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                  <text>. Pap:' B6 • The Daily SB\tinel

Monday, May t,

www .mydailysentinel.com

200~

•

~ro~s probe Lions-about Harrington

-

8Y TOM WillERS

BEREA - Busy woRing
tbe phones during the NfL
dnlft, lbe Cleveland Browns
m• a couple interesting
long-dislance calls ·to Detroit
to see what the Lions wanted
for
quarterback
Joey
~ogton.

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General manager Phil
Savage said Sunday that he
spoke •with Lions GM Matt
Millen about Harrington, a
.fonner No. 3 overall pick ih ·
2002 who wants out of
Detroit and has reached a preliminary two--year deal with
the Miami Dolphins.
·
"I wanted to check in and
just see what they were looking for, and also the potential
of him being a fallback- option
here as a quarterback."
Savage said. "I thought it was
at lea~t worth making a call."
interest
in
Savage's
Harrington - no matter how
exploratory or casual pomts to. two possibilities in
Cleveland. One is that the
Browns are not yet sold on that the Browns would be
Charlie Frye, who started fiv.e askmg .about Hamngton tf
games as a rookie, as their . everythmg was settled at QB.
starter next season . Another is Dtlfer had ?ffseason knee
that 33-year-Old Trent Dilfer, surgery and ts nor re~dy to
who signlld a four~year free PartiCipate m the club s conagent contract before last sea- d1110mng program.
son would like to move
ESPN.com reponed that the
again.
Lion~ told Harrington's agent,
Savage downplayed both D~vid Dunn, that th_ey were
scenarios.
He • · said gomg to try to trade htm to the
Harrington, who was 18-37 as Browns for draft · picks but
a starter with the Lions under that Harnngton told DetrOit
three coaches would be an he didn't want to come to
option for Cleveland as a Cleveland.
backup rather than a starter.
A message seeking comAnd while Dilfer has not ment was left with Dunn.
asked to be traded, Savage
Savage believes Harrington
said he didn't know whether is headed to the Dolphins,
the veteran was happy,
who need a backup for new
"I can't answer that," starter Daunte Culpepper.
. Savage said.
There's even a chance that
As for Frye, Savage insists Harrington could begin next
that the club's opinion of hiin season as Miami's No. I QB
as a potential starter has not if Culpepper isn't ready fold.iminished. The second-year lowing a knee injury.
GM said Cleveland's inquiry
Browns coach Romeo
about Harringtot;l was nothing Crennel also tried to contact
more than that.
Harrington.
"That situation is dead as
"We left each other phone
far as I'm concerned," he message~." he said.
.
As always, Crennel wouldsaid.
·. Maybe so. But it.'s curious n't bite when it came toques-

Ohio picking governor
candidates in
scandal-plagued year, A8

Rice honored·
for service, A7

lions about hi s quanerback
dilemma ·
"I haven't decided who my
S!Mter is going to be yet," ho
said. "I might name a starter
before
training
camp.
Whenever it is, I feel both of
the guys can go in the game
and play. When we go on the
field we' ll see who's best."
The Harrington hubbub
provided a puzzling backdrop
as the Browns followed up a
strong first day in the draft by
making seven more se lections, choosing players whose
initial impact will mostly
come on special teams.
·
Cleveland used its fourthround picks on Miami · linebacker Leon William s and
Indiana offensive guard Isaac
Sowell s, who broke down
crying when the Browns
reached him on the phone at
his home in Louisville, Ky.
In the fifth round. the
Brown s took Washington
State running back Jerome
Harrison and Georgia cornerback DeMario Minter. In
round six, Colorado fullback
Lawrence
Vickers
and
Stanford
nose
guard
Babatunde Oshinowo, who
goes by "Baba," became
Browns.
With their final pick, the
club selected Virginia Tech
safety Justin Hamilton , a former running back with the
Hokies.
"All in all , I think we had a
yery successful draft because
it's very sol id all the way
through," Savage said. "!'or
us, all of our picks made
sense . and tliey seem to give
us an opponunity to make us
better."
Savage was . especially
pleased that the Browns were
able to strengthen their defensive front seven - an offseason priority - during free
agency and · in the draft.
Cleveland struggled in its first
season in a new 3-4 scheme,
but better talent across the
board should make a difference in 2006 .
"I think our front seven has
a chance to tum the corner
from where we were last
year," Savage said.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
Cincinnati first-round pick in the NR. draft, Johnathan •ph, from South~a. left, and Bengals
coach Marvin Lewis answer questions .from the media during a news conference Sunday in Cini:innati.
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AP phoiO

Bengals take linebacker
'with off-field troubles
BY JoE KAY
AssociATED PRESS

CINCINNATI - For ·the
second . consecutive draft, the
Cincinnati Bengals decided to
take a risk on a player with offfield problems.
The Bengals picked Florida
State
linebacker . · AJ.
Nicholson in the fifth round
Sunday, committing themselves to a player with a lot of
talent and several incidents
that made him drop to the second day of the draft.
The most recent was
Nicholson's suspension for tbe
Orange Bowl after )le -took a
woman to the team hotel - a
. violation of team policy an~ .she accused him of sexual
assault. Nicholson has not
been charged.
"It hurt me a little bit in the
draft, it did, because everyone
had concern about my character is sues," Nicholson said
,Sunday. "But r'm here to say
l'm a person that's dependable. You can trust me."
Last year, the Bengals took a
chance on · West Virginia
receiver Chris Henry in the

third round. Henry was ejected happy," he. said. "I was upset
and benched at West Xirginia yesterday, but today I was
for on-field outbursts and dis- rejuvenated."
agreements with his coaches.
The Bengals' first-day picks
He also was suspended. for weren't surprising - comerviolating team rules.
back Johnathan Joseph, o{fenHenry was arrested for mar- sive
tackle
Andrew
ijuana possession in December Whitwonh, defensive end
and for a gun charge ,in Frostee Rucker. Their secondJanuary. He pleaded guilty to day choices were a lot more ·
marijuana possession last intriguing.
month in a northern Kentucky
After taking Nicholson in
court and avoided jail. He's the fifth round, Cincinnati
scheduled for trial May 30 in took a different type of gamble
Orlando, Fla. on a charge of by choosing Texas A&amp;:M quarcarrying a concealed weapon. · terback Reggie McNeal witb
Coach Marvin Lewis said the intention of turning him
last week that the Bengals into a receiver. McNeal is fast
would be reluctant to draft - he ran the 40-yard dash in
another player who had prob- -4.31 seconds - and has a
Iems with teammates or strong arm, but lacks patience
coaches. The Bengals looked in the pocket and touch on his
into Nicholson's suspension passes .
before picking him.
· . So the Bengals decided to
Nicholson realized how bring him in and give him a
much the · off-tield problems role like Antwaan Randle El
cost him when he failed to get bad for the Super Bowl\ champicked in the first tbree rounds pion Pittsburgh Steelers.
SatuFday. He sounded ecstatic Randle El's 43-~ard · touchwhen the Bengals finally down pass to Hines Ward
chose him with the I 57th over- clinched a 21-10 victory over
all pick.
Seattle i11 the title game. ·
"I kept faith, and when the
"He's got a chani:e to be our
Bengals called, I was so Randle El," Lewis said.

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SPORTS

Bishop to Meigs migrants: .'DignitY in all work'

• Eastem boots Miller.
SeePage 81

was special for one reason: it
gave life, shelter, ,food and
clothing to our Savior."
"We can do the . same,".
POMEROY - Bishop R.
Daniel Conlon told Mexican Bishop Conlon said, "by carmigrant workers to see God in ing· for the children and each
their work, as he celebrated other."
Mass and baptized migrant
Bishop Conlon was join~
workers ' children at Sacred by the parish pastor, Rev.
Hean Church on Monday.
Walter Heinz, members of the
Celebrating the May I feast parish, and a choir from St.
of St. Joseph the Worker, Matthew 's
Church
in
Bishop Conlon, head of the Ravenswood, W.Va., who
Diocese of Steubenville, told sang Spanish hymns during
, the migrant workers that see- the Mass.
inl: work as service to God
Like the Pomeroy Catholic
bnngs dignity to all work.
parish , the Ravenswood comCoincidentally,
Bishop mfinity has also begun a minCoolon's visit to the Pomeroy istry to migrant workers who
,Catholic parish fell on ihe live and work there. "La Casa
first day of a scheduled boy- de
La
Amistad,"
or
colt by . migrant workers "Friendshif House," is an
against
American-owned ecuminica storefront minbusinesses, to show the finan- istry which will open this
cia! impact the workers have weekend on Washington
on the national economy.
Street.
"It's easy to see work as
Most of Meigs County's .
drudgery, even the work of a migrant workers are based in
bishop," Bishop Conlon said, the Racine area, where they
"but work is taking all God · help plant and harvest Ohio
created and using it to serve River vegetables for local
Him."
truck farmers. Sacred Heart
"One way to better appreci- will begin weekly Spanishate our own work is to look at language Masses for the
.
Bltan J. Rood/photo
Catholic Bishop R. Oaniel Conlon meets with Mexican migrant workers, their children. and bap- St. Joseph's," he said. "The '
tismal Godparents prior to celebrating Mass on the Feast of St. Joseph the Worker on Monday. work he did as a carpenter. Please see Mllf•nts. A5 ·
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

OBITUARIES
Page A5
• Mildred Lee Robert
• Clarence Stewart Jr.

INSIDE
• Conservation groups:
Polar bears, hippos among
16,000 species 1hreatened
with extinction .
See Page A2
• • State lifts probatiqn from
hospital psychiatric unit.
See Page A3
.• Meigs students take
part in state science
contest. See Page A3
• Social Security and
Medicare trust funds both
deteriorated in past year.
SeePage A&amp;
• Senate GOP backs off
from oil tax increase to pay
for propQsed $100 rebate
check. See Page A6
• AP. Exclusive: Draft of
pandemic plan sees
massive disruptions but no
closing of borders.
SeePage A&amp;
• Racine Southam FFA
participates in flower .
festival. See Page A7

MODEL liT 254Z HEAVY-DUTY
GARDEN TRACTOR

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SALE 1,599M

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WEATHER

Submltuol photo

Rome Township fire fighter Joe Ortman (left) works with
Middleport VFD member Derek Johnson (right) to cut a fire line
during wildland fire training with the Wayne National Forest fire
management staff in Nelsonville. More than 45 fire fighters
from various southeast Ohio counties completed the four-day
course 'to improve their skills In responding to both local wild
fire and to be eligible for temporafy assignments ,to,f]gl)tJarg,.
er fires ir'l other states.

· Beth S.rcont/plloto

Workers from Pool Masters of Vienna were busy tearing up the concrete decking around London
Ponl yesterday as well as draining the standing water. Council approved Pool Masters' bid of
$112,800 to repair the structure and work is tentatively scheduled to be don~ in time for a
rededication of the pool at 2 p.m. on Sunday, May 28.

Pool
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

SYRACUSE- Repairs on
the London ~ool have finally,
officially beg11n.
Workers
from
Pool
Masters of Vienna arrived

yesterday to begin dismantling the damaged concrete
decking and drained the poo~.
Last
week
Syracuse
Village Council approved the
$112,800 bid from Pool
Masters to begin work on the
London Pool.

Local fire fighters train.
for wildland fires

Yesterday Syracuse ClerkTreasurer
and
Federal
Emergency
Management
Agency (FEMA) Agent
Sharon Cottrill lear:ned that
the final' actual eligible cost

Athens ·and Vinton County
volunteer fire fighters · and
fire department personnel
NELSONVILLE - Over trained and completed course
the past · two weekends ,
Please see Fires, AS
nurnerops Meigs, Gallia,
STAFF REPORT

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Pleas• -

Pool, AS ·

·Meigs High School prom candidates '

Buildings demolished

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

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INDEX
"

2 SECTIONS -

16 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B4-6

Comics
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:·

'•

Editorials
Obituaries

.Sports

Ch•~-

B$ection

AB

Weather

© 2006 Ohi? Valley Publishing Co.
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Hoafllch/photo

Three buildings on the first block of Middleport's Norttj
Second Avenue fell .to the wrecking ball Monday morning. They
were condemned last winter. The future of the lots will be
determined by the build ings ' owners, Lenny Tennant. Sandy
lannarelli and R~x and Brenda Darst.

"Starlight Fantasy' will be the theme of the Meig High School prom to be staged Saturday night
in the gymnasiiuni. Candidates for king and queen are left to right kneeling, Kylen King and
Nathan Becker, front, Ashley Samar, Channing Burge, Miranda Young, and Kayla McCarthy; and
back. Nathan Argabright, Nathan Stotts and Bryce Davis. Candidates not present for the pic~
,~
ture are Brittany Jacks, Ash I.e~ Cook, and Eric VanMeter.

---------- ---,--

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J. RHd/photo

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nieDaily Sentinel

PageA2

AROUND THE WORLD

Tuesday, May 2,

The Daily Sentinel

2006

Community Calendar
requests for' comment.
Multinational com~anies that
pn:xjuced I 00 million cubic
feet of natural gas daily last
year in Bolivia will be able to
relain only 18 percent of their
· production, with the rest being
given to YPFB, he said.
Morales did not name the companies.
A Repsol spokesman said the
company could mll respond
because it had not received
official word of the announcement. Pelrobras officials did
not immediately return messages seeking comment on
Monday. a national holiday in
Brazil.
"We are monitoring the situation very closely," said Bob
Davis, a spokesman for the
world's largest oil company
Exxon Mobil Co!]3., wl]ich has
a 30 percent interest in a nonproducing field · called !tau,
which is operated by Total.
Morales said the government
would begi11 negotiations
immediately with the companies to make sure they are willing to comply, but sairl they
could be stripped of their privilege to' operate in Bolivia if
they don't sign new contracts
within six months.
In the past, YPFB produced
Bolivia's natural gas, but it was
reduced to an administrative
role in the mid-1990s after the
·•
1 ·
d
country s gas exp oratiOn an
production business was privatized. Experts have .warned that
the company is incapable of
becoming a producer again
without a massive infusion .of
cash.

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· LA PAZ, Bolivia
President Evo Morales ordered
'soldiers to occupy Bolivia's
natural gas fields Monday and
threatened to evict foreign
oompanies unless they give
Bolivia control over the entire
chain of production.
· Morales sent soldiers and
engineers with Bolivia's stateowned oil,company to installalions andtields tapped by foreign companies - including
Britain's BG Group PLC and
BP PLC, Brazil's Petroleo
Brasileiro SA, SpanishArgentine Repsol YPF SA,
France's Total SA and U.S.b~ Exxon Mobil Corp. The
companies have six months to
agree to new contract' or leave
Bolivia. he said.
. Vice President Alvaro Garcia
Linera said troops were sent to
56 locations around the country.
Soldiers took over major gas
fields and refineries and. in the
eastern city of Santa Cruz
where much of the industry is
tiased, occupied some oil company offices, said Tuffi Are,
news editor at the El Deber
newspaper, one of Bolivia's
largest. He said about 100 soldiers were guarding the
Petrobrds refinery just outside
the city.
. Morales, a leftist allied with
Cuba's.. Fidel Castro and
Venezuela's Hugo Chavez in
seeking to blunt U.S. influence
in the region. had pledged to
exert greater state control over
the industry since winning
election in December, becomMorales has repeatedly said
ing Bolivia's first Indian pnesi- the country's natural resources
dent.
have been "looted" by foreign
"The time has come, the companies and must be nationawaited day, a historic day in alized so that Bolivians could
which Bolivia retakes absolute benefit from thft profits that
control of our· natural were being sent overseas.
resources," Morales said in a
But he has also said that
nationalization
will not mean a
speech from the San Alberto
·
th
B ,. ·
complete · state takeover,
fi e'ld m
sou ern
tvta oper- because Bolivia lacks the abiliated by Petrobras in association
. with Repsol and Total SA.
ty to tap all its natural gas on its
"The looting by the foreign own.
companies
has
ended,"
Last week, Morales told
Morales declared.
· Brazil's Valor · Economico
Brazil is Bolivia's biggest newspaper that Bolivia would
natural: gas client, followed by have to "set up a new battalion,
Argentina,
and
Brazil's .a new army of oil and gas spedemand has been rising rapidly cialists to exert the property
due to.power generation, cOok- right" for a complete state
inf!d automotive needs.
takeover of petroleum produc,dlocked Bolivia must sell lion.
to its neighbors because it lacks
Morales chose May I,
a· pipeline to ship gas to the · International Day of the
Pai.ific OCean and from there Workers, to announce the
to A~a, Mexico or the United nationalization plan, wearing a
Stlltes.
YPFB helmet as he gave his .
The announcement follows a , speech.
trend hy oil- and gas-rich Latin
Morales also said the state
American nations to exact a would retake majority control
larger share of ·profits from of Bolivian hydrocarbons comextraction of the fossil fuels.
panies that were partially privalt comes as Ecuador argues tized in the 1990s. ·
with Washington over a new
Monlles is followin¥ the path
oil royalties law and less than a of Chavez, his popuh~t politimonth after 'Chavez ordered ' cal mentor, said Pielro Pitts, ·
tlie seizure of oil fields from editor-in-chief
for . the
total and Italy's Eni SpA when V e n e z u e I a - b a s e d
Qle companies failed to comply LatinPetroleum.com.
with a government demand , "You can call Bolivia
that operations be turned over Venezuela !&gt;art II because · it
t~;~ Venezuela's state oil compaseems like he (Morales) is
ny, Petroleos de Venezuela SA. going to II)' to do. the same
. Bolivia has South America's · thing that Chavez is doing,"
second largest natural ga.s said Pins, referring to giving
reserves after Venezuela, ·and the state majority l:Ontrol of
a;ll foreign companies must hydrocarbons.
'
turn over most production conEcuador's Congress last
trol to Bolivia's cash-strapped month ratified a hydrocarbons
state-owned oil company, reform law designed to cut into
Yacimientos
Aetroliferos windfall prorits of foreign
Fiscales Bolivianos, Morales crude producers, among them
said.
U.S.-based
Occidental
:-An Army spokesman did not Petroleum Corp.
immediately return telephone
.The law .would give the gov-

Keeping
Meigs
County
infor'med

: GENEVA - Polar bears
and · hippos are among
more than I 6,000 species
of animals and plant s
threatened with global
extinction,
the
World
Conservation Union said
Tuesday.
According to the Swi ss~ased conservation group,
known by its acronym
IUCN, the number of
species classified as being
in serious danger of
extinction rose from about
15,500 in· its previous
"Red List" report, published in 2004. ·
· The list includes one in
three amphibians. a quarter of the world's mammals and coniferous· trees,
and one in eight birds,
according to a preview of

'

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the 2006 Red. List. Th~
full report is published
·
later th1s week.
"Biodiversity loss is
increasing , not slowing
down,"
said
Achim
Steiner, the conservation
group ' s director general.
"The implications of this
trend for the productivity
and resilience ·of ecosystems and the lives and
livelihoods of billion s of
people who deperid on
them are far-reacljing."
The Red List classifies
about
40,000
species
according to their risk of
extinction and provides a
searchable online database
of .the results. The total
number of species on the
planet is. unknown, with
15 million being the most
widely accepted estimate .
Up to 1.8 million arc
known today.

Subscribe today
992-2155 .

,&lt;

m~tings

Thesday, May 2
RACINE Southern
Local Board of Education,
s~cial meeting, 7 p.m. at the
h1gh school for interviewing
superintendent applicants,
approve state loan of
$41,000, talk about a music
teacher, and approve permanent budget.
ALFRED
Orange
Township Trustee, 7:30 p.m .
at home of Clerk Osie
Follrod.
POMEROY -.
Bedford
Township. trustees, 7 p.m. at
the town hall .
·

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i.'

Wednesday, May 3
PAGEVILLE Scipio
TownshiP. Trustees, 6:30p.m.
at Pagevtlle town hall.
• FREE 2.n Technical Support

.

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AP Photo

emment 50 percent of oil company profits whenever the
oil
market
international

Thursday, May 4
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m., town hall.

JUSISJ more

.

.

Call T~sy &amp; Savel

exceeds the · prices established 1990s oi I prices when crude
in existing contracts. Most of was worth a fraction of today's
those deals were pegged to market.

Association, llJOnthly public
meeting, 6 p.m., fire department. Plans for field
improvements, opening day
activities: Question and
answer session.
Thursday, May 4
RACINE - Special meeting of Pomeroy-Racine
~ge 164, F&amp;AM. Work. in
the
entered
apprenttce
degree . .
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053 Ladies
Auxiliary, 7 p.m. at the hall.
Friday, MayS
R,ACINE - Meigs County
Pomona Grange· regular
meeting, 7:30 p.m. at Racine
Grange. Baking Contest will
be juc;lged. Members are
reminded to bring pop tabs,
Campbells soup labels and
eye glasses for donation.

Clubs and
organizations

Sign Up Onllnel www.Loc:aiNet.com

(7401992-6260

Youth events

3rench City

OHIO

Jtntique &amp;: Craft ..llall

VALLEY

Mother's Day Gift Items
*Home Decor *Furniture

10:30 am - 2 :00 pm

5 great sandwiches

.· to choose from ...
only Sl.99

ill liNCOUI

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Point Pleasant, WV

195 Upper River Rd.
OaUipolls

113-5536

J40-448-IIGI

Powell's
FOODFAI

700· East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
740·992·5252
www.foodfairmk.com

WHY PAY MORE??
EVERY DAY
tOW PRICES!

POMEROY - The Meigs
High School class of 1976 is
planning its 30 year high
school reunion, and efforts
are being made to contact
classmates.
Since there are several
classmates whose addresses
. are not known and assistance from relatives and
friends is being solicited so
that contacts can be made.
There were over 250 graduates in this class and so far

*Hand Puppets tor Children

Specials"

*Antiques fo~ the
· Antique lover
Our '19,000 square foot
store offers thousands of
gifts for the entire family,

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CINCINNATI (AP) - The exhibited, the attempts to avoid
psychiatric unit at University using weapons and what vital
Hospital has emerged from the . signs were taken following
probation it was placed on in a their use.
.
dispute over the use of force on
"University Hospital has
patients, state regulators said worked effectively and collabMonday. .
oratively with the depanment
The Ohio Department of on their plan of cortection,"
Mental Health put the inpatient said Anita Leiser, the agency's
psychiatric unit and emergency chief of licensure and certificaservice on probation last lion. 'The improvements made
month. The agency said the will lead to a safer treatment
hospital had failed to properly environment."
justify every use of force and to
The hospital said there were
document the behavior pati~nts seven instances of force being

IIIIViNG CWJJA II
IVIIIOIINDING CO!l!ma

BINGO PLEASANT
Now Pllllnti.Ewn
· 124 HIGHLAND AVE.
Pl PLEASANT, WV
(Old Carolina Lumber Building Across
from CSX) '

VALLEY
HOSPITAL
304-675-4340

Complete Above &amp; lnground Atptlr
Above Ground &amp; tng rouna Sl!llea
&amp; lns tallaliM
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DR.Il1lii.DW ftlll IPIIIIM/
740-441-9896
380 State Rt. 7 N. •&lt;iallipoli•, OH

Church events

.Other events

Birthdays

Meigs students take part in state science contest:

'

Relay for Life

PERSONAL
OXYGEN SYSTE""
HEliOS

• Eosy to corry.
.
..~ ...... ............. • Cool, qu1et operation.
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• Weighs just 3.6 lbs. I
• Requires no electricity or batt~ries.
Lasts Up to 10 hours at a settir1g of 2.
about 40 seconds to fill.
Ope.r~tes.upright, on,its back or in any

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Special Fixed Rate.
Home Equity·Offer!

May 12 and 13th

RELAY
FORUFE
..

HELlOS

.

'.
I

Friday 6 pm
Saturday 12 Noon
Meigs County Fair
Grounds

,..

'·
Luminary
Ceremony - May 12 at 9 pm

positiOn tnbetween.

For infornuJtion regarding luminaries, please contact: ·

740-446-0007

Sue Lightfoot at 992-3138

Toll Free 877·669-0007

!lrwnli!l

For general Relay for life information. plea.se contact:

70 Pine Street • Calllpolls

tntt.'fe&gt;l R&lt;ltr

$10 each Limit 2 names a Lumina

Diane McVey

• Fixed For tO Years!

Join us at dusk, .Fridqy evening, May 12.th
for the lighting of our luminari.es.

\ t.A .. (;(;( ·-A
U \\llf r &amp; 1\ uri~ J{ i.. ,

Purchased F o r : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Check one: Din Memory of DIn Honor of
Hobbies/Lifetime Activities:_.;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

· $7 99- 10 Wiri\JS $3 00

Ib.IHJ.I!IIY · Hall ChiCken Dinner
$5 99
Er.id.i!Y. · 1&gt;4aUers $5 .99
.S.illlrll~. ~ · Ch1cken &amp; Rib Dirmer

59.50
Suf1Q.fW •

Por~o~

Chop Dmnor

1 CIC . $5.99 . 2 pc. S7 95
IHI:'. l,'ll(n._ .!alt.. l I fill· It ~r!l ~fl. !I t!fl ·-' 11'11

130$ (ASlfRN AVf CAWI'OI!S, /)1/ •5611

• r,\d als &amp;. W.oxlng
• Massage • Body Wraps
- Spa Pack418es • Olernical Peets
• Mlcroderm Abrasions
326 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 456~ t

HOLZER
CLINIC
Medical E!CC:ellence.
Local tarim!.
EverYwhere

(740) 446-2933
Hours:
~
M·F l Oam-Close .. .

•

www.holzercllnlc.com

•

~('l&lt;ef~IKJ&lt;! filM/

JoAnn Crisp at 992-2136

Locally owned. We cal'e about

• Hair Car~ &amp;. Makeup
• Nail Care • Helix Cuts

A very sincere thanks to all
those who supported me!

MEIGS COUNTY

, 6.

M.Qrull!y · F
Drink;
T.IIDdl!)(· $ 1 00 of! any Dinner
W!!!ln.~sg.tly· Half Rack Droqer

2, 2006

DEAR ABBY: Your reply
behind "Bald in Baltimore's"
live entertain, and food. Open to "Bald in Baltimore," the
mother's comment as well. PATRICIA IN
to students, sixth through man- who' s considering getBELLE,
ting rid of his wig, left me
seniors . Free.
W.VA .
feeling you were advising
DEAR ABBY: I am in my
someone with an "affliction"
late 20s. When I was still in
Dear
that isn't normally publicized. ·
college, I tnet a wonderful ·.
Abby
(I have false teeth, so should I
man in his 30s. He was com-Friday, May 5
also have a "coming-out
pletely
bald. He explained to .
HARRISONVILLE
party"? Pun intended.) ·
me
·
that
when hi s hairline .
Harrisonville Presbyterian
My 40-something-year-old
began
to
recede, he staned
Church, 6 p.m., guest speaker son lost most of his hair by
s ~aving his head rather thM ·
LeAnn
Bates,
founder the time he was 22 - thanks
thinking
of
ditching
.
his
rug.
dealing
with the anxiety of it
Lighting the Way Ministries, to genes from my side of the
Many women find bald men I saw old pictures of him with
light refreshments after."
family: When he was in his attractive, and r am one of hair, and I can honestly say I'
30s, he and a couple of them. So what if his head is like him better without it. ·
Saturday, May 6
friends shaved their heads on
PORTER Rev. Bill a dare, and he has kept it that shaped a "little" funny! That's · What attracted me to him was.
Zinn, preaching at 6 p.m. at way ever sinc.e. It's a popular what makes him an individ- his personality, his intelli-.
the Clark Chapel · FWB and fashionable look. ~·Bald ual, like our fingernails, noses gerice, and the fact that ha '
or toes . I'd rather see a bald treated me better than gold. :
Church.
in Baltimore" should retire man any day than a "rug" or a
Please tell "Bald i~
the wig and join the band- "comb-over." That man needs Baltimore" to do what he .
Sunday, May 7
wagon.with a shaved head. to know he has nothing to feels comfortable with and be ·
BIDWELL - Gospel con- NANCY
IN
SPRING, lose and everything to gain. true to himself. In the end,·
cert, Poplar Ridge Freewill TEXAS
And bravo to you, Dear Abby, he'll find it is the be st deci- ·
Baptist Church, State Route
DEAR NANCY: If my for suggesting a coming- out sion he ever made: - SHERI. '
554, 2 p.m., the White Oak comment about the "comingparty. What an excellent idea. IN ALBERTVILLE, ALA. ;
Quartet and Forgiven 4.
out party" offended you, it - T.L.C., CANVAS, W.VA.
DEAR ABBY: When I read
BIDWELL - Rev. ·Bill was not meant to. I was being
DEAR
ABBY:
I
totally
your
advice to the man ·in .
Zinn preaching at 7 p.m. at literal. Many other readers
agree
with
your
answer
to
'Baltimore
to have a "coming•
Springfield Baptist Church.
agreed with me that the hair- "Bald in Baltimore." My hus- out party" to get rid of his·
piece was unnecessary. Read band has the same problem. I wig, I thought, "Wouldn 't it
on for a sample:
met him when he was bald. be wild to arrange to 'shave'·
DEAR ABBY: Your idea of We have been married seven his head if people pledged .
a coming-out (or oft) party is years and have three beautiful money for cancer resenrch or ·
Wednesday, May 3
RACINE - .American Red a great one. He must have a children together. I think' it's some other favorite charity?'.'·
Cross blood drive, 10 a.m. - 2 sense of humor about all this: time that writer ditche.s the - KATHY IN CHICAGO ·.
p.m., Southern High School. Have a laugh and be done wig and becomes the man he
DEAR KATHY: Yes! I love
with it. I hope he knows that always wanted to be! - your idea. Way to go!
what makes a man appealing M.S., OKEECHOBEE, FLA .
Dear Abby is written by ·
isn't a head of hair but his
DEAR ABBY: I worked for Abigail Van. Buren, · also •
attitude, outlook, and the way many years with a man in the known as Jeanne Phillips; :
Wednesday, May 3
he treats others. When he same situation. His mother and was founded by her ·
POMEROY
Doris loses the wig he wiil gain his also objected to him "coming mother, Pauline Phillips . .
Thomas who is a resident of freedom.
DENVER out" from under tile wig. Her Write
Dear Abby
at
The Inn ·at Lakeview in LADY
real
objection
was
that
his
www.DearAbby.com
or
P.O:
Groveport will observe her
DEAR ABBY: Hooray to baldness · made HER feel Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA ·
90th birthday on May 3. "Bald in Baltimore" who:s "old." Perhaps that's what· is 90069.
Cards may be sent to her at
The Inn at Lakeview, B-21,
4000 Lakeview Crossing,
Groveport, Ohio 43125.
POMEROY
Two • letic championship and one information science and .
Meigs High School stu, of the largest of its kind in technology, manufacturing
dents qualified through dis- the nation. The 'participants sciences, ·materials science,·
trict competition to partici - advanced to the state level recycling and · litter' prevenSteve Bachner at 740-416- pate in the 57th annual competition from more than tion and water resources
re-search.
4936 or Des Jeffers at 740- State Science Day held at 16 district science days.
Ohio
State
University.
Among
the
awards
at
The Day' is sponsored by
992-4441 of the planning
They were Morgan S. State Science Day were the · Ohio Academy of
committee can be called or
of Pomeroy with Governor's Awards for Science, American Electric ·
Kennedy
can be reached via email at
his
·project
"The Physics of Excellence
in
Student Power,
the
Ohio ·
meigs76@hotmail.com.
Warfare: Research in agriculture · and Environmental EducatioQ
This . reunion will take Medieval
place on Saturday June 3, · at Trebucher", and Calee · M. food science, • biotechnolo- Fund,
and
Boehringer
Reeves,
Pomeroy,
"So
how
gy,
environmental
science
,
the Riverside Golf Club in
lngelheim Roxane, Inc.
Mason W.Va. 1976 'gradu- many germs do you touch
ates who not ·receive a letter each day?"
Nearly 1200 . students,
and ·want to attend, .are to
Today's The Day! Be sure to Vote!
contact one of the commit- from 'seventh . to 12th
grades, representing 305
tee members.
scnools from 69 counties in
Ohio exhibited their science research projects at
Science Day. They were
used among 13,251 patients -vying for nearly I00 scholwho were admitted in the past 4 . arships and awards valued
1/2 years, and six cases of force at more than $1.7 million.
The event is the academamong 56.084 patients in the
ic equivalent of a state athpsychiatric emergency room.

State lifts probation from hospital psychiatric unit

.~.:!~

FrldiJ&amp;IIRIIIJ 111111111

addresses have been secured
for &lt;lnly about 140. J_.etters
to these folks were mailed
on Monday May I st, said
Des Jeffers of the . reunion
planning committee. ·
He asked that any members of the class who did not
receive a letter or those ·here
related to or has friendship
with a member of the class
contact ·the reunion class
with the address. Beth Bums
Birchfield at 740-992-6227,

84S llld .A.w. Galllpolla, OB

Faclndlll•

Tuesday, May

Class plans reunion

BANK.

AvaiWble

Come in for our
"Daily Lunch

PageA3

Bald is beautiful for men unwilling to hide under rug

Saturday, May 6
SALEM CENTER -Star
Grange #778 regular session,
6:30 p.m. potluck, 7:30 p.m.
meeting.
·
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge 411,
F&amp;AM., 7:30p.m. at the hall.
Thesday May 2
·
Members
and visitors to take
MIDDLEPORT
nonperishable food for Grand
Middleport Lodge 363, Lodge
food
drive.
F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. at Refreshments.
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Take non-perishable. food
item for Grand Master's food
bank program.
POMEROY - Morgan's
Friday, May S
Raid 11 planning session will
RACINE- Youth Lock-in
be held 6 p.m. at the Meigs at the Racine United
County
Chamber
of Methodist Church, 6:30 p.m.
Cl)mmerce office.
continuin!l through night to
TUPPERS PLAINS
10 a.m. on Saturday. Weather
Tuppers
Plains permitting, frisby golf and
BasebaliiSoftball other outside games. Music,

(~':;":6XIaster!J

Soldiers guard the Gualberto Viltarroel refinery, operated by 8(azilian oil company· Petrobras, in
Cochabamba. Bolivia, Monday. Pres ident Evo Morales ordered soldiers to occupy Bolivia's natural gas fields Monday and threatened to evict foreign companies unless they give Bolivia control over tne entire chain of productior.

Conservation groups: Polar bears,
· hippos among 16,000 species
threatened with extinction
Bv SAM CAGE

Public

The Daily Sentinel. ;

°

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITE~

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Purthased for: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Check o~e: DIn Memory of DIn Honor of
Hobbies/Lifetime Actiyities:_._ _...:.._ _ _ _ _ _ __

Hear whGt others are saying

about otkon syncro..

DII.ES

IIF \1&lt;1'\;( ;

Farmers
Fs
Bank

From:-----------------Address:-------,----------Amounl Enclosed: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

( ' ENTEI~

(l.AUJ.POLIS
4.\SYl Sl'l'Ond \\ cnuc
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Pomeroy 992 2136
Mason 7716400
Tuppers Plains 667 316 !
Gallipolis 446.2265
Poim Pleasant ~
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Corning Soon/
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The Daily Senti.J;lel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street• Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallyuntlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing·Co.
-Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager·News Editor

· Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment 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 of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY

l

"

'

''

Today is Tuesday, May 2, the l22rid day of 2006. There
&lt;ire 243 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History:
On May 2, 1945, the Soviet Union announced the fall of
Berlin, and. the Allies announced the surrender ·of Nazi
troops in Italy and parts of Austria.
On this date:
. In 1519, artist Leonardo da Vinci died at Cloux, France.
In I 670. the Hudson Bay Company was chartered by
England' s King Charles II.
In 1863, Confederate Gen. Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson
was accidentally wounded , by his ,own men at
· Chancellorsville, Va.; he died eight days later.
In 1890, the Oklahoma Territory was organized.
In 1936, "Peter and the Wolf," a symphonic tale for children by Sergei Prokofiev, had its world premiere in Moscow.
In 1957, Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy, the controversial
Republican senator from Wisconsin, di'ed at Bethesda Naval
Hospital in Maryland. .
.In 1960, convicted sex. offender and best-selling author
Caryl Ches~man was executed at San Quentin . Prison in
California.
In 1965, the Early Bird satellite was used to transmit television pictures across the Atlantic.
In 1972, after serving 48 years as head of the FBI, J.
Edgar Hoover died in Washington at age 77.
In 1994, Nelson Man&lt;lela claimed victory in the wake of
South Africa's first democratic elections; President F.W. de
· Klerk acknowledged defeat. ·
·
Ten years ago: The Senate passed, 97-3, an immigration
bill to tighten border controls, make it tougher for illegal
aliens to get U.S. jobs and curtail legal immigrants' access
to social servict:s.
·
Five years ago: President Bush and Republican cmigressional leaders clinched a budget deal embracing most o( the
president's tax and spending goals. Germany inaugurated its
new Chancellery in Berlin amid concerns the l&gt;uilding was
'too grandiose. A landslide destroyed a nine-story apartment
building in China, killing ai least 79 people.
One year ago: Pvt. l st Class Lynndie England, the young
woman pictured in some of the most notorious Abu Ghraib
photos, pleaded guilty at Fort Hood, Texas,' to mistreating
prisoners. (However, a judge later threw out the plea· agreement; England was later convicted in a court-martial and
sentenced to three years in prison.) Greenpeace co-founder
Bob Hunter died at age 63 .
·
.
Today 's Birthdays: Actor Theodore Bike! is 82. Actor
Roscoe Lee Browne is 81. Bianca Jagger is 61. Country
singer R.C. Bannon is 61. Singer Lesley Gore is 60. Actor
David Suchet is 60. Singer-songwriter Larry Gatlin is 58.
Rock singer Lou Gramm (Foreigner) is 56. Actress Christine
Baranski is 54. Singer Angela Bofill is .52. Actress Elizabeth
Berridge is 44. Country singer Ty Herndon is 44. Rock
musician Todd Sucherman (Styx) is 37. Wrestler-actor The
Rock (Dwayne Johnson) is 34. Actress Jenna Von Oy is 29.
Olympic gold medal figure skater Sarah Hughes is 21.
Actress Kay Panabaker ("Summerland") is 16.
. Thought for Today: "Like ships, men founder time and
again."· Henry Miller, Alllerican novelist (1891-1980).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be .less than
300· words. All letters are subject to editing, must be signed,
and include address and telephone number. No unsigned letiers will be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues. not personalities. Letters of thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

cusPs 213-960)

Ohio Valley Publishing CCl.

Our main concern in all stories Is to be

Published ever)' afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court Street,
: accurale. If you know of an error in ~
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
: story. call the newsroom at (740) 992· paid at Pomeroy.
2156.
Member: The Assoclated Press and the
Ohio Newspaper Association.

Our main number Ia

Poalmaeter: Send address corrections

(740) 992·2156.
.Department extensions are:

to The Deity Sentinel, 111 Court Street ,

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ei&lt;l. 12
Reporter: Brlan Reed. Ei&lt;l. 14
RepOrter: Bet~ Sergent , Ei&lt;l. 13

Advertising
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PageA4

OPINION

Tuesday, May 2, 2006

Tuesday, May 2, 2006

Obituaries

Bush switches on media, energy ·- but is it too late?
'

President Bush
ha s
clearly changed his mind
about both energy .Policy
and White House communications strategy, but his
failure to switch sooner is
causing him grievous
political damage .
Disquiet about the Iraq
war is the main .factor driving Bush's approval ratings down to the 30s, but
high gas prices and failures to communicate are
contributing to his woes.
There's good news to
report on the economic
front - low unemployment, a strong growth rate
- but $3 -a-gallon gasoline has Bush's approval
raling on the economy
stuck at 39 percent in the
.latest Gallup poll .
The administration has
consistently failed to communicate · good news and fight its adversaries because of a restrictive ,
corporate-style information-management system.
Bush's appointment of
Fox News joumalist Tony
Snow - and the apparent
freedoms he's been granted to speak out and innovate - are the latest sign
that a ll!iljor change of policy is afoot. This is welcome, but it comes perilously late.
Similarly, it wasn ' t .until
this year's State of the
Union address that Bush
decided that "Amerfca is
addicted to oil" and began
to promote a ·comprehensive energy policy.
A:mericans ought to be
disgusted with the way
both parties have handled
energy. Democrats have
resolutely blocked Bush's
past proposals ~nd now are
demagoguing the issue for
electoral advantage.
Still, Bush long ago
should have tried to compromise, and he should
have communicated the
fact that he was doing so.
The problem is that dating back to the days of
first-term White Hou se
·Communications Director
Karen Hughes, Bush press
secretaries have been, kept
on a tight leash, authorized to repeat only message points composed by
their superiors.
Beyond the president. '

to administration-friendly panies of "price-gouging"
journalists, as if persuad- and " profiteering" and
in~ neutrals , qJUch less alleging that, as a former
cntics, was deemed out of oil man , Bush has been
the question.
colluding with them.
Snow's appointment is
To cover himself. Bush
Molton
part of a sea change clear- urged an inquiry into posKondtacke ly induced by the fear of
si ble price-gouging and
. political failure . For some
weeks now, the Bush took other short-term meaWhite House ha s been sures to temper prices.
engaged in an · extensive Administration officials
press sec retaries are the outreach program for admitted , however, that "it
most visible personalities )\1embers of Congress and took us ·a long ,time to get
in any administration , the medi a. Also , Bu sh into this situation, and it's
especially now, in the 24- himself has been engaging going to take us a · long
hour cable TV age. It ill- in less-scripted exchanges time to get out."
serves a president to make with citizens.
And that's the danger for
them perform like automaBu sh's first word s in Bush.
America
was
tons .
announcing '
Snow's "addicted to oil" in 2001,
Bush's first spokesman, appointme.nt were " I'm
Ari Flei scher, was experi- here in the briefing room but Bush's energy policy
was pegged strictly to
enced and agile enough to to · break some news" come up with somewhat- and that was a departure in increasing supplies, not to
intere sting answers to .the itself. Bush appearances . decreasing demand.
questions thrown at him. rarely malle news except
Democrats, for their
But
outgoing
Press in communities where a part,
blocked
supply
Secretary Scott McClellan presidential . visit is a increases, notably an
became almost a caricature major event.
expansion of drilling offof : someone who never
Snow - who is a ·per- shore and in the Arctic
varied from his script.
sonal
friend and a long- National Wildlife Reserve,
Moreover, unlike th.e
time cplleague of minec at and concentrated mostly
best press secretaries of , Fox
~ apparently has
on demand-reduction meathe recent past - Marli'n
he
will
been
assured
that
sure·s such as higher taxes
Fitzwater m the Ronald
attend
crucial
meetings
,
Reagan and George H.W.
and conservation.
Bush administrations and have ready acce ss to high
The impasse was partialMike McCurry and Joe officials and be able to ly broken in 2005 when
Lockhart
under
Bill . both parry With and try to Congress passed a; comClinton ~ ,Bush's spokes- educate the media .
He's a naturally cheerful prehensive energy bill,
men have had little role in
minus
ANWR,
but
policy-making and mes- person who's able to put
Democrats now claim that
sage-shaping and were an upbeat face on . the
absent from meetings administration, and he's its initiatives are underwhere important decisions quick-thinking, . well- funded. Bush's 2006 proinformed and dedicated posal,
the
Advanced
got made.
conservative
who'·ll
be
is going
Energy
Initiative,
During Clinton's various
able
to
counter
Bush's
nowhere.
McCurry
and
crises,
Lockhart
had access, critics.
. America needs an all-out
Still, Bush's problems approach to solving the
information and the freedom to make news , to are so deep at the moment energy problem in which
and
too
many
fence with the press and
we "do it all" - that is,
feel
too
strongAmericans
answer the president's critmore domestic oil in
find
ly negative about the presics, often pungently.
Moreover, the adminis- ident - that it's open to the short run, conserve and
trations· of Reagan, the question whether commu- find alternative fuels for
elder Bush and Clinton nications changes can turn the long · run . But that
requires a willingness to
engaged in affirmative things around.
As
the
liberal
compromise.
policy-seii_in.\l .' Pr~ctically ·
Tliat willingness is utter:
every tmllallve was pro- Democracy Corps noted in
moted not just with presi- its latest polling analysis, ly absent from both parties
dential speeches but also "an incredible 78 percent in this election year.
extensive background ses- in a CBS poll believe Iraq Democrats are on the
sions where reporters and is already engaged in a attack; Republicans are on
columnists got to meet civil war, and President the defensive . Bush may
with high-level White Bush ... is no longer seen be starting to -talk smarter, ,
as a credible messenger on
House officials.
..
but it's very late in the
It is poss ible to get Iraq."
day.
Meanwhile, on energy,
phone calls . returned from
(Morton Kondracke is
some top officials in the .Democrats are trying to
editor of Roll
executive
current White House, but make . high gas prices an
·until recently, briefings issue of Bush's integrity Call, the newspaper of
have been largely confined by accusing "big oil" com- Capitol Hill.)

Newspapers remain engines .ofdemocracy
James Madison, the
sources. The president tried and on the Internet, the
to get her newspaper not to voracious 24-hour news
architect of ~he First
Amendment, credited thP,.
publish one of her reports. cycle creates a quicksand of
newspapers of his time for
But the First Amendment news that needs much furdevelopment
if
"much of the lights" that
prevailed - and while ther
Americans
are
to
get
more
"conducted the United
N t
Congress has yet to hold
States to the ranks of a free
a
the CIA accountable for than the surface of the
Hentoff
being (with the president's . knowledge that ·Thomas
and independent nation."
This year's Pulitzer Prizes
permission) above our Jefferson cited as nec·essary
show dramatically how
laws; Priest is still on the for self-government. . . ·
When I find, increasingly,
. newspapers - above all
story.
,
other media remain Kristof - · it made some
For National Reporting, that many of the young no
to
Thonias amends this year..
. this year's Pulitzer Prize longer read newspapers - ·
essential
Meanwhile , as Kristof went to James Risen and and get their "news" from
Jefferson's warning: "A
people who mean to be kept the spotlight on, Arab Eric Lichtblau of The New Jon Stewart on Comedy
their own governors must states have been silent on York Times for greatly Central or Jay Leno - I
arm themselves with the the mass murders al\d gang intensifying a crucial wish that · newspaper pubPo,wers knowledge gives." rapes of these black African national debate across party lishers would make their
And he cited n~;;.vspapers .
Muslims, while ~ in the lines, on whether the presi- papers much more available
In our war against terror- U.N. Security Council dent can secretly and uni- in schools, as they are at
ists, for example, human · China, Russia and Qatar li!lerally bypass the consti- airports and on trains. And .
rigl)ts - respect for life block any meaningful stop tutional separation of pow- editors should give more
is a primary moral value. we to these atrocitie.s.
ers by allowing the support .to the increasingly
.stand for. How much have
On the other hand, what National Security Agency beleaguered student press
you seen on broadcast or has marred this country's to eavesdrop on Americans in their towns and cities.
Those are the kids 'who live
cable television about the own human-rights record without court warrants.
genocidal holocaust in around the world - to the
The pres.idennlso tried to . the First Amendment by
Darfur - which has lasted delight
of
terrorist prevent this story from contrast with their fellow
much longer and cost many recruiters - is our abuses, being published, ·and sue- students.
Last
year's , Knight
. more lives than the horrors . including torture, of our ceeded for months . But
in Rwanda?
prisoners in this war.
\ finally, that ·newspaper Foundation poll of more
But it took one newspaSince 2002, Dana Priest awoke to the vital constitu- than 100,000 high-school
perman, Nicholas Kristof of of The Washington Post has tiona! principle emphasized students, for example,
The New York Times, this regularl'y reported breaking by James Madison that "the revealed that 73 percent
year's winner of the news about these violations censorial power is in the had no opinion of the First
Pulitzer for Commentary. (o of our own ' statutes, and . people
' over
the Amendment or "took it for
alert this nation and the international treaties we Government and not in the granted" - . and 36 percent
world to these mass ive have signed, by the CIA in Government over the peo- believe that n'ewspapers '
..must first secure governcrimes against humanity. official interrogation cen- pie."
He made six dangerous · ters , as well as in CIA
The depth and steadfast- ment approval before pub·
trips to Darfur to report secret prisons. Exposing ness of the reporting by ·lishing. .
How much •'do any of
names and faces of victims this, Priest embodies the Nicholas Kristof, . Dana
of the genocide for which very spirit of the First Priest, James Risen, Eric thet;n even know about
Madison
and
George W. Bush had long Amendment that, in a Lich.tblau and , the other James
Thomas
Jefferson?'
before indicted the govern- democracy, holds our gov- newspaper journalists hon(Nat Henroff is a nationment of Sudan - to the ernment to a.ccount for law- ored with Pulitzers this year
world's indifference.
lessness .
- let alone the many others ally renowned authority on
'!'his year, Priest won the ' who disinfect, with sun- the Firs/' Amendment and
Last year. ABC News'
nightly newscasts devoted Pulitzer for Beat Reporting light, corruption and inhu- the Bill of Rights and
just 18 minutes all year to by pUtting light on addi- manity in towns and cities author of many books,
including "Tile War on the
Darfur; ' CBS (except for ·· tiona! CIA secret prisons in throughout this country "60 Minutes") only three Eastern Europe·. The CIA take a lot of time, .and sup- Bill of Rights and the
minutes ; and NBC only five and the Justice Department port . from publi shers and Gathering
Resistance"
(Seven
Stories
Press;
minutes all last year, have started investigations . editors.
although
prodded by of "leaks" to hu from
Meanwhile, on television 2003). )
'

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•

Local Briefs

For the Record
Arrested

Mildred Lee

'

, . The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www,mydailysentinel.com

ALBANY - Mildred Lee, 81 , of Albany, passed away
Sunday April 30, 2006, at her residence.
Bam in Evans. W.Va. on Aug. 4, 1924, she was the ·daughter of the late Ellis and Iva Parsons Donohue. She was a
homemaker, member of Pageville Freewill Baptist Church
and a Sunday school teacher for many years.
She is survived by children: Flora (Larry) Bailey of
P.omeroy, Shirley (Lester) Wise of Middleport, Edward
(Charolette) Lee of Alexanderia, Tva (Buzz) Sloter of Albany,
Pamela (Ray) Harless of Ft. Pierce, Fla., Thomas (Jan) Lee of
Albany, Paul (Cathy) Lee of Albany, Loren Jr. (Virgie) Lee of
Paintsville, Ky.; Roberta George of Pomeroy, Amanda Green
of Albany, Anita (Tom) Kennedy of Pomeroy, Mary (Tim) Lee
of Albany and Angela Lee ofAlbany; 41 grandchildren, 46
great-grandchildren, 7 great-great-grandchildren; brothers,
Ray Donohue of Laughman, Fla., and Raymond Donohue of
Pomeroy; sisters Ruth Gillilan of Gainesville FL., Olive
Stobart of Seminole, Fla. and Kathleen Bingham of Emporia,
Kan.
.
In addition to her parents she was preceded in death by her
hus~and, Loren W. Lee; grandchildren, Gwendolyn Savage
and Jared Lee; brother, Laurence Donohue; step-son Denver
Gould; great-grandson Colten Buzard and a son-in-law,
Everett George.
Services . will be at !p.m. oh Wednesday at Bi.\lony-Jordan
Funeral Home with Rev. M,ichael Harmon officiatmg and burial in Wells Cemetery.
Friends may call from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Tuesday at the
funeral home.
Memorial donations rnay be made to Pageville Freewill
Baptist Church, 41037 SR 692, Albany, Ohio 45710 or
Appalachian Community Visiting Nurse Assoc.. Hospice &amp;
Health Services, 30 Herrold Ave., Athens, Ohio 45701.

BIDWELL -· · Robert Clarence Stewart, Jr., 44. of Bidwell
died Saturday April 29, 2006 at his residence. Services will
be I p.m. Wednesday May 3 at the Middleport Chapel of
Fisher Funeral Home with Rev Bud Herdman officiating.
There will be a private family graveside service following cremation.
·
Friends may call on Wednesday May 3, 2006 from II a.m.
until time of service at the funeral home.
on the national resource
database from which land
management
agencies
across the country call up
from PageA1
resources to fight wildland
fires .
Members from The
work with Wayne National
Forest · fire personnel for Plains FD , Albany FD,
national certifications in Waterloo FD, and Rome
Township VFD worked
fighting wildland fires.
Each year the Forest through several hundreds
Service and other national pages of classroom .work
and state agencies fight that included Incident
hundreds of thousands of Command Structure and
acres of wildland fires in organization, fire weather
equipment
states from Ohio to Florida, conditions,
operation,
and
travel and
and west across Te'xas,
Oklahoma and through the deployment by )&gt;round and
Western
states
and air transportatton . The
California and Washington. · courses also included train·
To date for 2006 there have ing on cummunicati'o ns,
been more than 34,000 fires physical fitness, and extenreported,
which
have sive study and practical
burned more than 2.2 mil- applications in the myriad
safety rules, standards,
lion acres.
Numerous fire fighters equipment and procedures
fmm the four-county area for fighting wildland fires.
Mike Buchanan, the
participated in the national
District
Fire
Wildland Fire Behavior and Athens
Officer,
Wildland Fire Fighting Management
Techniques . classroom and pulled other Wayne NF fire
field work April 22-23 and managers and wildland fire
April 29-30 to complete the fighters together for ihis
extensive course for anum40-hour course.
.
·
This' is the first step that ber Of reasons.
"As a smaller Forest, we
certifies they have met the
don't
have a large number
~tandards for fighting wildland fires. The next step in of full-time fire fighters,"
receiving their Forest he explained. "So having a
Service "Red Card", show- pool of trained and a'vailing completed qualifica- able fire fighters to help us
tions and certifications, is a protect the local communi3-mile "pack test" for ties · and the natural
a. roun~
the
phnical endurance. which resources
Wayne
was
one
big
consid. they will take in late May
and early June. Once com- eration."
Buchanan also explained
pleted, these qualified. fire
fighters can then register that these fire fight~rs are

Fires

Water interruption
'

POMEROY· Meigs County Sheriff Robert Beegle reports
RACINE -An ·interruption of water service is planned in
that the first inmate jailed in the reopened Mei~s. County Jail Racine for Wednesday for Elm Street from Fifth Street to Oak
was Sean Braley, 34, Pomeroy. Braley was Jatled on two Grove Road, Broadway off Elm, and Oak Grove Road. Due to
counts of domestic violence late Sunday, April 30.
the tank being out of service, all customers are asked conserve
Beegle also reported that Angie Spangler, 40, Pomeroy was water. Rain date is Thursday.
arrested and jailed in the Washington County Jail on char~es
of wrongful entrustment of a motor vehicle and obstructmg
·
·
·
justice.
Beegle reported Spangler 's charges were the result of a
REEDSVILLE- The Eastern Hi gh School band, choir and
Saturday afternoon pursuit in which Meigs County Sheriff's
Office Deputy Adam Smith attempted to arrest David Persons · handbell choir will present a concert 7 p.m. Thursday in the
on a Meigs County Common Pleas Court indictment. Smith high school gymnastum.
was turning into the sheriff's office driveway anc;l observed
Persons drive by on Second Street. Persons fled and crossed
the · Pomeroy-Mason Bridge into West Virginia and into the
back roads new Clifton, W.Va.
SYRACUSE -The Carleton College Board of Trustees
The West Virginia State Police were notified and went to now has scholarship applications avai lable to high school
the area to attempt a traffic stop but Persons was not spotted. graduates who are residents of Syracuse.
The applications can be picked up from Sharon Cottrill at
Syracuse village hall. The deadline to apply is June 15.
Applications are to be returned to Cottrill or Bob Wingett.

Band concert set

Scholarship applications available

Unauthorized access gained to
Ohio University alumni·record~

ATHENS (AP) - The FBI
is investigating two thefts of
personal · data at Ohio
University, school officials said
Monday.
The university said it discovered April 24 that someone
gained unauthorized access to
rec;ords in a computer ~ystem
that supports the school's
alumni relations department.
The records included biographical information for more
than more than 300,000 people
and organizations, including
137,000 SociaL Security numbers, the university said. Toe
breaeh did not involve credit
card or bank account infonna,
tion.

Church time changed

Barbecue planned

Dinner set

now close to completing . intense classroom study
thei~ qualifications
that and course material, and to
make them eligible to ·be get the hands-on experi·called out to fires in other ence with the fire tools and
neigftboring states in the equipment. Fighting wild. East, South and to the larg- land fires differs the most
er Western fires that flare from fighting structure
up through the summer · fires, in that wildland fires
months.
are fought mostly with
"When a wildland fire hand tools and the use of
starts, they grow and prescribed fires to remove
spread rapidly," Buchanan potential fuel ahead of and
said. "And resources to around the (ire. · In fighting
contain and fight them are structure fires, more water
needed from all over. We and foam are applied to
· look forward to the day, smother the fire and
hopefully this summer, remove the heat to extinwhen we can send a trained guish the flames.
and qualified 20-person
Participants learn how to
crew from Ohio to repre- use the wide range of
sent the state in other scraping, digging ·and
chopping tools, many of
areas ." .
He went on to explain · which are only used in
how the training th~se local fighting wil(jland fires.
fire fighters received over They a! so learned about .
the p_ast two weekends pro- how weather can greatly
vides that much more influence the fire fightknowledge and safeguards ers' . efforts in containing
for the local communities a fire and minimize the
as well.
chance that it spreads to
"These local fi·re fighters other areas outside the
. get called to the widest fire containment lines.
The Wayne fire manrange ' of incidents and
fires ," he said, "and this is agement staff is planning
another layer · of · training to offer more courses local
that they now have to bring fire fighters can sign up for,
into their local com,muni- including: pump and pump-·
ties . We do have small · ing operations, chainsaw
brush fires , escaped burns qualiftcations. plus other
and accidental fires that wild lund fire leadership and
spread quickly here (in support resources courses.
southeast Ohio), and tiie
Ftre departments interesttraining they completed ed in any future training
will help them, and us, to courses should contact
better protect communities Mike · Buchanan at the
and structures."
Wayne National Forest's
The local fire fighters Athens Ranger District ,by
were eager t_o take on the calling 740-753 -0101.

Pool

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Mig~ants

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Courthouse y~rd sale

CHESTER -The yard sale to benefit the Chester-Shade
University spokesman ,Bill
Histori.cal
Association will be held 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Thursday
Sams said investigators haVen't
and
Fnday
at the home of Linda and Green Blosser which is
found evidence that the information has been u~ illegally. a gray log home 2 1/2 miles north of Chester on Route 7.
Three days before. that
breach was discovered, the FBI
told the university's Innovation
Center. a small business incu;
MIDDLEPORT - Beginning May 7 ~II Sunday and
bator, on April21 that someone Wednesday evening services at the Ash Street Church will
had gained unauthorized · begin at 7 p.m.
access to a server that contained e-mails and patent and
inteUectual property' files:
Officials said a consultant
SYRACUSE - Chicken barbecue dinner, Syracuse
will be hired to review the uni- Community
Center. Serving to begin at II a.m. Benefit for
versity's computer systems.
"Bud" Lavender, longtime Syracuse · Volunteer
The two security breaches William
Department member who has been debilitated by cancer.
appear unrelated and student
data has not been affected, the
university said.

However, FEMA is only ·this point.
parking on the right hand
covering what it will cost to
During a special session ()f side of Bridgeman Street
fix the concrete and the Syracuse Villa~e Council last (facing the river) near the
inside of the pool. Repairs week a rededtcation of the ball fields to protect children
from Page A1
including the kiddie pool, London Pool was scheduled playing near the park and
pipes and plumbing, filter for 2 p.m . on Sunday, May motorist who may not see
for the project as approved by sand, filter valves and gaskets 28.
them.
FEMA was $114,385.
were not approved by
Other businessc discussed
· Council adopted lhe cbdiCottrilL was relayed this FEMA. It is estimatecl that .at the special session incllid- fied ordinances of the Ohio
message by Laura Adcock, these additional repairs will ed:
Basic Code at a cost of $600.
deputy public assistance offi- come to·$7,160.
A chicken barbecue dinner
Council approved panicicer- wtth the Ohio Emergency
Council aprroved that to benefit Bud Lavender will pation in 'the Gallia Meigs
Mana~eme'nt Agency.
these additiona repairs will be held at II a.m. this Sunday Commu~ity Action Agency's
Thts · $114,385 figure be done by Pool Masters. · . · at the . Syracuse Community (GMCAA) Summer Youth
means that at this point
The London Pool Steering . Center,
The
Syracu se Program. GMCAA will pay
FEMA will be shelling out , Committee purposely raised Volunteer Fire Department is youn~ people to work at var$85,788.75 for . the pool extra money for repairs not assisting.
, tous JObs throughout the vilThe village's insurance lage at no cost to the village.
improvement project which covered by FEMA and . it
Council asked that those
75 percent of the total cost. appears in hindsight its company agreed to pay for
The Ohio EMA atid village instincts were correct.
repatr to the fire department's wishing to reserve the shelter
will be. paying $1.4,298.13
Jim Powell of Pool Engine 34 ~ ruck and replace house call · Councilwoman
each, which comes to a 12.5 M&lt;~sters had previously said hoses damaged during a fire Joy Bentley for reservations.
Yard sales are prohibited
percent match for each entity. it would take approximately run. After paying a $500
, Cottrill said as of yester- four . weeks to complete deductible, the
village , in the roadside park.
Council passed a resoluday the Syracuse Pool Fund repairs to the London Pool received checks for $5885 to
tion
making the mayor's
total was $34.340.66 which is depending on the weather. repair the truck and $832 to
office and bathrooms at vilmore than enough· to .cover This means the deadline to replace hoses.
the $14,298.13 the village · open the pool by Memorial
There .will now be n·o lage hall smoke free.
requires to pay its share of Day will be a tight one but
t_h_e_
re_pa_ir_c~os-ts.:_._ _ _ _ _on_e~t-ha_t_c_an_st_ill_be_m_e_t._at :
and the assistance of Sister
Francesca
Aguilla
or
Wheeling , W.Va. as a translator. Sister Aguilla will work .
from PageA1
in ministry to migrant workmigrant community on ers throughout the 13~cou nty
Saturday at the .parish church. Catholic dioce se, but will
Rev. HeillZ has enlisted tlie spend "80 to 90 percent" or
assistance of Catholic priests the summer working in
from several area parishes to Meigs County, Rev. Heinz
·
asstst tn the weekly Masses; said.

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Auditor
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YouA[
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' Shuler
.m+•~rs

RACINE- Racing American Legion Post 602 will have a
public sirloin tip steak and noodle dinner. Serving begins at
II a.m. $6 includes dinner, beverage and dessert.
,

Yellow flag yard sale
MIDDLEORT- A yellow tlag yard sale will be held in
Middleport and Pomeroy May 5 and 6.

Meigs County Court news
POMEROY - Representatives of the Meigs &lt;;:ounty.
Prosecutor's Offtce report. that those sche~uled to appear in
Meigs County Court at II a.m., II :30 a.m. or I l,l.m. this ·
Thursday need not appear ilue to a scheduling contltct at the
prosecutor's office.

Immigrants march,
demonstrate around Ohio
country, as if it wete our
country," said Solano, 29, a
U.S . citizen and native of
Immigrants and their sup- Costa Rica. :'They say · we
porters took off work Monday take jobs from Americans, but
to march, demonstrate and what Americans do you know
even serenade at federal who want to go to Florida to
offices around Ohio, tlashing pick oranges?"
their economic strength and
.Frederico Ventura · of
pushing for immigration Guatemala, who runs a
reform as part of a nati'onal Guatemalan grocery store in
day of proiest.
Cincinnati, said he shut his
Several hundred people business for the day.
walked in Cincinnati past the
"We need to stand togethoffice of Rep. Steve Chabot, er," Ventura said. "We need to
R-Ohio, and then held a rally say, ' President Bush, you
on the steps of the National need 19 welcome Latinos."' ·
Unde'rground
Railroad
Freedom Center as part of the
nationwide protest billed as
"A Day Without Immigrants."
There also were rallies in
Cleveland, Columbus, Tiffin
and in Dayton where 550
(lemonstrators
marched
around the Federal Building
downtown and then to a rally
at a nearby church. A half
dozen neo:Nazis, surrounde~
by police officers, hurled
insults at the protesters as
they walk.ed by.
.
Solano
of
Estabali
Cincinnati said he . took off
work at a call center to auend
the CinCinnati march.
The Ariel-Dater Hall
"We care about this country · 428 Sec. Av~.
OH
and do everything for this

BY JAMES HANNAH

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

~arria9e CEnrlcfrment Seminar
with Tony &amp; Beverly Rezendes
May 5th - 6:30 - includes Spaghetti dinner
May 6th - 9:30am - 4:30pm w/cot;ninental
breakfapt • Soup Lunch
$15 pe r '' ''non
~'-' o I
/ //
~"" Sunday May 7r.h ~
·
-

0

Worship Sc!VICC 10 am::::Guest Speakers
Tony &amp; Beverly ~

Rezcndc:L ~

~~''""'

.

WE ME ITMTitlS ANEW DETAUII BUIIIESI
ITMTM MAY liT, FOR THE liT WEBI WE ME
CORG TU GIIE AZO% IICOIM.

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Middleport, OH
For info Call 740-992-6249

BINGS CAR DETAILI

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The Daily Sentinel
,.

PageA6

NATION • WORLD

Tuesday, May 2, ~oo6

AND

LAURAN NEERGAARD
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

'

WASHINGTON - The
govetnmen! forecasts massive disruptions if bird flu or
some other super-strain of
influenza arises, with as
much as 40 percent of the
national work force off the
job, but it doesn' t foresee
closing U.S. borders to fight
the spread, · according to a
draft of the national response
plan obtained Monday by
The Associated Press.
An ouibreak could lead the
government to limit international flights , quarantine
exposed travelers and otherwise restrict movement in.
and around the country.
But a complet;; shutdown
of the border would ' not be
likely, nor would it do more
than slow th e pandemic's
spread . by a few weeks,
according to the plan that is
being finalized by Bush .
administration officials for
release Wednesday at t~e
White House.
"While we will consider
all options to limit the spread
of a pandemic virus, we recognize complete border closure would be difficult to
enforce, present foreign
affairs complications and
have significant negative
social and economic consequences," the 228-page drati
report says.
Pandemics can strike when
the easy-to-mutate influenza
virus shifts to a strain that
people have never experienced, something that has
happened three times in the
past century. The government is preparing . for a
worst-case scenario of up to
2 million deaths in the
United States.
It's impqssi.ble to predict
when the next pandemic will
strike, or how great its toll
might be. But concern is rising that the Asian bird flu·,

.

called the H5N I strain,
might lead to one if it eventually starts spreading easily
from person to person.
So far, .H5N I has struck
more than 200 people since
2003, killing about half of
them .. Virtually all the victims caught it from close
contact with infected poultry
or droppings.
The plan says preparedness for· a pandemic could
take years, and so significant
steps must be taken immediately across all ,levels of government and the private sector to protect national security, the economy and the
basic functioning of soc iety.
The report aims to energize the private sector, noting that 85 percent of the
systems that are vital to society, such as food production,
medicine and financi,al services, are privately run.
"While a pandemic will
not damage power lines,
banks or computer networks,
it has the potential ultimately
to threaten all critical infrastructure by its impact on an
organization's
human
resources , by removing
essential personnel from the
workplace for weeks or
months, " the report says.
Not only would sick workers stay home, but so would
anyone who caring for ill
family members, under quarantine because of possible
exposure to the flu or taking
care of children when
schools shut down . The
same could go for anyone'
who simply feels safer at
home.
·
Included in the report's
advice for eJ:llployers: Have
workers remain at least three
feel apart or otherwise limit
face-to-face contact to limit
the flu's spread, incl~ding by
workmg from home or substituting teleconferences for
office meetings.
The report envisions possible . breakdowns in public
order and says governors

might deploy
National that sealing the U.S. border
Guard troops or request fed- would not only be impractieral troops to maintain order. cal - I. I million people
Last fall, President Bush cross the nation's 317 offi.
announced a $7. 1 billion cial ports of entry daily strategy to fight the next flu but it would only delay the
pandemic, focusing largely inevitable by a few weeks, it
on public health preparations says.
Domestically, Americans
- including plans to stockpile enough bird flu vaccine take an average of 1.1 billion
for 20 million people and trips a day - four for every
anti-flu drugs for 81 million. person.
So far, the stockpile contains
The
new . doc,ument
enough vaccine for 4 million promises that the Bu sh
·people and medication for 5 administration will create a
"toolkit" of options to help
million.
This new. report is Step 2, mayors, governors and transoutlining how every branch portation officials decide
of government would have '· what, if anj ; restric-tions on
to work together with feder- that travel. would be approa] health officials to try to priate at different stages of a
contain a pandemic and min- pandemic. It calls mandatory
ijllize Hs damage to the quarantine a last Teson, and
economy and society. By urges planners to consider,
early next. month, · govern- for example, that closing a
ment agencies are to release community would sever it
the specific steps they plan.
from the delivery of, groThe report attempts to set- .ceries and other essential
tie any turf battle within ihe
administration, saying_ the goods.
The military could .be acti- .
Department of Health and
Human Services would lead vated to enforce . travel
restrictions and deliver vacthe government's intera- cines and medicines, the
,gency ~esponse effort and
the Department of Homeland report says ..
Security would hav~ a secColleges should consider
ondary role to assist with the whether dormitories could
health response and non- be used to house or quarmimedical support.
tine the sick, and establish
If a pandemic begins mandatory sick-leave poliabroad, federal health offi- cies for anyone exposed to
cials are guaranteed to take the flu.
certain initial steps, such as
Repeatedly, the report
screening travelers arriving stresses that government
from affected areas and must provide accurate and
putting the possibly infected timely information to citiinto quarantine. Ship and zens, who could either help
plane captains already are or · hinder ·flu's s~read
required to report certain on- through their own actions.
board illnesses upon arrival, , "1)le collective response
but crews would be trained of 300 million Americans
to take such steps as putting will significantly influence
a S[\rgical mask on a cough- the shape of the pandemic
ing traveler. ·
and its medical , social and
With no border restric- economic outcomes," the
tions, pandemic influenza report says. '.'Institutions in
would arrive in the United danger of becoming overStates within two months of whelmed will rely on the
an outbreak abroad, the doc- voluniarism and sense of
ument estimates. But·models civic and humanitarian duty
of influenza' s spread suggest of ordinary Americans."

cross
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

TOLEDO
Investigators say
stab
wounds on the chest of a
nun slain in a hospital ,
chapel in 1980 formed an
ups1de-down cross, a symbol that an expert on
Roman Catholic· law and
the occult testified Monday
has been used in satanic
worship.
·
According to traditio~ ,
St. Peter asked to be crucified on an inverted cross
because he believed he
didn't deserve to die in the
same manner as Jesus, said
the Rev. Jeffrey Grob ,
associate vicar for canonical services in the Chicago
archdiocese. But the same
symbol also has been used
to mock the Catholic reli gion, he said.
"Any way you look at it,
it's an affront to God ," he
said.
The
Rev.
Gerald
Robinson, 68, i-s accused
of killing Sister Margaret
Ann Pahl, 71, in a hospital
chapel the· day before
a
significant
Easter,
Catholic holy day that is
part of three days of services, Grob said.
Grob sa id only a priest,
nun or seminary student
would understand the significance of the inverted
cross and other · aspects of
the crime scene, including
a small streak of blood on
the nun's forehead that
could have been made by
someone forming the sign

BY H. JOSEF HEBERT

negative.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Another Senate staffer, who
spoke on condition of
WASHINGTON - Senate anonymity because the senator
Majority Leader Bill Frist, · was among those who have
under pressure frorn business been pushing the GOP energy
leaders, retreated Monday from package, said voters know that
a plan that would have used a with gas costing more than $3 a ,
tax increase on oil companies gallon the rebate likely will pay ,
and other businesses to fund a for only a couple of tanks of
$100 gaSoline rebate for mil- gas.
·
lions of motorists.
"It's probably one fill-up for
, Frist,
the ·Tennessee a Sequoia," added the aide,
Republican; had ,proposed an referring to the Toyota SUV .
accounting change that would that gets 15 miles to the gallon
have required oil companies in city driving.
to pay more taxes oll their
But Frist said the rebate "will
inventory of crude as a way to help people who are emptying
pay the one-time rebate which therr wallets at the pump....
GOP leaders rolled out last We've got to help those wbo
week as they scrambled to
feeling pain '" as quickly as
find ways to ease public anger possible." Single taxpayers
over soaring gasoline prices.
earning up to $145,950 and ·
In a statement, Frist said he married couples earning up to ·
will still push the rebate, but $218,950 would get t)le rebate .'
abandoned the accounting in August under the Frist prochange m1d said the Senate posal.
:.
The Energy Department
Finance Committee planned a
hearing on the issue in the reported Monday .that the avernear future.
age cost of regular grade gaso- ·
Frist gave no indication line nationwide had increased ·
how the rebate, estimated to to $2.92 a gallon with many :
cost about $1 0 billion, will be p311s of the country showing
paid for, although he said he prices at more than $3 a gallon. ·
still planned to "find a way to
The tax accounting change
bring our proposals to the involving inventories was the
Senate floor for a vote."
most substantial tax hit
The rebate proposal, mean- Congress has been seriously ·
while, . seemed to have little considering in response to the
appeal among motorists who· huge oil industry profits at the ·
would benefit
time of soaring costs at the
Aids to severd] Republican pump. The change, applying
senators, including some who only to five of the largest dil
support the proposal, said companies, had been approved
Monday they have received by the Senate,., but faced strong
generally negative feedback opposition in the House.
·
from the public in telephone
Oil companies waged an
calls and e-mails.
intense lobbying effort to block
''There· are some who say the change.
this is a Band-Aid and they
Rex Tillerson, chairman of
want a real solution ..... There . Exxon Mobil Corp., at an enerare people who say, 'Do you. gy conference Monday, 'called
think I can be satisfied so eas- it "nothing more than a backily,"' said Don Steward, an door windfall profits tax" and a
aide to Sen. John Cornyn, R- "very dangerous and very
Texas. He said almost all of poorly thought out step to
the comments received about take." The change was estirnatthe rebate - which Comyn ed to increase taxes for the five .
has chamcterized as "a theatri- major oil companies by $4.3
cal response" - have been billion over five years.

are

..

BY M.R. KROPKO
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CLEVELAND - At least
three Ohio cities went t:O court
Monday seeking to block a
new state law that prohibits
them and other municipalities
from requiring police officers,
firefighters and other employees to live in the city limits.
At issue are_home rule powers that Akron, Youngstown ·
and Cleveland say guarantee
their right to set residency
·
requirements.
The law, which went Into ·
effect Mom~ay, generally pro- ·
hibits imposing residency
requirements, exempting parttime employees and volunteers.
Sen. Tim, Grendell, the
Geauga County Republican
who wrote the bill, said he
expected the legal challenges
and predicted the · Ohio
Supreme Court eventually will
have to ·decide whett\er the
Legislature !las authority over
municipalities on setting resi-

funds both deter!orated in past year
AP ECONOI;11CS WRITER

WASHINGTON The
trustees for the government's
t:Wo biggest bene.fit programs
said Monday that the trust fund
'for Social Security will be
depleted in 2040, a year earlier
than expected, while Medicare
will exhaust its trust fund just
12 years from now.
The · annual report showed
deterioration in the financial
condition of both programs
although the problems in
Medicare were depicted as far
more serious because of the
skyrocketing costs for health
care.
A year ago, the depletion of
the Social Security trust fund
had .been projected to occur in
2041 , one year later than the
current estimate, and the
Medicare hospital insurance
fund had been forecast to last
until 2020, two years longer
than the current estimate.
The trustees, who include
the head of the Social Security
Administration and three
members of President Bush's
c;:abinet, painted a sober
assessment of the health of the
two programs in advance cif
tile .looming retirements of 78
r(Jillion baby·boomers.
' They stated that the projected long-term growth rates for
b.oth Social Security and
Medicare are not "sustainable
under current · financing
'
" ·
ammgements.
: The trust funds contain the
equivalent of · government
IOUs. To raise the actual cash
to meet obligations, the' government must borrow more
r(loney from the public by
i~suing marketable Treasury
securities, raise taxes or cut
sr,;nding in other programs. .
Bush tried last year to overhaul Social Security with the
introductiop· of private investment accounts for younger
workers but t])e idea went
n:owhere
in
Congress.
Democrats attacked the Bush
program as a hidden effort to
cut future benefits.
In this 'year's State of the
Union address, Bush asked
Congress to create a bipartisan
t

•

'
commJss1on
to study entitle- ed return for the trust fund's
ment reform. But even this government bonds.
modest proposal has not genFor Medicare, the faster
erated much interest, in part exhaustion of the trust fund
because lawmakers do not occurred because of rising
want to address entitlement prices for hospital care and
reforms in a congressional greater utilization by sick peoelection year.
ple of the program.
The trustees estimated that
Treasury Secretary John
Snow, the chaiiman of the in 2040 when the Social
trustees group, said the new Security trust fund is depleted,
report depicted "a looming fis- it will be able to pay 74 percal crisis ' as the baby boom cent of benefits from the taxes
generation moves into retire- imposed·on current workers.
ment" and he urged Congress
The trustees estimated that
the monthly Part B premium
to move forward.
''The serious concerns raised that Medicare beneficiaries
by the trustees' reports demand must pay to cover insurance
the attention of America's pol- for doctor visits will have to
icy-makers and the public," rise by around 11 percent next
Snow said.
·
year to $98.20 after an increase
But Democrat~ charged that , this year of 12 percent. ,
Sens. Edward Kennedy, Dthe administration was using
the trustees reports to try to Ma~s. , and Debbie Stabenow,
create an air of crisis to make D-Mich., said in a statement
radical changes to the two ben- that the projected increase for
efit programs.
next year; 1f it comes about,
''There is no crisis," said would mark the fourth doubleRep. Pete Stark, D-Calif. digit advance in Medicare pre"There remains plenty of time miums.
·
They said they would introto mend rather than erid
Medicare."
, duce legislation to cap future
While the depletion of the increases to the amount the
reserves built up over past Consumer Price Index rises in
years is projected to occur in a given year. Last year, conjust 12 years for Medicare and sumer pnces rose 3.4 pencent.
34 years for Social Security, · The trustees report reduced
both programs will face the ·estimate for the cost of the
financing issues much sooner new drug prescription benefit
at the point that the amount in Medicare, which went into
.paid out each year exceeds the effect this year, by around 20
amount the g9vemment col- percent, attributing part of this
. lects to f urid them.
reduction to the fact that peoFor Medicare, that occurred ple are signing up for less costfor the year of 2004. However, ly drug plans.
Democratic critics said the
the program is projected to be
· in the black again this year funding shortfalls for Social
before crossing over to paying Security and Medicare s.hould
out more than it takes in per- be viewed in the context of
manently in 2006 and the' Bush's drive to make ihe tax
cuts of his first term permayears following that.
For Social Security, the nent.
Sen. Jack Reed, D-R!., said
point at whicQ the program
that
if Congress approved
wiU pay out more in benefits
Bush's
request to make his tax
than it takes in will occur in
20 17, the trustees projected, cuts permanent and enacted a
the, same as in last year's permanent fix for the alternative minimum t,ax, which was
report.
The one-year faster deple~ designed to tax·the welllthy but
tion of trust funds in the case is falling on more middle-class
of Social Security octurred tax payers, that would reprebecausy the government esti- sent a cumulative revenue
mated a slightly lower average shortfall equal to 2 pencent of
of 2. 9 pencent rather than 3 the totltl economy over, a 75percent for the inflation-adjust-' year period.

·eed help

·ngweight?
the Holzer Center for Comprehensive
Wejght Loss wiJl be conducting
an informational presentation
for individuals in Gallia County
and,surrounding areas who are
~isted in learning about bariatric surgery.
The presentation
take place on
May 4th at 6 p.m. at the Holiday Inn
located
at 577 State Route
7 North in
'
.
·~alli)liOlis, Ohio. Those who wish to attend
'iufornrtation.al presentation will learn about
oo1:n preoperative and postoperative issues
pllr.tdll1lgbariatric surgery and the necessary
~:tuirerne1ntsin order to be considered as a
qualified candidate for bariatric surgery.
Attendees
will also
learn how the actual
'
'
surgery is conducted and the risk factofll
involved.' There is no need to pre-register
for this presentation.
For more information regarding
the presentation .on bariatric surgery,
or to schedule a consultation,
'
·contact the Holzer Center
for
Comprehensive Weight Loss at

AP Photo

Defense lawyer Alan Konop point at the Rev. Gerald Robinson as he cross examines Toledo
Police Cold Case Detective Sgt. Steve Forester, backgroGnd, during Robinson 's murder trial
Monday, in Toledo. Robinson, a Roman 'Catholic priest, is accused of killing a nun in a hospitai
chapel over Easter weekend 26 years ago.
of the cross on her head.
"You're taking a person
who's devoted t.o God and
in every aspect, it 's a
mockery,"
Grob
said,
referring to the wounds
and marks on the body.
"These aren ' t random
acts."
In addition to the . stab
wounds on her chest, previous prosecution witnesses have testified that the

nun's ' body . was displayed
in a ritualistic fashion with
her arms and legs straight.
Grob, who reviewed
photos of the crime scene
and Sister Pahl 's body,
also sa id an altar cloth
placed over her chest
before she was· stabbed
could be viewed as a symbol of sacrifice.
Under defen se questioning, Grob acknowledged

dency rules.
''There's no basis for these
lawsuits. Unfortunately these
mayors are wasting taxpayers'
money," Grendell said. ''The
Ohio Constitution gives the
Legislature priority authority
when· it comes to rules and ·
laws
governing
public
employees."
.
About 125 cities and l3 villages have some sort of
requirement for employees to
live either within city limits or
within a certain distance, such
as within the county, according
to the Ohio Munictpal League.
,Tom George, president of
the municipal league and
mayor of Lakewood, a
Cleveland suburb without a
residency law, said he supports ·
Cleveland's ·challenge and
e~pe'cts several additional
ClUes to go to court.
Lawsuits were filed in .
Summit,
Mahoning and
Cuyahoga counties.
The new law allows local
laws that can require an
employee to reside either in

nun before she was pronounced dead.
Prosecutors
showed
jurors a 90-minute video of
Robin son's interview with
police just after he was
.arrested in April 2004 . In
it, Robinson said he woke
up and had finished showering when he receiv ~.;d a
phone call about Sister
Pahl's death.
During the interview
with Tom Ros s, an investigator with the Lucas
County prosecutor' s office,
Robinso n maintained that
he was nowhere near the
crime scene.
"I was not there," he
said.
Robinson also totd Ross
that the hospital's other
chaplain, the Rev. Jerome
Swiatecki , accused him of
committing the murder,
Robin so n said he was
stunned when he walked
into the sacr isty and
Swiatecki turned around
and said, "Why did you do
this ?" Robinson said he
did not know why the
other prie st pointed the
finger at him.
At one point in the
video, Ro ss left the room
and Robinson folded his
hands and began speaking
in a barely audible voice.
He whispered the word
"s ister," out the re st of
what he said was unclear.
l;le then prayed again
with his head bowed, at
one point saying, "Oh my
Jesus." _
Prosecutors , who likely
will wrap up their case this

•

chairperson of the board in.
1982, 1983 and 2001- 2003 .
She also served a·s the . board
secretary from 1992-1997
and in 2005.
Programs of the MR/DD
Board include Carleton
S.c hool and Meigs Indu strie s,
located in Syracuse. Board
Chairperson, Father Walter
Heinz expressed hi s appreciation to Rice for her years of
service to children and adults

'tr':

.

&lt; ,..

'

.

PlllnSWIIIII
wra· fnml&amp; CHir IHI
Submitted photo

,

Amy and Amber Norville purchase chicken from FFA treasurer Grant Phillips and FFA Advisor
Butch Mitchell.

Racine Sou them FFA participates in flower festival
RACINE - The Racine
Southern FFA Chapter participated
in
Saturday's
Racine Area Community,
Organization's flower festival.
The chapter
~ntered a ~oat which was
Ldorned w1th hay bales,
FFA members, ·dogs, lambs,
Racine Southern FFA banners, and flowers raised in
the school greenhouse. The
•

•
•',,

.... .
:~

..

- . . .. -.

week. are heavily leaning
on the chaplain's letter
opener they say was used
to kill Sister Pahl and the
bloody altar cloth, which
was found in the . chapeL
So far, no witnesses have
placed Robinson near the
chapel at the time of the·
killing , and DNA evidence
hasn't linked him to scene,.
either.
·
Robinson and Sister
Pahl, the chapel caretaker,
worked closely at · Mercy
Hospital. He pre sided over
the funeral of the nun , who·
also had been choked.
He was a suspect early
on because hi s living quar- .
ters were near the chapel
but he wasn't charged until
two years ago when
authorities reopened the
case.
The pro secutor's office·
received a letter about a
woman 's claims that she
was molested by priests as
a child. Among the names
she
mentioned
was .
Robinson. Police were,
unable ,r.o substantiate her
allegations of sexual abuse .·
Toledo pol ice detective
Steve Forre ster testified '
Monday that he spoke with
the woman who wrote the
letter. She told him that ·
"one . of the things we,
should look · for is an
upside down cross on the
victim 's ·chest," Forrester
said. Inve stigators hadn ' t
di scovered the pattern
prior to that.
Robinson could get life.
in prison if convicted of
murder.

Rice ·honored for senice

SYRACUSE- Nora Rice
of Middlepo-rt recently· completed another term as a
member of the Meigs County
Board of Mental Retarc;ation
and
Developmental
Disabilities (Meigs County
Board of MR/DD) .
Rice served on the MR/DD
1968- 1973 ,
' board from
1977-1983, 1990-1997 and
1999-2006. Durin g those
years she served as . the vice

'

•

savs

the county in which the
employee works or in an adjacent county.
"This is another attempt by
the leadership in this state to
usurp cities' authority and
quiet the voice of the people,"
Akron Mayor Don Plusquellic
said.
Cleveland Mayor Frank
Jackson ·also has been outspoken about his city's determination to protect its home rule
powers.
.
"The issue for us is the
(Cleveland) charter is our constitution and the people voted
to have residency as part of
our constitution," Jackson
said.
He said the city intends to
continue enforcing its residency law.
·
"This is about home rule to
Submitted photo
us. Residency is just what has
Thf!
Rev.
Fr.
Walter
Heinz,
right,
and
Steve
Beha,
executive
director
of
Carleton
Schools/Meigs
brought it to the forefront. If
the residents of the city of Industries, presented a plaque to Nora Rice for her ,many years of service as a member of the
·
Cleveland decide to change Meigs County Board of Retardation.
that, I would abide by that and
l would enforce that," Jackson
said.
·

will

...

he had never before ' se·en a
crime scene and that there
were doctors and nurses
who may have changed
Sister Pahl's po sition. He
also agreed when defen se
lawyer Jvhn Thebes said
the blood on Sister Pahl's
forehead didn' t nece ssarily
mean someone made the
sign of the cross.
Several doctor s and
nurse s tried to save the

2, 2006

Cities chaUenge new residency
law on constitutional grounds

Sociai ·S~c~rity and Medicare trust
Bv MARTIN CRUTSINGER

Tuesday, May

to

BY JOHN SEEWER'

proposed $100 rebate check

PageA7

LOCAL • .STATE

The Daily Sentinel

AP Exclusive: Draft of pandemic plan sees· Senate GOP backs offfrom :
oil
tax
increase
to
pay
for
·
massive disruptions but no closing of borders
BY NEDRA PICKLER

•

.

.

-

float took first place honors
in the parade overall.
Tile
Southern
Band
Boosters al so partnered
with the Southern FFA and
served chicken dinners as a
fundraiser. . The FFA was
responsible for- the chicken
and the band provided the
side · dishes. Besides the
chicken dinners, the chapter
sold flowers , perennials.
.

I

and vegetable s sets.
'
FFA report er Whitney
Wol fe- Riftle saiu both the
!lower and chi cken dinner
sales were great.. It was
noted that locally grown
flowers and plants are· still
available at the hi gh school.
Advisor Butch , Mitchell at
949-2611 , extension 211 8
can . be contacted for, more
infnrmarion.

Quality Gazebos
&amp; Lawn Furniture

with developmental disabilitie s.
Also honoring Rice was·
Carleton.
School/Meigs
Industries Executive Director
Steve Beha. She was presented 'fifh a plaque commemorating her service and
commitment to the enhancement of the li ves of children.
ancj adult s with developmen-'
tal disabilities and their families.

�Page As

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel ,

. Tuesday, May 2, 2006

.

'

Omo PICKING GOVERNOR CANDIDATES IN SCANDAL-PLAGUED YEAR

Wellston baseball wins TYC Ohio crown, B2

oppo ne nt Ken Bl ac kwe ll
has never had a positi ve
me ssage, " Petro said whil e
COLUMBUS - In one
campai g nin g last wee k.
of three state primarie s
"When people make ,. an
Tuesday, voters wi II pick
investment. they ' re progovernor 's candidates in
moting bu sinesses."
battleground Ohio, where
The winner of th e prima. the level of dissatisfaction
ry is likely to ,f ace
displayed for ruling , scan Democrati c U.S. Rep. Ted
dal -embroiled Republicans
Stric kla nd in November:
will fore shadow prospects
Strickl and is viewed as
for a political sea cha nge in
the Democrats' best chance
November.
·in 16 years to regain some
North
Carolin a
and
control o ver a s tate governindiana also have primaries
ment where all three
Tuesday - including govbranches are controlled by
ernors, congress me mbers
·Republic ans.
and an election for di stri ct
His campaign, which has
attorney in Durham County,
raised more than either
N .C., where vote rs will ·
GOP candidate, has been
decide w~ether to replace
energized by the close
'the prosec utor in the Duke
re semblance
of
Ohio
University rape case.
Republi can s' woe s to those
But it is in Ohio, a bell unfolding at the national
wether state that decided
level : accusation s of govtbe 2004 presidential elecernment perks tied to gention , where the Rep ubi ican
erous political donations,
party has been beset ~y
administration
officials
AP Photo
scandal and that politicians Ohio Attorney General Jim Petro, Republican candidate for ·governor, speaks to supporters at being dragged into courtare looking for signs of the Republican party headquarters in Delaware County Saturday. Voters in Oh io, a bellwether rooms and the ac companyvoter di ssatisfaction .
' state that decided the 2004 presidential election , head to the polls Tuesday for a primary ing dropoff in the populari· The
race
for
the expected to foreshadow prospects for a national political sea change in November.
ty of the g uy at the helm.
Republican nomination for
Republicans, meanwhile,
'
Ohio governor has been go ve rnor fn Ohio and is report free golf outing s and are coping with scandal have targeted the House
painted as party outsider am o ng a handful of guber- gifts.
from th e investigation into seat Strickland leaves open
In the rare -coin ca se, a lobbyi st Jack Abramoff, as one of its be st shots
:Vs. party insider: outside r natori al candidates poised
draw
from
the trial is expected before which
;Kenneth Blackwell , th e to
has
en snared nationa ll y to
gain
a
secretary of state who De mocrati c Pa rty ' s typical- No ve mber fo r the ·coin Republican Rep . Bob NeY Democrati c . congressional
dealer, Tom Noe, a prodi - of Ohio .
Sj:rved in the Reagan ly loyal bl ack ba se.
spot. They have been
Petro, who lagged in helped by the fact the
administration and ca rries a
Blackwell 's ads have al so giou s GOP fundrai ser and
Bible to e vent s. agaigst hit on the state 's biggest contributor charged with polls published Sunday, has · Democrats ' leading candiinsider Attorney G~ neral scandal s, seeking to taint embezzling $1 million from hammered Blackwell as a date mu ~; t run as a write.·in
Petro with connections to a a controversial $50 million hypocrite who opposes due to a filing mi stake .
Jim Petro .
Blackwell' s P.rominence state inve stment in rare state inve stment in coins abortion and gambling National Democrats and
as a leading black voi ce in coin s that went awry and to and illegally funneling while some of hi s niultimil- Republi cans have spent
to
President lion dollar stock portfolio· roughly $1 million in . the
the GOP criUid be pivotal to tie him to Gov. Bob Taft, · $45 ,000
Republi can s amid the state who pleaded no contest to Bush ' s re-el ection cam- is invested in those inter- race, more than th ey have
for any primary in the past
ests.
and national scandal s. He is four ethics violations last paign.
"I would only say that my decade.
Nationally, Republicans
the fir st black to run for year involving a failure to

,High school tournament drawin gs, B3
Reds blast Cardinals. B8

Tuesday, May 2, 2006

COLUMBUS (AP) - On
the mayor 's Jist of Columbus'
"worst of the worst" neighborhood eyesore s are II
blighted properties owned by
the city he leads.
A study of Franklin County
records found that Columbus
'ranks second amon g owners
of the targeted properties
cited in February by Mayor
Michael
Coleman, The
Columbus Dispatch reported
Monday.
Coleman didn 't mention in
his speech, which pledged to
track down O\\'ners and press
them' to make repairs or give
up th~ property, that the city
owned 12 of the' 376 blighted
properties.'
It since has sold one, but
still ranks behind only
Stillwater Asset Backed Fund,
which own s 22. The New
York-based investment portfolio involved in financing the
purchase and. resale of hundreds of Columbus properties.
The city acquired the houses and vacant lots with the
intention of cleaning them up,
selling them, or demoli shing
them. But it must come up
with the money, Coleman's
spoke~ man Mike Brown said.
111e city's demolition budget
last year was $100.000 . .
Colum.bus owns more than
I ,600 properties in Franklin
County and others in neighboring counties. They range
from the city's new fire station on Cleveland Avenue to
the boarded-up, vacant .houses
on the "Worst of the Worst"
list.

Lady Eagles soar p3st Miller: .10-4· Meigs blasts
· BY BRYAN WALTERS

locALScHEDULE ·
GALLIPOLIS- A ~ le ol upcoming coRege

and high echOO va11ity sporting wents _,volvlng
t&amp;am!l from Gai Ma, Meig! and Mason cbunt~a .

Todev'a gampa

Baseball
lr?nton at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Atv~r Valley at Eastern , 5 p.m.
Wahema at Duval , 5 p.m.
South Gallia at Chesapeake. 5 p.m.
Southe rn at Wellston, 5 p.m.
Huntington St. Joe at Poi nt Pleasant, 5
p.m.
SOftball

• Eastern at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Parkersburg Catholic at Wahama, 5 p.m.
Southern at Wellston, 5 p.m.
Track end Field
River Valley at Chesapeake Relays, 4 :30
p.m.
Point Pleasant at Ripley, TB~
South Gallia at -Coal Grove, 5 p.m.
Southern at Eastern. 5 p.m.
Meigs at Oak Hill, 4:30p.m.
Tennis
Vinton County at Gallla Acade my, 4:30
p.m.
Point Pleasant girls at Wahama, 4 p.m.
. Wednesday's garDgs

Baseball
Fairland at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Sissonville at Point Pleasar_tt, 5:30p.m.
River Valley at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Softball
Fairland at Gallia Academy. 5 p.m.
River Valley at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Wahama at Wirt County, 5 p.m.
Vinton County at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Thur~day 'a

Tournament

,1\CI - · 100.17
.-EP -33.16
"kzo - 57.01
Ashland Inc. - 65.58
BU - 13.99
Sob . Evans - 28.84
Borgwamer - 60.40
CENX - 48.57
C:hamplon -· 6.05
.
Charming ShoPs - 13.90
City Holding - 36.09
Col - 57.09
DG -17.21 .
DuPont - 44.20
Federal Mogul - .35
USB 30.95
Gannett - 54.40
General Electric - 34.39
GKNLY- 5~55
Harley Davidson - 50.37
JPM - 44.78
Kroger - 20.35

vs. Buffalo (at Buffalo), 5 p.m.

Wahama

Bueball
River Valley at Southern, 5 p.m.
Fairland at F»oint Pleasant, 5:30p.m.
South Gallia at Nelsonville· York. 5 p.m.

Softball
River VaJiey at Southern, 5 p.rn .
South Gallla at Nelsonville-York, s p.m.
Track and Field
Point Pleasant at Winfield, 4 p.m.
South Gallia at Nelsonville-York, 5 p.m.

T8nnla

BASEBALL
TVC Ohio Division

Equity Rates IGtiC!
.•

\

i

·-

TVC Hocking Division

•

'

lOll

I

'

•

11111l!.WI

Pl'lrt:r&gt;I&lt;KJC II.Jt.t•/
lnler&lt;'\1 R.Jtr

• Discounted Rate First 6 Months!
·('Then fluctuates with the Wall Street Journal Prime Rate.J

II

• NO Closing Costs!

I·
'

~m.l DiK"IOM.ir~ "tii1;Jl'j ff'?'Jt-.,X:'l' r::ny rtJ ~~~'!-- No:/(.IQ\.I~ CO'St$ ~{O,'"(ll'ft'~ ~ ~U~(/ JtT'tfliT'4ot"fl S({j'JXXl, Cll' «rU'.t' oi'J an 1!-MtnQf.-{l'oi?N &amp;rt !'(lt~lt" ~~"yie..Yl lo',~
htmr..IU~I IO, ( ~~ (&lt;fi i'Qf ~~ w&gt;:s N~ ~~ S¢1 (If) W\IP ,Y!fU't'Nf!N't"?ft roce 1_.,'1tl ,,-~ '•'llt' W•IO:'o ~ l~!Jt,

"....m 011-.ld"ii:cu"t ~ W~}lfR f(-. &lt;llm:i"i~.., \l..A'If~:( t..ttJ ,\'ill~ W;,~l ~

""'f\iJI

J:drnJdc~d.~ Fettrl;.Wff.W l:) ~,r., P~opt'OI"11 ~Hy~ct '~orYf. cailoon~~ ~)){th~(!'1.fdltl:!:~'&gt;'r' !&lt;!"t v.~ n.:u.xfS'd l ~ ""g;J.~ ~SOle: N!n.~~o.¥
INI'!~I(\'"\MJJIX'w~ "'-v ~ ·~ ~J(. t5C~yt·M ~ht \V'I ~ lnifMI Mil"frruY'r~t1 ef S S.COO~{Q~ ~300~»•1r&lt;'l.,lrl·~;n;.,:n;~ ~· r~~~fl."'!d$10.nt'7t'~d 5
.n.r.n:n~m:.nn UA•mvn!O-It'l :a ~ .-s fl;(14 f&gt;r0otoiftll"!$$..t3'\"e ...., no~ ~ U:l«l to,reot ~ f')f!rl'lf''~'"""vt.~~~tUrq~ettv:vct ·.~
t.~le

.

·

·

.

Ctrm,OI' a rm!oo

~D!t"JI,'((' ("o":f /d!r\.YYY:&lt;l, )'t

•

Lady Rockets

'

BWALTER S@MYD~I LYTRIBUNE .COM

BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS - Ati
eight-run fifth inning enabled ·
host Eastern to claim a I 0-4
victory
over Tri- Valley
Conference
Hocking
Division opponent · Miller .
Monday at
Donald
Jackson '
Field.
The Lady
Eagles (612, 2-8 TYC
Hocking)
sent a dozen
batters to the
plate in that
·pivotal
frame, using
four
hits,
four walks,
two errors
and a hit
batsman to
their advantage in turning a 3· 2
deficit into a
seJJen-run
cushion.
Bissell
F r 0 m
there, Green and White ·
·starter Brittany Bissell took
care of the rest, allowing just
two hits, no walks ·and ·no
earned runs over the final two
innings.
Bissell went the distance,
surrendering three earned
runs, st;ven hits and seven
walks in the complete game
victory. The junior hurler also
struck out II in the decision.
EHS pounded .out II hits
and five earned runs off of
MHS starter Malika Spires,
who walked seven and struck
out one over six innings. The
Lady Falcons (3-10) fell to 27 in Hocking play.
· Katie
Wilfong
paced
Bryan Watter8/pholo
. Eastern with three hits, while
Bissell· and Danielle Phillips Eastern's Kelsey Holter scores the eventual game-winning run during the fifth inning of
Monday's TVC Hocking finale against Mi!ler at Don Jackson Field in Tuppers Plains. EHS won
Please ... SCNtr. 83
the game by a 104 score.

. WELLSTON - Meigs isn't
going to win the Tri-Yalley
Conference Ohio Division agl\in
- but the Lady Marauders are
sure making the
final days bf the
title race interesting.
Amy Barr hit
a two-run home
run in the sixth
inning to cap a
big 5-l high
school softball
victory
over
league leading
Wellston
on
Monday.
. Lady
The
Rockets fell to
7-2 in the TYC
Ohio and now
need to win at
Belpre to claim
a share of the
title
with
Vinton County,
which
has
already
wrapped up the league portion
of the schedule.
. Meigs (13-6), which has won
the Ohio Division the past .two
years, improved to 6-3 in the
conference.
The two clubs split their season series. Wellston was a 2-1
winner in Rock Springs in early
.
April. •
Joey Haning held Wellston in
check and surrendered just one
run oil three hits. She struck out
10 and did not issue a walk. Erin
Sturgill suffered the loss .
Barr added a· single to go
along with her round-tripper.
Melia Whan went 2-for-4 while
· Chalsie Manley, Whitney Smith
and Cassi Whan also hit safely
for the winners.
Amber Lambert,
Becky
Perkins and Audra Milliken had

Please sH Blasts, B3

•••
•••
•••••••••••
•••••••••••••••
•••••••••••
9-0
Fed Hock •
••
••
Trimble
7-3
Miller
5-4
• . COED FLAG FOOTBALL · ••
Southern
4-6
••
Eastern
4-6
••
••
Waterford
0-10
•• TEAMS BEING ACCEPTED! ••
SEOAL
••
••
:1 Gallipolis*
8-2
Special guests will be players fro m the
Warren
7-2
••
•
Marietta
6-3
•
Huntington Heroes Arena League Football Team
•
Jackson
5-5
•
•
Logan
2-8 ·
••
•
Athens
1-9
•
•
••
••
SOFTBALL
••
••
TVC Ohio Division
••
••
•••
8-2
Vinton Co*
Wellston
7-2
••
••
Meigs
6-3
Arlexander
4-5
••
•• ••
Belpre
· 2-6
••
Nels-York
0-9
••
••
TVC Hocking Division '
••
•
•
Trimble*
l 0-0
••
Eastern's Kyle Gordon (6) rounds third and heads home trying •
Water.ford
8-2
to score during the. fifth inning of Monday's TVC Hocking con- •
Fed Hock
4-5
••
test against Miller In Tuppers Plains.
••
Southern
3-7
, Miller .
2-7
••
•
2-S
Eastern
•
Eagles
drop
pair
to
••
••
SEOAL
••
7
•
·Miller
in
extra
innings
••
Warren*
9-l
•
•
Logah
7-3
•
•
Marietta
5-5
• , Saturday, June 10, 2006· Begins'ith.m. ·· . ·
••
Jackson
5-5
•
•
Gallipolis
3-7
• .$175 entry fee perteal!l (Maximum roster: 8meQ &amp; 8women)
TUPPERS PLAINS ••
•
Athens
1-9
Apparently Eastern baseball
•
• .HWJtingtonHeroe$playersavailableforautogfaphsfrom 9a.m.to II a.m.
playing against Tri••·
•
* - denotes champion enjoys
Yalley Conference Hocking
•• Rain or shine -Double Elimination
·
foe Miller. It just
•
doesn't care for the results.
••
Must
be
18
or
older.
to
playLimited.numb'erofteams
•
(11-1.1,
4-6
The
••
CoNTACT US
••
TVC Hockmg) dropped a pair
Point Pleasant High School, Mason CoWlty Career Center&amp;. Omance fields •
of extra-inning decisions
Gerlach
•
Shaffer
OVP Scorellne
•
·•• Pick-up entry packet at the P.leasant Valley Well ness Center
Monday to the Falcons (5-9,
•
5-4) by counts of 6-5 and 7-6.
Jared Bolyard went the dis•
(Meigs
The first contest, which nince for the Falcons, allow- •
Make
all
checks
p~yableto
"Pleasant
V~llty
Hospital
Foundation"
•
started back on April I0 in. ing five earned runs and eight •
•
•••
Corning and was postponed hits in the triumph.
••
For more infonnation please eall, (304) 675-4340, Ext. 1326
because of darkness, resumed
Gottke paced MHS with •
••
·in· the tenth
tied at five. three hits, while Eastern was
Brad Sherman; Sports Editor
Jordan Gottke s single in led by Cory Shaffer . and •
••
•
the bottom of· the tenth Derek Young with two •
'

.._

'

9-1
7-2
6-3
3-6
2-8
1-8

Wellston*
Alexander
Belpre
.
Me1gs
"9lnfuri Co • •
Nels-York

,·Special Adjustable Rate
Horne Eq~.ity Offer!

Local weather
· : Tuesday .. .Mostly cloudy in
Thurst:lay ... Mostly cloudy
tlie moming ...l11en becoming with a chance of showers and
j)art:Iy cloudy. A chance of thunderstorms. Highs in the
tliunderstorms. Showers likelv mid 70s. Chance of ra'in 40
in the morning ... Then a chance percent.
bf showers in the afternoon.
Thursday
nighLPartly
Highs around 70. Southwest cloudy with a chance of showwinds 10 to 15 mph. Chance of ers and thunderstorms. Lows in '
rain 60 percent.
the lower 50s. Chance of rain
Tuesday
· night... Mostly 30 percent.
cloudy in the evening .. .Then
·Friday... Mostly cloudy with
becoming partly cloudy. A a chance of showers and !hunchance of thunderstorms. A
·
chance of showers. Lows in the derstorms. Highs ·in the lower
lower 50s. Southwest winds 5 70s. Chance of rain 40 percent.
to 10 mph. Chance of rain 40
Friday
night
and
percent.
Saturday ... Mostly cloudy with
"'ed
.. , n esday ...part 1y c1ou d y. a chance of showers and ·thunHighs in the mid 70s. West derslorms. Lo~s around 50.
' winds 5 to 10 mph.
H1 ghs 111 the m1d 60s. Chance
Wednesday night... Partly' , of rm.n 50 percent.
cloudy with a slight chance of
Saturday
night:.. Mostly
showers and thunderstorms. cloudy with a chance of showLows in the lower 50s. West ers and thunderstorms. Cold
winds around 5 mph. Chance with low~ 'in the mid 40s.
of rain 20 percent.
Chance of rain 40 percent.

at Ravenswood, 4 p.m.

HS Standings

Farmers Bani&lt; Home

Ltd. - 25.55
NSC- 54.95
Oak Hill Financial
28.12
OVB- 25.30
BBT - 42.65
Peoples - 29.50
Pepsico :.... 58.17
Premier 15.50
RDS'A - 68.70
Rockwell. - 72.82
Rocky Boots - 25.44
Sears - 142.98
Wai-Mart - 45;93
Wendy's - 61.41
Worthington - 19.64
Dally stock reports are
the 4 · p.m. closing quotes
of the previous day's
transactions, provided by
Smith Financial Advisors of
Hilliard Lyons In Gallipolis.

cmea
ftball

St. Joe vs. Hannan (at Buffalo}, 5 p.m.

~ahama

Local stocks ·

'

Riverside Senior Mens' League, B2

City second-leading
owner on its
own 11Worst" list

BY JULIE CARR SMYTH
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

.

I

.

Bryon WoHer8/photo

·• Pomeroy 992.2 136
• Mason 7736400
. • Tuppers Plains 667 .3 16l

Fo

• ' Gallipolis 4462265

Hen.,_

FDIC.

• Point Pleasant Corn1ng Soon I

,

'"'

BY BRYAN WALTERS

Q

'

BI'/AlrERS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM '

I

Have you spent y~u~ life f~king care
· of others? Now zt zs zmportant to
.
.take care of yourself
·

'

.

Ea~le s

(5 p.m.-1 a.m.)

EXPP.RIENCBD .. COMPASSIONATE .. QUAI.IFIED

1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
or' 992-5287
Co.)

Dr. Craig Strafford is accepting new patients in Athens, Gallipolis, and Jackson.
Dr. Strafford, practices gynecology with a focus on:

Fax -

1-740-446-3008

E-mail .;_ sportsCmydallysentinel.com

'S ports Shiff

• Menopausal Symptoms •

CerVical Disease •

Preventive Services

To schedule an appointment, please call:
Athens: (7 40) 589-3120
Gallipolis: (740) 446-5381
Jackson: (740) 395-8801
Dire~t Line (740) 446-5065
I

I

Divi s io~

Craig Strafford, MD
Gynecology

(740) 446·234 2. 9J&lt;I. 33
bsherman@mydallytribuna.com

Bryan WaHer,s, Sports Writer

~

HOLZEf-t
~ CLINIC

Medical E:.cellcnce.
Local Carim:,

(740) 446·2342, exl. 23
bwallers0 myd aUytrlbun'e .com

Larry Crum, SportsWriter
(740) 446· 2342. ext 33
Ierum C mydallyregister.com

innin~

allowed Lester Green to score
lrom third with the gamewinning run .
Eastern's Kyle Gordon was
saddled with the .Joss, going
live innings in his re)ief effort
of starter Matt Morns.

apiece.
Game two saw the guests
pick up right where they left
off, as Gottke doubled to
leadoff . the nightcap. Gottke

Please see Drop, B2.

:

•

!
•

PLEASANTVALLEYHOSPITAL -:
•
. The Family of Professionals

!
•

I
··· · ·· ····· · · · ~· · · · ··············
······ ····

�,.
•

Page 82 ~ The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, May 2,

Tuesday, May 2,
2006

Eastern competes at Bellaire Relays
DeVIls grab No. 1 seed, Southern SPORT:::A,~~~~N~LCOM
is~~~~~~:~~~~~~~;.'~uc~~~~

PrEp ~aSEba/1 .-

'

St;luthern boys·fall to Trimble; 7~0
'

BY ScOTT WOI.FE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
GLOUSTER
Good
pitching makes for a great
defense. The Trimble Tomcats
(16-3), seeded number one in
the sectional draw Sunday,
rode to victory on the sturdy
arm of Anthony Dixon, who
posted II strikeouts and tired
a two-hit shut out against the
Southern Tornadoes Monday
night . at Glouster Municipal
Park.
Trimble rarely had much
worry in the field as they
clawed to a 7-0 win over the
Tornadoes, now 14-7 on the
season.
Trimble took a 1-0 lead in
the first on an Anthony Dixon

a 1- I fast ball over
the ri ght ~enter field fence,
the ' cure now 2-0 Trimble .
Trimble didn 't need any
more ol'fen,e, but two errors,
a hit batter, a walk to Chaz
Mohler, and a two-run Nick
Giffin single pushed the score
to 5-0. Trimble added two
insurance markers in the sixth
on three walks, a fielder's
choice, and RBI ;ingte by
Jo,h Dixon, the score 7-0.
Trimble
hitters
were
Chri stman · with a home run,
Giffin a. single, Dixon a si ngle. and Blake Fouts a si ngle.
Southe·rn hitters were Wes
Rifne and Brad Crouch.
Trimble took advantage of
eight Tornado walks in a combined effort from Patrick
mu~cled

Crouch

Riffle

rip that resulted in an error.
Matt Chri stman walked, then
with two out Ryan Nagucki
walked and Dixon came home
on an error.
In the third inning,·
Christman repeated a feat that .
he accomplished in Racine.
The bulky t~ird baseman

BY BRAD SHERMAN
~SHERMANOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

TRIMBLE 7, SOUTHERN 0
000 0

-

024

Trimble

302 x

-

740

101

Pat Johnson. Butch Marnhout (5) and J.A.
Hupp. Anthony Di~~:on and S. Barrett. W DIXon. L- Johnson .

.Wellston downs Meigs, wins TVC
Ohio crown
.
.

.

STAFF REPORT .

SPORTSII&gt;MYOAILYSENTINEL.CDM
WELLSTON - Don 't tell
Wellston
coach
Pat
Hendershott thar 13 is an
unlucky number, because he's
the
Tri-Valley
leaving
Conference on top.
His Rockets won an outright TVC Ohio crown, the
Poole
Blackston
13th all-time for the retiring
veteran coach, thanks to a 6-1
high scho.ol baseball victory . .in front of second place
over Meigs on Monday.·
Alexander. Meigs (6- 13)
Wellston (16-5) finishe s the meanwhile finishes up at 3-6
league schedule at 9-1 a game in the Ohio after winning it

outright last season.
the second inning before
Chris Comer went 3-for-3 Meigs drew even with a run
to pace the Golden Rocket of its own in the third.
bats while Alex Milliken and
It was Meigs' final run,
Casey Molihan had two hits · though, and the Rockets went
each. L.B Wilson, . J.R. on to add five more tallies.
Johnson and Jacob Walburn The Blue and Gold scored one
also hit safely.
in the third and fourth frames,
Dave Poole paced the two in the tlfth and then one
Marauders, going 2-for-4 more. in the sixth.
with a double while Clayton
Meigs is at NelsonvilteBiackston had a ·hit and the · York in makeup action today.
lo.ne Meigs RBI. Bryan
Delong also had a pair of hits
WELLSTON 8, MEIGS 1 ·
Meigs 001 000 0 - 1 5 4
in the setback.
Wellston 011 12.1 x - 6 10 2
Wellston jumped in front 1- Austin
Dunfee and Aaron Story. Tyler Gill
0 with a run in the bottom of and Zach Fisher. W -GilL L ~ Dunfee .

Trimble wins TVC Hocking, downs Lady 'Does
BY ScoTT WoLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

\.

GLOUSTER
The
Southern Lady Jomadoes (6· ,
12, 3-7) had upset' on their
mind, but the league champion
Trimble Tomcats found a way
to prevail Monday night during
girls Tri-Vattey Conference
Hocking Division softball play
on the newly christened
Buzzard
LEddy
Trimble field.
Trimble (16-3, 10-0 TVC)
overcame a 7-4 deficit in the in the third to lead 4-0 and the
fifth inning to claim the hard- Trimble faithful were feeling
foug.ht wtn 0 ver the young the pressure of a possible first
Lady Tornadoes of Alan Crisp. league loss. Lindsey Buzzard
After a scoreless first inning singled to lead off the inning,
that was highlighted by a big then Brickles ripped her secdouble play · by the Southern ond double, a blast to left field
defense, the Lady Tornadoes to give SlfS a. 4:0 edge,
posted three .runs m the sec&lt;;&gt;nd · Trimble tied the s'core at 4-4
timing. Virginia Brickles Jed with a big four-run third
off with a double, Chelsea innin~. Julie Trace ted off with
Pape walked·, then with two a smgle, Tabby Jenkins
out. Rashell Boso singled to reached on a misplayed bunt
load the bases. Linda Eddy attempt, Sikorski walked, and
slammed a three-nun double to Jenkms scored on an error.
give Southern a 3-0 lead, then Then a sacrifice fly by Carrie
tbe elder Eddy trotted to third •Woodgerd brought home a run,
on an error in the outfield. and Alicia Andrews hammered
Eddy was left stranded on a a long home nun over the left
pop up, but the Tornadoes had centerfield fence for the tie.
done some damage.
In the, liflh inning, Southern
Southern added a single run regained the lead when
.

'

Buzzard sinjllcd to left, notched her third sin~1e of the
Whitney ,Wolte-Rifile singled night and was sacnficed by
to center, and Brickles had a Riffle. Brickles reached on an
sacritlce 10 advance th.e run- error; ·but was ca1.1ght stealing
ners. Pape walked to load the · on, a 2-4 peg from catchers
bases. then Stephanie Cundiff Andrews.
singled hume .a rup and Amber
Southern
hitters
were
Hill smacked a two-run single Lindsey Buzzard who wa~ 3for Southern's 7-4 advantage. for-4, Linda Eddy a dotible
Trimble took an 8-7 lead in . with three RBis, Virginia
the fifth inning. The lead was Brickles 2-for-4, Chelsea Pape
Trimble's first of the game. a double. and singles bvf.
Two errors, a hit batter, and a Stephanie Cundiff, Amber Hil ,
third error brought home the and Rashell Boso.
tlrst run. What could have been Trimble hitters were Brooks
a double play to end the inning 2-for-4, Andrews a home run,
With no runs. scored. turned Allie Jago a double, Withem a .
mto Southern s dem1se when single, and Jenkins a single.
the Tnmble .runners advanced . Carrie Woodgerd posted the
W.tlhout Laggmg. An overthrow ·win. The talented pitcher
prevented tile ~oublc play and struck out three, walked just
the r u~ner~ advanced to second two, but gave up eleven hits,
a?d .third. llle~ Abby W1th.e':" and seven runs. Sarah J2ddy
had a two-run smgle, and Trace suffered the loss with six
walked to 6Jut runners on the strikeouts, five walks, six hits,
corners. ~a by Jenkms "ogled and nine runs registered
home Withem wtth the go- against her.
ahead run, .then a 1-3 grounds h
out ba~k to pitcher Sarah Eddy
out ern ~oe~ to ~~IIston
ended the inning.
· Tu• esday for an mterdiVIstonal
Trimble added an insurance 1eague game.
ru.n in the sixth on an error and
TRIMBLE U, SOUTHERN 7
Brooks single. That pushed the Sou1hern 031 030 o - 7 11 s .
score to 9-7 Tnn'lble.
· Trimble 004 041 · x -i- 9 6 1
Sarah Eddy and Wolfe-Riffle. Carrie
Southern threatened in the Wogdgerd
and Andrews. W - Woodgerd.
top of the sixth when Buzzard L-; Eddy.

Winebrenner still leads Riverside Senior League
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@M't'DAILYSEN TI NEL.COM

· MASON , W.Va. - Mickey
Wi.nebrenner of Racine
remains on top of the leaderboard in the 2006 Riverside
Senior Mens O'otf League
through four weeks of pl~y .
Winebrenner, a former
Meigs County teacher, has
scored 53 poinl~ for the young
season to lead Jack Maloney
of Gallipolis by a mere 2.5
points. Clark Greene· of
Jiurricane has 44 points to

DroP
from Page 81
later scored when Jordan
Doup reached safely on an
error, giving . Miller a 1-0
advantage.
Doup came around to score
two batters later when
Bolyard ·singled, giving the
Purple and White a 2-0 edge.
The Green and White cut
the deficit in half during the
bottom -half of the first when
Shaffer started the inning
with a single.
terry Durst's single with
two outs allowed Shaffer to
come homeward, making it a
2-1 contest.
The score stayed that way
until the bottom of the fifth,
as Eastern posted three runs
on four hits.
.
Gordon started things with
a leadoff single, then a sacrifice bunt from Mark Guess
moved Gordon into scoring
position at second.
.I
.
.

5enlor Standlnga
hold down the third slot thus Bob Hysell. In third place
1. Mick Winebrenner 53.0; 2. Jack Maloney
far.
~
with a score or 62 was 50.5; 3_Clark Greene 44.0; 4. Gary Bates
A total of 55 players were Winebrenner. Harvey Blain. 43,5; 5. Pat Wil liamson 43.0: 6 1 Chet
Thomas 42.0; 7. (tie) Garv Minton and
on hand fur the. Tuesday edi- Ron Phal.in and Rus; Wood.
Clauae Proffl:t 40.5; 9. DICk Dugan 39.5!
tion of senior play. A total or The clo;est to ihc pin win- 10. tile) Bob Hysell and Jacl&lt; Fox 38.5; 12.
Miller 36 .0; 13. (tie) Wes peterson
13 team; of four players and a · ncr on hole No. 17 was Bill George
and Rich Holland 35.0; 15. Harley Alee
threesome made 14 points Winebrenner of Syracuse, 34.5; 16. (tie) Ron Phalln and Jim Gordon
poss ible for the winning Ohio, with Gary Minton tak- 33.5: 16.(lie) Russ Holland. Chuck Yeager
Tom Fisher 33.0; 21. Bill Pethtel32.0;
scorc.
'
ing the honors (m hole No. 14. · and
22. Earl Johnson 31.5; 23. (lie) Bill Yoho,
The winning score of 60 Four players made their initial Jim Bowman, Jim Lawrence and Paul
Somerville 30.0; 27. Don Fields 29.5; 28.
was shot by the team of appearance ·on Tuesday mak- (tie)
Gene Gray, Harvey Slain and Russ
Maloney, Jim Bowman, Ricli ing the overall total90 for the WoorJ 29.0; 31 . (tie) JaCk Sturgeon and
Dana Winebrenner 2:8.5; 33. Kenny Greene
Holland and Jack Fox. In sec- early season.
28.0; 34. Jim Capehart 27.0; 35. Cecil
ond place with a score of 61
New players this week were Minton 26.0: 36. (tie) Mike Bragg and Paul
22 .5; 38. (tie) Dewey Smith and
was the te~m of Jim Gordon, Keith Woods, Nick Salem, Lanham
Craig Barnes 25.0: 40 . (tie) Ed Coon and
Clyde Jarvis, Nick Salem and Rob Moore, James Spencer. Ken Whited 23.5

Shaffer 'inglud to plate
Gordon one batter later, making it a two-all game .
Cody Gerlach singled 111
the next &lt;It-bat, moving
Shaffer to third with one out.
Joel Lynch hit' a sacrifice
tly, allowing Shaffer to score
for a 3-2 edge.
Morris delivered a two-out
single two batters later to
bring Gerlach home for a 4-2
advantage afte r five full
frames.
The score remained that
way until the top of the seventh as Miller sent 10 batters
to the plate. Two hits, three
walks and an error h!ter, the
guests held a 6-4 lead.
Lynch, who took over for
starter Zach Hendrix in the
sixth, walked leadoff hitter
Shane Luning.
Lynch induced a groundbaH out, then walked Zack
Osborne to give MHS runers
at the comers.
An infield error allowed
Corey Murphy to reach safe ly as Luning ~co red for a 4-3
, game.
{

Members of the Eastern Infield huddle during the fifth Inning of
Monday's TVC Hocking matchup with Miller at Tuppers Plains.
Osborne came around one four.
.
batter later when Tyler Styles
, Kyle Fisher singled in the
singled to tie the game at ·next at-bat, allowing Murpby
I

.,

-- -·--·- - - ·--- --·-

· -- · --- ·..,--~-

TournamEnt Drawing '

hosts'Eastern for s'ectional title

Johnson and Butch Marnhout.
Johnson and Marnhout registered four walks each. They
combined to hold Trimble to
just four hits, but errors and
walks led to their demi se.
The duo struck out five combined.
Anthony Dixon went the
di stance for the win with
eleven strikeouts, no walks,
and just two hits recorded
against him .
Southern goes to Wellston
for . an interdivisional TVC
game Tuesday.
.
.
Southern 000

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www .mydailysentinel.com

2006

Crumlpholo
River Valley's Kayla Smith, foreground, knocks down a ball at
second base during Monday's Ohio Valley Confer£mce contest
with Coal Grove in Cheshire. Second b&lt;lseman Stephanie
Griffith is pictured in the background.
Larry

Coal Grovestings.RV
'

..

'

• BY LARRY CRUM

LCRUMII&gt;MVDAILYREGISTER.COM

Wyatt added the other hits
for Coal Grove in the eight
total hit game.
'River Valley fared a little
better at the plate with II
hit&gt;, but it was not enough to
get the win. Taylor led the
way with the but, going 3for-4 and scoring a run ,
while . Kaylee Rose and
McFann added two hits
·apiece, with McFann also
grabbing the losing decision
on the mound despite a solid
eight strikeouts.
Porter went 2-for-4 at the
plate, while Griffith and
·smith provided the rest of
the offensive muscle with a
hi.t apiece.
Coal Grove took the early
lead in the top of the first
inning when Callier reached
on an error and was later
drive home by Willis. River
Valley then responded with a
rtin of its own in the bottom
half of the inning when
McFann led off with a double, followed by an RBI double by Porter,
The Lady Raiders then
took the lead in the third
when Taylor and Porter
grabbed back-to-back singles, with Porter and Rose
driving in runs for a 3-1
lead. But in its hext at bat,
Coal Grove took the lead
back for good with a pair of
singles and an error which
allowed runners to reach
base and score safely for a 43 lead and the eventual victory.
River Valley will now gear
up for a 5 p.m. contest
again st Meigs at Rock
Springs Wednesday.

CHESHIRE- Every rose
has its thorn, and for the
River Valley softball team,
that thorn is Coal Grove.
Over ttie past two seasons,
the Lady Hornets have managed to grab win ~ .over the
Lady Raiders while struggling through the rest of the
schedule. In fact, Coal
Grove grabbed its first ever
win in OVC conference play
last year against the Silver
and Black and followed that
up by sweeping the Lady
Raiders this season for their
only wins of the year as Coal
Grove (2-1 0) took a narrow
4-3 win from River Valley
(3-11) Monday · evening in
Cheshire.
·
The Lady Raide.rs had an
opportunity to get back in
the game in the seventh
inning when Kari McFann
struck out a Coal Grove batter with the bases loaded to
keep the score at 4-3, giving
River Valley a chance in its
last at bat.
Mcfann led off with a single, but things quickly got
off to a bad start when a
botched steal attempt left the
Lady Raiders with one, out
and no one on.
·
Stephanie Griffith and
Holly Taylor then made up
for the first out with back-toback singles an&lt;j, following
an error on a throw, left the
two batters on second and
third with only the lone out.
But when Terra Porter
popped up for an out and
Kayla Smith hit a line drive
to first base, the game ended .
COAL GROVE ·4, RIVER VALLEY 3
in another close call as River
Coal Grove 100 3P0 0 ·- 4 8 0
Valley fell 4-3.
River Valley 102 000 0 - 3 11 4
Willis dominated ,the plate Callier and Willis. Karl McFann and Terra
for the Lady Hornets, going Porter. WP - Callier. LP - McFann.
3-for-4 while Callier took
control ·of the mound, striking out three in the winning
decision. Callier also had
two hits in the contest and
. , Subscribe today.', ·:.
scored a run .
'· .
Garner, . Campbell and
' 992-2155
.

·MORE LOCAL·NEWS: :
MORE LOCAL FOtKS.

and Styles to score for the 64 advantage. ·
Eastern responded in its
half of the sevenih as Shaffer
tripled to start the inning.
Gerlach 'followed with a
walk. then Lynch hit a sacrifice .fly that a!lowed Shaffer
to score for a 6-5 game.
Gerlach later scored in the
inning to tie the game at six ,
after regulation.
Then in the top of the
ninth, back-to-back doubles
from Fisher and Gottke
resulted in a run, giving
Miller a 7-6 lead .
Doup, who went the distance, recorded two of his
four strikeouts in the ninth to
secure the complete-game
victory.
.
Doup allowed six earned
runs, eight hils, seven walks
and hit three batters in the
winning decision. while
Shaffer took the loss in his'
two-plus innings of relief
work. ·
Shaffer, however, paced
EHS with thre~ hits and

.

three runs scored. Gerlach
was next with two safeties,
while Durst, Morris . and
Gordon provided the other
hits. ·
Gottke, Bolyard, Styles
and Fisher each had two hits
apiece for Miller. That quar-.
tet accounted tor all of the
guests' hits.
.Game two, the originally
scheduled contest, also
served a~ se nior night for tbe
Eagles.
Eastern returns to action
today )l'hen it hosts winless
River Valley. Qame time is
slated for 5 p.m.
'

MILLIII e, IAITIIIN I
10 lnnlngo •
Eoororn 310 001 000 0 - 58 0
Mitior 004 000 100 1 - e 71
MoH Morrto, Kyto Gor&lt;lon (II ond Torry
Ourot. Jortd Botyord ond ¥or Styloo.WP
- Bolyord. LP- Gordon.
MILLIA 7, IAITIIIN I .
8 lnnlngo
Mlllor 200 000 ~01 - 7 8 0
Etotorn 1oo 030 200 - e e 2
Jordan Doup and L11ter Qrnn . Zach
Hondrl• . Joel Lynch (8), Cory Shoffor t7J
end Terry Durat. WP Sh11fl11.

Coup, LF' -

WELLSTON Gallia
Academy grabbed a No. I
·seed in Division II, and two
Meigs County rivals will face
off .for a D-IV sectional title
- two of the more interesting
story lines to come out of the
Southeast District tournament
draw on Sunday.
Galli a Academy ( 13-5),
· fresh off its first Southeastern
Ohio Aihletic League title in
21 years, .got the nod over
SEOAL rival Warren (18-4),
and as a result, will have the
, opportunity to host two
games.
,
First the Blue Devils have
to get by their first-round
opponent,
fourth-seeded
Athens (5-12), which hasn't
been much of a problem so far
this season. .
Gallia Academy was the
talk of Southeastern Ohio;
and also got into the state
record book, following a 334 beating of the Bulldogs in
early April. The Devils were

PrEp Softball -

.
10-0 winners in six innings in big games - and have also
their second meeting.
struggled with the neighborIf seeding holds true, coach ing Eagles.
Rich Corvin's club's, tourney
Eastern ( 11-9) has ex peritrail could read like an enced a down-year by its
SEOAL tournament. After standards, but is 2-for-2 when
facing league member Athens facing Southern. The Green
in the opener, Warren will be and White have won by lopa likely opponent in the sec- sided scores of 9-1 and I0-0.
tiona! championship, then The game is 5 p.m. May II
Jackson may be waiting in the with the. winner advancing to
district semis.
the district tourney at the
Warren, a perennial top University of Rio ·Grande,
seed the past few years, set- · where top-seeded Notre
tied for the No. 2 seed despite Dame (12-5) will be the proban 18-4 record. The Warnors able opponent.
will play host io third-seeded
In the lower bracket in DMeigs (6-12).
IV, South Gallia (2-10) drew
Both first round sectional rival Symmes Valley (9-9) in
games in Division II will be the first round. That contest is
held 5 p.m. May 8, with the 5 p.m. May 8 in Aid. The winsectional title game on May · ner faces the top seed Green
( 11 -2) .
I I at the same time.
In Division IV, No. 2 seed
Young River Valley, still
Southern plays. host to third- winless in 17 tries this season,
seeded Eastern in one intrigu- has the misfortune of facing
ing sectiopal championship powerful top-seeded Federal
showdown.
Hocking (18-3) in its Division
The Tornadoes, 14-6 over- JII first-round game. That
all, have had a solid season- .game will be May 9 in
but have struggled to win the Stewart.

TournamEnt Drawing

'

·Most local softball teams facing
road games 'for 2006 tournament
BY BRAD SHERMAN

BSHERMAN.MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM
WELLSTON -It's been a
lot of years since Eastern has
had to hit the road for a firstround softball tournament
game.
But the Lady Eagles, who
have been one of the area's
perennial powers in Division
IV, will be in unfamiliar territory when Pam Douthitt's
young squad Ira vels to
Miller (3-9) for a first-round
game May 10.
Eastern (4-12) got the No.
5 seed. The winner faces topseeded :rrimble on May 13.
In fact, most local teams
are going on the road. Of the
~ix schools in Gallia and
Meigs counties, only Meigs
and South Gallia drew home
dates.
The Lady Rebels, whose

League
rivals
Gallia
Academy and Jackson will
meet in one semifinal. The
No .. 4 seed Blue Angels (610), who split the season
series• with the third-seeded
lronladies, go to the Apple
City.
Like in D-IV, AII first
round games in Division II
are 5 p.m. May 10 and the
sectional
championships
games are on I p.m. on May
13.
No. 7 seed River Valley (310), the lone local team in
Division Ill, faces a
winnable game despite facing a second seed. The Lady
Raiders travel to Belpre (5·
10) in .sectional . semifinal
action on May 8.
The winner will likely play
host to Alexander (5-11) for
a sectional title and trip to
the district tourney at the
University of Rio Grande.

only wins have been over
first-year program Hannan,
face lowly South· Webster (Ill) for the right to face
Symmes Valley, whic.h is
ranked second in the state.
Also in the lower bracket
of D-IV is Southern (6-11 ),
which goes to Waterford (128) for a sectional championship game. Both received
first-round byes.
All first round games in
Division IV are 5 p.m. 'May
10 and the sectional championships games are on I p.m.
on May 13: . ·
In Division II, Meigs ( 126) received the second seed
and will. face Athens, which
has only two wins in 16
chances this season. The
winner will, barring a huge
upset, go to powerful Warren
in the section final.
In the D-11 upper bracket,
Southeastern Ohio Athletic

BELLAIRE - During the
Bellaire Relays Saturday, the
Eastern track team !lad a solid
showing with a an individual
win in both the boys and girls
events.
Kay lee Milam took the lone
win for the Lady Eagles when
she claimed first in the 1600meter run at a time of 5:48.
Milam also took second in the
800-meter with a time of
2:39.
·
Other strong finishers
ilfcluded Alyssa Newland,
who took thtrd in the 400meter dash (67 .2) and fifth in
the 200-meter dash (30.1 ),
Morgan Burt who· took fourth
.Jn the high jump (4-4) and
sixth .in the long jump (12-8)
and Katie Hayman who
placed fifth in the 300-meter
hurdles '(56.5).
In tlie · team cYents, the
4x400-meter relay squad lin-

1
j:~p
~5~~)~esri~~ c~~~~r ~~~
took second the 800-meter

.

111

(2:24) and fifth in the 1600meter run· (5:27), Jordan
Pierce who took third in the
400-meter dash (59.4) and
Brandon Batey who took
third in the shot put (41-4 ).
Martlwdale
Milam
Also placing at the event
was B'l'ce Honaker who took
ished secood as Newland, fourth 111 the long jump r18Milam, Hayman and Becca II), fifth in the 100-meter
Owen pushed the team to a · dash , ( 12.4) and fifth in the
4:40 time. The 4x200-meter 200-meter dash (25.65.
relay team of Newland, ' In the teams events, the
Hayman, Burt and Owen took 4xJOO-meter relay team of
third (2:0 I) and the 4x I 00- Pierce, Honaker, McGrath
meter relay team of Hayman, and Zach Moore placed third
Burt, Owen and Georgana (50.0) and the 4x400-meter
Koblentz took fourth (59.0). relay team of Pierce,
In the boys event, Aaron McGrath, Moore and Castor.
Martindale took first in the placed fifth (4:26).
32007meter run with a tiine of Eastern will now gear up
II :29, while also placing sec- fo'r a home meet 5 p.m . today
ond in the 1600-meter run on before traveling to the River
a time of 5:10.
Valley Quad 5 p.m. Friday.

Point Pleasant pounds Raiders, 18-5
Caldwell and Cody Edwards
with a pair of hits apiece, while
Clayton Curnutte, T.R. FJ\nt,
CHESHIRE- Hits ran wild Ryan Eggleton and Aaron
Monday evening in Cheshire Mullholland rounded out the
as the. Point Pleasant · ( 10-9) ~aider muscle with a hit each.
baseball team hammered River
H.L. Pugh sufrered the setValley (0-18) 18-5 in non- back pitching, making it
leauge aetion.
through only the first tive batThe Big Blacks racked up 17 ters until Devin Gibbs came in
hits as seven different players to fini sh the first and Ryan
had multiple hits and for the Eggleton finished out the game
two players who only had a when he took over in the third
· 1 h' bo h k d
inning.
smg e 11• 1 .too a vantage
Point Pleasant wasted. little
as Olris Casey hammered a
tlrst · inning home run and time taking the lead in the conDewey Wroten smashed a dou-· iest
· as Wyant and Casto
·
smashed back-to-back singles,
ble..
.
Warner and Wroten hammered
Rtcky Wyant had a hot mght back-to·back doubles and
at .the p)ate gomg 3-for-5, Casey deane~ the bases with a
.wht!e Brandon Warner. and · three run home run to give the
Chns Coopc:r had a pa1r of Big Blacks a 5-0 lead with ng
· doubles ap1ece and James ouL~
·
Casto, Johnny Wamsley, Justin
While Wamsley followed the
Cullen and ll!tck Stalnaker three run shot with a single, the
each h~d two .hils to help keep hitting slowed down in the
the Ratders wmless on the sea- inning, but not before the Red
son.
and Black added three more
Casto also had the win on the runs with Wyant driving in two
mound pitching three innings to push their lead to 8-0.
·
until Casey came in relief.
River Valley responded in
River Valley could only rack the bottom half of the inning
up eight hits led by Eric wl)en Curnutte and Caldwell
BY i.ARJIY CRUM

LCRUM@MYOAILYREGISTER.COM

reached base and scored, blll
the Raiders could do nothing
more despite loading the bases,
which was a problem all game .
long.
·
The Silver and Black left the
bases loaded at the end of two '
·seperate innings and left a total.
of nine· runners on t?ase in the .
~ame. In only five quick
mnings of work, River Valley
left runners in scoring position
in four of them .
·
River Valley added one niore
run in the fourth when Flin( .
was hit by a pitch and crossed
home plate later in the inning·,
but it was not enough as Point
Pleasant held them at bay, taking an 18-5 victory over the
Raiders.
The Big Blacks will now
keep up their busy week with a
5 p.m. contest against St. J()f!
Tuesday, wl;lile River Valley:
prepares for j':astern 5 p.m .
today:
PT PLEASANT 18, RIVER VALLEY 5
51nnlnga
Point Pleasant 812 24 - 18 173
River Valley
220 10 5 8 3
1-t.L Pugh, Oe~o~,in Gibbs {1st), Ryan
Eggleton (3rd) and T.R. Flint James Casto'.
Chris Casey (41h) and Chrie Casey, James
Casto (4th). WP - Caslo. LP- Pugh .

Work Without Limits
0 NEW HOllAND

Soar
fromPageBl
each added two safeties to the
win. Wilfong and Phillips ·
also scored two runs apiece.
Shana · Snyder; Hannah
Cozart, Kelsey Holter and
Bland provided the ot~er hits
for·EHS.
Neither team scored in the
first two ·innings, then MHS
struck in the top of the third
when a one-out walk to
Emily Bray came back to .
haunt when Spires helped her
own cause with an RBI fielder's choice for a 1-0 advanJ
tage.
·
The Lady Eagles countered
in their half of the third when
Phillips led off witlj a single,
then advanced to third on an
error and a passed ball.
Cozart hit a sacrifice fly to
center, platint~ Phillips for a
one-all tie.
·
Miller lacked on two runs
in the fourth for a 3-1 edge,
but the hosts again responded
with arun when Wilfong sin•
gled to start the bottom half
of the fourth.
Miller got the next two batters out, but an error allowed
Bland to reach safely, scoring
Wilfong, and making the
deficit to 3-2.
·
After the eight-run eKplosion mado it a 10-3 Eastern
.lead, the Lady Falcons tacked
on one more run in the sixth
when Bray led the inning off

New Holland Skid Steer
.·:·~
'•.

--

Bryan Walteno/photo

..

and up for full access to

cngi nc or transmission

by reaching safely , on an in the first round at Corning.
Easiern returns to action
error.
Heather Brown doubled roday when it travels to
Bray home two batters later Gallipolis for a non-conferto conclude the scoring at 10- ence matchup with Gallia
4.
Academy. Game time is
Bray, Brown and Murphy scheduled for 5 p.m.
each had two hits to lead
EASTERN 10, MILLER 4
Miller in the loss.
Miller
001 201 0 - 4 7 6
The game was alsq a preEastern
x - 10 11 5
view of the 2006 Division IV Malik&amp; ,Spires001and180Emily
Bray. Brittany
sectional · tournament, where Bissell and Hanmth Pratt WP - Bissell.
Ea&amp;tem and Miller will meet LP -Spires.
ing error. after C.assi Whan
put the ball in pl~y.
Barr' s homer in the sixth
added in surance runs as
Meigs went on to the comfortable victory.
Meigs goes to NelsonvilleYork in· makeup action
today.

'

..

• Cab and boom lift foward

Eastern third baseman Hannah Cozart makes a throw to first
for an out during the third inning of Monday's TVC Hocking contest against Miller at Don Jackson Field In Tuppers Plains.

Blasts

____ _______

are easy to reach.

...

the Lady Rockets' only run .
Meigs tied it in the top of
the second. Burton doubled
•
to left with one out, went. to
fromPageBl
third on a wild pitch and
came home on an error.
Wellston committed six misthe only hit - all sin~les cues compare to four for
for Wellston.
Wellston struck first with Meigs.
an unearned run in the botAnother Wellston error
tom of the first. L-ambert, helfed the La.dy Marauders
' following a single to center, pul in front to stay in the
· ·
B· · . d
stole second base - but a fI'fth
,
Jn~•n.g.
an:
an
pair of throwing errors on Manley h1t smgles, then both
the ·play allowed her to score later scored thanks to a field -

..__,;._

• IH-Xl HP .
.
•All majorscnicc poinh

-- --- - --

.

-

.

MEtGs 5, wELLsToN 1
Meigs 010 022 o - sa 2
Wellaton 100 000 0 - 13 6
Joey HanlnC· and AmtX~r Burton.' Erin
SIUrglll ano Peggy Fleming. w - Haning.
L- Sturgill. HR - Meigs 1, Amy Barr 2..

.

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Page B4

• The Daily Sentinel .,

.,

Tuesday, M~y 2 ,

www~mydailysentinel.com

2006

Tuesday, May 2, 2006

.www.mydailysentinel.com

Lady Falcons beat South Gallia again Warren gets h~g~ win
·

SPORT=iJ~~l.COM

MERCERVILLE - Last
time it was over by f!ie third
inning. This time, Wahama
really didn ' t get started until
then.
But once the Lady Falcons
started hitting, they rolled to
their second win over South
Galli a in four days - takin~ a
12-4 high school softball vtctory on Monday.
· Wahama won the earlier'
meeting 15-0 in two and a
half innings - via a special
West Virginia mercy rule last
Thursday.
· But Wahama was held
~carele ss and had just one hit
over the first two innings
l;&gt;efore scorin~ all 12 of its
runs on nine htts over the next
.
four innings.
. Kylie Riggs homered while
Ashley Wolfe, Kayanna Sayre
and Kaley Ferguson also had
inultiple hits. Wolfe had a
Oouble and Sayre drove in a
pair of runs. Mary Kebler
added a single and two runs
batted in, Raelynn Grimm
chipped in an RBI single and
Haley Davi s also hit safely for
the winners.
Riggs, who was also the
starting pitcher, kept South
Gallia hHless through four
inmngs before giving way to
Brooke Gabritsch m the fifth.
The Lady' Rebels reached the
reliever for their only three
hits in the fifth inning which parlayed into a trio of
runs.
Niki Fulks had an RBI
infield hit while Kristen
Halley and Brittany Spurlock
also logged hits.
• South Gallia led briefly 1-0
ihanks to an unearned run in
fue second frame. Glenna
Wright reached on an error,
then later scored on a second

over Blue Devils, 6-3
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

VINCENT
Warren
scored all six of its runs in the
bottom of the sixth inning to
score a huge come-frombehind high school baseball
victory, 6-3, over league
champion Gallia Academy on
Monday.
. The Warriors pulled to
within a half game of the Blue
Devil s and can earn a share of
their
third
straight
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
Leag ue tirle with a win over
Marietta'on Wedne sday.
Tyler Wynn picked up the
win on the mound while
was
Shaphen
Robin son

BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

tagged with the loss.
The win comes one day
after Gallia Academy (13-6,
8-2 SEOAL) beat out Warren
(19-4, 7-2 SEOAL) for the
top seed in the Divi sion II
Southeast
Dt stri ct
East
Sectional. The two teams split
the season series.
The two clubs will likely
face each.other once more for
the ·sectional championship
on May II . Warren needs to
get by Meigs and Gallia
Academy wi II need to secure
a third win over Athens thts
season to get there.
No other information was
available from the game.
Galli a Academy plays host
to Ironton today.

Brad Sherman/photo
South Gallia's Mary Stapleton steals past Wahama's Chelsea Hicks during the Lady Falcons'
12-4 win Monday.
,

throwing error.
The
Lady
Falcons
answered, through, with a trio
of runs in the third inning as
Wolfe, Kebler, Sayre and
Davis all logged hits in the
frame.
An error, an RBI sacrifice
fly off the bat of Kebler and a
run scoring single from Sayre
helped Wahama tack on four
more runs in the fourth to go
up 7-1.
Wahama went 'up by as
many as. I 0-1 with two more •

BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.coM

. allowed the go-ahead run to
score and the Lady Knights
never trailed again.
POCA. W.Va. - There's a
Oliver scored the run that
new No. I in West Virginia, put the visitors up 2-1, and on
and that team wasn' t about to that same play, a bad throw
let another upset at the hands also allowed Cottrill to score
of Poca take that away.
and make it a two-run Point
The Point Pleasant Lady lead.
Knights, now on top of the
Poca answered with a run
state's Class AA Coaches of its own in the bottom of the
Poll, avenged an earlier loss fourth, but a Shobe RBI douto the Dots by winning a 6-3 ble in the sixth put the Black
high school softball game on and Red back up by two.
Monday.
Point added two more insurKayla Shobe, best known ance runs · in the seventh
for winning games with her thanks to errors.
pitches, went 4-for-4 at the
Shobe picked up the victoplate with a pair of doubles to
ry, striking out five and walkpace Point Pleasant. Anna ing none. Bri Winter took the
Sommer added three hits
while Jeannette Oliver, Tessa loss.
Point Pleasant jumped in
Wyant and Devin Cottri 11 also
I -0 on the strength of an
front
hit safely.
RBI
double
by Shobe in the
Hedrick and Dudley had
first inning. Poca managed to
two hits apiece for Poca.
tie
it with in the second before
It was Point's second win
the
Lady Knights pulled in
over the Dots thts season. The
Mason Countians won 1-0 front to stay in the fourth.
Point'Pleasant plays host to
before being upset 5-3 later in
Cabell
Midland Wednesday.
the season.
.
Poca managed to hang
PT PLEASANT 6 , POCA 3
around and the clubs were . Point
100 210 2 - 610 1
even at one apiece after three Poca
010 101 o - 3 6 2
innings. But Alyssa Darst 's Kayla Shobe and Jeannone Oliver Bn
. .fi
b
. •h c
h W1n1er and Skeens. W --5hobe L sacn tee unt 111 t e rourt W1nter.

Duval downs Lady 'Cats
STAFF REPORT

with a run in the fifth and
produced a solid II run
sixth to close within four of
ASHTON , W.Va.
Duval, but the early pair of
Despite still being in their innings proved. too costly as
first sea son of play, the the Yellow Jackets held on
Hannan softball team con- for the victory.
tinues to make strides as
Duval had 14 hits in the
they learn the sport and how win, as its pitcher produced
ro work as a unit.
a solid game with seven
: But despite the experience strikeouts and 10 walks in
the team oas gained, they the winning decision .
must still suffer through the
Hannan was not as lucky
bumps and bruises of their on the mound as hurler
inaugural season as the · Summer · Stov~r recorded
Lauy 'Cats (0-5) fell b~ a only six strikeouts while
score that looked more hke walking 20, helping add to
a football game , as Duval the Yellow Jacket score.
Stover also added a pair
came a way wtth a 21-1_7
wm to clatm tts second w!n of hits, while Reanna Black
of the season Monday tn went 4-for-4 with four RB!s
Ashton_.
in the contest, Tabby Payne
V; stttng Duval took the recorded three hits and two
e a~ly lead 111 the contest, RBis, Megumi Swann and
gomg up I 3-0. through the Alisha Leonard bad a pair of
ftrst two mmngs before hits each, while Alisha
Hanna,n could respo,nd. The Cornell and Jessie Shannon
_Lady . Cats then added two 'had a hit apiece.
run s 1n the bottom of i~e
Hann'an will now travel to
second and three more tn Point Pleasant today to face
the thtrd to keep the game the J_.ady Knights junior
altve at 13-5.
varsity squad before facing
After a scoreless fourth, St. Joe Thursday in tourna1
Duval got back to work wtth
a pair of runs in the fifth men 1 P ay.
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL. COM

DUVAL 21, HANNAN 11
ouval
670 o2e .o -21102
Hannan 023 01(11) 0 - 1714 5
Summer Stover and Alloha Laonar1i.C8861
and Ashley. WP - Casst. LP - ,stovsr.

runs the next inning. Another
of South Gallia' s five miscues
resulted in the first tally
before Riggs hit a solo' homer
into the weeds in right field .
The Lady Rebels answered
with three runs in the home
half of the fifth. Two runs
scored thanks to a pair of
Wahama errors then Fulks'
infield hit allowed another to
come home.
Wahama added two more
insurance runs in the sixth ,
Grimm had an RBI infield hit

to plate Ferguson, then later
scored herself to round out the
sconng . •
Wahama is in sectional
tournament action · Thursday
in Buffalo beginning at 5 p.m.
South Galli a is at Nel sonvilleYork, al so on Thursday. ·
WAHAMA 12, SOUTH GALUA 4
Wahama

SGallia

003 432 0

-

010 030 0 -

12 10 4

435

Kylie Atggs, Brooke Gabritsch (5) and
Mary Kabler Ntkt Fulks , Knsten Halley (5 ),
Nlki Fulks (6) , Krtsten Halley (6) and Laura

Gwtnn. W - Riggs. L - Fulks. HA Wahama 1, Kylie Atggs 1 (1)

RIO GRANDE The
UniversitY of Rio Grande Big
Red Basketball Camp is currently accepting applications
for the 2006 summer basketball
camps held in the Lyne Center
on the University of Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College campus.
The camps begin with a one
day junior varsity/varsity
shootout on June 8 with a
shootout held for varsity teams
only on June 9 and junior varsity teams only, June 10. A second
shootout
for
the
jayvee/varsity combined will
be June 15.
Each team will be given at
least four games of competilion.
All games for the team
shootouts will be played inside
and at one location, the Newt
Oliver Arena.

A new feature for the Big
Red Basketball Camp this year
is a Little Redmen Camp set for
June 12-14. This camp will
focus on the basic fundamentals and having fun while doing
it. The camp will be held from
9 a.m.-noon for boys age 6-9. A
certificate of parttcipation
along with an action photo will
be awarded to each camrer.
The highlight of the Btg Red
Basketball Camps each year is
the individual camp, held June
25-30. The individual camp
features ''The Triple", the only
triple elimination tournament
· in the country. This is ·for boys
ages 10-15 with an emphasis
on offensive and defensive fundamentals, team play and work
ethic.
For additional information or
to register contact Rio Grande
Head men's basketball coach
Ken French at (740) 245-7294
·or 1-800-282-7201 ext. 7294 or
e-mail kfrench@rio.edu.

Wahama rallies past South Gallia, 10-7
·

BY GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
MERCERVILLE - The
Waharna White Falcon baseball nine overcame a rocky
start in spotting the South
Gallia Rebels an early fiverun lead before the Bend Area
team rallied for a come-frombehind I 0-7 diamond victory
Monday evening at South
Gallia.
Kameron Sayre settled
down to blank the Rebels in
five, of the next six frames
after giving up the tive-run
uprising to enable the White
Falcons enough time to mount
it~ comeback rally.
The Bend Area team scored
I 0 unanswered runs after
falling behind early before
South Gallia tacked on a pair
in the seventh to bring the
final count to I 0-7.
Sayre went the distance and
allowed but five hits on the
night with the Rebels bunching four of its sareties together in the opening frame.
Sayre struck out 11 and
walked five in notching his
fourth mound triumph in eight
decisions on the spring.
Bernie Fulks also pitched a
complete game effort in giving up I 0 runs on eight hits
with three strikeouts. Fulks'
walked
seven
which
ineviubly kept the SGHS
hurler in hot water throughout
the evening.
The South Gallia offense
erupted from the start with
Fulks and Travis McCarty
beginning the game with base

Brad Sherman/photo
Wahama's Caleb Roach tags South Gallia's Bernie Fulks as he slides into third during the White
Falcons' 10-7 victory over the Rebels Monday in Mercerville.

hits and by the time the inning
reached its conclu sion the
Rebels had dented the plate
five times for a quick 5-0
advantage.
Wahama bounced back in
the second inning to score
four times to close the gap
with the White Fal cons
adding anotper tally in the
third to knot the score at 5-5.
A three run fourth and two .
more in the sixth pushed the
Falcon lead to I0-5 before
South Gallia scored two times
in its final plale appearance to
fall by a I 0-7 score.
Cody Herdman had a couple of hits and an RBI to pace

the Wahama attack while
Sayre drove in a pair of WHS
runs with a triple. Nathan
Staffo~d a!so smacked a three
base htt wtth Brandon Fowler,
Caleb Roach, Garrett Cullen
an~ Brento~ Clark all strokmg
a smgle aptece. Clark 's base
knock kept his hitting streak
alive at seven straight games.
South Gallia was Jed offensively by Josh Wright who
ripped a pair of doubles and
drove in a run on the day for
the Rebels. Fulks, McCarty
and Micah Cardwell also had
safe blows for the host team.
Fulks also swiped his 33rd,
34th and 35th bases of the

season.
· Wahama is sch.eduled to
visit Duval for a 5 p.m. contest today before welcoming
Wirt County to the Bend Area
on Wednesday. Away dates at
Ravenswood on Friday and
.
Clay County Satu~day ~111
conclude the regular season
wtth sectwnal tournament
play set to begt~ on Monday,
South Galha goes to
Chesapeake today.
WAHAMA 10, SOUTH GALLtA 7
wahama 041 302 o - t083
S.Gallla 500 000 2 - 7 5o
sayre and Stafford Fulks and Wright. w
- sayre L- Fulks

Sophomore centerfielder Kri sten Chevalier was I -forJe ssica Ross, freshman sec- 2 with a run scored, an RBI
ond
baseman
Shannon double and a stolen base.
Abbott and sophomore left- Brandi Jones and Abbott al so
fielder Miranda Laws all had tallied hits.
two hits for the Redwomen
Rio will now take aim on
offense . ·Ro ss and Abbott the post-seaso n. For the secscored the runs and Laws ond consecutive season the
knocked in a run . Mi chele Redwomen will host a first
Dettwi ller and Erin Rat! iff round series in the AMC
also collected hit s for Rio Qualifyin g Tourney. The
opponent is Walsh ( 15-23, 6Grande . .
8
AMCS)
In game two, Law s (19-3)
The
Redwomen
and
celebrated a homecoming by
pitching fabulous in going Cavaliers tangled early thi s
the distan ce to get the win ._ season at Rio with both
She allowed only three hit s teams winning a game. Rio
and an unearned run with a out-slugged in the fi rst
strikeout and ,a walk .
game, 11 -9 and lost game
Rio had six hits, Jed by two, 3-2. Walsh is a svon g
freshman Amanda Stevens, offensive club and the best
.who went 2- for-3 at the pl ate -of th ree seri es should by very
with a run sc ored and a entertaining.
s tolen base. Ross was 1,for-2
Th e two te ams will play a
with a walk and two stolen doubleheader
Thursday
bases and seni or shortstop aft ernoon at Sta nl ey Eva ns

Field. If Game 3 is necessary it will b~ played on
Friday afternoon . Saturday
is the rain date.
Redmen Note : Th e Rio
Grande Redmen baseball
team (33- 20) will also be
hosting an AMC Tourn ament
Qualifying Tournament best
of three series versus Urbana
(35- I 9) on Thursday wi th the
games set fo r Noon and 3
p.m. Game 3, if necessary
will be played Friday at
Noon at Bob Evans Fi eld.
Saturday -is th e rain date.
Rio and Urbana split four
games this season. Two of
th e fo ur contes ts went to
extra innings. The Redmen
posted victories of 7-2 of 9-8
(eight innin gs) in the first
and th ird games of the series
whil e the· Blue Kni ghts won
by scores of 6-5 ( I 0 innings),
and 13-9.
.!

I
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~,r.~a_tfF.Lp
__w.ANIID
__,JI L,l::ro:M:~:~::I ~L.'o_...ro."a•o•SALM•
ES••:- •

1 year old Collie, , Needs
room to run
Good with

OVel'brQok Center is current·
111
Awell mamtamad House for
ly accepting applications for
~
**NOTICE:**
Sale. Large porch base·
Kids.
740-742·2607
AN's. 8 and 12 hour sh1hs
ment. deck. heat p,ump,
Evenings
available
Competitive
G
rrow Smart contac located in Gallipolis Ferry
wages and benefits package
he Qh1o Division o $69,900 phone (304)675·
1·Biue
Tick
pup;
1
available.
All
Interested
manctal lnst1tullonr 1536
;'l'li
~ve11.
black/white pup about Smo.
applicants
should
pick
up
ff1ce of Consume
old, 1 kit1en, long hair. litter
to&gt;JJoytt&gt;
an
appltcant
at
333 Page
ffa1rs
BEFORE you reft
Attention!
trained (740)446·3897.
1"~~ 11v
Street, Middleport, OH . For We have openi ngs forenthu· ance your home o local company offenng ~ No
additional . information slastlc, dedicated prates· blain a loan. BEWAR DOWN PAYMENT' pro·
2 male- 314 Border Collie,
I&lt;!Dii'&gt; ~
fUND RAISER YABD
please contact Hollie al sionals who enJOYwork1ng f requests fo r any larg grams for you to buy your
1!4 Blue Heeler puppie s to
ra than the cost o
St\lt: FOR
(740)992-6472. EOE
with people in a fast paced dvance payments o horhe Instead of rent1ng
QIVa away. (740)367·7654.
he space occupte
environment.
who exhlbtls ees or insurance. Cal · 100%llnanci ng
SARAH
WAUGH
3 small pupp1es to good
Overbrook Rehabilitation leadership Snd des1re to he Office of Consume · Less than perfect cred1t
the error and onl
home Call (740)388·9839.
Cent8r ts currently accepting build· management sk1lls If ffa1rs toll free at 1-866 accepted
1 flrtt lnurtton. W
,
Date· May 6, 2006
applications
for LPN's. this describes you and 78-0003 to learn il th · Payment could be the
hall not be liable fa
Brown part Cocker Span1et,
Location· Guyan Fire
Available s/llfts are 7A-7P you're ready to grow. we ortgage broker o same as rent
ny loll or oxpan
wavy hair, no tall., spot of
~
Department
and
7P-7A. All interested otter you the opportu nity
Locators
ender Is proper!
white on head Red collar,
hot results· from lh
T1me 8·0oam-?
applicants
should p1ck up an
(740)367-0185.
1censed (ThiS1s a publ
ublleotton or omio
application at 333 Page we offer the opportunity and
ton of an advarll
Cement !rom porch , already All proceeds go to Sarah
Street,
Middleport, OH For the tollow1ng benefits Blue
nt. Corractlono wll
busted up Wou ld make and her fa mily tor medical
furthe
r
Information, please Cross
Blue
Shield
expenses and travel
made In the fire
good 1111.You load (740)379·
contact Halite at (740)992- Insurance,
Dental,
2235
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www coma oom
vallablt edition.
6_4_7_2_EO_E_____ Prescripllon card, 401K.
Prizes raffled off
Child Swmg Se t (304)675·
Food available
"'111!"""-~---... -~------., Part time position to Manage pa1d vacations, t1ve day work
Box number ads ar
1916
Hugh selection of yard sale "--·WoiiiiA.ONTF.Iiico--' . ,r1.10______
Country
rental Area·
com· week and un1forms
!ways conlldsnllal.
items available
10 BuY
Hf.I.p WANTED
mumty Homes
In Shade
Two Fem Golden Ret.
. Includes a house to live ln. If Interested apply at Burger
TURNED DOWN ON
Puppies. 4 M old, 1st set
Send resu me to . Country Kmg, 65 Upper A1ve r Road SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
Current rate car
shots and wormed twice. - - - - - - - Randy Hart Logging
omes. PO Boll 1033 in Gallipol is, OH or mail No Fee Unless We Wtnl
ppllei.
740_742.2380
Garage Sale. Mult1ple fami· Certified Master Logger Full ttme sales position H
Logan,
Ohio 43138.
resume to.3210 Washington
1·888·582·3345
i::~.;;;.,~.;.;..---., lies, 515106·516/06, 9am·
Member of OFA
~==ed~nd
~~~e;~~~~e
u~;
.c
P
c.:ar"'
t
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k..:..:c_
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825
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5
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WV
Rl\11
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Lnorr
AND
5pm
1831
Cora
M1ll
A
d.
All Roal Eatat
required.
Successful
candl·
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1.1_
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Furmlu
re,
antiques.
applidvartl11mant1 ar
Wantto buy mature standing
Computer expenence and
ances. Home Interior, dish- limber
HOMES
fo r select cut. dates must be proficient In knowledge 01 farm eq\.lfp.
ubJtCI to tho Fedora .,
FOR SALE
. Br,ick home 4BA. 3BA
Premium prices lor hare- customer service and per- ment send resume to· CLA ~~t50~~"'--Satoo!'"'"--lS-...,, .,
air Housing Act o Lost 4 month old black trl es. etc.
INsntucnoN
Australian male pup on Ke rr '"Hu
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968.
basement. ftreplac£1
Road. near Harrisburg &amp;
Responsibilities mclude Tnbu ne, PO Box 469, '--oiiilliiiiiliii.iiliiiro,..l "6uillln 1!;t96 "Approx 1800 garage,
(740)332·6420
mce lot with storage bldg,
Adamsville $25 reward. Call 512106-513106 Baby Items,
sal&amp;s,
scheduling,
Inventory
Gallipolis,
OH
45631
Sq
Ft
w
i2
1/2
acres
'3brm
2
toys, Home
Interior,
Thio newspape
and quallry assurance
Gtlllpolll Carwr College full baths "LAm, FRm, carport, patiO, pool an~
740 245_5984_,
I \11'1 '''\II '\ I
n~:;:;.::;;;;;;;;__ __, Longaberger, too much to ,
ccepta only hoi
Salary
based
on
experience
The
Bob
Evans
In
Mason
I
s
(Careers Close To Home} Formal DAm, Eat in kitchen fenced backyard Excellent
..., I H \ II I ..,
YARD
SAI..E
mention·
576
Orchard
Hill
To appty send a resume to now Htrlng All shifts &amp; pbs!- Call Today I 74()-446-4367, "All Appl' Stay 'Central tocat1on on Jackson Pike
1ntec1 ,IIJa JIIH!In
(740)446-7903,
cell
Ohio
Valley Wireless, 186 Hons currently a11allable
1·80D-214·0452
Atr/heal 'Covered Front (7
OE llllndords.
~~:=::==~
R
oad,
5th
hou
se
on
right
aH
40)44,
.
7096
lltl
SA 7
Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy, .A:::pp~ly~wl:::l:::hl:::n~----'-- www gallipollacareercollegecom Porch, Deck '3 car detach
Ohio45769. Ouestlon,s may Accredited Member Accrediting
Wo will not knowing
be directed to 740.508. The City of Point Pleasant Is Council for Independent COIIeg86 garage w/one stall as a liny accept any advor
accept1ng appllcallons for and Schools 12T4B
ished heated room *Small
100 WORKERS NEEDED 0636
lument In Ylotallo
lifeguards.
Current
lifeguard
1176
shed
attached to garage
Assemble crafts,
and
CPA
certification
is
MJSCE'J.ANF.Ol5
W
ith
a
well ·Two-run dog
f the low..
w
ood
Items.
3 family Garage/moving
Growing
Home
Health
reqUired. Applications are ' - - - - - - - · kennel
•Immediate
To $480/Wk
sale. 2 miles from Holzer
Agency In Lawrence and available
at City Hall. 400
Possesion
' Loan
Matenals provided
Medical Center 1303 E
Mower
for
Sale.
Tray
B
i
t
.·
A
ss
m
pt
n
A·
1 5.5""' All real e1tate advertlalng
' Galli• Countlaa now hiring VIand Street, Point Pleasant
u
10
va1
Free
mformatlan
pkg.
24H
r
Bethel Church Ad. 5/5/06·
In this newapaper Is
RN'1, LPN'a, CNA'e and or for students at PPHS, at 8 HFt - 2 s~- 3
speed-high ' Located between Am
801·428-4649
5/6/06. Rain/shme.
subject to !he Federal
HHA'e.
Point Pleasant High School whaeis 19~ , 3.5 HP Mower, Grande and Ga111polIS Fair
Acl of t968
must be Motorllft45Cyclmderw/10 u$99500
, Shown by APP1 · whichHoualng
5 fam1ly yard sale May 4th- Starmg May 3 4, 5, 2t29 An Excellent way to earn Above average' "1age, Applications
mekes
It Illegal to
ft
reach,
12
HP
Wheel
740
245
0125
740
645
Chestnut
St
,
Gall1
pol1s
m
oney.
The
New
A
v
on
waakenc;t
differential,
flexlreturned to the C1ty no later
· ·
or
· ·
5th, 4466 SA 554 4 miles
advertise
•·any
'l
Call Manlyn 304·882·2645 ble houra. Apply In peraon than 4·00 pm Wednesday Horse w/'JB~ Tiller 740·992· 2249
from Cheshire. Kids clothes,
preference, llmlhtllon or
Fight lha coat of gael , 'ca r
YARD SALE·
'
at A&amp;L Home Care at 6101 May 12
2201
3 months-size 7. womens
based on
PoMEJtoY/l\1n&gt;DLE AVON I All Areasl To Buy or St. Rt. 7, Proctorville, Ohio
112 Pleasant Street, Flo1nt dlscrlmlnatton
pool !Tom Pomeroy to
race, color, religion, ux
, st.le 4 to 1 X., mens
A
1
chmond
T1ckets
for
Sale.
Pleasant,
WV
{
304(675·
Gallipolis (8am-5pm) . I clothes
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304· 'or call 1-866·886-7823 Equal Opportunity Employer
statui or national
clothes , toys playpen, baby
drive, you ride , spill . gas
Mon-Frl between aam- =::::::.:::.:::::.::::::.;:..::;:::;::.:::. 2 Busch and 2 Cup Tickets. 4034 or (304)675-04t8· 3 familial
4 family yard sale, May 1st, 675·1429.
origin, or any Intention to
walker, cetltng fan &amp; lots of
Tired
of
working
all
holiFace
Value-$250.00
C
all
bedroom, 1 1/2bath, fam11y
Smokers welco me
Call
malile eny such
2nd, 3rd, 4th, time 9·7, Care Giver wanted 5pm.
days? Tired ol working 12 740-992·6634
room, d1n1ng room, new Win- preference, limitation or
Melissa (740)446·2342 old
35980
Rocksprings
Road,
SatU
rday,
Sunday,
Monday.
dows new AC, new ~ate r
~4
.
or Large yard sale May 1st Pomeroy
discrimination."
London Pool Manager t)_~ur shills? Come home
WAI'ffi'D
-$60 shift. Needed Send Resume to l'nd JOtn us at Med1 Home
tank, fenced yard
myancoo oey9043C char:. thru May 6th. 12 miles out -....,------- Day shift
'Big Garage/Yard Sale May r-~------,
(304)675-4138
To Do
Aoute 218.
Tl'lls newspaper will not
P.O. Box 266, Syracuse, Health! Open1ng for a PAN
1900 sq h 3bd 2ba home
knowingly accept
AN
and/or
lull
time
AN
posi5&amp;6 Too ~ Mise , Clothes.
Oh1o, 45779, Attention:
with
basement.
sits
an
3
advertlaementa
for real
Care
lor
your
loved
one
1n
tiOn
EOE
Full
time
positions
Chester. 9.00-5:00.
Village Clerk Deadline May
CLASSIFIED INDEX
acres. just off of At 7,
estate which Ia In
my
home
Open1ng
tor
1
I
ncludes
benefit
package,
10th
4x4'a For Sale ...................................... .... .... 725
Friday. May 5th . 297 Ash
401K, and s1gn on bonus lady Expenenced Call Chester Township, Eastern violation of the lew, Our
Announcement ....................;.......~ ........ ....... 030
reedera are hereby
School D1stnct Also regisAntlquee ....................................................... 530 Street, Middleport Lots ot
MATURE, EXPERIENCED $2,000. Call Judie Reese, (740)388·0118
Informed that all
tered
quarter
horses
for
clothes
a-plus
sizes,
toys,
AN , C, Cli nical Manager, at - -- - - - - Apartmanta for Rani .............................. ..... 440
MAINTENANCE
PERSON·
dwellings
edvertilted In
740
4321
985
Auction end Flea Markel................. ............oeo and bedding.
NEL to work In Pomeroy (740)441-1779 or 1-800· Computer Troubleshoot &amp; sale 6Call ( } .
lhll
newepaper
are
' NO EXPERIENCE NECESSA.AV
Auto Parta &amp; Accaaaorlea .......................... 760
Repair Call (740)992·2395 _aft_e_r_:P:_m____ _
481-6334.
area
3
days
per
week.
avell•ble
on
an equal
'FULL ·TIME CL.I.SSES
Auto Repair ......... ............................... .... ... ... 770 Garage Sale. May 5th and
• COL TRAINING
opportunity bn...
20 acre farm with 2500sq ft
Duties include general and Tri-State area dealership In
Autoa ~or Sale .............................................. 71 o 6th S.A. 124. Portland, OH.
' Flfii ANCINO AVAILAALE
vari
e
d
m
aintenance.
cleanGeorge's
Ponable
Sawm1
ll,
oustom
1999,
2
story
home
- -- - - - Boats a. Motora for Sale ............................. 760
need
at
qualified
ATV
&amp;
' JOe PlACEMENT
1 1/4 Miles past Harris
don't haul your logs to the located between Rio Grande
• ENROLLING NOW
Ing
and
on-call
coverage.
Building Supptloo ........................................ 550 Farms,
M
otorcycle
M
echamcs
To
1O:OOAM to ? .
Bualnaaa and Bulldlnga ........................ ..... 340 Cozarts. Aaln
Reli able lransportaMn Is a be considered· Please send Mill just call'304-675-1957. and Jackson, 3-4BA; don, 3
or Shine.
Bualneaa Opportunity .................................21 0
must Mileage paid resume &amp; references to ~1) ~Cm~~ I full bath with master Jacuzzi,
Bualneaa Tralnlng ....................................... 140
ALLIANCE
Applicant may have to sub· 4367 State Route 160,
huge wrap-around porch.
Camper• &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
TRACTOR-TRA ILER
m1t
to
drug
test
and
!X)Iice
large
kitchen with ISland 3
May
4th
and
5th
9
OOAM·
7
Ohio
45631
Gallipolis,
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
TRAINING C ENTER S
record
check
Send
resume
•
car
garaoe
foundation ready
Carda of Thanka .......................................... 010 Somethmg for everyone.
WYTH EVIllE, VA
Gl,
n
gerbread
Hous ~ Day 10 frame: pnvate selling With
Truck
D
nver
Needed
and
phone
numbers
of.
3
Chlld!Eiderly Care .. ..................................... 190 613 Elm Street, Racine, OH
Care Accepting Children 6 great hunting. $234,900
personal references and for· Henderson, WV Based
EIKtrlcaVRefrlg8ratlon ...... ~ ............ .... ... ..... 840
wks. to 12 yrs Hours of (740)384·5182
Equipment for Rent .....................................480
May 5th and 6th Starts at 1-800-334-1203 mer employers to 410 Third COL Ltcense &amp; 2 years operatiOn
7·00 AM to 5·30 ~~:.__:.,...::_ _ __
Excavating .. ., .......... .................................... . 830
'=
- ".:'":::r'o:'""'""-'""-"'"'"""'
' "m
'....J Street Marietta Oh 45750 expenence.
9.OOAM . Women 's an d 1.--"
PM
Oh1o
State, WV State 291 2 Anniston Dr. PI Newly remodeled. 3 or 4
Farm Equlpment ............................. .. ...........810
MVA required.
men's clothes, Beanie Ch1idcare worker needed tor EEO
and
Farms for Rent .............................................430
P~rvate Pay A
ccepted Pleasant 3BA. 2BA. LA. bedrooms. central a1r full ,
Bab1es. many ho~:~ se hol d Residentia l
Treatment ---;-------- ccc::a.:.ll:(::304
=16:.:.7.:.5·.:.74.:34
.::.:...__ Call for rates and to
Farm a for Sale .. .. ...... .. ............................. ... . 330
see 1f FA, Garage N1ce neighbor· basement. hardwood floors.
Items 1381 Duskey Atley. Facolny Pay based on e&gt;peNRA
We are NOT
For Leaae ............... ...................................... 490
hood (304)675 3637 days. detached garage large covyou
m
ay
quality
for
ass1s·
Call 992-1820 for Informs- n~nce, pa1d 1nsurance Call
For Sala ..... .... ..... ....... .......................... ..... .. .. 686
Recrultere Needed!
Typl a1
ered pat1o, fenced back
(304)675-:!!355 evemngs
tance
for
Day
Care
740·
liOn.
to applo
Mon·FII, 9am-3pm Help renew membershipSo1
your
C
For Sllle or Trade ............................. .. .. .. ... ... 590
yard, close to schools, Potnt
'
992·3142
Fruita &amp; Vegetablea ............:.............. .. ...... .. 580
(7
40)379·9083
past
and
present
NAA
Telemarlr.etJnat
3BD.
2Ba.
l1rep1
ace,
40JC60
~ leasant,
$69,500
Fumlohed Roomo ........................................450 Yard Sale, May 1 &amp; 3, -'-- ' - - - - - - barn,
8
flat
acres
Pleasant
(740)709-1382.
10'00AM·6 OOPM, St Route Oesk Clerk posltton open members and work with We help·make a difference Personal Care lor elderly Valley Ad , RIO Grande .c.._:.:._ _ _ _.....c_
Oeneral Haullng...........................................850
Qlvoowoy ..................................................:...040 160, VInton. OhiO
~
Immediately Professional other reputable Political
couple. All shifts In cOuple's $120,000 (740)709-11 66 N1ce hOuse w l 2 additional
by calling on behalf ol the
Hippy Ada ....................................................050
att1tude &amp; tnendly personal!·
orgamzat1ons.
home Call 740-992-7180
lots m Rio Grande Great
natiOn'
s
l
e
ading
Non-Profit
Hoy • Qreln ..................................................640
ty
a must. Please appty 1n ,; Up to $8/hour
Between
e·ooP.-8·00P:
3BR,
2
Car
attached
Garage
rental property or room for
Hea~h Organl.zatlons
ttelp Wanted ................................................. 110
person at Holiday Inn, ./FOil and part time ached·
on I 06 acres $60 000 !lXp~ns1on Call (740)379·
Homalmprovementa...................................810
Gallipolis. NO 'P HONE ules
W1ll babysit In my home (304)675·6331
9887
Homea for 9ale ............................................ 310
NO Credit Card Calls!
AuCtiOn House At 2 CALLS PLEASE
./WMkly Pay and bonus
Eastern
School
District
or
'
------Household Goodl ... .'.. ........................... ..... . 510
NO ProduC
t Sates!
Glenwood wv, next Auction
potentia!
will sit wtth and run errand 3BA. 2ba. LA. FR w/wood Three Bedroom House on
Houaea for Rant .......................................... 410
•
NO
8111
Collectlngl
May 7, 2 pm. Semi Load , Direct Sales FantastiC ./Paid Vacatlona, tra1mng
In Memoriam ................................................ 020
for the elderly ~40·992· burner: gas furnace. new l/2 acres lot Hardwood
lnaurance ........... ........................................... 130 newbrand name tools, tool Oppoitu nlty, 50K no and holidays
4174
CA: attached 2-car garage ttoars, heat pump. large
Lawn a oarden Equlpment ........................ aeo
cabinets, hand tools, house· Problem. Must be Motivated ~ P rofes sional work e nwo r~· •Convenient Schedu+es
w/posslble upstairs apart- pat1o, hn1shed wa lk o~t
Every Friday &amp; Saturday
Llveatock .............................................:.•......830
and Self Starter. Ca'l Ken ment ·
ment, plus another attached basement
W
illing
to
Babysit
In
m
y
wares.
gas
grills.
tents
Two acres
OFFI
Loll and Found ....... .................................... 080 canopies. bikes. mopeds, 17401992·744
1-c'ar garage/workshop: opt1ona1 Ideal tor Horse
near
Middleport
home
CALL
TODAY
Lola a Acreage ...................................... .. .. .. 350
•C
om
pelltlve
Wages
1-877-463-6247
Monday-Friday $2 00 per large outbulldmg above· owner Two m1les lromPoll)!
Mlacellaneoua.,............................................. 170 horse drawn equipment &amp; elman eroaucuon. rnc
17-$8/h r. FT
ground pool: 3 acr~s m/1 Pleasant (304)675-1536
hOur Call 740·992·2217
m
u
ch
more
(304)
762·
111
7
Putchaslng
A
gent,
knowl
e!C1.
2331
Mlacellaneoua Marchandlae............. .......... 540
•W..kly Pay w/Bonus
Askmg $11 0,000 Near Rio
or cell {304)638·5981
dge
In
Technical.
Mobile Home Repalr....................................aeo
I I \ \ '\ t I \I
•Paid Vacations EVERV 8
lectronlcs Automotive.
Grande (740)245-0372
Mo!JIIe Home• tor Rant ............................... 420
Monu . Ho~ u:s
Montha
Mobile Homeefor Sale.................... .... .. ... ...320
Hydraulics, w/experlence I Nursing Assistant Classes
tOR SALE
Auction:
M
odular
H
ouse
beginning May 9, 2006 If ' •Paid Holldavs/PAID
B~SNENS
Money to Loan .............................................220
and
T
ools
&amp; Equipment. urchasing &amp; buying Sen
enjoy elderlypeople and
TRAINING
Motorcyclee &amp; 4 Wheelere............. ..... ........ 740
Ot'!'oR'l'UNfiY
Buckeye Hills Career Resume Fax tQ (304)862 you
14x55·'97 FleetwoOd MHMualcll lnetrumenta ................................... 570 C
want
to
become
a
mem
ber
•MedicaV
DentaWislon
1187
enter, Alo Grande, Ohio.
2BR, I bath, elec heaVAC·
Personal• ................................................... ..005
Benellls
ol
our
health
care
team
T&amp;E, farm tractors at mail· Qlp,:mmaJkerOiron please sloppy Rocksprings
good condil1
on $10,500 Call
Pete for- Sale ................................................ 680
•NOTICE•
Plumbing• Heotlng .................................. .. B2~ 11 ·ooam, House at 12·00 lernet.net
(740)446-3644 tor appt
R
ehabi
l
i
tation
Center
at
Call
N
O
W
_to
start
your
new
HIO
VALLEY
PU
BLISH
Profeaalonal Servlcea ............................... .. 230
•
on May 6, ~ohs. Pos1110n available for 36759 Aocksprmgs Road,
careerl
NG CO. recommends tha
R... lo, TV • CB Rapolr ................... ...... ...... 180 Noon
74
14)(70
Schultz, 3 bedroom,
il
l 1110~)2_4_5~
-53~34~.- - - . , Assistant Housemanager m Pomeroy. Ohio 45769 andfill
(740)446-7442
u do busoness wOih peo
R•l Eetale Y/anted .........................;···--·"''' 360
WANnD
a women's residential fac1!i· out an application for the
ert. 1901
le you know. and NOT t 4 year old Coloma! on 3 2 bath, 6'x20' expando,
Schoola lnetructlon ........................ .............. 150
SHd , Plant 6 Fertilizer .............................. 850
Extendicare
end money through th acres, approx '1,900 sq tt 3 bulldlnQ, porch $10 500
ro Buv
ty. The position requires classes
or
Situation• wanted ..... .................................. 120
Health
Services,
Inc
Is
an
atl until you have ln..,estl bdr, 2 baths, 2 C(\r garage; (304)675-591 1
working e. . enlngs, \~ee kSp8ce tor Rant ................................. .... .. ...... 460
ends Snd · Holidays.
nJaster bdr Is 28x24 w1th a 1996 and Up 14, and 1S
opportunity workplace
employer ,..-~l!-8~7~7~
- 4~6~3-~6~24~7~~~at:
•d:t:he::oH=e~rln~.~~ jacuzzi
Sporting Ooodo ........................................... 520 Absolute Top Dollar· US Candidate must have reli- equal
that encourages
WWW lnfoclalpn
cgm
tub. $125,000. Wide Mob1ie Hornes for Sale
SUV'I for Sale ...... ............................. ... .........720
Sliver and ' Gold Com's. able transportatiOn and h1gh d1ver~lty MIF DN
(7 40)446·7029
Truck• for Sale ............................................ 71!5
1n excellent Conc1111on DAy
Proofsets, Gold Rings, Pre· schOol diploma or GED
Upholstery .................. ...... .. ... .. ..... ............... 870
7 40-388·0000 or 740 38ft
1935
US
Cwrency,
1
4BR
Foreclosure.
only
Vane For Sale............................................... 730 Sollta1re D1amonds· MTS. Must have goOd decls1on
POSTAL JOBS
8513
Eve111r1gs 740·388·
$14,900
For
11stlngs
call
Wanted to Buy ............................................. .090
mak1ng ability and be able to ~1567-$21.98fttr , now hlr·
8017
800-391 -5228 ext. F254
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies .,................. 820 Com Shop, 151 Second work w1th people trorn all mg
For apphcaiiOn and free
Wonted To Oo ...................... ........................ 180 Avenue. Gallipolis, 740..446· backgrounc;ts. Interested
,4BA, 2ba, 100•1b financing ~87~ Home, 3 Brm, 2 bath.
governement
call
2842.
wanted to Ranl ~ .. .. ............................. ... .. ... .. 470
persons may apply t'o Amer1can Assocjobof1nto
available, even wtlh less very n1ce w1th underplnn1n".
Labor
1
·
Yard Sale· Qalllpolla....................................072
Pers!jimnel. PO Box 454, 913·599·6042, 24/hrs emp
thaf\ perfect credit No down $8.800/hrm. Serious Calls
Yard Sala~Pomaroy/Middle ......................... 074 I will buy J\m1l Qaro. Call Gallipolis.
OH 45631
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleaaanl .•.......\ ...................... 078 (740)388·9303
payment (740)742·2376.. ' onlyll! 1304)675·4218
serv

.,. 1

rL,

I

r•o

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Redwomen close season with split at Charleston
CHARLESTON, W.Va. Ttie University of Rio
Grande Redwomen softball
team closed out th e 2006
regular season on Monday
afternoon splitting a doubleheader with the University of
Charleston and will now turn
their attention to the
American
Mide ast
Conference
Qu alifying
Tournament. Rio lost the
first game, 3-2 but won the
nightcap, 2-1.
The offense for Rip
Grande (31-16), in game
one, wasted a solid pitching
effort from senior Andrea
Lotycz. 1 Lotycz ( 10-·12)
pitched six innings with two
strikeouts while yielding
four hits and three runs (one
earned) .

;__

I

'

BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

- Sentinel - 1\e f!)ter
_____

CLASSIFIED
.

URG hoop camps set

~ady Kilights beat Poca

and six more scores in the
sixth to end the scoring for
th e Ye II OW Jac kets .
Hannan got back to work

~rtbune

-

1

1

I'UU'o

r

°

'r-------_.1

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•

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�Tuesday, May 2, 2006

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel .

Rent or Sale 4br in
Syracuse. $800/month &amp;
Oeposlt.
Water/Sewer
Included. No Pels 1304)675·
5332 o«740)59Hl265

SR 7S· 4BR, 1 ·bath home·
garage, basement, river
0535
access. Propane heat. win·
'86 Crestrlge 14x70 28Rf 2 dow A/C. $650/month rent·
bath. $6.995. Call1740)385- $650 sac. dep., you pay utll·
lties. A~atl~e 1st week in
9948.
April . Call (740)446-38441or
'86 Skyline front kitchen. an application .
Cash ~rico $8.995. WHI
deliver. Call1740)385-9948. Stop ranting Buy 3 bedroom
foreclosure $11 ,500. For list· Newly renovated 2 b~room
911 Oth of an acre tor sale on ings 800·391·5228 ext. apt. Downtown, Gallipolis,
143 . 2 mobile homes. 740- 1709.
$475/mo., no utilities Includ992-5858.
ed. Depos~ required . Inquire
in · person at French City
e·rand
new
16'. wide '
H~
vinyVshingle $181/mo. Call
.UR RENT
. Childcare, 300 Third Ave. or
call1740)446-4467.
1740)385-7671 .

i

MOBD...E

I

For Sale or lease At 2
Lesage, WV next to Lesage
Fire Dept. 1.77 acres 211120
sq. feet new log oHice, whole
area Is stoned Ideal tor car,
truck mobile home lot &amp; o1t1ers uses.
Some owner
financing (304)762·1117 or

.-

l\l.'\1 .... 1111/1'-.
\ I 11 I .., II ll 1,

bdrm.-2

Blazer LT
4x4, .
g, ,OOOml, lo aded, New
Goodyears, Onstar, t.eather,
1995 Model1110 Ford New All Powar. $7.500. 1740)245Holland TraCtor. 4 wheel 9245. (740):167-0624.
drive, 17 HP Diesel only 995
Hrs. Hydiostat transmis· 2003 DOdge Neon 4 c:Yt •. s
sion, 3 Pt. hitch, turf tires, speed, air, 78,000 miles,
very nice cond . $3,950.00. $3,600 OBO. (740)2561233.
74Q-416-D918.

General Consb•cllon
and lxcavatl•

North
•

?.. S,~· S,nt ~
At :l?.ecto·4k :t'..eu
New Construction
and Remodeling ·
Flat Roofs A Specialty

MONTY

HOME CREEK ENTERPRISES
-7953
416-1436

I.---------.

Judy 'l&lt;ay's ':Restaurant

~V~15,...;;...TR!""'u·CKS---."'I

L

Repair
3 miles west

OH
State Rt. 124

992-5682

r

David Lewis

740-992-6971
~~=::~~~~@

Ir

"Carpet

LL---~GOOil'i:;;:;;:;lO..-

I

~40

· MANLErS
SElF STORAGE

•

SIMI

I

I

1()

1

111

'

I.AWNCARE
Mowing- T~ee
Trimming - Aeratio~-~
Fertil izalion· planting·

Campers- Trucks - Deck

Mulching
I

II I

f

.11'11

tl

'I I

r

KrnnTNG
SUPI'I..IFS

I

For Syracuse Ball Association
Yard Sale
Bring items to tennis courts
May 5th sta(ling at 8 am.
Larger items can be picked up
Just call 992-17 49
992-6137 992-5564
Yard Sale
Sat, May 6th 9 am - 5 pm
Syracuse Tennis Courts
Proceeds Benefit

I

I i

GMAUTOSHOW
Point Pleasant
Riverfront Park
Friday, May 5, 2006
2 prT,l to 6 pm
99.5 Big Country Live Remote
. Saturday, May 6, 2006
10 am to 4 pm ,
Cherry Ridge Band Bluegrass
Music 1 pm to 3 pm
Register for FREE Megabash
Jickets $100 value

Sponsored by
Smith Superstore

r

AKC Reg . Lab pup s, shots &amp;
papers. Born 2/8/06. $200.
(740)44 1·0931
AKC. reg. mini dachshund
puppies 2 liners 1 ready now
very unusual colors ~nd
dapples 350.00 and up ~40·
256-1498, cell-5781058
Dachshund puppies $300. 1
shots &amp; 1 wormtng, AKC
Call (740)645-7009.

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
INfHE
CLASSIFIEDS
'

2.001 Partk.raft 24ft Pontoon ·
Public Notice
by Godfrey Marine. Canopy. - - - - - - - 2 stroke 40HP Yamaha, trail· In the Common Pleas
er, beautiful boat Garage Court,
Probate
kept. approx. 42 hrs on boat Division
Meigs
motor.
Call
daytime County, Ohio
.
(74;0)446·9416 or evenings
In the matter of
&amp; weekends 1740)441-1724. Set)lament
of

Block, . brick, sewer pipes,
window's. lintels, etc. Claude
WinterS. Rio Grande, OH
Cell740-245-5 121 .

Two 1997" three seater
Sedoo's on a twin aluminum
trailer. One BSHP GTI &amp; one
11 OHP GTX under 85 hrs on
both PWC's. Garage kept.
Excellent as new conditio n.
Call daytime (740)446-9416
- - ' - - - - - - - - or evenings &amp; weekends
1989 Teyota Tercel. Does
(740)441-1724.
run, needs work $350. Call
(740)367-7057.
CAMPERS &amp;
:...._:_,-_ _ _ _ __
1990 · Chevy
Caprice ~ MOTOR HOMES _
Classic,' runs good, like new
inside &amp; out, 85K, must see 02 Wildcat 28ft . Slh wheel,
$1850, (740)416-1472
slide out, fiberglass sides,
$18,000. Excellent condi·
1995 Pontia c Bonneville tion , clean. (740)245·9109,
20 mpg, 93,000 1740)441-7632.
3800
miles, all power, AC, $3,000 ---~----080. (740)245·5934.
1982 Allegro Motor Home.

r

ve.

Lab puppies AKC, papers,
shots, wormed. Only 4 left.
1997 Buick Park Avenue.
$100 (304)675-7652
Leather, loaded. all malntenance records, well maintalned , 116k, asking $4,600 .
(740)245-5934.
Water Hyacinths
1998 DOdge Dakota, Auto,
V6, 2X4, air, bed topper.
Butterfly Koi, Red &amp; White
1994 Chevy Astra Conv.Van ,
FBntails (304)675·5043
Auto, Air, $1500.
1999
Dodge Caravan, Auto. Alr.
FRuns&amp;
$2800.
1998 Chrysler
VEGETABU.S
Sebring LX, Auto, Air,
Homegrown
Asparagus $3200. M&amp;J Auto, St. At
available at McKean Farm, 160, Vinton, Ohio, Cali 388Centenary Rood , 1740)448- 9693 2PM-6PM or. 742-2662
9442.
. ~ny1ime.

-'-'------

I

Accounts,
Probate
Court Meigs County,
Ohio
·
Accounts and vouch·
era o( the following
named fiduciary, has
been flied In the
Probate Court, Meigs
Ohio
for
County,
approval and settle·
ment.
ESTATE NO. 30988·
The Second Account
of Richard and Sherry
Riffle, Co·Guardlana
of the person end
eatate
of
Kevin

Jerome Jaml.on, Jr., a

minor.
·
Uhle88 exceptions are
flied thereto, said
Good Condition. Low miles.
account will be set for
&lt;740 )256 "6492
hearing before aald
1983
Nomad
Century Court on the 2nd day
camper by Skyline, 24', of June, 2006, at which
good condltkln, sleeps 6, ac

needs repair all else worMs
. goOd, {740)667·3655
Truck Caml"r. wlbath, AC,
TV Antenna on top $5,200.
(2)
26" Bikes , like new
1304)675-3353
'-. I tn II I-..

HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

+AJ

(740) 992-2804

)\·..

CARPENTER
SERVICE

V.C YOUNG Ill
997-6? 15
l'rw 1''11V Ohl~
2'1 V .11~ Lnr dEll-'' 111

r1

FRANK-&amp; EARt_.IEST

rJO··IT'S JUST
~;-:_ ·

I

(740) 517-6883

Je ff Slel hem · Ow ne r

ArJOTtl~ll

/ CAS~ OF
M~l&gt;IA~

':Insured"

Call Gary Stanley
740·741·1293
• Leave a message

Jl•••••••

time said account will
be conalder9d and 1
continued from day to
day until finally dla·
posed of.
Any person Interested
may Ilia written exception to aald account or
• New Homes
to matters pertaining
• Garages
to the execution of the
truat, not less then five
• Complete
daya prior to the date
Remodeling
aet lor hearing.
J. s. Powell, Judge,
Common Peas Court,
·Probate .
Division
Stop &amp; Compare
Mtllgs ·County, Ohio

1998 · red Monte Carlo,
Cuto Contracting
loaded, Pioneer CD stereo,
Commercial
Residential
American racing wheels ,
Remodeling "We do it all"
68,000
miles,
$7,000.
Phone (740)446-0306.
Phone(740)446-3267
(5) 2

ROBERT
BISSEll
COISTIIctldN

740-992-1611

54
,55

56

bees

57

20 Hotel

24 Tillers

East

Pass

Db!.
Pass

3 NT

AU pass

+A

Double, redouble
and duck

9 Winmn's

10
13
19

21

DOWN

combos

4

lead:

58

~~

1 Heavy metal
27 Kissed
band
loudly
2 "Banana
30 Line of rotaBoat" song
tion
3 Cain's
31 Sopranobrother
Gluck
4 Stadiums
32 Lightning
5 Fake leather
by-product 6 Whichever
34 Glnnio7 Vortexes
35 Crisp cookie 8 Toe woe

24
25
26

27
28

29
31
33

feeling
Ctlquea
Fuel source
(2 wds.)
Untts of
resistance
Big Dipper
bear
Radio
hobbyist
Reason to
cram
Stead
Tame
Cotleen'a
home
Senhora
Primeval
Auction
algnal

35 Twins, e.g .
Remnant
Nothing
39 Place of
china
41 Round
numbers?
42 Furtive
36
38

sound
43

44

46
47

48
51

Wiesel or
Ducommun
Scrape of •
cloth
Yuppie
apartment .
A Great
Lake
Bird food
Gleeful
shout

spot-card '" the South hand?

Over East's lakeout double , Sout ~'s
redouble promises at least 10 high-card

points. After this, a sensible agreement is

Hardloocl calllneirJ And FunHurt

that either the opening side buys the contract or the opponents play in something
doubled for penaRies. So. North's pass
over one diamond is fo rcing- when East
passes, Sou1h musl do somethin~. Note
also that if North rebids in front at his
partner, it shows a minimum or subminimum ope.ning. Wi th full values, he passes
and continues his description on the next
round (unless he passes out a penally
double by·pa rlner) .
In three no·trump, if declarer wins the first
trick, guaranteeing two diamond tricks, he
should go down. East wins the ne)(t trick

BARNEY

www.-lMwo,HkoablallU7·...,

740.446.9200
2A59 St. Rt. 160 • GaiUpolls

~

!

~2u~I~4

J

:

E

Chu~k

Wolfe
Owner

11,-.;-L-.----L:!:..=--.J

• New Homes • Additions
• Remodeling

THE BORN LOSER

Licensed Home Bl!ilder

WI-\P..T l fOI((;()T TO

(740) ·992-0496 -

r

.

P'"t-\CI'E...:. Tt&gt;-KE. OFF \"l==R=&lt;R
1"\"' :,ocK::&gt; N"l&gt;

,,£'&lt;,!'AD~, c;,u~~~

~1-\0E:.~!

t:&gt;O &amp;.fORE.. I

with his club ace and returns the diamond
nine, the top at two remaining cards . West
should know Ia duck. Then, when declarer plays a heart, East grabs the tricl&lt; w11h
his ace and leads his lasl diamond. The
detenders collect one heart, th ree dia·
monds and pne ~lu b.
But il South concedes the 1i rst trick, he
m~kes the contract West may take the
nexl diamond and ret urn a third, bul he
has no entry. Declarer lo ses onlY one
heart, two diamonds and one club .
It is lucky. thoug h, tha1 South has the
.spade tO~ else East a! tr~k 1wo or West
at Irick three could shift to that suit, n_etting lor the defense two spades. one
heart, one diamond and one club.

G

..
aiG NATE

.

WHAT·s

NOT

"SoUT

IT, IT5 AN

!&gt;Oii.ING

EXACT CO~'( oF
E"l/ E R'l' OTHE~ DA'I'
AROUND THIS DUI'\P!

.

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

!)

.....

.

'Red 'Rose
§reenfiouse
Opening Day
Sunday May 7th
12-?
Refreshm~nts

Served
$8.00 Flats $8.00 Baskets
Variety of Min"iature Roses
Hour.o: 8-8 Daily
50447 Tornado Rd.

Racine, Ohio

PEANUTS
I'M NOT 601N6 TO SC~OOL ANVMORE
BECAUSE l ALREADY' KNOW E~ER'r'T~ING
I'LL EVER NEED TO KNOW ..

~OW

FARAWAV 15 TI-1E
MOON, W~EN WA5 6£0R6E
WASI-IINGTON BORN AND

W~AT'5 T&gt;IE FRENCH WORD

FOR TOOTHPASTE?

ADVERTISE IN THIS .
SPACE FOR $54 PER
MONTH
Cornerstone
·Construction

·'

SUNSHINE CLUB
I AM MJ OIL

£XELUT/Vb.

Residential • Commercial • General Conln~d.lna
Painting • Doors • Windows • Decks
·
• Siding • Roofing • Room Additions • Remodeling
WV 031882
• Plumbing • Electrical 7-t0-367..0544
OH 312-44
• A ccoustic Ceiling
7.t0-33ii-3A12

-Economy Beef $8.25
·
-Shade Rtver Beef $8.75
-Whole/Shell Corn $7.25/Bag
-Cracked Corn $8.25/Bag
-Soybean Meal $13.25/Bag
-Shade River Hog Feed $8.85

GARFIELD

Why Drive Anywhere Else?

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537 St Rt 1 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-985-38 1

FOR RENT- MEIGS COUNTY
1·4 BR Houses &amp; Apts.
1 Luxury- Also HUD
Also Cc;Jmmercial Space
740-416- 547 .
Now Available At ·

BAlll\1 Llii\IBER
Scorpion Tractors
"Taking The Sting Out Of
Hard Workl"
Mid-Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines
'

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celeb!~

Clphef cryptograms are Cleated trom Quota~ !)OS 1zy famous p&amp;O!lie . past anc1 pr&amp;Sent
Each lllnet in the Cipher stands !!J anolller

Today's due: Eequals R

" YECYF

HR

GRIZZWELLS
1\l;-,''RE

KZIB, YFWG OZGBM,
UHIB DB

MY Mo\ffi-1

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Tb be a grea1 champ ion , you mus1 believe you are
th e be11 It you·re not. pretend you are:- Muhammad Ali
•

WDID

AstroGraph
-

OiMI

&lt;JIIrthda,y:

By Bernice Bede O•ol
In the year ahead, people you know on a
social basi s are likely to play far more
pro minent roles in your aflalrs than they
ever have previo usly. When somethi ng
important is at stake, make your desires
known so they can help.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)- You have .tar
grea!er_ resolve to draw upon !han you· may
rea lize. Should challenging sitJ,Iatio ns
arise, draw upon the strength that's 81ways
wtlhin you. You're equal to the test.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- Doubting the
validity ol your ideas or ventur.es will be
your downfall . Instead. put your full force
behind them; ·believing In yourse lf will
make big things come you r way.
·
CANCER (June 21-July 22) • No matter
what. do not lower your sights where your
material goals arB concerned . You're now
In a good cycle 10 increase your holdings,
but you must llrst believe in' yourself.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) • Kriowledge that
you've gained from pa st experiences can
always be helpful, and , if you are ·so
inclined you can use it in a profitable man ·
ner. Use your smarts to f)lak.e more money. ·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22)- Although you
might not raa!ize II , you have a diligent
supporter busy working_ on your be half
behin d the scenes. S/he Is able to do
lhlngs lor you that you're unable to do for
yourself.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - People who
meet you tor the lirst time will be favdrably
Impressed. TheY'll be. aware of your liner
qualities, even if you are not. and will be
eager 10 get to know you better.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Breaks that
were previouslY denied you concerning
your career might start popping loose. Be
alert, hOwever, because , once th ey start.
opportunities may come in rapid succession .
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) - Don't
waste time on small matters or issues ol
little consequence. If you let.yourself th ink
in tJrandiose terms. substantia l strides can
be ma de at th is time In furthering your personal interes ts.
·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - You're
w.ell equipped to manage the affairs or
resources ol othe rs. so don't sell yourself
short I~ any lash ion. When you loOk O~t for
their welfare, lhey, in turn, will look out for
yours .
AQUARIUS {Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - .11 you
have a n.atter of great Importance 10 dis·
cuss wit h another at this time, don't use
the telephone. e-mail or post olfice. The
re sults will be lar better if you meet him/her
face·IO·Iaca
PISCES (Feb. 20-Ma rc h 20) - The re
might be e tendency on yo u part to sell
your skills short when perlormlng work or
services lor another. Your client will be willIng to pay you a talr price to r value
received".
ARIES (March :2 1-Aprll 19) ,.,_When the
we&amp;~er types beg!n to falter, don't let them
pull you down. People with whom you're
Involved wil l be tooklng for leadership, and
you should assume tnat role .

J

SYHUB

•I;

I'

'

I
D0 E R 0

SHES IT

I I.

:1'!-" fdltnQ

r~e:

chu;:kle aiJOied

1r. the m1U1n~ woros

oeve lop irom s1ep Nc 3 beiow

Deputy- Humid - Ubel- Tamely- MULTIPLY
friend and J were hsvin~ lunch. The
dessen. "No thanks:· m)
friend smiled, calories""' known to add and
Mv

pv~rwei~ht

waitress asked if we wanted

II .

MVLTlPL,_:Y-"-!"_ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ __

ARLO &amp; JANIS
OH, IOOI.l'f KfJOIV.'
A LITfl~ EJ,Cil£11£1.)! .
WOOLD BE- lllCE..

.~

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f p

·'
.

0 .Com~ll!!e

SCRAMLETS ANSWERS 511106

I~

r

Whiie attending a cocbail party. J
overhe!lrd one gent say to his date.
•·A bore is someone who thinks he
is alwaySai ·-M -- .•·

~ol.!

~ M.Ai-1"

--- ----- . .

1

'-...l.-i--..L-'.__J ~

IJ.J~i~~l\'16! '··

------·~---

I~

.,t--,--1-r---r-:11,....,----1 ~

St. Rt. 124 Chester 985·3301

1--- - - - - - ---------,------------'-

YFWG VWDB,

YFZEBWC

A\..REA\71'

l'liXi 'l:l

BAUM LUMBER

YZ VZEYCGB."

YECYF . " - FBGEM L.

Of't~IH6

·A rAMI\.'\"
lliflAURAHT
r.A~K

EZWL

-X. EZC· RRBWC " EWYFBE - YFWG

SOUP TO NUTZ

I IIEARP

'T'riE

GZ

Wednesday, May 3, 2006

740-949·2217

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• 'Free Estimates

·

53

Puzzte

This deal features a clear-cut double, a
textbook redouble and an unusual duck.
But what is potentially the most important

giA$. -

'

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

+

Opening

,

Hill's Self
Storage

olngor
17, Recital
piece
18 Group of

23 Before, In

Soulh . West · North
t

52

An1wer to Prevlout

movie
Gorman city
Tiro feature
Geltha's
accessory
Alphabet
onder
PoreoY8r
Ph lily loam
Mill refuse
DEA operalive
Sounk&gt;ugh'a
olrlke
Deep breath
A grand
Old curse
word
l;xperlment
" Daddy"
Warbucks' · .
servant
A Kennedy

computer

to

Deale,·; North

Pass

50

22 Kubrick's

Vulnerable: Neither

1 NT

49

IIINfrlnaly
15 Textile
colorer
16 "Cilinoco

"'109 2

Redbl.

45

offerings

K to 3

I

42

14~~t

¥ · Q109• B

992-3194
or 992-6635

t~

i

•

'
1

.

South

staining or painting
Special rates for

I ' I )I II ill I

K 9 5

4 A 6

EIP.

POWER WASHING
Homes- DecksDriveways- Equipment
Degreasing- Boats·

+

41

Heck
Onion

Flow''

East
• QJ 9 4
¥ A 54 2

"' 8 53

TRI -STATE mOBILE POWER WHSH
AnD LAWn CARf

97 Beech Street
Middleport.
10x10x10x20

Ray Martin

A 7 6 2

8 5
7 6 3
Q784 .2

2101

304-675-2457
'

1

r1.~-~MER=CHAND~-ISE:ii.J r

•
•
•

ROGER HYSELL
GARAGE
Auto &amp; Truck

"

05-02..()&amp;

West

Parking Lots • Ball Courts • Private
Roads • Driveways • Streets •
- Free Estimates Playgrounds

~===============~

r

cinema

7 Brunch fare

• 8 3 4KQJ74

• SEAL COATING
• PATCHING

36 Firat 007

1 Tooth pro's 37
org.
39
4 Gardner of 40

¥ KJ

S~rMfi,U.,

7
591-4641

c

aw~lll

ACROSS

11
12

r

t

'

Phillip
Alder

·2001

Beth.

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

BRIDGE

1999 Honda Civic 2d
$4,200; 1993. VW Passa1
CLX $3,492; 2000 Grand
AM · SE $4,200; 2001
Cavalier $4,200; 1997 Tahoe
4x4 like new $6,900. We
have Saturns, Geo Metros,
Sunfires &amp; others In stock.
Prices displayed on wind·
sheitds of all cars. Cook
Motors, 328 Jackson Pike,
(740)446-Q103.

untur- Pl . Pleasant area 2br cloae 2 Case Tractors, 85hp, 1 2003 Man te arlo., 3.4 1iter,
AI"\ nn?
~£
$10.995. Will help with deliv- nls he d- Washe r/D r yar. 1o downtown. Kitchen lur- with tronl end klader. Call 6 cyl , likenew,52.320miles,
ery. Coll1740)385-9621 .
porches. No Pets. monthly nished
$300
deposit (740)245-5535.
(740)992-0477. 740-416rent and utilities and. deposit. requi red (304)675-7783
3357, must sell
r
L&lt;m&amp;
740-992..()()31.
•
4000 Ford Tractor diesel, - - - - - - - - Philly Stellk &amp; Chetst
A&lt;:RMGE.
- - - - - - - - Single Bedroom $300 month F&gt;S, $3,600. Call (740)379· 2003 PT Cruiser Turbo,
wJFries
2 Bedrooms and 2 Baths, + S300 deposit 2 br Apt 2544 leave message.
automatic,
cruise,
air,
$5.99 Everyda~
(made with Choice Fresh
22 acres, wonderlul view, unftHnlshed--washer/dryer, $350 a month $300 deposit. ----~-'-~- $4.600 OBO. Call (740 )256•
Blpck Angu" Sliced Ribeye)
po rches. No PBts. $550.000 Tracy's Apt. (304)675-2288 Ford 9-.N 195Ci tractor, bush 1652.
ridgetop property, close to
main highway no:orfect for 4 • and utilities and deposit. T
-r
h
hog, finish mower. Looks, - - - - - - - - . 1
.1
0 a1111 Lunch Specra
8 re~t k·'145 r Spectll
,.....
740-992-()()31
'ara
.own ouse run great. $3,750. (740)669- 2003 PT Cruiser, 4 cyl.,
s
wheeler trails. (740)707- - - - - - - - - - Apartments , Very ,Spacious, 4971
All Day
'
$4.99
2 09
runs &amp; looks great, good gas
1
$
eggs,stws~tgeorbacott
S,alads- Cl1ej-Grilled
3 Bedroom, Bath &amp;1 /2 2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2 - - - - - - - 7 200
Trailer Country-Aural Area, Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby Have some hauling to do? mileage,
·
·
Call
.hornefries &amp; toast $4.99
Cllicken &amp; Chicken Tender
7 40 38 8 1 4 0
At Glenwood 5-7/10 acres of HUD Welcome · W!Oeposit. Pool , Patio, Start $425!Mo. Carmichael
Equipment· _(__&gt;_~_-o____
· _._ __
All Burgers made from fresh ground c huc~ featuring
wooded land only $6,060. (740)843-5196
No Pets, Lease Plus your sour.ce tor quality 2004 Mercury Marquis GS.
Call 703-971-0839.
Judy Kays Special Burger -Charlie Brown Burger
Security Deposit Required, goosenecks, dumps and util· Gold color, 4 door, VB, good
Mobile Home for Rent In (740)367- 70S6.
ities. Your dealer k&gt;r Prostar gas mileage, Etxcelleht con&amp; C11rolina Burger
Wanted : Pasture &amp; Hay
Family Pride Mobile Home _:__:____ _ _ _ and Load Trai l traile rs. dition,
6,000
miles.
ground to lease or r6nt. Call Park. 2 bedroom $375 Twin Rivers Tower is accept· ,
6"
17.4 0)446·0626 . 3·8pm
, 740144 241 • ·
t 95 N. Second Ave. • Middleport, OH
1740)256-9250.
month {304)674-4633
ing applications lor waiting
John
Deer
650
tractor
w!6fY'
evenings.
list lor Hud-subsized. 1· l:ir,
Mobile home sites 1or up to apartment, call 675·6679 belly mower. 1,o4o hrs, ·
16x80 in Country Homes. EHO
$5.500. call (740)949-2169
tuR SAUl
_
(740)385-40 19.
'Ill&lt;( 11\ \ llhl
John Deere 10 h. No Til Drill
Need to sen your home?
Taking applications for 2
for
rent .
Carmi chael 1998 C6500 GMC cab &amp;
Late on payments, divorce,
chasis. 24 foot frame. Great
Equipment (740)446-2412.
job transfer or a death? 1 bedroom mobile home. No
pets. $285/mo. includes
for rollback or log truck. 366
can buy your home. All cash
John Deere Mini Excavator/ C.U. with Allison automatic.
$200/dep.
and quick closing. 740-416- water/sewe r.
(740)446-3617.
.
Tractor Loader Backhoe! $6,500. Leave message
All rypu or rooting:
3130.
Complete queen size poster
Skid Steers. Carmichael (740)388-8803.
New or Repair
bed
I~ I \I \I ..,
$400;
Armoire
$200;
Very clean 14.1164 2 bed·
Equipment (740)446-2412
of
Seamless Gutter
room. Only $7,995 . Call new love seat $350; 3 enter98 Dodge 1500 Quad cab.
· Downspout
tainment centers, 1 lor $1 00; Load Trait/Load Max Trailers· Pomeroy;
(740)385-0698.
4WD. loaded, $6,850 nego2 $50 each, rocking chair G oos en ·e cks/0 um p s·/
tiable . (740)446-1905 or
Very small 2 bedroom . $25: computer desk $25; Utilities.
on
FREE
Carmichael (304)412-4645.
watei, trash, sewage paid. chest $25; console TV $75.
Equipment (740)446·2412.
ESTIMATES
No
pets.
$335/mo. 1740)441 -0988.
For Sale or Trade 1987
1BR house- 11 Garfield Ave. $335/dop. (740)368-9325.
Massey
Ferguson
135 Chevy 5 _10 4 :&lt;4 , 1994
Gallipolis. $350 month. Call
Free est imates Mollohan Tractor with Howes Bush ~ntiac Grand AM, 19, 7
AJ'AKI1\1F1ffi;
for deta ils (740)441 -0194 or
Carpet. Berbef S5.951yard. Hog. Ford 2000. Ford 6610.
John Deere 1520. 740 _286 . Olds Achieve for parts only
tuRRENT
(740)441- 1184
(740)446-7444. 76 Vine St.
6522.
~(3ili04~).;.57..;6..;·2;;;2.;.25~~-..,
2br House 2123 Lincoln 1 and 2 bedroom apart· ~ Refrigerator, almond, large - - - - - - - - 4x4
Ave. No Pels; Deposit &amp; ments, furnished Bnd unfur- freezer at top, nice, $150. New John Deere COmP,acts
FoR SALE
References
$385/month nished , security deposit Washer. heavy duty, $95, and 5000 Series Utility trac- ~~--llii-iiiiiii;,._.l
(304)675·2749
required , no pets, 740-992- dryer.
$95 .
Gene tors CO% Fixed ·for 36
2218.
Appliances , 76 Vine St. months
through
John 1979 Ford F 150 Custom All
3 bedroom, r)a, nice clean - - - - - - - - - ( 7 4 o.} 4 4 6 -. 7 ; o o. a m , Deere Credit. Carmichael OriginaL $2,500.00 Firm.
740-742-0519.
house. small yard , quiet 1 bedroom apt . Stove, (740)441·8258-pm.
Equipment (740)446-2412
street , good· neighborhood, refrldg, water. sewer, trash :__::_--.::::::.:_::...__ _
$425.00
pl us
deposit, paid. Porter. OH (740 )367 _ Thompsons Appliance &amp; Quality John Deere .Hay 1966
Chevy
Silverado
26 Years Experience
(740)843-5264. 1n Racine.
For
sale,
E;qulpment
for
less-round
Shortbed
4x4.
94000
.
Repair-675-7388.
7015
re-conditioned
automatic balers, square balers 8. Original Miles. Garage Kept.
3BDR + 2 1/2 baths, 2 car 1 bedroom apt. . Vine St., w~shers 8. dryers, retrigera- mower conditioners @4.7% Nice. $4500. 740-446·95.74
garage, lurnish&amp;d, closed to Gallipolis. Ohio. (740)367· tors , gas and electric Fixed for 48 months th rough 740-339-2312
Holzer.
$850
month. 7886.
ranges, air conditioners, and John
Deere
Credit - - - - - - - - (740)441 -0310.
wringer washers . Will · do Carmichael
Equipment 1999 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Free
2 Bedroom Apartments repairs on major brands In (740)446-2412.
L aredo, Burgund y, 4 .0, 4
3BA, 2 1/2 bath, unfurn. starting at $400/mo. Most shop or at your home.
OH
~ ·wheel drive, 135,000 miles,
$600 per mo. Oep. req ... ref. Brand New. Call lor ~etails
good condition. $6,800.00
Good location. (740)446· (740)441 -0194
~
SPORilNG
~ LIVI'SIOCK
Firm. 740-992-7599.
Free Measurements
3667,
2 bedroom apt in Rio
M
""- _,
Angus Bulls, two X·breds, 4
4br, Living room, Family Granda. $340 month $340
4 W~ll...I...6Y ,
Room , 2·barhs, Kitche n, deposit. Call (740)245-9060. Winchester model 12, 1948 hailers. E:&lt;cellant breeding. ...,
Installer
12128i mod. $400. (740)245- Sla1e Run Farm . See
Dining Room . Mt. Alto. No
· "Middleport's only
Construction 06t1 .
WlfJW.slaterunfarm.com, 1972 Yamaha XS650 origiPets S650/month (304)674- Attention
Self-Storage•
Carpet
nal paint $1,200.
Workers .
2 sleeping ~r~--------,
_ (740)286-5395.
5577
. ANnQUE't
2004 Honda Trail 70 Clone
rooms.--turni shed w/cable
Ceramic Ttle
4br. newly remolded near and utilities-weekly and L~-------..r Quality horse and livestock 90cc,
as
new
$750.
Open For
Hardwood • Vinyl
740·992· trailers now available at (740)245-0611 .
Ritter Park. Great for Grad. monthly rates.
Spring
Season!
Carpet Restretch
0031 or 304-882-3449.
Buy or
sell:
Riverine · Carmichael Eqt.llpment. New
Students. (304)593-8890
*
Flats
$7.50
Laminates ·
BEAUTIFUL
APART· Antiques, 1124 East Main dealer for Valley and 1985 Honda Shadow VT500
Attention!
'
H
anging
Baskets
740-517-3704
MENTS
AT
BUDGET on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740· Kieferbuilt
Horse
and runs &amp; looks grea1, new
Local company oHering "NO
*
Pots
and
Tubs
tires.
garage
kept
Asking
-06
_
PRICES AT JACKSON 992·2526. Russ ·Moore , Livestock Trailers. Many
740 992 50
DOWN PAYMENT" proSPRING SPECIAL
options available- steel, alu- $1.200 OBO. 1740)645- ..__ _ _ _ _ __.
ESTATES, 52 Westwood owner.
grams for you to buy your
Large 10"' Ferns $6.95
minum, dressing rooms, liv· 2091.
Orive irom $ 344 to $442 _
home instead of r8nt1ng .
Pie Safe, Sellers Kitchen ing quarters (740)446-24,2
Shrubs and Perennials
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call cupboard. Table and chairs,
·
· 1999 Harley DavidSon Ultra
• 100% financing
1
HUBBARD'S
Equal 1800's Oak Secretary, and Registered Angus bulls. 3 Classic. Loaded, Excellent
" ~ess than perfect credit 740·446·2568 .
GREENHOUSE
Housing Opportunity
accepted
.
Bedroom Sui1e. 740·2:86· year olds to yearling. Price condition, 29,000 total miles.
6522.
• Payment cou~ be the
$2,000-$1,000.
· Call Price $13.500. Cell 740Syracuse. OH
• BASEMENT •
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT1740)245-5984.
same as rent.
949-2217 until7 pm.
740-992-5776
WATERPROOFING
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
MISL1li:1.ANID!.!i
Mortgage
Locators .
Open Mon-Sat 10-5,
Unconditional lifetime guar·
Townhouse
apartments,
1999 Harley Fat Boy 9.400
1
(740)367-0000
antee. Local references furC losed Sunda
and/or small houses FOR
miles, tots of extras, new
4 S2mo
nlsh8d. Established 1975.
Behind Go-Mart , 2br House. RENT. Call (740)441 -111 1
lires. $13,000. 1740)441·
JET
Call
.
24
Hrs.
(740)
446lor
application
&amp;
information.
$375/monlh Ty (304)675Tobacco Plants for sale. Call 1794 or (740)339·3528.
AERATION MOTORS
0870, Rogers Basement
.
4030
YOUNG'S
Gracious lil(ing,. 1 and 2 bed · Repaired , Ne'# &amp; Rebuilt In 1740)446-7843 or (740)6452004 TTA225 . Excellent Waterproofing.
1660.
room
apartments
at
Village
Stock.
Call
Ron
Evans,
1House lor rent . (740)446·
condition, low hours, $2,400.
Manor
and
Riverside 800-537-9528.
I \I\\. ,\ I .\ )Hi l ' I Ill )
423'\ or (740)208-7861.
(740)446-7166.
Apartments in Middleport.
Middleport. 2 to 3 bedroom From $295-$444. Call 740- - - - - - - - - - Gravely Zero Turn mower.
Room Additions I
BoAlS &amp; MOTORS
Like new, $2,500." Call
Remodeling
House.
Total Electric. 992·5064. Equal Housing
~
tuRSALil
•
New G•r•u$425.00. 740-843-5264.
Opportunities.
Eitc1rlcal 6 Plumbing .
Roofing &amp; Gutters
VInyl gdlng 8t Pllnllng
Patio •nd Porch Deck•
WV036725

Nice t 4x70 3 bedroom only 2

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALLEVOOP

FOR SAul

FOR REm
2002 14&gt;® Claytoo Mobile
Heme. 2 bedroom. 1 balh
with AC. Can stay on rented
lot in Spring Valley if accept~
ed by tandJord.
Great
Ccnditlon.
$17 ,500 call
(740)446-4096 or 1740)645-

Tuesday, May 2, 2006

AUTOS

llotlsls

----.·--- -'-"'-----------

�Pqe 88 • The Daily' Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, M·ay 2, 2006

O'Bleness Memorial ·

Plenty of whining·in Wizards-Cavaliers·series

AP photo
Cincinnati Reds' pitcher Bronson Arroyo reacts aftenhe final out of
his complete game taking the Reds to a 6-1 win over the St.Louis
Cardinals during their baseball game Monday in Cincinnati.

CLEVELAND (AP)- The
playoff series between the
Cleveland Cavaliers and
Washington Wizard s · has
become a battle of high-scoring stars, and their complaining coaches.
LeBron James and Gilben
Arenas rank first and third in
scoring average this postseason, while coaches Mike
Brown and Eddie Jordan likely lead the league in whining
about officiating.
The series, knotled 2-2,
returns Wedne sday night to
Cleveland, as mud\ a contest
of words as 3-puinters and
dunks.
First, Jordan accused referees of givi ng James ·the star
treatment a; his 41 points led
Cleveland to a 97-96 road win
in Game 3 Friday night.
Jordan wanted a traveling call
on James' game-winn ing
drive to the rim with 5.7 seconds left .
Jt was Brown 's turn to
grouse after Game 4 Sunday
night.
"I don 't know how LeBron
'can be on the floor for 45

minutes and pick up four
offensive fouls," Brown said.
"I need to watch the tape. but
it's sh ockin~ to see htm get
four offensive fouls in 45
minutes o~ action."
With the Cavaliers traveling
home late Sunday, the team
took the day off Monda~ from
practice - and co mplaming.
Brown wasn't alone in his
grumbling after the 106-96
loss in which the Cavaliers
blew a t3-poi nt second-half
lead andofthe
control
the chance
series . · to &gt;eize
"Out of our 22 · turnovers.
I'd probably say I 0 to l 2
were offensive fo ul s," said
James, who finished with five
fou ls. "Questionable calls, but
we have to live with it."
Were the refs compensating
for Friday night's game?
Cavaliers guard Larry Hughes
thinks so and believes
Jordan 's complaints helped
the Wi7..ards even the series.
" I guess it makes a difference. You can see during the
course of the game - 40 free
throws, we get 34 fQuls, that 's
the way it goes, I guess," .

Hughes said.
"If LeBron gets calls , then
In
comparison,
the Gil should get calls," Wizards
Cavaliers shot just 25 free guard Jared Jeffries said.
throws on 2 I Washington " H~ 's one of the top four or
fouls.
five players in the league this
Hu ghes, who fouled out year, so he should get those
while allowing Arenas to calls."
score 34 points, added that the
With· the series headed back
refs shouldn't · let coaches 10 Cleveland, Jordan declined
sway them because it makes 10 address the ofliciating in
for poor basketball. ·
the series again Monday.
"l play defense. That's what . "I' m going to complain
1 do. and 1 like doing it," about my room service in.
Hughes said. "That's tough Cleveland so J get better room
w1ten yuu don 't ge1 th e oppor- servic·e when we stay at the
lllnl.ty to do what you lt'ke to Four Seasons," Jordan J·oked.
do: that's anticipate, beat guys "I'm not saying any more."h
to the spot, get your hands in
But the players know 1 e
there, play clean basketball, battle of .words isn't ov,er.
"It' ll be a chess
Play good de'ense'"
•· · ·
· tnatch
Jordan antic.ipates a poss i- between the coaches to try
ble fine from the NBA for hi s and get referees on their
complaints Saturday about side," Arenas said Monday.
Arenas not getting the same · "LeBron said, ' Yeah, your
calls as James. The league coach is CQmplaining. That's
was reviewing hi s comments. what he did.' So I go back.
Arenas is averaging 31 . over there and said, 'I see
points to James' 34.3 points in your coach is complaining.'
the playoffs. He 's doing more It's a chess match and players
scoring at the line though - have to adjust to what's going
40 points compared with on out there with the referJames ' 29.
ees."

. Hospital honors
Its volunteers, A2

:)O ( 1.'\T~,

\ 'ol. .).-; '\o. tX·;

SPORTS
'
• Lady
Eagles fall to Gallia
Academy. See Page 81

'

CLEVELAND (A P) - Cleveland's only run off The right-hander struck out third baseman Aar,on Boone
Javier Vazquez dominat~d for Vazquez, who has ~?iven up Victor Maninez but gave up collided with Pierzynski, who
six innings and Paul Konerko two earned runs in h1s last 20 Ben Broussard's RBI single was awarded third on interferhomers, a record for April.
hit a three-run homer to help innings.
that made it 8-6. Jenks then ence.
"I tried to take him out of teammate Jim Thome enjoy
Konerko connected for his struck out Ronnie Belliard and
B·rian Anderson followed
the equation," Arroyo said. his return· to Cleveland as the seventh homer in the first off Todd Hollandswonh for hi s with a roller that Boone let
"He helped me out with a Chicago White Sox held off Cliff Lee (2-2). .
eighth save.
slip under his glove for an
couple of nice pop ups early. " ttie- Indians 8-6 on Monday
embarra,
ssing error, and the
Podsednik had four hits and
Thome was greeted with a
Pujols flied out twice, night.
ball
even
sktdded past Peralta
matched a club record with . mix.ture of boos and cheers
_
,
backing
up Boone - to
popped out and walked, leavThome was back at Jacobs four steals as the White Sox when he came to the plate in
ing it up to the rest of the Field for the first time as a vis- won their founh straight and the first. One sour Ind1ans fan score
Pierzynski
and
Cardinals' lineup to prove iring player. The Indians ' improved to 18-7 _ their held up a cardboard sign read- Mackowiak.
career home run leader bolted
The White Sox added two
itself. With their big hitter as a free agent following the record on May 1. a year ago ing: Et Tu, Thome?
runs
in the sixth to go up.7-0,
when they went on to win the With the White Sox leading
held in check, the Cardinals
had no chance.
2002 season, signing a six- World Series. ·
helped
by reliever Brian
5-0 in the sixth, the crowd of
year, $85 million deal with
· h I 7,845 got a little testier, Slocum's two wild . pickoff
Arroyo has been the Reds' Philadelphia.
Chicago · has won . etg t directing some derisive chants attempts.
best starter by far. making
Before heading to the hall- straight and I 0 of I I in at Thorne.
Notes: It was Ozzie
naw general manager Wayne park, Thome, who lives .in a Cleveland.
Lee struggled to get through Guillen's 2ooth win as White
Krivsky's first major move Cleveland suburb during the
The Indian s trailed 7-0 after the first. He allo.wed consecu- Sox manager. He's I 17-70
look good. Cincinnati got the offseason, got a reque st from making four errors and play- tive singles to Podsednik and since the stan of last season ....
right·hander from Boston for his young daughter, Lila.
ing some comical baseball in Tildahito Iguchi before fan - On Tuesday, Indians LHP
outfielder Wily Mo Pena on
"Daddy," she said, "hit me a the first six innings. However, ning Thome. But Konerko foi- c.c: Sabath1a makes his first
March 20.
.
' tater."
Travis Hafner's third career lowed with a 411-foot shot to start since getting hurt on
Arroyo allowed only one
Thome didn't muscle out a grand slam '--- a towering shot right-center that made it 3-0. openin_g night in Chicago.
hit in eight innings· of a 5-0 homer for hi s little girl and off Brandon McCarthy -.
The White Sox added two Sabathla strained an oblique
victory in Washington on - · went 1-for-5 with an RBI in brought Cleveland within two unearned nens in a third inning muscle and had to leave in the
Wednesday. He extended hi s his first game at the Jake since in the seventh. It was Hafner's when Cleveland seemed to be third innin~ April 2. "Here we
streak of scoreless innings to Sept. 29,2002. He .also struck eighth homer of the season re-enacting scenes from the go ·again,' Sabathia said of
"Bad News Bears."
16 before Encarnacion hit a out twice to the delight ot and tirst in 53 at-bats .
seeing the Sox again. ...
The Indians kept scrapping
Lee hit A.J. Pierzynski, who Jndians C Victor Martinez
solo homer into the upper some Cleveland fans.
deck in left fi eld in the second
Vazquez (3-1) allowed fiv e and put two on in the eighth took hi s time walking to first. extended his streak of reachtwo
outs,
Rob inj; base to 41 str~ight games
inning, his second homer in hits and would have blanked. before Neal Colts got Casey With
two games.
the lndtans for SIX mmngs .•f Bl ake on · a grounder. Colts Mackowiak singled and Juan wtth a walk in the founh ....
Aurilia 's fifth ·homer barely left fielder Scon Podsedmk gave up a walk and single to Uribe hit a grounder that was Both benches were warned
cleared the right·field wall in h~dn t dropped a two-out fly stan the ninth before giving backhanded by Jhonny Peralta after Vazquez threw behind
at shon. On the play, Indians
Belliard in the third.
the first inning and got the ball. The error led to way to closer Bobby Jenks.
.
Reds' offense rolling. Lopez's .----'---,..------'--------------------~~-=---------,..--,..-----,
two-out, ' run ~sco ring single
put the Reds up 2-1 in the
lifth and snapped the shortstop's 0-for- 17 slump . His
base s-loaded single in the
' i.xth off Josh Hancock completed a four-run rally that put
the Reds in control.
.Notes: Cardinals 3B Scon
Rol en stayed back in St.
Louis' to recover from a viral
infection that has side! ined
him for a week. The plan is
for him to rejoin the club in
Houston on Wednesday .. .. C
Yadier Molina went 0-for-3,
extending hi s s lump to 0-for15 .... Reds CF Ken Griffey
Jr. remains on the 15-day disahled li st, rec'overing from.an
inllamed tendon behind hi s
ri ght knee. He was eligible lo
be activated Friday, but the .
leg doesn 't fee l back to nc&gt;rmal. "He ran a 'lot today and
fe lt pretty good," manager
Jerry Narron 'said . ."He's just
not J.OO percent yet." ... Reds
RHP. Paul Wil son will stac,t
for Triple-A Louisville on
Tuesday, the second stan on
hi s rehabilitation stint. Wilson
is recovering from shoulder ·
surgery last June 17.

CINCINNATI (AP)
When
Bronson Arroyo
showed up the first time with
his skinny s ideburn~ and
long, highlighted hair, no one
was quite sure what to make
of him.
A month
later,
the
Cincinnati Reds love everything about him ..
Arroyo stayed unbeatep in
Cincinnati by pitching a fourhitter for the second complete
game of his career, and the
Reds beat the St. Loui s
Cardinals 6- 1 Monday night
in a matchup of the NL's lop
two teams.
"They're the No. I team in
the divi sion ,'' said Arroyo,
who threw only I09 pitches.
"It was nice to shut them
down . Any time you go up
against those guys, you want
to show that you can play
with them ."
Cincinnati set a club record
with 17 victories in April, and
started a.new month with the
same winning forniula ·_ a
lot of offense, a lillie dazzli~g
pitching.
Rich Aurilia hit a solo
homer and Felipe . Lopez
drove .in three runs for
Cincinnati. Every Reds starter
except Arroyo had a hit off
left-hander Mark Mulder (21), who was denied his IOOth
cQ)'eer wm .
"I just left ··a lot of pitches
up as the ' day went along,"
Mulder said. "Just one of
them days."
The biggest change in the
Reds is the addition of Arroyo
(5-0), who has dramati cally
improved a rotation I hat was
the NL's worst last sea,on.
The right-hander is the fir&gt;~
Reds staner to win his first
five decisions since Paul
. Wilson went 7-0 in 2004.
"He's been outstanding,"
Lopez said. "You can 't say
enough about what he's done.
He's helped a lot.
"He brings the personality
of being on a winning te&lt;tm.
He has a lot of experience in
the postseason, and we're
feeding off that."
Arroyo ex tended the best
stan of his career by limiting
the Cardinals to Juan
Encarnacion 's solo homer,
three other harmless hits and
three walks. His onfy other
c.omplete game was for
Pittsburgh on Oct. 2, 200 I,
against the Mets.
Arroyo made 29 forgettable
stans for Pittsburgh from
2000-02 belore the Red Sox
claimed him off waivers. In
his return to the NL, he h i.~
gotten everyone's attention.
"We - didn't see him,"
G:ardinals manager Tony La
Russa said of Arroyo's first
time through the NL. "He was
.in Pittsburgh and then went
pff to lhe other league. I just
Dr. Kander is seeing patients at the Holzer Cardiovascular Institute in
,know he 's doing a lot of
Gallipolis and Jackson, Ohio. Dr. Kander is Board Certified in Internal
t:flings well now."
• Arroyo became the first
.Medicine and has performed thousands of angioplasty and stenting proceReds pitcher to go eight . I
dures, as well as cardiac catheterizations.
innings in three consecutt ve '
.starts since Jose Rijo in 1994.
The victory left Cincinnati
'(l 8-8) in sole possession ·of
HQI-U~
first place in the NLCentral , a
game ahead of the defending
To· schedule an appointment, please call
champion Cardinals.
' Arroyo did hi s best work
'against Albert Pujols, who
'
had his way w'ith the Reds '
during · a three-homer game
April 14 in St. Louis. Pujols
..
leads the majors with 14 il..__ _ _ _.:__~-----'---------'-----'"'"--~---~-------'------'""'

.

0BITUARIFS
Page AS
.-Hertlert -Bar&amp;, 56
• Wanora !Sis' Beaver, 84
•AimaJeanJohnson, 81

INSIDE

Democratic
candidate
in the auditor's race.
Meigs
County
Republican

• MWSCD announces
essay cbntest winners.
See Page A2
• OU Marching 110
director to speak at
Southam banquet
See Page A2
• The Shining Stars
4-H Club meets.
See Page A3
~ Blackwell, Strickland
to face off for governor.
See Page AS
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
•· Eagles to award
scholarships.
See Page A6

WEAmER

"

'1 ,

. ·'

Di strict (2/9), Roger L. Kline,
I ,530; Judge of Court of
Appeals (2/10), William H.
Harsha, 1,481.
State Central Committee;
man , Patrick Hennessey,
I ,530;
State
Central
Committee, woman, Marilyn
. Kaye
Ashcraft,
1,5 18;
Common Pleas Court Judge·:
Fred W. Crow lll, 2,091;
County
Commissioner,
Ernest E. Spencer, 1,659.
Please see GOP, AS

Racine voters
approve
school levy,
beer option

•

PleaH ' " Strickland, AS ·

Civil War boot camp .

planned for Meigs students
BY CHARLENE HOEruCH
HOEFliCH(JjiMYDAiLYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Plans are moving
forward for a Civil War boot camp to
be held on the Eastern High School
football field on Monday and ·
Tuesday, May 15 and 16.
· The program is geared to educate
students · about the Civil War,
Morgan 's Raid through Meigs
County, and the effect it had on the
lives of Meigs Countians.
The boot camp will be open to students in all Meigs County s~hools during the daytime on both days, 9 a.m. to
2:15 p.m. It will feature several different stations including Civil War arti facts, camp sites, uniforms and gear,
life style, and survival techniques. The
studen(s will be broken up into platoons, learn to march, and then actually panicipate in a battle charge.
They wi II also listen to Darrell
Markejohn, the man who ponrays
Capt. John Hunt Morgan in thcCivil
War reenactment, and talk about the
Morgan's Raid 2 planned for the first

week in September. Following a
break the I5 or so reenactors panicipating in t~e program will mount:
their horses, a.nd do demonstrauons of
a saber charge and \he technique of
firing rifles from horseback.
For the school programs, students
will be brought by bus to Eastern: On
Monday the program will be for flft~ to
eighth graders of Eastern: So~them and
Meigs; and ,on Tuesday .tt wtll be presented for htgh school history students.
On the evening of May 15 the pubhc
will be invited to the program where
all five stations will be open and a cavalry demonstration will be held. The
gates will open at 6 p.m. and the
demonstrations will begin at 7:30p.m.
For the public program there ,will be
a charge of $3 for adults, $1 for students, and children under (ive will be
admitted free. Reenactots from Ohio.
Pennsylvania and West Virginia will
be participating.
The boot camp is sponsored by the
Chester ·team of the Morgan 's Raid
·committee, according to Jeanie
Ridenour, chairman.

STAFF REPORT
NEWS&lt;liiMYDAiLYSENTiNEL.COM ..

POMEROY - Voters in
the Southern Local School
District approved the renewal
of a current expenses levy on
Tuesday's primary ballot, by
a vote of 786 for the levy and
449 against.
Voters approved a local
option for beer sales in the
Village of Racine, 143 to II 7,
but rejected a Sunday sales
option for the same estabhshmenl, Hill's Citgo, 136 to 126.
Other levy results:
.
• Middleport Vil\iJ.g_e, cur·
rent expenses, 2.1 I for, 212
against.
• Rutland Village, police
protection, 48 for, 48 against.
• Columbia Township,
cemetery maintenance, 107
for,• 82 against.
• Salisbury
Township,
· cemetery maintenance. 557
for, 434 against.
Results are unofficial,
pending an official count by
the Board of Elections at ·a
ciate to be announced.

AEPplans
open house on
transmission
loop proposal
STAFF REPORT
· NEWS®MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE Columbus
Southern Power Company
and Ohio · Power Company
have scheduled an informational open house in Racine
in connection with the companies' pla!]s to build and
operate a 345 kilovolt transmission loop to suppon the
operation of its proposed new
clean-coal technology power
plant at Great Bend. ,
:
The meeting is scheduled
fur 6:30 to 8:30p.m. on May
16
at
the . Southern
Allen has assisteu the village Elementary School. It is pan
·b . .
h
t
ey
tn 0 tallllllg t e gran mon
of tl1e formal siting process
lor tile proJect.
established by the Ohio •
"Everythin g is movutg Power Siting Board and will
11ne." Allen said of the· cur- al low area res idents to obtain
·rcm grants (five total ) in information concerning the;
regards to distribution and need for the transmission
administration. .
project. the project sch~d~le,
Allen had more good news the design of the transmtsston
when he announced the faci lit y, and other peninent
United States Environmental facts about the project.
Protection. Agency has
AEP representatives will
approved the release of a Staff three information staState and Tribal Ass istance tions anti provide details of .
Grant (STAG) of $500.000 variou s aspects of the pro-·
for the village's . water posed transmission loop.
improvement project. Allen The public can come at any
sa id thi s figure would be time during: the ·two:hour
slightl y reduced to $48 1,000 period to obtain information
after the US EPA takes an about the project.
A EP has proposed a 600~
· administration fee .
megawatt
generation faeiiity
In addition to STAG Racine
has received a $500,000 ~rant in Mejgs Coun~ to sattsfy
from Ohio Small Ci11es the growing energy needs of
Community
Development the 1.4 million customers
Block ' Grant Water and served by AEP's Ohio subSanitary Sewer Program . sidiaries. The plant 'will use
Ple.,e see AEP. A5
Please see Redne, AS

Racine considering water and sewer rate increase_

INDEX
2 Sl!CTIONS -

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
-Dear Abby
.
Editorials ·
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

12 p AGI'S

A3
B2-4
Bs

A3
A4

A5
B Section
A6

© 2000 Ohio Volley PubllohlnM Co.

.•
'

Hanman , I,291; Treasurer of
State, Sandra O'Brien,
I ,069, Jennette B. Bradley.
905; U.S . . Senator: Mike
De wine, 1.8 I0, William G.
Pierce, 236, David R. Smith,
346; State Representative
(92nd District): . ·Jimmy
Stewan, 2,175.
Justice of : the . Supreme
Court
(1/.1 ).
Terence
O'Donnell, I,603; Justice of
the Supreme Court (1/2),
Roben R. Cupp, I ,48 ~; Judge
of Court of Appeals , 4th

POMEROY - Meigs County Democrats·
supported U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, D•
Lisbon, in his bid for the Ohio governor's
office by a margin of 94 percent in Tuesday's
Democratic primary.
.
Strickland received I,482 votes. His opponent, Bryan E. Flannery, received 98 votes.
Democrats also gave victory to State ·
Senator Charlie Wilson, D-Bndgeport, a
write-in candidate for U.S. Representative
to the Sixth District. Wilson's petitions for
candidacy were n;jected because of insufficient ·signatures, and he launched an aggressive call\)laign as a write-in. He received
826 write-in votes among the 2.353
Democrats who voted in the primary. Bob
Charleno Hoefllch/photo
Carr received 400 votes, and John S.
Sixth Ohio CavaltY. IJJembers Mike .Churql),. lllfl,.and .P.lurell Markejohn will disLuchansky, 17~ .
•. ·
. . ;. .
·
In Meigs County's Democrattc pnmlity, play uniforms and weaponry of the Civil War at the Civil War boot camp to be
Michael T. Struble df ·Syracuse defeated held at Eastern High School, May 15 and 16. They Will also be speakmg about
Debbi.e Phillips of Athens in the contested • Morgan's Raid 2 and the impact it had on Meigs County.
nice · for State Representative of the 92nd
.
·
District, 786 'to 599.
.
Democratic Primary
Attorney General: Marc Oann, I ,051,
Subodh Chandra, 245; Auditor of State:
Barbara Sykes, I, I 16; Secretary of State:
Jennifer Brunner, I, 131; Treasurer of
State: Richard Cordray, U.S . Senator,
Sherrod Brown. l, I 04; Merrill Samuel
Keiser, 360; Justi~e of the Supreme Court
(1/1), William Michael O'Neill. 738, A.J .
Wagner, 537; Justice of the Supreme ~ourt
( 1/2); Ben Espy, 759, Peter M. Stkora,
455 ; Judge of Court of Appeals •(2/9), no
candidate; Judge of Court of Appeals
.
(2/ 10). no candidate.
State Central Committee, man, William E.
Moore, 744. Darrell Lear, I85, Anthony
Vernell, 266; State Central Committee,
woman, Lynda L. Bolin, 673 , Susan Gwinn,
615;
County
Commissioner,
Mick
Davenport, I ,276.
County Central Committee races: S~lem,
no candidate; Laurel Cliff, no candtdiite;
Leta~t. - Raymond L. Rowe, 37; &lt;::Jr~nge,
Dana Kessinger, 49; Pomeroy 2, Phtlhp M.
Ohlinger, 15; Pomeroy 3, Rebecca J.
Triplett, 39; Pomeroy 4, no cand1date;
· Scipio, no can~idate; Bed.ford, . Jane
Frymyer, 73; Bradbury, no candtdate;
Columbia, Judy Carter, 78; East Chester,
no candidate.

Dellllla on P811o AI

740.446.5002

•

Blackwell's I ,063 votes.
Chuck Blasdel received
I ,05 I votes in the race for
· POMEROY -Mary T.
U.S. Repre sentative, with
Byer-Hill won a four-way
I ,051 votes. Tim Ginter
primary battle for the posi- ·
314,
Danny
received
Harmon, 666, and Richard D.
tion of Mei~s County Auditor
v o t e r s· Stobbs, I 58.
in Tuesday s Republican primary; winning 34 percent of
end o r'Sed
Jim Petro
Republican primary
the votes cast.
=-'-l in
the
Byer-1-Iill received 891
Attorney General: Betty
votes. Marty L. Cline Mary Byer-HIII Republican Montgomery, I ,708, Tim
primary for Grendel!, 615; Auditor of
received 835, Carla Shuler
654, and Fred L. Hoffman Ohio governor, with 1,287 State: Mary Taylor. I ,618;
to
J.
Kenneth Secretary of State: Greg
244.
There
was
no votes
Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREED&lt;liiMYDAiLYSENTINEL.COM

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEOOMYDAiLYSENTiNEL.COM

The Holzer Cardiovascular Institute welcomes

CMWIOV..uoJiAA

• '

Byer-Hill wins GOP race for County Auditor

·

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT&lt;lPMYDAiLYSENTINEL.COM

Interventional Cardiology

.

\\Ill'\ I'-ll\\ . \I\\ :1 -'""''

Strickland, write-in
Wilson win Meigs
Democratic primary

'--------------------------_,;;..;....,.-.o.;...;:;;.____-:-_____. .

Howard Kander, MD, FAce ·

CountY gels

out the vote, A6 _

Middleport .• P~meroy, Ohio

Thome, White Sox take down Cleveland, 8-6

Reds blast Cardinals

Mei~

. RACINE - Most people
know the old saying, "You
~et what . you pay for!"
mcluding village oflicials 111
Racine who are weighing the
costs of a new water
improvement project and its
future maintenance.
These costs may include an
increase in current water and
sewer rates.
Despite Racine receiving
70 to 80 percent of the funding for its water improvement .
project in grants, the village
will eventually have to draw
upon its Ohio Water and
Development
Authority
(OWDi\) loan' to complete
the project, and loan s, unlike
grants, must be paid back.
The water tmprovement
project (plant, tank. piling.
water wells and all) wil service 360 customers and is
esti mated to cost' roughly
.
'

-

.

-"

a.th SercontJ pllata

The residents of Racine will -soon have a new $2 .3 million
water system and possibly an Increase In water and sewer
rates to finance future malntaince and repay a vill~ge loan on
the project. The new water treatment plant's holding tanks are
pictured in the background.
$2.3 million.
Bob Allen from Ohio
ARCAP visited Racine

Village Council this week to
discuss the funding of the
water improvement project.

,,

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