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MMIIOSS- JaM Gatti's deiJtll* \lld.Otla Gottl Ul\$ ~ Ptpw~ FUMrlt ~

eft.er attelldlnt 1 wake ~ 1\!lr ~. In QueeM, ~ ~~ ot ~til~
1 tlinefll d'lepel overflowlfC ~ltll · flo~ Tllu~ to bid prl\lft flel!ultll ~ 1 111ft
publle mob t11r: Jolin Got\1 , ~ the 11\ClSt powvM Mlft"l boss In the eountr,. tAPl

Du 001 slllnd at fllll ~mve lind cty. tam 001
there. I did 001 die:"
Novelist Vil:lorill Gotti w in the flnt
row in frol\l of her father's closed t:Oftln.
weurit~~ II blllek dress with her ~i\e.d
blond liWr fllllina ~ down her lid:.
Across the sttee~ from the fWienll home,
11 media hon:le stood behind pollee burl·
elldes. watchina the people file in. CllriOII&amp;

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Smith

lnwn ..... DI
If a thief acts hold of those,
he or she will ruck up bills
aaalnst your nwne und you
won't even know it. Ol'lllltcd.
your flnunciallhibility with a
credit card company may
only be about $SO, but the
arief and aggravation of aet·
tina the problem sorted out,
and aettina your account and
your credit report cleared, is
well worth some preventive
measures.
Also, ICI a sufe deposit
box, or at least a home strons
box. for your Important
papers, passports, and the
i:redlt cards you are not cur·
~ntly usin11. Speokin11 of

unused credit cards, if you
huve trunslerrcd IIW11nces to 11
card ·with lower Interest,
destroy the old cards and
notify your former cardhold·
ers that you are closina the

phone unless you ~l'lltcd

., ..

the ell I and know tilt person

or entit)t with which you are

de11lin11. Never &amp;ive your
bankclll'd's personil identifi·
CAtion numbe.r (PIN) to 11ny·
~~ecount.
one o~er the _phone no matter
Lenders do not like to see who they clwm to be.
multiple, open · credit Hnes.
Carry only the credit ~:ard
even wit.h zero bulances; or clll'ds you ure. goi111 to
those open accounts cun only need. lf your wllllet or purse
hurt your credit rating.
is stolen, you'll wunt to limit
Keep It to yourself
the number of 11cll0Unts the
In the interest of tllr$et thief can access. And never
marketing, stores are beam· curry your Social Security
ning to ask for your tclc· cllrd unless you plun to use it.
phone number. Don't 11ive it Your Sotial Security number
out unless you ure comfort· is the ticket to ull kinds of
able with how the store will personal 11nd financi11l inforuse the Information. Th11t ·mation In the htmds of 11
goes for uny personal infor- · knowina nafllrio.
mutlon. When dealina with
Whenever po slble, put
telephone sales or charitable your outgoing mall in the
donations, do not give your postlll service's mllilboxcs
credit clll'd number over the r11ther than in your home_

at Bloodmobile

Donors

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high qua'lt; home

abl1t, compauionate,
wvicea, ramernber

lt'a Your Health. lt'a Your Home. It's Your Choke.
Choo11 Holnr Homt Carel
Call
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1·888·225·1135

MEDICAL CENTER
... .Disoooor the llo~r .O~~n~

www.holzer.org

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POINT PLEASANT
Jeff V'JCt.ers. 46, ol Ptlmemy.
funnerly of Point Pleasant.
W.Va. died Sunday, June 16,
2002. al his residence.
ArrangemeniS will be
aniiOWICCd by Crow-Hussell
Flmera.l Home.

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Nldhan Goodwkl
POMEROY Nathan
Goodwin. 23. Pomeroy. died
unexpectedly Sunday, June
16, 2002, at Holzer Medical
Center
in
Gallipolis.
Arrangements are under the
direction of Fisher Funeral

Wilben Lo~ officiatin
Friends. may call at the
funeral home on Tue day
from 2 to 4 and 6 to S p.m.

Lesler P. DadHa
MASON. W.VA.- Lesn:r
P. Dodson. 89. of Mason,
W. V11. died Friday. June 14.
2002. 1 Overbrook Center in
Middleport.
Born oo Moly 10. 1913 at
~ Colwnbi.a. W.V:a.. 1r was
the son of the late ~wis P.
Dodson and Hattie Orilla
fQwlet. He was a retired~~
~. a nanber of the Glrpenters
Local 1159 at l'llint Pleasant.
IWII!retlded the First Church of

Home.

God. New Ha~ W.Va.
He is survived by two
daughers lllld sons-in-law.
Shirley A. and Robert H: Ball
REEDSVll.l.E - · LweUa of Toledo.. und E. June .and
Nutter, 81, Reedsville. died Lawrence A. Moore of
saturday, June 15, 2002. at Mason. W.Va.: a daughter· in·
Camden-Clark
Memorial law, Margaret A. Dodson of
Hospital in Parkersbtl'g; w. Va. Mason, W.Va.. and a sister.
She. was born Mm:h 2. Mabel L. Strayer of Vienna.
1921, daughter of the late W.Va.; two grandchildren,
Creed and Lucy Brooks. She and silt great-gr.mdchildren.
He was preceded in death by
was a homemaker and a
member of the Faith Chapel his wife. Ver.~ A. Dodson in
Church in Coolville.
1994; a son. Lewis P. Dodson;
Surviving are her husband. two sisters, l..aum A. Dunbur · '
Clay Nutter; a son and and Eleana' R. Ewing; and
daughter-in-law, Charles and two brothers. Thomas F.
Pat Young of Akron; a son, Dodson and Lewis M. Dodson.
Ray Stevens of Akron: a stepGraveside services will be
daughter and her husband, held at l p.m. today at the
Sharon and Bill Campbell of Kirkland Memorial Gardens
Akron; eight grandchildren in Point Pleasant, W.Va. with
and 16 great grandchildren.
the Rev. Robert H. Bull offiServices will be held at II ciating. There was no visitaa.m. on Wednesday, June 19, tion. Arrangements were han·
2002 at White Funeral Home died by 'Foglesong-Tucker
in Coolville with Rev. Funeral Home.

Louel1 Nutll!r

to bring
borhood

. ~ SWEI:P- Jennifer Gr:ady, 1-funter Cox, Judge Robert Buck and Aaron Oliphant represent the diverse group of wlun~eers WhO partici/)tited in the Oliio River Sweep at Pomeroy on Saturday. Groups including scouts and 4-H members, as well
.~$ dedicated volun\eers wliO jOined up merely to help out cleaned miles of riVerbank at Middleport, Pomeroy and Racine,
;Wiiile ano'tlier group did the same near Forked Run State Park at Reedsville. (Brian J. Reed)

switching Medicare
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: • New rules for 'When -and ihow often opportunity to switch plans. If they
~~le -&lt;:an sWitch Medica.re health switch ·plans then, the change will be
:~plil\s .re being phased in ~ver the next effective Ja.nuary I, 2003.
years.
.
The rules will change again starting
Medware I'IO'w wm opmte like il'lost January l, 2003. People can leave a
:(1(1\er ~llh lns~n&lt;:e programs and Medicare health plan and join another
:-allow ~le to change health plans plan only once between January I and
~only dUringtettainli'Mes ~fthe year.
March 31, 2003. Their coverage will
! More lha'll 3S million Ali\eri&lt;:ans are begin the first day of the tnonth follow·
: el'l'rolled ln v-arious Medicare health ing the -&lt;:hange.
·:plans. these plans include the orjginal Just like in 2002, they will have
:; :plans
Mecli&lt;:a're
'Plan, Medicare managed care
·
· h 1 d
'(HMOsand ;similar:otiinizatlons) another opportumty to S\Wtcn p ans ur• ,•d Medicare pn'vale fee-for·service ing the. annual election period between
, a&lt;N
,
November l and November 30 every
• hea\th ~are -plans. Until the end &lt;&gt;f last vear. An" change made in November
· :.ye;:r, ~ "&lt;:OUid leave a Medicare '
'
:health pan at ~ny time, for any teas®. will be effective the following January.
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The new rules are being put in place
·
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· ~~ow. l*&gt;P
e
WI
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a
tohel_
p Medt'care"lan
health ,plan &lt;&amp;nd }oin another
.. providers manage
- ~an only once betWeen Jalluary t and their health care costs and payments and
· une 30', ~2. . Their coverage will ·p)an for enrollee care.
:
in tbe first 'Clay orthe 11\onth followPeople also will be able to leave or
:!ng the thinge 111 Medicare plaM. In join a Medicare health plan if: their
2002, they will have another health plan leaves Medicare; they move
,. •November
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out of their plan's service area; or they
are in another situation that Medicare
decides is an exception.
Different rules also apply for people ·
who are turning 65 years old and are ·
new to Medicare, and for people who
just became eligible to join a Medicare·
managed care plan or private fee-forservice plan.
If people are in a Medicare health
plan or are thinking about joining one,
they need to know how the new rules
will affect them. They can talk to the
plan representative or membership
office.
If anyone wants more information, .
they should call Medicare at l-800-633·
4227 (TTYfl'DD 1·877486-2048 if
they are deaf or hard of hearing) to ask
for publication CMS,02241, New Rules
For Switching Medicare .Plans, or visit
www.hcfa.gov/pubforms/ on the
Internet to read, print or order a copy.

LOCAL BRIEFS
Answer calls
POMEROY- Emergency
units answered five calls for
assistance on Monday.
MEOICl

3:34 a.m., assisted by
Syracuse, Sixth St., Symcuse,
Tom Lowery, Holzer Medical
Center;
·
4:36p.m .. 4:36p.m., assist·
ed by Pomeroy, Mulberry
Ave., Edit Barton, Pleasant
Valley Hospi'-1;
6:49 J;&gt;.m., Bigley Ridge
Rd., asststed by Reedsvilfe,
Dale Brooks, Holzer.
MEDICS

10:55 a.m., South First
Ave., Middlepon, Lorena
Davidson, Holzer:
5:22 a.m., Skinner Rd.,
assisted by Pomeroy, Nathan
Goodwin, Holzer.

Plans camp
RACINE -Amazing Grace
Day Camp, sponsored by St.
John and St. Paul Lutheran
Churches, will be held at the
St. John Church, 33441 Pine
Grove Road, Rocine, from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. June 24·28.
It is for youth who have
completed kinderganen to
sixth srade.
.
Acttvities will include
crafts, singing, games, recre-

ation, ands Bible study. There
is no cost to the participants.
Lunch and snacks are provided daily.
The Day Camp is a cooperative effort of St. John and St.
Paul Lutheran Churches. the
Southem Ohio Synod of the
Evangelical Lutheran Church
in America. and Lutheran .
Outdoor Ministries in Ohio.
For information. call
Louise Michael at 740-985. 4237. Registration will take
place the first day of camp.

Boll.advisory
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers
Plains-Chester
.Water District has issued a
boil advisory for Meigs
Ciunty, Sci~;&gt;io Township for
the followmg area: State
Route 684 from the intersection of SR 684 and Vance
Road, all of Pageville. and
SR 692 to the interesection of
SR 681.
When a boil order ts m
effect, residents are asked to
boil their cooking .and drink·
ing water for three · minutes
before bein:g consumed, said
Donald C. Poole, general
manager. Samples of the
water will be taken and as
results nre received. they will
be announced.

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The Daily Sentinel

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Healthy Start
Healthy · Families.

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Mtwt Dtpll tmt~\tl.

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Health Care Coverage for
Ohio's Working Families

,_,. 'lni., .l'I\Jn\bilf li 992·21M.·

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Proud to be apart
of your life. ·

lo tend ~tr~n~ll
ntW*OfnY\laMyae;;ttnel.llOIII

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On\htWeb

www.mydaftysentllltl.com

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s•rtbe todty • m-2156

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Healthy Start offers no-cost or low-cost health
care coverage for kids (birth to age 19)
and pregnant women.
Healthy Families offers no-cost health care
coverage for the entire family- parents AND kids.
( NO T. .l IMO&amp;JH NtQtfT)

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U.S. advances in Worla.Cup 82
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Healthy Start &amp; Healthy Families Covers:
Doctor Vlelte
Hoepltal Care
Immunization•
StJbltlnc. AbUII
Preecrlptlona
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Dental Cere
Mentel H11lth
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�.• The Dail
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Sentinel

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failure leaves foars urifoonded

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FF"S VIEW

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were vacuuming up crimina1s and ten'Oil&amp;tS.. It im l

TODAY IN HISTORY
8'1' lHE .t.SSOOIAltn PREsS

Today is Mondny. June. 17, the \68th day ol' 2002. There
lll'e 197 duy s left in the ytlll'.
Toduy's Highlight in HistOty:
.
Thiny years agu, un June 17, 1972, President Nixon'&amp;
eventulll downfall beglln with the arrest of five burtlars
inside DemQCtatic nlltionlll heidquaners in Wllsblnaton
D.C.'s Watergate ~umplex.
On this date:
In 1775, the Revolutionary War Battle of Bunker Rill
took pluce near Boston.
In 1856. in Philadelphia, the Republican Pliny opened its
first convention.
.
In 1885, the Stutue of Liberty llfrived in New York City
abourd the French ship lsere. ·
In 1928, Amelia Earhart embarked on • trlln&amp;·Atlantic
night from Newfoundland to Wules - the first by 11
woman.
In 1940, France asked Oermany for tenns of surrellder In
World Will II.
.
WBSTtS VIEW
In 1948. a United Air Lines DC-6 crashed near Mount
Carmel, Pa., killing all 43 people on bollld.
In 1963, tho Supreme Court struck down rules requiring
the recitation of the Lord's Prayer or reading of blbllcal
verses in public schools.
In 1969, the raunchy musical review "Oht Calcutta!''
While the &amp;plritual natlll'e . of It's ~ notina he bM &amp;~aPf!OI\td ~
opened in New York.
·
.
Wa$hlnaton, D.C.'s brand new clle-u,~ pro&amp;ram&amp; rot ibua usm.
In 1971, the United States and Japun signed u treuty
EpiSCOPal bishop will re"Vealltself over and hu clinoUnllid IO'miiD\01\t ilrlla-under which the United States would return control of the · time, the politics of the Rev. John B. enfONCII\OIIt policies 1111\Cl 1!\tenllcl!OO
island of Okinawa.
Chane's pulpit llre already on display, eft'ons as ~ a ''!'allure.' He hu
In I991, tho remains of President Zachary Taylor were
ShoWCIISinaa leftism thlt Is - how to decried eubUc utilities tot senlna
briefly exhumed in Louisville, Kentucky. to test a theory
Sll)' it? - praetlcally a:omy in Its Ideo- "immoral ~tes1 and has c.tted the ld
that Tuylor had died of arsenic poisoning. The results
loaicl\1 purity.
.
of unlversaiiiCIUth Insurance ''a n11tlonshowed his death was .from naturl\1 causes.
·
During Chane's installntion cemno- Ill scandal Ri'Vell the promises of the
Ten yelll's ago: President Oeorge H.W. Bush and Russian
ny, keynote spewr and antique leftist Constitution'~~ -a I~ Into the penumPresident Borls Yeltsio signed a 'breakthrough llfms·reduc·
Rev. Willlnm Sloone Coffin Jr. took the bras not even Hllllf)' "Heallhcm"
· : .tion agreement. Addressing the U.S. Congress. Yeltsln
opportunity to redefine President CUnton thouaht of tllklna. Rl jaun·
pledgeCI to find any American prisoners of war still being
BuSh's terrorist "Allis of .Evil" as a tri· di~ worldvlew Is skewed towinl a
held in Russin, 1\vo German relief worke.rs, the last of
umvlmte of ·~environmental deal'llda· morll1 iumble of equivalence lmCl!la
.Western hostages held In Lebanon. were released. , ·
tion, pandemic poverty ond a world Sept ll, the Holoeau t, the atotnloFive yeurs ugo: Mir Aimal Kosi, the susr&gt;ect in the shoot·
awush with weupons.'' Then, the 58· bomblna of J'"', hlestlnlan tenorism
ing deaths of two CIA employees .outside agency head·
year-old Chane addressed his . IIIah· atnd l81'11ell self-defense.
quarters in Junuury 1993. was brought to Fairfax, Virginia,
powered tloc:k at the Notlonl\1 Cathedral PredictablY eno~~&amp;h, Bishop Ch11ne
to face trial after being arrested In Pakistan. He was later
for the first time us bishop. There, halls &amp;om the ''notlilna justlfles Sept.
convicted und sentenced to death.
accord ina to u Washington Times 11, but" crowd. "N()Ihlna on the cruted
One yeur ago: Texas Governor Rick Perry vetoed a bill to
rep&lt;nt, he declared, ''the Church Is fllllC of Ibis elrth ctn ever justifY what
ban the execution of mentally retarded death row Inmates,
'Jullty' in .Its complicity with lnstitu· was do11411 ... on Sept.llt" tie wrote laat
saying the state already had numerous safeguards in place
uonal slavery and narrow-minded In It$ ~. "But Ill of ua neoa to lllldenlllld
to protect them.
attitlldes toward women and homoluu· · thlt we muat not Ollly.IMit awll\juldol
Today 's Birthdays: Actor Peter Lupus Is 70. Sinaer Barry
ala."
f'or those who J)llllllllllted .... Crimea
ManUow is !56. C!!median Joe Piscopo is SI. Aclor Mark
And that's just for starters. A vocal aaainst humanllYl. but we mu1t ..,o
Linn-Baker Is 48. Actor Jon Ories is 4S. Actor Greg
church liberal, Chune has Inflamed tra· llCklress with swlnneu the aearth for
Kinnear is 38. Olympic gold-medal speed skater Dan • dltlonallsts with his commitment to the justice for so many In a part of the
Jansen Is 37. Actor Jason Patrie is 36. Rhythm-and-blues
ordination of women and noncellbate world that we have too ofteil nepleetecl
singer Kevin Thornton is 33, Tennis player Venus Williams
homosexuals, 11s well us to the "bless- or looked to only u u 1011rce o bene·
is 22. Actor-rapper Hercuieez i 17.
.
Ina" of amc-scx unions. But such poll· fit." Or worse, IICCOrilina to a reoe.!lt aer. · Thought for Today: "History teau;hcs us thut men and
tics, of course; don't Stop 11t. the cathe· mon about ll Februwy 2001 10p to
nations behave wisely once they have ellhausted all other , dral door. Considering the bishop's pub- Lebanon,
alternatives."- Abba Eban, lsrueli diploma'!.
lie vows to cng11gc se&lt;:ulnr Wushinaton, "It Is clear that lhe bllllona of dollm

, New bishop~ 'exciting' stance isn't ·a spiritual salve

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la futel&amp;a lid ~~~ to lWet .00 '""
blind SllllPOrt atTmd the lnell 1:0~
n\01\t by'lhe United Stille&amp; hu (~) ~
11 burtf\lt lbill,l to the ~~ tltl~.M \If
the ~lon,"l\e wrote. Mu&amp;tna lboolll
r&amp;llalous Clll'IJII'lan to etlU Mlt.kll
Baattrn "~ lllcl mum •w di!lpllt•
ed territories" to thtlr 'l\ahtl'ul ownm"
tlll11t: not UktiY · to be tilt linlell*),
Cba wrote, '"M)uldn't It be
lblna lf the world's rellalous ltlll.len!
woold &amp;tel) foro.¥W I\OW as they tllil
dllrlna the llomxs of liDU\he.ld In Sooth·
Ahlta and &amp;llY by tfielr ~Ions 111\\1
lnftuence, 'enouah Is enouahl'
\\\luldn't It be 5011\llthlna If ~ Wl\i)
oppose the aovtrnment of l%fll~l·~
nadonlll oollcy of land IM:Q\Ijsltlon tnt!
mill~ llornlllllnce In the Mklille ~ill
could do so without alway&amp; bel11g
labeled anti-$enutlcl"
'lbllt woold be "aomethlna," all riaht . .
Mtlllwhlte, Chane has prol\\llled tu
lllliD Wuhlnaton the ''nioal ex.tltlrta
cl\oce.. lft lbe,1~J)lscop~l Churell." su~.
llld mtybe lte'll tldd 'M!od.&amp;toc:k's aro~t·
est hits to the hyl\\flll, That would ~
'"llcltlnat" .too. TiQte will tell, uf
cou11e, wnether auch ex.eltetnent ofl'e~
a spiritual 81ilve fur ttuubled time&amp;.
(DinM \\t!st t,~ a wliUIIIIIst alld tdiw.
rlill wrll«r /tlr :Nit! \\b.tAllllkllt 1llllf.t. ·
Sltt t'QII bf Clirtk lfd VHl

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The Daily Sentinel

All..QAio 6M-6aU '"""'- Pat;e B2

.Rftb Noub«Jl. Pqe B2

U.S. SIOCCf!r •

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ers recognized

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.G AlJ..IPOUS- A 1'\ c''" 1n:e was
1 a1 Arbors of Gallipolis Fiiday clur-slhe ~·s l'llriaric n.y "'in hclllor c#
all mililaly 'lldei
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'

anc~1!-~':.~wt!~::l

· fcrcd qiiRSSIOII. MIDy Ollioos owe their
frecdoottO die ~-of Americms. Today
we ue gattweaed in a cclcbntion of free- M~11C THEME - Laura Sojka, VOice
dom - that ~ious. fruile. ideal, of
Oemoctacy winner, reid her winning
dreamed of by our founding lathers and
defetlded by our own fathers; $(lll$ and by speech at Patriotic Day at the Arbors of
some of us~ today," he wlded.
- Gallipolis~
"We will plant a nee-today -the international symbol of~
" Jeffers said.
The nee planted ·
grew from seeds
of lite gn::en ash tteo

lite home of

Gen. and President Dwigbt D. Eisenhower

year.

Mail screening room
at Point Pleasant High

School questioned:· ·"

PROMOnNG FM''I"'* - Veterans planted the Freedom Tree at Patriotic Day atthe
Albors of Gallipolis. It was planted In honor

of all military wtenms In celebration of
fTeedom. (Kris Dotson photos)

civilians- a number still uncenain - but
those terrorists were terribly mistaken,"
she added. "We as American citizens, of
different colors, religions, races, and
beliefs. Q~~ited hand in hand despite our .
many differences and joined to fight for
freedom, one nation under God." ·
' The VFW post did the posting of colors,
the planting of the tree, and a three-gun
volley was completed by the Honor
"'flelkeli OUI'SJI(riiS. . . ..~
'
0\lard. Thps was peifonned by OAHS stu"Indeed. we lost many li'lleS of innocent dent Sara Dovyak.
·

aware of die process? "Ah,
The Register asked ~r why
see. Down here? l don't is it that the concession stand
POINT PLEASANT - know when I was aware of it. at Point Pteuant High Sthool .
Wodi:ers at Point Pleaslltt that's the trulh," Steele said. was chOsen as the location tO .------'""!"'-~~------------------.
Hiatt School. Od the MOOI\ "I meullrnow .that it's been sort mail for anthnx. .
~ty ~ Center have done there but I didn't know "[ guess that's the only
~ sCI'eel'ti"* n'tail for "
·
place they could find at the
l.1llhmt in. the lood con&lt;:es· Are we talking several time," Boardman said. "Dr.
iiOt't slalld. The facility has months, she was asked. Parsom; said that we have to
been used fer food distribu· "Problbly," Steele said: "And think of the mail yoo know,
tiOI\ dllntlg tb\s time. No evi· I talked to them abollt it and 1 over the concession stand at
dence of anthrn lt~s ever don't know what they did, this time.
been found on the mill. .
and that's the truth."
"Then in the fall,"
'Ibe ~rs, who deehned · Asked if there wasn't a bet· Boardman added, "he is going
to be idel\tified l'ot fear of ter place in Mason County to t ...., kl I k 1t - ..~. ·
beina fi~ say the saeenlng son Iiili\, perhips renting a ~.;:e to ~ort tt:';'.8ptc!on~
was
ookred
by ._
·1 and not sort It
· 11\
· a .-~
S\ll*intendent
of Schools Dr.
~ta
..lnder.
'""" have the mall· deI'1ve•__.
.,...••
~ ..c... . .., ""' ~ __
•
. The
Register
asked
....,~~~OOntacted b)' :·voo wool~ think. ~o," she Boardman wliy a trailer waste\'m"tone to let \ill m inter- ~1d, her ,v01.ce trallmg ~ff, n't rented and placed off carnvie~~bout the \l&lt;)licy Ftidav But, that s not '!*' 't.h01:;e. pus. "I don't know,"
ll:\emoon, he wanted to do (t That s Dr. Pa~ons . chotec. . , Boardtnan said, "l can only
\t'i\il\ed
. lately by speaker·
But doesn t Dr. Parsons tell you what he (Dt. Parsons)
~e but The Rellister work for Steele as a Board told me to tell you.. I can't
U~ to use the spetket- !!'en'l~tt sh~ was asked. answer your questions."
~ due to low, unrec:ord· Yea, sne satd between Rill·
She then attentPted to call
able volUMe levels. When gles.
. . . .·
Dr. Parsons It nome, but
The Reaistet went to his The Board unammously failed to reach him. He does
office1 leas than a half-hour renewed Dr. Parsons' c:'?ntract not carry a mobile phone. The
later at 3 p.m., Panons had for. three more years IR the Register later tried to reach
· left to l!lck up his children in spnng,
him at home Friday evening
. Pt!:keri"bu~.
Steele also volunteered that . but reached an answerin,a
· Vice PleStdent of the Board letters are sorted In the machine. A call placed to hts
Educatioo Brenda Steele Bridges computer lab at Point home on Saturday reached a
tontim\ed that she has known Pleasant Middle School. ''The child.
about the practice. She said it lab where children go in there Board President Io Hannah
was Dt. Pttson$' choice.
and use," Steele said.
Rorrer could not be reached
· "Mf. oMcial stance?'' Steele When The Register for comment Friday afteruid. 'I don't thillk it should attempted to contact Point noon.
·
t,e done. But it came from the Pleasant . Middle School Reached by telephone,
Healthy Start offers no-cost or low-cost health care coverage
~tate. 'l'lley went tO a seminar, Principal Rita Cooper Friday Board member J. David
for kids (birth to age 19) and pregnant women. ·
l believe Dr. Parsons and slatY afternoon at 3:30, she had left Morgan said he was unawm
dld, and they had memos that for the day. Calls to her home of the mail screening process.
Healthy Families offers no-cost health care coverage for the
wesbouldsonourmailsome· later in the day wete not "[ didn't think we had an
entire family· parents AND kids.
where other than inside the answered.
·
anthrax problem Qr was aware
buildlna."
When
The
Register that we were doing anything
But 1n the food stand? attempted to interview Dt. about anthrax," he said.
'111at'a where Cellttal OMce ·Parsons at his office, he The Mason County Health
checks ... " she said.
directed Vana Boardman to Department could not be
How long has Steele been address the questions,
reached for comment.

1\r MIIM!Mm•••

~~l'£R.(.'(;.! kt'~

Healthy Start
Healthy Faotilies

Health Care·Coverage for
Ohio's Working Families

of

MEIGS CALENDAR
CIMftmllllliY Calltl•r Ia 111111- and · eonge. Atlrwhmerill. CIOIIng and 1 to 3 p.m. Memorial Drlve,
~~ ar lhl Pomeroy. Tiki ohHd't thot reoorctt.

llllttid • 1 fltl ... ~lie to 116ft- ·program 10 a.m. 01'1 June

~ ••up• wllhlnt il atw:l- Ohulllh.
11\Mithii 1M l.lilll wtllll. '1M
••nllir II net . . . . . to 111'11'
LETART -

iMM ..... It l\lllllof....N 01 lillY
~ 1t11M n iiH1tW11 0111J H
...
Ill
lo M lllllllllllllt
jloMid a .I~. 111110
· 'h llmilr of Clift&gt;

·•::rt"lha
~!

MlbDI.E.-~T

.

- 1M Mldlhpart

WM!eyan lllble HolM... Cl\uroh

Chlld1811 ID be IICCOIIIPinled by filii'
Ill I *•"rdlln DonaiiOIII o-.
Utarl Tawnahlp 111 ega .
.,.,..•
IIUIIMt, Monday, 5 p.m. allhl otlk:4l Olatta.
bUilding.
WIDN. .DAY
TUI.DAY
REEDSVILLE - Elllem Lacll
MIDDLEPORT - Nlghtll~18, a 8ohOol llalrd meetklg WldnHdly,
Chtlttlan auppan group. held at 8:30 p.m. In lhl admlnlttrato:''l · Ill:·~~
~YI· e p.m. Allhl Fl11t llaptllt Clfll.-,
....ulllh of Mlddlepan, 11th and Ptlmei
lltn:elll. PubliC lnvlled:
I'JIIDAY

ll&amp;oatton lllblt llchool, Monday
lhrolial\ Friday, 8•8 p.tn., et me
POt.IEAOV MtiOt Counly
POMEROY - Poi:181'0Y Churllh al
Chtircfi an PHil 811111. For ct.lld:lli, H111th Dtliartment, ahlldf:ood rmmu· Chrltl ''" community OOOI&lt;OUI
1Qf1 1011r to l.thl. O.iliH 1 atolitl nizatlon llllniO, Tutlday D to 1t a.m. · Friday, at 5:30 lo 7 p.m.

\

at die RiYei'Side Golf

push

Tiger holds
. offsurprise
challenge

Course..
FARMINGDALE, N.Y.
·Mite Fetty of Pomeroy
- The U.S. Ooen
.m.ae his firsi bole-in-one as (AP)
came to life Saturoa~
he aced the 148-yard fourth
when two of'lipr Woods
hole, whicb was m:ooled
biagest rivals suddenly
with an eight iron and -;Atclosed in Oil his lad.
11( sscd by Foster Grinstead ·
That's when the alum
· and Jeff Collier of New
went off.
Ha~ and Bob Mclntosb of
. Jolted awake by thunAthens.
demls cheers for birdie
Nathan fowler of Mason
putts b)' Senlio Garcia and
made his ace on the 115-)&gt;ard
Phil Mickelson, Woods
responded with his best
• seventh hole as he h1t a
wedge, which was witnessed
golf of the day - along
by Mr. and Mrs. Donald
with his only two birdies
Fowler of Mason and 1bny
- for an even-par 70 and
Dugan of Rutland.
a four-stroke lead after
liRe rounds.
After struggling with his
swing on the easiest day
for scoring at Bethpage
Black, WoOds was poised
tO become the first player
since Jack Nicklaus in
1972 to clllim the first two
CLEVELAND (AP)- A
legs
of the Orand Slam.
municipal court j~ge on
He
won the Masten in
Saturday set bond at $50,00&gt;
April by building an early
each Cor liRe men accused of
ICild
and watching everythrowing an ~losive device
one
else
get out ofthe way.
akin to a firemcker at a
That
ml.abt
not be the case
·Cleveland Indians game.
·
in a final round that is sud· The explosion injured two
denly dripping with
.le and briefly disrupted
drama.
&amp;:l:inth inning of the Indians'
Woods was at S-under
5-1 win IJ88inst Philadelphia at
205 and will be paired In
Jacobs Field .
·
the final group Sunday
Donald Kre. and Clifton
with G~la, a rivalry that
Oliver, both ~and Andrew
has been brewing for the
:Mendez, 20, were charged on
last th~W years and intenFriday with felonious assault
sified the last day.
and aggravated arson for
Garcia ignorei:l heckles
·throwing the device, which fire·
about
his waggles and girlafficials said might have been
friend Martina Hingis and
·llomcmade. All three are from
turned in his best score at a
.Elyria. ·
U.S. Open, a 3·under 67
Because the ch~ are a
that
Included a near ace on
felony, the case wtll go to
No. 14 and a 20-foot birdie
Cuyahoga County proseculor
on the 16th.
William~ason, who probably
Mickelson, who claims
will take the matter to a granil
tQ be one of the few play·
jury for an Indictment in the
ers who can stand up tQ
next week, sj)!lkeswoman Kim
Woods, made seven
Kowalski saJd.
Wimesses told police that • birdies in a calamitous
round that nonetheless
three men tossed the fireorack·
added
tO 67 and left him at
er from the upper deck in right
even-par 210. He is still in
field into the street-level smokthe hunt for his first majQr
ers' plaza below, yelling
championship.
"Watch out for the bomb!" an
"I ~rinded my butt off
instant before it blew up.
tcxta~, ' said Woods, who
Witnesses said the device
dldn 1 make a birdie until
was about 8 inches long. It
the 15th hole. "I didn't hit
shattered the plastic name tag
the ball reallX well, but I
on usher Brian Burke's chest
and burned the legs of Judith . · hung around.
He's .right where every·
Knight, 43, police said.
.
one expected, and that
doesn't make the task for
Garcia and Mickelson
easy.
.............,10

Reds out

of first

Bondsetfor
Jacobs Field

:flreaac:ker bto

in Denison, Teus.
"I woold like to acblowledae the suppon of Wal·Matt StOreS, die "Scotts Co.,
and American Fuesu.," added Jeffers.
Wal-Man donated the tree for the second

"In my heart. this tree is a memorial,"
staned Barb Darst of Wai·Mut. "As this
tree grows, let its roots Jemincl you of the
fonndation on which this country was
built. Let its bnnches remind yon of the
perseverance that our nation has shown,
and last but not least, let its leaves remind
you of those who continue to bring these
United Slates toRedter tO form a more perfect Union. Wal~art is proud to be a part
of this ceremony."
LaUR Sojka, Ollila Academy High
School SIUdent. is the \Qc:e of Democracy
winner sponsored by the local VFW and
was the keynote speaker, aJona with Jeffers.
"The unfOQlettable temJrist attacks on
oor country on Sept. .11 occwred at a time
when We Americans least" expected it."
said, Sojka. ''These attacks .were intended
to hurt us deeply, ruin our nation, and

1\vo

JOifers rtc:ently m.ae ltoles-

Keitt~ Jeffers.
ilel of Glllipolis'
VfW Post 4464. was me ' of caerllORies.
-Aua!ca has defended herself in die
wolicl ._. time aad time ~Pin." Jelfas

.

• 11, 2112

Pirates
NIOISU.MlMYII" I I'IE.CIOM

-

Paae 11

992-2117
l-800-992-2608

RACINE - The Southern
Football Hcl~t fitting for
Jll1ldes 7·12 will be Tuesday
Jlme 18 at 6 p.m. at the football
~ildlng.
·
If you wish to play football
you must be fitted for a helmet
011 this day. ·
·
.• • The Southern. Football
team will resume 7 p.m. to 9
p.m. hours Monday ·Thursday
for the weight room starting
today.
These hours will be for the
rest of the summer announced
Southern head coach Dave

Barr.

: Southem -rls .
: camp r~~ults
RACINE - The Southcm
girls basketball team held its
elementary, varsity; and reserve
basket11all cii!Iips this past
week.
. Winners in the elemeniary
were as follows, !lth·Sth
s and 3rd 4th respective-

~
1)':

F~W

PURl TIGER - Tiger Woods watches hls ea&amp;le attempt on the 13th &amp;reen during the final

round of the u.s. Open Golf Championship at the Black Course of Bethpage State Perk In
Farmingdale, N.Y. Sunday. Woods missed the putt and birdied the hole. (AP)

McDonald helps lndi·ans defeat Rockies, 5-4
DENVER (AP) - John McDonald ·
is making his time as a starter count.
McDonald doubled, tri~led and
drove in two runs as the Cleveland
Indians beat the Colorado Rockies S·4
Sunday.
.
·
McDonald entered the Colorado
series hlttl~ .244 in 18 games. Since
replacing 1iijured second baseman
Rf~ Gutlem:z on Friday, McDonald
is S·for;12 with two doubles, two
triples and four RBis.
. He figures to get more playing time

with Gutierrez on tbe I S-day disabled
list, but doesn't just wunt to lllke up
space.
"I don't want to jusl go out there and
en)C!Y it. I want to make the mosi of it,"
smd McDonald, who has played 64
games in pans of four seasons in the
majors. "[f you don't play well, the
opportunity's nC!tgoing tQ come around
again."
·
Not lhat McDonald hasn't enjoyed it.
"Of course, it's been a lot of fun,"
said McDonald, who had one career

extru-base hit before Friday, "These
guys huve been great toww-d me whert
r do get an opportunity to play, They
wanl to get me going and it's jusi been
n lot of fun ."
McDonuld was 2-for-4 und knocked
in two wilh n double in· Cleveland's
four-run seventh tQ help Bartolo Colon
win his fourth game in five starts.
Colon (9·4) used a fustbull lhul
reached 98 mph und a hard slider to
keep the Rocktes off-balance for 6 2-3
innmgs, and added a bunt single in lhe

u.s.
Mexico

Throw ChainpiOIII-

Catie Wolfe and Gabby
. Johnson; Knockout Champs·
Vlfl!lnla Bc:ieklt4 and Hayley
Sprir.dllng; P·l·O Shootout·
CJeoraetta Brlckles and ~
Johnson;
Hot
Shot
Championship team-Emma
Hunter, Catie Wolfe, and
Martina Annea; Two on Twobb Johnson and Haylgo
ing; 3 on 3-Catie Wolfe,
getta Bricktes, Amber
HUt, ~ylyn Spradling. Most
Improved p1ayen
were
Martina Annes, Ashley
.Walker,and Katey Patterson.

e

·

CINCINNATI (AP) - .
Craig Wilson and Jtmmy
Anderson pried first place
out of the Cincinnati Reds'
desperate grasp.
Wilson homered for the
third straiBht game and
Anderson pitched a five-hit·
ter Sunday, leading the
Pittsburgh Pirates to a 5·1
victory that ended the Reds •
long stay alone on top of the
NL Central.
After rallying to win the
first two games of the series
and hold otT St. Louis, the
Reds slipped info a firstplace tie when the Cardinals
beat Kansas City 5- 1 later in
the afternoon.
The Reds had been in fi tst
place all by themselves since
April 26, a span of 51 days
thai had become a point of
pride in the clubhouse. It
stung to see it finally slip
away.
"If's always great to be in
first place," said Jimmy
Haynes (7·6), who gave up
two homers. "It always gives
you a little confidence.
We've been in a little skid
hllely. We need to tum it
around."
·
· The Pirales .also have been
struggling, losing three in a
row before salvaging the
finalgame.
'
Wilson had a three-run
· homer and a run-scoring single, matching his career hi~h
with four RBis, and Kevm
Young added a solo homer as
the Ohio River rivals finished with one more longball binJe. There were II
·homers m the three games,
accounting for 16 of rhe 20
runs.
The Reds hit five of the
homers •• all off the Pirates'
bullpen •• as they won the
first two games with big·
swing comebacks and
ell:tended their stay in first
place.
They couldn't do anything
against Anderson (6· 8), who
held them to four singles, a
double and five walks during
his third career complete
game. He induced three dou·
ble plays and IS ground· ball
outs.
"He was pretty nasty
roday," said Sean Casey, who
was O·for·3. "He was cutting
it, sinking it •• nothing was
slraight. That's why he got so
many ground balls."
.

HAPPYMNIFans celebrate
while watchlnll the
United Statu end
· Mexico &amp;ame durIn&amp; a velwln&amp; party
at Columbua Crew
Stadium In
Columbus, Ohio
Monday. See relet·
ed stories on B2.
(AP)

seventh for his second cnreer hit. ·
Colon, who struck out eight, is 6-3
with a 2.00 ERA in his last II starts.
"He is one of the better pitchers in
baseball, not jusl the American
League," Colorado starter Denny
Neagle said. "He is a bulldog and a
workhorse. I've never seen unylhing
like that, a guy whQ can start off at 93
und lhen all of a sudden he's throwing
98 in the eighth inning. He's a freak,
there's no question about it. I knew my
job was going to be cut out for me."

Kenseth doesn't pit
late, wins at Micnigan
BROOKLYN, Mich, (AP)- No way Matt Kenselh was giving
up rrack position - not with a chance for car owner Jack Roush to
win on his home track.
Kenselh kept his lead rather than pit for fresh tires following a red
flag, lhen held off two rookies and Dale Jarrett to capture the Sirius
Sa!l!llite Radio 400 Ill Michigan International Speedway on Sunday.
"Ftfth or forward, you liave to stay out," said Kenselh. wlio
eamed his series-best third victory this year. "If anyone told me to
come in for tires, I would have refused. I didn't want to give up lhe
lead and I didn't want tires."
Roush survived a nearly fatal plane crash in April. He is recover· ·
ing at liis Michigan home but came to the track on crutches to watch
his four cars race.
"When we do really poorly here, and I remember the times we've
done poorly as much as the times that we've won, it's a huge embarrassment and J can't wait to come back for the nell:t race," Roush
said.
.
Kenselh contended for the lead during the final third of lhe race
with rookie Jimmie Johnson, but aPPCBrCd headed to an easy victory wilh six laps to go until Elliott S8dler crashed in Thm 2. · . ·

�lllond8y, June 17,2002

www.mydallyantlnel.com

All-Ohio Hlp School Ba~ll Teams

'

&lt;Xll.UMBUS (AI') ~ .,. 1M OF-Aor I 1 2 r. Mans. M1 . . •; Walllh Jeault. C-D.J. Fllhndric:h, ~; Matt Curtla, 'let'ta '~••· OH- Fairfield. 3&amp;-Antllony Gresalck,
Chaney;
1&amp;-Todd Jolh HamOV. Colt. Rtatly.
2002 Aa&lt;lhio . . SctlOOI 81Mbalf Jemie Matuty, Cllya!loga Fa..: Young.
lane. Flaher Ctth.. S$-Krls
i

1Mm&amp; -

School

-

Marwt

Gelttlllllfl,
Canlol'l Scllumlktr, Ottawa-G'-Iort. ~ Player of
McKinley. DH-Chri&amp; Coleman, O.y. Bobby Dubowc, K -. 38-Gary Joht.town

by ... ONo High
8aMbaM
Colodlea

Carroll.

~IICI C(MiCA t;

•

. _ _ Mao ollon: Sponeor Hahn,
DMIICtll
Firs1 Tnm: P-&amp;andon Hynic:ll, Findlay; Jenttn Lewia, Cin.
No&lt;tll Royanon: Allen !hell, Anderton;
Nicl&lt;
Goddard,
Harrison.
~"
Talmanllc, WadiWOflfl; Jtkt TurkaK, Mentor;
Wlliletlollle ""'-Y wayne. 1&amp;- Stan Cllny, Yeung. Boardmen; Chad
Jon vondi ... Cen1tMIII. ~Tyler Wager, UnlouiOWn LAke.
Wusennan, ONgon Clay. 38-l'om
DIVISION I
leftS, Young. Boardman. ss-Drew Fil'lt THm: I'-Oiad Blllingtley,

1M YHr: Ryan Grube, Moorman, St. Henry. OF-Kyle
Botclttr, OUoville; T. J. Kennedy,
Nor1hik¥t.

of the Year: o..... Klontz,
Cello. OF- Heath.
Matt Jot&gt;-., Cole. W a -; Ryan Stc:ond Tum: P-Je" Nowling,
Siller, Granville; O..W Romlah, Balolt Pony; Cory Rojtclc. Wlcklllle. cWest , Branch. DH-Pet Pk:cont, Niclt Zartey, Johnatown N&lt;x111o~
la..... Mayaville.
1&amp;-Kyle Fltlda, Cln. Madalra.
Honoreblt
Mantlon: Ronnie Johl) Hlaricll, ~ Ga.-y.
Bourquin, Canlol'l South; Juttln 3B ...... - . .. Del. llnara. ssBanlca, Steubenville; Aaron Crwelt, Mh Fa.,.., Wlckllile. Of~n

Borla.

Young. Chaney. Ss-Jot Coach

~. CtMon CM*al

Sylof, WI&lt;IIWOflll. Of-5coll llillllc, ~~; Mattlong,GI'I~.c­ Bryan:
Dusl)l
Hammond, Baker. Chill. Zane Traoe; Matt
North Royanon; Joah 81ugl'lman, Johl) Rtat, Cola. Waltel'lon. 1&amp;-Je" Bellelontelne; Jon Deluca, Colo. Hatlitld, Heath; Seen Urquhart,
I'Mytburg: Justin Riley, G..,.. City. Carrol, Colt. Wallerlon. 2B BNot Watterwon: Nlcll .......,, Galllpolle Cincinnati Hills Christian Acacllmy.
DI+-Oa.... wa ..... Wlda-'1'1.
Llliey, Ctnlol'l Central Cello. 38- Gillie Ac!KI.; Dutl)l CuMingham, DH-Gaiem Schumm, Roclcford
Player of the V..r: Draw Saytor, Juatln Banlca, Steubenville. SS- Granville; Ch&amp;IO Liggett, Mlntrvl..
Pa- .
·
A&lt;IIm MM!Ico, canton South. OF~ Mention: Brian Plitricl&lt;,
Weds~ .
·
DIVISION Ill
Coach Of""' Year. Mike Shttll. Oily. Oiln Bratyt, Jr., Lake Cltllollc; Ktltlo Firat Team: P-,Joah Brunt, New Parla Ntlional Trail; 81ny Roe,
Bortt, Roaalord; Coley Myera, v.n.tllles; Anclntw Davis, Chll. laM Heath; Adam Hesler, Marion
Canolt.
Second Team: P- Tr~vls Koehler, Ottawa·Giandorf.
DH-Scott rr-. C-Mike G..,.., N. Robinson Pleaan~ Chad Partcer, Ironton; Kyle
Carroll; Greg Movltl, Cleve. St. Hartord, Indian lake.
COlonel Crawford. 1~Tyttr Renner, Htyne. Coidwllltt'.
Player of lila Veer: Matt long, Sugar C'"k Gtraway. ~Ryan
DIVISION IV
lgna"us. C-Connor
Grube, Johnttown Northridge. 38- First Team: P-BIIIy Williams,
Lebanon. 1a-'l'yltr Vancil mont. Granville.
Celina. 28--Ail&lt;hw Good, Young. Coach Of ""' V..r: Jon Bennett, llaron Landla, Cardington-Lincoln. Toronto; John Zlnnlcker, Fairport

MeG""'"·

Ss-Eddle Smith, Jollnatown Harding. C-Oan Stier, Gloualer
8oaroman. 38-Chase Welker, Tol. Gran'tilte.
St. Johns Jesuit. SS-Wea Stcond '!Mm: P ~ Ctrpenlef. NOfthridge. OF-Kyle Wellman. Trimble. 1B-Jeremy Schell,
Schlolzinger, Westerville North. Bryan; .Bri~l! . Chad, uya. Falla llloom·Ctrroll.; Man Miller, Matt. Crestline. · 28-Justin Groaa,

Mowrystown WhlltcMIIc; Matt Ewrltt,
l.tlboopoot OH-.Mtin Schla,.., St.

Henry.

Player of IIMI Year. Krlt
St. Htnry.

~.

COIIdl of ""' Vtar: John Domer. St.
Henry.
Second Team: P-Jtmee Yenaer,

Del. Ayersvllle; Todd Boeclcman, St.
Henry. c-Zach Weber, FOft
Jennlnga. 1B-Jay Hyflt, Convoy
Craatview. 28-Adam Faires,
Gioutller Trimble. 38-Luke Srock,
Berlin Canter Western Reserve.
Ss-otan Stokes, Columbiana,
OF- Patrick Rice. Lane. Fisher
Catholic; AI Gertdoutz, Miller Clly;
Brad Johnson, N, lima Soulh
Range. DH- Edward Colaman,
Fairfield.
Honorable Mendon: Matt Bailey, N.
Lewisburg Triad; Aaron lalontaiM,
New Rleatl: Tyler OverbH, Carey;
Chris Miller, Bllfln Hiland; Ted
Applaton, Cincinnati Country Day.

Chen hopes to get·started in Cincinnati
CINCINNATI (AP) - Atlanta:
Philadelphia. New York. Montreal.
Cincinnati.
Left-bander Bruce Chen has played
for them all - and failed to stay in
any one of them for very long.
The Reds made Cincmnati his lat·
est s~ Friday night when they
acq~,ti
him from the Expos for
right-hander Jim Brower. Chen,. who
turns 2S next Wednesday, has played
for three teams this season alone.
He tends to entice teams with
potential, then wind up traded in a
multi player deal.
"He doesn't throw real hard," manager Bob Boone said Saturday. "He
ends up being a package guy. When
you talk trades, everyone wants a
left-bander. He's been OK. I think
Atlanta kind of gave up on him."
The Reds are giving him another
chance. Chen will be their fifth
starter, though they're not sure when
he'll get his first tum in the rotation.
He was available as a reliever
Satut'day against Pittsburgh.
.
Chen can't explain why he gets
traded so often.
"I don't have an answer for that,"
he said. "I've had my good times in
the big lea'-ues, but I need to be more
consistent. •
He started the season as a reliever
with the Mets, who traded him to
Montreal on April S while the Expos
were in Cincinnati. Chen joined them
at Cinergy Field.
The Expos tried him as a starter,
but it didn't work · out and he got

Reds

Reds' 4-3, 11-inning win. Reese went
1-for-S with a single.
He wasn't surprised by the rough
treatment.
Notebook
"Junior is a Hall-of-Fainer to be,
and they've booed him," Reese said
moved back to the bullpen, In five before Saturday's game. "It really
starts and 10 relief appearances, he didn't bother me at all. I was getting
went 2-3 with a 6.99 ~A.
.booed when .I was here, so it really
Pitching coach Don Gullett plans didn't survrise me at all.
to work on Chen's delivery, trying to
"I love 11. It's just too bad I didn't
·
.
fine-tune some things to help his go 4-for-4."
control. As of Saturday, they hadn't
Reese could hear the hecklers In
gotten down to details.
the early innings.
"They want me to settle in first,"
"I think the only word they know
Chen said. "That's one thing I'm here is, 'You (expletive).' They must
really excited about. Jf they see teach it in schoof," Reese said.
something that can help me, I'm
Some of the fans' wrath is the
more than willing to try. [ know that result of his comments during spring
for periods of time, I've been good, training, when he said Ken Griffey
but then [haven't been consistent." Jr.'s special treatment fractured the
The last time Chen was traded, he Reds' clubhouse. Outfielder Dmitri
had to get a flight to Cinergy and Young, now with Detroit, later said
meet new Expos teammates m the the same thing.
.
visitors' clubhouse. He was making
Given the stir those statements
new friends again Saturday in caused; shortstop Barry Larkin wasCinergy's other clubhouse.
n't surprised at the way Reese was
"Maybe this is my calling, you • greeted.
knowr• he said.
. "Based on all of the. stuff that was
• POKEY BOOED: Second base· said this spring, no," Larkin said. "As
man Pokey Reese heard boos last beloved as Dmitri was here, I'm sure
season in Cincinnati after he made it he'd get the same reception. Fans
clear he wanted the Reds to trade don't forS_et."
him.
• RIJO NOT THROWING
In his first return as a member of YET: Right-hander Jose Rijo isn't
the Pittsburgh Pirates, those boos close to returning from the ~sabled
were a whole lot louder.
list.
. .
Reese was taunted and booed when
Rijo, sidelined by a weak right
he was introduced and whenever he shoulder, is eligible to come off next
came to bat Friday night during the ·Monday, but hasn't even thrown off a

mound yet.
"I won't be . ready," he said
Saturday.
Rijo 1s playing catch over a distance of 75 feet every other dar. His
rehabilitation plan calls for h1m to
get back on the mound in 10 days.
Rijo completed his comeback from
five major elbow operations by win·
ning a relief role last season. He
moved into the rotation this year but
started to fade as the innings piled
up, causing him to lose control of his
fastball.
He's doing strengthening exercises
for the shoulder.
"My shoulder is so much stronger,
it's unbelievable," he said. "I could
thtQW hard enough, but I just didn't
have the control. I'd try to throw a
fastball low and outside, and it would
end up high and inside most of the
time.' ·
·
• RIEDLING BACK IN FORM: .
Right-hander John Riedling couldn't
have been much better in his return to
the lllajors.
Riedlin$ pitched two scoreless
innings, g1ving up_ only one hit, during Friday night s game. It was his
first appearance in the majors since
he had surgery to repair a tom labrum
and rotator cuff in his right shoulder
last Sept. 4.
"[ was more excited last night than
the first time I was in the big leagues,
just to be given a second chance," he
said. "It was good to be back out
there again. A lot of hard work has
gone into it."
·

._
WuuuS
-~

laom .._ 81

l

.-......
Woods is 23-2 when he has
at least a share of the lead
going into the final round,
and he's never lost a 54-hole
· lead in a major championship.
Throw in a New York
gallery that has become more
boisterous each day, and it
could·be·quite a finish.
"It's gomg to be tough for
both of us," Woods said.
What could make it even
juicier are the sassy comments from Garcia on Friday,
when he complained that
Woods was getting all the
breaks and received preferential treatment. .
Garcia thought there was
too much water on the greens
and in the fairway for the second round to continue.
"If Tiger Woods would
have been out there, it would
have been called " he said.
"It's tough to ~at a guy
when ... he ~ets breaks and
makes putts.'
Garcta said he left a note in
Woods' locker SaturdaY,
morning to explain that •I
didn't mean anything bad
about him."
"I hope it's OK," he said.
"It depends on him."
Woods said he had not seen
the note. ·
·
"It was awfully nice of him
to do that," Woods said. "I'm
excited about playing with
him, and I'm sure he feels the
same way.''
They shook hands as they
passed each other in the interview room, although the final
round will be no time to build
a relationship.
''I don't think he's a guy
who likes to talk too much on
a Sunday in a major, anyway," Garcia said. "That's
why we have a caddie.''
Whether there is any more
drama on this Bethpage State
Park course also depends on
Woods.
"Tiaer rarely moves back
to the field, to there's a lot of
pre11ure to try to make
birdlet," Mickelson said.
Mickelson made his .share,

but only after a wretched start
-five
bogeys on three of his first
holes. He also finished
badly, hitting his drive on the
18th hole into shin-high
grass, chipping out to the
fairway and winding up with
bo~i cost him a spot in the
.
last ~up with WoOds, but it
didn t knock him out of the
tournament.
"[' d like to put a little pres·
sure on Tiger and Sergio
pl~ying
~hi,~d
me,"
M1cke~so~ s81d. If I make, a
few . b•.rdtes, maybe they ll
feel a httle pressure to do the
· same."
Woods has !lnly lost a 54hole lead tw1~e - o~e of
those was to M1ckels&lt;;m ·~ ';he
2000 Tour Champ1o.nsh1p,
when Lefty played m the
group ahead of Woods.
But tha! was. only ~ oneshot deficit. Th!s ?De 1s four
strokes, and th1s 1s the U .~ .
Open, the toughest test m
golf.
. . .
~·[ get more mttmldated br,
the f'?ur s~ots than by Tiger, •
Garcta srud. .
Others still had fleeting
hope.
Jeff Maggert had a bogey·
free 68 and joined Mickelson
at even-par 210, five strokes
behind. Robert Allenby, the
ra!l-thin Aussie, ~apped_ h!s .
wtld afternoon wtth a b1rd1e
on the 18th for a 67 and was
another stroke back, along
wilh Billy Mayfair (68) and
Padraig
Harrington
of
Ireland, who played with
Woods and had a 73.
But it was Garcia and
Mickelson who got Woods'
attention.
Woods was on the 1Sth tee,
2 over for the day and, after
blowing a birdie chance two
holes earlier, he heard .two
roars that shook Bethpage.
·The first c~me . from
Mickelson, 8umptn$ hts left
fist as his 2 -foot btrdie putt'
trickled into the center of the
cup at No. 17, just 2~0 yards
away from Woods .
R1ght next to him was the
16th green, ·where Garcia
rolled fn a birdie from 20 feet .
that also brought him to I
under, just two strokes
behind.
I

"Even though the guys
were making a run and I was
still over par, I had to remind
myself I still had the lead,"
Woods said. "And if I parred
in, they had to come get me,
and that's how I played."
He was even better than
that.
He laced a 3-wood into the
fairway on the toughest hole
at Bethpage Black, and hit
his approach into 12 feet.
When the birdie putt fell.
Woods threw his putter at his
bag.
"That was my way of saying to myself I finally had a
birdie," Woods said.
Only he wasn't through.
He stuffed a 6-iron Qn the
207-yard 17th to 6 feet below
ihe cup for another 'birdie
and pumped his fist harder
than he has all week, sensing
order had been restored.
It wasn't a perfect day, but
it was good enough.
As tough as the Black
Course was Friday - · the
highest scoring in I0 Jears
- it was soft, still an forgiving, just right the mood
for players to climb up the
leaderboard.
·Nick Faldo, who only got
into the U.S. Open two
weeks ago on a sponsor's
exemption, showed JUSt how
much he loves New York by
making six birdies in a round
of 66, the best score all week.
That put him in a tie for
eighth.
The course was ripe for a
runaway, only Woods wasn't
on his game.
·
He didn't hit a fairwar.
until the sixth hole. He didn t
have a decent birdie . putt
until the seventh - and
missed. He barked out
instructions to his ball
through pursed lips.
Harrington fared , even
worse.
He tried to stay close, but a
double bogey on No. S started his swift slide. Harrington
hit Into the left rough, hacked
out to the fairway and then
flew the green into a bunker.
That left Woods with a
fre1h set of challengers, but
still a four-shot lead as he ·
tries to win his eighth mlijor
championship.

•
OUR REPORT CARD

Is IN ...

WE'RE WAITING ON YOUR INPUT.

(lolf Digut Listed ·
CAPITOL.

THE LEGISLATOR
at Capitol Hill as
among the best
new courses m
America.

HIL.L

PIIATTVIL~,

.

ALA lA...

Golf Magazine
readers gave THE
JUDGE at Capitol
Hill a 5 out of 5 rating. A Golf /Hagazine ranked Grand
National in Auburn/Opelika and Cambrian Ridge in
Greenville as among the Top I00 Courses in America
A Golf Digut named
the Trail as one of
the Top 50 Trips in
the world. A Come
see for yourself why

Freq.ant Flyer Maga-

US. soaer

team advances
;_:to quarted]nals

I

. YOKOHAMA, Japan (AP)
. - Mexico had tradition and the
crowd on its side, and for much
of the match it had the ball. But
•• ,the United States got the goals · and a place in the World ·Cup
. 4_uarterlinals, its best showing
'smce-1930.
: "Amazing," defender Pablo
Mastroeni said after a 2-0 victo. ry Monday put the Americans
·. 'into the final eight. "It's been a
Ion~ drive coming in and this is
: ,the 1cing on the cake." ·
~
Brian McBride scored in the
· '8th minute and Landon
:Donovan in the 65th. Although
North American neighbor
Mexico had possession for two. 'thirds of the game, goalkeeper
·'Brad Friedel leaped and dived to
: ·block the Mexicans' six shots on
• ·goal.
·' "Sometimes in games past,
other thin~s have let lis down,"
"Friedel saJd. "But our effort and
' "'Ur heart .never were lacking." .
· · Hours before the game,
• 'President Bush called Arena and
· the players listened in on a
· speaker phone.
· ''The country is really oroud of
the team," Bush said. ' 1A lot of
• :people that don'~ know anything
•·ilboiJt soccer, like me, are all
. •excited and pulling for you."
· The United States · will play
• .Germany on Friday at Ulsan,
·"South Korea.
"We got a very difficult oppo...nent in Gennany,'' coach Bruce
, .Arena said. "I think when Friday
. comes around our team will be
.:·ready to play."
... In Monday's other second,:round game, Brazil played
Belgium at Kobe. Japan.
At Jeonju, South Korea, bat. :ues for the ball led to five yellow
: C8lds on each side. Mexico's
.. :Rafael Marquez was e~·ted in
· the 88th minute for eras · g into
I .,CObi'J~ Wiih alugli lilck and
.., a blow to the head.
· "It's a rivalry. We know each
. other," said U.S. coach Bruce
• Arena.. 'There has been a lot of
: ·bad blood over the years. When
: the .game's over we're friends
• agrun."
: A U.S. team reached the semi; finals at the first World Cup in
; 1930, losing 6-1 to Argentina
• They reached the secona roWld
; at home in 1994, but were last
; among 32 teams in 1998.
: Mexico, where soccer is the
.! No. I sport, was in its 12th
• World Cup. It reached the quar; terfinals in 1970 and 1986, and
; lost in the second round in 1994
• and 1998. '
: "We played very good foot: ball," Jared Borgettt said. "But in
· football, you win by . scoring
; goals and we didn't score.
' 'The United States has a very
; good team, very fast with a very
: dangerous counterattack."
• About I0,000 Mexicans were
: in the predominantly Korean
; crowd of 35,000 at Jeonju. The
: Koreans joined them in cheering
• wildly for every attack by
: Mexico's team. The crowd vig; orously booed every U.S.
; advance.

OIIAND NATIONAL.
AIJIUffNioHJ.HCA,
ALAIMMA

one of the Top 10
Trips in the World I

ALABAMA'S

1.100.....44M

-+f.-

•

Mexican coach
upset with officials
JEONJU. South Korea {AP} - Mexico ooadlla..,.ier Aguirre
referees missed a hand ball during bis
team s secood-tound 2-0 loss to the United States.
'"'lley showed the replay on the big scn:cn Wid we saw it..
40.1XMl fans saw it," Aguirre said after the Mexicans. were elimi~Monday thai

nated
In the 53rd minute of the maid\ between CONCACAF rivals.
U.S. midfielder John 0' Brien. defending a MeAi&lt;-1111 corner kick.
jumped for a headel: with Mexico's Luis. Hemande2. O'Brien

aPilCared to punch the boll away.
·
.
·No infraciKlll was called- a penally kick woold have been war-

ranted -- despite repeated protests from Mexi~'llll players and ·.
A"uirre.
'We had an unfortunate~ ~the linesl1lUII... A~uim: sai~.
"A. e' header, wasn't u?" goalie Brad Fnedel sa~d sarcastically. 'The referee made the decis.ioo. I took u double-take.
maybe. When I saw it. I didn't-believe il.
'This happens in a game. We've been on the wrong side of a lol
of decisions, too."

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

t"\lb~

\'Q~tr

1'1\ulkll!!t. I• l'lic-w:&lt;~.paaprrs.

lll,pl W Kau•~ lklh·cml Mla:ht tv \ ·ou.v

•

NOTICE 10 IIDOERS project will, te the Hundred Nineteen
Sealed propoa111 extent prectlceble ua thouaand dollara). A
will be ...W'Itd by !Itt Ohle preducta, pre bid meatlng will ba
MEIGS COUNTY met1rlale, a1rvlcea, held at 10:00 AM en
COMMISSIONERS.
and labor In tha. Thuradey, June 20,
MEIGS COUNTY lmpl1m1ntallen Of 2002 at the Leading
COURTHOUSE, 1001!. 1hair
projec1. Cretk Conaarvancy
Second ·St r.. t, Addlllonally,
Dlltrlc1, 34481 Corn
Pomeroy, Ohio 41711 conlrlctor compliance Hollow Road, Rutland, .
·
until · t:30 pm, with Ute equal Ohio.
THURSDAY, JUNE 27, employment
licit llhall be aealad
21102, for ""nlthlng 111 oPPortunity
and merited a• lid lot
labor, mattrlale and Nqulramenta of Ohio STATE ROUTE t 43
equipment n...aaary Admlnlatratlve Code WATER LINE SERVICE
lo complete the Ch1pt1r 123, the PROJECT and mailed
preject known 11,
E1ecut1va er &lt;1111- to:
STATE ROUTE 143 Ordtr of 1872, and
MEIGS COUNTY
WAT E R
L I NE Gow.-'a Executive COMMISSIONERS
EXTENSION PROJECT Order 14·1 ahall be
MEIGS COUNTY
11 which lima lh1 raqulrtd.
COURTHOUSE
propoaals will b1 llddara mull 100EASTSECOND
publicly open•d 1nd comply with 1he STREET POMEROY,
raad aloud.
prevailing wage ratll
. OHIO 457at
Notice to bldda,., 0 n'
pub 11 0
Each blddar 11
apeclftcallane, bidding lmprovemen1a In required to furnleh
documentt, con1ract Malga county 11 wllh Ita propoaal, a
anti other documentt dalermlnad by the lid Guaranly and
may be ..amlnad al Federal
Llbor ' Contraot lond In
the office of Linn Stendlrda Provltlona 1ccordance with
Engineering lno. 5:14 and Davie-Bacon Sactlon 153.54 of lhe
•arkal Strut, wegu, varloua Ohio Revleed Code.
Zaneevllle, Ohio lneur~.lid aacurlty lumlllttd
43701, 1ht Melgt Nqulremanta, varloul In lend form, ahell bt
County Granta Adni. equel opportunl1y leeued by a Surety
Olfloa 117 E. Memorial provlelone, and the Com P• n Y
or
.
Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio requirement lor a Corporation llcanud
HOORAY - U.S. soccer team captain Claudio Reyna celebrates with fans after winning 2.0 45788 and Leading paymenl bond and In tha State of Olllo to
against Mexico in their 2002 World Cup second round playoff soccer match at the Jeonju World Cr1ek · Con .. rvanoy performance bond for provl&lt;lluid aurety.
South Korea earlier today ·(AP)
Dle1rlct Olllce, 3401 100% of 1he con1rac1 Each Propoaal muet
Cup Stadium at Jeon'u
1 '
•.
Corn Hollow Road, prloa.
contain the lull name
team
Fans
cam~in~ outside sell leftover tickets 'on the Rutland, Ohio 43771
No bidder may of the P•rty or partlea
Ironically' South· Korea's
· ·
·
1
'I th da be' and obt1lned from wllhdrlw Ilia bid aubmlttlng
the
helped the Amencans mto the · Daejeon's Wo d . p stadium ntemet unt1 . e Y tore Linn Engl-lng lno. within thirty 1301 deye propoul 1nd all
second round by eliminating hopmg for last-minute tickets to match day."
534 M1rket Str111; 8fler the ao1ual elite of peraona lntert11ed
Portugal. The Americans fin- Sotith Korea's match against
In a number .of ftrst-rouml Zane1vllle, Ohio 43701 the opening thereof. therein. Each bldd1r
ished the ftrst round with a win ltaly discovered belatedly that matches, there were empty seats upon peyment by The MEIGS COUNTY mutt eubmlt evidence
. WI'th Korean organizers sold I,465 ms1
. 'de s·tad'
check
payable COMMISSIONERS
ill ..olaimllar
perlanc..alze
on
over '.avored Portugal , a ne
. tUrns. o·1s_gruntied 10
Linnmade
Engineering,
raeerve the right to of
project•
South Korea and a loss to tickets on the Internet.
fans had difficulty loggmg on to Inc. In the amoun1 of w a 1v e
1 n y and oompl .. lty. ·The
Poland.
"We've become idiots," said the ticket Web site or, later, $115.00 lor each 11t, lrragularlllea and 1o owner Intend• and
Also in the Americans' half of Hur Jin-beom, a 26-year-oid stu- couldn't.get throu~on. ~hone which ahell be non· ,.jecuny oren blda. requlrea Ihal 1hlt
retundable
· MEIGS COUNTY project be completed
the draw, Spain was awaiting a dent who had been camping out lines set up to pure
ttc ers.
The ~ngln .. r•a
COMMISSIONERS on 11tar than JULY 31 ,
quarterfinal match against the since Friday. "Organizers knew
In Japan,~ people have been • It I m. I I '
0 I (8)7, 12, 17, 3to
. 2~~- contrlclora and
winner of Tuesday's game . we were here. If they had any arrested for comes related to the con at ruction co1t It
should have been World Cup. Police have detained S&amp;lo.ooo.oo (Eight
aubcontreclora
between co-host South Korea tickers, they
'
.
'
40
1
·
na1
d
12
hundred
Ninety
Public
Notice
Involved wllh the
SOld to us.
and three-time champion Italy.
. ,ap~ese na11o , s .an
thouaand dollar•). A
project will, io the
On the other side, · England Added Oh Thek-hoon, a 32- Bntons smce soccer s sho~~ P""bld mHtlng will be · NOTICE TO BIDDERS extent prectlc1ble uae
was awaiting the Brazil- fri-old retailer: "I'm going to began May 31. 1be remwrung htld al 10:00 am on Seal1d propoaala Ohio producu,
and surprising
e'into the stadium, whatever 12 J:ple arrested were from a Thurtday, June 20, will be l'tlcelved by the meterlela, aervlc.., ·
Belgt·um wt·nn-,
w.
•
2002 1 lh1 L dl MEIGS COUNTY and l1bor In the
Senegal will play the winner of J
es, even if I die trying,"
hal ;dozen other countnes,
•
•• ng COMMISSIONERS,
lmpltmentltlon of
.
d'
I
I
d
th
U
'ted
Craek
Conaerv1ncy
Thesday'sJapan-Thrkeygame.
Lin.Byung-taik, a spokesman mclu mg rean_, e m Dletrlct, 34481 corn MEIGS COUNTY lhelr
project.
Hollow Roed, 11u111nd, COURTHOUSE, 100 E. Additionally,
·
D1.ffi.culb'es t'n obtainl·ng tick• for the organizing committee, States and Argenbna.
SEC.OND STREET, conlractor compliance
ets touched off another wave of said Monday: "I understand the
More th3JI a~irdke. oscalfthe.arrests O~~cia ehell be •••lad POMEROY,
OHIO with the equel
outmge in South Korea.
fans. But our basic policy is to have been 10r be t
pmg. and marked •• Bid lor 45711 until 1:30 PM, employment
STATE ROUTE 143 THURSDAY, JUNE 27, opportunity
•
WAT E R
L 1NE 2002,1or furnlehlng ell requlremontt of Ohio
EXTENSION PROJECT labor, m11erl1l1 1nd . Admlnletrllive Code
and m1iled or equipment neceaeary Chapter 123, the
dtllveract1o·
1o complete the Governor'• Executive
Melge.Counl)l . projtot known aa, Order o~ 1172, 1nd
.
CommilliOMrl
STATE ROUTE 143, Gov1rnore Elecuti~e
· ·
·
·
Melgt County
WATER LINE SERVICE Order U · t ahall be
MEXICO CITY (AP) _ Millions of
But oilly a small scattering of fans dommatmg the Umted States m socc~r.
courthouaa
PROJECT 11 whloh requlrad.
Mexicans, including President Vicente showed up at the An~el after the loss, at least. But U.S. teams have stead1ly 100 Eai!Sacond llmethepropoulawlll Blddert muet
. • Fox, stayed up through ·th. e night to mar;{; of them sprawhng on the asphalt improved and now have beaten Mex1co Street Pomeroy, Ohio be publicly opened comply with 1h•
f h · 1
·
·
48788
and read aloud
pravelllng wage rat..
· f'
: have their hearts broken, their dreams in esolation. A handful of people tn ~ve 0 I ~u ast SIX meetings. Each bidder ;1 Nolle• to bldd1re, on
pub 11 c
of advancing to the World Cup quarter- trudged around the monument holdmg Mex1cans continue to scoff at lhe state required to turnleh ·epeclllc•tlone, bidding Improve menta In
finals smashed by a 2-0 loss to the ·aloft a Mexican flag .
of soccer · knowledge among U.S. with 111 propoaal, , documenta, contracl Melg• County n
United States.
If U.S. newspapers often treated the . sports fans, whose nonchalance toward Bid Ouaranly 1nd and o1her document• determined by the
"It hurts us here," sa1·d Jose Lu 1's bu1'Jdup to the game as secondary to the game makes defeats even more bit- accord1nce
Conlract Bondwith
In the
may office
be examined
at atandarda
F1deral Provlelona
Labor
of Linn
Luviano, punching his chest. Tears golf, the event dominated the news ter.
.
.
Btctlon 153.54 of lht Englnurlng, Inc., 134 and Davi•·Bacon
melted the Mel(ican flags painted on pages in Mexico.
"The Umted States IS a country of Ohio Revlo•d Code. Mark1l
Slrul, Wagu, varloue
his cheeks. "There has to be im end to
"This is war!" announced a front- basketball, not of soccer," said Lucia Bid eecurity furnltntd Zenea~llle, Ohio ln1urance
.
) teat
page headl•'ne t'n the Mexico City Arango • a .street. vendor. "Destiny
has 1In Bond
form ahall be 43T01, the Melge requlreme~ta, varloua
. d'1sgrace where (A mencans
thIS
r
..
11 ued by a Surety County Grant• Adm. equel opportun11y
us like rats and 'i&lt;fiots.''
newspaper Reforma before the game. played a duty tnck on us.
c 0 mpan y
or Olllce, 111 E. provlatona, end lhe
Fox summoned almost his entire
At Yuppie's Sports Cafe, one of hun- . In a televised conversation with team Corporation llcenaad Memorial Drive, requirement for •
Fox tried to put an opti- In the Stall of Ohio to Pomeroy, Ohio 45711 payment bond 1nd
• Cab(· net to watch the ~arne, broadcast dreds of restaurants that stabed open members
· 1·
!
th
It
pro~ld• uld turety.
and Leading Crnk performance bond lor
I
00
I
I
• live from Jeonju, Soul Korea, at I :30 for the game, near Y •
peop e m!~ IC spm on e resu ·
..
Elloh Propo..t muet Con11rvanoy Dielrlot 100% of th• contr•cl
· a.m . 1oca1 t'•me.
gathered to watch on large-screen teleIn no way
defeated, he cont11n 1111 lull name Ofllct, 34411 Corn priCe. ·
. do we feel
Thousands of police were on a tense visions. Chests were covered in the said. "The Important
Ih'mg ·IS to f'1g ht, ollhe party or partlea Hollow lload, Rutland, No bldd1r
may
watch around Mexico City's Angel of Mexican team's green jersey, faces fight fight with tenacity."
eubmlttlng
the Ohio 43771 and withdraw hla bid
0
0
1
Independence monument, a half block were painted the green, red and white
When B~ian McBrid_e scored the first :~~:::: In~::..,:~ ;~~~~:~ln~ r.'c.~~': :~~~~h~~~ru~~ J.C::~~
from the U.S. Embassy, to guard of the Mexican flag. The restaurant. U.S. goal m the 8th mmute, screams of thareln. Eech bidder Market
street, the opening thereof.
against post-game disturbances at the thundered with chants of ''Mexico! anger burst from the crowd at Yuppie's muat aubmlt evl&lt;llnca Zanatvllla, Ohio 43701 The MEIQS COUNTY
• tradl·t 1·onal center of Mext'can soccer Mexico!"
andlseople buried
axperlenoaa
on check
upon made
payment
by COMMISSIONERS
, their heads
d f in
d their oll11
proltctt
Olelmltlr 110
p1yable
reeerve the rlghl lo
: celebrations. Cars were banned in the
All stood and sang as the Mexican h_an s. Af tcr a oew ~econ s o ep~es- 1nd complexity. The to Linn Engineering, w a 1v e
1ny
• area and police searched· all those anthem was played. Many screamed ston, the crowd af,arn began shoutmg, owner Intend• •nd Inc. In liM amounl of lrraguleritlea •nd to
approaching the monument · for obscenities at the "Star Spangled "Mexico I Mexico."
· r1qu1re1 that lhlt $118.00 lor nch tiet, reject any oren blda.
; weapons or alcohol.
. Banner" -- signs of resentment at a
But after the .second U.S: gboal the =~ol;:• 1 :;:h':~'= :~!~~.::':"be non· ~:~~~..lon;,:unty
~
The U.S. Embassy, surrounded by wealthier, more powerful northern crowd grew qu~et , and as ,tt ecame 3t,Z003.
.
The engln .. r'• (e)t,12,17
of
• barricades and riot police, announced neighbor that Mexicans often feel clear that Mex1co wouldn I recover, All contr1ctore and alitlmate
; : it would be closed Monday because of treats them with disrespect.
men began to weep and pull their team aubconlrlctora
conatructlon coel Ia
•
For decades, Mexicans took pride in J·erseys over their faces.
Involved wllh the $118,000.00 (On•
the game.

.
n
s
~ Loss to U.S. stuns·· Mexican fa

zine listed the Trail as

•

Americans s

~y

•
FROM THE PROS

WORLD CUP

JEONJU, South Korea (AP)- U.S. coach Bruce Arena
knows all about how Germany
beat the Americans four years
ago in the World Cup. He also
has a warning for the Cienilam
and everyone else: "The gap is
closing."
The Americans' 2.() vi
Monday over Mcxic:o to ~
the World Cu_p qlllll1edinals,
their best performance in 72
years, makes even a victory
over Germany on Friday look
possible.
Arena called three-time
champion Germany ''the.overwhelming favorites," recalling
how the Gennans beat the
United States.4-2 on March 27
in Rostock. Germany. And how
Germany
blanked
the
Americans 2.() in France' 98.
But with upstans like the
United States, Senegal and ~
hosts Japan and South K01e11
making an impact at this 17th
World Cup, anything could

I"' '' .•

..

•

The lgap
is closin
in worl
soccer

(Gennany) soundly
beat us on that day and we
understand · they are overwhelming favorites against the
U.S. on 'Friday," he said ''On
paper, it looks to be no match.
However, we don't play this
game on paper."
Arena tried to spread the
American success around, not·
ing the North ~ and
Cenlral American region sel·
dom gets much respect from its
European and South American
rivals.
"This is terrific for our
region," he said. "In all honesty,
I think our region is very underrated around the world. I think
this showing of Mexico, Costa
Rica and the United States will
get us a lot more respect."
Arena also shrugged off suggestions the United States had
been lucky. The Americans
advanced from their first-round
lp despite being beaten 3-1
Poland· in the final game.
y beat Portugal l-2 and lied
1-1 with South Korea. . .

.,

www.m,.-' Rynn'linel.com

:· llo;'lday, June 17, 2002

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Vulker Ruhe. then
the German defense
minister, said in
1992, "I am 1101 will·
ing to risk the lives of
German soldiers for
countries whose
names we cannot
~pcll proJI!!fly ."
llllerestingly, when
Genuans bid. they
use the French words
for the suits " but do
not spell them cor,
n.-.:tly! For eJtample.
they use Pik instead
..,.. ill · of pique for spades
·• 17
and K:uo not carrcaux for diamonds.
Out it doesn't mauer
in whllt lunauage you
bid or tlimli; the
method.~ for general•
ing tricks are identical.
In this deal, would
you 'prefer to de&lt;:lare
m or defend against
four heatts'?
Despite having live
poor trumps, South
went for the major·
suit gumc. Note that
no other game has
uny chance.
If y9u are defend·
ing with four good
trumps, do not try to
organize a rutf for
yourself (especially
when you have rea·
son to believe from
the bidding that part·
ncr has a weak hand).
Instead. try to sap de·
clarer. West stiould
lead the diamond
tour.
After · that start,
South has no chance.
He takes East's diu,
mond J. nck with hi~
nee an plays a heart,
but West goes in with
the queen and contin,
ues with the diaii'!Ond
queen. South wins
with the diamond
king und leads an·
other trump, but West
wins witli the king
and returns the dia,
10
mond
• forcing
South to ruff. Then,
South has to shift to
the black suits to hold
NO, M'( TURN SI&amp;NAL
his losses to minus
IOO.lrinsteadSouth
15 NOT 8ROKEN!
persists with a third
roun d 0 r trumps.
West wins with the
uce and leads the dia·
mond eight. South
to h~u::~.witt!,.~!~
trumps the second
round of clubs and
cashes the diamond
three for two down:
minus 200.

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. $'

CELEBRATING AMERICA
CELEBRITY CIPHER

..

by Lula c.mpa.

C I '"lj~=--.!111~11!111~1~~-bftllllaoa
Eecll_lll .....................

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.

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VLN

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MLG

oiRX

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LG

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High: 70s, low: 50s
Dtl. A2

AC

PZACII'

challenae

NAP. •

PGoiT

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PGG MHGWACIN
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "'ur flag hi' no otn.r cn.~r
11\an lllet whld\ we give 11 fiQm u-naratton to u-nara\1011." -

Woadrow Wlllon

WOlD
tAM I

0 ~'::"!;!...bl:d"'!o,~, ~':

low to form four .simple words.

N I V 0 I L:
.1ha;--r'"-il-:r2 ~~-;-1..=.,.-1
...~~~-=~·=t·

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r-

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C R VEM
~~snl;;;...;,l'--1
. . . .

:======~
N V T E R ~ : :',·
4 I
I I I

I

.Overheard in lobby of court·
house: 'Aro attorney Is someone
...__,__._...._.___..., who knows you ere Innocent and
is willing to spend every cent you
PUR J EM
_haveto·····it.'
·
I
I
I.
I
I
Complete
rho
chuckle
1. . . . . . 1 by lilllnv In tho mlsalng quo"d
wardt
yOU dovolop from stop No. 3 below.

e

r
1: r
-~;TH~E~Sf~S9~U~A;R£~S;_;;::;~:;::=~·;=:;-=~·~-~~-~• PAINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN

6 u~~~~N~~~~E lETTERS

II

I'

Emetic, Noose , Width , Nestle • SeNT THeM

· My forgetful uncle made a deal with a florist to send
my aunt flowers on special occasions. After a period of
time. however. in his usual absentmindedness. he saw
a bouquet and sald,"Very nice ,but who SENT THEM?"

piiii·U: CLBVELAND (AP)
tawsuits in Ohio and three
other stases allege that
JSroc;essive Corp. hM
cbaijiW different prices fur
the same auto insurance. ·
A former regionlli man·
ager for Progressive csti·
mated that the · sales prac,
tice hus allowed the auto
insurer to collect more than
$SOO million in extrll premium payments sim:e the
early
1990s,
The
(Cleveland) Plain Dealer
reported Monday. The
source was not identified.
Progressive believes the
llilegation is fllise, compa·
ny spokeswoman Leslie
Kolleda sllid Monday. She
declined to conunent fur,
tiler because lawsuits are
pending.
Progressive has its head. quarters In the Cleveland
suburb Mayfield Heishts.

· Ohio

Pick 3: 6-8·9
Pick 4: 3·5·1·1 .
1·2-4·19-24

Pick 3 n!l!d: 3·1·6 .
Pick 4 nljht: 8+ 1-4
Deily 3: 4·l-2
Del~ 4: 5·1·3·6

C:.sli 25: 4·6-14·Hi-18·20
you lonk like un intnlerant
quibbler. Work i1 out in pri·
\Ute.

. VlltGO (Aul!. 23-Sept. 22)
•· Unlc-. yuu monitor your
luvolvcolellls with friend• toduy with u tnudcnt e~c. they
~ould cuslly drug you 1ilto doIng ~om~thlnp thol I• beyond
your budget limits. Keep
budget intact.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) •
· Toke cure not to let your
wonderful dlspo$hion cuuse
you to undercslimnte your
competition or foveal ~our
aamc plnn too corly. Either
one may lund you smack be·
hind the eight liull.
SCORPfO (Oct. 24·Nov.
22) •• Letting un old grudge
from the pu~t innucnce your
attitude or behavior today
could be counterproductive.
Treat toduy's occurrence~ ns
new c~perlcnccs and judge
them uuuch .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec. 2l) •· In order to be !UC•
cessful toduy. you must re·
main cool-headed at ull time!.
Don't ullow yourself to yield
to 1he annoying rumblings of
otherA. lt may lend to rash or
Impulsive bel\uvlor.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jun.
19) ··When eriterlna Into uny

~urtnership arrangement to•
ijay. make certain that every·
one who porticiputes hus
something to offer. If not, the
alliance will collapse from
lnck uf purity.
AQUARIUS (Jun. 20-Feb.
19) •· If your heart Is not in
.your work todny. it will not
·be o good time to Iuckie nsslsnments you already find
difficult. Your performance
will be well below pur.
PISCES (Feb. 20,Miuch
20) ·· Whatever you do today,
du not gamble on situations m
which others have complete
control. It will nc¥atively af·
feet your contribution and you
mMy suffer u loss.
ARIES (Murch 2l·Aprlll9)
•· Don't ollow unythlng to
fester under your skin, espe.
clolly If It has to d11 with your
mate or n partner. If you don't
resolve it. it will negatively
affecl whatever you try to do
today.
TAURUS (Apri! 20-Muy
20) ·· If you're hellbent nn
pecking over 1hc shoulder~ of
th?sc under your supervision.
thiS constant oversight will
unnerve them toduy . Instead
of geuin~ the best out of
them, you II get a poor substi·
tutc.
.

CONCENTRAnNG - Weide Collins wants to be a winner In the P.O.P. contest of tile Ohio
Bicentennial Commmlsslon and at a recent WOII\shop at the Meigs Museum nothing could dis·
tr8()t him ftom the design work on his rura~1ype mallboll. (Charlene Hoeflich)
•

Bicentennial mailbox contest
underway in Meigs County
~Otft.ICH....YOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Lottettes

Index
.~ :a Sadlon•- 12 ,.._
Calendar
!:lassifieds
Comics
pear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A5
83·5
86

A5
A4
A3
A3
81·3
A2
c :100a Ohio volloy Publtlhlna ec.

Moodily monUftl lll the (Mili~t COWit)' Clwober- of
COil\lllel\.-e·s mlh Luncll wilh eM U@~ ~
In the Pork."
In 11tt~ ~ SlAte Stn. Mike ~. 1).
Bourne~U~~ State ltep.. John Cln:y. R-~1~ TJ.
Jus~. Oov. 'IWI.'s II!!~ 111.'tllltllnie dt~ ~tift':
senmuv~~ Joy~- direclor of the Go\ttnllil ~of
pp:dldli•: ~~ of the Gatlipotk i~ .~
Gury ~: Ctlllllty Commlssioott Stip Meado-w~
City M~Mgtt E. V. Oam. Jr.: W\d Chiisty 1..,)1\dl, fiekl repn!stntllli\'e for U.S. R~:p. ltd Stridllllld. ().~'~The ~\'eDt ~-as spoi\S(lfed br SBC merittth IJid Bob
E\'IIIIS F~~rtns. IJid ~ by Cbwnber ~~ John
Plillelier.
Altltou!h StrickiiJid ~in WwJtington ~tlliftll\'landa)'
morning. lynch .-1 1 letter from SlridiiJid to ~host in
1111~ndance. He touclled on Mtional security issues. prescription drug oosts tOr senior cltittn&amp; IJid thlt his major
i sues now &amp;re f~ghting lefrori:sm IJid !~!storing fiscal
n!Spon~bility.
.
Shoemllker lldded lhlt the concern · O\'ef the ~t1te bud&amp;et
crisi · we genuine, ~ will probably get \\'OI'SC.
He nlso commented on the ciaarette tu. IJid that lawmukers we puttilll! tobKco farmers on tt roller OODster ride..
ghing them money and taking it lll.'tl)' IJid giviq them
money ugaln.
·
Carey spoke mostly of the road construction aoi"' on in
the distrkt.
.
"I think it is Bfellt lhlt our part of the stttte is finally ca~
i"' up with the n!st of the lllte in ltltld construction," he
a.

BY ~· ~~ HOIPUCII

au~ 5:

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Gi\WPOUS-Community ~IIDilllnl ~
ton mtt :md eli~ ~ 0\'tf flapjleh IIlii JUite

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I I I 'I I 1.

SCRAM.WS ANSWIRS

BfM•!Pih

lllttiiSStll.I.WilN.~tw

Welt Vh'llnla ·

dcnuutds muy be mude on
your ubilltie~ nnd skills.
which will bring put your
very b~st.
GEMINI (Muy 21-June 20)
•• Munnging your personol us·
sets todny isn't upt to be one
uf ~our long suits. Your reck·
less ubundnnmcnt of prudence
will cuusc you to be e~truva·
gunt, with little to show fur it.
Trying to pntch up u broken
. romnncc? The Astro·Oruph
Mutthmuker cun help you un·
demund whttt to do to moke
the rclutlunshlp work. Mall
$2.7~ to Mtttchtnuker. c/o this
ncwsr•uper. P.O. Box 167,
Wick ilk OH 44()112.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
•• II' things urc u bit more dlf·
ricult fot yuu tuduy, loo~ to
you1·self before pointin@ uny
ringers of blumc at uthen.
The stress ui1d main you feel
muy be gencrutcd 6y your
own blod unitudc.
.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ··If
yuu urc huving trouble with
80mcuue, It won't help to nir
your vrlcvuncc! ln public. In
. fu&lt;:t, itmny buckllr~ and make

I 1•

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JUNE 17l

tlves. fn cm:h ir'lstnnt·e, grouter

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POMEROY- A mailbox is a mu.ilbox until
it becomes an· Ohio Bicentennial project, and
t!len it becomes a work of art.
Meiss Countians are turn ins ordl"'fY mail·
· boxes into decprative conversatioq pieces
commemorating the 200th bitthday ~Ohio.
It's a part of a state-wide contest ~ to
shift the observance's spotlight from ~ project
to anOther
from
sinsle ~ each
county
painted -with
the abicentennial
to
dozens of mailboxes lliong city streets ~ral
roadways with originlli themes and anwork.
Residents of 1111 ages are encotiraged to get
out their paint brushes, their desisn 1d~. even
their jig saws, and begin creating .eyecilching
mailboxes which can be entered into cOunty
and state competition.
.
Theme of the contest Is P.O.P. which means
"Post Ohio's Past." The Ohio Bicentennial
Commission in col\iunction with the Meiss
County Historiclli Society and Meiss County
Museum are sponsorins the ,contest In Meigs
Count~.
.
"Mallbox decorations should feature a per,
son, a place, a patriotic desisn or an event
empbasizinJ Oliio's slorious fast," said
Marsaret Parker, cha1rman o the Meigs
County/Ohio Bicentennilli Commluee.
Prizes will be awarded in two catesories,
free·standins or rural type mailboxes and

house-attached or city type boxe in both the
county and state contests.
Th each of the county winners a S I00 SIIV·
inss bond 110d a copy of the newly published,
· Meiss County Ohio History ~lume m. will
be awarded. The judsing will take place nt the
annual meeting of the Meigs County
Historical Society in October.
. · Rules specify thnt contesumts can submit in
one category only Md must ~nter in the coun·
· ·m ea....
-" calcty where the y I'tve. one wmner
sory from each county will be selected 110d
those winnin~ entries will be submitted for
state competition.
.
From the county winners 10 finalists in each
catesory will be selected and the winners will
be announced on Statehood Dny. Mnrch 1.

2003.

· The mailboxes of the 20 finlllists will be on .
display at the Fayette County Museum during .
the summer of 2003 as port of the statewide
celebration.
Then on Labor Day weekend, srand prize
winners in each catesory will be announced
and $1,000 prizes will be awarded.
·
"This is a great opportunity to bring Ohio
history to every neighborhood," said Parker.
She Uf8ed residents to remember the decornt·
ed fire pluss of 1976and to retlect on what the
P.O.P contest ~an contribute to memories of
Ohio's 200th birthday observance.

Slid.

CW'ey udded that he is ''U)' concerned with the Cheshire
situation 111111 thzn the House will he hellring testimony from
residents soon.
"This is something thut we will hn\-e to monitor very
closely," he said.
·
·
Justice also remarked on the cummt road constriiCtion
going on wad said ~this office' main goal now i to market the area to busmesses.
"We hnve come n long, long wny Md can no longer tallt
about the need for new highways." he said. "We need to
focus on economic development risht now."
Padgett told the crowd to be on the look out for the July
22 edition of Forbes magazine.
''My ollice hns worked very hard to put together an tld in
the magazine, thas is now up to 17 pages, to market this area
and surroundins uens to large businessc • both here in the
.United Stlltes Md outside the Un.ited State ," Pod~ said.
Purtnering efforts were the theme of Fenderbosch s speech.
"We have attempted to drllw business into the county by
prutneri"l eft"orts with the co;:r commissioners, working
together,' he Slid. "What's s
for Gallipolis Is good for
Gllilin County, and what is BOOd for Gallia County is BOOd
for Gu.llipolis."
Meadows blasted AEP for not being a "&amp;cod corporate
neighbor" after the slllte allowed both the ntn. James A.
Gavin Power Plant and the KyF Creek Power Plant to not
pay taxes on more than $1 bilhon worth of consuuction.
"The state is nllowing this,'' he said. "They llilowed $20
million in talt breaks that were not negotiated on the loclli
level, but instead were negotiated through the state."

'*"-IMtllcol Canflrl in Gollipolio ond Jaclt-, 0/oio, en ,_ acctpline applicafiom
lor twjjl*orl ...- . 'Mt oller -pet Jiem ..... luilion roirnl&gt;unon.ol, lluiht. tcloociU/ir'fl,
8 ond 12 hour Joifls. in·""- a apporluniliea, ' ,, """"' Ollislant9, ... ll.ocl Ji,_,tial,
ond cr
flonw ol $3000. l'ooilions en tlVGilablo in lloe ;..u_;ng enos:

.-on

Medical/Surgery • Critical Care • Emergency Department
Obslelrics • Pediatrics

Alllislod pcrsilions roq~&lt;i,. propet

.

.

hm in 0/oio.

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer· Difference
www~bolzer.org

If inJwRtad, please conlact:

Human RtiOVreol Deportment, Holzer Medical Centor, I00 Jotkson Pike. Gallipolis, 01\io AS63l

........ (740) 446·11 01 •••• (7401 446·11 06
----~-

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