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Page B6 • The.Daily Sentinel

Monday, May ts, 200~ .

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

-

.

~.

Rain postpones Indy qualifying ·- again

INDIANAPOLIS (N') Frustration is mounting at the
Indianapolis Motor S~dway.
Dri v~rs and fans will have to
wait another week for qualifying.
Rain, which has cut short or
canceled every practice session
since the track opened for Indy
500 practice last Tuesday, beld
off just long enough Sunday to
give everrone a little taste of
what they re missing.
Defending Indy champion ·
Dan Wheldon and Sam
Hamish Jr. txith nianaged to
post speeds above 228 mph the fastest so far this month AP photo
·during a brief practice session
NBA great Jerry West, left, receives an honorary Doctorate of that was supposed to be only a
Humane Letter~ degrf!e from West Virginia University warmup for ihe start of quahfiPresident David Hardesty on Sunday in Morgantown, W.Va.
cations for the May 28 race.
T\vo-time Indy winner Helio
Castroneves, Hamish's teammate, arid . Scott Dixon,
Wheldon's teammate, added
laps over 227 as 24 drivers took
advantage of the short dry spell
.
.
· .
,.
.
AP photlj :
and
nearly
perfect
track
condiIndy
Racing
League
driver
Michael
Andretti
·sits
In
his
car
under
an·
umbreaal
as
rain
delayell.
MORGANTOWN, W.Va . .cious player who was rarely
tionsovercast
sl&lt;.i'es,
no
wind
·
the
start
of
qualifications
for
the
90th
running
of
the
Indianapolis
500
at
the
Indianapolis
Motor
(AP)- Jerry West is now Dr. satisfied with· hi s perfor·
mance. He grew up shooting and temperatures mthe !ow 50s Speedway Sunday in Indianapolis.
J.
to get m some practice laps be .
h .
·
H .. h
d 1 behi d
West returned to West at a basket nailed to a shed -in anticipation
of qualifying.
gm .t eir ' vre]Jaraupns orrus staye c ose
n at and newcomer Jeff Simmons
University · six and often shot until hi s finVirginia
But then the rain returned, Wednesday. That s likely to 228.220, followed by h1s were bunched well down the ·
months after his alma mater gers bled.
·
wiping out time trials for ihe m~e for a crow~ed track.
' Marlboro Team Penske team- speed chart, with Patrick, lasi :
retired the NBA great's No.
He became the first high second straight day and
It puts a httle burden on (the mate Castrone,ves at 727 .8~8 year's fourth-place qualifier :
44 jersey to give the school's school player in state history prompting track officials to teams) now .because they have and Wpeldon s Target Chip and finisher, best at 222.720.
Asked about waiting to qual- ·13 7th
commencement to score more than 900 points reschedule qualifying to next to kind of rrux and balance full- Ganass1 teammate Dixon at
ify
until next weekend, the only
.
address Sunday.
..
. in a season, averaging 32.2 Saturday and Sunday, which t~ runs a.n'd race prepara~on 227.274. .
woman
entered here said, "It
Andretti Qreen Racmg. teamIntroduced as among the points in leading East Bank were supposed to be ihe last of wtth quahfyn~g preparat!on
could
be
better or worse. All we
four days of time trials.
because you w\~ be JOCkeyi!lg mates Dana Franchi\II and
most . recogm~~ble West High to a state title.
know
·is
we need mofl! rrack .
Brian Barnhart, president of ~r all,33 spots, Barnhart satd. Tony Kanaan, last ~ear s poleVirgmians ever, West also
"Success without a personal
time and we're looking forwan'l
an
honorary satisfaction or sacrifice isn't the Indy Racing League, said They II hav.~ to keep an eye on wmner, were next at 226.960 to it."
received
:·,
officials
had
considered
trying
the
weather
wrecast,
too.
It
JUSt
and
226.389.
,
.
Doctorate of !:fumane Let~ers. success at all," West said.
Still, for many drivers and
. West, weanng the tradmon- "It's posturing. Money is .a to qualify at lea~t part ofthe33- adds ~'?ther dimension to II .. The restless dnvers went out teams, the delay in qualifying
ar field on Monday or that Will JUSt mak~. 1t more chal- as soon as .they ~ould Sunday
al gold-and-blu.e cap and means of power, but seldom a 'cTuesday,
.
with no on-track lengmg for ~em. ·
and Franchmi sa1d the speeas simply is ftustrating·. ,
gown, foc~sed h1s speech on measure of succes~."
"For a driver, you get focused
activity scheduled for those
The last time the first two - weren t Im:licattv~ of the re;tl
how he built his career from
·
.
·
.
humble beginnings in his
West was given a standmg days. But Barnhart .said that · days of qualifymg were washed strength of the drivers because and do some decent times ana
hometown of Chelyan.
ovation before and after his with more rain in the forecast out was m 1983 and all 33 spots there was so much traffic on the then get rained out. To ine, i(s .
more frustrating sitting out
.
"I had a God-given gift, but 30-mmute .speech to about many fans unable to returri in the field were filled on the 2.5-mile oval.
there,"
said Tomas Scheckter,
because-ofwo_rk
and
other
following
Saturday.
The
fie!d
"~,was
!TYi[.Ig
tt?
get
a
clear
that alone WiJS not enough," 3,300 students and a crowd of
who
was
I Oth on Sunday ~t
obli~ations and many of the was also filled on one day m lap, he said. We JUSt need one
West said. "I needed charac- I~:000 .
225.091.
IRL s volunteer officials and 1999, when there was only one clear lap to know exactly where
ter
determination
and
That was neat because he track
workers in the same boat, weekend of qualifying on the we are. But I'm a lot happier
Townsend Bell, Scheckter!s
rcs~lve. I never took myself is a legend here and not many it was decided to continue with schedule.
rookie teammate on the Vision
than I was a few days ago.
very seriously, but I took people ~et the opportumty. to the original schedule. ,
. !"omish had been the fastest
"I think my team has worked Racing team, had a different
what I did very seriously."
do that, doctor of pharmacy
That
includes practice driver each day smce practice really,.really hard on th1s car for viewpoint. .
.
The current president of the graduate M&lt;1ndy, Downes Wednesday through Fnday.
began, topping out at 226.789 these four (qualifying) laps. It
"It's been a good month,"
NBA's Memphis Grizzlies Jed said. "He offered a lot of
All of the top teams ran the mph as part '?f ~four- l ap simu- d?Csn't really matter m the big said Bell, who got up to
the Mountaineers to their advice for grads, ~ lot of first week with hopes of quali- . lated quahfymg . run o.n picture, because !think you can 224.779. "Kind of a series of
only NCAA finills appearance things we could take with us fying on the openmg weekend Thursday, the last lime the dri- wm this, race from th~ last row. starts and stops. l suppose. But,
in 1960. He still holds school and use in life."
and spending a couple of days vers · had been on track unlll But we d certamly like to get to me, Indianapolis and this .
records in points scored
West's son, Johnnie, has · this week setting up their cars Sunday.
up at the front and stay there." race is all about drama and ten(2,309), rebounds ( 1,240) and signed a letter of intent •to for the race. Several of the
But Wheldon jumped to the
Rahal Letterman Racing's sion and unpredictability,
four. other categories.
play basketball at West other teams, with smaller bud- top with a lap of 228.663 in driving trio of Danica Patrick, which is kind of cool. It just
gets and less equipment, will Sunday's
short
session. 2004 race winn11r Buddy Rice adds to the flavor."
· West was known as a tena- Virginia next season.

South Ameriea's largest
. city erupts in violence;
four-day toll passes So, A2

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YOUR LOCALLY OWNED
CUB CADET RETAILER KNOWS
HOW TO GET YOU MORE ER;

.

'• Eagles leading after four
i~nings. See Page 81

• Factory-trained technicians
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• Setup and assembly
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'

.. ~ , 4Ubyao.~ apivists ·
~· dealh of'l'\8. ~rm-­
drlve In region~
See Page A2
• HN!3 teaches kids the
value of money.
See Page A3
:• Gheen leads Society
meeting. See Page A3
• Senator asks oourt to
examine records.
SeePage AS
• Taft funds .,
treatment-over-time after
opposing similar idea in
~2. See Page AS
' • Cheney stands firm on
Patriot Act. See Page AS
•• Cincinnati to study
whether to remove tiles
.over City Hall art.
Page A&amp;
:• New style of worship
brings new spirit to
mainline church.
SeePage A&amp;

--·-·--·-·-· ------~· ·-------·----·----

until then ,
Meanwhile, Brian Conde,
Mayor Sandy who addressed the issue of
lananrelh.
streetlight operations at last
The village cannot other- week's meeting of village
wise afford to pay for the council, said he, will suggest
operation of the 250 lights the formation of a commitnow illuminating village tee, to investigate funding
streets. Fiscal Officer Su san options for operating at least
Baker said earlier this month a portion of the public lights.
it would cost the village
The village has tried three
approximately $17,000 to times to pass a current
keep the lights burning for expenses levy for the operathe remainder of· the year, a tion uf the lights. The levy ·
sum the village cannot afford proposal on the May 2 prito pay without levy pro- mary ballot failed by JUSt
ceeds.
one vote.
accordin~

dark
to

Bv

Bm

Classifieds

12 PAGES

'

A3

. B3-4

Bs

Comics

A3
A4
As
B Section
A6

l.

"By NICOLE FIELDS
NFIELDS@MYDAILYREG.ISTEA .COM

club and more.
the Middleport Library.
. A schedule of special programs assoThe adult summer reading program
POINT PLEASANT, W Va.
ciated with the children's summer read- also kicks off on June 5 and will go until - This isn't your average hisPOMEROY -. The Meigs County ing program is as follows: 2 p.m., June 5, July 28, with · registration beginning on tory lesson.
. Butit's unlikelyyou 'llleave
District Public Library will kick off the Pomeroy Library,Mark Wade, ventrilo' , May 22.
For every three books an adult patron without learning something
summer with reading programs for bath quist; 2 p.m., June 14; Pomeroy Libracy,
adults and children.
· Nancy the Turtle Lady; June 21, to be checks out of any of the county's library about the string of events that '
The 2006 Children's Summer announced; 2 p.m., June 28, Pomeroy branches they will receive an entry slip tran spired during the late
Reading Program is set to begin on ,June Library, Mark Wood Fun Show; 5 p.m., that goes towards ·random drawings for 1770s to shape this region .
5 wllh a theme any pet lover can appre- July 5, Pomeroy Library, P.T. Reptiles ; ·travel mugs, At the end of the program
Organizers currently ate
ciate- "Paws, Claws, Scales and Tales!" July 12, to be announced; 6 p.m, to 8 all those entry slips will go into an even preparing for the sixth annual
Registration for this program begins p.m., July 19, Middleport Pool , end of bigger drawing for a $50 Wal-Mart gift SiegeofFortRandolph,a hiscard: ~
tori cal drama and encampMay 22 with the program lasting from summer reading prollram.
·
Children's story lime programs are at
. For more information, call the ment scheduled to begin
June 5-Jul;,: 22.
The children's summer reading pro- 2 p.m .. Mondays at the Racine Library; 2 Pomeroy Library at 992-5813 or visit Friday and run throughout the
gram is open to young people preschool p.m., Tuesdays at the Eastern Library ; to www.meigs.lib.oh.us. The library wei- weekend.
,
age through young adult, With programs, be announced on Wednesdays at the comes children and adults of all abilities.
According to Craig Hesson,
prize drawings, story hours, a reading Pomeroy Library; 2 ·p.m ., Thursdays at All programs are free of charge.
chairman of the Fort
'
---'------------ - - - - - - - - - - " - - - - - - - - - - - - : - ,- - - - - - - - - Randolph Committee, the
SERGENT ·

BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM .

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX
Calendars

soon

to

BvBETHSERGENT

2 SI!CI10NS -

Organizers
prepare annual
Si~ge of Fort
Randolph

Beth Ser&amp;fnt/photo

Cristina Oney, 4, of Mason, W.Va. reads. up on one of her favorite subjects - dogs. Oney, who is the daughter of Gary James and
Gloria Oney will have an opportunity to do even more reading during the Meigs County District Public Library's 2006 Children's
Summer Reading Program beginning June 5. The library will also offer an adult sumfl)er reading program. Both programs begin
registration on May 22 .

e~ent
has grown
year.
Re-enactors
from each.
six states

• ,

@ 2006 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

····-··

remain

.
·. es 'llraledicton·an, salutaton
··an
SHS.nam

Detail• on Poco Ae

'

,.

,\ llfll

POMEROY
- Sheriff
Robert Beegle has issued an
advisory about a financial
scam operating in the area,
and warned about mailings
· containing checks
and
promises of c;ash prizes . .
According to Beegle, letters have been mailed from
Canada to reside.nts in the
local community, informing
them they have won a sweep.stakes drawing or other jackpot prize, and enclosing
checks tO' help pay taxes and
other fees .
· ' "The letter gives a telephone number to .call, and
residents are asked to send
part of the money back
before they can receive the
balance of the winnings,"
Beegle said.
In the most recent 'case
reP?rted to his office, Beegle
said, the check was written in
the name of a Colorado business, drawn on a bank in Van
Wert, with the letter announcing the winning of the sweepstakes from the Netherlands,
and the envelope postmarked
from Canada.
"All of this should arouse
suspicion," Beegle said.

·see

Sports

.•

streetlight's operation . once. determine the best location
the village contract expires for a li~ht and the costs· of
is not true. However, he installat.Ion and monthly
said, the utility company operation, Rennie said.
offers an "area hght" service
The streetlights are to be
for tesidential customers, extinguished next month ,
allowing for the instilllation when a contract between the
of a security ligl)t on a pole village and AEP for their
operation expires. because
near the residence.
Rennie said arrangements voters· in the village rejected
for an area light can be a proposed one-mill current
made by calling AEP's cus- expenses levy for the lights'
tomer service line, (800) operation .. The village ·will
277-2177. After the call is try •again in November to
made, an AEP representative generate public support for
wilf visit the customer and . the levy, but the streets will

REED

INSIDE

lweather
•'

J.

:Page AS
'e
Ruth Basim
'"' ·
'
·• David Pratt

~bituaries

•

BY BRIAN

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

0BITUARIFS

-.

·

d oil h .. t"fll j 11 d

STAFF REPORT

.~ito rials

,.,..~ . . . ~

111 \

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

'

t

\\ \\ \\

•~~~nw.-nn.-~~~~~~~
Sher!ff advises ,
community about
"'"'nL·'"' scam

DearAbby

"* ~A-u _ .,..Pifl'llll*•~ "'*'.....- ~or O$ti'l ,.,.,...... ~ ra&amp;Kpra\ .,, .w! !of.,... ..:~_,,... ,.lua h•tf'l. • • .-d~ u_.,es !llrfbeld:i:I:"""".C .filly .,.;y thiMt. NI;KI tt ltn• w•k:.Df

:!:4 tOh

.

MIDDLEPORT
Residents of Middleport concerned about the coming
dark streets cannot "adopt" a
streetlight, b11t · they •.can pay
the power company for an
area light to help secure ,
their property.
·
Jeff Rennie, a spokesman
for American Electric Power,
said earlier reports that
Middleport residents will be
able to pay the cost of a

'

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

I { ' I ,S I) \\ • :\I \ Y I h'

J (':.!

AEP: Streetlight 'adoption' not an alternative in Middleport

SPORTS

WEATHER

'

Ex-interim Boston
leader installed as
Cleveland bishop, A6 ·
•

West receives honorary
doctorate at WVU

l!"""'l'd~ Y·Twin
......"OHV
. -onatn•
•• $0"
23 ·H~-dilly
f&gt;t I&lt;Dhler' cC!ftlino,oci"
• Futtr wo~dod ""'~r~~M

•

•

RACINE - John Robert
Bentz has been named valedictorian and Kristiina Dahn
Williams salutatorian of the
Southern High School Class of
2006, Principal Matk Miller
announced.
Bentz is the son of Keith
and Rebecca Bentz of Racine,
and Williams is the daughter of
Debi Williams and Todd
ZeinerofRacine. ·
Bentz was a member of the
SHS golf team that made it to
the state tournament for the
first time in the school's his tory last fall . He was also a.member of the National Honor

•.·

..

.

~,

Society, Pep Club, Spanish
Club, Drama Club, Varsity "S"
Club and participated in Quiz
Bowl and Educational Service

come to Fort Ran~olph ·for the
·
b
h
·
d
encampment
and drama that
studymg ot accountmg an
centers around the events that
computer-aided design and took place there in 1777 and
drafting.
·
17
Bentz received a full schol- · 1~· the story ·goes, Chief
arship from Rio Grande in the Cornstalk returned 10 Point
form of the Ohio First Pleasant to seek mediation
Scholarship. In addition he . over .land deals tha.t had creat" received Ohio Regents, Dale · ed friction between native
Arnold Cutler and Kibble Americans and the new setScholarships.
tiers after he was repelled
valedictorian from the area by the forces of
Bentz's
· speech .focuses on success and CoL Andrew Lewis in the
more ·specifically how to use Battle of Point Pleasant on
the present and future to obtain Oct. 10, 1774.
th.at success.
Cornstalk and his son,
as
Elinipisco,
were slain, and
Williams,
also
known
John Robert Bentz
"Tex" to classmates was a despite assurances from ·
Learning.
member of the SHS basketball authorities that the $Uilty parHe plans to attend the and volleyball teams. She was tics would be pumshed, the
University of Rio Grande in
Please see SHS, AS
Please see Slep. AS
the fall as a double major.

,

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PageA2 •

NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

•

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Tuesday, May t6,

2006

•

Community Calendar .

SOUI'H AMERICA'S lARGEST OlY ERUPIS IN VIOlENcE; FOUR-DAY TOU PASSFS 60:

-

Bv ALAN CLENDENNING
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

SAO PAULO, Brazil . Masked men attacked bars ,
banks and pnlice stations
with machine guns. Gangs
set buses · on fire. And
inmates at dozens of prisons.
took guards hostage in an
unprecedented
four-day
wave of violence around
South America's largest city
that left more than 80 dead
by Monday.
President Luiz lnacio Lula
· da Silva prepared to send in
4,000. federal troops. and
officials worried the violence could spread 220 miles
northeast to Rio de Janeiro,
where police were put on
high alert and extra patrols
were di spatched to slums
where
drug Igang leaders
,
I tve.
.
.
"What happened in Sao
Paulo was a provocation, a
show of force by organized
AP Photo
crime," Silva said. He said A policeman guards a commercial area in the , suburbs of Sao· Paulo, Brazil, Monday.
the gangs' "teinacles are
spread around the world and Businesses closed 4 hours earlier in East Sao Paulo due 'to the recent waves of violence.
we must use a lot of intelli - many businesses shut by 4 trol of most of them. At least
Sao
Paulo 's
Roman
gence" to quell the chaos p.m. so workers could get 91 people were arrested Catholic
archbishop,
their attacks caused.
home by dark. Sao Paulo 's since Friday. police said.
Claudio Hummes, said the
The violence was trig- main stock exchange, the
gered by an attempt to iso- Bovespa; canceled afterlate gang leaders, who con- hours trading to let investors
trol many of Sao Paulo 's ·and workers leave early.
As two buses smol.dered
teemi ng, notoriously corrupt
prisons. by transferring eight near his home in a workingof them Thursday to a high- class neighborhood, engisec urity facility hundn;ds of• · neering student Julio Cesar
miles away from this city of said the violence left him
18 million people.
with a choice of skipping
The leaders of the First classes and risking ·his future
Capital Command gang, or or going to his night college
PCC, reportedly used cell and fearing his family could
phones to order the attacks. get caught in the crossfire of
Gang members began rid- evening attacks.
"Of course I'm ·s·cared to
dling police cars with but-,
lets. hurling grenades at take ·the bus, because now
police stations and attacking they are targeting people and
officers in their homes and not just police," said Cesar,
afterwork hangouts.
19. "I'm also scared to leave
Then, on Sunday night, the because my mom . lives ·
gang employed a new tactic: here."
sending gunmen onto buses,
There was no mention of
ordering passengers and dri- injuries . in the . nearly 50
• vers off and rorching the reports of bus burnings.
· But 21 , new killings were
vehicles.
Miln!IAJ · FREE Drtnks
Thousands of · drivers reported Sunday night and
W.Jllay- Sf 00 off any Dinner
W.OJiMiillliY· Hatr Rack Dinn~r
refused to work Monday, Monday morning, the state
$7 .99 . 10 Wings $3.00
leaving an estimated 2.9 mil- government of Sao Paulo
Jburaday
· Ha ll Chicken Dinner
lion people scrambling to said, putting the death toll at
' $5. 9~
find a way to their jobs. 81 - 39 police officers and
Et:lll.e¥
.
Plailers $5.99
While most stores and busi- prison ·guards, 38 suspected
$JlJIWV · Chicktln &amp; Rib Dinner
nesses remained open, .gang members and ·four
$9.50
almost all shut early, creal- civilians caught in . 181
· Sunday • Pork Chop Dinner
ing one of the city's worst attacks since Friday.
1 pc. $5 .99 2 pc . $7.99
Prison officials said they
traffic jams ever as workers
H.RV; M.o.o.:.ii&amp;J.I •me lPJ:~LS:wn..Uan ,• 0 Pff1
fJOI !ASIF~i'l Alii'. Q.lfWPOIJt ()II 456Jf
struggled in vain to get do . not know how many
home.
·
inmates have died in Sao
74()-446
Worried parents kept many Paulo's lockups because
children out of schools, and they were just retaking con-

Libyan, Mideast activi~ts see death
of U.S. reform drive in region
Bv SALAH NASRAWI
1\SSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CAIRO, Egypt - Activists
in the Middle East said Monday
the U.S. decision to restore
diplomatic ties . with Libya
undermined Washington'.s drive
for democracy tmd signaled that
the Bush administration was
tumirjg its back on dissideflts in
the country.
Cairo-based Fayez Jibril,
spokesman for · the Libyan
. National Congress opposition
group, said Moammar Gadhafi,
whose regime was .removed
from the U.S. list of nations that
sponsor terrorism by Monday's
decision, would use. the
American opening to further
crush dissent.
"Colonel Gadhafi will most
certainly use this to tighten his
hold on the Libyans who aspire
for such simple things. such as
fieedom of expression and freedom to' have a constitution,"
said JibriJ. . I
Mahmoud ·shamam, a leading Libyan activist, voiced similar concerns about the wider
effects on the region.
.
"This wao; the fmal and fatal
bullet fired by the administration into its initiative to spread
democracy and refonns in the
Middle East," he said in a telephone
interview
from
Washington. "Everybody in the
area will now ask if the United
States is after promoting the
principle of democracy or its oil
mterests."
·
Secretary
of . St;Jte
Condoleezza Rice said the de¢ision to restore ties with the .oilrich North African nation held responsible for the 1988
·bombing of Pan Am flight ·I03,
which claimed 270 lives- was
based on Libya's "continued
commitment to its renunciation
of terrorism.
She noted, as well, Tripoli's
"excellent" cooperation in combating international .. terrorist

'

.

organizations.
.
Opposition ligures pointed to
what they saw a&gt; a double standard, noting the State
Department's latest human
rights report, ·which called
Libya an "authoritarian regime"
whose "performance remained
poor, although it took some
steps to improve its human
rights record."
The department's latest look
at human rights under Gadhafi
noted "problems" in 14 areas,
including torture, poor prison
· conditions, arbitrary arrest and
detention and "severe restrictions" on freedom of speech,
press, assembly, and association.
·
•
'This is an indication that the
·United ·States has never been
serious about calls for reforms
and respect of human rights in
the region," said Bahy El-Deen
Hassan, head of the pan-Arab
Cairo Center for Human Rights.
The move was welcomed at .
the official level, however, with
the Libyan foreign minister saying .it served both the United
States and Libya
·
"It was a result of contacts
and negotiations.' It is not unilat. eral. It is a result of mutual
interest-;, agreements and understandings,"· Foreign Minister
Abdurrahman Shalgham told
The Associated Press. ·
Ordinary Libyans also wei- .
corned the announcement.
' "We have experienced tension and bad relations in the
past and it was not .good for
either country. Now let us try to
'work under good relations,
which I'm sure will benefit
everyone," said Ali al Hamrouni, a leather.
''Tt's good news that the.name
of our country will b e removed
from this American list, and we
can now do busi{less with the
United States like we do with
other countries," said Salem a!-'
Weghati, a businessman.
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Beegle,
Linda
Grimm.
Mildred Hart, Barl)ara Gheen,
Mary K. Yost, Beulah
Neigler, Geraldine Cleland,
Mabel Brace and Lill,ian
KindneSs."
Hayman.
.Mabel Brace of Racine was
Gbeen led the roll call,
hostess for the meeting, with eas member answering
·attended by Martha Lou with a Scripture ven;e. She

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Submitted photos

also read the minutes from
the last meeting, and gave
the treasurer's report.
LiUian Hayman reported on
the White Cross Quota. Cards
were •sent to shut-ins, and
refreshments were served .
The June meeting will . be
. an· outing.

Work Without Limits

'HNB teaches kids the value of money

FOODFAIR
700 East Main Street

380 Stott Ill. 7 N. •G&amp;IIiJl111il, OH

RACINE .- Barbara Gheen
opened the recent meeting of
the
Bertha · M. Sayre
Missionary Society with
devotions, "Wisdom and

Home National Bank employee Tina Wood helps present a ·lesson on saving money to Southern ·
· Elementary second graders ~s part of National Teach Children to Save Day.

IJI'\'lAI.r:::

• F l!t~n•

Church events

! ,.,

·. (304) 675-aen

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Clubs and
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Other events

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Youth events

4fother's Dar eM Items .

HOLZER
:CLINIC

• Free W11ar ~ 1 alyt.ett

. Mason . Perry' Varnadoe , eco- Dr. David Rahamut. "Called
nomic development director for Christ" to sing Friday,
will be the speaker, and a "Justified on Saturday.
Wednesday, May 17
women's quartet will enterDEAR ABBY: May is
- explore how your orgaTUPPERS PLAINS
·
tain.
'fuesday,
May
23
National
Foster
Care
Month,
nization
or business can
Eastern Local Board of
Ohio
River
LONG
BOTTOM
RACINE
time
when
we
celebrate
the
encourage.
people in your
a
Education regular meeting, 6
Revival serVices will be ·held thousands of foster care par7
Producers,
regular
meeting.
communitx. or your employp.m., Eastern Elementary p.m ., Southern VoAg room.
May 23-26 at the Faith Full ents who play a' vital role in
ees, to. become involved.
Cafetorium.
Gospel Church at Long' helping children, youth and
Dear
- support affordable housBottom. Services will begin .families in crisis to heal. The
ihg options for young people
Thursday, May 18 ·
at 7 p.m. each evening. Leon commitment of these families
. Abby
making ·the transition from
POMEROY - Youth drug
Forte will be the speaker.
leaves an indelible mark .
foster care - a critical time
awareness and solutions
Saturday, May' 20
They are helping to end
in their lives.
meeting~ 7 p.m :, God's NET.
REEDSVILLE - Forked
cycles
of
physical
.
abuse
,
become a licensed
CHESER
- . Chester · Run Sportsmen's Club. kids
and
substance
abuse
,
respite
care provider as a way
neglect
Township Board of Trustees fishing derby, 9 a.rrr. to noon,
Wedllesday,
May
17
often enabling a child to be tern . Readers can:
of providing support to foster
finanical meeting, 8 p'.m., at the club lake, ages through
POMEROY
American
the
first
in
his
or
her
family
to
_
donate
goods,
sui
(Gases,
parents in your neighborhood.
. I5.
Chester Town Hall. .
Red
Cross
blood
drive,
I
:30
POMEROY ..:.. Free tea
goAn
to college.
become a CourtexampleI of ·this com- books, ·games, compu ters,
party for girls entering p.m .. 6:30 p.m., Meigs
mitment aod advocacy is a sports · equipment ' must·cal Appointed Spect'al Advocate.
Senior Center.
kindergarten in the fall, and
and CASA volunteers are trained
·
'. clothing
·
foster parent ,named Corinne, instruments
a parent, . 1-3 p.m.,
.
.
·school
supphes
to
young
peocitizens appointed by judges
Thursday, May 18
· t
who, m· spite ofddalmostdoverpie
·n
'oster
care.
t
·
Pomeroy Library. Sponsored
1
1
'
·
o represent
the bes1 m
eres 1s
h
I
POMEROY
Official
0
Thursday, May 18 · by · Girl Scouts. Songs, count of May 2 primary, 9 wH e _mmg K . s k unh.ng , - learn about how policy, of abused and neglected chilumcane atnna, ept er legislative· and budget priori- · dren.
POMEROY
Meigs games, ·crafts. Information a.m., Board of Elections,
three
foster children together ties af'ect childre· n and youth
·
d h
County American Cancer from Deb Dowler at 888·m she Iters untl·1 they cou ld in foster
'' care. .
recogmze
·
an
on or a
.
•tOster. parent m
· your commuSociety Taskforce , meeting, 474-7792.
ttl
·
h
Saturday," May 20
rese eh m a new orne.
'-- mentor a young person. nity. Write a letter to the edi-·
noon, Pomeroy Library,
POMEROY - Health fair,
We
ope
that
your
readers
Research
shows that chil.dren
lunch provided, RSVP at
· · th. e Na,.1ona1 Foster and youth with mentors earn tor of your local newspaper in
9 a.m. to noon, · Mulberry WI'II JOin
'992-6626. ext. 24. ·
·
·
· 1ton
Community Center, free Paren t Assoc1a
m
show- higher grades and improve praise of someone who . is
POMEROY
Meigs .
.,-riday, May 19
· d s'upport t hetr
·
· h.1ps w1th
.
making a difference in the life
health screenings, non-fast- l·ng. apprec1'at•'on an
re 1at1ons
County · Retired Teachers
of
a child in foster care.
MIDDLEPORT - Redv'al ing and fasting blood tests, •tOT every foster parent - .friends and families .
,
meet at noon at Riverside at Ash Street Church, 7 p.m. call 992-9919 for appoint- especm
· 11y d unng
· May. Wh'l
Visii
www.fostercare. 1e
- help young people in
Golf Course Clubhouse m Friday and Saturday, with ments for fasting blood tests. npt everyone can· be a foster foster care organi'ze a youth month.org - an excellent
t
rt
Web site - to learn more
~oarsteenr arevee.ryonKe.AcRan
. ENsuJpOpoR- leadership or support group. about how each of 'us can.
''
- send "care packages' to
GENS EN,
EXECUTIVE foster C'!fe alumni ~!lending make a difference-and change
DIRECTOR, NATIONAL college, and/or become a a li(e .
·
·
FOSTER PARENT ASSOCI- "virtual" mentor for .a young
Dear Abby is written by ·
ATION
·
person in college by lending Abigail Van Buren, also
DEAR KAREN: Thank you emotional support as an e- ·known as Jeanne Phillips,
for pointing that out. There . mail/online pen pal.
a.n d was founded by · her
are many ways we can .lend - become a foster or adop- mother, Pauline Phillips.
support apd influence the live parent. Caring families Write
Dear Abby
at
lives of young people who - are especially needed for wwwDearAbby.com or P.O.
through no fault of their own older youth, siblings and chi!- Box 69440, Los Angele,s, CA
- are in t.he foster care sys- dren with special needs.
90069.

Gheen leads Society meeting

·OHIO

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

2006

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• CJQ81ng•

Tuesday, May t6,

Foster parents deserve support
for rescuing kids from abuse.

-Public meetings

government had not done prisons .in Sao Paulo state, ·
enough to stop the violence. with rebellions put down at
"Society cannot accept 72 facilities .
Inm~tes were holding 16
being held hostage by criminals," he .said. "The state prison guards hostage must improve the prison sys- down from more than 200
tem to stop it from being a earlier in the day - but had :
made no demands and were
school for crime."
The violence also weight!d not believed to have serious- .
in on financial markets, ly harmed any hostages, the
helping to drive stocks down . Sao Paulo Prison Affairs
more than 2 percent as a per- Department said.
ception took hold that Brazil . In Mato Grosso do Sui
is more risky than preyious- state, . which .borders Sao
ly thought. The .country's p 10 h ·
· on riots ·
currency, tfre real, fell 2 perau ' t rfe pns
·
·
were brought under control,.
cent again t the U.S. dollar. · but inmates still controlled
The PCC was founded in
' 1
1993 in Sao Paulo's Taubale another jail after kil ing a
.
.
d b
fellow prisoner.
Pemtenuary
an . ecame
Gilson Adei, 35, driving
involved in dru~ and arms
b
·
trafficking,
kidnappings, one of the few uses m
bank robberies and ex.tor- downtown
Sao
Paulo, :
demanded
authorities
lash
tion.
back
at
'
t
he
criminals.
·
It staged a massive prison
"It's
absurd
the
gang
uprising in 200 I in wh1ch 19
inmates died, and attacked members can do whatever
more than 50 police stations they want? They can just
in November 2003. Three start'a war? And why would
officers . and two suspected they attack the transportagang members were killed' tion, normal people? Next it
and 12 people injured in will be schools," he said. ·
"We should get the military
those attacks.
On Monday, upnsmgs on every corner and kill
'were still under way at two them."

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Home Oxygen
Portable Oxy_gen
Nebulizers
Electric Beds
Wheelchairs
Diapers

PageA3

BY ·THEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

RACINE - Most children think money ,. appears
magically from their parents
or grandparents, at least
they think that until they're
adults when reality s~ts in .
.:::.Teaching children that
reality and liow to value
money was the purpose of
Na.tiqnal Teach Children to
Save Day of which Racine 's
Home
National
Bank
(HNB) participated in.
Recently HNB employees visited second graders at
Southern Elementary to pre·sent them with a lesson on
s'aving money ard where to
go to receive or earn money.
· Students were given $12
and" asked to' help fictitious
1
'Patty" visit t~e equally fic:titious "pet s.tore" to see if
·she had enough money to
purchase a pet hamster. This
lesson was meant to teach
children the value of mone.y.
AII of the second graders
were g.iven lm uncirculated
co'in at the end of the lesson
and lunch from D&amp;M Pi·zza
served by Roma Sayre,
HNB vice-president, Tina
Wood, HNB compliance
officer and Ann Engle, HNB
teller supervisor.
The · students were then
given a "challenge" hy the
bank to see if they could
· find a new way to earn
money or to see how much
money they can save within
a two week period.
After ·that two week peri ad the students then report·
ed on their progress while
experiencing a field !rip to
the bank. Students then met
HNB president Bill Nease
and received a ceramic
·
piggy bank.
· HNB has elected to participate in National Teach

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'

Home National Bimk President Bill Nease visits with Southern·
Elementary second gr&lt;~ders ilS they take a tour of the Racine
branch of HNB. ·
Children to Save Day as an
annual tradition at Southern
Elementary
with
help
through
the
American
Bankers
Association
(ABA).
The ABA establi shed
National Teach Children to
Save Day to spot li~ht the
Importance of te.acl11ng the
nation 's youth abou t saving
money. The event ·occurs
every April when bankers
make presentations to students in grades K- 12 about

•

budgeting, saving, recognizing needs and wants and
how interest makes money
grow .

• FREE 2411 Technlcll Support

Enjoys ,motHer daughter banquet
RACINE - The BethanyDorcas Sonshine Group
held . its annual MotherDaughter 13anquet recently,
with 41 attending. The
meal was catered · and a
fashion show followed.
'
'

•

.

Readings and skits were
also performed .
The next meeting will be
held iii June at the Hazel
McKelvey · riverfront. This
will be u picnic and family
members are invited .

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•

�·OPINION

·The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

Tuesday, May 16, 2oo6

www.myda.ilysentinel.com

Tuesday, May 16, 2o0l;

•

•

The Daily·Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohlci

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnel.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 Governmentfor a redress ofgrievances.

' .

- The First Amendment to the

U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HIS.TORY

Polls, economics support Bush on ·immigration ~

Recent polling and economzenship will prevent their
ic studies . support President
exploitation by unscrupulous overall worry about bad polls
Bush's moderate approach to
employers. Major employers and. November electjQ/1
immigration. If only he could
i111d unions in agriculture, prospects.
"For fear of losing his staJ;Jclconvince his fellow conservahotels and the construction
tive Republicans. .
industry favor Bush's work- ing with Hispanic voters lljl,d
Polling by Tune magazine
Morton
permit plan and earned citizen-. perhaps even business SliJ'and the liberal Democracy
Kondia:Je sh_ip even though the process port," the Democratic repmt
Corps confirm earlier findings
w1ll rruse wages.
said, Bush "has moved to b&lt;!CJ&gt;
that"U.S. voters want strict bor. The late-March Tune poll comprehensive refor.m - but
der controls, but also will supshowed that 79 percent of U.S. that is not what his base·· is
port work permits and earned
voters support a guest-worker looking for."
"
citizenship for illegal immi- other U.S. workers because of program that would allow illePitting the elements of the
grants.
immigrants' purchasing and gals to remain in the United House bill - including a likeThe Democracy Corps ·productivity.
States for a fixed pei'iod. ly-to-be-deleted
provisicin.
found, however, that 62 perFor those without a high Seventy-eight percent say that declaring illega!'immigrants to ·
cent of GOP voters favor school diploma,
wa~es 'illegals who learn English, pay
de~rtation of illegals. That, it declined by 1.2 percent dunng taxes and hold jobs should be be felons - against the B~,ijh
approach, the Democracy
said, "is why the House the 1990s. Still, Peri disputed able to earn citizenship.
Republicans have . become that illegals take jobs that
Additionally, 71 percent .Corps found that vot~.rs
demagogic and acted to pass a American Workers would fill if · favor major penalties for favored the latter by 58 percent
punitive immigration bill." · the pay were higher. "Less- employers who hire illegals,. to 34 percent.
The group advised that.
Bush' - whose general educated foreign-born work- and 62 percent want the
"Democrats
can attack the
weakness is evident in his ers, for instance, are found United States to take "whatevroughly 25· percent public· mostly in agricultural and per- er steps are necessary" to Bush administration for failin_g
approval rating in handling sonal-service jobs, while less- · secure the border with Mexico. to enforce the law and losihg
immigration - is urging the educated natives are found
All those measures are part control of the problem" and
. Senate to pas~- a comprehen- mostly in manufacturing and of legislation originally span- · also "advance their own comsive "compassionate conserva- mining," he wrote.
sored by Sens. John McCain, prehel]si ve ideas, retlectiilg
tive" immigration bill. But . Foreign-born workers with- R-Ariz., and Edward Kennedy, mainstream thinking against
House Republicans seem out high school diplomas D-Mass., and modified in a bill mass deportations and a path
adamant about responding to make up 23 percent of the U.S. sponsored by · Sens. Chuck to citizenship for the law-abidbase pressure for a restrictive workforce, up from 6 percent Hagel, R-Neb., and Mel ing."
border security measure, even ·in 1970, the study reported, Martinez, R-Fla., as well .as
The responsible thing for
if it risks destroying Bush-dri- when:as non-high school supported by the White House.
Democrats
to do would oo' to
ven GOP gains ·a.Jnong Americans h?ld only 12 perFifty-six percent of voters in
Hispanics.
cent of U.S. jobs, down from · the Tune poll - and· 43 per- back Bush if he can produc¥,:a
And the obdurate House 37 perce~t m 1970. . ·
cent in the :Democracy Corps comprehensive, constructive
GOP stance has cost Bush supThere IS. a_n Amencan youth poll - favored building a bill in the Senate, then
port from Senate Democrats dropout cns1s. A study funded . fence along the Mexican bar- what comes out of a Housewho nor.mally favor legaliza- by the Bill and Melinda Gates der, as called for in the House Senate conference - and fililion, but either want to see the Foundauon found that about bill.
buster it if it's odious. · •·•
GOP falter with Hispanic vot- 30 perce~t of ~tudents don't · That measure focuses only . If Republicans then .try :-to
ers or fear that whatever bill graduate, mcludmg 40 percel)t on enforcement and seems say that Democrats oppose
· passes the Senate will be trans~ o~ blacks and 50 pc:m;nt of - aimed at depriving illegals of border security, Democrats &lt;JIIJI
for.med for the wor.se in a Hisparucs. The ans~er Is not jobs and public services, effec- answer back that it's a lie and
House-Senate conference.
to ~pen up low-s!ti'~· fruit- lively forcing them to leave the that fences won't solve the
Meanwhile, a study by picking and domestic Jobs for country.
problem.
Hardcore
Giovanni Peri · of the them, but rather. to see f!mt
The Democracy Corps Republicans will vote agaipst
University of California at they graduate With the skills study, which was designed to them, but polls show that ilie
Davis shows that immigration thai allow them to take decent advise Democrats on how to public will support the
does depress wages for low- jobs with better w~es.
profit from the immigration Democrats.
skilled Americans, but less . Moreover, Bush s plan ·to 1ssue, attributed the House
(Morton Kdndracke is execthan is widely belie.ved, and it'. _give Illegal immigrants work qop stance to 'base-voter
editor of Roll Cal4 the
utive
improves the income of all permits and a pathway to citi- antipathy to illegals and to

Today is Tuesday, May 16, the !36th day of 2006. There are
229 days left in the year.
.
Today's Highlight in History:
On May 16, 1929, the first Academy Awards were presented during a banquet at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. The
movie "Wipgs" won "best production," while· Emil Jannings
and Janet Gaynor were named best actor and best actress. .
On this date:
.
,.
In 1770, Marie Antoinette, age 14, married the future King
Louis XVI of France, who was· 15.
In 1866, Congress authorized minting of the 5-cent piece.
In 1868, the Senate failed b.y one vote to convict President
Andrew Johnson as it took its first ballot on one of II anicles
of impeachment against him.
· In 1905, actor Henry Fonda was born in Grand Island, Neb.
In 1920, Joan of Arc was canonized in Rome.
.
In 1946, the Irving Berlin musica! "Annie Get Your Gun,"
starnng Ethel Merman as Anme Oakley, open~d on
· Broadway.
In 1960, a Big Four summit conference in Paris collapsed
on its ope'ning day as the Soviet Union leveled spy charges
against the U.S. in the wake of the U2 incident. .
In 1975, Japanese climber Junko Tabei beca.Jne the first
woman to reach the summit of Mount Everest.
Five years ago: Former FBI agent Robert Hanssen was
indicted on ·charges of spying for Moscow. (Hanssen later
newspaper of Capitol Hill.) .,.
!'leaded ~uilty to 15 counts of espionage and was sentenced to ·
hfe m.pnson Without parole.) Nathaniel Brazill, a 14-year-old
boy who shot his English teacher to death on the last day of
~t~,~
.
. :.
the school year, was .convicted of second-degree murder in
.
RJLICEJ
~est Palm Beach, Fla. (Brazill was laler sentenced to 28 year~ ·
Tl-l!:R!;'~
m pnson.) ·
·
.
One year ago: Newsweek magazine retracted its Quran
abuse story that sparked 'deadly protests in Afghanistan that
l~l&lt;*T OJT€olD(;;
left ~bout 15 people dead and scores injured. Army Specialist
TltE $C.HOOL
Sabnna Harman was convicted at Fort Hood, Texas, of six of
' GAT~'
.
the seven charges she faced for her role in the mistreatment of
Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib. (She was sentenced to six
months in prison after testimony about her ac.ts of kindness
toward Iraqis before she became an Abu Ghraib guard.) The
Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that states can't bar out-of-state wine
shipments. Mexican President Vicente Fox regretted any hurt
feelings for saying that Mexicans in the United States were
doing the work that even blacks wouldn't.
Today's Birthdays: Author Studs Terkel is 94. Actor George
Gaynes is 89. Actor Harry Carey Jr. is 85. Jazz musician Billy
Cobham is 62. Actor Bill Smitrovich is 59. Actor Pierce
Brosnan is 53. Actress Debra Winger is 51. Soviet gymnast
Olga Korbut is 51. Actress Mare Winningham is 47. Rock
musician Boyd Tinsley (The Dave Matthews Band) is 42.
. Singer Janet Jackson is 40. Country singer Scott Reeves (Blue
County) is 40. Actor Brian F. O'Byrne is 39. Rhythm-and- ·
blues singer Ralph Tresvant (New · Edition) is 38. Actress
Tracey Gold is 37. Tennis player Gabriela Sabatini is 36.
-" .
•
Country singer Rick Trevino is 35, Actor David Boreanaz is
35. Musician Simon Katz is 35. Actress Tori Spelling is 33 . .
..
Actress Melanie Lynskey is 29. Actress Megan Fox is . 20.
Actor Marc John Jefferies is 16.
On April 23, the National
Cheney to withdraw his anti- We certainly recognize that
Thought for Today: "Take it easy, but take ir:" - . Studs
Consortium
of
Torture
Terkel, American author.
.
torfure
a.Jnendme:nt The presi- while the McCain amendment
Treatment programs - includdent even threatened to veto is an encouraging step toward
ing 34 programs that care for
the Defense Authorization bill,
"victims of politically motivatLETTERS TO THE
in
which the McCain a.Jnend- preventing future atrocities, we
ed torture" - awarded Sen.
ment originally appeared, if it all have much work to do.""'.
Nat
EO I TOR
John McCain its 2006 Human
Reading·that, I thougpt tliat
stayed in.
Rights
Visionary
Award
for
his
Hentoff
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less than
But then - in a televised while the force-feeding at
·"tireless work io pass the
300 words. All leiters are subject to editing, must be signed,
and otherwise much-publi- Guantanamo was getting wide.
McCain
Anti-Torture
and include address and telephon.e number. No Uf!signed letcized Oval Office meeting with attention here and abroad, the
Amendment" Omitted was
'
.
senator might have been alile
ters will be published. Leiters should be iri good taste,
McCain's disturbing silfjlce (against the detainees).obtained McCain on the amendment the
president,
praising
the
sento stop it - as prisoners lockCfl
addressing issues, norpersonalities. Letters of thanks to orgaafter his a.Jnendment was made through coercion.'' (That can
ator,
said
nothing
about
a
veto,
into
restraining metal chairs
nizations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.
- meaningless .to prisoners at mean torture.)
and
McCain
had
clearly
prewere urinating and defecatit:lg
Guantana.Jno Bay when the
Wilner continues: "That pro- vailed.
·
·
on ·themselves - by sayllig
president signed the Detainee _vision works a significant
As
it
turned
out,
not
so
clearpublicly that the Detention Act
Treatment Act of 2005 last change of existing U.S. and
·ly. In a signing statement that of 2005 was grievously violatDecember.
international law and actually .accompanied the bill becoming
That law strips these prison- provides an mcentive for U.S. law, the president - as he has ing his anti-torture amendment,
Reader Services
(USPs 213-9&amp;01
ers of the. habeas corpus ·rights officials - · or offiCials from
Correction Polley
Ohto Valley Publishing Co.
done so often to undercut other which is uselessly included in
Our main concern in all siQries is to be Published every afternoon, Monday
provided them in the Supreme other governments through new laws - made clear he the same law.
· accurate.' If you know of an error in a through Friday, 111 Court Slroet,
Court's ruling in Rasul et al. v. (CIA) renditions (sending terIn a Washington Post' colwould disregard the torture ban
story, c811 the. newsroom at (740) 992· Pomeroy, OhiO. Seconektass postage
Bush
in
2004.
Accordingly,
no
rorism
suspects
to
other
COWlumn, "A Man Who Won't Sell
paid at Pomeroy.
matter how harsh these .triewto be tortured) -to obtain if harsh interroga\ion tech- His Soul," · David Ignatjtjs
2156.
Member: The Associated Press and the
niques help prevent tenurist
detainees' conditions of con- such coerced statements." ·
Qhio NewspaPer Association.
writes, "A McCain candidal;}',
attacks.
Our main number Is
Poatmaster: Send address corrections
. finement
they have no
As soon as the Detainees
McCain did say publicly if he makes the for.mal decisibJJ
(740) 992-2156.
to Tho-Daily Sentinel, 111 Coun Street,
recourse
to our courts. For Treatment Act of 2005 was
then
that he woul!l keep an eye next year to run, wiU be rooied
Departmen_t ext•nslons are:
Pomeroy, Ohio 4576G.
example, during the brutal signed, I called McCain's press
force-feeding of prisoners on a staff: whicl\ had previously on the implementation of his in his image as a man of prinSubacrlptlon Rata ·
a.Jnendment. But when that ciple. But it will also be some- .
News
By ea"ler or motor route
hunger strike, the guards told a been quick to answer my quesOne month ...... . ....'10.27
EdHor: Ch~r1ene Hoeflich, Ex!. 12
detainee, "We can do what we tions. I requested a statement amendment was nullified tor thing &lt;if a balancing act - 6l'le
One
year
....
.
....
.
.
.
'123.24
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
want now because you can't go by the ~nator. on this deep-six- Guantanamo prisoners -with that the candidate himself Is
Dally
..
.
..........
..
...
50'
much wider implications, as
Reporter: Beth Se'!Jflf1t, Ext. 13
to court anymore." McCain has ing of his a.Jnendment outlaw- Wtlner has noted - McCain likely to fmd uncomfortable.'(
Senior Citizen rateo
'
not publicly protested the effect ing cruel, inhuman and degradOne month .............'9.24
I certainly hope so. ~r
has
been
silent.
One year ........... .'t03:90
of this law.
ing treatment of prisoners in
McCain 's "triumph" in title
.
Advertising
Yet, the "Certificate of
Stbiaboni ShOt!!d Alf11lt in'"""""" c:lroct
.
Tom
Wtloor
(an
attorney
for
U.S.
custody.
No
one
called
. • Outolde. Se~M: Dave Hams. Ext. 15
Oval Office, I was serious~
D the Dally Sentinel. No subscription by
• Outllde Seleo: Brenda Oalo1s, Ext 16. mail permitted in areas where home
a nwnber of the prisoners, who back. I then left a personal Appreciation" presented to thinking of voting for him ~
John McCain in April reads:
~ Clau./Circ.. : Judy Clark, Ext. 10
carrier serviOO'Is available.
has talked to them at · message for the senator asking "in recognition of his unyield- 2008. But I have changed fll.\1
Guantanamo Bay), in explain- 'for any comment he chose to
mind. Situational ethics are ~t
Malt Subscription
ing' how "the heart has been· make. There has been no ing will and tireless work to ·the Saine as real pri1,1ciples. :
General Manager
lnolde Metgo County
pass the McCain Anti-Torture
taken out of the . McCain response.
Char1ene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
13 Weeks ... . ... . .•. •. '32.26
Amendment."
(Nat Hemojf is a .nationalb
26 Weeks ... . . . • . ...•.'64.20
,amendment," points out that in
Like many Americans
renowned
authority on iJie
Moreover, in a comment
52 Weeks . . .. . .... . ..'127.11
E·mlll:
language slipped into the ~ill and human-rights supporters sent to me after I questioned
First Amendm-;m multhe B~/
newsOmydal_lysentlnel,com
during the House-Senate around the world -1 had been
Outside Meigs County
the award,. Mary Fabri, presi- of'Rtg/11.&lt; and author of maJfY
Conference Cotnmittee ses- very impressed · when . John
13 Weeks •.......... . .'53.55
dent of the Consortium of .
Wob:
26 Weeks .........•.•'107.10
sions, the final law "actually ~ain withstood · persistent Torture Treatment Programs, books, including "The War i.fl
www.mydallysOntinel.com
52 Weeks .. ....•. . .. .'214.21
..
authorizes the tribunals at pressure from the president and wrote: "We know torture is the Bill of Rights and t}t
Guantanamo to use statements from Vice President Dick common throughout the world. Gathering Resistance" (Seven
Stories Press, 2003). )
:
'
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I

C:Allll-E.

A.

C'Ol&lt;li DGALt;R

.

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-

McCain's straight-talk express breaks down

The Daily Sentinel

are,

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.The Daily Sentinel• Page As

Senator asks court
to examine records

Ruth Basim
Ruth Leona Basim, 92, of The Woman's Home in Marietta,
IPllSSI~ away Saturday, May 13,2006, at Harmer Place.
She was born Oct. 6, 1913, in Torch , daughter of the late
and Bertha Dunfee Basim . She lived most of her life in
. ,.,·ners and Washington Counties and was a resident of the
IVionaa~ 's Home for over 27 years. She had been employed by
office of U.S . Ceramic Tile Co., Parkersburg, W.Va., for
several -years and worked in other offices iw West Virginia .
She was a member of the Norwood United Methodist Church
belonged to the Mary Martha Circle and Home Builders
.
Bible Class.
... Several nieces , nephews and friends survive. Besides her
l~~~~~~hshe was preceded in death by her brothers, Paul and
Basim. '
.
Services will be held at 1 p.m. on Wednesday, May 17,
2006, at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home in Coolville with Dr:
IJ:amt~s &lt;;:·n p•r&lt; officiating. Burial will be in Torch Cemetery.
Frienj:fs may call from II a.m. until the service at the funeral
., . home .

l

David Pratt
,d

David Charles Pratt, 65 , Pomeror, died on May 13, 2006, at
l .l-Iolzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
·
.:,.. He was born on March 19 , 1941 , in Cleveland , son of the
..lilte Alfred and Veronica &lt;;:rist Pratt. He gradua!ed from
~ootstown High School. He was formerly a girls softball
:s;oach and was President of the Big Bend CB Radio Club.
' In addition to his parents, he was preceded by a brother,
.tan-y
Pratt. .
"'"'He is survived by: his wife 9f 45 years, Barbara Jean Jones
Pratt, Pomeroy; daughters: Angela (Rodney) Manley,
'P'omeroy Teresa (John) Porter, Destrehan, La.; grandchildren:
Shawna (Mark) Young, Ashley and Chris Fields,
. J. W.
··and Samayntha Porter; great grandchildren: B~alyn Young,
Chelsea Manley, Miranda Manley; sister, Mananne Dav1s;
·brothers: Neil Pratt, Mickey Pratt, Danny Pratt, Bill Pratt,
Fred Pratt.
" Services will be held at II a.m. on Friday, May 19, 2006, at
Fisher Funeral Home, Pomeroy Chapel with Rev. Mark
,Moirow officiating. Burial will be in Carleton Cell)etery.
.,. Friends may call6 to 8 p.m. on Thursday, May 18,2006, at
,'he funeral home .
·
•

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"" Taft funds treatment-over-tiiDe
~fter opposing similar idea in 2002

':II

' I l l'

BY CARRIE
SPENCER GHOSE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

' • '•

COLUMBUS . - Gov. Bqb
Taft announced Monday that six
counties will test a program that
ptbvides treatment instead of jail
· time for certain drug offenders
- four years after fighting to
defeat a similar idea on the
statewide bW!ot.
The counties will share $25
million for treatment and counseling for offenders who are
· j,~Jveniles .or who have children
are earning less than twice
the federal poverty level.
. 'Allen, Franklin, Hamilton,
Mahoning, Richland and
Washington counties will ~de
· which drag offenses qualify
s6meone for the program and
. what services to offer. Incentives
for the offenders could include
dismissing the charges or clearirig or sealing a criminal record
IJ.lon sUc:cessful completion of
tile program.
'
: In a release Monday, Taft cited
the success of Ohio's 65 existing
drUg .courts, which have the
option of ordering treatment

and

.,

....

Sieg~
.trom Page A1

.suspects were acquitted in a
trial. Cornstalk:s followers
"plotted revenge on a grand
·'Scale, and in 1778 planned to
-·attack Fort Randolph and
·other white settlements along
..the Kanawha River.
. Even though she lost her
brother and nephew to the
whites, Cornstalk's sister
·Nonhelema assisted the local
:forces in savi~g the settle-

..

...

SHS
from PageA1

"
·•·.
. a. member of the National
· Honor Society, Drama Club,
'Spanish
Club, Student
'Council Yearbook and Prom
:e'ommittees, Pep Club ,
Varsity "S" Club, and part1c1-

instead of jail.
.
"Today· we are going a step
further to help communities provide th!; counseling and other
drug treatment services to help
indivilluals lo assume a produc·tive role in society rather than
(become) a long-lelm member
of Ohio's priSon system," he
said.
The project differs from
2002's Issue I , which failed by
2-to-1 at the poUs. It would have
required judges to impose treatment instead ofjail for. all first- or
second-time nonviolent offenders who asked for treatment.
Thft called the ballot issue
"seductive, deceptive and dangerous" when opposing it along
with Ohio's police, prosecutors
and ~judges.
· ·
"He s never been o~ to
treatment in lieu of pnson," Thft
spokesman Mark Rickel said:
The .Republican governor's
objections were that the rnanda-.
tory treatment would undermine
the authority of dmg courts, and
that putting . the measure in the
state cOnstitution would make
problems extremely difficult to
fuc

COLUMBUS (AP) - Th~
Ohio Supreme Court should
examine the record~ . Gov.
Bob Taft is withholding to
determine if they fall under
the limited privilege the
court has granted Taft, a state
senator who is suing the governor said Monday.
State Sen. Marc Dann·, a
Youngstown-~rea Democrat
who also is his pany's nominee for attorney general, is
suing for access to documents related to unorthodox
rare-coin investments by the
state Bureau of Workers '
Compensation. He said his
case would be weakened if
he isn't allowed to see the
records, mostly reports that
Taft assistants gave to the
governor.
,The court ruled April 14
that Taft had the right to keep
the public from viewing certain re~:;ords sought as part of
a Taft administration investment scandal.
The U.S. Supreme Court's
1973 United States v. Nixon
ruling over release of the
Watergate tapes sei'Ved as a
foundation for the Ohio high
court's 5-2. decision, which
for the first time allows the
governor to keep many ·policymaking documents private.
The Ohio justices rejected,
however, the notion that Taft
has sweeping executive privilege to withhold all communications with his Cabinet
directors and policy advisers.
The ruling set up a three-step
process for releasing such
records when they are in the
public interest.
Dann wants the court to
look at the records in question to determine if they are

Local Briefs
.

Round, square dance

exempt from public view
under its ruling.
·
"Without the ability to
obtain factual, non-deliberative records of the gover:
nor's office relating to the
use of tax funds, citizens will
be hindered in exercisin~ this
historic right of acuon;:
Dann told the court m a
response to Taft's April 28
motion to keep the records
hidden .
Taft, a Republican. asserted that the reports withheld
from Dann contained sensitive information that could
reveal, for example , a plant
closing, business expansion
plans or the governor's legislative strategy.
Taft said all material relevant to Dann 's lawsuit was in
already released weekly
reports to Taft from for.mer
Bureau
of
Workers '
Compensation administrator
James Conrad. Taft withheld
the. weekly reports submitted
by' his aides for business
because they contained sensitive information, his filing
said.
Bureau investments have
lost at least $300 million in
·the last several years, including up to $13 million lost in
rare-coin investments managed by Republican fundraiser Tom Noe , who .has pleaded not guilty to charges of
stealing from the funds.
Taft has com pi ied with
Dann 's request to see all relevant documents pertaining
· to the scandal and is continuing his lawsuit for political
purposes, Taft . spokesman
Mark Rickel said. Taft will
comply with whatever ruling
the court issues, Rickel said.

Cheney stands firm on Patriot Act
Bv M.R. KROPKO .

BELPRE - A round and square dance will be helq from
7:30p.m. to II p.m . on May 20 at 214 Stone Road in the old
bowlmg alley : Randy and the Renegades will provid_e the
music . The caller is Earl Welch . Call 423-7781 for more mformation.

Plan reunion
. RACINE - Southern High School Class of 19~6 will have
a class reunion on May 28 . Information is available by calling
Jennifer Cummins Riffle at 247-2079 or Jyl Marazon
Mathews at 654-8937.

Immunizations offered
•

•

TUPPERS PLAINS - The Ohio University College of
Osteopathic Medicine Childhood. Immunization ~ogr~, a
mobile health program, will prov1de free routme lmmumzations for all area children from birth through 1 .~ years of age,
from 3:30 to 4:30p.m. on June 19 at the Eastern branch of the
Meigs County_Publi_c Library. . .
.
.
.
_
The service IS ava1lable to familie s of all mcomes, mcludmg
those with insur~nce coverage. To receive immuniza~ons,
please bring your child's previous shot records. The chicken
pox vaccine is available to those children who have not
received it.
·
·
Adult immunizations available for a nominal fee:
.
Tetanus/diphtheria, $10, and Hepatitis B, $34 .. .
The new and improved Meningococcal vaccme IS available
through CHIP for a $115 fee, on a first-come, first-served
basis.

Eastern Class of 1981 reunion
TUPPERS PLAINS ~The Eastern High School Class of
1981 is making plans for their 25th reunion. Addresses of
class members are needed. If you are a 1981 graduate of EHS
or know a 198 i graduate please cont.act membe_rs of the cl!15s
at EHSclassofl981 @yahoo .com. The reumon IS bemg
planned for June 3.

For the Record
Highway Patrol
ROCK SPRINGS - Roger L. Roush Jr., 31, 33780 Bailey
Run Road, Pomeroy, was cited for failure to yield by the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol followmg a
one-car accident Sunday on County ~oad 26 (Flatwoods) at
the intersection' with CR 20 (Rocksprings).
.
.
Troopers said. Roush was northbound at 2_:45 a.m .. when .he
failed to stop at the stop sign a.t the 1~tersect1on w1th
Rocksprings. He drove through the mtersect1on, went across
Rocksprings and struck a guardraiL ·. .
.
The car came to .a stop off the north side of the road against
the guardrail, the report said. The car had d1sabhng damag~.
SALEM CENTER - Thomas P. Gannaway II, 28, 99 R1fe
Cemetery Road, Gallipolis, was dted for failut:e to control by
the· patrol following a one-vehicle acc1dent Fnday on CR 65
(Red Hill).
·
Troopers said Gannaway was eastbound, four-tenths of a
mile east of CR I (Painter Ridge) at 12:22 p.m . when h,e lost
control of the minivan he operated and shd off the left side of
the road.
The minivan overturned, the report said. Damage to the
vehicle, owned by Edwin H. Davis and Son Inc., Clarksburg,
Ohio, was disabling.
·

Bush accep!ing mode~t
curbs on the goVernment s
power to investigate susCLEVELAND - Vice pects in terror probes.
President Dick · Cheney
He said the nation's terrorattacked congressional crit- ist surveillance program
ics of the Patriot Act on remains limited in scope.
Monday, saying they have
"The president has been
been well· briefed about the very, very car~ful to m~e
purpose ·of the anti-terror certain that th1s program IS
law.
conducted in a manner that
"This is a good program," safeguards the civil liberties
said Cheney, in Clevela11d to of the American p;ople ,''
attend a fundraiser for a Cheney told .about 200 ~eo­
Republican congressional pie attending the fundra1ser
candidate . "It has saved for Craig Foltin. the _ma~or
many lives. I'm convinced_ it of Lorain, a Lake Ene c1ty
· has been absolutely cruc1al on the western outskirts of
to maintaining the security Cleveland.
of the United States."
"Issues of national security . POMEROY - Meigs County Sheriff Robert Beegle reportCongress r~":ewed th~ act will clearly be at the top of ed the following complaints filed with his office:.
.
in March, g1vmg Pres1dent the agenda as these midterm
• The owner of the cw wash at Tuppers Plams re~rted
Bt~sh a victory and allowing
elections draw near," the equipment there-had been spray painted on Thursday mght.
Republicans to add to their vice president said.
• David Bystrek. Beavercreek, ':"ho owns property on
tough-on-terror image for
In
December ... 2005. Carpenter Hill Road, reported that h1s shed had been entered
the midterm elections. The Democrats
blocked
an and two Honda four-wheelers were stolen.
vote came on! y after a attempt to renew the Patriot
• A student at Eastern High School reported the theft of cash
Democrat-led filibuster, with Act and Senate Minority from his wallet while he was in gym class. The wallet was not .
Leader Harry Reid , D- in a locker. The student had the money on hand nr order to
. ..
.
ments from destruction.
he said presentations and Nevada, said at a rally after purchase a dirt bike, Beegle said.
• Carl Whee let of Sandridge Road reported the theft of _his
These and other details will demonstrations of hide tan- the vote: "We killed the
1994 Toyota pickup truck. Athens County officials are assistbe portrayed t_hroughout the ning, cloth dyeing and m'ilitia Patriot Act."
said
Reid
boasted
ing
in tile investigation.
Cheney
event , which kicks off Fnday drills will continue,. and there
morning as re-enactors arrive will be an 18th century auc- of his efforts to try to k1ll
the bill.
.
and set up camp. Hesson said tion.
"Some
of
our
opponents
school tours will take place
The event will conclude
who'
advocate
a
sudden
during the day, while partici- Sunday with a colon!a!'church
withdrawal from Iraq are
pants will be treated to re- service and demonstrahon.
counseling
the very kind of
Denny
Bellamy.
Mason
enactor enhance1pent semi (Osama) bin
TOLEDO (AP)
A
retreat
that
Patricia Saunders was
nars and activities during the · County Convemion a~d
Visitors Bureau director, sa1d Laden has been predicting .. · woman whose two· children stabbed at her home in a rural
evening .
·
.
Saturday's events include this year's event should be Yet these critics will not, were shot and killed during a neighborhood near Swanton,
· the drama itself at I p.m. and 4 one of the best the fort has and cannot, make the case domestic dispute was trying about 20 miles west of
that surrender in Iraq would to get her kids out of an Toledo. She told emergency
p.m. The public can vie_w the hosted.
For more information about make our nation safer."
attack and siege from ms1de
unhealthy relationship, her medical workers she had been
But Reid voted for the act family said Monday.
and outside the fort walls dur- the event, call the tourism
stabbed by her husband.
each time it . came to a final
ing the show. Between shows, center at (304) 675-6788 . .·
When a deputy arrived at
Authorities think her husvote and his spokesman , Jim band shot" the children after the home to investigate, he
Manley, said Cheney was stabbing her Saturday.
was shot and wounded. The
paled in Educaiional Service happy.
trying to dredge up old comthen heard a series of
deputy
Family
members
would
not
"It's important to be happy, ments to · distort Democrats'
Learning. She was also named
say anything more about what muffied shots coming from a
Racine Fall Festival and SHS and not all successful people positions.
·
Homecoming Queen.
are happy," Williams said
"Senator Reid is a strong Patricia Saunders · ·and her bedroom where the bodies of
Williams plans to attend when describing the. inspira- supporter 9f the Patriot Act husband , Clarence Saunders, Clarence Saunders, 58, and
the University of Rio Grande tion behini1 her speech.
and no amount of d1stort10n may have been going through . his two children , Lauren
in the fall, .majoring in preBoth Bentz · and Williams or distraction from the vice
"I don 't understand · the Saunders , _10 , and Jacob
pharmacy. She received a full agreed this time in their lives · president can change that," depth of the relationship ," Saunders. 5, were found dead,
scholarship from Rio Grande . is bittersweet as they say Manley
said.
"The Jerry Staczek, the woman's · said Lh Don Atkinson, a
in the for.m of the OhiO FirSt good' bye to high school and Republican tough -talkin_g brother, said at a news confer- member of the investigative
Scholarship. In addition , she move into the next phase of . rhetoric is no longer credi - enee at St. Vincent Mercy unit that discovered the bod•
. received the Dale Arn~ld their lives . · ·
Medical Center.
·
ies .
ble."
Cutler Kibble and other m1s- · That next phase begins at 8
cellan~ous scholarships.
p.m. this Sunday at SHS's
======~
- ~====~===
Williams'
salutatorian Charles
W.
Hayman
speech also focuses on · sue- Gymnasium when comcess and how to incorporate mencement exerctses get
success into one's life, but . und_erway for the Class of
more importantly how to be 2006.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Complaints

Family says woma11. wanted kids
, out of unhealthy relationship .

Arcadia Nursing Center
We(comes Youl

Columbia Township
Trustees would like to
thank the Voters f.o r
passing the Cemetery
Levy.
Paid for by Columbia TownshipTrustees.

.

.

WE HAVE OPENINGS

,

Arcadia is here for our local community-no need to drive to Parkersburg.
·
Marietta or Athens!! .
Please call 740-446-3157 and ask for Kathy McDaniel
. Arcadia Nursing Center
Coolville, Ohio 45723
Small
to Care!!!

�The Daily Sentinel

as
BY THOMAS J. SHEERAN
ASSOCIATED PAESS WRITER

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OHIO.

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CLEVELAND The
bishop who briefly led the
Archdiocese of Boston after
Cardinal Bernard Law quit
amid the priest s,e x-abuse
scandal
was
installed
Monday to lead a Catholic
Diocese of Cleveland that
must deal with declining
numbers of priests and possi ~
ble parish closings.
The Most ~ev. Richard G.
Lennon, 59, his thick Boston
· accent underscoring his New
England roots, was eseorted
to the cushioned marble bishop's seat, ·symbol of his
authority, by Cincinnati
Archbishop
Daniel
Pilarczyk, head of · the
church's Ohio province.
"I pledge myself to work
with all of you," Lennon said
after his installation.
Archbish.o p Pietro Sambi,
the Vatican's representative
AP Photo
to Washington and the U.S . Bishop Richard Lennon, consecrates the wine for communion, during his installation mass at
Catholic community, read the · The Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist in Cleveland, Monday. Lennon, the 10th Bishop of the
appointment letter from Pope Diocese of Cleveland was appointed to replace Bishop Anthony Pilla who has retired.
Benedict XVI.
Cardinals William H. your embrace as I embrace of our church and see the close and two merge since
good things in Cleveland," 2002. Pilla has sought to
Keeler of Baltimore and Sean you," Lennon said.
Lennon mentioned attend- she said. "One challenge will avoid emotionally charged
O'Malley, 'who succeeded
Law as Boston archbishop ing a recent game at Jacobs be coming in the footsteps of closings that can undermine
after a seven-month caretaker Field between the Indians Bishop Rilla. Those are big urban neighborhoods by
role by Lennon, led more and his beloved Boston Red footsteps, you know, shoes, encouraging parish collaboto fill . I hope he will realize ration.
than 300 priests and bishops ·Sox.
When a Cleveland player the legacy that he is stepping . Pilla and Lennon have
at the standing room-only
.
been criticized by victims for
installation Mass at St. John · homered, Lennon said he · into."
Dwindling numbers of their handling of priests who
was encouraged by a seatCathedral.
Lennon succeeded Bishop mate to "clap a little - they priests and the continued sexually abused children.
Anthony M. Pilla, 73, who are looking at you." And migration from the city to Pilla ack!nowledged lllllk:ing
retired with Lennon' s instal- when Lennon stood and surging suburban parishes mistakes and Lennon said
lation, which he attended. cheered a Boston home run, will present an early chal- when he arrived in Cleveland
Pilla, the only local priest to the response he got was , lenge for Lennon, who led that he would abide by a
the move in Boston to close national bishops' policy barserve as Cleveland bishop, "Please sit down.':
60
smaller parishes.
ring abusive priests Jrom
"I have much to learn. I
led the nearly 800,000
The Cleveland diocese has · ministry.
have . much to unlearn," he
Catholics of the diocese At least 17 Cleveland diosaid. "I'm sure I will have a 460 active priests, including
the mition 's 16th-largest those
on
special
assignment
cese
priests have been suslot
of
help
identifying
them."
for 25 years. ·
Sandra Gay Chapman · of elsewhere and .order priests · pended over abuse ' allegaLennon appealed for faith·
fuiQess to the Gospel mes- Cleveland, who led a 'Psalm including Franciscans and lions since 2002. In a lawsuit
sage of the apostles and said response . with African-style Jesuits. The diocesan priest deposition last July, Pilla
the Catholic community must music at the installation, said ranks total 296 and could declined to specify how
many priests he had . reasbe marked by unity and a she was excited to see shrink to 15.1 by 2030.
The diocese, with 233 signed
were
known
readiness to serve the needy. . Lennon installed.
parishes,
had
just
one
parish
pedophiles.
''I
hope
he
will
be
a
leader
: "I ask you to take me into

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

S po rtB'f
s ne s .. .. ...... B2
Scoreboard .... . . , .. . .. B6

C_indnnati to study
whether to remove tiles
over City Hall art

Tuesday, May 16, 2oo6

CINCINNATI (AP)
bly painted on plaster and
.Covering the ceiling qf City canvas. Workers .are erecting
Counci~
chambers with scaffoTdifig ih council chamacoustical tile may have bers to remove a small secseemed like a good· idea at the lion of tiles before routine
time. Council members in the maintenance is performed.
1930s apparently thought it
"It's time to paint and
was more important to. hear restore some water damage,"
each other rath«[ t~an to gaze Koopman said. "But' we want
at the murals ovt:rl)ead.
to do this investigation before
But with the availability of that work, so we don't do any
modem sound systems- and more damage if it is somean interest in reconnecting thing that can be restored."
with the history of the I 9th .
If the murals are' salvage.century building - officials able, the ne.xt step will be to
want to peel old paint, glue figure out how much it will
and tile from a section of the cost and how to pay for it,
ceiling to see if the artwork Koopman said. Any restorauildemeath is worth restoring. tion work could be years 'off.
Charles Pedretti, from a
Staff from the Cincinnati
Cincinnati family of mural- Art Museum will evaluate the
ists, painted the q:iling as part mur;lls. Stephen Bonadies,
of a $25,000 contract he won 'interim co-director of the
to be the interior designer museum, said the tyr,e of glue
when City Hall was under used to attacl:l the tiles could
construction from 1888 to make all the difference.
"If the glue can be·softened
1893.
A program from the May or dissolved, it's possible to
13, 1893, dedication included remove it," Bonad1es said. "If
this description: "The panels it's somethin!l like a more
.of the ceilings are frescoed modem adhestve,like carpenwith seals of the nation, of the ter's glue, (restoration) would .
state, of the county and of the be quite a task."
city."
Workers didn't look into
But Pedretti, who had stud- restoring the murals during a
ied in Italy before returning to 1990 maintenance project in
Cincinnati and opening a council chambers. The city
business with his brother, considered removing all the
complained in 1935 about his acoustical . tiles, but deterwork bein!l buried.
. mined the $300,000 ·price tag
. "Pedretti lamented the fact was too expensive.
.•
that cherubs and artistic fig"We don't believe it is higb •:·
ures which he painted on the art," then-superintendent of
ceiling of council chambers architecture Ronald Kull said,
have been covered up in the adding that removal of the
city's program of improving · tiles would likely "rip up the
acoustics of the auditorium," canvas."
according to a story printed,
Koopman said acoustics
then in The Cincinnati wouldn't suffer much if the
Enquirer.
tiles are removed because
Joel Koopman, principal there's a state-of-the-art
architect for the city, . said sound system in•the cjlambers
Pedretti's murals were proba- today.
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PERSPECTIVE: . New ~tyle of worship brings new spirit !9JJ1~nline church
:DemOCratS Seek moral hu:rh

to exist."
starts out with a skit about pretty close to the core of
There js little st.ructure in golfing . and religi?n, and their faith," sa~d Bill Rindy,
the servtces. Pratse bands mo~es l~to [0~~ -· J\... roll a pastor ~t Ftrst Lutheran
.
take the place of an organ or mustc wtth a heavy drum Church m ·Fargo, N.D.
B CARRIE
·
·
have been replaced by a choir. There's dancing beat that brings nearly "You're on holy ground and ·
Y
half support making emer- upholstered chairs at St. instead· of kneelin,g . Skits everyone out of their seats.
need to be aware of. that."
gency contraception avail- Paul's Lutheran Church. are acted out. Hymn books
, St. Paul's added its first
His chuh!h offers both
SPENCER GHOSE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITEA
able without a prescription, The altar is now .an ex pan - are missing. Scripture often contemporary service I I styles of worship . which bas
while 37 percent oppose it.
sive stage that accommo- still pta_ys a ro.Ie. but in less years ago. A.ttendance on "helped us avot'd. the warCOLUMBUSIt's
a
bill
But
lawmakers
have
shot
d
ates d rummers, key board &lt;,orrn~ 1tzed read mgs. . .
Sunday morm~gs had flat- ship wars," Rindy said.
with almost n' chance of d
0
own milder versions of the players and guitarists.
Thts style of worshtp ts a tened out to a httle over 400,
St. Paul's bas lost about . ·
passing. That's thl! point.
proposal -in the past, and· are
And the most popular big reason why Protestant and Miller was worried that 50
members,
mainly
House
and
Senate considering a competing spots in the building are megachurch.es have grow_ n the c.hurch would soon see a because of the worsht'p
Democrats last week heavi- measure that would restrt.ct sea ts on t wo 1ea th er couc hes so muc h , w1t h some .d rawm_g dec1me.
changes and sanctuary reno- ·
ly publicized a proposal to access to emergency contra- that make the church's m_ embers away from tradiHe also th.ought. Sunda~s vat1·0 n. ·
increase access to contra- cept1'on used after u· nprotect · entryway f ee 1 more l'k
1 e a
Ilona!
: churches. w,, ere becommg a httl_e sta e.
The remaining mpmbers
ception
and
require
compreed
sex.
The
higher
dose
of
·
hip
coffee
h
p
·
M
h
h
th
k
I
b
"
0
·
d · b. h
s
egac urc es WI a wee ·
remem er saymg to · divided into the "frozen
·v·e sex educatt'on rather th h
hensl
.
. e orrnones use m . ut
St. Paul's rocks with dane- . ly attendance of at. lea. st mvself, 'I'm just tired of chosen" who attended. the
than
pro- control
pt'lls ,·s ot.ten
·
·
' 10
·
2 ' 000 have d ou bl ed 1 ~ f tve 1h{IS;,I1 s lh': same old, same traditional service and the
witht'ncor
th~ mg,
c1appmg
and music
rams abstinence-only
in schools.
rectly confused
g
contemporary
services years to 1,210, accorqmg !O old, he satd.
.
"Christian light" who preLegislative leaders quick- abortion pill RU-486.
offered in addition to its tra- a study from Leadershtp
The results were dramattc. ferred the new style.
ly dimmed prospects of pas"When these groups talk ditional style of worship.
Network, a. ch~rch-frowth
Attendance . mcreased
Dave Metzger, dt' rector of
sage.
That allows
.minority
"We neede d to offer some- consu It m~ t trm _m D. a_ 1as.
Democrats
to . accuse
the about denying access to
every Y':ar - I t gre:-v b y 63 evangelism, said the church
St. Paul s, whtch ts m sub- percent m the f1rst s1x year~. became two totally d'ffe
t
contraceptives, they're way thing different because peo1
GOP of ignoring the wishes out of step with voters.," said pie were leaving to find urban Toledo, holds one Many attendees were famtt'
ren
·
· a 1·1es w1t
· h d'f'
·
congrega
. by pooh - Roberta Aber, chat·rwoman c h urc hes where t hey cou ld contemporary serv1ce
m
1 .ereot re 1·1g10us
B t thtons.
t'
Of most Amen·cans
10
poohing a plan that could of the state group of Planned express more joy or celebra- m?vie theater, get~ing e~gier backg~ounds. "W~ had a lot
h u · a s started
reduce the number of abor- Parenthood affiliates. The · tion," said the Rev. Roger w1th sk1ts, flashmg hghts of m1xed marnages that c ange..
.
tions. ·
campaign doesn ' t stop with Miller. "The church is just and rock ' n' roll. They call it ended up settling here,"
Some members . _who
The bills put abortion the bills, she said. Backers looking for a way to speak "church for peoole who . . Miller said.
atte~d the e~ly tradltlonal
rights advocates back on the . plan .letters to · newspaper to the culture."
don't go to church.''
. Rish, who grew up Roman service now hnger af~erward
offensive, because they can editorial pages, public serMany mainline Protestant
There's not a suit and tie Catholic, begati atterlding and have coffee wtth the
say they've offered a pratti- vice announcements and, if denominations with leveling among the crowd. Ab.o ut St. Paul's just before the ini- contemporary crowd. Some
cal and. affordable solution they raise the money, ads.
or declining attendance are 150 people attend each week tial changes. "When I are crossmg over to attend
to decrease unwanted pregNeither House Speaker considering or experiment- - more than the number at stripped away the tradition, both servtces.
.
Forey ,Kosch, a member ?f
nancies, said Sen. Marc Jon Husted nor Senate ing with new ways of wor- the 8 a.m. Sunday tradition- I, was able to .make a better
· Dann ,
a
Youngstf!wn President Bill Harris knew ship, following the lead of al service. Financially, it's connection with God," she St. Pa?l s for 50 ~ears, satd
Democrat.
'. about the bills, but the non-den om in at ion a 1 almost reached a break even said.
there 1s mpre excttement at
"We hold the moral high Legislature has few session megachurches that ar.e point:
The growth allowed the the church. People are start'
ground in this .debate~· he . days left this year.
growing quickly with conPeople who might be church to begin a $2.6 mil- mg to get to kn&lt;;&gt;w each
said on the Statehouse steps
"I imagine there are a temporary services that uncomfortable going into a lion renovation and addition other. "My generation, they
last week, surrounded by a number of people that have appeal to young people and church have no ·problem that included new Sunday went to church because
few hundred volunteers some
more
aggressive families.
going. · 1o a. th~ater, said school rooms, a new kitchen ,mom. and dad made them,"
ready to visit their lawmak- options to reduce the num"Main.line churches are member Patti R1sh. A few and an updated sanctuary.
he satd.
ers . I(/ press for the propos- . ber of abortions than that way behind in the ballgame always wander in late.
The transition, however,
· One's position in the
. .
idea," was all .Husted would because they were so . "They don't come in y.ith can be traumatic, Churches church. is no longer deterals. ·
The bills are safely say.
'steeped in their worship tra- a quiet reverence," she said. often lose at least a few mined by income, he said on
grounded in public opinion:
State Rep. Tyrone Yates . ditions,"
said
Ronald "It's just like going to the longtime members and ri5k a Sunday morning, just after
According to a Pew intr,oduced the House ver- Shifley,
pastor
at movies."
alienating a large part of . greeting a man wearing a
Research Center survey last sion last week, minus a sec- Spencerville United Church
Instead of popco~n and . their congregations.
leather jacket and blue
August, three-fourths of . tion that needs rewording, of Christ. "Down the road, soda, churchgoers gralrcups
"People are creatures of jeans. "There was a time
· Americans favor teaching and Sen. Teresa Fedor want- churches will have to move of chocolate silk coffee and habit and messing with their you 'didn't dare wear that,"
birth control alongside .ed to redraft that section to contemporary worship in . jelly doughnuts. The service worship service reaches he said.
abstinence in schools and before introducing hers.
some form or they ' ll cease
·.

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·ground OTi abortwn debate

BY JOHN. SEEWER .
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
MAU.ME
" 'E' - . The pews

· 1-lEMLOCK GROVE
Louise Radford received a
50-year membership award
and Genevieve Burdette a
65-year membership· seal at
the recent' meeting of
1-lemlock .Grange at the
Grange Hall.
Rosalie Story conducted
the meeting and discussed
inspection on June I : Practice
will be at 7 p.m. on May 30.
Kitn Romine, lecturer, used
May as Older Americans
Month and Mother's Day as

the theme for the program.
Older American Month was
established in 1963, when
only 17 million people
reached their 65th birthday.
The current world population
65 or older is 483 million.
Florida has the highest J?Crcentage of American semors
- 17 percent.
There are 80.5 million
, mothers in the U.S. To- 2005,
there were · I 0 million single
mothers with children under
18. Four million women gave

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birth in the U:S. last .year.
Roy Grueser, legislative
chairman, said· Iowa has the
world's largest ethanol production plant, generating 1.2
million gallons a year.
Members followed with a
discussion of gasoline prices.
Donna Davidson donated a
rug for the kitchen area.
Rosalie ,Story won the bowl
given away at the Grange
banquet.
The May meeting will be
preceded· by a chicken dinner.

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Local weather ·

Grange recognizes members

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Bl

The Da;ily Sentinel

Inside

Tuesday ... Patchy fog in the cloudy with it chance of
morning.. Mostly cloudy with showers and thunderstorms.
a 40 percent chance of show- Lows in the lower 50s.
ers. Highs in the mid 60s. Southwest winds 5 to 10 mph.
West winds 5 to I 0 mph.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Tuesday
nlght...Mostly
Thursday ... Mostly cloudy
cloady with a 50 percent with a chance of showers and
chance of showers. Lows in thunderstorms. Highs in the
the, mid 40s. ' West w'inds mid 60s . Chance of rain 50
around 5 mph.
percent.
W,ednesday ... Mostly . Thursd~y night...Mostly
cloudy with a 30 percent , cloudy wtth a ,chance of
chance of ·Showers. Highs showers and thunderstorms.
around 70. Southwest winds 5 Lows in the upRer 40s.
to 10 mph.
. Chance of rain 40 pel1;ent.
Wednesday night...Mostly · Friday ... Mostly
cloudy

with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Highs in the
mid 60s. Chance of rain 30
,
percent.
Friday night through
Saturday · · night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
40s. Highs around 70.
Sunday ... Partly . cloudy
with a 30 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the lower
70s.
Sunday
night
and
Monday ... Partly
cloudy.
Lows' in the !ower 50s. Highs
in tll,e lower 70s.
·
J

Redwomen fall short at·Region IX tournament
' BY MARK WILUAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

l...ocAL SCHEDUI,E
GALLIPOLIS - A ~thedule ol upoomlng college
and high td1ool varsity sporting events involving
teams from Galli, M-'01 and Mason coumiea.

TutJdey'• MmM
Tr1ck and Field

OHSM Division Ill ·oisulct

.

&amp;t Rock

3:30p.m.

WtdOIIdly'• gamu ·

Tm:k ond Field

0HSAA Division II District at Oa""

3;30 p.m.

CLEVELAND After
blistering Ohio Dominican,
11-0, to blitz through the winner's
bracket, the Urtiversity
Hill,
of Rio Grande Red women
softball team stood one win
away from earning a . return
Hill, . trip to the NAJA National

Tournament.
That one victory never
came as four-time regi!Jn
·tournament runner-up Tiffin
defeated Rio Grande twice, 4· 3 and 8-4, to snatch the
nationals bid away from the
Redwomen on Saturday as the
NAIA Region IX Tournament
wrapped up.
Rio Grande (36-18) smoked

Ohio Dominican (4 1-20) 11-0·
to breeze through the winner's bracket. The Redwomen
started early scoring four runs
in the first inning, which
would have been more than
enough to subdue the Lady
Panthers. Senior third base,
man Brandi Jones clubbed a
two-run home run to be~in the
scoring. Sophomore lefttield-

er Jenny Phillips·also added a
two-run double.
Sophomore centerfielder
Jessica Ross hit her first collegiate home run and made it a
grand one, as in grand slam to
blow the game open in the
.third inning.
Rio banged out 14 hits in
the onslaught. Jones and
Phillips, along with senior

rightfielder Jenny Olding,
sophomore catcher Whitney
Harless, sophomore designated hitter Miranda Laws and
senior Kristen Chevalier all
collected two hits each.
Olding, Phillips and Jones all
totaled two ·RBI each and
so phomore first baseman

Please see Reclwomen. B2

Tournament a...ball
Eastern vs. Portsmouth Clay (at Rio

Clrande). 5 p.m.

Tournament Softball

River Valley vs. Portsniouth West (at Rio
Gra~de),

5 p.m.

•

Tbugdly'• qtmtl

Tournam.nt Softball
Point Pleasant vs. Magnolia/Oak Glen (at
~ltchle

County), TBA

FddO'egenw
Track and Field
West Virginia State Championships, TBA
OHSAA Division Ill District at Rock Hill
:3:30p.m.
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IIH;IISnlooi.B\SLB\1.1

Eastern leads

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1 ,, ,

1

Clavaner

.innings
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BS~ERMAN&lt;IIMYDA I LYTRIBUNE . COM

RIO GRANDE- Joel Lynch pitched qut
of a bases-loaded jam just before play was
Satunt•v'• ge0111
halted - allowing Eastern to retain a 3-2
Track and Field
advantage over Portsmouth Clay during
OHSM Division II District at Oak Hill, 10
Monday's Division IV district semifinal. ·
a.m.
West Virginia State Championships, TBA
Heavy rains at Bob Evans Field forced the
hig~ school baseball game to be suspended
unttl 5 p.m. Wednesday; the contest will
resume in the top of the fifth inning.
·· Eastern's Terry Durst hit his seventh home
run of the season, a solo blast that tied the
game in the second inning, before Thomas
Bishop knocked in the go-ahead score in the
fourth. Clay's lone error allowed Bishop to
score later that same inning and made it a 31 Eagle lead.
Clay pulled to within one thanks to a
Stevie Phillips run-scoring single .i n the bottom of the fourth, but was threatening to add
more. Base hits by Phillips and Zack Parker,
along with a walk ·to Drew Fitch, loaded the
bases.
Lynch, though, struck out Robert Bauer to
keep the damage at a minimum and leave
three stranded. Lynch had five strikeouts and
~ad surrendered . four hits through four
mmngs. Starter N1ck Blanton is also still in
the game for Clay.
, Danny Frantz had the only other Panther
hit- an RBI single that put his team in front
.
1-0 after one half inning.
HOUSTON
(AP)
Eastern's Kyle Gordon also hit safely in
Catching a ghost turned out
addtllon to teammates Durst and Bishop. ,
to be 1\0 .. easier. on the road
Eastern, a defending district champion,
·
than it was.at home.
brou~ht
a 14-12 record into the game, having
At least not for Barry
elimmated county rival Southern in the sec:
Bonds.
·
tiona! final. Clay, on the other hand, was a
En route to a 10-1 win over
more surprising entry into this year's
the Houston Astros, guys
Southeast
District tourney.
ahead and behind Bonds in
The
Panthers,
who won just s;x times durthe Giants lineup Monday
ing the regular season, knocked out topnight demonstrated that with
seeded Notre Dame the previous round. It
$OOd timing and a little pop
was the third straight win for Clay.
· Ill the bat, driving a baseball
,
.
.
Larry
Crum/plioto
The winner plays again Friday at Rio
~yond the outfield fences in
Eastern
s
Justin.
Brownmg
puts
the
tag
on
Portsmouth
Clay's.
Drew
Fitch
in
the
firs'
t
inning
of
Monday's
Division
against the winner of the Eastern Pike-St.
Mmute Maid Park hardly
IV
d1stnct
sem1fmal.
The
game
was
suspended
with
the
Eagles
leading
3·2
in
the
top
of
the
fifth
inning.
Joseph
grime.
¢)uired Ruthiap power.
l
: But it must have looked
itnd felt otherwise to Bonds.
· In one of those ever-rarer
(nterviews the slugger has
granted recently - outside of
'
those earnest bits he does for
his infomercial, "Bonds on
BY ToM WITHERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Bonds" - he mused before
the game:
BY JoE KAY
CLEVELAND - Rasheed
"This thing, it's like chasASSOCIATED PRESS
Wallace's right .ankle was
ing ghosts, you know. I can
heavily taped . Maybe his
imagine what Roger Maris
CINCINNATI - Owner
mouth ·should have been, too.
went through. Babe Ruth, I Bob Castellini stood in the
Wallace's perfect record of
think he just kind of. hovers back of th~ balfpark elevator
predicting
Detroit playoff
over people a lot."
after the Cincimiati Reds' lat·victories
was
snapped
Wheri a young reporter est loss, looking perturbed.
, Monday when LeBron James
· ~sked a follow-up question Someone asked how he was another.
scored 22 points and the
moments -later, Bonds shut doing.
"We've been throwing
Cleveland
Cavaliers dug
Him down in a hurry.
·
"I'm lousy," he said.
great,"
said
left-hander
deep on defense to beat the
"You wouldn't even underAt the moment, so is his Brandon Claussen, the latest
Pistons 74-72. evening their
stand it, kid," he said. "I team. The Reds have lost a Reds staqer to come up
second-round series at two
don't even know how much season-high three in a row, a empty. "You can't ask any
games apiece.
you know about baseball, slump that knocked them -out more of our staff. Anybody
"Everybody was counting
really. It's too long."
of first place in the ,NL we put out there, I'll tal,e a
us out," James said. "Even
What's too long, to be sure, . Central and raised a question : chance on them winnin?.
people in our own backyard·
is the homerless skid the Has their bubble burst? "
"We'll score runs. It s just
were
counting us out That's
greatest home-run hitter of
The signs are mixed, mak- that part of the season. It'll
extra motivation for us. We
his era finds himself sliding ing it too early for a definitive come."
· ilon' t listen to nobody."
·
on.
~sw_er. It~oul~ be the start of
The Reds were ~wept by
Following DetrQit's loss in
:- During his single-season Cm~mnatt s shde out of c?n· Philadelphia in a three-game
Game
3, Wallace had pledged
• record of 73 homers in 20Q I, tentton. &lt;?r. as the players hke weekend series even though
the
Pistons
would not only
Bonds averaged one for \O thmk, 1t could,JUSI be a had the1r starters ·gave up only
win Game 4, but that the
every 6.5 at-bats. Coining weekend.
. four earned runs· all together.
Cavaliers would be playing
iilto the season, his career
"I wouldn't say it's a Left-hander Dave Williams
in .front of their fans for the
average was one for every slump," catcher Jason LaRue allowed only one earned run
last time this season Monday
said. "It's just part of the in 8 1-3 inmngs of a 2-0 loss
night.
Please see Litke, B2
year." ,
. . .
.
on Saturday, and Claussen
· He was doubly wrong.
Whatever 11 _ts, 1t certamly ~ave up · one run in eight
The Cavaliers, employing
mnings of a 2-1, 12-inning
defies expectations.
Pi ston-style defense and getIn the first month of the loss on Sunday.
ting big shots from everyone,
season, the Reds played the
"It's unfortunate that we
CoNfACTUS
.are back in a series that began
part that everyone !lntic!pated lost (th~se) two, but you reallopsided and is as tight as it
score a lot of runs, gtve up I~ -cant say anything bad,"
OVP ScoreUne (5 p.~.-1 a.m.)
can be . For the second
a lot of runs . They had the LaRue said . . "You'd love to ·
straight game, Cleveland won ·
.• . 1·7 40·446·2342 ext 33 ·
National League's top offense have pitching like that every
a low-scoring defensive
: "' .or 992·5287 (Meigs Co.)
and , were averaging an single' day. If yoti did, you'd
struggle - · the kind of game
•
·
··
astounding 5.9 runs per game · win a lot of ~ames."
. f!lix -1-740-...46-3008
that has typified Detroit for
.
when
they
moved
mto
.
first
If
the
rotation'
holds
togeth·
·
E'-m~ll- sports Cl mydaltysentlnel.com
years.
p,lace in late April.
er, they still could. The
"We're not feelin!;l the pres~!li...Sta.l!
Since then, the starting bullpen is iffy, but the offense
sure,"
James sa 1d. "The
Bred Sherman: Sports Editor
rotation - the club's biggest has too much talent to stay
Pistons
are."
(740) 446·2342. ext 33
9uestton - has stra1ghtene~ stagnant for long. The Reds
bsherman 0 mydaltytribune .com
With Wallace watching
Itself out, offermg hmts that 1t have scored one nm or less in
•
the bench after rolling
from
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
could be better than expected. six of their last II games, a
his
ankle,
James made two
AP photo
(140) 446·2342, ext. 23 '
The rotation's. earned run trend not likely to continue.
free
throws
- the last with
bwaltef'&amp;Omydallytribune.com ·
They hit two balls 'to the Cleveland Cavaliers' Zydrunas llgauskas from Lithuania takes I. 3 s~conds left '- and the
average has dropped to 4.18,
one of the NL's top five. But warning track in the ninth a hit from Detroit Pistdns' Ben Wallace, back, in the second
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
quarter of a · second-round NBA playoff basketball game
(7~) 446·2342, ext.' 33
the · otl'ense has gone cold,
Ple151 see cavs, Bl
Ierum 0 mydaltyregister.com
Monday in Cleveland .'
·
wasting one solid start after
Please see Reds, Bl

Jim

Utke

· Bonds feeling ·
·haunted: 'Babe
... hovers over
people a lof

Cavs now even with Pistons

'

�•

'

Page 82 ~ The Daily Sentinel

Rain cincels Hall of Fame game
Bv

throw out the first p1tch to
htm m honor of the boy's late
father, Demell Stenson The
COOPERSTOWN, NY
25-year-old Stenson, one of
A little ram wasn't gmng to the Reds ' most promtsmg
spoi l the day for Ken Gnffey prospects, was playing for the
Jr. and 4-year-old Kobe Arizona
Fall
League 's
Stenson. even though It did Scottsdale Scorptons when he
put a damper on the Hall of was 'killed Nov. 3, 2003, m a
Fam(:} game
carJackmg
As the Cmcmnall Reds and
''That's 90 percent of the
Ptttsburgh
Ptrates
were reason I'm here," Gnlfey
n11lling
around
before satd "It's bittersweet, but tt's
Monday's annual exhtbt!Ion a chance to see the httle man
game at htstoric Doubleday and how much he looks like
F1eld was canceled by rain, h1s dad."
Gnffey grabbed Kobe by the
The game was called m the
arm.
'
bottom of the thtrd because of
1'You want to see all the a steady rain that was predtctguys? Come on," Gnffey sa1d ed to last all day It was the
as he led the buddmg tee-ball fifth ramout m the 60 years
star through the Reds' dugout. · the game has been played and
"He's exctted, but I don't first smce 1993. Cmcmnatt
thmk he understands," Kobe's led 3-0 un an RBI smgle by
mother, Sara Rtchards, said as Jason LaRue and a two-run
she snapped pictures "He homer
by
Qutnton
thour,ht he was going to McCracken, both off Ptrates
play '
starter Wardell Starlmg m the
A month ago, Griffey con- second mmng
tacted the Baseball Hall of
Gnffey, who JUSt came off
Fame and asked tf Kobe could the dtsabled list after mtssmg
JOHN KEKIS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Cavs
from PageBl
Pt stons threw away thetr final
mbounds pass to James, who
grabbed the ball and punted 11
into the second deck
Moments later, James
JUmped up on the scorer's
table as Qutcken Loans
Arena quaked beneath ht m
The butlding was electnfted
from start to ftmsh , and
Wallace's boast had a lot to
do wtth that, Detrott 's
mouthy forward was booed
every tune he touched the
ball.
Afterward,
Wall ace
remamed conftdent the
Pistons would eventually put
' the Cavs away
"I am 't worned about
these cats," he satd "There's
no way m hell they beat us m
a sen es They played well I
gtve them credtt We lost
We shot 30 percent and they
had to play thet r best to belft

us ..

James added mne ass tsts
and etght rebounds, narrowly mtssmg hts thtrd tnpledouble of the postseason
Eric Show had 12 pomts I 0 after halfume - and
Anderson VareJao had l 0
pmnts and drew a key foul
late tn the game
Rtchard Hamtlton scored
30 pomts and Tayshaun
Prince had 16 for the
Pistons, who suddenly fmd
themselves m a tense senes
after dominatmg at home m

Litke
from PageBl

~

12.7 at-bats. Since pulling
within one of Ruth s 714
mark last Sunday, Bonds has
now gone without in seven
games and htso last 22 at-bats
Bonds made no secret of
hoping to catch the Babe during a seven-game homestand
last week, before the mghtly
drama headed back into

hts fourth homer of the year.
Bonds went 1-for-3 wtth
the double, a walk, a called
stnkeout and a popup before
Jason Elli son replaced htm in
left field m the seventh. Mtke
Matheny drove m two runs
and Feliz matched ht s career
htgh wtth ftve RBls for the
Gtants a day after they lost a
weekend senes to the nval
Los Angeles Dodgers.
Bonds scored m the Gtants'
five-run thtrd, when Feliz htt
the first pnch he saw off the
bnck facade m left fteld for
ht s team-Ie admg seventh
homer The Gtants made for
an easy mght on fill-m starter
Brad Hennessey (3-1 ), who
pttched welltn place of strugglmg rookte Matt Cam
Bonds has made h1story m
Houston before It was here
ftve years ago m October
200 1 where Bonds hit hts
70th home run to tie Mark
McGwtre on the way to the
smgle-season record of 73
Exhausted and sore but
play mg for the seventh
stratght day, Bonds satd he.
has become tmpattent at the
plate as the pressure mounts

seven-lime NL MVP, avoided
becommg the 420th pitclier to
gtve up a homer to the slugger That's partly because he
only lasted three mmngs
Bonds returned to the
cleanup spot followmg two
games m the No 3 hole hts first appearances m that
spot since 2003 - a move
manager Felipe Alou had sa1d
mtght be long-term.
"It really dtdn't help anythmg to bat htm third for two
days," Alo11 satd. "It was not
nght It was not comfortable
It was not productive He' d
rather bat fourth "
Houston has gtven up 37 of
Bonds' home runs Bonds
d1dn't play m last Monday's'
makeup game wtth the Astros
m San Francisco after the
cross-country flight • from
Phtladelphm
Smce his homer against the
Phtlhes, hts fifth thts season,
Bonds hasn't htt one QUI m 22
at-bats Booed as he stepped
mto the batter's box Monday
mght, Buchholz qUtckly
walked him.

Games I and 2 The senes
now shtfts to The Palace m
Auburn Htlls, Mtch , for
Game 5 on Wednesday
That was when Wallace
ftgured the Ptstons would be
wrappmg thtngs up Instead,
they ' II be cmm ng back to
Ohto on Fnday, and tf
they' re not careful , 11 could
be to save the1r own season
"We don ' t feel pressure,"
Pnnce satd "That's the
expenence of our , guys
We 've been m these sttualtons Usually we make a run
m the fourth But tomght we
couldn't, and that's when the
Cavs dtd "
The Cavaliers were again
wllhout starting guard Larry
Hughes, whose 20-year-old
brother, Justm, will be
buned Tuesday
iu stin
Hughes was born wtth a
heart defect amj had a transplant m 1997 \
The Cavs vhll attend
Hughes' funeral on Tuesday
tn St. Louts before traveling
to DetrOit
"It 's what we have to do,"
Damon Jones said "It's a
mu st. We want to be there
for Larry and hi s famtly
He's our family"
Wallace came in 4-0 m
playoff games he has
"Guaran-Sheed:" His ftrst
came ul Game 2 of the 2004
conference fmals agamst
Indtana, and he made another m '05 m Game 4 of a second-round senes wtth the
Pacers.
Last year, he also gm'lranteed Detrmt would win

Game 6 m Mtamt , and he
prom1sed the Ptstons would
beat Mtlwaukee m a Game 3
earlter m these playoffs
- Thts tune, Wallace's bombast blew up m ht s face
Wtth the score tted at 72,
James was fouled by
Ham tlton wtth I 02 remammg, and as Cleveland's forward hned up for hts free
throw s,
Ptstons
guard
Chauncey Btllups came up
alongstde and sm d some"Hey'" Cavs coach Mtke
Brown shouted to th&lt;; offictals "He can' t talk to htm
ltke that'"
James had done the same
thmg to Gtlbert Arenas In the
closmg seconds of Game 6
in the first round, tcm g
Washmgton's guard who
m1 ssed two free throws that
allowed the Cavs to wm
"Chauncey tned to gtve
me what I gave to Gtlbert
last senes," James satd
James spht the foul shots,
but Detroit couldn't capttal tze as Pnnce mtssed before
Ben Wallace was tied up
underneath The Pt stons
controlled a JUmp ball but
Btllups was whistled for barreling over VareJao with
29 .6 seconds left
James ran some ttme off
the clock but m1sfired on a
19-footJumper. After a umeout, Hamilton missed on a
drtve, Ben Wallace couldn't
tip 11 m and Pistons forward
Maunce Evans knocked the
ball out.
Agam, James, who was

only 5-of-1 0 from the line,
spht a patr w1th I 3 seconds
remaimng The Ptstons had
one last chance, but were
unable to complete a pass
before ume ran out
Much to the delight of
Cavs fans, some of whom
were
boomg
Rasheed
Wallace two hours before
game ume, Detroit's bOisterous forw ard rolled hts right
ankle whtle guardmg James
on a dnve m the second
quarter
After bemg helped to hts
feet,
Wallace
gmgerly
walked to the locker room to
get re-taped He ftm shed
wuh seve n pomts on 3-of-13
shootmg
" I' m all nght," Wallace
satd "Don't send me to the
glue factory yet It's nothmg
that
hasn't
happened
before"
Notes: Detrott's 72 pomts
were the fewest ever by a
Cleveland playoff opponent
When the are na's "Ktis
Cam" focu sed on Detrmt's
bench, Rasheed Wallace
pursed hts ltps and tned to
pl ant one on Btllups
Ja mes plans to leave the
prognosttcatmg to Wallace
and others, saymg he would
never guarantee .a wm.
"Those are very, very bold
pred1c1tons," James sat d. "I
let my game speak for itself.
I don't do too much talkmg.
But that's part of Rasheed' s
game, that's what motivates
htm " .. The Cavs are 25-19
all-ume at home tn the playoffs

enemy temtory, where tt has
come to resemble a witch
hunt more than a home run
chase.
"San Francisc.o is my
biggest supportin$ cast. I: ve
been able to do It for them
forever since I've been here.
There's nothing more gratifying than, you know, llaving·
them able to catch a ball on
your turf," Bonds said
But a moment later, he
added, "The way I'm swin~­
mg, it looks hke I can watt '
If there ts a lonelier athlete

on the planet, he should
mtroduce himself to Bonds,
Less hostile than the fans in
Philadelphia and about as
indifferent as those in
Milwaukee, the Astros fatthful razzed him almost as tf it
were an obli~ation
He stuck hts head out of the
dugout and got booed. He
walked to the plate and handlettered, neon.yellow stgn's
with asterisks scrawled
· across them sprouted m the
grandstands hke daistes m a
meadow He looked at a

called strike three and was
cheered. He headed back for
the safety of the dugout and
sprinkled m amtd the astertsks are even crude: senttments - "Got Respect?"
"Cheater"
and
"Sterotdslmposter."
The btggest surprise of the
night mtght have been that
the crowd dtdn 't boo the midmmng 11nnouncement of the
changes m the Gtants' ltneup
when Bonds was replaced in
lefl fie ld JU St before ' the
Houston seventh.

•

}

'

- - --

~-

-

~ ,-~ -- ·

-

'

'

www.mydailysentlnel.com

'

Sentinel - l\egister
CLASSIFIED

{;~l ila

CLEVELAND (AP)- The Cleveland Indtans had plenty of
work to do, both on their ram-soaked play mg field and in trying to stop a season-h1gh s1x-game losing streak, even before
their game agamst the Kansas Ctty Royals was postponed
•
Monday mght
"We've ~ot some playing field tssues," genefal manager
Mark Shap1ro said JUSt before the game was called 90 mmutes
ahead of ns scheduled start and rescheduled as the first part of
a day-mght doubleheader Aug 12 "With all the rain over the
weekend, Ahere's at least an hour of work to be done to the
playmg surface to get 1t ready "
It's also takmg some time for the Indians to emerge from a
dtsappointing stretch of stx stratght Central Div1sion lossesthree m Kansas City and three more at home to Detroit The
latter was the T1gers' first senes sweep m Cleveland smce
1990
"We're not m a must-wm sttuatton, though," Shapiro said.
"It's no fun to lose and everybod~ ts a little frustrated. But
whatever pressure we feel is self-mflicted because our standards are higher than they have been m prevtous seasons."
After a 6-1 start, the lndtans have gone 11 -20 to fall mto
fourth place m the diVlsion, but Shaptro would not blame manager Enc Wedge or the coachmg staff
"No one here is working for a Job," Shapiro satd "Job secuntY. 1s not an issue. The coaches have done all they can do.
'The talent is there to wm. Whether it ts enough to wm the
dtvlSion or get mto-the playoffs, too many vartables enter mto
It to be defimtlve at thts pomt."

Former slugger Jim Lemon dies

Ca~T;~::;... (7!~~ To44~:~~~2
Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m
HOW IQ WRITE MI. AD

fromPageBl
Jenna Gauthier added an RBI
walk.
Semor hurler Andrea
Lotycz went the full f1ve
innmgs to get the wm
Lotycz (12-13) allowed only
three htts wllh two stnkeouts
Rio then faced Ame-rican
Mtdeast Conference North
DlVlsion runner-up and
NAIA No. I 4 Ttffin (55-9) m
the champiOnship wtth the
Lady Dragons havmg to wm
two games
Tiffin eked out the wm tn
the bottom of the stxth wtth a
run agamst Laws (2 1-4) to
make tl a wmner-take-all
final game.
Jones agam got the
Red women off to a great start
with a solo home run 10 the
first mning.
Ross was 2-for-4 with a run
scored and Olding was 1-for2 with two RBI and a stolen
base.

'

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allabla edition

Reds

rotatiOn an anchor The righthander 1s 5-I w1th a 2.03
earned run average
Arroyo's
performance
from PageBl
seems to have inspired the
inning Sunday, a couple of other starters, who are trying
to keep the roll going. Aaron
near-misses that would have Harang
is 5-l, and the rest of
busted the slump and put a the starters
.have done well
smile on thetr owner's face
lately,
improvmg
the rota"We hit some to the wall
tion's
earned
run
average
by
that had a cllance to be- hits,
but they dtdn't get there," more than a run over last seamanager Jerry Narron satd. son
That 's what ntade the
"We give up four runs in two
weekend
downturn easter to
games and lose both of them
dJSmlSS
- u's unbelie vable "
"That 's )USt baseball,"
Bronson Arroyo's amval Claussen
satd "I don't frusfrom Boston in a spnng tramtrate
myself
trymg to answer
mg trad~ ha s finally gtven the questions I can't
answer"
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Laws pttched six innings,
gtving up s1x hits and four
runs (one earned) With stx
stnkeouts and two walks.
In game two, Rto came
wtthm one stnke of returmng
to Alabama and the naltonal
tournament. With two outs
and two strikes on Ttffin
Kri stina
leadoff
batter
Schwetkert and the Lady
Dragons tratltng 4-3 , she singled JUst mstde the nght field
line
•
Lauren Wtlltams destroyed
the hopes and dreams of the
Redwomen when she later
clubbed a grand slam home
run off Lotycz (12-14).
Lotycz
pttched
seven
mmngs, gtvmg up seven h1ts
and etght runs and posted
e1ght stnkeouts and three
walks.
Oldmg led the offense wah
a 3-for-4 game and a stolen
base Laws went 2-for-3 and
Ross was 2-for-4 With two
runs scored and an RBI,
Harless was 2-for-4 wtth an
RBI and freshman second
baseman Shannon Abbott
was 2-for-4 wtth an RBI.

Sentinel

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MINNEAPOLIS (AP)- Jim Lemon, a former All-Star outfielder and maJor league manager who once received personal congratulattons from Prestdent Etsenhower after a sluggtng show, has died He was 78
Lemon dted Sunday at h1s home m Brandon, Mtss He had
been til wtth cancer.
Lemon spent 26 seasons with the Washington Senators and
Mmnesota 1\vms as a player, manager, coach, scout and
instructor He also played for Cleveland, Phtladelphta and the
Chicago Whae Sox.
An All-Star m 1960, Lemon batted .262 wtth 121 doubles,
35 tnples, 164 home runs and 529 RBis m 1,010 career games
He hit 33 home runs wtth 100 RB!s for the Senators tn 1959
and had 38 homers and I 00 RB!s m 1960.

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~ribune-

Around the Nation

Grand jury indicts third player

for htm to move past Ruth
Desptte hts struggles, he's
still gettmg walked - mcludmg on four pnches from
rookte Taylor Buchholz in the
f1rst mnmg Monday.
"I'm accustomed to it,"
Bonds satd in an tmpromptu
medta sess1on m the dugout
before the game " I JUSt
ha ven' t been patlent wtth the
OPJ?Orlumttes that I have I'm
swmgmg at a lot of pttches
that I normally wouldn't
swmg at. I'm takmg more
chances than I ever have m
my whole enure career Rtght
now, I JUSt haven't had that
pauence to waH tl out "
The 41-year-old Bonds,
booed by Astros fans whenever he mo ved, hasn 't homered smce a 450·foot shot to
nght May 7 &lt;tt Philadelphia
He ended an 0-for-15 funk
wuh the double- his first hit
smce a seventh-mmng single
last Tuesday mght agamst
Cubs left-bander Scott Eyre
Bonds went 1-for- 18 dunng
the Gtants' last homestand.
Buchholz (2-3), who rett,red
Bonds twtce last month m hts
only appearance against the

•

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

"It' s tmportant that my
grandchildren wtll know that I
dtdn 't hurt the game "
CINCINNATI (AP) - Quarterback Cratg Krenzel was
Senttment on Bonds was waived Monday by the Cincmnatt Bengals, who have spent the
vaned among the several offseason addi!i'g quarterbacks whtle Carson Palmer recovers
thousand fans who turned•out from reconstrucuve knee surgery.
Krenzel led Ohio State to the national champtm!jhip tn 2002.
for the noontime parade
The
Bears drafted htm m the fifth round, and he started five
"It's a tremendous perforgames
for Chtcago m 2004. The Bengals claimed htm oft
mance, but did he use a perwa1vers
to be thetr No 3 quarterback last June, but he didn't
formance-enhanci ng drug? I
appear
m
a game last season
don't know," satd 42-year-old
Palmer
suffered extensive damage to his left knee dunng the
Jeff
Wmters
of
Bengals'
playoff
loss to Pinsburgh Cmcmnatt have stgned freeMechamcvtlle, who was
qmir!erbacks Anthony Wnght and Doug Johnson to onewearn\g a No 21 Jersey m agent
year
contracts,
knowtQg that Palmer might not be ready tor the
honor of former Ptrates great
start
of
the
season.
Roberto Clemente "But a's
Also Monday, the Bengals watved undrafted rookie tight end
sun an incredible feat m this Ryan Hamby from Ohio State. Hamby signed wtth Cmcmnau on
day and age. It's snll a lot of M~5.
•
home runs"
Recetver Glenn Holt of Kentucky and cornerback DeMarcus
The names Ruth, Jeter, Rideaux of MaryvtUe State agreed to two-year deals Both rookPuJols, and Gnffey dommated tes par1tc1pated on a weekend rrumcamp and tmpressed coaches
the backs of the l)aseball Jer- enough to get offers.
seys worn by the fans
"A lot of people say he
shouldn't be in the Hall of
Fame. They're not too happy
DURHAM, N.C' (AP) - A grand JUry mdtct:ed a third memwith him," satd Barry Renert,
ber
of Duke Urtiversity's lacrosse team Monday on charges stemmanager of memorabtlia store
muag
from a woman's allegattons she was raped and beaten at a
Seventh lnmng Stretch. "I'm
team
party
earlier this year.
not surpnsed He's very arroDavtd
Evans,
a senior and team captaJ.n from Bethesda, Md ,
gant."
was mdicted on charges of first -degree forctble rape, "sexual
offense and kidnapping. 1\vo other players were mdtcted on sunilar charges last month.

•

thtng

2006

Bengals waive Krenzel, Hamby

26 games wnh a nght knee
IDJUry, was the focus gf at tenlion on thts day, and not only
because of his gesture to
Kobe
Gnffey has 539 home runs,
far behind Barry Bonds' 713,
and Griffey's career has never
been tamted by the alleged
stermd abuse that has been
swtrhng around the Gtants'
slugger
"I know I can look at
myself 111 the mtrror," satd
Gnftey, who has been on the
dtsabled list 13 ttmes m 18
xears of maJOr-league play
'Every day I gave 100 percent. and that's all that really
counts "
Gnffey and hts dad rank
second on the father-son
home run hst wtth 711 - far
behmd the I ,045 htt by Bobby
and Barry Bonds. And Jumor
was quick to praise h1s father.
"It was just not m our famtly to do certain thmgs. He
always talked about that ,
playmg hard and playmg nght
from day one," Gnffey satd

Bonds' homer-less streak reaches seven games
HOUSTON (AP) - Barry
Bonds satd any kind of htt
will do
Then the San Franctsco
slugger made good on that
statement, limng an RBI doubl(,! to nght m the thtrd mmng
of the Gtants' 10-1 vtctory
over the Houston Astros on
Monday ntght for hts ftrst hll
m stx games
Yet Bonds' streak wtthout a
home run reached seven
games and he remamed stuck
at 7 13 m the tmy section of
Texas listtng 713 as tts area
code He remamed one homer
shy of tymg Babe Ruth for
second place on the career
lt st
"Tht s thmg, u's like chasmg ghosts, you know 'l"
Bonds satd before the game
"Babe Ruth, I thmk he JUSt
kmd of hovers over people a
lot."
On a warm mght at httlerfnendly Minute Ma1d Park,
where the thermometer read
76 degrees at first pitch,
Bond s watched teammate
Pedro Feltz hn ht s fourth
career grand slam and Randy
Wmn lead off the game wtth

Tuesday, May 16,

www.mydailysentinel.com

ar

ub(act to the Fodera
air Houolng Act

968.
Thta
ccopts only hal
nttd 1d1 meetln
OE otandords
We will not knowing
accept any advtr
lument In vlolatlo
fthe lew

www eomlca com

Blue eyed ,Husky/Pit Byll
pupp1es free to a good home Huge sale·3 farn11y Nice
only Phone (740)388·8762, men s women s &amp; teen's
clolhe&amp; drapes spreads
leave message
household dishes, m1 sc
Old western books 3679 SA
325 So Mlly 17 18-19, 9 4

ET
yard
RESULTS
WITH A
4
CLASSIFIED r ~~~~
oAD
Moving
sale Baby
household 373 Kmg Ad off
Neighborhood
Ad
Gallipolis Frod!ly·Sal

Alligator Jacks May 26 1
5 May27&amp;2895 SJ AI
7 F'omeroy $5 setup

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4'a For Sale................ . ...... .. .. .. •
725
Announcement............ . • . .. . .. .. ..
030
Antlqueo............... . ................... . . .... .. 530
Apanmenta lor Rent ................................ . 440
Auction and Flea Markot .............................OBO
Auto Parts a Acceooorleo
760
Auto Repair..... . . . .......,...... .. .. . .........770
Autoa lor Sale..... .. ....................................710
Boata a Motora lor Sale ......... .. . ......
750
Building Suppllea . . ............ ....... ... ... .. .550
Bualnaaa and Bulldlnga
... . 340
Business Opportunhy ................................ 21 0
Buolneaa Training ......................... .... .. . 140
Campara Motor Homos..... . .
• .... 790
Camping Equipment.......... ....
...... 780
Carda of Thanka ........................................010
Child/Elderly Care ...................................... 190
Etectrtcai/Relrtgeratlon,........................... .840
Equipment for Rent ................................... 480
Excavating .............................................830
Farm Equipment . ....................................610
Fanns lor Rent............ .. .................... • ....430
Farmalor Sale.... . ......,......... . • ....... 330
For Lea•. .........
• .................. ....... 490
For Sale • . .......................................... 585
FQr Sale or Trade ..... .................................. 590
Fruita Vegetables
.......... ..................... 580
Furnlahed Rooms...
..... .. ................450
General Hauling. .
.. . .... ...... ...............850
Giveaway................. .......... .............. .. . .. 040
Happy Ada. .... .. . .. .... • .. ..... .........
.. 050
Hay Grain •
. • .
...........
.. 840
Help Wanted • . ,......, ................. .................: .110
Homo tmprovomento ............................... 810
Homeolor Sate . .
............................. 310
Houaehold Goods . . ............................... 510

a

a

a

Houaea tor Rent ......................................... 410
In Memoriam .............................................. 020
Insurance . . . . .. .. . . ................................ 130
Lawn Garden Equlpmant ........................ 880
Livestock..... ............................................. 630
Lost and Found .......................................... 060
Lola &amp; Acreage .. . ........... . ................ . ... 350
Mlocallaneoua .......... • ... • .. • .... .. ... 170
Ml • ~ollaneoua Morahandloo ...................... 540
MObile Home Repair.: ....................... . .. 860
Mobile Homeolor Rent ..... . . .........
...420
Mobile Homoo tor Sole ... .. ................. 320
Money to Loan........................................ . 220
Motorcycleo 4 WhHlera. . •
.. . . 740
Musical tnatrumonta ........................ ,......... 570
Paraonata . ... ........ .. • .... .. ................. 005
Peta lor Sate ............................................... 560
Plumbing Healing.. .. ... . .. • . . .. .. 820
Proloaalonat Servlceo •
.. ... • • 230
RadiO, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... 180
Real Eotate Wanted........................ ...
.. 360
Schoolo lnatructton................................ 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertlllzar . • ,... .. ............ ... 850
Situation• Wanted.... ............................... 120
Space lor Rent............. .......... .. .....
480
Sporting Goodo........ ..
.
• .
520
SUV'o lor Sale.............. . . . . . ........ ... . 720

a

a

a

Trucke tor Sal• . ...... ..... ................. .

"""'""
EXPERIENCED

. 715

Upholotory ...... .................... . .. • .
.. 870
Vans For Solo..................... . .. . . .. . . 730
wanted to Buy ........
. ......... 090
Wanted 1o Buy- Farm Suppllea ................ 620
Wanted To Do ............ ...... .
180
Wanted to Rant .......... ... .
470
Yard Sale- Galllpollo.. ............ . • .............072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middto .... .... .... .. •.. 074
Yard Sale-PI Ploaoant ............. c . ..
076

TRUCK DRIVERS AND
HEAVY EQUIPMENT
OPERATORS,
DRIVERS MUST HAVE
VALID COL LICENSE/
OPERATORS MUST HAVE
EXPERIENCE WITH
VARIOUS DOZERS AND
EXCAVATORS APPLY IN
PERSON AT MEADOWS
DRILLING, LLC IN
AAVENSWOOO VN OR
CALL (30&lt;1)273-4121
FOR DIRECTIONS

Yard
and Bake Sale
Thursday May 18 9AM· 7?
Long Bottom Community
Bldg 1\wlve Tables Fulllll

r

~~

Absolute Top Dollar US
Silver and Gold Coms
Proofsets Gold Amgs Pre
1935
US
Currency
Solitaire Diamonds M T S
Coin Shop 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis 740-4462842

I will buy Jur~ Calli Call
(740)388·9303
I \ ll 'lln \ II '\ I
' I I~\ II I "

'

• NO EICPERIENCE NECESSARY
• FULL TIME: ClASSES
' COL TRAINING
' FIN.-.NO NO AVAILABLE
'JOe PlACEMENT
' ENROLLING NOW

HELP Wi\NI'ED
100WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts
wood items
To $480/wk
Matenals provided
Free mtormat1on pkg 24Hr
801-428·4649

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR-TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS
W\'THEVILL.E VA

1. 800.. 334_1203
.l !ll

L-.:&gt;-='"'"'"""="""""'=':"0:"""'
:: '"'-..J
1

Childcare worker needed for
Residential
Treatment
Faclllty
F'ay
based
on &amp;Kpe·
An EKcellenl w~ to earn
rlence paid 10surance Call
money The New Avon
10 apply Mon·Frl, 9am·3pm
Call Marilyn 304·882·2645
(740)379·90a3
As81S1anl manager/counterman Pomeroy Auto Parts Community Actions Is seek
11 9 W Seco nd Street lng a Driver lor medical
transportation programs
F'omer~
Must be able to transport out
town
(Huntington,
Attention Mechanics Now ol
taking appllcat1ons for expe· Columbus Charleston etc )
rlences Truck Mechanic w1thln .150 mile radius have
Mall resum e to
R&amp;J valid drivers license good
TrucklnQ 14530 St At driving record and be
approved by our Agency
7 Marietta, OH 45750
Insurance carrie r Able to
ATTENTION AN Sill
deal with persons ol vanou&amp;
NEW PEA DIEM RATEIII
soclo·economlc
back·
Overbrook Center Currently grounds Good commu nlca·
Has Openings For AN S II tlon snd record keeping
You Are A Caring And skills Sensitive to the needs
Compa.sslonale
Person of ott'1ers High School
Who En joys Working With Graduate or equivalent
The Elderly We Would Love Send or bring resume with
To Have You As Part Ol Our three (3) references to Mra
Team We Are Now Offering Edwards
Gallla Meigs
New Per Diem Pay Rates C A A SOt 0 N State Aoule
Please Slop IQ And Fill Oul 7, Cheshire Ohio 45820 by
An Application Or Call At 5/26108 GMCAA Is EOE
(740)992 6472 For More
01rect Salei Fantaatlc
lnformat1on E 0 E
----~--- Opportunity
50K
n~
AVONI All Areaal To Buy or Problem Must be Motivated
Sell
Sh1r1ey Spears 304 and Self Starter Call Ken
(740 )992 •7440
675

,.29

At 35 Adult Book Store need Security Officers needed
Mldnlghl Clerk Full lime PT $6 BM1r Call TF 9 5
(800)275·6359 EOE
(304)937-4900

II

Sales Person 6 figure
potential Blue Cross Blue
Shield, 401K 5 day work
week Proven sales record
Call
Russ
Murdock
(740)446·3093
or lax
(740)448 3599
e ma~ l
rm7600clayton net

Ohio Valley Home Health
Inc hmng AN's Accepttng
applications for CNA, STNA
CHHA PCA Comp~lt tve
wages mileage and benefits
Including health Insurance
Apply at 1480 Jackson Ptke
Gallipolis or 2415 Jackson
,·
Avenue. Point F'leasant 'NV
Housekeeptng Superviso r or phonetollhee t--866-441 Healthcare Services Group, 1393
Inc Is looking for a career - - - - - - - onented, aggressive hands· ~art time position to Manage
on manager In the Ga!llpolls Country Homes rental comarea As tt'le leading provider munity In Shade Area·
of housekeeping and te.un· Includes a h~se to live 1n
dry serYices to the long term Send resuma to Cg.unlry
care Industry we are seek Homes PO BOK 1033
mg Individua ls who will Logan Ohio 43138
effectively represent our
-------"-company and manage our F'arts Salesperson wanted
on site operations We pro·
v1de a competitive salary ComputeP eKperlence and
knowledge of fa rm equip·
pa1d trammg and beneftts ment preferred
Salary
packagt Please rax resume
negotiable
depending
on
to t-614-577.0 125
experience
Health
- - - - - - - - -· Insurance provided Send
Kitchen
help
wanted· resume to CLA Box 569 rio
evenings and weekends a Gallipolis Tribune PO BOx
must, 20.30 hours per week 469 Gallipolis OH 45631
Must Be Dependable Apply - - - - - - - - In person O&amp;M Pizza
POSTAL JOBS
Syracuse Qh
S15 67·$21 98/hr now hlr·
----'-o---:--:Jng For appllco!lon and free
Ucenlld Property ..,d
governement job !nro call
Cllualty lneuranca Agent American As soc ot Labor 1•
913--599-8042, 24/hrs emp
Oak
Hilt
Financial aerv
Insurance, a subsidiary of .!....-..,-----Oak Hill Banks, has a fUll·
Pt Pltaeant
time career opportunity In
--sates Position·•
our Jackson office for an
Wallpaper Outlet
experienced Property and
Casualty lnaurance Agent If you enjoy decorating With
llcenaed In Ohio Excellent Wallpaper and have an W&lt;/e
com munication and organl·
for Color and Style thu!t
zatlonal akllta are required
could be the position you
Excellent compenaatlon and
have been looking for
benetlla, Including hea!thlllfe We are a aecure and grow
ing and growing Company
lnaurance and profit shar- with 17 retail locations It
lng/401 tk) Pre-omploymenl
drug laaHng required Send you enloy peOple and are
resume and salary require· salf·motl val~d rellabl~ and
menta to Oak Hill Banke, IHklng emp oyment p 8888
Attn Human Aeaourcea,
apply (aee below)
, Ja~··n.
OH
Oyr ooe!Uon1 ottlrt
Po "•x
~ 847
..-u
45640 F'lea1e reference • COmpetitive wages
Job Code f575E EOE. • Day hour1 only 1 3010 4 30
M/F/ON
"CJoN!I Sundays
• F'ald vacations &amp; holidays
- - - - - - - - Employee dlscounts
Local convenience 11ore • Experience helpful
accepting application• tor but not DICIIIBrv
store
manager Apply In person at 410 Main
conl/8n lence store experl·
StrHt or you can email
ence prelerrad , Apply 11 68
your resume to
chuei&lt;OWAL.L.~PER \NC,OM
Vine St GalllpoMa

Temporary elderly ca re
needed Ba·6p Must be
fam111ar with d1abet1c care or
w1lllng to learn Excellent
payll Call (740)256 8t89
Ttred of workmg all holl·
days? liutd of working 12
hour shifts? Come home
and join us at Med1 Home
Health' Opening for a PAN
AN and/or full nme AN pos1
t1on EOE Full time pos1tlons
mcludes benefit package
401K and s1gn on bonus
$2 000 Call Jud1e Reese
AN C Climcal Manager at
(740)441 1779 or 1-800
-481 6334
~-------

Truck Dnvers
Ohto Based Small Trucking
Company
Look1ng
tor
Tractor Trailer drivers with
flatbed experience $600 to
$900 take home after taKes
Home wery weekend and
some weekdays del1venng
to OH KY VA &amp; WV
(330}527-2789
-'-~-~----.,
"'150
c.::M.."'-A~
................... ...,
r .. ........,u~ON
1
U"OIK --.. ..

Gelllpolle CerMr College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl 74o-446 •4367
1•800•214..()45 2
wwt~ga lpoHacarMrcolleoa corn
A.ccredltea Member Accrednlng
CoYncll Jot lndependlnt Coli~·
and School• 12 748

1180
~,

WANTID

To Do

HQME&lt;;
FORS\LE
112 F'leasant Street, F'o1nt
Pleasanl WV (304(675·
4034 or {304)675.0418 3
bedroo m 1 1/2bath tam1ly
room dmlng room new w1n
dows new AC new water
ta nk fenced yard
1900 sq tt 3bd 2ba home
with basemen t SitS on 3
acres JUSt off of At 7
Chester Township Eastern
School 0 1stnct Also reg1s
tared quarter horses for
sa le Call (7 40)985·432t
after 6pm
----'----1997 Fa1rmon1 Celeb rity
double w1de 28x72 FA den
lg kitchen 2 lull baths 3BA
with walk 1n closets lg deck
above ground pool 36x18 2
ut1hty bu1ldmgs Lot 2 89
acres very secluded pn
vate drive 5 m1n from Green
SchOoi/Holzer $1 10 000
Call alter 3pm (740 )441
0494
- - - - - - - -20 acre farm w1th 2500sq tt
custom 1999 2 story hOme
located between A10 Grande
and Jackson 3 4BA den 3
full bath with master Jacuzzi
huge wrap around porc h
large kitchen with stand 3
car garage foundation ready
to frame pr vate setting with
great hunting $234~900
(740)384 5182
:.._:_ _ _ _ _ __
2112 acres at 44998 Baum
Addi t1on Behmd skating
rink Last House on nght 4
or 5 bedrooms·J bath split
level basement attached
garage
and
separate
garage $199 QOO
740985 3586

I

_ _ _ _ _.__,..

~

IU \1 I ' I \ I I

c

rd
R 1
AHo able omputer epa r
Expert Service (740) 992
3
2 95
.- - : ; - - - ---::-Geor'Qes F'ortable Sawmill
d0n1 haul your Logo 1o !he
M1ll tust call 304 675 1957

--,---~-1!60r•ro..~~-~CARE~,.,~
.~
-~.·~-,~ 2912 • Anniston Dr
Pt

11

\..-nn.U".I!.Coi..JU'U..

N8eded I
dl t i&lt;~
mme a 8 7
Baby!lltter for afternoon
shift Various days Includes
aome weekenda Prefer In
my home due to a ch ild with
fOod allergy Muat be great
with kids dependable and
re liable Call for more Info
{740)245·0321

Pleasant 3BA 2BA LA
FA Garage Nice neighborhood (304)675·3637 days
(304)67S 2355 evenings

All reel estate advertising
In th la new•p•per Ia
subject to the Federal
Fair Houaln~ Act of 1968
which makal it IUeg•l to
advtrtlae 'any
pr.terence, limitation or
discrimination billed on
race, co lor, rallulon, nx
familial 1tatua or national
origin or any ln1entlon to
make any 1uch
praleranca, limitation or
discrimination
Thla newspaper wiU not
knowingly accept
advertisements tor real
eatal:e which lain
violation at the law Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwelling• advenised In
thl• newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity

btl•••

===::::::::::~
New 3 bedroom 2 bath
brick home lor sale m Rio
Grande Calt (7401379•2615
Three Bedroom House on
1/2 acres lot
Hardwood
floors heat pump large
patio flnlsMed walk out
basement
Two acres
opuonal
Ideal for Horse
owner Two miles from Point
Pleasant (304 )675 1536

MOBIU. HO\IES
•"OR SALE
14&gt;e55 97 Fleetwood MH
2BA I both elec hooVAC
good cond1tlon $10 500 Cell
(740)448·3644 for appl

3BA :2 Car attached Garage 1970 2 Bd Rm Tre.ller on
on '1 06 acres $60 ooo' 50 X225
Lot
In
(304)675·6331
Harrlsonvll le
' Exterior
F'ainted recently Has new
3BR den LA K 1 1/2 bath carpet ce1lln~s painted
AC private dr rec room Make nice starter home or
basement Qarage In town renral un" $13,600 00 740
742 40 11
Call (740)441.05t4

2000 Clav!on-16X7o 3 sr
2Ba C/A Heat r ump new
..,~-~----, Ne...ar lived 1n new 3BOAM carpet vinyl porct1es 01
Bl.ISIN~
w/'2. bathrooms, In drywall rented lot • $18 000 740
OPPoRTuNrrv
stage sits on 2 beautltul 992 •0650
Lw-iiiiiiiliiiliiiiio_.l acres, co unty water at road
about 20 mlns soutn of 86 Crestrige 14x70 2BAI 2
F'arty Supply Store tor sale Alhens, OH $74 500 Call bath SU95 Call (740)385·
In PomerO)' (304)675-5332
(740)489 9146
9948
II '\\'\( I\!

iw

BANK REPO

:.:::...:..:=-----

•

�Tuesday, May 16,2006

-,:ruesday, May 16, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

.ALLEY OOP

l.MsiOCK

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Caoh price $8.995. Will
deliver. Call (740)38~9948 .

$2,00Q-SI ,OOO.
(740)245-5984.

911 oth ol an acre for' sale on

Call

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

143 . 2 mobile hOmes. 740-

1192·5858.
Brand

new

16'

"Carpet Guy"

N orin

Pree Measurements

•
•

• SEAL COATING
•PATCHING
I

LAWN CARE
Mowing- Tree

paid. Call (740)441 -Q 117.

~'•I

5 Rms &amp; bclth, range &amp; i-ef.
furn . W/0 hookup. 2nd floor

f

,fHI

II'

'•lltrol'ill'll

\'1

(f 1

•-------r1

..
Buy . or sell. Riverine
·Antiques , 1124 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740.
99~·2526 . Russ Moore,

balers, square balers &amp;
mower conditioners 04.7'ro
Fixed for 48 months through
Joh'n
Deere
Credit.
Carmichael
Equipment
(740)446-2412.

~;f~i;{nU:Nil;t;~j
il~-------,
~

1998 4K4 Bronco, excellent
condition, new wheels, tires,

2001

Chevy

Metro

call

between 8-5pm (304)6757375 or cell (304)674-0098
after 5:30
2001 Grand Prix SE, burgundy,
54~ooo
miles,

$8,000. (740)448·8957 can
leave

message.

·. J

i

PErs
L.--oilllRittiiiiiSAI£iiiiiiitio-•· _.1

14x70 trailer, $400 month _
12_7_1'_(_
74_0_)7_09_-_16_5_7·_ _
plus deposit. (740)367- Tara
Townhouse --,
7782, (740)367-7272 pr Apartments, Very Spacious,
AKC Mini Dachshunds 2
(740)446-4060.
.
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1!2
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
Pool,, Patio,· Start $425/Mo.
No Pets , Lease Plus
, Security Deposit Required,

(740)367-7086.

male

puppies.

Pa88

Pass

21 Hurrlc.,.
-

22 ~~~!.Ill

Cor for hire
2 Pamplona 23 T_.,ike

1

3

ch-

a..on l*1lll

4 Bedroom ·
community
5 Big leland
port
6 Mo. Merkel
7 Siopdaah
6 Amoebae
have one
9 Europe-Aala
divider
10 Piece ol turf
14 No aweatl
19 Macho
motorcycle

Mauna-

48 Vei,P.Itlent
49 Gets
the nawa

cookie
24 Dalla•

•

hoopotero

25 Dormont
29 Aboiilhlng
30 Pub. p,.,..
cutora
32 Ego ending
35 ~38 Borodin
r,rlnce
37 ndonlkeye
42 TV brend
43 Buhlul
'
45 Tie down

48 Elglrt

voleM

47

Vie* game

so-.~ ·
lbo..W.
52 111g Dipper
bear

53 Fete.
56 c.rtoCII't
home
58 Swoet
murmur
511 Old C1'0III
60 OUt-_..
limb

Keep your ears open during !he bidding
because you will benefit ln the card play.
Even when you pass throughoui, listen
intently io all of the calls and build up pictures ot the hidden hands.
You are South, the declarer In fou r
spades .aner Was! has overcalled. in
hearts. West cashes three lop clubs, then

I GOT SPI'DERS IN M'l' CUPBOARDS,

KITCHEN AN' SNAKES IN M'l'
SUI'!EAUS !!

ELVINEY'S
HOUSE

(740) 949-1405

r;;;;::=::;;;:===~

Once you have deci~ed, took at all tour
hands. What do you think 61the auc11on?
It West had continued with five hearts and
was doubted by South , what would have
been the penalty?
You have fOur heart losers in hand. You
should plan to discard two on tile ace king of diamonds and to ruff the others on
!he board. Bui Eas! is ilchlng to overruff
the dummy. Gash lhe spade ace, then ruff
a heart witll a spade hailor on the board.
Play a spade to Y94' king, ruff ano!her
heart high, take those two discards, and
you have only high trumps left. When you
. can afford to ruff high, do so.
The auction is good. South has an auto-

CAN I GO PLA'I'
OVER AT

MICE I'!UNNIN' THROUGH TH'

....

?11

WOLFE~

VAN'&gt;

FOR SALE

·--itiiiiiiiiiiito-rl

2001 Stratus $4,900; 1998 1998 Ford Windstar, 94,000

Honda Civic 20 54 ,200: miles, quad bucket seating,
1997 Blazer 40 $4,SOO; du~ . air/heat, Good condl-

Chuck Wolfe •

~~~"'"!'!'~~"'~

St..inflres, Cayallers, Sliturns ••4ioWittiiliEilLERSiiiiiiiiii'- -.rl
&amp; others in stocl&lt;. 3 months- ,
3,000 miles warranty. See 1999 B!ad&lt; Harley Davidson

MlilllEY'S

Cart Stover or Rocney Cook, Falboy. Lots of chrome and
Cook Motort, 328 Jackson ~xtras · 9,400 miles. Call
Pike (740)446.0103.
(740)446-9954 or (740)33!1-

2005 Chevrolet Cavalier.
Auto~ 2dr. Burnt Orange
exterior and charcOal ·lnterl·
or, towered , 1a• factory rifns.
$10,000 OBO (740)416~
0522

3528.
-2004--H-o_nd_a_'fi_ra_t_t7-0-C~t-on-e,
90oc, 4 speed, semi auto,
Street Legal , 79 miles, titled
and licensed. Adult owned

I

IIR

SElf STiftiA8E
97 Beech Street
X

drag

F1§

lllRTR~~

end Polled Hereford Bulls 4WO, loaded, $6.850 negoand Heifers for sale. 12 ·28 tiable. (740)446·1905 or
months old. Certified and

"304i4~)4~112:;;-4;;;64~5.~--..,

4x4
FOR SAlE
lwllliiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiii-,.1
·--itiiiiiiiiiiito-,1
BASEMENT

'ho

2001 roo Grizzly Auto 4X4.
· WATERPROOFING
Less thari 300 mMes. Great Unconditional lifetime guar·
Shape. $3600. 740-742· antee. Local raferences fur·
4011 .
nlshed. Established ' 1975.

options available· steel, Blu· $12,000, books $14,500.

minum, ~reosing roomo, ltv- (740)367-7272, (740)387lng quarte111. (740)446·2412. 7782, (740)446-4080.

Casto Contracting
Commercial
Residential
Remodeling "We do It an~

S€€.1 ~G, 1-\lll-\?

4 52m .

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room AddltloM &amp;

Romodollnt

making him ruff spades. Alternatively,
North cashes his top diamonds, South
discarding two cl ubs. South ruffs a dia-

J!

mond, returns his last club,

.tr

spade , and receives

EIIICI:rle•l &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; 0'-'""r•
Ytnr. Siding &amp; Pllntlng
P•t o •nd Porch Decka

WV038725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
•

~ •• rr

1 °J

iy

[Jiw

I r • 1l

f

G

C L~P .

'(OU'RE' \..--......_
Lt VI N '
f' '' 1&lt;»1.'•1

CLAP ~

THE

..

'Red 'Rose
§reenfiouse

~:J,fg;1~

~

Opening Day

·sHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

1498.
Chihuahua$. 12 weeks old.
Had 1st shots. $200 each.

(740)256-1871 .

Public Notice

Sales Event
Thurs, May 18th
Frl, May 19th
Sat., May 20th
Get 10% off and If you
·carry It out yourself, ·
We'll pay the Sales Taxi

Elliotts
Appliances
317 St. Rt. 7N

446-8051
1·800-377-2532

-

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNT'(, OHIO
in Ra; Change of Name
Dl Kimberly Ann Bable
to
Kimberly
An'n
Ginther
NOTICE OF HEARING
ON
CHANGE
OF
NAME ,
App!lcatlon
for
Change Of Nome in the
Probate
Court
ol
Meigo County, . Ohio,
requeot!ngthe change
Dl name of Kimberly
Anri Sable to Kimberly
Ann Ginther. The hear·
!ng on the appile~~tlon
will be held on the
1lih day of June, 2006
11 1:30 pm in the
Probate
Court
ol
Melga County, located
at 100 Eo at Second

Sunday May 7th

Street,

Courthouse,

2nd Floor, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.
Juanita Moria Giniher
47485 Morning Star
Rd.
Racine, Oh 45771
(5) 16

'

:PEANUTS
•

Hours: 8·8 Daily

50447 Tornado Rd.
Racine, Ohio

ADVE~TISE .IN

THIS
SPACE FOR $54 PER
MONTH

LEND ME '(OUR PEN
'(OU, MAR.CII:?

nlEN LET ME I-lAVE .
'1'0UR PENCIL ..

'

.

TIME OUT, MAAM. F=OR
AN EQUIPMENT Cf.IAN6E !

''

a club ruff.

Hill 's Self
Storage

CANCER (June 21 -July 22)- tn .negotiatlons with others, your mind Is capable of
laying a solid foundation , moving both parties forward. Discuss disagreements that,
up until now, have held things back.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) ~ Even ff It means
disengaging from associates who tack
youi ambition and drive , do so because
you.can achieve Important objectlvos once
ihe detractors are out of the way.

10~

rrqFF

es.
SCORPIO (Qct. 24-Nov. 22) - Becau se
you're able to draw upon your mental .
capacities far more easily than usual, take
tr:tls day to tiQure out whatever it is that has
' troubted you lately and you'll find good
answers.

SAGITIAR IUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)- Your

Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM
1!1-4/1 mo. pel

••

TRIMMINC 1c

.
•

GENERAL

···~·'

BISSEll
COIISTRicnlll
• New Homes
• Garages

• Complete
Remodeling

J40•192-1m
Slop &amp; Compare

••

attention Is likely to be' drawn to things you
hold of value, whether !hey are material,
Intellectual or spiritual. You'll be able to
plan more effectively to improve upon
them.

I

~GARFIELD
~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~-"

STANLEY TREE

"insured'

NW

JYADCL

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)- II you
"

NOTICe HOW COOl. I
PURING YOUR
'TWO-HOUR ":ee.eRTA1'10N?
RfMAINE:!7

have to make a choice between as_sociallng with persons you like or those to whom
you f~el obliga ted, cha nces a..re you 'll
·choose the former. You r sense of account-

.

1 N01'1CfP YOU

ability Is high ,
AQUARIUS (Jan , 20-Feb. 19)- You could

FEL-L. A&amp;L.fEP
A"f ONE POIN'f'

be · Inclined to keep more to you rself,
because you're likely lo be better In touch
with you r hidden side. Defining y o~r needs
and desire&amp; will serve yo u well down thi
line.

•
n

FOR RENT· MEIGS COUNTY ~:
1·4 BR Houses &amp; Apts. :
1 Luxury- Also HUD
~

PISCES (Feb. 20'March 20) -Toke time
to communicate things that are Important
to you, becau11 your &amp;harp mind and verbal akllla will enable you to have good Intel·
lec:tual ~chang" concerning them.

~:

Also Commercial Space

...

Now Available At

B.\l l\1 Ll iMBEI{

Scorpion Tractors_,
"Tttking The Sti11g Out Of
Hard Work!';

Mid-Si ze 4Wheel Drive Tractor ,
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engine~

BAUM LUMBER
'

St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

J "'-"'

"""'"""'"""'1111111::1"""'"-i

:ORIZZWELLS
:· :tl"tl! I A~ l='oW\ Til~
:: ~ITU: OF i'H£ lfcoe't&lt; ! 1\Aj'O,

:: ~ A It[~ Ci'\

"•' r--------..

•"••
'

ARIES (March 21-Aprlt 1i) - Getno art
likely to be made bocautt you'll bo both

'-----------~---....! lndu1trlou1 and clever.·'four mind il .ktener
than u1ua1 and able lo make aan11mtnte
•that wlllencouragt
to act on them.

••

,.,,'

CPAIH

CPSRVSDZSV."

BPOYBSU

VNYO

"CPS

RYUMSUSU

AV

-

ODD

CODH

AV

JSNWWUSL
NW

KDA!M."

•

0

ODKSUC

a oR v v
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "i'V~ been clean since I've been In the league... t\n
cleaner !han Pine-Sot.' - Sea«&lt;e SuperSon~ Reggie Evans, on his drug 1es1
.. 1.m

DAUT

•un 111

4\' ( _

C:. /i"-1"0
\:1\\;:l

I-'-""J N ~

UMI
CL.l Y •• 'OI.L.AN - - - - - - -

lcrlit~ti ily

0 four
Aeom::ng• '•"•n ol
~r::~mb 1ad words

,f)~ ~C..t WOlD

~ ...,~.~· :J

.rne
bt ·

lo.o 1c iorm Tour IUTiple words.

I

ACRYAN

I 1 I ~ I I·

I

1

I

-

i

REW AY

'l

j

I 1 I'
PA YOS

Is I; I I

•

r--.

~
!':
;~

~

I

"][ is a wise man." a colleague
consoled his pal, "that does ·
with a smile .what he would

DWYOS O
bavcto---- ."
-r-:, ..,..,. ,.
I a
, .-4
: ol'floitte th1t

,
I. .,- , .

.
1

.

1

.

'--'-"-'--'--'--'-.....J

0

c:~uckle

quoted

b-_. lill1nQ in the milling words
you d&amp;veloo from ~~e~ No . 3 below.

PlliNi NUM6ER: D
L: iTE RS IN SQU ARE S

!" I
I'

I.

VIRGO (Aug. ,23-Sept. 22) - You should

"&amp;1&amp;.11 St\1/"!HAT"THE.liU HA~
A m.G fXJJ 11-JAi WIU EX1£1JD LlfE.lD I SO ~ •

29670 B~shan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

Caii .Gary Stanley
740·742·2293
• Leaye a message

"CPS

-~:

Wednesday, Me~ 17~ 2006
By Bemtca Beda O.ol
In the ye.e r' ahead , promising new channols cou ld be opening up. allowing you to
use ~ur creative talents. This Will be due
more 'to your mental abilities anct efforts
than to chance or circ umstance .
TAURUS (April ~0-May 20} - You won 't
have a prOblem keeping your emotions on
an even keel, allowing you to accomplish
fa r more than usual. All and all, it will make
tor a very pleasant day tor you .

.

Torillysclue: z eq&lt;Jbts v

AstroGraph

do rather well In social Situations where
competitive acllvltles are involved . You'll
demonstrate hOw tO make t~ game more
Important than the score, end all will eojoy
themselves.
LIBRA (S8pl. 23-0ct. 23) - Your ability to
reflect on and confront. reallty concerning a
joint venture brings much promise tor success because ot the harmony it establish·

,.SUNSHINE CLUB

I
---- - - ~----

In with

do nice .things to r you in reaction to the
most pleasant way you treat them. It's a
day when yo u can get your mind off more
s&amp;rlous thing s and catch your breath.

, L---------~--~

12·?
Refreshments Served
$8.00 Flats $8.00 Baskets
Variety of.Miniature Roses

~ll&lt;'lt• 11(1'

.CONTRAOINCi
• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
; References
Available
• Free Estimates

by Luis Campos

Celetlfity C~r ayp\lglamti ll'e ettaled from quotdoni by lllllOUB peopls, pal and 1J1t1n1.
Each letter In lht cipher ~nds b ardhlr

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) "- People will

Phone (740)446.0306.

740-256-

gets

the heart ace, gives Norlh the lead wi!h a

1

...

eoo. One

defense is to shorten West's trumps by

N•wG81'11ga

lo~

Five hearts doubted can cost

·

Syracuse, OH
740-992-5776
Open Mon-Sat 10-5
Closed Sunda

qt)£
I ••lll•'t

values, four-plus spades, and at most
one lleart

!~-'----\

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

"I In It I ._,

only 11 high-card points. North, easily
worth lour spades, produces a tour-heart
splinter bid , which shows at least game

:'&gt;1-\E:. 1&lt;\U:)\ BE. f.\1-.W OF '"&lt;I

C LAP~

CELEBRITY CIPHER

malic one-spade opening despite holding

;

Large (0" Ferns $6.95
Shrubs and Perennials

.

HOME

I

P"'01-1.,

*Pots and Tubs
· SPRING SPECIAL

$17.500. Excellent condi tion, dean. (740)245-9109,

rio
, 'IMPRoVEMENrS

X

'Flats $7.50
'Hanging Baskets

02 Wildcat 28ft. 5th wheel,
elide out. fiberglass sides,

Call 740·992-

" 1\E.I&gt;¥-1 ~C. 1'\1 t&gt; I

(740) 992-0496

1\ f\E.I'.RI ~c, 1-.1 b, WT :)fl.(
w~ o::t.t&gt;J..L'i mtc..K G&gt;U&amp;ES!

Open For
Spring Season!

tM~~~

34". $250 OBO. (740)256.:&gt;AU'.
1233.
Sites Left.
_Pe::crfoc:_rm_a_n_c_
e -tes
- ted--A-ng-u""i 98 Dodge 1500 Quad cab. 5956.

X

Self·510r1Je"

pipes

For Rent Ca~plng Trailer
Sltea NNr River. Cement
Patios. Full Hook-Up. Only 2

w-0 \0 WEAA.

"Middleporfs only

2006 Jayco 27' travel trailer.

Miniature Stud, pan regis- before Qpm

1-\CA~It'l&amp;-~fi.E.

Licensed Home Builder

~ ~""'M.'&lt; c.~t&gt;AA t:&gt;OC~I w~

992·3194
992 _6635

$5,500. (740)446.0367.

(740)441-7632.

:THE .BORN LOSER
l""fl\'( (,~I)W., ·~ ~t) Ot
. .

Or

and ridden only on pave-

riri1s,

• New Homee. • Additions
• Remodeling ·.

Middleport, OH
10 10 10 20

ment. $750 oeo.·(740)2450611
·
H.O. 883, black 1,000 miles.
spoke

"(~~~~~~~=::::~~~~~~!J
I

Owner

1999 Geo Metro 40 s2.900; lion.
Asking'
$3,900.
1991 Tahoe ,4,4, like nrrw li7i:ii4ro~::ae:;7~-o:::3~94;;._
. _ _:-l
$6,900
MOTORCYCWli

4011

Accredited Herd with nega-

Pass

East

The bidding places
the missing cards

. BARNEY

FREE
ESTIMATES

""
deale
for Valley and - - - - - - - - - Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446· dows. ;·In teIS; etc. Cia·~
r
New 2BR opts. Watson Rd. Win
.....,e Kleferbullt
Horse
and 2001 Grand Chief Cherokee 0870, Rogers Basement
Rodney Pike/850 area. Winters, Rio Grande. OH Ll
k ~ 11
..
••• white, loaded, sun roof, Waterproofing .
1
'Deposit Calf 740·245-5121 .
ves oc
rra er_s. Many 4"""'
Reference/ .
required, no pets. (740 )446 .

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

www.~-blnetry,......,

-R-ed-M-er-ce-~-e-,-R-oa_d_s-ter Used twice. Oueenlfullltwin
6 full blood, 1 year old regis- EDtcellent condition, 79 Ford beds &amp; sofa, lg. shower, surtared males . Ready to lariat Ranger, 85 Chariot round sound. Was $18,000,
breed. Champlonshl'p blood· edition sliver Cadillac. 90 Now $14,000. (740)446tt,.,s. Call (740)245-0485.
Cavalier
(304)675-2290 2800

Johnes tesl. Contact
Diamond
l.
Farms
7 1
stove/refrigerator included.
~IJIUJING~
(304)a s- BSa
Two 2 Bedroom Homes. starting at $400fmo. Call for
.n~r,.-~
Quality horse and ltvestock
Kitchen equipped. No Pets. details (740)441 -0194 or
trailers now available at
, Oep. required . Middl8port
Block, brl·c·k. s-"er pipes, Carmichael ettuipment. New
(740)441 -0194.

·r

HardnH CDinetry And Furnliurt~

brakes, ,etc. $3,500 OBO.
(740)388-()034 evenings.

Boer Golita for lale

·oao: live

Past

further

shills to the heart kihg ; !hree, jack, ace.

heifers. Excellent breeding. Lots of repairs done. Rece~nt 2000 A6rolite Cub, 23-30 Ft.
Slate Run Farm. See Paint Job Looks and Runs Like New Fully Equipped.
www.slaterunlarm .com, Great. $1.500. 740-742· $6499.00. 740-992-5963.

tered, not trained, approx

f'jorth

·

How would you continue?

Angus Butts, two X-breds, 4 Auto Nrrw Tires and Brakes

(740)286-5395.

Weot

Opening lead: • A

,,,,

86 Chevy Celebrity, tors of
L.~-------,...1 new parts, runs great, good
Lw-li
•
gas mileage, $900.00.
Angus Black Limousine, Negotiable. 740.992.0759.
Electric SCooter Pace Saver Ctoss herd Bull, gentle easy
by Passport Rarely used. calving, 1,SOOib. Deliver 95 Z-28 Camara 350 Auto T$500 (304)675-6114
locally $ 1 ,200 (3041675 _, Tops leather. Great Shape,
- - -- - -- - - 6442
runs great, green, ~n inteli·
JET
- -- - -- - Of' $4500,. 92 Corsica V-6

Blick House 3br. on 5 acres. Frdlh $295-$444. Call 74Q. AERATION MOTORS
15--20 minutes from Toyota 992-5064 . Equal Housing Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Plant $550/mon1h
plus Opportunities.
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·
deposit (304)576-2217
800·537-9526.
Immaculate 2 bedroom
Rent or .Sale 4br In apartment in the country.
Syracuse, $600/month &amp; • New carpet &amp; .cabinets, . NEW AND USED STEEL
Deposit.
Water/Sewer lreshly.painted &amp; decorated, Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
included, No Pets (004)675· W/0 hookup. Beautiful coun- For
ConCrete,
'Angle,
5332 or(740)591-0265
· try setting . Must se e to Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
appreciate.
$400/mo. Grating · For
Drains,
SA 7S· 4BR, 1 bath home· (614)595-7773 or . 1--800- Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
garage, basement, river
798-4686.
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
access. Propane heat, winTuesday, Wednesday &amp;
dow AJC. $650l month rent· In Pomeroy Area. 3 Bd.·2
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
$650 sec. dep., you pay util- Bath mobile home. AlsO, 2
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Ities. Available 1st week in Bd.- 1Bath. Both Very Good Sunday. (740)44&amp;-7300
April. Call (740)446-3644 for Condition.
Call J.R. 740Solo Flex elCerclse machine,
an application.
243-5811 for more detail.
old
but
indestrUctible
Stop renting Buy 7 bedroom
Modern one bedroom. Call Butterfly leg &amp; dip attach·
foreclosure $ 18, 000~ For list- (740)446-3736.
ments. These sell now lor
, ings ao0-391 ·5226 .ext.
New
Apartments
$1 ,950, asking $400
Bedroom
2
1709.
.
Washer/drye r
/looku p. (740)245-0611 .

964

2. 4.

Nat-"""

moutho
28 Ate g,.a
31 Btrauu
Dljeano
33 Airport info
34 Perched
· 38 Fling
39 - annum
40 Long story
41 incUiloilona
44 Conver'ge on
45 Hawaii's .

-

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

(740) 517-6883

required . (740)441-Q596. ,

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments 'at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments in Middleport.

.. •

Je ff :Jtet h em - Owner

in city. Reference &amp; deposit

.

.A7 5 42

. I

1tl

I \lnt '-I 1'1'1 II "
,\11\ I ' I I Hh

\ II Rl II \\111..,1

deposit (304)531·1197 or Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call Volquartsen scope mount &amp; months through John
(304)531-1198
740·446·2568.
· EqUal trigger parts, 6~18 target Deere Credit. Carmichael 2003 PT Cruiser, 4 cyi ...
scope, $600 Invested, $350 Equipment (740)44~2412
runs &amp; looks great, good gas
Accepting applications. 3 Housing Opportunity.
OBO. 740 245.()611 .
mileage,
. $7,200. Call
bedroom, 1 bath , 1 car Clean Efficiency, Ref,. Dep., ft~.:.;::::l:;;:;:;;~.:.;..-.,
. Quality John DHI'II Hay
. garage, outbuilding. Green No Pets (304)675·5162
(740)388.0140.
~
Equipment for lass· round

3 bedrooms,
bath,
stove/ref. furnished , WI D
hookup. No Inside pets.
$325/mo.
$150/deposit.

llltC1

11 Tllel glrt't

~ r.~~oypiace
v Zoolcigltts'

• A K 10 8 4

Homes- Decks - •
Driveways- Equipmetft'
Degreasing~ Boats- _.

(740) 992-28 04
'

Accepti ng application tor
very nice · tbr, Garage Apt .,
Utilities paid. $425/month , Free estimates Mollohan Ford 2910 tractor; Ford
3130.
$275/deposit (304)675-2319 Carpel, Berber $5.95/yard. 4100; John Deere 1250;
I{ I \ I \I -.. .
Vinyl $4.95/yard. (740)446- Massey FUrguson 298;
Accepting applications lor 1 7444, 76 Vine St.
(740)266-6522
or 2 bedroom apartment ,
$400-$500 month, kitche'n Thompsons Appliance &amp; Have some hauling to do?
HOUSE'i
appliances &amp; W/0 furnished , Repair-675--7388. For sale, Carmichael
Equtpm8nt·
lllRREI'lr '
water &amp; garbage Included, re-conditioned automa'tic your source for quality
I
no pa,ts, 1st month , security washers &amp; dryers, refrig8ra· goosenecks, dumps and utll·
1 BR house· 11 Garfield Ave, depoSit &amp; lease reQuired . tors, gas and electric ittes. Your dealer tor Prostar
Gallipolis. $350 month. Call (740)446-9565.
ranges. sir conditioners, and and Load Trail trailers.
for details (740)441-0194 or
Apts. for Rent. New Haven, wrin~er wash~ra. Will ~o {740)446-2412.
(740)441-1184.
1 bdrm. furnished or unfur· . repairs on major brands In John Deere 10ft. No Til DrNI
for
rent.
Carmichael
3 bedroom, 2 full baths, fu ll nished. No Pets. Deposit &amp; shop or at your home.
basement, 1 car garage , References. 740-992..0165 Used Furniture ' store, 130 Equipment (740)44&amp;2412.
$600/sec. deposit, $600/mo. Attention Conetructlon Bulaville Pike. Electric gas John Deere Mini Excavator/
(740)446·3481
Workers.
2 steeping ranges, bunkbeds, chests, Tractor Loader Backhoe/
3BR house, SA 160, $400 rooms .··furnlshed w/cabl e dlnettes. couches. used Skid Steers. Carmichael
Grave Equtpment .(740)446-2412
. month plus deposit. No pets, and utilities-weekly • and mattresses.
reference. -Call
(740)446 - monthly rates . 740-992 ~ Monuments. (740)446-4782.
Gallipolis, OH. Hrs. 11 ~3 (M- Load TraiVLoad MBlC Trailers6865 or (740)379-2923. ' 0031 or 304·882-3449.
F)
Goosenecks/Dumps/
3br,
1-bath,
attached BEAUTIFUL
APARt- ~:ii=o-~-----, Utilities.
,Carmichael
Garage, fenced yard, nice MENTS
AT
BUDGET
SFOR11NG
Equipment (740)446-2412.
neighborhood
in
Pt. PRICES AT . JACKSON
GooDs
New John Deere Compacts
Pleasant. Rent with option to ESTATES, 52 Westwood
and 5000 Series Utility tracbuy
$695/month,
plus Drlve from $344 to $442. Ruger
1022
Target, tors 00% Fixed for 31

740-992-3823.

57 ClnYOn

18 Ft'lll !titer
86 Gantie
20 Warda
oxtrc!M
Dl welcome
. 22 Donee band
DOWN

Soulb

Trimming - Aeration- Campers- Trucks- Decj
Fertili z ation ~ plantingstaining or painting 1
Mulching
Special rates for :
Trucking companies '

7 40 2 56 684 6
Vacant land on Jessie Creek ~(_...:...)__.___
· ---off 554 by Kyger. 5.064 4 rooms &amp; bath, stove/ref.
acr~s. Rife Farm. LOt 18. Util itia's paid .' S450/mo.
$10,000. (740)645-0440
Upstairs. 46 Olive Sl. No
pets. (740)446-3945.

Furnished 1 bedroom apartment suitable for 1adult No
smoking. No pets. Ref &amp;
dep (3040675-2651

oToHSZ

POWER WASHI~

49.5 acres by Tycoon Lake. 3BA apt. W/0 , stove. refrig.,
Can (740}709·1166.
OW.
central
alrtheat .

grams for you to buy your
home
instead of renting.
• 100% financing
• Less than pertect credit
accepted
'" Payment could be the
same as .rent.
Mortgage
Locators.
( 740)367 _
0000

oToAKQ

flow

oTo916

• K Q 10 9 I 6 • J
.95 2
.QJ10BS

rRI-STATE mOBILf POWER WASH
AnD LAWn CARE

1 and 2 bedroom apart·
ments, furnished end unfurACREAGE
nished, security deposit
.
. ·required , no pets, 740-99221 /4 acre lot avatlable, qwet 2218
'
. - -- -- - settlrlg on Crew Road, close _ _
to Me)gs High School 1 BR apVcabin, all utilities

L&lt;mi&amp;

SChool District. No pets .
$550/mo. plus deposit. CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
(740)245-0372.
Townhouse
apartments,
Attenttonl
and/or small houses FOR
Local company offering ·NO . RENT. Call (7401441 • 1111
DOWN PAYMENr' .pro - lor application &amp; information.

l!an

DP. :

7 acres on River. 3BR, barn.
$150,000. Crown City. Call

740 256-6140.

•s

20111

l lu ' ., l I I

3
AK764
J 10 8

West

•

304-675-2457
( 1·II 1ll

•

"ol

:.MONTY

Golay"""

sa S&amp;Lolllrttg

12 --lillY
12
13 G,_. Labs 53 llloppied
port
ho15 Admtrtr
14 Pedro'l
18 Licl&lt; up
IIJnt
17 VoiCIInlc
65 - -ttep

,._ " "'

• QJ 3 2

Parking Lots • Ball Courts • Private
Roads • Oriveways • Streets •
- F,;,e Estimates Playgrounds
•

(740)446-9061.

a Bollia'•

or Trebll&lt;

(Broad Run area) (304)8823970

Need to sell your home?
Late on payments, divorce,
job transfer or a death? !
·can buy your home. All cash
and quick closing. 740-416·

.,.

00. ·

Trailer &amp; House In Country

t

loclle

1 Popal rival

11 Haley

Nice Hx70 3 bedroom only Mob1le home sites for up to
$10,995. WHI help with delv· 16x80 in Coun try Homes.
(740 ) 38~40)9 .
ory.can (740)385-9821 .

(3CM)773-5270

51 Roll
53 Woo11out

5 Say-

wide

vinyl/shingle $181 /mo. Call
(740)385-7671 .

•

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Registered Angut buMs. 3
year olds to yearlng. F»rice

'88 Skyline front kitchen.

1-lo. WAIT/
1

~t.M~M&amp;E~

·· ~i

ALAMo "

vou
SOUP TO NUTZ

SCRAMLLrrl AH81ftRir 5115101

Proper - Glint - Broke - Minnow - WRI~GER
"I can n:call the good old days," grinned the old
lady, ''When then: wen: no clcclric dryers and cloches

were run lhroutth
a WRINGER."
'
.

ARLO&amp; JANIS

�'

.
'

Pqe 86 • 'The Daily Sentinel

· www.mydailysentinel.com

.

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

Meigs Middle School
students visit
) MassachusettS, A3

OVP Scoreboard
DOUBLE8-81gglo.

18: Friday, April2t : Naahvmo 4, San Jose 3
Sunday, April 23: San Jose 3, ~ashville 0
TUOiday, April 25: San Jose 4, Naahvlllo 1
Thunoday,April V : San Jooe 5, Naahvilla 4
Sunday, April 30: San J&lt;M 2, Nashville 1
TRIPLE8-SFinloy, San Franclsc:o, 7:
Sullivan , Colorado, 6; DRobert&amp;, San
CONFIIIINCE SEMIFINALS
D• . 6: Reyes, New Yorll. 5: Lotton, Loa
(IIMt.ol-7)
Angeles, 4; Cedeno , Chicago, 3;
EASTERN CO-RENCI
HaRamirez, Ftorida, 3; HollldaV. COlorado,
Otllwl va Buffalo
3; Wlnn, San Francisco, 3.
. Friday, MayS: Buffalo 7, Ottowa 8, OT
HOME RUN8-Pujolo, . St. Louis, 19: Monday, May 8: Buffalo 2, Ottowa 1
CaLM, Mitwaukee; 15; Dunn, Cincinnati, Wednesday, May 10: Buffalo 3, Ottawa 2,
1t3: Berkman, Houston, 13: CDelgado, New OT
York, 13; Howard, Philadelphia. 12; · Thur&amp;day, May 11 : Ottawa 2, BuffalO t
Ensberg, Houston,
12: ASoriano, Saturday, May 13: Bu1falo 3, Ottawa 2, OT,
Wa shington , 12.

Pro Baseball
Boston
New Yoik

American IAagua
Eal Olvlalon
WLPet GB
22: 14 .6tt
21 15 .583 1
21 16 .568 1'1,
18 21 .462 5:\
15 23 .995 8

Toronto

Baltimore
Tampa Bay

Cenlrlll1 Dtvlalon

Chicago
Detroit
Cle\leland
Minnesota
Ka ~sas City
Texas
Oakland
Seenle
Los Angeles

WLPctGB
25 12 676
24 t3 .849 1
17 21 .447 8'1.
17 2 1 .447 8\
w· 25 .286 t4
Wut Division
WLPct GB
20 17 .541
t8' ts .486 2

~·· N!W JtrMy
16: DRoberts, San Diego, 14: Reyes, New Saturday,Carof!DI·
May 6: ~rollno 6, Now Jaraay 0
Monday, May 8: C8rolna 3, New Jersey 2,
OT
.
Wednesday. May 10: Carolina 3, New

York, t3; Pierre, Chicago, 12; HaRamirez,
· Florida, 10; Freel, Cincinnati, 10; W&amp;e~.
Milwaukee, 9; FurcaJ, Los Angeles, 9;
Lofton ..Los Angeles, g,
•
PITCHING (7 Ooclalona}-T(31avlne, New
York, 5-2, .714, 2.19; ~addux , Chicago, 5-

17 22 .436 4
16 22 .421 4'b

Sunday'a Gamea

AP photo

Edgar ~rado: a war
of art 1n the s·addle
BY RICHARD ROSENBLATT .

•

(Byrd 4·3J, 7:05p.m.

·

Boston (Schilling 5·2) at Baltimore (Chen o-

.

~lhl~iop.~ hite

Edgar Prado bio

Saturday, May 13: New Jersey 5, Carolina
1 '
Sunday, May 14: Carolina 4, New JerseY
1, Carolina wins series 4-1

.7t4, 3.10; Oswa~. Hou-. 5·3, .625,
Cook, Colorado, 4·3, .571 , 3.27; Marquis,
3.50: Capuano, Milwaukee, 4-3, .571 , 2.83;

WESTERN CONFERENCE
BanJQIIVI.EdDHKdpn
Sunday, May 7:San Jose 2, Edmonton 1
Monday, May 8: san Jose ,2, Edmonton 1'
V'fednesday, May 10: Edmonton 3, San

StLouis, 4-4, .500, 5.33 STRIKE~

PMartlnez, New York, 62; CZambrano,.
54; Harang, Cincinnati, ' 50;
C&amp;plJano, Milwaukee, 49; Carpenter, St.
louis, 45; TGlavlne, New York, 45: Bush,
Jose 2, JOT
Milwaukee, 44; Peavy, Sen Diego, 44; Friday, May t2: Edmonton 6, San Jose 3
Smoltz, Atlanta, 44.
Sunday, May 14: Edmol'lton 6, san Jose rJf
SAVES-Gordon,
Philadelphia,
13;
Edmonton leads series 3-2
Turnbow, Milwaukee, 12; Valvert1e,
Wednesday, May 17: ~an Jose at
Aiizona, 11 ; Lldge, . Houston, 11;
Edmonton, 8 p.m.
lsrlng~ausen, St. Lou!~, .11 ; Fuentes,
Friday, May 19: Emtonton at San Jose, 9
Colorado, 9; Weathers, C1ncmnatl, 9.
p.m., it necessary
Anobllm 4. Colortdg 0
Chic~go,

ProS OCCef

~riday,

Major LHgue Soccer

·

OT

Eutern Conferance

so'x (McCarthy 2-1) at

Tampa Bay (Kazmlr 5·2), 7:15p.m.

Sea111e (Hernandez 2-4) at Oakland
(Blanton 3-4), 10:05 p.m.
Toronto (Lilly 4-2) at L.A. Angels {Santana

1

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CDM

• Postseason off and
running. See Page B1

POMEROY - Under a
program to provide fun~ing
for small environmental ,education p~ojects, Ohio . EPA
recently awarded two mini
grants for a total of $9,&amp;65 in
Meigs coun"ty. .
One award is for $4,983 to
the Meigs County Soil and
Water Conservation District
for its Water Meigs County

3~

Arana Football Laaguo
NATlONALCONFERENCE
El•m Dlvlelori
WLTPet PF PA
z-Oallas
13 3 0 .813 929 710
•·Naw York t0 6 0 .625 846 687
•-Phlladelpi"Ma 9 7 0 .563 m 747
Columbus
8 6 o .500 724 717 ·
Southam Olvlalon
WLTPctPFPA
y-onanoo
10 6 o .625 813 756
•-Austin
10 6 0 .625 816 757
x-Goorgla
8 8 o .500 855 735
Tampa Bay 7 9 0 .438 808 656
KansasCily 3 t30 .186 70&lt;1 842 ·
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Canlral Olvlalon
W L T Pet PF PA
z-Colorado
11 5 0 .686 903 833
x-Nashville
8 8 0 .600 818 799
x-Chicago
7 9 0 .438 8.25 834

· Grand Aapi~a

5 11 0 .313 722 876 .

WHtwn Dlvlllon
W
1o
8
7
5
5

y-San Jose
x-Artzona
x-Utah
Las Vegas
Los Angeles

L
6
8
9
11
11

T
o
0
o
0
0

Pet PF PA
.625
.500
.438
.313
.313

898 848
n4 756
849 883
748 874
808 906

x-clinched playoff spot
y-clin9hed division
z-clinched conference

Frlday'a Oemea
Austin 67, Orlando 43

DoMas 82, New York 38

Colorado 59, Arizona 35
Uiah 55, Kansas City 54

Saturday'• !lomoo
Chicago 70, Grand Roplda 47
Philadelphia 57, Georgia 41
Nashville 66, Tampa Bay 50
San JosQ 68, Columbus 47

Los Angales 44, Las Vegas 27
End of Regular SeatOn
'1"1...-~ftctions

•• ill~

.

Monday'a Spolia Tranaac:llona
BASEBALL
AmartconLNgua
BALTIMORE ORIOLES-Piaeod RHP
Daniel Cabrera on the 15-day DL. Recalled
AHP Chris Britton from Bowie of the EL.

KANSAS CITY ROYALS-Placed RH~
Chris Booker on tho 15-doy DL. Recalled
RHP Joe Nelson from Omaha of the PCL.
National Lo.guo
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS-Agreed to
tenns with 38 Chad Tracy on a ttvoo-yoar
contract eKienslon through tho 2009 season.
·
FLORIDA MARLINS-Optioned LHP
Jason Vargas to A.lbuquerque of the PCL.
Recalled LHj:) Ae'nyel ~Into from
Albuquerque.
c

FOOTBAU
National Football Lngue
CINCINNATI BENGAL5-Walvod QB
Craig Krenzol and TE Ryan Hamby.Agreed
to tonns with WR Glenn HoH alld CB
DeMarcus Rideaux on two-year contracts.
DETROIT LION5-Agraed to terms w~
OT Jeff Backus on a one-year contract. '
t!EW ENGlAND PATRIOTS-Announc«&lt;
the reilrement of QB Doug Autle. Signed
RB Patrick Cobbs and WR Jaka~ wallace:
ST. LOUIS RAM8-Releosed DE Kory
Lathe and TE Ed Nelson.

.

" " " · ""'lo~il\

"'"li,..-1., '""

(Watersheds and Teachers education programs through- ers' work shop will intraEducating Rural Meigs out the year. Elementary . duce 30 local grade 3-6
County) project. The other school classroom visits by teachers to activities from
award is for $4,&amp;82 to the vil- SWCD educators with water- Proj e¢t WET th at are correlaf~e of Racine for its shed models will be aug- lated with Ohio 's science
Integration of Source Water mented by 12 field trips to content standards.
Protecti()ij: Grades K - 12 pro- local streams, Wetlands, and · A sur(lmer watershed day
ject. Eleven projects through- ponds to find macro-inverte-. camp will provide two day s
out the state were funded for brutes and test water quality. of conservation-related activThis will be for approxi- ities for 50 children entering
$48,388.
The Meigs County Soil and mately 267 third graders, · grade s 5-8. Two thousand
Water Conservation District 272 fourth graders , 253 copies of the Leading Creek
(SWCD) project provides fifth graders and 291 sixth News, a quarterly newsletter
support for four different graders . A ·summer teach- on water quality and land use

Showing respect for Wingett

issues, will be distributed to
local schools and residents.
The day camp and newsletter
are components of the education portion of the endorsed
Leading Creek Watershed
.
Management Plan.
The village of Racine's
project supports the village's
ongoing source water protection education efforts !Jy providing classroom activities

Please see Grants, A5

Civil War boot _c amp

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Michael T. Holland, 35

INSIDE
• ~ilitary plan fat: bOrder
control triggers ~ncen'l
among some lawmakers,
military experts.
See Page A2
• Meigs students
participating in Close-Up
Washington, D.C.
See Page A3
• SeniorBration health
lair to be held May 31 .
See Page A5
• Mother-daughter
banquet held..
See Page A5
• Local Briefs.
See Page A5
• For the Record.
:See Page AS
• Former governor's
·birthplace hopes to
emerge from fiscal
trouble. See Page AS
• Family Medicine.
See ~age A&amp;

WEATIIER

Bath s.rcent/photo
Yesterday family and friends said goodbye to the late Robert
L (Bob) Wingett, . former publisher for the Ohio Valley
Publishing Co. and Syracuse community leader. Wingett's
funeral procession was led by the Syracuse Village Police
Department, Meigs County Sheriffs Office and the Syracuse
Volunteer Fire Department which draped a fire truck in black
as a sign of respect;
· .. · ..

. '

Medicare Part D open
enrollment ends, what now?
BY BETH SEROENT .
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - The open
enrollment
period
for
Medicare Part D ended this
past Monday which means if
seniors haven't already
enrolled in the government's
voluntary prescription .drug
progr~m they must now wait
·
until Nov. 15.
Enrolling after November
will result in seniors being
charged a .six percent late
penalty whic~ amounts to
one percent per month on
premiums. These penalties
are accessed each month after
the May 15 deadline.
Medicare can charge up to a
24 percent late enrollment
penalty depending on when a
senior enrolls in the program.
However, last week there
was some good news . in
regards to those penalties
when
the
Bush
Administration announced

Members of the 6th Ol;lio
Cavalry Civil War re-enact·
ment group "trained" Meigs
County middle school and
high sch'ool students at a
Civil War boot camp at
Eastern High School Monday
and Tuesday. The program,
designed to teach students
about the Civil War, is sponsored by the Chester/Shade
Historical Association, and is
also a promotion of the
Morgan 's Raid re-enactment
scheduled for SP.ptember.
Rick Wilson of Parkersburg,
W.Va .. a member of the reenactment group, is shown
introducing Eastern kindergarten students to "Rosie,"
one of the horses accompanying the cavalry group, when
the students visiteq the reenactors' camp. Students
from Meigs and Southern
school distrJcts participated
in Monday activities, ·but
Tuesday'.s field drills were an
"All-Eagle" affair, involving
history students in marching
training and a battle drill.
Brian J. Reed/photos

those fees would be waived
for low-income seniors as
well as the disabled.
Eligibility requires an individual have an annual income
below $14,700 and assets
worth no more than $11 ,500.
For eligible couples the annual income limtt is $19,800
with assets of $23,000 or less.
Donald Vaughan of the
Vaughan Agency in Pomeroy
said the lowest monthly premium offered through one of
the prescription drug plan
provtders is around $14.43.
This would mean an increase
(due to penalty) of just over
$1 in a senior's premium if
they enrolled in November.
Of course there are a variety of plans and premiums
out there to suit the individual needs of seniors , which
is something
Vaughan
appreciates.
·
He said he appreciates this
flexibility because it allows

Plllll IH Pllrt D, A5

Meigs names valedictorians, salutatorian

He's the winner

BY CHARLENE HOEFI.tCH

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM·
POMEROY - Miranda
· Beha, Whitney Thoene, and
Jacob Venoy have been •
named valedictorians, and
Joshua Venoy, salutatorian of
the 2006 Meigs High School
graduating.lclass.
Beha is the daughter of
Steve and Mary Beha of
Albany, Thoene is the daught.
. '
ter
of Dale and Nancy Thoene
ll SECTIONS - ta PAGES
of Pomero~. and, Jacob and
Calendars
A3 Joshua . Venoy are the twin
'
sons of Robert and Lisa
82•4 Wnoy, Jr. of Pomeroy.
Classjfieds
Graduation will take place 8
Bs 'p_
Comics
m, Friday, May 26, in the .
Larry R. Morrison auditorium.
Dear Abby
'A:l
A student of broad inter.
ests,
Beha has been jnvol ved
Editorials
in · school, church and comObituaries ·
' As munity events before and
during her high school years.
8
Section
She has performed in drama
Sports
and speech events, played in
.A6 .the marching, concert and
Weather

INDEX

Interventional Cardiology
~

.M ,

740.446.5002

v

\\' 1· D:\ I Sl 1.\ ' . l\1 .\ Y 1':', :!!HI(&gt;

Pro Football

Howard Kander, MD, FACC

•

.

.,

Ohio EPA awards Meigs environmental education grants

SPORTS

1

The Holzer Cardiovascular Institute welcomes
'

50 CE:'IiTS • Ynl. ;;:;. :'lin. 19:1

W L T PlsGFGA Thursday, May 11: Anaheim 4, Colorado t
4 t 2 14 14 7
4 2 1 13 10 7
CONFERENCE FINALS
3 2 1 10 9 ·4
(Beat-ol-7)
3 3 1 10 6 8
EASTERN CONFERENCE
.
114788
Saturday, May 20: Buffalo at Carolina, 2
.
o 1 5 5 5 8 , p.m.
I Monday, May 22: Buffalo at Carolina, 7:30
Wntem Conlei•tce
W L T PlsGFGA p.m.
FC Dallas
4 1 3 15 15 12
Wednesday, May 24: Carolina at Buffalo.
Housto'n
7:30p.m.
4 2 1 13 14 11
Colorado
2317911
Friday, May 26: Carolina al Buffalo, 7:30
Los Angeles
2 5 1 7 6 14 p.m.
CDChlvas USA 131457
Sunday, May 28: Buffalo at Carotlna, 7:30
p.m.. If necessary
.Real San Lake
1 5 1 4 8 12
Tuesday, May 30: Carolina at Buffalo,7:30
NOTE: Three points for victory, one point p.m., If necessary
for tie.
Thursday, June 1; Buffalo at Carolina, 7:3Q
p.m., If necessary
Salurdoy'o Gomea
WESTERN CONFERENCE
TBA
Chicago at Houston, 4 p.m.
D.C. United
KansasCily
New England
Columbus
Ch~go
NawYork

,

'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

May 5:Anaheim 5, Colorado 0

Sunday, May 7: Anaheim 3, Colorado 0
Tuesday, May 9: Anaheim 4, ColoraCIO

He ins.ists there isn' t much to
say before a race, anyway.
3·1), 1005 p.m.
Wadne.day'a Garnes
Nome: Edgar P,_,
"We look at each other, and
TeJCas at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05p.m.
NEW YORK - · Edgar Aea:a&amp;(bomJune \2, 1ser,.
that's about it," Prado said . Minnesota at Detroit, 7:05p.m.
Kansas City at Cleveland. 7:06p.m.
Prado has been riding too =·~~.
"Then I go ride the horse."
Boston
Baltimore, 7:05p.m.
long to get caught up in win- Hot11ali!wot.·U11111:Paru. · . ,
Prado won the Derby on ChicagoatWhite
SoJC at Tampa Bay, 7:15
ning one race -·even if the Roo~: lloii1WCOCI, Ra.
·
his seventh try, and it came p.m.
race happened to be the t':;:r;,:::;,•&lt;J:!~t!,dger Jr., Luis about four months after the Seanle at Oakland. 10:05 p.m.
Kentucky Derby.
'lltiN c.awn _ , Dei!&gt;Y. t-ror-7; death of his mother, Cenaida. Toronto at LA. Angels, 10:05 p.m.
"It definitely puts you in an ;r::,o-:~,:e:~:;;HZ;i!;.y Although she did not 'attend
Net&amp;onal League
Eaat Division
elite group of riders," Prado lilert!Y): Blrdalone (2004 lloilmcint the races often, Prado twice
WLPctGB
8
said, "but I still felt the same. Balmont
- · Travers); Sorava (:1002
23 14 .622
Stakes): Folldora (2005 brought · her to the Derby New York
D.C. Unl1ed at Columbus, 7:30p.m.
Philadelphia
22 15 .595 1
... I had to come back ·and -··cup "'-''tt FIIH); Si!¥tr hoping to win.
CD Chlvas USA at New YoM&lt;, 7:30 p.m.
Atlanta
18 20 .474 5'h
New England at FC Dallas, 8:30p.m.
ride Sunday."
Train '(2005 Br"""""'' Cup SllrintJ;
After he came through Washington
13 25 .342 10\2
Kansas Qty at Real Satt Lake, 9 p.m.
Slinl
Uam
~~
Wocdward);
Paaco
h
d
Pra do returne d to Be Imont· ·ilulea 12003 Blue. Gra,., Hukell May 6, e edicated the race Florida
11 25 .306 tt &gt;
Colorado at Los AnQeles, 10:30 p.m:
Central Ol'llalon
Park the morning after win- 111'11ialional); Bird Town (2003 Kalilucl&lt;y to her, adding that when he
wedntllday. Moy 24
W L Pet GB ·
FC Dallas at New Yoti&lt;, 6:30 p.m.
ning the Derby aboard unde- Ool&lt;sr,
Ha~an·•
Holld4oy
12002.Fiorldla
crossed
the
finish
line
"the
St. Louis
24 14 .632
Derby, Blue Gruo).
•.
· S.turdsy, May 27, 2006
feate d Bar b aro. H e was Accompllah_.a: Spelled Triple first person that came to · Cincinnati
23 15 .605 1
ColoradO Rapids at Rear Salt Lake, 4 p.m.
22 17 .564 2'1
Houston Dynamo at· New England
cheered by a small group of Cl!lwnbldoo1WarEmlilamlni!(J92o(ld. mind was my mother. That Houston
Milwaukee
19 19 500 5
Revolution, 7:30p.m.
fans, then went out and rode =.'!':.0:.~~=-n~ · was emotional.''
Chicago
15 22 .405 8'1,
D.C. United at Kansas City Wizards, 8:30
11 27 .289 13
p,m,
seven races, winning three.
'04 ...~ ~ natlot!'a r1dn In wint from
Prado, married and the Pittsburgh
Wett Divlelon
Chicago Flre at Chives USA, 11 p.m.
No rest for the weary.
.!:~~~s9~53eln '97, •70in 'llhnd father of three children, is the
WLPctGB
San
Diego
22
16
.579
!...
"What is· done, is ·done," · '"'" earned c..t;pr): second youngest of I 2 kids.
21 17 .553 "t .
Pro Hockey
73·38 t.D4l .thll'lugh Ma~e. · ·
Prado said before the races $tWlnnara
His father was an assistant Colorado
Arizona
20 17 .54i t:\
taoleif): ' 5,806 lhiough
one day last week at May e.
·
· ' trainer in Peru. Prado arrived Los Angeles
19 19 .500 3
Natlonal-keyLAogue
t9 20 .487 3\
Playolt Glance
Belmont. "Yol.t have to con - - ha 1101 ...-, Fa!Nr wu an in Miami in 1986, then San Francisco
FIRST ROUND
tinue to do .yourJ'ob."
...
moved to Pimlico in
andlalanltralnerlnP-.u:b!olheriJorqo
Anlbel were jo!:l&lt;eya••
Sunday'a Gomeo
(Beol-ol-7)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
While not missing a day of ~wl""'.f:;r""~ t983(1nP•ru&gt;· . Maryland, where he won 14 Washington 8, Atlanta 1
1;.121nnings
Oltawt4 I11DP'IIIy1
rlding since his first Derby .o.,.,., NYRA - · • gulda: riding· titles in the 1990s and Phlladelphia2,Cinclnnati
Florida 8, Pittsburgh 2
Fnday, ApriJ 2t: Ottawa 4, Tampa Bay 1
win, Prado is gearing up for ~ M-m o1 Mctrio'a Hall o1 was the nation's leading rider Milwaukee 6, N.Y. Mats 5. 10 innings
Sunday, April23: Tampa Bay 4, Ottawa 3
Houston 3, Colorado 0
Tuesday, Apnl 25: Ottawa 8, Tampa Bay 4
·
in victories from 1997-99.
his next big challenge: the $1 FArizona 7. St. Louis 6
'
Thursday, Aprll27: onawa 5, Tampa Bay 2
million
Preakness
on
He moved to New York San Diego 9., Chicago C~bs 0
· Saturday, April 29: Ottawa 3, Tampa Bay 2
C.ro!101 4 Montrul 2
Saturday. A victory would forefront of top jockeys. He's and began to make his mark.. LA DOdgers 6, San Francisco 3
Monday'• Gamee
Saturday, April 22: Montreal 6, Carolina 1
send Barbaro to the Belmont always been "in the big races, He's won riding titles at Atlanta 11 , Florida
8
Monday, April 24: Montreal6, Carolina 5
Stakes with a chance to but not always on the best Aqueduct, Belmont and San Francisco 10, Houston 1
20T
j Wednesday, Ap~l 26: Canol~• 2, Montreal
become racing's first Triple horses. That is changing.
Saratoga_ His first two wins LA Docgers at Colorado, 8:35p.m.
San Diego at Arizona, 9:40p.m.
1, OT
Crown champion · since ,.During the Derby . preps, in Triple Crown races came
Tue1dey'e Games
' Friday, April 28: Carolina 3, Montreal 2
Prado rode several top con- in . the Belmont ·- aboard Cincinnati (Harang 5-1) at Pittsburgh ' Sunday, Apri130: Caroline 2, Montreal1
Affirmed. in 1978.
·
Tuesday, May 2·: Carolina 2, Montreal 1,
1·4), 7:05p.m.
Prado loves the idea.
• tenders besides Barbaro, Sarava in 2002 and Birdstone (Maholm
Florida (Willist-4) at.AUenta (Hudson 3·3), , OT
"It would help everyone in including First Samurai, in 2004. Both times, Prado 7:35p.m.
·
New Jtryy 4. N X BenP"rt o
Phiiadelphia (Lidia 3-4) at Milwaukee
Saturday, April 22: New Jersey 6, N.Y.
racing because we need a Strong Contender and Keyed spoiled Triple Crown bids- (Capuano
4-3), 8:05p.m.
Rangers 1
'
hero," Prado said. "And Entry.
first by, War Emblem, then py . Washington
(Hernandez 1-4) at Chicago
Moriday, April 24: New Jersey 4, N.Y.
Cubs (Zambrano 1-2), 8:05p.m.
Rang~rs 1
Barbaro would' be the hero.
"f'rado was· Bailey this Smarty Jones.
San Fran;isco (Wright 3·3) at Houston
Wednesday, April 26: New Jersey 3, N:Y.
Tm just the jockey."
year, getting to choose
His emotions got to him (Rocnguez
5·t). 8:05p.m:
Rangers 0
The 38-rear-old Prado has between four horses," trainer after the win over Smarty N.Y. Mats (Giavine 5-2) at St. ·Louis Saturday, April 29: New Jersey 4, N.Y.
4-2), 8:t0 p.m.
.
Rangers 2
.
·been among the nation's top Kiaran McLaughlin said. Jones. Despite the biggt&lt;st (Suppan
LA. Dodgers (Lowe 1-2) at Colorado I
Buffalo 4 PhlladtiQbla 2
riders for yt;ars, though it's "Thai says a lot about his tal- victory of his career, Prado {BKim 1-1 ), 8:35 p.m.
SalUrday, April 22: Buffat.o 3, Philadelphia
·
hard to tell by the way he ent."
apologized for spoiling San· Diego (Peavy 3-3)' at Arizona 2, ~OT ·
(Hernandez
2-4),
9:40p.m
.
Monday,
Aprll24:
Buffalo
8,
PhllodelpNa
2
Adds trainer John Ward: Smarty's Triple try, saying he
acts. He rarely shows his
Wedneaday'a Gamel
Wednesday, April 26: Philadelphia. 4,
feelings, his · face usually "All the tea leaves are com- was only doing his job.
LA ()9dgers at Colorado. 3:05 p.m.
Burfalo 2 .
at Pittsburgh, 7:05p.m.
Friday, Apnl 28: Philadelphia 5, Buffalo 4
expressionless whether he ing together for him. He's
Last October, Prado ended- C1ncinnatl
Flo'rida at Atlanta, 7:35 p.m.
Sunday, April30: Buffalo 3, Phiiadelp~ia 0
wins or loses. Some say he become the go'to rider. "·
an 0-for-31 record in the Washington at Chicago Cubs, 8:05p.m.
Tuesday, May 2: Buffalo 7, Philadtplphla 1
WESTERN CONFERENCE
even looks angry. Prado calls
Michael Matz, who trains Breeders' Cup, winning the Philadelphia at Milwaukee, 8:05p.m.
San Francisco at Houston, 8:05p.m.
Edmonton 4. Pttrott 2
it "concentration." He's also Barbaro, calls Prado a "ter- BC Juvenile Fillies with N,Y. Mets at St. Louis, 8:10p.m.
Friday, April 21 : Detroit 3, ·Edmonton 2,
humble, preferring to credit rific rider," but that's about Folklore and the BC Sprint San Diego at Arizona, 8:40 p.m.
20T
.
Sunday, April 23: Edmonton 4, Detroit 2
the owners, trainers and it. A falling out two years ago with Silver Train.
Tuesday, April 25: Edmonton 4, De.trolt 3,
NATlONAL LEAGUE
especially the horses.
could be the reason. After
With more than 5,600 vic- BATTING-Mc'Cann.
.
Atlanta,
.352; 20T
"I'm not a very emotional Prado chose another horse tories during his career, MiCabrera , Florida, .341 ; Ausmus, Thursday, April 27: DsJrolt 4, Edmonton 2
Solurdey, April 29: Edmonton 3, Detroit 2
Houston, .340; Vldro, Washington, .338;
person," he said. "I Eke to over Matz's Kicken Kris in Prado would like to add a HaRamirez,
Florida, .333; Pujols, St.Louis, Monday, May t: Edmonton 4, Detroit 3
keep it nice and quiet. That's the Arlington Million, the first Preakness win to his .333\ Aeriteria, Atlanta, .333.
Co!grtdo 4. D1U11 1'
RUNS--Pu)ols, St. Louis, 39; HaRamirez,
the way I've always been."
trainer did. not use Prado on resume.
saturday, A(?rli 22: Colorado 5, Dal!ae. 2
Florida, 34; Dunn, Cincinnati, 3-1:
Prado is a calculated cus- any of his horses for nearly a
He has a great chance. NJohnson, Washington, 30; Galee , Monday, Aprtl24: Colorado 6, Dallas 4, OT
tomer on the track, though, year.
Barbaro should be the heavy Milwaukee, 30; MiCabrora, Florida, 29; Wednesday, April26: Colorado 4, Dallas 3,
Reyes, New York, 29; Flopez, Cincinnati, OT
fighting for every inch in
Matz has been cordial favorite to make it seven in 29:
Friday, April28: Dallas 4, Colorado 1
Furcal, Los Angeles, 29.
every. race no matter the whe'n discussing Prado, but row when he takes on a small RBI-Pujols, St. Louis, 48 ; .Berkman, Sunday, April 30: Colorado 3, D.allas 2, OT
A"'h1lm 4. CIIQII) 3
Houston, 40; AJones, Atlant-. 38; Holliday,
quahty of horse he' s riding. asked last week if he trusts · field, including Brother Colorado,
Friday, April 21 : Calgary 2, Anaheim 1, OT
34 ; Francoeur, Atlanta, 32;
Gary Stevens, the recently Prado, he said: "If I have to Derek ,
and C8L.:ee, Milwaukee, 32 ; MICabrera, Florida, Sunday, April 23: Anaheim 4, Calgary 3
. Tuasday, AprN 25: Calgary 5, Anaheim 2
'
retired Hall of Fame rider, tell him how to ride the Sweetnorthernsaint. ' There 30.
ThurSday, April 27: Anaheim 3, Calgary 2,
HITS-HaRamlrez, Florida, 50; Eck&amp;leiiri,
says Prado reminds him of horse, then maybe I need a aren' t many picking against St. Louis, 48; FLopez, Cincinnati, 48 ; or
Salurday, April 29: Calgary 3, Anaheim 2
actor Clint Eastwood.
new rider."
Barbaro.
MICabrera, Florida, 46; Vidro, Washington,
·.Holliday, Colorado,. 45; FleldEir,
Monday, Mey t:Anaheim 2, Calgary 1
"I'm gonna -s)loot you, this
Prado says lhe matter was
"I hope they're right," . 46;
Milwaukee, 45; Berkman, Houston, 45;
Wednesday, May 3: Anaheim 3, Calgary 0
is the way it is and then I' m "blown out of proportion." Prado sa1d.
San Jw 4 · Neebylllt 1 .
ASorlano, Washington , 45.
""- .
gonna move on to the next
guy trying to kill me," .
Stevens said. "He's got that
same look in his eyes that
Eastwood did in all those
Westerns."
After Winning .the Derby
by 6 1/2 len~ths - the fifth
largest margm in 13 2 years
- Prado let go for a rare
moment. As he returned to
the winner 's circle, he
.
.
flashed a huge smile and
pointed to the horse with
Dr- Kander is seeing patients at the Holzer cardiovascular lll$1itute in
both hands; encouraging the
Gallipolis and Jackson, Ohio. Dr. Kander is Boaro Certifie(fin Internal
crowd at Churchill Downs to
turn up the volume.
Medicine and has performed thousands of angioplasty and stenting proce-,
Not for him, of course.
dures, as well as cardiac catheterizations.
"I was cheering for
, Barbaro. I was only a passenger," Prado said. "I was for,
tun.ate to be on the right
horse at the right moment.
I'm not going to pump my
CARDrOVASCUI..AR To schedule an appointment. please call
chest. It's good to hear peo'
ple say nice things, but it s up
to them to say it."
With the recent retirements
of Stevens and fellow Hall of
Famers Jerry Bailey and Pat
Day, Prado moves to the
ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

~~2

2,

Minnesota (Lohsa 2-3) at Detroh

(Robenson 3-2), 7:05 p.m.
Kansas City (Eiarton 0.4)' at' Cleveland

Buffalo wins series 4·1

STOLEN BASE$-Flopez, Cincinnati,.

Detroit 3, Cleveland 2
Oakland 6, N.Y.Yankoost
Toronto 8. Tampa Bay 3 · .
Baltimore 8 , Kansas City 7
Texas at Boston, ppd.,
Seanle 9, L.A. Angels 4
Chicago White sox 9, Minnesota 7
,
Monday'• Gam••
Chicago White Sox 7, Minnesota 3
Texas 4. N.Y. Yankees 2
Boston 11, Baltimore1
Kansas City at Clev('land , ppd., rain
Tuesday• 1 Gam••
'·
lexas (Koronka 4· 1) at N.Y. Yankees I
(Chacon 4· 1), 7:05p.m.

. Barbaro, with Edgar Prado aboard, l]eads down the stretch to win the Kentucky Derby at
Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky. , Saturday May 6.

Houston.

MICabrera, Florida, 1•; WiiNngham,
Florida, 13; Sullivan, Colorado, 13; Tracy,
Arizona, 13; Koskie, Milwaukee, 13;
DMHIUJ, Mltwaukee, 13.

Scouts collect
eyeglasses for Lions
program, Aa·

I

© aoo6 Ohio Valley Publlshlns ~..

.·.:

"

Pluses.• Melp, AS

Jacob Veney

Josh Venoy

Joy Kocmoud/plloto
Phil Cox of Gallipolis, right. is congratulated by Paul Barker, cir·
culation manager of the Ohio yalley Publishing Co .. for being
the wi nner of the· bingo contest readership promotion in the
OVP newspapers. Cox will be awarded $500 as winner.
•'

..

1&gt; ,

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