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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, May 10,2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

NBA Playoffs
'

Lakers finally take spur out of Spurs
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Facing a
must-win situation, ShaquiHe O'Neal
dominated the inside and the Los
Angeles Lakers tightened their
defense to rout the San Antonio Spurs
105-81 on Sunday.
The Lakers cut San Antonio's lead to
2-1 in the Western Conference semifinals with Game 4 set ·for Tuesday
night at Staples Center. Game 5 is
Thursday night in· San Antonio.·
O'Neal had 28 points, 15 rebounds,
five assists and eight blocked shots.
and Kobe Bryant added 22 points. six
rebounds and six assists for the
Lakers.
Tim Duncan shot 4-of-14 for I0
points and committed six turnovers.

and Tony Parker was 4-of-12 for eight
points with three turnovers for the
Spurs.
The loss snapped San Antonio's 17game winning streak.
Gary Payton had 15 ·points and
seve n ass ists, and Karl Malone added
13 points. - six rebounds a nd five
assists . for the Lakers. who shot 56.9
percent.

Force defeats Destroyers
COLUMBUS (A P) Leon Murray threw for 334
yards and eight touchdowns. and the Georgia
Force snapped a sevengame losing streak with a
72-51 victory over the
Columbus Destroyers on
Sunday in the Arena
Football League.
Murray went 24-for-34,
scored on a rushing touchdown and threw three scor-

Hill pounds Cats, Bt

ing passes to both Markeith
Cooper and D1alleo Burks.
Cooper had I 0 catches
for 148 yards. while Burks
fini shed with eight receptions and 104 ~yards for
Georgia
(5-8). which
scored a team-record -t4
first-half points.
For Columbus (4-9).
Ryan Vena completed 14 of
23 passes for 184 yards and
three touchdowns.

Eastern Conference se mifinals.
The Pistons still lead the series 2-1.
with the Nets looking to tie it in Game
4 Tuesday night.
Ben Wallace grabbed 24 rebounds
for Detroit. but he was the only member of the Pistons to display the same
type of energy that fueled Detroit's
lopsided victories in Games 1 and 2.
Kerry Kittles scored 17 . but his· L--------------------'----'
biggest contribution was his defense
with a sacrifice lly off Matt
on Chauncey Billups. who averaged
Herges. Jim Brower ( 1-2)
Nets 82, Pistons 64
17 points in the first two games of the
came in with the bases loaded
and got Ryan Freel to ground
EAST RUTHERFORD. N.J. (AP)- series but was limited to two on 1-forfrom Page 81
out, keeping it tied.
Ri c(lard Jefferson had a career play- 10 shooting.
• ... The Reds' defense. among
Wallace and Richard Hamilton had
off-high 30 points 'as New Jersey
n't
have
a
good
series.
We
the majors· worst for the sec15
points
each
fo.r
the
Pistons,
who
finally put together 48 minutes of
pitched
him
well.
But
he
's
ond
straight season, commitdece nt basketball in Game 3 of the shot only 22- for-76 (29 percent) .
still Barry Bonds. The odds ted three errors that Jed to
were in his favor. I guess."
three unearned runs . Juan
Miley took the same Castro, usually a sure-handed
approach in the series opener, infielder, had two errors at
walking Bonds in the seventh third base.·
inning of a scoreless game.
Neither Bonds nor Ken
Pedro Feliz followed with a Griffey Jr. contributed much,
other than the one intentional
homer, setting up a 6-l win.
"The same people who walk that turned the game.
.question you when you walk
Bonds • average dropped
scored for the Flames, who conference finals . Game 2 is od. Harvey tied it in the final him would question you if from .403 to .379. He hasn't
minute of the period, deflect- you pitch to him and he hits it gotten a hit since hitting
won for the fourth time in Tuesday night in S,an Jose.
five overtime playoff games.
Both teams stuck to the ing Wayne Primeau's slap out of the ballpark,'~ Miley career homer No. 668 on
Calgary followed its second- strategies that propelled them shot and capturing the · said. "That's part of the April 29 off Florida's Brad
.
round upset of Detroit. which into thi s unlikely matchup of momentum.
game. We went to the well a
0 f
Penny. going - or-IS since
But
Calgary
.
kept
to its few times with hiril."
two
teams
that
missed
the
included two OT wins, by
Bonds declined to be inter- then with 15 walks, nine of
stealing home-ice advantage playoffs last season. San Jose hard-hat mentality. grinding
from the Sharks in the opener rallied from 14th place in the out scoring chances and play- viewed after the game. He them intentional.
· h h'
f
A day alter e It a pair o
of the Flam~;s' first trip to the conference last spring to the ing keep-away in the Sharks ' dressed and sat on a couch in
homers. Griffey was just
conference finals since 1989. best season in franchi se his- zone ·until Conroy found the clubhouse, reading a car solo
quiet.
going 0-for-3 with
a
s
.
The Sharks held Flames tory, while the sixth-seeded himself alone near the blue magazine .
two walks and two strikeouts.
captain Jarome lginla with- Flames ended an eight-sea- line. His tloating shot barely
Marquis Grissom said
Grissom'; two-run homer
out a shot in regulatiOrl and son playoff drought before got past Nabokov, who was teammates could tell Bonds
wasn't feeling well for the in the first inning got the
dominated overtime, out- upsetting Vancouver and screened.
entire
&gt;eries.
Giants going against Todd
shooting Calgary 12-5 - but Detroit.
The Flames seemed headed
Van Poppe!. but Castro's
The Sharks specialized in for victory until San Jose got
l~inla made the game-win" He's real sick," said two-out. two-run double off
nmg pass to Mantador. The outstanding
first-period an extraordinary bit of luck. Grissom, who hit a two-run Brett Tomko tied it at 4 in the
low-scoring. seldom-used efforts this season, and they From the boards, Korolyuk homer in the first inning. "He sixth inning.
defen seman
skated got 18 shots in the opening absently flung the puck to the showed me a lot by playing.
J.T. Snow's sacrifice tly
untouched into the slot and 20 min\ltes of Game I - but net - but Nils Ekman com- These three days, we could put the Giants up 5-4 in the .
beat Nabokov, who made 33 KiprusotT turned them away, pletely screened Kiprusoff, see he's not himself."
saves.
and the Flames got goa ls who didn't see the knuckling · The Giants headed home seventh. but Sean Casey tied
.
.
it again with a two-out homer
Mike Ricci and Todd from Oliwa and Conrov. who puck until it was floating trom
a 2-4 tnp that dropped
them seven games out 'of first off Scott Eyre in the bottom
Harvey scored in the second capitalized on an odd-man over his shoulder.
petiod for the Sharks, who rush.
Kiprusoff stopped 90 con- in the NL West. their biggest of the inning.
The Giants went up by a
have lost two straight home
Kiprusoff lost hi s sco reless secutive shots during a score- deficit since eptember 2002.
in the ninth, when the
playoff games after winning streak of nearly 170 minutes less streak that included two Bonds will have an off-day run
Reds fail ed .to turn a double
their first five to earn the on Ricci's rebound goal mid- 1-0 shutouts that finished off Monday to try to shake his
illness.
play on Snow·s grounder
franchise's first trip to the way through the second peri- the Red Wings.
The Giants hlew three with the bases loaded. Herges
couldn't hold on. blowing a
Iea d s, an d were on the verge save
for the second time in 12
of losing in the ninth after chances as a fill-in for the
Barry Larkin tied the game injured Robb Nen.
'

Reds

Stanley Cup Playoffs ·

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,o ( 1 "\ 1 l..,.

\

ol -,.1 '~'·

PGA

• Durbin helps D'Amico.
See Page 81

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)
- Fourteen years and 370
tournaments removed from his
fast victory, Joey Sindelar
tnade it worth the wait Sunday
in the Wachovia Championship
with an improbable rally and a
playoff victory over fast-fading
Arron Oberholser.
Sindelar, 46, birdied two of
the last three holes, waited for
Oberholser to wilt, then polished him off with a par on the
second extra hole for his fiiSt
victory since the 1990
Hardee's Golf Classic.
"I never, ever gave up hope,"
Sindelar said. "This feels way
too good. It's a thrill. It will
take me a while to understand
!his is real."
- Oberholser might need some

Red men
from Page 81
first
round
American
Mideast Conference Playoff
series, losing the first game
7-0 and taking game two 5-2.
Rio Grande (35-22) managed only three hits against
Point Park (2 1-14) ace Joe
Martinson (8-l ). Martinson
fanned six in going the distance.
Rio ace Kevin Hale lost
his second consecutive outing. Four the seven runs that

time to recover from a stunning
collapse at Quail Hollow.
Two shots ahead with three
to play, his first PGA Tour vktory firmly in his grasp, the
pressure overcame him . . He
bogeyed the next two holes and
needed a brilliant recovery
from the trees on No. 18 just to
force the playoff.
Sindelar closed with a 69,
while Oberholser had a 72.
They finished at 11-under 277.
Tiger Woods, errant as ever,
gave himself a chance with a
30-foot birdie putt on the 17th
and nearly chipped in for birdie
on the 18th. He closed with a
68 and joined Carlos Franco
one shot behind. Franco had a
35-foot .birdie putt on the tina!
hole that ca.ught the right lip.

Hale (9-5) surrendered were field assists and he made a
earned.
·sensational diving catch at a
The first game was a com- key point of the game. He
pletion of game one that also drew three walks in the
began on Friday. After just a first game.
half inning of play on
Junior center fielder Scott
Friday, the game was Peterman was 2- for-5 with a
washed out.
double and an RBI. Charlie
In game two, Rio broke Kabealo broke out of hi s
open a 1-0 game in the sev- slump with a 3-for-4 day at
enth with four runs. Senior the plate and Ewing was 2shortstop Brent Ewing and for-4 with an RBI.
freshman right fielder Nate
According to Rio Grande
Chau had key RBI hits. Head Baseball Coach Brad
Ewing singled and Chau Warnimont, · senior Jaso n
ripped a two-base hit.
Williams pitched his best
Chau had a splendid at the game ·of the
season.
park, going 2-for-4 with Williams (3- 1) scattered
three RBI, a double, two out- three hits over six innings to

Draftee
from Page 81
tinued to work on Andrews.
"Every time I saw him, I'd tease him about
coming out. He'd laugh," Latina said.
"Finally he stopped laughing and decided to
come out."
A,ndrews' younger brother, a two-time AllAmerica tackle at Arkansas, helped influence
his decision.
"I was talking to my brother Shawn about it
and I finally j ust made up my mind to go
ahead and do tt," Andrews said.
He played as a backup in just five gam~s.
but that was enough to get scouts interested.
"He picked up the game very quickly,"
Latina said. " He's a really fine athlete who
has natural ability. If we had him another
year, l think he'd be the first lineman picked
in the draft."
Andrews, 22, is a year older than Shawn,
who was Philadelphia's first-round pick this

-'

He shot 70.
Phil Mickelson had a bogeyfree 67, the best .round of the
day, to finish in a tie for fifth.
Vijay Singh held out hope
for a third consecutive victory
and got within one shot of the
lead with an eagle on the 15th
hole, but a bogey-double
bogey finished dropped him
into a tie for lOth, four shots
behind.
Oberholser appeared to have
this locked up. He never lost
his lead all day, and when his
5-wood into the 15th hole
stopped 8 feet away for eagle,
he pumped his fist with pass1on.
But those finishing holes can
expose the slightest nerves, and
Oberholser was loaded with

·-

Larson

them .
from Page 81
He hooked his tee shot on the
16th next to a bush, had to
punch out to the fairway and decided to be cautious.
"There's a small tear."
then overshot the green. Only a
· great chip allowed him to Larson said. "I didn' t want to
· go on the DL. but they felt it
escape with bogey.
Then, he badly pulled his tee was best for me and best for
shot on the 17th and got a huge the club."
The Reds called up infieldbreak - the ball was one turn
er
Tim Hummel to take his
awaY' from going in the water'
spot.
Hummel ,hit .289 in 27
From the hazard line, he
for
Triple-A
chipped to 10 feet and missed games
Louisville.
. the putt.
Juan Castro filled in for
Suddenly, he was tied at II
under with Sindelar, who two Larson at third base Sunday
groups ahead made a terrific and had two errors as the
charge. He holed a 15-foot Reds lost to San Francisco 7birdie on No, 16, then hit his 6 in 10 innnings.
It's the second time this
approach to 3 feet on the par-3
17th, the hardest hole at Quail season that Larson has gone
on the IS-day disabled list.
Hollow.
He developed turf toe in
spring training and was sideget the win. Point Park lined until April 26. Hi s
touched Williams up for two ·comeback was slowed when
runs (one earned) in the sev- ·he was hit by a pitch during a
enth. Senior left-hander Tim minor league rehahilitation
Sutton pitched the final three stint.
Larson struggled after he
innings to collect hi s second
was activated, committing a
save of the season.
With the second game tri- team-high five errors in only
umph, the 2004 Redmen set II games. His errant throw
the standard for single sea- on a two-out grounder in
. Milwaukee allowed · the
son victories with 35.

year.
"Hi s physical ability is . first-round type
physical ability, He has legitimate size, legitimate speed and is very, very strong and powerful," Latina said. "The upside i&amp; he is very
inexperienced- you know he's going to get
so much better. l wouldn't be surprised if he
became an All-Pro ."
At this point, the Bengals simply don't
know if Andrews will be able to play in the ·
NFL. Latina thinks he can because he learned
the college game so quickly.
"We had a very com~lex system with Eli
Manning at quarterback,' Latina said. "We·do
a little bit of everything. That's not easy for
anybody, but he (Andrews) picked it up fairly
quick."
Latina thinks Andrews' late start may actually be a ~Ius.
'
"Somet1mes when a kid has played 14-15
years, he's kind of burned out JUSt when it's
the most important time of his life," Latina
said. "Coming out so late was not easy to do.
It took a lot of guts on his part. But it's pay. o f'...•
mg

Brewers to rally for a 9-8 win
on April 27, the day after he .
rejoined the club .
· Since 1997, when he was
the College World Series
MVP and the Reds· firstround draft pick, Larson 's
career has turned into an
odyssey of odd injuries.
He tore up his knee while
sliding into home plate early
in his second pro season,
resulting in reconstructive
surgery. He hurt the same
knee a year later and went on
the disabled list.
The Texan had one of his
proudest moments on Aug.
15. 2002, hitting a homer off
Randy Johnson the first time
he faced him. Two at-bats
later. Johnson hit him with a
pitch . on the right big toe.
breaking it.
Three weeks later, Larson
was in the dugout in St. Louis
when Todd Walker lined a
foul hi s way. The ball
smacked him behind the right
-ear, and he broke his left
hand as he fell to the ground.
Last year, he strained his
rib cage during spring training, then lost the starting
third base job. He had
surgery on his left shoulder in
September.

NOW YOU CAN

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TO CABLEI

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tiltH

1

to improve water quality at the treatment site .
Council\ plans to include the system will increase the total cost of the
plant to $2.4 million. and will increase
engineering fees hy $.10.000.
,
·'To build this plant without a water
softenin g system wouldn't make
sense:· s7.id Council President Stephen
Houchins," especiall y with water as.
hard as Middleport's ."
The village 's engineering , firm.

Floyd Bniwne A"ociates. is no11
\Ceking. grant and loan funds for construction of the new plant. to be built
on Page Street on propeny to he pmchased from Harold Brown.
Other business
\1ayor Sandy lannw-elli said she is
working with,a local .; urveyor to pre-

pare a bid packet t r sale of the
Middleport High School and Central
Please see System, AS

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM .
POMEROY - A former
sheriff\ depanmcnt emplo)ee ha&gt; pleaded gu1lty to one
count o theft in office. and is
expected to be placed on probation and ·ordered to pay
restitution for money determined miss in~ in a state audit.
Lisa Roush. Pomeroy. entered
a guilty plea to one count of
theti in oftice on Monday afternoon. before Common- Pleas
Coun Jud~e P. Randall Knece
of Pickaway County.
The indictment tiled against
Rou.sh in December conlained
_
12 counts o.f theft in oftice. allegmg that she stole Sl7.605.50
from funds paid into the sheriff's
. department in 2000. while ·she
was employed by former Sherif!.
James M. Soulsbv as a SC\.TetarY.
The chames in "the indictmein
are founh':deeree telonies.
Roush had- 01iginally pleaded
innocent to all counl\. and the

• Bush examines new
photos, video with
'disgust and disbelief,'
stands firmly with
Rumsfeld. See Page A2
• Prom dress charity
becomes legacy of South
Florida teen.
See Page A2

WEATHER

Holter, Boyles take top EHS graduatio~ honors

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Shannon Stobart
• Genevieve McFarland

INSIDE

maner

Details on Page

AS

INDEX
S•:cnoNsCalendars
Classifieds

12 PAGES

A3
B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

Sports

A3
A4
As
B1

Weather

-

Editorials
Obituaries

A6

TUPPERS PLAINS - Alyssa
Holter, daughter of Ed and · Jan
Holter of Pomeroy, will address
her fellow graduates as valedictorian of the Eastern Hi gh School
Clas s of 2004.
Jess ica Boyles. daughter of Joe
and Laurie Boyles of Tuppers
Plains. is th e class salutatori an.
and will also speak to her classmates at the school's commencement ceremon y at 2 p.m . Sunday.
An active 4-H member and athlete, Holter serves as vice president of the Eastern National Honor
Society and vice president of the
Class of 2004.
She is a three-year varsity letterman in volleyball. basketball and
softball , and has received a number of athletic awards.
She is also a member of the
Eastern High School concert band .
She is president and an 1.1 -year
member of 4-H, and belong s to the
Better Livestock Dairy Club. She
is a member of the Trinity Church
of Pomeroy, and is the director of
the nursery there .. She plans to
study Agri-busines s and applied

w't'

set for a jury trial.

Her attorney. Charle' Knieht.
and · Special
Pro,ecuung
Anomev Sumnne Schmidt said
·in couri Monday a negotiated
plea agreeement ha' been
reached. calling for the dismissal
of the remaming II counts
against Roush and payment of
full restitution by Roush.
That restitution is expected
to be paid to the county auditor
no later than the end of thi s
week. Kni gh t said. but the
Ohio Auditor of State must
detem1ine how it is distributed.
Knecc ordered the completion of a pre-sentence investigat ion by the Adult Parole
AuthoritY. and continued
Rou&gt;h's bond. No sentencing
date ha&gt; been set.

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

M·F 9 to 5

!!004

Middleport Polrce Chief
Bruce Swift, right and
Lt. Jeffrey Miller look
over evidence seized in
a drug investigation in
Middleport over the
weekend. Crack
cocaine, prescription
medications believed to
have oeen used for
sale , marijuana, a handgun and nearly $10,000
in cash were seized
. from a North Third Ave.
residence. Arrested was
Elisha "lacy" Dickens,
24, on two counts of
trafficking in crack
cocaine. He remains in
the Middleport Jail.
Swift said the Meigs
County Sheriff's
Department and
Pomeroy Police assisted
in the investigation, and
said it is an ongoing
search into
Middleport's "i ncreasing and serious" drug
problem . (Brian J. Reed)

2

INGELS
JEWELRY

li ,

system approved for plant Roush
pleads to
theft
charge

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
Village Council approved including a
water softening system into plans for
the new water treatment plant now in
planning stage.
Meeting Monday evening, council
approved changes to the engineers'
plan for the plant to include a half-milli on dollar softening system, designed

s.

Sindelar wins for the first time in 14 years

11 1 Sit .\ \' 1 ,\ :1;\V

1 .

··~ softening

Flames take opener of Western finals
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) Overtime suits the Calgary
Flame~ particularly when
their goalie seems determined
to show his former teammates exactly what they gave
up.
Steve· Montador scored
18:43 into overtime, and
Miikka Kiprusoff stopped 49
shots in the Calgary Flames'
4-3 victory over the San Jose
Sharks in Game l of the
Western Conference finals on
Sunday.
Alex Korolyuk scored with
3:21 left in regulation to force
overtime for the Sharks. who
set a franchise playoff record
with 52 shets. But Kiprusoff,
who became a star after the
Sharks traded him to Calgary
last November, turned aside
nearly everything while winning a duel with Evgeni
Nabokov, his longtime teammate.
Craig Conroy got two goals
and Krzysztof Oliwa also

Eastern mercies
Waterford in
sectional, Bt

Alyssa Holter

Jessica Boyles

economics at Th e Ohio State
University.
Boyle&gt; is a Regional Scholar and
member of the National Honor
SocietY and French Club. She is a
USAA
International
Foreign
Language Award winner and
received the 2004 Holzer Clinic
Science Award.
S'1e has also hccn awarded the
Ohio First Scholar,hip and the
Ohio
Board
of
Regents

Scholarship.
She plans to study pre -phan11acy
at the University of Rio Grande,
Th e Top I0 Scholars or the Cia"
or 2004 will be annou nced FriJay
by Principal Rick Edward&gt;-'
Members of the graduat ing da"
are: Jessica Renee Baker. Micah
Ryan Barber. Jason Barringer. Eric
Shane Batev. Brandv Mac Bi.s.sell.
Jes sica Liane B,)yk&gt;. Logan
Samuel Bun ger. J(,,hua D;tvid

C'legg_ Herman James Dalton.
Ste\~.;n Allen Dillon. Rachel Lynn
Elliott.
Ant"nda Chri&gt;tinc Gregory.
Nathan Lee Grubb. Jennifer Lee
Ha rris. Brittany Lea rin Hauber.
.Paul Daniel H~ns l ey II. Alyssa
Elaine Holter. Ryan Edward
Kidder. . Brandon
Kleeberger.
Brend an David Lind. Kassa1idra
Jean Lodwick. Michael Leon
Long. George Curti' Macdonald . .
Roger Ke\'in Marcinko. Vinson
Michael Martin. Santana Marie
·Murphy. Jonathan Ri chard Owen .
Jes &gt;ica Ann Pooler. Sandra
Virgene Powell. Tia Ashlev Pr:.~tt.
Rohcn W. Putman. Joseph Michael
Ri chard. Larrv Joseph Ritchk.
K:.~therine Elicabetli Robcmon.
Holl y
Jean
Ruse.
Philip
Ale,anJer Simpson. Brandon
Smith. Stacy Lei~h Smith. Derek
· Arthur Ta.;l"r. CTirnntlw Tvl er
Th&lt;&gt;rnpsotl.- Caleh Ryan -Toi!Cver.
Andrew Fran,lin Upwn. Andrea
Sue Warn n. Nidwlas Paul Weeks .
Den ise Ela ine We st.
Harry Earne't Wh) bell. J o,h u:.~
Pete Wilfon~. Michael Adam
EJwanJ Wil l. Adam Mar&gt;h all
Wolfe. and William Bradley
Woods.

�The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

Tuesday, May tt,

2004

Prom dress charity becomes legacy of South Florida teen
ASSOCIATED PRESS WR ITER

.President Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney and Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld emerge from a military briefing in
the Defense Secretary's office suite at the Pentagon. (AP
Photo/Gerald Herbert)

Bush examines new photos, ·
video with 'disgust and disbelief,'
stands firmly with Rumsfeld

•

WASHINGTON (AP) Rumsfeld's executive din. President Bush examined ing room was transfonned
new photos and video clips into a TV studio for the
of American soldiers abus- president to address a bank
ing lmqi prisoners Monday. of cameras. a handful of
reacting with "deep disgust journalists and a gaggle of
and disbelief' during a top aides. ·
Pentagon visit in which he
Rumsfeld stood on one
underscored his suppon for side of Bush , Cheney on the
embattled Defense Secretary other. Cheney left the
Donald Rumsfeld.
Pentagon ahead of Bush to
The president spent the campaign
i'n
New
morning in damage-control Hampshire ·and Maine.
Also on hand
were
mode at the Pentagon,
where he convened an Powell: National Security
extraordinary gathering of Adviser Condoleezza Rice
top military, diplomatic, and her deputy, Stephen
legal and intelligence advis- Hadley; White House. chief
ers.
of staff Andy Card, CIA
Seeking to douse specula- Director
Tenet;
Gen .
. tion
about
Rumsfeld's Richard Myers, chairman of
: future, Bush stood shoulder- the Joint Chiefs of Staff;
: to-shoulder with the secre- Gen. Peter Pace, vice chairalong with Vice man of the Joint Chiefs;
• tary · President Dick Cheney. John Negroponte, the new
Secretary of State Colin U.S. ambassador to Iraq,
· Powell ,
CIA
Director and
Deputy
Defense
· George Tenet and other Secretary Paul Wolfowitz.
. civilian and military offiThey sought to project
· cials - to offer a testimoni- unity at a time when the
· al before teleyision cameras. · prisoner-abuse matter has
· Then Bush went behind strained his team. Above all,
closed doors to view about Bush wanted to buck up
two-dozen video clips and Rumsfeld, who faced new
photos showing U.S . sol- questi&lt;;ms about his fitness
diers abusing Iraqi prison- to serve.
/ers.
"You are courageously
White
House
and leading our nation in the
Pentagon officials went out war against terror," Bush
of their way to let it be said. "You're doing a superb
known that Bush saw pic- job. You are a strong secretures the .public. had not, tary of defense, and our
part of an effort to position nation owes you a debt of
the president ahead of the gratitude."
unfolding election-year conThe defense secretary
troversy. Until Monday, stood with his hands clasped
Bush had seen only pictures behind his back during
obtained by the news media Bush's remarks.
- a state of affairs that led
The Army Times, a
him to scold Rumsfeld last Gannett Co. Inc. newspaper
week.
read by a quarter-million
Rumsfeld 's
spokesman, troops around the world,
Larry Di Rita, called the said in an editorial · that
images "disturbing," and responsibility for the abuse
said they showed humilia- lies at the highest levels of
tion of prisoners as well as the Pentagon, including
"inappropriate behavior of a Rumsfeld and Myers. Both
sexual nature." They were men are guilty of "profesconsistent with what · has sional negligence," the edibeen seen in photographs torial said.
published around the world
His voice still hoarse from
in recent days, Di Rita said. three long days of cam"The president's reaction paigning last week, the
was one of deep disgust and president also used the
disbelief that anyone who appearance to offer a
·wears our uniform would lengtliy, favorable progress
engage in such shameful report on military operations
and appalling acts," White in Iraq .
House spokesman Scott
His remarks came on a
McClellan said. " It does not day when the military
represent our United States reported three rriore U.S.
military and it does not rep- soldiers' deaths between
resent the United States of Saturday arid Monday.
America."
Bush said twice that the
Bush said in his public United States is "on the
remarks, "Tiie conduct thai offensive," and used the
has come to light is an phrase again in an interview
insult to the Iraqi people with the Armed Forces
and
Television
and an affront to the most Radio
basic standards of morality Service. He cited patrols
and raids in
Ramadi,
and decency."
The Pentagon has not yet Husabayah and Karmah, and
decided whether to make said Marines would "ensure
the videos public, and White that Falluj ah ceases to
1
1\Hou se officials repeatedly become an enemy sanctu~idestepped questions about ary."
the president 's opinion on
The president also sought
that subject. Bush twice to bolster the troops.
ignored reporters' questions
"Our military, from this
about the matter.
building to the streets of
McClellan did say the Fallujah, is performing with
and
administration was seeking a exceptional · sk ill
way to share them with courage," Bu sh said. "They
Congress. so lawmakers can and their familie s are mak"carry out their oversight ing tremendous sacrifices
responsibility."
fo r the security of our
A highly unusual ga ther- nation and for the freedom
ing of Bu sh officials at the of others."
Pentagon illustrated the
He added , "All the hardgravity of the prison-abuse ships and sacrifices are not
controversy.
behind us."
~·

.....:...

POMPANO BEACH, Ra.Before she died in a car accident last year, 16-year-old
Rebecca Kirtman collected
about 250 prom dresses and
gave !hem to needy girls across
South Rorida.
Now her closet of dresses is
open to girls around !he world.
Inspired by her kindness,
Rebecca's parents. tiiends and
family have colle~ted more than
3,000 gowns and opened a boutique in Pompano Beach. More
than 1wo dozen chapters of
Becca's Closet are opening in
nine states, and another is starting in Singapore.
"She would have loved to see
this," said Rebecca's 17-yearold friend Alexandra Venezia as
·she helped girls pick out dresses at the boutique.
Rebecca died Aug. 20. just
days before !he start of her
junior year, while driving home
rrom orientation at Nova High
School. Her car collided with a
spun-utility vehicle on a rainslick road and skidded under a
tmctor-trailer.
" It was just very dear to me
that I needed to do something to
show how good Becca was,"
said her father, Jay Kinman, his
eyes welling'with tears.
Kirtman, along with grieving
family and friends, turned !he
dress bank !hat Rebecca ran out
or her home into a fed~rally certitled charity with a board of
directors, a stUdent board, a
scholarship fund and a Web site.
The teen magazine YM featured the link in its March issue
and soon readers were starting
local chapters from New York
to California.
"It just seemed overwhelming," said Phil Goldstein, a
board member whose daughter,
Jenna, was friends with
Rebecca. "I .thought someday
we would be a big organization,
but I didn't realize it would happen so soon."
Donations of dresses have
come from across !he country,
including tlve from the set of

Amanda Sullivan. a senior from Santaluces High School in Palm Beach County, Fla .. tries on a
prom dress in the fitting room at Becca's Closet in the Festival Marketplace in Pompano Beach,
Fla . Volunteer Jenna Goldstein, left. looks on. Before she died in a car accidept last year, 16year-old Rebecca Kirtman collected about 250 prom dresses. and gave ' them to needy girls
across South Florida. Inspired by her kindness and determined to keep her dream alive,
Rebecca's parents; friends and family have collected more than 3,000 gowns and opened a
boutique in Pompano Beach. (AP Photo/Steve Mitchell)
!he soap opera "The Young and
the Restless" and an anonymous shipment of $10.000
worth
of
gowns
from
Mississippi.
On April 10, Rebecca's 17th
binhday, !he group moved from
a donated stomge facility into
the boutique at Festival
Marketplace. a Ilea market in
town.
That Is where girls such as
Phaedra Fleming come by
appointment to look through
mcks of dresses tq find !he perfect gown.
Fleming, a senior at Cross
Creek School in Pon1pano
Beach. was in foster care until
October, when she turned 18,
and now lives on a stipend from
!he state. It is not enough for
luxuries like prom dresses.
"At that point, I was like, I'm
not going," Fleming said. ·
She contacted Gary Levine,
her former caseworker, and he

directed her to Becca's Closet.
There she found an elegant
Donna Gray embroidered silver
dress with a matching shawl.
"Realisticallv, without. this.
there's no pro1i1 dress," Levine
said.
Later !hat morning. 18-~ear­
old Dionne Thompson left the
boutique with a sparkly, tloorlength, midnight blue gown.
Thompson lives with her sister
and plans to attend !he prom at
Blanche Ely High in Pompano
Beach.
"I never thought I was going
to· go to my senior prom."
Thompson said.
Girls who need a dress contact the organization through
the Web site to make an
appointment at the boutique.
They must show a student ID.
but no proof of need.
"We ' re doing it the way
Rebecca did it th e
honor system," said her

mother, Pam Kirtman .
She said sharing the joys of
!he prom with other people was
a lining tribute to her daughter.
"Rebecca loved to party. she
loved music, she loved .to be
with her tiiends," her mother
said.
Rebecca started her dress
bank last year after reading a
magazine article about wealthy
girls at a boarding school who
donated their old dresses to a ·
less-aftluent school. She wrote
to dress companies for donations. Delray Beach-based
Alfred Angelo Bridal Company
Stores donated 200 dresses.
With the expanded project, "it
helps because you can remember Becca. She loved to help
other people." said Venezia, her
friend . She added : "Like she
said. ' Little things can make a
big difference. ' Now l see
where she was coming from
when she actually said it."

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·Scholarships to
be awarded
RACINE - Several schol arship awards will be presented to ·Southern High
. School graduating seniors bv
· the Racine Area Communi! v
Association again this year.·
In addtion . there will be
rour •500 scholarshiups from
the edisdon 13race Memorial
Fund, and one 5500 scholarship from the Jim adams
·Memorial Fund. o/cThe annu al scho larship dinner has
been set for May 25 at the
First Baptist Church in
. Racine . President Kathryn
Hart has appointed the committee for selection of the
scholarship winners.
At a recent meeting of
RACO final plans were mad~
for the annual spring yard
sale .to be held May · II, 12
and 13 at Star Mill Park. It
was noted that a food drive
was held earlier this month
and that AB&amp;T had donated
stuffed animals to be used on
.the emergency squad.
Reportsd were al so given
on the autism Walk and the
Meals on Wheels fund raiser
for hte Meigs County Senior

0

0

0

0

0

Penny Brooks
honored as best
loser
COOLVILLE - A certifi ·
cate and fruit basket were
awarded to Penny Brooks at
the May -1 meeting of Top,
Ohio # 2013 held at the Torch
Bapti st Church.
Pat Hall thanked the group
for the !lowers . cards and
phone e&lt;ill s during her i,l lness. The group held a purse
auction for a runt! r,tisc r and
the meeting was closed with
the Tops circle ur hands.
Meetings are held every
Tue sday at the Torch Bapti st
Church with weigh beginning
at 5:15 p.m. and the meeting
begining at 6:30p.m . Anyone
interested should contact Pat
Snedden at 662 -2633 or
attend a free meeting :
0

0

0

0

0

UMW meets at
St. Paul
TUPPERS PI,.AINS - A
quiet day and sch-denial service was observed at the
recent meeting of the St. Paul
United Meth odist Church
with Judy Kennedy presenting the program.
·
Anna Rice opened the
meeting with prayer and all
members · read the U.M.W.
Litany. Terri Soulsby di scussed the new church directory she has put toget h0r and
the group agreed to proceed
and make more copies. There
will be a Bake Sale at the
Farmers Bank on June 12.
· Teresa Lemons discussed
the possibil ity of starting a
lending library for the
Church, and the group agreed
to purchase two books to start

burden of bad bra design ·

the lib rary.
Joanna Weaver reported
that the Mission Outreach
Committee is doing well in
DEAR ABBY: "Double10 remember tho'e hr:i': all
ge tting donations. The group
Jointed
in
Dayton."
who
we ha ve to do is rent an old
di scu,;ed replacing the tables
how
difficomplained
about
Madonna
video: She wore
and chairs in the church basecult
it
is
to
buy
a
bra
,
hers on the outside. no le&gt;s.
ment.
tou&lt;:hed
upon
a
subject
that
so
no one could mi" the
Four get-well cards were
has
been
my
pet
peeve
for
point.
se nt. James Stobaugh was
Dear
DEAR ABBY: I wish nutnselected 10 re ce ive this years.
Abby
it
that
if
a
woman
.
Why
is
ufacturers
would design
month \ . mi,sionary birthday
wears
a
32-A
and
really
somethin g that fits re al
greeting. A birthday e-card
·
t
need
to
wear
a
bra
at
doesn
\\'Omen instead of Barbie
. will be sent.
all.
she
has
her
choice
of
do ll s. The strap adjusunet\ls
The :;roup sa ng ··Jesus·s
nav
y.
white,
black.
beige.
are
only the beginning of the
Hands are Kind Hands. "
letting me. have my say. .
shocking
pink
and
turquoi
se
.
problem. We women are m1 t
Pastor Jane Beattie closed
BETTY IN SAN JOSE
the meeting with .a prayer and as well as plaids. polka dots
DEAR BETTY: I agree . It fooled for one minute as i(•
Joanna Weaver served the and leopard print s&gt; But if a is short sighted to expect all why those' sharp litt le hooks
woman is a 42-D (or more) heavy-set women to be far- are alwav&lt;. ri ght in the de:'tu
rerresh ment s.
cemer ci f i1ur h;~ch . We
The next meeting will be at and requires a bra every wak - sighted - or liniber.
ing
moment.
she
ha
s
a
choi
ce
7 p.m. on June 7. Barb Rou sh
DEAR ABBY: I am l'e ry know it's to keep us gal.s
will present the program and of - white.
slender and small-busted. from rclaxinl! fo r ~~Yen · J
The lingerie indu stry is Underwire bras hurt. .lust try minute. It 's pretty IJ&lt;trd ti1
· Sharon Louks will se rve
mi ssing ·out on a large (liter· to find a 3-+-B that doesn'1 lean bad ami ree l Clllll fOrt ·
rerresh mcnts .
ally) part of its potential cus- ha ve underwires. - BRA- ah le with those ltttle J e1 ils
tomer base. Sign me ... THE LESS IN OKLAHOMA
0 0 0 0 0
frat:turi ng your . . pin~~ I'm
WOMAN ' IN
WHITE,
DEAR BRA -LESS : Do sure I' m not the only one
LONGPORT. N.J.
what I do. Emancipate your- complaining . - DISGL'STWOMA"J
IN self by using a razor blade ED CUS TOMER
DEAR
WHITE: When I printed that and remo vi ng the wires.
DEAR DISGUSTED CL1Slett er, I thought I'd do it .as a
DEAR . ABBY: When TOMER: You're not . AnJ if
hint to the lingerie industry. someone asks if there is a the garmen t manufacturer·..,
Little did I know that the let- "Satan." I always respond. are reading. here arc a f~.\'
ter would hit a nerve with so "Yes. Who else would have other tips from well-endowed
many women. My cup run- invented women \ undcrgar'- reader,. ThC) ·u like wille t
neth over .. . Re ad on:
ments an.d shoe s''"
;trap options. ' traps with bet DEAR
ABBY:
While
Trul y, the manufactu re rs ter support and no elastic .
you· re on the subject of bras, have no concept of reality straps that are plac·eJ , a littk
may I add my 2 cents'' I want when it comes to brassieres. more to the center S'l the1
to tell you how inconvenient Those of us old enough to don't slip off the shoulder; .
it is for large-s ized women remember the 1950s know Li ste n up!
·
.
- 200 pounds - when our what real tonure is. That was
Dear Ahhl' is H'riUe/1 /" ·
size is always displayed ncar the day of the bullet-shaped Ahiga il \ 1a~1 Bu ren. {1/s(J
the floor on the racks. Every bra' No wonder the first act J.aJ 0\1'11 a~· J eann e Phillip.\.
Charles and Sylvia Neece
store puts the small sizes at of rebellion in the women's and \\ 'O S f'ounded hr h11r
the top of the rack . Not only liberation movement was the moth e1: Pew/ill&lt;' Pliillif'·'·
are the items we need hard to burning of bras . - RUTH L. Write
Dear
Ah/)1'
(1/
reach . but it's al so hard to IN FRESNO
lt'H'H'. DearAbbl'.com ,;r PO.
locate what rm look ing for
DEAR RUTH L. : We don' t Box 694-+0. LiJ&gt; Ang ele.1·, CA
while bent over. Thanks. for have to look back to the '50s 90069.
POMEROY Charles
and Sylvia Neece of Bail ey
Run Rd .. Pomeroy,will celebrate their 50th wedding
The Daily Sentinel welcomes your photographs. Here are a few guidelines for submissions:
·
annivesary on May 13.
Color
photographs
are
accepted,
provided
they
are
in
focus
and
have
.good
contrast.
Negatives
·
•
They·are the parents of five
also are accepted; however, please include a print along with the negative.
·
children, and have I0 grand• Black·and-whlte photographs are accepted, provided they are in focus and have good .contrast.
children and a great grandNegatives also are accepted; however, please include a print along with the negative.
son.
• Standard-size slides are accepted, provided they are in focus and have good contrast.
• Submitted photos should be no smaller than standard wallet size and no larger than 8 x 10.
They were married at
. • Polarlod-type phOtos are discouraged since they do not reproduce well on newsprint.
Kistler. W.Va. by the Rev.
• When submitting digital photos, be sure the images are saved as high-resolution, high-quality · .
Andrew Parsons.
JPEG flies.
.
The family will host an ·
• Advantlx·type photographs are discouraged due to their unique sizes, which do not translate we ll
open house reception for the
to newspaper columns. Advantix·type negatives are not accepted.
.
Neeces ·at Silver Memorial
• Laserwrlter prints of digital Images are discouraged since they do not reproduce well on .
newsprint.
Church at Kanauga on
• Please be surfl all subjects in photographs are clearly identified on the ·back ot the photograph
Saturday.
or on an attached sheet of paper.
·
.

Celebrate .
anniversary

WE WAN' YOUR PHO,OS!

Calend~u

Church services

meeting of Shade River .
Lodge 452, F&amp;AM 7:30
at
the
hall .
Tuesday, May 11
· p.m .
Wednesday, May 12
Refreshments.
DARWIN - . The Bedford
MIDDLEPORT
TUPPERS PLAINS Township Trustees will
Revival
services
will
be
hold their regular monthly VFW Post 9053 will meet · held at 7 p.m. through
meeting at '7 p.m. at the at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Saturday, May 15 and 10
Meal will be served at 6:30 a .m. Sunday, May 16, at
township hall.
POMEROY
The p.m .
theVictory Baptist Church,
Meigs
County
525 North Second Ave ..
Saturday, May 15
Genealogical Society will
Middleport . Dr. James Ellis
SALEM CENTER
. hold their regular monthly Meigs · County Pomona of Bessemer City, N.C. will
meeting at 5 p.m. at the
be lhe evangefist. Public
Grange
will
sponsor
a
Meigs County Museum.
welcome, nursery providMeigs County Spring Rally ed.
The public is invited .
POMEROY Meigs . on Sunday at Star Grange,
on C.R. 1, three
County Board of Elections located
miles north of Salem
will meet at 8:30 a .m.
Center. There will be a
Tuesday at the office.
. Friday, May 14
potluck dinner at 1 p.m . folMASON,
W.Va .
- .
lowed
by
entertainment
by
·
Wednesday, May 12
Widows' Fellowship, noon ,
the
Red
Brush
Band
of
POMEROY
The
Jackson County at 2 p.m. at Bob Evans Restaurant.
Meigs County Board ol The day will conclUde with
Elections will be closed
Wednesday due to the a hay nde around the area
3 p.m. There will . be voldeath of the director's at
leyball , horseshoes and
Friday, May 14
grandmother.
various other games and
POMEROY - Woodrow
activities
,
available Harmon . 38140 Mudfork
throughout
the
day. Rd., Pomeroy, will celeInformation is available brate his 90th birthday on
from Opal Dyer at 742- Friday.
2805.
Tuesday, May 11
. POMEROY
- Meigs
County
Chamber
of
Commerce will hold its
monthly Business Minded
Luncheon at noon on
Tuesday at the Wild Horse
Cafe. Theresa Lavender of ·
\ f'\onth
DraWin ~
.
the
Meigs
County
,
'n\i{('lited
.
on
fil
or
Baskets
of
Department of Job and
u
.
&lt;,:,esSI
gOOdies Valued @
Family Services will speak
I ann'ng oo
S75. oo
about
the
One -Stop
sz7·
Employment and Training
Center and employment
r.a{('l\&gt;oo·Cut
Gift Certificates
opportunities.
5 S
T Available!
Wednesday, May 12
\ 5.oo
hftese make great
S "' 0~ f'\a'i
91 s for that h d
TUPPERS PLAINS ntl•
to b r0
ar
Eastern Athletic Boosters,
fot {('I0
uy ' f person.
6 :30 p.m ., high school .

HEALTH

and
,.

FITNESS

Support Groups

111 UPJIIIIVIIr Rd.

lltl..lts.llllll aaar
Open Hours.:

7 40-441-0200

0

Citizens Cetner.
Libby Fisher had prayer
after which the grup enjoyed
a potluck dinner. Offtcer- ·
reports were gdiven and
members approved the purchase of I0 white chairs and
two white tables for the park
building .

Public meetings

CHINESE RESTAURAN

INDVITIW IQVIPMINT

• MASON - Author and
County
native
· Mason
William )'no" Winebrenner
w1ll be stgnmg copies of his
.. boob from I t6 4 p.m.
: Saturday. Ma y 15. at the
: Ma so n Public Library. 8
·~ Brown St.
Winehrenner was born in
West Columbia. and attended
West Columbia Elementary
School and Wahama High
. School.
He has been nominated for
· Who 's Who i.n America for
hi s historical ficu on. which
centers on the hills and valley s of Appalachia. His
book s it\clude "From Out of
: the
Forest,"
'The
"Narrowbackin "',
Wood Walkers... '·A Place of
Evil" and "Smoke in the
Valley."

Community

'''
•••

Tuesday, May u , 2004

COMMUNITY NEWS Women tired of'shouldering

Author to sign
books Saturday

Bv CORALIE CARLSON

PageA3

BYTHE ·BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Mon-Thurs: 11 :OOam- IO:OOpm
Fri-Sat : II :OOam- !0:30pm
Sun : 11 :3 0am ~ I 0:00pm

Getting fit and
staying fit is in!

Birthdays

Clubs and
organizations

IS•••
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Thursday, May 13
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters to meet for ritual
tea at 6:30 p.m., home of
Clarice Krautter. Social
committee as hostesses.
CHESTER - Regular

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Controller-Interim Publisher

:·; · Congress shall make no law respecting a11 ~
. l . establishme11t of religion, or.prohibiting the
:·free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
' .:of speech, or of the press; or the' right of the
·. ~ people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
:; · the Government for a redress ofgrievat~ees.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

.

'

STATE

' '

VIEW

.,

Iraq

1 .,'

·- .

.' .

'·· The Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch, 011 misma11agedjimding
'

:for the rebuilding of Iraq:

As if the escalating violence in lruq weren't di&gt;couraging

'

. -enough, a shocking lack of oversight apparently has allowed
'

• .many of the billions of dollars sent for rebuilding Iraq to dis~ a'ppear into a maze of corruptton. Failure to take every step
'

~cessary

,

Even the Bush administration. which not long ago had
been adamantly opposed to
rcimportation on safety
groumh, seems to be bucklin~: Health and Human
Services Secretary · Tommy
TI10mpsnn has remarked to
reporters that import legalization is 'inevitable.'
But hefore lega.lizing mass
impnrt&lt;Jtion of prescription
drugs and risktng
America's health in the
process - Congress and the
White House should let drug
discount cards work and get
other c·oumrics to sham in the
cost n!' dm g research
Md . . . , im[.lortatluns w·e tJangcrous because they will
almost inevitably suck in t ~1ke
anJ dangerou~ dmgs that even
er1hanc~U government

Greedyfingers

.

Increasingly. it looks as
though the reimponation of
price-controlled phanllaceuticals ti·om abro;td is gainmg
speed like a runaway train.
Republicans are joining
Democrats in Congress and in
state gove mments, all rushing
headlong to sallsfy public
·demand for cheaper prescrip1ion Lh11gs.

Charlene Hoeflich ·
General Manager-News Editor

..

US. can do better on drug· reimport issue

to ensure the success of this most essential part of

the U,S. mission is intolerable.
. . The desperate rush to make progress and the chaotic condi-

.

tions of a war zone no doubt have contributed to ineffi ciencies
a"nd less-than-optimum prices.
A culture of corruption that flourished under Saddam

inspec-

ttons won't catch. They are
also tantamount to importing
foreign price controls. which
retard uru~ research and
ucvelopmell l or new treatments l()r disease.
In other words, polittcians
- in thm haste to satisfy public dcm,md t(Jr cheaper ph.trmaccuticaJ., - wtll end up
~ill ing people and letting others suffer ti11m delayed cures.
In reality. there are better
ways to handle the dispanty
l:ictwccn U.S. and foreign dntg
prices - the factor that has
heen drivmg the retmportation
uebate. One is to reduce U.S.
prices something that.
should happen soon, thanks to
the dru g discount cards now
being offered to America's
seniors under provisions of
last year's Medicare overhaul.
Unconscionably,
Democratic leaders, in a misguided attempt to make a

Customs Service have seized
thousands of fake, out-of-date
or adulterated drugs at U.S.
ports of entry, otien ostensibly
from Canada but actually from
J._attn American or Asian
countries with minimal satety
standards.
A recent Congression;;l
Budget Oftice study foul)d
that importing dntgs might not
save consumers much money.
especially if demand from the
U111 ted States causes prices to
rise in Canada aild European
countries. if those coun~·ie s
limtt cxpo11s or if lhug companies lim it supply to those
countries
Mew111 hile, dntg discount
curds c~ 1st - but House
Minorit y Leader Nancy
Pelosi, D-Calif.. and others. as
pw1 of a general etfm1 to discredit the Medic;u·e !Jw• are
urging seniors not to acquire
them.
John Rother. national policy
director of AARP. told me that
the Democrats 'have gone off
the extreme end. The cards
give poor seniors,, $600 credit on their cards, g1ving them
drugs almost for ~free .- You'd
think Democrat' would want
to help thi s constituency.'
Rother said that while there
'are problems getting the discount cc~rd sy qem started ,
seniors should be able to ~et"
JO percent discount. ·whtch is
almost what they'll save by

one by Sens. Byron Dorgan.
D-N.D .. John McCain, RAriz.. Edward Kennedy. D·
Mass., Olympia Snowe, RMaine , and Trent I.-ott, RMiss.
Morton
And Sen. Judd Gregg. RKondarcke N.H. -the senator designated
by M~OJity Leader Bill Frist,
R-Tenn .. to handle the issue
for the GOP leadership - is
scheduling hearings and dratlpohtical point, are urging ing another bill that would perseniors not to sign up for the mit imports, probably with
cards. even though they could safety standards similar to the
make drugs up to 30 percent other Senate bills but posSibly
cheaper for many Medicare taking a' less punitive attitude
beneficiaries' and 'all 'but··free - "'owlrrd the drug industry.
for many low-iticome seniors.
'You've got a large majority
Another positive step. urged of senators tlowing in the
by Speaker Denni s Hasten, R- same direction right now,· said
Ill.. would he . for President one Senate aide. ' Right now
Bush to bring up the issue of they're in different tribut;u·ies.
d111g pricmg at the G-8 eco- bllt if they come together, the
nomic summit in June. The dam will break.'
Hou se GOP leadership
president needs to persuade
other major countries to con- aides Jis put e Thompson's
tribltte more to the enorn10us gloomy predtction thm rcimcost of discovering fllld devel- port at' 11 will be inevitable.
oping new drugs.
poi nt ~ out that if the
The retail price for patented Sen ale agreed on a bill. It
dtugs in the United States is ltkel y would have to go to a
typically 25 percent to 75 per- House-Senate conference.
cent higl1er than in Canada, where it could be alteretl or
EuroJJe and other indusuial- delay ed. But one aide
ized coumries. This occurs ~cknowledge~ that a majori because other nations set tv of House memhers could
prices as close as possible to sign a discharge petition to
the drug's production cost- a bring a Senate-passed bill to
decision that ignores the the House floor. bypassi ng
investments made before a leaders opposed to imports
dntg is ready for market. On
Under current law. drugs
average. these costs total $800 can he nnportcd only if Health
million for just one new medi- and Human Services says it
cine.
ca11 be done safely. Both
The White House says that Thompson and his predecesthe United States 'will look for sor. Democrat Donna Shalala.
opportunities to raise the issue refused to certify imports.
with other countries.· But
Nonetheless. some 2 million
other sources say it's not on Americans have imported
Bush's G-8 agenda.
drugs on their own, otien via
In the meantime, the House the Intemet. And several states
has already passed a bill per- have set up Web sites to allow
mttting the mass importation citizens to impo11 drugs. These
of drugs from Canada and include 1'!1innesota and New
dozens of other counuies but Hampshire, both of which
includes few, if any, safety have GOP governors.
protections.
Canada's government will
Two bills pending in the not ceitify the safety of the
Senate impose suicter safety drugs heing exported from its
standards - one by Sen. territory. and the Food and
Chuck Grassley, R-lowa, and Drug Administration and U.S.

going to Canada.'
It\ true that non-seniors

lackmg health insurance still
get hit with hig~ drug prices,
although drugmakers are
beginning to otf'er discounts
lO
them . too. Former
Speaker Newt Gingrich, RGa.. has proposed making
drug purchasing like using
Travelocity. the cheap-airfare Web site.
All of this suggests that hetter altematives exist. Congress
ought to ~)' them before people die for the sake of political
expediency.
(Morton Kmzdracke is e,\ecutil'e editor of Roll Call, the
newspaper of Capiro/ Hill.)

Hussein, moreover, couldn't be expected to disappear
:I CAI-I'T" VoTE ~

overnight among the Iraqis selling goods and services to the
• .c'oalition's rebuilding effort.

KENNEDY! HE'l-L
L.ET TME VAT"! CAN
O"N'TK'ol... f.lrM !

Shannon W. Stobart

chiefly, independent oversight - to make sure that taxpayers
: ~oney really is building schools and power plants, rather than

RACINE - Shannon W. Stoban, 33, Racine, passed away
unexpectedly Sunday, May 9. 2004, at hi s residence.
Born July 27, 1970 in Ga'llipolis, Ohio, he was the son of
John Wayne Stobart of Racine, and Donna Bolin Stobart of
Racme. He v.:as a carpenter and a U.S. Navy veteran.
Su~v1v1~g tn ad~htion to his parents is his son. Joseph Morns, h~s fwnce, Betty Jo Stover; step-mother, Shirley
Stobart ot Racine; two brothers.' Seth Stoban and Shawn
Stobart, both ofRacine; two half-sisters, Cinherine Spence of
Akron, and Ttftany Asbury of West Virginia; step-brothers.
Mtchael Colhns and Willie Collins, both of Racine; step-sister. Sasha Collms of Racme: grandmother. Betty Vining of
Pomeroy, and his finance's daughter, Janella Stover. Several
aunts. uncles. meces, nephews, and cousins also survive.
Shannon was preceded in death by his grandparents,
George D. and Velma Stobart, and grandfather, Leo Vining.
Funeral services will be held at l p.m. Thursday, May 13.
2t004 tn the Cremeens Funeral home at Racine. Officiating ,
wtll be Rev. Rtck Rule. Interment will he in the Letart Falls
Cemetery. Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesday at
the funeral home. Military graveside services will be conducted at the cemetery.

Genevieve McFarland

'

COLUMBUS -Genevieve McFarland, 85. of Columbus,
died Sunday, May 9, 2004 at her residence.
She was a member of the Cypress Wesleyan Church , and a
past member of Twigg #68, D.A.R. She retired from Aetna.
She was preceded 111 death by her parents, Emmett and
Norma Will.
Surviving are her loving husband of 53 years, Miles: brothers, Jim (Dolores) Will of Meig s County: Wyatt (Miriam)
Will of Grove City: Don (Betty) Will of Lewis Center,
numerous nieces and nephews and a host of friend s.
Friends may call from 2 t.o 4 and 7 to 9 p.m . Tuesday at the
Tidd Funeral Home, 5265 Norwich St., Hilliard, where funeral services will be held at I0 a.m. Wednesday with Pastor
Dale George officiating. Interment will be Sunset Cemetery.
In lieu of flowers contributions may be made to Cypress
Wesleyan Church Care Ministries or Mt. Carmel Hospice.

Local Briefs
·Weatherford to sing
CARPENTER - Gospel Music Hall of Fame member Lilly
Weatherford and the Weatherfords will he in concert at 6:30p.m.
on Saturday at the M t. Union Baptist church near Carpenter.
They have been featured on televisionJ'rograms and the
Gaither Homecoming Series. Pastor Davi Wiseman invites
the public to attend. Refreshment s will be served in the
Fellowship Hall following the concert.

POINT PLEASANT. W.Va. - A preaching service with
Pastor John Elswick of Athens will be held at 9 a.m. on Sunday
at the West Virginia State Farm Museum. Music will be by Ray
and Delores Cunditf'. Proclaim and Dan and Faith Hayman .

Sponsor rally

..

SALEM CENTER - Meigs County Pomona Grange will
sponsor a Meigs County Spring Rally on Sunday at Star
Grange, located on C.R. I, three miles north of Salem Center.
There will be a potluck dinner at I p.m. followed by enter7
tainment by the Red Brush Band of Jackson County at 2 p.m.
The day will conclude with a hay ride .around the area at 3 p.m.
There will be volleyball, horseshoes and various other
games and activities available throughout the day.
Information is available from Opal Dyer at 742-2805.

The opinions expressed in this column are the

..consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co.'s
: ·editorial board, unless otherwise noted.
; &lt;I

~

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CHICAGO (AP) - Though Mamie
Ti II Mobley never lived to see it, the
pressure she exerted over four
deca.des to have her son's 1955 murder reopened has finally borne frull:·
The Justice Department is now looking into the case.
R. Alexander Acosta, assistant attorney general for the Civil Rights
Division said Monday officials will
reopen the Emmett Till's race-motivated murder following a long campaign by the NAACP, members of
Congress and Mobley, who died in
Chicago last year at age 81.
"I can see her sitting in the chair
with a tissue , and her cheeks rosy red
arid her eyes full of tears. It would be
a happy, relief, burden-lifted type of .
cry," said Airickca Gordon, 34, a
cousin whom Mobley helped raise .
After Till's murder, his mother
insisted upon a public viewing and
funeral in Chicago for her only child.
Pictures of the battered body shocked
the world , and ihe case became an
early spark for the civil rights movement.
Till, a black 14-year-old from
Chicago. was killed during a tnp to
see relatives in Misstssippi, apparently because he whistled at . a white
woman. The boy's mutilated body
was found three days later in the
Tallahatchie River.
Two people were charged 111 the

Nat
Hentoff

Ashcroft afraid of? Let's see:
Section 215 of the Patriot
Act has spurred particular
resistance among both conservatives and liherals. It provides the FBI with access, during foreign intelligence and
international terrorism investigations, to an array of business
records - financial reports,
genetic infonnation , library
use, e.ducational records, credit reports and medical records.
As Craig and Durbin
emphasize, the FBI only has to
show a court: that these records
are 'sought tor' toreign intellige nce and international terrorism investigations. Mqst troubling. the senators add, is that
'The FBI need not show that
the documenb relate to a suspected terrorist or spy.' No
specific individual information need he named to get the
court order. And once the FBI
shows the certification for the
search, the court has no
authority to ask for anything
more. Thi s does not meet the
probable cause requirement of
the Fourth Amendment, or
even reasonable individuated
suspicion.
Section 215, accordingly,
say Craig and Durbin, 'gives
the government too much

Meeting planned
MIDDLEPORT - The annual Middleport High School
Alumni dinner/dance and meeting will be held May 29, with
the dinner and business meeting from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m., and
the dance immediately following, with Tom Payne as D.J,
The event will be held in the auditorium of the former
Middleport Elementary School on Pearl St.
Information is available from Paul Gerard at 992-5815.
Diane Lynch, 992-3225, or Carolyn French at 992-9799.

Boosters meet
TUPPERS PLAINS- Eastern Athletic Boosters will meet
at 6:30 p.m. on Wedne&amp;day at the high school.

games. and part1c1pating in
finger plays. With fin~er
plays. ·,children combme
music or a simple chant with
hand and leg motions. They
really like the "active" part
of this play 'activity.
Parents should remember
to keep toys simple. As a
child grows. the toys can
become more complex, but
the child learns more from
those toys that allow the use
of the imagination. A child
will soon hecome bored with
a toy ·that does everything,
and all the child does is sit
and watch it.
Parents should expose
children to a wide variety of
play activities and provide
them with several different
types of toys. Some toys·
may be for individual play.
ll'hile others can he for group
games or sports. Some playthings should be for quiet
times or amusements. others
for active participation and
exercise. There should be a
variety of indoor and outdoor toys, as well as those
for playing pretend, creating
art projects, and promoting
musical activities. This does
not mean the child should
have hundreds of playthings;
however 11 does indicate that
there should be at least one
toy in the child's age range
for the different types of
play.
Probably all parents have
experienced the situation
where they have bought a
high-priced toy as a gift, but
instead, the child chose to
play With the box in came in
or with a small trinket. If
children have too many toys
or toys that are too expensive, they become overwhelmed, and tend to play
with the more simphstic
ones. Not' only will simple
toys satisfy the child, but it
v.ill also help the parent's
pocketbook.

case - Roy Bryant, the husband o(
the woman Till purportedly whistled
at, and . J.W. ]\11lam. Bryant's half
brother - were acquitted by a jury
that deliberated for 67 minutes .
The two later admitted to the killing
in a magazine interview. The Justice
Department never investigated the
case despite appeals from Till's mother and others. Both Bryant and Milam
have since died.
The Justice Department said 11 will
partner with local law er\forcement
officials to investigate whether any
prosecutions remain possible under
state law. The five-year statute of limitations in effect in 1955 means no
federal charges can be brought against
any potential accomplices.
"This brutal murder and grotesque
miscarriage of justice outraged a
nation and helped galvanize support
for the modern American civil rights
movement," Acosta said. "We owe it
to Emmett Till, and we owe it to ourselves, to see whether after all these
years, some additional measure of
justice remains possible ."
A few days after allegedly whistling
at Carolyn Bryant at her family's
store. Till was abducted from hi s
uncle's home in the small town of
Money, Miss .. on Aug . 28, 1955.
'There are lot s of loose things out
there that have never been answered.''
said Wheeler Parker. 65. a cousin who

was in the house with Till the night he
was abducted .
The Till case gave many Americans
a closer look at the segregated South,
its Jim Crow laws and lynchings. The
slaying occurred a little over a year
after the Supreme Court's landmark
Brown v. Board of Education decision
outlawed state-sponsored school segregation and about J00 days before
seamstress Rosa Parks refused to give
up her seat in the white section of a
segregated bus in Montgomery, Ala.
••Emmett Till's death changed the
hearts and minds of millions," said
the Rev. Jesse Jackson. "It was the
wake-up call."
In 1956. Look magazine published
an account of the slaying in which
Milam admitted he and Bryant were
guilty. Double Jeo pardy prevented the
pair from being tried again.
In the article, Milam recounted the
incident that Jed to Till's murder.
"'Chicago boy.' I said. Tm tired of
them sending your kind down here to
stir up trouble."' Milam was quoted as
saying. "I'm going to make an example of you. just so everybody can
know how me and my folks stand."
Milam said he beat Till and shot
htm in the head. then used barbed
wire to tie a heavy metal fan around
Till' s neck and dumped the body in
the river. No other accomplices · were
mentioned.

Bradford Anderson. The bills retlect a six-week meter reading penod, because employees were unable to finish reading
meters due to weather and maintenance problems.
According to Anderson, June bills for most consumers will
from Page A1
reflect a two-week meter reading .
Council also :
Buildiq.
.
• Excuse Council Member Laurie Reed from the meeting
"The buildings have been costing the village a lot ot
money," lannarelli said. "and vandalism is an increasing due to her attending school in Colorado. but voted 3-1, with
Houchins, Roger Manley and Robert Robinson voting "no,"
problem."
The Legends Realty Co., Indianapoli s. Ind ., has expressed' and Kathy Scott voting "yes:· to excuse Member Robert
an interest in purchasing the buildings for conversion to Pooler from the meeting.
• Approved the mayor's report of fees and fines collected
apartment use, and remains interested, lannarelli said.
There is an explanation for an increase in many vi llage in May in the amount of $3.513.05: and bills 111 the amount
water bills for May, according to Village Adnumstrator of $42.847.22

System

Sponsor contest
ATHENS- The Ratlroad Model and Historical Society of
Southeastern Ohio is sponsoring a photo contest from JO a.m.
until 2 p.m. on Saturday, at University M~ll in Athens .
Entries are $1.00 per photo. There wtll be several categories for the young and old. The photo must have been taken
by the owner; photos may he framed or _unframed (~II photo
sizes welcome): and photos can be of a ratlroad bmldmg, cars,
track , engines, locomotives, railroads, etc.
.
The photo classes ~re black and white, color, and oldies.
The oldies class conststs of photos acqu1red over the years.
Awards will be presented in all classes.
Information is available at 594-4026.

• Thursday, May 13, 2004
f'~l:l: t71f'T T()
• Noon to 6 p.m.
ALL ()()I'!III()~~~
• Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
• Sponsored by the Pleasant Valley Hospital Auxiliary

·- ........ ..,._.

..
...-

-

r ·. .

of 2002, the FBI can obtain a
'John Doe' roving wiretap that
does not have to include the
place -or the target - to be
wiretapped.
What the SAFE Act
requires, instead, is that 'Jaw
entorcement ... ascertain the
presence of the tru·get hefore
beginning surveillance and
identify either the target of the
'wiretap or the place to be wiretapped.' There would he no
more 'John Doe' roving wiretaps, 'thereby ensuring that the
govemmcnt does not surveil
innocent Americans who are
not the target of the wiretap.'
An April 16 Salt Lake City
Tribune editorial , addressed to
Hatch. says that ·it is hard to
imagine that a credentialed
conservative such as Utah's
senior senator would view any
other federal statute, especially
one as far-reaching as the law
(the Patriot Act) hurriedly
written in the wake of Sept. II,
200 I , as so pertectl y drawn
and tlawlessly executed that it
not only needs no revisions but
also should he immune to all
questions and doubts from the
public it purports to protect.'
Surely, the reasonable Sen.
Hatch, whom I've known for
many years, is not going to
keep on obstmcting a hearing
on a clearly reasonable and
SAFE Act, are you. sir'
(Nat Hentoff is a nationally
renowned aut/writ)' 011 the
First Amendmem mid the Bill
of Rights and author o{.l·everal book~-. includin~ ln.&lt;currem
work, 'The War 0~1 rhe Biil of
R1ghts and rile Gathering
Resistance' (Snen Stories
Press, 2003)

~

· ,addressing issues, not personalities.

power to seize the personal
records of innocent Americans
who are not suspected .of
involvement in terrori sm or
espionage.·
The proposed SAFE Act
remedies
the
executive
branch's excessive intrusion
into our privacy by requiring
the FBI 'to certify that there
are specific and aniculable
fact s giving reason to helieve
that the person to whom tlie
records relate is a terrorist or a
spy.... The SAFE Act would
thus prevent broad fishing
expeditions.'
If the government is not
required to search our records
on the basis of individualized
suspicion, then former U.S.
intelligence
officer
Christopher Pyle (now a political science professor at
Mount Holyoke College) has a
chilling point: 'We need a
requiem mass for the Founh
Amendment, hecause it's gone
... buried by the Patriot Act.'
Another example of how the
SAFE Act mends but does not
break the Patriot Act involves
how roving wtretaps are cur- .
rently allowed under the
Pauiot Act. Suspects do not
use only one phone in a 'neighborhood or city. Accordingly, a
single judge can now authorize a wiretap that applies to
any phone a suspect uses, any~
where.
But, as Craig and Durbin
pomt out to Orrin Hatch, the
FBI. in using roving wiretaps
for intelligence purposes, is
not required to 'specify the
facilities to be tapped.'
Moreover,
under
the
Intelligence Authorization Act

·

:.be published. Letters should be in good taste,

Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah),
chairman of the Senate
Judiciary Committee, has vigorously - and rightfully criticized Democrats on the
committee, and on the Senate
tloor, for obstructing the president's nomination of federal
judges by filibustering them
rather than allowing an up-qrdown vote by the entire
Senate, as the Constitution
requires.
But now, Hatch himself is
refusing to hold a full hearing
by the htdiciary Committee of
a strongly bipartisan bill to ·
improve - not repeal - sections of the increasingly controversial USA Patriot Act.
Introduced by Larry Craig
(R-Idaho), with Richard
Durbin (D-lllinois). the
Security
and
Freedom
Ensured (SAFE) Act has 18
Republican and Democratic
co-sponsors in the Senate.
There is also a companion,
bipartisan House bill (H.R .
3552). Support for these bills
'lxm the political spectrum .
from
the
American
Conservative Union to the
American Ctvtl Liberties
Union.
In a 'letter to Hatch, asking
that he schedu le a hearing 'as
soon a&gt; possible.' Craig and
Durbin point out that, even
hefure there has heen a hearing, Attorn~y General John
Ashcroft
declared- that
Prc,ident Bu'h would veto the
SAFE act if it's passed. TI1is
hardly retlects the executive
branch's willingness to wait
lor the legislative process in
our 111le of law.
What are Hatch and

·

· editing and must be signed and include address

-

Improving the Patriot Act

··be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to

-

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should

.

LETTERS TO TI-lE
EDITOR

hobby horses, tricycles and
slides are good choices for
this age group.
Preschoolers want to better
understand the world around
them. so playmg makeBecky
believe or dramatic play is
Baer
an important learning activity. Parents should provide
children with toys that allow
them to use their imaginations. The simpler the toy,
shaking or pushing buttons .
the more imaginative the
Playing peek-a-boo with a child can he. For instance.
baby helps the child grasp dolls that do not talk can be
the concept of object perma- used much more creatively
nence. At first babies think and in many dtfferent ways
that people and things no than those that do speak.
longer exist if they can't see
Parents should encourage
them. When parents play the use of nontraditional
peek-a-boo, the infants stan gender toys. If gtrls want to
to realize that their parents play with trucks. and bo~ s
are still alive. even if they want to play with dolls, that
can't see their entire face.
should be fine - parents
As they grow older. bhbies should not prohibit it. Both
enjoy
maktng
noise. types of toys allow children
Everyday items around the to more accurately underhouse such as pots, pans. stand life .
.
plastic bowls and wooden
Art is very important to
spoons allow the child to children. It not only helps
understand the cause-and- express their feelings. but
effect relationship of bang- also helps fine-tune their
ing and the sounds that small motor skills and
result.
Bouncing balls, encourages thetr imaginabuilding with blocks, and tion. Parents can provide an
playing with pop-apart- supplies such as blunt scisbeads also demonstrate this sors, crayons, construction
. concepi. By the time chil- paper, modeling clay, ami
dren are a year old, they like finger paints to aid children
toys that they can crawl after in their artistic endeavors.
or push and pull.
A parent should never ask
Simple picture books are a child •. "What is it?" when
always interesting to babies. shown artwork by the child.
Adults should read to chil- The child knows what it is,
dren from a very early age. and expects the parent to
This stimulates their desire know. too. Instead. parents
. to Jearn and will ultimately may comment on the creativhelp them do better in ity mvolved i1r producing the
school.
artwork and the wonderful
As children enter the tod- bright c.olors that were used.
dlet stage, their play should Parents can ask the child to
encourage the development tell them about the item. As
of both large and small the child talks about the artimotor skills. Large motor cle, the parent will soon
skills include learning to use learn what the picture
the arms and legs; smull denotes.
motor skills involve the use
Preschoolers
enjoy
of fingers and hands. Balls, singing, dancing, rhythm

Family of slain bo relieved at reopening of
investigation into is 1955 racial murder

Service planned

· sticking to greedy fingers.

· and telephone number. No unsigned letters will

Play is essential to a
child's intellectual development. Children need a variety of toys and various play
activities in order for them to
learn about the world around
them.
Infants start the process at
birth by learning through
their senses. This is known
as perception. Newborns
may only look and listen, but
the -senses of sight and hearing will help them understand their new environment.
If infa'nts are placed in
brightly-co lored rooms with·
an assortment of objects to
look at, their senses will be
stimulated. For example, a
mobile above the crib will
allow them to see different
shapes and colors and hear
different sounds. Then if the
baby randomly touches the
mobile, it may produce a
chime or set the objects in
motion . This will introduce
the child to the concept of
cause-and-effect.
Within a few weeks.
babies begin to put every-.
thing in their mouths. Their
senses of touch and taste are
now being used in order to
Jearn. Parents will want to
supply the child with toys
that can be handled safely.
Toy s should be at least J _
inches in size, so they cannot
be swallowed. There should
be no sharp edges or points
or places that could pinch
fingers or toes. Cords sh6uld
be less than twelve inches in
length to prevent strangulation . The playthings should
be durable, with secure parts
that can't come loose and
include safety features such
as unleaded paint and nonflammable materials.
When a baby is between
four and six months of age.
they enjoy stuffed animals,
squeaker toys, and rattles.
They hke things that will
respond to their actions of

CHESTER- Chester United Methodist Church will hold a
family dinner at the church on Friday. The meal will be served
at 6 p.m. and reservations are due by Tuesday by calling 9853978, 985-3846 or 985-3979.
.
The Unity Singers of Coolville, under the direction of Sue
Matheny, will present a program at 7 p.m. Attendance at the
dinner is not necessary tb attend the concert, but the public is
invited to both.

tion has declined to use the cost controls that are available -

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

Dinner concert planned

· · What's much harder to accept is that the Bush administra-

..

Obituaries

.......

__

-

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysantlnel.com

2004

www .mydailysentinel.com

-

·.·. The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, May u,

Tuesday, May 11, 2004

~

OPINION

·-The Daily Sentinel

••

PageA4

-

...

'.

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

--- ______________________________.,_____________

�(

PageA6

WEATHER• STOCKS

The Daily Sentinel

Dow Jonn
Industrials
9.750

I

-=-FEc-8--M-A_A_ _A_PA
___
MI\
_Y_ 9•250

I

. -117.11

•

9,990.02

:.=.,

Hlgll
10,116.28

-1 .26

Low

- h i g h: 11.722.98
Jan. 14, 2000

9.932.74

Nasdaq
composite
Standard &amp;
Poor's 500

2,200

Russell

·127.3:1

9,99002

---~-------- 1,BOO

1,896,07
·11.51

Prep Schedule

1,087.12
·10.70
537.86

NYSE diary
"'A,_dv:.:•:::n_,ced==--=-350::.:: New highs
Dacllned:
3,074 N 91
==='----"'"'--'
f1W ows
Unchanged:
70
845
Volume: 2.367,644,430

1.200
1,150

Nasdaq diary

1,100

Advanced:
717 New highs
11
Dacllned :
2,511 New lows
Unchanged: 267
209
Volume:
1,880,259.490

1,050

MAY

Tuesday, May 11, 2004

·2f~·

2000

I,(XXl

AP

Local Stocks
ACI- 28.07
AEP -29.01
Akzo- 34.36
Ashland Inc. - 45.44
BBT- 33.54

Thesday, May 11

Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)

fall should end around I :OOpm
with total accumulations for
this event near 0.10 inches.
Temperatures will rise fro m 67
with 1oday's high of 76 occurring around 5:00pm. Winds
will be 5 MPH from the southwest IUming from the south as '
the afternoon progresses.

It's going to be a cloudy
morning. Light rain is forecasted: The rain should start
by I O:OOam . Accumulations
·of 0.09 ~nches are predicted. ·
Temperatures wi II hold steady
· around 65. Winds will be 5
E••ening (7 p.in.-Midnighl)
MPH from the soutli turning
It will remain cloudy.
(rom the west as lhe morning
Temperatures will drop .from
progresses.
Aftemoon (I p.m.-6 p.m.) 75 early thi s evening to . 6~.
It should continue to be Winds will be 5 MPH from the
cloudy. lt will be dry. except sou1h IU·rning from the southfor a sprinkle or two. The rain- east as the evening progresses.

Ovemight (I a.m.-6 a.m.)
It should continue to be
cloudy. There is a slight
chance of rain. TemperaiUres
will linger at 64 with today 's
low of 63 occurring aro und
6:00am. Winds will be 5
MPH from the soulh.
. Wednesday, May 12

12.96

Bob Evans- 29.70
BorgWarner - · 78.13
Cily Holding - 28.80
Champion- 3.99 .
Charming Shops- 6.62
Col- 30.25
OuPont-41 .63
DG - 17.73
Federal Mogul - .26

It's goi ng to be a cloudy momin g. Temperatures will climb
from 63 to 78 by lme this mom. ing. Winds will be 5 MPH from
the south turning from the southwest as the morning progresses.

RD Shell - 48.16
Rockwell- 31.61
Sears- 37.80
SBC- 24.51
AT&amp;T. 16.48
USB - 25.13
Wendy's- 37.00
Wai-Mart- 55.22
Worthington - 17 .13

Gannett- 85.10
General Electric- 30.03
GKNLY-4.07
Harley Davidson- 54.4Q
Kmart- 42.07
Kroger - 17.03
Ltd -19.92
NSC-23.46
Oak Hill Fin;mcial - 31 .74
Bank.Qne- 46.76
OVB-34.70
Peoples- 23.47
Pepsico - 53 80
Premier - 8.89
Rocky Boots - 18.98

Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m . closing quotes of the previous day's transactions, provided by Smith Partners at
Actvest Inc. of Gallipolis.

Coming Thursday in the Sentinel ...

.

Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
·

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May 10 2004

Dow Jones
Industrials

Keep a
check on
local
weather

Redwomen advance in regional Page 82
Flyers win NHL playoff game, P~ge 86

Market watch

May 10,2004

BLI -

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

Tuesday, May 11, 2004

A DAY ON WALL
.. STREET

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

•

Sectional Tournament
Today's Games
Baseball
Division Ill
Oak Hill at Beipre
Nelsonville-York at Fed. Hocking
Coal Grove at Porlsmouth
Chesapeake at Ironton
South Poonl al Fairland
Wellston at Alexander
· Wednesday's Games
Softball
Division II
Gallia Academy at Vinton Counly
Marietta at Meigs
Jackson at Norlhwesi
Athens at Warren
Division IV
Southern at Crooksville
South Gallia at Green
Walertord at Miller
Ironton St. Joe at Ports. East
Monday's Results
Baseball
Division II
Warren 12, Gallia Academy 5
Athens 10. MeigsO
Jackson 14, Rock Hill i3
Vinton County 5, Waverly 4
Division IV
South Gall ia 9, St. Joe 3
Miller 4, Southern 3
South Webster 10, Southeastern 0
Sciotoville 11 , Eastern (Pike) 3
Easlern 10. Waterford 0
Manchester 17, Western 0
Softball
Division Ill
River Valley 11 . Wellston 0
Lynchburg Clay 5, Piketon 2
Belpre 14, Nelsonville-York 2
Alexander 13. Federal Hocking 1
Chesapeake !,South Point 0
Westlall 11 , Oak Hill 1
Minford 2, Por1smouth 1 ·
Fairland 9. Coal Grove 2
Wheelersburg 8 , Ironton 1

Athens blanks
Meigs in five
inning sectional
• THE PLAINS - Alhens
defeated Meigs 10-0 in five
innings Munday in scl·tional
semifinal baseball aclion.
Meigs ' pitcher Mi.chael
Davis gave up six unearned
runs in the second inning
against the Bulldogs.
Jeremy Blackston was 3fu r-J al the plate for the
Marauders. while Chris Pitts
was 2-for-~ for Athetls. ·
Pitts. Chris Hewitl and Aen
Ch leboun eac h drove in two
runs for the Bulldogs.
Athens will travel to
Warren in the se&lt;:tional final
Thursday.

Buckeyes move
into second
place in. Big Ten
COLUMBUS (API- Mike
Madsen pitched eight effecli vc
innings . and Ohio Slale tied
Penn St:11e for second place in
' the Big Ten by bealing the
Nittany Lions 9-4 Monday
nighL
The Buckc·yes (27- 19, 15-9)
and Nittany Lions (26-20. 159) each trai l firsl -place
Minnesota by one game.
Madsen (7-4) all owed
homers lo Clint Eury and Matt
H&lt;mer. but Penn State managed little else . The Buckeyes·
slarter gave up seven hit s.
struck out seven and didn't
walk a bauer.
Adam Schneider went 2-for4 with lhree RBis and Drew
Anderson was 2-for-4 and
scored twice for Ohio State.
· Penn State starter Claylon
Hamilton (4-4) allowed four
runs on five hits · 111 four
mnongs.

Haynes put on
waivers by Reds
CINt;INNATI P.itcher
Jimmy Haynes was put on
waivers Monday by the
Cincinnati Reds, who would be
responsible for the rest of his
$2.5 million salary if he doesn't
get claimed.
The
right-hander, who
agreed 1o a $5 million, twoyear deal in December 2002, is
0-3 with a 9.60 ERA in four
slarts and one relief appearance
for Cincinnati this season. The
Reels la;t week demoted him
from the starting tolation to 1he
bullpen.
The Reds lir&gt;t signed Haynes
,;, a free agent in January 2002.
He went 15-10 thai year to lead
the team in win.s. stao1s (~4).
inning; pilched (I% 2-3) and
strikeotlls ( 126 ).

Prep Baseball

Eastern mercies Waterford irl sectional
BY ScoTT WOLFE

Sports correspondent
TUPPERS PLAINS - Scoring
early and oflen. the Eastern . Eagles
made an easy go of it in lhe first
round of lhe Se~tional Tournament by
posting a 10-0 mercy rule win over
the Waterford Wildcals .
Eastern· now advances to the sec·

tional tlnak
Easlem ·,Jonathan Owen picked up
the big win on the mound. whi le shuttin£ oul the Wildcah "ith live strikeouts and four walks. Owne has done
a great job for the .Eagles Ihis season
and once again put Ea!-~tern in postion
to win.
Han son suffered lhc loss for the
Wil.dcat s. with a 1\\'0 inning relief
stinl from Huck. They combined for

three strike outs and six v.alb.
Eastern &gt;cored first in the holtnm
half the tiN when Chri' Myer' drew
a :1-1 lead-off \\alk. Rvan Smith
walked. and Ken Al1\sharv.hammercd
an RBI double. Amsban;· s blast "a'
followed with a two -ru"n douhle hv
Terry Durst down the line and to the
fence in left field . the score 1-0
eastern .
'
In the second innin~ Will Woods

Durbin helps D'Amico
BY JIMMY GOLDEN

Associated Press

doubled to left center for the Eagle'
of Coach Brian Bowen . Du ... tin Ri !!i.!."

walked. M\~rs sacriticed Riggs. tii~n
Smith '"I' llit wilh u pitch to loud the
h'"e' and Anbbarv had a lwo-run ·
double and l1i' thin.f RBI of th~ ~am~
Dur't then had a line 'inde and
Corev Shutler a sanific·c 11\ · to 2ive
E'"1ern " 7 -ll leucl
·
•

Please see Eastern, Bl

Prep Softball

Hill
pounds
'Cats·
.

BOSTON
Jeff
D'Amico probably pitched
him self out of th e Cleveland
Indians' starling rotation for
now.
Luckily for him. ByungHvun Kim did the same for ·
the Boston Red Sox.
Kim was demoted to the
bltllpen aflcr giving up sox ·
runs in 3 1-3 innings on
Monday night when th e
Indian s bealthe Red Sox I06.
D"Am1cu :ollowed four
.
?_ '... - _'1 mmngs.
.
.
runs 111
vut
avoided the loss because
Chad Durbin U-)) was able
lo hold Boslon to just one
more run through lhe fifth.
''We· ve go I a day off coming up here. We're going to
pitch the besl starters we
have:· Indians manager Eric
Wedge said after snapping a
five-game losing streak.
''I've always said Durbi1i
will have a chance to start at
some pu.int." he _,a id. "I
1hi nk he did a good job
· today."
Durbin relieved D'Amico
wilh runners on first and
lhird wilh two outs in the
1hird and gol Pokey Reese to
line out 10 center to end the

Southern wins 11
inning thriller, 13-12
BY Scon WoLFE

~

Spans correspondent
RACINE - Smothern 'enior c·e nlerfieldcr Emil) Hil l 'ctn"·c one deep into
the hole at shurhlop to bring Ash ley
Roush home with the winning run in all
eleven innin~. e\t ra innin!2 thriller at
Ra.:inc's Swr'Mill Park Mo1l'da) night.
Southern cla imeJ the extra innim.! Tri Valley Conference varsity softball \·ictorv. 13-12. after the Wuterfonl Wildcats
liad gone ahead 12- 11 in lhc top of the
llllll-l1i!.

mntn g.

Durbin gave up one hit Brian Dauhach"s solo homer
and two walks while
striking out three. D'Amico.
who has a 7.92 ERA. will
return to Cleveland on
Tuesday 10 have hi s ba.:k
~:hccketl out.
'' I jusl wenl out there ballling'" with control. he sa id .
''It's harder lhan it needs to
be.".

Kim ( 1- 1) was only
charged with four earned
runs, bul he also helped lwo
unearned runs score when he
crossed up catcher Jason
Yaritek for a lw&lt;Hlln passed
ball. He gave up five hits and
1hree walb in 3 1-1 innin~s
before l eav in~ to catcalls
from the Fenway crnwd.

Please see D'Amiro. Bl

.

.

Clevelafld Indians re lief pitcher Rafael Betancourt nght, gets a hug from
catcher Victor Martinez after their 10-6 victory over the Boston Red Sox at
Fenway Park in Boston Monday. (AP)

Smlthern is no\\ R-9 merall and 7-R in
the league after claiming their fifth win
in a mw. while Waterford drops to h-1 S
owrall.
Time after time Smnhern see 1nin ~ l v
had the game won. but could not clalnp
down defcnsi\'cly un lhc pes~) Wildcah.
St ill. the Lad\ Tornadoes 'l1owed much
characte1· in tianlin~ bad thr~c time' in
l'Xt r&lt;t inninf! . . after i'"r;1ilin!2.
Southern" kd K-6 ~oill~ inlt&gt; the lasl
innim!. but three· \\aTk .... ':111 ~rrnr and a
, inglc to Mallor) Mc:Cutcllcon ticu the
~co~·t.! at X.-X. Southern went down in the
boll om h,d f the in111ng and the game " ·cnt
int(l extra inoin!! ....
In th~ eif..!hth'" inninc, two errors and :1
smgk to K~) Ia Murpl1) gaw Waterford a
I0-R lcau ,mJ cast a ~loomv forecast on
tile Tornado hopes. Tl1c fir'l-1\\ '&lt;l Tornauo
hailer' wcr~ put out ,md their llOpc;
slipped further intll gutter
Soulhern \ Kalie Sayre 1hc11 ignited a
rally of lhrec straidll dllllble,. Joanne
Pic~~ns thc11 ~noc·~~d home Sayre. and
1\icki Tuc·kcr slammcu the third doubk
ti&gt; tie the game at 10-10.
W,llcrf&lt;~·d went &gt;cOrcles.s in the ninth.
then Suutlh:rn went ~corele""· the game
'ti ll deadlm·,ed at I 0-1 II.
•

Please s_ee Southern, Bl

Prep Softba II

Prep Baseball

Eastern
girls
fall
to
Southern
ousted
by
Miller
·parkersburg South
BY ScoTT WoLFE

Sports correspondent

HEMLOCK - They say i! is hard to heal
a team three times.
Monday night in the Sectional Tournament
at Miller, Southern proved that old adage. to
be fact as Miller squeezed out a 4-3 varsity
baseball win over the Tornadoes lo advance
to the Sectional finals at Trimble Friday.
Miller scored two in the first inning when
Goetke reached on an error. stole second.
Jordan Doup hit an RBI double, and Aichele
bunted. Southern made an error' on the play
as a run scored for a 2-0 Miller lead.
Southern scored once in lhe third when
Cole Brown singled, J.R . Hupp sacrificed
him to second. Brown went to third on a
passed ball, and Brown s~:ored on a Tucker
4-3 ground out. the score 2-1.
In the rbird Luning walked for Miller. slole
second and third. and scored on an errant
pick off' play. the score 3-1.
In the fourth. Miller scored when Bolymd
was hit with a pilch. and he was sacrificed to
second. Then Griffith singled hiu1 home . .f-1
Miller.
Soutl1ern scored two in the sixth when Wes
Burrows singled. Joe Phillips si ngles to put
runners on the corners. Jake Hunler wcnl in

to run fur Phillip.1 and stole second. Brad
Crouch was 'hi I hy a pit.:h to load tile bases.
then Jo1h Papc l1i1 a sacrilicc fly to rig ht .
scoring Burrow' and HLIIller ad\·anl·ed.
Pal rick Jolmson then hit anulher sacrifice lly
10 knock in Hunter. and Cole Brown singled
bet&lt;&gt;re a gro und out ended the imling.
Southern rallieu in the lasl inning. but it
wa1 loo little. too late.
In the s~venth, Yeauger reached on an
error and Burrows singled 10 put 1wo on wilh
one out. then a pop up and strik~ out ended
the game.
. Southern hillers were Chris Tucker a single, Jeremy Yeaugcr a .1ingle. Wes Burrows
two 1ingles. Joe) Phillip1 a single. Brad
Crouch a single, and Cole Brown ·lwo sin-

gles.

.

Miller hillers were Jordan Doup a double.
Griffilh a double and single .
Jordan Doup was the winnin~ pilcher with
four 1trikeouts and no walk1. while hilling
one bauer, Cole Brown struck out eight.
walked two walks. and hit three bailers. Southern hosts Waterford on Tue,day.
Division IV Sectional Semifinal
Miller 4, Southern 3
Southam

001

002

0

-383

M1ller
201
100
0 -4.13
WP·Jordan Doup and Curt Lunmg , LP·Cole Brown and
Jeremy Yeauger

BY Scon WOLFE

Sports correspondent
PARK ERSBURG. W.Va .
- In a non-league pick-up
game. the
Pur kersbur g
South Lady P.atriols tripped
Lip · the red-hot Eastern
Eagles during a non-league
varsity softball contest that
Coach Pam Douthitl used as
a tune-up for the tournamenl.
Ea&gt;lern is 15-6 and 13-2
in
th e
Tri-Vallcy
Confcrcn,·e .
It dc,cloped into a pitchers Jucl early as both
hurlers sat do\\ n the ,ide in
lhc fi r'' inning and hnth 'ct
tht.! tone for the ~a me \\ ilh
t\vn ,trikcnlll~ ~'PT~I..'c in th~
opening: frame . E;.~..,tcrn·~
Kri,,ta White. lhc "HIIhp.l\1.
and Patriot Jill Stephens
cngat-cd in a lnrrid hattie

frnm lhe pitcher's rubber.
Stephen' ended up un. the
v. innint: end of thC . . tid.. and
bmught home a no-hitter ~"
\\ell.

The second inning was
also a 1-2-3 affair with
Wh7batters whiffed in the
thi r~ round. · but three was
th e lucky number for the
Patriots. ·
In th e bottom half of the
third a sin~le to knox and
two 'traigl1i errors brought
home a mn. A sacrifice
brought lwme ano th er run
and t\1 o more error' and a
Tailllllmcr singk pu1hcd the·
score to ~ - 11 for Par~cr.,bllrg
South .
E"'tern·, c,,,C\' Smith.
who rca(.: hr:J (ll1 ·an error.
and Ka" Lud\\ id. who
\\CI"ed \\ c•rc the (lil ly
t:agk' to reach

ba~i.." .

Please see South, Bl

)

�\

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Rio performs well at Ohio Open
STAFF REPORT

ATHENS - The Umversny of Rto
Grande men's and women's track and field
squads put together sonie strong ellorts at
the Ohto Open on Saturday
Sophomore spnnter Tory Jordan set a
new personal record m the I 00-meter dash
wtth a tune of I 2 I 5 Jordan won the event
She was also a member of the 4x I00-meter
relay team lhat qualified tor the NAJA
Nattonal Meet wtth a ttme of 48 47
Semor Bnan Mttchell and sophomc1re

Mtcheal Conger went 1-2 IIJ the 110-meter
hurdles on the men's stde Mitchell limed
out 'at 15 83 .md Conger wa' 16 37 Both
men out-dmanced Chad LUiz ot Ohto
( I 6 7 I ) 111 the event Conger was also thtrd
111 Ihe long JUmp
Freshman Carlesh.t Ch.tmbers wnunued
her stelfar season wtth a second place fimsh
m the 200-meter dash (25 78) Freshman
Shannon Soulsby narrowly nussed wmmng
the 400-meter dash (I OJ 9~). timshmg second behmd Oh10 ·s Andrea V.mBusktrk
(10191)
Freshnw1 thrower Ahem Smtth recorded
two runner-up timshes 111 the dtscus and the

hammer throw Smtih measured 124 feet.
mne mches 111 the dtscus and 117 feet. stx
mches 111 the hammer
Other Redwomen results Ntesha Fuller.
thtrd m the 100-meter Ja,h ( 12 36). Ntckt
ThonM,. thtrd m hoth th~ J.lVehn (8"1 feel)
and the shot put (33 teet. 5 mches) and Cam
Ratchll was fifth 111 the I00 ( 12 91)
Other Redmen results Gastm Green,
second m the shot put (41 feet. 8 mches)
,md lifth m the discus (127 feet. 9 mches)
and lim McCoy was seventh m the 200meter da'h (23 48)
R10 Grande " slated to compete at
Baldwm-Wallace on Saturday

College Softball

Redwomen move on in region play
STAFF REPORT
sports@mydallytnbune com

RIO GRANDE - The Umversttv ot
Rto Grande Redwomen softball team
swept a doubleheader frorn Mountam
State 111 the opemng round of NAlA
Reg ton IX playoffs to advance to face the
top seed Ohto Domtmcan on Thursday
Rio won 7-2 and 9-7 on Monday aflernoon at Stanley Evans Fteld
Rio Grande (34- 11) had a 3-0 )ead
headmg mto the fourth mnmg ot the first
game and erupted for four runs m seiZing
a 7-0 advantage Semor second baseman
Emtly Cooper was 2-for-3 and scored
two runs to lead the Red women offense
Semor lhtrd baseman Anme Tucker
was 1-tor-3 wtth two runs scored and
knocked 111 a run Jumor first baseman
Amy Conn (Wheelersburg .•OH) went 1for-2 at the plate wtth an RBI and sophomores Jenny Oldtng. Brandt Jones and
Knsten Chevaher also added RBI hns tor
the Redwomen
Temma Chow, Enca Bond and Casey
Vest all collected two hus each tor the
Lady Cougars Vest and Genests Coli had
RBI hits for Mountam State (9-30)
Andrea Lotycz pushed her personal

wmnmg streak to 15-consecuttve games
wtth a route gomg performance Lotycz
(21-3) scattered seven htts and struck out
five whtle gtv~ng up two runs
Natahe Hanson sutfered the loss tor
Mountam State. She gave up seven runs
(five earned) and etght hits m SIX mnmgs,
fanmng two and walkmg five
Both pttchers were plagued by shaky
defense as each team committed four
errors
In game two, Rto scored two run s m
the ftrst and four runs m the thtrd to take
a commandmg 6-0 lead Oldmg clubbed
an RBI tnple and Jones Jut a home run to
set the tone for the early run product ton
Mountam State would prove to be a
worthy opponent on thts afternoon as the
VISitors scored seven runs over the next
three mnings Rio countered "tth a solo
home run oft the bat ot Chevalier m the
tourth and plated two key runs 111 the fifth
and then held as the Lady Cougars
mounted a senous charge
Jones had the btg game m game two.
gomg 2-for-3 wtth three RBI. She later
tnpled to bnng home a run that made the
count 8-4. Chevaher also had a two-htt
d.ty as dtd Olding and Anme Tucker
Tucker had two RBI's and scored a run.
Bond was a thorn 111 the stde of the

Redwomen as she went 3-for-4 wtth four
RBI and three runs scored Breanne
Harper added a 3-for-3 d~y with a run
scored and Coli was 2-for-4 wilh a run
batted m Je sstca Wood added an RBI hll
and Enca Hall had two htts, mcludmg a
double and a run scored
Stephame Broccolo benefited from the
early run support as she lasted 5 2/3
mmngs m gettm~ the wm Broccolo (138) ytelded 12 hits and seven runs (five
earned) She also walked one and struck
out one Lotycz pitched the tlnal 1 1/3
mnmgs for her thtrd save of the season
She fanned Kay Ia Ruble to end the game
and preserve the wm
Katte Rams suffered the loss for
Mountam State. Rams gave up 12 hus
and mne runs (seven earned) and walked
one over SIX mnmgs
Rto detealed Mountam State for the
fifth and stxth times this season wah the
doubleheader sweep.
R10 wtlltravel to Columbus to face the
Lady Panthers of Ohto Dommtcan I
p m , Thursday 111 the Regton IX semifinal s Ttffin and Walsh wtll match-up m
the other sem1
Rio split wtth Ohto Dmmmcan lhts
season when the two teams met at Evans
Fteld, Apnl 10

Even in defeat, coaches can
impart lessons and impact lives
COLUMBUS (AP)- Often. the wmners do not learn the greatest lessons
Earher thts spring, 111 a matchup ot
htgh school baseball teams. Bexley beat
Columbus' Lmden McKmley 47-0 m
five mmngs
'The one regret I have ts thai I called
the score m"' for newspaper publtcauon,
Bexley coach Chad Mttchell satd
Lmden coach Darrel Guess satd the
score stmply retlects the truth about the
game, and he thinks his team learned a
lot from the game
Mttchell's team IS fed by mtddleschool, freshman and JUmor-varstty programs m the suburban Columbus dtstnct Many ot ht s players began pamctpatmg m orgamzed leagues when they
were 6 Some of them spend thetr summers playing for travehng teams
Guess recruns hts players m the school
hallways and the playgrounds of Lmden.
In many cases, hts players have httle 01
no baseball expenence
"Obvtously, I feel bad about the score,
but I don 't feel bad about the competition we had, and our conduct on the
field," Mttchell satd "It was one of those
things where tf you were at the game
you'd have a completely dtfterent tdea
of it than tf you JUSt looked at the score
I had Lmden parents come up and tell
me how they enJoyed pl aymg agamst
us "

Guess smd the Bexley team and coach
should not be given any gnef about the
game
"The score wasn't a he , It was a
score," he smd "There were four easy
tly balls m the ftrst mmng II we calch
two of those, they don't score 23 runs,
they mtght have had a se~en-run hrst
and we're talktng about a completely
dtfferent game "
•
As Lmden dropped to 0-13, Guess
conlmued ht s routme of teaching the
game, gomg forth with humor and celebratmg the small vtclones
Steve Hall, who played at Ohto State,
satd he had to adjust to coachmg gtrls
basketball at suburban Grandvtew
Hetghts after always playmg on wmnmg
teams. Hts has had a tough run of late,
and Hall says he tnes to stress learmng
from losses.
"We haven't been as blessed here, but
we work hard, we dedtcate ourselves to
what we' re domg,"' he satd "We take
nole of the effort the ktds ate puttmg m,
and we apprectate 11 "
As Hall talks about 11, though, one
doesn't get the sense thar hts players
have suffered through lean years
"Some people of great abtlity go
through bhnd m hfe, and coast on abthty, and never reach their full potenttal ,"
Hall satd. "As a coach and a teacher, to
see how hard we work, th,tt's the best

teehng
We talk about bemg the best
you can be If we're playmg at the htghest level we can attam, we 're comfortable."
Guess remembers, vtvtdly, playtng on
a dtstnct champ10nshtp team when he
was a student at L111den Tune has moved
on In the present era of open enrollment,
Lmden, a heavily populated area of
Columbus, has become a feeder of ath·
Jetes for other htgh schools
"When you thmk back to high school
and what you remember about tt, a lot of
ttme s tt's about playing a sport, or parttctpatmg m some other extracurncular
actlvtty." he satd "You remember the
fun of it, and that sticks wnh you.
"Some of these ktds we get out here,
thts may be the last btt of fun they have
before a hfetlme of work Some of the
ktds we get out here, we're takmg them
off the street. These are more httle vtcto·
nes ,
As the sun was settmg last Wednesday,
Lmden was fimshmg tis game wtth East
East had won once thts sea~o n - one
more ttme thdn Lmden
Lmden blew a four-run lead, then
came back to wm, 7-4.
How dtd 11 feel 1
"Cold. And wet," Guess satd after get·
tmg a bath from the team's dnnk bucket
It ts sprtng and hope remams, even m
a so-called losmg season

Bonus pays big for Smarty's owners, trainers
BENSALEM. Pa (AP)
Pat
Chapman went down to the WIre for
meetmg the deadhne to name her young
colt In a rush, and forgettmg the horse
was born on her mother's btrthday,
Chapman named it Gel Along
When the paperwork returned,
Chapman reahzed she had mtended to
name the colt after her mother, Mt ldred,
who was mcknumed "Smarty."
"I never told my husband, but I paid
$1 00 to change the name," Chapman
said, laughing.
Get Along went out to pasture, Smarty
Jones took the wm.
And that $1 00? Well, Pat and Roy
Chapman more than made thetr money
back .on the smallish red chestnut colt
that went on to win the Kentucky Derby.
Another big payout came Monday when
they received a $5 million Centennial
Bonus check from Ouklawn Park for
Smany Jones' wins at the Rebel Stakes,
Arkansas Derby at Oaktown Park and
Kentucky Derby.
"It's unbelievable," Pat Chapman sat d.
"I think we should take htm out and let
him run up the art museum's steps "

•

The bonu s check, the largest m North
Amencan horse ractng htstory, was
offered by Oaklav.n Park owner Charles
J Cella to the horse that could wm the
three races
"It was a wonderful concept, never to
be duplicated agam m thoroughbred raemg." satd Cella, who announced the
bonus last fall to honor the !rack's tOOth
btrthday and hts famtly, whtch has
owned Oaklawn since 11 opened
Because of Roy Chapman 's health,
Cella dectded to travel to Pennsylvama
tnstead of awardtng the pnze tn
Arkansas
Roy Chapman, m hts wheelchair and
suffering from severe emphysema, kept
interviews brief, but spoke long enough
to credit trainer John Servis for making
the colt the talk of the racing world.
"When he told me we're going to
Arkunsus, trust me, Arkansas wus the
lust place tn the world I wanted to go. I
live in Florida all wmter." Chapman
said. "John satd we'd take him Arkansas,
let htm mature and we'd go to the Dcrb~
from there That's exactly what he dtd'
Smarty Jones, the ftrSt unb~aten

2004

•

Tuesday, May 11, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

.

College Track and Field

sports@mydailylnbune com

Tuesday, May u,

www.mydailysentineJ.com

Kentucky Derby wmner smce Seattle
Slew 111 1977, IS prepanng for the
Preakness on hts home turf The paydays
wtll contmue to skyrocket tf he can wm
m Baltimore, then the Belmont Stakes
three weeks later for a Tnple Crown
sweep.
There was plenty ot cash to go around
Monday Roy Chapman satd he'd make
someone's hfe better. Serv1s, a native of
Charles Town , W Va, planned to share
hts ponton wtth the rest of the tratntng
staff.
"It's gomg to be a really good start for
n lot of those guys back there," Servis
sat d.
Cella satd Arkansas Gov. Mike
Huckabee ~roclaimed Friday "Smarty
Jones Day ' and the mayor of Hot
Springs ul so proclutmed the sume honor
for Saturday.
On Monday. Smarty Jones took un
ea~y I 112-mile gallop with u pony on a
closed Philadelphtu Park track. Servis
may give the colt at least one more day
on hts own before the Preakness
"I want htm where he's ready to beat
someone up," Servts satd

Eastern
from Page 81
Eastern added smgle runs
m each the thtrd fourth. and
fifth inmngs tor the 10-0 stxmmng vtctory
Eastern
hmers
were
Amsbary wtth two doubles.
Durst a double and smgle.
Shutler a double. Morns a

Southern
from Page 81
In the
lOth
mnmg
Waterford 's Marlin went 111 to
run as the runner at second as
part of the tte-bteaket rule
whtch destgnates the mnmg
start wnh a runner at second
Robinson had a nt ce 1-3 sacnfice bunt, Murphy hll d sacnftce tly to score Martm.
then a ground out ended the
mnmg. Waterford leadmg I I10
Southern put De,ma Pulhns
on second m thetr half the
mnmg. Brooke Kt ser sacnficed her to thtrd. then Kane
Sayre smgled home Pulhns
wnh the tymg run Sayre was
then doubled off on a hne
drive on the next play, the
score 11- I I
In the Waterford eleventh.
Waterford went up 12-11
when Martm went to second
on the tte breaker rule and
advanced on an error that Jet
McCutcheon reach safely A
sacnftce tly to nght by
Dr.tyer knocked home Mart Ill
wtth the go-ahead run
Southern's Pulhns ag.nn
went to second and advanced
on a Tucker ground out then
Ashley Roush had a gametymg smgle and Emily Htll
dehvered the game wmnmg
htt wtth Roush makmg the

South
from Page 81
Stephens struck out 15 and
walked one to ptck up the
no-htt wm.

from Page 81
Ben Broussard hit two of
Cleveland's etght doubles
and Ronme Belhard h,1d two
hits to ratse hts AL-Ieadtng
batung average to .383
Manager Terry Fr,tncona
satd the team hadn 't dectded
whether Ktm, who h.ts a
6.17 ERA, Will go to the
mmors or the bullpen
·'Rtght now, it's JUSt not
workmg startmg," Francuna
smd " I don't thmk tt's fa tr to
hun or to us. So we ' re gmng
to make a change for now··
Bronson Arroyo wtll start
Saturday m Toronto
"It's an opportunity for
me," Arroyo satd "I've JUSt
got to try to step in and run
with tt. "
The lndtan s hit the ball off
th e Green Mon ster three
t11nes m the ftr st mmng to
take a 2-0 lead After Boston
tted It, Cleveland scored
twi ce on Vantek's pa ssed
ball.
Varitek also htt a solo
homer, and Johnny Damon
had three swgles for the Red
Sox, who lost thetr second
stratght game Boston threw
out ftve Cleveland runners
on the basepaths
It was " rematch of last
Wedne sday's
matchup
between D' Anuco and Kim
111 Cleveland. and both pitcher&gt; were htt hatd for a second con secutive start But
the lndtans won lhts ttme.
thank s to four shots off
Fenway's left-fte ld wall and
two more that short-hopped
II
Matt Lawton hit a leadoff
double off the Green
Monster to open the game,
then scored two outs later on
Victor Martinez 's double .
Travts Hafner stngled ott the
Monster to score Martmez,
but was thrown out trymg to
stretch it into a double to end
the tnmng.
Damon singled to open the
first for Boston and scored
on Murk Bellhorn 's trtple.
Bell horn scored to make 11 22 when David Ortiz singled,

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

m:rtbune - Sentinel - l\egister

smgle. and Woods a double;
M) el' walked three 11me~
and had an tmportant sacnlice bunt
w.nertord hilling was Jed
by Ht II "tlh 1wo smgb. an~
Pugh and Huck smgles
:

CLASSIFIED

WeCov•.,..-7
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
CountletUke

Dtvlsion IV
Secttonal Semtftnal
Eastern 10, Waterford 0

NoOne

Elncanl

Watertord ODD ooo -040
Eastern
340 111 - 1070
WP-Owen and Durst LP;Hanson and
Hill

wmmng shdc across the plate
lor the wm. 11-12
Southern httters were led
by Katte S.tyre who was 4-6
\\tth two RBI's Ashley
Roush 3-5 Wtlh a Slll(?le;
double . and a lnple ,md tour
RBI' s. Jo,mne Ptckens tw(J
stngles ,md .1 double. ,md
Emlly Hlll three smgle s.
Nt&lt;kt Tucker had an RBI
double. Jordal1 Netgler a Stn•
gle . ,md Holly .Dully a sm;
gle
Waterford httters were
K.tyl.l Murphy two smgles.
Shannon Htll a smglc and
tnple . and smgles by Kyhe
Rob111son.
Mallory
McCutcheon and Shannon
Barth
Brooke Ktser was the wm ~
nmg pttcher, scattenng severi
htt s atmd etght Southern
errors. stnking out four and
v. alktng se\ en batters.
Ashley Arnold suffered lhe
loss. tannmg two and walk,
mg five as Southetn pounded
out 16 htts off WHS pnchmg
v.htch
saw
Mtsty
Offenberger pnch the tmddle
l\\o dnd two-thtrds mnmgs
between Arnold's two stmts
Southern
goes
to
Crooksville tor Sect10n.u
Tournament
play
on
Wednesd,ty
Southern 13, Waterford 1 2
Wa tertord00104122Di 1- 1271

Southern 11 00 6 0 0 2012- 13168
WP Kcse r and Sayre

LP Arnold and

Barth

Whtte sutlered the lo ss
wtth etght stnkeouts and no
walks m a good etfort

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Parkersburg So. 4, Eastern 0
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Rewar~ Colocado
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Gall1po1ts Ca ll Romana at

SIH

but 0 Amtco got the next
three b,tltets to escape further damage.
Broussat d doubled wllh
one out 111 the second, Lou
Metlom walked dnd they
both moved up on Coco
Cnsp 's groundout. Wnh
Lawton b.ltttng , Kun c10ssed
up Yantek and the ball went
to the backstop Yantek had
trouble fmdmg 11 and bot!\
runners scored
Lawton walked , but was
ptcked ott to end the mnmg
Clevel.md took the lea&lt;.)
tor good 111 the fourth when
Belhard doubled, Broussard
was htt by ,, pttch and
Merlo111 walked to load the
bases C11sp smgled m one
run and Lawton' s sac nhce
fly scored ,mother to make It
6-4

Belltard
smgled anq
scored m the stx th to make tt
7-5. The lndtan s added tv.o
runs 111 th e seve nth on an
RBI double by Hal ncr and
Brnussatd's run-sconng stn·
glc
Aftet Yantek 's homer
made It 9-6. Martme z added
an RBI smgl e tn the ntnth
NOTES: OF Manny
Ramtrez mts sed ht s first
start of the sed so n because
He was bemg sworn m as a
US clltzen tn Mtamt
General manager Theo
Epstem satd the team w,ts
nottf ted 111 advance and
Ramtrez was gtven pe11ms:
ston to mt ss the game
Kevm Millar lett alter foul mg a ball oft ht s foot 111 the
seventh
The Red Sox
wtll bnng nght-handed
prospect Enc Glaser from
Portland
to
Double-A
Fen way on Tuesday to pitch
to SS Nomar Garctaparra,
who has yet to play thts season because ot tendtmtis 111
his right Achtlles ' tendon ....
Boston ftr st-base coach
Lynn Jones underwent eye
surgery Monday at the
Cleveland
Cltntc.
He
mjured himself working
wtth a screwdr1ver last
week. . Indians 3B Casey
Blake ts day·to·day with a
strut ned rtght humstnng
Merlon1 wtfl fill in while
Bluke heuls

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purses curta tns comforter
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Frday 8·4 740 446 7930 or
Now Hmng quality people
apply at 1354 Ja ckson P1ke
Apply at Burger Ktng
65 Upper Rtve r Road
HEY DRIVERS"'
Galhpohs
Here s a great op po rtunity
to come grow wtth us
Overbrook
Re hatJ I ta t1o n
Kuntzman Trucktng an 80
Center w1 ll soon be hav1ng
year old Aeg1onal Truckload
ST NA classes tf you world
Carr er wtlh term na ls m
hke to part tctpate m the
Alliance and Columbus Ohto
classes please come 1n and
has opened a new ter m1nal
fil l ou t an application at 333
1n Ptketon Ohto Only hard
Page Street Middleport
workrng eltpenenced dnv
EOE
ms wtth a clean MVR and a
mtnimum or two years expe Postt on Open at Darst Adul t
r1ence need apply
Group Home (740)992 5023
We have opemngs for
Pr1nt Shop part ltme 20 +
15 Company Dnvers
per week movtng tn to full
15 Owner Operators
ltme Must be dependable
For 1nfo catl Ray
and have good PC abthlles
1 866 436 1013
and knowledge of graph cs
HVAC Techmc1an must be (304)675 3952
cert1f1ed and at least 1 year
peop e oca
exp Call (740)446 163.,. or
ho Y)lant to earn mane
send resume to Plants &amp;
htle Jos1ng we1ght show
Son 300 4th Ave Gall1pol s
ng
others
how
Oh 45631
OVDIC
Informational
Instruc t anal A1de posttton
for the Me gs County Adult
Bas1c Educat ana l program
Applicant mu st have or be
able to obtatn an educai!On·
al Sid€ perm I POSitiO n IS
grant fu nded lor 20 hours
per w eek/50 weeks per year
Interested persons should
submtt a letter of 1nterost
and resume to Carol Brewer
at
the
Athens Metgs
Edu cat 1onal Servtce Center
320 1/2 East Matn Street
PO Box 684 Pomeroy Oh
45769 More mlormalton IS
ava1lable by calling 740 992
5592 The Athens Me1gs
. ESC IS and equal opportunt
ty employer
-'-'-"-'------

Tractor·Trailers
·we tram Man and Women
Full and Part T1ma Classes

"Job PlacemQflt
'CDL Tra1nmg
"Fmanc1ng Ave. lable.

ASSfEN ONTV
ALLIANCE
Tractor Trailer Tratmng
Centers Wytheville VA

1-800·334·1203

www ath:;mcelractortrallsr com
l ocal Home Health Agency
seekrng RN PCA S and
Home Heal th Atdes wtll
tram the q;Jhl person com
pany offers benefits fle:oo;tble
schedultng
compettt1ve
wages and a great work
atmosp here Please send
resume to CLA bo.11 568 c/o
GallipOliS Trtbune 825 Third
Ave Gallipolis OH 45631

Med1 Home Health Agency
Inc seektng a full·tlme and
PRN RN s and a PAN
occupationa l Theraptst for
the Gallipolis. Ohio area
Must be licensed both tn
Ohto and West Vlrg1nla We
offer a compehttve salary
benefit package for lullttme
and 401 K E 0 E Please
send resume to 352 Second
Ave Galltpoh s OH 45631
Attn Otana Harless Chn cal
Manager
Nee d a Job ?
We are h1nngl
You could earn up
to $8/hour plus bonuses
We also offer paid
tra nmg holidays
and vacalt ons
Full or part ltme
Shifts availeble
Call today
1 877 463·6247 9JCt 2455
Www tnfoclston com

Addresses wanted 1mmedt
&amp;
EMT s
atelyt No expenence neces Paramedtcs
sary Work at home Call loll needed Apply at 1354
Jackson Pike Gallipolis
(405)447·6397

varia ble upon request 740
41 1984

===------'
The Mason County Public
Library ts seektng a Part
t•me l brary Clerk The sue
cesslu l applicant must be
fnendly tam1li ar w1th com
pulers and able to hft up to
25 pounds
Saturday and
even1ng hours are requt red
Interested applicants may
p1ck up and appltcat on at
508 V an d Street Pont
Pleasant EOE

rh, I 11111~1·

Ut•,;tm !!lur\

11u rtljl\
Full-11me pos1t1on Mu st be
Ohro licensed ART/C RT
Must be able to per1orm all
aspects of Aesp ratory Ca te
mclud1ng EKG s and ABG s
Ru ral healthcare fac iltly
competitive wages good
benefits flex1b le schedulmg
Contact Doctors Hospttal
Nelsonville
Cardtopulmonary Dtr ec to r
~950 Mount Saint Mary
Drtve
Nelsonvil le
OH
45764 (740)753 1931 e:oo;t

6262 EOE
Waste Management Inc IS
the leadtng prov1der tn the
solid waste management
tndustry We are currently
lookmg for a responstble
motivated
tnd1v1dua ! to
assume the responstb tlitles

of
Scalehouae Atlendant
Gallla County Landi II
Bidwell OH 45614

2004 by NEA, Inc

110

1110

WAN'Illl
ro Do

Waste Management Inc IS
the 1ead1ng prov1 der tn the
sol1d waste management
1ndustry We are currently
lookmg 101 a res pons ble
mot1va ted
1nd1v1dual
to
assume the responsibtlilt es
ol
Landfill S1te Manager
Ga111a County Lan dfill
B dwell OH 4-5614

Wtll care for elderly person
n my horne E:oo;per1enced
w1th tnost Illnesses hOme
cooked meals 28 yrs eltpe
r ence good references

17'0)667 0499
Wtll Pressure Wash hous es
mobtle homes metal bu1ld
mgs
and gutt ers Call
(740)446 0151 ask for Ron
or leave rnessage

II'\\'\( 1\1

Quahfted cand 1da1es !IlJ.!.S.!
possess pnor e:oo;per1ence tn
10
'StN•:&lt;·'i
employee supervtston and
Or!')I{IUNrn
fam11tanty w tn heavy equ1p·
ment operat1on and expen
ABSOLUTE GOLDMINEt
ence 1n e ther solid waste
60 vending machines/
!andltll or earth movtng conexcellent locations
structton Aad lt lonal pre
all ror $10 995
!erred qualil1cat10ns would
800·234 6962
mclude computer literacy
OSHA program knowledge
and exposure to lleavy Mob•l e Mm t·Oonut conces
stan busmess lo' sa le
equ ipment ma1ntenance
Locally owned Eastly make
Waste Management Inc $1000 00 or more at week
offers a compet1!1ve com* end events Everyth ng sets
pensatton and beneftl pack up tn a spec1a11y destgned
age tnclud ng 401 K Health 10X10 canopy E~~:co ll ent
and L1fe Insurance Short part ltme or fu ll lime oppor
Term
and
Long Term tunrty 59 950 00 Donuts
Mrddleport
Dtsabthty among several Galore

Bt

4 rooms &amp; bath 52 Olive St
1986 t4x70 3 bedroom
No pets S300 month S300
Mob11e Home 2 bath on a
depds t (740)446 3945
rented
lot
$7 000 F1rm
phOne (304)675 145 1
N ce 2 bedroom attached
garage Near Rodney Lease
1990 14X80 3br 2ba Heat
and Refe rence 5400 month
pump w AC Ca thedral ce11 plus depostt Call (740)446
ngs &amp; deck
S14 BOO
2801
(304)882 3682
- - - - - - - -·Smoll Far m house 3 bed
2000 Oakwood Home 16x84
room 17 acres perlect for a
3b r 2ba all elec:.:tr1c centra!
couple of horses 1 S6t~O+
ai r Call anyt1me (30 416 75
depOSit. (740)245·9020
7157
\101111.1~ HO\II-~
2001 Skyline Double Wide,
1-'0k RE~l
28~~:52
JBr, 2 Baths ,
bcellent Condition, Must
2
bedroom
t ra1ler
Move (30 41523-404~
$300/month S300 deposll
98 14lt60 2 bedroom new no pets (740)992 7546 call
www.com1cs.com
carpe t great cond s10ve after 5pm or leave message
a1r $9 500 060 (304)642·
2 bedroom tra1lor 1n Rutland
9142 OR \304)335 0528
10
HoM~
No Pets Call (740)742 2661
FOR SAL[
Betore you buy I
3 bedroom mob t!e home tn
DoeS your dealer':!
Mlddleporl $375 00 plus
Move h1s names Do s1te
eau 1u
e roo m ca preparatiOn bu1ld lounda depos1t No ms1de pers
(740)992 3194
ttached 2 car unattache
11 ons Roll and set hOL ses
arage w1th garage apart
Do heat1ng and a1r Have •n 3 bedroom 2 bath pr vate
ment m Gallipolis V!e
house servtce people
lot ~ery ntce added room
hotos/1nfo
on! n
Install sept1c systems Do $425 month (740)44 6 7322
ww orbv com
Cod
electncal/ plumb ng
Do
2204 or call 740 446
dnveways II the answer to N1ce 2 and 3 bedroom
1082
any at these que sttons IS no mobtle ho mes tor rent
or •f they sub con tract You ndudes water sewer &amp;
Brtck Ranch tn a ntce well
trash no pets depoSit &amp;
es tabl shed neighborh ood better see the oldest most $300 per month (740)992
deale r
m
3br 1 5 B 2car garage eKpenenced
2 167
e:oo;tra garage •n back Must Alhen s County Smce 1967
see to apprec1ate (740)446 Coles Mob le Homes 15266 N1 ce 2 bedroom mob1le
US 50 East Ath ens Ohto home
No
pets
Call
3081
,
4570 1 Where you get your 1740)446·.2002
moneys worth
At'"""n ~-,,
340
Ill \SINFNS
1-0~ Rl'\"1
\~1&gt;
lliNl.S

other benelts

(740)992-4294

"'

~

Resumes wrll be accepted flHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
unttl 5/ 1912004 Position 1s lNG CO recommend s tha
ou do bustness w 1h peo
currently avat lable
Je you know and NOT 1
Interested partt es may send send money through lh
a resume to (please do not !matl unt tl you have tnvestt
contact Site d rectly)

galed lhe altering.

Waste Management Inc
3415 Twp Rd 1447

i

Wa ste Manageme nt Inc
offers a competll!ve com Gelllpolla Career College
(CarEJers Close To Home)
pensahon and
beneftts
Call
Todayl 740 446 4367
package mcludmg 401K
1 800· 214 0452
Hea lth and Ute Insurance
www galllpohscaroercol ogo com
Short Term and Long Term
0 1S8blhty among several Accrodlled Memo11r AccreOrtlng
Counc l lor lndl!pl!lnrloni Co leges
other beneltts
ana Sc~ls 12746

Prmn:sstONAL
SERVIQ);

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We W1n)
1 888·582 3345

Hi \I I \ I \II

HoMES
mRSAtl.

~

All real estate adver1lslng
In th1a newspaper Is
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makee it Illegal to
advertise any
preference, limitation or
dlacrlmlnatlon baaed on
race, color religion, ae•
familia l 1tatue or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any •uch
preference limitation or
dlacrlmlnalton
Thla newapaper will not
knowingly ac::c::11pt
advertlaemenla for real
eatata which Ia In"
vlolallon of the lew Our
readara are herebv
lntormeltl that all
dwellings advanltad In
thla newepapar are
ava~labte on an equal
opportunity baaea

To Do

F
l__

B13 779 4542

mtles south of G llpolis Call 4274
e room
a
740 256·1673 01 740·256·
cres tn co~.mtry Bidwell
9350 leave message
hto
Vtew
photoltnl
Wtll watch Elderly In my
nllne
www orvb co
ode 42104 or call 740
home or yours (304)675

4860

88·9839

N1ce 1 bearoom complete
kitcne n A C Reterence and
depos1t No pets (740)446 '

0139

N1ce two bedroom apart
men ts Large rooms Fully
equ ped k.1tchen Central
heattng cool1ng
Washe· ldryer
hookup
13041982 ;i523
Tar3
Townhouse
Apa rtments Very Spac i OtJ~
2 Bedroo ms 2 Floors CA 1
1 2 Bath Newly Carpeted
Adult Poo l &amp; Ba Jy Pool
PatiO StA.rt 5385 Mo No
Pets Lease Plus Secur tv
Depostt Req wred Days
740 446 ~481
Even1ngs
740 367 0502
Tw1n Rwe rs Tower IS accept
ng applicatons tor wa i ng
I st for Hud subs zed 1 br
apanmem call 675 6679

EHO

St•\!T
mRRI\1
Retail or Off1Ce Space
Pr1me Downtown Gal1poh~
tocatton call (74 Cl)J79 9::J1 1
or 17401379 2204 lor mme
1nlo

-----R•vers1tes for rent fam1ly

rype 3 campSites full
hookup near rtver 3 dock·,
s1tes no hookup Call

i740i992·5956

~10

llot SEIIIlllt
G( K&gt;l'JS

i

Good Used Appliances
and
Recond1tto ned
Gua1anteeo
Nashers
1 and 2 Oed room apa I
Range"
and
3 unit build ng 2 bustnesses ments furn1s ned and unfur Dryers
&amp; 1 apartment lor sale mshed secur1ty depos t Refnge rators Some start at
downtown reqt..tred no pet~ 740 992 $95 S~aggs App l am":es 76 •
Located
In
V1ne St [740)4ol6 7398
Excellent 2218
Middleport
Please
ncqme po ll:lntlal
Moll ohan Carpet .202 Clark
1
bedroom
apt
call {740)354 "4084
Chapel Road Porter Ohto
Washer/dryer hOokup $290
(740)445 7444 1 877 830
30~~:40 commerctal buitdmg rent depos11 reqwed No
9 162 Free Est1mates Easv
2 12)i 12 pets 740 441 1184
1n Mtddleport
f1nanc ng 90 days same as
$275
month
doors
1 bedroom ups1a1rs apart cash V1sa1 Master Card
(740)992 3 194
mant
$275 + ut1l lieS Dnve a 1tile ~ave alot
deposit requ1red lor applica
Lfrrs &amp;
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
ton call (7 40)379·9511 or
A!.:IlEA( :E
A epa r 675 7388 For sale
(740)379 2204
re cond 1 oned
outomat1c
16)(80 Sites avatlable $1 15 1 Br apartmenl
for rent wAshers &amp; dryers rei• gera
per month 1ncludes wate r $350 mon th all uttllt es tors
gas and etectr1c
sewer &amp; trash (740)992 mc!uded
$150
secur ty ranges a r cond1!1oners and
2167
deposit close to downtown wnnger washers W 11 do
Pt Pleasant (304)675 3654 repa1rs on ma1or brands 1n
FOR SALE 3 Grave lots tn
shop or at your home
Metgs Memory Gardens on 2 bedroom lUSt past Holzer
stde $4.25 month Call (7 40)441
Ihe
Veterans
Used Furntrure Store

Bun

E

I

1740)992 2636

1184

Mercer ville lo-ts tor sale 2 bedroom near Holzer
shared entrance off St F\t CJA WJD hOokup qutet
218 3 13 acres Phone locatton avat lable 5' 1/04
$429 plus uttl lieS (740) 446
(740)256 tB25

Nlc9 3 bedroom 1 bath
concrete driveway carport
$49 000
Ea st
Bethel Private lot for newer Mob1la
Church Ad (740)441 9108
.Home C1ty hmtls $120
month
plus
Security
PI Please ni/Sandhtll Road
3Br , sa 1600/sqft Ra nch on (304)875 1996 0' (740)388
6 acre level lot Oak floors 6126
1st house on Rtgh t past Two homes tes lor sale Both
Ma rs hall
Un lverstty one acre m/! 3 112 mtles

3 bedroom 2 balh 2 car $103 000
(740)949 1131
giuage ci ty schools &amp; water after 5 OOPM
CIA electric turnace Pnce
Ranch style 4 bedroom .2
reduced (304)926 6661
bath famlly roo m w/11re
33 Acres
Ra nch style place large 2 car garage
W~N1Hl
Resumes w II be accepted
House on Eckard Chape l (740)992·6064
unttl 5!19/2004 wtlh a tenia
Ad
PI
Pleasant Area
ttve star t date of 6/ 14/2004
Spnng Valley area 4·5 bed
(304)895·3 129
Georges Portabl e Sawmtll
rooms 2 1/2 baths 2-car
Interested part1es may send don t haul your logs to the 3Br
i Bath
Ni ce garage lots of updates 439
a resume to (please do not mtll JUSt ca ll 304 675 1957
Neighborhood appliances Jerry Street
$125 000
contact srle d1rectly)
1ncluded Corner lot behtnd (7 40)446 2624
I am an expenence Ch1ld Armory
PI
Pleasant
Waste Management Inc
Care prOVIder provrdtng .....-Asktng $69 000 \304)593
MOBILESH~~J.:I)
3415 Twp Ad r447
chtld care 1n my home l am 3542
fUR ALE
GLENFORO OH 43739
a non smoker and have a
Job Code SA0244
fenced n yard Very reason- 4 bedroom 1 1/.2 bath 2 1978 Scttultz 14K65 Mobtle
able rates $10 per day per story brrck 2 car unanached Home 2Br 2 decks AC
EOE AA M/F/D
child $15 on weekends garage $37 500 Fou rth St very good condttton must
Avarlable any hours 10 New Haven WV (7 40)446 sell $5 000 OBO (304) 675·

Rt:."'r

3 bedroom house n country N1ce .2 bedroom apanment
no 1ns de pets references 'o r rent Middleport Oh
requ1 red $400 00 a month $325 mo
S300 depostt
$400 00 depOSit (740)742 (740)596 2198 or 740 591·
0649
2210

1420

1150

help daycares summer
leagues schools PTA s
coaches ratse money lor
local area Av/46 000 yr

1 mtle from Holzer Hosp1tal
3 bedroo m home $4 75..,
depos t Call (740\446 3838
after 6 OOpm

Call (7401245 0144

~

A~~KniF-'1"
FOR

1982 Double wtde Ex cellent
star ter hOme Very good
cond1 t1on Well taken care
o f and clean 3 bedroom all
walk n clos els 2 baths w1th
garden tub 1n master BR
bath Includes underp1nn1ng
Al l electHc w1th central AJC
Must be moved S1 2 000

Quallfted candidat es mu.a1
possess co mpetency wtth GLENFORD OH 43739
computer operation mclud Job Code· SM0244
mg Mlcrosolt Office spectfl
cally Mi crosoft W ord and
EOE AA M/FI V/D
Excel Must also poss es n'l'!:'-~~---'""1
pleasant telephone sktlls
ScHoou;
and abthly to multi task
•
INSI'RUCilON

Youth Fundralslng

10

Momu HoMtoS
FOR SALE

lwnght@ tc net

LP TA wanted tor home
health physical therapy sarv·
Ices Mot1vated self directed
lnd1v1dual wtll like flexible
scheduling good mdepend·
ence and compensation
Opportumtle s avatlable In
Absolute Top Dollar Us Athens Meigs Jackson
Sliver
Gold
Coins Vtnton &amp; Gallta counties
Proofsets Diamonds Gold _c_al_lB_B_B_4_6_4_1_12_6_ __

Rings
US Currency
M T S Com Shop
151
Second Avenue Galhpolls
740 446·2842

Dally In-Colurnn: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for ln5ertlon

How you can have borders and graphics
"-"
added to your classified ads
.:. ~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Learn to Drive
Surv1vors and Frtend s
Relay For L1te Cancer Team
5114 5/ 15
St Peters Eptscopal
Church 9·5;

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
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\\\01 \( I 'II \ I ..,

PERSON\!$

Oeaclif;,lhf'

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

t740)645 0906

D'Amico

•

2957

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 52 Westwood
Drtve trom $344 to $442
Walk to shop &amp; mov1es Ca tl
Equal
740 446 2568
Houstng Opportun ty

!rom Holzer Hasp tal
6.20 Evergteen Rd $19 500
560 Evergreen Ad $18 500 CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
Call
(740) 44 6 8840
or ED &amp; AFFORDABLE !
Townhouse
apanmAnts
(740)645 4513

and or small houses FOR
You could fiS h your badlands RENT Call (740)441 11 t 1
and Increase property value for aopl calion &amp; 1nlormat on
toot Make land tnto lakes
Furn1shed 1 oedroom ut1l
(740)388 8228
t1es patd 2 m les to Hosp1tal
cal l alter 6pm { 304)674

l(f\111'

~~::;::::::::, _00_3_'------~----10

HOt.JS~

130 Bukwllle Pike
Mattresses
dressers
couches recliners much
more Grave Monuments
(7 40)445 478.2 GalltpOIIS

r·------_..1
OH HA S 104M F

A\11()t ~:~

Buy
or
sell
Arvenne
Ant1ques 1 t 24 East Ma1n
on SR 124 E Pornt~roy 740
992 .25.26
Russ Moore
owner

f"'U

ML'&lt;L"FII.ANFOI IS

1\11-:R( HANilL'~
DP Air Stnder cl mber arm
e;o;erc1ser l1 ke new ~ owe
ponery crock plate 8. roast
er {304 \675 5549

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Rcpatred New &amp; Aebu11t In
Stock Call Ron E"ans 1

Gractous liv1ng 1 and 2 bed
room apartments at V1Uage BOO 537 9528
Man or
and
R1vers1de
Apartments rn Middleport
0°'0 Down Payment PoSSible From S295 $444 Call 7 40 Patto Furniture Lg glass lop
w/good credtt approKtmate 992·5064 Equal Hous1ng table 6 Chair &amp; al l the CtJSh
10ns Used one summer
ly $625 a month to r th1s Opportunrttes
L ke 1'19W $200 7 40 446
beautifully restored 19th
1847
century home 3 bedroom 2 Modern 1 Bedroom apt Call 4254 alter 5pm
bath central a1r 2 1/2 car \740)446 0390
Pole Barn 301!.50x10 only
2000 28x48 Doublewtde 3
garage studto apartment
New 2 bedroom apartment $5 295 1ncludes patnted
bedrooms great oondtlton
perenn al garden to many
$400 00/mo plus depoSit no metal plans hOw to bUild
stove
frtg
atr clean
amen11tes to ltst must see
pets (740)992 4119 ask for book Flider free dehvery
$17 500 (304)842-9142 0'
call (740)992-5883
t937 )789 0309
Marge
(304)335 0528
FUR R ENT

I

\

•

'

,,

\

�Auction

Tuesday, May 11, 2004
ALLEYOOP

Auction

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentinel.com

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
NEW AND USED STEEL Round bale hay, $10. Pho~~
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar

ESTATE SALE

Concre1e,
Angle,
Chan!Jel. Flat Bar, Steel ;;;;;;;;;;;...._ _ _ _....,
, Grating

For

AutOS
FOR SALE

Drains,

• Dtivoways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
'· (jcrap Metals Open Moodily. L.,------.,1
~f'!lesday, Wednesday &amp;
$5001 .Hondas.
Chevys,
.- riday, &amp;am-4:30pm. Closed
Saturday
&amp; Jeeps, etc ! POLICE
· hursday,
·~~nday. (740)446-?300
IMPOUNDS
Cars from
SSOO. For listings~ ·800-7198111 Rolollller 8 HP. 3001 •~ 3901

~

•froy

!"'Orse Model, vary good - - - --

---

cond. asking $625 (304}675- 1993
Bronco
644()
(304)674-0133

$3.500

.t

t994 Ford Aspire, 5 sp .. air.
great gas saver, $1995 :
1999 Ford Taurus, V-6. auto,
air. tilt, cruise, $5495: and
•Eltock, bricl&lt;. sewer pipes. many more great deals to
windows, lintels, etc. Claude ·choose_from, trade 1n's welWinters, Rio Grande, OH come. Riverview Motors , 2
Call740-245-5121 .
blocks above McDonald's
Pomeroy. O h. {740)992·

3490
1995 Ct1evy Corsica. Runs
AKC Black lab pupp1es. great. $2.500 . (740)446-

heads. Excellent 8731.

blocky

~untlng

stock, $250 each . .:.
, 99
...:....
- o- S-tr_a _lu-s .-4- c-yl.
7 - 0-odg
Call (740)643·0128.
2.4, auto. aJ! power. Very
AKC Blactc Lab pupp ies, good condi11on . $2,000.
males and females . first

(740)446·7029

Drop leaf table &amp; chairs, Buffet, Hutch Ross
SWeetheart cedar chest, 3 pc Poster bed,
Chest of drawers, vanity &amp; stool, wing back
arm chairs, love seat, couch, smoking
stand, double &amp; single beds, •ound, oval &amp;
square stands, RCA and Samsung TV, chest
of
drawers,
gossip
bench,
Sharp
microwave, oil lamp, misc. glassware, mise
pots &amp; pans, recliner, Emerson VCR, lamps,
pictures, misc. linen, lable, desk, pair end
tables. and more.

t 2 female , 1 'male. $600.00

AUTOMOTIVE

""'eopard

Gedl;o Aquarium .
: heat lamp, cricket term &amp;
1 supplies Paid $120 sell for
~ $40 (304)675·4500
·

over 39,000 miles , wh ite
with brown interior, 56.500
080 or will trade for sma112
door
au tomatic
car

•

(304)675·4 144

r·

~

e~~;celtent

condition. little

2001 Cavalier, 40 42K ,
___
$4.895: 1995 Cutlass Cirea,
1
4D, $1 ,995:1 997 Cavali er Z~v~g . must sacrifice a fine 24, $2.995; Others in stock.
~ldWin Spinet piano. Fine
COOK MOTORS'
I wood craftsmanship. Hardly
J touched. Original price well
(740)446·0103
:over $3.000.00. Will let II go 2002 Mitsubishi Lancer ES.
• lor $800.00. Call 17401992.
•~
31 ,000 mile~. auto, CD play' e_S1i;:i1~0._-::---::----, er, rear spo1ler. $5,900 OBO.
':, rlir
FRUI1S &amp;
740-256-1618 .
740-256i,'

\In 1 -.1 1'1 '1 II "

Ford · EsCort. $2.895: 98
Dodge Caravan, $3,000: 97
Dodge PU, $3,995; 94 GMC
P.U. VB, auto, AJC, $3,395:
9~ Olds Achieya. $2,195; 95
Dodge Stratus. $2.000: 95
.~N Ford Tractor. Disc &amp; Ford Probe, $2,000: 94
brush hog, needs all pump, Chevy Beretta, $500; 96

j1,300. (740)367-0632.

Ford Ranger. $1.700 .

m~st soil (304)674-0133

r

For

r

60

Box

HAULING:

• Limestone
• Sand
• Dirt
• Ag Lime
740-985-3564

1.

r~

f740)245-0380 after Bpm.
Registered

ANGUS

and

payments (304)773-5177"or
(304)593-3596

'Bo

·- ·

KIS

for 2004 Meigs
County Fair.
Serious
Inquiries Only
Call
985-4159

Syracuse, OH

740-992-2507
Call 1m Daily Specials

CALL-ItJ ORD!:R~
WUCOIA!:

750 East State Street Phone (7~10)~;93-6671
Athens, Ohio

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

Let me do it for youl

316 Washington Street
Ravenswood,WV 26164
Dr. Kelly K. Jones

UNII'S PIINnNG

~~~~~~A:~~~~~-.~res~unT~I~L~E~NITT~lQ~~~~T~H~A~T~'~S~J~E~S~Tl
(304) 273-5321

29670 Bash.an Road
Aacme, Ohto
45771
740-949..2217

r ~5'x10'
~;t ~ 'O'x30'
IV::" ,
Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM
1/ 1411 mo. pel

raras

7-(0 -11112-55114
740-11112-6862

• Super Hi Efficiency Equipmen~,

• Free Estimates
• 5 &amp; 10 yr Warranties

.• 't•-

, "·~•AA.,.,., . ~,

• Huge I nvcnlOJ)'

• Vanguard Vemless Fireplaces "&amp;""· ' '·

'!!!~.!!.'!!1 Gibson 1~.

--c--

GaJiipoJiS, OH WVOI0212
446-94 I 6 r 1-800-872-5967

Yl:

Richard L. Hunt, et al.,
Defend ante
· Court of Common
:,Pleas,
•-Meigs County, Ohio
:• In pursuance of an
· order of Sate In lhe
· above
antltlled
; action, I wilt offer lor
' aale at public auction
: In the ebove country
· on the 18th day of
'. June, 2004 at 10:30
. a.m. altha door oflhe
· courthouea, tho lol: lowing ~ocrlbed real
· eatate:
Said premlees aleo
known •• 42820 State
Routll124
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
: PPN: 18-01280.000
. A:ppralsed Itt: $5,000
. and cannot be eotd
· lor 1111 than two.: thlrde (213) of that
; amoUnt
Tanns of Sale
: Sherif!
of
Malge
' County
.John
D.
Clunk
. ·110005378
Tad
A.
Humbert

•

L..I----'-..;:.;:.;_....L..L.~____, u......l.--"' A
THE BORN LOSER
...
DO YOt.J REN.LY Tt\11"1(.YOU St\0\Ul

~

. Lawn am/ Garden Eqr&lt;ipmeoot is or&lt;r

BO.WL'ilt.l&amp;

busi11ess, 1101 our ~;ideline

----=""

FOI'WI'-1 i'\£t.J
Manning K. Roush
Owner
Open Mon-Frl 9-5 Sal. 9-12

Meigs County's largest selection of
annualS, perennials, Yegeta!Jtes,
shruiJIJery, fruit, ornamental trees,
roses, rhododendrons, ana azaleas.
COMPARE THESE PRICES!!
4" pot of annuals 94e

Friday, June 11, 2004 ,

at10:00 a.m., of said
day, the following
described real eslate:
Situated In the
County of Meigs, In
the State of Ohio, and
In the VIllage of
Pomeroy, In Secllons
8, Town 2 and Range
13; beginning at a
stake south 89· 112
deg. east 93 links
!rom the northwest
corner
of
David
Richard's
lot
In
Walshtown j thence
south 89 112 deg. east
1 chain 69 links;
thence north 11-112
dag. weet 96 links;
thence north 55 deg.
. west 3 chains and 81
Unka; thence aouth
24·1/2 deg. east 3
chains and 47 links to
the place of beginning.
Containing
40/1001h
acres .
Excepting tho coal
therein and the right
to mlna the same
wllhout Incumbrance
to
the
surface.
Excepllng also a
right-of-way through
said lot along David
Richard's line lo the

Walahlown Road.
CURRENT OWNERS NAME: Ralph J.
Day aka Ralph J. Day,
Sr., and Rella K. Day
PROPERTY
ADDRESS:
32023
Welch
Town
Hill,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
PERMANENT PAR·
CEL NUMBER: . 16·

"Your One Stop Poured
Solid Concrete Shop"

oD40o

PRIOR DEED REFER·
ENCE: Volume 111 ,
Page 227
APPRAISED
AT:
$9,000.00
TERMS OF SALE :
Cannot be sold lor
less than 2/3rds of the
appraised value . 10%
down on day of sale,
cash
or certified
check, balance on
confirmation of sale .
RALPH T. TRUSSELL,
SHERIFF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
REIMER &amp; LORBER
Co.,L.P.A.
By: Dennis Reimer
(Reg. #0031109)
JeHery T. Kalnlz (Reg.
#0067213)
Altorneys lor plainliH
2450 Edison Blvd.
P.O. Box 968
Twinsburg , OH 44087
(330) 425-4201
(5) 11 , 18 &amp; 25

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass

+A

w-

Open 7doyo
a

daylight
to dark!

TtiE F IRST

COr1E ON ,

INNING OF

CHESTER !
LITTLE

TtiE FIRST
G.AI1E OF
THE
SEASON'

By Bernice Bede Osol
You can get a lot further in the year ahead
in bellenng your lot in life 11 you concen trate on using your talents to get what you

.
BING0 1

BUILDERS InC.

want rather than thinking you can buy you r

.p•"s.e

New Homes • Vinyl

Siding • New Garages
• Rcplacemcnl
Windows • Roofing

PEANUTS

"Rotky '•RJ"
Hupp .

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

740-992·7599

HOWARDL
WRITfSfl
*IOOFINI
dOME
MIINTENAIICE

:, BUSINESS
_,

TO VOTE '6UILTV'!

Dean Hill
New&amp;: Used
475 South Church St.
Ripley, wv 25271

BETIY
WAIT! 11-(15 HAS A
1'1\RENTAL N)VISOR'I
WAAN lNG FOR FOIJL

1·800-822-0417

I.ANelJAC1E AND

' ~liPLICIT

"W.Vs # l Chevy, Pontiac , Buick, Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

CONm-11'

011 tlris page for as low CIS

$25.00 per month!.

The
Daily
Sentinel

Sunset Home
Construction

740-74:?·341

•

992·2155

a

Bryan Reeves
New Homes,
Room Additions,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens. Drywall
&amp; More
FREE ESTIMATES!

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

way to top of the ladder.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - It won 't be
for a lac~ ol effort that you could tail today;
it wil l be due in part to a tack of proper
organization . C larity yo ur objectives and
won.: in an orderly fashion to attain them
GEMINI (May .21-June 20) - Unless you
skillfully handle those with wh!Jm you have
to dea l today, your goals are likely to be
thwa rted. Be realistic about their purposes
and don't take the1r expertise for granted.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- Your wellmeaning intent and ingenuity today in getting something started will count for nil if
you don 't push th1ngs through to conclusion . Follow-through is essential tor sue·
cess .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - This sllould be a
profitable day for you so long as your aspi rations are realistic and feasible. Relying
on Lady Luck to pull things off witt reave
you holding an empty wallet.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) - II your
motives fo r teaming up With others todaY
are selfish or if you 're&gt; s1mply trying to use
people. you'll end up ba ing the big loser.
Strive 10 be sincere and lair in dealing with
associates
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) - Nothing is
going to be handed to you today, so don't
make the mistake of ban~ 1 ng on such a
scena rio Substantial returns are possibl e
tor the tt11ngs you truly wo rk lor and earn.
. SCORPIO {Oct . 24-Nov. 22)- It is going
to be impossible to be both a b1g talker
and a doer today. If you 're looking to pro·
duce anything of substance. you're ga in ~
to have to be more industriou s and less
· vocal.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23· Dec. 21 I Should you be placed in the posi t(on today
of naving to make choice as to what you
should devote your ene rgi es Md
resources to, g1ve tam1 1y top prio ri ty. All
else sh ou ld come second.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Your
assoc1a1es aren't apt to be impressed by
dynamic displays of phon1ness today, but
what will impress and capt1vate them will
. . . , . . - - - - - - - - - - - . - - - , be modest y an d dependability. Don't put
on any a1rs.
HOW MUCH OF l'f I~
AQUA'fliUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - G reat
COVIORED SY L.ASAGrNA
str ides ca n be made today, Doth financial ly and where your career is conce rned, if
you don't allow yourself to get Sidetracked
by involvements that aren't pertinent to
either. Stay foc L!sed.
PISCE S (Feb. 20·March 20) - Conlinue
to be d lliQe nt and watct11u l where you r pe rsona l Interests are concerned today.
Unless you think throug h your every step,
you could do somet hing that would work
aga1n1t you.
ARIES (Mtrch 21 •Aprll ' i) - Bt sure you
go to tha bast minds potllblt II you're
lttklng w1ya of constructing eomtthlng In
whiCh you 're not In IIIPirt Don't trust
actvlca that toundl too good to tla uua .

r WA5ALL SET

IMPORTS
Athens

FREE ESTIMATES

1'

•

I

J

Advertise in this
Space for
$50 per month
YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addition• &amp;
R•modellng

• New Garage•
• Et.ctr k:al &amp; Plumbing
• Roo ling &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks

We do it all except
furnact work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
. 992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

t;!f!::;.-' ~~ ~

~~~'-Ao~~~~:::J

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeli ng

QRIZZWELLS
'1bU ~, I'ACI( 'H\\~\-1

I

,..,..~

SOUP TO NUTZ

'tJA~ A~&lt;St.

)l:j,l~

6E'AR

:t u~~ ,..,
1\lRI-\A

\Prof

740-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

22 Years L.ocal bperlence

I

\\LOO'~~..,_j._~~~:.._, ~- I
""""'"

r::':

=nome

: "- .,.:r.

51
52 Friar
of legend
55 Luau
welcome
56 Senors boy
57 Trouser pari
58 Before
59 Starry vista
60 Keats'
works
61 In favor

11 Roe or berg
12 Actress
- Falco
13 Colora
15 Wooden pin
16 Talks
to a beat
17 Syllogism

word
18 Emerson

opus
20 Wearisome
tasks
21 Seine sHe
23 Kung 1u pro
Bruce 24 Fervor
27 Good friend
29 Herd
·
ot whaiH
32 Sale callers
33 Angel lopper

DOWN

19 Has the ftu 43 Mk:rown.
20 Promo blpe 44 Knl

22 Re~

23 Calmed
24 Miniseries
of dlsmly
2 King_,.
"Shaka -"
25 Discharge
3 Baobecue
extras
26 -181
28 Nam&gt;W
4 Sophie
mergtn
portrayer
29 Writer
5 Spud at
34 Wand!!'
6 Touch
30 Cobblet's
35 Fleur-de- of frost
36 Dirt ·
7 - Plaines
tools
31 Give out
37 Graceful
B Common
sparingly
lhythm
question
38 Comanche's 9 Fainl glow 36 Deposed
kin
10 Secondruler
37 Scrawny
39 This spot
sto"' man
41 "Star Trek"
40 Besides
14 Distreoa
41 Riled up
signal
physician

t Cry

&lt;~n•··-an,

45 Ralngodden
46 Piece
of chain
48 Music

not.uon

49 SpliCe ·

pt acador

- s-y so Fishing
place

52 Bout53 Stunn l&gt;nlng
54 Mediocre

grade

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebfity Cl~ cry p\Og:rans are CfUied !rom qu:Jtallons bV lamous people. pas111!ld pr!$111'11
·
Eadlletler 1n 1tle ctpher &amp;lands !01 aoolhel.

'Itrl?(-s C:\.12: :; Eq.:als Y

"PKYSHXD

KY

UXKSSGO

UKOOGXY."

R.

"PKYSHXKWOY

HJRPS

HJS

HT

SPG

WXSPJX

L. D

SPG

HXUGAA
SH

YSWD

TJSJXG. "

B.

YIPAGYKORGX

VX.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'I always worked hard. I realized ability is like
beauty. It can be very , very n..ting." - Hall of Fame shortstop Ozzie Smith
(c)2004 by NEA. Inc . 5-11
·

~~~:~:~' ~©ttJJ1A-~£2f~·
liit•tl lty CLAY I. POLLAIN

-.o-'111~:

WednejSday, May 12, 2004

42 Splrel
molecule
44 Zen&gt;
47 Uoe I bottle

1 Tie up the

, Graph

'~

ADVERTISE··YOUR ..*F!:~:
.
e'*
949 1405
'

••

Th1s week , we are looking at bidding with
weak hands. If your left-hand opponent
opens w itt1 one of a su it, your partner
makes a takeout double . 3nd you r right hand opponent passes. you must b1d
someth ing , even w1tt1 a Yarborough
(unless you are long and strong in the
opene r's sutt). And when you have a
hand like South 's. try to make your oneheart bid in a normal 110ice. not sotto
voce, and avoid shaking your head sev·
eraltimes.
'
Now assume that you (Soulh ) are lhe
declarer in lour hearts . West leads the
diamond ace. thEm· shifts to the spade ·
king . You win with dummy's spade ace,
cash rwo ro unds of trumps, dropping
West's jac~. and cross to hand with a
heart. How would you continue from
tt1ere?
North's four diamonds is a splinter bid,
showing game va lues in hearts with at
most one diamond. Note also that East
might have ra1sed diamonds - and il the
vulnerability had been difterent . h~
should have raised. Here , lhm.J(lh. five
diamonds doubled costs 500, more than
the value oi the Nortt1-South game.
You need four club tr icks to go with one
spade and five hearts (lour tops and a
diamond ruff on the board). But getting
those club tricks will requi re taking three
club finesses . (You know· !rom the auc tion that Wesl'has at least four clubs .)
You must start with the club nine - the
lowest card in your hand thai can take
the first trick in the suit. When that holds.
continue with the club jack. This will leave
you in your hand, able to lead a th ird club
through West. You lose only two spades
and one diamond.

.

BIG NATE

*IEAMLESS

front steps of the
Meigs
County
Courthouse
on

1+
2•

F--asl

·Astro-

I

BISSEll

Spedalizing In Poured Concrete

Public Notices in Ne•wsp&gt;ap&lt;ers.
Your Right to Know, Delivered Right tu Your

SHERIFF'S
SALE,
REAL ESTATE
CASE NUMBER 03CY121
GREEN TREE FINAN·
C!AL SERVICES, LLC,
lka
CONSECO
FINANCE SERVICING
CORPORATION
YS
RALPH J. DAY aka
RALPH J. DAY, SR.
Delendant
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
In pursuance of an
Order of Sale to me
directed from aald
Court In tha above
enlltled action, I will
expose to sale at public auction on the

Pomero~·. Ohio

992-2975

Flat of plants $6.60
IH11nglng Baskets $6.60

StateWide
Cll Poured Walls

liter. IB·OB. Power steering,
.A.m-Fm , CD, Bikini Top. lots
of equip. brand new condi tion (304)675-3354

Toll Free: (866) 254-1559

Public Notice

SALES &amp; SERVICE

UIURS

Free Estimates

80022307
Tlmolhy R. Billick
80010390
Robart
R. Hoose
10074544
Llea M. Michaela
f0068918
L. Wlery
Michael
10068898
5601 Hudeon Drive
Suitt! 400
Hudson, Ohio ·44236
(330) 342-8203
(4) 27, (5) 4, 11

&amp;

pot of perennials $1.1 BBuy 5 or more lor ~UIU 1111

Foundations, Basements, Floors &amp; Walls

Sherlfl'e Sale of
oReal Eelate
Cue Number
04-cV-DOI
Mprtgage Electronic
Regletratlon
Syatema, Inc. Plaintiff

r

Come ~ee our new
~u mmer menu!

Residential &amp; Manufactured Housing
Air Conditioners , Heat Pumps &amp; Furnaces

Crossbred bulls. Top blood- 2002 F-350 SAW 51 ,400 2000 Soa RB)', 1~0 8R. 3 .0

BLIC
NOTICES

1~~~K.?~:

GRAVELY TRACTOR
204 Condor Street

AWFUl. !! ARE
YOU ALRIGHT
?!

~

Snapper

Gravely

IT TO
SNUFFY!!

Will Maw

Monday 9am-2pm
Tues • Fri &amp;am-Bpm
Sat &amp; Sun 7am-4pm

HEATING U C:OOUNG

&amp;M

Hill's Self
Storage

New Hours

BENNETT'S

·--FOiiiRiiiSiiiALEiiiiit-,.1
:.::.::=:.::..::=:...___ '

lines, Slate Aun Farm, miles XLT. $28,500, Fifth
Jackson.
(740)286-5395 wheel towing package,
look
up many extras . {740)645·
2103.

I ood
.\laud ll'llilahl•·

River Way Cafe

Trucking

FOR SALE

7"'iil

.~tatiouarr

.740-992-5232

r.eec!_s clutch &amp; pressure
plale, $1 ,500. (740)3670632.

North
Dbl.

If partner doubles,
you should bid

vi._~

Free Estimates

R.B.

West

Opening lead:

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Pomeroy, Ohio

- - - - -- - 84 Chevy Pickup 4K4 H.__ s
noise in transmission , bod}
very good condition, $2,900 .
91 Ford F250, 7.3 Diesel ,

1111

4•

i

33795 Hiland Rd.

9 8 3
lO 9 8 6
Q 7
J 9 3 2

Dealer: West
Vulnerable: East,West

I

Self~Storage

$7 ,700.

K 8 6 5

..
9
•
•

Servict!~~

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

High 8J. Dry

•
•

South

189 • Middleport

1/o4t ~e«tiH9

J LO 52
7 4 3
10 • 4 3 2
7

•
•

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Tree Service

Hnm:

TRUCKS

Ooats for sale, all ages. shape $12,500 or take over

• DrivewaysHennisCourts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets

hii'R0\"1:\IENI"S

r

•

Quote or Appointment

JONES'

~

6
A Q 10 4
Easl

+AKJ85

19

ALTOP.um;&amp;

s

MOTORCYClE')

674-3311 FaK 304-675-2457

SFREE

740-843-5264

wheel drive 2 .500
~enger car, 4-31xt0/50R1 5,
Goodrich
93 Toyota tor sate 51.500 4-BF
(304 )675 _2245
LT265X.75A16 StOO per set

·I
L.,_,..;Oiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-,..J

a Free

\and Financial

94 S· 10 Truck for. sale S 4-P225X60R16. lor a pas-

lioO .
Asking
(740 )441.()658 .

Bonanza Get

Cell Phone

WKt
.. K Q
• J 2

MONTY

South

,\(H~~lRIES

96 F1 50 XLT 4x4 Super
Cab. 302, auto old. AJC.
cru1se. t11t, pw, pdl. keyless ~ 10
entry, JVC CO/MP3 player.
6" lift. 35 's on Am erican

Last ThuJ:Sd&amp;y of
every month
All patk"$5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00

875-2417

Rocky Hupp Insurance

"Not responSible for accidents or loss of property"

lill'CKS
FORSAU

~:.JO

•
•

Henderson, WV

Call:

Ohioll1344 WV#SI S

1999 Harley Davidson,
Road King Classic. Blue &amp;
1970 Ford F350. 10 Fl. Silver. E:J~cellent condition .
(740)446-4999.
Grain bed, low miles, many $13,900. (740)446-2924 or
M'pvtng Locust Fence Post, new parts, new tires/wheels. (740)446-8142.
MIJsl Soli (304)674.0133
-------(740)245·0485.
2000
Yamaha
Warrior
1979 Chevrolet 1/2 ton.
red/white plastic, Ner1 .bars,
129.000
miles.
Body loud pipe, new nandte bars
good/lair, runs great $400+ &amp; grab bar, rUns great.
AOHA 3 yr old, Philly, dark accessories . $1,000 firm. $3000 obO (740 }8 43 •5235
. bay.
Granddaughter of (740)441 -3131 Ieaiie mes - . - - - - - - - Wprld Champion, Go !"tank, ~•a:eg:.:•·------ 2003 Suzuki AM 125, like
Barrel
Horse
broke 1986 Ford F-160 box trucK new condition . $3,500 060
(3p4)67~-6440
600 w/lift gate. light damage (740)367·0632 .
AQHA
Yearly
Philly to lop of bo;w:, 39,820 miles,
Grl
Grea~ $14,500 080, (740)696- 2003 XR650l Honda Dual
Chestnut,
Daughter ot Conclusive, '..2=2::.7_ _ _ _ _ _ Spor1 . 783 Miles, exc. cond .
$4,000 (304)675-5428
Show 2003 done very good 1991
Chevy
Silverado,
(304)675·6440
$4,500. Call (740)245·5752. Four wheeler 98 model, 4x4.
For sale Boer Goats for Fair 2001 GMC Jimmy SLE 4x4, like new, $2,800. {740)446·Projoc1S (304)675-1126
CD Player, all power, exc. 17 5~0~-~~---.
M;Jssey Ferguson 50, 4 cyl.
gas. Price $2,850. Phone

Porch Boxes
Combination Pots
Perennials
Spruce Trees
Shrubs
1
Peat Moss '

MYERS PAVING

05-11-04

.. A 7 6 t
9 A K Q 5

We can insure you valuables! •

DAN SMITH AUCTIONEER

B &amp; D Auto Sales
Massey
Ferguson 255
HWY 160 N.
~40
Diesel with front loader.
(740)446-6865
Mrs, $10,500 moving ,_....;....;.;.,....;.....;..;.;........, ~

2800

•
•
•
•
•
•

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:.l0
Early birds slllrt

I

North

What would you lose if there was a firel

Co Executrix - Cynthia Hawley
&amp; Shannon Osborne
Case II 33068
CASH • POSITIVE ID

1

,\ I I \ I " I I )I 1'\

• Easter Flowers
Bedding Flowers
Vegetable Plants
Blooming
&amp; Foliage Ba sket s
Poning Soil

IF YOU RENT

World globe, wheelchairs, fans, 110
Westinghouse air cond itioner, file · cabinet,
jewelry, alum . ext. ladder, water can,
wheelbarrow, misc. shelving, work bench,
book shelves, walker, bath seat and etc.

at Charles N!cKean Farm cd player. ye llow. (740)992~ · - - - - ··- and William Ann Motel. Call 7228 after 6pm, $9,000.
1990 Plymouth Voyage r
(740)446"9442 ·
2003 Cavalier 4door, 4 cyl. , Van . one owner, V6 LE. 7
. KESSEL'S PRODUCE auto, 9.000 miles, t1lt, cruise, pass. auto 1rans. E)(celle•.,t
air cond ., CD player, $6,500 . Condition. All power· .• h
Atnish Cheese. Lunch Meat, (740) 44 1-Q337.
A/C. $2,900. (740 )44 6·1~ -7
Fresh Fruit and Vegetables .:__:__ _ _ _ __
98
Toyota
Camry,
$5,900:
01
Open Thurs·Fri-Sat. 1354
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Chevy Impala. $6,995; 99 1999 Mercury Village.· ':"
Ply. breeze. $2,295 ; 98 passenger, fronVrear a1r
Oh&gt;O. (740)446-7787
Chevy Cavalier, $2,795:· 99 94,000 miles, good cond1·

I

Syracuse, OH
Now Open

MISCELLANEOUS

Racing wheels, Reese style
BASEMENT
drOp hitch . bed liner. dla·
WATERPROOFING
mond . plate tailgate protec- Ui1concii\IOn al life time guartor, nerf bars. cab v 1so r. slid·
antee. Local references fur·
ing rear Win dOW. $ 9.950
OBO . 740 . 367. 7251 or cell mshed. Established 197 5.
Call
24 Hrs. (740 ) 446 6200
_ _ ·- - - - - - 740-645-4647.
0870. Roge rs Basement
2002
Pontiac
Sunfire ,
VANS &amp;
Waterproofing
Home Grown Strawbernes 29,200 miles, sunroof, auto,
4-\VDs

.1.--VioEGilliiEiii~iiliiilliiO.~ _

llu66ard 's qfeenlunue

Monday-Saturday 9-5 Closed Sunday
740-992-5776

miles. good cortdi-.

2000
Kia
Sportage
AutomatiC, 2 wheel drive ,

'

1977,Cadillac Coupe DeVille, 2 door, White
with blue interiOI, approx. 54,000 actual
miles, garage kept. Real Sharp !

:11&lt;10)367-()()36 or (740)367· lion. $8,000 OBO 740-379t 7202.
740·645·5740
9088 or

! each OBO (740)992-()()53 or
~f~0)416-Q441

•I .

HOUSEHOLD &amp; ANTIQUES

AKC Lab puppies, chocolate cond . $2.700 (304)675-8165
and yellow, 6 weeks old, 1st 1999 MEirc ury Cougar,

: AKC registered Yorkia pups. evenings.

Phillip
Alder

Located at 293 Race St. Middleport across
the street from Fire Dept. The personal
property of the late Virginia (Jenny) Hindy.

shots. work 740-992·9784. 1997 Olds. Cutlass, 86,000
hom&amp; (740)992·3887.
miles. Loaded , excellent

:)tiots and Wormed. Call 64.000

ACROSS

THURSDAY EVE. MAY ll, 2004
5:10P.M.

!'or

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four

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Krcmbled words below to form four words.

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line: 'Tmnolsurewhattheminimum wage is in my state .but
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PR INT NUMB{i;'fD LET1~!l5 IN

1HfSf

SOUA~ES

UN SCRAMBLE ABOVE LHIERS
10 GEl ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS S- 1 o- o,
Visual- Begel- Pinch -Kingly- GIVEN you ANY
"Th is place has the worst service I've ever encountered.' the woman complained to the wa1ter. "What do
you mean the service is pvor?'' the waiter replied, "I
haven't GIVEN you ANY yet!"

ARLO &amp; JANIS

.

�Page B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, May u,

•

2004

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•

. Middleport • Poi:Deroy, Ohio
•'' ~I~ 1'---t • \

11l

.~

f , :\u

Associated Press

TAMPA. Fla.- The Flyers
had all the right answers in a
game they felt they had to
win.
John LeClair scored to end
his puzzling playoff drought
and goalie Robert Esche outplayed Nikolai Khabibulin
Monday night in the Flyers '
6-2 victory over the Tampa
Bay Lightning to even the
Eastern Conference finals at
one game apiece.
Sami
Mark
Recchi.
Kapanen
and
Vladimir
Malakbov also scored to build
a 4-0 lead. drive Khabibulin
from the game and ensure
Philadelphia would stop
Tampa Bay's eight-game winning streak in the playoffs.
·The Flyers also halted ·an
eight-game slide against the
Lightning that included four
losses during the regular season and a 3-1 setback in
Game I Saturday.
Game 3 of the best-of-seven
matchup is Thursday night in
Philadelphia, where the
Flyers are 6-0 in the postseason .
Esche, helped by the
Flyers' ability to clog the middle of the ice and limit scoring
opportunities for Tampa
Bay's potent offense, stopped
29 shots to improve to 9-4 in
the playoffs.
Ruslan Fedotenko. scored

Michal Handzus scored
midway through the thi~d
period with Tampa Bay down against the Tampa Bay back6-0. NHL scoring champion up late in the second and
Martin St. Louis added a Mattills Timander added an
power-play goal with 2:J2 to unassisted goal less than four
go.
minutes into the third period .
The loss was Tampa Bay's
Even thou gh the Flyers
weren't facing elimination. fir&gt;t since Game 2 of its tirstthey considered Monday round series against the New
night a must-win situation -- York Islanders. The Flyers ·
in 'part because while ihey're were confident they could
unbeaten at home in the play- even the series after dominatoffs. this is the first series ing the first half of Game I,
they began on the road.
when they outshot Tampa Bay
The sense of urgency was 20-17 but faltered because of
evident from the start.
defensive miscues and an
LeClair scored on the first inability score more than one
shot of the game. picking up goal against Khabibulin.
the puck after Marcus · NOTES: Ragnarsson had
Ragnarsson ki cked it along three assists .... Malakhov 's
which
ended
the boards and skating in to goal,
beat Khabibulin from the leti Khabibulin's night, was hi s
circle for his first playoff goal first in the playoffs since May
in 16 games, dating to last 6, 2000 against Toronto. a
season.
span of 26 games.
Recchi made it 2-0. recti- Philadelphia was 0-for-18 on
reeling Ragnarsson's shot on power play opportunities
the
power
play
past before Recchi 's goaL .. . The
Khabibulin with II : I0 left in Flyers have outscored oppothe opening period . Three nents 16-3 in the first period
minutes later. Kapanen 's during the playuffs. The secshort-handed goal pushed the ond period has been Tampa
Lightning into a deeper hole. Bay 's strongest, with the
Khabibulin began the night Lightning holding a 14-4
with .a 1.00 goals-against edge after giving up two
average and four shutouts in . Monday night. ... New York
the playoffs, one more than he Yankees · owner
George
had during the entire regular Steinbrenner purchased 350
season. The Flyers scored on tickets for military personnel
fouf of 12 shots against the stationed at nearby MacDill
Russian goaltender, who was Air Force Base, as well as
replaced by John Grahame some of the families of serwith 13:58 remaining in the vice men and women fighting
second period.
the war in Iraq.

• Reds top Padres.
See Page 81

Braves' Garcia hopes to
·finally stick in major leagues
BY PAUL NEWBERRY

Associated Press

•

ATLANTA -- Journeyman.
It's the most dreaded of labels
for a professional athlete.
Just ask Jesse Garcia, who
showed up at spring training
last year for the Atlanta Braves
coming off a .300 season at
Triple-A . .
What did that earn him ? For
the first two weeks, he didn 't
even get in a game, relegated to
the back fields with all the upand-comers and down-andouters.
"That was a low point,"
Garcia said. "Sometimes, you
just have to sit back and wonder, 'What kind of player am I?
Am I good enough or not?'"
He stuck with it, played in
the Triple-A All-Star game,
and finally convinced a few
people that he might be useful
as a utility infielder in the
majors.
At30, Garcia made Atlanta's
&lt;_&gt;pening-day roster. With shortstop Rafael Furcal and second
baseman
Marcus
Giles
plagued by injuries, Garcia has
become an integral part of the
team.
As of Monday, Garcia was
batting J 13 with one homer his first in the big leagues since
.1999 - and eight RBis. He's
been one of the few bri ~ht
spots for an ailing team, which
is two games under .500 as it
bids for a 13th straight di vision
title.
But Garcia kn ows hi&gt; position is still tenuous. He's a

journeyman, remember? Those better in the 1970s and '80s,
guys can never get too com- where a middle intlelder didn't
f01table.
have to worry about hitting for
Giles and Furcal could return power. These days, everyone is
to the lineup Tuesday' for the expected to knock the ball over
start of a series at St. Louis. If the fence.
that happens, Garcia will shufA superb athlete, Garcia
fle back to the bench, hopeful played four sportS in high
that 'his contributions so far school and won several titles as
strengthened his spot on the a Golden Gloves boxer. But his
baseball career got sidetracked
25-man roster.
"He's a grinder, man," said in 1994, when he missed the
teammate Mark DeRosa, who entire season because of pneuwent through a similar effon to monia.
prove himself "He's willing to
Garcia struggled to catch up.
do whatever it takes to stick ·finally making it to the big
here."
leagues
in
1999
with
Garcia has been Atl anta's Baltimore. But he lasted less
version of Forrest Gump. pop- than two weeks, getting farmed
ping up in the middle of all out when Deli no DeShields
·sorts of improbable moments came off the disabled list.
this season.
"He had the defensive
He homered last month skills," remembered Frank
against Florida - off World Wren, now the Brdves' assisSeries hero Josh Beckett, no tam general manager and GM
less. Last week , Garcia helped of the Orioles at the time. "He
tum a triple pl ay against San didn ' t have the offensive
Qiego.
skills."
Over the weekend. he rallied
DeShields isn 't around anythe Braves to a win over more, but Garcia kept plugging
Houston -- first, convincing away. After spending most of
the umps that he was grazed by 1999
and
2000
with
a pitch in the eighth, leading to Baltimore 's Triple-A team -two runs; then, driving in the with brief stints in the majors
tying run with a ninth-inning both years- he was traded to
triple.
' the Braves in one of those
"It's just a maner of getting obscure offseason deals.
Garcia wanted a fresh start.
an opportunity," Garcia said.
"''m doing fairl y well, but I've Instead, he found more of th e
go1 to keep it up."
same.
Beller th an anyo ne, he
He was usuall y called up by
kn ows past percepti ons are the Braves when rosters
ex panded in the fin al month .
never very far behind.
Garcia is only 5-foot- 10 and He played a career-hi gh 39
171 potmds -- hardl y the pro- games in 2002, but on ly
lotype player for thts homer- because Gil es and DeRosa
crazy era. He might have fit in were injured.

MASON, W.Va . -- The
Ravenswood Red Devils
broke open a close conte st
by exploding for six runs
in the sixth inning Monday
evening to hand host
Wahama an 11-3 diamond
setback in high school
baseball action.
Wahama entered the
sixth trailing by a slim 4-2
score before the Red
Devils erupted for six runs
on five hils, two walks and
an error o turn an otherwise close outing into a
runaway victory. The loss
kicked off the final week
of the regular season for
the White Falcons and
dropped the Bend Area
teams spring record to 9-11
on the year.
Ravenswood totaled 16
hits, all singles, on the day
with Wahama touching a
pair of Red Devil hurlers
for eighf hits.
Three of the Bend Area
teams safeties wenf for
extra bases with Kameron
Sayre delivering a lead-off

home run in the sixth in
addition to a double by
Dustin Vickers and a three
base knock by Caleb
Litchfield.
Six Ravenswood bailers
enjoyed multiple hit games
with Nat Adkins leading
the way with four singles
and four RBI's. Ty Hern
and Brad Ritz had three
hits apiece while Bret
Greene, Eric Panerson and
Larry Hol stien had two
each.
Sayre added a single in
addition to his round tripper for Wahama with
Litchfield owning a triple.
Vickers a double and a single each from Jeshua
Branch, Jimmy Rife. John
Barton. and Ian Smith.
Ravenswood jumped out
to a 2-0 advantage in the
first
when
Greene ,
Pallen;on and Adkins came
up with singles.
The Red Devils added
another tally in the second
on a single by Ritz and a
sacrifice fly to center by
Greene.
Wahama dosed the gap
to 3-1 in the .second after
Vickers smacked a double

to lead off the inning
before later scoring on a
sacrifice fly by Litchfield .
The White Falcon s closed
to within a run in the
fourth
following
Litc~fields' one-out triple
and a run scoring single by
Barton.
An unearned run by
Ravenswood in the fifth
made it a 4-2 affair before
the visitors exploded for
six run s in the sixlh to put
the contest away. Wahama
got one of those back in it s
half of the sixth on Sayre 's
blast before the Red Devil s
tacked on its final tally in
the seventh . for the 11,-3
win .
Adkins also picked up
the mound victory for
Ravenswood with Chad
Zerkle taking the lo ss.
Greene worked the final
frame for the Red Devil s
while Lucas Litchfield
came on in the sixth to finish up for Wahama.
The White Falcons will
entertain St. Joe today in
_its search to gain some
momentum heading into
next weeks post season
tournament action.

H

\\I l•i\1 · :--..1• \\

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Helen King, 87
• Michelle Stobart. 33
· • Milton R. Clarke, 59

INSIDE
• At Pleasant Valley
Hospital Coed Flag
Football Tournament
Eagles' receiver to be
featured celebrity guest .
See Page A2

J.

Meigs announces top
achievers in 2004
graduating class

*

, Thu~. l\}.ay 27th ~n Th,e ~Y. Sentinel•.
Harry, Daai'Dne for •tries is May 20, 2004!
dri:iP off or

Team Name - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - Phone Number ______~----------------------Message (up to 10 words): --------------- - - - -

--- - ---------·-- -·--··- ---.--

unh

the

make

~i t uattor J

\.-\Uf ... e:

·

lannarelli said ·MonJ av eve ning. "but the rr,,cess
of se ll i n ~ them mav take longer ihan we fir&lt;t
hoped ... '
·
•
·

Please see Problems, AS

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH @MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY Jaynee
Davi s and Mnegan Dodson
are co-valedictorians and
David Tyler Barnes is salutatori an of the 2004 graduating class of Meig s 1-Jigh
SchooL
Announcement of the top
achi evers was made by
Dennis Eichinger. principaL
as the school prepare s for
graduation &lt;It 8 p.m. on May

David Tyler Barnes

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

For a taste of what is to come . the Oh io De pa rtment of Transportat ion opened up a half mile
section of the new U.S. 33 near Dar win to detour traffic down a two-lane section of what will
become the new highway. The temporar y detour started May 5. As soon as the finish ing to uches are completed. the new hi ghw ay fro m Dar win to Athens wi ll open up - probably in early ·
September. (J . Miles Layton)

ca~ ier

MILES lAYTON

POMEROY -- Bu siness
and cn inmun il y lead er'\ c: tme
toge th er 10 li sten to Theresa
Lavend ar discuss uncmp lo ymcnl solution s m the monthly
Meig' Co un ty C'hamhe r of
Commen.:e meeting Tuesday
at the Wild 1-lorse Cafe .
·
The O ne Slop Program
m;nches polcnt ial cmpiDyees
with e mrl oye rs. Lave nclar.
who is a graduate or Southe rn
Hi gh Sc.hool a11cl is curre mly

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

Details on Page A6

INDEX
2 SEcnONS -

Calendars

12 PAGES

A3

Classifieds
Comics ·
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries

Sports
Weathe r

A6

© :1004 Ohio Valley Puhlishlng Co.

Child's Name-~------------­
Parent's Name - - - - - - - - -- -- - - - Town _______________________________________

breu l.. - in ~

C\C il

JLAYTON@MYDA ILYSENTINE L. COM

,r1

*Football
*Golf
* Basketball ,* Gymnastics
Child's Name
*Baseball ·· · *Tumbling
Child of: Parent's Name
*Softball
Team Name
*Soccer
Message
*Track
*Karate
&amp; More!!·
. Swimming. ·
This special secticm will run on

Ma,or SanJ) lannare ll i told !'vli ud lcpori Village
Co un ci l membe rs Monday even i n~ that work is
underway to prepare a h-id packcl for pote ntial ·
buyer' for ihe two bui ldings. and I hilt the fir&gt;l qep
i,n preparing f~1r 1he sale \\'ill he a sur,cy of b01 h
prn pertt es. ·
''The se hui ldi rH.!" arc L'O"ti nc the ,·j Jia t!c a lot pf
money. and' the · prob lems '~ ith ,· and~ l i 'm and

SMALL SECTION OF NEW
US 33 OPEN TO MOTORISTS

BY

(

,,-

REED

Meigs Local Board of Education One Stop Program helps local business
and
w orkliH! on a masters t.l eu ree wo uld make it
J.
takes action to reduce staff
less cosily to hire peoat Ohi o Unive"il)'. sa iJ~ 1he

School will soon be out, but IT'S NOT TOO LATE to
salute your athlete from this past school year!

AA

~,.,.\\'\ un;l,lih l' tlllhu ltotu

:..• uo.J

Please see Achievers, AS

WEATHER

"Star Athlete" -::. .' on\h ~..;-­
in your eyes, .! S\0. 0;:.include them in ;;;:::....-1A
this section!!
-yv, ' '

1:! ,

He " ' iJ en trv is be lie,·ed to haYe been made
th roll gh" brD~e n " induw. and some records lcrt in
th ~ !&gt;ttilding by th e Meigs Local School Di slricl
MIDDLEPORT -· Vandal is m. hi gh ut ilit v costs when ihe hu i ld i n ~ was \acaied are heli e,·ed tu
·and maintenance requirements ha ve made ~illage ha\T bee n st ol en. '
.
official s anxious to sell th e Middl eport Hig h
Vand ali sm and art empied . brea k-in s h&lt;n e
School and Central buildings. bu t the proce" may become an increasi ng pro hk m at tile two t&gt;ui ldtake longer than was first anticipa ted.
ing~. Sw ift sai d.
- Middl eport Pol ice Chief Bruce Sw ift said
"We ' re ~lw ay-.. finding .. pray painttng. ne wlyTuesday his department is investig aling a break-in broken wi ndows and otl1cr s i ~ n s of ,·and ali sm at
. at the Cent ral Building. located bchinJ the hig h I h e schook hu t unlc" we· rc at I he scene w hen I he
sehoul building on South Third Ave .
incidents happe n. there·s not much we . can do.
· According to Swifl , four female juve ni ks arc · especially with only one officer on the streets at
suspected in ihe break-in, and arrests ·are expecteJ . any g i n~ n titlle ."
BY BRIAN

Jaynee Davis

If your child is a

f\1 \\

BREED@MYOAI LYSENTINEL.COM

Prep Baseball
BY GARY CLARK
Sports correspondent .

I

Problems arise with Middleport schools

SPORTS

Flyers soar over Tampa Bay Devils wipe out Falcons
'
BY fRED GOODALL

Rudi Johnson signs
1-year contract, Bt

~

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T-3:38. ~ 251 (35,C95).

TUHdr("s Games

NY MetS (l el1er 1-1 1at Anzona (Dessans 1-4). 9'35 p.m.
Cerocnnato(Harang 2- 1) a1 San Doego (OWti!ls 2·2). 10:05 p.m
Cubs (Wood 3-21a! Los A.ngales 1 Wea~ 1-4), 10·10 p.m.
Pt1iladelph 13 (M11wood 3-21 at San Franosco (J W~h:ams 3- 1). 10; 15 p.m.

Taa.

FHRERBBSO

O'Mwx&gt;
Dum W.J-3

Sl l ouiS S. Montreal 2

Florida (Peony 3-l l at Houston (ClemenS 6-01. 8.05 p.m.
Monlrea l 1L Hernandez 2-21 at M.tw-&amp;uk&amp;e (Sheets 3-2). B:OS p.m
At~n1a JWngh12·2) at St Lowos (W.Wo ~ iams 0-31. 8 10 p.m
Prttsbu ~gFI (K.Wens·2-4\ a1 Cokllaoo (Eiarton 0- 5). 9:05 p.m.

220

~

Houston 2 . Atlanta 1

~holadelphoa 7,

a

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20:2 010 100 8
E4kCarty t1). LO&amp;-C111. m 5. Bosron 8.
28----L.aWJQn (5). VIZQUel (a). Geru1 (8).
VMar1lleZ (5). THalner (a~ Beaard (12). Brous-

Suoct.J'• Result•

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N V 'iankees 7 Seattle 6

1\Mdaoy'a a.m.
OaldlV1d {lito 2·3) al Dwort {Jol-f"lson 1-5), 7 05 p m.
Ananam (Escobar 2-1) a1N.Y. Y~ (K.BrOWI"1 4-0), 7-05 p.m
Clel.eland {SabBtNa 1·1 ) al Boston (PMarttnez 4 -21 7 05 p m
Texas (0rese 2-0) at Tampa Bay (Waechter 1-2 ). ? 15 p.m
~ (Penson 2-2) 111 Ctucago WMtt·Sox ( Buenf~ 1·1). 8 OS p.m.
SAIIIme (Pnttm 1-4) a1 Minnesota (Silva S-0). a:10 p.m.
TOIQI"Ito (Halladaof 3-3] 11 KaOS8S City (D.Reyes 0-{l]. a 10 p.m.

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Sundrt'• Rnub

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1-tn!ike ]:)

--10,AodSao6

POMEROY - Action to
implement a reduction in
staff to include both teachers anp other profe ssional
personnel as .well as nunce rti fied support workers
was taken by th e Mt! igs
Local Board of Education at
Tuesday ni ght 's meeting.
A decline in e nrollment
and the resulling re du ction
in financial income to ihe
di stri ct were given as the
re ason&gt; for the planned personnel reduction which will
go into effect in earl y
August.
"We' ve bee n talking
ab out staff reducti on for
several
month s,:· said
Supe rinl endenl
Will iam
Buckl ey. However, las t
ni ght wa s th e first time
ac ti on was taken by th e
Board in a move forward to
!let the distri ct on a better
·
linancial bas is.
Buckley ,said thai I he total
budget redu ction in personnel costs will be $694.000 .
He said about 20 employees

· William Buckley
of the distric t will be affecled, that many st:iff reducti ons will come th ro ugh
attri tion. retirement or rc~ i !.! ­
nat ion and ihcrc will be IJO
replaceme nts. He sai J .some
may have an opportu ni ty to
be re-em ployed lai er in the
summer and cm pha &gt;i1.ed
that the reduction will affect
teachers. ~ u pe r viso r~ ;. md
non-certi fie d empl oyees .
They will be made on a " Ia&gt; I
in. first out" basis. he said.
Board me mbers we re

Please see Board, AS

program i~ a useful too l
which helps b~ 1w ec n 100 10
120 joh , eei- c" each month.
Some of the fun .:titll~&gt; nf the
On~ Sto p Prog ram arc to
recrui t anJ snce n po te nl ial
emp loyees . post job ''"canc ie-" on th e Int ern et.

a sse~s

basic s ki lLs for pole otta l
hire s. ca reer l' nu n~c- li ng tt nJ
res ume wri ting.
Lavendar said these I) pes
of serv ices can be very helpful to busi ncs&gt;cs because it

pl e. The One Stop Prog ram i'
locaicd on the .sc,·un d floo r of
the M e i ~s Joh and Fami lv
Sen·ices 'in Mi JJi eport.
·
" We \\ 'cl com..:

bu~ mcs~

to

use

th e O ne Stop Program."

~o, b e

sai J . ··o ur

~ mtl i~ to

me et

the needs of both job seekers
anJ em ploye rs... ·
With one of 1hc hi d lc''t
une mp\\):- mcnt rat e ~ i11" the
~ t a le. M e i g~

Ct5lm ty neeJ~

:t

Please see One Stop, AS

Antique tractors prepare to invade Racine
BY

J.

MILES LAYTON

JLAYTO N@MYDAI LYS EN TIN ELC OM

RAC INE -- Eve r wo nde red wha t it wo uld be like
lo rl ow a fielJ '? Anyo ne
i ntc rc~ t eJ
in usin g an
anliquc trac tor or p&lt;;\Si bl y
eve n a plow wi lh a le am of
horses has an opport unit y to
learn fro m I he he1t and practice \V ith the re1 L
An tique lractors and such
will piU\v the fi eld al I he old
Oh io Ri\er · Campg rou nd
' tarting al 9 a. m. Salll rday.

Si nc e thi s is an antique tra c-

fi eld nwy :-.ee m '-~"'

~ in_1p l e a-.;
but it ·j, a lot

mowing a yard.
than ll/59 is e lieibl e mn re co mplica ted . The
Retired far mer Da n Smi th depth of the plt&gt;w. kH~ I of
will he using a 19)) ga~ the lr&lt;lc'lnr and ot her vari mode l 1hat bas prnhabl) ahk" ha\·C' tn be con-.idere' U
plowed thmt.sa nds of acres so 1hat the farmer i1 not
mere ly pulling a piece I nf .
in its heyday.
'harpencU
n1~ t a l ae ro':-. the
"We 're ju1t going 10 plow
a lill ie. ta lk a little and have ~ round . Nor dn vou \\ant to
!1ln\\ till' f UITO\-\ ~ too dee-p .
a fu n da v: · &gt;aid Sm ith.
·· we had a pre u:. htg
For o.11i yn ne who has ll lt \" 1! 1"
...
ho\\
in g. t he ~; ,..,, time \\ e did
plowed a Sl raig hl fLJrrn" . rh e
expen, w ill he on lwnd 10 t1m.'· he sa lll.
give poi nte r:-. . Tu th e undi ~­
~rimi n at in g L:)~ e . plow ing a
Please see Antique, As

tor ~\"l~ n L nothi ng . you nger

.

National Hospital Week
May9-15

Celebrating 32 Years on Jackson Pike
We would like to recognize those who make
Holzer Medical Center such a special
place - our staff. This week, and every week,
you help us make the difference to those we serve.

R
MEDICAL CENTER
Discm:cr· the 1-ln/zc t' Di[(crcnce

Www.holzer .org

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