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Still in style

Aaouttt data
used in fmud

Ever:~~onil

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

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

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. •.
THE BORN LOSER

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PEANUTS

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I(ES, /Y\~."'1¥\, I KNOW WIN
I'M IN

I MONDAY

SCI-IOOL. ...

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

umple,

Welther
Ddii. . Al

lv IRI~M J, RHO

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

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

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011

I I . I' I' I

PRINT NUMBERED
,:p LETTERS IN SQUAB!$

A

I)

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UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER

I' I' I' I
1· I I I I. I I !,
'

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

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

..

In county

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

Volunteers .rally for

Lottlrl•

IV ToNY M. WOH

Ohio

TLSAOiiOMVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

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

W11t Vlr~lnl•

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

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

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

bo'

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

· Ro1ds closed

CELEBRITY CIPHER

1\IISCS.

JUNE10 I

forCDBG

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

·

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

Streets seleded

RIVER SWEEP 2002

.,,

I rtte

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

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

Index
ll IICtiHI • I :1 Plpl

Calender
Clesslfleds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather .

A6
83·5
86

A5
A4
A3
A3
81·3
A2

" 2002 Ohio VIlli\' Publl1hln1 Co.

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

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

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

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

the

Fisher

n..'*

of

th

t ..
be.rJid

throug

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

Route 760 • Gallipolis ·

For more information, call

•

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

www.holzer.org

740) 446·4091
•

•

�Otiio

The Daily Sentinel
IJJadliMd&amp;r&gt; June 11

...

0~--

~ "' Cloudl' coo..ty

-

. ....
"·"

.

,__

AI&gt;\

6.

-

1• •
'lh!&lt;-

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-~~

lOt

Muggy, wet through Wednesday
BY THE

~SSOCI~TEO

'IHu'

PRESS

Cooler and drier air will
move into the area after one
more day of warm and humid
conditions on Wednesday, the
National Weather Service
said.
A frontal system will produce more storm clouds and
temperatures in the 80s on
Wednesday.
Highs on Thursday and into
the weekend will be in the
70s, the weather service said.
Sunset tonight will be at 9,
and sunrise on Wednesday is
at 6:02a.m.
· Weather forKast:
lbnight...Partly cloudy with
scattered showers and thunderstorms. Muggy. Lows In
the upper 60s. Southwest
winds S to 10 mph. Chance of
rain 40 percent.
Wednesday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Highs in the
mid 80s. West winds 10 to IS

mph. Chance of rain 50 percent.
Wednesday night. .. Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers ;md thunderstorms.
Lows in the upper 60s.
Chance of rain SO percent.
Extended forecast:
Thursday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Highs in the
upper 70s. Chance of rain SO
percent.
Thursday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
SOs.

Friday... Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers. Htghs in
the upper 70s.
Saturday... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the mid SOs and
highs In the mid 70s.
Sunday... Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the mid 50s and
highs near 80.
Monday... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the upper 50s and
highs in the lower 80s.

OHiclals push sales tax
AKRON (AP) -Area politicians have started promoting
a sales tax that would be the first in the state to pay for
aohool construetlon.
·.
The 30-year, half-cent Increase would raise the sales tax
rate from 5.75 percent to 6.25 percent and generate an estimated $30 million a year to pay for schoor capital projects
ln Summit County.
. Political leaders on Monday called such an increase the
Falrest way to raise lihilllons of dollars to build or renovate
schools.
·
"Peo_pie have been crying out for an alternative" to relying
on property taxes to pay f~r schools, Akron Mayor Don
Plusqueiiic sald.
.
.

Prostitution char1e closes bar
CLEVELAND (AP) - A judge declared a tavern a nul·
sance, a week after its owner was · indicted on charges of
compelling prostitution Involving a 17-year-old boy.
Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Judge John Sutula
ordered Lyn Ernsberger's bar, Marshall McCarrons Tavern,
padlocked Monday. Sutula will have another hearing June
20 to decide whether the bar should remain closed.
A county grand jury Indicted Ernsberger, 61, last Monday
on 12 counts of compelling prostitution and single counts of
aross sexual imposition and corruption of another with
arugs. Ernsberger had sex with a boy in exchange for

CLEVELAND (AP) Several hundred doctors'tallied
In downtown Cleveland on
Monday to protest malpractice
lawsuits that they say are driving up medical malpractice
insurance rates and driving
doctors out of business.
Standing under a banner
reading "Stop Lawsuit Abuse,"
Dr. Daruel McLaughlin, a vascular surgeon, said the state is
facing "a crisis of medical care
availability" due to the growth
in malpractice lawsuits.
. But citizen groups say the
reports of rising jury verdicts
are a r.use used by doctors and
insurance companies to generate support for le~slation to
limit hugation agrunst doctors
and hospitals and limit the
dam~es that juries can award
to pauents
·
No one disputes that medial
malpractice insurance rates are
rising dramatically in the state.
Larry Lika, an orthopedic
surgeon at Southwest General
Medical Center in Middleburg
Heights, said his premium
went from $36,000 to $80,000

in one year.
"My insurance rates doubled
and I never had a claim against
me," he said.
Dr. Anne Cath, who has a
private practice in internal
medicine in Cleveland, said her
malpractice rates jumped 350
percent this year.
"My ovcrftead far exceeds
my take-home pay," she said.
Cnth said she may have to
move her practice to a city
where insurance rates are lower
so "I can afford to pay myself."
Under state law, insurance
companies must justify rate
increases to state regulators, in
a simi Jar manner as utilities.
Todd Boyer, spokesman for
the Ohio Department of
Insurance said medical malpractice rates rose 14 percent in
2000, 21 percent in 200I and
35 percent so far in 2002.
"Insurers have .been able to
demonstrdte to the department
that their costs have been going
up at an equivalent rate," Boyer

District awaits .
bids on four
classrooms
HIGH RATES - Several hundred physicians and nurses rallY .
on Public Square In downtown Cleveland against rising ma~
practice Insurance rates. (AP)

ly hard hit because several taken over by state. regulators
companies that used to provide in December 1997 and later
mal!&gt;ractice insurance have
liquidated. The head of _·tbe
gone bankrupt or left the mar· company later pleaded guilty to
ket.
"d
PIE Mutual Insurance Co. draining funds from tbe com·
sat .
While rates are rising nation- was the largest malpractice pany to pay gambling debts
wide, Ohio has been particular· insurer in tbe state until it was and to contribute to politicians.

.

money, prosecutors said.
when he went outside during the rain stonn Wednesday to
Several neighbors ,who watched as authorities closed the check on the fan.ily's dogs. The normally ankle-deep creek
bar said they were glad to see the place closed.
that runs by the family's home overflowed its bunks.
Police have been searching the area since Thursday. On
Friday, they found the black hooded sweatshirt jacket on the
creek bank that Kennedy was wearing when he was seen
CLEVELAND (AP) - Thousands of dollars worth of last.
·
flowers, shrubs and trees have vanished from area cultural
"I thought that was bad news," said Bob Kennedy, the
gardens in a strinl! of thefts.
·
boy's uncle, about finding the jacket. "Of course, he could
Gino Colage satd he spent more than a year working on have took it off and throwed it down and walked off arid left
the Italian Cultural Garden for a ceremony honoring U.S. it, but we just kind of think that water is so swift it just
soldiers who died in Italy during World War I.
maybe took it risht off of him."
Colage, 77, said most of the hundreds of flowers he planted are gone. The mulch was pocked Monday with gaping
holes.
· "It broke my lleart," he said.
· OXFORD (AP) - ~alice arrested nine people on a total
of 17 drug charges dunng a two•day sweep resulting from. a
·
six-month investigation.
All nine were in the Butler County Jail on Monday. .
HAMILTON (AP)- A nurse who pleaded guilty to steal·
Undercover officers from the Oxford Police Department
ing drugs from The Fort Hamilton Hospital has been sen- and the Butler County Sheriff's Department made 20 pur·
tenced to a six-month treatment program at a minimum· chases of cocaine, crack cocaine, marijuana and prescription
security prison.
. ·
pills durin¥. the investigation, said Detective Jeff Riegert of
John Meehan, 43, was scheduled to report to the Butler the sheriff s department.
.
County Jail on Tuesday. If he doesn't follow the treatment
Another half-ounce of crack cocaine, some marijuana and
program, he' II have to spend more time in jail. .
drug paraphernalia were found while the arrests being made
"If you get kicked out, I'm going to ship you out for 17 over the weekend, Riegert said.
.
montlis," Butler County Common Pleas Judge Patricia Oney
told Meehan during his sentencing Monday. ·
Oney also sentenced him to five years probation and a
$1,500 fine.
·
AURORA (AP) - Six Flags Worlds of Adventure sent
thousands of customers home early Monday because of a
power outaje. .
It took officials two hours to get everyone out of the park.
XENIA (AP) ....: .The Greene County animal shelter and Free
passes were given to those who were sent home.
the local Humatle Societr want pennisslon to euthanize ·Park
officials said no one was stuck on any of the rides
three dogs that have been m custody since the mauling of a
because of a backup generator. The power went out at 11:45
3-day-old boy last November.
a.m.
and was restored two hours later.
.
The dogs have been kept alive while county Prosecutor
was
left
with
FirstEnergy
Corp.
seeking com·
A
message
William Schenck investigates the death of Alexander
Bennett. The boy's mother, Patricia Bennett, told authorities ment on what caused the outage in the c1ties of Aurora,
Twinsburg and Solon.
one of the three pels fatally mauled the her son Nov. 16.
The dogs - a husky and two German shepherds -are fed
and given water, but have no cdntact with workers because
of the mauling. Dogs normally are housed for a short time,
WASHINGTON (AP)- A plan to cleanup·uranium waste
until adoption or euthanasia.
in
Ohio, Kentucky and Tennesse is buried within the U-S
"1 am verr concerned and very sympathetic to the plight
Senate's
anti-terrorism spending bill.
.
of these ammals," Schenck said. "What I ask peor,te to
The provision would require the Energy Department to
understand is, I have (a case Involving) n dead infant. •
build waste conversion ·facilities in Piketon, Ohio and
Paducah, Kentucky, where uranium compound now is being
stored. It also is being stored in Oak Ridge, Tenn.
The converters would turn the compound into less toxic
ZANESVILLE (AP) - Police used cadaver dogs to
forms.
search a creek and surrounding woods Monday for a teen
Congress approved similar legislation in 1998 but the
who they believe was swept away in a flash flood last week.
Relatives last saw Joseph Kennedy, 16, of Zanesville, Bush administration has maintained it wasn't mandatory and
it might build only one facility. · ·

· Thieves target flora

9 arrested In drug _sweep

Nurse handed sentence

Outa1e closes Six Fl11s

Do1s set for euthanlzatlon

Waste -plants sou1ht

Hunt on for missing teen

COLUMBUS (AP)
schools enroll children who
Critics say charter schools' weren't served by public
poor performance on the schools and need more time to
Mltllh proficiency tests is evi· develop their programs.
dence the schools aren't doing
''In traditional school disa 100&lt;1 job.
tJ:icts, building enrollment tend
Onlf 6 percent of charter to be fairly stable, but In the
Schoo fourth-graders passed case of charter schools, they're
all five tests, unchanged from all start ups receiving new stuIllS! year, according to the dents, many of whom are older
'Department of · Education. students who tend to be lower
Only 6 percent of sixth- performing," said Steve
graders passed all five tests, up Ramsey, president of the. Ohio
from 4 percent last year.
Charter Schools Association.
Among regular public "There's a lot of ground to
achools, · 43 percent of all overcome."
fourth·and
sixth-graders
Only 19 percent of charter
passed all five tests.
school fourth-graders passed
"One would still expect the reading portion of the test,
them to show improvement; compared with 64 percent of
overall at least, they're not," · fourth-graders at regul"ar pubsaid Tom Mooney, president of lie schools.
.
the Ohio Federation of Charter schools, called com·
Teachers, which has sued the munity ·schools in Ohio, were
State challenging the constltu- created by state law in 1997.
tionality of IIJ charter scihool Free from some state regulalaw•.
tions, they receive basic per·
"This ought to give leglsla· pupil aid but no money for
tors paui!C before e"panding construction or renovation.
and deregUIIIling this program Comparisons with last
'
further," Mooney said.
year's results for both charter
••
A blil before the Ohio and regular public school stuSenate and already approved dents are difficult because, for
by the House would overhaul the first time this year, students
. • the ltate'l charter school laws, had three chances to pass the
includlna stripping the state of fourth-grade reading test.
direct oversight over the
Ohio has more than 90 charachools.
ter schools enrolling 23,000
Supporters . spy
many students. The state estipmtes it

'

will pay them about $131 mil·
lion this year.
In Cleveland, 24 percent of
Hope Academy Cathed~al students passed the fourth-grade
reading test, up from 8 percent
last year. Only 14 percent
passed all five tests in citizen·
ship, mathematics, reading,
science and Writing.
The students scored slightly
better than · fourth-graders
enrolled in Cleveland city
schools, only 22 percent of
whom passed the reading test.
Only II percent passed all
five.
Hope Academy Cathedral,

.'

BY Br r" J. RID

BREE.l»MYDAILYSENTINEI..COM

TUPPERS PLAINS Gro.wing en.rollmetu andl
. new ·· state requirements.
· have created a sho.nage of
.. 'space at Eastem Hi&amp;h
, :·school - a shortage t~
,. district bQard o.f education
· hopes to remedy with the
. construction of four n.ew
' • classrooms.
.. 1 • Eastern's
board bas
adve.rtised for bids fa• a.
- proposed building project
. to involve tbe construction ·
•·;~ of four full-sized dass·
: room~ betwe.e n the· sdeoce
,,, department and the section
;., .of the high school' building PROfGSED SlT£- Easte.nn LI!Call Eklardi o.1! Eliucation hopes. to. ~WUlltl fQwt nell!tcliiSSI'OQm$
- :.which once housed junioc lr:l this area, located between the Eastern Hid" Sl::hQQI iil:ience d!!plll!tment. lflft and!-. win"
' high
students.
"'"The:fiJtureofthe: PI'Qfect.will rei)f011'CllSts~
•
, the district com- which once houwdlunior hi(h iithool students..
In 1998
•.
mitte.d by lllf'OSReetive: cantrwnors. (Brian .L Re.ed)
,, ,Pieted the c_onstruction of a
.. new consolidated elemen· left over fl'Qm the distritl's
"The space is. needed till The district has aD a.v«:_ ,tary building and the major 199&amp; building project. Any_ adcbeu. sta.U~ ueqlliR- age diill)! a.tten~e &lt;ill &amp;.20,
·renovation of the hig.b balance would be pa.id from men!£,» Well said. "The studeniS,. and lli.Q&amp;t claMschool, buiJt in 11)58. .
the distrid's, genero fUild. numw of students. i01 ~ ~ h&lt;~~ve 111. ~u.m
That renovation included if the proj.ect is. de.emed cial educacion pROgrams, illl &amp;tu~nt/te~~ rattQ Q:ti" 25:the conversion of the junior afforda"le.
the distri¢t ha.~e gtQ.Wa;, and! t0r-l .
.., high w~ng, built in 19141, ''The OOald woo'l know if in Ol'derte, ghe a. meaning:U lh.e dli:s.llic.t t!&gt; UDAb:[e tO;
;: .1nto · h1gh schoQl dasS.· we can afford it until we gee fu• eduuli:on I.O&gt; a&lt;U o£ out a.ft'o.rol ~ e:C!lnS.Uileti®r pulill, 'rooms.
the bids from li:OOtraclon,"· &amp;ludenls, we l\at~e tOJ ha.~e jut. W~~ iiattd. ~lt.f
Grades 7 and 8. are now Wen s.aid.
enough 1!0_o.m for !hem.~
un•cs w m p..110;ba".l:): ·l:!e:
. housed in the new elemen· The new classrooms. if Ael:orotng to. Welt, tbRe pta.e:edl en the sli:hoo.ll co::·
,nJary building.
c.onsuue.ted. would house dusroom.s. wll:l!e cut from pus. tlill a.dd!iess. tb.e nu.dl fCMt
"'. The new construction will te.ehnology
programs., the dis.trie.t's. ~t98. buildina: &amp;pa~ - l!tu.t it i:.s Blll altet-. depend on the coils submit· · indudina computer lalM&gt;n· program plans..
.
native tba.t neilhel' e ~
1
'} ted by any tJfOSpective bid· tory s.pace for the Jildus.lrial
With a J,Nwing ' enmll- the bQudl hopeS; is D.Cii:ti·
'&gt; rders, s~rnntendent Deryl Tec.hnoloay proaram, and me.nt andl ever-inaeasie!5 suy.
. Well s11 .
spec.ia} eclucaiion.
state re.qu.imnents, then
"'If we act e:~~mpctio'r;e.
"''' The district has access to The Athens. uchite.ctural for additiona) dasm110m idflillda.hl:e b.ids.IUid 1n e:m
funds which remain .iii tho firm of hnie:h &amp; Noel com· &amp;pace presented it&amp;elf affOtdl to buitll the a~­
hands of the Ohio School pleted a feasibility study on almost immedia.tely after i.ion.al100 · tbl:'s the ·~
Facilities Commission ia the propoaaJ earlier tbi1 lhe new lntildill!&amp;s we1e we're &amp;oiDI to 10.- WeD
. the district's niDle - fi.lnds yeu. accOrding to Well.
occupied.
said.
·

-~------------------------------------------------------water .quality have resulted available to all who puiici. ueu alaq the side ol the

. ·I•

-·.:·er streams of the Ohio
~ River," she added.
The River Sweep is spon·
sored by ORSANCO, a
water pollution control
agency for the Ohio River
" :and its tributaries, and other
" ·-environmental agencies in
the states of Pennsylvania,
1
-' West Virginia, Kentucky,
• • 1ndiana and Illinois.
~'
9ver the past 20 years,
improvements made in
;,(

.

in inc:JeRsed recreational use
of the Ohio River. This
incJU.se in rec:reatioo produces more litter on the
riverbanks. Because of this
yearly
progression, · a
cleanup pro.riDl like the
River Sweep 1s neces&amp;ar)'. It
is hoped that increased public: exposure to the river will
foster areater environmental
concern for its future, said
Ison.
Trash bags and gloves
will be provided and each
volunteer wilJ receive a free
T·shirt. Following the River
Sweep, refreshments will be

,,

NOTICE
Edwards Moving and Rigging, Inc., has
been contracted to move ·generators, turbines and transformers into the Rolling Hills
Power Plant in Wilkesville. 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 taking Hwy 1689
n?rth to the P?wer Plant. We would appreCiate your pauence and cooperation. Move
date: June 13, 2002.

I
I
I

''

Healthy Start
Healthy Families

1.
I
I

'

~Ev--31.~

llcHgWa"*- 61.08
Char'rllliOII- 2.86

Cha"'*'tt Shopa- 7.85
City Holding- 18.58
Col-25.14

00-17.2a

Eld. 13

DuPont.- 44.63

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Ollefed by Mid valley Chris1lln Sdloot

ty

$27.30
$$3.82
$108.!41

~~--llolpCOUnty

. $211.28
$!8.418
$1011.72

...........•.•...•....••...
i U_nluerslty of Rio . :·

Rlchrd Kind ("Spin Cily")
married Dana Stanley in New
York's Cenlral Park wllh friend

Georp CIOOIMy u besc man.

~-~

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~~:::; ·i Conanaunlty College Yout• :
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·. nap ogment Service :
be
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contluctinr a

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Luncheon

••

On Thursday June 13

••

Front 1:1:00 to 1:00

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'the Sentinel -

••

111tlli""'--ot.ts ... Hto(jltlk-.-#-~..... lloM.Ttot •
•

Healthy Families offers no-cost health care
coverage for the entire family- !)Brents AND kids.

•. r.Ji'.s.,........,

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Meigs

Healthy Start It Healthy Famlllea Covel'l:

I
Vl1lon Servlcea
Dtntll C.re
Mental Health
And Much lll!orel

to Mason County

(740) 992-2217
•

ATIT-10.91
Bank One - 39.9S
Bll.-17.89

"*'

newaernyclalyHnllnet.com

•

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~1M Wwnm") &amp;!ltc:t 11:

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LOCAL STOCKS
Allllancllnc. - 38.211

News Dlplrtmlntl
1M
number le 992-2156.
Oepar1menl ex1antlona are:
Qenanl _...,
Eld. 12

Cleullled Ada

Doctor Vlaltl
Hoapltll Care
lmmunlzaUon•
Sub1tlnce Abuie
Prescription•

road.
• Wear old, c:«&lt;lf01rta.Ne
clothina and! slM!es.
• Wear ate'r;es to pi!0le(t
yO\R hlmils f.rom slwp
objects lin glass and metal
• Avoiil ~~reu thai ue
o.v~wD wilh s.hruK.
bldividuals inteteSted in
partkip&amp;tin&amp; io SaturdA) 's
event can do so by Ci::allill(l;
992-6360 or by
the. Meig' County Recyaing
and Litter Prevenlioo Office
oo the sec\lQd {loot ~ the
Meias County Annex to
obtu.n the appropriate waiv·

• Watch for traffic: when
working in the pull-o'ler · er fon~~S-

Arn~-33.1S

Our meln COl 101m In alllltorlle le
to be acc:Urate. H~ know 01 an
erro&lt; In • story, call !he~
at (740) 992-2156.

or

Healthy Start offers no-cost or low-cost health'
care coverage for kids (birth to age 19)
and pregnant women.

·

AEP-40.96
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AllZo -43.91

Correction Pcillcy .

Newt

Health Care Coverage for
Ohio's Working Families

bl11ffs.

The Daily Sentinel

I

I·

paled.
Safety lip&amp; for Rivu
Sweep volunteers ue IS follows:
• Watch were y01.1 wilt
and a.void broken alau.
1)151)' nails or poison ivy'
• Never place yours.etf in
a dan~erous situation, s.ue:ll
IS tl11n&amp;: to &amp;et trash !hit is
floating m die river.
• The c:unenl can be
strong, so don't get in the
water.
• Avoid high cliffs or

Call 992-6249 for details

I

operated by the Akron-based
for profit White Hat
Management, is one of a handful of original charter schools
still operating.
"Not only do I think we're
starting to see some significant
improvements, I think this is
an indication, as students
spend more time in our
schools, where we're able to
provide our academic pro·
gram, we're seeing continuous
improvement in those test
scores," said Mark Thimmig,
president of White Hat
Ventures, which operates the
White Hat schools.

,.......
•••

I I ?• '

... Reader SerVIces
I

poolty on state

. .. .

-.

,..,.

p.· a n,:atn

Doctors rally against skyrocketing insurance costs

Ohio weather

, Inc.

PageAl

(

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See Butch Cooper's story ... Bl...........:....._,

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ftft'ils

·f0MatOV- 'Sn '"'0 iia- ~ 3 - Olivia .Bl!'n, ~ )lp !jtrit Le:wis. Hale Moqu Km•-:d). And.ew
, \leigs llOtlll :sdlool lt ) I I ·Ot • M, . "*'rite ~ kcidy 'SI 1:1.
U'Bij
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Crilil SW.Z.
· I&amp; , idtwiiti.-a~u· ~!! • Bw tm Os :t: •, ltWm'P
Wz.
Grade 6 - Saaaatha
&lt;a.6cM:iia4frt.llr ~- lioaw:DwVD. ~'Dclds, kWouptta . U.biey Adauwu. NaJanc Acbms,
~!bet.
1 1 41l0dteldrar l(:y'k )o) s_
Sllelb} 'Bw&amp;Cdl, Cm
Davis, Jacob lbroes,. Amy Bur,
'Kii b~ filllal '( , •t.. s ~&lt;loll IC«r, ~ Sl*lly fr:a' lti, StkN ~ Bella, ERJy Da¥is,
:g:: r t paf(,;'Cf*: !ml~ Lc-M1 • " A'iflel li :ste,r. 'ReywOWs. ~ylor s.e-~, Meg&amp; Day,
Dlnly,
'!d!td)ol*
lin d ' :t~'SI
n Ma!J-'hdrer. :bnttO.S.. Elizabdh Doca, Ashley
'Stiilti IS ,ull'i()'l;&amp; fftia )Ill r»t)ta. :sldiy "f''ccull, ~ Bcrwd. 'lltyb Ebabath. Robert ruw •
**'~' lll211ili~"""""*.e• Ill . tt ~·a. Oe d• IIJ:.ell, W,. Hysell, Jacob 'Re«hmy GilJhs, O.Utapla
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Til tt
Megu 1fcwlsa; Patricia Jo1msoo.
~Ad~ VIi•.,
·Oc:bnd. K~ ·Goble. ~ Jones. lr..t.- KinDm,

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:t.a'itia ~ A«tilM Kinl p u
~Nitti &amp;I&amp; .
. A:~ IIlia, E 3 'I 'm .

Q1lie S:MI A'l$- k:ui~
·~We, Ulil Ro'f~Wian. A.:a
tbot ~di.(W lklaillt'ft..
~
~
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n ,. r# li t t y
&amp; Q1~ - ~
Btllra, D.t&amp;' · ~
:S :rr I tiM ~ IBibLIOil

&lt;il!retA

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Dena, 'li!lla lkd'he,
81C.Wilt&amp;, ~
Kilfited)
IR

M

IWmoll, Abigail

llolwa, 81anduu Mahr,
Kdtolr ~ Otelza
Mc'MiJlla, ~v'b Mitc:Wl,
8locly ·Peyton, "rmlon ~'rata-.
Tlylor l'llcbs, l.-a Snider,
'Giim:t CUllclitf, Austin
............ Jonlall HlDlft,

m Lindsay
Legar,

Joha Lamb,
Coley Mayes.

Me~ Bl ''*'lliU! Mildlell,

a.etsey Noel. Cassaacira

Patters011. BrinaDy Preast,
l.=ey Preece, rc.yla Rowley,
'htM&lt;~~ ·
~
Tithity Simpsoo, · l'tlillip
flib'4l:
Sissala, Moly Smith, Sle\ldl
M,!!ltlltidl Ma1llod:a Lambert. William Slewut. Lacey Stoblllt. James
lild 1111(18, StalMay.
Aaron Stacy, Aleu Veno)'.
Grade 1-&lt;llris~ Hanllah Williams, LQute
~ ~
_KiBt,
'Net Qtm, Silane ~ Wilson.
A* 'i
Paula &lt;Ole 7 BartOli,
.Wi'tt' lfa.
Bani tb .. ' . Manon. a.~ Bla&lt;:ltsloa, Daniel
f'Ozrit'l - ~ A1;d4. ~
lol'»
. . IC 1e Boo'bnln Valerie Canlmter.
, ~ ~ .Alit~ l~ .
~.. Jonalhan
Angela
Caci, . ·Alisba
' ~•1 ·
'SIM~!I,
'SI.ca W.ia"'Mt&amp;• ~ Oc-r,a, Cecili• .Core. Mad
.
-' (lrM!( 1iF
AMet
~la MCO\:de, Natalie Cor.Ut, Cody Davidson. Cary
'Oiait - 11¥"'-Y ~
llliC:b.el,
ShawneUa Dill. Jl!ll'her Eagle, Healher
'SIW ;¢, I() II~ 'Siill&gt; ' e
Paaenalfl, Qlld Se.ule$, Elam,
Kayla
Grover,
~ Vidcii l: t '£if, ·
Alilber Slti'oiJ'Ii'tz, Sblaa Courtney Ha,uy, Brittany
iBt' IIMit Mtr\1&amp;, Mtlitli:c
&amp;dtllif'&gt; M.J. Huttall, Haning, J~ lleftclrids,
Olat!t, ~ 'Nii&lt;llll.
~ Laae. 0\Janer Keilah Jtcb. Salah )eftas,
.~ SllfdfiiJa, "Midltiie
Mc:Xirrliey,
Breuna BethaD,y JCiDa, Dustin Knapp,
.:slillUfitla Mil~~
~ caey ~
Jtm~iret Kulin. Salah Lllitz.
Gt* 3 ....., ~ ~
rGnlde 2 - &amp;e-ven Mahr, &lt;Ayla Lee., Gabrielle l.esta',
~ Da'
. M\. ~:!'..._
Kassandra Mllllins, R. J. Olalsie Man.ley, Chelsea
ldllil$0iil, le&amp; LIIRZ. Milt
~ ~nidy
All Man~ey, ·aayton Mayes,
be
A\; R.oltie Cundiff, Ionian Martin McAngus, Amanda
~ &lt;\ - O.WII Bi-'1,
Je1Jeri. Metand:a Dickens, Miller, Rachael Mowery,
A~ ~~
lemlifer . Robinson, Kara David Poole. Jesse Price,
~.
· !!.~~Sly
Acl~.ennan. &lt;llelsey Eads, Bradley RllnSbuQ!, Robert
,U'M$
lW WliMms ·
Ric~
FM~na~~,
Km Reed, Amanda Scharliger,
6rd S ~
~
. c0r:h,Cod.}' Hy&amp;ell, Holly &amp;mantha Shontz, Alexander
'-'l'ra'¥kmtb .
TI!hl\y Mctqnney, Sissoo, Bobbi Smith, Bradley
t t -lacob '9ibi'll:litifu.
laoob N'Jtz. ~ Wlute.
SOulsby, Timothy Spires,
Mt 1•11 ilt 'i!l ,ta · Beaver, Ol}via
Grade 3 -Cameron Bolin, ~ Stitt, Maria Thodos,
Ki~\tv:t ...... Oiiflaft Dallielle 'C.lhnns,
Aum Sly1e. Cartee Smith, Kristin Trader. Dustin
A~ .. DY\awr
am, ftitdll\4., lt$$ica
'fY$ofr
Morris,
Alex
~ BeD. he BciMt. lt-.le U.W..,.~ Jones, Ac:lcerman, Shellie . Bailey,

Br:

I

Pt~ .a ~

....._ ~·
·

Jcs~ph

I

snk_

Tucbr,

rnr.v

TODAY IN HISTORY

.a

~~1\ooooCUci,

t're'Y&lt;lt c..tltf, Nicihaela
Da~ OJ, Dlx~ 1\b:l&lt;:k

lllletti raM:

~ R&lt;Msl\,
Sel~ ~

Mt\tox., 8Atcleftf'cltix.

aclcefttie

Grade 4 -

Ian .BulliilgtOII;

Streets, Miclci 8imes, Jll'Siin Cotterill,

ev..,ISMC~Olt)a:ille C.~n Smit)i. VIctoria Bn.dKood.AnnlshaKopec: .
M:a\._ 8rildlty l~IWI. ~Grade S ..,.. Cl:ayoon Bohn,
~:fi~~Oli¥1atli!M.
~· 3 Bna'ilna All A'$&gt; M~an l.elltes,Jason
~lor Rowe.. te\li ~.. 8•~· H:annab 'Cleek., Mom$. UllY Ja&lt;:b, All A's,

A~ ~ stwmo\\ \Val\tt, ~~"lite\ iGil\ey, Desirlllea
Walt«$.
~iW ~ JdNthin Mic:bael,
Wi,ylind, Valerie Wolfe.
Oldsea 'Patta$01\i..Bo-:Dara
~ l - ~ Babr, Po'Wl!, 0..~ Rime, Kasey
~ley B~. latQb l01iih,
~1e~
SU.Cy,
Bna\e:y, Matthew tascl, ~ Woodi.
. i\-'\V$&lt;111 'Davis, Robbie • Or.te -4 - Ashley Q]ey,
· nl\lon, &amp;ilea Pox, Rarley IV~ Conde, Caleb Davis,
fox, Makerlzle ()teeM:, Kit~ Davis,~~.
cotton M:a\1~ J~a$\ln leffeb. A~IM DeMoss, Kristel'l
F.Mi~
Ktflflall,
'~ Qlin, \lemnica Grimm, l,lolty
' 'McKtfl'i\CY• Jessi .,.ead&lt;'lws, Jeh, ~aft J~ttm, Patie'i\ce
~J~ Mul'hoUand, Jtrchel Jollnson, Erin Pattenon,
, \)a)'fle,
Emma
Penlll, Samantha Prater, Shelby

bY*

MtK•yla

~\\&gt;etl,

~iidd

Jt.yb\im, Keana R.obtillOI'I,
'Kicsha R.o'We, ~ Swanfl,
ll~tey Wtlls, Zi¢\1 Yeauger,
Orade2~0t\y'Caq)elilti',

Bnrno Casci, Suzy Cox,
: Oe-slrae Cundiff. Kimberly
CIJrl, Michael Davis, Zlcb
Fink, S~lby FitdiDitrick,
Raynee Hetman, 'Matlee
Uoftll'lail,
Jlt Jewell,
Michelle Johnsoo1 lefttey
,Kimes Allstll'l K\ng, Ben
· Reed J:ac:&lt;lb ~ Di Juan
· R:obl~oo Nathab it~
, ,l.,J, 'Ro~, Kayl. ShiM,
1favts ~kett. Haley ~
McKenlia Wamet, )esce
,WiseMAn,

........

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.. "

..
.

'

.

-.~

..
................. .

•

,,

WYatt Ball, April Oiler,
Oielsea SmaUwocid; CC •
Jesse C&amp;tt, Teny · Jewell,
Oarnis Nonis.

· ScM ~Miry Eleme~~tary
Kindergarten

-

Olivia

~ns, .Aiyson Dettwiller,

Devan
Dugan,
Andrea
McGrath, Jonathan, Mc~ey,
~ngel Rllssetl, Eric Snnth,
Ka~lynn , Stanley, Laun;n
Swrck, Bnanna Wen:y, Dalri
. n
Will.
Grade I - Kaitlyn Collins,
0'1\linget~, _ .ftcob
Riftle~ Christoi)h_er Folmer, Jen"!y
~anVanMa~.
·
Men Gheen, Hillary Stone, Dustm
VanMeter, C&amp;yla 'Ilylor, Ulbrich, Ka~e~yn Wallace,
Ashley Walker,
Aut~ltll\ Wtllrams, Jared

v.t.~
Nichclle
Wraws, Cassi Wba, Kasey
~. Morgu Wolfe,
C011stmJc'O: Wymt. Jc:rod

Jaynce
))eidson,

Nicllole Huper, Redl!ll
HlldllOO, Uniisey Jeffas,

~'7:..0!ri:
~~~,........,
~Gpt-At:.L~y
Pa~
1_._:!-.-~YcAIIUuh,llg, nn•
o&lt;.:~&lt;:=~S!!!.
.....,

Erica Poole. ame Wdm.
Mirada BeN .hmiD Bdl.
Oracle 11-BaookBotia
Jud
Bolia,Daek Baictles, ADc11ea Bmdelte, MeJiDda
Rc na
. Brooks,_ Wdliam OwJc.:ey, Ashley Colwell,
BudJriciJle. TraVIS Butcbcr, Kayte Davis,
JON!Nn
Joshn lloumi. Samantha Diddle, Maria Dn:uaa:
Cole, B .
Da . Valerie
•
Diddle,~
Ashley ~~ ~ .M =
Eqle. ~ Eskew, .JIIJ!CS · Brandi Hicb,
Jdfors.
Fife, ~ Fife, Cniaa Kelly JobnsJOII
Jestica
Ganblet, . Robert ~ · J!JS(ice.
Kisner.
Josllaa Gnnt, Joey H~. Rachel Morris, -Mathew
ADOIIa HalieGbach, Bntn~y O'B...,•.. J - y n-.~L
lac~ ~ Jeffers. lilian Mk~ R;.y;;.,
Jenkins, KnnbHiy Jclmson, Spradling, Emily Story.
Joshua KenDCdy. ~acob Stepblnie
Story..SChwab.
Kennedy, Brandon Kimes, Samantha nlle~Jennifct ·
'Jan Lee, 'hryn_ Lentes, "'-'"--, M·-.......

Jii:

Kal:

ZacMrY

A;;

M

M~y.

Ka

Lcsl

te.

. McLaughlin,

A~

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.,......,..,

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......,

Matthew ur...-J.... ·-~'fer'Zi•lt"n-'-'

B~w~'B~t. Re~~

~--- ... -

R~ Anael Riley, Ashley
Savage. Timothy Shane,
Jordan Shant. Jonathan
Slai!F, Rox•nne ~Abby
Stewan ' Whimey 'I'hoene,
VanReeth. Joshua
\IeDay. )ac:ob ~Y Miranda

Z::b'iiavrs,
~~......,.;Eakin '
. S.

Mead

K lly N

- ----"""

Gt_-ade 12- Carrie Abb&lt;it.
Rader, Vincb Rate_lift', Adrean ~~ ~~ . n~~oau:

OlristoDher

v.E;:'
.~a1
M · RIP

Sella
.
9 - Emily Ashley
Jefftey llaqh!Nll
Eri~
Cullums Trevor 'Depoy
Pattick Dowell, Eddie Fife:
Brandon Grover, Randy Hart.
Cassie Lee, Katie Reed.
Adun Snowden, Jennianne

YOUJ18.

Grade 10- David Barnes,
David Boyd, Jaclyn Bradbury,
Nathan
Brickles;
Joel
Clelland, Rachel Colvin,

Antber Ellis, Heathi:r Fatty.
Rae~! Garey, Joshua Glue.
Jess•ca
Ony,
Ashley
Hamilton, Corrie Hoo~•
Jameson Johnson, Mehssa
Kirk. John tentes, Jessica
Lucas; Brim McKinley, Kua
Musser, Joshua Napper,
Christopher Neece., ·Mindv
O'Dell, Kzystal Pennington,
Kristy Puckett, Misty PucKett.
Jennifer Reeyes, Jessica
Roush, . Lesbe
Runyon,
Amanda Saxon, Jessica
Schuler, Stacia Sims, Teny
Smith, RebeccaSmith,Antber
Snowden, Allison Story,
Joseph Varian, Dais_y_ White.
Shauna While, Tara Wyatt.

Healthy Start
Healthy Families.·

Health Care Coverage for
Ohio's Working Families .

Ottde S ~ Lacee Alms, Willramson,

Jamie Ash, Alex ClillUMs,
Dee Candill, £mily fiields,
t\tcmhia Ho\yaN, Satah
Hubbard, lessJc:a Jewell,
Ttffany
JobnsM, , Cara
-Lawless, A•ron . Ohph~lit,
.Alex PanersM, Erin 'Pertdns,
~Reeves, Kelsey SauteY$,
Zach
Schwab,
l&gt;ev•n
S&lt;llilsby, Josi Vai\Metet,
LD: tJ. Conlin, !me

Cm\stoft, Tal~ Lewis,

Grade 2- Cowtney Baker,
Daniel Collins, Breanna
Obee~, Emalee Glass, Cody
Hamung.
,.
·
.
Grade 3 - ~lame ~~ld,
Heath Deu:wrner, Wilham
F~mer, Mrranda Orue,ser, .
Ntc:holas Ingels, Manssa
Mc:Al'lllus. Cor\nor Swartz.
Otacfe 4 -:- Jacob Dunn,
Darby.
Gll~ore,
Scott

Kennedy,Iemnfer ~yne. ,

Dll: .)ames Cllnnri\gbam
Grade 5 - Janue Batley,
Ml4: 'Kim Deaver, AJ, Crockett Crow, J, R, Greene,

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.

992-2117
1-800-992-2608
.,

Maeg-.

Davis,

Sun•"l!tl Folmer,

�au

,.

Bradford Church
of Christ holds
mother-daughter ,
luncheon

u2 3 a

t

R

The Daily Sentinel

EOUTFORDPS

PllpBI
• • • ,,. •••• n.2UJ

Reds stumble at Texas in series opener
ClNCINNAl'l (AP) Receiver Michael ~brook
worked out Monday fur the
Cincinnati Benpls, who are
loold~ to improve one of
the NFL's worst passing
games.
The Washingtoo Redsldos
let Westbrook become an
unrestricted free agent after
kist seaSPD, when he cau~ht
57

pas.~

for 664 yards With

fuultoochdowns.
The Bengals scored a
l~e-low 2l6 point last
season and were lied for last
with 12 toochdown passes,
setting up their II th consecutive season without a win·
ning record.
·
· The Bengals have a deep,
}'011118 8fOOP of receivers led
by ·Diu1my "Scott, who turns .
30 before next season and
didn't attend voluntary minicamps last mooth. Scott
missed the 2000 season after
breaking his leg in training
camp, and caught 57 passes
(Qr 819 yards with two
tooclldowns last season.
· .Scott's contract calls for a
$3 million Slllary this season . .

ARUNOTON, fuas (AP)lsrnael Valdes took a shutout into
the ninth inning, and the Thxas
Rangers built a b~ eaa-ly lead en
route to an 8-2 vtctory over the
Cincinnati Reds to brQk a threegame losing streak.
John Rocker, r«.tled Sunday
from 1Tiple-A Oklahoma, got the
final two outs in his first major
leaaue appearance since May 18~
· .tferbert Perry and Machael
Young homered early, pushing the
Rangers to a 6-0 lead after two
innings.
.
The last three starts for Valdes
( 4·5) were no-decisions, even
though he hadn't allowed lllOOl
than t"ree runs in any orthose out·ngs.
a ~IdeS missed a chance for his
sixth career shutout when he

Rangers 8

...A

---!!!.!l'e•d;ps~~-balked in a run in the ninth inning
and then allowed Juan Castro's
RBI double. The right-hander was
then relieved by Rocker.
Valdes allowed II hits in 8 1-3
innings. He walked one and aruck
out five.
Perry's three-run homer in the
first · inning came against Scott
Sulljvan, who had just iepl11Ced
fill-an starter Carlos Ahnanzar.
Almanzar (0-1) left the game with
n fractured finger.
Young hit a two-run homer in
the second to give the Ranger,; a 60 lead. The Rangers' No. 9 hitter REDS ~-Cincinnati Reds pitcher Jose Sliva rolls off the mound after stumbling .
P11111 sealada, 11
while pitching against the Te~as Rangers In the si~th inning Monday. (AP)

•
I

son
BY 8u'rcM COONit

BCOOPE~'IIWL'ITRIBUNE.COM

MASON, W.Va. - lt
may be one of the best
rivalries in American
Legion ooseball this season
this year.
Meigs took on Mason
County Post 23/140 in the
first of four scheduled
'
games Monday as the
Mason squad won 5·3.
If this. game is indicative
of the series. then it could
live up to the rivalry
·
billing. ·
Mason County {3-2) had
.: CINCINNATI (AP) -The
some outstandtng perfor·
'Yerdict is in. The Cincinnati
mances at the plate as third
Reds want the 42,0!i0 seats in
baseman John Crawford
tli\ir new stadium to be red.
went 4-for-4, while Ryan
:·:'The team initially selected
Hodge was 3-for-3 with a
mrest green as the color for
double, triple nnd three
the seats. But man~ment · runs.
switched its eho\ce after John
Hodge was intentionally
Allen, the team's chief opel'llt"
· walked in his fourth at-bat.
ing officer, saw a computer
Mason collected 12 hits
rendering of the ballpark with
compared
to nine by
red seats.
Meigs.
. ·
Allen said he was struck by
Dustin
Gibbs
was
2·for-4
the conti'IISt of the red seats
with
11
triple
for
Meigs
(0against the white steel super3),
while
Ryan
Spaulding
structure of what will be
was also 2-for-4 with a pair
known liS the Great American
of
RBI und John Stanley,
Ball Park. HOK Sport, the
who
was walked twice, was
ballpark's III'Chitect, provided
2-for-3.
· the computer ~rtrayals.
At)er Meigs took a 2-1
"Green is faarly common in
lead
in the third inning
new stadiums; and we had that
when Spaulding singled in
as a placeholder," Allen said.
"Then we did a mock-up of . Stanley, M11son tied the
game in the fourth ns
the ballpark and tried different
Hodge tripled and scored
colored seats. The red reanr
on a Crawford base hit.
made the ballpark stand out.'
Muson County took the
Construction crews are to
lead for good in the next
begin the $4.1 million job of
installing seats this sunimer.
inning liS Andrew Cochrari
Managers estimate that the
drove In Ken Durst on a
job won't be finished until
single. Durst had reached
· January.
third base on a double and
The baliJl!lfk Is to be ready
error.
l'or the Reds' regular season
Cochran was 2-for-2 after
opener in April 2003.
entering . the gume in the
Each seat wUI have a cup
fifth inning.
holder. Mo~t seats will be 19
The home team added
. mches wide alld have Q team
runs in the si11th, as Hodge
logo on their red metal .supdoubled and scored on · n
ports.
sacrifice tly to right .field by
Seats In more e11pensive
J.P. Harmon, and in the sevsections, lncludln§ lu11ur)'
enth when Matt Warner
boxes and the diamond
scored on a Brad Roush
club," will be wider and
sacrifice fly to center field.
pndded.
Mason's first run came in
the bottom of the first with
two outs as Ry11n Hodge
singled and came across the
pl11te on a double by
Harmon.
.
.MASON, W.Va. - The
Meigs tied the game with
no outs In the second us
American Electric Power
Spaulding singled in Gibbs.
Fourth of July Baseball
The visitors had a chance
Tournament will tnke place
to do some damage later in
July 4-9 at the J.C. Cook ball·
the second with buses
fields.
loaded, but Mason pitcher
There will be two divisions
Bradford Clark got out of
- Pee ~ I0 and under and
the inning In good shape.
7-8 year old.
Relief pltclier J.D. Long
For more lnfonnation, call
picked
up the win, while
304-773-SS28.

Redsw•nts
seats to be red

.In new stadium

MEIGS CALENDAR
Community C.lendllr Ia Pub- dren's shot reccirda. Children must the United Methodlat Church, annual
lllhed u a .._ aemce to non- be acco.1'lJ)anltMi ~Y p~~rent or legal picnic, Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at the
profit groupe wllfllng to guardian. Dorattons appreciated but home of Julie Hubbard Syracuse.

Ohio University
Band summer
performances set
to.begin June 19

announce maatlnga and apeclal not required,
.Potluck
'
eventa. The calendar 11 · not
·
dealgnecl to promote aalu or CHESTER - Chester lbwnship
tunckalaera of any type. ltema Trusteea, Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW 9053,
TUppers .Plains hall, Thursday, 7:30
are printed only aa apace I* udta Chester town haH.
p.m. meeting; meal at 6:30 p.m.
and cannot be guarantMd to be
printed a apecltlc number of THURSDAY
dllp.
RACINE
Bethany-Dorcas SATURDAY
Sonshine Circle, Thursday, 7 p.m. in F»QMEROY - Father's Day dinner
the church annex. Mikhd Hart and
TUESDAY
POMEROY Meigs County Mabel Braoe to have ~:gram, Saturday, 6 p.m. at the Eagles Aerie
,
2171, Pomeroy. Members and one
Health Department childhood imfl'lu· refreshments. All women In
· guest are Invited. Women attending
nizatlon clinic, Tuesday, 1 to 3 p.m.
at 112 E. Memorial Drive. Take chil· MIDDLEPORT- Eleanor Circle of are to take a covered dish or dessert.

ATHENS
Ohio (Michigan State University),
University's School of Music: conducting;
will ~nt the "Under the • June 26 - John Climer
Elms concert series bCgin- (Ohio University), conductDing June 19 at 7 p.m. on the ing;
college green.
.
J1 3
John Cl'
The series will continue . • u Y amer
each Wednesday evening at 7 ~~~io University), conductp.m. through July 17. This
series has provided the ~ July 10 ...... Michael
Athens area wath outstanding Robinson (University of
summer band concerts since South Florida), conducung;
the late 1940s.
• July 17 - Ricbatd Suk
The Communiversity Band (Ohio University), conductis open to all adult and col- ing.
lege insarumentalisas and Those attending are invited
invited high school students. to take a picnic and enjoy outThe concert series includes: standing music presented by
• June 19- John Madden the suminer ensemble. .

Bugs Is coming back
LOS ANOID .FS (AP) - Hollywood, Las Vegas and
Bugs is coming back, doc.
Africa while searching for his
Warner Bros. announced missing father and an ancient
plans Monday .to produce a · treasure.
new feature film starring "Gremlins" filmmaker Joe
Bugs Bunny and fellow Dante has signed to direct the
Looney 1\me's cohorts Daffy comedy.
Duck, '1\veety Bird and the Several new Looney Tunes
scenery-chewing Tasmanian cartoon shorts will be created
Devil.
• to run before other feature
"Looney T\anes: . Back in movies, said Lorenzo di
Action" will combine those Bonaventura, president of
animated characters and oth· worldwide production for
ers with live-action back- Warner Bros.
grounds and performers; The studio started in the
much like the 1988 Disney animated-shan business in
comedy "Who Framed Roger 1930, when it released the
Rabbit."
first Looney Tunes short, a
It's the fti'St feature film for parody of Disney's Silly
Bugs and the gang since Symphonies titles, but in
1996's "Space Jam" with bas- recent years the cartoons have
lcetball star Michael Jordan. · been limited mainly to televiBrendan Fraser, best known sion.
for ''The Mummy" and its "Looney Tunes: Back in
sequel, will star m the new Action" begins filming in late
. film as a man who encoun~rs July with a planned theatrical
the cartoon creatures ·in debut in November 2003.

Youth toumey .
set for Mlson

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

.

Give Dad what he really wants this year... a trip to the Trail. One
.
·
phone call to our central Reservations number gets you a gifi
certtficate he can spend on some of the most-praised golf on this planet. G~if Maga:tint
recendy ranked The Judge Course at Capitol HiU as one of the 10 courses in the country
worthy of hosting the US Open. And people who've played the
Trail caD .it the number one value in the world as a golf
ALABAMA'S
destination and number 8 in the world for quality over 31 major golf
destinations around' the world... GOLF DII~SST SUII.VBY
Beginning July I, Dad (tnd Mom) can play 3 consecutive days of unliniited
golf for just '99 a penon (add SIO to each greens fee at Capitol Hill.) Hotels,
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www.rtjgolf.com
This Father's Day, give Dad what he really wants, golf on Alabama's
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incredible Robert Trent Jones GolfTrail.

~

'

SUMMER BASEBALL -

Mel&amp;s' Josh Lynch (above)
takes a knee with a break
In the action after &amp;ettlng
to flr$t base on a single In
the fifth Inning, while
Meigs pitcher Ryan
Spaulding (right) dellevers
to a Mason County hitter
durin&amp; Mel&amp;s' 5-3 loss to
Mason County Monday In
American Legion baseball
action. (Butch Cooper)
Crawford earned the save
pitching in the ninth.
Spaulding, who pitched a
complete game for Meigs,
picked up the loss.
Meigs travels to Athens
Wednesday, while Mnson
County plays host to South
Charleston.
·
Meigs and Mason are
scheduled to meet again
July 2 at Rock Springs.

V•.

11 Milton, w.
MIIQI 011000 100 -311 1
Maton 1 o o 1 1 1 1 o • - 5 12 0
Spaulding and Lynon . Clark, Long (8),
Crlwford (II) 1nd HOdge, Wamor (5).

Phillies
defeat ··
Indians
CLEVELAND (AP) - ·
Terry Adams pitched six
strong innings as the
Philadelphia Phillies got
their fourth straight win, 3·
I Monday night over the
Cleveland Indians in the
first matchup bi::tween two
of baseball's oldest teams.
Adams (3-4) grounded
out the Indians, getting 15
of his 18 outs on balls that
never got past the infield
dirt. The right-hander gave
up one run and four singles,
walked three and struck out
two.
Cleveland only hit four
balls - three hits and a fly·
out - into the outfield
against Adams, who carne
In 1·4 in his career against
AL teams. After starting his
first season ·in Philadelfhia
0-3, he has won three o his
last six starts.
One of the NL's slowest
teams. Philadelphia had a
season-high five steals in
five attempts. The Phillies
came in ranked 13th in the
league in steals with 29 in
60 games.
· Phillies relievers Jose
Santiago, Dan Plesac and
Ricky Bottalico got it to the
ninth for former Indians
closer Jose Mesa, who
earned his 18th save.
The Phillies, coming off a
three- game
sweep
in
Detroit, scratched out three
runs against C.C. Sabathia
(5·5), who allowed . eight
hits in 6 2·3 innings.
Phillies third baseman
Scou Rolen spent some
time before the game
addressing a repon that said
some or his teammates
· wished he would get traded.
The club has upped its
efforts to deal Rolen, who
has turned down a contract
offer from the Phillies and
is eligible to become a free
agent after the season.
He went O·for-3 with a ·
walk and a stolen base, and
made two sharp plays in the
field. Rolen also dropped
behind · Florida's Mike
Lowell in NL All-Star balloting.
Sabathiu's inability to
keep runners close allowed
the Phillies to steal bases
and score two runs in the
fifth for a 3-1 lead.

.I

I

•

Give Bl d...Sava A.lila I
• Thursday, June 13, 2002
• Noon to 6 p.m. 1
• Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
• Multi-purpose Room
• Sponsored by the Pleasant Valley Hospital Auxiliary
• For more information call: (304) 675-7222

•

.PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
•

..

�·-

---- --- . ---

- ~·-

•••·mt'' '1p1 atll.iCOift

P 11 B I• The Dilly s uUnel

•

"The Daily Sentinel

Red
Wings

-. ..

2
3
4
S
7
9
.10
11
12
1S

16

18
23
24

.Upcomlnc Sd:edule
JuDe

12 atAthens

:~ ~ersburg Post 104 (DH) .

17 at Nitro
18 Lanc:aster 2
19 Aleunder

.

7 p.m.
6p.m.
2 p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6 p.m.

22 at Pickcringtoo (DH)
25 at Lancaster
27-30 at Logan Post 78 Tournament
July
2 Mason
S · at Logan
6 Wellston (DH)
7 at Belpre (DH)
8 atMason

I p.m. 9
7p.m. 12
13
14
6p.m. IS
· 6 p.m. 17
I p.m. 19
I p.m. 20
6p.m. 21

Nick Merola
Tony Costanzo
Dave McClure
Ryan Spaulding
JoshLynch
DrewBush
Dally Hill ·
Jimmy Smith
Dustin Gibbs
Casey Dunfee
Shawn Wooten
John Stanley
Michael Warren
Ken Bumpass

Belpre
at Alexander
Parkersburg (DH)
at South Owlesloll
Athens
Mason
Lancaster.
at Chillieolhe (DH)
District Tournament at Ullcaster

6 p.m.

6p.m.
2 p.m.
2 p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
I p.m.

Unhappy with play, Indians' Travis
Fryman ponders possible retirement
Indians

CLEVELAND (AP) - As a
reporter danced around asking Travis
Fryman about his future, the
Oe.veland Indians' third baseman put
everything right out in the open.
"Am I ihinking about retuement?"
Fryman said. "I've said all along this
was a crucial year for me in my career.
This is not a new revelation."
Fryman has been bothered by
elbow, shoulder and back problems
the past two years, and the five-time
All-Star reiterated Monday that if his
production doesn't improve this season, he would think seriously about
lnaking it his last.
"I want to be an asset to the club, I
don't want to be a detriment," said
Fryman, who didn't start for the third
. straight game because of lower back
.... spasms. This is major league baseball.
You perform or you don't.
"If you don't, you get out."
The 33-year-old Fryman said he
f1rst began to contemplate the end of
his career in 1999 when a torn ligarnent in his right knee landed him on
· the disabled list for the first time.
But he bounced back in 2000 by
batting a career-high .321 with 22
homers and 106 RBis.
"Shoot, I thought I could play

Notebook

another 10 years," he joked. "At least
another three to five."
Fryman, though, decided to delay
elbow surgery and play last season
because he thought the Indians had a
real chance to make 11 run at a World
Series title.
·
He now thinks playing last year
may be a factor in his struggtes this
season.
He's batting just .213 and has never
been able to get on a roll at the plate.
The Indians, who have had trouble
scoring, sorely miss his usually productive bat.
Fryman said his health is tine, it's
just that his numbers are hurtln'-. ·
. "I'm throwing the ball OK,' said
Fryman, who liad shoulder surgery
last winter. "I'm just not swinging the
bat OK, and I don't know why that
is."
Concerned lhat he's been bringing
the team down, Fryman said he met
with Indians manager Charlie Manuel
about three weeks ago to discuss his

season and future.
Fryman said he wanted to be u~
front with Manuel and the Indians
organization. He had a similar meeting with Cleveland general manager
Mark Shapiro at the end of last season.
The Indians have a $6 million
option for 2003 on Fryman, who said
he wants to stay with the club as long
as he thinks he can help it win.
Fryman has promised himself lhat
he won't star. in the game if he can no
lonfer contribute.
·
" would never do that," he said.
Fryman consulted with Manuel
because he respects his manager's
opinion and before he makes a deciSIOn about retiring, he also would talk
with Hall of Fame manager Sparky
Anderson and former Detroit teammate Alan Trammel, he said.
· Before that, he's holding out hope
he can turn his season around.
"Somewhere I still feel like I am
capable of being an exceptional
everyday 11layer," he said.
• ELLIS OUT: DH Ellis Burks
was a late scratch from Monday's
lineup with a sore left knee, but he's
still expecting to make his first start in
the outfield Tuesday.
'
•

Burks, who has had both knees
operated on, said his knee would be
diained of fluid Monday night, but
he'll be able to play the second game
of the Indians' thiee-garne set with
PhiladelphiL
.
Indians manager Charlie Manuel
plans to 2lay Burks in the O!ltfield
against NL teams when Cleveland
continues interleague play with a road
trip to Colorado, Florida and
Montreal.
Manuel wants to use Burks twice in
each of the three:aarne series.
• BUCKEYE BATTLE CRY:
The Indians have made inquiries with
major league baseball about renewing
the "Battle of Ohio" and resuming
their interleague series with the
Cincinnati Reds.
The cross-state teams played each
year since 1997 before this season's
mterruption. They met three times in
'97 and '98 and played home-andhome series the next three years.
"I .enjoy~ playing the Cincinnati
Reds," Ind1ans manager Charlie
Manuel said. "From the fans • stand(XIint, I think it draws a lot of attention. People like to compare both
teams. I tlilnlc it's good for the state of
Ohio." .

NBA FINALS

.Freudian slip from Phil as Lakers, Nets take a day off
EAST RUIHERFORD, N.J. (A.P)- ''It's hard to say you can come back
Phil Jackson accidentally refcired to from 3..(), but you really can't. think
team owner Jerry Buss as Jerry Krause about the 3-0 deficit. You can only lllinlc
on Monday, an indication of hOw easy it about Oame 4," Nets auard Jason Kidd
is for the Los Angeles Lakers I!J let their said. '1t would be .nice to get one on the
mindJ wander.
board."
. ·
With a 3-0 lead over the New Jersey There wasn't a lot of bold talk coming
Nets in the beat-of-seven NBA Finals, from the Nets, who are well aware that
the Lakm need to have their lads.on no NBA team has come back from a 3acraight for only 48 more minutes to win 0 deficit to win a playoff series. Not in
their third consecutive title.
the second round, the conference finals
In the meantime, they Cll\ pclllder the or the fmals. Never.
bigger questions:
New Jersey's best chance has already
How will history rate them. and what · come and gone, and it seems nothinJI
should they call themselves? The Zen can prevent the Nets from Jakin~therr
Q}'IIIS!Y?
rightful place alongside Mike son,
Whai inscription should they put on WarEmtilemandtheFrench Worl Cup
, ' their clwrlpions:t:gs, and how can team.
·. they ~i61y do
than last year's
The Neta played their best game of
, ; chOice of "Bling-bling"?
the series Sunday night and silll lost,
·:.
What retrojerse,Y sbould Kobe wear 106-103.Abouttheon1ythingtheyhave
' to the championship parade?
' left to play for is pride, trying to avoid
.·: . '1' ve been in this sftuation before, and becommg the seventh team in NBA hisit's v~ difficult to keep a team tory to bC swept in the finals.
'focused,' Jackson said. ''The~ forget The last time a team had a 3..() lead in
about the fact they have to win..'
the finals was in 1996, and Jackson was
Game 4 isWedilesday nil{ht, and both there.
team~ decided not to practice Monday
That was the year the Chicago Bulls
on a warm. swnrrierl!U day. If fonn won a record 72 games but sqUandered
holds, both teams will begin their sum- a chance to be.remembered as the great·
mer vacations for real on Thursday.
est team in NBA history. The Butrs lost
All it will Jake is one more victory by Games 4 and S in Seattle before returnthe Lakm.
ing home to finish oft' the SuperSonics
•·

.

Reds

'

froni ..... B1.
llniiJhed 3~for-4.

Kevin Mench, ·recalled from the
IJlinon earlier Monday, added a 403foot solo homer to left in the aixth.
·Cincinnali had some early chances,
but left five men on base the first two
lnninga. They got two on in the fJrst
without scoring and left the bases
lotded in the seCond when Sean Casey

irounded

t.

Valdes :fidn't have a 1-2-3 inning
undl the fifth, and that was with the
help of. double play.

. .~ .

-·-

\

After retiring the first two batters he
faced, Almaniar was hit on the right
ring finger when he tried to field a ball
hit by Alex Rodri~ The ball glanced
oft' his hand and mto center field.
Almanzar stayed in the game after
resting his hand with some warmup
pitchis. But he left after walking Juan
Gonzalez and allowing an RBI single to
Rafael Palrneiro, and was taken Ia a
hospital for X·rays that revealed a hairline fracture.
Almanzar was making his first major
league start, after 13o relief appearances, for the injured Joae Rijo (shoulder). The Reds said Almat)zar would be
placed on the 15-day disabled list and
return to Cincinnati for treatment.
Rodriguez scored the game's first run

B1'f.ant was ~ing to figure out why
Philadelllhia Mayor Jolin Street hail
invited liim to a meeting. (Private booing session, JlCJ'haps?).
Bryant hail a bieakout game Sunday
nijht with 36 points, maldng a clutch
10-footer with 19.1 seconds left to give
Los Angelea a four-point lead.
It was a performance right up there
with the defining moments of B~ant's
career- Game 4 aaainst Indiana m the
2000 finals, Game·3 against the 76ers a
year ago, the AU-Star glllile in Philly
earlier ihis year- ind put the 23-yearold star on the verge of winning his third
championship.
By the time Bryant reaches the age af
whiCh Michael JOrdan won his tint title
- 29 - he may be running out of fm· .
8C!S on which to dill])lay hii rings.
-ISS.
Bryant .and O'Neal are already
The next victory will tie him with Red regarded as one of the greatest pair of
Auerbach for most·championships - teammates in NBA hisk1fY.
nine.
"After this year, they hive to be con"I expect a cigar. Not lit, hopefully," sidered_pretty cloae to the top," Lakers
Jackson said.
·
gl!ard Derek Fisher said. "You look at.
With an afternoon off, the Lakers Michael and Scottie, Magic and
pi~ to relax.
·
Kareem, but these two guys are deti·
Samaki Walker was trying to decide · nitely somewhere in there.
whether to go shopping in "Harlem or "You can't compare eras, and you
SoHo. Lindsey Hunter was wondering have to respect thoSe who came before
which pa~-,PCr-view movie he'd get us, but Sh.t. and Kobe- man, they're ·
while awattillg his wife's arrival. Kobe something?
·

in Game 6.
That memory remains vivid for
Jackson, which could help explain wh)'
he uttered the name of his old nemcs1s
while answering · a question about
whether he plans to retire when his conlnlct expires in two years. ·
"I ha:ve not said two· years is it,"
Jackson said. "I want to fulfill my contract, and m_y first obligation is to try
and do that. It's a responsibility I owe to
· Jerry Krause. At that time, I'd like to
think the next step over."
·
Realizing his faux pas, Jackson
grinned as he corrected himself explaining that he meant to say "Buss,"
not his ex-boss with the Bulls.
The Lakers' victory in Game 3 moved
Jackson into a tic with Pat Riley for
most career postseason coaching wins

on the hit by Palrneiro,. even though
right fielder Austin Kearns' throw beat
A·Rod to the plate.
·
When Jason LaRue had to jump to
catch the ball, Rodriguez did a stutterstep and dived toward the pl~~te.
RodriJIIICZ touched horne with his band,
avoidmg the tag of the catcher who was
sitting on the plate but falling back·
ward.
·
Young's homer came after rookie
Ryan Ludwick had a leadoff walk in the
second..
After Mench's horner in the sixth,
Young reached on a two-out infield hit
and scored on an RBI single by Ivan
Rodrig~~~:z for an 8..() lead. ·
NOTES: Hall of Fame catcher
Johnny Bench, who spent his entire 13~

year career with Cincinnati, threw out
the first pitch. He also was on hand for
a p:egarne ceremony in which Ivan
ROdriguez was presented hil lOth
straigllt Oold Glove, matchina Bench.
... Alex Rodriguez ended tile aixth
inning when he dived and was ful~
extenlled to ~h .Russell Bran)'81la
short pop to left field to end the iixth.
He held on as he alanuned to the
21'01111d. .. • Branyll\ was traded from
Cleveland to Cincinnati on Friday, and
was the DH for the third straight game.
... The Rangers had lost four al:i:aight
interle.aaue games. ... Alex Rodriguez
had his 1ourtb straight game withoUt an
RBI. his longest stretch since not driving in a run the fJrSt five games of the
season.

France
Denma and
Senegal

shut out
·'Canes
RALEIGH. N.C. (AP)
-

Dominik

HISel'&amp;

adventuresome journeys

from the net scii!II'Jtimm
scare and fru$11'8te his
teaJnllllitS - but they've
also led them within one
..v-.. of the Sta_nley Olp.
-~. lCCfllired laSt
~.for the sole purpose of
.leaciUI&amp; the NHLY aldesl
and mos1 talenled team to a
c:himpionship. put on a
~show for hb
m:cxd sixth shutout of lbe
playoft's to lead the Red
Wings to a 3-0 victcey
over
the
Carolina
Hurricanes in Game 4 of
the Stanley Cup finals
Monday night.
The RedW'mgs apeoed
a 3-1 lead in the besi"'f~ven series and can. win
their third Stanley Cup in
six years by winning
Game S on home ice
Thursday night at Joe
Louis Arena, where
last won the CI!P in 1 ,
They won in 1998 by fin. ishi11g a fOUJiogame sweep
. "Washington
mFor the secOOd s!raight
i~· the Red W'J!IiS'
tliggest aoats carne frOm
Brett Rull and Igor
Larionov, the seemingly
~less stars who com·
bined for all three scores in
Detroit's momentum-shifting, three-overtime 3-2'
victory in Game 3 on
Saturday night.
Hull J.OI the game.'s tint
goal Wlth a shot off the .
post in the second period.
Larionov, who won the
third-longest game in
finals history in the third
overtime Saturday, made it
2-0 by scoring eJirly in the
third period - hls . third
~ in two games.
.
Of course, maybe Hult
owes Hasek a Cup, and i.a
paying him !lack with his
two big goals. Hull's
Dallas Stars · denied
Hasek's Buffalo Sabres the
cup by winning the finab
in 1999 on Hull's disputed
goal in the third overtime
of Game 6 in Buffalo.
The way Hasek was
playing, thOugh, one goal
woUld have lieen en~h.
Aliuably the best plie in
NHL history wlihout a
Stanley c:up ring, the 37- ·
year-old Hasek did it all in
his best game of the finala,
often wlndering far from
the net to stop shOts and
begin up-icc rushes while
miking 17 saves in his first
shutout of the ~ries.
Hasek even started the
rush that led to Hull's goal
by leavilul the net to Jrialce
an up-the:tce feed. He also
exteilded his · scoreless
streak in the series to 127
minutes, 13 seconds, one
that began in the third peri· .
odofOame3.
Hasek's moat brilliant
play was a save-or-else.
SlOP on Erik Cole til keep
the; game scoreless late in
the first period.
•
Cole, who is scoreless in
10 ,IIIIICI, got loose by
skatmg around defense- .
man Chris Chelioa, only to
be surprised when Hasek
became his own defenseman by coming out to the
top o( the right cln:le to
poke the puctc away.
With bOth teams showing some fatigue · from
Saturday night, Hull
OJlC!lled the scoring.
Working a 3-on-2 break
started by Hasek's breakout pass, H.ull skated down
the left wing and . took
Boyd Devereaux's crossice pass to one-time a shot
oft' the left goal post and
into the net before goalie
Arturs Irbe could react at
6:32;
Irbe played well, stopping 24 shots, but lie
a1niOit needed to be perfect to match Hasek.
Hull's league-leadigg
lOth goal of tbe P.~JOtfl
came on the Red .W!DI•'
fint lhot of the period incl
made him the f0u11h player in the NHL history wfth
100 career playoff 1oals.
Hull now trails Wayne
Gretzky (122), Mark
Messier (1 09) and 1ari
Kurri (106) in career playoff goals.. •

:9{.

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1

i

Germany and
Ireland move on
to Round of 16
BY ..... llltoMI
~TEDPRlSS
YOKOHAMA, Japan -

N~ 2011s, no gkxy. No more
, WcirTd CuD fOf Fnnce.

cllarnDiou
: needed to beat "banmft by
I •

The

defend.i112

• two ROlls Tuesda~ to IUtth
I the World Cup s second
round. Instead, the Dalles
• won 2-0 in lnc:heon. Sooth
: Korea. and Les Bleus becufte
: the first champions to go
: scoreless throUgh a (llSt
· round. Thefre also the first
: defending ,ntlist to exit ~er
: the opening round smce
: Brazil 1n 1966"It's the end of a beautiful
story," French striker ·David
Trezeguet said. ''That's the
law of soccer, you have to
accept it.
"We had lots of ambition
and we wanted to do a lot better. It's a real pitJ."
1
While the o.nes won
: Group A, tournament new: .:omer Senegal rode lhree
l first-half goals into the next
· 1 round. The Africans took a 3: 0 lelld and barely held on for a
: 3-3 tie against Uruguay in
: Suwon, South Korea. .
Denmark plays Saturda}' in
Niigata, Japan against eliher
. : England.
Sweden
or
: Argentina. Senegal plays
Sunday in Oita, Japan against
one of those teams.
"I believe a small team c:an
be big," said Sene-at's El
Hadji Dlouf. "Today 1s a historic day fot African countries."
· Those two joined four-time
winner Brazil, Spain, threetime winner Germany and
Ireland in the round of 16.
1
Germany, despite playing
: the final SO minutes a man
1 down when Carsten Ramelow
: was ejected -at Shizuoka,
i Japan,lcnocked out Cameroon
1 2-0 on 41oats by Marco Bode
i and Mlroslav Kohse, who
· : now has five goals. The
: Germans will P.lay Saturday
: at Seogwipo, South Korea
1 against either Spain, South
i Africa or Paraguay.
l Ireland defeated already1 eliminated Saudi Arabia 3-0
' in Yokohama to finish second
to Germany in Qroup E. The
; Irish will opt)Osc eitlier Spain
' or South Africa in Suwon,
: South Korea on Sunday.
: With 1998 World Cup hero
: Zinedine Zidane on the side. 1 line with a thi~h injury,
i France opened w1th a stunning 1-0 loss to SeneiJil and
then tied Uruguay 0-0. Zldane
returned for tlie Denmark
game, but nothing helped the
French, who saw two shots
rebound oft' the crossbar. ·
Zidane walked off the .field
with his head hanging down,
followed by the rest of the
French team.
''I didn't expect to go back
home like thit after the fint
round," Zidane aald. "We're
'all very, very disappointed,
but we won't II9P bOre. We
will have to t~~r,~;~ the page,

!

DOWN AND OUT - French m~ldef Zinedlne Zklene, ri&amp;ht.
loses belence while chaslrc ttl&amp; bell wiUI Denmlfk's Martin
Laursen (4) du~"'l their World Cup Gnlup A match at World Cup
Stlclium In lncheon, South ~OI'et. on 'TUesday; Zldtne flit.cl to
revM!t Fl'ance's WOrld cup c"mPitan 'TUesday, aMna • tnce~
dlsappointlna performence as the defendi"'l chiiiTiplon Sink to
a 2-0 defeat acatnst Oenmll'll and exlted the competition. (AP)

turn over a new leaf."
Thousands of traveling Les
Bleus fans fell silent, while
Danish fans in the. opposite
c:omer of the stlldlum ocat on
drums and sang "Ole, Ole,
Ole."
"We had a good da}'.'' c:oach
Morten Olsen said. "The team
played with a lot of c:onfl·
dence and, especially, a lot of
discipline."
·
Back in Paris, some reaclions to the French loss were
strong.
"I'm disgusted. They are
the defending champions, and
for four years they braued
and did nothing," said atcni.teet Alain Ooust, 32. "When
they arrive back at · the
Champs Elysees, they're
going to have tomatoes
thrown at them."
·
· Needing only a draw to
advance, the Danes got goals
from Dennis Romniedabl in
the 22nd minute and Jon Dahl
Tomasson on counterattack
In the 67th. It was Tomasson 's
fourth gO.l in three games .
While the French couldn't
convert at all, Tomasson connected on a rare opportunity.
In fact, the Danes scored on
their only two shots on goal.
"I had a difficult time
today,'' Tomasson said, "and
nine out of 10 times l didn't
have a chance to reach the
ball. I jus~ ha~ to keep working, workmg.
.
Denmark earher beat

a

Uruguay 2·1 and tied 1-1 with
Senegal.
Senegal gained its 3.() lelld .
on a ~nalty . by Khalilou
Fadiga m the 20th minute and
goals by Papa Bouba Diop in
tbe 26tfl and 38th.
.
In the second half, UNguay .
had goals by Richard MoraleS
in the 46th minute and Diego
Farlan .in the 69th, and lied FliRCI COMPITniON -Ireland's Gery Breen (14) llncl Saudi Arabia's ADGIIIIIII ~hllttnll batthe game on Alvaro Recoba's tle fof the ball durin&amp; their 2002 World Cup GI'Oup E1 flrst I'Ound metcn on 'TUesday In '1'bkohlml,
penlilty k;ck in the 88th.
Japan. lrleend won S-O to ldvlnce to the second round. (API ·
.
.
UNgu11y narrowly ' missed
advancing instclld of Senegal
in the first minute of injury
time. Senegal's Lllmino Diatta
headed 11 shot off the line and,
staring at an open net,
Morales sent a close-in head·
er wide.
"We're bitter,'~ Forlan said.
"One aoal could have made
the difference and we should
have had it at the end."
In Senegal's capital, Dakar,
fans careened tllrough the
streets in battered ota cars
waving fists and national
flags.
A British man remained in a
coma Tuesda~ after fracturing
his skull in a fall the previous
eo.. A!omllt\tqp1,
0111, lalt\ and IIOdV
night at . Jeonju · Stadl~m,
All Nallllll Ht!llt.
where Portugal was beat1ng
OADIR
ONo\.INI
Poland 4-0. The man was run- •
Cllalag Available
nlng around a lower con·
1800·'1te-Mt
course in front of spectator
kllhvthelbl.com
seats in the rain when he
sliP.ped 11nd fell over a barrier
ana 1 Into a moat, FIFA
spokesman Keith Cooper
Ml~ng 0\ir 8lltl Broai\UMI
said.

CHEERLEADER
TUMBLING CLINIC
with

HENRY &amp; MATT
Saturday, 8·1!i
91m·NOOI'I

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FM S~plltl, l'olllgtl
Stan lmmtOialtiVI
Clenulnt Olo!oortunllyl
For FM.Inlormltlon,
Clll 'IQIII'M:

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U11 our " 'I
Spill ptCiilel
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luppllll. Q1nulnol
II
1lnat 1Ill. lonulllll
MLMliiiONT

11011 bllno VIOTIMIZIDI

Mill Park Board

LONGABEAGER
BASKET BINGO
Tueldayl Ju111181 2002

7:00p.m. ·

Middleport Legion Hall
$20.00 for 20 Gam81
Drawing
2 Raffle Baskets
Prizes • R•lra•ll'lm11nl1
Specllll bUket drawtng lor tlck•lll
purohatld prior to June 18
NOSMQKING
For tlcketlnlo or Info, call ·
Jenn 11 740·848·2188

eo-eo

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ACC 10

Any Cpportunllyo

WllhOUI

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0111: I·IOO·RR?olll!,
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(unavallablt In plnlbllrg

IPfOI:flo oonltnl of tht Nlllontl
Claa:tl!ltd ldl. Befort lnvtltlngll OONSO"DATI YOU~ WAY OUTO,

In
I

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1.

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'""""'"""'" WI W 0 10U
, pltlll 0111 tht Nltlontl

IBullntll Burtlu 11::

mon&gt;nly paymonlt.

pay one bNVmonlh.
IASY 10 Oil 111"111.
"""nclal Frttdono Ohrlolltn Oounullng
11001111·8717 003
www. cltbiOOt.Ort (Non·Piolll)

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Stade IUwr
"AheM In Service"
35537 St. Rt. 7 NOI'III• Pomeroy, OH ~720
"' I

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rifnut

Oolden Bow 16,000 twine ................... $18.~

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Golden Bow 9,000 twine ..................... $ 16.95

(?40)448 2342 Su.tiftet (740) 99N1S6 1\tath (304) 675-1333

a.. ... _..,...,.llll ·
•

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20,000 Plutlc Btltr twine ................... $13.73

•

OtPult(MitMa1SJ

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Thp 0....0 Putura with SulfUr
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QtfU ,_C*)UMIM

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tuperiOn

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12 ................ :...................... $3 .~ Ills.
StuD'..................................... $3.99/SO lb&amp;
for boms, pens.
&amp; nilen

~"" r-... ~rlct•y

• to·

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p.m.

P/1

Sunset Home
Construction

COIItllacMIS, INC. I
· Aaclne, Ohio 45771

I

74MIW84t .
toll&lt;tmtiLOWtiKl

• Fooom, Walla, Slepl •
Fl1t Wort,
Rq;l.,.menta, • Walko 1
alit! llriYO&amp; • Stencil

. Cellular

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Authorized Agent ·

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Free &amp;u...tta

FREE ESTIMATES!

992·5479

-Servlna ollto alit! w. v.

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Publlo Notice

Bryen RMVM
New HomM, Room Addltlone,
GII'IIQel, Pole Bulldlngl, Roofs,
Siding, 'Dicka, Kitchen•, Dryw•ll
• MOI'II .

740-742·3411

..
ROBERT BISSELL DIPGYIII
Pllfl
CONSTRUOION

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL
Roofing- Home •NtWHOIMI
Maintenance- •Gir~gtl
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Raii'IOdtllng
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Stop 1 Comptrt
Ff8f' Etfltnlftl FREE ESTIMATES
741).882·1871

All Makes Tractor &amp;:
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized

Case-IH Pans
Dealers
I(}()() Sr. Rr. 7Sourh

Coolville, OH 45723 I
'

0«.6 &lt;&gt;vht: &amp; Gravely
MIIHY Fergueon
Perta l Service

Raelnt, Ohio 45771

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

.740-667·0363

740.848-2217

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR

8liiltl'x'o'
to10'd0'

43SUt. Rt. 1110 .
Ollllpolli, OH 411831

Houre

(740) 446-1044

7:00AM • 8:00 PM

Mondly•Frldly WPM • Slturdly 8-2pm

11-~~ MACK'S
Pocket Knlvea

High&amp; Dey
SeU·Storage

&amp; Collectible•
~Cut Above

...,the Rest•
HOUI'I:

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Mon-Sat 1G-4
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74().992·5232

(740) H2·111108

Pv,.,. ()1M

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IIIIISTIIIA111

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SIIICI1914

Tr•• S•rvlce

• Top • Removal • Trim
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• Bucket Truck

LIME·

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BLIND ·SPOT

I \1, \I
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(l'aototy Oulltl)
All vel'llul blkldl aN!

I I I I II
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end number

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d tt41fll

•Hilling
A u"te.e•
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110 yr, peril • Labor

• Hlltln~ • Air Conditioning
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"IALI!I AND 8ERVICI!"
WOLFE HEATING l COOLING

Connie's ·
Child CARE

hat openlnga, 15 yr.
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In Melg1, Athtnt ind
Waehlngton counlltl,
IXpt~lnct,

Open 24 hours.
7 Days per week
St. Rt. 7 Tuppera
Plains, OH
CALL 667=6329

992-215$
STRTfSTORE

Business Services

for
150 per
month

. (740) 1591·2173

144~ ........h

..

Now Open

New Homes 1 VInyl
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BntndiWIW~CIIW1
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FREE ESTIMATES
s r · ""'

11a.m. • 1 p.m.
Mond1y thru

laturdly
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100 Ulnt llllln St.
Pllllll'lll
892.0008

74D-H2·7IIKI

INO 8UNIOAY I)AI

In this

space

dtta1II. C.ll:

• Mlnlo f Etc

Advertise
•

perton1 I to 10
tone, rlmlttd
· ..... call for

our loelllon
• Vet'llelll • Wood

Daily

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m.de lo order II

I tm4 It 11 tht

T 1i.•· lh• · PAIN
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1, 1 11u ,. 11 1 1 v· 1

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21 flll'll!xptrlenol
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PLUIRIIDI
Jim lltu•rk

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(104) 771•1411
II

7

looflng, Siding, ftdd-Ons, Electrlcl~
Plumbing, Decks, RtnlldeUng,
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Haning's Construction
Fo,.man: L.ny
awn.r:
740·387·0181
Ronald ' MIQk" Haning
Chrletlna 'Chrl1' Haning
74D-9ii2:Q780
Cell• 740·591-0919
Coli: 591·8393

. I

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BARNEY

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THE
,. BORN LOSER . ·
P\.1&gt;.'1'E.D '1'~
f'IR!IT ~&amp;.lJ..I..

-

~Ofl'I'.E.

V .U 'fiii'H.lV MT
LC'HM'UVV~C.a

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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~
I t)ON'T PUI.YER .
THIN I&lt;.

I CAN
WI~\

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

duJ,

oroun • •

:a lldllll •1:1 ....

· Ct•ultltd•
tomla

DllrAbby

1!dltorl1l1
Movltl

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Spotts

W11thtr
• 1001 Ohio -

•

83·5
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AS

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A!
81-3

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l'lllltillllllg eo.

Holnr Meclltel ~ lit Oal/;lolll• JlcQeft, 01\M, 111'1 ntw arn,ilflt l\l~llcelllna
lar rfllaincl""'"" W. ollw new rw llilllll'lfll. 111/litll ~ WMilllt ~
I tn4 lllttw lltiAI, llloltoua Cl ~11icM, l'lt.roflotl 1111lraMt, w...111d Mwtrltlel,
orwlt ..,....,. ....... ., . . . ,...,. 111'1 ....111.,. '" ,. ,.,,.,. -

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Obatttrlca • Pt4Jiatrlca

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

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, ••

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