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THE
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P\.1&gt;.'1'E.D '1'~
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BIG NATE
I DON'T
THIN!&lt;. I

OF COUR.S.E

'ltiU CI&gt;.Nl
Cl&gt;.r-1 cr.o
'IOU'II.I "
OI,IT THEII.E, WOMMII:I'UI.
I'\ It RO~ . CHI! S~
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THIN I&lt;.

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CSEA
ICIIAMoi.IH ANIWIIII

Acllng • Bllflk • Pilot • Clmtre • REI.IGION

ITUESDAY

JUNE 11

.

Following 1n optt'ltlon on my lhouldtr 11tood In my
hoapltlt room dolna my Wilking lht Will t111rcla11. Af. •
ttr Witching me 1 fellow Pllllnt 11k1d timidly • Juat whit
RELIGION It'll you?'
'

I

·wcdnesdny, June 12,20112 ·
If! pu~slblc thutthroujh\lut
the your nhcud y11u will ba
more fortunutc than In tho
pust. Thl' cycle I! lonalastlna
nod n~ny lirlna nbout mnny
huppy rc~ults In hulh your cu·
r~ur nnd Moclul nffnlnt.
. OP.MIN I IMuy 21 ·lima 20)
.. Ooud

lu~k

uhuundM 111duy.

An OjlpurtuniiY. thut muy iCII•
crutc u wlndfull muy develop
throuvh n lon!t MU!pccted
chunncl. It'! mount just for
~ou, so count your blc!!hll!l·
Uemlnl, trout rounelf to u
blrthdny jlil'l. Send for. ynur
Astro·Oruph Jrcdlctlon! for
the ycnr nheu by mnilln11 S2
und 11 SASE to ANtm•Oroph,
c/o thl! naw1pupor. P.O. Box
167, Wickliffe. Oli 441W2. Ba
! UI'O to !IIIIa ~uur zndlnc Rl(n.
CANCUR !Juno 21·July l2)
.. Uc the una In ohur110 toduy,

and don't let anybody attomtlt
Ill usurp your loudcrlhip.
With yuu at tho holm, tlia
bcnanu you derive from your
antcrpl'isu will n1b uff unto
evcrybmly llroltnd yuu.
LEO (July 2~·Aus. 22) ••

Snmc Cottfldcntlul fnfunnu·
· tlun yuu nre uffcrcd tuduy I!
men111 juM for you. rr ynu
wuntlt to puy off. clun't1Ruro

It with unytllxly ol~e ·· thoro Is
only one prl~ llehiM offered.
VI ROO (Au&gt;· 23·Sopt. 22)
.. With yo11 licudlnll 11p to·

today In purtnonhlr arruna..
· moots thun you wll 11o uetfna
on your own,
.·
· AQUARIUS (Jun. 20-Fob.
duy'! uotnmlllcc mooting In·
19) ··Tho onlstanea you tQ•
vohlna tt a~ruttp 1ltuu!lon.
qulru todAy will bo eu~ltr to
tlllnn ~hull wurk out rc·
ounln th~n yuu think. Vou'~o
marinhly well. Your optir dtlnc u llfCttt dan! for Olhoraln
ml~m . wlll hu the tnuln rcu8tm
tho pn!l, oml . tho~ arc Just
LIBRA (Sept. ~3·0ct. 23)
wullinu now to bo uakad to
• Shout fur I!Oula that ut·o bla
. help ~mt out.
and mcunlnllf'ul talluy, bo·
PISCBS (fob. 20·M"'gh
cause aooa 011naa u"n ean1o
20) .. Yuu uro aolna to wunt .
~our way. Don't wusto yuur
to muke IUijiiAtmolll~ to ~our
time untr taloma on lnalanlfl·
s~hadula If aotnoth n11 fun, ex·
eunt objoctlvoa that produce
oltlna or fortunuta popa up,
.little or nuthlna.
.
. Tr~ not to look yaunotr Into
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nav.
nn~thin&amp; thAI Is too wtruc·
22) •• MUch thruuah your of·
ture4.
fum today, uny naracmonta
ARIBS (Murch 2l·Aprlll9)
you enter lnto will work out
•• Lndy L11ck will ba pullln1
bcmaflclally for everyone In·
lor you tuduy, ospaulully In
volvad. Bach will feel aha ar
uffuin thAt muy uffout YI'IUr
ho_1111 ~ folr shuka.
famll~ D! well oM yoursolf. Bt
lfAOITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec. 21) ·• There Ia aome·
thlna In tho wlpd lilduy, and It
Is 1111 aood, A clu"o friend of
youn could be tho ono to
Jrlltlfy not one, but two of
yuur Immediate needs.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22·Jun.

19) .. It behoovea you to !leek
cut m1trona ally when 8\lln¥
«ftor 1omafhlna bl1. Tfils 11
bOCQUID 1you Wlll be luckier
y
.

oplimlltlc thnt avurythlna will
turn out •" ~uu llko.
TAURUS (April 20·Muy
20) .. You may be tho roclpf•

cnt of Aoma very happy newa
thnt will put you ln!m upbllot
frutl1c of mind l'or the raat or
tho
'rhls tnood will mako
you • oyful, run penon to bll

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Holnr Meclltel ~ lit Oal/;lolll• JlcQeft, 01\M, 111'1 ntw arn,ilflt l\l~llcelllna
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I tn4 lllttw lltiAI, llloltoua Cl ~11icM, l'lt.roflotl 1111lraMt, w...111d Mwtrltlel,
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Medical/

• Critical Cart • lmergency Dlpl.rhlllw't
Obatttrlca • Pt4Jiatrlca

~ INIIJ ~p/te::z '",.Cillo.

. www.holz r.org

Mumon Rwwrctt Dltlolllnlllt, Mo!IM Mllllttl Cdr, IPO .llcklon Plitt, Galllfll(ll, Clllt •8631

441·1101 ....

Discover tho Hol1er DUJb••mtt~t!

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BRIEF

'

CAUGIIl'
-- ----------~---------

.:: local women onate
~;to 'Locks of love'
'

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.al't&lt;l
\ays 00\ &lt;tOOmtilmellt roqui~­

Project helps
... cancer victims
•••
tvlw lose .
.. dteir hair
....
'

M ~ b'lldl i'Jecane stud! IInder the CSX Railroed

mel\~.

Raltlh ~
~tM~ that

""t
In \llhtt ntat~ tile boaRi

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1l:d itct\l:'ll'l oo the following
I'll\\~:

• ~vcd fl~ da~
c~alan1\ty
days due

BROOKVILI.E (AP) - A lllyton hiab school tacher has
been ile&lt;:Used of
to have sex wilh a minor o~ the
Internet, J)Olice said
y.
Bryce M. Petty; who teaches hismry and socio1otY to sophomores at Stivers H~h School, was lrle$tcd 11\er 1. one-monlh
in~atiol\ in winch a polite detective posed as a 14-ye.rICGBad
~d~Y over the lntemet, the Brookville police deplrtinent ·
W~i'ON (AP) - A man stabbed 111\d killed hi$ estranged
Polite Chief Ancbew Papanek said ~ was arrested
wife .ttl thtlr. ~ before Reelhl! with their two children, M~ey behill&lt;l a fast-food restaurant in BroOkville, about 15 ·
~tllt~ties said.
n11les northwest of Dayton, where be thou&amp;ht he was meeli.na
Fred Gontales, 30, tllhled hiWtselt ht to pollee 'tUesday the boy.
.
1\100\lhl!, lte was bell\1 held In the Wood County Jail. The Police said Petty, 32, of Dayton, has been charaed with
children Were not hurt.
importuning and sexual mistonduct wilh a minor. If convicted
Alltlmrltll!s fuulld ~ body of Lisa Gonzales, 31, at the of the charxes, he could be sentenced up to lhrec years in
home early 1\lesday ttfter a nei~rh·bot-re.;,ported
__
. _helri_·_~~a;;.·.,;.ye_u_lllg,;..pn·so,.n.and_:l_
fim~~tj-ed""S7.;,,500"""
.10.1 · - - - - - - - - - •
:-.,..

\oc~a~~

• hired Lelia H~y fur a11
additiooal :20 d~~Yll of scrvke

In July~

In

• hllll·t'llllewcd

Health Care Cover~e for

•'•

I

Ohio's Working Families

of 1\eed: ·

· • &lt;~dopted
Children's

•lol·OCAL STOCKS

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. f ~ eo!Jl·• 20.86
,

Smugler pts 8 yun

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HAMlL'rON (APJ - Ahllll1 who prosecutotB say confessed
, m-hi!lplllll 81tllll!gle ltlllre thnn 200 pound~ of marlju~rla from
'1\!Jlu ttl Ohio liM been sentenced to eight yeats In pri s~n .
Abutler Couot~Cmummt PleM Nry deliberated 35 mututes

•

Chambe
·
r
INm ..... A1

lield trip for the I'I'A to

rem~~ ~~~d~~~

Atte11dln~ w.e~ Buckley,
Rhonemus. nnd boon! 1!~111bers Humph~ys. Rol!er

cities shulna the same
sc:~n. This Is known as 11

·sr.rl:,~ c:!t•;:r!r:'l~

Abbott, Ron 1.o!lan Gild Sc\'ltt

Walton.

Glnnttt-?U3

· AO&lt;IkylloaW -6.20
05

I MORE.LOCA.LNE.WS, MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
•

,

1

The Da. l"ly Sentm•el

!'

through

_..__ 11
OUr maIn GOI10tffl In Ill """ !W"
to bt aocura,., If you ~now Of an
"ror In a ato!Y, oan 11\t newaroom

al (740)882·21~.

New• DtDartmentl

1
11
•

The main number It . 892·1118.
Department txtthtiOna are:
EICt. 1t

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Otnll'lttnlnlger
NIWI

EICt. 13

•

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IICt. 14

'
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992-2117
1-800-992-2608

Internet

attend c:1111p at C'al1'011ton.

C11bell · County in West realonwlll\llewtherenllllnder
=!".~:-a.o =~.~;&amp;:~·
Vir;inln, hnve b®n dcs~nnt· orthe news with onere~
AT&amp;T - to.sa
HMrtO.V'tm -as.tn Wai·Mitt -sus
ed liS my ·~t.' " ~~lid ed. while another IWil will watch
Btnk Ont- 311.41
l&lt;mln- 1.01 ·
Wtncly'a - 38.18
Cline sntd 1t 1s '""' rtspon· the news with the second
&amp;Ll - n.as
l&lt;lllQtr - auo
'l-t'onlllnQ1011 - 1a.ot
· siblllty to lnvestiaate possl· rennn~~.r," added Cline.
Bob~"'- use
Landa End- eus
o.~y • • "!)0111 .,, ble story lde11s in -her desialifl\e Implementation of
BofQWimtr- 110.47
~:_~;~1
tilt 4 p.m. ctoalng nnted nre11, nnd ultimately, this technique allows WSA.Z
Champlon-1.87 ?e8 Ollc .. Anlll -iO.IJO quo,.. ot tilt pttvloul hllve them reAdy for tlie to better understand the
=-a•'rnQ
.~18.•o 0'18-IM
llly'a lllnuellona, P!O· even ina's newscast.
needs of Its market as well 11s
Col
~.40
aar - 38.7158
~~~'1~1111 ~~~ Cline also explained how broadcut simultaneously
DG - 17.05
=::so
. .aa
GIUipOIIa.
WSAZ·TV emplo~s II tech- from different realons so llll
DuPont- ..a.se
nique known 11s ·split news people In our 11 rewlna ·arel
castina" to keep Its viewers can be lnfonned uf hnppen· .
in specific realons informed lnaa In 11 more nccur11te tilshof ttie da)"s tap news stories. . ion," she snld.
"WSAZ-TV h11s television
stutlons In both Huntlnaton 1111d
Clllll'leston, W.VII..," sufcl Cline.
.
"If you've ever w11tched
our
evenlna news, you h11ve
~IIMIO)
Reader SerVIces Olllo Vlllty l'llllllllllfttl co.

Aklo-4U8

•

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

provl~ions of the

• and approved :m lnteme1

Comotlon Pollay

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

·

school computers;

l'llbllehtd IIVtiV

DAYTON {AP) - A $9,2 mllll~l\ rtli~Viltloli fot the
Mul\tgtlftll\1')1 Cuunty Jall would add too beds ahd improve the
ultlelt 8~tloll tlf the bulldlllS wlthll\ th~ neltt twu yenrs.
The uuunty hils beell trying to tedUte the 1\Utrtber of prlson~t'i It sefid! ~lsewhere because of uverorowdlng nt the jnll.
Shl!rUY Dnvld Vore outlined l)lans ruesdiiY tO renovnte the
jall whl11h hu une s~tlon buill t11 I!164 111\d a wing that was
ildded 1ft 1992. The liddltlofiitl ~~~Will btl lidded to the newer
t!tlltlllll, whll• thl! ulder Pirll• upgtadl!d,
.
Vun! Mllld It will tOIIt SI,g miD run to add the 100 beds, but
the wunty wltl 811\11! th11t muth lrt the l'irst year because It will
tlol hllvt !o llliY to send tho5e prl ~ohers somewhere else,

~ubsti ­

Prolectil'ln Ad II\ "block"
certain lnterrt~t sites lh.m1

~

Renovation planned for Jail

tl.c

tute t-e&lt;~chhi~ contrad or
Mkhclle Miller due lo lac\.. .

,

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to

July I to June 30, mn. with
an II &lt;et1t cmplo)ott nloothly

ma.r:!:t:

Healthy Start
Healthy Families

as

h1clen.cnt weather fur all
~boots~ and
oov, ll fOOl"
P'oi~~eroy lilementary due to
IIU'~ (ailme.
• ~~ teimbm~iiiCIIt
ofSl,IOI to l{mda Williams
fut e~l)en~s lnculmt oil
Meigs Middk School dass
1\eld trip:;;
• reliC\\~ the vls\011 insutli~Ce with Vision Plus for

1'11dt1r flas •ca•IIIM

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ne\V OliMOOI".
ch..'el"'e.aders

"'"' be ~-h'd to COI'Ifutm
to ~tll requ\~~e~m \r they
to ()artk\p;ant,

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'Viadutt kl Deftance.. Ohio. i.cooliding to OeCiante l'olice,
\fie \nict( driVen by ~ Ross. 41, of PauklirC. Ohio.
alld IWII'Ied bY tfallllanci Pn:ll:tuets of ~lei, Ohio, lleadll1g ~ ~ it bec::elt~e wedged llnder tfte
~- Ro$s 'NilS \M\1Id and ntiHsed at Defiarote
~ 8l'td cited for essllred cleat distance. M IMif·
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Cpnyenltnptltort Pbont
Atltturtnt Phone

887·8100

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OPEN 2~ hourel7 dlyt li'IHk

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887·8101
· 7:00a.m. • 10:()0 p.m.

�ntinel

TERRoRIST

The Daily Sentinel

Churc

a reach o trnst

D&amp;\RAUY; After daY$ of~m~tt·
iDe ill~ lbe U.S. cadiaab

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toknttee lOr chiJd 11M I s. They
say,~ mib lltd you're ow."
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mtllllrip halfwa~ the globe
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lib 1liREE sttib:s and you re 0111?
The real bunw:lillgler is that !bey will
1101 nec:es.sarily apply the ~­
ance rule to priests who ll'llllenM

Ill

Dear
Abby
ADVICE

children yeus ago but have a_qreut·
ed and are well-received by their

ATIO

~~~is the~?

Olild molester. ru say it ._.m ...
am.D MOLESTER! It's tune to
take these people
from our
c:hildren and oUr dl
and put
them in jail where they bel011g. LAURA IN LOS ANGEI,ES
DEAR LAURA: I'm sure the

AL VIEW

•;:r.:s

'•

: Buslt should be lift alone to
} find best bargain for trade

MEIGS COUNTY NOTEBOOK

WHICH ~E IS TlfE FoRGERY?

Ptolc:lancy woduhops
offeNcllltmllea• -

'

: • Cbkqo 'lribune. onft~ trade: The U.S. Senate
lias voted to give President llush sQmething faintly
PERKINS' VIEW
;resembling trade l'legotiating authority, Unless
:Congre.-;s ultimately comes up with legislatioo that
. is rar better than what the Senate has approved,
: President Bush will have no choice but to veto it.
: The 66-30 Senate vote last month achieves very
I have a confession: I'm a Washington
toward American Indians.
·:tittle, except to keep the pror..&gt;ess nmving along. The
Redskins fan. ·In California, the nation's
They are decidedly positive symbols
:Senate has joined the House in approving what the
most knee·jerk politically correct -state.
in the minds of students who attend
that makes me some kind of racist.
. schools that boast Indian team names:Bush team officially cans trade promotion authority,
I'm in t1te same box as 71·year.old
like the San Diego State Aztecs, the
\he right to ~SOtiate trade agreements tlmt must be . . Dale
At~n of Manhattan ~each. He
Illinois Fighting lllini and Florida State
approved, but cnnnot be amellded, by Coogress. The
got a leiter from the state Depanmen~ of
Seminoles. They are the pride of cities
· . president has been denied that authority fOr the last
Motor Vehicles back in December
with professional sports team with
Joseph 1\ldian
. eight years. h 's past time to restore it. ... •
ordering him to remove his i-year-old
monikers - like the Kansas City
vanity
license
plate
ihat
reads·
I
RED·
The best way to help U.S. wo~ ... 1s to open
the Atlanta Braves and the
Perkins Chiefs,
SKN.
.
..
Chicago Black Hawks.
.·
new mati&lt;ets fur the goods they produce. The only
The
DMV
infonned
Atkeson
ihat
his
Indeed,
those
sports
team
names
and
way that is going to happen is If the president has the
COLUMNIST
was deemed a · slur against tlte
mascots are no more offensive than say,
rreedolll to t\egotiate trade pacts throughout the plate
American Indian community. However,
the old "Indian Head" nickel or, more
world.
.
the septuagenari11n was simplY paying for Native Americans."
recently, the Sacagawea dollar coin.
homage to his farorite professional
The bl}&gt;artisan jockeyin~ that continues to en\'elop
Of course, the American .Indian
.
But
that's
just
it.
activists
and tribal leaders to which
foothill
team,
the
Redskins,
for
whom
th~se .Capitol Hill negnti~tlons reft~ts the fracturing
Goldberg's bill, which she introduced s
Ill
ed 11 d d be
d'~
he
happened
to
play
back
in
the
1950s.
at the behest of the Southe!'ll California ports usttat a u e :g to luer.
ol broad su~port fur free trade tn recent yem.
That history mattered not to radical· Indian Center, Is ba~Sed on the fallacious
"You wouldn't call the Washington
Members of Congress want to protect constituents
lrted American Indian organizations like notion that Indian team names make life team the Wetbacks, would you?" asked
from harm. But each one of th.o:;e 535 lawmakers
the Slluthem California Indian Center,
·
d'
Eu~ene . Herrod, the American Indian
· mencan 1n •ans. 1t activist who filed the complaint against
the
outlit responsible for pressuring the un bearable for A
has a differem set of constituents that needs protect·
state DM V to ban license plates bearing assumes ihat the mass of American Atkeson's 1 REDSKN plate.
ing. The president is the only one charged with
"Would you have the Brownskins, the
any conf~guration of the word Redskin. Indians find such team names patently
negotiating the be:st deal for the whole Mtion. Let
offensive und mascots racially repug- Blacksldns or the Atlanta Negroes?"
And
now
Cruifomia's
Indian
activists
him do his job. .
have taken their crusade to another nant.
Well, probably not.

Hey folks,

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY lllE 1\SSOCii\TED PRESS

llxl11y Is Wednesday. June 12, the 163rd day of 2002. There
are 202 d;IYs len iti the yem·,
.
.
Today\ Highlight in Histury:
On June 12, 19311, the National Baseballl-tlill of l'ame and
Muselinl \11;\s dedicated in Cooperstuwn, N,Y.
· On this date:
. ln 1776, Virginia's colohial legislature becilme the first to
adopt a Bill ofl{ights.
·
ln 1838, the Iowa Territory was organized,
·
In I898, Philippine natlonalish declared Independence from
SP.;Iin,
.
.
In 19tH, dvil rights leader Med11ar Evers was fatillly shot In
· front of his home ln Jacksoh, Miss,
.
· In 1967, the Supretne Court struck down state laws pro·
: ltlblting intertadalmarrlages.
h1 1971 , Tl'ldn Nixon nnd Edward F. Co~ were married In
the White House l!.ose Garden.
In 1979, :111-year-old cyclist Bryan Allen flew the manpowered Gossmner Albatross across the lingllsh Channel.
tn 1981 , tnajor league baseball phtyel'll begnn 11 49-day
~trike over the tssue or free·ngent colltpensatltlrl. (The season
·did not tesullte until AU!!, 10.)
·
ln 198i, President Rengani during 11 visit to the divided
Gemlull d ty of Berlin, pub lcly Cfmllenged Soviet leader
Mikhail S. Oorbachev to "tear down this wall."
hi 1991 , Russians Weht to the polls to elect Boris 'N. Yeltsln
!)resident their republic.
..
.
.
Ten )'llllrs ngo: Pre~ldent O~tge H.W. Busll, llddresslng the
Eurth Summit In Bru~ll , declared Amerlca1s envlronmentru
record "second to not\e," In u letter to u.s. setllitors, Russhtn
Ptcsldeht .Burls N. Yeltslh suld the Soviet Union had shot
down nine U.S. planes In the early 19~08 and held 12
Alllerlcun surviVI:lrs,
Five yenrs ngo: 'the Treasury Department uhvelled n new
$.50 btn mennt. to b&lt;! more coumerfelt•reslstllfit, 8nseball
begnn lnterleague pluy, endlnl! a I 26·year tradition or seplll'llt·
ln~t the mltjor leugues until the World Series.
.
Otit.i ye~r IIIlo: President Bush urtlved In Madrid, Spain, on
hls t1rst on1dal trip to Euro~~ A federal court in New York
sentenced Mohamed Rushed Daoud AI· 'Owhall, 11 Saudi
Arabian follower of Osnma bin Laden, to life In prison with•
out plii'Oie for his role .lt1 the deudly bombing of the U.S.
Embassy In 1\enyu.
Tbday's Birthdays: Bunker Dnvid Rockefeller Is Bi. Actress
Uta Hugen is 83. Former President George Bush Is 78. Singer
. VIc Damonc Is 74. Actor-s inger Jim NaborRIs 72. Jau musl•
dun Chkk Coreu is 61. Sportscuster Marv Albert Is 61. Singer
Roy Harper Is 61. Rock slnl!cr Reg Presley (The Troggs) is S9.
Rodt ~lnger-muslclun Brnd Delp (Boston) is 31, Rock musician BunB. Cutlos (Chcup Trlcli) Is 51. Country slnger-musidun Junior Brown Is .50, Slnger-i!c:mgwriler Rocky Bunlelle Is
49. Actor 'timothy Busfleld Is 4~. Actress Jenllee Harrison is
43. Rock musician John Linnell (They Might Be Giants) Is 43.
Rupper GrurldtMster Dec (Whodinl) Is 40. Actress Paula
Marshall Is 38. Blues musician Kenny Wayne Shepherd Is 2.5.
Acwr Wll Hornetr 15 23. Singer Robyn Is 23.
Thoug~t for lbduy : "A tnan without utnbition Is dettd. A
mun with nmbltiM but no love Is dead. A mun with umbhion
and luv~ for hi s blessings here on eun h is ever so alive,"Peurl Bailey, A111erk11n cntcttuincr ( 1918· 1990).
·

or

let~ get

level. They are backing legislation that
would make Califol'llia the first state to
outlaw the use of Indian-related mascots by public schools and colleges.
Sponsored by a Los Angeles Assembly
member, liberal Democrat Jackie
Goldberg, the measure specifically bans
the use of Redskins, Indians, Braves,
· Chlds, Apaches, Comanches or any
other American Indian tribal name.
If enacted inm law, the 60 or more
California ·public schools and colleges
that boast Indian team names would
have until .the first of next year to abM·
don those monikers.
"My goal," said Goldberg, "is to
mllke sure that while we're alfhaving a
wonderful time, school spirit is not
inlldvertently making life more difficult

real -in the debate ·over mascots

But that simply is not the case1 as
But 1 sure wouldn't have a problem
revealed by a recent poll conductea by · 'th
h 'W h'
z 1 ·h
the Peter Harris Research Group for WI , say, t ·e as mgton u us, wrt a
Sports Illustrated.
proud African warrior as their mascot.
"Although most Native American Or even, say, the Atlanta Homeboys,
activists und tribal leaders consider with a buffed·out bro as their mascot.
Indian team names and mascots offen·
Because when it comes to team
names, to team mascots, intent is what
sive," repo~ed Sl's Andrea Woo, "nei- · matters. IS li team name and mascot
ther Naitve Americans in generru nor a meant to disparage a group of people?
cross-section of U.S. Spot:(s fans agree.'' Or do they represent Inspirational symJn fact, four of five Americ11n Indians
f
·
said that professional teams •. like the bois around which fans o alll".tclal and
Redsklns ·• should not . slop using ethnic backgrounds can rally?
. ·
Most American Indians understand
Indian nicknames, mascots or symbols. the distinction. Too bad those who pre·
Asked whether the use of Indian nick·
names contributes to discrimination sume to speak for them do not.
against them, the vast ml\iority of (Joseph Perkins is a columnist for
American Indians said it does not.
The &amp;m Diego Union-Tribune mrd can
bt
reached
at
I would venture to say that Indian Joseph.PerkinsUnionTrib.com.)
tenm names actually foment goodwill
.

.

RED GREEN'S VIEW

•.

lf'hy is it that young people ·are looking unfamiliar?
I was driving by a high school In an prevent the enemy from intercepting
unfamiliar part of town last week, It their lltessages. This is not an unusual
was late ln the nftemoon, the students concept. Husbands and wives have b&lt;!en
were leaving, and I couldn't get over communicating in code since the beginhow young the~ all looked. They ning oftime. When an attractive wom11n
looked to me as 1f they were 11 or 12 moves in next door, your wife will say
years old nnd should bCi In grride 6 or 7 "Have you seen our new neighbor?" but
rather than in grade 9 or 10. Then I she really means "I've seen our new
·n.otlced that .I wns wrong - this was not neighbor, and I'll be watching you like
11 high school. It was a college.
11 hawk," When your wife says "Does
Tllese 11-year-old kids were 20. That ihis dress look all right to wear to the
$Ot me thinking about how many party?" she's really saying, "I'd like
encounters I have where the person I'm r.ou to start paying attention to me now,
dealing with Is much younger thltn I n the hopes that the pattern will carry
expect them to be. The store clerk, the over to tile party so that our friends will
insurance salesman, the cop. It's as If see that although their marriages have
they took everybody out ofelementary become stale and repetitive, ours is still
school and gave them jobs while I was- fresh and vibrant." And although you're
n't looking. Of course, that's not right. thinking, "Wear any dress you want.
TheiSe people are the exact age they You don't need file to tell you what to
. should be for what they're doing, The wear. And vice versa," what you say is
probl~lll is mine. I've forgotten what "Yeah, it's great..What should I wear?' 1
young r;ople look like.
. . And after you've been at the party for .a
That s btcause all of my instrumenta· couple of hours &amp;lid your wife says, "I
tlon needs to be re-calibrated, since I think we should go home now," you're
spend so much of my time with myself thinking, "This Is looking food," but
and other people my age. It's hard what she really means is, " think we
enough to face the fact that you're no ~ould go home now." And when you
longer young, It's a shocker when you
t home and she says, "It's time for
realize that the people 20 years younger
d," what she reaUy means is
than you aren't young either. There are "Goodnight."
only two places In the world where a
LOii8 of frallillty
mun like me can stiJI,feel young - In
As we get older we start losing the
hi s own mind and Florida.
· nervousness of youth. We gain contiThe code
dence and self-assurance and aren't eas·
There's a tnovle out now about the ilyaffected by the opinions of others. If
s~cret codes that the military uses to you're wonderingifJI&gt;u've reached this

stage yet, here are a few signs to watch
for:
• No tie is too ugly for you. . .
• You' get your flair "cut" rather than
"styled."
·
• Your hom wears out before your
brakes,
·
• You .shlin activities that require skill
orene.rgy. ·
• At a Karaoke Bar, you get up more
than once.
It's touah at the top
Recently,I played golf with an excellent golfer. This guy was much better
than the usual duffers 1 hang around
with. He was much more focused, more
intense, more unhappy, I've noticed this
behavior_pattern in other accomplished
people. The master craftsman, the diva,
the respected artist. lt seems that the
better you are at something, the less you
enjoy it. I'm sure the opposite is also
trtJe, which is why so many men love
sex,
·
Q1,1ote of the Day: "If you look Iike
your passport picture, you probably
need the tnp." - Red Green
Red Green is the star of "The Red
Green Sho"i" a television series seen in
the Unitea States on PBS and in
Canada on the CBC Network. and the
author of the new book ·,.Duct Tape i.v
no/ Enough: A humorous guide tn
midUfe " (Hatherleigh Pre.v.1·, 2001).
Watch for the feature film "Red Gree11 :1
'Duct '/ape Forever"' at a theater 11ear
you.

POMEROY - Area high school stu·
dents will be given a chanCe to brush up
on their math and science knowledge at
Washington"State Community Col~ge in
July.
Sponsored by the college's
Educational Talent ~h program, the
Ohio ninth grade proficiency test workshops for math and science Will offer Stl!dents the opportUnity to enlwtc:e thetr
knowledge for the ~uired tests.
Openings remain . tn the work~hops
scheduled for July 22-25. The sctence
workshop and one math workshop run
daily from 8:30-11:30 a.m. A ~
math workshop is sc:heduled for 12:303:30 p.m. at the college.
According to Sheri L. Fleegle of the
staff, workshops are open to any high
school student who has taken the math
and/or science sections of the state's
ninth grade proficiency test and needs to
repeat.
Students must at!Cnd all workshop ses·
sions in order to take the test, scheduled
to be given on July 26 from 8:30-11:00
a.m.. Priority will be given to
Educational Thlent Search participants
and seniors.
Nina Oath and Janet Schilling, profes·
sors of mathematics at Washington State,
wil~conduct the math workshops. ~
Olaltwell, a member of the colleges
adJunct faculty and a teacher at Wanen
Htgh School, will lead the science section.
Students may still register for the
workshops by .calling the college's
· Outreach Center al 740.374.8716, ext.
741. The student's sociru security num·
ber will be required at the time of regis·
lrltion. For more infonnation on the
Ninth Grade Proficiency Test
Workshops, students may call the
Outreach C~ter.

GAR accepts new
memba1s
MIDDLEPORT - Two new mem·
bers were welcomed into the Maj. Daniel
McCook Circle Ladies of the Grand
Anny of the Republic at its recent meet·
ini at the Riverbend Arts Council in
Middleport.
Whitney Ashley, president, conducted
the meeting during which Judith Oraf of
Long Bottom and her sister, Peggy Ernst
of Cincinnati, on their ancestor, l'vt. Eli
Powell of Company C, lst and 9th W.Va.
Infantry, were accepted into member·
ship.
· .
Information on an upcommg tour
sponsored by . the !.Jniversity of Rio
Grande for etght days in late June was
announced. The cost includii)S ~otel is
$650 per person. Prof, Samuel Wtlsqn of
the university can be contacted for reser·
vations.
.
An Ohio Depllrtlilent ~campment ~111
be held June 14-16 at Mt. Umon
College, Alliance. Jean Hilton was elect·
ed as a delegate to the convention.
· Emma Ashley, cin:le secretary, was
repoited recovering from a broken hip. A
review of the successful Civil War
Memorial Day ceremonies on May 18 at
the all-wars monument in Middleport
was discussed.
. .
James Cline of Beverly gave a CIVIl
War educational program on Reuben S.
Mason of Beverly Mason seiVed in the
63fd Ohio Inf11ntry and as an o~cer ,in
the U.S. Colored Troops. He was tmpnsoned in Aodersonville Prison and sur·
vived. Cline has produced a new book on
Mason's service.

Grange honors com·
munlty c1t1nn
RACINE- Kathryn .Hart has bee.n
honored as an outstandmg commum·
ty citizen by Racine Grange.
,
At a recently meeting s~e was .rec·
ognized for her work tn various.
organitations including the · Racine

Area Community Organization and
the Bethany United Methoclist
Church.
Charles Yost, master, presented her
a cenificate signed by the National
Grange master, Kermit Richudson.
A letter of thanks for the support
of the Racine F.F.A. prognm from
Aaron Sayre was read.
Also read was a uqent letter from
the National Master about cunent
action of Congress to eliminate
patents for prescriptions. drugs. It
was noted · that such actton would
eliminate the most cost effective
means of dealing with runt health
problems by deterring drug companies from producing new drugs since
patents allow a company to recoup
Its extensive costs in developing
such drugs.
The membership voted to send letters to the Ohio Congressional sena·
tors and representative to oppose the
end of drug patenting.
A letter was read from U.S. Sen.
Mike DeWine to Racine Grange
regarding the members strong concern that the federal government was
given financial help to all of the air_Iines and insurance companies who
lost in the September 11 attack but
failed to give any assistance to the
U.S. Postal Servtce. It was pointed
out that as a result, postal rates will
increase. The members felt that the
letter did not properly respond to
their original concerns and will send
another.
. Emily Ashley announced that the
Ohio State Granfe Youth Camp will
be held July 14· 9. Reservations are
due by June 21.
Concerns regarding the announcement of the closing of the extended
care by Holzer Hospital was discussed as one member is residing
there. There is a proposed buy-out of
this facility later thts month. It was
also mentioned that the Meigs
County Commission under the work
of Mick Daven~ort was working to
re-establish limned hospital care at
the currently closed county hospital.
Plans for a float for Emily Ashley
and Carson Yost, Meigs County
Grange prince and princess, were
decided for the upcoming Racine 4th
of July parade.
Mary Kay Yl)st gave information
on the meaning of the 13 folds of the
U.S. flag in honor of Flag Day.
Keith Ashley, legislative chairman,
informed the members of · a current
Ohio law that .says that ~uman
remains are no longer constdered
human after burial for 125 years.
He said that this means that such
remains have the "same legal stand·
ing as any soil." He ~ointed out that
soldiers from the Civtl War, Mexican
War, War of 1812, and the American
Revolution have all been buried
longer than 125 years. That would
mean that the remains of. U.S. veterans were subject to legal desecration
as a result. The members voted to
sponsor a resolution asking for
repeal of this law.
. Progress is being made on the
gran~e 's bicentennial project of
markmg the Oak Grove community.
Emma Ashley, grange lecturer, was
reponed recuperating from surger~.
It was announced that a spectal
history display from the National
Archives has opened at the Ohio
Historical Society called "American
Originals." It features among other
items original copies of such impor·
tant
Americana
as
George
Washington' s acceptance as general
of the American Revolution, Treaty
with the Six Nations of 1784, offi·
cial voting record of the U.S.
Constitutional Convention, The
Northwest Ordinance of 1787,
Louisiana Purchase Treaty, Harriet
Beecher Stowe's copyright of her
Cabin,
book,
Uncle
Tom's
Emanciration
Proc tarnation,
Lincoln s nomination of U.S. Grant
as head of the U.S. Army, the arrest
of Susan · B. Anthony for illegally

NOTICE

voting in 1873. Thomas Edison's.
patent application for the electric
lamp. the undertaker's bill for Pres..
Garfield's. funeral, surrender of
Germany in 194S, Pres. Kennedy's
inaugural address, letter by Pres.
Nixon to announce the loss of astronauts to the moon in 1969 if they
failed to return. and many others.
The exhibit will continue through
Sept. 2.
The next meeting will be moved to
July 18 due to conflict with
Independence Day. Hemlock Gnnge
will be . guests. Refreshments .were
served after the meeting in honor of
Mrs. Han.

Edwards Moving and Rigging, Inc .• has
been contracted to move generators, turbines and transformers into the Rolling Hills
Power Plant in Wtlkesville. Roads will be
shut down along the following route for the
duration of each move. We will be starting
.at the Meigs Rail Siding in Rutland proceeding to Hwy 124 going west. At
Wilkesville we will be tllking Hwy 160
north to the Power Plant. We would appreciate your patience and cooperation. Move
date: June 17,2002.

·Rutland Ganlen Club
li&amp;eets
RUTLAND.- Reports on plantings
at the mini-parks and the Meigs County
Flower Show were made at a recent
meeting of the Rutland Garden Club
held at the home of Pauline Atkins.
FloWers for the mini-~k phtntings
were provided by Bob s Greenhouse
and Chelcie Steams, while flowers for
the Harrisonville Presbyterian Church
were given by Betty Lowery.
It was ·noted that the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners and the Rutland
Garden Club will be co-hosts for this
year's flower show and the entrance
decorations.
Again this year there will be two
flower shows staged at the fair, one on
Aug. 12 and the other on Aug. IS.
Karen Werry, Janet Bolin, and Pauline
Atkins are in chaqe of the show which
will feature arran~ement, specimen and
educational exhibtts for both senior and
junior exhibitors. Members were given
schedules and encouraged to exhibit.
A report was given on the Master
Gardeners garden party held June 8
with the program featuring "Start a
Hobby" greenhouse. There was an
after-dinner program by Hal Kneen.
Devotions were given·from · Matt. S;
Bccl. 4, John 13 and 14. "Let This be
Our Creed" and "A Time to Pray", were
the readings. For roll call members displayed a rose.
·
Summer was the topic of the frogram. Joy Combs read an contro of
moles an!l Atkins presented information on iris and peonies." She said thar .
most times iris and peonies are planted
too deell• that the best time to refurbish
beds ism late June after the iris are finished blooming, that if laqe clusters of
rhizomes come to the surface, they
need to be dug up, separated and trans·
planted.
As for peonies, they need to be planted in a sunny location, divided every
ten ;rears, and planted not more than
two mches deep.
·
Lowery talked about . roses and the
care they require, but said that today
it's easier to have pest and disease free
plants and perfect blooms from early
swing to late fall . All you need are
some really good fertilizers, water, sun,
good sprays and common sense, she
said.
Good soil is important as is regular
feeding of the plants, she said. Roses
love sunshine, and need a lot of it up to
six hours a day, the one exception are
the florabunda . Watering is important
for growing roses if Mother Nature
doesn't help water at least one to two
times a week. She also talked about
pest control along with mildew, blight,
and black spot.
The last fertilizing of the season
should be one month before the first
frost of the season: If you trim your
roses back then Jou are encouraging
them to grow an the cells will break
down and kill the canes, she said.
The traveling prize furnished by
Steams was won by Eva Robson.
Taking flowers to church was
Lowery and · to the · Masonic Temple
was Atkins.
Hint for the month was use baking
soda to protect your roses from rlack
spot and mildew. ,

Healthy Start
Healthy Families

2002
t•l\

llrllll'.tl'l'd L'lr111rcr1 (llf' h1•\&gt;"':L'

Family
Size

Annually

.'(1\1, ~ ~'L

Hourly_

Monthly

1

$17,720 $1,477 $8.59

2

$23,800 $1,990

3

$30,040 $2,504 $14.55

4

$36,200 . $3,017 $17.54

5

$42,360 $3,530 $20.52
lnsurt'd ur Urrnt~llll'd
,"i. Prt•qn,trtl 1 ,(l

~_'trlld~t·n

Family

Annually

Stu

1

Monthly

$11~57

~

PL

Hourly

$13,290 $1,108 $6.44
.

$17,910 $1,493 $8.68

2

'

$22,530 $1,878 $10.92

3
4

$27,150 $2,263 $13.16

5

$31,770 $2,648 $15.40

u""''·'""" Cl"'""'"illl' lo Arw
F1mlly

81••

Annu1lly

l~l)

/00" .. FPL

Monthly

Hourly

1

$8,860

$739

$4.29

2

$11,940 $995

$5.78

3

$15,020 $1,252 $7.28

4

$18,100 $1,509 $8.77

5

$21,180 $1,765 $10.26

(740) 992-2117
1..800-992-2608

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
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--

.

_,......,.

-·

-·

�I

0

I

0

&gt;tt

Committee denies license
for Grateful Dead reunion
concert in Wisconsin

•*••
Fonner

in

Ohio coach
Bob Wren
dies at 81

: an. ....

....

::..··=-~
o...:...a

S-1&lt;9'0Rl

A'mENS - Former 011\o baseball
oooacll Bab Wml passed a~ 1Ues4ay

a~ a l011g innes-s, the family
~~Hewas81 ,
.
Wrel\ reUred u Ohio Univet"Si~'s

kers .on

N

head baseball coadl in 1'97l after an histOOt ll!mlft tha\ elevated the stllblre of
~ progam to a national level.
He bllllh as the Bobcats' all..ftme win· ·
n~ ooac11 with :a «i4-ll'i0-.4reooro
an4 ~ 12th oo ihe NCAA's ~
winni"' ~ list with a mark of

.12-4- .
. .
.
wl\ was :a pri~lege to oome to koow
Coach Bob Wren over the rast seven
B..lo. ......._.

11UU . . . _ . $

-. d

I atiM

all OI.D

414·160 c•
(.724'''I

y~n.

D1~tor

S3id
of

Athletics
Thomas Boeh.
«His captivating
~nee,

keen

sense of in~­
ty, and commit·
me~t t,o Ohio
Untversny were
• 1 1
beyond extraor• • _
_• II dinary. I am
.tlm.,nltll U"
proud to count
llhM III II ry myself among

the tl\ouS3nds of

Paul McCe~ _ anclllelther
•ny
befate family, 1udl stars at Irish caste
OLASLOUOH, Ireland
(AP) - Palll McCartney 111&lt;1
Heather Mills were mlrrled
'tuesda1, In a remote Irish cas·
tlo, whdo fans 111&lt;1 .Joun!IIISIS
thronged tho aatos for a
alimpso of tho ox·Boatle and
his bride.
Tho c:oUple was detonnlned
to have a private weddina
des~itO the srowiq Cr!)Wd
outside and tho noisy hell·
copters hoverina overtioad.
More than 2 1/2 hours after
the ceremony, as tho newly·
weds and their guests feasted
on Indian food 1n tarao tents
on tho Castle Leslie estate,
. McCartney's
spokesman,
Geoff Baker, omeraed to
reveal some details.
The bride, wearina a fitted
ecru lace dress she do&amp;il!led
herself, curled a bouquet of 11
pink McCanney roses named for her now husbandand two pe&lt;l!lies, Baker said.
She wu aliahtly lato for tho
ceremony and was overcome
by emotion, falterlna aliahtly
as . she spoke before fainlly
and frlenda, he said.
Mills entored the 17th con·
tury church to the strains of
"Heather," I sana McCannoy
wroto for hia recent album. Aa
the beamina pair walked back
down the aisle, · a weddlna
march McCanney wroto for
the 1966 movie "The Family
Way" was played on the
oraan, Baker uld.
The guest llat of 300 was
kept pretty well under wraps.
Rlnao Starr, the orlly other
surv!Ylna Beatie, was seen
being whisked thro~h the

gatos to attend tho coremot~y
at St. Salvator's chaDel within
the walls of tho weD-guarded
estllte. ·
Baker bad conflrm.ecl earlier
that Boatles DI'Oducer Oeorp
Martin and flink Floyd frorit·
man David Gilmour also
would be there.
The larao crowd outside
could only auess when the
ceremony - scheduled for 4
p.m. (11 a.m. EDT)- beaan.
The rinalna of church bells
more than an hour later indi·
cated that McCartney and
Mills had Indeed tied t1io knot
ill tho Protestant Chun:h of
Ireland service.

Media ini01Ut had I'OIIChecl
fever pitch as newsplpll'l
s~ula\ed about every deWI,
iiiclucllna ~ list IMt 101ne
said incl
roclc vetomls
Elton John and Eric: Claptoll
For some of the
local peopJo waitlna outllcle,
the classic roclcera were a bit
of a myaiOI)'.
·
When a Mercedes llmou- ·
sino with darltenocl window&amp;
moved through the ftont gate,
• policeman tumed to three
little girls! all under 10, 111&lt;1
asked, "D d you see who that
wu?" He told them It was
Starr, but their only reply was
"Who's that?"
·

younp..

Individuals that were ronunate to call
Coach Wren. mentor and mend.
Out heartfelt sympathy and prayers are
with the Wren falllily and we remain
atateful that the Bob Wren name will
continue to ha\'e a sigl'lificant presence
on oo~, campus for many. many years ro

'•

come.

See Us For

Father's

Dunn homers lift Reds over Texas

Day

~lwifl
Dan's has everything you
· need for Father's Day1
• Knives • Carhartt
• Boots
• Levi's
• Shorts • Shirts

2SJO North Second Ave • Middleport _

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And Much Morel

Mason, WV
(304) m-s583

JOHNSON'S
Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·1182
Malon, WHt VIrginia
(304) 773·5305

AltUNO'I'ON, Teltts (APl -Adam D111111 hit a
~t Of two-run homeR, the fiRt J)llttlng C\11dllllilti
ilhtad til ~tay, •lid the Reds beat the Texas Rangers
8.S '1'llesdQ 1\~ht.
.
Rus~ll llrtnyan also home~ for the Reds, who
remained alone lti fitil place 111 the NL Central fur
t~ 47th s~ht daY.
·
Jlll\n\y Htynes (1·.5) alluwed two runs on seven
hits over 7 1·3 innlnas ro will his fourth strai$ht
stlU\, • c~ best. It was his sb.th ronsecutl\'e win
ove(ltxaulnce 199?.
.
Haynes, who signed with the Reds ils 11. tree agent
hlst winter, pltehed In the AL from 199.5-99 with
Baltimore arid Ollkland. Hls lot loss qalnst Texas
wu 11·0 ~:~n Sept. :14, 1997, when be was with the

Athletics.

Dunn- homered in the first inning off Kenny
Rogers (7·4). His second hometl. lltd 13th of the
~1)11, came In the seventh ott rookie reliever
RandJ Flores. The only other two-htm~er game for
the Tens nallve was April 28 against San
francisco.
Ro8tf5 lasted just four innings, matching his
shortt$t outina of tho season. He gave up five runs
- three earned -on six hits alld made a throwing
error.
Haynes left lifter giVil\lUP three straight one-out
hits In the elahth, including Michael Youna's run·
$00rlng doubfe. He struck out five and walk"ed one.
Scott Williamson sa\'e up Ryan Ludwick's two·
run slnale In the ninth, but Danny Graves got two
outs fur 1\ls 20th stwe In 25 chances.

Wren was named head coach at his
. alma mater in 1949 following six years
of professional baseball in the St. Louis
Browns organitation, replacing his for.
mer coach and another Ohio legend, Don
Peden. .
He roached fur 24 years, winning II
Mid-American Conference titles and
never turning in a losing season.
In the days when teams played only 20
ro 30 games in a season, Wren saw his ·
teams lose less than .I 0 games 20 tlntes,
including 13 straight from 1956-68. ·
A 28·3 record in 1965 marks the
fewest losses In the last 56 yean (12-lln
1946).

His 1970 team was one of the best in
school history. Ohio went 33-6,
outscored its opponents 3I2·134 and
advanced to the NCAA College World
Series after winning the District IV play·
oft's. In Omaha, the Bobcats upset topranked Southern California 4-1 , but then
lost to Tex.as 7·2.

,........ wn..aa

I lVI load...
• Thursday, June 131 2002
• Noon to 6 p.m.
• Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
• Multi-purpose Room ·
·• ·Sponsored by the Pleasant Valley Hospitl\1 Auxiliary
• For more infunnation call: (304) 675·7222

PLEASANT
'VALLEY
OSPITAL

'

�.

v !I'S

er confident Browns
·1 rework his deal
....-

·~~~ButohDam

~

lLlll!tMs~ ·
BIO'WIIs
'telr
6Ml ~ yea!!$ his «lfttnl(t is ~ • .- . f&lt;M"-~ '

«

deal
Rdu4es • sign~ bilnus ·
ex()tSl; &lt;li$lla1ioll.
Miller 'Was Idle «~\y Oeve\altd pi~
'Was

.....

Carolina's number
·may be up against
older Red Wings
DETROIT (AP)- Aae is
cmiY • 1illllla to the Ddroit
Rea Wiap. Ri&amp;k now. !hal
Jllllllher is one.
Hoc:ley's oldest lleUD is
mae vict!oqt a~y mm win• the Sllllley Cup. and
Reel Wmp t.lkcd
1\lesdl,y o{ not wMilittg 10 go
beyond thll one pme to get

:e'

it. -

The Rec:l WiiJ&amp;s, playing

•o "*~ in the ~m's ~ .
voblnl.iy ' quartcm.c\ camp. and

Mt

~

• ....., .. - . June 11,

lin..

BBIBA. (i\P)- Jamit
~
faill &amp; lht p(JIBi:sN., ad aow idle
Oeve'llrll4 aro..s~ iP'Nl Bowl. lineb
.
i d ·s -

.. •· ..

• ••

better the Jooaet the series
lasts, can fillish olf the
Carolina • HwricaDCS in

~

ibiticwl !hat be migtit skip this

~~ ~-d~, mandatory mini~Miller'Sbowe4 Qp and said be and

011me 5 1bursday nigN at
Joe Louis Arena, fullowing
wbat several players salcl is
an IHIWanted !WtHiay layoff. ·
Most ..,.tO,get this over
as soon as possible, and the

Da\is bave \allied about uyi1lg to get

~~

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--10....... =•••

• •

on tnOSl tearm.

In this era of neuttal

1m1

IIJDe

trapping, ~pe .~Y

and an ~s 011 W1llllllll
with defense first' and
offense ~ Hull said
knowing the tricks o{ scariDa
i!Oils can be tn01e ~
ihan having the :yoonaest an4
fteshest lqs on the ice.
"Age in today 's game has
zao to do with aDYtbina.''
said Hull, who st&lt;Rd rus
l OOth cueer playoff goal
Monday. "You would almost
~ have a team with l

solid mixture of veteran
players because the wal
teams play now, you doo t
have to be swift of foot or
super skilled. All you bave to
enra day between games dO is be very knowledgeable
only~adds to the tension.
and [ think we've proven
"No doubt we want to that.
close it out," said goalie 'That's the game today.
Dominik Hasek, who got his It's not a great big skilk:d
record sixth playoffs shutout game."
this year in a 3.() victory What may be surpnsmg
Monday night. ''W: want to Carolina the most is
finish it here, and we want to Detroit's defensive skill, one
do anythina we can to win." that extends far beyond
'J1Ie Reef Wmgs have an Hasek and ·star defenseman .
excellent record of closing Nicklas Lidstrom and Olris
out teams, doing so each Otelios.
time possible in these play- Carolina set the tempo
offs. They also finishec:l their early in the series, but
last two finals, in 1997 and Detroit be$an d~~tnping
1998, in the first game possi- down defens1vely about the
blc.
same time it began scoring
Still, the New Jersey more goals.
Devils of the past two · With Carolina. scoreless
Stanley Cup finals provide a for more than 127 minutes,
cautionary note for tbose or the equivalent of two-plus
convinced Carolina · is fin- games smce the third period
ished. The Devils led Dallas of Game 3, coach Paul
3·1 going into Giune S on Maurice broke up the line of
home ice in 2000 and lost, Rod Brind' Amoilr, Bates
then needed two overtimes Battaglia and Erik Cole that
to win Game 6. .
. . was productive through two
A year ago, the Devils led rounas, but has all but dislipColorado 3-2 going . into peared since.
Game 6 on home ice in the
~'There bas been a little bit
Meadowlands, only to be of a frustration to score goals
outscored 7-1 in losing the and it set .in with us," Cole
final two games and thC cup. said. "Maybe we weren't as
· "We haven't finishec:l our sbarp defensively· as we
business. There's no time for ncec:lcd to be. But it's time
celebrating until you win all for us to refocus, and play a
16 games," Hasek said. much tighter game."
"With the talent we have in As he met with his players
that locker room, We should Tuesday, Maurice · didn't
win. Bui we can't tbink sense any frustration or a
about it until we win that feeling · tbat losing is
fmal game."
inevitable, even though only
The Rec:l Wings are by far one team has rallied from ll
the older team, with eight 3·1 deficit in tbe finals:
key players who Ire 35 or Toronto in 1942 agal111t
over, includlna two who are Detroit.
40-plus. Regardless, Brett "I have always had a
Hun is convfuced that what- tremendous amount of faith
ever ·physical disadvantage In these gu~s and in that
the Red Wtngs arc at because locker room, ' Maurice said.
of their age, they make up ''Ma)'be I see what I want to
for It In goal-sctiing know- see, but it's a good room.
how.
We're down 3-1, but we're
Detroit had trouble break- In as good of shape as we can
ing through a congested neu· be down 3-1."
tral zone to get good scoring
Still, as Game 4 wound
cbances early in the series, down, the fans in Raleigh's
but has now scored the last Entertainment and Sports
five goals.
Arena were asked to g1ve a
Beginning with Hull's · final cheer for the
tying goal late in their piv· Humcancs, something that
otal, three-overtime Game 3 normally wouldn't be done
victory, the Red Win11s' at end of any playoff 1011.
goals were scored by Hull, "It's why I wanted to
37; Iaor Larionov, 4h Hull, come to Detroit to win the
Larionov and Brendan Stanley Cup," ihsek said.
Shanahan, who Ill 33 would "Now we've gOt to finish the
be one of the older players job."

•.

,
t
I
I

'

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.

en, En
.~Roun
16'

situa..- tedvecll!ef&lt;n mining UIIIP next
nl0ild1.
"'nlat's what we're shoonng for,"
Miller Rid. ''We'rt both • ~ same
~ I'm h&lt;llleful " ' • will happea,"
. Mill« and Davis .spote .abollt the~tt.ct dl$pllle MOOIIar before the
Bro'MIS' onua\ iROlf Clltlng.
N'i\let said behad Men disappointed
by Ute: lad 'Of progress in COftttlct talb
but utnc away from :bis meenng widt
Davis ~ t'hat lltillg$ could be
'9.'&lt;ldced '()lit.
"I 'have an undemanding lltat we both
want ':"e same thift$," Miller sai~. -1
w.as dtS.ppOlntec:l witb dtc way tlnngs
were going. l feel a lot better a~t
tltings. We mul\llllly want to :get tbts
thi~ resolvec:l as :soon .and as quiclc as
posstble."
.
.
Does that mean be'II have a new con·
ttaet by training camp'!
"After the conversation I had yesterd~ tltat's me feeling that I had," Miller
said. .
Miller said be planned to be at train·
lng camp and woold not bold oot.
"fm a part of the team. I'm under
conmct," lie said. "He (Davis) said he
w.ts going to get everything resolved, so
I'll be~"
There coold be some ()(bet issues ·t o
~olve before then, however.
Browns president Carmen Policy hu
indicated tbat the team, which was
"stunnec:l" whew Miller's .
David
Dunn, askec:l. fa~: a new deal, wants a
commitmen.t frOm ~iller hefort 1he.Y
WOIIId consider R!dolng any part of hiS
con,:etBrowns want Miller to be in
camp on time, and they expect him to
have another Pro Bowl season. Policy
said only then would the team consider
"doing something'' witb Miller's 2003
contratt.
·
.
Millet will make a$3.5 million base
Rlary this season and $4 ·million next
OI'Jll1l"act

1

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Browns sign CB McCutcheon to .3-year deal

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'

'

YOKOHAMA, Japan (AP)
·- First defending champion
·.France,
now
vaunted
• Argentina.
Two teams ori$inally
•
.thougbt likely to wm the
. World Cup .have made very
early exits, and the final barri.
.~ers for both were surprisingly
strong Scandinavian teams.
· Anders Svensson sent a free
i •kiclt over a defensive wall and
,.past the goalkeeper in the
.. :59th minute. Then Sweden
held on for a 1-1 tie against
•·the A'lentines on Wednesday
:·- all•t neec:led to advance to
: the second round.
.• When England tied 0-0 with
:· Nigeria, it also moved on.
And Argentina joined France
.jn first-round humiliation •
1 lhe Frencb were beaten by
'·Denmark on 1\tesday.
t.. "This is going to be ve~
! .difficult for me to forget, '
-, 'Argentina's Juan Veron said.
r "We're going to face a lot of
•.criticism, but we gave all we
chad on the field."
· It wasn't enough, mainly
because of a 1-0 loss to
lan:hrival England last Friday.
•' "There have been a lot of
·su!J?rises in this World Cup so
•·far, ' said England captain
-David Beckham. 'Two of the
:biggest threats to any team
' have ~one out,. •France and
WAN11NG
- Cleveland Browns linebacker Jamlr Miller takes a break during
Argentma. So it docs open it
the team•a mini-camp in Berea Tuesday. Miller's demand for a contrect axtenslon
'Up
a lot.
could teaa to a summer trainii\C camp holdout. (AP)
I "And I am sure there will be
.tain in a vOte by bis teammates, came to Browns was redone during the 1999
' 1.1 few more surprises· along
the Browns' only mandatory mini· season, said he didn't come to the
•r.he way."
camp.
,
Brow,ns' voluntary, 14-practice quarter·
The United States would
Davis, too, wants the contract situa- back camp because one of his daughters
'like to be one of those sur•
tion rectified.
broke her arm. ·
·prise teams. It needs at least a
"We're counting on him to be a bl« Miller doesn't think asking for a new
•tie against Poland on Friday
part of out f&lt;lotlilll team this year, con!nlct is unfair followitlg his career
in Daejeon, South Korea.
year.
Davis said. "We may bave to make sea&amp;on and said he's got the support of
' "Hopefully, we can win and
The 28-year-old Miller led the some concessions and make sure it's his teammates.
'get first place in the group,
Browns with 13 sacks last season and not a distraction.
.
"How much leverage does a player
•which is unheard of," midfinished second on the team in tackles. "I think before ttaining camp there have?ltow much docs a team have?" he
fielder DaMarcus Beasley
He became the first Cleveland player needs to be some kind of resolution. said. "Thams can cut you. Teams can
' said.
selected to tbe Pro Bo~l since tbe team You can't get to ttain)ng camp and pre· cut Y?Ur salary an~ players can't do
·· Also unheard of is the elim~
rtturned to the league tn 1999.
season ~ames where tt's going to be up anything but accept u.
-!nation of two soccer powers.
Davis was pleaSed tbat Miller, who in the atr."
"All rm asking is for fair treatment
' French
coach
Roger
la&amp;t season was chosen a Browns cap- Miller, whose initial contract with the and hopefully that's what I'll get." .
.Lemerre
was
summoned
by
1
: ''his federation to an emer' ·gency meeting Friday. Among
I
other things, Lemerre has
'been criticized for failing to
' ·adjust team strategy.
I .! Argentina coach Marcelo
·
I1 'Bielsa also can expect strong
BEREA (AP) - Cornerback Dayton 33 picks.
tlon' for a TD last season against
McCutcheon, one of the few impact One of the team's surest tacklers, the }acksonville. :·somebody. is ,going to
l negative reactions back home.
players ten from Cleveland's 1999 5·foot·l0, 180.pound McCutcheon had have to take 1t (his starting JOb) from
c "I'm very sad and tremenexpansion team, sianed a new, tbree-year been andous to get his deal signed tbis me."
1 :aousiY. disillussioned," Bielsa
contract with the Browns on Tuesday. · spring and he was upset when the McCutcheon said he hod concerns
said. 'Argentina had bad luck,
McCutcheon, wbo has become one of Browns didn't quickly offer him a new about his future · with the Browns
, 'rhe same bad luck it had
the Browns' best defensive backs since deal.
because he didn't know If Davis, who is
: against England. We had 20
being draf\ed by the club in l999, had But he said he got assurances in sever· In his second ~ear in Cleveland, had
1•• opportunites on goal, but the
been a restricted fret ajent.
. al recent talks with Cleveland coach plans to bring 1n more phiy~rs he was
ball didn't go in the net."
since his graduation.
.
Tenns of the deal were not disclosed. Butch Davis that he \\Ia$ an important familiar with.
Spain, already safely into
He was inducted into .the
Marvin Demoff, McCutcheon's agent, member of the Browns' se&lt;:ondar)'.
"You never know with a new coach,"
~.ri the round of 16, ~layed Sol!th
school's Athletics Hall of
did not immediately return phone mes· "He told me he wanted me to be he said.
'' Africa in Dae.Jeon, ':"h1!e
Fame
in 1967 for his suc·
around," McCutcheon said. "I was But the way Davis praised him,
faamll'llpll
· :Paragu~y faced Slovema m
cesses
as
a
student-athlete.
happy
to
hellr
that."
"I'm
happy
that
we
came
to
an
agree·
·
Seogwipo, South Korea later
McCutcheon
doesn't
have
anything
to
·~·
The · Bobcats fought back
In 1997, Bob Wren
ment," McCutcheon said after the first Although he has a new contract, worry about.
"''Wednesday. Only Sloven~a
day of Browns' mini-camp. "I've said McCutcheon won't be handed a starting "He Is one of the le~ue's premier to defeat Iowa State 9·6, but Stadium was dedicated as
'· had no chance to advance m
from the beginning that I wanted to be In spot by Davis, who said the cornerback nickel, slot cov~r corners, ' Davis said. were then eliminated with a the new home of the
:JdGroup B.
while
-on
Oeveland. I'm happy to have It over, position is one of several that's up for "Dayton Is a very, very good football 2-0 loss to Florida State. Bobcats,
:" · Astde
from Sweden,
grabs In ttaining camp.
and we can just focus on fQOtball.''
player and he played very well for us last Three Bobeats from that September 22 of last yeB£, a
'· England and Spain, teams
te11m achieved All-America statue of Wren was erected
McCutcheon started In all 16 games McCUtcheon, though, doesn't plan to year."
: ·· ·alread~ in the final 16 include
McCutcheon, Jamir Miller and Corey status, while 11 signed pro- on tbe grounda by his fotmcr
list season with the Browns and bad a sit on the bench.
•'.four-t1me winner Brazil,
career-high four interceptions .for a "I look at myself as a staJ;ter," said Fuller are the onl~ usual starters remain- fessional contracts following players.
Denmark, Senegal, Oennany
their collegiate careers.
"We ·.have witneued the
Cleveland defense that led the NFL with McCutcheon, who returned an lntercep- ing from .the browns' 1999 defense.
•.. 'and Ireland.
Wren's 1971 team won its passing of a leaend," said
;.., · Sweden plays Senegal on
fourth consecutive MAC current Bobcat coach and
:,.!Iunday in Oita, Japan.
leave the arena.with all t~ fans hitting the
"Dignity and pride, this learn has been title, finiahln~ 30·7 to earn fonner player Joe Carbone.
"'England faces Denmark on
brooms up agamst the wmdow of tbe bus. playing with that aU seasont g'"!rd Kerry the best winmng pcrcentaie ~·Coach Wren wa, not only a
'• Saturday in Niigata, Japan, on
So, it would feel good to return a favor." Kittles said. ''Everybody tn this locker over a two-year span tn great college baa,ball coach,
·''Saturday.
Brian Shaw and Robert Horry don't room has pride in each other and them· school history.
.
but a llfCal man. •,He 11ave of
~. Argentina at least outscored
neec:l O'Neal's recollection of thc5 sweep selves. We don't want to get swept."
In all, S6 of his players himself and a~ a di~t
' -'France, which didn't get a
- Shaw, then witb Orlando, was on the
No one expects the Nets to come back signed professional con- result, had a tremendoua
' :J~oal at all. The Argentines
man wbo knows. for certain he's only bus with O'Neal, while Horry; then a in tbis series, so it would seem a single
tractund
11
went
on
to
play
inOuence
on
those
yo'1na
!'Beat Nigeria l-0 In thelr open·
cried four times in his life - the first time member of the Rockets, was inside cele· victory would do little but extend New in the majot leagues. Those men whom .he COIChed apd
· : •'er and Heman Crespo sent in
his father hit him, when both of his llrand· bratlna.
·
Jency's season a few more day1.ln reali· 11 lncluile Hall of Fame taught.
a rebound after Magnu•
mothers died and the 1995 Finals.
Uke O'Neal, Shaw would like to make ty, the mental impact of at lcut one win third .bueman
Mike
It
ia
a
areat
lo..
to
""fiedman's
save on Ariel
"It was a hard feellna. I said to myself, New Jency the latelt team swept out of · could last all the way into next season.
Schmidt,
Terry
.
Harmon,
community,
the
uni
verdty
•::ortega's penalty .kick in the
'If I ever have the oPPortunity to make it the Finals.
"It would help us feel a little better Steve
Swisher,
Rich
and
the
many
frienda,
family
'·'88th minute to gain the draw
to the Finals aaain, l-won't let my team• · ' "[t would help redeem that situation a about ourselves,' Nets coach Byron Scott McKinney, Tom Murphy, and playen he touched." .
with Sweden.
mates down. I have to make my presence little bit -I know that it has helped rnoti· said. "But I don't think it's going to John Morlan, Jim French, . A memorial service will
~
:
' . But that was not enough for
known. We juat have to win,'" he said.
vate us to do better up to this point," Shaw diminish what we've done all season Lamar Jacobs, Dick Murphy, · take p)ace 4 p.m. Friday at
'•
He's also told his Los Angeles team· said.
·
long."
Joe Nossek and Dave Bob Wren Stai!ium. A recep.r '
mates many times what it felt like that
'
As much as the Lakers want to end the
To the Nets, losing four straight games Wickersham. He also
will be held immediateniaht In Houaton, urging them to never let series, the Nets want desperately to avoid would be forever remembered as a cleba· coached the two men who tion
ly followin11 the service. ·
It happen to them.
ending their season at home on cle.
have followed in his foot·
In lieu of flower~, the fam"He said it was one of his most hunful Wednesday night
.
"Getting swept means the other team steps as head baseball coach, Ily asks that contributions be
experience• to have to go through," Kobe
Sure, New Jersey knows that no team had its way the entire series," Kittles said. Jerry France and Ioe made to the Ohio University
..' "
Bryant said. "He said it was a lot of pain has ever'overcome a 3.() deficit to win the "We'd like to think we did some good .Carbone.
Foundation/Bob
Wren
I•
to be swept in the NBA finals and be on Finals. But. tbe. Nets are refusing to lay things and ca~ comJ?Cil: agai~tst these
Wrj:n has received several . Stadium, P.O. Boll 869,
the road lind have. to get on tee bus and down and gtve 1t away to the Lakers. t
guys and make tl a scnes."
honon from the university Athens, Ohio 45701. \
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held 11 10:00 All on 11 lila prolact alta C111 held tl \0:00 1111 Gn
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STATI IIOUTI \43 bt provlcltd to 1 STATI ROUTI 143
WATI!III.lNI URVICI ~~~=~ESTIC STill. WAT E R
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Cll CllllVMtd to.
AS SPI!ClfiiD IN and mtllld
Gr
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IIC'tlON \IU\1 OF cltllm.d to:
THE RI!VliiD COOl
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APPLY TO THIS
CommltliOMft
100 EAST
PROJECT. COPII!S OF
Mtlgt CGIInty
SICTION 113 11 OF
CourtiM&gt;ull
ITIIII!T POMIIIOV. THE RI!VlSI!D CODI!
100 Eall Second
I! ~HIOb~~~ I CAN IE OITAlNID SIMI Pomaro~, Ohlo
11
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41788
required IG lurnlth Ol'l'lCI!S OF THE
Itch bidder II
With lit propGitl, t DEPARTMENT Ol' required to lurnlth
lid 011tr1nty end ADMlNlSTIIATIVI!
wllh Itt prGpGIII, t
CGntrect lond tn IERVlCII
lid Olltrantv and
. taoGrdance wUh The
'contrect Contract IGnd · tn
hoiiGn \13.14 Gt lhe DGcumentt me be uoord1nct wllh
OhiG flevllld Code. reviewed lor bt~dtng Stcllon 15U4 Gl the
ltd 110urttv turnltlltd purpGIII wllhG\II Ohlo lltYIIId Coda.
ln .loncl ICllm, thlll bt oturge
during ltd aecurlty turnlahad
·lttued b'f • Surttv butlntla 1101111 11 the In lond torm ahell be
CC 0 m pI n V 11
Q rd OIIICII of lht lettarn lttUid by I Sllrety
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or
ln tilt 811.. ol Ohlo IG 1111 Anlhlteol and lhti CGrporellon llcenaed
In the 8t&amp;tt Gl Ohio to
provtdt utd allrtl'f. following loclllon•·
l!ech Propoael mu11
FW Dod
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provldt uld auretv.
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of the Pflrtv or ptrlllt CotumbUa Ohlo W\1 cGnteln tht lull ntmt
IUbmltttng
lht lulltftra t!xolltnge 01 of the partv or ptrtlea
propGtll 1nd 111
·cotumbua
aubmltttng
lht
pereont tnteretttd . 1178 Dublln Aoed
propont 1nd · tll
thtreln. IICh blddtr C l ... OH 43218 pertone lnltrtllld
m111t .eubmlt evtd•n~• o um .... e,
tharaln. l!toh bidder
mull eubmlt tvldtnot
ot 111 e•perlenou on
proleot• of tlmller alai (I) I; 11
Gf 111 nparlanoaa on
1nd oGmptnttv. The
proltoll of tlmller lilt
owner tntende end
Public Notice
1ncl complt•lly. The
requtr11 lhlt thlt
owntr tnttndl end
prG/eot bt completed T h t
o h 10 requlrtt thlt ·thta
on lltr than JULY 31, Department
01 project bt compltltd
:IOOS.
NIIUrll ReiOUrCII on no Iller thin Mly
All ooiltraatora tnd Dlvlelon ol 1'ore1try,' 31 • 2003•
iu boGntrecto '*
will ho.at In Open
All oontractora end
Involved with the Houll from 3 to 7 euboontreotore
pro(eot wlll, to lhe P m June 1Ith 11 Involved with the
tltlnl praotloable Ull the ·• Athenl Dlelrtot project wlli, to tha
producte, 011101 310 1111 8111e exlant praollclbie Ult
OhiG
produota;
m1terltl1, 11rvlo11, SlrHI: Athtnt. Thll Ohlo
end labor tn the will bt·an oppc~rtunttv matarltlt, . aerviou,
Implementation ol tor tht public to and l1bor In the
their
proJect. dltcun and Ilk tmptementatlon ol
Additionally,
'q11ettlon1 tbout lht I h tl r
P r 0 Ito I.
oontrtctor compllanoe Dlvltlon 01 I'Grtltry'a Addlttontlly,
wllh lht a qual progl1lmtln HGoklng, contreotor oompllence
employlftlnt
Zalukt lhldt River wtth the equ11
oppCirtunlly
and Qllf0 d St11 ' tmployment
e opportunity
r
requlrtmtnla of OhlG
AdintnltlrttlVI Code Forttll.
requtramtnll Gl OhiO
Ch1ptar 123, thtll) 11 12 13 14 20112 Admlnlatrellvt Codt
Oclvarnor'a l!ucuttn 11 • • • •
Chapllr 123, tht
Order ol 1172, 1nd c
oovemor't l!ucullva
Oclvtrnor'e Euoutlvt
Ordtr of 1872 1 end
Order 14·1 thell be
.
Oovarnor't htoutive
1111~~::~,. m u11
Order 14·8 ahall bl
I
required. ·
llddtra
mull
comply with the
prevailing w1gt !1111
comply . with lhe
on
P u b II c
p~avelllng w1g1 retia
lmprovementa ln
p u b 1 1c
0 n
Mtlge County 1e
tmprovtmtnle In
detarmlnad by tht
Mtlge County 11
Ftdtrtl
Labor
dtltrmlntd by lht
llendtrdt Provtalon1
F 1 d 1 ra 1
Lib o r
and Dlvlt·ltoon
8t1ndard1 Provl1lona
Wagu,
YlriOUI
and DIYII •Iacon
lneurenoe
W1gu,
urloua
Nqutramenta, varlout
lnaurenct
equ1l opportuntty
raqulrtmtnla, verloua
provteiGna, and lht
equtl opportunity
rtqutrem,nt lor •
provtalone, 1nd the
ptymant bond and
requirement tor a
. perlorm1not bond for
Pl'fmlnt , bond anci
1DO~ ot the oonlraot
perlorm1n"- bond for
101• bldd
P'N
100~ ot the oonlraol
o
tr may
prlot
wlthdraw hit bid
No' bidder may
within thirty (301 dayt
withdraw hll bid
wilhln thirty (30) d1y1
anar tht tctuai dill of
the Opining lhlrtOf.
lfttrlhe aolUII dill ol
Tht MIIQI COUNTY
thl opening lhtrtQI.
COMMIIIION!R8
Tht MI!IQI COUNTY
rtttrve the right to
COMMIIIIDNiftl
w.'.
e
•
n
to
lrrtgulerltlet and to
w a 1y 1 th• right
1 ny
NltDt any orell bldt.
lrragulerlllll 1nd to
Mtlgt
County
ratacunyorallbldt.
Commllllontre
MIIOI COUNTY
(I) I, 11, 17
I)OMMIIIlONIRI
(II 7, 12, 17, 31c

"*

=,. . _,". ,. _
GO:'":'

::C..

me:"litt

Sweden's Nlclas Alexandersson (7), right, charaes Araentlna's Gabriel
Batlstuta during the 2002 World Cup Group Fmatch In Mlyagl, Japan, on Wednesday. The game
ended 1·1 tie, which means Argentina Is eliminated from the competition. (AP)
KNOCKED OUT -

the South Americans.
"I can't say the last five
minutes were el\ioyable when
you sit on the bench andJ'ust
hope the players can stan up
to 1t and do their job," Sweden
co-coach Lars Lagerback
said. "It is fantastic."
The Argentina result drew
more cheers than England's
draw in celebrations back in
London.
"The game was painful. The
only Jood news is that
Argentma went out," said 25year-old Lawrence Jones,
who watched the game in a
pub.
While the English defense
was strong, En41land's for·
wards couldn't btl the target,
and Michael Owen was taken
off near the end after missing
a .chance he would nonnally
make with ease.
No matter, Beckham said.
"We~ve gone out there,
done the job, lind we are .
through the group," he noted.
Five suspcctea hooligans,
four from Britain and one
from Ireland, were refused
entry and detained at Japanese
airports. A total of IS people,
all but one from Britain, have
been denied entry into the
country to attend the touma·
ment.
Two Irishmen and a Briton
were arrested Wednesday for
trespassing ·at World Cup
games. An Argentine was
detained on suspicion of ·~o:.~...:..:.-........:.-....;--...;..----.:....
scalping tickets:
. , · AIRBOANat - England's David Beckham, center, otiallenges
In Moscow. Mayor Yurt
·
Luzhkov said outdoor big- for a high ball with Nigeria's Benedict Akwuegbu, lett, as Jay
screen broadcasts of matches Jay Okooha looks on during the 2002 World Cup Group F soc·
would continue despite a riot cer match between England and Nigeria at the Nagel Stadium
that eru~ted during a showing II in Osaka, Japan, on Wednesday. En&amp;land drew ().() with
of Russta's 1·0 loss· to Japan Nigeria to qualify for the next round. (AP)
·
on Sunday. Two people were Moscow police chief hour.
killed as up to 8,000 people, Vladimir Pronin urged city To avert a similar fiasco many of them drunk, set cars authorities not to use the the deluge last Friday paraablaze, smashed windows and Kremlin-area sit~ again.
lyzed the phone system fou11ht police and each other.
Fans hopin11 to get tickets to NTT DoCoMo, Japan's
"Broldcasts will continue," Japan's game against Russia biggest mobile phone compa·
Luzhkov said, adding the city last Sunday found the compc· ny, will provide a recorded
would not stop COihmunica· tition was insane. For 750 "sold out" voice message
tions activities "characteristic tickets for sale over the tele- once tickets for Thursday's
of a ll)odem civilized nation, phone, a record 100 million Japan-Tunisia match are
a modem civilized city."
calls were placed in just one gone.

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Sunset Home
Construction

...._,ONo.srn
740 . . . . . .

Cellular

QIIKUJkOMICI

•..._., w.n.. Slops •
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on-a.....

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ar,.nRauM

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New llomn , Room Additions,
GinQII , Pole Building.. Roofs,
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Factory Aulboriml

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Ohio

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a Collectibles
High I Dry ~Cut
Above

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Self Storage

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29670 Ba&amp;han Raad
Racine, Ohio 45nl

......,.

Parta a Service

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LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR

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Phone (740)593-667

.....,
..

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740-992-5232

the Rest•

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Mon-Sat 111-4
217 E. 2nd St. •
Pomeroy,OH
(740) 992·5908
Pd. 1 mo. $'29

MANLEVS
SELF STORAGE

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Park Board

Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Lite lnsul'llnce;
Burial and Final Expen&amp;es; Cancer &amp;
Dental, ReUrement,
Pension 1: 401K Rollovcn;

LONGABERGER
BASKET BINGO

Mortpp; M~or Medical
• Nunlna Home

Tutaday, June 18, 2002

Th1 CRAFTY,
BLIND SPOT

7:00p.m.
Middleport Legion Hall

. $20.00 for 20 Games
50·50 Drawing
2 Raffle Baskets
nnnr Prizes • Refr'8shmen11s
Special blaktt drawing for tlok•1te
purchaatd p~or to June 18
NO SMOKING

ANNUAL KIDS
FISHING DERBY
Optn to Ill kldt IQII 3· 17
F111 Dr1nka &amp; Food tor the klde
Everyone Ia a wlnnerl

Sal. June 15
81m · 11 am

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·8215

........,, ONe&gt;

TFN

!f!NJ
A

1'1!111.

Owner &amp; Operator, John Dean

T,,b: \he Pr1IN
i)U\ ct PAINTING'

740-742·7037

CONDmONINQ a HI!ATINQ
A:Jiol'llUif

•HHttng
• Air Condlltoneta
•lti:VIDI On All lllndl

SrA•tl•wt

• lleildlntllll It Light Commercial

·

Connie's
Child CARE
hat openlnge, 15 yr.
tKperleneil, Certified
In Melga, Athena and
Washington counties,

Open 24 hours. ·
. 7.Days per week
www.lmerlolnellndlrdllr.aom
St. Rt. 7 Tuppel8
"SALES AND SERVICE"
Plalns,OH
WOLFE HEATING '&amp; COOLING CALL.667·6329

Your
Concrete
Connection LTD

Club't Fllhlng !Jond

STilT£ STORE
Now Open
11 a.m.· a p.m.

Mondaythru
saturday
CIOHCI Iunday

,_..,

lOG Illest llalll St.
.

982..0008

Advertise

in this
space
for
•so per
month
YOURCOOCRETE
COOOECTIOO, llC
(740) 742-8015
Qu~llty

Coft&lt;rele Work

Driveways, Patios,
Parking/play Areas,
Sidewalks, Floors

• HMIIng I Air Conditioning

Location: Clalllpolla Shrine

TFN ·

ftetft~~~f.'

Special II ton
$135.00

446-4995

fil•.•.
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Delivered a Spreed

1441111rU~~t. Oal,1la

• 10 yr. peril a Ltbor

Free Esllmates

IJi1:..

M':l.

New Homos &amp; Remodeling
"Specializing l.n Log Homes
•
&amp; Rubber Roofs"
~
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Ourages , Pole Buildings. Concrete
1
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Commerciaf &amp; R&lt;sidenlial
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(740) 992-3987
\It!'.

In this space L1 1 nH · k 11 1· ' y· u'
for
125 per month .

. AMERICAN STANDARD CENTRAL AIR

PUBLIC WELCOME
Galllpolla Shrtnt Club't

• Pllto end Porclh Dtckl

Advertise

(FIOiory Outltt)
AD vertleol llllnol1 are
mldo lo otdor 11
ourl...,lllon
• Vorllula • Wood
• Mlllil • Ett

For ticket Info or Info, call
Jtnn at740·1M8·2189

•Addlllone •
llolnadollng
• NewOorege1
• lltOiriCII • Plumbing
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J.D. CONSTRUCTION .

(8'17·3!3·7021)

• Call for more
info/free esrimate
WV031256

21 yeare Experience
FrH Eltlmltn
(10111111)

an-353·7022
1

JIS flftTIIC 1i
PlUmiii'IG
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RleOtrto, Pluml&gt;lng,
•nd 1m111 Ho,.
Mlllnlen•noe JaM
(304) 771·1412
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174·3082

*

.Raot1111, Siding, lldd-Ons, Electrtca~
Plum"ng, Decks, RelllldeUng,
Drywal~ Painting

Haning's Construction
}

,,, 1·-'t

Fll!llly Friend Golcltn All· ·-;~~' ~~
rlvtr Puppltl, AKO: Vt1 J \\ ,,, -\1"11 ~.};""'

=•

currtnl. (7&lt;10)378·

- --- -

'

'

Foreman: Larry
O wnt~r:
740·367·01 81
Ronald "Mick" Haning
Chrlsllna 'Chris" Haning
740·992-0780
Cell• 40·591 -09 19
Cell: 591·8393

�P 11 a I •1111e Dtltl I

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•RBEDSVlLLB A
t!Qil advisory issued by
ppers Plains-Chester
ter District hi Olive
wnshlp has been lifted.
.-esults of a umplo taken
Tue&amp;dlly are conaidered
safe.
• The advisory affected
customers on Ohio 124
from the lnterseetlon of
Bd~n Ridge Rood to the
Intersection of Barr
Hollow Road. ·

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:;Gl'lde Clrds

rudy

ALL I'M OOlN615 SITTIN6
ON YOUR ISLANKET.. IF :r'OlJ
1J.V TO PULL IT AWAV"'!,LL
SUE '1'011 FOit ANIMAl. CIWEL1V!

ROCK SPRINGS Students In grades 9·11 at
Meigs Hlah School may
pick up their arade cards at
ihe high school computer
rOom, from 8 a.m. until 2
p.m., Monday through
Frldny.

NOW, TloiAT'S
ANIMAL CRUEL.'N!

ICIAM-Lm ANIWIM

Historical
Society helps
kids explore
area's past ·

.,...·::... H~~·low:..... SOS
••
•
~
'

"UIDI'IIOU

backbone of our local eoonomy and the money one spends
in them goes back into
improving the community in
manY ways," said Butcher.
"For example, payroll is
directly derived from the purchases of customers, which
goes toward the payment of

'

[nviltd sptilket$ tillked
llboot music unstruments, ooln
oollecti~ 1 and eating nutri·
tlous f6ixb, The speakeh
were Bob White, Bob
ORI\:~m and Linda King, The
lot day of cam~ illtlutled a
visit tfl the Brennerhas&amp;ett
hlll?'ld,
· . Here, day camPe.h ~njoy
milking sro?'le ooup fur h111di.

Thmatoes, other ~.&gt;egetables,
and astone was added to a pot
of soup while Wade Colllns
and Brayden Pratt cut out
pl«es uf tnwnships in Meigs
County to form a puule.

SMtlnel photos
by loy lefties

POMEROY Eleven
l01:al children exPIOrtd the
hlst\\f'y of Melas Ctll?nty at a ·
di!Y 1:1\mp htld this week at
the Meigs County Hl&amp;tflrical
S01:iety.
Chlldren from arades 4·6
lwned about tilt hlsrory of
Melts County, wl!Ue p,ll!ticl·
patina in~ ~oo• ~~v~tles.
~lunteers lhowed them looa·
tlons of different pl~s il'l the
county, tuld stories, a?'ld sung
sonas with them.
Vruious ;runes were jllayed,
such u croQuet, Chinese
checkers lind dominoes. Also
campers completed 11 histnrl·
cal booklet with facts and
lnformlltlo?'l about the county.
The children were a~slgned
to bring namim ot their l'amily
members to make a fllmliY
tree from t'elt. Other crafts
Included slate palntlna.
desianlna tin cans with nall
holes to hold candles, and
paper pu&amp;zles from a Meigs
County map.

deal or humility.
. .
VIROO (Aua. 23-Scpt. 22j
-- The enc:oura11ement you 'I
receive from your aaeoclatea
concernlna one or your proJect• will be heart warmlna.
lt'a exu~lly what you need fa
be Apurred onward tuward
aueceu.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0t:t. 23) •
- Don't be deceived by outward appearancea today. Instead, meet them head on.
Thut which appeal! to be dlt·
ncult at tim alance may tum
out to be the eaaleat for you to
Khlevli.
SCORPIO (O~·. 24-Nov.
22) -- You may have a mind·
upandlna uperlente ?odsy
that will broaden your appreciation for aood ars ano all
thln11 of beauty, und will
areaUy refine and advance
your tuses.
SAOIITARJUS (Nov. 23·
Dec. 21) .. A reraon who
think• 11111111 dea of you may
bt Instrumental In puu1n11
aomethlna toaether that haa
the P.OIIntlal to acquire mone·
tary benen11. Be aura to show
your aratltude.
CAl'RICORN (Dec. 22·Jan.
19)-- Plndlnf a pleaunt companion to pa around with to·
clay will ~me euy for you

to you; do 10.

~"

POMEROY- As a

residents .

' btta L ' ~

of ttue Area Agency on Aging in
Mllrietta, has announced that
.
.
the agency has now joined
Pfizer Shore Cords
Pfizer In snaking ~vailable
are OIIOi/ob/e at the
medications to sentors who
might otherwise be unabte to Area Agency office as

~ U:~

that appllca- we// OS SentC?f centers
dons for Pfizer Share
located In Athens,
Cards are available at the
Hocking, Meine
Area Agency office as well
:rr
11s senior centers located in
Monroe, Morgan,
Athens, Hocking, Meigs,
Noble, Perry and
Monroe, Morgan, Noble, t.u...sh.
ti'
Perry and Washington rru mgton COUn
counties.
"Most of the 40 snillion Medicare l!eneficlarles in the
U.S, are able to participate fully in the health care system.
However, about 17 mllllon, many of whom are elderly
seniors, do not have any prescription coverage," said Lane.
"While some ofthese Individuals find alternative ways to
pay for medicines, often paying out of pocket for them,
ihere are many mote who simply can't afford them. As a
result their Illnesses- many life-threatening- go untreated," according to the director.
She said that the Hlll'l'ls Poll taken last whiter showed that
40 percent of low-Income adults have not filled a prescriptlo?'lln !.he past 12 months. In addltion tow-income seniors
without drug coverage lite substantial1y more likely not to
·tllke their prescription drugs as prescribed than their countetpllrts wfth prescription coverage, she 11dded.
't'he Pfizer Share Card program is committed to helping
these low,income Medicare beneficiaries get their medi·
cines as well as helping them better manage their health
citre, Pflzer'srrogram is desi~ned to bridge the gap In drug
coverage untl broader Med1care reform Is implemented,
nccordfng to Lane.
't'he program offers a $1 S fee for each 30-day Pfizer pre,
scription for nil Pfizer prescription drugs available at retail
phnrmacles, as well as two co-promoted drugs. It Is a simple, easy to enroll process with no membership or enroll·
ment fees, allcording to the agency director.
She said the Pfizer Share Card is accepted by most retail
phnrmllllles In the U.S. and that there are no flmils on the
number of prescriptlo?'ls or snediclnes.
Th be eligible for the card, you must be 65 years of age or
older or otherwise a Medicare enrollee, you must have lndi·
vidual reported gross Income below $1 8!000, or joint reported ;ross Income below $24,000 and have no oilier prescription coverage, Lane noted In a release about the program.
For more .lnformatlon or to receive an application for the
Pfizer Share Card Program, residents may l-800-717-600S,
the Area Agency on Aging at I,800-833·0830, or Meigs
County'sloc:al Senior Center at 992-2161.

es.

.

. · A3
84-S

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Comics

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OVIII

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bltulrlll

· ~~portl
Vfllthtr
'.

solution to the dilemma faced
difficult to pay their
drugs, the Area
has partnered with
5I

' '.• •• :1111111111•11 ..... .

· Calender
0111lfltds

up for lower
dn1g costs
II\' CHASIUMI HOINCII

.

because like bcaeta like, Your
conaenlul attftude attraets
thuse who are also DJrttllble.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Peb.
19) .. Take on taaka that In·
elude the beautltlcatlon of
your aurroundlna•· You'll
achieve the most lllilfi&amp;Ctlon
today when )'DU aet a chance
to uae your creativity and ar·
tlstlc talents.
PISCBS (Peb. 20-March
20) .. If you flirt today, be
prepared ror the person so ralurn the favor. Your attrac· .
P1ven111 to memben of the
opi!O!Ite aendcr Ia at a hlah
point, and even an Innocent
amite could ·be taken aerl·
oualy.
AR?ES (March Zl·Aprll 19)
.. Throu11h lhl klndneu of
another, aomethlna you
thou&amp;ht very difficult 10 nnal·
lze will be completed today
with relative cute. You'll bi
very relieved to act It out or
the way.
TAURUS (April 20·May
20) •• Never be bAihful about
ualna terma of endearment
when ?hey are richly de·
acrved. TQ!Iay, If you art In
the po11tlon to !Ina she prui!CI
. of IOmellne who l1 lmportont

team
HOEFLICHOMYOAILYSENnNEL.COM

Ooling ·Await, Valet· Nimbly· NOT on IT
The train made an unacheduled atop. A man Juml)4td
aboard, only to be told by • porter that he would have to
get oil blcauae the treln didn't really atop there. 'That' a
okay; the man amllecl, 'In that caae, I'm NOT on IT.'

Thur1day, June 13, 2002
The year ahead may brlna
alx,utthe achievement of ~ev­
eral JOIIII. Much of thla may
be due to .thc effort! ur a loyal
auppoller who has your beat
lntcrc~t at heart.
OEM INI (Muy 21-June 20)
-- The ways and mcana to ac·
quire somcthlna you've been
wuntlna will he fnrthc:omlna
today. lluw It comes about
will warm yuur heart and
aladden your spirits. Major
changes are ahead for Oemlnl
In the comlnfrl year. Send for
y.our Astru-Oraph predictlonl
by malllnJ 52 uild an SASE PO
Aatm·Orallh c/o thit f)eWIPJI·.
per, P.O. Box 167. Wickliffe.
OH 44092. Be aure to atate
your zodiiiC alan.
CANCER !June 2t-July 22)
-- Althouah 7 may be lmpor·
tant fur you tu as~erl yuur~eif
today. you'll do ao with a
reat deal ur tact and charm.
hose who need to be dl·
rected won't Phlnk of you al
·
'belna puihy at all.
LEO (July 23·AUJ. 22) -Don't be reUcent tOifay when
lenin&amp; others know about
aomclllln11 remarkable. you
have recently done. You're
not a brauurt; you'll find a
way to tell othe11 with a 1re111

local taxes, which in tum
helps support our schools;
public safety departments and
stteets and parks," she said.
"We feel this unique program will create new opportunities for the collaborative
m;ll'keting of the goods and
services available in Meigs
County,"
added
Betsy
Nicodemus, tourism director.
"We are positive that the
planned success of the marketing campaign, along with
the 'Dollar Days' event, will
result in an annual projec?,"
said Nicodemus.
For information, contact
Butcher at 992-5005.

,

HISTORY DAY CAMP.

FOit YOVIt OWl#
~ AGTIOI'IS'.

ott. At#l&gt;
wttOSf FAtJLT
1$ TttATl

:.rre~b~sinr:;:ro:~

rnl~ tor publication In The
Dally Sentinel, while five
r.dlu brolltutlons in the fum\
of public service annooncements will be aired on
WYVI( 92, I.
.
·
The pro?OOtiOiis will detail
the .fullowing mpics as they

.'

YOU OON7 T A~f rtti'P0fti$1IILITY

•

. • employment/community
interest and support:

:a:=•

n •

Llbft win NIA tltlt, 11

THE BORN LOSER

-

II 'I Clta•tr•

87

A7
A.!
A.!
B1,2,4

A2
2001 Olllo Wiley I'll~ to.

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