both the long-standing theory that life evolved by
natural processes as well :if the newer concept that a supernatural designer guided human development.
The stale Board of Education, scheduled to meet in
Columbus on Monday to resume discussions on .the issue. is ·
struggling to rewrite state science curriculum, whic~ i? J13!1
will recommend what students should know about hfe s ongins and diversity.
·
The 19-member board must approve the standards by
year's end and is evenly divided on the issue. A majority of
members on the standards committee favor including the
alternative to evolution.
Ohio would be the first state to include intelligent design
in its curriculum.

comfort &amp;save!
I

Right now you can brfntMm~ Zof your

favorite LI·Z·Bor styles for 1great low prfcal

'

':Fishing contest

· in Point Pleasant

:; draws crowd
,·

BY Mull fbn•JraJ

~~'IREGISTEII.!XlM

l.
I

.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
...-About 90 anglers lined lbe
shore of the lake at Krodel
Park Satunlay morning as.
, put of the 8lh Annual PUnt
:Pleasant Children's Fishing
•Derby.
:: Sponsored by Columbia
:pas and Transmission, who
:stocked the lake Friday night,
•the derby was desigucd few
;some good old-fashioned
! clean fun for kids of all sizes.
; ·"We like to give this just for
1the jo)' and fun for the chil. dn:n, · Rick Harris, of
, Columbia, said. "We like to
, try to lake a proactive stance
!to give something back to lbe
1community."
l . Rick's own daughteu,
: Courtney and Katie, had a lot
: of fun, catching .more fish
' than , their dad, giving lhem
, family bragging rights at the
· dinner table.
i "It feels good," Courtney
: said, adding that she thought

••
••

·Healthy Start
Healthy Families

Wa"

c:atche&amp;. giving him a fish
story he c:an tell few g,eaera,.
lions. "I c:au:b new mil... he
said. '1 want to goc:all:b same
more."'
.
None of the anldcn nee ltd
a license Satunli.y because
lbe fishing derby was 011 lhe
first day of die lice fishing
weekend every year when
fisherman are IKlt n:quired to
have a license.
·.
The WiiiJieiS of eac:b ClteI!OI'Y were given prizes liD&amp;"
mg from life jac:~ to clolb
foldinl! chain to coolers, all
esseonal items for any serious
angler.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

Our main coneem In aH stones Is
to be accurata. If
know ol an
error In a story, ca 1he ,_room
at (140, 992·2156.

r.';:

Health Care Coverage for
Ohio's Working Families

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News Departments
The main number Is 992·2156.
Department erctaullti 18 are:

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QenereliNim&amp;ger

Eld.12

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or

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~·•ne

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Clrculltlon

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CJ...Ifled Ad•

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To send e-mail

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4\IIPS 21NIO)

Olllo _ , "'tltl... c:o.
Pullllallod
...,., - - -y
t~~roooh Fridoy, m
eou.t
St.
Pomeroy,
ONo. Soconcl-c1ou

·-r:

poiiOglt polctat

f'llmoror.

T
the Ohio ...
eu Ih
'1P«e
"tPol~ I I . Stnd -

-..-.a

WtJon.

comtcllcntto The Dilly Sonllnel; 111 Court
St.~- Ohio 45789•

a,_ .. __

Subacrlptlon rates
12

OnoOnoOno-

. $8.70
$104

eo""'*'

Dlllf

not~to pey""'
collier
remit In -nco to
The Dally nltnol. ~wllbe .,_
collier uc:lo - · No ...,..lpllo.1 by
mall permllled In who"' home
carrier 11rYk;e II OYOIIable.

"'"l.,

_...,..

Mil~·
13WoN
26Woeko
52 WoN

$27.30
$53.82
$106.58

R--Motpc-,

13Woeko
26Woeko
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$21.25
$58.88
$1011.72

LOCAL BRIEFS
EMSiocGis
POMEROY - tiiiils d die Me.ip
Emergency Service amwen:d se~~en
calls lor a.s.siS1Uce oM the we•• swf
Units

for kids (birth to age 19) and pregnant women.
Healthy Families offers no-cost health care coverage for the
. entire family- parents AND kids.
.

FLAIR

Parking

·~

FINANCINQ AVAILABLE
7
'" :

Ope~~~~~~:~~

FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN
"BRAND NAME I'URNITURE AT DISCOUNT PRICES"

Ate

WV

675·1371

FREE

Layaway

lillE•
•·

RACINE · lkllwly-Dm:as
Scwrshm. Cildu:ill Died 'fhtntby a 71
p.m. in lhe dudll - · Mildml Bin
lllld Mthel Bnwce will haWt lhe pnl!V'.tm ·

~'t:iSPATCII

Sundly, Ict26 a.m., BaD R1111, Suab
Gibbs, Holzer Medical Center;
12:20 p.m.. Maple Sbcct. Bemic:e

u.s.]]

-~
AD womm :am ia\\iled 10 llllli!lllil.

._._ __ .......
"tal orna..:- holders lUid the:
a1 b.,...• .,.,.. ..... caJII s VIIHf
&amp;eJlel Pll .
and West Vi · ia.
lie through lcllers., pbooe
"''nce
projects in c:alls. ew e-m:ails until JIIDC
and uoulid Me1gs Couuty 28, which, al lbllt lime, the:
ha~~e beea fmisbed. U.S. 33 project wiD be reevaluated
will see mon: ttaffic, and if . to delermine ODOTs · Dell
stakeholders rejected lhe lhe
bypass isn '1 COllstniCted, step.
bypass alternatives and
all
thai IRfrtc: will go
Filson added lhe next
threatened to take legal ri~tofthrough
Nelsonville."
slaleholders
meeting has
action against OOOT if the wd Story.
been scheduled for July 17
bypass is built as it is current"The
concerns
of
at
the Nelsonville-York
ly JII'OI)OSI:d.
.
Nelsonville's leaden are Elementary School cafete-

Onless ODOT remedies
all four problems and cur·
rent plans are changed.
stakeholders said they do
not want the new road con"
Strutted.
''The fate of the bypass
not only affects Nelsonville
and southeastern Ohio, but
the entire state of Ohio and
. West Virginia as well," said
Story. "It plays a very
imponant role m the c:omeletion and success of the
Capital Corridor' project.''
The "Capital Corridor"'
includes bypasses at both
Nelsonville and Lancaster,
the Ravenswood Connector
proje~t. a~d the Athens·
Darwm project.
· Upon completion of all
four projects, the new high. way will be the shortest, and
most accessible route

Give·

Healthy Start offers no-cost or low-cost health care coverage

992-2117
1-800-992-2608

it was fun 10 bell ha- dad M
lbe fisbiDg arne..
"It's. '!.!.!~~ Bobby Ahrs
saicl "I
lol offUn, it was
good.."
"It was fun, c:ardling aD
lbese fish,... Tyler WaJmsJey
c:aug!'lt 19 fisll.
•
'flln:e,.year-old DustiD
Walmsley showed tile·adulls.
and kids al'ike how it was.
clOlle. He led the: clay wilh 34

••

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Ebili:~·$~·~:~
_ ~~tm~=

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Cllll!lllltDIS an lw: S!eDI ria
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.

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----

son~llebnws@dot.sbte.oh

aa-

by rcgUbr mrail. ~
Dittttor GeoQe Collin$.
338 Mu$kingum . Drh-e..
Muictla. Ohio 45750: or by
calling 373-0lll.
.ll\;

truly · legitimate and I
believe OOOT is trying to.
be sensitive to those con·
cems," he added. "ODOT
hu done a great job witb
these highway projeCtS and
the general consensus of
Nelsonville's officials, I
believe. is the bypass will be
a good thin~ . However, how
the project s design affects
their community is a factor
they just can'l ignore.''
''The most imporlallt thing
right now is for both ~ides to
keep the Jines of communication open so a reasonable
solution that benefits each
· party can present itself," he
said.
.
Stephanie Filson, Dislrict
10 information officer, said
ODOT is currently · accept·
ing comments from stake·

d...Save LiteI

Thursda~

June 13, 2002
Noon to 6 p:m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
Multi-purpose Room
Sponsored by the Pleasant Valley Hospital Auxiliary
• For more information call: (304) 675-7222

PLEASANT
VALLEY
'HOSPITAL

�X

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Abby. I ~ your readets ~
dial dlis special ~lion coold bet!efit families ·ew:I)"A'Me. ·- A.R.C

Dear

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.

Family tradition promotes sibling love

lheDti'y
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AS

.

'1 . . t

a\L VIEW

•-bile ...&gt;e .,.~ aD dn::sxd up. I
&amp;Sled tbe phorogiapber ro ate a
funily picture. Thinking dais wolllcl
IN A11..\NI'A
be a nice U'aditioll.
ua llbn
DEAR A.B.C: What a lovely · group pomait 111ten !be ne.:u )'12".
idea. We hear so roocb aboul bow . I &gt;Wied a '"family v.'311" iD our dell
desl:rocti~-e sibling m'alry can be. v.ith the r.vo p!111Us.. lu -.tm ilWM
YOW" positi'&gt;&gt;e approach to building a time £or the next one. our )~SOD
suor,ga bond among your childreO au! his wife had gene boogh a nasi)'
•iD benefit e'&gt;~ixldy later an.
dhace- so, of «lllfSe. '"She- .,.~ oo
DEAR ABBY: I re.l v.ith amuse- ~in the pictwe
ment the leru::r from "looking for
On.:: day, ..bile looking at !be fust
':Ide in Pmrisylvania,- who ,....,_nted ~u family photos thai included our
family pholos thai included her" bus- e:~-ilaughler-in-bw. I decided they
baod'su-v.ifelllkendov.11 from her 'A~ too good to h~ or throw
modler-in-law's li•-ing· room WlliL away, so I pulled out some acrylic
Here's how L handled a simibr painiS and painted o•-er her using a
problem.
Oonl panem. In the fust pictur'e, I
My husband and I have rwo ll\3f· call the flower "'Venus Man Trap.
ried sons. Ln 1985. the si~ of us In the second. '"Blooming Idiot.''
attended a fa mily wedding. and
Since that time.. our older son and

'""had

M

SOUIHERN ELEMENTARY
HE

FBI~

TO ff S V IEW

rmmt visit ro ~Midhons ofcivil 6betties ·

NOTEBOOK
Salisbury awards asse111bly
•

POMEROY - Salisbury Elementary held its end of
the year academic aw.uds assembly with certific:ares
presentecl to students receiving all A's .for all four grad-

m~t=::

I 5· D ·oA\- FUll-Southern Bemetltai\''S first annual field day was held May 20, for students K-6. Students who participated
enjoyed .a sack race game. {Cantribuled)
·

First field ·day at Southern successful
softball throw, sack race, limbo, pun-putt
golf, bay 'maze, ping-pong throw, for
gold _fisb, ~nd. ~ fueman's n::lay race.
Desptte the chilly weather, ~I the students and helpers had ~ gn::at tune.
'11\ose assisting front AEP Sporn Plant

·Buck Roush. Jv aunn a Neigle r. Si d
Manuel, and Pete Sayre.
AE P Gavin helpers were Rick
Buzzard, Dave F ife. Dave C undiff,
Lare R'ffl ...
·Pi
. nd c· d
n 1 e. . ony e rce, a
m y
wen:: Sam H~wley, Perk Ault. Marlene Sands.
Johnson, .John Oblil\gef, Jeny Houser,
Spom .Plant is a Partner-In-Education
Bill English, Bob Anns, Dave Stout. with Southern Elementa.ry School.

Special·medical exams may help
people qualify for disability benefits

TODAY IN HISTORY

Itt .Ioiii LMIL hi
· scow. SEtURnY

tal exam is s~heduled only
hhinlt it is heiDfUI for~ nati011.
to !mow dlat Social Seturity
Depending on the medical when we cannot get enough
lnformati011
we need, we may medical evidence that shows
help aet ~""medical

in!.:~ftk.e~'-'
re:n!\~.~.
:: can

W E ST'S VIE. W

Okay, who's responsible for policing the INS?

be able to have your regular
doctor perfonn the exam.
Sometimes we will need addi·
tional medical information
from a specialist, such as an
orthopedtst or psychologist.
We try to find a doctor whose
office is convenient for you,
and we pay for the exam and
the cost of transponation to
the doctor's office. Of the 1.5
million people who applied
for Social Security disability
benefitS in 2001, about two of
every five were n::ferred for a
supplemental exam.
·
Remember, the supplemen-

infunnatiOll you itviou.

, .,.... ,...._

~·YI·..

"" ...,..... ~·v
Whell you apply for Social
'Citsability benefits. She · Security disa6!1ity benefits,
explainea that her family doc· we t011tact the docton and
.
tor bad retiJed '*- ):Cat and
.$1te badn't found .another one, adler hel.llh can:: p:ofession.She was OOII&lt;:tl1led that 'She als 'Who have tJeateiJ you. And
even when doctors have
might have trouble IPOI.Ying moved or retired, their mtient
fur benefitS, since she"1iaa no
F.doctor to tell us about Iter l'eCOids an:: lls\lllly avatlable.
medical &lt;xlnditiOII.
1 think many people m.y be
in similar situations. Or, pel'r
haps they receive medical
.care from hospitals. clinics or
emergency tOOms w~re they
see many different doctors w
health care professionals. So,

Awarded sdlollrshlps

M. Puckett

enouah

If we receive
.information from these medical
soun:es, we can decide
whether yoll aft: disabled
under Social Security law.
However, if we need more
infunnarion, we :ask you to
have a special medical exami·

RIO GRANDE Three Meigs High
School graduates have
been awalded scholal"'
sltq&gt;s ro attend the
Unwe~ity of Rio
Grande
and
Rio
Grande Community
College.
·
· B~;~dley &amp;ylot, son
of Kenny B~lor and
Beverly Adkms, has
been awarded the
Robert
S. Wood
Scholarship,
which
pays · half-tuition to
students who show
academic excellence.
Baylor ' plans to
major in business
administration.
Kristy Puckett and
Misty Puckett have
eacb lleen awarded the
0hio
. First
Schola~hip,
which
offers rn:e tuition fot
four yea~ to high
school valedictorians
and salutatorians.
They ale the daughters of Sidney and
Linda Puckett and plan
to major in fine wood•
working and establish
their own furnhure
business.

you are disabled under Social
Security law.
To learn more about disability benefits and how we make
our decision , contact Social
Security toll free at 1-800772-1213 and ask fo rthe fol ·
.lowing
publications.
Disabilitis l!nd A Specia l
Examination is Needed fo r
Your Claim. Copies of these
publica\ions also are available
on
. our
webs ite
at ·
www.ssa.gov.

(Jolm Lamotte is mairager
of the Social Security office in
Arheru.)

Academic banquet . Basket bingo planned
POMEROY -·
The Salisbury
Elementary Academic Banquet sponsored by the Salisbury PTO was he ld
recently at the Meigs Hi~h School.
· Cindy Johnston, princtpal, welcomed
the pan::nts and honorees. Medals wen::
presented to the following students who·
bad all Ns all year: kinderganen, Olivia
Cremeans, EriC Smith, Katlynn Stanley,
Darrin Will; grade three, Emalee Glass.
Cody Hanning; and grade four, Scott
Kennedy.
.
Medals were given to the followin g for
honor roll recognition three out of three
times; kinderg~rten, Alyson Denwiller.
Devan Dugan, Lauren Swick; grade one,
Christopher Folmer, Jenny Gheen,
Hillary Stone, Autumn Williams, Jared
WilliamsOll; .g ra&lt;ietwo,CourtneyBaker,
Breanna Gheen, Bethaney Ulbrich,;
grade three, Alaine Arnold, Miranda
Gmeser, Marissa .McAngus, Connor
Swar:u; grade four Jacob Dunn, Darby
GilltlOl'e, Oreana Hemsley; grade five,
Jamie Bailey, Crockett Crow, Morgan
Kennedy, Atidtew O'Bryant, and Caitlin
Swaru.
Receiving medals for honor roll two
out of three times were kindergarten ,
Andrea McGrath, Jonathan McVey,
Misty Russell, Brianna Werry; grade
one, Kasie Ellis, Jonlen Evans, Joey
Smith, Dustin Ulbrich, Katelyn Wallace,
Kenzie Shuler, grade two, Kayla
Oreen.~gtade three, Mr. Robin.e tte
Nicholas lngels, William Folmer; and
grade fuur, Jennifer Payne.
I

RA CIN E - S tar M ill Par k Board
of Ra cine wi ll be s ponsori ng a baske1
bin go
p rogram
· 1ili th
Lon ga be rger
Baskets.
a t I he
Middl epon Ameri can Legion ha ll
on June 18, 7 p.m .
All proceed s will used to fun d
con s t.ru cti on fo r new res t roo ms a t
the park. There will be 20 ga mes for
$20 , a long wi th o1hcr fund ra isin g
acli vi ties a nd door pr izes will be
awarded and refres h ments ·served.
according to the spon,ors .
·
Those playing must be at least 18
an d there w ill be a no smoking rule
in effec t. it was repo rt ed.
Tickets tJ ur chased prior to June 18
will be entere d into a specia l ba ske t
draw in g . Tickets may be purch ased .
at R &amp;G Feed in Po meroy. Hom e
National bank, Rac ine Opto metri c
Center, and a C ut Above, or by con tactin g Je nnife r Ho b ac k a t 949.2169 or Ka1hry n Hart at 740-9492656. It was re pmte d th at the neith e r th e Lo nga berger Co. nor any or
it s represent at ives are connec ted to .
the games.

VanMeter birth
LONG BOTIOM -- Meli.ssa and
Victor VanMeter of Long Bottom
announce the birth of a daughter. Emil y
Faith VanMeter, bom. Ma y 10 a t
O'Bleness Memori al Hospital. Athens.

qu:alifp ng were kinderga,nen, . Olivia
Cn::means. Enc Smtth, Katlynn Stanley; EmaJee Glass,
Cody_Hanning, and grade four ScOlt Kennedy.
Certificates were presented to the following top math
students: Olivia Cremeans. Jenny Gheen, Cody
H anning, Connor Swanz. Nicllolas Ingels, Scott
Ke nnedy. Crockell Crow: top language students:
Karlynn Stanley, Autumn Williams, Emalee . Glass,
C ody Hanning, Alaine Arnold, William Folmer, Scott
Kennedy. Morgan Kennedy, top social studies students:
Alaine Arnold, William Folmer, Nicholas Ingels, Scott
Ke nnedy. Andrew 0 ' Bryant; and top science students
Connor Swartz. William Folmer, Scott Kennedy, and
Andrew O' Bryant.
· Perfect attendance awards were pn::sented to
Christopher Folmer. Emalee Glass. Cody Hanning, and
Bo bby King,
Citizenship
award prizes were awarded to Ruebel Davis, Crockett
Crow. X elsey . Shuler. John Davis. Samantha King,
Daniel Collins, and Kelsey Burton .

State FFA Degcee Awarded
RACINE - Joe Adkins. sat of Wanda Adkins; grandsm
ofElhel Adkins, waschosentoreceive !be State FFADegree.
The degree Adkins applied for was evaluated at the
. District and State levels. Tradilionally this award goes
to the top two percent of aJlricultural students in the
State of Ohio.
Adkins has been an active member
of the Racine Southem fFA for the
past four years. He has also participat·
ed in many competitions such as soil
jud~ing, parliamentary procedure.
envuonthon, the State Corporation,
and agricultural mechanics.
Adkins
participated
in
the
Supervised Agricultural Exp¢ence
project with 1,342 hours of work
Adklnt
experience. His hours wet"e completed
in the vegetable fields of Letart Falls,
with Jimmy O' Bri~n. Russell Cummings, and Aaron
Sayre.
.
Adkins recently graduated from Southem ~h School
and plans to attend Hobart Welding Institute this fall.

HEALTHY START
OHIO'S HEALTH INSURANCE
OPTION FOR CHILDREN

Health Insurance
For Your Kids
Is Just A Phone Call Away

Call Today!
992-2117
1-800-992-2608
1 Meigs County Department
of Job and Family Services
175 Race Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760

�The Daily Sentinel

lllside:

The Dn1ySetdirlff

l'aaeBl
llftlsfo/l • . , . , . B3
·~Itt! hwhfiNII ¢11

Rhode Island neWspaper employee
blamed in killing of colleagues

cautious
alest

II

Tri-County golf tour to begin 12th season

·Colorado

lb Jlla T' I??PP
~PMSS

ble and invited to participa~
The toor has proven to be a grea
pliloe to learn the game. experieno

&lt;:OmpeCition, make some friends. m
have links fun. All area youth, mal·
~ female, an: urged to join in .th
events whenevet possible. Shout•
anyooe have questions regarding th
upcoming excitement, contac
Hidden Valley Country Club at 675

lllhiwd ~ «p'£QIIy lht
)UU4 dderiy aJ thooe with
1~ p•Hrntt ID SDJ

GLENWOOD SPRINGS.
Colo. (AP) - Fue ieams instde Slaby.

;=W::...~ora "'~~~ ..!..:i:~fin:W:.~

9739.

western CobaJo ~~baa 10..000-foot-bigb IDOIIIIWn
!lying 10 figllt die IQ•• ;. iil5 ~ llOitb of Dur.ango
fbm:s that burned llmiSS ar ton::hcd 6.500 'aaes.. Two
bsl 7.300 IIICreS, dl::saro)q t'llh•'S•"•mds 1lieR: ~24 ..... a. md sending ~ eel_ and • Nnst Ser.Piice: hdidcnls, fleeing. ·
copler pidcd up se-.1 biklt was Cllll: of seYenl ~ ers. and nn.,.ts. One SUIIIIIItr
blazes in the 5WI: early cabin was dcslro}':IIL
Monday tiDl left tiJr: Om_. The Fedalll ~y
ouea enveloped in a haze of M~t Agmcy late
yellow smoh.. MoYiug e~eo ~uncby · approved funds to
faster was a !oeCOlld Wildfm: help the state ftght the bl;azK
in cenbal Color.ado butning The gnnt was the ninth
on JO.OOO acn:s of pnme FEMA
._.
.,
bmd and in the Pike Nllliooal Colorado r~.
for!:st. west of Colorado ageucy issued a tllllll of eight

Regisuation forms and informatio1
for events can be found at Riverside

.a....,., ' ....

....... .......•

.

. ""'-.

Cllt'hide. Pine Hills and Hidde1
Valley.

.,

· -..............
i u."'--.' ......

.. ,
•

I

t

.....

~

·take

Plolledtty

3-0 lead over

..;:

S~gs.Bill
n....
bo . . gnntuo Colorado from 1994
uuv.
vwetiS, _
w Y\Sit- to 2Ull.

ed Glenwood ~gs; abo
got a look at the Pite forest
fue fr_om a pi~
'1t IS Ill! amwng ~~
It loob l!ke .~oclear WlDter,
~.said. All of ~olor.ldo
IS bumi!'8 t~y. !t IS~· very,
vel)' SCliOU$ SJIUaUOO.
At Glenwood S · s, fin:..
~
fi. ghlels wen: especilllly_
cautHlUS because of memones of
the so-called Storm King fm:
on similarly cby, steep tenain
that killed 14 fin:fightets in
1994. Thciugh 40 suuc~
including 24 homes wen:
destroyed Sunday. then: were
DO n:poned injuries in the
Glenwood Springs fire.
"We lellmed from Storm
Kin!~ that dwellings can be
n:built but you don't want to
Jose any life," Mayor Pro-tem
Rick Davis said,
About 3•000 ~le wen:
Olden:d to leave the1r homes
while fm: cn:ws stood guard
on the ridges above the rown.
The fin: was apparently ignited by undetground coal that
had been burning for years,
officials said.
.
.
The Pike blaze was~ed
by a campfin: Sat ay. It
exploded Sunday aftemooo
as winds of 40 mph drove it
through bone-dry limber and
brush. Campfires are banned
~on:-•· and u
~t
. nan·-al
m
~· 1' ....
counties because of the
drought
-.-.a the evacuaThe tile fi:"'"""
ti·on of hundreds of homes ··n
the mountains southwest of
Denver and spewed smoke
alone Front Range. A yetlow
covered the Denver
area and ashes rained on communities.
State health officials

.Nets in

1n Smanville. Clllif.. n:sidents foo:ed from theit bona.

by an 1.1~ wildfire
lllJowed to return, but
firefighters still bad DOt
gained an~ band ovu the
Nonhem Cllltfomia blue.
Wind
_,....
oL.1 s w~ r-·•.ng ~"'
fue southeast tn the din:ctioo
of Moonev Rat Road. about
. 1
·
60 llllles nonlteas.t of
~to, when the evacuanon was Olden:d for a~t
ISO homes on ~y. said
JoAnn Canosce
. lh. spol:e~­
woman for . the Caltforma
Dcpanment of~·
The fire, whic~ stu.ted
early Sunday after.htgh _Winds
knocked power lmes toto · a
~· was 30 pen:ent ~n·
tamed Sunday . e":enmg.
H~wever.
unp~tct~ble
Winds made condinons diffi.
cult to access.
In Cimanon, N.M., hun·
dn:ds or. fin:fighteiS and a
fleet of mtankCIS and water·
dropping heliCO!'!CIS tried. to
slow down a senes of Wildfin:s that have chantd thousands of acres of forested land
·n northeastern Ne w Mextco.
·
1
The. fire, which had burned
an estunated 85,000 acn:s on
and around the Philmont Boy
Scout Ranch, was ~led by
erratic winds Sunday, and
officials expected another day
of wind Mooday.
Pushed ·b,v' SO mph wt'nds,
another fi·t'n southwestern
u~
Utah tripled in size Sunday,
growing to 5,000 acn:s.
Firefighters wen: able to save
about 30 vacation homes and
evacuated 40 residents on
Saturday from the area nonh
of Zion National Park.
WC1C

Missionary's. family_ worships
as they await reumon
.

U.S. Ro11111n ca111olic leaders
to proposed abuse polky. ask

changes
prayers

• ~~)m· ...... SeR~ Cudinal Bemard Law asked c:hui'Cb le4dership following
"'"""'"'""" ......,.,. """ ~·-·
to pray fur the revelations that some pn'ests
"-tholic -L.--. -'-' ..... -··-•
.........
'-"
"'"'"'"'" """' "'"" - - -........
who victimized young people
:!':sos::r:;.r,:•.~-~ "We wiD be llleiDpOng to were allowed to continue
""" ·- """' _.,... ICSpOIICillllionally to what we worl:ing in the chwch. .
needs to
have responded to ~ in Bishops will DOt be the only
the
TheU~S. Conr.epoln:niccye tbaof' teiiJIS of our policy in
ing ones in Dallas. City Duthoricases of sexual abuse by c:ler- ties have been {lleparing for
Catholic Bishops is. expected gy." Law said during Mass It the expecled llfllval of tl:Jou..
to focus 00 calls for z.ero..tol- Bo$ton 's Holy Ooss Cathednl. sands of demoostntors and
erance
who molest
· .L.
·
childrenforinpriests
the future
and a canrmIll Rogcr M·Lauuny, ~-tsts dunng
"""meeting,
head of the Los All$Cies
y through Satwday.
two-slrikes-lOO 're-out policy . Archdiocese - the nanon's An advocacy group for
for those gutlty of past abuse. lugest - kept a low profile alleged victims of clerical sex
Under the proposal, the on Sunday, but said last week abuse said Sunday it would
Vatican
would ho
be .asked
to . he WI'II wac b'•"""•
adnnl WluNi•W
......_ L-__
. ....
•L-t
d "--k those
I the
'-"'~"' to
uum • Iawswt
eu.....w vto ate
a zero-tolCIIDtc policy, -r~ prompted bishops to bar them
~licy, andld abell abuseed of which "one infraction and from the meeting.
mtnors
wou
n:pon to they WI'II never •oun
· setVe m
·
""' 'd a-....
·- nanon
· a1
· ·1 authori"'•
.,..VI
"'""""Y•
ctvt
....
s.
-..
"Wha1 we have befion: us ts
· an~ minis~....
·
director of the Survivors
he bis ops have
Netwodt for Those Abused bv
a dra"'" and 1 think 1•1 needs to
1
be strengthened," Canlinal
-----------to
Adam Maida of Detroit told

n:move 1111y abs1lacles to ttlks.
Sister M11ry Ann Walsh. a
spokeswoman for the bishops' conference, said she
could not comment until
Monday, when conference
adminisllll.tors would have
their fil!lt chance to review
SNAP's offer.
Lay groups, other victims'
groups and gay and lesbian
groups also plan to attend..
Gay groups plan to demon·
stnte qatnst the blaming of ·
gay priests for the scandal.
Among church organizations coming to Dallas is
Voice of the Faithful, a
Boston-based laity reform
group that \\'ants parishioneiS
' more say in chlll'Ch

c·shioners

=thened.

~-----

~arishioners

attendin~

undafi Mass at SL ~enne
Ca~ ~has come under fire
from victims for not being
tough enough on abusive
priests. Bishop William Lori, of
Dridgepon, Conn., said he plans
to present specific cltanp to
stJenathen the proposal.
"We will have a chance to
amend the document and sub- ·
mit alternative language. I
will be ·pmtitipatin* in that
amendment process, he said.
Archbishop Hurry Flynn of
Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minn.,
one of the architects of the
policy, said he expected
changes befon: the plan faced
the full body of bishops.
"I hope something will happen in Dallas that will speak ·
to the people and say to the
people, 'We've got it, we
know that we mishandled
this, and we've got it,'" Flynn
said Sunday on ABC's "This
Week".
Other U.S. bishOJ?S were
less definitive in thetr hopes
for the conference. In Boston,

ROSE HD.L. Kan. (AP) ~ ·prayer you said for· its during
litmily of slain miWataly our ordeal in the jungle," said
Martin Bilmham gathered to Burnham, who was in a wheel. recall a man who linfllidtingly chair with a g~hot wound to
toolchisfaithimlthejunglesofthe her right thigh. "We especially
Philippines. His wifu, meanwhile, wlint to thank the military QlCn,
began. llllking her ~ llock to the Americans. the Filipinos
Kansas IIIII her 1Im: c:hildJat.
who risked and even gave their
Manin Burnham "was lives to rescue us."
doing God's will to the end"
Martin Burnham's body has
before he was killed in the been flown to a U.S. military
Philippines, a minister told base in Japan and would
Bwnltlun's family at a Sunday · return to America in "a few
prayer service in Rose Hill.
days;" U.S. Ambassador
Martin
and
Gracia Francis Ricciardone said.
Burnham's da~J$hter, Mindy,
In Kansas, Pastor Robert
sang in the chotr as her two Varner told the congregation
brothers and other family at the Rose Hill Bible Church
members joined parishionel!l. that Martin and his wife went
Martin's brother, Doug, led the to the Philippines to take the
congre(!ation in joyful hymns. word of God to those who had
Glacta Burnham, 43, left the not heard it.
••••••••••••••••Philippines on Monday to
meet her thn:e children in
Kansas, sometimes smiling
and once near tears after her
yearlong ordeal at the hands of
Muslim extremist kidnappers.
Edwards Moving arid Rigging, Inc., has
She was rescued Friday
been contracted to move generators, turwhen · Philippin«: soldiers
bines and transformers into the Rolling Hills
ambushed her cap!OI'S of the
Power Plant in Wilkesville. Roads will be
Abu Sayyaf group, which is
believed to have links to the aishut down along the following route for the
Qaida terrorist network. Martin
duration of each move. We will be starting
-Burnham and Filipino hosrage
at the Meigs Rail Siding in Rutland proEdiborah Yap wen: killed in tile
ceeding to Hwy 124 going west. At
two-hour shootout.
In comments at the airport
Wilkesville we will be taking Hwy 1689
before her departure, Bumllam
north to the Power Plant. We would appredelivered harsh words for her
ciate your patience and cooperation. Move
. captoiS and praised her resdate: June 13, 2002.
cuers and suppOrters.
. · "We needed every single
~

~

-

.

.

.

SAVE 20o/o -40°/o

Jlwwettwlns

at Pocono

LONG POND, Pa. (AP) Dale Jarrett ended a 30-ruce
losing streak with a little luck
over the final laps Sundlly to
win for the third time in his
career at Pol'OOO Rnc:ewny.
Jrurett passed Robert Yates
Racing teammate Ricky Rudd
on the I95th of 200 mps, then
won under caution after Rudd
hit the ~all with one lap to go.
Rudd looked like the driver to
beat, but had alate tire problem
that made it ens~ fur Jarrett.
The victocy m the Pocono
500 was the first fur the 1999
Winston Cup champion since
l.~t July in Loudon, N.H. He
ulso won on the 2 112-mlle trlwle in 1995 and 1997, both
tlnies in the Pennsylvania SOO,
Pocono's July race.
·
·Jwreu got the 29th victory of
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - This was
his career when his Ford beat
the timeliest goal of a seeminglY. timethllt of Mnrk Martin by 0.326
less career, o special moment for the
NHL's oldest player. Yet Igor Lurionov
seconds. '
The 45-year-old driver from
knew he couldn't fully celebmte.
There's all that lost time he willoover
Hickory, N.C., hilS not been
get
back, nll that money he will oover
effective for most of this sen·
inoke, no mutter how mw1y ~llllle-win,
SQn. His best J1!eVious .tini~h
. ning overtime goals are let\ m his 41 ·
was fourth Ill Apnl In
year-old body.
.
Martinsville, Vn.
Lurionov's goal in the third overtime
·With the lield set by points
of the thlrd,Jongest Stanley Cup finals
lifter qualifying wns canceled
game gave the Detroit Red Winas a 3-:t
because water from recent
victory over Carolina and the senes lend
heavy rains was seeping
going
Into Oame 4 on Monday night.
through the track, Jarrett slllrted ·
Just as important. it may have provid·
13th.

Larionov's goal: timeliest moment in a timeless career

NO TIC·E

I

·.CLEVELAND · (AP)
R!)Okie ~ Drese shut out
New Ytldt for 5 2-3 itmi~
mid Omar Vilqutl had 1\W
. fOOre RBis Sunclny as the
Cle'idlllld Indians sal~ the
finnle of ~ ~le series
with 1111 8-3 win over the slop- .
pyMets.
Dmt (64) llounced OOtk
liotu his worst outing this season with one())' his betrer QDe8,
allowing ~ runs lind foot hits
helbre Sllllllbling - literally
-' in the sixth.
.
VilqUCI, who homered twice
lind had fi\'e RBIS on Satunlay
ni&amp;bt. had a two-run single in
the lndiwts' five-run foor1h off
Shawn Estes (2-5), who hadn't
stnrted in I0 dnys. ·
Vilqutllms driven in 39 runs
this seliSOII, wtd came in with
mon: RBis ·than perennial AL
run
producers
M!l':'ny
Ramirez, Rafael Palmeuo,
Mike Sweeney and Bernie
Williams.

EAST RtJT'HERfORD, NJ. fooled Rick Fox with 3.5 sec(AP)- Just when it looked as onds left. He made both, and
if J~ Kidd might make the Kidd was off-target after dri~
NBA Finals competitive. the bling upcourt and launching a
budding d~ known as the JO.footer just before the buzzer.
Los A~es _!:alrets - no, it . Bryant had 36 points, shoot·
wasn't JUSt Shaq - moved ing 14-for-23 and scoring a
within ooe victoty of their third dol.en points in the fourth quar- h t l:hampionship.
ter.
R&amp;en Hony bit another
"I wanted it. l wanted it.·it's
clutch 3-pointer to put Los game tin\e. I wasn't going to let
Angeles ahead for good, Kobe them take it from me," Bryant
Bryan! 1100 his lirst b.rilllant said,, "We'n: battle7tested .
offenstve game of the senes and That s what I keJ11 telling the
O'Neal . scored 35 points fellas in timeouts.
Sunday numtas the Lakers beat
O'Neal was 12-fur-19 from
the Nets 106-103 in Game 3. the tield with II rebounds,
This was the closest and most Derek Fisher scored 12 points
entertaining game of the Finals, while going 3-for-3 from 3and in the end the Lakers point r.mge and Horry Wid Fox
showed the stuff champions are came through at the end.
made of.
Lakers coach Phil Jackson
When it came time for clutch tied Pat Riley for the most
baskets. big blocked ·sholl&gt; and Cllreer playoff victories- 155.
key free throws, .the two-time It took Jackson only 209 games
defending champs had enough to tie the mark, a winning perof each to lllke a commanding cent~e of .741 compared to
3-0 lead in the best-of-seven Rile~ s .608.
series
·
K1dd had 30 points and
No team has ever recovered Kenyon Martin s..'Ofed 26 for
from such a deficit to win an the Nets, who knew that their
NBA playoff series, and don't best chance for keeping their
expect to see one from the Nets title hopes alive rested on thetu
~ even though they managed • winning this game.
to play a competitive ~arne fur
"If we can lock this one in, it
the tirst time in the senes.
makes lor a very small chance
Gante 4 is Wednesday night that they could win it," Jackson
in New Jersey.
. said befun:hand.
Kldd was outstanding again,
Indeed, the Nets now need to
leading the Nets oo a 19-5 run win four in a.row against a team
that g~ve them their bi!J!lest that has only allowed them to
lead of the series- 86-80 early have one single glimmer of
in the fuurth.
hope through the first three
But it was Bryant who made games.
·
the bil!ger plays down the
Kidd provided it, but it was·
stretch- none more important n't enough.
than his I0-foot jumper over
Los Angeles led 52:46 at
Kldd with 19.1 seconds left fur halftime and had its advanrage
a I04·1 00 lead. Bryant wa~ back into double digits after
double-teamed on the shot, and Bryant hi I a 3-pointer with 8:17
Kldd even got a hand on the left in the third. The Lalcers had
ball betore Bryant broke free, little difficulty maintaining that
turned to his letl and .hit the margin for the next few min·
bucket.
utes, with Bryant putting severKidd knocked down a 3· al nifty moves on Kerry Kittles
CLUTCH SHOT.- Los Angeles Lekers' Kobe Bryant scores over New Jersey Nets' Jason pointer with 5.2 seconds to cut leading to a short jumper for a
Kidd, rtght, with 19.1 seconds left in Game 3 of the NBA Finals Sunday. {AP)
. 11 to 1.04-103, and the Net~ 73-631ead.
·

'FIIEE PELIVEIIY
'FII!E BET·UP

'FIIEE PARKING
'Filii! LAYAWAY

FINANCING AVAILAILI
Opoft Dolly .... Fri. 1-7:
ClaHdlunday

ed the Red Wings what the resilient and
unruffled Hurricanes refused to concede
in the first two .!lames - munel.y, the
sense that Detroit controls a series that
WIISn't supposed to be nearly this dilti·
cult to win.
"Now they're down. ~- 1111111;, obvious·
ly, thev are not out of tt, but tt chnn11es
things~' suld Brett Hull, whose liOill wtth
1:14 lefl in the third period 'Sntunluy
night prevented Curollna l'rotn winning
the game in regulation time.
The Red Wings' only other goal scorer in a game lhut lasted more thiUl five
hours, tind potentially swung the series,
was Larionov, who also scored their first

goal hours before to tie it at I.
· bled a military regimen than an athletic
Lruionov hilS always been 11 scorer- pursuit.
just not recently, eoing nine games with·
"II wasn't easy · rot us," Larionov
out a goallllld mtssing live others with recalled Sunday, barely 12 hours after
injuries
· ·
what he called "one of the greatest
Now,' perhaps he is simplymaldng up · moments of my life."
· tbr lost time ;ifter not bem~ allowed to
"I played for eight years and it wus II
l~uve the tanner Soviet Umon.and pluy months a yeur - can you believe that?
in America until lte was 29, about the -and we trained three Limes a day," he
age some players are exiting the league. ~aid. "You play together. you stay
Before that, he was u tixture on the together, . you eat together, you wm
Red Anny's fruned KLM line, one of the together, you lose together, share joy and
greatest hnes in hockey playing on one sadness- and. then all of a sudden. at
of it.~ greatest teams. It was u different the end of your career, you get a chance
time during ndifferent em, when playing to go play with different tewnmates and
hockey in the Soviet Union more resem· a different style of hockey."
·

PHONE (304) 675·1371

FlAIR
FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN
"BRAND NAMt; FURNITUR~ AT DISCOUNT PAIC&amp;S"

liT. a
GALUPOLIS FEAIIY
WV2SI11

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PLEASANT
VALLEY.
HOSPITAL

�P p 112 • The D lly S1 ttltllf

-.mydallysentinel.com

2002 OHSAA STATE TRACK &amp; FIELD MEET
'

Wiseman finishes second
was finished as He was taken
to a local hospital with dehy·
dratioa.
The Gallia Academy senior
had won his heat in the 200meter dash and minutes later,
helped the 4x400-meter relay
team rally to qualify for the
state finals.
But, Perry looke&lt;l physically drained as he received
at
medical
attention
Welcome Stadium and
seemed
doubtful
for
Saturday's finals.
''I was worn out," said
Perry, who was unable to
hold down liquids Friday. "I
had to block out in from
being tired in my head. That
was the main thing . My legs
and whole body felt tired and
worn out."
When Saturday afternoon
came, Perry arrived at the
stadium and was ready to at
least compete ·in the 200meter finals.
Perry overcame his previous days e~perience and fin·
ished .fourth with a time of
22.50, not as fast as his 22.12
the day before, but not too
bad either.
Justin
Conway
of
Sandusky Perkins won the
state title with a time of
22.03.

Johnson
finishes tenth
·in 800-meter
BY IMcM CooKit

~YTRtBUNE.COM

DAYTON -As lap after
lap went by, Sara Wiseman
found herself all alone on the .
Welcome Stadium trnck.
During the 3,200-meter
Division II state championship Saturday, the Gallia
Academy sophomore led
from the very beginning, but
midway through the race, she
kicked in and took an impressive lead over a group of four
runners, . including . senior
Amy Arnold, the defending
state
champion
from
Cuyahoga Valley Christian
Academy.
"I felt lonely and I knew
someone was going to come
up at the end," said Wiseman.
And someone did.
As the lead group behind
Wiseman came around the
secorid to last turn, Arnold
broke loose from the pack to
give chase.
On the final stretch,
Arnold, who finished third in
the 1,600-meter run earlier,
finally caught up with
Wiseman and took the lead
on the final 50-meters to capture another state title.
"(Arnold) helped me with
my kick," said Wiseman. "I
mean she's got a stronger
kick than I do. She pushed
me.
For ~even and a half laps,
Wiseman led the best in the
state and nearly pulled off the
win.
. "I just pushed myself so I
could have that big lead,"
· said Wiseman. "I thought I
was going out to fast, but my
splits were like regionals so I
. kept with it. I was feeling
strong."
Wiseman still finished second, and will retun\ next year
as the top return! ng 3,200
runner in Division II.
ALL ALONE- Gallla Academy's Sara Wiseman holds a big
"I was surprised and I'm in lead during the 3200-meter state finals Saturday at
shock right now," said Dayton's Welcome Stadium. She finished second In the
Wiseman of finishing second event. (Andrew Carter)
in the state. She finished
eighth at the state meet last fourth in prelims the day already under his belt.
before, finished seventh
"I have all next year to preyear.
"I've got two years to go, Saturday.
pare and get ready," · said
plus more in college. This is "I thought I'd do a lot bet- Simmons. "I know what I'm
only the beginning. What ter," said Simmons. "I didn't up against now. May be I'll
happened was meant to be. run my race today. I felt good do a little better next year.
There's more to work on.
going in, but my legs were a Josh Perry finished fourth
little weak."
in the 200-meter dash finals,
Meanwhile, in . sprint Eric Barrison of Willard while the 4~400-meter relay
action, Gallia Academy won the race with a time of team, with Perry on the
junior Ty Simmons entered 10.96, while Edison's Jerod anchor, finished eighth.
the 100-meter dash finals Batt (11.27) was second.
When the first day of comwith hopes of pulling off the Now. Simmons will be able petition at the OHSAA State
best run of his career.
to focus on his senior year Track and Field meet came to
Simmons, who finished with a state meet appearance a close, it looked as if Perry

•••

•••

Gallia Academy had a runner on both the boys and girls
800-meter run.
In the girls race, senior
Brianna Johnson was second
2:23.89.
lndia
Pettus
(2:12.51) of Garfield Heights
Trinity won the event.
Gallia Academy's Daniel
Roush (2:06.51) finished.
16th in the boys 800.
•

• ••

In the Division II discus
throw Saturday morning,
River Valley's Harmony
Phillips entered the event on
a roll, coming off her personal best throw of 125 feet in
the regional at Byesville.
On Saturday, her best
throw of 116'11" wasn't
good enough to advance to
the discus finals.
·
"I was happy to be here,
but I
nervous," said
Phillip .
She topped out with her
best throw on her first
attempt, which w~s good
enough to finish 12th.
She reached 112feet on her
second try and 115'09" on
her third and final attempt,
all of which compiled for her
season average. Her best
throw came three feet shy of
the final qualifying throw of
I I 9'03', a distance that
earned the final spot in the
finals.
Shelby's Allison Booth
won the state title with a
throw of 139 feet.

las

Cle. St. Ignatius,.Heath, Tallmadge, ·
Newark Cath. win state titles
COLUMBUS (~- Neall French's
three-run double s
a seven-run second inning, and leveland St. 'Ignatius
held on to beat Milford 11-10 to win its
. fust Division I state championship.
In Sunday's other championships,
Tallmadge beat Richmond Edison 6-1 in
Division D, Heath beat Elyria Catholic 72 in Division ill an!! Newark Catholic
beat Windham 8-4 in Division IV.
The Wildcats also got a two-run double
by Jeremy Farrell, an RBI double by Bill
Lazio and an RBI single by Dan Kralik in
the second to take a 10-2 lead.
French went 3-for-4 and drove in four
runs. He hit an RBI double, Kralik had an
· RBI groundout and Brian Schmoter
scored off a throwing error as the
Wtldcals (27-3) took a 3-0 lead in the
tint
Milford's Rory Cousino hit a two-run
lingle, and Jacob Chalupa had an RBI
sing~!: in the sixth to ·tna~ce it 11-8.
In the seventh, Eric Lawson had an
RBI f'OI!lldout. and Seth DeBia hit an
RBI Sins)e to close to within 11·10. But
Chalupa lined out to end the pme.
Kyle Rallo went 3-for-5 for the Eagles
(25-(S). He" had a two-nm RBI single in
thlrd and scaed off a throwing error in
the tint
Brian Hoyer (8-2) aot the win. He
pitched 5 2-'3 innlnp 8nd allowed eight
ru111 off ten hits. Hti struck out three 8nd
. wallred three.
Eric Coomer (.5-1) took the loss. He
pitched 1 1-3 innings and allowed five
runa - all earned -.,.. off two hits. He
I

PREP
BASEBALL
struck out one and walked four.
In Division IT, Casey Jirsa and Mike
Kline each drove in two runs in the fifth
inning to lead Tallmadge to its first state
championship.
Jirsa's double and Kline's single put the
Blue Devils up 6-0.
·.
Brandon Caipen had an RBI single in
the fust inning for Tallmadge (26-5), and
Ian Campbell had an RBI single in the
second.
Edison's R.P. King drove in an RBI single in the seventh for the WildCats' (21-9)
only score.
·
_Gian Testa got the win. He pitched six
innings and allowed no runs off three hits.
He sD'IIck our eight and had no walks.
David Ujcich took the loss. He pitched
4 1-3 innings and allowed folir runs off
four hits. He walked three and struck out
two.
Tallmadge finished second in 1966,
1996,2000 and 2001.
Matt NorriJ and Barry Roe each drove
intworullluHeathwonitsfirstDivision
mstate championship.
Norril' two-run RBI single and RBis
by Roe and Jason Tomlinson put Heath
up 6-2 in the fourth inning.
Miles Johnson had an RBI triple and
Roe hit an RBI double in the thiid to tie
the game at 2-allfor Heath (30-2).

Elyria (19-8) took at 2-0 lead in the second afrN Aaron Randleman scored on a
throwing error and Dan Sldenicka hit a
sacrifice fly.
Matt Hatfield got the win. He pitched
four innings and allowed two runs none earned - off two hits. He had five
. strikeduts and two walks.
Mike Clapman took the loss for the
Panthers. He pitched 4 1•3 innings and ·
allowed six runs off eight hits. He had
two strikeouts and five walks.
In Division IV, Brad Petticrew hit a
three-run home run and Scotty Lake
drove in three runs as Newark Catholic
won its third state championship.
Petticrew's three-run shot to right was
part of a five-run fourth iMing for the
Green Wave. Lake added an RBI triple
and Doug Stevens hit an RBI double to
put Newark Catholic up 8-0.
Lake's two-run RBI triple and Doug
Steverw RBI single in the tint put the
Green Wave (27-6) up 3-0. ·
·
Rick Vrebranz hit a two-run RBI sinale,
and Zack Burns hit a two-nm RBI dou"ble
in the fifth for the Bulldogs (18-6).
Lake (6-1) got the win, He pitched 4 J.
3 innings and allowed three rurw off
seven hits. He struck out three and
walked tw'o.
James Lade (S-2) he took the loss. He
pitched 3 1· 3 innings and allowed eight
rurw off eil!ht hits. He walked three and
struck out ihere.
Newark Catholic also won the state
tide in 1988 and 1989.

Monday, JUM10. 2002

Prep star LeBron·
James breaks wrist
AKRON (AP) - LeBron James, the nation 's top
high school basketball player, broke his left wrist wh~n
he was undercut dunng a summer AAl.! gam~ m :
Chicago and won't be able to play for sax to eaght
weeks.
James, Ohio's Mr. Basketball the past two years who
has already been on the cover of Sports Illustrated, was
attempting a dunk with II: I9 left in a game Saturday
when he was bumped by C.J. Walleck, a player for
Chicago Rising Stars.
·• .
James, who will be a senior this fall at Akron's St.
Vincent-St. Mary High School, landed hard on his
wrist. He lay on the floor for several minutes bef~re :
being taken by ambulance to Northwestern Memonnl
Hospital.
·
Eddie Jackson, a friend of the James family, confirmed that James broke his wrist and that he had been
told he would be sidelined for up to two months.
"He's OK," Jackson said Sunday. "When he comes
back, we'll see everything and go over everything."
After James was hurt, Wa!leck was ejected and the
game was canceled.
.
"I feel terrible," Walleck told the Akron Beacon
Journal. "It was completely an accident. I tried to draw
the charge. He came in and he jumped ·so high that his
knee hit my head."
James, who shoots with his right hand, is expected to
be ready for his senior season, but he won't be able to
play in any of the prestigious summer camps.
The 6-foot·7 James was dubbed "The Chosen One"
by Sl in a story last winter. He was playing for
Northeast Ohio Shooting Stars in the Mac Irvin
Summer Basketball Classic at Julian High School.
James averaged 29 points, 8.3 rebounds and. 5.7
asshts last season and took St. Vincent-St. Mary to the
state finals. He won every major national player of the
year award following his junior year.
There had been speculation a year ago that James
might sue the NBA so he could make himself eligible
for the player draft this summer, but he announced he
would stay in school.
.
&amp;
James has yet to decide whether he will attend college or go pro after he completes high school.
James worked out recently at Gund Arena with the
Cleveland Cavaliers. The NBA fined the Cavs
$150,000 and suspended coach John Lucas for the first
two games next season for having contact with James.

A beating for Tyson's
body ~ and mystique
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) Like Joe Louis and
Muhammad Ali before him,
Mike Tyson has discovered
he is no longer invincible.
' All three were the idols of
millions for their power anc;l
charisma as heavyweight
champions. And all three
were beaten badly late in
their careers, their mystique
taking a hit along with their
bodies.
Tyson's beating came on a
steamy Saturday night in
Memphis, where Lennox
Lewis turned boxing's scariest force into a mortal whose
legacy, already tarnished,
was further darkened by his
clear inferiority.
· Just as Larry Holmes
pounded Ali for II rounds in
1980, and just as Rocky
Marciano dominated Louis
jn an eight-round bout in
1951, Tyson received eight
rounds of punishment from
Lewis in a brutally one-sided

fig!lt.
.
·ryson bled from both eyes,
his nose and his mouth dur·
in§ the first six rounds alone.
That was probably one of
the most thorough and systematic beatings a heavyWeight champion has evl!r
given to a lesitimate chalrenger in the htsto?' of bo~­
in!!," ,said Lewis veteran
tramer, Emanuel Steward.
"[ think fans will appreciate (Lewis) a lot more after
this performance. He fought
such a beautiful, systemat\c
fight. He should have
knocked him out earlier, but
I'm satisfied."
With eight rounds of tech· •
nical brilliance and raw
power, Lewis reduced Tysdn
to a palooka who could take
a punch well, but couldn't
deliver a winning combimi·
tion at any point, let alone
the one magical punch many
thou~hl could knock out
Lew as.

McPeek learns lesson
that·pays off 3 years later
NEW YORK (AP) Trainer Ken McPeek learned a
lesson in 1999 that wouldn' t
pay off until three years later.
What a payoff, indeed.
McPeek, the son of a
Kentucky breeder, scored his
first victory in a Triple Crown
race when Sarava, a 70-1 shot,
won the Belmont Stakes on
Saturday.
The lightly regarded colt
beat Medaglia d'Oro by a half·
length, and produced the
.largest win payout in the race's
134-year hastory - $142.50
on a $2 bet. ·
It was the biggest payout of
McPeek's fledgling career,
and it all came about from a
lesson he learned after running
Pineaff in the 1999 Belmont
That year•. McPeek showed
up close .to race day, which
dtdn't give . the colt · time to
adjust to Belmont's track,
nicknamed ''The Big Sandy"
for its deep, sandy sUrface.
''This is the ttack and thit is
the leg that's most difficult,"
he said Sunday. "You have to
be here to win it." .
In '99, Pineaff finished
ninth. McPeek wu embarrassed, and told his wife, Sue,
that if he ever had another
Belmont horse he'd arrive
early.
Mindful that Triple Crown
winners S"retariat (1973),
Seattle Slew (1977) and

Affirmed (1978) were based In
New York, · McPeek and
Sarava showed up I0 days
early.
"I think that contributed to
us winning," he said. "This
track is a totally different consistency. It makes it real difficult on horses; they labor
through it if they haven't had
any time on it."
·
It wasn't the track that got to
Triple Crown hopeful War
Emblem. It was the start of the
I 112-mile race.
The speedy colt who won
the Kentucky Derby and the
Preakness stumbled to his
knees and nearly fell coming
out of the starting gate, ending
his boDes of becoming raCing's 1~th Triple Crown win·
ner and first in 24 years.
'
· "His one chink in the armor
is if he breaks slow and is in
behind horsel, he is not at his
best," iaid ·Bob Baffert, who
traim War Emblem.
·
The colt led briefly at the
half-mile pole before fadina to
eil!hth.
Trainer D. Wayne Lulw,
Baffert's chief rival, said War
Emblem'• 1tumble only
briefly compromised him.
'Then he JOI back into the
race preuy Sood." he 1aid.
"It's not my place to evaluate
it, but I felt he p back. If
you're searchina for excu~Ct
that'• a good one."

Page 83

The Daily Sentinel

JUMIO,l002

AROUND THE DIAMOND

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.......... . ....
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ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP)
When Eckstein hit his
- The last time .David othe{ grand slams, on April
Eckstein hit a grand slam, it 27 and 28 against Toronto's
came too late to help .Scott Scott Cassidy and Pedro
:Scboeneweis get a victory. Borbon, he became the first
This one came in plenty of player in mlijor league histotime.
ry whose first two career
· Schoeneweis and the slams occurred in consecuAnuheim Angels rode tive games.
The second , one was a
Eckstein's second-inning
slam to n 7-4 victory over ~arne-winner in the 14th
the Cincinnati Reds on tnning - seven innings
.Sunday. It was the third this after Schoencweis departed.
season by the S-foot·8 short· . "It's amazing that he's had
·stop, who became only the three grand slt1ms already·second player in club histo· and the season's not even
ry to hit three grand slams in half over," Schoeneweis
one season.
said.
.
"I'm not going to lie. That
Joe Rudi was the only
was a big lift," said other player in the Angels'
:Schoeneweis. who has 42-year history to hit three
:received 50 runs of support slams in one season, doin' it
:in his lt1st · six starts. in 1978 . and 1979. Dack
"Anytime you get runs Schofield was the only
early, it takes a little bit of shortstop to hit more than
the pressure off. But you three career grand slams in
:still have to e~ecute your an Angels uniform, hitting
·pitches and not give up that four over a three-year span,
:lead, So that's a challenge in
"I've never tried to hit a
·itself."
home run," Eckstein said .
Eckstein's eighth homer in "If you go up there and try
789 career at-bats came on u to hit one, you don't huve a
· 1-2 slider from Joey shot. But when it's the last
:Hamilton
(3·4),
who thin~ you're thinking about,
:allowed seven runs and that s when it happens."
;eight hits over five innings,
After AI Levine gave up
including a two-run triple in Russell Branyon's first NL
the fourth . by Adam homer leading off the ninth,
Kennedy.
Troy Percival relieved
"It was a terrible pitch," Levine with the bases
Hamilton .said. "It do(lsn't loaded and two out. He gave
take a power hitter to hit a up a two-run single to
banging slider down the Austin Kearns before strik·
teft-field line."
ing out Aaron Boone for his
A home run by Eckstein 13th save.
.
has become about as rare
NOTES: Ken Griffey Jr.
lately as one against missed his second straight
· Schoeneweis (5·4), who has game because of a strained
surrendered only one in 54 right hamstring .... Eckstein,
,2-3. innings over his last who had 41 RBJs last season
eight starts. The left-bander as a rookie, already has 30
beld the NL Central-leading this )'Car. He is 3-for-7 with
•Reds to a run and seven hits 13 RBis in bases-loaded sitthrough 61-3 innings. ·
uations. "I don't like it,
"l knew I didn't have good because there's nobody on
•life on my ball today and I base when I come up," said
didn't feel good physically, Darin Brstad, who had an
but those are the days that RBI
¥roundout
after
first-inning
'make or break your seas.on," · Eckstein s
'Schoeneweis said. "You triple. ... Eckstein's ~rand
·have to reach down deep slam was the first agatnst a
·and try to make something Cincinnati pitcher since last
' positive out of a bad situa- June 13 when ex-Red Paul
tion.''
Konerko connected off
· Schoeneweis is 4-0 in his Osvaldo Fernandez in a 4-2
last six starts after losing his interleague loss to the
' previous five decisions.
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t:J·

Ordonez impresses Omar with glove
CLEVELAND (AP) Omur
Vizquel rarely gets upstaged by unoth·
er shortstop.
Rey Ordonez, take a bow.
Ordonez, the New York Mets' slick·
fielding shortstop, outshined his
Cleveland counterpart this weekend.
making severul sensational pluys,
including two that took hits away from
Vizquel.
"He's pretty good," Vizquel said of
Ordonez, who holds the mlijor lea~ue
record of 101 consecutive games wllh·
out mal&lt;;ing an error. "Seeing him live
was 11 lot of fun to watch.''
Vizquel and Ordonez had never
gone head-to-head before interlenguc
play finally brought the Indians and
Mets together for a three-game series.
· Ordonez, a three-time Gold Glove
winner, showed why he's. frequently
compared to Vizquel with an assort·
ment of jaw-dropping plays . in the
field.
·
In the first ·inn' g on Sunday;
Ordonez made a divi stop to snare
Ellis Burks' hard smas up the middle.
Then In the eighth, 0 onez robbed
Vlzquel of a single wit n backhanded
grub and throw from the hole.
On Saturday, Ordonez took another
hit away from Vlzquel, turning it into
a gorgeous double play. After diving
to stop Vizquel's grounder, Ordonez
flipped the ball in his glove to second
baseman Roberto Alomar while .lying
in the dirt.
Vizquel didn't get to see Ordonez's
plays because he was busy runnin' to
first, but said competing agatnst
another shortstop in his class was a
treat.
"It's a mutual feeling," Vizquel said.
"He plays good. He gets to a lot of
balls. He's a pretty good shortstop. To

Manuel said. "B ut I don't think it's
thi s yeur.''
• MOSAYS, "GO BUCKS": Mets
first busemun Mo Vuul!hn hu ~ b•·•·ome
an nvld Ohio State football fnn .
·
.
. . "Some friends took me tn my first
h~ve another guy who bus the sume gume s i~ ycurs 0110 ," Vuughn said.
ktnd of game ns. yo~ do ~umps Y?,U up. "Mun, I'm hooked."
But I wfsh he dadn t do tl to .me; . . . Vuughn, who has Jived in Columbus
• FRYMAN. DONE?. rravts the pust nve yeurs. suys he UIICtlds us
Fryman has considered the end.
muny Buckeye yames us possible.
F_ry.m~n, bothered by un u~sortment
"I've yonc 10 the Michitl.lln gume. ull
of •.nJuraes the pust fe~ seasons. told the big ones," Vaughn suid. "But I like
Indauns manager Charlie ~.anuel that the whole college footbull thing on
he has th?ught ubo~t r~~mng at ~he Saturday. I do the whole dcul. tuilgut end o,f !hts seuson tf hts produclton ing, everything. 1 love it . It's one of
doesn t tmprove. ..
·
. · those things I missed not I!Oing to u
Fry rna~ mis~ed hts second strutght big football &amp;chool."
·
gume wtth backs spas"!s on Sunday. .The burly first baseman went to
He has also been si~e~m~d by knee, Seton Hall In . New Jersey for thrtle
shoulder and elbow IDJUraes the past yeurs.
two seasons.
vaug hn•s e~ctte
· d b 01 · s .•.
The 33-year-old played in just 98
u out tto tutc s
games and batted .263 in 2001. This u~~omlng seuon.
. .
year, he's hitting .2 13.
Itulked t~ a couple of thetr couch·
Manuel suid he und Frymun recently es and th~.Y re g~ing to be reul good
met for 35-to-40 minutes to discuss next year, he satd.
.
the third baseman's future.
• BASELINES: The .lndt.uns
"Travis still loves Ill pluy und the improved to 25-S when scon ng tour
last couple of years have been reul runs or .more .... INF John McDpnuld
hard on ·him " said Manuel. "But 1 made has farst. career st~rt ut third on
think he's stil'i going to end up having S~nday, und P•.cked ~p hts ~econd .~~I
a pretty good season for us ."
With .a bloop stngle m, the fourth, I II
.
luke
McDonald saud .... RHP Ryun
Fryman has bee.n getung treutment DreseII,"hns
won four of his lust five
on his back .the past three days and hus decisions and leads AL rookie s with
been unu~aalable for com~c~t.
.
S2 strikeouts. ... Vizquel hus eight
The IndJuns have a $6 mtllton opuon RBls in his last four gumes and with
for 2003 o~ Frymun, who cume 10 39 already this scuson. he 's just II shy
Cleveland m a 199~ .trade from of matching his entire 2001 totul.
Arizona along with pllcher Tom
~lltl~':ns.for third baseman Mutt

Indians
Notebook

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS '

Manuel doesn't think Fryman is
ready to hang up his cleats for good
just yet.
"He'll know when that day comes,"

Sub.vcribe today.
992·2156

:3-on-3 hoops tourney
Bv DAN ADKiNS
being blocked off at the locaOAOKtNSOMYOAtLYREGtSTER.COM tion. Napora said he'd like to get
POINT PLEASANT - the tournament set u~ in front of
There's goin~ to be a new event the Mason County Courthouse,
at this year s Point Pleasant but that idea is not confllTIIed.
Stemwheel Regatta. one aimed
"We're going to try to get four
,r getting many people of all courts going for this, with some
ilges involved, including those mobile baskets set U{'," he said.
tfiirty-somethin$ ann chair ath·
The tournament IS open to
letes still dreaming.of becoming both male and female players,
· a star on the hardCoun.
with Napora and co-director
· Tudor's Biscuits, Sordman's Bill Wallace hoping to draw
Furniture,"and local CPA James some teams in from the sur·
· Rossi have te;uned up to bring rounding areas.
, to this year's regatta a 3 On 3
"This is not just a Point
Basketball Tournament, with Pleasant tournament or a Mason
the tipoff scheduled for 9 a.m. countx tournament," Napora
, on Saturday, July 6.
said. 'We want people from
, The tournament, the first ever Oallipolis,. Huntangton and
ill the regatul, will showcase not other artas to sign up: It's open
onlr younger players in the to everybody."
. jumor high and high school age
Napora said the tournament
, range, but also those in the post was the brainchild of Wallace,
high school and even an "Over with other coaches from Point
. Jhe Hill" (30 &amp; over) division. Pleasant High School such as
'Napora,Accordithen~ourto ~ge::~dier. Bill Buchanan and Richie Blain
"
also backing the idea He Sllid
• sions were planned to low a that Point Pleasant Mayor 1o1m
: wide anange of players in the . Roach also is backin&lt;&gt; the event,
' event.
•
ether
• "We're trying to get a lot of and hopes to get a team tog
· adults involvea in this also, rKt to lept eJ:nt the ci~,
just th~••·/ounger players,'.'
Currently, ·&amp;\'_!) ications are
'N
....
available at Fox 1 Pizm, and the
be a double elimina· . Point Pleasant City Building;
• tion, one-da
.
y onl~iournament. however, Napora said a few
· · ~
~ locations may be added
· 'with each team
gang our and possibly the applications
players to the game in case may be published in the
~~getSJl~
ReJisterforteams tocutoutand
or finish when a
with a deadteam reaches lS pot' nts.
line of u y 1. can be
to
· ' Theenb)'feepertamisSlO, theCt'"'Bw='ldin or111111'l to:3
with indiVIdual fmt and second
·~
•AAA
1aq
arded ·n each On 3 Bas
I Tcunwnent.
p
......
P
ues
aw
I
D-"~
Pleasant
Ct'ty
Buil,..:ftw
i:livision.
.-umo
.... ..,
· Theexactlocationofthetour- 400 Viand Street, Point
nament hasn't been set yet, Pleasant, WV. 25550.
· =added,buttheeventwill
For more infonnation on the
nltel take place in down toUrnament, Bill Wallace can be
.
I
town
Point Pleasant. with 1treet con·A~-....,_ at 6"~-0.C23
·," " ..

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N.Y. Moll t 11Cill 8-1)11 Chtoogo WNit
MonttM a. CNcoQa so.
1
St. Loula 11, KA,_ City 3
1'05 p.m.
Sol (Giovtr
Atllinll
s. 10 IMingo
St. Loui&amp;JB. Itt Q./1) 11 Soottlli (Mayor
1-11. to, p.m.
""""""ltllllt&amp;ll .. 10!onto 3. CoiMclo I
MltwoukM .(Cue- 3-51 at o.t.tana
~ 1-41), 10:05 p.m.
7, 11011041 3
et.lllllnd a, N.Y. Molt 3
ttlllu11)11 ~·A- 5·7) 11 Mllllinl
(Wasl\ttum ·1). IO:i)S.p.rn, ,
san~ 1Wrtpa "-a
, _ . . ,.. lnhtrt111ue Glmtt
N.V. VI
. I , Son Fnt- I
LooA~ I, 11111.,.....1
CGtorado (Jonninv1 7-l)ot Bcoton tArtojo
• ·I), 7:05 p.m.
·
.Mtn.-3

=··
.
.
,
·
-

~ac..tto
WI 11 -

(-0-l)·,::,t;·
..
Wl.
_.._
Bcoton

.... I

.'

1

I'IMIIufQII 1: Mttna•MM t. 11 1N't1nQt .

Ct-.toogo

,._._

This Father's Day,
Send the World's Greatest Dad
on Golf's Greatest Road Trip.
Give Dad what he really w~nl$ this year ... a trip to the Trail. One
phone caU to our central Reservations munber gets you agift
certificate he can spend on some of the ;noll-praised golf on this pbnet. Golf Magazine
recently ranked The Judge Course at Capitol HiU as one of the 10 courm in the country
worthy ofhotting the US Open. And people who've played the
ALABAMA'S
Trail can it the number one value in the world as a golf
dettination and number 8 in the world for quality over 31 major golf
dettinatiom around the world... GoLF Dtcesr SuP.VEY
Beginning July I, Dad (and Mom) can play 3 comecutive days of unlimited
golffor just '99 a penon (add S10 to each greens fee at.Capitol Hill.) Hotels,
cam and tax not included. Or give Dad the Summer Sampler for $99 and let
~im play 162 holet of golf at Hampton Cove, Silver Lakes, Cambrian
Ridge and Highland Oaks.
www.rtjgolf .com
Thit Father•a Day, give Dad what he really wanu, golf on Alabama's
1 800.257.3465
incredible Robert Trent jone1 GolfTrail.

-

. --- ---·--'

�www.mycllllyMntlnel.com

Pllll4 • The Dlity Sentinel

~----~--------------------~------------~~----

Monday, June 10. 2001

CLASSIFIED

---

~~June10, 2002
I \

t, \ ' "I I I I I I -.,

\ll\1,11~"

Actvertlse
your
business
on this
paQeforas
low as

E

E

Wltll Us RIACH OftR a8S,OOO PROIP.CIS
AD
'

tr (304) 675-1333
'taur Ad, Gl:tibunt(740)446-2342 Sentinel (740) 992·2156 J.egi01'..Fu'lb
(*) e'IM2M
·Todav... . .· . o.. Fu Tb (740) ue 3001
.
Ot Fu Tb y.-o&gt; MW117
.
0-.a«'A~.r

e

9"~~~.
rnch.adea
Up To
Ov•.- 15
Ad•

M o r w y t:hr-u Fr-Iday
: 0 0 a . m . to s : 0 0 p. rn .

,.,.• • ve.-d S•l• Slgnl
15 WO I"da, 3 Oev•
ward a 20¢ Pel" wo.-d
Muat ae Pr•pald

$25.00
per
month!

Dally Sentinel

992-2155
Thhlou rsruwiiMt

•••lrlttl ....

'tUrnpike Is In

...,.un.. .......,

good people!

Hones• • lntelllacno•

"*•• r, ..

Courteous • Friendly
A penoolooklng .

- ...

Mhtrtla••Mitotl'lll
•llllewhlohtolot
.....""" ollllo .... Out

need of 11 few

MM~tlll ·

................. II In

I

-

..., bh "'"' ....

ADVERTISING
SALES
REPRESENTATIVE

for a eal"l!er •

Nol Just a Jobl
We will pny u
auuranleed sulnry
Until we have you
trained and ready 10
asslsl consumers' in
their uulomotivc
purchnseo.

Fer well tltlbllahtd
LcctiCo..
OltmtniO:

HAOirtOIOitlnloCIIIO!I.oom
lnloCialon.oom

l/lall our wtb allot al:
~aal:

· whlll

olt,

Blut HM!tr (!~My wi\11

.I

y
Sentinel

loll~

Anawwa 10 Dill·
&amp;moMey Aow lid.

17..0)~71-1~1~

I

SERVING THE
TRI·COUNTY
AREA

.

Loti: Mall Iolii, I monlhl
old, Nam• sar;, MIMinGJune 3r!l ~Y Blut Foun~arn
Molel. "!In Color wtlh While
Chill, Wlllll FHI~Whlie
Brown Spola on Bel , Long
Eert, SIUbblll 1111, hal&lt;er
Ohlin with Blue bone wtlh
Slrg a phone • on 11. 1o rr
olcll pel, LOVIKilnd mlvtry muon ~r ner. II lollnd
QltlM piNM C~ll-..0~8·

W.havtan
lmmtdlatt
full-tlmt
auatomtr
ttrvlat poaltlon
open In our
malnorrtct.
aaaa. 1740~441
Succttaful
applicant mutt
YAMD SAI.II
bt people
orltnttd, enjoy
YAIUl SAu~o
ualng tht
GAIJJI'OUl
phone,
aomputtr
Poroh Sale, Wodn.ldar
lllh 6 Thurlldty 131h.
llte111tt, and
10:00·4:00. 844 Llnooln
enjoy working
Pll&lt;t, Don'l Mill.
with numbt111.
Potltlon offt111
all company
Varll Sale: a mll11 oul
btntflts
LeadlnQ Cmk Aood, on 111.
7, MOndly•SIIurdly 8:00
Including
Mt-8:00 PM.
h11lth and lift
WA"'IIal
lnauranct, 401 k,
TCIBUV
paid vacatiOn,
Abtolult Top Dollar: u.s.
and pe1110n11
lllvtr, Gold COina. Prool·
daya. for
""· Dlamonda, Gold
lltnat. u.a. cu"enoy,•
employment
M.f."8. COin Shoo. 151 Slo·
ond Avtnut, O.lllpoill, 740&gt; . conaldaratlon,

' Mutt hM good
Communlclllon akllla
' MUll hM goCMI
driving rtCOid a
p!OYideown
lrlnlfiOrtallon
• Muat hlvt 1blllty to
Ill 1 TIAM piiVIf

$It BriQn Ross
or PQt Hill

Monday lhru
Sutul'dny

10:00 u.m. 10
6:00p.m. To begin
the career you huve
always dreamed of,

11nt~~~sbtud1

CIUIIIUifwi'Uf

••

"Ahelldln&amp;,~"

....,_tv--.. . . _. .
Quality, Y.rlny, Low f'rl«s

llfi6S DlftSSftGf
TllfRftPY .

lhat'e Ual

~-tv

m n. Seconllllve.

Bedding &amp; Vegetable Flats re.eo
10' Hanging Baskets re.eo

middleport, OK

[740) 992-1705

Wide Assortment ot Herbs. Annuals.
Perennials In 4" pots lor

Tonie Reiber
licensed by the Ohio
State mtdktl Board

only 94¢ tttCIII

P/1
Racine. Ohio 45171

Cellular

Crnte
Fl\.~ E~tlmutcs
S~r v i ng

Ohiu 11nd W.V.

wv 110.11 712

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL
Roofing· Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down

SIO.SM&gt;:Ii
Monon System Saver Ptllm for scpda •nd

992-5479

740.742-3411

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUOION

· FREE ESTIMATES!

DEPOYIAB
PUtS
All Makes Truc1or &amp;
Equipmenl Pans

•New Homes

• Gat'llges

Factory Authorized·
Case·IH Parts
. Dealers
· I 000 Sr: Rr. 7Sour/a
Coolville, O.H 45723

• Complete
Remodeling ·
Stop &amp; Compare

Spout
Free Estimates
949•1405 T~N

Sruff..................................... S3.~ lbs

Authorized Agmt

JetT Warner Ins.

1

.
...
.
120 penon
12 ....................................... $5.001S0 Ills..

BryanRHVel
New HomH, Room Addltlona,
Ga111g11, Polt Bulldlnga, Roofl,
Siding, -Decka, Kltchana, Drywall
&amp;More

• Fouters, Wulls, S t ~ ps •
Flm Work,
• Walh
and Drives • Su~nci l

20.000 Pla&gt;tic Baler Twine ................... $15 .7l

Top O..:os Pustu"' with Sotfllr

Sunset Home
Construction

CONTRACTORS, INC.

Ri!plu ~mc nt s,

St Rl . 7 North • Pl&gt;n..,roy, OH 45120

Golden Bow ICI.OOO'!Wono ...................$18.65
GQ!den 8o"' 9,000 1\o.in&lt;! .....................$16.95

Stall dry fur barns, pen&lt;, Calles, &amp; trailers

MOfnlng St•r Road • CR 30 • R1ctne, Ohio
1-740.949-2115

740.985-3948
CONCRETf/BlOW'BRICK

J~S37

FREE ESTIMATES

740-667-0363

740·992-1671

7SO East Sialc Slreel Phone (740)593-667
Athens, Ohio

112:l/TFN

Hill's
CllbCadeC &amp; Gravely
Self Storage
Massey Ferguson
29670 Baahan RoM
· Racine , OH 45771

Parts &amp; Service

~~~ MACK'S
Pocket Knlvtt

. High&amp; Dry

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACtOR

Self-Storage

Sizes S'x1 Q' .
to 10'x30'

4359 St. Rt. 160
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Hours

(740) 446·1044

33795 Hibmti Rri. ·
Pommy, Ohio

7:00AM· 8:00PM

Monday-Friday 8·5PM • Saturday 8·2pm

740-949-2217

&amp; Collecllblel

~Cut Above
the Rest"
HOU111:
Mon·Sat 10-4 .
217 E. 2nd St. •
Pomeroy, OH

740-992-5232

(740) 992·5908

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTINGI

Advertise

Pd. 1 mo. !Wt

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

t

t

LIME·
STONE

The CRAFTY,

448·2142. ..

BLIND SPOT

Loollino lor an on PIII!\IM
bllr 1rotn11 In Ollllpcllt
City Limite. P1HM rtapcnd
lo: Tn/111100 Lid,. 1'0 1&lt;.•
110, A hlna, I)H 48701 .

(Factory Outlet)
All mtlc•lldloul• ure
n1utl•! lu orcler ut

Delivered &amp;
Spread $115.00
par ton a to 10
tol)a, 1
lmlted
area, call for
detalla. Cell:

our loe~tlon

I \11 111 \\1 1 \I
' , I I ~ \ I I I '•

• Vcrllc.lo • Wood
• ~llnlo • ~;le

~~=·~:~~.:rio Ill!~ o17u40tc~=n 1~"'P'

'1071 IIIII 8pm.

,2000 Orona Am SE, ODIA!r,
•1111 I Crullt. 4dr., 1•,000

rid

'1304)875-7833

,

•mllta. "'kina ParcH. OB.O.

-

Connie's
Child CARE

AMERICAN STANDARD CENTRAL AIR
CONDITIONING &amp; HEATING

,..- ,.4

H...•~

"'""

IMI'IIOVIIl\100!1

• Heeling

~

• Air CondiUonera
• Sarvlce On All Branda

s~

• Raaldlnlllll &amp; Llghi.Commerclal
• 10 yr. perta &amp; Labor
• Htellng I Air Conditioning

Advertise
your
.
message ·

www.emerlcanetandardelr.com

"SALES AND SERVICE"

WOLFE HEATING &amp; COOLING

$8.00 column Inch weekdays
$10.00column Inch Sundays

1

mEIGS counTY
STfiTE STORE

Pomerov

992•000S
oll l21r'l mo. 1)0.

has openings, 15 yr.
experience, Cenllled
lin Meigs, Athens and
Washington counties,
I

space

for
$50 per
month

' St. AI. 7 Tuppers
'
Plains, OH
I

CALL 667·6329

Driveways, Patios,
Parking/play Areas,
Sidewalks, Floors
(877·J53·70llJ

Call for more
info/free e,,·timate
. WV0312S6

28·yetrl Experience
FrH Eallm•t••

(lolllrH}
877-353-7022

JliS UttTIIIC 1i
PLUmlltn&amp;
Jim Au•rk

BUILDERS IRC.

Window• • Roofing
OOMMUCiAL andiEIIDENTiAL
F~EE t;STIMATES

YOURCODCRflf
Your
CODDECTIOD,LLC
Concrete
(740) 742-8015
Connection LTD ' Qualify Conc:rtlt Work

Open 24 hours.
7 Days per week.

BISSEll

Now Open
11 a.m. ~ 8 p.m. : New IIOnlcS• Vinyl
Monday thru : Siding • New Oarugc•
Saturday
.I
• Replacement
Cloaed 8unday
100 West main St.

UIDfS PIIITIII

Or leava name
and number

446·4995

mll11. 18,780. (304)875· .,, -~·

in this

. (740) 591-2173

144 !hlrj An. GaiNpoll
•2000 Ford Focua WiDen.
Alr/TIII/Crultl. PCWII Win•
dowi/LockiMirrOtt. Tlnltcl

L&lt;c illll! .Jo 1! for youl

lleotrla. P,lumblng,
end lm•ll Ham•

Siding
kd' d
Brand l1lm!8 )WQ¥1
buill
Certai11eed, Slom1·ln~"*'"1

· 740·992·7599
(NO SUNOAV CALLS)

I.Mre~
F188 Eatlt 1111&amp;e

Cheek out the Cla11lfled•l
The Dally Sentinel

992·2155

M•lnt.n•nce Jab•
13~) 773·5.13
Call :104 17.· 3083

Roofing, Siding, ft d-Ons, flectrlca~
Plumbing, Decks, RemodeUng,

Dryweu, Pelntlna

Haning's Construction
Fortman: "arry

Owner:

740·381-tl1 81
Ronald "Miek" Haning
Chrlttlna 'Chrle" Haning
740·1182·0780
Cell n40·591·0919
Cell: ~91·83113

�.. ,,,..,,_

,....... .,...s.....

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......... "········

•

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....
• 1\ "' '

t!MWM•

,

.

Child

.,

~

""""

_ _ .. ll~

.

Still in style

Aaouttt data
used in fmud

Ever:~~onil

know
00 tl&gt; flllilS-'ii,'. bell
1 look¢ up toot wooJ
in my the.Snurus, om:

. syno!iym WM_"style."
Movmg to 11 book of
quouaUons. l found
this t;omment by Fml
Allen: "Her hilt i~ 11
creation th~t will
never go 0111 or style;
it wilf just look rl·
dh:ulou yellr nflt:r
yetlr.'' .
Fi.nesscs will never
go out of style. but
~umc ·- In ~rticulor,
those thnt h~vc no
chuncc nf ~UC:t.~S~ ••
FRANK &amp; EAR~EST
cun be ridlcultliiS. To,!.!!::~.!!..:!..!:::.::~::::;:~..,..----::~-_;---------------, . dny, let's look llt 11
. h •DAL'tt"r,.
TO""JIY .l TLIIu.,
relatively elementnry
y.,,.,..~,
P '"""'
deal fc11turing scvcntl
r•TNIS:/;.S'~~~
w.&amp;'£.L uiQ~~ ON
finesses. Tomorrow,
~VM
II'
""
we will sttady D much
\7 I'
more complicatt'd ex..

,.._

'''

. •.
THE BORN LOSER

ll!!.p~t,
10 ~

~a~
~

n

'-'10 ~

-::::::;·-- 1\-IP..VSS"

...w~rn I w..'le: ro oo 1".'&lt; 'ffil!'-11'."':
.

I~ fltotl\ 11\1'!&gt;\D( nil'!&gt; @1(.1..!.1

,,

PEANUTS

''

I(ES, /Y\~."'1¥\, I KNOW WIN
I'M IN

I MONDAY

SCI-IOOL. ...

BECAUSE I DIDN1T 00
WEU.. DURIN6 'fi.IE RE&amp;ULAR
SEAiON ... 1 MEAN TERM ..

umple,

Welther
Ddii. . Al

lv IRI~M J, RHO

Sitting Suuth. how
would you pluu the
rluy in four hcnrts'!
West lend~ the club
(IUCCil, and you rul'f
the second mund .
South's jump 10
gnme is pushy. How·
ever, vulncruble
gmnes pay big bo·

..........

by LUll C1mpo1

~Ciphor=

..aiiGmqiiOilllcMb~f·m&lt;M
, E~ ltMf In tilt~ ttanda lot • -·

I*IJit, put 1M

"X

Torlty't CU.' M tqUIIt U

PXAI

NV

X' H K

J N

MAIKW

IKKA

RNAU."

LXPK '

·

RliPK

ONOPIIXR ,

JI'WXLV

I

VKKR

LKZ

-

VXIDDI,

NA

XOK
OIIOftlCW
I' • J

O Roorrono•

lotion of tho
four Rrombloa woral bo•
low to form lour llmplo worat.

I1-r-l,_, .C 1.-r.G -;
T AN

1,_ 12
. . . . .
~~;7;~:;::;~-J
rl
K l. 1 8 N

111

1--rT~~r.f--r-i

I'
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I"
I
:::·::;:~·;::;~·;:·~
I L 1 T0 P
· Is 1 16 1

·

L..

~

· Following an operation on my
shoulder I stood In my hospital
room doing my walking lhe wall
. . . . .., axarclsaa, After watching me a
'fallow patient aakaq timidly,' Just
R E M A C A . what • • • • • • • • are you?'
o
0 ComQillo
1he chuckle quoted
. . . .
by filling In !he milling word•
yo• dtvolop from otep No, ~ below..

r

.

I

011

I I . I' I' I

PRINT NUMBERED
,:p LETTERS IN SQUAB!$

A

I)

r

UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER

I' I' I' I
1· I I I I. I I !,
'

SCIIAM·LITI ANIWIIIS
Collar · Oxide • Tryst· Blazer · E:XACTL Y

I had almost gotten a perfect grade and was brag·
glng to the other classmates. My teacher put me In my
place by announcing that there Is a 'big difference be·
tween nearly right and EXACTL:Y right.

..

In county

MORNINGSTAR Ohio Deptl.rtmem of
Trllnsporhttlon (ODOT)
hns unoounced two ·
upc:omlna rood closures In
conjunetfon with new con·
structlon
of
lhe
R11venswood Connector
project.
Bushnn Rond (County
Roud 28), locuted between
Morning Stnr Roud und
Bowmlln's Run Roud, will
clo~e
durlna duytlme
hours, 'f11.m. until 5 p.m.,
on Thursday und Frldny In
order to set the be11ms for
u future bridge In the ureu.
Suggested detour Is
Mornlna Star Road to Pine
Omve Road to Bowman's
Run Rond back to Boshnn
Roud.
:rn nddltlon, ODOT
RIVIR IWHP 1001 - Paula Wood, director of the Melae County Recycling and Litter
oilnounced the permunet\1
Prevention Pro&amp;rem, end Hal Knaen, Mllll County l&amp;ricultural e~ttenalon ;ant, nana e blinner
closure of u ·section nf
et the Pomeroy levee announclna the arrival of River Sweep 2002, an annual riverbank cltlli1"
Elise
Hill
Roud
up dey that takas place on saturday at verloua locatlona along the Ohio Rlvtr. (Tony M. l.aach)
(Tnwnshlp Ruud 129) ttl
nllow for new construction.
The TR 129 closure,
which will begin near the
lntcrsccllon of NcMe
Hollow Road und ond neor
the
Intersection
of
Portlnnd Road, Is sched·
uled to begin on June 20.

Volunteers .rally for

Lottlrl•

IV ToNY M. WOH

Ohio

TLSAOiiOMVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

Pick 1: 7·9·2
Pick 4: 5·1·2-2 .
I~ 1: I &amp;·ID-32-33-34
Pick s niP.t= 5·9· t
Plck 4 nliflt: 8·3·6·3

W11t Vlr~lnl•

Q•lly J: 9-1·5
Dally 4: 6·3·2·0
C.ali 25: 7·8·15·20·23·24

Tuciduy. June II. 2002
De ulcrl for •overul unu•unl
brcnks In the yenr uheud thul
mny come your wuy. You
mu•l he rcudy II) mnvc !Wiftly
'wllh cnch unc, bccnU!C they
won't hung nmuml very long.
Cl~MINT (Muy 21·Junc 20)
•• Rcgurdlc•s of whnl the
odd! urc, you're cupublc of
pi'Oducing your desired en\1
resulls. lllo muller how un·
usual your ldcn! mny !cem w
other•. N\und your f!rl•un\1 un\1
1cc lhem through. Tryins to
putch up u broken romance?
The Astro·Cirupn Mutchmnker
con help you undmlnnd whnl
to do to mnke the rchulonship
work. Mull $2.7S to Mutch·
mukcr, c/o thi! new•ruP.er,
P.O. Bux 167. Wickliffe, OH
44092.
.
CANCER (June 21·July 22)
•· You might get Invited Into
n bu•i ne•s proposition toduy
thu1 you wnulun't hove ulhcr·
wile conaidcrtd. You 'll be
uble to thunk the pcr1on be·
cau!e It'll work &lt;lUI well fur
ull.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) ..
Through un uKsociutc . with
whom you s~ ldom huvc deul·
Ins!. !Otnc kind of frlnJic
benefits onuy come your wuy
today . ThoUMh they IIIU~

come uboutln uncunvc n~lonul
wuy1, there won't be unythln~
wrong with them.
VIIH.JO (Allg. 2~ · SC\ll. 22)
•• lr you've been stym cd by
dclny! lmely. the wuy 111 'cur·
reel' thl~ Is lu flrRt discnrd uld
procedure!, Then, c~pcrimcnt
wllh i'rcsh technique! Utid
mcthud! Utllll you find u wuv
10 circumvent the roudblockK.
LlllRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) •
• You muy flnully be privy to
Motne lntormutlon thut you
huvc tried very hurd to obtuln.
This new knowledge Will be
ju1t what ~ou need to milkc
yuur pion~ full into pluce.
SCORPIO (0~1 . 24-Nov.
22) •• An une~pectcd ~urprlse
muy occur loduy lhrouMh un
uld friend of the fumlly. It
will be something very piCU!·
unt and pouibly of mutcrlal
value thot the entire clnn will
enJoy.
!IAOI'ITAiUUS (Nov. 23·
Occ.21) •• Mental gymnu~tlc•
won't
yuu duwn loduy. In
fuct, you II be fur superior In
dcnlins with thctn thun you
will lie with uny kind of
phy!icul cali!thcnlc s. Rcle·
sotc your worko~ll to idt!u•.
. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jnn;
19) ··Owing 10 chance dcvel·
optnent ~ .chut occur this week,

bo'

ll~EE1'&gt;61M\'OAil\'SENtlNtL.COM

· Ro1ds closed

CELEBRITY CIPHER

1\IISCS.

JUNE10 I

forCDBG

Hl&amp;h: 80s. Low: 60s

·

With one loser ll(l·
purent in euch side
suit, you must uvold
bolh n second ~pudc
loser ttnd a heart
loser. This re~:~uircs
finding West wuh nt
least one spade honor
lind 61181 with the
hettrt king. Oet roudy
to hncssc1
At trick tlncc, pluy
~I..L MA'Tl:HI:S
n
spude to dummy's
BE.COIN IN
·
I
0
•• finesse no. I.
ONE I'IINUTE!
Eust wins with the
king ond shirts to the
diumond jnck. Win
with the ucc und leod
o spude lo dummy's
juck ~· rinesse no. 2.
When thut wins, us it
must if you are lo
muko the contruct,
you should play 11
heart. to your queen ••
finesse no. 3. Thut
succeeds · too, but
Wcsl discords u diu·
mond (pluying red on
red): Not overlooking
the bud spill, you
cross to dummy wilh
u spade, ploy n heurt
to your jock •• finusse
no. 4 •• cash the heurt
uce, und claim, con·
ceding one diamond
:'\I.~--~:::::;;2J trick ulong with the
...
. club und spade ul·
ready lost.

Streets seleded

RIVER SWEEP 2002

.,,

I rtte

CSEA's fraud Investigator,
said the slate was notified
some eimc ~o about the
rruudtalent Met Ufe checks.
but the loc:~l agency was
UM\Vare of any problems with
cashin:g the cllHd support
check~ until '' loc&lt;tl grocelj'
notl!'ied hhn friday,
flte idetuity of the person
or petsoll~ involved m the
alleged lraudulent check scam
have not been released, but
the n\atter has been referred to
ProsecUlor Pat Story, Swisher
said.

you ntlly find younclf In·
volvcd In •nmcthlng thut turns
mtt to be rnlhur profltublc.
Milke til~ moll nf your yoQti
luck.
AQUi\lll US (Jun. 20·PCb.
19) •· Those wllh whom
you'll be lnvnlvctl ioclully !U•
iJuy muy be the very one! who
will be the luckleRI i'or you.
llu u mixer, because ! OIIlC·
1hlng opportune mny occur
out of It ,
PISCI:!S '(l' cb. 20·Mnrch
20) •• Oct uff by yourself to•
uuy, In quiet surrounding!
whet·e your boll ldcu1 cun be
rnnnul11tcd. Don't forget: The.
sunctuury of your own home
muy offer the best plucc If the
rokttlf the J'umlly Is not ubi)Ut.
ARIES (Murch 2l·Aprlll9)
•• There's u possibility thut un
auoclntc with whom you hu·
vcn't tulked fur quite aoma
time will contuct you toduy.
1'l1c cull muy be prcfecl tim·
lng, since fills penon may
poucu lnformullon you're
seeklnw.
TAURUS (April 20·May
20) •• Oood luck lAOil it! wuy
co you toduy lnvnlvlnM olonJI•
swndins. flnondnl or ~urccr
objective. When It opcn1 up,
uct fu~t to tukc udvun111g~ or It
before It dlaoppeors u~uln.

Index
ll IICtiHI • I :1 Plpl

Calender
Clesslfleds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather .

A6
83·5
86

A5
A4
A3
A3
81·3
A2

" 2002 Ohio VIlli\' Publl1hln1 Co.

POMEROY ..;_ lt's n dirty
job! but these people love to
llo 1.
Members of the . Melys
Coumy Recycllna ond l..lucr
Prevention Prngrum, ulony
wllh locttl volunteers, will bC
oul In t'ull force this Suturduy
helping clean refuse from lh~
butlkM of the Ohio River dur·
lny Rl ver Sweep 2002.
More than 3,000 miles nf'
shoreline, from Pittsburgh,
Pu., to Culro, Ill., will be
combed for rrush nnd vurlouN
debris durlng the unnuul
event, which Is genred tuwurd
druwlna ullentlonto lhe eJtiSI·
inK litter problem while uctu·
olfy removing the ~urbuge
through u volunteer ett'ort.
The cleon-up Is the lurgest
cnvlronmcntul event of Its
kind und will encompass 'siJt
stute8.
Puulo Wood, director of the

Meigs County Recyclln11 und
Lllltlr Prevention Pro11rum,
suld Monduy severul coordl·
ntlled oleun up sites will be
tistnbllshed
In
Ruclne,
Pomeroy, Mlddleporl, und
other ureus olon11 thll Ohio
River.
"The River Sweep hus
olwoys generuted u lnrye
umount or Hupport from lncul
communities one:! we expect
muny volunteer~ to !urn out
on SuiUrduy," suid Wood.
. "The cleunup effort not
nnly lntproves the vls1.1ul
beuuty nt the Ohio River, but
lncreu~e5 public perception of
wulcr quullty In our rivers und
~lretttns · and enhunce~ wuter
quullty nnd wlldlll'e putcn·
tlul," udd d Wood.
In Pomeroy, volunleerN will
11uther ot 1he purkln~ lot next
to lhe bout levee; t~e Ruc:lne
Nl&amp;ht will be locuted ut the old
ferry lundlny; und In
Mi~dlepurt , the meeUna spot

will b~ In Dttve Diles Purk.
Accordln11 to Thdtl Bissell,
i.!Otlrdlnultlr ftJr the Forked
Run Stute Purk clelinup Nlte,
volutttetlrs will 1ne.et ut the
t'lrst sheltt~r houKe tumr ihc
pnrk 's entrunec und this yeur's
River Swe~p will b~ dedh:ut·
tul to Jim Werry und Jim
l&lt;lny, pu~1 purtlclpunls of lhll
onnuul envlmnntenml event.
All m~etlnl! times ure
st:hlltlttled for !f:30 u.m.
''River Sweep Is Yery
lmpul'tunt be~UUNC . fur u few
hours u duy vnlunuter.~ ~u n
help nmkc u dll'l'crettcc In !he
uppeurtut~e nf !his greut nm·
urul resource," sultl Jeunne
lson, prt)lect director for the
Ofti(l Rfver Vulley Wuter
Sunhutlun
Cmnntl~slon
(OR SA NCO).
'1'hc sweep hns grown Mo
much In lhe pu8t few y~ur~.
we've be~n uble to upund th~
PIIIH aH IWHp, AI

MIDDLHPO~T - Middleport VIllage Council selected
six strtets fur a $3~,000 summer paving pruject dutlng
their l"el!Uinr meetillil 1)11 Monday.
Mlcyl)r Sttndy lunnnrelll presented council with u list of pos·
slble .strtets ttl be puved this summer through the Con\munhy
Dllwlopment Block Onmt furnmhl prugr111n. 'the Meigs
C011111y I.'Ommlssloi\CI'!i l'el.'ently approved $30,000 in graht
t\tnds to the vllhllle for
ptwlng. und .tw\tturelli's list
Council approved
lm:luued the cost uf paving,
.
nntli~ .
by Strellt.
·
,.,,.. • o
CtlUIIdl IIJ)I)I'OVed the
of North Fi
pavlnl! Q( North l'll'th
.\venue, l'tlslter Street,
Avenue,
Oliver Street, J&gt;a~~;e St~et,
O't'11 'vcr
"""
5..........,.,
Rutlnntl Street und Pnrk
u cc~~;
Stl"elltL ttl " totul ~ost . of ~~ n..~frl013f
$35,0:~3,31. The balance
.Ju ~ rv
., '"'"'-..;
ubove th~ 11rnnt uwuru wm Rutland . · and
bel paid throullh the vlli~~Se
('f......A. ....., ""'
stre~t fulld. ·
rv ..m~ ut"'
r\ddltinnnl streets pro•
.
"'.0 .."'''"'"'"'(
P\)Sed but nut 11pproved lust
t~ tu u1,;,
nll!ht , lncludfnl! Muple
1135 053 J 1 The
Sttellt, Helldle~ Street,
i'· •
•
•
Russell Street anti Fulrview
bc:J/anOO above
Strecl, and others. not on
hmnurelll's list, will be
e gron a!NtlroJ
ln~luded In n second llfllnt
w;/J
~roposnl til be subn\ltted
throu11h the Slnle Cnpltnl
the
lmprovemefll Pro11rum's
·;1_
·
,1:;.nd
lssu~ II progrnm Inter this Vluuge street IV. •
yettr, lunnurelll said.
.
Clluncll took Its t'lrst step In revising the village's 1965
~01111111 l"egillutluns, by appmvlng u contruct with Jnmes
Hm1tf~r nt' Cnllltl Winchester, hi the umoutitllf $2,850.
Hurttler, u t:llnsultunt who worked with village oftkiols in
1994 to develop Mlddlllport's downJtlWI1 business stmtei!Y·
will work wlth vl\iu11e otllclals und u zoning cmnmlttee to
revise lufld use regulations In lhe cenlral buslness district.
Cou~~~:ll President Stephen Hlluchlns voted ugulnst the con·
true! which will be paid thmugh the vii luge's general fund.
Vlhuge t1nunces were discussed, Including the need tor
ll'tutsti!rs lit the sul'cty fund, which l'ihunces the operation of
!he police deportment. Council members usked tn meet
wllh Pollee Chief hruUl Swlt) utthelr next re11ulur nteetirtg,
to discuss pending bills und u possible shorttullln the pny·
roll line Item.
Coundl "/'lll'tl\led lrtutsters us ~ubmhtcd by Clerk Susie
l"rcnch: $1, 00 In the clerk's hudget und $4,000 In the fire
fund .
·
lunnhrelll expressed.her thunks til those who helped com·
plete the demolition of the Murk V build In!! on the co1·ner
of Nm·1h Sccmtd Avcttu~ und Mill Strcet,lndudlng lhc cnntructur, Jeli'ers u~cuvutlng, t1rc dcpttrlment volunteers who
helped tlt!un up the ~ltc, untl cound I lttemoors !'or their
~OOil~rmlun .
.
Thm Dooley, president of the Middleport Cnmmunity
AssQCiutlun, reported thut ~~~ ll!'tlllp hus metlu July 4 fire·
works rundruls1ng guul or $7,000, und suld plnns for the
hullduy cclebrullon ure nearing cmnpletinn.
DcltllllY. ul~tl dl~cussed u Community Assodullun fund· .
rulscr being held In cotljunctlon whit the July 4 festivities.
Houehlns 1101ed thnt sturin sewers need dcunlng or·
r0pulrinl!, und thtttgrnss und bttlsh Ut'l! cuusi11g clogs In the
Hewers during rulny weulher.
Cnundl ulso:
• H,l.lld the first rending on 11n ul'dlnuncc lncreush\g cctne·
!cry fees ;
. • A!Jprtlved ud()ptlon ijf' the Oulllu-Juckson -Meigs Vinton
Solid Wuslc District t1Yc-yeur munugement plun:
• Approved puyment of bills In the umount of $14,173.:24,
$11,766 of whh:h wus for the Bourd or l'ublic Atl"ulrs;
• Approved the 1l1uyur's report of lines und l'eeM collected
In Muy, In the umoutu ol' ~.5,643.4~ .

the

Fisher

n..'*

of

th

t ..
be.rJid

throug

Holzer Medical 111ulpment, Inc•.
Oxygen and Related Services.
Medical Equipment and Supplies.
2~8 7 State

Route 760 • Gallipolis ·

For more information, call

•

M eo 1cAL c e NT E R
• Discover tlte Holzer Difjel'ence

www.holzer.org

740) 446·4091
•

•

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