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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March

.www .mydailysentinel.com

28, 2005

Sorenstam blows out field ·in first LPGA major championship:
BY TIM DAHLBERG

Associated Press

nerves at all," Jo.nes said. pense.
"Her ball striking was just
"It only shows that she');
that much better than the rest
great."
Sorenstam didn't make a of us," defending champion
bogey all weekend, playing Grace Park said.
the last 36 holes 11-under par
Lopez, now just a ceremoas she nu;thodically made her nial player, went even further.
way around a 6,535~yard · "I think· really, and truly,
course that was supposed to she 's better than Tiger
play tough with narrow fair- . Woods," Lopez said. "WI:
wavs and deeper than normal have a lot of great players out
rough.
here and nobody is even comJust for fun, Sorenstam ing close to her."
capped off her command perSorenstam was impressiv«
formance by going for the with bolh her driver and ht&lt;r
green iri two on the 485-yard short game. ~he was th~
final hole . Her 4-wood safely longest hrtter 111 the tourn~
cleared the water, and ment, consrstently hrttmg the
Sorenstam took a victory lap · ball- 50 to 60 yards past her
on her way to the green, playing · partners, and made ·
exchangi ng high-fives with almost ev~ry putt under 10
spectators as she walked past teet when rt counted.
the grandstands:
Teenager Michelle Wie finShe promptly three-putted ished outside_ the top 10 fo_r
from about 100 feet, but it the tirst time 111 three years 111
was· of little consequence. the Nabisco, shooting a final
When ~he tapped in for the 'round 71 to 11nish at even par,
win, 'her sister and a few oth- 15 shots back. That was two
ers raced on the green and shots better than fellow tee~,
sprayed her with champagne. Morgan Pressel.
· Sorenstam 's fellow com" It was a really strange
petitors were just as much in week,'' Wie said. "For somr
awe as the gallery that reason I couldn't shoot lo~. ·
enjoyed a beautiful day .of and I really couldn't ptnpomt
golf but one with ·little · sus- what was wrong.:·

sons , tying a record set by
Nancy Lopez in 1978. It was
also the 59th of her careera number Sorenstam is very
familiar with - and her
· hh
·
h
·
h'
er~ 1 maJor c amprons tp
Will .
More important for her

RANCHO MIRfi.GE, Calif.
- The suspense was over
before the leaders left the
putting green and headed for
the first tee. The question
wasn't
whether
Annika ii11mediate goa ls, it kept
Sorenstam would win her Sorenstam in the hunt for
·· · h
d somethi ng no woman has ever
lrlt straight tournament an done before _ .win all four
the first major championship
of the year, but by how much. · major - c.hampionships in a
Plenty, it turned· out. as year.
Sorenstam turned a runaway
"That is one of niy go,als,
into a blowout Sunday. shoot- but first things first ,'_'
· a final rnun d 68 to ,..rms
· h Sorenstam said.
tng
· the
Sorenstarn st"··ted
tl1e day
~
at 15 under and wrn
Nabisco Championship by with a five-shot lead over
eight shots. In doing so, the Rosie Junes . and promptly
most dominant player in golf birdied three of the tirst five
not only added anmher entry holes in what was little more
to the LPGA record books, · than an Easter Sunday stroll
but showed that the best may around the MiS&gt;ion Lakes
be yet to come.
Country Club.
She also got very wet ..ge tShe led by eight shots after
ting doused in champag ne eight holes before Jone s
after sinking her putt before birdi ed the ninth and I 0 h&lt;)les
taking the traditional winner's to draw a bit clo&gt;er. But, after
plunge into the pond next to opening up· a five-shot lead
the 18th green along with her with a 66 on Saturday. there
sister, Charlotta, and her was never any doubt thi s was
mother, Gunilla.
going to be Sorenstam's day.
The . win was Sorenstani's
"Everything just went my
fifth in a row over two sea- way," she said.

AP photo
Annika Sorenstam, right, of Sweden. jumps into the lake with
her sister Charlotta after winning the Kraft Nabisco
Championship at Mission Hills Country Club Sunday.

a

Jones finished with pair of She also got a close-up look at
71 s in the final two rounds the best player in women's
after being tied for the lead g0J f.
"S he . didn 't show any
going into the third round.

'

Easter egg hunt, As

Pomeroy ViUage Council approves new magistrate

SPORTS
• Cavs sting Hornets
in overtime. See Page 81

.

.

Graves finally recovered from Reds' starting experiment
BY JoE KAY

Associated Press
SARASOTA , Fla .
Danny ·Graves is finally getting over hi s one-year fling in
the rotation.
Yes,. it's taken a long time
- much longer than anyone
expected,
The most accompli shed
closer in Cincinnati Reds history figured there would be
no harm in trying hi s hand at
something different during
the 2003 season, helping a
team that was de sperately
short on starters.
· Not surprisingly, he wasn ' t
very good. To his amazement.
the one-year experiment had
a long-lasting impact. He
went back into the bullpen

osu

from Page 81
regular-season losses to
Temple and Ohio State. The
Buckeyes beat the Scarlet
Knights 52-50 on Jan, 16.
In that game, Davenport ·
scored 22 points and dominated inside with her 6-foot-5
size and reach. The sophomore had 22 points arid 14
rebounds Sunday, but she
struggled to get touches .
Rutgers did a great job of getting to loose balls and converting them into . ~eco nd ­
chance ,points, hotding a 20-7
edge.
"It was physical and there
was a lot of bumping for 40
minutes," said Davenport, 6of-11 from the field .
Ohio State coach Jim
Foster thought Rutgers got
· away with too . much on
defense.
"Are they talented? ' Yes! '
Do they have individually
great players'' 'Yes'"' Foster
said. "Do they have a nice
defensive scheme? 'Yes'' Is
the game called differently in
the postseason than the regular season? 'Yes'"'
Freshman Matee -Ajavon

Tames

las t ye·ar. but wasn 't himself.
His fastball was slower. His
body was worn down . His
routine was out of whack.
"I created a lot of bad
habits when l was a starter,"
Graves said Sunday.
Finally this spring, everything is back in plaoe. His
fastball and his comfort level
are back to where they used
to be' before he agreed to help
out the team by moving into
the rotatfon - a totally foreign .place.
The right-himder had never
been a starter and didn't
know what to do. Even the
simple stuff - figuring out
what to do between starts - .
was a challenge because he
had no experience at it.
His unfamiliarity and his
unease showed in the results

- a 4-15 record and 5.33
earned run average. It quickly
became obvious that he
belonged back in the bullpe'n.
"There was not one thing
from starting that helped me,
except for the fact that I knew
I was never, ever going to do
it again," Graves said.
"They're too different. The
mentality is too different. The
way you pitch is too different.
I don ' t think there's anything
common in the two. It's a
whole different story, like
night and day."
Graves pitched a careerhigh 169 innings as a starter,
roughly the same number of
innings as in the two previous
years combined. He lost a
few miles per hour off his
fastball as the season werit
along.

When he went back to the
bullpen last year, he wasn't
the same.
He had his second All-Star
season·as a closer, converting
41 of 50 save chances even
though he never felt right. He
had an excellent first half,
reaching 30 saves faster than
anyone in major league history. Then, he wore down.
Back spasms forced him
onto the disabled li st in
August, whefl he was leading
the majors · with . 37 saves.
Later, he came down with
strep throat, forcing him to
miss the last 12 games and
costing him a shot at the franchise·s saves ·record. He finished three shy of Jeff
Brantley's mark. ·
"Toward the end of the season, I had the back problems

and got sick and all of the
innings started adding up, and
I was still recovering from all
of the innings I threw as a
starter," he said. "Coming
into this year, I want the work
load."
Graves isn ' t the prototypi cal closer. Even at its peak,
his fastball isn't . overpowering. His best pitch is a sinker.
and hitters usually make contact , making for dramatic
ninth .innings..
His easygoing personality
· has allowed him to endure the
drama in a role that can burn
out a pitcher quickly. Graves
is the Reds ' career saves
leader with 172 -· he moved
ahead of John Franco last season.
Since 1999, Graves has
saved 164 games, the lith-

highest total over that span,
· He would most likely be in
the Top 5 if he hasp't spent
·that one year in the rotation.
None of that matters very
much to Graves, who has
· come close to the. postseason
only once, when the Reds
lost a one-game playoff to
the Mets for the 1999 NL
wild card. He · turns 32 in
August, when he' ll be finish'ing off the final year on his •.
contract. The club expects
22-year-old Ryan Wagner to
develop into a closer in the
next few years.
· The
uncertainty
has
increased Graves' urgency to
get the Reds back into con'
tent ion this season.
"I, don' t want '99 to be the
last time I get the chance to
experience that," he said.

BY BETH SERGENT

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Edna Chasteen Pinnell
• James C. Wilburn
• lona Brickles
• Kimberly A. Harter
• Ma~orie I. Kapple
• Juditti Wood
• Freda Wolf

Sparks missed a 3-pointer, diagram plays, when an offithen Azubuike got the cial' fi nail y held up the last
rebound and dribbled to the three fingers on each hand to
right corner. only to mi ss signal the basket was a 3.
from Page 81 .
another. The rebound went
But the Wildcats were out
·all
the
way
to
Sparks
near
the
of
magic,
even
with
.the Spartans (26-6) in the Big top of the key and his shot
Anderson and Hill making
Ten this season.
rim
and
then
fell
hung
o'
n
the
si
lly mistakes in ihe backWith .~i:25 ten in regula- 111.
court
at the start of overtime.
tion, fifth-seeded Michigan
A junior who grew up in
Michigan State was led by
State seemed poised to Kentucky dreaming of playsophomore
Shannon Brown ,
advance easily. Torbert fol - ing for the Wildcats, Sparks
lowed a block on defense walked away stonefaced, whose 24 points on 8-of- I0
with a dunk on the other end, fl as hing an index finger shooting with 11ve 3-pointers
putting the Spartans up 70- before breaking out in wild sends him to a Final Four
reunion with high school
62. '
.
. ce lebration .
He
also teammate Dee
Brown .
But Rav i Moss hit a · 3- redeemed himself for miss21
Maurice
Ager
added
pointer with I :55 left and ing the front end of a. oneKelenna Azubuike made and-one with 27 .I seconds points, Paul Davis had I5
. another with I :06 len, mak- left after he replaced Ramel and II rebounds .
Anderson scored · 13, Hill
ing it a one-point game. Bradley, who collided so
Shannon Brown upped it to hard with Anderson he was and Torbert had seven each.
Randolph Morris
led
75-72 by hitting two free . taken to the locker room with
Kentucky
with
20
points
and
throws with 19.8 seconds a bloodied chin.
As oft1cials reviewed Sparks had 15, all on 3left..
·What followed is a play -whether the ball was shot in pointers. This wa·s the first
that was scrutinized courtside time (it clearly was) and time the Wildcats lost when
for more than 11ve minutes, whether the tip of his right he made at least two 3s; they
but it seemed like an eternity blue-and-white sneaker was had been 19-0. Chuck. Hayes
to everyone holding their touching the line, Michigan ends his career tied for the
breath inside the Erwin State coach Tom lzzo seemed most consecutive starts in
Center - and certainly in to know what was going to school history, but without a
living rooms and sports bars happen. He was .holding a Final Four trip. He had 16
clipboard and a pen. ready to points and 11ve rebounds.
around the country.

WEATIIER

.

)

Call us today at 304-675-1333 or 740-992-2155 or 740-446-2342

POMEROY - Massage theraPY is the latest addition to the ·
Wellness · Program at the Meigs
Senior Center and is intended for
not only senior citizens ' but all
adult citizens of Meigs County.
Ohio Board Licensed Mas sage
Therapist and Pomeroy resident
Janice Haynes will conduct the
sessions that begin this week.
Appointments may be made
Monday through Thursday beginning at 4 p.m. and can be scheduled by calling 992-2681 , extension 233.
The cost for the service is $30
for a half-hour and $50 for one
hour. Those with a current Meigs
County Council on Aging membership card will receive a 10 percent dtscount.
Medicare and private insurance
is not acce'pted for the service but
receipts will be provided for claim
forms.
'
"Massage therapy can lower
blood pressure, reduce stress, help
release endorphins · and increase
range of motion," Haynes said.
Massage therapy also helps
relieve the pain of arthritis, muscle strain, and tendoniti s. eases
chronic back pain, reduces posttraumatic headaches, lessens pain
and muscle spasms in patients
who have undergone heart bypass
surgery ·and alleviates the perceptions of pain and anxiety in cancer
patients.
Haynes explained that massage
therapy follows the highest ethics
and protects the client's privacy.
The massage itself is a modest
procedure where the client dis-

Drugs, stolen
property
seized in .
Friday raid

This special is only available to private, non-commercial individuals.

***You must call prior to the end or initial25 day period to extend.
***Limited to one, 25 day extension. (Maximum of SO days)
***Classified ad limited to 15 ·words or less.
. ***25¢ for each additional wo'n l over IS words.
***Typographical correctio.ns must be made within first 3 days or publication.
***Only one Item per classified ad.
***Pre-payment Is Required and non-refundable.
••• Available only to private, non-commercial individuals. ·

The bid was from Terry Congo
for $1 ,000 for an estimated 13
mowings i.ncluding three times
during the wet sea·son amJ two
during the dry season. Council
accepted the bid. ,
Council received three hi tb
on a vi llage dump truck. with
two of the bids resLil ti.ng in a
tie. Council decided to table
the vote unti l Village
Administrator John Anderson
th em.
could
review
Councilman Jim Sisson voted
against tablin ~ the vote and

wanted to accept ·one of the
bids.
Resolution 11 .0.5 was
pass~d allowin g Mu,_
ser to
apply lor an ODNR gran t that
wOLrld pro\lde improwmenls
to the Pomc rov Ri verfront and
boat ducks. The grant pays ftir
I 00 percent nf the improvements and is for a total amount
of $200.000.
. Mary
Councilwoman
McA ngus. rec·ogni t.ed the

Please see Pomeroy, AS

Detallo .on Page A6

INDEX

BY BRIAN

J.

REEO

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
2 SECTIONS -

Calendars
Classifieds

12 PAGES

A3
~3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials
Obituaries

A4
As

Sports

81

Weather

A6

© 2004 Ohio VaUey Publishing Co.

test pool for
safety before
re-.open_
,. ng

.

, Ple.se see Ther•py. AS

We'll run your classified line ad to sell your Boat, Camper, Motorcycle, 4-Whl;eler, ·
Van, Pick· Up Truck, or Automobile for the low price of only $25.00.

We'll run rour classified line ad in 25 consecutive editions of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
the Pomeroy Sentinel and the Point Pleasant Register. Your ad will reach over
13,500 homes. In addition, your ad will apjlear in our weekly Tri County Marketplace
which is delivered to 17,000 homes. If you sell your vehicle within 25 days, just call
and we'll cancel your ad, if your vehicle didn't sell, just call prior to the end of 25 days
and we'll extend your ad another 25 days.

and blacktop to seal the gravel.
" If you put grav el without
black top you're j ust wasting
y.our time ," Burton said,
" We 'l l get it patched ...
Mirsser replied. explaining to
Burton that the blacktop plant
does not open until mid-April.
"We' ll patcl\ all of Monkey
Run as so·on as we can blacktop it ," Pomeroy Street
Superintendent Jack Krauttcr
said.
Council received one bid
for cemetery maintenance.

6SERGENT®M YDAILYSENTINELCDM

• Authorities predict up .to
2,000 dead after major
earthquake off Indonesia.
.See Page A2
• Literary group hears
review of Ohio Angels.
See Page A3
• Easter egg hunt.
See .Page AS
• .Two astronauts ·
complete spacewalk work
just before station drifts
and rolls, See Page A6

.

ommended Linda Warner to
replace Knight. The motion
was passed unanimously.
POMEROY - Personnel
After passing his physical ,
Patrolinan
matters dominate~ Monday's Pomeroy
Pomeroy Village Council ChristopherGrueberwas hired
meeting,. which resulted in the on a fuiHime basis. Floyd
approval of a new village mag- . Hickman was rehired as· a
istrate and the hiring of two patrolman on a call-in basis.
officers for the Pomeroy
Resident Charles Burton·
addressed council about the
Police Department.
Council voted to accept the condition ofCave'Street in the
resignation · of
current Monkey Run area. Burton
Magistrate Chuck Knight. requeste~ more . gravel for
Mayor. John Musser then rec- large holes near hi s driveway
BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Senior wei/ness program adds massage therapy. Middleport to

-INSIDE
added 14 points for the points .she ever got,"
Scarlet Knights; who can.re Richman said. "We just tried
into the game limiting oppo- to focus on staying in front
and relying on our guards to
nents to 50.8 points.
Brandie Hoskins scored 12 put a lot of pressure, on the
points for Ohio State (30-5). ball."
The Buckeyes shot better
Michelle Campbell scored
than 50 percent in winning on a layup with 4:23 to go
th~ir opening two NCAA aJter Rutgers got a secondtournament games and com- chance possession for a 4945 lead. After Packer missed
mitted only 18 tur~overs.
. Rutgers' defense, however, a 3-pointer,. Pondexter hit a
was a lot better than Holy 12-foot banker and added a
Cross and Maryland.
3-pointer after a turnover for
The Scarlet Knights held a 54-45 lead.
Ohio State without a tield
"You have to start ·defense
goal for .the final 9:50 of the against her at the 3-point line,
11rst half in turning an 18- 10 especially with a player like
det1cit into a 27-22 lead.
Cappie,'' said Foster, who
The key for the Scarlet coached Pondexter in 2003
Knights was the tough play on a USA Basketball World
of backup centers Rebecca Championship team for
Richman
and
Mariota · Young Women.
Theodoris. They used their
Ohio State, which was 4size and muscle to limit the of-17 from 3-point range;
,number of touches for ne~er threatened after that.
Davenport.
The Buckeyes hit two !'ate 3Down 39-30 with II :30 to pointers to make the game
play. Ohio State made a run, close.
Fos(er said the biggest
closing within two points
three times - the last was · problem for Ohio State. was
47-45 on a 3-pointer by the play of point guards
Marsci lla Packer with 6:0 I to Ashley Allen and Kim
play.
Wilburn, who combined for
Davenport had eight points 1-of-6 from the field and six
in the run. all in the lane.
turnovers.
"She did get 22 points, but
" It's .not conducive to winI:m sure it was the· hardest 22 ning basketball," he said.

Host SOLE Debut, Aa.

RUTLAND -A Rutland
man was arrested and charued
"'
with eight criminal counts
after a search . of his home
resulted in the contiscation of
drugs and stolen property.
Sheriff Robert E. Beeg le
said Martin "Marty'' Pierce,
44, of Beech Grove Road, was
arrested late Friday on three .
charges of felony tamfJ!!ri ng
with drugs, two counts of
r&lt;;cciving stolen property, trafticking or cultivation of mari-

.

BY BRI4N

J.

REEO

BRE.ED@MYDAILYSENTI NEL. COM

MIDDLEPORT - The
Middleport Pool may be
.,
opened to the public this summer if an engineering study .
deems the 50 year-old pool
struc turall y sound, Mayor
Sandy lannarelli said Monday
evenmg.
.
At last night's reg ular meeting.
lannarelli
told
Middleport Village Council
that
Flovd
Browne
Associate,. the village's engineering firm .. has recommended a Parkersburg, W.Va. engineer fur an inspection of the
pool ;,itc . Core samples will be
tested to determine if the
structUre is safe. and if it is
considered safe. it will be likely be re-opened. la.nnarelli
said.
An anonymous donor
offered funds for reP&lt;Jirs and
operations last yeaL and
lannarelli said those funds
would likely · be available
again this year to help the viiL&lt;rge offset the.cost of staffing
and operating the pool. After
donations were co nsidered . ·
the pool . operated at an estiBeth Sergent/photo
mated $3.000 loss in 2003, the
Licensed Massage Therapist Janice Haynes began ·practicing medical massage therapy in last year it was opened. The
Athens and rs now taking appoi~tments at the Meigs Senior Center. People of all ages may · pool was not opened last year
make an appointment , although those under 18 must be accompanied by an adult. . because a suitable manager
Medical massage therapy can help lower blood pressure, alleviate neck and back pain and could not be found after minor
generally reduce stress. Haynes is pictured with client John Bentley on the heated table repairs were completed . .
used during the massages.
Mountaineer scrubbers
· An increase in traffic from
labore rs working on the
instal tat ion of scrubbers at the
AEP Mountaineer Plant in
New Haven. W.Va. could
cause some headaches in the ·
Sheriff Robert village, an AEP official said
Beegle, .left.
last night.
and Deputy
Chris Long, environmental
Rick Smith
engin'eer of American Electric
are pictured
Power' s Mountaineer Plant
with a stolen
discussed new environmental
Masseycontrols planned for the pl~nt
Ferguson trac- this year.
tor recovered
. The new scrubber system is
during a
designed to remove sulfur
weekend raid
dioxide emi"ions from the
of a Rutland
plunt. u~ing linu~q one to make
residence.
a slurry. which is then turned
Drugs and evi- into gyp,um. Con~tructioh of
dence of drug new crwironmemal contro ls
will begin th i' year with a new
trafficking '
I .000- fuot stack and comple· also were
tion
and operation are planned
seized.
·
for
January.
2007 .
Brien J .
Reed/photo
AEP plan' to improve and
expand a lnndfill already
near
. the
operatin g
'

Ple•se see Pool, AS

Pie•se see R•kl. A5

WednesdoyMarch 30th is

National
Doctors' .Day
Holzer Medical Center salutes our physicia~s on this special
day, recognizing their role in caring for the sick, advancing
.medicar knowledge, and promoting good health.
Be sure to thank
on their
dayl

The Daily Sentinel

2·
•

•

MEDICAL CENTER

"Hca lthcarc in Your
Own Bad?yard"
www .holzer.org

•

�•

The Daily Sentinel

WoRLD

PageA2
Tuesday, March

29, 2005

Community Calendar

AU1HORI'HES PRED1l1' UP TO 2,000 DEAD AFfER MAJOR EARTHQUAKE OFF INDONESIA
· BY MICHAEL CASEY

tents and homes. Many were
crying and jumping into cars
Second quake
and onto motorbikes and pediBANDA ACEH, Indonesia cabs .to head for higher
almost • powerful
·_ A powerful earthquake ground. Two women wearing
The IICCll1d pcMatA a.flquake
struck off Indonesia's west prayer shaw ls and sarongs
In~ OYWthfiiiiiTIOiilhiiD Rial .
coast fate Monday, killing grabbed a fence to steady ' the W88l CCMt d lndolllliaamong the 51n:1ngeat quakes ot
scores of people whose homes themselves.
the pest century.
collapsed
on
them
and
spread"People
·
are
still
trauma1
i ng panic across the Indian tizcd, still scared. they are
"Lo~c""r~t'o~n'!_:__ _!llll~eon~'~ltu~lde~
Ocea. n . that another
killer
.
running
for
higher
ground,"
. h
191!0 Chile
tsunami was on t e way. said Feri , it 24-year-old aid
~~~~·!II•~
Indonesi a\ · vice president volunteer who goes by one
~
1 Pmc:eWIIImSound.~
predicted up to 2.000 deaths. name.
u
Fears of a second tsunami
In Sri Lanka, warning sirens 1957 Andrunof tllandl, Alcatastrophe · in just over three blared along the island
9.1
months eased within hours , as nation' s east coast , and
Chandrika · 21104 Oil'
officials in countries at risk President
··~~~of~ni-;~•imis;uim~a~t.au
reported their coasts clear of Kumaratunga urged people to
Bavtel Unlan"
the type of earthyuake- evacuate immediately to high- 111112
8.0
spawned waves that ravaged a er ground . .
11108
Olllheof
Falacto.:
doz~n counrnes m Asta and · " It . was like reliving the
8.8
· same horror of three .months
Africa on Dec. 26.
2IICIIi
Almost all the deaths report- ago," said Fatheena Faleel.
Dfn&amp;MIIan lu.,...
ed alter the 8.7-magnnu~e who tled her home with her
1.7
qu;Jke were on lnd ones 1a s three ·children after seeing the
1!1115 Rat Iolande, Aluka
.
8.7
Nms 1sland. ~ popular ~ urf~ng warning on te levision. .
spot ott Sumatra tsland s ."est
In Malaysia. residents tled
1950 AIMm-Tibat
co.ast and close to the epicen- their shakinu apartments ;ind
i ii!!JII!II••• s:ll
(er. ~~hce were pullmg chtl- hotel s.
e
·-dren ~ bodtes out of the rub" I was oettin o readv for bed, NumberofHrthquaU.
.b.le at collapsed houses._ and a am.! s udd~nly. the roo"m started
magnitUde 7.0 or greet8r,
!tre was reportedly ragmg m shaking," said Jessie Chong. a . 1900m2003
..
01~c town . .
.
. .. resrdent of the largest city,
. It 1s pred1cted - and ·rt ' Kuala Lumpur. " I thought I
still a rougl~ esqrnate -. that. was hallucinaiing at first. ·but
the numbers ot dead may b~ then· 1 heard nw 11eighbors
between . LOOO and 2,000, screamino and running out." : 20
15
V1ce Pres1d~llt Jusuf Kalla
The qtfake. was felt as far
10
told the . el-Shmta radto sta- away as Singapore and the
5
1986:8
t10n. saymg the estimate was Thai capital. Bangkok, more
0
'1900 1920 194D 1960 ~ 2000
based on d!l assessment ot than 435 miles from the epice t
damage to butldtngs. .
Oh
·
· d A
n er.
. SOURCE: u.S. ~~~ &amp;.orwov AP
. l er ~~umates vane · .
Nias island was badly hit on
ill'd theb town ot Dec. 26 , when a·t leas t 3·40 resdistnct othc1al
. 11. 531
.
G
300
unungsno
a out . idents were killed and 10,000 deputy spokesman Adam
r~Jo dt~d . rerei ·0 wh!~e were left homeless.
Ereli said U.S. diplomatic
i~ter n~~:~ \~~~;~~a \ 0~ ':~d The d~vastation there from missions in Asia and Africa
?OO
yuake
- h·ad d.IC d . •
bMondays
f
. appeared to went into "battle mode" to
Two people were also killed e ar wo~se. . .
.
reopond quickly to any continin Sri Lanka during a panicky
Ind~nestan Ptestdent Susllo gency. Authorities worldwide ·
evacuation from the coast in a Bambang ' Yudhoyono smd had been slow to recognize
Tamil rebel-held area, author- early Tuesda~ he would fly to the magnitude of the Dec. 26
ities said.
the stncken tsland to assess disaster, which killed at least
. The U.S. Geological Survey. the damage for htmself. . . 17'5 ,000 people in 12 Indian
said the quake struck abou t 19 . In the town of Gunun~st.toh : Ocean nations and left another ·
miles under the seabed, some about 70 p_ercent of buildmgs I06,000 missing.
Preliminary
indications
155 miles south-southeast of cullaps~.d m the market dtsBanda Aceh. the capital of tn.~t. otltctal s satd.
. . . were that energy from
AP Photo
Aceh province on Sumatra . Hundreds, ot b,Utldm~s . Monday's quake might be
island. It was centered just have bcen.. damag~d or h!\e directed toward the southwest, Residents gather at a government apartment area after flee high-rise apartment buildings .
. smd, A, us said Frank Gonzalez, an aftertrem6rs were felt throughout peninsular Malaysia's'west coast, Tuesday.
II 0 miles southeast of collap,ed.,
December's 9.0-magnitude Mendrota, the Islands de)Juty oceanographer with
the
temblor _ the world's most dtstrtct head. He. told el-Shmta National Oceanographic and
.
radto statton that at ..least 296 Atmospheric Administration ·
powerful in 40 years.
Monday's wallop. althoug h people . had
dted
in in Seattle.
very powerful , was but a frac- Gunungsnoh.
The only tsunami reported
The MISNA miSSiOnary was a small one- 10 inches
tion of the earlier quake. In
explosive power. December's news agency m Rome, Italy, - at the Cocos lsll)nds, 1,400
quake was equal to I00 mil" reported that a huge fire was miles west of Australia. Hours
lion ,pounds of TNT; it caused ragmg . early Tuesday .m later, Australian meterologists
the seabed to spring up as Gunungsttoh.
reported a tsunami-caused
"From the window I see wave of I0 to 20 inches hitting
much as 60 feet.
Terrified of a disaster of very high flames," MISNA to the north and south of the
equal proportions, sirens quoted Father Raymond Laia Western Australia state capital
sounded throughout the as saymg by telephone ~?out Perth. No damage was reportregion as authorities issued two mtles from the town. The ed in either area.
Officials said after the
tsunami alerts for six coun- town ts completely destroyed.
tries after the quake struck at I repeat, the town is complete- . December disaster 'that a
II :06 p.m. as many people ly destroyed."_
...
tsunami early warning system
were sleeping.
. Anot~et pollee ofhcer, who could have saved many lives.
. Women clutching children tdenttfled
himself
as. Such a system exists in· the
ran into the darkened streets Namggolan, satd rescuers Pacific but has not been estabof Banda . Aceh , crying and . were trying to pull people out . lished in the Indian Ocean.
chanting "Allahu Akbar." or of the rubble, and that many Japan and the United States
"God is Great." Others were st1ll pamckmg because had planned to start·providing
.tsunami warnings to countries
grabbed small bags of·clothes of se.ve;al aftershocks. .
and tled their tents and homes
"We are busy now trymg to around the Indian Ocean this.
for higher ground.
pull people or bodies of chi!- month as a stopgap measure
Another man rushed instead dren from the collapsed build- .until the region establishes its
to the local mosque. sayi ng ing," said Nainggolan, who own alert system.
·
"Where can I go, you can't like many lndmiesians uses
But for residents of ravaged
outrun a tsunami ."
only one name. "It is very Banda Aceh, no warning sysThe ·quake lasted two min- hard al so because there is no 'tem was needed after they felt
utes and briefly cut electricity power."
.
the quake and headed for
in Banda. Ace h. Thousands
"The situation here is really higher ground.
poured into the streets, where messy," he said. "Aftershocks
At the city's biggest refugee
flickerin g campfires and keep hitting every half hour camp, a voice ori loudspeaker
motorbike and car head.lights making thousands of people later announced that there was
provided the only lighting.
tlee their homes and afraid to no · tsunami. This time, the
People grabbed small bags go horne."
Noice said, people could
; of clothes as they tled their
U.S. State Department return to their tents.

Clubs and
organizations

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Wednesday, March 30
MIDD!:.EPORT - · The
Middleport Literary Club will
.meet .at 2 p.m at the Pomeroy
Library. Sara Owen will
review "The Buffalo Soldier"
by Chris Bohjalian.

the--

•

Kam-.

Olrlhe--

*

POMEROY
- · . Connie
Gilkey reviewed the . novel
·•ohio Angels" by Harriett
Scott Chessman published in
2002 at a recent meeting of
the Middleport Literary Club
held at the Pomeroy Library.
Chessman has been a professor of English .and taught
literature and creative writing
·at Yale . and at Wesleyan
University. She has written
· several books, including a
book about the · . author
Gertrude Stein entitled 'The
Public Is ' Invited to Dance"
as well as another earlier
noveL She is the .co-editor of
the Library of America'·s two
volumes on the writings of
G,ertrude Stein.
Gilkey said the "Ohio
Angels" i's the story of Hallie
Greaves, who has returned to
her childhood home in Ohio
to help her father care for her
mother Virginia. As long as
Hallie · can remember, her
mother has. been " low" J)m
now, for. over a ,month, she
has been staying in her bedroom and Hallie's father is
. unable to deal with her.
Virginia responds to her husband bitterly. if at all.
The story revolves ·around
Hallie who as a child was
ashamed that her mother was
not like other mothers, espe-

•

VATICAN CITY (AP) · Pope John Paul II skipped
anoth.e r beloved tradition
·Monday - . a post-Easter
blessing from his window ending the Easter holiday as
silently as he began it.
A few hundred people had
gathered in St. Peter 's Square
in .hopes that John Paul
would appear as he has on
each Easter Monday of his
26-year pontificate. and
Vatican TV cameras zoorned
in on his third-tloor window
around noon.
But the curtains remained
closed as the 84- year-old
pope continued recovering
from Feb. 24 surgery to insert
a tube in his throat to help
him breathe.
"Despite the regret, we're
happy because it 's good that
he· continues his convalescence wit hout strain,'' said
the Rev. Federico Lombardi,
head of programming at
Radi o Vatican .
John Paul 's appearance on
E::t,.,fPr ·l\\11nrt:.w -

tried but failed to speak ·beyond the physical ability to
was still on the minds of communicate - spoke to us
many at the Vatican, a dra- . perhaps as never before the
matic end to a Holy We.ek in universal language of love," ·
which the pope's suffering Lombardi .said. "For us it was
was clearly evident.
enough. We understood what
John Paul had come to his the pope wanted to say, and
studio window at the end of how much he wanted to bless
Easter Mass to bless the tens us."
of thousands of people in the . John Paul last spoke to the
square below. Aides readied a public on March 13, shortly
microphone , and he tapped it before he was discharged
as if preparing to speak. But from the hospital for a sec- ·
after utt.ering a few unintelli - ond Jime ·in a month. In addigible sounds, he made the tion to the breathing tube,
sign of the cross with his John Paul suffers from
hand and the microphone was Parkinson 's disease, which
.
makes it difficult for him to
taken away. ·
· Many in the crowd cried talk .
and others quietly applauded
He ·followed the Holy
in appreciation of the pope 's· Weel ceremonies by televiefforts to speak to them.
. · sian from his apartment. He
Vatican. Radio said Monday also appeared via live video
it would be difficult to ever hookup to the faithful markforget the pope's pained ing Good Friday at Rome's
"Urbi et Orbi'' bless ing and Colosseum. But he never
that it would " remain in the spoke. The pope has not con· hi sto ry of the church and firined public appearances for
humanity."
· several months, and Vatican
"This silence - full of officials have stressed that
whe n he emotion and desire to spe'!k this is a time of recovery.

.

.

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dar card sent to them.
Refreshments were served
by Mary Jo Buckley and
Pastor Jane Beatie preceding
a fellowship meeting. Mary
Jo Barringer presided with
officers" reports being given.
It was noted that II 0 friendship calls had been· made
over the past two months.
A prayer calendar card was
signed for Kathleen Wilson
in Alaska, who serves ' With
the Evangelism/Church communi!~ Development there.
Pastor ·Beattie reported on

at

the
upcoming
United
Nations seminar in new York
City to be held Sept. 24-0ct.
L Thelma Henderson gave
the mlSliion report from
Response
magazine
on
"women and food." The
group discussed the possibility of doing a friendship
qui It to raise money for a
special project.
Mary Jo Barringer have ·
the Easter program "In God
We Are One." The next
meeting will be held April
12.

Husband's hostility strains marriageto breakingpoint

I

.

Church events

'

•

*

District spring rally plans discussed

3 p.m., Meigs County Health
CHESTER
. Plans for at the rally. · Transportation changed from 7 to 7::10
Department Bring shot reconls, the spring rally of the there was di sc ussed. The p.m. Refreshments using ·a
medical cards if applicable. Daughters of America on rally starts at 9:30 a. m.
St. Pat rick's Day theme
Saturday, April2
Children
must
be
accompanied
by
·
April
23
at
Portsmouth
Ruth Smith . presided at were served by Charlotte
MIDDLEPORT-A special
paremorlegalguardian.A$5donawere
discussed
at
a
recent
the
meeting opening with a Grant and Julie Fleming .
service will be held at 7 p.m .
meeting
of
the
Past
countion
accepted
but
not
required
r.eading
of scripture from Barbara Sargen t and ln7y
Saturday .at tbe Hobson
cilors
club
of
Chester
Club
1.0.
The pledge to. the Newell had games and Joor
Mark
. Christian Fellowship Church
at
the
Mas'Onic
323,
held
American tlag was given prizes were wo n by Doris
Friday,Aprill
at Hobson. The service will be
building
in
Chester.
and
the Lord's prayer given Grueser. and Eichinge r. ·
REEDSVILLE.Customer
·
a part of World Mission
for
the
rally
will
Practice
in
uni
son. For roll · call
Others attending were
Appreciation
Day.
at
Reedsville
Outreach Ministries and a
be.
held
.
at
the
.
April
5
member
s
named
.
their
Thelma While. Laura Mae
donation will be taken to go Post Office. Refreshr:nents.
meeting
of
the
lodge.
favorite
spnng
flower.
Nice, Dorot hy Mvcrs. Opal
. toward building a church in
·
asked
to
Members
were
Officers'
reports
were
given
Hollon.
Delores Wolfe. Jean
Malawi. Africa. Singing will
·
attend
that
meeting
and
also
by
Esther
Smith
and
Opal
Welsh.
Mar v K . Ho lt er.
'
.
be Earthen Vessels, Together
to
being
getting
their
gifts
Eichi
nge
r.
Mary Jo Ba.rnngc r. anti . a .
for Christ, and·Proclaim.
Thursday, March .30
ready for the sp~cial tables
Meeting
were vi sitor. Sandy White.
time s
MIDDEPORT Freda
Edwards will observe her92nd
birthday on Thursday, March
Thesday, March 29
30. Cards may be sent to her at
POMEROY - Childhood 677 South Fourth Ave. ,
ATHENS
-Southern
immuniZation clinic, 9-11 a.m., 1- Middleport, Ohio 45760.
Ohio Lady Entrepreneurs
hosted their first SOLE
Debut recently at the Ohio
Q
IQ
University Inn.
Brook Bolin of Rutland
cially her best friend Rose 's decades of pain, and the fam- won a grand door prize with a
mother. From Rose's mother, ily begin to return to normaL retail value of $282.
Reviews of this novel were
SOLE members participat- ·
Hallie received the nurturing
that her own mother was mixed. Publishers Weekly ing were Helen Sowards ,
Mary Kay; Sue Dewhurst, .
unable to give her. Now as said negatively that the end Main Street Jewelry; Tracy
an adult, Hallie turns once of the novel "was lost in a Joseph, Home and Garden
.Joy
Burdette,
again to her ftiend Rose for stew of flashbacks and Party;
friendship and stabi lity as dreams." The same critic Longaberger; Tish Wagner,
she struggles again with her .said the author showed the Weekenders U.S.A.; Beverly
mother's depression.
characters "with gentle intel- Smith,. Red Rocket Gallery ;
The two friends reconnect Iigence and the odd yet poet- Terri Blackwell, Southern
and share the memories of ic accuracy of ber prose."
Living at Home: Paula
their childhood: As she conGilkey said that readers Pickens, Creative Memories ;
fides in her friend and might have troub le with the Suzie Francis, BeautiControl:
attempts tq reach her mother. author's unconventional style Kathryn Norman, Watkins;
Hallie also examin~s her own of writing. particularly punc- Jeanette Arnold, Pampered
marriage and her inability to tuation, and an abruptly Chef; and Lynda Houck,
·
· 0 1- VIeW.
Stitchiil' by the Lake . .
have a child. Hallie's conver- Sh...
tfttng pomt
sations with her inother fail
After the review, members
SOLE's collective g·oal is
to make a connection and
b
II'
"Combining top quality merthey avoid real issues "and ~s~~~~~tl~f~~ c~~ey y ~~s~~~ chandise with exceptional
sidestep the f!Ctual problems, the)' had discussed with their customer service in a oneJust before Hallie is to
stop shopping experience."
return to her own home in own mothers, but had not.
Information is available by.
New York, Virginia attempts
The next meeting will ·be contacting Burdette, SOLE
suicide with an overdose of held at the Pomeroy Library . . president,
at
. (800)
.SubmiHed photo
sleeping pills. In the after- Nadine Qoebel will serve as · RINGJOY, or Dewhurst, sec- Brook Bolin was the winner of a $282 · grand door prize premath of the suicide attempt, hoste.ss and Sara ·owen will tetary/treasurer, at 742-8403. sented at the recent SOLE ·debut in .Athens .
Hallie inadvertently discov- review 'The Bu,ff~l&lt;i Soldier"
ers the cause of her mother's by Chns BohJahan. There
· will be a book exchange. In
depression.
Among other things she thetr book . exchanges, club
NELSONVILLE- Sherry
also discovers that her moth- memb!!rs brmg books. paperer had had a stillborn chiid backs; and magazines which (Johnson) and Shaun Mace of
www.mydallysentlnel;com
that Hallie ·never knew -about. are placed on a table and Nelsonville announce the
Finally, she and her mother then members may take birth of a daughter, Rebecca
Jo, on March 17 at O' I;!leness
talk abou.t the true issues and . those they wish to read.
Virginia reveals. the secrets
Gay Perrin was the host- Mem,orial Hospital in Athens.
that have caused .her the ess . .

· ALFRED
Spring
retreats for United Methodist
Women were imnounced at a.
recent meeting of the Alfred
UMW at the church.
A spiritual retreat will .be
held bv the W.O.C UMW
on April 2 in Columbus, and .
the Athens District retreat
will be on April 30 at The
· Plains Church.
Osie Mae Follrod passed
around a letter and li{erature
from
Birc hwood
Camp . in AI:\ska which
came . in to a prayer calen-

*

Pope skips post-Easter appearance

29, 2005

UMW hears about spring retreats

Istate

*

Tuesday, March

'
f
Oh.
A
I
Literary group hears review
nge s .

•

*

Friday, April!
POMEROY
- Meigs
County PERl Chapter 74 ,
noon luncheon at Meigs
County Senior Center with
program
. following:
Charles Riffle discussing
medications
and their
interaction s.

PageA3

BY THE BEND·

· The Daily Sentinel

· DEAR ABBY: Is it possible
· to marry someone for love .
and have it turn to what feels
like · hate over nothi'ng? (I
mean, I can't think of one
''big" thing that has gone
Dear
bad.)
Abby
My II 'year marriage is
about to end because of.- get
this - nothing! We have
three wonderful kids, 3, 6 and
9. I'd do anything 'for them.
which is why I'm still here.
are not suffering because of
Abby, when I wake up · in "nothing." You are under fullthe morning, it is without a ·scale assault by your passive"good morning." When I aggressive spouse. His refusal
enter a room from shopping, to discuss · what 's wrong
etc .. the reaction I. get from ensures· that whatever it is, it
my husband .is not a "hello,'' cannot be fixed. Please do not
but a sneer, and I'm not exag- continue to tolerate it ,
gerating. He says · "good- because your children will
night'' only if I say it first.
notice, if · they haven't
I take care cif the bills, the already, and mistake what's
kids and the house. I also going on for "normaL"
work outside 1he ho.rne. I
For your sake and for
never get any acknowledg- theirs, copy all of the !inanment for anything I do. There cial records and property
is a lot of tension all day long. records you can locate. Make
(You shou ld try walking sure no assets can be .hidden.
around the house with him .) I Then offer your husband a
am ready to do something choice: marriage counseling
tiut I don ' t know what. I or a divorce lawyer. You have
know the first step is talking, suffered enough.
and I have tried. His usual
DEAR ABBY: I am a 16. response is, "I'm acting this year-old girl who' has a thirdway because you did ii first!" degree black belt. When I was
Am I wrong to wartt a sin- 14,1 had a boyfriend who was
cere smile and someone who very abusive both physically
likes me and is happy at least and verbally, Back then, I didsome ofthe time? (Oh, he is a n't know how to handle him
wonderful person to everyone - even though I was a firstelse.) I feel really hated and degree . He. drilled into my
he won' t tell me why. What head that I was ugly, fat, and
now'! - SUFFERING IN good enough only for him . .
I finally broke it off. and I
WASHINGTON
DEAR SUFFERING: You have found a great guy who I

love a lot. . My problem is,
even though he says I'm
beautiful, I don:t believe him.
And that makes him sad. I
haven't believed any of the
guys that told me I'm pretty. I
know it's because of my abusive ·ex.
·
How do I make myself .
believe that I'm pretty and
finally make my new
boyfriend happy? - NEEDS
TO KNOW IN .I'LORIDA
DEAR
NEEDS
TO
KNOW: Perhaps understanding your ex- boyfriend's
behavior will help: Abusers
- and .lhat is what he' was use criticism and insults to
chip away at tlie self- esteem
of their victims · and make
them incapable of leaving.
You nailed ·it in your letter
when you said, " ... and good
enough only for him."
. The reason you have trou~
ble believing you're attractive
is that you're still feeling the
effect~ of the psychological
poison he spread. It has nothing to do with reality. If you
weren't ·attractive, the abuser
wou ldn "t have wanted you.
Remind yourself of it every
time you . put yourself down.
If that doesn 't work, you may
need counseling.

Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and was founded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write
Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069. .

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�.OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

·

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 t~e right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, March 29, the 88th day of 2005. There
are 277 days left in the year.
.
·
Today's Highlight in History: On March 29, 1973, the last
United States combat troops left South Vietnam, ending
America's direct military involvement in the Vietnam War.
On this date: . In 1638, Swedish colonists settled iri presentday Delaware.
·
In 1790, the lOth president of the United States, John Tyler,
was born in Charles City County, Va.
In 1847, victorious forces led by Gen .. Winfield Scott occupied the city of Vera Cruz after Mexican defenders capitulated.
In 1867, the Britisb Parliament passed the North America
Act to create the Dominion of Canada.
In 1943, World War TI meat, butter and cheese rationing began:
In 1951, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were convicted of conspiracy to commit espionage. (They were executed in June 1953.)
In 1962, Jack Paar hosted NBC's "Tonight" show for the
final time.
·
In 197l,Army Lt. William L. Calley Jr. was convicted of murdering at least 22 Vietnamese civilians in the My Lai massacre.
(Calley ended up spending three years under house arrest.)
In 1974, eight Ohio National Guardsmen were indicted on
charges.stemming from the shooting deaths of four students at
Kent State University..(The guardsmen were later acquitted.)
Ten years ago: The House of Representatives rejected, 227- ·
204, a constitutional amendment placing term limits on lawmakers. (The rejected proposal would have limited terms to
12 years 'in the House and Senate.)
·
Five years ago: President Clinton told a news conference he ·
was appalled when he first learned his campaign had taken ·
illegal foreign donations in 1996 - contributions. he called
both wrong and unneeded . A federal judge ruled that President
Clinton "committed a criminal violation of the Privacy Act"
by releasing personal letters to undermine the credibility of .
Kathleen Willey, one of his accusers.
One year ago: Massachusetts lawmakers approved a proposed constitutional amendment to -ban gay marriage and
legalize civil unions, sending the issue to the next legislative .
session. President Bush welcomed seven former Soviet-bloc
nations (Romania, Bulgaria, Slovakia, Lithuania, Slovenia,
Latvia and Estonia) into NATO during a White House ceremony. In a stinging rebuke, Secretary-General Kofi Annan
fired one top U.N. official and demoted another for security
failures leading to the Aug, . 19 bombing of the- U.N.'s
Baghdad headquarters that killed 22 people. At least 19 people were killed in a wave of terrorist violence irr Uzbekistan.
Today's Birthdays: Political commentator John McLaughlin
is 78. Author Judith Guest is 69 .. Former British Prime Minister
John Major is 62. Comedian Eric Idle is 62. Composer Vangelis
is 62. Actor Chris Lawford is 50. Olympic gymnast Kurt
Thomas is 49.•Actor Christopher Lambert is 48. Rock singer
Perry Farrell (Porno for Pyros; Jane's Addiction) is 46. Model
.Elle Macpherson is 42. Rock singer-musician John Popper
(Blues Traveler) is 38. Actress Lucy Lawless is 37. Couiury
singer Brady Seals is 36. Tennis player Jennifer Capriati is 29.
Thought for Today: "Tolerance always has limits- it cannot 'tolerate what is itself actively intolerant." -. Sidney
Hook, American philosopher and author.

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Tuesday, March 2c),

Tuesday, March

BV CHRISTOPHER HITCHENS

Probably a lot of the mis. understanding begins with
the word "neoconservative" itself. This was originally a teasing term ;
coined
by
Michael
Harrington to embarrass
his former .leftist friends.
(Harrington was the moral
and political leader of the
Democratic Socialists of
America: a force that it
would not be too rude or
crude to describe as a part
of "actually non"ex isting
socialism.") Harrington
mostly failed in his campaign to c.hange the world,
whereas th.e W'orst enemy
of the neocons would have
to say that they have succeeded somewhat in theirs.
When the left hears the
term "regime change," and
responds with anxious
whimpers about "destabilization," do we not detect
a hint of what Marxists call
negation? Who are the rad· '
icals here?
I was invited recently to
neocon· central in Chicago,
the Committee on Social
Thought, to discus.s the
question, and ended my
talk rather .lamely by citing
Hegel , who said that the
authenticity of a movement
;vas never decided until it
had underg·one a schism. l
looked forward, I said, to a
public fight among neocons on several questions,
from Israel to economics.
My host, professor Nathan
· Tarcov, has a near-perfect
Straussian pedigree (and a
picture of Leon Trotsky on
the wall oi· his office, to
which he drew my attention), but he remains a
skeptic on the Iraq war and
is disproof in himself of
the stupid idea of a Jewish
"cabal. " And the split came
sooner than I had thought,'
with the defection of many
senior neocons from the
editorial board of their his-

toric home at the National Washin gton in the early
Interest. It seems that the days of the Bush adminisforces of the Nixon Center tration. by telling the gung. have decided to preach a ho crowd not to forget the
of
the
new, unsentimental "real- suffering
ism" from that perch . Palestinians . He has spoCommenting on the row on ken quite clearly of linkage
the Doug Ireland Web site, between the demolition of
my old Nation and New Arab rejectionism and the
· Left Review comrade demolition of Jewish setNorman Birnbaum makes tlements. I can ' t exactly .
my point for me by prefer- say that I know the man.
ring the stolid pragmatism but on the occasions that I
of Nixon, Kissinger and - have met him I have been
Scowcroft to the Utopian very struck by the differschemes and dreams of the ence .between his manner
neocons. In such &lt;\ conser- and the amazing vol leys of
vative worldview, ·what's . obloquy and abuse that
the need for a left in the have been flung at hini .
(This is made easier, for
first place?
The position of Paul savants SLich as Maureen
Wolfowitz in this contest Dowd , by the fact that the
is rather harder to read first four letters of hi s surthan many people sup- name spell an animal that
pose . For one thing , he is is known in nursery
practically what we used rhymes to be big and bad.
to call a "Third Worlder." How satiri cal can one posHe has long had a close si bly get'?) The truth is ,
relationship with centrist he' s a bit bleeding heart for
in ·
the my taste, even though I
Democrats
Philippines , Malaysia and know some very tough
Indone sia, and though Kurdish and Iraqi and
centrist Democrats might lrl\nian and
Lebane se
not sound very exciting, antifascist militants who
they are an iinprovemenl would welcome him as a
on the democratic centra l- blood -brother. No shame in
ists of Tiananmen Square that, l think.
(loved by the Kissinger
For all this. I don't take
crowd) or the pseudo- it for grantd that the nomDemocrats
such
as ination for leadership of
Ferdinand Marcos or Gen. the World Bank is in the
Suharto, favored by the gift of the president of the
more Cold War neocons. United States. How and
Wolfowi.tz was one of the why does this come to be ?
first to go ashore in the Like many of the in stitu tsunami relief operation tions of the future United
-mounted by the U.S. Nations. the concept of a
Navy, an operation widely World
Bank
and
and rightly accounted a Intern ational
Monetary
'
major success. He prizes Fund (IMF) took
shape
his Asian contacts and the while World War II was
relationship with modefate still being fought. Keynes
Islam that they symbolize. made the first stab at a
On the excruciating so lution in 1942. with his
of Proposals
for
an.
question
Israel/Palestine, Wolfowitz Int er national
Clearing
is not at ail the "Likud" fan Union:
that his defamers portray.
"We. need a sy&gt;tem posHe almost ·went out of his sessed of an interni:!l stabi way to be jeered and hoot- lizin g mechanism , . by
ed at a pro-Israel rally il) which pressure is exercised

Obituaries

to

Services will b~ held at 11 a.m. on Thursday, March 31,
2005, at Fisher Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Officiating will be
WEIRTON, W.Va. -Edna Chasteen Pinnell , 86, of Weirton, Pastor John S/.vanson and burial will be in Carlton Cemetery.
may call on ,Wednesday, March 30, from 6 to 8 p.m. at
W.Va., and formerly of Middleport and Vinton, passed away . Friends
the
funeral
home . On-line condolences may be sent to
Monday, March 28, 2005, at the Brightwood Care Center in www.fisherfuneralhomes.com
Follansbee, W.Va.
·
She was born May 30, 1918, in Corbin, W.Va., daughter of
the late Noah and Mattie Gai,ld Chasteen.
·
She was a niember of the Victory Baptist Church and
Amencan Legton Aux1lmry Pn., t No. 1211 at Middleport.
LONG BOTTOM - Kimberly A. Harter. 49, Long Bottom ,
She was preceded m death by her husband, Howard Pinnell, passed away at 1:35 a.m. on Sunday, March 27, 2005 , at her
·on Jan. 10, 1994: a daughter, Brenda Pinnell: a great-grand- residence. ·
'
daughter; and four brothers and two sisters.
She was born on Feb. 12, i 956, in Circleville, the daughter
Edna is survived by five children, Howard E. Pinnell of of. the late Frank and Irene Toole Cahill . She was a busine~s
Weirton,. Jimmy L. Pinnell of Toronto, Ohio, Robert A. professional, having received her aassociate and bachelor of
(Vickie) Pinnell Df Toronto, Ohio, Shirley Roush of scie nce degrees in bu sine ss management from Urbana
Wittiachata, Kan ., and Linda E. (Tom) McCarthy of Havelock, College .
N.C.; 21 gran~children, several great-grandchildren l\nd greatShe is survived by her husband, Ronald E. Harter; her
great-grandchildren; and a sister, Dolores Straka of Toronto, daughter, Michelle Francis of Racine; two sons, Aaron Harter
Ohio.
.
of Racine and Ronald E. Hm1er of Ft. Hood , Tex. : a daughter,
Services will be 10 a.m. Thursday, March 31, 2005, in the Jennifer L. (Randy) Gibson of Columbus~ nine grandchildren:
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home at Vinton, with Pastor Jim . Chelsea Greeno, Tiffany Francis, Bubba Francis , Amber Ray,
·Keesee officiating. Burial wi ll follow in the Vinton Memorial Courtney Ray, Zachary Ray, Austin Gibson, Serena Hoy. and
Park. Friends may call at.the funeral home from 4 to 7 p.m. Elizabeth Harter: and a brother, Michael (Paula) Cahill of
Wednesday, March 30, 2005 .
' Grove City. .
She was greatly loved and will be sadly mis sed.
' Services will be held at 4 p.m . on Thursday, March 31, 2005,
at Cremeens Funeral Home · in Racine with Rev. Donald
Combs officiating. Cremation will follow.
GALLIPOLIS - James C. Wilburn ,
Friends may call an hour prior to the service.
ACE/COAL MINER, 73, of Gallipolis,
passed away at 5:26 p.m. Satmday, March
26, 2005, surrounded by family and friends.
He was born Dec. 24, 1931 , in Harlan, Ky.,
son of the late David and Massie Mitchell
POMEROY- Marjorie I. Kapple, 86, of 110 Maple S't..
Wilburn, and later a stepfather, Alfred Botts.
Pomeroy, passed away on Friday, March 25, 2005 , at
A resident of Gallipoli s since 1970, he
Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center in Pomeroy.
assisted in the construction of the James M.
She was born on Feb. 23 , 1919, in Pomeroy. daughter of
Gavin Power Plant as a welder.
Elza, Sr. and Nora Shepard Gilmore. She was a homemaker
He was also employed by Southern Ohio
and a member of Pomeroy Church of Christ.
·
Coal Co. in Meigs County for 21 years.
James 'c.
Surviving are a daughter, Phyllis Irene Kapple of Pomeroy;
He remained active in the United Mine
Wilburn
a ,~ister, Louise Gilmore of Pomeroy; nephews : Joe (Linda )
Workers Association (UMWA) as an organizer until health Gilmore of Walworth, Wise., Rick (Debbie) Gilmore of
issues arose.
'
Reedsville, Roger (Mary) Gilmore of Pomeroy, Mike (Debi)
He was a member of the M~sonic Lodge in Harlan, an active Gilmore of Rutland, and John and .Eddie Nelson of Pomeroy:
campaigning member of the local Democratic Party, a member . and several great nieces and great nephews.
of the UMWA with various locals throughout Ohio and
Besides her parents , she was preceded in death by her busKentucky, and a past member of the Ar9heologist Society.
band, Denver Kapple; a son, Dennis Kapple: a sister-in-law,
He. was an avidfisherman, conservationist, supporter of the .Flossie Nelson; and a brother and sister-in- law, Elza and
United States Marine Corps, coin, stamp and artifact collector, Evelyn Gilmore.
·
and was known as a man about town.
A graveside service will be held at a later date at Beech
He is survived by his wife of 42 years, Leigh Williams Grove Coemetery. There will be no ca lling hours.
Wilburn of Gallipolis: a daughter, Sandy (Bill) McCreedy of Arrangements are under the direction of Ewing Funeral Home
Gallipoli s; a stepson. Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lyons of Paintsville, in Pomeroy.
Ky.; a half-brother, Paul Botts of Wynyard, SK, Canada; three ·
stepgrandchildren. Mr. and Mrs. Adam Lyons of Paintsville.
and Andrea and Carrie Lyons of Paintsv.ille; and a great-grandchild, Audra Lyons.
GALLIPOLIS - Judith K. Layne Wood , 48, Gallipolis,
Services will be II a.m. Wednesday, March 30, 2005, at the
died
unexpectedly on Sunday, March 27, 2005, at her resiMcCoy-Moore Funeral Home Wetherholt Chapel in
dence.
Gallipoli s. with' Pastor Larry Drummond officiating. Burial
She was born Feb . S, 1957, in Cleveland, daughter of
will follow in the Dixon Cemetery at Paintsville. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 5 to 9 p.m. Tuesday, March 29, Dorothy L. Layne of Gallipolis and the late James W Layne.
Services will be held at I p.m. on Thursday, March 31,2005,
2005.
at Cremeens Funeral Chapel in Gallipolis with Rev. Ralph
Workman officiating. Burial will follow at O~io Valley
Memory Gardens.
Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. on Wednesday at the
1
POMEROY - lona Brickles, 80, Pomeroy, passed away on chape l.
March 27, 2005, at Scenic Hills Nursing Center in B.idwell.
She was born on May 23, 1924. in Ravenna, daughter of the
late John "Jack" Clark and Julie Eckert Clark. She was
employed in housekeeping at the former Veterans Memo~ial
Hospital. She was a member of the Pomeroy Nazare ne Church.
li1 addition to her parents, she was preceded by a sister,
Norma Brown, an brothers. Harold and Kenneth Clark
She is survived by daughters, Rheba (Charles) Hysell ()f
MASON, W.Va. -Freda Goodnite Wolf. 86. of Mason.
Arizona, Carolyn (Lonnie) Darst of Long Bottom, and Denise
W Va., died on Monday, March 28, 2005, at Pleasant Valley
(Terry) Rowe of Pomeroy; sons, Steve (Sue) Brickles of
Pomeroy and Bruce (Lorena) Brickles of Wilmington, Ohio: Nursing imd Rehabilitation Center in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Her husband, Olin · Wolf, preceded her in death.
grandchi ldren, Jeremy and Ryan Hysell, Stephanie Fife. David
A graveside funeral service will be held at l p.m. on
Ban~s , Kelsey Howell , Kaylee Rowe, Jeffery Brickl~s .
Thursday,
March 31, 2005. at Graham Cemetery with Rev.
Michael Brickles. Lindsey Brickles, and Kristen Brickles: 'nine
greai-grandchld ren. and sisters, Helen Clark of Ravenna, Ruth Sam Cale IV otTiciating.
(Curtis) Andrews of Indiana, a brother, John Clark, Ravenna,
Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m . on Wedne sd.ay at
and several nieces and nephew's.
Fogelsong-Tucker Funeral Home in Mason.

Kimberly A. Harter

mean

-.

Submitted photos
Bicycles, tricycles. and· vtagons were given away at the Easter
egg hunt held in Tuppers Plains Saturday. The winners were left
to right, front, Glenn Osborne. Branson Amos, Chonslyn Spaun.
and Haytee Knapp, and back, Gregory Barringer, Kat1e Ho lb rook,
Tyle r Neal. Jessica Queen, Kaitlyn Smith and. Noah Cremeans.

Judith wood

so meone who is. impatient
with· th e statu s quo.
(Christopher Hitchens is
a columnist for Vanity Fair
and a regular contributor
to Slate. His m ost recent
book is "Love. Povertr and
W{//:" He is also th e ciurhor
of "A Long Short War: Tlw
Postpon ed Liberarion of
Iraq and of' Blood, Clan
and Empire.")

lona Brickles

Deaths ·

Freda WoH

'
Deputies
reported that Pierce
was firing a gun out of his residence from the back door,
and
continued to do so after
from Page A1
deputies warned him to stop. ,
"Three
minutes
after
juana, persistent disorderly dep\1ties
left Pierce's properconduct and possession of ty. after warning him to stop
drug
parapernalia, and tiring the gun, we received
remains in the Southeastern another call from a neighbor,
Ohio . Regional Jail in who reported that he was conNelsonville.
tinuing to fire shots,:• Beegle
According to Beegle, said. "Deputies then returned
deputies were first cal led to to the. scene and conducted a
Pierce 's residence when a more thorough investigation."
neighbor n;ported hearing · When deputies returned,
gunshots from .his residence. they took their investigation

·into the residence. to determine if anyone else was in the
residence, Beegle said.
Investigating officers found
a female subject in the residence, ancl deputies observ~d .
a small amount of marijuana
and drug paraphefllalia on a
table in the home. They then ·
secured a search warrant,
Beegle said. and found prescription medication which
appeared to be packaged for
illegal sale, and I07 marijuana
plants in a growing room ·
above a garage next to the residence.

Deputies also seized a 2004
Massey-Ferguson tractor and
a 1992 Hornet camper, which
deputies discovered were
stolen after running the items'
serial number~ through the
NCIC database. Beegle said
the tractor had been reported
stolen in Marysville, ;,md the
camper reported stolen in
Sissonville, W.Va.
Beegle said two safes, 'containing cash and additional
evidence of drug trafficking,
also were recovered from the
property.

Wright expressed his Wish to
see Anderson condemn two
houses in the village, on~ on
Butternut Avenue and the
from Page A1
.
other on Lincoln Hill.
"We'll take a look at them,"
"good work" the Pomeroy Musser promised.
Street Department is making
Wright also inquired about
cleaning the river bank.
. the roof repair job at the
Sisson asked · Krautter to Pomeroy Municipal Building.
check on a clogged drain neat
"Looks good," Krautter
the
Meigs
. County said, adding that he had not
Courthouse.
witnessed any leaks .
Councilman ·.
·George
Councilwoman
Ruth

Spaun emphasized the "good
turnout" to the Community
Distress Block Grant meeting.
"It was encouraging to see
so many turn out," Musser
agreed.
Mu sser
than'ked
the
Pomeroy Fire Department for
bringing in more than 300
grant surveys filled out by .
Pomeroy
resident s and
informed council that Meigs
Local
Superintendent
William Buckley will be dis·

tributing them into the mail boxes of teachers who live in
Pomeroy.
Nearly 900 surveys h~e
been returned to the village at
this time.
Musser .calle.d the meeting
into executive session once.
citing personnel matters.
All members of council
were present for the meeting.
They were joined by Krautter
and Pomeroy Police Chief
Mark E. Proffitt.
·

Raid

Pomeroy

Pool
from Page A1
Mountaineer Plant to receive
the gypsum byprodu.cl. .
As many as 2,000 .people
could be working at the plant
during peak construction periods, in the spring of 2006 and
· fall of 2006. and that increase
in
traffic
will
affect
Middleport, Long said.
becau se laborers from the
Gallipoli s area wjll likely
travel through the village to
· get to the Mason County,

•

-----·- -·---------- -- - ·

II

•

Marjorie I. Kapple

sistent vegetative state. cracked. Not long after this
Thi s same judge has agonizing ordeal, she will'
del\ied a reque.s t for new die.
te sting and examinations
Complicit in thi s egreof Terri by independent gious denial to Terri of due
and qualified medical pro- proces s and equal protec-·
fessionals. As a doctor, this tion of the law has been the
i'roubles me . All the more American Civil Liberties
so when the attorney for Union. ' it correctly called
·Terri' s parents submitted unconstitutional
the
33 affidavits from (!actors Florida legislation pushed
and other medical profe s- through by Gov. Jeb Bush
sio nal s that Terri should be in 2003 to reinsert the
re -evaluated ." And a num - feeding tube becau se it
ber of them believe that, app lied to only one person.
with new tests and therapy,
But ever since , the
she may indeed improve .
ha s
supported
ACLU
Re sea rche rs support.ing Michael Schiavo's insisTerri
allege
Michael tence . on puttiflg Terri to
Schiavo has denied his death.
But it has not
wife , a Catholic, sacra- shown any awareness .of
ments (a n important rite in her husband 's blatant conthat religion). saying he flicts of interest - with
doesn't want her to choke such re sult s as his withon the Communion wafer drawal of therapy and
(his lawyer denie s thi s). reh abilitation from · her.
Yet he pr.e ssed for the However, the ACLU would
removal of her feeding insist thllt a prison death
tube. On . March
15. row inmate receive vastly
appearing on ABC- TV's more civil liberties than
"Nightline~' in a disgrace - Terri Schiavo has from the
fully one-sided accouAI of Florida courts.
·the case that should shame
As a Feb. 28 letter to the
Ted Koppel (who wasn't Washington Times from
on the -show but · was in John Sobieski asks: "Who's
charge) , Michael Schiavo ne.xt? Alzheimer's victims'
said that without the feed- The elderly in· nursing
ing tube, Terri " will drift homes' Will we be allowed
off to a nice little sleep and to do to people what is illeeventually pass on and be gal to do to dogs?"
·
with God."
The courts - and the
In dread fact , Terri faces ignorant coverage by most ·
a horrific death from dehy- of the media of this crucial
dration : In covering previ- case - have until now
ous cases when feedi.ng appallingly failed Terri
tubes have bee n removed, Sehiavo and the communiI've found out how terribly ty of the disabled :..
painful th is way of dyin g is
And wh.o knows how
for so meone .like Terri who may more irinocent victims
is not in a persistent vege- in the years ahead')
tative state and can feel:
Nat He111ajf is a nati(mBy the eighth day, without ally renowned authority 011
water, her liver, spleen , the Fint , Amendment ·and
kidney s. stomach , esopha- thf Bil! nf Rights and
.gu .s, longue and ,. eyeba ll\ · author of sel'eral books,
will swell and begin to i11cluding "Tire War on the
crack .
Bill (~( Rights and the
All of her body 's organs Gathering
Resiwance ..
- by her ninth or lOth day ( Seven
Stories
Press,
will have sp lit and 2003).

•

TUPPERS PLAINS - The overcast skie1. and muddy
ground could not keep more than 300 children from attending
the Tuppers Plains Fire Department \ Secoml Annual Ea,ter •
Egg Hunt Saturday .
The event was co-1ponsored by the Amazing Grace.
Community Church . The children humed fur. and found . over
9,000 colored plastic egg filled with candy and pri1.cs.
Bicycles. tricycles . and wagon s were given out as pri1.es. as
were savings bonds. E:bter baskets and li ve bunnie&gt; .
"Al l of the kids found at leN 15 to 20 Ct!gs ;mu they all
were smiling. Thi .1 is just on e w,ay our department is trying to
. reach out to the community and ,ay Thank you· fo r all the
support· ymr show us." sa id Turpers Plain s Fire Chief Je ff
Newell.
Another member of the fire departmen l was overheard commenting that there were so many eggs that the younger children would rill the ir basket. dump .it nut. and gi1 try to fino
more.
Hot dogs and sloppy joes. cookies and pop were served. In
addition to the ·lllany children. more than 200 adults were
there makin g it one of the largest gatherings ever at a 1pecial
event in the .community.
Plans are already under way for next year' I Eillter eg.g hunt.
and based on the number unending thi s year the ex pectation i'
for an even larger crowd next year. ·

James C•.Wilburn

•Judicial barbari~m may end in horrific death
. Florida Circuit Court
Judge George Greer ha s
again ordered the removal
of
41-year-old
Terri
Schiavo 's feeding tube. As ·
of this writing, attempts by
Nat
the
Republican
Hentoff
Congressional leadership
and some Democrats are
being made to save her,
through the courts, but the
odds are long. If she dies' of
She
has
not
been
dehydration and starvation, attached to any machines
this grave injustice can - on ly to a small feeding
affect the rights of many tube by which she is fed
disabled Americans who do three times a day.
not have . clearly written
The primary judge in her
directives as to their treat- case, George Greer, has
ment. when they can no steadfast ly found ''clear
longer speak their wishes.
and con'!incing ev.idence"
The fundamental issue in to support the contention
Terri's case is disability of her husband and
rights .- not the right to . guardian ,
Michael
die. Throughout all the Schiavo, that 'before she
extensive media coverage ·coll apsed in 1990, she said
of the case, there has been she would not want to cononly slight mention- usu- tinue to live in the state
ally none at all - that she's been in for ' IS years.
nearly every major disabil - The only source for this
ity rights organi:~;ation has claim is Michael Schiavo
filed legal bri.efs to prevent and two of his relative s.
what they and I regard as However, one ·of Terri 's
judicial
murder.
The best
friends, · Diane
protests are not only from Christine Meyer, has testipro-rifers and the Christian fied in court that Terri told
Right.
her forcefully she would,
· Schiavo who col- indeed, want to live if she
lapsed in 1990 from what 'c ould no longer express
may have been a potassium her wishes. Judge Greer
.imbalance that temporarily discounted the testimony.
stopped her heart and cut·
As to Michael Schiavo's
oxygen to ber brain - has credibility, he has long
never been comatose, brain been living with another
dead or in a persistent veg- woman, with whom he 's
e.tative state (despite what had two children. He has
some physicians have stat- forbidden therapy or rehaed and others have bilitation for Terri since
denied) . She is responsive 1991, or any further test&gt;
not · only .to her parents, since 1993. Terri has never
brother and sister, but also even had an MRI or PET
when a new lawyer comes scan, let alone a complete
into the room - she turns, neurological examination.
as she hears an unfamiliar As Republican majority
voice. I have statements leader, Dr. Bill Frist, who
from people who have seen has had experience with
her and whose credibility I disabled patients, said of
have reason to trust. as to Judge George Greer on the
her unmistakable respon- Senate floor:
" A Florida judge has
siveness beyond · mere
ruled that Te.r.~i is in a perreflexes.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Easter egg hunt

Edna Chasteen Pinnell

on any co untry whose balance of payments with the
rest of the world is departing from equilibrium in
either . direction, · so as to
· prevent · movements which
must create for its neighbors an equal but opposite
want of balance."
This essay, cited in my
book
"International
Territory: .The United
Nations
!945-1995"
(Verso. 1994), provided the '
framework of the Bretton
Woods agreement · and the
eventual estab li shment of a
· World Bank in the first
place. It was Keynes :
belief that the bank and the
IMF should be responsible
to the United Nations. That
was idealistic, but then so
was the whole design.
Even so, it wasn'·t for some
time that th e bank and the
fund
surreptitiously
migrated . to Washington
and became wards of a
.
superpower.
Now even the supreme
and magnificent United
Stines is hostage to debt s
held by others, while poor
cOLintries ·are mired in an
even worse debt trap . arid
the U.N. bur!!aucracy is a
swe ltering, corrupt banana
republic in it s own right.
Who can'guess the way out
of th ese dilemmas ' But
with the Wolfowitz and
even the John Bolton nomInation to the United
Nations, the Bush administration retains its capacity
tQ startle. mainly because it
has redefined the lazy term
''conservative'·

w\vw .mydailysentinel.com

29, 2005

'

2005

·That bleeding heart Wo!foivitz

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

PageA4

Winners of savings bonds and Easter baskets at the egg hur\t
in Tuppers Plains were front. Wil liam Oldaker. Hamah Sharp.
Dylan Swatzel , Allison Atkinson . Ronald Lavender: 'and back .
Owen Johnson (held by mother), Anna Anderson. and · Knsten
·Prince.

More than 300 children braved cool weather and muddy field
to take part in the Tuppers Plains Easter egg hunt Saturday.

PET PADDIN'G
All style• or carpet are Included:
BERBER CARPET, SAXONY CARPET,
TRACKLESS CARPET, SHAG CARPET,LEVEL
LOOP CARPET and SCULPTURED CARPET.
No enra cbarge for -'rilll fumlture
01" removt111 old carpet.

Therapy

W.Va. plant. Long alld others
Council als6:
from Mountaineer have made
• Approved a one-year contheir presentation at village tract with Verizon for DSL
from Page A1
council and other meetings · Internet connection service at
throughout the area. ·
$39.95 per month. with
Other business
robes and is then wrapped in
John Tillis of Hamilton Council Pre sident Stephen a concealing sheet.
·Street expressed his concern Houchins voting in opposiHaynes uses a heated table
that low-income housing in tion .
for her form of medical masthe Middleport High School
• Approved payment of bills sage therapy at the Senior
building would affect proper- in the amount of$20,591 .99.
Center. Among other areas.
ty valuation in the area.
Present were lannarelli. she is trained in sport' maslannarelli said the apartment Council members Houchins, sage and compassionate
complex The Legends, Inc.
touch that is performed on
hopes to build on the si te Roger Manley, Kathy Scott, the critically ill and dying.
would t.e open to anyone. not Bob Robinson, Laurie Reed · ' "Touch is an ancient form
only those approved for and Jeff Peckham, and Fiscal of communication and therapy." Haynes added .
. Officer Susan Baker.
Section 8 housirig.

CaU us or stop in.
We'll .come to rour Jao•e and meuure
for a free no obllpdon quote.

'
Pomeroy, OH • 992·3671

�•

The Daily Sentinel

PageA6

NATION

Tuesday, March 29,

2005

Two astronauts complete spacewalk work justbefore .station drifts and rolls -

INSIDE

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

.

Rio Grande ·roundup, Page B2
Bogut headed for N8A draft, Page 82
WVU declaws Kentucky In WNIT, Page 82
Funk wins Play"rs champion, Page 86

BY MARCIA DUNN

watch over the big spinning electricity and certain compowheel, which appeared to be nents do not become overworking fine later in the day. heated from exposure to the
CAPE CANAVERAL, Flu, Besides the gyroscope that sun.
- The two . space station shut down two weeks ago.
The spacewalkers ignored
astronauts installed antennas another broke three years ago. the recent problem that
and released a baby Sputnik
Laboring 220 miles above knocked out the gyroscope;
during a spacewalk Monda~, ·Earth, ·Commander Leroy visiting shuttle astronauts will
completing the work just Chiao ·and his Russian crew- tackle that repair job in two
before the orbiting outposi mate, s ·aliz-han Sharipov. · months.
drifted and rolled slightly plugged in four antennas for a
The two station residents
. because of overloaded gyro- new type of cargo carrier due have spent the past several
scopes.
·
to tly ·neKt yeaL They also weeks dea)ing with an assortThe astronauts were in no released a 1-foot-long, tt ·- ment of breakdowns, includdanger, and ·the slow roll pound
satellite
called ing an oKygen generator that
which lasted just 17 minutes Nanosputnik, desig~ed for still is not working. Over the
- was not unexpected. ln. experimental maneuvering by weekend. they replaced a
fact. NASA said the space sta- ground controllers.
. pump panel that is part of a
tion held steady longer than
During the spacewalk, they critical cooling system.
anticipated.
left the space station empty.
NASA hopes to launc h
For reasons that are not With the shuttle lleet ground- Discovery to the space station
entirely clear to NASA, the ed since the 2003 Columbia in mid-May. Technicians had
space station has tended to catastrophe, the space station trouble aligning the shuttle
drift during spacewalks over has been home to only two and its transporter Monday for
the past year or so. The space astronauts at a time , instead of the big move from the hangar
agency thought the problem the usual three. ·
to the Vehicle Assembly
might be even worse this time·,
Chiao and Sharipov hustled Building, where the booster
because one of the gyroscopes through their work and rockets and redesigned fuel
that keep the orbiting outpost wrapped everything up more tank are attached: The move
·stable and pointed in the right than an hour early, despite was resc heduled for Tuesday.
AP Photo
direction stopped working extra safety precautions.
two weeks ago,
NASA . and the Russian
U.S, station com.mander Leroy Chiao installs one of three planned space·tC&gt;-'space communic&lt;t
On the Net:
But the space st&lt;ttion held Space Agency instituted the
tions antenna on the exterior of the Zvezda module of the International SP.ace station during a
NASA: . .
steady until the very end of extra measures to a.void a
·
h rrp: 1/spac~/7 i gllT.IWSCt go•• televised spacewalk Monday.
the 4 I /4-hour spacewalk, repeat of the problem that
when it went into a partial, happened during the men's
slow-motion cartwheel. The spacewalk
in
Janua ry.
drift lasted far less than the Because of a miscommunication during that outing, Chiao
three hours expected.
Flight controll ers could got too close .to the firing
have prevented this so-called thrusters. ·This time. the
free drift by immediately fir- thmslers, which fire automatiing the station's thru sters·. but cally when the space station
waited to .do so until the tips out of balance, were disspacewalkers were out of the abled for the astronauts' safeway, rather than risk contami-· ty,
nating their spacesuits with
Engineers have yet to iden· toxic rocket fue I.
tify the mysterious force that
Right after the spacewalk, ·causes the space station to tilt
one of the two good ·.gyro- during spacewalks. The space
scopes exhibited a bdef but station needs to point in the
unusually strong vibration. right direction so that its solar
Engineers were keeping close panels continue generating .
AP AEROSPACE WRITER

R
·&amp;l
·v .
0 00

Prescription
Oxygen

Deputies arrest Bible-toting,
heavily armed motorist on
mission to ·help Indian children
BY JIM SUHR
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

ST LOUIS (AP) - A
man dressed like an oldtime pioneer and parked
along Interstate 70 puzzled
deputies with his claim that
he was headed to South
' Dakota with Bibles and
"supplies" · for American
Indian children.
Then the deputies noticed
a smell of marijuana as the
man argued with them, and
they searched his vehicle
and found . a staggering
arsenal , including loaded

with military"style boots,
cargo
pants
and · an
American Indian vest. "I've
he3.rd him described as
looking · like a frontiersman
or pioneer: that's what he
was dressed as," McGuire
'd
SaJ .
The loaded tirearms were
within easy reach in nearly
every direction, McGuire
said, 'The placement indicates to us that he . was
well-prepared to handle any
type of confrontation or
oppoSition," he said.
- John W, Hill, 46 • of High
VieW; W.Va., was charged
with possession of a loaded
firearm while intoxicated,

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· pistols and an assault rifle
with a 3D-round clip and a
bullet in the chamber.
A · double-edged . knife. plus two counts of drug
with an 8-inch blade was possession alleging he had
in· the sun visor above the methamphetamines
and
man's head, and a loaded cocaine, St. Charles County
two-shot Colt · Derringer Prosecutor Jack Banas said
pistol was in his pocket, Monqay. All of the counts
authorities say, Searchers are fblonies, with each dmg
also ·s eized about 400 charge carrying a possible
seven years behind bars .
rounds of ammunition,
. "He said it was all selfHill was freed Friday on
protection and that it's dan- $20,000 bail. Banas said
gerous out west," St. more charges were possible
Charles Sheriff's Lt. Craig ·depending on reports from
McGuire
sai~
of investigators_
. Thursday's traffic stop that
A woman who answered
authorities said also uncov- the telephone Friday at
ered an array of drugs, Hill's home said "we have
" It's kind of bizarre, but no comment, sir" and hung ·
it's all also kind of sober- up. There was no response
ing,"
to a call seeking comment
The man was shirtless Monday,

01',,

·•zt••
Mo,

..

40 with today's low of 39
occurring around I :OOam.
Skies will be mostly clear
with 5 MPH winds from the
southeast
Wednesday, March 30
Morning (7 a.m,-Noon)
Temperatures will rise
from 43 to 68 by late this
morning. Skies will be sunny
to mostly sunny with 5 to I0
MPH winds from the southeast turning from the south
as the morning progresses,
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
.
Temperatures will rise
from 72 early this afternoon
to 76 by 3:00pm then drop
down to 73 late afternoon.
Skies will be sunny with I0
to 15 MPH winds from the
south.

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Wellston at Gallla Academy, ~:30 p.m.
, South Gallia at Southern, 4:30p.m.
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Wellston at Gadia Academy, 4:30 p.m.
South Gallla at Southern, 4:30p.m.

wednttday'l u•me•
lallbatl
Gallla Academy at Athens, 4:30p.m.
Meigs at Vinton County, 4:30 p.m.

ll'imbla at Eastern. 4:30p.m.
Federal Hocking at Southern, 4:30

p.m.
Softball
A.thens at Gallla Academy, 4:30p.m.

· Vintoo County at Mei~JS, 4:30p.m.
Trimble at Eastern, 4:30p.m.
Federal Hocking at Southern, 4:30

J:l.m.
· Fairview (KY) al Soulh Gallla, S p.m.

Tllu,.ctay'a·
lallball
lronlon at Gallla Academy, 4:30p.m.
River Valley at Athens, 41:30 p.m.
Southern at Meigs, 4:30p.m.
EBstern at Wellston, 4:30p.m. .
Hannan at South Gallia, 4:30p.m.
Softball
Gallla Academy at Chesapeake, 4:30
p.m . .
South&amp;rn at Meigs, 4:30p.m.
Eastern at Wellston. 4:30 p.m.
·River Valley at Athens, 4:30p.m.
Wahama at South Gallla, 4:30p.m.

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abol4t

Big Ten puts two teams in Final Four
BY NANCY ARMOUR
Associated Press
CHICAGO _Excuse the
Big Ten if it gloats a bit
t hese d ays.
Dissect and· dismissed ~II
year as being weaker than
the other power .conferences, the Big Ten is showing its mettle when it counts.
After pulling three teams in
the regional finals · of the
·NCAA tournament, the Big
Ten is sending Illinois and
. Michigan State to the Final
Four this weekend.
For those keeping score,
that 's one more Final Foqr
team than the vaunted ACC.
And two more 1han either

the Big East or the Big 12.
"We're proud of our teams
and our players," Big Ten
commissioner Jim Delany
said Monday . ." You don't
take
it too seriously. You. 'd
.
like peop 1e to say n1ce
things instead of not-so-nice
things, But I think the criticism, to the extent there was
some, I don't think it was
justified."
But knocking the Big Ten
has become the thing to do
in recent years. Critics say it
isn'-t as strong as it once
was , with an RPI this year
that was sixth-best among
.- the eli te conferences and
only three teams in the final
Top 25. Others say it can't

compar~

with the ACC.
Ten.
After Illinoi s lost for the
And when it comes time
first time this season .. for · for the NCAA tournamen t,
example, it kept its No. I few· co nferences match the
ranking but 22 voters went Bi g Ten. It has the most
for North Carolina, a team appemances of any conferwith three losses.
ence, and lrail s only the
Delany disputes all that, AC:C in victorie' (309-278).
and can rattle off the num - This is the third time since
bers to back it up. The Big 1999 it 's had two teams in
Ten had seven teams ·in' the the Final Four, and sevenlh
top 50, and beat 32 of the time si nee 1976,
top 50-ranked teams. The
Since 1997 , . more than
Big Ten a l ~o wbn 70 percent . half of' the conference- six
of its t·J0 nonconference teams - has made at least
games.
one Final Four appearance .
Those who claim the Big Michigan State, which will
Ten is too plodding? Delany play North Carolina on
said the ACC averaged 71 Friday night, is playing in its
points a game, a mere 3- fourth Final Four since
pointer ahead of the Big 1997,
.

.

PARKERSBURG, W.Va,
- The fourth annual West
Virginia
versus
Ohio
Basketball Classic will take
place on Friday, April I, at
Parkersburg South High
School.
The two ~g ame charity.
event. which· benefits the battle against Cy~tic ·Fi brosis, ·
features some of the· best
boys and girls· basketball
players from . southeastern
Ohio and West Virginia in a
clash of states.
This year, four Meigs
County seniors have been
selected to play in the con. test.
Eastern's Adam Dillard
and Meigs' Carl Wolfe have
been chosen to represent the
Ohio squad in the hays tournament, while Eastern's
Morgan Weber and Jen
Hayman have been invited .to
the girls contest.
Eastern
mentor
Rick
Edwards will coach the Ohio
team in the girls' event.
· Wolfe, who averaged 14.1 ·
points, 7.2 rebounds and
three assists per game, was
part of a Marauder team that
finished I0-12 this season,
while Dillard,. who averaged
9.8 points, 2.3 assists and 1.8
. steals per outing, was pan of
the Eagles' 20-4 distric.t
championship club,
Weber, the 2005 Ohio
Valley Publishing girls'
Player of the Year: averaged
19 points and 8,6 rebounds
this season for the Eagles,
which finished 13-8 on lhe
season, Hayman averaged
6,5 points and 5.6 boards for
Eastern.
· The boys event .will tip-off
at approximately 8 p.m., followmg the girls contest at 6
p.m. All proceeds go to the
Cystic Fibrosis Foundation_

MORGANTOWN ,. W.Va.
(AP) A dozen West
Virginia University students
face sanctions after being
charged with setting illegal
fires, obstructing police or
other rowdiness fqllowing
the school's victory in a
regional sem ifinal of the
NCAA men 's basketball
tournament.
About 50 street fires were
set and Morgantown police
were forced to use Mace to
control crowds after West
Virginia defeated Texas Tech
65-60 last week to advance to
the regional fiitals, w'here the
Mountaineers
.lost
to
Louisville 93-85 in ov~rtime
· on Saturday.
.
No serious injuries were
reported,
Twelve students have been
charged by police or cited by
fire officials for their alleged
roles in the chaos aft.er the
semifinal victory, Charges
range from disorderly conduct and public intoxication
10 obstructing an officer and
illegal burning. WVU officials said Monday.

"When lh ey put 11 on the
TV '&lt;.:reen, the conferences
and the records. we're on
top right now_ so it's a good
feeling," lll inoi&gt; . coach
Bruce Weber &gt;aid. " I know
our coac hes in the league
have been · upset ahout it
really since lasl spring ....
Our image is being hurt.
beca use it mainly affects
recruitin g.

"So i1 \ go t to be a posilive to ha ve two team·s. lo
ha ve them win in overt ime.
us win in an unbelievable
fashion." Weber added.
"Hopefully it will give us
some good publici ty nation-

Please
see Big Ten, 86.
.

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

Four to play in
.WV/Ohio Prep
Hoops Classic

12 WVU students
face sanctions

NewsChannel
Thesday, March 29
Morning· (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures will stay
near 41. Skies will be sunny
with 10 MPH winds from the
northwest
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
Temperatures will hold
steady around 47 with
today's high of 50 occurring
around 4:00pm. Skies will
range from sunny to mostly
sunny with 5 MPH winds
from the southwest turning
from the southeast as . the
afternoon progresses,
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
Temperatures will linger at
41. Skies will be mostly
clear . with 5 MPH winds
from the southeast.
Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
Temperatures will hover at

Tuesday, March 29, 2005

Braves
double up
Cleveland
BY TOM WITHERS
Associated Press

AP photo

Ci,ncinhati Reds designated hitter Ken Griffey Jr. swings and misses on a strikeout in the third itming off Minnesota Twins
starter Kyle Lohse in Fort Myers, Fla., Monday. Griffey went 0-4 with two strike outs in his outing.

.Minnesota blasts Reds, 7-1
FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP)
-. · Entering his 19th major
league
season,
Terry
Mulholland's desire to win
hasn'i waned.
Mulholland pitched two
scoreless innings of relief
and Jacque Jones hit a threerun homer to lead the
Minnesota Twins over the
Cincinnati . Reds
7- 1
Monday.
"Anytime I come into a
ballgame and we're behind
or the game's tied, I go into
the dugout after the inning's
over and bastcally say. · H ey~
let's win one for the old
guy,"'
the
42-year-old

C~vs

Mulholland said. " It doesn't .
hurt to ask. Sometimes they
answer pretty well. I don ' t
say it under my breath - I
come in there to make a
point of letting everybody
know, and today they gave a ·
good effort."
Mulholland allowed one
hit, stmck out a batter and
walked one.
Jones' home run highlighted the Twins ' seven-run
sixth inning.
Justin Morneau led off
with a double and Michael
Cuddyer · followed with a
single before Jones homered
·off reliever Todd Coffey. ·

Luis Rivas then tripled to
center and scor.ed on Augie
Ojeda's single. Ojeda scored
on a single by Lew Ford,
who came home on Joe
Mauer's double. Mauer
scored pn a wild pitch to
make it 7-1.
Jason LaRue homered in
the second for the Reds. Ken
Griffey Jr. went O,for-4 and
struck out twice.
Cincinnati right-hander
AarOii Harang shut · out
Minnesota through five
innings, allowing two hits
and striking out two while
walking five.
"Harang kind of shut us

down - he threw the ball
prettx good agai nst us ;"
Twins
manager,
Ron
Gardenhire said. "But then
after that we kind ·of got
after it a little bit. Jacque hit
a big homer - that was nice
to see - and a few of the
·other boys put some· nice
swings on the ball and we
ended up having a big
inning. That's two days ia a
row we've scored a touchdown. Touchdowns are good
in hasebaiL They're good in
footbalL but they're better in
baseball."

WINTER HAVEN. Fla.~ ·
Andruw Jones should have
taken Willie Mavs· advice a
few years back~ The ,;Say ·
Hey Kid" was right all along.
Using an old batting stance
that Mays urged him to go
back to, Jones hit his major
league-leading ninth and lOth
home runs of the spring, leadin~ the Atlanta Braves to a
I :f-6 win over the Cleveland
Indians on Mondav.
" It's all about feeling comfortable up there," Jones said,
"and I feel comfortable_"
After hitting 29 hoiners last
season. his fewe.st since
1999, Jones spent part of the
off-season watching tilm of
when he played in the minor
leagues . He notic:ed that his
feet were closer together in
the batter's box.
So, when camp opened,
Jones widened his stance and
the result has been baseballs
sailing higher and farther
than ever before.
Mays was the one who first
approached Jones about
widening his base. which
allows him to stay back on
the ball and ~:over more of the
plate with his .swi ng.
"He's a Hall of Farner."
Jones said. "I took it (his
advice) but I didn 't use it
right awav."
~Meanw-hile, · Cleveland's
Juan Gonzalez. who made the
'ope ning -tbv roster in his
~

.

Please see Tribe, 86

Please see Blasts. 86

sting Hornets in ~vertime

BY BRETT ,MARTEL
Associated Press
NEW ORLEANS
LeBron James scored 44
the
points, . igmtmg
Cleveland Covaliers' comeback from a 17-point,
fourth-quarter deficit in a
109-108 overtime defeat of
the New Orleans Hornets on
Monday night.
·Drew Gooden , who hadn't scored since the first
quarter, clinched the victory
with a three-point play after
he rebounded James' mi ss
and scored as he was fouled
with 6.4 seconds left in the
extra period.
.
Dan Dickau's driving
tloater that could have won
the game for New Orleans
in the final
seconds
bounced wide off the glass,
and Gooden grabbed the
rebound and hurled it
towa rd the rafters as the
buzzer sounded. ' ending
Cleveland's 11 -game road
'.lostng
'
st reak .
·

With the Cavaliers trailing 84-67 early il) the fourth
quarter, James initiated a
· huge momentum swing
when he took the ·ball down
court with an angry look on
his face and quickly drilled
a jumper from just inside
th~ 3-point line . That was
the first of -14 points James
would score during a 25-7
Cleveland run that vaulted
the Cavaliers into the lead.
With 17 point s in the
quarter, James hit on drives ,
jumpers. and four fre e
throws. It was contagiou&gt;.
The Cavs hit their first 11
field goals and first I 0 free
throws of the quarter. Sasha
Pavlovic added a baseline
jumper and three 3-pointers
during the run, his last giving Cleveland a 92-91 lead
with 4:41 to go, James fol lowed with a 3 and a drivin g
score as Cleveland bui It a
97-91 lead before New
Orleans clawed back in a
wild. finish that included
two turnovers in the ·last 15

seconds.
Jame s then .missed one of
two free throws with 8.3
seconds left in regulation,
allowing New Orleans to tie
on Boston Nachbar's short
fade with 2.4 seconds left .
Pavlovic scored 13 for
Cleveland, all during the
fourth-quarter comeback.
Zydrunas llgauskas scored
·14 points. while Robert
Traylor added 12 and
Gooden finished , with II
points and II rebounds.
J.R. Smith led New
Orlem1s with 22 points. hit ting . four
3-pointers.
Smith's last 3 gave the
Hornets a I 06-103 lead in
overtime,
but
Jame s
responded with a J of hi s
own to tie it.
P.J . Brown. who had II
points and II rebounds, hit
a jumper with 24 seconds·
left in overtime before
Gooden's game-winner.
AP photo
Nachbar scored I 7 for the
Hornet s. Jamaal Magloire Cleveland Cavaliers' Eric SnQW (20) tries to go around Ne.w
Orleans Hornets P. J. Brown. left, 1n the first half in New
Please see C.Vs, 86
Orleans Monday
. night. Snow was fouled by Brown on the play,

.

t

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

'

Tuesday, March

www.mydailysentinel.com

29, 2005

Tuesday, March 29, 2005

www.mydailysentlnel.com

RIO GRANDE ATHLETICS

'm:rtbune - Sentinel - 1\.e
CLASSIFIED

Redmen split final two games in Florida
Bv. MARK WILLIAMS

Spec1al to the Sentinel
ORM0ND BEACH. Fla. - T,he
University of Rio Grande Redmen
baseball team, ranked No. 22 111 the !trst
NAIA Top 25 poll of the season. s~IIt
thetr final two games 111 the sunshme
state on Thursday. droppmg a 7-6 decision to West Vlfgtnta Wesleyan and
defeatmg Huntington (IN ) College, 107 m a slugfest.
Rto Gtande ( 16-7) fell behind early as
starter Dusttn Gtbbs (Vinton) struggled
out of the gMe Gibbs (4-2) gave up
ftve runs m three mnings of work on the
htll. Freshman Chri s Brown (Bidwell)
did a fine JOb rn tel1ef to keep the
Redmcn 111 it. The rooktc nghthandcr

gave up only t\vo runs m the final six
innings.
Freshman Kenta Sato (Fukuoka,
Japan) had a btg game at the plate,
gomg 2-for-4 with three RBI. including
a big two-run single to bring the
Redmen to wtthm a run. R10 bats then
went silent as Wesleyan recorded three
consecutive strikeouts to end the rally.
· Sophomore
Michael
Warren
(Gallipol is). senior Charlie Kabealo
(Rockbridge) and sophomore Bobby
Jones (Gallipolis) all collected two hits
as well for the Redmen
In the second game of the day, Sato
aga in came through in a big way clubbing his first collegtate home run, a
two-run shot. Sato was 2-for-4 versus
Huntington with the two RBI.
Rio tratleu at one pomt 4-2 early 111

,
the game. .
Sophomore Gage Mellor (Logan)
also wielded a big bat for Rio Grande,
gomg 3-for-S wtth two doubles and an
RBI. Senior Kris Schuler (Lucasville)
was 1-for-3 with a two run double and
Jones was 1-for-3 and stole three bases.
Kevin Dolari (Newark) picked up the
win in relief of Brent Watterson
(Palmetto, FL). Dolan (1-0) pitched
two scoreless frames.
· The Redmen were scheduled to play
NAIA No. 3 Embry Rtddle on Friday
but the game was cancelled due to rain.
The Redmen have scheduled a game
with Miami (OH) University on
Tuesday to make up for the loss of the
Embry Riddle contest. Game time is set
for 3 p.m.

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Redwomen limp home from Florida
Fr. MYERS. Fla. - The
Utmerstty ol Rto Grande
Red women softball team
closed the fuldl set ol games
at the Custc Softball Classic
v.tth three stratght losses on
Thursday. 5-2 to Lutheran
College . 2-1 to Franciscan
and I:o to St. Thomas
Rio Grande (5-9) just could
not generate much offense to
speak of and limped home.
goi11g 4-6 on the spnng trip.
Freshman Miranda Lav.s
(Nellis. WV) took the Joss

desprte going the . distance
agmnst Lutheran . Laws(l-4)
· went six innings. scattering
five htts and ftve runs (two
earned) with only one walk.
Junior right fielder Jenny
Oldmg (Fatrfteld) was 1-forI with a triple, a run scored
ami two walks, 111 leading the
Rio offense. Freshman center
fielder Jesstca Ross (Hilliard)
drove in the other Rm run
with a single in the seventh
rnning, scoring Michele
Dettwiller (Greenfteld).

Franciscan was able to
defeat R10 Grande for a ~ec­
ond time on the trip, 2-1 in a
tightly contested pitching
duel that saw Andrea Lotycz
(Marysville) absbrb the loss.
Lotycz (3-3) went six mnings
with four hits and two runs
(one earned). She struck out
one and walked two.
Rio's only run came in the
seventh on single by Laws,
which scored JUnior left
fielder Stephanie Flowers
(Newark). who reached on an

error.
Rio had already lost 4-1 to
Franciscan on the first day of ·
the trip. "
Ross ( 1-2) was the tough
luck loser in the St. Thomas
tilt. dropJ?ing a 1-0 decision
on a run 111 the bottom of the
sixth inning .
Rio fanned seven times in
the game and produced only
five hits .
Rio wtll face West Virginia
Tech on Wednesday. Game
time is set for 2 p.m.

Oftfee lloar~

Special to the Sent1nel
CEDARVILLE
University of Rio Grande
senior race walker Matt
Boyle s and sop homore
thrower Altcta Smtih both
came away wtth first place
fimshes at the Yellow
Jacket Open on Fnday at
the Yellow Jacket Track
and Field Complex.
Boyles. a native of
Tuppers Platns. outdistanced the fteld in .th e
3,000-meter race walk with
a trme of 12:1 3.63 Smith,
a nattve of Wtlmtngton.
OH, captured the top fintsh
111 the women ·s discus wilh
a throw that measured 116

feet, two mches.
Freshman sprinter Jo sh
Perry (Rio Grande) had
another productive outing
for the Redmen, fimshing
second and fourth in the
I 00 and 200-meter dashes
re spectively. Perry was
clocked at 11.26 in the 100
and 23.37 in the 200.
Sophomore Gastin Green
(Marysvi lle) ftnished 7th
overall in the shot put with
a heave of 43 feet, II inches
Other Redmen results:
JUntor
Brad
Gilders
(G louster) was 9th 111 the
800 with a lime of 2:03.67
and freshman Chase Smith
(C hillicothe) was 19th in
the 800 covenng the distance in 2:13.45.

Rio as a team was 8th
(out of 10 teams) accumulating 25 points .
In addition to winning the
shot put event, Smith was
6th 111 the women 's hammer
throw with a toss of I 08
feet, II inches. Freshman
Harmony Phillips (Bidwell) '
was 5th in the discus (I 0 I
feet, two inches) and lith

in the hammer (92 feet, six
inches).
Freshman
Nicholet
McKinmss (Galhpolis) fin ished 6th in the I00-meter
dash with a time of 13.56
and 17th in the 200 (3 1.32).
Sophomore
Shannon
Soulsby (Pomeroy) was
12th in the 400-meter dash
(I :05. 12) and 15th in the
200 (30.43).
Rio Grande was 1Oth
overall (out of II teams )
with 23 points .
The
Redmen
and
Redwomen will compete at
the
Ohio
Bobcat
Invitational on Saturday.
The meet will commence at
9 a.m. ir Athens.

:00 a.m. ·to 5:00 p.m.

Associated Press
LEXINGTON, Ky.- West
Vtrgini&lt;\ ended its offensJve
drought just m time agamst
Kentucky.
West Vtrgmia squandered a
22-poim second-half lead. but
rode a 31-pomt. 11 -rebound
performance by Meg Bulger
to an 80-75 double-overtime
win over Kentucky 111 the
semifinal s of the Women's
'NIT on Mortday . mghr at
Memonal Coltseum.
West Virginia (21-12)
extended its longest postseason run ever and will play
Southwest Missouri State on
Thursday m the tournament's
title game.
"Every tune they took the
lead. one of our young Jadtes
came down and hit a · big
shot," West Ytrgmia coach
Mtke Carey said. ··rm very
proud of that. This was a
tough place to play. probably
the loude st place we've
played in all year."
West Virgmia was scoreless
for more than II l/2 minutes
in the second half and lost tt·s
sizable lead before rallying
'

and outscoring Kentucky 149 in the second overtime.
Bulger, a sophomore guard
and the leading scorer in the
Btg East Conference, had
eight points in the second
overttme and went 4-of-4
from the free-throw Ime in the
final 26.8 seconds.
"She took the ball to the
basket n1ore," Carey said. "I
thought in the second overttme. we finally started pushing the ball on a miss.
"It seemed like when we
got the 22-pomt lead, we
played not to lose. We didn 't
pla.y to wm. We were a little
bu tentative. Fmal ly in that
second overtrme, I said. 'Let's
push it,' and we were able to
get stx pmots off the break ."
. West Vtrginia shot 11 -for23 from 3-point range . Sherell
So"' ho led the way, goi ng 5for-7 and scoring 21 pomts.
Bulger. who set a school
record with her fifth 30-point
game of the season, shot 4for-9 from 3-J?Oint range.
West Virgmia led 49-27
with I6:43 left, but dtdn 't
score again until 5:09
remained After Sowho's 3pomter put the Mountaineers'

ahead by 22 points , West
Virginia had just three baskets
and nine points in the final
minutes of regulation.
"That's not a pretty stat,"
Bulger said of the scoring
drought. "It's something you
never, ever want to happen in
a game. But luckily we pulled
together in the end, and our
defense kept us in it when we
weren't scoring."
Kentucky (18-16) took its
first lead at 53-52 with 2:27
left in regulation . West
Virginia regained the lead
before Sara Potts made a 6footer with 7.8 seconds left to
tte the game.
"I don't think this team has
ever given up during a game,"
said Potts, who scored 29
points after scoring 32 and 31
pomts in Kentucky's two previous games. Entering the
WNIT. the senior guard's
career high was 30 points.
After a West Virginia
turnover, Kentucky freshman
Samantha Mahoney missed a
well-guarded 3-pointer at the
buzzer.
The teams traded the lead in
the first overtime. West
Vtrginia went just 4-of-8 from

AP photo .

Utah's Andrew Bogut (4) dnves past the defense of Kentucky's
Joe Crawford (32) rn the f1rst half of the NCAA Austrn Reg1on
semtfinal game at the Frank Erwrn Center in Austin, Texas,
Friday. Bogut will enter the NBA draft. forgorng h1s frnal two
years of eligibility to posstbly become the No. 1 chotce, a
school source said Monday.

BY DouG ALDEN
Assoctated Press

SALT LAKE CITY Utah center Andrew Bogut
will enter the NBA draft, forgomg his final two years or
eligibility to possi bly become
the No. I choice, a school
source said Monday
The
7-footer
from
Melbourne, Australia, was
scheduled to make the
announcement at a news conference later in the day,
according to the source, who
spoke to The Associated Press
on condition of anonymity.
Bogut, the leading vote-getter on the AP All-America
team, averaged 20.4 points
and 12.2 rebounds while lead-

ing the Ute s to a 29-6 season.
which ended with a Joss to
Kentucky tn the regional
semifinals of the NCAA tournament.
Bogut cotmdered leaving
after last season, when he was
the
Mountam
West
Conference freshman of the
yea1. but a vis11 to Austraha
from new Utah coach Ray
Giacoletti tnnvmced Bogut to
put oil th e NBA at least
another year.
•Bogtit ts expected to be a
lotte ry pick rn the NBA draft
ancj possibly the first player
chosen overall with his
exceptional
ballhandling
skills for a center Bogut led
Utah 111 scon ng and rebounding and was third on the team
in assists with 82

the line, and' Potts made two
free throws with )5 .9 seconds
left to tie the game at 66.
Yolanda Paige missed at the
buzzer for West Virginia.
Kentucky didn 't score for
the first 3 mmutes of the second overtime. Bulger scored
with 1·53 left to give West
Virgmia a 72-66 lead, and the
Mountaineers shot 6-for-8
from the line to help seal the
vvin.
·
"We had to exert a lot of
energy in the game,"
Kentucky coach Mickie
DeMoss said. In the second
overtime, "Jt may have' caught
up with us."
Freshman center Sarah
Elliott finished with 14
points, 12 rebounds and five ·
blocked shots for the
Wildcats, who matched their
season high with 23 turnovers
and completed their longest
postseason run.
Kentucky hit just 3 of 17
AP photo
shots from beyond the arc, West Virgtma's Meg Bulger, left. looks for an openrng agarnst
including 2-of-10 by Potts.
Kentucky's Danyelle Payne whtle teammate Yolanda Paige ,
Paige had 12 assists for background left, looks on dunng their WNIT semlftna l game at
West Virginia, giving her 892 Memonal Coliseum rn Lexington, Ky. Monday.
in her career and tying the
senior for eighth on the
NCAA Division I career hst.

INGELS

T

lllini turn focus to Final Four in ·St. Louis ~BY JIM P.AUL

Associated Press
CHAMPAIGN,
Ill.
Illinois ' dramatrc comeback
against Arizona was sttll the
talk of the town two days later.
But the lllmi players weren't
saying much Monday. They
already put their amazing finish from Saturday behind them
and began focusing on a final
goal: the national championship
"We got a lucky game.
Something happened good for
us," coach Bruce Weber told
his players. "Now you've got
the opportunity tn go to the
Final Four. Let's make the
most of it and try to go wm the
thing." .
.
If anythmg, Saturday s 90-89

overttme thriller, in which
Illinois rebounded from a 15point deficit, might have given
the lllini more resolve to win in
St. Louis this weekend.
"We' ve still got to stay
focused. stay humble. knowmg
that anything can happen;· Dee
Brown said. "You can easily go
down there and lose and our
season could be over."
The II lint (36- 1) will meet a
Louisville team in the national
semifinals Saturday that·is very
similar to themselves. The
Cardinals (33-4) revolve
around Larry 0'-Bannon,
Francisco Garcta and Taquan
Dean, just as llltnois revolves
around
· Brown,
Deron
Williams and Luther Head.
"They're good. They play at
a very aggresstve pace. TI1ey
take it to you." Weber satd of

Louisville, which overcame its
ovvn 20-point deficit to beat
West Virginia 93-85 in overtime ,Saturday. "It's goinjl to be
a game w~ere detense ts very
'mWh7~~he' lllini are making·
their first Final Four appearance since 1989 Lou 1svtlle
hasn't been there' since win-·
ning the' national title in 1986.
Its moti vauon to win Saturday
will be equally intense, and
Weber ts challengmg hts players to recover qmckfy from the
exhaustiOn of the. Anzona
game and refocus thts week.
"Every day when they stan
practice and when they end
practice, they say 'National
Champs,"' Weber said of his
players. 'They say it every, day.
I told the guys ... ' Is that
rhetoric or did you really mean

that?'
"Now, we' II see by your
reaction this week, your prepa·
rattan and then how we
approach the game on
Saturday. We'll s~ if it really
mea~ssomethmg.
.
llhnt players say II does
mean something. They also say
reaching the Final Four mrght
help them relax a bit.
" It's a little bit of pressure off
our backs because everyone
was expecting us to get to the
Final Four," said Williams,
whose four 3-pointers at the
d f
.
d
.
en o regu 1auon an overttme
sp~rked t~e comeba~k agamst
Anzona. But we sttll want to
wm the ~atmnal champtonshtp,
and I! wtll be a dtsappomtmenl
if we don't win that."

. Ir

\\\Ol \(I \ II\ l '-1

WVU declaws Kentucky in double overtime
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CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4's For Sate .............................................. 725
Announcement ............................................030
Antlquea .......................................................530
Apartments lor Rent.. ................................. 440
Auction and Flea Markel.. ...........................
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair ..................................................
Autos lor Sale .................. ............................ 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles ........................................550
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opportunily ................. ................210
Business Tralnlng ........... l ........................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790 ,
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Carda of Thanks ..........................................OIO
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Etectrlcai/Relrlgeratlon .. ............ ......... :.......840
Equipment tor Rent .....................................480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equipment ........... .... :..........................610
Farms for Rent. ............................................430
Farms for Sale ............................................. 330
For Leaae ....................................... .............. 490
For Salo ........................................................ 585
For Sate or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruita &amp; Vegetablea .....................7. .............. 580
Furnished Rooma ........................................450
General Haullng ........................................... 850
Giveaway ......................................................040
Happy ,Ads .................................................... 05~.
Hay &amp; Graln .................................................. 640
Help Wanted ................................................. 11 0
Home lmprovements .......,.................. oo ........ 810
Homes for Sale ............................................ 310
. Household Goods ....................................... 510
Houses for Rent .......................................... 410
In Memorlam ................................................020
lnaurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment........................ 660
Ll•estock ...................................................... 630
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
Lots &amp; Aereage ............................................ 350
. Mlscellaneous .. ............................................ 170
Miscellaneous Merchandlse ....................... 540
. Mobile Home Repalr .................................... 860
Mobile Homes tor Rent.. ............................. 420
Mobile Homeolor Sale ................................ 320
Money to Loan ........... .................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheetere .......................... 740
Musical Instruments ................................... 570
Pertonala ..................................................... 005
Pets lor Sale ................................................ 580
. Plumbing I Heatlng ................ :................... 820
Prolenlonol Sarvlcao ................................. 230
' Radio, TV , I CB Repair ............................... 180
Reef Ealota Wanted ..................................... 3e0
Schoolo lnotructlon ..................................... 150
SHd, Plant&amp; Fertilizer .............................. 850
Slluatlona Wonled ....................................... 120
Space for Ront ............................................. 480
. Sporting Good a ........................................... 520
SUV'alor Sale ..............................................720
Trucka for Sale ............................................ 715
: Upholltery ................................................... 870
Vans For Sate .......................... ;.................... 730
Wanted to Buy .............................................
Wonted to Buy- Farm Suppltea .................. 820
Wonted To Do .............................................. 180
Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
Yard Sale- Galllpolla ....................................072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ......................... rJ'/4
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311 Buckrldge Road
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Earn a salary whtle ga1n1ng Kelly Home care services 0 H K
sktlls 1n paltent care, f1t11ng A Fortune 500 Company, Cleamng &amp; Restoratron, Let- (1 closed 1n), deck 213 acre
eyewear and med tca l test- has 1mmedrate opemngs for ' Us-Help-You Clean-er-upltl flat lot Heat pump Rrver
•ngl We are a well estabhshed Athens Optometnc
Practice and writ provtde on
the JOb tra1ntng tor a career
1n opllctanry We otter a
dynam1c work enwonment
w1th a great team of pratessmnals No e)(perrence neeessary, applicant must be
detml onented self mottvaled and possess good commun1catron skill&amp; G1ve us
the opportunity to d1scuss
how you can be a vital part.
our team while ga1111ng a
career as a licensed opt1c1an
Fax resumes to 740-5942270 by April 6. 2005

SFIDF/EOE
HROblndemhNithcare.com
Addresses wanted lmmed•atelyl No expenence necessary Work at flame Call toll
405-447-6397
An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon
Call Marilyn 304-882-2645
AVON! All Areas• To Buy or
Sell
Sh~rtey Spears. 304675·1429

-Joseph
- - - - - -- 'I
Cl tmca Vs ecretana I pos110n
tn 8 very fast paced medtcal

offlce ,
Computer, offtce
machrnes, and great people
sktlls a must. Must possess
a wtlhngness to cross tram
and be a team player. Apply
In person at the office of
John Wade MD, Pleasant
Valley Hospital. Surte 112,
Pomt
Pleasant
WV
ApplicationS taken ONLY
Wednesday March 30 from
8 am to 3 pm and Thursday
March .31 from
am to 12
pm No phone called w1ll be
accepted

a

DlyehiH Openlnge
Part-time
Stable work, ProfeSSIOnal
enwonment.
L1mi1ed number of
poSitions avatlable
Call Now!
1..Sn--4&amp;a-&amp;247 ext. 1901
D1etacy Cook
Overbrook Center IS currently accephng applications lor
a Part-Ttme' D~etary Cook
Must he\le some expenence If you are Interested,
please come 1n and f1ll out
an applicatiOn at 339 Page
Street,
Middleport, Oh
45769 EOE

·

Growtng $1 billion comm uni·
d
ty bank has a
ynamtc
opportunity S6r\IIOQ new and
extstlnQ clrents 1n southern
and central Oh1o Succeed 1n
a prest1g1ous bank environnl
- a strong client
me
wru•
referral base and expert
prod l.ICI a nd saIes suppo rt
Senes 7 and 66 destgnatrans and OhiO ltfe, heaUh
and
vanable
annutl191i
licenses are reqwed You
will rece tve excellent com·
pensabon and benef1ts. plus
coni Inuous
pro Jesstona I
tratmng and development to
leverage
your
career
ExceII ant co mpensallon and
b~nefl ts, mcluding profllshanngl401(k} Send your
resume and salary reqUirements to· Oak Hill Banks,
Attn Human Resources,
PO Box 688 , Jackson OH
45640 Please reference Job
Code 11:51 5E EOE, MJFIDN

Help wanted- Oars! ~dult
Group Home, (740)9~25023

McCtures Resrauranl now
hmng all locations, full or
part-lime ):ltck up appliestion at location &amp; bring back
between ' 10 ooam
&amp;
Mo da" lhru
11 00
· am,
n '
_s_a_1u_rd_a:._y_ _ _ ___,_
McDonalds· Now h1r1ng all 3
loca1 1ons· flexible hours-

--------Jim's Carpentry
We do remodeling and most
any unfm tshed work, also
small
tree
removal
(740)446-2506, (740)367 0437

Mike Pooe
S
p

r.

an apphcallon at 333 Page
Street,
Middleport
Oh
45760 EOE

~25-:5::-5-0-::-:--:---:--:-.=
X-Ray Tech for doctor's
office, 4 or 5 days per week,
8 30-5 , no weekends, hohdays or evemngs New graduate's may apply Please
apply at Med1cal Plaza ,•936
St At 160, GalhJlQiis or
phone (740)446-9620
11!0
•

ca- CoiJego
(Careers Cloee To Home)

Golllpollo

3 Bedroom 1

DIS1f1Ct
$69,500

r

&amp; 112 batll ,

new-wmdows &amp; roof located
12 Smtih St Kmgtown area
Alver-v tew ava tlable No
Down-Payment
$425 8
month (304)675 _2749

lnveniOfY Clearance New 4
bedroom
Home
$319 00/month
Includes
AJC Deltvery and Set-up
Call Harold. (740)385-9948
"Movrng Must Sell"
14 x70 Norrrs set up on lot
$t0,900 {740 )446 _9480 or
{7401446 _3266
' - - ' - - - - - -Natmnwtde avatlabthty All
Repos 1999 and older - half
pnce Wtll bnng 1n lrom out
of state to fill cus10mer
demand tst come 1 serve
(304)736-3409

- -- - - - - -

3 Bedroom Ranch . LA. FR
lull basemer.1t, 2 car garage
State Route 141 Centenary
(740)446-1035
-------4 bedroom 1 1/2 bath gas
heat ale, soft water system
tul ly furn rshed. lmancmg
avatlable, $65,000
call
Gwdo (740)992-.2529 or

r.O

BUt~

Om:lR'ruNrrY
BUIIdtng for Lease Galltpohs
ideal 1or
Ferry Area.
Aestauranrl Ere (304)6757538

"'

.

pHtO VALLEY PUBLISH

740-99~650

E

MONEY
rol.oAN

'UleOIOQ Flna..,el
Institution apProvmg Small
Busmess, Mortgage
Personal and Vehrcle
Loans Immediate
response
give us a call at
1 - 866-228 - 706.3~ Or apply
on11ne at
wwwirweatmentfinaneie l.orc

**NOTICE**
~rrow Smart Contact the
~hlo Division of Flnancia
OHice
o
nattlution's

MJStEJ.ANFD.:.5

~110

I

1 and 2 bedroom apart
ments turn1shed and untur
n1shed • secunty depos1t
required no pet s 740 992
221 8

-------~

Moneys WorthM

· no pels S900 pe r mo
(740)446-2325 or (740)4 46Several mobile home s late
4425
.
and
90's.
call
1
or
70 5 80 5
pr 1ces (74 0)388-8371 or BEAUTIFUL
APART·
Local company offenng "NO (740)388-9686
BUDGET
MENTS
AT
DOWN PAYMENT" proPRICES AT JACKSON
grams for you to buy your
LoTI; &amp;
ESTATES. 52 Westwood
home mstead of rentmg
ACRF.&lt;\(-;.E
Dr1ve tram $344 to S4 42
___
• 100% trnanc1ng
Walk to shop 8 movtes Cal'
o Le ss than pertect cred1t
Equa•
For Rent Tratler Lot No Pets 740-446-2568
accepted
$100 Plus Deposits Ro ush Housr ng Opportunrry
o
Payment could be the Ferrel Or of Camp Conley
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
same as rent
Rd . (304)675-2614
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Mortgage
Locators,
REAL
E'&gt;oAn:
Townl'louse
apartmen ts
~
(740)992·7321
and/or small houses FOR
WAI'mll
RENT Call (7 40)44i -11l1
tor apphcatron 8 1ntorma110n
I BUY HOMES

r

·G:r

Need to sell your ho me
quiCkly beca use ol a
drvorce
bankr uptcy jOb
transfe r or death Don't let
the bank foreclose and rurn
your creOrt Loc al person
buys houses Fast closrngs
Al l cash J\m
(740) 992 ·

~II

NG CO recommends tha
tlou do busmess wtth peo
le you know, and NOT t
end money through th
~all unhl you have 1nvest•
loa1ed l~e on,;rino.

1 &amp; 2 bed room apartm ent s
Beecfl
Stree t
m
on
Mrddleport lurnrshed ulrlrtle S paid deposrt &amp; refer
ences reqUIIed no pet s
(740)992·0165

2 bed room apa rtment tor
ren1 Rac1ne OH Depos11
r-equ1red no pe ts (740) 992 5174, leave message
,SAVE-SAVE -SAVE
h
StoCk models at old pr1ces Be autiful 2-s tory town ouse
G
C
2005 models arnv1ng Now overtookrn g
a11 rpo111s o R11y
Coles
Mobtle
Homes par~ K1tchen-tamr Y
LR
A
d
b th
3 8
15.266 US SO 6ast Athens
stu Y 2 a s
0 hto 45701, (740)592 -1 972 Iaun d ry area Refe rences
"Where You Get You r requi red securrty deposi t

Aoofmg , 1dmg, . ore es. 49 acre farm w•th free gas
D
"h
)
ecks r one 1740 388 - and royalty check from well
8329
$ 2 !3 9 , 0 0 0
Beverly@Sitl,lpassRealty
Quality Lawn Mow1ng smce
1980 Free Est•mate Small {740}643-2589
yards- $25 and up Call
t740)446-7139
492 acres , wtth home and
• · ..::c_:..:::_~::__ _ _ two-car garage Good prrvate. farm land, some
Weekend Tree ServiCe Tnm
&amp; Removal. Call (740) 256 _ woods, Call (740)99'2-7037
1883 or (740)6454458
Attention!

New Store open ing In Call Today! 740.448-4367,
1-800-214-()452
Gallipoll1! Now htrlng lor aU
~?naumer
Artaln!
positions!
wwwgdlpoliea!rwrcoj~togecom
Accr.ctlled lHm~ Accrediting ~EFORE you reJ~nanct
Sen d your resume 10
Council tOr hMieo; ldwnt Cohgel
~rhome or obtain a loan
peternonei!Ogamestop com
nc1 Schooii1274B
or tax 10 304-842-9019
I IBEWARIE of requests fo
~ny large edvanct pay
Home Health Care of SE 1
~nta of feea or Insurance
Ohto i&amp; currentty hiring •
the
Ottk:a
o
all
Home Health Aides, com- • cemetery plata Atvervlew ~tum« Atfolro _1011 lret
petltive
wigea ,
call Cemetery, tot t5 Row 10 ~I Hl88·278.(J(J()3 to IHr
Sec ·D. ~25 l01 oil lOu r. f the mortgage broker o
(740)662·1222
endar Ia property licensed
Pa,.modlca
&amp;
EMra (740)384-4187
noodod Apply 11 1354 ::-:=::-=-:--::---:-- frl'llt Ia_a pobMc aervic4
Jacl&lt;lon Pike. Gallipolis.
DIRECT TV Free 4 rt&gt;Om lannounctment from thl
hookup FrH HO Big SctHn
.• '::.,"'Y Publrohinl
moo
TV, 800-283-21i"O
.

\ne

Valley
School
Bulav•lle Ptke
(740)367·7272

h

pa1d holidays and vacat10ns
Starttng rate above m1n1mum wage. Apply w1th1n.
Will do Engme Change
Engtne Repatrs and other
Overbrook Ce nter IS current- Automotrve
work
ASE
ly accepting apphcatrons lor Certified. Call (740)441tull -ttme STNA's all post1306 or (740)645 1794-cell
tions and all shift are Svatiable 11 you are Interested
Please come m and ftll out

Sales
person
needed
Furniture store Full ttme .
sales expenence preferred
Immediate opening Apply 1n
person lltestyle Furntture.
856 Th1rd Ave , Galhpolrs ,
Flexo Prell Qparator
OH, 10am-5pm. No phone
St John Record Programs, calls please
a manufacturer of pnnted
labels for the medicaltndus- Secretary needed must
try, located rn,.Logan, Ohro, have computer skills &amp;
currently has an openrng lor exce!lent commumcattons
a first shift Press' Operator skills Send Resume by
Thts pos1tlon Will be respon- Aprll-8th to TS028 r:Jo Ftoml
Sible for runntng a llexo web Pleasant Regtster 200 Ma1n
press (Comco) The quail- St Pomt Pleasant, WV

fled applicant must ha\le
expenence 1n runntng flexo
equtpment Th•s poSition rs
also raquired 10 work closely
Wittl key manufactur~ng personnet to ensure production
Domino's now Htnng .
goals are accomplished We
Safe Dr1vers
offer a compet1t1ve salary,
AU locatiOnS
heaHh benefits. and 401K If
Apply rn person
lax
tnleresled.
please
(304)675-5858
resume with salary requireVera ·Croft
Driver Wanted 1 year exp. ments to
Tractor Trailer Home most ~17_4.:;0)::.38.:.5:..·2.:.5::.54
_ _:-::::::--::mghts $500-$700 a week GAM ESTOP NOW HIRING
Call (740)378·6400

Drivera NMdecl: '
COL Orl\lers willing to drive
for local ready-mix company. Experience I&amp; pr8terred
but not necessary Driver
must be w1111ng to do premaintenance on trucks &amp;
eqUJpment. yard work &amp;
other miscellaneous chores.
Experience operating equipment &amp; extra skills tuch as
welding a plus
Gall (304)931-3410

No Matter What The Job Is
We Will Get-er-Donettl For
All You're lnstde/Outsrde
Needs We're the Ones for
You Call Karen or Dave at
740-985-3633, Bustnesses,
A e s 1dent 1a 1I homes
Contracts ,
Anytrme ,
Anyplace,
Clean
All .
PoweiWashtng, Remodeling
etc
No Job Is To Dtrtyl 11

FINANCIAL ADVISOR

Chrrsttan heavy metal Duo
need s drummer and ba ss
11 you are a young
I
Payer.
-,an and lookCh'lstlan mu' "'
109 to JOin a band\ call
(7401441 • 1236 ask
for

Wee~ly pay, Saturdays off,

expenenced Home Heahh
Atdes and CNA's Must be
relrable, htgh-q ualrty caregt\19(5, preferably with an
avatlable autqmob1 !e and
proof of msurance II you
enJOY working w1th the elderly or physically challenged
you have what 1t takes to
work for Kelly We offe' flexrble schedules very compet1trve pay, and ass1gnments
throughout
Mason
&amp;
Putnam CountieS Weekday
&amp; Weekend shifts currently
available Come see what
Kelly Home Care has to
offer Call 1-866-755-5182
Kelly Services IS an Equal
Opportunity Employer

FOR R E1\iT

4367

No Fee U~less We W1n1
1·888·:;82·3345

~

Nrce country, cabm on 33
acres. references reQtJired
25 mtnutes from Athens
good hunting (7 40)699
7244

-------For Sale, 14X70. 3 be droom . set up 1n Country
Homes, $6 995 00 Move rn
today' Call (740)385-4.3 67

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?

Scen1c Hills Nurstng Center,
a Tandem Health Care
Facll•ty, 1s 'se9ktng a select
lew to JOin our outstandmg
team We currently seek a
lull t1m9 ACIIVItiBS Director
Must have expenence m
ectrv1t1es plannmg
wtth
strong emphasis on creait\11ty and 11me management
Certrftcatron a must We
offer excellent benefits and a
wonderful work envrronment Please apply to

R&gt;1&gt;'f

96 Norrts 14x76 CIA 2 bed room 2 bath sale $16 000 Renov aled farm house
Rent $450,
no
pets Country salting
B1dwe ll
(740)4 46·1062
area 38R 1BA $500/mo
$4001deposrt
(7 40 )446·
For Sale - 1979 Homette . 2 0118 or ( ? 4 0)709 _9069
bedroom
w/centraJ a1r
$ 3 49 5 00 Call (740 J 385- )420 MOKIJ.£ 1-IO:\Ifo.)i

Jewelry Buy Sell Gold
Diamonds
Gemstones
Repatr, Appra1sals , Gem
Testrng
Graduate
Gemologist,
Jeweler
(740)645·6365 or [740)446·
3080

ACTIVITIES
DIRECTOR

Hot SJ-};
H&gt;H

2002 Clayton 161180 mobr1e
home
Sh rngled
roo f$25 999 Call (740 )446
7817

DIAECTV

1-&amp;n-463-6247
ext. 2457
www mloc1S10n com

. '

ffiRSAI~-

Free Equ1tmen1
Free Proless1onal
rnstallaiiOn
Free DVD playe r
Call 1-800-523·7556
call lor Free HBO/Cinamax
&amp; Show t1me

lwnght@ic .net

great money domg 111
We pay up to $8/hour_
Weekly pay, Pa1d tra1mng,
Excellent benef1ts.
Stable work, Profess ional
env1ronment
Call TODAY to set up an
Interview!

10

MOBILE HOJ\IES

{1~.

real eshlte advertialng
In this newapaper 11
subjKt lo the Federal
Fair Houalng 4ct of 1968
wtllch makes It 11141gal to
advertise "any
prwt.rence, limitation or
discrimination baMd on
rKe, color, religion, HX
r.mlllll status or nations!
origin, or any Intention to
msktl 1ny such
preference, limitation or
diacrimln~~flon "

iiiiiiill

e

r

Fu rn1shed apartment SUitable for 1 person all ulllit ~es
paid
Downstarrs
$285/month 919 Second
Ave (740)446-3945
Grac1ous lr\ltnQ t and 2 bed-

Call (740)446-3481

From $295-$4 44 Call 74D
992-5064 Equal Housmg
3 or 4 bedroom house $500 OpDOrtun•tres
pe1 mo , $500 deposit no
Modern 1 bedroom apt CaU
ammals, 1 years lease
1740)446-0390
(740)949-7004
New 1 bed room apt
(740)446-3736
4 rooms and bath 52 Olr'o'e

I

1989 Redmond 14x70 30r
2ba , newer windows, appli·
ances good condrtton. on
renled IOJ Addison-Pike
(740 )387-7662
'
2 Payments dOwn 4 years
left on note. (304 )738·3409
200 t Oakwood 16xSO. 3
bedroom 2 bath 'o'lnyVahln glt, eppllancts. central n. .t
&amp; atr $16,900 (304)833·
6538

----·----------~---------

I

Furn1shed 2 &amp; 3 room apts
Clean no oets Reference ~
depOSit
reqUlfed
Call
(7 401446 1519

3 bedroom Condo With rrve1 room apartments at V1Hage
\II8W ,
full
base men! Manor
and
R•~ers1de
Galhpohs Ferry $700 month Apartments m Middleport

This new1p1.,., wiU nM
knowingly .Ccept
advllf'tteements tor rMI
eaUite which Ia in
violation of tnt law. our
~ra are hereby .
Informed ttl81 Ill
dwelling• advertiMd In
lhla newspllper are
•v•ll•bl• on en equal
opportunity bnea

MOBILE Hor.Wi
FOR SAIL

HCXN:o;
FOR ItEM

EffiCiency ap1 S300 month
plus lrt1l1hes No pels Ideal
tor 1 or 2 people Cah
(740)446-4313

Call

THE MAPLES

St No pels, $300 month '
100
(740)446-3945

MEMOR IAL

DRIV E

EAST

Attention!
Local company otterrng ~N o
DOWN PAYMENT" pro ·
grams lor you lo buy yoU!
home mstead of renting
• 10001, hnencmg
' Les&amp; th an perfect c.-.drt
accepted
o
Payment co tJ id be th e
ume u;tent
Mortgage
Locators
(740)9ll2·7321

.,

POMEROY 700·992·7022
Res1denha!
SUbsid iZed
Hou srng for 50 vee rs o! ene
end older Priority Qlven to
Applicant• Mth lncorM at
or below $10,800.00
Max1mum Income effectiVe
02111 2005 tor 1 person
$1 8 15000
Mual mMt HUDI/20218 criteria for hou•holcl composition.
Managed
by
S•lvemee la Incorporated A
Realty Co mpany, Equat
Hou srng Opportumty_

�.Tuesday, March 29, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

0

lng applications for walling
list far Hud-subslzed, 1· br,
apartment, call 675·6679
EHO

r

SPAa;:

FOR RENT

·

negotiable · to encourage
. business.
Call
new
(740)446-4425 or (740)446·
3936.
Warehouse lor Rent 3000
Sq. Ft. An Utilities Available

Bell6mead
area,
Pt.
Pleasant, INV call (304)6753423

WANIID

looking fur a heme or trailer
to rent in Gallipolis School

Warehouse

Border-Collie Pups lor sale,
Black &amp; White, 3 males, 7

.weeks-old,
Parents on
premises (304)895-3328

in Henderson, WV. PreownBd .appllcanes starting a!
· $75 &amp; up all under warranty,
we do servtce work on all
Make and Models (304)675·
7999

CKC Jack · Russell pups.
Ready lor their new homes!
Vet checked, $250. Call
1740)256.6341 .
Mayt8g dryer, $95; Whirlpool ' - - " ' - ' - - - ' - - - - - washer, $95; Tappan ga·s Golden Retriever puppies
range, $150: GE refrigerator. has had 2nd shots and
. small 1reezer. $150·. wormed, $250. Eight weeks
$ '50·
'
"de relrl· g- . old, (740)388-8965.
like now Side -'-··sl
~,
~1rator, white, $375; Westing Pood)e puppieS - tiny toys,
nouse cordless sweeper, AKC, white &amp; cream, 2 male,
$75; assorted chairs, $5 , 1 female , (740)401 -0327
eac hSkaggs
.
Appliances
. FR.urrs &amp;
76 Vine St., Gallipolis
,. VEGETABLES
(740)446-7398.
Ka••• l •s p-•uco
Mol!ol'lan Carpet, 202 Clark
•uu
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio. Am ish cheese &amp; lunch
(740)446-7444 1·877·830· meals, fresh fruit &amp; veg.
9182. Free Estimates, Easy Open Thurs,.Frl , Sat. 1 mile
.
west of Holzer Hospital on
financing, 90 days same as
cash. ·visaJ Master Card . Jackson Pike, ph. (740)446·
Driw-a· littte save alot.
na7- 740339·2131 .

j

Thompsons Appliance · &amp;
FORSALI:
Rapalr-675-7388 . . For sale,
re-conditioned automatic
washers &amp; dryers. refrigera- ATV used very little with
newly painted trailer, $5,000
tors, gas and electric Troy built tiller, $400. Call
ranges, air conditioners, and
wringer washers . Will do
repairs on major brands in
shop or at your home.
...,,.;....;;;.;;,;;,;;,;;,;;
UBuseela·"IIFeurpn~,kere A5p10pl~lea.nc1e30s
FARM
...
·
'
.EQUIPMENT
maHresses,
dressers,
_
couches, dinettes. recliners,
grave monumentS , much 472 New Hollahd hay bine
more.
(740)446-4782, $5,000: 256 New Holland
Gallipolis, OH. Hrs. 11-3 (M· hay rake &amp; dolly $3,500 like
S). We buy used furniture.
new; 14 loot hay te9der
$1 ,700; 16 foot goose neck
II 9200 Gvw $1,900; (2)
·
A...._,...x:o
traer
~"""-'~
John D
eere 1056 running
.
gear wagons: 10 Iug hay
Buy or sell. RIVerine wagon $ •' •000 : Cc ats 40·50
Antiques, 1124 East · Main SA llre changer $1 ,000;
SR 124 E. Pomeroy. 7~ Massey Ferguson 3 bottom
992-2526. Russ Moore. plows $550: New Holland
round balers $2,500. AU in
owner.
condi1ion .
excellent
New Antique Mall Opening (740)709-9069 days or
.
Soon Off In &amp; Us A1 ,~In
Downtown
Aavenswood, (140)446·0118 after 7pm.
.WV, ~er spaces available Knight mode! 2250 Reel
reasonable charges for Auggle Forage feeder with
Boo.ths Don't miss . this scales.., Good condition . Call

rlb .

i

oo

Chance. Information, call
Fre d (3041532 •27 '0
•
or
~')2~2746
(~
•..;r

21}C-41 metal garage, insulated, elect. equlpt., lights, 4
yrs old, 4 windows, entr.ance
doo Obi
doo pd
.~ •.$3,ga~e. 17 ;.42:
1
3802
6

:0•

ft. pool table. Hke new with

ace.
Amish oak glider, like new,

""' nlce. l740)446·2500.
Beige ltft chair, like new,
1200. 1740)992-7655
JET

.

I.ERATION MOTORS
Repaired. New &amp; Reooitt In
SIOdt. CaH Ron Evans, 1-.
800-537·9528.
Large

Indoor

;:::=::...:=-~,--..,---"""'",.,----,

Swimming

Pool with all , Acceaaories

20 games for $20.00

0

1995 Forcl F·150 XLT. 8 ft.
bed, e~&lt;ce llent condition.
Asking $6,800 OBO. Call
(740)992· 1777.

1999 Chevy 1 ton with 11 tt.
utility bed . AC, cru1 se, .tilt. 2003 Dodge Duly, 4x4,.
350 gas, 5 speed trans., black. , 4 door, 6 speed,

69.000 miles. Excellent con- Cummins engine, nerf bars.

dition Call (740)256~ 1526 or stainless body moldings,
diamond plate too l· box &amp;
L•IVESTOC--K-.,l (740)645-0446.
·
.
bed
sides,
retractable
2000 Chevro let-Silverado
·
k "all
59 , OOO
d
.
goosenec
u
.
Yearling Angus Bulls, Mostly 1500 . LS . 1uII y-op I10ne · mites $ 29 ,000 . ,( 740 ) 256
•
A.l . excellent bloodlines. 4x4 ,bedllne r, t rallermg - 92470 r 17401645•0870 .
priced reasonably. Slate Run pkg.. Pewter ext. ,C harcoa I :::.c.:..:c..:.:..:.::.:._:...:c:.:.__
Farm , Jackson . (740)296· int ,100k highway miles. ~Ford F-150, 6cyl. sspd,
5395.
syn.oil, befowbook $12,900 4x4, $2000. After Spm,
www.slaterunfarm .com
304-773-6062
leave message. (740)949""!lll:""-~!"'"~---,
2524
2000 StO·LS, Ext-cab, 3rd
HAY &amp;
door. 4-cyl , 5-spd . AC,'CO. 98 JeeR C.herokee Classic
L_ _ _,;;G:;RA~IN--_.1 48.000
miles.
Asking 4x4 Loaded , too much new
$7,900.00 080 (740)949- to list runs great, 20+ MPG.
1000# bales. $7 00·$10.00 _2.:_62_1-----~- $3.000 OBO. (740)245&amp; $15.00. pick up load or
9142.
2002 Chevy '500 VB
semi-load .
good ~ hay.
I
,
,
•=---~,.---29 080 m·les Sspd PS/PB
"AJNS
• ' CD, $12,000.
'
' .
• • SALE .
(·740)698-2765
_ __:__ _ _ __ _ AC,' tiiVcruise,
FOR

r

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

-Ear co{n, $2 .50 per bushel. Raeon lit·1e. (304)6'..-4-51 31.
Call (740)245·S047.
2004 FORD F-1 50 lariat.
Orchard grass hay round· Super Crew. 10.000m1
bales, 1.000 lbs. 2004, barn 2yrl2o,OOOmi warranty left.
kept, $20 each. Around •40 loaded/extras,
$30.000 .
I h (740)446 0223 8t
(304)523-3500, (304)654·
e ·
•
ter
. 5pm.
9318; (304)886-1668.
2004 Silverado 1500, Z71 ,
4WD. ·Loaded. still under
72" Corroli finish mower.
Good. shape. $SOD. Call warranty, 29,000 mites, ask •ng $26 ,000 (304 )67 5- 4917
93 Ford P-U extendcab, a·
bed, XLT, loaded, 114,000
miles, $2195 Reduced to
$1895.00, (740)992 -t721

At.TJ'Oi

FOR SALE
$500'. u
•
Ch e_vy ·s.
· 1ondas,
'Jeep's,
Eel.
Police
Impounds! Cars from . $500
for listings 800-391 -5227
EXT 3901
---.,..--'-~---

1952 Plyffiouth 4dr. engine
runs good. body exceiL. all
orginal, no rust32,000 miles
304
53:...2_ _ _ _
_
'--·5_7_6·_2.:_
1969 Ford .Xl, Galaxy 390,
automat 1c, power steering
and brakes, AC, interior
eKcetlent, Mechanical eKcetlent, body good. Needs
m1nor repair and paint.
$3.300.00 OBO. (740)6961373. (740)591·5888.

:.=..::.;:::..:::.c:::.:..:=::.._1987 Dodge Diplomat.
excellent condition, 70,000
miles, clean ins1de1out ,
garage kept. $1 .500 firm.
(740)992-1493
1994 who"to Thunderbo"rd .

d
. e

i

Block. l&gt;rlclc. - . r pipel,
wtndOwt, lintalt, etc. Claude
Rio Grande. OH

Auttra White Pullets

SL50-eactr
6&lt;Jfl Orplllng!On Pulle1S
SU!O.. acn
-Tokintl~

9!5 Buick Century Wagon.
Under 48,000 mnea, new
tiret. brakeS. battery, m'uf·
fler. alternator. $3,600.
EKCOiiont. (74Q)446-2739.

(30')H3-1073

BMW Z3. '99. Spocial
Edition. 22.000 mllol, dar1c
(
Registered Black AngUI grHn. $19.999. (304)412·
N&lt;C 1egiata ed Jed( RUIM!t Bulla. 12 to te montha. 3380.
-' Torriora. 3 polr1l of · (7~1
9856.
TRucKs .
$300 oo.. $400 per pelr;
FOIISALE
Jock RuaHII F. puppy 1200; Suffolk Ewu for aale. Call
~.,.
Regiltorod Boo1on Torritr. f. (740)446 • 836.
$400; (140)378-881 0
1993 Chevy 3500 Turbo
0-1. Rod Pk:l&lt;up. Dully.
AKC Reglatered. German
Power Wlndowa, Locka,
Shepherd. pups, excellent
Loaded
18.000
lirm
blooellinet, large boned
(304)593-!5()73
1225 (304)1175-5724

••e

_..:._..._ ..

_____ ---.

15

F_

I

STANLEY TREE

YOUNG'S

TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;

• Prompt &amp; quality
work :
·Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
. Call Gary Stanley

Remodeling
• New Gmrages

• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gu"ertl
• Vinyl Sldin9 &amp; Painting

992·6215

4 WHEEl •ms

;..,...;,,;,;;iiiiiiii~iiiii~iiaa-_.

.

?003 Suzuki V1nson 500, 4-

~6.e~e:a~ 0

0:ej0=-~~ 5~

27..,9_0_ _ _ _ _ __
_
20 4 HariA\/ Davidson 1200

-,

·---iiiiiiiiiiiioa·

97 CABO. Race ready, runs

+

740-667-0700 f-888-HUPP~34

JONES'

I.'VE .ALilMt)Y GOT A ~YIIlll&gt;
'
C:A~ --- tMLF

great must see to appreciate. $1,000. Gallipolis area .
cell {740)645-0873.
BoATS &amp; ~OTOHS
.

I

Buildings, Roofs. Siding. Windows &amp; All

Other Residential Needs
Phone: 740-742-3411
for a free estimate.

Toke the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me do ;t for youl

.,

High and Dry

1997 Coachman Ca1alina
l.:lte 24' foot. Front Bedroom.
many
extras
phone
(304)67&amp;.2039 $6,995 080

Phone
(740) 992-5232

r•o

2005

BARNEY
D'YA HAVE A NICKEL ·
NO, SIR, I
ONLY GOT A
FER TH' COLLECTION
DIME!!
PLATE, JUGHAID ?
-""-&lt;"~.._

Let us help you
choose a lasting
tribute w your loved
rme S memory.
\l"R~. F

\1()1\1 \II- '\ "1
("()\11'\'\)

THE BORN LOSER

39728 SR I 4J
pomeroy. OH

P\-\E.W

~

·"'i tlO 1l\\S,.. I tlO\f\1&gt;..\ ... l tlO

""'

.

Wf\(1'1 I GO\ ~E.\), I Mi&gt; \0
:5/&gt;o.\"L OO!' ~t&gt;\1-\f&gt;..l~ WE WI&gt;-.'&lt;
IT~ \:&gt;C:E:t-1

I

740-992-9922
tv1on-Sat 10AM·5 PM

~

('IE.!:.'&lt;If\\1--\G ~N.O f.i-ER( 1

WV. OH and all legal

E\f(~

states must br 21.

Slt-\C.L

or ·992-66 ..

Get A Jump

On

ROBERT
BISSEll
CINSTRUCDON

i

140-992-1671

.

Wednesday, Mareh 30, 2005
By Bernice Bede Osol

TELL YOU H O W 10

IMPORTS .

TEACH

?HYS . EO!!

Athens

Whaley•s Auto
Parts

Si. Ri.681 Darwin, OH
740-992· 70 13 or 740-992-5553
Reslockin9 1~1&lt;· 11ilodel Sah·a9e

PEANUTS
YES. MA AM .. MAY r
I-lAVE PEKM15510N TO
HOME EA~LY ?

and .t lfler Markel Parts
See Brent or Brian Whaley
M -Fri 8:3 0-5:00

I TI-IINK MY DOG IS

·I SEE IT'S
STARTING TO RAIN ..

6ETTIN6 WET.

Sat. 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

MYERS
Henderson,

WV

871-2457

SUNSHINE CLUB

Cell Phone 67 4·3311 Fax 304·675-2457

11E. IIJ%.)1£1) f/J A
\OCB sm.. 1l-1P:r ru.s
'fCXJQ 00/..JCRI ON

• Drivewayst Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets

11-l-I~T

\

WV Contractors Lie . #003506

•

. 1"HA1"'6 BREAKf'A61".
t..UNC.H, AND DINNER. ..

NORTHUP DODGE

NOW ALl-1
HAVE 1"0 170

OH ... ANc:&gt; A
C.OUPLE OF SNACKS! ·

If&gt; C.HEW!

2S2 Upper River Road • Galli~lis
74o-4411-0842 • 949-11 55 Evenings

Rood, Pomeroy, Ohio

45769.

Seolod blda mual be
oubmltted
lo
lho
Molgo
Counly
Commlaolonera
Office at lhe Molga

Counly CourthouM ,
~cond
· StrMI,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4576i
unlll1 :10 P.M. Aprtl7.

2005 and then opened

and read aloud. The
con;~mlealonera

re10rve the right to
accepl pr reject ony
and ·
all
billa.
Qu..tlona ahould be
dlrecled lo the Melgo
Counly EnglnMr 11

(740) 1182-2811.
(3) 22, 28, (4) 5

Public Notte•
Ordlnii)Ce
04-G5
VIllage ol Middleport
An
Ordinance
AUTHORIZING
APP .R OPRIATIONS
FOR MEETING ORO~
NARY EXPENSES OF
THE
VILLAGE.

· General
Fund
485,387 .27;
Watar
Dept.
"258,397.70 ;
Sewer
Dept.
283,744.611 i Aefuae ,
138,160.41 ;
Slreet
123980.88 ; Meier Dep,
33976.39;
Watar

I m p rove man f ,
305930.88,
Sewer
lmprovemenl, 585.00;
Comalory,
9132.00 ;
Flra Dopl. 283U.98 ;
Fire Truck 12,284.19;

Rec..atlon 16,061.08;
Cemetery
Endow
· ft31U7 Duly paiMd

the 14th day of March,
2005. The complalo
laKI of 11111 ordinance
may be viewed al lhe
office of lhe flocal
Officer, 237 Race 91.
Middleport.

(3) 22,28

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road

Racine , Oh1o
45771

Puzzle

44 Lose traction
47 Labor org .
49 Crinkly
paper
51 · Smell

54 Retired
56 Breakfast
item
57 Candy·
striper
58 Icy crystals
59 Estuary
50 Road map

info
61 Fizzy drinks
62 Terminate

DOWN

23 Slops to the 4.3 Patrick"s
Ganges
I
domain
Que. or Ont. 24 Ocean tlsh 45 River
Safe harbor 26 High point
in France
Refleclion
27 Smile
46 Ate heartily
Handwriting
broadly
(2 wds .)
Sammy or . 28 News
48 Distort
Danny
follower
49 Short-term
Just
30 Ginza
worl&lt;er

1

2
3
4

5

·

6

35 Walk off
with
36 Gauls.
to Romans
37 Uncle or
granddad
38 --fool
pole
39 Switch

scrape by

money

7 Into the

50 By Jove!

31 Roswell
crasher
32 Perlman
and Silver

sunset

8 Cleailing
tool
9 APB datum

10 Congeal

33 Darin~

13 Jellystone

bear
18 Neon and

42 Flower
holder

/ nitrogen
20 Flndajobf9r

51 Dory "s neec

52 Morse ·
signal

53 Work by
Keats
55 College
maj .

exploot
35 Water

40 Lament

reservoirs
40 Pricey car
41 Stage
. whispers

b --1-+-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnt) C.p/Jel cryptograms are crealed lrom quo1a11on s ':1)' lamous Ol'O~e past ano Dteselll
EaCflleiW• 1n Tnt! c~~e1 s1anos 101 anoltE•

Today·s clue R equals Y

DVZU

"" WLA
VM

N

NCP

HLMF

NZEWIZ

OLEW

OILFE

NC

FNBW

LCATLZNELVC ."'
VM

~YNXTHF

E. WF

HLSFP

NZF

PLKCLER

PNSLP

XNXFE .

XLHHFZ

i
j

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

740-849-2217

•
'
~-:1---__L.l...U.i
•

•
Now Available AI

R\l l!\1 Ll '!\IBER
Scorpion Tractors

~l_~==~~~~~M~O~~W~!~~5~-2~~~

GRIZZWELLS
II!X'IIU: .1OIECI&lt; OUT liiE '1/A~
/MI.I'U~'

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "She was a poet on a street corner try1ng to rec!le
to a crowd pull1ng at her clothes: - Arthu1 Mi ller. on Manlyn Momoe
(c) 2005 by NEA , Inc 3-29

T~:i:~;~T S©R&amp;U~\-.2"£~5&amp;

-... 'lllrtlxiiiY:

'

APr"RENTLY '"'TH i s
DAY A.N D AI;;. E YOU NEE D.
A C.ONI"ERENC.E TO

G"ARF~ELD

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Melga Counly
Commlaalonera are
""king
bids
for
oqulpp_
l ng two (2)
2005 7400 SFA 614
lnlern.tlonal Tandem
Trucka
purchoMd
through Stata purchaolng procadu,...
Speclflcatlono for
Dump Body, Snow
Pklw, V-Box Sproader,
and
Central
Hydiaullc, Electrical
and Holol Syolamo
are 11Vallable at lho
Mel go ·
Counly

Yesterday, we saw the advantage ol pulli ng i.Jp the bottom of touching honors
when you are playmg third hand h1gh . For
example, you play the Jack from 0 -J-3-2
In tha·l pos111on , lh1rd hand m1ght win the
tric;:k. However, what happens when third
hand cannot win the trick. because either
he IS discarding or someone else has
already played a card higher than his
best?
Thi s deal spotliQhts the answer. You are
East , looking i11 your hand and the
dummy (North). Against lour hearts, West
leads the club ace. promising a suit head·
ed by the ace and king. Which club would
you play?
It is tradit•onalto respon d two hear ts wi th
that North hand. Sut over West's takeout
double . Journament players these days
jump to three hearts. This IS a pre-emp·
tive ra ise showing exactly four trumps '
(with nine combined trumps, bid 16 the
nine-trick level). but fewe r than 10 total
points (counting high-card and shortage
points) If North were stronger, he would
respond "two no-trump over the double.
wh1c;h prom1ses at least four-card support
and 10·p1U s )otal po1nts.
·
At trick one , yoU must con tribute the club
queen. Unless her majesty is a smgl'eton
(which is impossible here), thi s guarantees that you hold the club fack too.
Now West should continue with a low
club to put you on lead tor the deadly diamond shift.
Note thai South has 10 maJOr-suit tricks if
he is given the chance to cash them .
. When you cannot win a trick and wish to
tell partner about a sequence ot touchmg

AstroGraph

Sx!O, IOxiO,

10X10X10X20

Pass

Crossword

hon.ors, drop the top one.

Storage

MilLEY'S
SElf STORAGE

SAV.IN.GS

23.

Saturday April,

Ref1,1nduhle llepn&lt;r,;il'
Cal 740-992-9444
or Email person6@,·erizon. Nel

~a3~ 34' Jayco 5th wheel. ·112' slide out. Like new, many
extras. (740)339·0218.

I

l"llnnn• ,,...

9:00A.M.
MasonVFW
$75.00 ($25.00 Non·

·--·tuiiiiiRaiiSiiiALEiii
·iioa...r"

ANl&gt;
tMLF TO
7'~e BANtc.

Brian Ree ve s

IIllA CD1tt:Nied ·

Pass

to top down

OF IT

Sunset Home
Construction

RESIDENTIAL

F.ast
Pass

From bottom up

TOM~

COMMERCIAL and

740-992-7599

Obi.
Pass

25
29
31
34

position~

J~LONGS

New Home Construclion, Remodeling .
Renovations. Decks. Garages . Pole

L......;._ _ _ _ _lW

1¥

North
2¥

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

\\Y&amp;'-1\&gt; AUToS \

New Hom l's .• Viny l
S iding ~ Nl'~ Garagl's
• Replacement
Windc'l\\·~ • Roofing

FREE ESTIMATES

West

22

l&amp;tter
Bias
Wheel type
Crash into
Bar of soap
Join oren
Fish roe
Whiskey
grains .
Fiery gem
Carrot or
spud
Yank
Half-moon
tide
Relieved
sound
Horse barn
Cattleleed
Impulse
Passing

grade

Opening lead: olo A

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

BUILDERS InC.

South

4¥

Tree Service

BISSELL

2002 Stingray 20 ft open
bow, Red/ White , 5.0 liter v.
8, Hustl ~r trailer, excellent
cond ., Qarage kepi, pr1ce
new ·$24.000 sell $15 ,700.
2000 Ford WindStar LX , call . Troy Krebs 304-67591,000 miles, 2 sliding
doors. power windows &amp;
cruise $6,300 (304)6754014

Suvs

oloQJ .J2

oloHl 95

WVOl5725

1998 30' lil1h wheel travel
10xl5, 10x20,
r:4WM~R~CLES' trailer, double slide, excel·
__
~
• IBnt condition, $13,900
10x30
phone: (740)698-9319
Janel Jeffers
WITH A PHOTO!
02 Honda 400 EX . Excellent
2001 Hornet Bunkhouse 32',
33795 Hiland Road
co ndition, rode little. $3,000
12' expando. steeps 10,
neg. Call (740)256-1526 or ·
Pomeroy, Ohio
Call (740)446-2342
excellent c9ndition. $16.800.
· For Det••ls
(740)645-()446.
:;==:;;~~==~ 04 Yamaha Rhino after mar· (740)441-1501 .
1
ket wheels, speed-o-meler, rr.r;;;;;,~~;;,;;.;;.;;; ~.I.L~I,I~~~~~
~--·FOR--SALE-··-· $6,800.
·Call (740)3839HOME
.
1620.
IMPROVEMENTS
--'-''---------,,.-- '-..,;;iiiiiiiii.iiiiii!iiiiiliior-1
A19W9D9. ElodadediedBa.leuaelhreEr.'6Pidol~secr F
1982 Honda 500 TriDke
S
aring w/Siereo system. k
BA EMENT
97 Beech Street
CD
changer.
sunroo I, blue .. Evenings (740)256·
WATERPROOFING
~.ooo · miles . $9,500 OBO. 6870. $3.000.
Unconditional lifeti me guarMiddleport, OH
(740)446-7777.
1982 Yamaha EKciter 185, antee. Local references fur-~--,,-----nished. Established 1975.' .
2001 lincoln N·avigator. 942 .actual miles, last tune- Call 24 Hrs. (? 40) 446 . ·
AWD, 5.4 va, 3rd row seat- up Spring 2004, $750 OBO,
992-3194
0870 , Rogers Basement
ing, casseneiCD-changer. ,&lt;&gt;.:_4.:01:.::6:..96:..·:.:12::2.:_7____
5
WaterproOfmg .
~
heated/cooled-seats. low
1993 Suzuki 600 Kantana .
miles, e&gt;ec:ellent .condlt1 on , New paint last fall. Great r~-:=,.--:-:--:------.
.,Middleport's only
$2J.500. (7401453 "5535 ·
shape. Asking $1 .800 OBO.
Self-Sioroge2003 Chevrolet Trailblazer (740)388·0172.
EXT LT 4x4. 3rd .row seat1ng , :.....:.::::::..::..:.::.::..._ __
loaded,
garage
kept. .1998 Buell S3 Thunderbolt
Excellent
condition. Harley Davidson engine ,
$ 24 .SOO. (740 )44 6- 7484 or very last sport bike, great
(7401441 , 7411 .
shape. $5 100. (740)985·
:..._:.:c..:.._:,-:.:..__ _~ 9857 ·
99 Jeep Grand Cherokee - - - - - - - laredo. loaded, 6 cylinder, . 2000 · Harley Davidson
;New Homes
excellent condition , 97 ,000 Sportster 883 Hugger, 6,350
• Garages
miles.
$7 ,900
OBO. m1les, new t1res, extras,
1740)592·2948 ·
$6.500 Neg. Day: (740)845• Con:),Piete
i;:;F;.;;.,;.;;.,~~---, 3248 , evening atler 7pm
Remodeling
4X4
(740)256-6589.
. FOR SALE
~---iiiiiiiiiiiiii-r 200t Harley Road King . Teal
in color, many extras, one
Stop &amp;Compare
2001 Dodge Ram 4x4, 46K, owner, excellent condition,
28 months on 19K remain· 29,000 niiles. $16 ,000.
ing factory warranty, new (740)446:.021 3.
tires, tong bed,. quad cab, e-..:..._ _ _ _ __
tow package, am-fm-cass- 2003 H.D. 883, $6,300; 1996
cd, loaded, one owner, Honda 300 "4K4 , $2 .500:
. 1986
BMW. K1000AT.
517 ,500 . ( 7~) 992 • 2459
$2,500. (740)245-5747.

r

19
' 21

¥ AQJ1095
KJ

Accident

Pomeroy, Ohio
25 'llears Local Ek rience

e

r

~ 5 3
8 4
10 7 6 4

A AK

V.C. YOUNG Ill

i

1983 Ford Van 6 cyl., $450.
1985 Ford · van VB 460,
$600 Call (740}446·0194
G d
l984 Chevy Van. oo condition, will maintained inside
&amp; out. Asking $1 ,850. Phone
(740)367-7264
'--'--~---1993 ChevrOlet Astra Van,
.
good
condition
phone
(304)675-5077

17

South

furnace work

40 MOIORO'O~l-S

o

16

•
•
•

• 2
t A QR5
olo A K 16

• Patio and Porch Decks
We do It all ekcept

740-742-2293

* Leave amessa

2

East

}Ve st
• 7 6 4 2

MONTY

• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •

Sup. • Cancer •

14
15

... 8 4

45783

Medicare

13

Dealer. South
Vulnerable: N either

Custom Sportste r, loaded.
$9 ,900 080, 304-593-3542,
_77_3_·5_1_8_2_
. - -- - 94 Harley Davidson Ultra
Cl
. '0 000 .,
I
ass1c, • ,
m1 es, b ue,
excellent condition, $13.500 ,
(740)949-2217

99 Dodge Dakota Club Cab
SLT. Loaded V-8. 4x4. Bed·
liner,
Runnmg-Boards, 2000 Ford Winstar LX. 81K ,
Tonneau Cover, 95Kmi. 2/slidlnQ doors, seats 7, all
$9,500 (304)BB2-2845 ,
power, rear air, tinted windows,
asking
$6,600,
SELL YOUR TRUCK . (740)669·5653
.
HERE
'--"'-Pic..:.:V....::..:.:.A:..C_L__
ded
_:__
89 Y· an.
' 08
' no
Rust, Great Int. Must See
$1,100 (304)593-0517

I U110
EnglnHra
Office, ·
Fairground•

_.liiiiiiii;;,.,t.

Insured

jwill45769 @y~ h ou.cum

4x4 price reduced. loaded
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The Dail y Sentinel • Page 85

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Tuesday, March 29, 2005

An opportunity may davelop for you in
the year ahead from a place distant
1 from
where you presenlly res1de ·
However, it may not be necessary for
you to travel or change locations 1n
o rder to reap its benefits
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - Things
could work out very well for you loday
by hnk1ng up with someone whose
ide·as complement yours. However. 11
might be up to y6u to take the Initiative.
TAURUS (Apn! 20- May 20) - The
timlnQ might be perfect today to resurrect an old projact tha t you had diScarded . With a little dab of ingenuity
·and a touch of elbow grease it could
come off perfectly.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20) - Charm
and humor ro lls out of you n!'llu rally
today and acceptance by those you 'd
like to imPress shou ld be no problem
Your ingratiatihg manner will make
you a most deSirable companion. '
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Today
cou ld be the right day for you to
undertake that major project around
the hou se you ·ve been con templaTing
for some time. AI the very least , lay
out your das1gn. and plans now.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - II you ·ve tall·
en b ehind In yow soc1al obligations.
take the initiative to day to do wh·atever 1t takes to rectify manors. Check
the availability of whomever you 'd llke
to inv ite out ,to dinner.
. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ) ' _:
Conditions are taking a 1Urn for the
better today pertaining lo a touchy
fam tly issue that you've been skept1·
ca l about b~1ng atjle to rE\solve. Keep
your firlgers cro ssed.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0c t. 23) - Keep
your c hannels of communica llon
open today so that you don't m1ss
be 1ng contactad about somet hing
important Check your e-ma1l oHen
and keep your cell phone handy at all
' times .
· ,
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22)- This 1s
one of those days when others ere
li kely to lrQOlt you in a generous fashion without You seemingly doing httiEI
to promote 11, even lrom people who
you didn't think gave a hoot
SAGITTARIU S (Nov. 23·Dec . 21)- 11
may seem thai being aro und people
is what you might need to make your
day. all because you'll be a! your besl
and brightest when in the c~mpa ny ol
friends.
C APRI CORN '(Dec . 22-Jan. 19) Although you like to be In charge at all
times. It Will behoove you to flow with
events as they unfold tOday Lady
Luck will open up channe ls from
which you can beneftt 1n some man·
ner.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - You
could gel the opportun1ty Ieday to add
to your warehouse of knowledge
something that will serve you quite
will in the future What you learn now
Will beneltt you greatly in · various
ways.
PISCES (Feb. 20·Ma rch 20) - Get
out and circu l a r~ today m places
w here you will havo an. opportuni tY to
{099t intlutmtial paopkl. Your chances
for meeting and mak1ng a valuable
contact are ewcellent.

WOlD
GAM I
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SC:RAM·lETS ANSWERH- &lt;e -~;

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LIVmg- Atlas· Cloth- Wa&gt;ter , ACTIONS
. · Children and .po liticians are .will1ng to ta&lt;e. an,.th,na
except responsibility for the1r own ACTIONS
, -

ARLO &amp; JANIS
WHAi'6 Wi!OIJC&lt;! UIOI&lt; AH~ I;
PICTURE. AIJD T!&gt;t..t.. ME.
THAT 1/JA;IJ'TAGOOD TIM€..'

'f/W,, liHIIJK

YOO W~~E.

W.UTIFUV

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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, March 29,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2005

Hot wings, shopping
spree: Soldiers
seek favorites on first
dayback,A6

Funk's spunk makes him Players champion DouG FERGUSON
Associated Press

Bv

PONTE VEDRA BEACH,
Fla. - I! took live days for
The Pla'yers Championship to
resemble a major. Fred Funk
had io wait .even longer to
show he's a big-time player.
A former college golf coach
and .career grinder, -Funk delivered clutch shots over the
water and the only par pun that
mattered, a 5-footer on the
·fmal hole that gave him a oneshot victory Monday in the
toughest final round the TPC at
Sawgrass.has ever had.
·
"! can't believe it." Funk
said, choking back tears. '"I
didn't fathom this happening."
He dosed with a !-under 71,
then had to wait unti I Luke
Donald missed a 20-foot birdie
pun from just. off the ·green
before ce lebratmg the seventh
- .and by far the biggest victory of his career.
. Funk, 48, became the oldest
winner uf The Players
Championship with a final
round that aged him even
more, with conditions that
were tougher than most majors
~cause of 35 mph wind.
He had three-putt bogeys on
consecutive holes to lose a

two-shot lead. He got it back
with a bold fairway metal from
234 yards that narrowly
cleared the water on the par-5
16th and set up a two-putt
birdie. He found land on the
island-green 17th, a victoty in
itself, only to three-putt for
another bogey.
And after a 'bold tee shot
over the water and a bad shot
into the bunker on the 18th. he
saved par with a 5-foot putt
that ultimately spared this
wacky week from stretching
into a sixth day.
·
"Yes!" Funk screamed out as
the putt disappeared, giving a
quick thru st of his fist and
slamming his cap · to the
ground.
Funk finished at 9-under 279
and eamed $1.44 million from
the ri chest purse on the PGA
Tour, nearly three times as
much as his previous largest
_
-· ·
paycheck.
Without that putt. it could
have been a four-way playoff
with no daylight remainmg.
Scott Verplank, who earlier
Monday ·watched best friend
Bob Tway take a 12 on the par3 17th, watched in disbelief as
his 10-foot par putt caught the
left lip on the 18th. He shot 70,
one shot behind.
Donald, the 54-hole leader,

recovered from a 40 on the
back nine and had a chance to
force a playoff until his putt up
the slope and down toward the
hole stayed slightly to the left.
He closed with a 76.
·
Funk became third player to
win before a home crowd at
The Players Championship,
joining Mark McCumber in
1988 and David Duval in 1999,
He was followed around by a
group of friends called "Funk's
Punks," and he kept them on
the edge of their seats.
·
"I never made anything easy
·on my self," Funk said.
Nothing has come easy for a
guy who once coached at the
University of Maryland until
deciding to give the PGA Tour
a try. He had won six times on
tour, but always against weaker fields - two victories were
opposite-field events; two others are no longer on the PGA
Tour schedule.
He was criticized last year
for skipping the Briti sh Opef!
and .instead playing the B.C.
Open, with hopes of ean1ing
Ryder Cup points.
But he showed plenty of
spunk at Sawgrass by beating
the strongest and deepest field
in golf, playing 32 holes
Monday on a course that was
the hardest it has ever be.en.

The wind was the strongest
since the tournament moved in
1982 from Sawgrass Country
Club across the street and next
to the ocean. It nearly blew
tlagsti cks out of the hol e,
swept sand from the .bunker
and produced the highest finalround scori ng on the Stadium
Course.
There were 16 rounds in the
80s, more than two dozen balls
in the water on the island-green
17th and never a du II moment ·
during a marathon' Monday.
With so much attention on
the Big Four at the still1 of the
toumament. none finished in
the top 10.
Vijay Singh was within four
shots of the lead until he threeputted from 8 feet for a double
bogey on No. 15. He closed
· with a 72 and tled for 12th,
enough to retain 'his No. I
ranking by finishing ahead of
Tiger Woods.
' Woods tied for 53rd by
shooting a 75. Phil Mickelson
dropped out of contention with
two balls into the water on the
17th in morning, and another
one in the aftemoon. He shot
75 and tied for 40th.
AP pho!Q
Emie Els started his day with
a double bogey and a triple Fred Funk celebrates after sinking a putt on the 18th hole dur' ·
bogey, but closed with a 69 to ing the final round of the Players Championship Monday in
Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.·
tie for 17th.

ToM WITHERS
Associated Press

WINTER HAVEN , Fla.The Indians' bullpen blew
leads, half a season atrd probably any chance Cleveland
had of winning the AL
Central last year.
Say this for them, though.
before the All-Star break ,
Cleveland's relievers were·
consistent consistently
bad.
"It was tough on the guys,"
said closer Bob Wickman ,
who missed the first three
months while recovering
from an elbow injury. "We ' re
not goi·ng to let that happen
again."
They ' d better not.
I! would_be difficult for any
relief staff to replicate the
Indians' atrocious tirst half

Big Ten
from Page 81
wide."
And the Big Ten is watch·
ing to make sure . ·it does.
Delany said his office' has
monitored the national

Cavs
from Page 81
'

and Lee Nailon each scored
15 and Chris Andersen II ,
Leading 53-42 at halftime,
the Homets hit all II of their
free throws in the third quarter

Tribe
from Page 81

last season. By mid-July. the
bullpen had wasted 21 saves
in 36 tries. posted ~ majorleague high 5.60 ERA and
sabotaged the club's·ciimb to
contention,
At one point, a member of
the reeling bullpen printed out
copies of the ' pen 's statistical
sins and taped them up in the
lockers of every pitcher. If his
intent was to motivate, it didn't work.
·
"You don't want to hear all
that," said David Riske. who
had a 12.27 ERA in eight outings as Cleveland 's closer
before sliding back into the
comfort of his usual set-up
role. "It's a pride thing,"
Although
the bullpen
rebounded with a solid second
half in ' 04, it still finished
with 28 blown saves and a
4.90 ERA-- the AL's third
highest.
broadcasts on CBS . and
ESPN. When he 's seen
. 's omething unfair, he 's
called the networks to point
it out.
Delany said he's only
done it a " handful" of
times. But even a handful is
too many, especially with
all the attention paid to the ·

Dukes. North Carolinas
and Connecticuts.
"I have a lot of respect
for basketball in the East
Coast," said Delany, an
East Coast native. " I just
don 't think there 's two levels: A level in the East and
a level everywhere else."

and pulled further away with
acrobatic driving layups and a
breakaway dunk by Smith.
Notes: Hornets reserve
guard had to leave the game
brietly after he was hit in the
face and started bleeding
from hi s lower, lip .
Cleveland is 5-8 this month.
... Cleveland has beaten New

Orleans in five straight meetings .... James' missed 3 with
I :52 left in the fourth period
was Cleveland's first missed
field goal of the ·quarter. ..
Tray lor came in averaging
4.9 point s but scored I 0
points in hi_s first IO ·minutes
off the bench against his former team.

seven runs and nine hits in
four . innings. In the fifth,
Jones homered off Arthur
Rhodes.

'·'

" I told him to save a couple
of those," said Atlanta pitcher
Mike Hampton, who allowed
seven hits in five innings.
''Every game he seems to hi t
one or two."
The Braves didn ' t always
· keep detailed spring training
stats. but Jones ' 10 homers
are the team's most in training camp since 1990. Jones'
previous high in a . spri ng
traini'ng was seven in 2000.
"That's the year I hit .300,".
said Jones. who batted .261
and had 91 RBis last season
but was di sappointed with his
results. "My main goal this
year was to be more consistent because last year I was-

comeback from three injuryprone seasons, was a late
scratch from the starting lineup with a tight left hamstring.
· The Indians kept Gonzalez
on their · roster over top
prospect Grady Sizemore on
the hope that the two-time
AL MVP can stay healthy.
But already he's already
missed a game.
"He's lioton the shelf. It's
day-to-day thing," Indians
manager ,Eric Wedge said.
"We· re going to be carefu I
with him. This is a guy who
hasn' t played a lot in the last
. two or three years."
,
Jones hit an RBI double in
the first inning before con- n't."
Raul Mondesi and Marcus
necting for a solo homer in
Giles
hit two-run homers and ·
the third off Cleveland starter .
Cliff Lee. who was tagged for Pete Orr added a solo shot for

Blasts
from Page 81
Mauer finished 1-for-3
with a walk, an RBI and a
run in six i,nnings before
being replaced at catcher by
Mike Redmond. Mauer is
scheduled to start Tuesday
niPht in ""'"'ola a~ainst the

The Indians are expecting
"With this bullpen, we have
better things after rebuilding enough guys who can pick up
their bullpen during the off. the slack. Somebody isn ' t
season by adding .veteran left- going to make this team who
handers Scott Sauerbeck is one hell of a pitcher."
(recovering from · shoulder
That was Brian Tallet, who
surgery in '04) and Arthur was optioned on Monday to
Rhodes (with Oakland). Only Triple-A Buffalo despite posttwo relievers Rafael ing a 0.87 ERA in six appearBetancourt and Riske ances and outpitching every
remain from the anything-but- reliever. Tallet was battling
magnificent s.even relievers for one of two linal spots in
who opened on Cleveland 's · the bullpen that ultimately
25-man roster a year ago.
went to Matt Miller (8.38
The bullpen is new. It ERA) and Betancourt (.308
remains to be seen if it's opponents batting average).
improved.·
Wedge gave the two right"People say this bullpen handers the nod over Tallet. a
isn' t the strength of this team, lefty, based on their experibut I have confidence this ence and reliability last seayear," said Wickman , whore- son. Before he began to tire
signed for one year as a free
agent. "I know that if I got
hurt, someone could step jn as
the closer and they ' re not
going to !!liss a beat.

the Braves, who have homered 36 times this spring:
Ben Broussard had three
hits and two RBis for
Cleveland.
Notes: Indian s ace cc.
Sabathia pitched two innings
in a minor league game,
all_owing one hit- a, home
run. Sabathia is on the 15-day.
disabled list with strained
oblique muscle and won ' t
start on opening day. As long
as he doesn' t have any setbacks, Sabathia will make his
season debut on April 17
against Minnesota. 'T II just
look at the 17th as my open- .
ing day," he said. "It's against
the Twins, and you know I
.hate them. And they know it.
I' ll be fired up." ... Mondesi
also doubled and singled in
hi s first game· back after
missing a week with a hamstring pulL ... The Indians
·
had won five straight.

a

Reds, his first back-to-back tomorrow night, and we 'II go
from there."
starts of the spring.
Noles: Gardenhire said RH
The club still is being caureliever
Grant Balfour has
tious with Mauer, who had
arthroscopic surgery on his been cleared by doctors to
left knee and missed all but start hi s throwing program.
35 games in his rookie sea- Balfour was placed on th~
son. He had swelling ami 15-day disabled list Saturday
soreness in the knee the first wit h a strained forearm ....
week of March but there have Before the game, Donald
been no setbacks since.
Fe hr. head of the players '.
"I felt good. No problenis.:t union, met with the Twins for '
Mauer said. ''I'm ready to go almost two hours.

from overuse, Betancourt was
Cleveland's only dependable
reliever, appearing in 68
games and serving a variety
of roles.
Miller earned his manager's
confidence in 57 appearances
last season, emerging as a
dependable set-up guy after
spending nearly a decade
bouncing around the minor
leagues looking for steady
work.
"I' ve been in spring training
a number of .times when I
pitched really well and it didn't matter," Miller said. 'Then
I came here feeling like spring
training was · the only thing
that mattered. I was a little
down about the way I pitched.

But I feel like I've got a bunch
of zeros (shutout innings)
ahead of me."
Wedge is counting on his .
relievers to keep things
together thi s season. When
the bullpen door swings open,
he doesn't want the tloodgates to follow.
''The experience- we have,
the complementary arms we.
have down there now, it's just
night and day from last year,''
he said. "But they 've still got
10 go out and do 'it on the
field. They've still got to go
out there and perform and
feed off each other. But it's.
definitely a stronger situa"
tion ."

.

) 11

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. • Tressel aiming for
national title.-See Page 81

tl)

HHnnnd.nh"'t'lltlnel~ ·~· m

..2ltt))

Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

plan for an Integrated
Gasification Combined Cycle
coal-burning power plant.
GREAT · BEND - If wliich the company would
American Electric Power like to build on a 1.200-acre
proceeds with plans to con- site it owns near the
struct a $1 billion power Ravenswood Bridge. AEP
plant at the Great Bend site, expects the PUCO to render a
further development in the decision on its plan to recovarea will likely depend on . er costs of construction later
infrastructure ·improvements this year.
there,
Meigs
County
L9cal officials hope the
Economic
Development
Director Michael Gulliver construction of the plant expected to begin in . 2007
said.
AEP has asked the Public and continue for three years
Utilities C01nmission of Ohio - will , create a "domino
to approve_ a cost-recovery
Please see Gulliver. A5

Submitted photo

This aerial photograph taken by Economic Development Di rector Mic hael Gulliver on March 17
shows the 1.200 acres where AEP hopes to locate a $1 billion power plant. The Ravenswood
Bridge is seen in the background.

Southern school boardvotes against .d ual routing
OBnuARIES

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSER~ENT@MYD~ILYSENTINEL,COM

Page AS
• Lois Diles Bush, 85

INSIDE
• For Red Lake
chairman, shooting
becomes more personaL
SeePageA2
.• National TRIO Day to
be observed at ou.
See .Page A3
• Teachers hear from
STRS Board candidate.
See Page A3
• Local briefs.
SeePage AS
• For the record.
See Page AS
• Meigs County transfers
posted. See Page AS
The Southern Local School Board meeting was preceded by a
presentation on dual ·bus routing and public comments.
Several of the district's bus drivers attended the meeting to
voice their concerns about the policy which' would result in the
elimination of two ,routes. The school .board later voted against
dual bus routing but the ultimate' authority rests with the
Financial Planning Supervision Commission which oversees
Southern's deficit reducing plans. The commission meets
today at 10:30 a.m. at Southern High SchooL

We'll run your classified line ad to sell your Boa~ Camper, Motorcycle, 4- Wheeler,
Van, Pick-Up Truck, or Automobile for the low price of only $25.00. ·

This special is only available to private, non-commercial individuals.

_***You must call prior to the end of initial25 day period to extend.
***Limited to one, 2S d!ly extension. {Maximum or 50 days)
***Classified ad limited to 15 words or less.
***25!! for each additional word over 15 words.
***Typographical corrections· must be made within first 3 days of publication. ·
•••Only one Item per classified ad.
***Pre-payment Is Required and non-refundable.
***Available only to ·private, non-commercial individuals.

\l\R.l11

Gulliver: Development in Great Bend depends on infrastructure .

SPORTS

WEAmER

We'H run your classified line ad in 25 consecutive editions of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
the Pomeroy Sentinel and the Po.int Pleasant Register. Your ad will reach over
13,500 homes. In addition, your ad will appear in our weeki' Tri County Marketplace
which is delivered to 17,000 homes. Ir you sell your vehicle within.25 days, just call
and we'll cancel your ad, if your vehicle didn't sell, just atll prior to the end of 25 dliys
and we'll extend your ad another 25 days.

.

Miami shuts out
Rio Grande, Bt

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Indians feel relieved by offseason bullpen acquisitions
BY

Ria

'

RACINE - In a four-to. one vote, the Southern Local
Board of Education voted
against a policy of oual bus
routing during Monday
night's meeting.
Preceding the vote was a
presentation by Southern
Superintencte'nt Bob Grueser
on dual bus routing followed
by public comments.
Grueser's presentation consisted of projected figures that
showed the school district
':"Ould ~ ave $88,000 by eliminating two bus routes but this
elimination · of bvs routes
might result in additional
costs that totaled $96, I08.
Due to students being delivered in shifts, these additional
costs included hiring of part·
time staff, additional fuel
costs, bus driver ·· salary
increases, 1!\.Por and equipment for food services and the
extended operation of library
and computer services.
·According to Grueser's figures. · these additional costs
·would send the district over
$11,000 in the hole if dual bus
routing was implemented .
However, those numbers
~ere just projections.
"Until we start doing it we
won't really know what it
really will cost," Grueser told
the audience; several of

-Please see 'Southern. A5

Helping seniors maintain their in.dependence
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX '
2 SI!C110NS- 12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B2-4

Comics

Bs

Dear A,bby

A3

Editorials

A4
As
As

Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

B Section
A2

© aoos Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Beth Ser&amp;ent/ photo
Betty Spencer, Opal Tyree, Geraldine Cleland and Carol Hall sit
at their table known as "the club " at the Meigs Senior Center.
All four ladies are capable of getting out on their own unlike
homebound seniors who receive help from programs through
the center like PASSPORT which may face .some cutbacks.

Hoeftlch/photo
Kelly Grueser, veterinarian, and Margie Lawson , dentist, are
new members of the advisory board for the Meigs County
Tuberculos is Clinic. They are pictured here with other members, left to right. seated, Melanie Weese. Judy Pate and Kathy
Cumings, and standing, Gayann Ctay, !:dna Wood , Grueser, ·
Tom Reed. Chuck Riffle, and Lawson.
'
, C~arlene

.

.

Thberculosis remains
controlled·in Meigs County
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY - No active
cases of tuberculosi.s were
found in Meigs County in
2004, according to a report
from Nancy B'roderick. R.N.
of the Meigs County
Tuberculosis Clinic,
Broderick said that during
the year 2.998 skin tests were
done with four positive
results. In addition to giving

tests at the office in the Meigs
Multipurpose Building, there
were a total of 4 1 outside and
evening clinics.
Two of those patients with·
positi ve results were placed
on preventive medication.
Four chest X-ray clinics were
held with a total of I08 chest
X-rays being don.e. The
nurse said thai early detection
throu gh skin tests "keeps the

Please see Meigs, A5

AEP5 donationfor education to bmqi( Meigs
POMEROY
Meig s
County is one of several
Southern Ohio counties
which will benefit froiu the
American Electric Power '&gt;
(AEP) gram of $25.000 to the
Foundation for Appalachian

Ohio (FAO).
The gram will support the
Foundation's efforts to begin
to promote its goals of
greater access opport unities
Please see Donation, AS

POMEROY
Maintaining a level of independence can become dimcolt for anyone, but especially for the elderly, many of
whom see nursing homes as a
last resort.
"Nothing against nursing
homes b.ut there's no place
like home.'' Meigs Senior
Center visitor Betty Spencer
said about maintaining her
independence and own home .
"My husband has been· gone·
since 1960 and this (main·
taining her independence) is
just a way of life."
Although Spencer keeps Jane Hart. AEP's vice president of external affairs. presents a
her own house. some seniors check to Marianne Camp_beiL chair of the board or trustees for
the Foundation for Appalachian Ohio. and Ron Strickmaker.
· Please see Seniors, AS
vice-chairman of the board of trustees.

ibe ,tloint l\1leasant l\egi~ter
~4-675·1339" '
' llaM

~~r ~al!ipoli~ iailp ~ribunr . ~

740·44&amp;-2342
'

I

____

....__

.

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