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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, AprilS. 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Rough

Southern Winter Sports Banquet
Ashton Brown, Coach's good to being great and to members
were
Dustin
Award;
and
Stephanie work hard this summer to get Brinager, Terry Bell, Brad
Crouch, R.J . Hamlon, Jacob
Bradford and Cassie Cleland. there."
The Southern varsity club Hunter, Jesse Mc.Knight, Joe
RACINE _ The Southern Outstanding
Cheerleading
Winter Sports Banquet was Awards
and
Four-year consisted of the following ,Nottingham, Josh Pape, Darin
. players: Susan Brauer. Ashley Teaford. and Buddy Young.
recently held in Charles· w. Cheerleading Awards.
Hayman gymnasium where
Receiving
senior Dunn. Linda Eddy. Jessica
The 13-8 boys varsity basmember of the boys and girls Cheerleading&gt; awards were Hill. Katie Sayre . . Brooke ketball team was honored by
basketball teams and cheer- Cleland. Dailey. Hawley. and Kiser. Jordan Neigler. Joanne head coach Jonathan Rees.
Pickens.
Dea.Ja
Pullins. Rees "laid down the law" as to
leading squads were honored Bradford.
for great seasons. The large
Next to recognize her team Ashley Roush . Kristiina what hi s expectlltions were for.
crowd in ·attendance was treat- was reserve gi rl&lt; basketball Williams. Kasie Sel'ters, neKt season and that he "was
ed to a fine meal and awards coach Rebecca E~am who .Bethany Vance. and Mallory not satisfied with this year's
assembly.
praised her'team for continued Hill. Brittany Morarity was record". · .
Rees spoke of discipline
Southern High School ath· improvement throughout the the team manager and Nikki
Jetic director Ryan Lemley season. Evans also challenged Riftle wa' scorekeeper.
both at /home and on the.court.
gave the welcoming address . her club to .. work hard and to
Earning special awards . and l;ited several facts that
then girls' coach Scott Wolfe continue improving" through- were Katie Sayre: Most Steals help create winners. including
gave the invocation .•After the out their careers.
and Best Offensive Player: hard work and achieving
Reserve team members Ashley
Dunn.
Most goals. Rees said, .. We are curpotluck meal and a main
course provided by the were Emily Babbitt. Linda Rebounds : Joanne Pickens. rently on a job laying 5 miles
Southern Athletic Boosters. Eddy. Amber Hill. Mallory Kristiina Williams. Brooke of pipe and our goal is to lay
· high school principal Gordon Hill. Jordan Neigler. Adelle Kiser. Coach\ Award: Deana 3.000 feet per day. When five
Fisher and Lemley gave Rice. Kasie Sellers. and Pullins. Best Defensive Award o'clock comes we don't quit.
thanks to all those people who Bethany Vance .
and Hustle Award: Susan when it gets dark we don't
have helped with the boosters
Head varsity coach Scott Brauer. Best Free Throw quit, we only quit when we
and various programs.
'wolfe then honored his sec- Percentage: and Jessica Hill achieve our goal for the day.''
"This is true in basketball
Cheerleading advisor Tracy tiona! champion varsity club and Ashley Roush . Most
and in real life. You don't quit
Pickett was first to make a which posted a 16-7 overall Improved.
presentation by · honoring record. Wolfe praised his dub
Senior Awards went to Katie until you achieve your goals if
members of the 2003-04 for working hard last off-sea- Sayre. Deana Pullins. Jessica you are going to be successcheerleading squad. Pickett son to make 2003-04 a sue- Hill, and Ashley Dunn.
ful. ..
first made presentations to tha cessful season. He said.· "For
Next. freshman boys coach
Rees praised his team for its
reserve
squad-Amber two veais Fve said we had to Chad Zimmerman awarded 13 wins. and challenged them
Holsinger, Stephanie l:loskins, get bett.cr than White Oak. we the freshman basketball team to post more victories next
Nicole McDaniel, Allie Rees. finally achieved that goal. . for their effons. Team mem- season. Varsity team members
and Chelsea Smith.
Now. we have to get better bers were Nick Buck. Randy were Wes Burrows. Josh
Next. the varsity squad- than
Trimble. " Trimble Collins. Weston Counts, Jacob Harris. Dustin Keyes. Jak,e
Stephanie Bradford, Ashton accounted for three of our Hunter, PatrickJohnson, Mike Nease, Craig Randolph, Tyler
Brown. Cassie Cleland. seve n losses. If we tum those Lavender. R. J. Leach, Scott Roberts, Aaron Sellers, Josh
Brandi Dailey, and Sarah into victories that iurns a goOd Musser. Eric Zeiner. and J. R. Smith. Derek Teaford, Jeremy
Hawley-was honored. Hawley 16-7 season into a great 19-4 Hupp.
Yeauger. and Chris Tucker.
The Re serve boys were hon- Additionally. team manager
and Smith were recognized as season. This summer we must
by Coach
Steve Pat Snyder was honored for
Most Improved cheerleaders: work extremely hard to make ored
Bradford and Cleland were up for the loss of O!Jr se niors. I Randolph. Randolph praised helping out the team.
for
improvement , Senior awards were presentco-captains:
Dailey
and . challenge you (the team) to them
McDaniel, Most Spirited: take . that jump from being throughout the season. Team ed to Josh Smith and Jeremy
STAA' REPORT
spor1S0mydailytribune.com

Meigs
frQm Page 81
matched their hosts the rest
of the way to win by a pair of
runs.
Fackler went 2 for 4 at the
plate with two runs scored
and one batted in, and also
pitched the final two innings
to pick up the save.
Winning pitcher Mike
Davis helped his own cause
with a pair of doubles.
Jeremy Blackston and Eric
Cullums also had two hits
apiece for Meigs.
Jared Humphreys had two
hits'. including an RBI triple.
for Jackson. Meanwhile
teammates Zack Hoover and
,Brenton Wayland added a
double and single each in the
loss.
Fackler's homer, which
easily cleared the fence in
right field. answered a
Jackson score in the bottom
.of the . first and evened the
score at 1-1. Then Davis doubled and Matt Holley drew a
walk, both eventually scored
on tielding errors to make 'it
3-1.

NASCAR
from Page 81
seven caution periods that
took 45 laps. Twelve drivers
led the race, with Sadler topping the field the final 27
laps. ·
Gordon finished third and
Dale Earnhardt Jr. was
fourth, his fourth top- I 0 linish at the I 1/2-mile track
where he got his tirst Cup
win four years ago. A week
after a runner-up finish at
Bristol, Rusty Wallace was
fifth, stretc hing his winless
drought to I05 races.
Kahne led when he took his
Dodge into the pits on the
262nd lap. Just after he got
back on the track, and before
Gordon apd Sadler had pitted, Ward Burton spun on the
backstretch to bring out the
caution.
Staying on the lead lap
on ly after getting the free

Jackson cut the lead to a
sing le run in the bottom half
of the second on a two-out
Hoover single Op the middle
that plated Brenton Wayland.
The Marauders had a
chance to blow the game
wide open in the third and
fourth innings. however, as
the Meigs Countians twice
had the base loaded with only
one out. But Jackson used 12-3 double plays to erase the
threat both times.
The two teams exchanged
single runs in the fifth. Meigs
scored in the top half when
Davis doubled home Fackler,
then
Jackson 's
T.J.
Md)unald had a run-scoring
double himself. ·
Meigs added a pair of runs
in the sixth , which turned out
to be the game winners.
Blackston led off the inning
with a double and eventually
· scored on a Dill single to
right center. Dill later scored
himself on an error to give
his team a 6-3 lead.
The final two runs were
scored off Jackson ace Justin
Ochsenbein, who did not
start either game. Ryan
Delong started the second
game for Jackson and gave
up three·runs on four hits and

walked three.
.Jackson added one more
run in the bottom of the
frame, but failed to make it
all the way back.
Jackson stranded four base
runners over the final two
innings while Meigs left a
dozen runs out on the base
pads for the game.
Humphreys pitched the
first game for Jackson, allowing only four hits over his
five innings of work. He
struck out four and walked
three in picking up the win.
Doug .Dill suffered the loss
for Meigs. as the lronmcn
touched up the senior for six
hits through the first three
'innings.
Jackson took a 2-0 lead
after the first inning thanks to
RBI singles by Humphreys
and Justin Rippeth.
Rippeth was 3-3 in the first
game with a pair of runs
scored and batted in.
The third inning was highlighted by a two-run sacritice
bunt courtesy of McDonald.
The bunt · easi Iy scored
Rippeth from third, but alert
base
running
from
Humphreys saw the multisport star score all the way
from second . The unusual

play saw the lronmen build a
5-0 cushion.
Jackson went on to add
three more tallies each in the
third and fourth frames,. winning 11-0 via the mercy rule
after five innings.
Two of Meigs' four hits
came in the first inning when
Blackston and Cullums singled back-to-back to start the
game. Cullums added anoth.
er hit later on and Matt
Holley doubled.
Meigs looks to stay unbeaten in Tri-Valley Conference
Monday at Nelsonville- York.
That same day, Jackson
opens Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League play at
Logan.

Subscribe todm·.
992-2155 .

Javy Lopez horneral and drove
in three ruth. and fellow newcomers Ralilel Palmeiro and MiC
Tej&lt;rll both bOO rwo h1t' to
the Orioles over the Boston Red
Sox 7.-'2 Sunday night in Lee
Mauilli 's first gmne as
Baltimore's J11lll13!,&gt;er.
· ManineL experienced . an
unchardCieristic 13p'e m control
while yieldi~ three secondinning nms. t ne Red Sox fell
behind the New YO!X Yankees (II J in the AL 8.Jst foc the first time
thi~ season by virtue of the opening-night loss._
.
Signed a~Aree ae.ent' dwmg a
busy winter for the Orioles. I..opcz. •
Palrreiro and Tejada combined to
go 7-ter-11 -with three
and
four RBls. Tejada 1v-Js also perfect
on 12 chan&lt;."CS at shoo.'itop.
Martinez w'Js the loser. gi1ing up
three run&lt;;, two earned arrl seven
hit' in six inning;. He struck our
five. walked ore arxl hit a Iutter
It was his liN appeamnce in a
£ame. tllal oounted since Oct 16.
when the three-time Cy YOWlg
Award winner blew a 5-2 agaim;t
the Yankees in Game 7 of the AL
champion,hip series. and New
Yort went on to win 6-5 in II

.

S - Brandon Fackler
HR - Meigs: Brandon FacKler, second
inning, none on. Jackson: none .

I97th lap.
There has never been a
repeat winner 'at Texas, and
no driver has ever won from
the front row.
Just 20 laps after his previous stop , Labonte got only
gas and came out of the pits
first. But after the restart on
lap 205 , Joe Nemechek took
over as Labonte started slipping because of an alternator
problem. He slipped to 35th
four laps down before recovering to finish 25th.
Elliott stayed in the top 10
for much of the race, and led
twice for 26 laps, until a cut
left tire sent his' unsponsored
Oodge into the ' wall on the
275th lap.
Making the slowing transition to retirement while serving as a mentor to Kahne in
his old No. 9 car, Elliott is
running a limited schedule
for Evernham. Without sponsorship, Elliott might not
drive again
until
the
Brickyard 400 in Au gust.
pitched five innings, giving
nine hits and six earned runs
witli one strikeout.
Cedarville now possesses a
fiv e-game winning streak
while Rio Grande lost for the
tb.itd slrai.g.b.t-!\"Uill'-----~1
Rio Grande will play nust
to Pikeville College 3. p.m..
Tue sday.
The game originally scheduled on April 2 against
Concord College has been
cancelled.

;;oCL:\TS•\'ol.)-t '-o ,- .,
•

•

•

•

TlTSl)\\

.)-

J•

•

•

• Reds drop season
opener. see Page 81

BY

J. Mtl£5 lAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTI~EL.COM

...

,

\H~to\\ . rn ~ d. t il ~c.,( • Jill liC' I.fi, JJI

).

CHESTER - Two men have· been
charged by the Meigs County Sherift"s
Office with kidnapping and other
felonies related to an incident that sent
a woman to the hospital Sunday.
Shawn Fitzgerald. 25. of Coolville,
has been charged with two counts of

assault. kidnapping. aggravated burglary
and the intimidation of a crime victim.
all felonies. and one misdemeanor
charge of domestic violence. Thomas
Shuler. 24, of Coolville. · ha' been
charged with kidnapping. complicity to
aggmvated burglary. and two complicity
charges to assault - all felonie,.
According to the Meig, Sheriff's
report. Fitzgerald all~gedly broke

into Steven HuJ,e·, home in Che~ter
and threatened him with a baseball ·
bat while Shuler was waitin o nearbv
in hi~ vehicle outside. Huh.;' tried to
defend him,elf with a .22 caliber
rifle. but Fiv~erald took the rille
from him anl firer.! severa l round,
into the ceilin!! . Accordin!! to the
sheriff',
report . Hube
said
Fitzgerald hit him in the head with a

ha,ehall ·oat and then he alleued l1
kidnapped
H uhe ·'
!! irl t~ien~
Kimberlee \la1le. the e-.-'girltriend
of Fiugerald . ·
·"
·
When \1eiQ,. Cnunt\ Sheriff',
deputies arri,ed. HuJ ,e liar.! bloo.d on
hi &gt; face und arm' ..-\n e mer~enc1 ·
s4uad treated him for hi ' infurie~.
Please see Kidnapping. AS

Meigs County Relay for Life fund-raising b.egins

Boston ultimately tired m&lt;mager Grady Linle for. among other
things,le&lt;~ving a tiring Martinez in
too long.
Little's successor. Terry
Fmncona. watched the Red Sox
stmnd 14 runne" against Sidney
Pon&lt;;()fl and three relievers in tempemtures that dipped into the 30s.
Ponson. the winner. allowed
one rnn. seven hits and three walk~
in 5 2-3 innings. His fine effort
bocked his stature as the new staff
ace and belied hi' career nwnbcrs
against Boston &lt;;oming in: 1-9 ;uld
a 656 ERA in 12 !!'unes.
BJ. Ry.m got five out' for the
save.
Randy Hays, a member of the Relay for Life Cancer
Fighters team, serves a hotdog to Sandy Wise from his
stand in the Farmers Bank lobby. The food sale was a
fund raiser for the team ·s contribution to the American
Cancer Society. (Charlene Hoeflich )
'

Bv

CHIIRLENE HoEFLicH

HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL·.COM

• ODOT warns of work
zone dangers. See Page
AS
• Holzer inplements new
therapy program. See
Page AS

POMEROY - Fund-raising is already underway by
the numerous teams who will
be participating in Meigs
· County's Relay for Life to be
held June 4 and 5 on the track
at Eastern High School.
Friday the Cancer Fighters
of Farmers Bank served hotdogs and· other refreshments
at noon to raise money for
the event. On April 24 the
Fraternal Order of the Eagles
and the Meigs County
Health Department teams
.will host a public spaghetti

-.

... "" .

Pomeroy gets new postmaster

I

Not in the
tniddle tivet Pott.

,............ ,gf

dinner at the Eagles Club on
West Main Street. Dinners
will be served from 2 to 5
p.m. All of the proceeds will Luminaries decorated to honor a cancer survivor or remember a loved one who lost their bat·
go to the American Cancer tie to the disease· are being sold at Farmers Bank. Here the Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz purchases
Society.
several from Sue Lightfoot. chairman. (Charlene Hoeflich)
Since the Relays for Life
"I am proud to repres~nt
were started 20 years ago. next morning. Team mem- one with something signifithe
many cancer sun·ivors
the event has spread 10 over bers take turns walking or cant to their life . Placed
4,000 communities in the running on the track through- around the track the luminar- and the families of those who
United States and into nine out the night. The relay kicks ies light the way for those have lost their battle to cancer.'' said Ligh tfoot. "As the
off with a survivors lap
other countries. It was which is followed by a recep- who travel the track by night . luminaries light ur the night,
Sue Lightfoot is the lumi- it i ~ very clear II' h) we relay
declared the
American tion ·honoring them.
Cancer Society's signature
A luminary ceremony is nary chairman for the event and why we need to continue
event in 1993.
. held at dusk on the opening Luminaries can be purchased to raise money for cancer
Meigs County 's Relay for· night. The luminaries consist at Farmers Bank or by calling re.&gt;earch. education. advocaLife is an L8-how:_eyent, of tea lights in paper bags- her at 992-3138. They will cy and service:· 'he added .
beginning at 4 p.m. on June 4 decorated to honor a cancer also be sold at the relay. Last
Jo Ann Crisp i' £eneral
and closing at 10 a.m. the survivor or reniember a loved year 400 luminaries were sold chairman of the event.

WEATHER

-

"

mrungs.

CLUE FOR FRIDAY.
APRIL 2. 2004

'•

\P"IIf .,-UO..J.

Two men charged with kic;tnapping of Chester.woman

SPORTS

INSIDE

Meigs 6, Jackson 4 ·

-

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Page AS
• Shelby Ann Jarrell
• Norman C. Will
• Willard Pa&lt;;kman

Meigs
o 3 o o 1 2 o -6 10 2
Jackson 1 1 o o 1 1 0 -4 9 3
Mike Davis, Brandon Fackler (6) and Malt
Holley. Ryan Delong, Tommy Baker (4) ,
Justin Ochsenbein (6) and Tylef Baisden.
Ben Jord8n (4).
WP - Mike Davis

LP- Ryan Delong

.•

..•

OBITUARIES

000 00
041
Jackson 233 3- x
11 81
Doug Dill . Eric Burnam (4) and Man
Holley. Jared Humphreys and Tyler
Baisden.
WP- Jared Humphreys
LP- Doug Dill

ne

• •

run'

Jackson 11 , Meigs 0

Chevalier and Stephanie
Broccolo went . 4-for-3 and
Brandi Jones went 2-for-4
with
" double and an RBI.
from Page 81
Sophomore right fielder
11 runners on base.
Jenny Olding clubbed a twol=l===:R,i•e~-~1ae-41~ea;;es-~~G~-~~~~~~~~~~~
the run home run . Junior first
with no outs in the seventh
~baseman Amy :Z:oRIJ --&lt;~lso
but could not dent the plate.
Fox relieved Allie Smith .to added an RBI hit.
Andrea Lotycz topk the get tlJe, win . She pitched the
Courtney Thayer and Tara
tough luck loss for 'Rio final 2·, innings yielding .one Mun&gt;on were the big hiller'
Grande. Lotycz (7-3) pitched hit and one walk .
for the Lady Jackets as they
six inning s yielding 10 hits
Tucker . wenl 2-for-4 and delivered two RBI 's each.
and two runs (one earned) scoreJ two . runs for ' the
13roccolo (6-4 ) su ffered the
Redwome n.
Kri sten loss for Rio Grande. She

Rio

MORE LOCAL SPORTS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

HMC recognizes social
workers, As

BALTIMORE (AP) - One
iB:I inning did in Pedro Martinez.
ju&lt;;t like la..t October.

M91QS

pass under yellow. Kahne Gordon has been snakebit at
resta'rted eighth. Gordon and the track. He was involved in
crashes the first four Texas
Sadler were 1-2.
There were three more cau- races (1997-00), including
tion tlags before the final when he Jed the inaugural
restart on the 302nd of 334 . race in 1997.
"We've had some crazy
laps. Gordon and · Sadler
things
happen (o us here,"
maintained the lead and
Gordon said. "The last three
Kahne was seventh.
Six 'laps later, Gordon sud- · or four races have heen phedenly fell off the pace nomenal for us here in Texas.
because of an electrical prob- But we just haven 't been able
lc;m . By time he switched to to win.' ,
Kurt Busch finished sixth
his backup battery, Gordon
to
take over the series points
had slipped to fourth behind
Sadler, Earnhardt and Kahne. lead, 19 ahead of Matt
Kahne went inside on the· Kenseth. his Roush Racing
314th lap to overtake teammate and the defending
Earnhardt for second and season champion. Kenseth
.
•
started his dogged pursuit of tinished 16th. .
Bobby
Labonte
and
Bill
Sadler.
It was a good comeback for Elliott, two of NASCAR 's
Kahne, who last week in old guys, started on the front
Bristol finished 40th after an row, but neither was a factor
early crash with Jamie into the end.
Arter starting on the pole,
McMurray.
Texas is one of four tracks Labonte led only five laps
were four-time Cup champi- during a caution after defendon Gordon hasn' t won a race . . ing race winner Ryan
Despite hi s fourth straight Newman 's car broke slid into
top-five finish· in Texas. the outside Turn 4 wall on the
with one strikeout and one
walk.
Jn
game
two,
the
Redwomen jumped out to a
5· 1 lead but failed to hold on
as the Lady Jackets scored

Yeauger.
Special Awards
went to Wes Burrows, Most
Assists and~ Most Defensive
Rebounds:
Jake
Nease,
Coachfs
Award,
Craig
Randolph. Most Steals and
Best Free Throw Percentage:
Josh Smith, Most Offensive
Rebounds:
and
Jeremy
Yeauger. 110 Percent Award.
Gordon and Linda Fisher
were recognized for their contributions to the spons programs. and Mrs. Fil;her for
keeping scorebook. Tim
Cogar. Josh Pape. Dale
Teaford, and Brad Crouch
were recognized for keeping
the boys_ video and Brenda
Johnson and Maxine Rose for
ticket taking, and Johnson and
C.T. Chapman for running the
clock
at "'oames .
.
Rees closed with challenging his team to get to the
spring and summer shootouts
and open gym and to Qe more
successful next season .
Mr. Fisher recognized the
members of the Tri- Valley
Conference
All-Academic
team-Stephanie
Bradford.
Sarah Hawley, Ashton Brown.
Deana Pullin&lt; Katie Sayre.
Ashley Roush. · Kristiina
Williams. Craig Randolph.
and Jeremy Yeauger. In order
to achieve this award a player
must be at least a sophomore.
maintain a 3.5 average, and
must have lettered during their
varsity spon.
The benediction was given
by Scott Wolfe.

Huskies wreck
Geot-gia Tech, Bt

second inning
dooms Pedro,
BoSox

BY

J. MILES

LAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTI NEL. COM

.'
Detail• on Pace A8

INDEX
SErnoNS Calendars
2

Classifieds

- Egg is not at a place of business
- Egg Is not at a private residence
-Egg Is not inside a m&lt;t.~·made ogject
- You will not need digging tools
;- You will not need to climb or the use of a ladder

The Daily Sentinel

12 PAGI!S

A2

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A2

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

~

Le Ann Matvey, project coordinator for the Southeastern Ohio
Breast and Cervical Cancer Project, joins Meigs Countians,
Diana Coates, chair of the local MCCI, Carol Adams, treasurer, Carolyn Grueser, membership, and Donna Williamson, historian, to review papers on the newly awarded nonprofit sta·
tus of the organization. (Charlene Hoefle h)

MCCI attains 501 (c)3 status
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Sports

B1

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Weather

A6

POMEROY
The
Meigs County Cancer
Initiative (MCCI) has

© aoo4 Ohio Valley Publlohtng Co.

achieved its 50 I c3 nonprofit' statU$, almost four
years after community
members joined forces to

Ple1se see 501 (c)J, AS

POMEROY - By special
delivery of the U.S. Postal
Service, Pomeroy has a new
postmaster.
Starting this week, . Tom
Sanders, 54, will be in
charge of IS postal employees who process hundreds of
thousands of letters and
packages each year and who
provide carrier service to
four mral routes, three city
routes and one auxiliary
route which is split between
Pomeroy and a neighborin.g
post office. For the past three
and a half years, he was the
postmaster in Oak Hill.
Sanders replaces Charles
Grim who retired las t
August. Bonnie Brown has
been the acting officer in
charge until the replacemenl
postmaster
could
be
appointed . Sanders has
· worked for the U.S. Postal
Service for the past 36 years.
His father Harland Sanders
also worked for the post

Pomeroy's newest postmaster Tom Sanders helps Diana
Woods process a letter bound fo r Syracuse . Sanders has
served in the U.S. Postal Service for 36 years. (J. Miles Layton)
office and was the postmaster in Benton for a number
of,years.
Sanders said he was naturally drawn to the post office
at a young age. After graduati ng Gallia Academy in

1968. he started work "'i1s a
can·ier.
"I tonk the te\1 in high
'chool and th ev called me
into 11ork:· he ;uid. "I gue"
Please see Postmen. AS

Brought to you by:

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The Daily Sen~el

BY THE BEND

1\Jesday, April 6
l\LFRED Orange
Township Trustees. 7:30
p.m., at the home of the clerk.
Osie Follrod.
POMEROY - Town hall
meeting with Congressman
Ted Strickland ·whe.re the
recently passed prescription
. drug plan for Medicare recipients will be discussed.
·Meeting to be held at II :30
a.m. at the Senior Citizens
Center, Memorial Drive.
Pomeroy.
Wednesday, April 7
ATHENS _ The Region
14 (Athens. Hocking. Meigs,
Perry and Vinton) £EO
Consortium will conduct an
organizational meeting for
the implementation of the
Workforce Investment Act
(WI A) at 10 a.m. at the OU
Inn in Athens.
. PAGEVILLE _ Scipio
Township Trustees. 6:30p.m.
at the Pageville townhall.

Clubs and
organizations
1\Jesday, Apri16
MIDDLEl'ORT The
Middleport
Community

Association will meet at 8:30 special singing by Ray and
a.m. Tuesday at Peoples Delores Cundiff.
Bank in Middleport.
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, at the temple.
Regular business meeting. .
1\Jesday, Apri16
Thursday, AprilS
POMEROY Caring
CHESTER _ Shade River Friends, a support group for
Lod
h .. those -.who have.lost a loved
53 7 30
ge 4 ' : p.m. at t e one. will meet at 1 p.m.
hall. Refreshments.
TUPPERS PLAINS _
Tuesday at the Pomeroy
YFW 9053 will meet at 7:30 United Methodist Church.
Second Street. Meetings are
p.m. at the hall in Tuppers held every Tuesday.
Plains. A meal will be served
at 6:30 p.m.
Saturday, April 10
.,
RACINE
Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
1\Jesday, ARril 6
LETART
.
Oris
Daughters of the American
Revolution, 10 a.m. at the Bumgarner will be celebratRacine Public Library. Patsy ing his 99th birthday April 6.
Gaines, state chaplain, to Cards may be sent to him at
give a program on Rebecca Route 1. Box 56. Letart.
and Daniel Boone·
.
W.Va. 25253
Monday, A(Jri112
POMEROY - Robert C.
RACINE - Metgs County ''Bob'' Hartenbach
will
· Repubhcan Party 7:~0 p.m. at observe his 82nd ·birthday on
the Racme Legton halL
April 6. Cards may be sent to
him at 43748 Russell Road,
Pomeroy. 45769.
Wednesday, April 14
POMEROY- Tom Parker
Thursday, AprilS
VETO- Revival services who resides at Darst's Private
will be held at the Veto Care Home, 33164 Children's
Road,
Pomeroy.
Tabernacle 7:30p.m. April 8, Home
9 and I 0. John Elswick will 45769, will observe his 88th
be the speaker. There will be birthday on Aprill4.

Support Groups

DEAR ABBY: I read
with interest the letter
from "Worried Sick in
Alabama," whose mother
was about to give money
to a known con man. The.
same thing happened to
my mother, who didn't
stop "lending" money
until $67,000 was gone.
.The district attorney,
two police departments
and an attorney who specializes in elder issues
sympathized with me, but
no one could do anything . They told me, in
effect, that as long as
· people are mentally competent , they can do whatever they want with their
own money. Trusting,
naive and misguided do
not constitute incompetence.
Finally, I hired a private
detective who found
pending
felony theft
charges . and
other
incriminating facts about
the guy who was conning
my mother. I believe she
· was persuaded more by
the fact I hi red a private
detective than by what
he dug up. She did quit
writing checks, but I live
in constant fear that
some other con artist will
.
find her.
I encourage "Worried"
to find some way to
invest
her
mother's
money so that Mom
won't
have
instant
access to it. If possible,
she should be convinced
to let her ·daughter . pay
her bills for her, and set
up a checking account
where two signatures are
required.
This is a difficult and, I
suspect ,
widespread
problem. I don't know

Birthdays

Church services

Church Calendar
Rutland Free
Will Baptist
Church
RUTLAND ~ A hymn sing
will be . held at the Rutland
Free Will Baptist Church at 7
p.m. on Good Friday. Groups
to sing will include Joy FM,
Glory Bound Quartet, Marvin
and Deana Clark Family,
Evelyn Roush and family,
\Gabriel . Quartet,
Jeff
Dausherty, and Two for
Jesus. Pastor Jamie. Fortner
invites the public.

Easter services
announced
Hysell Run l;loliness
POMEROY -"Easter services at · the Hysell Run
Holiness Church will be~in
with a 6 a.m. sunrise servtce
and communion, followed by
a breakfast. Sunday school
will be held at 9:30 a.m.,
worship service at I 0:45 a.m.
and the Sunday eveing service at 7 p.m. .
·
Long Bottom UMC
LONG
BOTTOM
Easter sunrise services will
be held at at 7 a.m. Sunda;r at
the Long Bottom Umted
Methodist Church. There will
be Sunday school at 9:30
a.m. and worship servich at
10:30 a.m.
Enterprise UMC
POMEROY Maundy
Thursday
Service
at
Enterprise United Methodist
Church
will
be
held
· Thursday. Silent Communion
meditation can take place
anytime between 7 and 8
p.m. followed by the choir's
Easter cantata, "Because He
Lives" which begins at 8 p.m.
An Easter Egg Hunt will be
held at the Enterprise United
Methodist Church at 2 p.m.
Saturday for families of
Rock Springs, Flatwoods and
Enterprise Churches. There
will be prizes for the children
and refreshments will be
served.
The Easter Sunday Sunrise
Service, "Mary Magdalene's
Good News" will be presented at 6 a.m. at the Enterprise
United Methodist Church. A
breakfast
will
follow.
Worship service will be at
9:30am.
Rutland Nazarene
RUTLAND Rutland
Church of the Nazarene will
present a drama, "Midnight
Cry.~ and at 9:30 a.m. on
Easter Sunday with special
singing by, Bev Adkins,
Tammy Taylor, Darlene
Vanaman , Eloise· Drenner,
Jim Vanaman and Keith

Kennedy. An Easter sunrise
service will be conducted at
6:30 a.m. with breakfast following.
A penny drive will be sponsored by the children jn the
opening of Sunday school
with a special program directed' by Sharon Wise, for children. The public is invited.
Syracuse Nazarene.
-Good
SYRACUSE
Friday communion will be
observed at Syracuse Church
of the Nazarene at 6:30 p.m.
An Easter egg hunt will be
conducted at I I a.m. on
Saturday.
A sunrise service will be
held at . 6 a.m. on Easter
Sunday, followed by breakfast at 7, Sunday school at
9:30, and worship_with special singing and music from
the children's bell choir at
10:30 a.m.
Hillside Baptist
POMEROY Hillside.
Baptist Church will conduct
Good Friday. services at I
p.m. An Easter Sunday program will be presented at
i .0:30 a.m. by the Sunday
school department.
'
First Southern Baptist
POMEROY- Easier sunrise service will be held at
First Baptist Church at 7
a.m., with breakfast to follow. A Bible study for all
ages will begin at 9:30 a.m., ·
followed by worship at
10:45. Evening worship is at
7 p.m.
Bradford Chun:h of Ghrist
· MIDDLEPORT - "Why
Did the Father Forsake Him"
will be the .sermon topic during the Easter sunrise service
at Bradford Church of Christ.
Breakfast will follow.
The Easter program, " At
the Cross," will be preseted at
9:30 a.m., followed by the
worship service, "Why Did
Jesus Come Back to Ltfe" at
10:30 a.m.
Evening worship will be
held at 7 p.m.
Trinity Congregational
POMEROY Maundy
Thursday service will be held
at Trinity Church at 7:30p.m.
Easter sunrise service will be
· held at 7 a.m., followed by
the Easter worship service at
10:25 a.m.
Sacred Heart
POMEROY -On Good
Friday, the church will
observe the Stations of the
Cross at noon, followed by
confession from 1 to 2 p.m.,
and Liturgy of the Passion
and Death of Our Lord and
Holy Communion at 7:30
p.m. Easter Vigil Service will
be conducted at 8:30 _p.m. on
Holy Saturd\'Y· and Easter
Sunday Mass will be
observed at 9:30 a.m.

Coming 'lhundly in the Sentinel •.

t riCeJ f~ ((;i
'

~~ r~. Jf)t

TUesday. April6,

2004

Few legal remedies exist ·
to help elderly con victims

Community Calendar
Public meetings

Page.A2

Racine First Baptist
RACINE - Easter Sunrise
service will be cqpducted at
6:30 a.m. at the church at
6:30 a.m., with breakfast to
follow. Sunday school is at
9:30, followed by morning
worship at I 0:40. The church
will conduct a groundbreaking ceremony for its new
multi-purpose center after the
worship service.
Reedsville United
Methodist
.
REEDSVILLE - Good
Friday services will be held
at 7 p.m. ·at the Reedsville
United Methodist Church.

~ar

Abby

ing an attorney and contacting law enforcement ,
our advice is to report
concerns
to
Adult
Protective Services, the
long:term care ombudsman or the state attorney
general's ·office .. Gall the
Eldercare Locator, a public service .of the U.S.
Department of Health
and Human Services,
Administration of Aging,
at (800) 677- 1116
(Monday through Friday,
9 a.m. to 8 p.m. EST) to
quickly find the numbers
of your local agencies. To
learn more about how to
prevent , recognize or
respond to elder abuse,
neglect or exploitation,
please visit our Web site
at www.elderabusecenter.org.
.
Thank you, Abby, for
helping
millions
of
American seniors with
yo-ur informative and sensitive advice. _ AMY
HANLEY,
NATIONAL
TEA ON ELDER
CEN
ABUSE .
DEAR AMY: Thank you
for a helpful letter; you
will never know how

HOLIDAY COLORING CONTEST
.
.

'FIRST PRIZE ....... slS.OO
SECOND PRIZE •.. s1 0.00
THIRD PRIZE ....•••. ss.OO

what the answer is,
because · ·it
includes
iSSJ.leS of dignity and selfworth, as well as independence. I know elderly
people who have lost
their good judgment, and
will lose their ability to
pay their own way
because of it. - STILL
WORRIED IN ALABAMA
DEAR STILL WORRIEO: Perhaps the next
letter will ease your
mind. Read on: .
. DEAR ABBY: We at the
National Center on Elder
Abuse read the tragic letter from "Worried Sick in
Alabama." . Sadly, her
story illustrates how
financial crimes pose a
growing threat to the
well'being and independence of our "greatest
·generation."
·
It is cause for concern many people you have
when a senior grants helped today. It breaks
unusual access or con- my heart that these sertrol of his or her assets to vices are necessary, but
·another person in suspi- I'm grateful that you are
cious circumstances. A there to protect ·vulnerachallenge in detecting · ble seniors from predathis is that victims may · tors.
be reluctant to reveal
Dear Abby is written by
financial
abuse
or Abigail Van Buren, also
accuse their abuser out known
as
Jeanne
of fear ·of retaliation or Phillips, and was foundlosing their indepen- ed by her mother,
dence. They may also Pauline Phillips. Write
feel embarrassed or Dear
Abby
at
reluctant to get the per- www.DearAbby.com or
petrator in trouble.
P.o. Box 69440, Los·
In addition to consult- Angeles, CA 90069.

Name
Address
Phone

CONTEST RULES
I. Just color one or more of Ihe drawings on these pages, Fill in the blanks and take
y~ur entry to the sponsoting store before 5 p.m. April 12.
2. Entries will be judged in two different categories, ages 4-8 and 9-12.
3. Children may enter as many pictures as they like but can win only one prize.
4. Crayons only may be used to color pictures.

Name
Addres.s
Phone

Age

.

Age

Age

Name
Address
Phone

VALLEY LUMBER

The Daily Sentinel

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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Phone ________________________________

CROW'S RESTAURANT

BROGAN WARNER INSURANCE

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

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Number
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Sentinel

OPINION

'

The Daily Sentinel
,

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

.•

Congress shall make 110 law respecting an
. establislunmt of religion, or prohibiting the ~
free exercise thereof; ·or abridging tile freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Moderately Confused
HE CANT
gE A PROFESSIONAL

ATHLETE ...

•

NoT ENOUGH TATOOS
8. JEWE~RY.

Moments after leading the
way in scuttling reauthorization of welfare refonn. Sen.
Edward Kennedy. D-Mass..
declared to the press that he'd
never seen the Senate "so dysfunctional " in all his 41 years .
Morton
serving in the chamber.
Kondarcke
He me;mt it as a blast at the
Republican majority. which
denied Democrats a vote on
raising the minimum wage. but
blame -- dist!ust. in bet -- is fell lrom 13 .7 percent in 1995
de-.crved On all sides.
to a low of ' li.7 percent in
Congress. caught up in the 200 1. though it rose to 12.1 ,
rancid p&lt;u1i,anship rife in all percent in the 2002 recession.
American politics. ·resembles
With their mothers working,
an infinity of mitrors in which 2J million fewer children live
eal'i1 'bows one side pointing a in pove11y. including 700.000
linger of bkune at the other -- African-American children.
amf getting nothing done in the
The 1996 law has expired.
process.
Congress keeps extending it,
Welfare rel(mn is only the although it might stop doing
latest \ ictim. but it's the most so: deprivi ng states of $ 16.5
lamentable. The reform. billion in federal assistance to
req uiring recipients to work in help poor women.
·
retum for assistance instead of
The pending reauthorization
remaining dependent genera- bill would increase women's
tinn atier generation. is one of work requirements. but the
the s i g~al li&gt;ipartisan achieve- Senate-- by an overwhelming
mcnts of the 1990s and an ?R-20 vote recently -- added $6
unquestioned social policy billion over five years to make
success.
sure that &lt;m additional I00,000
It was originally the brain- loiver-income women receive
•child. in the mid- 19R0s. of the child care assistance to help
co-chairmen of. the National them keep working.
Governor~&lt;
Association,
The Bush White House.
Republic;m Lamar Alexander demonstrating once again that
or Tennessee and Bill Clinton . "compassionate conservatism"
. of Arkansas, who made it a pi I- . is a chimera, opposed the
lar of his "New Democrat" money, but 31 Republicans
presidential campaign in 1992. sti ll supported it, including
When Clinton entered the Majority Leader Bill Frist of
White House, he pushed Tennessee.
rci\Jrm against the fierce oppoNow it's all in jeopardy.
sition of renctionary liberals in Why? The two si&lt;Ths explain it
his own pwty &lt;md reactionary with an endless chain of blame
Republic;ms who wanted to that goes from GOP refusal to
make it&gt; terms as punitive as allow a vote on the minimum
·possible. After veto tights. it wage to Democrats' refusal to
was passed by a GOP-domi- agree to House-Senate confernated Congress in 1996.
ences to House Republicans'
And it has worked, as even refusal to give Democrats a
former
opponents ·like proper role in decision-makKennedy acknowledge. ll1e ing.
welfare rolls have fallen from 5
If it wasn't one thing. it
million in 1994 to 2 million, would be another. Republicans
and the national poverty rate accuse Democrats of, in the
BOYS ...
TOO

MUCH TV
CAUSES
ATT&amp;NTION

PRQBLEMS.

words of Sen. Chuck Grass lev.
R-lowa. "a consistent pattern
of obstructionism" designed to
prevent the GOP Senate from
achieving anything this year.
Indeed. there is a long list of
blocked measures. including
an energy bill (at a time when
Democrats are
blaming
Republicans for high gas
prices). a measure lO tree U.S.
exporters from $40 million a
monthin t;u·ifts (w hich might
crealCJObS) and caps On .lllCdteal malpracttce. ltabthty
awards (wh rch. nught bnng
down the ..:os.t oi health cm·e).
Republicans refashroncc! the
malpractice bill to apply only
to espectally burdened obstctri~ians and pediatricians. tig,unng that Democrats wouldn t
dare pllt women and cht ldrcr;
ahead . ol the tnal lawy~rs
lobhy. ll1c Democrats ,u ll !tilhustered.
,
.
. Well arc rclorm.reauthonza- .
ttnn t' clo-.c to dymg because
Dem• ·t, insist on attaching
;une, , . nls to rarse the tllllltmum -''"g~. extend unemployment IINtrance ami ovcttum a
Rush admmtstratton labor regulation re,tricting overt ime
pay t\1r whi te-collar workers.
There's a strong case. to be
made lor :rll three proposals.
The minimum wage .. for
mstance, hasn't been rat sed
since 1997 and its current level
of$5.15 an hmtrleaves a lamily or three $5,000 belov- the
poveny le veL Kennedy proposes to raise it to $7 pvcr a
two-yem· period.
But. merits a' ide. there is
also reuson to suspect that. as
Grass ley ch;u·ged, Democrat&gt;
are "more interested in politics
than product" and that these
are "message amendments"
designed to appeal to
Democrats' trade union base :and to embarrass GOP candrdates . -- rather than . achieve
passage.
The likeliest target at the
moment is Sen. Arlen Specter.

R-P&lt;l., •who would nonnally
vote with Democmts on the
labor measures but is facing a
sti tT primary from ri ght-wing·
Rep. Pat Toomey. who could
use the votes to charge that
Specter is ton "liberal."
Democrats think Toomey
would be easier to beat in the
!:til than Srecter.
.
Republican' arc developing
a minimum wage bil~ of their
own -- detail' to come -- and
promised Democrats the votes :
they seck if Democrats would
agree lo rx:rmil a final vole on
the welfare measure and then
to appo i11t conferees with tl1e
House.
Demon al' refused. demanding thai .\cnatc Republ icans
shou id 1111luc1Ke House
RepubliL·ar1s to treat H ou ~e
Democrats \Vith more respect.
The suppo,ed bottom line is
that Demo.:rat&gt; are killing wel' are reform hccause Rep. Bill
Thomas. R-Calif.. is mean to
Rep. Charl ie Rangel. D-N .Y,
in the Ways ami Means
Comm ittee. I dun'l. believe it.
Some mnderat~ Democratic
Senutors arc privately furious
with Kennedy. Minority
Leader Tom Da,dlle, D-S.D ..
and other h;u·d-l iners. but the
·whole Caucus voted in ilx:kstep on welhtre-cloture. That's
what happens in gang wars .
. Republican' d aim that
Democrat' will d:t their comeupplll)L'C in No\•ember. when
the GOP again will charge
"obstructionism" and hopes to
pick up seats us it did in 2002.
It remains to he seen i r that'll
work. Right now. .the country
is not paying attention to the
Senate. Poor women &lt;tre about
to be victimized by partisan
point-scoring. but they have
less clout than either the AFL00 or the U.S. Chamber of
Commerce.
.
IMonon Kondracke is executit•e editor of Roll Cdll, the ·
ne•rspaper ~f' Capitol Hill. )

WHAT
WAS

THAT

editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone numbu No unsigned letters will

In good taste,

pddressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in the rolumn he/ow
. are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishin g

s editoria! board, unless otherwise Hated.

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www .rnydailysentinel.coiu

· Willard Packman
EAST LIVERPOOL - Willard D. Packman, age 85. of 404
North Elm Street East Liverpbol, died at 2:19 a.m. Sunday,
Apnl 4. 2004 in the East Liverpool City Hospital.
He was born Nov. 20. 19.1 8 in Akron. NY, son of Orin and
Lois Cummings Packman. Packman had lived in Columbiana
for 39 years coming from East Liverpool.
. He had been a Ceramics Engineer for General Dynamics
Corporarion and then he O\i&gt;ned and operated ARB Consulting
in Columbiana.
Packman graduated fro m Alfred University at Alfred, NY
and served in the European Theater in the Armv during WW
II. receiving a Purple Heart.
'
He was a member of the First Christian Church ; the Riddle
Lodge #31 0. F&amp;AM at East Liverpoool , the Benjamin
. Firestone Post #290, American Legion of Columbiana and the
Veterans of Foreign Wars .
Packman was preceded in death on July 5, 1979 by his first
wife, the form er Anna Belle Baker, whom he married
February R, 19-ll and on December 20, 199J by hi s second
wife. the former Robin E. Dorff whom he married November
24, 1979.
He is survived by his wife. the former Margaret Hayman
Carpenter, whom he married December S, 1993; a daughter.
Melanie Kay Packman of Troutman. NC; two step daughters,
Mrs. Dale (Ruth Ann) Meadows of Port St. Lucie, FL and
Mrs. Ronald (Mary Lill) Gers tenmaier of Barberton; a son ,
· Michael Keith Packman of Greensburg, PA. three step sons.
Donald Carpenter of Georgetown, PA . David Carpenter of
Calcutta 11nd Ronald Carpenter of Easl Liverpool; two sisters,
Mrs. Charles (Jacqueline) Schmidt of Camden, NY and Verna
Talbot of Rome. NY; two step brothers, Ronald Packman of
Perry, NY. and Richard Packman of Akron. NY; 20 grandchildren and 18 great-gniJldchi ldren.
Rev. Clarence Mansfield will be conduct the service at I :00
p.m. Wednesday, April 7. in the Warrick-Kummer Funeral
Home in Columhiana. Entombment will follow in Green
1 Haven Mausoleum.
Friends may call 5-8 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral.

Norman C. Will

ODOT warns of work zone dangers
MARlEITA Sandra
Cappel knows from cxperience how dangerous h1ghway work can be. Last year.
her husband - the father of
l\~o college-aged sons.- was
killed while tnspectlng a
highway work zone in
Tuscarawas County.
Allen Cappel , a 24-year
veteran of
the Ohio_
Department
of
Transportal ton was only 42.
:· Had the driver had hi s
mmd on the road _and hts
truck between the lmes. my
husba.?d would still be .
alive , . satd
Cappel.
"Moto~tst s ~1eed to. slow
down and pay attention m
work zones so that more
boys don 't have to . go
through life without their
daddy,"
Yesterday
kicked off
National Work Zone Safety
Awareness Week, which run s

April 4-10. Events are George ·M. Collins . "But if
scheduled ac ross the country yo u don't care about them.
to raise awarene" for work lhink of you rse lf. It on l)
zone dangers and encourage takes a ,pi it-second or had
drivers to do more for ' afety. judgement to end a life."
Thi s year. motorist' will
.ODOT say&lt;. the mo&gt;t comencounter more than 700 mon cau&gt;e' of cra&gt;he &gt; are
ODOT work zones &lt;,tatewide foll owing too close. fa ilu re
In 2003, there were 7.265 to yield and speedi ng. Many
work zone crashes in Ohio: work zone cra.&gt;hes occur at
l ,055 people were injured interc hange&lt;.
where
and 16 people died. Despite motorists are merging onto
the safety warnings. the the highway.
nu.mber of crashes increased
Collins sai9 ODOT does
~y II percent I rom 2002
what it can to reduce acci (6.500 cra,hes) .
dents by reducino work zo ne
While construction and congestion. Thee depar1ment
mamtenance workers are at spe nds about $30 million
o ~viou s risl\.. motorists and 'an nuai} Y. to .maintain more
passe nge rs ~e tour time s lanes ol trafftc, speed the
more likely to be injured or pace of construction and
killed.
cot)duct more wo rk on week"Our employees and con- enc11' and ni"hts when .fewe r
tractors ris k their lives every people are 0~1 th e road.
day to repair and rebuild our
lh addition. ODOT
roads and highways." said employs full-time work zone
District 10 Deputy Director managers to des ign and

Can ive preach liberty to the world?
Recently. I was asked to
deponed for les.s-than-major by both Israeli and Palestinian
speak in New York before
immigrat ion law violations. human rights groups. But. I
first-year graduate students
and
accordingly,
other added. suicide bombers and
from 71 countries studying in
Muslims have become feart'ul their celebratory acceptance
the United States under the
when the FBI k nocks on their by many Palestinians had
Fulbright Program, which prodoor.
changed the moral equation.
motes mutual understanding
Nat
It is not necessary to limit
The Palestinian student 'aid
between us and other counHentoff
civil liberties of Aniericans, I he did not approve of. suicide
tries. It was an honor, since in
said. The administratfon bombers. but "among the une1950 1 studied in Paris under
shou ld
demand
more ducated. repression by the
this program established by
resourceful investigative lead- Israel is created the cvnditions
the late Sen. William
ership at the FBI and in the that created suicide bombers."
Fulbright.
am speaking to you in criticiz- higher divisions of the Justice I reminded him that aniong
The theme of this year's ses- ing my government, and when Department.
these mass murderers have
sions, organiz_ed by the I leave. I will not be arrested."
Several students criticized been Palestinian college stuInstitute of International To emphasize.my point, I citeu the Bush admi11istration for dent s and teachers. I should
Education and funded by the the gathering bipartisan resis- not calling sufficient attention have also noted that Yasser
State Department, was an indi- tance in Congress and in cities . to some of our allies in the war Arafat's so-calleJ "cnndemnavidual's responsibility to soci- and towns across the nation on tenorism who are egre- tion'' of this fo rm of resistance
ety during an age when the against government over- giously violating the human was belied by the PLO!eader's
focus is on individual rights.
reaching.
rights of their own people. I payments to Organi zations that
1 told the students that, in
Another student said, how- agreed, citing the resumption tecntited the suicide bombers.
this constitutional democracy, ever, that · it's necessary to of black Sudanese slavery and
I couldn't resist adding that
it is the individu'al's responsi- restrict some liberties to dis- gang rapes in the Darfur no Israeli prime minister has
bility -- es.pecially in a w(U' able terrorists. My response region by Sudan's National been so authentically sensitive
against such a ruthless, elusive was that there is a need to Islamic ·Front government. to Palestinian ' rights than
and widespread enemy as we improve federal law enforce- This despite American ofti- Shimon Peres. But, as Peres
now face :- to help safeguard ment -- not disable our liber- cials speaking confidently of said of Arafat on "Nightline"
the rights that are the very def- ties. For instance, the "new" an imminent peace treaty during one of Ted Koppel's
inition of the United States. FBI still doesn't have enough between the National Islamic extraordinary town hall meetBut our leaders are weakening agents who speak Arab1c or Froni and the main organiza- ings in Jenrsalem, "when I
some of these in.dividual translators who can read the tion of black Africa rebels in became ptime minister, what
rights.
language; ·and many local and ' the South. So far, the redemp-. did you do to me? Despite
For example. I pointed out, state police ofticers maintain · tion of thousands of black O'lo, you ignjted violence."
the president and attomey gen- that the FBI 'remains imperi- Sucjanese slaves in the Nonh Arafat helped drive Peres
era I are om ni vorously expand- ous and doesn't fully cooperate is (till he in~ i15norcd in these from office.
ing electron ic search &lt;md sur- m terronsm mvestrgatrons. peace negottatrons.
For this former Fulbright
veillance --eroding our Fourth Another example of incompeOther students questioned student, who spent most of hi s
Amendment right to privacy- tent investigatory techniques: I the credibility of th is country time in France, in movie hous- while insisting their actions asked why alleged terrorist as a light unto the world on es and jazz clubs. it was one of
are within the bounds of the Jose Padilla was arrested at human rights, as well as. its the most challengi ng mornCon,titutiQn.
.
Chicago's O'Hare Airport intemal reductions of the indi- ings I've had. And. though 1·
Is it not a citizen's responsi- instead of being followed to vidual liberties of its own citi- strongly criticized · John
bility to d1allenge them on learn the contacts he was mak- zens. But, on my way out, a Ashcroft, I was not arrested
their responsibility to that fun, ing.
Palestinian student questioned when I left.
damental document?
Also, instead of gaining the the consistency of my princi(Nm HemojJ' is a nationallv
_._:]fJhj~hat YQU
£g_overn- confidence and cooperation of pies. Why had I not mentioned renml'lfed a111hori ry on rlie
ment is doing," one- studenrl11ose American -Muslims -the ~ humall
rig.ftt.s-=----m=f-ir·sn~m~'&gt;Jtlm&lt;•tl'l"um:f::!llAfM~==
a;,ked. "how can the United opposed to the hijacking of Palestinians?
of Ril!hts and awltor of severStates credibly preach its way their religion by the jihadists,
For many years, I told him. I a/ books. including his currem
of government to people in there was ihe post-Sept. II . have written in support of an work., "The Wur 011 the·Bill of
countries whose leaders have roundup of hundreds of ind~pendent Palestinian state, Rights and rhe Gmhaing
no respect for their rights?"
Muslims. Though none were and reported on the inve&gt;tiga- Resistance" (Seven Stories
"Because," I responded, "I tied to terrorism, some were tions of the Israeli government Press, 2003)

' MASON. W. VA . Donnie and . - - - Kimberl y zu,pan of Ma,on announce the
birth of a son. Den,yl Ray Zuspan un Feb.
24 at Pleasant . Valley Hospital He
weighed ~ pounds I 0 ounces. They also
ha ve a davg hter. Christina Hope.
Maternal grandparents are Ernie and
Brenda Haggy of Po meroy. :'· kn ern :tl
g re at -g randp&lt;Jren l ~ are Jim and Dunna
Gilmore of Pomeroy &lt;!nd Eul a OdegarJ of
Pon~erov .
·
"------'---"'
Patenlal granOparenh are Kath y anU
Social workers recognized by Holzer Medical Centers in Gallipolis
and jackson were. left to right. Theda Covey, LSW. HMC-Jackson
Social Servtces Coordinator: Ashley Jones, LSW; and Erica
Garnes , MSW, LSW. Standing, left to right, Dennis McGuire, LSW;
Eugenia Moore, MSW, LSW; and Dow Saunders. MSW, LSW,
Director, Social Services at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis

.

GALLIPOLIS - Nati onal Social work was observed in
March with recognition of employees at Hol zer Medical
Center, Holzer Medical Center - Jackso n and Holze r
Hospice.
"The Power of Social Work: Pass It On " was the theme
of the observance geared to creating a better understanding
of the · profession. Social workers are actively involved in
helping individuals with their various needs in areas such
- health, mental health, diversity and cu lture, international
human rights, youth and schools, aging. children and fami lies, hospice/end of life care, and poverty and social justice.
Social workers actively advocate changes in policy and
le~islation to 'strengthen the social safety nets that make a
cntical difference to so many.

\

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I
napping
K

The Rev. Glenn Rowe is new pastor of the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church. He has tJeen in the ministry for 16 years
and has pastored churches in Kentuc ky, West Virginia and
Ohio. He and his wife Linda reside in Middleport. They have
three grown children.

from Page A1

Social workers of Hojzer Hospice recogni zed were, left to
right, Pat Hamad, LSW and Jennie Frazee , LSW.
for carriers.
'· A cold rai n is the worst
there is." he said.
ll1e U.S. Postal Service is
from Page A1
on the fron t lines of the war on
I was at the right place ai the ten·or. In yew-s past. anthrax
and other biological agents
·
right time."
Sanders said he has deli v- have been shipped through
ered chickens, rabbits and all the mail to teJTorize congres&gt;son s of odd things to people · men, senators and prominent
al l over southeast Ohio. One news organizations. Sanders
of the strangest things he has said if he suspects a letter or
ever delivered was an urn package might be dangerous.
tilled the cremated remain &gt;. · he has been instructed to cal l
Other time&gt;, he has faithfully. the appropriate authorities
deli ve red car bumpers and into investigate. Also. he said
othii'r bulky items weighing su&gt;picious mail can be irradiated in Akron.
up to 70 pounds each.
The emerge nce of the elecHaving been a carrier for
.a number of years, Sanders nunic age has ch&lt;mgcd the volis very familiar with the ume of leners the postal set'licc
. weather be it &gt;no\v, 0sleet or pllx:esse.s because of e-mail &lt;Uld
rain . He said the worst in. tant pay\nents made by onweather to deliver mail in is line b;mk accOilnb. While fewer
the cold rain of December stwnped tmditional letter&gt; are
and late winter. Snow he can being sent. Sm1der' "tid there are
handle and ordirfa ry spring more packages being 'hip[i"CC
rains are tolerable, but he because of c-commerce.
said the col d rain in
Sanders lives in Galltpolis
December before ihe &gt;nowy with his wife Anita and they
winter months hit is terrible have four children.

Postman .

Sunday Times-Sentinel
740-992-2155'

New pastor

501(c)3

Church egg hunt set

Celebrati'!g special
days with you!

Tom Edward" li f Ma~un a nd paternal g re~n-g ra n dmother is
Bett y Adkins of Huntin gton. W. Va.

HMC recognizes
social workers

RACINE - The Meigs County District Public Library will
hold an Easter egg hunt at II a.m. at the Racine Library. . ~The children will be divided into age categories of I :4, 5-9
and 6-12 for the hunt. Candy, prizes, and refreshments will
be provrded.
· ·
.
There will be dra~ings for prize winners at the conclusion
qf the hunts. Chi ldren must be present to win.

POMEROY - An egg hunt will be held at I I a.m. Saturday
· at the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church for ages I through
12. The public is invited .

mon itor work zo nes and is
te,ting new materials to
make ' ign'. pavement marking' and other warning
devices more visible at night
or in wet conditions. Thi s
year. the department will
also test the use of speed
trai lers in work zones to get
motorists' atten tion.
Motorisls ca n he lp ODOT
keep highways sa fe by using
good judgment and common
sen'e in work zones :.
• Stay alert and g tve driving yoltr full attention.
• Follow all ·posted signs
and obey tlaggers.
• Don 't tail gate : Most
crashes 111 work zo nes are
rear-end cnl li,ions.
• Merue earl v and be courteous to-other drivers .
• Don't speed . It takes less
than a minute more to travel
a two-mile work zone at 45
mph than 65 mph.

Zuspans announce birth

Egg hunt planned

be less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to

..,

A~BANY - Shelby Ann Jarrell of Albany died Saturday
- · Apnl 3. 2004 at St. Marys Hospital after a short illness .
Born July 4, 1936 she was the daughter of the late Vestus
and Estelle Walker. She is survived by two daughters. Mrs
Jeffrey (Pa':llela) Russe ll , Long Bottom; and Beverly A
Morrow: Mrddlep() rt. She was blessed with tbrcc loving
grandchildren. Jelfrey J. Karr Jr .Albany; Mrs Christopher
(Lori ) Zerkle. New Haven W.Va .• Leah M. Morrow.
Middleport; and one great-granddaughter, Rilee Madison
Zerkle .
She leaves behin ~ th ree sisters, Doris Kenney Seth. W.Va ..
Wiln1a Cook. Eva' Workman . Gorden. W.Va. and several
niece». and nephews. She was also blessed to have a very specral fnend , Robert Michael Clark. Glouster: ·
In addition to her parents she was preceeded in death by her
lovrng and devoted hu sband. Mauri ce L Jarrell. a son Leslie
Al.len, a brother Norwood Walker, and a sister Emogene
Mtller.
··
Arrangements are being handled by Handley Funeral Home in Danville. W.Va.

Local Briefs

Letters to the 'editor are welcome-:-J'-he-y-Jheukl

Polley

Shelby Ann JarTell

RUTLAND - Norman C. Will, 91, Rutland, died Monday,
April 5. 2004 at Overbrook Center in Middleport. .
Arrangments will be announced by Fi sher Funeral Home in
Pomeroy.

EDITOR

Correction

Obituaries

ALL

LETTERS TO THE

Co.

Tuesday, April 6, 2004

ABOUT?

Inc.

be published. Letters slwuld be

,.

· Tuesday, April , 2004

Welfare impasse ,a.case ifpartisan posing

:

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

PageA4

Hulse told deputies he believed · some J11jurics from being hit with a
Fitzgerald, Shuler and Mayle were baseball bat. She was tran;ported to
headed toward a house in Tuppers O'Bleness Hospital and later released.
~="
fr""o'-'m Page A1
~=-- Plains. Meigs deputy Donny Mohler
Fitzgerald was arraign~d Monday in
and Mi d epot1 patmlmari9ohrr Riley= MeigsCCoumy -&lt;:1lttl't
tteie=judge-searched the Tuppers Plains area and Steve&lt;l L Story set bond at $200.000. I0
Deputies ca lled for assistance from the
the car with Mayle and hnth percent cash down. Fitzgeralll i' curMiddleport and Pomeroy Police discovered
suspects
on
Dobbins Roall at the inter- rcntly mcmcerated in t11e Middleport
Departments. Meigs deputy .Jim Stacy
and Pomeroy patrolman Dave Woolard section of State Route 7. The vehicle Jail. Shuler was released on a personal
secured the crime scene and searched was stopped and both suspects were recognizance bond of $5,000. Their prearrested.
liminary hearing is scheduled for April !I
the local area for Mayle.
The sheriff's report said Mayle had in Meigs County Court .

help reduce the dispro po rti onately high cancer incidence and mortali t)· rat es
fou nd in the Appalachian
reg ion or Ohio .
"As we continued to
rai se awareness about ca n'

'

'

cer assue s tn our co mmuni -

·. 'locally wirh individuals all
comm itted to reducing the
burden of cancer in our
communi ty ... said Carol
Adam s. treasu rer. "On e
hundred percent of all contributi ons go back into the
COill mU n i ty.
In addition' to receivi ng
tax deductible con tributions. MC'CI no w has the
added k' a agc to compete
nationally f()r Yarious·
gnlnh aimed at helping
Meig .s Co unt y reside nt s
fight cancer.
Coates can be co ntacted
hy callin g &lt;J&lt;J2 -2 161 nr em;tiling the coa litio n at
mc&lt;:i-l 0' ya hoo .l' &lt;Jlll
for

ty. Meigs Coun ty residents
wanted to donate to our.
cause. The time seemed
ri ght to move forw itrd on
nonprofit statu ' to allow
contribution' made to
MCCl · to
he
lax
ded uctible," s;lid Di ana
more informoJtion o n how
Coates . chair.
"We are happy to be . to get involved with .
niaking such a difference MCCI \ effort&gt;.

(hirop~ dlcCenter
.

SlliUintofoPrSfeJJ

AdfoPrWe1Y'J1JBJe»~.oml

Pt.l\elb' J"AeJAimoP.-:
Straighten l 'p Your Life

In April Spel'ial
. TO lhl' I Sl I 00 Nl'W l&gt;a tit'lliS

We Offer A $25 Complete
Chiropracth: Exam

This Offer Include-:

• Privat~ Ct'~lhllltation '\ ilh Dr.
' • X-Ra\ ' : ;1 ;\t'CL'v.. it\

Jnn~'l

• Compll'tc Orthnpc-~hc ~iiH.l ~cunllogu.:.d

1: \,lllh

• Confidcnti.1l Rcpnrt of Fi nding'
• J..,t .-\Uju ... tm~nt"..
I

ch1rnpracuc c 111 . 1

'

1

p \PLI.

Call or sro11 /Jr our S!&lt;ll&lt;' {Jf The .4rr
· H:f{i'cc ro
Your&lt;&lt;t1fminlfll c·JJI'

Ill&lt;'""

Dr. Kelly Jones
316 Washington St. • Ravenswood, WV

304-273-5321

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PageA6

COMMUNITY

The Daily Sentinel

.I

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Twins tweak Tribe, Page B2
Meigs boys blast Buckeyes, Page B6

Tuesday, April 6, 2004

Bl

{

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
•

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Tracy named employee of month
ATHENS - Amber Tracy
of Pomeroy. registered
nurse in the medical/surgical unit, has been selected to
be O'Bleness' April 2004
Employee of the Month.
"Trac·y was nominated for
Employee of the Month
bec ause she treats her
patients, the way anyone
would like.Jo be treated. She
always smiles and she can
make the sickest of patients !--_. :.__....:
smile back.
She is .positive
Amber Tracy
.

NewsChannel

and always focused on her
patients," said Linda Weiss,
pub Iic relations manager, in
~l release.
Tracy ha&gt; worked as a registereLI nul·se in the medical/surgical unit since· June
1999. She
resides in ,
Pomerov. Ohio with her husband. J~ff ami8- month-old
daughter. Audrey. Her hobbies include selling and collecting Longabergcr baskets .

Tuesday, April6, 2004

Holzer inp,lements new therapy program
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Medical Therapy Center in
Gallipolis recently implement·ed a therapy program to assist
with the restoration of feet sensation in diabetic patients with
peripheral neuropathy.
TI1e Anodyne® Neuropathy
Care Center progrmn is the first
to offer hope to patients for what
was thought to be a progressive
&lt;md irreversible disease.
Diabetic
Peripheral
Neuropathy (DPN) is nerve
damage associated with diabetes , the symptoms of
which include numbness
and/or pl!in in the feet. legs
and hands, hypersensitivity,
burning sensauons or other

Local ·stocks
ACI- 32.87
AEP- 32.78
Akzo - 3803
Ashland Inc. - 46.77
BBT - 35.20

BLI -15.13
Bob Evans- 33.80
Borg Warner - 86.28
City Holding - 35.15
Champion - 5.05
Charming Shops- 7.95
Col- 32.52
DuPont - 43,98
DG- 19.46

Federal Mogul - .39
Gannett- 90.99
GKNLY -4.75
Harley Daridson - 55.59
Kmart - 46.15
Kroger- 16.75
Ltd- 20.55
NSC- 22.31
Oak Hill Financial- 32.89
Bank One- 54.50
OVB - 34.00
Peoples - 2R. 10
Pepsico - 54.48
Premier -. 9.00

Rocky Boots - 24.63
RD Shell - 48.13
Rockwell- 36.05
Sears- 43.00
SBC -25.34
AT&amp;T- 19.49
USB- 27.10
Wendy's - 41.98
Wai-Mart - 58.64
Worthington- 19.37
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the
previous day 's transactions,
provided by Smith Partners at
Ad vest Inc. of Gallipolis.

discomforts.
Whil e drugs are sometimes effective for pain associated with DPN . no drug or
medical device has previously shown an increase in se nsation once it has been diminished or lost due to DPN.
According to study results,
the new program showed significant improvc_mcnts in
sensation in 100 percent participant s after only twelve 30minute treatments.
·
The ATS is a patented.
FDA-cleared, non-invasive
device that uses near-infrared
light emitting diodes to safely
increase local circulation and
reduce pain. The diodes are

fitted into nexible pacb that
can be applied directly to the
skin on any part of the buLly
while rel easin~ "nail mole.:ulcs of nitric oxide from
hemoglobin in the bloodstream. Nitric oxide increases
blood tlow and helps deliver
healing cells and nutrients to
the treatment area.
New data shows that treatment with this therapy can
also improve balance and
gait and reduce the ri sk of
falls by 96 percent in elderly
patients with neuropathy.
ATS treatments are reimbursable by Medicare and
private insurance, it_ was
reported.

tificate and fn1it basket went
to Tracy Chevelier. Amy
Hendrix rece ived her charm
bracelet !'or her fiN I5 pound
loss., and Amv Hendrix was
winner _in the paper clip contest. There was a Chinese auction fundraiser to raise money
for the trip to ARD.

A new contest was introduced along with new food
and exe(cise chmls for the
month of April. Weigh-in
begins at 5: 15 p.m. and the
meeting begins at 6:30 p.m. ·
Anyone interested in attending
a meeting may call 740-6622633 or attend free of charge.

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Meigs Local honor roll announced

Lee, Aira Little, Steven Major,
Tiffany Manley, William
Mamhout, Vince Mru:on, GaT)!
Moore, Sheena Moms, Bobb1
Napper, Christma Pauley, Erica

Hajivandi, Angela . Hilyard, Lesley Preece Steven Stewart
Morgan Howard, Jamie Jeffers, Jmnes Story Richard Well
Kyle Johnson, Ju1ia Lantz, - Meigs High School
Angel Lemley, Aaron Maxson,
Freshman - Kry;tal Bailey,
Marissa McAngus, Shannon Daniel Bookman, Cory Dill,
McLaughlin,
~ohnathan
Dane Eichinger, Sarah Engle,
Michael, 'fYson Morns, Chelsea Kay Ia Grover, Kcilah Jacks,
Patterson, Braden Prater. Garrett Gabrielle Lester. Je&gt;se Price,

Priddy, Ray Ratcliff, Melissa
R1chmond, Jesse Sargent,
N ikolas Seagraves. Stefan
Stamper, Miranda. Stewart,
Ryan Stobart, Corey Vaughan,
Carrie Walker, Cassie Watson,
Jordan
Williams,
Holley
Williams.

'-

urueser.

Hope

Kitt tegar. Breanna

Robe1t Reed, Whiwey Smith,
Krysta Stin, Michelle Weaver.
Sophomore - - Miranda
Beha, Matthew Brumfield,
Travis
Burbridge·. Travis
Butcher, Samantha Cole, Ashley
Cook, James Fife, Carita
Gardner, TYson George, Brithley
Jacks, Nathan Jeffers, Julia
Johnson, Jacob Kennedy, Joshua
Kennedy, Meghan Leslie,
KaylaMcCarthy,
Autumn
Mclaughlin, Rebecca Rader,
Adrean Reese, Ashley Savage,
Whitney Thoene, Leonard
VanMeter,
Christopher
VanReeth, Jacob Venoy, Joshua
Venoy.
Junior Grunt Arnold,
Emily Ashley; Renee Bailey,
Jeffrey Baughman, Jeremy '
Blackston, Jenny Bowles, TYler
Brower, Raymond Colwell, Eric
Cullums, Mirinda, Davis, Trevor
Depoy, Rosanna Dillard, Jodi
Donohue, Patrick Dowell, Eddie
Fife, Brandon Grover, Randy
Hart, Andrew Henderson,
Joseph Howard, Amanda Hoyt,
Aaron lhle, Ashliegh Kimes,
Madison King, Tiffany , King,
Cassie Lee, Megan Mayes,
Samantha Pierce, Katie Reed, ·
Anna Sayre, Adam Snowden,
Ruth Snyder, David Tucker,
Brooke Venoy, Ross Well,
Elizabeth Well, Chester Wigal,
Nicki Wilson, Natasha Wise,
Carl M. Wolfe, Jennianne
Young.
Senior David Bames,
Donald Bamett, David Boyd,
Jaclyn
Bradbury,
Kara
Buffington,
Brandyn
Bumgardner, Alisia Burton,
Kerbi Buzzard, Kathryn Childs,
!;len Collins, 1 Jaynee Davis,
Justin DeMoss, Jason DeMo;s,
Maegan Dodson, Andrea Fetty,
Kelly Freeman, Juliane Glomm,
Jacklyn Gloyd, Ashley Halley,
Jennifer Harris, Raymond Hess,
Jessica
Howell,
Randall
Hudson, Lindsey Jeffers, Aubrie
Kopec, Jonathan Larkins, Sarah

Rebates up to
Qr

0°/o Financing &amp; $1000 reballe~
-

_- Rebates up to

0

Eastern
_
girls
pound
Waterford

Eagles-dr-Op Waterford, 14-1

WATERFORD .- During
the past decade either Eastern
. of Wi1terford won the TriValley Conference softball
race. Today Eastern stands
alone as the dominant team in
the Tri- Valley Conference
Hocking
Division after
pounding ri val Waterford 222 Monday night during giils
varsity
softball
action.
Eastern - is 2-0 both in tl1e
·league and overall , while
Waterford drops to 0-2 in
both medium s.
After a scoreless first
inning. the complexion of the
game
changed
quickly.
Eastern went up 4-0 in the
second off Waterford starter
Misty Offenberger. Two
walks. two erro rs. &lt;ltld sacrifice Illes by Casey Smith and
Jenny Armes brought home
th e run s, 4-0 Eastern.
Krista White muwed down
the Waterford batters. whil e
her dub a~ain went to work
in the third. Despite leav ing
the bases loaded, Eastern
pushed across a run for a 5-0
lead. then broke the game
open in the fourth when they
notched six tallies.
In the fourth inning Jenny
Armes
walked,
White
reached on an error. Saridy
Powell had a two-run single,
Kass
Lodwi ck
walked.
Brittany Bissell had ·an RBI
single,
Morgan
Weber
reached lln an error and
Alyssa Holter waked to force
home a run. _Casey Smith
then tlew nut to force home a
run, while another scored un
the throw. the .score now 11 0.
Eastern added eleven more
runs in a huge sixth inning
attack that saw Offenberger
leave the mound and Arnold
come in for relief. ·
Eastern hitters for coach
Pam Douthitt's club were
Sandy Powell two doubles
and a single, Casey Smith a
single . Brittany Bissell two
singles. Morgan Weber a single. Sara Barringer a double,
Krista White a double, Hallie
Brooks a double, Linsee
Davis a double and Alyssa
Hol ter a double.
Waterford hitters were
Tiffany Wallace · and Kay Ia
Murphy.
Eastern goes to Trimble
Tuesday.

Subscribe today ¥ 992-2155

POMEROY - Students in Riffie, Aaron Roberts, Kao;ey
the Meigs Local School District Roush, Austin Say1:e, lan Slee,
making the honor roll tor the Curlee Smitl1, Stephanie Smith.
third nine-weeks grading period Chandra Stanley. Connor
were announced today by super- SwUitz, Tmmer Tacken, ·Paula
intendent William Buckley.
VanMeter, Shannon Walzer.
Me~ Intennediate School
Bobby Wheeler, Carrie White,
Grade 3: Casi Arnold, Paula Jose Whitlatch, Christian
Barthelmas, Chris Boring, Woods.
Dillon Boyer, Matthew Casci, ·
Meigs Middle School
Grade 6: Tyler Andrews,
Alyssa Cremeans, Robbie
Dillon, Megan Dyer, Kasie Ellis, Jeremy Ash, Kayla Bachtel,
Brittany Eynon, Delilah Fish, Lauren
Bames,
Charity
Christopher Folmer, _ Shana Barthelmas, Dawn Bissell. Tyler
Gorslene, Kendra Haning, Eddie Brothers, lan Bullington, Ashley
Hendricks, Justin Hettinger, Carey, Justin Cotterill, Caleb
Ashley Jeffers, Corey King, Davis. Tyler Deem, Jacob Dunn,
Hannah
King.
Brandon Dustin
Eads.
Autumn
Marcinko, Kayla McClure, Ebersbach. Kristen Eblin, Dale
Gunner McKinney, Alexander Ellis, Contessa Fish, Charles
Morris, Jacob Mulholland, Fitchpatrick, Oarby Gilmore,
Shawnella Patterson, Emma Kayla Graham, Shawn Hawley,
Perrin, Tess Phelps, TYler Price, · Charles Hayes, Benjamin Jacks,
Keana Robinson, Ashleigh Scott
Kennedy,
Pamila
Sayre, Kenzie Shuler, Maggie Kessinger, Annisha Kopec,
Smith, Bethany Spaun, Kyrie Cody Lee, Christa Martin,
Swarm,
William
Taylor, Ashley Mayes, Britany Parsons,
Madelyn Thomas, Dustin ,Erin Patterson, Jennifer Payne,
Ulbrich, McKenzie Whobrey, Jacob Riftlc. Ashley Smith,
Haley Wtll, Autumn Wtlliam&gt;.
Cassandra Smith, Latricia
Grade 4: Cheyenne Beaver, Smith, Shannalle· Smith, Cayla
Darienne Betzing, Olivia Cleek, Taylor, Hailey Williams.
Cory Curtis, Michael Davis,
Grade 7: Jamie Bailev,
Wesley Davis, Chelsey Eads, Amanda Baker. Wyatt Bail,
Andy Fairchild, Emalee Glass, Willliam Barcus, Caleb Bevan,
Karl Gueltig, Ronald Haning, Clayton Bolin. Adrian Bolin,
Cody
Hanming,
Raynee Chad Bonnett, Virginia Brickles,
Herman, Michelle Hilyard, Megan Bush, Crockett Crow,
Stephanie Hoalcraft, Marlee Le'Anna
Davis,
Kenneth
Hoffinan,. Cassidy Hood, Cody Delong, James T Evans,
Hysell, Taylor Jones, Jeffrey Jennifer Fife, Amanda Gilkey,
Ktmes, Steven Mahr, Holly Tisha Hart, Amber Hockman,
McGrath, Tanisba McKinney, Lian Hoffman, Jessica Holliday,
Tiffany McKinney, Gregory_ Sarah Hubbard, Lilly_ Jacks,
McKnight, Kassandra Mullins, Tell)' Jewell, Morgan Kennedy,
Brady
Norville. Timothy Christopher Kimes. Morgan
Parsons, Ben Reed, DiJuan • Lentes, Ashley Life, Mason
Robinson, Jennifer Robinson, Metts, Jason Morris, Andrew
Nathan Rothgeb, Jeffrey Roush, O'Bryant, April_Oiler, Raymoncj
' Zach Sayre, Kayla Shane, Patterson, Erin Perkins, Ripley
Cayelynn Smith, Emma Swiger, Raubeholt, Calee Reeves, Ruby
Travis Tackett, Sharaya White, Richmond, Zachary Schwab,
Tori Wolfe.
Melissa Snowden, Merissa
Grade 5: Alex Ackerman, Snyder,· Caitlin
Swartz,
Swisher,
Tess
Alaine Arnold, Hannah Arnold, Kimberly
Shellie Bailey, Kastle Balser, Thomas, Kelly 1)-ree, Jessica
Ashley Bateman-Lee, Olivia Wagner, Catie Wolfe, Jacob
Bevan,
Cameron , Bolin, Workman.
firancesca Buechner, Josh
Grade 8: Jacob Barnes, Amy
Capehart, Hannah Cleek, Heath Barr. Talisha Beha, Georgena
Dettwiller, Taylor Dowler, Brickles, Elizaeth Cremeans,
Nathan Eblin, Ashley Edwards, Emily Davis, Rebecca Hanstine,
1-==='Mi~~aEynon, Nate Gilkey, Bradley Jones,Kaylee Kennedy,

Prep Baseball

BY ScoTT WOLFE
Sports corres pondent

Members recognized fot weight loss
COOLVILLE Penny
Brooks and Jane Frymyer
were recognized for weight
loss for six consecutive
weeks at a recent meeting of
TOPS OH 2013 held at the
Torch Baptist Church. ·
The weekly best looser cer-

Prep Softball

$3000

"" .!f''"'' '

Eastern 22, Waterford 2
Eastern 0 4 1
6 0 11 - 22 12 5
Water1ord 0 0 0
0 1 1 - 2. 2 13
Krista White . and Kass Lodwick. Misty
Qflenberger and Shannon Barth. WP Krista White. LP - Mis~y Offenberger.

Auto, AC, CD Player

or

0% Financing

J l t
MERCURY

Coaches
reminder

••

A11 spring spotts coaches are
reminded -to send in their :game
or meet reports by II :30 p.m.
They can be faxed to 4463008, or e-mail them to
sport s@ mydailytri bu ne .com.
You may also call them in at
446-2342, e~t. 33.
They d(} need to 'be in by
11:30 p.m. to make it in the
ne~t day 's edition.

Discounts up to

$5800

Includes MRP &amp; Owner Loyalty

...

i

As Low As

Sports
stringers
wanted

L I .,NCOLN
...
,.. , .....

Mnchell,___:f~e, Britlan)'--P--ow~rs,Amanda ­

'-----tt

ij
MERCU~Y

.... ''. ." ..

LINCOLN

II
I

com

If you have an interest in
sp&lt;)rts and like to write, then
the Gallipoli&gt; Daily Tribune
and The Daily Sentinel want
you.
---we'llrflffi 1\'lllly toulcirlg for
, tringers to help improve our
sports coverage. pnmarily to
write feature~&gt; ;md to help in
other repo11ing duties.
If you' re intere,ted. then cal l
Butch Cooper at 446-2342.
ext. 33.

BY ScoTT WoLFE
Sports correspondent

WATERFORD - Eastern junior
hurler Ryan Smith pitched a complete game 14- 1 victory over the
Waterford Wildcats Monday night
during Tri- Valley Conference
Hocking Division baseball action at
Waterford . Eastern is 1- 1 both
overall and in league play. while
Waterford is 0-2.
Eastern went up 2-0 in the first
inning when with two outs Ken
Amsbary singled, Terry Durst
walked, and Dustin Riggs singled
home two runs. A fly out ended the

inning. but Coach Brian Bowen\
club led 2-0.
Eastern plated another run in• the
second after Sniith retired the side
in order in the first and faced the
minimum nine batters throu gh
three innings. Smith fanned five of
the first nine batters he faced. In the
Eastern second, Will Woods and
Corey Shaffer singled . and Matt
Morris reached on a fielder 's
choice to score a run . the score 3-0.
It was all over but the ·s houting.
a~ the proverbial saying gue~. since
Smith was in .:omplctc control of
the game. Meanwhile. Eastern
came up with II run s in the sixth

inning to break the game open. 1--1I.
Smith fanned 10 and walked one
in a great pitching eff011 .
Eastern hitters were
Ken Amsbary and Dustin R\ gg'&gt;, who
both had two hi ts including doubles. Jon Owen two singles. Will
Wood three singles, Corey Shaffer
a singled and Mark Guess a single.
Waterford had one hit. a sing le by
Sampson.
.
.
Eastern goes to Trimble Tuesday.
East!lrn 11, Waterford 1

Eastem
2 1 o a o ~114 11 0
Waterford
0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 3
Smith and Durst. Wagner and Paxton. WP .Smith . LP- Wag ner.

Reds drop season opener

Huskies
wreck
Georgia
Tech

BY JOE KAY
Assoctated Press

CINCINNATI - Sammy
Sosa couldn't get a hit. Keny
Wood couldn't get past the
fifth inning .
Big problems'' Not for these
newly confident CL1bs.
Corey Patterson homered
and Moises A lou doubled with
the bases loaded Monday.
leading the defending NL
Central chmnpions to a 7-4
victory over the Cincinnati
Reds.
After winning their tirst division title in 14 years, the Cubs
got a good start on their next
quest: back-to-back winning
seasons tor the first time since
1971-72.
''Last year, we were not really sure how good we were,"
said Patterson, who tore knee
ligaments on July 6 and missed
the 'rest of the season. ''Since
we did well last year. it byilds
more contidence. We ~now
everyone is gunning for us."
The Reds had another disappointing debut in · Great
American Ball Park. where
42.122 fans watched a lineop
missing Ken Griffey Jr. stumble out of the gate once again.
Qriffey reluctantly took a
few more days to rest a
stmined calf injured a week
ago in Florida. The injuryprune outfielder paced in the
dugout with a bat in each hand,
but never got to hit.
"We played so me spri ng
training games without him
and we did all right. but you
always want a stud like that in
your lineup." shortstop Barry
Larkin said.
Instead, the day belonged to
the Cubs, wiTo got Iittle from
their top starter and best run
producer, but won anyway.
'This is a new yem, a new
opportunity to go all the way."
said Alou, who doubled home
three run's in the third. ''We feel
. we have ..the team to do it. We
just need a little luck. We teel
we're going to win a lot of
games."
This one opened with a tribute to former Reds owner
Marge Schott and a ceremonial first pitch by Vice President

SAN ANTONIO (API The
Connecticut Huskies really do have it ·
all : the Ali-Ameri.:a center. the lla'h)
g uard ~, the ;.,:oach whu ¥el~ c-ver) th~1 g
ng.ht. and

nO\\

a

national tille.
which thev won
\\ ith l"i.l:".t".
Led bv 2-+
pt~int..,

from

Emeka Okafnr
and

Chicago Cubs Mark Grudzielanek, right, collides with Cincinnati Reds catcher
Jason LaRue in the ninth inn1ng. Monday in Cihcmnati. Grudzielanek was out
trying to score on a hit by Moises Alou . Chicago won , 7-4. (AP)

Please see Reds, 86

.

Connecticut's rashad Anderson celebrates UConn 's 82-73 win over Georgia
Tech during their NCAA Fmal Four
Championship game Monday 111 San
Antonio, Texas. (AP)

.

Prep Softball

Prep Baseball
'

21

f ro m

Ben Gordon . the
Husk1es outcla»ed Geor ~ ia Tech ~2-73
on Monday night tn 11 il1 the .:hampionship many predicted they· d get from
the very start of the season.
They looked like champions from
beginning to end. runnin ~ when thev
W&lt;lrttCd, COntrollin ~ the middk at other
times. grabbing jl~~t about en;r; loose
ball and makin~ th e Yellow Jac·kcts look
ordinarv.
~
UCmin became the fiN team sin.:c
the 1996 Kentucky WiiJ.:.lls to win !he
title after being ranked fiN in the pre~ea"ln . The Hu,kic&gt; ll'ound up on top (lf
the .college hasketbe~ll world. thank , to a
tall. quick. deep anJ talented roster put
together hy coa.:h Jim Calhuun.
Calhoun
mi"eJ
mal-ing
th e
Basketball Hull of Fame hv nne mte I hi,
week. After th e 1\ a} he h1 iilt and guided
thi ' team, it's hard to ·i m a~ ine " ll\ . He
coached UCunn to it&gt; &gt;ec~ond ch,impi - .
unship in six &gt;e &lt;Nlll&gt;. and joined Mike
Krzyzewski and Bob Kn ight'" the nnly
active L'Oaches with multip le t1tles .
On Tuesdav. tinv Storrs. Conn. - the
home of the 'Huskies -- could become
the undisputed capital of the basketball
universe. The women's team take s on
Tennessee in the , title game in New
Orleans. and wi th a win. Connecticut
would become the tirst school to sweep
both championships.
·
Sorne say the Huskie' · &gt;LK'cc,s stan&gt;

Please see Huskies. 86

...

'

Southern_falls to Trimble Meigs spanks Buckeyes
BY ScoTT WoLFE
Sports correspondent

RACINE - Whether the full
moon had anything to do with. the
follies, or just a lack of concentration, the Southern Tornadoes squandered al\'ay a great pitching effort
from junior Cole Brown as Trimble
slipped past Southern 6-3 Monday
night during boys varsity baseball
action in Ra cine .
Southern is 0-2 in both league .
w.,llelrlmble goes T-O in bmiT
venues.
·southern scored two in the first
when Jerem y ·Yeauger reached on
an error, Wes Burrows had a double,
and Joey Phillips had an RBI single.
then Andrew Philson , ingled home

Burrows.
Trimble scored one in the second
when Snyder walked, Di xo n
reached on an error, both advanced
on a Trent Knott bunt, then Snyder
scored on fie ld~rfs choice by
McElfresh. Brown fanned th e next
two batte.-s, the score 2-1 .
Southern scored in 'the fourth
when Burrow ; ; ingled , went to 'econd on a passed bal1 ;1 hen scored on
a Phillips single to make the ;core
3-1-.
T-rimble ' ___Fuut reaJ:hed on an
error in the visitors haff oflhc fTflfi.
then advanced on Scott Brown'&gt;
single- In the fir~Land lllirLituati ot1 Fout ;cored on a thrn winl.l
error. 'then Brown advanced to third -

Please see Southern, 86

BY BRAD SHERMAN

bsherman@ mydaitytribune .com
NELSONVILLE
Meig'
pounded out 18 hits as the Lady
Marauders rolled to a 16-2 Tri Valley Conferen ce Ohio Divi&gt;ion
.sb ftball victory Monday. . - ·
1
The win improve d Metgs to - - 0
both overall and in the conferen ce.
while NelsGnvillc
fell to 0-2 in
.
both cat~gone;.
.
·
Me1g&gt; Saman~ha Cole pitched a
completc ~ame-fi'-~e+.__,_h~tl-"_o
,t~uck out two and w.alked a p&lt;lll'

runs sco red . Teammate Re nee
Ba iley had th ree hit&gt; and 1om run&gt;
batted in. Chri"y ~1iller also had a
trio of hit&gt; and t1111 RBI. Ja1nee
Da 1 is had two hits. three "runs
smred and th ree RB I: Erica Poole
wu~ :!-2 with a pair nf run~ .1 1H.l
RBI; and Me~an Garne' a(, 0 had a
- .
pair of &gt;afetie&gt;
Mcig' j um ped 011 il\ Jm't' carl)
"ith a -handful nl run i11 the top of
the fir &gt;t. then put the c'llll te&gt; t "''a\
with four nwrc in the •eco nll
frame .
Th~lh.'m

mmrt~~-----

a ,in~lc run in h1&gt;th the fnunh ;llld

nt batte r':
firth \nnin~'· hut !\lei~' added l&lt;&gt;ur
- McQu,tl-d-.,Ltf-f-eree:Hl&gt;e-lllss 011 t~1 ''--ai1u n11-ee ~ in tl1e fhlh ;md- ,1\'th monndlor the Lad y Bud.eye, _
re,pectilel\ anJ 11011 comf&lt;&gt;rtahil .
N11-'1 ijutche1 was 4-4 at the
·
·
Please see Meigs, 86
plate for the winner' with fi,ur

�www.mydailysentinel.com

:ruesday, April 6, 2004
www .~ydailysentinel.com

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday; April 6, 2004

\!tribune - Sentinel - ~egtster

•

'

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PB--SAiomar.
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IJI'ongdh 42 '20
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4223
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HBP~ Flogers (Durazo), by THudson (ASpn(¥10), PB--OM1Her
Umpjres---Home. Dana DeMuth; First, Bnan
Runge; Second . l&lt;erwin 0M~I9y , Thlld. Mika
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Milwaukee
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Cllosell ss 3 o 0 0
JenknsH 3 0 0 1
Ovrbay 1b 5 0 0 0
Helm!3b 2100
Gneverf 41 23
Drngtnph 1000
Moellerc 3210
BShetsp 1 1 0 0
KG1ntr ph 0 1 0 0
Totals 30 S 6 8

St. loul1
ab rhbi
Wmack2b 3 1 t 0
Lankford W 5 0 1 0
Purols 1b 4 o 1 2
Eli'nnd cf 5 0 0 0
Aolen3b 4210
Anterrl!o !IS 3 0 0 0
ASodrsrf 4 1 I I
Mthen~c
3221
Mornsp
2012
MAI'l:lnPh1000
Cedenopn 1 0 o a·
Tottrra 35 6 8 6

Mitwaukee
002 203 100 8
St. Loula
010 302 OOQ 6
E-BSheets (1). Pupls (1). Flentan11o (1 ).
ASGzlzss 4 1 0 0 Freel ct
4 ·1 0 0
OP-St lout~ 2. LOB-Milwaukee 6. St.
Barrstt c 4 1 2 1 JCastro 3b 3 1 0 0
Lours 8. 28-Podsednrk ( 1), Lankford (1 ),
Woodp
2011
Lldlep
0000
Pujols j1), RSanders (1 ).- Morns (1) HRTWalkrpo'1 l 0 0 0 WPenapl1 1 0 0 0
Podiiedni~ Pl. G11ave (1 ) SB-Womaclt 3
Godwin ph 1 0 0 0 Vlent1n ph 1 0 0 0
(31 . S--Gmmsell, BSheets. SF-Jan~rns .
Totals 36 710 6 Totals
32 4 6 4
IP H FIEFIBBSO
Mllw•ukee
Chicago
103 100 020 ...__ 7
31-354333
BSileets
Clnc1nnat1
002 020 , 000 4
12-300021
Burba W 1-0
E-ASGonzalez (1), Dunn (1) DP--Gh1c ago F~d
222201
2. C1nc1nnan 1. LOB-Gh1cago 6. Cincinnati lV12Ca1no
t
1 0 0 0 2
7. 28- Aiou nl. Casey (1). 38-Barre(l (1). Kolb S.1
t O O OOO
HR-GPanersoo (1 ). SB-Freer 11) S-L1dle. St.Louis
IP H AEFIBBSO
Momsl ,0-1
6 5 7 5 5 3
Chicago
K1ng
2·3 0 1 1 2 0
;
5
4 4 3 6
WoodW,1-0
Locoln
11-3 1 0 0 1 3
1 0 0 0 0 2
Tall!!rez
1 0 0 0' 02
I 0 0 0 0 01.
Meu=kerr
HBP-by Ford (Matheny). WP--Morns
1 •1 0 0 0
Famswortn
Umptres-Home . Mike Reilly, First. Chuc~
Borowski S, 1
1 0 0 0 2 2
Menwether; Second. C.B. Bticknor. Third. Eric
Clnclnn1ti
Cooper. T- 2:57. A-49.149 [50.354).
565514
Lidia L,0-1
100001
R1edhng
Giants 5, Aatros 4
PN0r1on
2-310000
HOUltOn
1·3 0 0 0 . 0 0 S•n Fran
Reith
·
ab rhbl ·
ab rhtH
1 1 2 0 1 2
R'#agner
1 2 0 0 1 0 Drt1am2c4120 a· io cl 4 1 2 o
TJones
HBP-by Lidia (CPanerson ). WP-Wood. Snow 1b 4 0 0 1 Arvrttss 4 1 1 o
Tuckerr! 5120 Bgwe111b 3010
PB-LaRue.
Umpirer-Home, Joe Brin~man, First, T1rn SandiN
3 2 3 3 JKenl2b 3 0 0 I
TSCI'Ida Second, Jeff Nelson; Third, Marty Alfonw3b 4 0 1 0 H1dalgo r! 4 1 3 2
400 0
Foster. T-2:50. A--42 ,122 (42,263).
Przvns c 4 0 2 1 Srkmnlf
Grssomd 3000 Ensbrg 3b 4 1 1 0
NPerez ss 4 0 0 0 Asmusc 4 0 1 I
Athlotlca 5, Rangers 4
Rueterp 2000 ,Dswshp 2 0 0 0
Tax••
Oakland
Fejizph
I 000 L1dge p
0000
ab rhbl
ab r hbl
Rnscmpr 0100 JVzcno ph 1 0 0 0
MYongss 51 2 1 Kotsay cf 5 0 0 0 Total1 34 510 5 Totara 33 4 9 4
Blalodc 3b 4 0 1 0
KieltyN
422 0
ASrano 2b 3 0 1 0 EChavz 3tl 3 1 1 0
S1n Francisco 000 100 031 !'i
Fllmerdh 4 1 2 0 Oyert
3022
Houston
010 001 200 4
Tmlra 1b 4 1 1 3 Durazo dh 3 1 1 0
DP- Houston 1. lOB-San FranCISCO 7,
DIIUCCI H 4 0 0 0 Karras 1b 3 0 1 1 Houston 8 2B-Durtram (1). Bonds 2 (2).
Perry pl1
1 0 1 0 Crosoy ss 4 1 0 0
Ensberg (1). HR-Bonds (1), Hidalgo (1) . &amp;Menctrrf 5000 DMill&amp;r c 3 a· o o
Durham. AE&gt;Jeren. Oswalt. SF- Snow. JKent.

w,..,

0

3

7

1

1

1

1

MesaSl

10C000

0

0

1

9

4

4

1

4

1

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0

71.:1

2·3

Cleveland
ab r hbi
law1onlf 6020
VizQuel ss 6 0 ·1 0
Brssrd 1b 4 1 4 0
Gerutrt
5121
Blake3b 6 0 2 0
VMrtnzc 5000
Hainer dh '52 3 2
Bll1ard 2b 5 0 2 0
Cnspcf
4 010

0

1

0

1

Twins 7, Indians 4, (t t)

562233
'2 4 2 2 o 0
1 0 0 0 1 0

5

2

SacOnd J m Joyce . Timd Mar"k Carlson T...1
2112 A-35.702 (38 496)
•

Second , M1k&amp; D•Muro. Third . Jim WoH
T~2· 44 . A--43.351 [40950).

Dakllnd

6

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Minnesota
ab
ShStwl11f 5
Rr.tas 2b 3
Cddyer 2b 2
MntkW lb 5
Kosl&lt;ie3b 4

Bv

SCOTT WoLFE
Sports correspondent

RACINE - Taking advantage of eight
Southern errors. the Trimble Tomcats
outlasted the host Tornadoes 10-5
Monday ni ght during Tri -Valley
Conference Hocking Division softball
aclion at Racine's Star Mill Park.
Southern falls to 0-2 and Trimble goes
to 2-0.
Trimble hitters were led by Alicia
Andrews with a 2-4 night. while Allory
Hooper had a two-run double, Janelle
Nichols a single and Amanda Alexander
a si ngle. Southern hitters were led by
Katie Sayre with two singles, Joanne
Pickens a single, Brooke Kiser a triple ,
Deana Pullins a si ngle, Emily Hill a sin-

gle, Nicki Tucker a single and Jordan
Neigler a single.
·
Trimble took a 3-0 lead in the first
inning when Nichols hit a fly ball that
fell between the Southern left fielder and
centertielder fnr a single, then after two
walks , Janelle Nichols scored on a
passed· ball , Lindsay Jago had a sacrifice
fly, and Amanda Alexander had an RBI
single for a 3-0 Trimble lead .
Southern came back with one run in
the first on a Ki ser walk and Sayre single, the score 3-1. Southern dropped a
fly ball, a pop up and then had a ground
ball error in allowing Trimble to score a
run then Andrews had an RBI si ngle for
a 5-1 Trimble lead.
Southern cut it to 5-3 in the fifth when
Neigler and Pullins singled and after a
stolen base, Sayre hit a sacrifice fly and

NoOne

STAR

"""""'

didn't get the job done," said manager
Eric Wedge, who watched his team get 17
hits but blow a 4-0 eighth-inning lead
against the tw_o-time defending AL
Central champions.
There were actually three culprits for
Cleveland - Jose Jimenez and Scott
Stewart in the eighth and Chad Durbin (01) in the lith.
Matthew LeCroy walked againsl
Durbin with one out, and rookie Joe
Mauer singled. With two outs, Shannon
Stewart hit a 1-1 pitch to left to end it.
"It's good lo help the team out," he said.
"Very exciting."
Juan Rincon (1-0) worked a scoreless
II th after Joe Nathan nearly gave up a run
in the .1Oth. Omar Vizquel doubled into the
right-field corner, bul Matt Lawton was
out at home on a perfect relay throw by
second basemim Michael Cuddyer.
Sabathia, a 13-game winner last year for
an Indians team that went 68-94, gave up

Trimble 10, Southam 5
Trimble
3 2 0
0 0 5
0
10 5 3
Southern
100 020
2
58 8
Allory Hooper and Andrews. Brooke Kiser and Katie
Sayre ..WP - Allory Hooper. LP - Brooke Kiser

two hlts in the first inning - and none
after that. He walked three, struck out nine
and watched the bullpen·fri tter away a victory.
"Nasty,"
Minnesota's
Doug
Mientkiewicz said of Sabathia. "Best I've
ever seen him."
Jimenez started the eighth , got one out
and left Scott Stewart with runners on second and third. Cuddyer's pinch-hit single
to center drove them in, cutting the lead to
4-2.
After Corey Koskie's double scored
Cuddyer, Rafael Betancourt entered and
gave up a tY.ing RBI single to Tori i Hunter
before stnking out Jacque Jones and
LeCroy.
"Jose jusl didn ' t gel the job done
tonight," Cleveland's Casey Blake said.
"It was too bad for C.C. because he
pitched his heart out. With our bullpen,
that's a safe lead, and next time they' ll get
it done ."

Clarett works out for ·NFL scouts
in February, so this was the first time
scouts had seen the 20-year-old who could
Associated Press
force his way into the draft later this
month.
. COLUMBUS -: Maurice Clai'ett ran,
Clarett weighed in at230 pounds, exact·
JUmped, lifted wet~hts and caught foot· !y his playing weight when he last took the
balls for the first um~ for pro scouts on field for the Buckeyes IS months ago. He
!VIonc.lay. By and large, they came away had times of 4.66, 4.63' 1111d 4.67 seconds
t"1p,ressed,
•
in his three 40-yard dashes, a standing
Obviously he s 'olng to be a bellc~w long jump of9 feet, S inches and a venical
fQf!,Omebody- ~ _got-Ulat..+y~f-abll"-=-;1~ of3~3;nche .Jie lifted 22S pounds
lty, said former NFL!UllbacK Tof!! 19 times,
R~thm~p., ~ho represented .the Detroit
Almost every NFL team sent a scout.
Ltons. '3u JUSt a mat~f of..him ®velop· C-larett was joined in some of the-drills-by
ing liS a footbllil player.
.
cornerback/wide receiver Chris Gamble
Clarett and two.other fo'!ller Oh10 State and wide-out Drew caner, who were
teammates met pnva~l)' wtth scouts at the Clarett's teammates on Ohio State's 2002
W~y Hayes Athletic Center. Claret! ~ad national championship team.
decltned to work out at the NFL combme
Clarett rushed for 1,237 yards ·and

BY RusTY

MILLER

I

ElnCanl

GRAND OPENINGS
Ja"'' Lopez homered and drCM! lfl three run1.
and Aataet Pal'ne1ro and M'guel Tejada b01tl had
two hils to lead Ba'!lmore over Bostoo 7·2 Sul1rla'f n.ghl 1n Lee Mazz1n1 s mana~nal debut'
S.gned as tree ageots durng a bUSY wrnter
rhe ~- Lopez. Palme1ro and Tejada com,;
b1ned to go 7-lor-11 wrth three 1\JilS and 101(

r hbl
12 3
00 0
1 12
I 2 0 ' RBis
0 1 1
THnteJ cf 5 0 1 1
BAD START
JJonesrf 4 0 0 0 Padro Mar1f lE!Z ~ed an tn:haractens11C
LeCroy dh 4 0 0 0
lapse ..-. ror1rol wh:le ~18king three sec:on.iPuntopr
010 ()
111']111!:1 11,ms 111 Boston's 7-2 kiss to Bah1IDC1'8 oo
Mauarc
3220 · Sllllday ngtll Mart1ne2 gave up three runs, two
CGzmnss 51 1 0 earrW. and sel8ll h~s CM!I s1• "'"iflgS
•
Totals 46 4 t7 3 Totals 40 710 7
TRADED
•
Cleveland
021 001 000 00 4 Los Angeles acqurred wtl.elder Mlfton ~
.000 000 04{] 03 7 !rom Cle\leland on Sunday lor ,outlielde&lt;Frankl1r1
Mlnneaota
Two Outs when w1nn1ng run scored.
E-CGuzman {1). DP--Cteverand 2. Mn· Gut1erre2. the Doo::t,jers' mK101 leagus player r1
nesote 2. LOB--Creverand 14 . M1nnesota 7 !he year laSt season. and a ~aygr to b6 named
28-VtZQUEII (1). THafner (1 ). Mten lkleWICZ
11) Kos~1e [1). HR--Gerut !1), THalner 2 (2 ).
DISABLED
ShStewart tl) SB--Gr1sp (1 ). S- Mer1on 1.
The New Yorll: Mers placed Jose fleyes (J'I the
Crrsp
15-day disabled tlst Sunday because ot a han'l·
IP H RERSBSO
stnng lr.)ury Ae"~-eS was lfl)Ured Wh1ie sreatrng :i
aweland
base OJnng a sprt1g .trar'IIOQ game MarcM 14
SabatNa
7 '
9
0 0 '
Reyes was put on the DL retroactiVe to March 26;
JJrmene.z
1·3 I 2 '
1 0
maktng h1m eligible to return SatUrd3'J W!1!le tnp
ScStewart
0
'
0 0
Mets are 1r Puerto Ateo fac1ng Montreal.
Betancourl
2 2-3 'J '0 0 0 J
Durbm L.0-1
'
J J 1 '
SP EAKING
Minnesota
Radke
61 1 4 2 0 3 -~·s JUs! amaz1ng 'M'Iat adll!erence a )lear makes.
You see 3-4·5 all come through 1on rgh1 - and 1n
Fultz
1 2 0 0 01
JRoa
1 1 0 0 0 0 the clutch too h's rusl s.: drftelenf - Ja-1 Grbbons. Ba~1more's t..o 6 hrner. oommer1ttng Ofl tne
Romero
1 10001
Nathan
1 2 0 0 0 0 new-bok OriOles New acqursrt1ons Javy Lopez.
Ratael
Palme1ro and M~ue l Tey~da comb ned tor
RrnconW.1-Q
1 0 0 0 1 1
ScStewar1 p(ched to 3 batters 1n the 8th.
se.-er1 h~s 111 Sl.flday mght s 7-2 w1
n ewer Boston.
HBP--by Romero (VMar1mez). b~ Radke
(Broussard) WP-Aad~e . Fu~ .
2003 AL Leaders
Ump11es-Home. John H1rschbeck. F11st . W~lly
BA.TTING-Muet,er. Boston. .326. MRam1rez.
Bell Second. L.u O.az : Th1rd. B1fl Welke
Boston 325. Jeter New Vorl&lt; .324. Welts. T()(Of'lT-3:44 A---tg _58_, (45.4231
to. 317: MOrdonez . Chicago. 317: GAnderson.
Anahe1m. .315. rSuzukr. Sealtle.. 312. Plerzynsi(J ,
Pirates 2, Phlllies 1
Mmnesota . .312
Plttl bl.lrgh
Phll l
RUNs--AA Odnguez.. TB.l(aS. 124: Garc\8i)arra,
ab r 11bl Boston. 120: Wejls_ Toronto 118: CDel~do .
1b r hbl
Byrdef
4000 TRdmn cf 4 0 2 1 Toronto. I 17 MAarr.trez . Boston . 117: ASonanQ.
Planco2b 4 0 2 0 KandBII C 4 0 1 0 New Yorio: 115: ISuzuk1, Sea!tle 111: BBoonQ. ·
Thome 1b 4 0 0 0 ,MndeSIK 4000 SeaHie 111
Burrei! N 4 1 3 0 S1mon 1b 3 0 1 0
HOME RUNs--ARcdnguez. Texas 47, GOelgl!oBAbreu rt 3 010 JOav1s r' 0 0 0 0 do. Toronto. 4~ . Tlnmas. ChiCago'. 42 JaG1amb1.
Lbrthalc 3000 cw,tenrl 41 2 1 New Yorio:. 4t . ASonano. New York, 38~
Floll1ns ss 2 0 0 1 Hill2b
3000
RPalmeuo. Texas. 38. MR.am,rez. Boston. 37
DaBell3b 3000 STorresp 0 0 0 0
Mllwodp 2 0 p 0 ANunaz. 2b \ 0 0 0 2003 NL Leaders
Ledeeph t 0 0 0 Stynes3b 3 0. 0 0
RHmdzp 0 0 0 0 JW1isn ss 3 1 1 0 BA.TTING--P u)O!S. St LouiS . .359: He'ton ColMchflls ph 1 0 0 0 Wellsp
1000 orado, 358: Bor1ds. San Franc,sco. 341: RenteTotal• 31 1 6 1 Total• 30 2 7 2 ri a. St. LOUIS, 330: Shelfleld. Atlanta. .:330:
Ktv-rdall . Pntsburgh .325, MGI&amp;s. Atlanta. 316
Phil adelphia
000 000 010 1 RUNs-Pupts. St lours. 137. Helton. Colorado.
Pltt1burgh
000 011 OOx 2 135; Furcal. Atlanta. 130: Sheffield Arlan1a 126;
LOB-Ph1ladelph1a 10, Pl1tsburgn 6 2B- Th::me. Ph ~adelphia , 111 . Bonds. 5M' FrancisTRedman (1), CWilson (1) HR-CWII§on (1). co, 111 . Berkman. Hous10n. 110
SB-JDev1s (1) S-L!eb&amp;rlhal. W!! tls SFHOME RUN5-Thoma . Phtlade~~ 47 : Se~~'­
Rollins.
soo. M1fwaukee. 45 Bonds. San Fn!nc1sco. 45 .
IP H RERBBSO
PujOis, St. Loo,~~s, 43: JvLopez. Atlanta. 43 .
Phlladelphle
SSosa. ChiCllgo. 40, EOn:lods. St LouiS. 39 .
Millwood L 0-1
6 7 2 2 0 4 Bag.,;e!t Housfon, 39. Sheff.eld, .A.tl..-r.ta. 39
RHernandez
2 o o a 1 1
Pltt1burgh

Galli.&gt; (llu rlt}, OH

"!

.
In On~ Week With Us _
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS-YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

. ,.

Your Ad,

""'

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
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Should Include These Items
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Get Response ...

\'\\01 '\( 1· \11

••

Look1ng for a roommate to
split cost of re~t 8 utilities lor
a
4bri H oUse.
rent
$150/ month prefer nonsmoker/no
alcohol
(304)675-6019 or (740)441·
0406

word Ads

~74
Y\RD SALE·
"--Po-~;;,IEIIROiOO.\ii·ffl.lii1iiUiiJI)iilii.EiJ
.

-

HOCSEll

Ba rt e nd e rfWaite r-Wartress
needed- Must be dependable &amp; be able to work shitls.
honesty. neatn ess &amp; the
abrlity to work with the publtc
a must. Send Resume to ·
Gloeckner's Gate , t 10 E
Marn. Pomeroy. Oh 45769

Doio~ l ~illt;"
ME' . Yoo ·~£ 7+16

OI{E wrio WAfllfGD

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170

110

ML~CEI . L~NWUS

POSTAL JOBS

""11nu • . .,

Do

TRAVEL U.S.A
Publication Sales Co hiring
18 sharp enthusiastiC
Individuals to travel the U.S.
Travel, traln(ng Lodging ar.~d
transportation furnished'.
Return Guaranteed. Start
Aoday 1·800· 781·1344

~oint ~lrasant

:l&amp;rgistrr

(304) 675-1333 .

740 256-1962.

ScHOOl$
IN:\"11WC110~

(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today 1740-446-4367.
1· 800· 214-()452
www.gertrpoltscareercollege com
A tC !Eidlt&amp;d Mumbl r Accredlllng
Cour!Cil tor Independent Colleges
anct SchoolS 12748

r

sewer &amp; trash , (740)9922167

4 room house. 260 State St.
S35 0 month plus ut1ilties.
Lots tor Sa le . Beautifully (740 )446·3667.
wooded 2.36 acres Green
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
Tow nship . $4 7 ,000. Call
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
(740)441 ·9516
PRICES AT JACKSON
Ohio Land sale near 51 AI ESTATES, 52 Westwood
23&amp;32 about 10/acres , M1d Drive from $344 to $442
30"s caii(61412S3-2083
Walk to shop &amp; movies Ca ll
t Dam 1o 6pm Saturdays , 74"0·446·2568 .
Eq ual
leave number, !Jme to call
Hous1ng Opportun1ty

BliSIN•:ss
01'1'0RruNfiY

"'

Well tender needed for oil &amp;
gas company in Meigs
County. Ohio , must provide
own transportation . apply at
J .D. Drilling · Company~ 107
North Third St .. Racine , Oh
45771, Monday th ru Fnday
7am-4pm.

RE."'r

St. New Haven. (740 )446Wil l Pressure Wash house's ,
4274.
mobile homes, metal bulld tn gs , anc:t gutters . Call
(740)446·015 1 ask for Ron 8 room Ranch, lull baseor leave message.
ment, 3 bedroom , 2.5 bath .
2.5 acres , family room. cov·
II\\ \ I I \I
ered deck:, $99 ,900. No land
contract&amp;. (740) 446·21 96 .
~10

"'

Voterr nary Assistant needkJH iO VALLEY PUBLISH
Exp erience proferred,
lN G CO recommends the
but Will train. PTIFT. some
IYou
do business with peo
weekends
requir.ed.
pie 'you know , and NOT I
wage.
Se nd
M inimum
send money through lhE
resume to French Town
mail unt1l you have investi
Veterrnary Cli nic . 360 SA
ateO the offerrna.
160 Gallipolis, or laJr; 740446-41 01 .

ed

The Daily Sentinel

North 4th Ave . Mrddleport . 2
bed room furn tshed apar;ment aepos1t &amp; references
no pets !740)992 -0165

Monn.E

Agco·AI!1s (s 1mpilctty) 17 18
Garden Tractor SO" deck ,
$15 44-52 1 40/hr, now htr- hydro , 937 hours. new b)ock ,
mg. For appltcat ton and tree ag
t 1res
$2 .10 0
government JOb mfo call (304167SS253
G1veaway. S1lk1e Roosters
Amencan Assbc ot Labor.
HEY DRIVERS!!!
(3041895·34 70
H913)599-8220. 24 hrs .
Barn Removal
Complete
hospital · bed , Here is a great opportunity
'
emp
. se rv.
to com e grow with us.
OU1side ca ts. male and (740)992-5949
·All reterences &amp; full 1nsurfemale. J740)742 -3805
Kuntzman Truckmg 1 an 80 R estde nt1al
Treat ment ance . Call 304-373-0011
I· \11'1 0\ \II \1
year old. Regional Tr uc~load Fac1lity youth worker Pay
180
Tear clown old sheep barn
WA'illl&gt;
Carrier w11h termina ls in ba sed on experience Call
for lumber &amp; ciEi &lt;m up trash
Alliance an d Cnlumbus OhiO (740)379·9083 to apply
To
110
Call (7 40)446-7732.
has opened a new termt~al
ee ng
peop e·.:,.,;
o"cn""'
1n Ptketon . OhiO Only hard
Affordable S:ervrces. Hauling
ho want to earn mane
1'100
Lo&gt;r ANn
working , experrencecl drtv·gravel. dtrl. ect.. Painllng.
hlle los1ng wetghl , shew
FOUNll
ers wrth a clean MVR and a
DriveWay
'ANEW CLINICAL
ing
ot hers
ho w Tme ,Tr imming.
min,mum o1 two years expe·
Rep air. Gutters. Chimney.
PEELS!'
lnt
or
mat!Onal
OVD/C
Feiu 'ld· . black male Lab ,
Plumbrng Jack Ot All Trades .
Want to (oak you nger AND rience need apply.
1 va1 lable upon request 740
neu tered . camoutlage collar,
30yrs . ellpenence (304)882earn Money? Let's talk the We have open ing s tor:
41-t984 .
Oarw1n area , (7 40)992-3230
15 Company Dnvers
2196 (304)377 -8266
NEW AVON call
15 OWner Operators
The Tuppers Plarns-Chester
Marilyn (304)882·2645.
Lost
or
Stolen:
Part
Water Distr ict IS accept ing All types of masonry brick ,
Joyce (3041675·6919.
Make 50% sellrog Avon .
Doberman mix dog, female ,
appl ica tion s lor 1he next two block &amp; stone 20 y rs .
Apn l (3041882·3630
limited
ti me
ONLY.
reddish brown in color, trail
weeks w1th mtentions of fill- Expe rience free estim ate.
(7 40)446-3358. First 5 to cal(
cropped, spaded. Apr01c 10
ing two entry-level posrtions 1·304-773·95SO . 304·593rece1ves a gift
months old . red snap coll ar..
Within the next 12 months. 1007
AS SEEN ON TV
RiO Grande area. Reward!!
Need Money .
One pos1lion Is tor an office
INSTRUCTION
Daycare has openings for al l
Call 740·245·50601740·245·
Yo u could earn up
cle rk and the oth er Is for a
LEARN TO DRIVE
ages, call Dawn for details at
9S75.
to
$8/hour
plu1
field marntena nce positton.
TRACTOR· TRAILER
(740)949-2990 in Ra cine
bonuses
.
The
off1ce
pos1t1on
.
must
be
· Lost· Minia ture Ploche r mix NEW PROGRAM
area
We also offer paid
able to work wi l h the public
Btack!Tan . Female, answers No Experience Needed
training
,
holidays
and
have
general
knowlHandyman- ya rd wor k. no
to
"S assy~, Black collar Placement Dep t
and vacat1ons.
edge ol Microsolt Word and
job to biQ, sen ior discount,
tag .
Missmg Financing Available
w/ra bles
We are htring so give us
Excel. The second positron Tim Kern (740)992-274 1
3/29104 Tuppers Pl ai ns area. CDLITraioing
a call today!
is considered a field mainteReward . Call [740)667 ·6308 ALLIANCE
1-877-463-6247 axt. 2457 nance position but electrical Jim's Carpentry and small
Tra ctor· Tra der
systems and contro l k·nowl· laodscaprng Call (7 40)446White Rat Te rrier, black &amp; Training Centers
Paramedics
&amp;
EMT's ed~;~e i o be given preference
2506 .
brown face, black on back, Wythevi lle, VA
needed. Appl y at 1354 In the appllca lions selection.
female .
Reward .
Call Call Toll Free
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis
No prior water knowledge IS Roofing. siding , porches. No
1·600·334 -1203
(740)3 88·8166 .
requ1red ; we will train as Job to small , Free estimates.
needed. Your may pick L,JP an 20+ yrs. oxp., Reasonable,
appllca1ion at 39561 Bar 30 (304)773·502 8 . 304 -882Road. which is three miles 2095

(7 40) 446-2342

New Haven - 1 bedroom !urn, shed
apartment
has
washer dryer
No
pets
Depos1t
+
references
{740)992-01 65

1

Le-------_.1

&lt;!&amp;allipoli5 119ailp m:ribunr

New ·1 ~.edroom ap1 Pho ne
740-446-3736

Small House 5275 00 a
mo
nth Call Nancy (304 )675 ·
Rtver
v1ew 3 bdrm .. 2
4024
1304 1675· SS40
baths
.
base
ment
and
deck
Home sale jo C ttv. 3 bed·
Homestead
Reality B roker
Located tn
, roOm. 2 full ba ths, otce &amp; All electnc
P1 . Pleasant. WV
GalliPOl
iS
Ferry.
WV
c lean. great location in City.
Vinyl Siding . Pnce to sale $700/inonth , no •pets By Tara
. To"Anrr uu se
now Phone 1740l446-9 539. appt (740)446·3481 .
Apartments. Very Spa ctous.
20 MOBILE Hmn:~ · 2 Bed rooms, 2 Floors. CA 1
nee re uce .
.
112 Bath N ew ry Carpeted
FOR R E:-&lt;T
b ed room. 1.5 bat h. CIA,
Ad ult Pool '&amp; Baby Pool.
, ater salter, Pomeroy. OH.
PatiO. Start 5385/Mo No
pholos/rnfo
Ol'l! 2 bedroom all elect riC . water Pets. Lease Plus Sec unty
1 tew
and trash serv1ce prov1oed .
www,orvb com
Cod
Depos1t Requtred , Days
No pets. (7 40 )441 ·4 540 .
060 3 or call 740-992
740· 446-3481 . Evenmgs
650
740-367-0502
Beaut iful nver view. !deal 101
www.comics .com
one or two people No pets Twm Atvers Towe r IS 'accept HO~II'S
' references {740)441-0181
mg applications for wat: mg
mRSALE
trst lor Hud-substzed. 1· br.
be room,
a ,
Ntce 2 and 3 bedroom
apanment. ca ll 675· 6679
cres, 3 bay shed· Also fo
1989
Norris
Lancl mark mobile homes for rent EHO
a)e camper. vacant lot m Doubl e-wide. 60X27. 4 bed- Includ es water. sewer &amp;
Porter. View photos/inf
SI~-\CE
rooms. 2 full ba1hs . li~ t ng trash. no pets. deposn .&amp;
nli ne
www.orvb.co
FOR
room . den. kttche n. din1ng 5300 per month. (740)992ode 33004 or Call 740
room. laundry 535.000 .00
2167
· - - - - - -..
6·8626.
(740) 992·529S
app ~ tcalto n s .
on Office space downtown
Takt 'lQ
3bedl0om . Pomeroy a'ppra. 1800 sq
14x 7 0.
p oeoroom . 1.0 oam. 1.1 1990 '14X75 3br. 2oa has lnlersection
of CreekV1ew 11 street l e~Jel . near courtCathed ra l cetlmgs, central
!acres. 3 bay shed . Also fo
Dr. &amp; Gar ners Ford Ad house 5450 mo . (740)592a1r. deck $ t4,800 (30 4)882 ·
tsale camper. vacant lot i
$375+depostl
(7:40)245· 1758
3682
'Porter . V1ew ' photos/in!
S67 1
\II· HI "II \\IIISI
;&lt;&gt;n lme
www .orvb.corr
1994
Oakwood
M obile
Code 33004 or Call 740
AI1.-\RT\IE..'VI'S
Home, good condttton . 3
j51Q
'SEHOUl
446 -8626
mH R EN"r
bedrooml 2bath S 10 ,000 call
(6041895·38 43
; ueoroom, .:. oam . .:. ca
I and 2 bedroom apart85 Granvil le 41 x65. c lean. ments. furnished and unfur· Good Used Appliances.
garage, 1 9 acres SAt 41
Aecondt t ;onea
anCI
Vtew photos /i nfo onl tne good condition. new appllances &amp;
nrce furn itu re nished . secumy deposit Guaranteed
Wasners
www.orvb com Cod 3310
740 992
OlJtbulidtng Ready to move ;~~~red. no pets.
. Dryers
Ranges
and
or ca ll 740-446-76 33.
into Call [7 40)245·502 1 or
RefngeratOrs. Some sta rt at
(7 40)388-0460_
1 bedroom apt . stove! rel r~ g· 595 Skaggs App11ances 76
ueu~oom ,
.:. uau1 ,
95 Fairmont. 16x80. 3 bed· erator &amp; ulrlrt1es l urmshed Vine 51 (740) 4 46-7398
R1vervtew access . privat
boat dock 1n Ga llipo li s 1 room. 2 balh , m ust be Call (740)245·5859 .
Mollohan Carpet . 202 Clark
moved, books $19,000 sell
ere lot V1ew photos/in!
Chapel
Roact Parler O n10
1 BR Bachelor Apa rtment
S16,SOO, (7401667·6357 .
nlme
www orvb.corr
Pr1vate &amp; Quie t 5350 month (740)4 46· 7444 t.-877 -830·
~ode 90303 or call 740- 740·667·9823.
9162 Free Est1mates, Easy
(304)675· t550
46-053 1.
financtng . 90 days same as
Victorian I 736 sq. ft . 3 bed·
2
bedroom
new ca,s h Vtsa/ Master Card
room. 2 bath . Stainless steel
stove/refr igerator.
Rent Dnve· a· little save aJot
'ueuroom. &lt; .&gt; ua" '· 4 .22 appliances . .8 ft. flat ceilings
S400 .00
and
5400 oo
~:res.
3 car garage, Harc:fi lap with saddle roof. 5"
Thompsons Applian c e &amp;
deposit
No
Pets
011
SA554. VIew pho1osj inlc on 12" roof pitch • porch.
Kingsbury and 33 . Ask for Aepair-675·7388. For sale .
!on line
www. orvb. co~
Cole's Mobtle Homes 15266
re-c onditio ned
automatiC
Ma rge . (740)992-41 19
US 50 E. Athens . Ohi o
f;ooe 32904 or call 740
washers &amp; dryers, refnge ra(7 40)592· 1972. "Where you 2 bedroom apartment , reier- tors , gas and electnc
, p67-7619
get your money's woqh"
en ces and security deposit ranges. air conditioners, and
3-4 bedrooms, 1 1/2 bath.
.(740)949·2517
wringer washers . W ill do
Lars &amp;
M id dleport, above ground
repairs on major brands m
AcREAm:
2 bedroom apt. St . AI 160 shop or at you r home
pool, fencea yard, ga rage,
past Holze r, S475 mo.
owner
will
fin ance,
Used Furniture Store 130
(740)992-2886
1 acre level lot Sunset Lane (7401441-0194 .
Bulav111e
P1ke
. Grave
off Sa nd htl l Rd (304)675 ·
3 rooms and bath , upstatrs, M onuments (740)446·4782 .
2820
newly decorated. Re i jep Gallrpolts OH Hrs. 10-4 (M4bd ., 2-s1ory brick, full basem ent. 2-car unattached 16x80 sites availab)e $115 required . No pels. (740)446- S)
garage. Price reduced . 4th per mont h Includes water. 15 19.
'18,

•Operation area 400 mile
radtus of Jackson. OH

MAKf
SOMfONf'S
DAY!

A

, 6Afl-l.

Class A COL Drivers
Wanted

It

Din Am LA L arge FM . All 3 bedroom hOuse: Pomeroy
Oak Kit . Util Am . 3 Br 2 area . Basement and carport
F.B.R. 2274 Sq fl . 2 Car Depostt and references
Garage. 18x40 heated pool reqUired Phone (740)992·
.on 100~87 lot (304)674- 2272 .
0125
3 bedroom. large lawn . t car
For Sale-House. one &amp;1 14 garage . No pets Patnot
acres . 3000sqft 3br 2bh . lr, Vtltage. (740)379-2540 .
dr, tvr, fsb (304)773-5984 Or
N1ce 1 bedroom apartment.
593-3702
S3751month, washer /d r yer
-~ 3 bedroo~ Ranch. 2
hook·up. .cen tral a1r. 1 mtle
ar garage , m ground pool. north of Cheshrre on Rt 7
I7401992·S226
75.000 3460 State Rout

1

• S1gn on Bonus

For more lnformli·
tlon. contact your
· local Ohio V•ll•y
Publlshlnl offlc•.

FDR RFJ\T

AVON! AU Areas! To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears . 304675-1429

THE
CLASSIFIED$

- ~gg Is not at a place of ·business
- Egg is not' it a private residence
- Egg Is not Inside a man -made object
- You will not need digging tools
- You will not need to climb or the use.of a ladder

POLICIES: Oh 10 Valley Publlahlng re•en~aa U.. right to edit, rajtcl, or cancel •ny •d al •ny lfm11. Errors mu•t be reported on tha tlrst d~y of
I
Trlbuna•Santlnei·A•glaltlr will 1M rnpon1lbla for no mora than the co•t o1thtl space occup+ed by the error and only 1ht tirll lnHrtlon. We 11'1111 not
any 1011 or expenH tl11t reaultl from lhl publication or oml1alon ot an advertisement. Corrtctlon will be mllde in tha flrat av•llabti. edition . • Bo•
are alwaya confidential. • Current rata-card applies. • AU real estate advtrtlaements are subject to tht Fadl!lfa l Fair Houalng Act of 1968. • This .,.,..,, .. ,,.
acc&amp;pta only help w1nted 1d1 meeting EOE llanderda. We w!ll not knowingly accept any advartlalng,ln v!o11t1on ol the law.

CARLYLE

south of Tuppers Plains just
off State Route 7.

PLEASE REMEMBER:

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Buttlnes• Day, Prior To
PubliCation
Sunday Dl•play: 1:00 p.m .
Thur•day for Sundays

lwrlght@ic.net

4 fam ily garage s al~ . April 8- • 34 cent pe r m ile.
10.
8 -3 . Children -adult • 95% No touch
dishes.
toys.
clothes .
Loogaberger.
Nobl e - Call 800·652·2362
Summ1t, Durst.
Dommo's Now Hir1ng aq
:
WAN"I'EIJ
locahons great pay, 1le~eible
hours
Pt.
Pleasan1.
~
TOBUY
Galltpolis ,
Pome roy
&amp;
Abso lute Top Dollar . U.S. 'Eleanor
Gold
Co1ns.
Silll'er,
GOVERNMENT JOBS!
Proofsets. Diamonds, Gold
WILDLIFE I POSTAL
Rings .
U .S. Cu rrency.$13.51 to $58.00 per hour.
M TS . Coin Shop . . 151
Full Benefits. Paid Training .
Second Avenue. GaUipolis,
Call l or Application and
740·446·2842 .
E~eam
Informati on.
No
Experience Necessary. Toll
Cash paid for- gold &amp; silver
Free 1-888-269 ~6090 . ext.
c01n s &amp; coin collections,. lree
100.
estimates. Glen Bissell.
(7401992-7599

ar•n•t only for
buylna or aelllna
Items. you can Ule
this wld•ly read
1ec:tlon to wish
1om•onea
Happy Birthday,
provide a Thank
You, and pllice an
ad uln Memory"
of a loved one.

Now you can have borders and graphics
.~
addedtoyourclassifiedads
S,~~
Borders $3.00/per ad
f.!
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

must be prepaid"

• All ads

To (304) 675·5234

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

Dally In -Column: 1 :00 p . ln.
Monday- Prlday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In - Column : 1:00 p .m.
For Sundays Paper

&amp;

Or Fax

Oea.d'lflru-

,
Ii

Giveaway to good home.
La rge black m1xed b reed
dog 1 yr old, very friendly.
needs a home with lots of
room to run . Call 740-446239 8 after 6pm

scored 16 touchdowns - both freshman
records at Ohio State- while leading the
Bllckeyes to a 14·0 record in 2002.
Brought to you by :
The NCAA suspended Claret! prior to
last season for accepting improper benetits from a famil~ friend and then lying
ubout it to investigators. He saf out what
would have been h1s sophomore seuson,
then challen·~ed the NFL in court. He won
the first step m early February when u fedral-judge Nled that the NFL could not --j-,[Ol~=lC'~
prevent underclassmen from being in the
CLINIC
draft.
That decision .is being appealed b}' tbe
NFL IUid attorneys were fihng briefs while
Clurett prepared for Monday's workout.
Clarett's antitrust attorney. Alan Mil~tein,
said a decision on the appeal is expected
well before the draft on April 24-25.

YARD SALE-

GAlliPOLIS
SWM 41 seektng SWF 3045 for frtendship and p ossibly more 1f interested wr1te Garage Sale · Thursday 8-4,
to P.O. Box 533 Gallipolis. Frrday 8·2. 224 Frrs t Ave.
Ohto 45631 .
Lots o t Chlldren 's/womens
clot hes. toys. k1 ds-nd ing
toy_s. couch. much more.
Rajn or Shme Park on
street, walk up dri&gt;Je.
C ·1 Beer Carry Out pe rm1t
for sale . Ches ter Townshtp. Women's &amp; Men's clothing.
Me1gs County, send letters ca r seat, stroller. chatr . bed·
of mte resl to. The Da lly spread . drapes. household
Sent1nel. PO Bo11 729·20. items.
35 . Grape
Sl.
Pomer(...y. Oh10 45769.
Thu rsday, Fnday &amp; Saturday.

13 man old small white
femai B house dog . needs
love &amp; fenced in area
(3041882·2211

definitely
. liP th e
tivet.

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

111'~-Y-AHI&gt;S_AL
_E_·__,r"'1""o_HEl_J'_W_
ANilll
_ __, . KIT

~

or Fax To (740) 992·2157

.

• Start Your Ad• Wlth A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Ph o ne Number And Addre•s When' Needed
• Ad• Should Run 7 Days

~~-. .~
. . . ~,.w.s. .~l l.o~n._. . . . . . . .~

r

446·3008

t

\I~

GJ\-l:.AW.\Y
,.__ _
_ _ _ _...

Thig golden egg ig

or Fax To

Oftfee llot&lt;r~
HOW IQ WRITE At! AD

1\egtster

Sentinel

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Call TOday...

,.,

CLUE FOR TUESDA~
APRIL 6. 2004

\!tribune

To Place

'

an error let home another run. Southern
left two runners on base, ending the
inn ing with a strike out.
A fi ve-run sixth inning, highlighted by
six Southern errors pushed the score to
10-3, then Southern added two in lhe
bottom of the seventh for the 10-5 finale .
AI lory Hooper posted the win with ·
two walks, four strikeouts, and eight
scattered hits. Brooke Kiser pitched very
well but eight Southern errors led to the
loss. Kiser fanned four and walked six
batters.
Southern hosts Alexander Weclnesday
and Trimble hosts Eastern Tuesday.

Twins take down Tribe in· 11 innings
MINNEAPOLIS (AP)
The
Minnesota Twins' reconfigured bullpen
had a stellar season opener.
Can't say the same about Cleveland.
Shannon Stewart hit a three-run homer
with two outs in the II th inning, giving
the Twins a 7-4 comeback victory over the
Indians on Monday night.
The Twins lost their top two relievers Eddie Guardado and La Troy Hawkins to free agency in the offseason. How the
revamped bullpen holds up was question
mark coming into the season.
"We all did our job and gave us a chance
to win," said J.C Romero, one of five
Minnesota relievers who pitched a scoreless inning. "That's what we're here for."
Travis Hafner hit two &lt;~f Cleveland's
three home runs, and Indians starter C. C.
Sabathia pitched seven shutout innings
with nothing to show for it.
.
"We had two J;UYSwe're counting on to
take care of inmngs· late in the game who

Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
CoUnties Uk

L!)l)el. Onoles, wert! 3-tor-4 With •
homer and throo RBrs 11'1 a 7-2 Wlrl over 8ostOI'I

Southern softball falls to Trimble
\

Wt~Cove

~ Jaly

E-mail us your sports news:
sports@mydailytribune.com ·

Prep Softball

CLASSIFIED

HBP--by STones [Polaf'(;ol
Urnprras--Homa Gary Oiiirltng Frrst Brll Hohr'l'

Dotal LQ..l
1 0
1 1 0 1
HBP-by Dotel (ToJCato) WP-Oolel
Ump~res-4-1011'11!1, Joe West Fnt, Terry Crall.

RERBBSO

THI..idson

...,

Hergss S, 1

12. Oakland 8 2 8-Bialo::t (11 Nu1. (1). Klflll·
t~ (1 1. Dye (n Byrnes (1) HA-Terxerra (1 ).

T•xu

H RERBBSO f'!!11sW1-0

San Franclteo
Ruetef
652230
Eslrel il
2-342200
KWalker
1-3 0 0 0 0 0
FRodnguez W 1-0
1 0 0 0 0 1

4

0·0
0·0

IP

10 1 2

Scutaro2b 3 0 I 0
Totllla 32 S 9 5

3 0 10
37 ·H 1 "

SpM;-y2b , 3 1 1 0

----I

-~~~c

1·0
0·1
0·1

Sunday's Results
No Games Scheduled

S• n Dlago
001 060 010 B
Loa Angeles
000 011 000 2
DP-San Omgo 3. Los Angeles 1. LOB-San
D1ego 7. Los Angeles 15 28- L.awrence (1),
JEncarnacion 2 (2). HR--f:.levm (1 ). Payroo
(1). ShGreen (1). SB-DRober!s (1) 5-Surroughs. Llnebrink.
IP H AERBBSO
San or.go
5 8 1 1 2 3
LawrenceW,1.0
2-331100
Vakles
Qropo,.
1·3 0 0 0 1 0
120000
Unebrink
110011
Osuna
1 1 0 0 1 1
Wilaaicll
LoaAngolu
Nomol.,0-1
5 7 7 7 2 1
Sanchez
1 0 0 00 1
WAt-riartJl.
241110
Dreilort
110 000
HBP--b'( Nomo (BuiTO\.Ighs). PB-lo Ouca.
Umpires--Home. Dale Scott; First, Br11n Gor·
man: Second. SUI Miller: Third. Chris Guccione.

Cuba 7, Reds 4

0·0
0·0

().()

000

Kleskotl 2000 LDucac 40 30
RbnsonH 2 I 1 0 JEcrcnrt 50 3 0
Paytoocf 4 1 1 2 Ba ~re3b 51 2 0
AaHrd.Zc 4 0 0 0 Cora2b
3 00 0
Greene ss 4 1 1 0 Vntur.a ph 1 0 0 0
Lwrncep 2220 Nomop
2000
Loog ph
lOOp W~rthph 1000
Vak:les p 0 0 0 0 Grbwsk ph 1 0 1- 0
Totals 36 812 8 Total1
39 215 2

T:::--',..
'"-:::
A.,',.'·' ,..
".;.I"'
,....
·ooo
_ J_.

0·0
0·0
0·0

I

TUelday'l Games
Montreal (L. Hernandez 15-10) at Floriaa (B&amp;cllen 9-8), t 05 p.m.
Colorado (Estes 8-111 at AriZona (Johnson 6-8), 5:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Giav~ne 9·14) at Allanta (Ru.Or1iZ2 1·7). 7:35p.m.
San Francrsco (Tomko 13-9) at Houston (Pettine 21·8). 8:05p.m.
M1lw&amp;Jkee !D.DGIJIS :H) at St. LOUIS {MarquiS G-0), 8:10p.m.
San DiegO !Peavy 12-11 ) at Los Angt.res (Od .Perez 12-12), 10·10 p.m.

Oatrolt
000 103 300 7
Toron to
000 000 000 0
E-&lt;JHudson (1) lOB-Oelro1t8, Toronto 10
28-Catalanotto (1) . 36-Woodward (1)
HR-IRodrJguez (1). White (1), GPena (1).
IP H R ERBB 'SO
Dotl&lt;lit
JJohnsonW,1·0 . 6 4 0 0 2 3
i.eVII'IG
1 1-3 2 0 0 0 2
JWalker
2-3 0 0 0 0 0
van
120001
T....,o
Hallads:yL.,0-1 62·3 10 1 6 2 9
1·3 0 0 0 0 0
Speitr
de los SantOti
' 1 0 0 0 0 1
Douglass
1 1 0 0 2 2
WP--lev1ne. Yan.
Umpire!-Home Charl.e Reliford: First. Jelt
Kellogg; Second. Doug Eddings: Third, Dan
lassogna. T-2:48. A--47,817 (50,51 6).

S;an Ditto

1

M 1twau~ee

Home

Slri&lt;

[).0

ChiCII!)O Cubs 7. C11'1C1nnatr 4
Prnsburgl'l 2. Phlladelph1a 1
San Diego 8. los Angeles 2
M1lwaukee 8. St. Loots 6
San Frar.c1sco 5, Hooston 4

Toronto
ab r hbl
.&amp;.Snchz ct 4 0 0 0

C~Cubs

.g

PtD

GB

Monday's Resu11s

Tigers 7, Blue Jays 0

Kana11 City
1b r hbi
5 1 10
Vtenhn ss 5 1 1 1 Behran cf 5 1 2 2
MQrdzrl 4 0 11 MrSwy lb 4 0 1 0
Thma!!dh 31 1 0 JGnzlzrt 41 2 0
Aanda3b 3 2 1 0
Ca~H
4 221
KnerkO lb 4 t 3 2 Harvey dh 3 1 1 0
Crede Jb 4 000 BSirago c 4 2 2 3
4011
Rwandc! 4 1 1 0 GuiEttM
SArmrc
4132 Rralord 2b 1 o 1 0
Grffn no2tl 1 0 0 0
Mlopezp.'11 1 1 3
36 712 7 Totals 35 913 9
ab r hbl
WHerrs 2b 4 0 0 0

0
0
0
0
0

o-o

-Boston (Sctding 8·9) at BaJtimore (DuBose 3-6). 3:05 p.m.
-NY Yankees (Mussina 17·8) el Tampa Bay tlambrano 12·10): 4·15 p m.
·Anaheim (Coloo 15·13) at Seattle (Moyer 21-71. 5:05p.m '
'Oetroit (Maroth 9-21 ) at Toronlo (Ba11sta 10·Sl). 7 05 p.m.
'Ciewland (Ja.Oav1s 8-1 1) at M1mesot.a (Santana 12-3). 9:10pm.
:exas (Pari\ 1·3) a1 Oakland (Mulder 15-9). 10:05 p.m

Chicago

AHanta
Flonda
Mont reid
NY Mets_
Ptllfa_delphl8

[).1

·TUI!IIday'• Game•

Royals 9, White Sox 7

Pot.

1·1

Sunday'• Aeaulb
Bahimore 7, Boston 2

MondiY'I Retulll
i)etroit 7, T()(ontc 0
1&lt;.ansas Crty 9, Chcagc Sox 7
'MinneSOta 7, CIMiand 4, (11)
Uatrand s. Texas 4

L

0:0
01

-

Ll
LL

P10

0:_0
0·1

w

EAST

1-o _ wr

.000
.000

L

P10
1·1

0 _ 1.00C]

w

Anaheim
Seattle

GB

N1•ct

l&lt;11i'CIC
To !Ill

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Ill' PRon·;;siONAL
SERVICES

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Win I
1-868-582-3345

IU \I I ..._,, \II

HOMK~

mRSAU:
acros in R1o Grande school
dlstnct. Call (740)446-6541
3 Bedroom Bnck: Ranch 1
Acre lot Reduced (304)675 1714

IU '\d \1 "'

· Housts
roa REm

All r.. l est1te 1dvertltlng
In thll neWiptlper 11
1ubjeet to the Federel
Fa ir Houelng Act of 19&amp;8
which m•k.. lt Illegal to
a'dver111e " lny
preference. limitation or
dllcrlmlnltlon b..ed on
race, color, reUglon, ••x
temi Ual 1tatua or netlonal
origin, or •nv Intention to
mlb 1ny IUCh
preference, llmltltlon or
dlacrlmlnaUon."
Thl• n•w•paptr will not
knowingly acc•pt
adnrrtl1tmen11 tor real
. .t•1• which I• In

1 bedroom house. 1005 3rd
Ave . $250 mont h. Can
(7 40)2S6·666 I.
2 bedroom. 1 bath , central
atr , $400 month
Ca ll
(7401 446·3481 or (7401645·
2192
3

bedroom

hOuse

tn

Mtddleport,
t-Jo
pets
$ 4 0° DO
+
OepoSit
'(7 4 0)992·3 194
bedroom
house
m
3

Hot

Gooo.5

r

Buy
or
sell
R1venne
Ant iques. 1124 East Maut
anSA 124E Pomeroy 740992-2526
Russ M oore
owner

540 MISCELIA~Wl 'S
Mi-:RCit-1..'il )l~E

10" table saw. $75 r.o m oto~
Condo In K1Sslmee. Flond a 6" JOiner, $75-no. molpr, Jlt;l·
June 12·19 , sleeps 8·12 saw, 530, no moto r. m1te r
pebple 4 fl'\1 from Dtsney bo•. $30 . (7401388·834 9
Call ( 740) 44 6 - ~271
21 It round above gro und
Con&gt;Jentem IOCB.I10n Ntce 1 pool. accesso11es . d e c ~ &amp;
bed roo m Referenc es a"1d vmyl coated cha tn link le f1ce
depostt req u ~red No pets $1200 C alll3 041675 -32 1S
17401446·0139
G un cabmet- hOlds 10 gu ns.
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· 520Q 080 (7401992· 7653
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE I
h ctnd•cap Scooter for sa le
TownhOuse
apartments
$1 ,300 (304)675·8175 see
andfor small Muses FOR
at 2509 Mt Vernon Ave
RENT Call (740 )441-1111
tor ap phcahon 8 mformAhon
JET
AERAT
ION
MOTOR S.,---~
FumJs hed apt 1 br , 2nd
Repaired . New &amp; Rebu ilt In
Aye uostar rs. all utilities pd ..
No
pets
Galh pOirs . Stock Call Ron Evans. 1800·S37-9528
(?40)446 -9523

&gt;JJ0e•tlon.oU6illiaw~.~uiiL~d~e~os~,t~.~n~o~e~tS~.~t~7 ti~0~)9~ra&lt; 1!"'5 hw n1111 1 .. ~:,_l;;;;;;=g,~;;,::;,:-;;;;;;;;;;;,====reedera •r• hereby
, "loop
P
room apartment~ at Village bee n usee1 1 C~ll (7 401 4,46•
4
Informed th•' all
Manor
A •verst de 8951 1! no answer leave a
an d
dwelling• edvertlaed In
this newap•per are
avallebla on an equal
opportunity butll.

L,...,;;:;,:;;;;;:;;;;;:.;;;;;;;;;.....,l

·

819 V1ancl S!, Pt Pleasant. 2 Aoartments rn M 1ddlep or t
br full basement $400.00 + "from $295-$444 Call 740·

m
__ess_a.::.g_e_ _ _ __ _

uti! . ref &amp; dep. 304-675 - 992-5064 . Equ al H ou smg
8902
Opport unities

1
Whirlp ool re n ge ra tor tee
maker. $7 5 (740)992·681D

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, April 6, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, April 6, 2Q04
ALLEYOOP

~r~lro .!~L

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

www.mydailysentinel.com

AND USED STEEL 1995 Chevy Berotla. excel·
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar lent condition. engine good ,

For
Conc rete,
Angle .
Channel, Flat Bar. ' s1eel
Grating
For
Drains,
OrilleWays &amp; Walkways . L&amp;L
. Scrap Metal s Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
~ Friday, Bam-4:30pm Closed
::nu rsday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. (740}446-7300

transmtssion touchy. $3 .000
(740)256-6105 tor
more information.

ACROSS

OBO

Phillip
Alder

2000 Chrysler Sebnng LXI.
39,000 miles. leather interior. sunroof, excellent conditiOn . loaded. $13,500 OBO.

Get an area of
carpet cleaned free.

1993 Chevy 510 Blater
4WO lul1y loadM. tra 1l er
A.KC Lab pups. 7 weeks, out
pkg , 177 DOD m11es Good
ot hunting stock. Parents on
conditiOn ,
52 .800
Call

premises. Wormed and 1.st
(740)446-2398 .
shots. Ye llows &amp; blacks ,
(740)388·9515.
1993 Ford F 150 d1esel. 7 3

fRUITS

&amp;

'

~

(740!992·6810

BoAni

&amp;

&lt;fo'rd 5600 Tractor. round hay ..__ _ _ _ _ _ _,..!
baler. stde del 1very rack. hay 14Ft. Flat bottom John Boat
tedder. disc . mower Call w1th trailer 5 H .P. outboard
(740)245-5064.
42 lb. thrust trolling motor
$800 firm. Call after 4pm
Vicon round baler f1efd ready (740)742-2457
Charles L. Hatf ield call - - - - - - - - (304)675-4566
19ft Fisher ful ly loaded
w/tra1ler 75 Hp eJCc. cond
~
WANT ED
reduced to $3200 (304)593·

I_

ru BuY

1967 camper. Yellowstone
24'. air. ret self cqntain. ve ry
good condition. 54.000060.
(740)388-8743 alter 6pm .

4-H Pigs for sale. Born
1/25/04 t hru 02120/04. Call Cougar Model 276

EFS

(740)448·2002 · af1er 6:00 2002 F1flh Wheel,. eJCcellent
PM cell (740)541-7491

condition $20.000 (304)882-

3369
Painting gelding, 5 yrs . old,
good natured, broke, 2months advanced training,
shoes. hauls, baths. e~peri­
enced riders only. Good barrel prospectiVe. (740)388-

t

992-4055

ADVERTISE YOUR
BUSINESS

ALwAYS
i&gt;llOPS

.·1Bctrer 11;

Le: me de it for youl

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding .

Lilli'S PAINTING

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

Bucket Truck

l140J 985-4180

Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992·5232

R.B.
Trucking

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondi tional lifetime guaran tee Loca l references furnished . Established 1975 .
Call
24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870 Rogers Basement
Waterproofing

Uw&amp;
GRAIN

HAULING:

·$25:00 per inonth!

Get A Jump
. on

• Limestone

• Sand
• Dirt
• Ag Lime

SAVINGS

Round bales of hay for sale ,
· $15 a bale. Call (740)682·

8 \ 06:
lit\ '\"l'l IR I \1 If)'\

$500!.Ho ndas.
Chevys,
Jeep s,
etc
PO LI CE
IMPOUNDS
Cars
from
$500. Fo r lis tings 1·800·71 9·
3001 ext 3901
1990 Buick Century, auto.
runs.
Call. (740 )446·3005
after 5:30

992·2155

c

l

'

Hill's Self
Storage

..n

29670 Bashan Read

204 Condor Street

45771

740·949-2217

Hours
7:00AM · 8:00 PM

i

!

•
~ ~~~~~~~~--~
THE BORN LOSER

Law11 and Garden l::quipmenl i."' our

business, no/ our sideline

1114/ 1 rno pd

p-I WPO FREEZI ~C.. "'\':;::=;:---,
C.OLt&gt;

V'"'iOU )fl,O\JLD AAIJE.
W~ '(OUK Wl~l)­

~I

WJ&gt;.J..KEI)
1-\0/o'£ fR.Oi'\ ';)(J\OOL!

Manning K. Roush
Owne r

1.--.r-

r

Ponwroy. Ohio

992-2975

Sizes 5'x10'
to 10'x30'

PLAIN
L.AZV !!

~

SALES &amp; SERVICE

R acine , O hio

BE JEST

!

GRAVELY TRACTOR

e&gt;&lt;:.[NI-(K. L\ I(E.

Open Mon· Fri 9·5 Sat. 9·1 2

Service, Free

l lOLl) '(OU I

t"'l \..!1'0 WE.I&gt;o,R.Il'&lt;G
Tf\E WINOI:&gt;K.E.f&gt;..K.U:.
fi P--s-\1) II 1)11)\&gt;\'T I

II r-----_,

,.UIIDI

Nationol Co-ny
Neoll• Home Mallerll

UP TO Sl D47 71 WEEKLY, FREE CALLI
FOR INTERVIEW liND REGISTRATION

lmmttdiatety In Your AMat
Potfage ProoJtdedl
. ln BuSII~Se Since 1989!
Start lrrvnediatelyl

INFORMATION SIGN ON 80NUS 1ST
100 CALLERS SELEC f AREAS
H OO-ti2·$541 EXT, 92. 7 daye.

TI\L K

TO

Tt-l E

Morning Star Road • C.Rd 30 • Racine,

1·740·949·2115

BISSEll

NOSE !

TFN

ma

BUilDERS IRC.

New H o me~ • Vinyl
Siding • New Ga rage:-.
•

See
Rocky "RJ"
Hupp

R e placcm~.?nl

Wi mlo w~

• Rooling
COMMERCIAL and
RE SIDE NTI AL

; PEANUTS
TilE SECRET TO CROSSING
A LOG LIKE TillS IS NOT TO
LOOK DOWN •. JUST LOOK UP..

IMPORTS
Athens

FREE ESTIMATES

Ca ll now

tot trf'Je lnlormaricn

$1,380 WEEKLY
STUFFING ENVELOPES

Get Rid Of PSORIASIS

space
for
$75

Dean Hill
New ·&amp; Used

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25211

1-800-822-0-\17
"W,V's #I Chevy. Pontiac, Bulcl&lt; . Olds
&amp; Cuslom Van Dt'aler"

BETIY
I HEARD
FROM I'LD
11-IAT ilEA

HAD CAKE.P.

SOI C4U-CD
IlEA AND
fOUND OUT
IT \IllS JUST
AM~.,.

..,WHILe
I SHAVED
MY HEAD IN
SYMP..m!Y

v

ICAN
WE
WITH

1HAI

per
month

w..

1-aoo-sn-7735

No

E:w Nect~ssaryt

Forever!!

S50 ClUih Hlrtng Bonutll

For Detallt·Sencl $5
G, Miller
t24 Meadow Creek Drive
Crossvtlle, TN 38572

Gllarantecd In Wnllngll

Coli 1-1!88-590-9379

800-331·4555 X 2254

•

~~:::··

34
35
36

Sunset Home
Construction
Bryan Reeves
New Homes,
Room Adclltlons,
Garages, Pole
Bullcllngs, Roofs,
S id ing , Decks,'
Kitchens, Drywall
&amp; More
FREE ESTIMATES I

740·742· 341

HOWARDl.
WRITfSfl
*ROOFING
dOME
MAINTENANCE
*SEAMlESs--

GUTTER
*Frealsdmatas.

949·1405

GARFIELD

ORRIS NORTHUP DODGE

ANI7 YOU HA£7 TO TE l-L.
ME ABOUT IT?!

252 Upper River Road • Calli polis
740· 44"6·0842 • 949· 1155 Evenings

AMATEUR!

0
0
0

1Advertise

in this
Space for
$50 per month

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addition• &amp;
Remodeling

• New Garages
.. Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Booring &amp; Guners
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painling·
• Patio and Po1 th Decks

We do it au e:wcept
furnact work

V:C:YOUNG Ill
992·621~

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Years Local Experience

39

tire

39 Striped
· an imals

blue
21 Mem'o abbr.
24 Come
unzipped
25 Eu rope-Asia range
26 Beatles'
meter maid
27 h may be
mopped
28 Comparable
29 Ouch!
31 Moonshine
33 Mr. Beany

41 Jug and
·cooler
42 Herr's wife
43 Ttme period&amp;
44 Quick leiter
46 Psyche's
beloved
47 Zilch
48 The oppos· ·
ing side
51 Comic
strip"s
Daisy -

35 Fr. miss

36 Stovelop
items

38 Tugged
shar ply

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
·Garages
• Complete

Remodeling

740=9112-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

ly generat1ng two extra tncks .
You can do th at ruf11ng your two low diamonds m the dummy. Remember, a rut!
in the shorter trump hand IS worth an
extra trick .
Cash your lwo top diamonds. then ruff a.
diamond with the eight (or king) ol
·spades .. Always ruff h1gh when you can
afford to ruff high . R elurn to hand by
leadmg the spade two to your ace, and
ruff the second diamond loser with lhe

Astro·Graph

. CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis c"ampos
Ce~b!1Jy C•pc1er

cr1p10g•ans ar~
Eac~

r·l' 'anou~ ::lNIP c pasI ~ nd prese'll
.n ttl ~ C1the1star&lt;~s fer n::tr,er

::r~a1ect l;or;'l.;;u otahon~

Ieite'

Toaav s clue Y equals L

" MKB

BVCCG

VYJVTA
GS ' R
SLP

MEOP

VERJPBA

HKR S

SL V S

VERJPB

G R

CVBCVB V

AVG I .

MKB

"F MI

XBVTPBR ,

AM O PSGDPR
;
EM . " '

NP G EA SPG E

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ·we plan absentee ownership
I'll s11ck 10 building
ships.- - George S1embrenner, when he bough1 theN Y Yankees

,

\C)

2004 by ·NEA, Inc

46

&lt;Your 'Ill~ :

Wednesday, April 7, 2004

a week daylight
to d ark!

;'1.,.

FREE.POSTAGE, SUPPLIES!
Slart 1HlrT1edlatelyl
Free Call 24/1

Pass

The trump cards
have various tasks

O

BIG NATE

J

NG 20041*""*

POSTAL JOBSI

32

Pass
Pass

are stranded in lhe dummy. You exit with
a club, but West wms and can return a
trump. killing lhe vital second ruff . (Yes.
· ducking at trick one avoids this problem .)

Open 7 days

of plants $6.60
Baskets $6.60

in this

GREAT WEEKLY INCOME!

Use lnveslors Mooey!
· Split Profils!
Tra•ningl
Free lnformationl

I

I Hiono1ino

Dennis Boyd
740-992;1189
740-992-2902

Sheriff 's Sale of
callo), N. 2 Deg . 25"
RHI Eltlle
13" E., 94.17 feet, N. 35
Case No. 03-cv·102
Dog. 20" 37" E. 80.51
Tho State of Ohio , .laot to a point; lhanca
Meigs County
leaving aald croak, S.
Mid Truot,IV
54 Do . 08' 43"' E,
Plaintiff,
313.52 feet paaalng an
Iron pin at 20.00 feet
Va.
Mary J. Hawk, ET AL
to an Iron pin, S. ,41
Dag. 28'39" W,. 164.01
O.fandants.
In pursuance of an teat to an Iron pin In
order of aale In lhe tho Northerly right of
above entllled action I· way line Routt •t 24;
will oller lor ule at thence along said
public auction at tha
right of way Una, N. 48
door
of
the
Deg. 31 " 21"
248.21
Courthouoe
In feet to the point of
Poll)oroy, Ohio In lhe
BEGINNING and con·
above named County talnlng 100 Acree,
on Friday, .May 14,
more or le••·
2004 at 10:30 A.M. the
FORLASTSOURCE·
OFTITLESEE
O.B&gt;
following 'deacrlbed
real estate.
324, Pg. 597 ol the
Situate
In
the
Melgo County. Ohio
Township of Rutland, Recorda of Deeds.
Meigs County, Ohio :
Parcel
No.
11•
00025.001 .
BEGINNING at a point
In the centerline of.
These pramlaes are
Roula t24, said point
located al 31586 Red
Ia where the canterHill Road , Langavllla ,
li ne of Corn Holl ow
Oh io 45741 -9707 and
ware appraised at
Road Intersects wllh
Route 124; .. thence
$20,000.00 and cannot ba aold for less
with the centerline of
Route 124 S. 50Deg. than two-thlrdo ot that
amount; to wit:
33' E.• 153.97 feet to a
point at the center of
$13,333.34.
''
a bridge; thence N. 37
T E RMSOFSA I!'t-:
Deg. t 1"32" E., 24.92
10% cath In hand at
feet lo the true point
day of aala with bal·
of begi nning, said
anca be paid by Cash
or Cer tified Che ck
point Ia also In the
upon dell vary of deed.
northerly right of way
Ralph E. Trussell
line of Route 124;
Sheriff
of
Meigs
then ce leaving said
7lght-of way and along -counly,-Ohio
a severance line Mark K. McCown .
Attorney
through the properly
of DoUglas ChapmanJ • 3 It Park Avenue
D.B. 309, Pg . 395 (four
Ironton, Ohio 45638
740-532-8744.
callaO and following
(4) 6, 13, 20
the canterllne of a
small cr k for (two

_F.ast

king (or eight') of spades. Now you haVe
10 tric~s. those eight top tricks and the
two diamond rufts'in the dummy.
Finally. note thalli you w1n trick one and
draw one round of trumps , you should
tail. After taking the lirst diamond ruff, you

Advertise

========ii......

BUY FORECLOSURES!

4" pot ol perennials SU8 Buy 5or more for $1.00

Estimates
&amp; Affordable
Prices. Call...

. (740)245-9498.

FREE INFO RMATION!
Call Ot11 Live Operators 2411
Toll Frot' 1-800-3S7-1110

Meigs county's Larges t selection oF
annuals, verennials, vegetables,
shrubbery, fruit ornamental trees,
roses, rhododendrons, and azaleas.
COMPARE THESE PRICE$11
4" pot of ~nnuals 94e

Roofing-SidingPainting-GuttersDecks-Etc.
For Fast Courteous

79 Ford F250 , 2 wd. needs a
little work. $500 OBO. ca .:

27
30

C~eap

Firs t. counl your losers by took1ng at your
own hand and takmg dummy·s honorcards mto account. You should find l1ve
losers: two hearts. two diamonds and
one club. NeJCt. calculate your winne rs.
Here. you have only eight top tricks : f1ve
spades. two diamonds and one club . You
must eliminate two losers. Simultaneous-

THAT HE MIGHT

i

Snapper

Gravely

7 40-992·7599

%.1&lt;:{

24

\3

19 Greenish -

kmg.

(304) 273-5321

fONSl'IUJf'I'ION

'

22
23

Agamst four spades. West leads the club

BARNEY.

!J'l!.IIL 11'

The
Advertise
Daily
in this
spacefor$100
Sentinel· per month.
740-985·3564

Pass

2.

e~ent

55 Byron work
H.H. Munro 56 Pre-owned
Sweel
·sr Mountain
Indelible
curve
58 Well-known
design
Milk amts.
uncle
Country
DOWN
addr.
Medit&amp;tion
1 Censors
guides
2 Strong
Sell out
"'Tosca··
highlighl
3
Kind
• 4 Tips oH
_5 Prolifi c
of muffin
diarist
Uncles and
cousins
6 - Dawn
Chong
Serving of
7 Maid ,
butter
Humor
at times
Gas main
8 Coup d' Hide oul
9 Type
(2 wds.)
or shark
Like most
10 Buckeye
Stale
city land

17
te
20

North

54 Dressy

· Th1s week. we are look1ng at lhe vanous
tasks to wh1ch your trumps might be
assigned. Sometimes. the~r only job is to
draw the opposition's fangs. But much
more often. they will also have_ to do a
second tas.k . Then . you must judge w hat
to do first · the other JOb. or m1ssing -t rump
removal Wh1ch applies on th 1s deal?

Tl't~M.

Tree Service

33795 Hiland Rd.

on this poge for as low as

HOME .
L\IPIIOVtJIIEmS

· Good ' mil';ed hay. S1.50 a
bole, (740)742-7004

•

IT'S g~CAUS~ f:/lNI~

Ravenswqod Chiropractic
Center

High &amp;Dry
Self-Storage

Pass

in combos
16 Touche
provoker

37

'

Advertise
in this
space
for ,
$50 per
month

West

14

40 Compular
key
1 London
41 Gas burner
radio
42 Aromatic
4 Showwy mo.
seed
1 Promo tape 45 Not there
11 Every one 49 Swindle
12 Bard's
50 Mldeasl VIP
lraglc king 52 S\adium
14 Ogden locale
cheer
t5 Recent,
53 Penny -

3t

Opening lead : • K

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

~'R~

South

4.

..,IU\1&lt;~...,

0436.
Registered ANGUS and
Crossbred bu lls. Top blqod·
· lines, S late Run Farm,
Jackson.
(740)286-5395
look
up
' www.stater unfarm.com .

Dealer : South
Vulner able : Both

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

&amp;
MmnR HnMP.i

740 698-6809

WV Contractors Lie . #003506

WAL.KIN' BY NOW, MAW II
I'M GITTIN' WORRIED ~­

C AMI'I:IIS

poor with or .wtthout beds.

RU)' $5.011
Bonanza Get

East
• 7 54
¥ AK1093
• Q 10
.$. I 0 i 2

6 3
8 6
J9862
KQ.I 9

South
4 AQJIU9
• 7 4
t A K 53
• A4

LI'L TATER SHOULD BE

1994

Hay wagons good. fa1r or

LIVESTOCK

992-3148

• Driveways • Te nnis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets

All pack $5.00.
Bring lhis coupon

. JONES'

Pomeroy E;~les
(elevato r available)
21 games · $20.00
Special gam es - Raffle ·
Door Pri ze
Hot Food Ava ilable
Sponsored by
United Fund For Meigs County

1\t(OTO~

•
•
t
.

0-1-06-IH

8 G5 3

\'Ves t

MONTY

Cell Phone 674-33 11 Fax 304-675-2457

(Commeroal and Reso d~nt1ill)
Mowing. Trimm ing, Tree Trimming, Aeration, Fertilization,
Spraying of fence lines, .~eaf Remova l, as well as small
landscaping jobs such ,]5 planting and mulching.
FREE ESTIMATES e GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

Doors open 5 pm •
Bingo 6 pm

f.U R S:\I_.E

875-2457

Owner; Jeff Stethem

Tuesday, April 20th

740-992-6396.

•

{Co mme1C1al and Residential)
Mobile Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Deck s, Dri veways,
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Oegreasi ng of
Equipment, Boats, Campers, TractOf Trailers,
Dump Trucks, painting or staining of your deck
or log home, Aluminum bfighl ening.
Special ra tes l o Trucking and Dum p Truckmg (ompanies.

Exclusive Hartwell Hare
in each basket

1979 Hond a CXS (SOOCC)
S1lverwing . water cooled,
shatt driven. runs great. he.lmet included, Pnce $700.

North
4 K 8 2
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Thursday, April 8th
6pm
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• Vegetab le Plants

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r

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

N~

GRIZZWELLS

'Ptl INA~ "0 PL.A'1'

By Bernice Bede Osol
Circumstances that you couldn't control1n
1t1e past w1ll be undergoing favorable
transformations 1n the year ahead. Once
the changes are made . the conditions will
g1ve you greater financial security
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19) - Trust your
innate business sense today and chances
are it will lead you to profitable returns on
your eflorts. Your perceptions will point out
ways to use present happenings to your
advantage
·
TAURUS (April 20,May 20) - Beca use
you've proven that you woold stand up for
&lt;:~ssociates in their hour of need. th ose
you've ht~lrred are likely to be lhere for you
today if you let them know you could use
some suppor t
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Tasks from
wh1ch you would normally shy away will
pose no problems for you today You're
qUite ~ apable of handlmg th at whi ch you
tacl&lt;le and can accomplish much when
you try.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Although
you like everybody and are 1n a sociable
mood today, some compamons wilt oller
more than others Can. Seek out the company of those w1th w~10111 you ha~e much
in common .
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - · You tend to be
overly prot~ctive of !hose you love today,
and this is admirable. However, it w1ll still
be nnporlant that you g1ve all enough
room to call the 1r own 1n which to operate
VIRGO (Au g. 23 -Sept . 22) - Even though
you're exceptionally adro1t in handl1ng
phy SICal tasks, roday you'll be better
equ1pped to deal with mental tasks. Use
your powers of concentra tiOn to accom plish your goals.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - The lnendly
manner in wh1ch you handle people 1s one
of your greatest aSsels. However. today
you may have to be a bit more assert1ve
than usual 1n yOUf bus1ness deah[lgs
Don't hold back.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Wt10tl1er
you hke it or not. you·11 be not1 ced w11e1ever you 90 today. so 11 behooves you to
enhance your appeara nce With a b1l ot
pt1mp1ng. The 1mpress1on you make Will be
a 1as11ng one.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21 I Allhough you 're a person who likes to be
out front. you can be more eHec!1VC to day
by bemg the power pulll:;g the strmgs
behind the scenes Sometimes see1ng
less accomplishes more
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Ja.n 19) - you r
tr iends are apt to have more fa1 th in you
and your ideas than yo1,1 may have in you rself. Fortunately, they'll be there lor you
today. encourag1ng you to press forward
with your plans.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - Don't be
overly concerned, or loo complacent II
you f1nd yourself In a competitive situat ion
today. Your track t1me IS likely to blf lei'
11wlfter than those wl;lo nm against you
.
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20)- Instead ol
Qlv1ng into poor habit&amp; that have caused
you problem• In lhe pa1t. profit today from
thou put el'lperlences and be d1t1r·
mined to ttar t out on a fretn footing

F R 0 .F E T

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to
youngster,
"People are always wishing for
what Ihey haven'tgot."Youngster to grannv. ·'Sure !hey are.
What else can one --·· ... ?"

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SCRAM-LETS ANSWER S
Papacy . Motif· Crest · Hearth · REPEAT
1have two neighbors who are very nosy. I overheard
one gossip say to lhe other, "You can't bel1eve everylthmg you hear but you sure can REPE .~T it:

ARLO &amp; JANIS
If USCD

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"HALF PASl .. "

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71 3 01&lt;7'1-6

Ll F( WA'O Bf.TTE-.: WHEJ.l
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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Reds
from

Page 81

Dick Cheney, who wore a bright red jacket on a sunny. 45-degree afternoon.
Schott died last month at age 75. ending
a tumultuous chapter for baseball's first
pro team. Video clips were shown on the
scoreboard, and the puhl ic address
announcer asked for a moment of 'ilence
"to honor Marge Schott on this. he r
favorite day of the year...
Cheney got a lou8 ovation when he
stood in the grass in front of the mound.
and threw a right-handed strike to crouching Reds catcher Jason LaRue.
Four pitches l;~ter. LaRue was standing
~md watching Patterson's homer land in
the oyttield stands. putting the Cubs .ahead
. to stay. Patterson also dove for a ball in
center, showing no lingering problems
from his reconstructive knee surgery.
Patterson also opened spring training

Southern
from Page 81
and ·was thrown out on a lhrow by
Southern's Ty Hill to the plate.
Southern led 3-2.
Dixon struck out the side in both the
fourth and the tlfth inning for Trimble,
behind an awesome di splay of pitching.
In the sixth. Trimblefs Snyder si ngled. Matt Dixon reached on an error.
Nott sacrificed the runners and Snvder
was caught at the plate on a botched
squeeze play. McElfresh walked and
Dixon scored on a wild pitch. then
Djxon tlew out on a fine play by Dustin
Brinager. the score 3-3.

Huskies
from Page 81
with Okafor. the All -American who had
15 rebounds for his 24th double-double of
the season, which was marked by persistent injuries. Pro\liling ·the lane on both
ends. using his lanky 6-foot-1 0 frame to
block two shots and alter dozens more. he
dominated on offense and negated Tech's
Aussie center. Luke Schenscher.
Early in the second half. Okafor kept
his hands straight up and denied three
sJraight Tech attempts to get the ball

Friday, April 6, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

with a home run.
imploded last season. Instead of merely
"He's hungry because he missed all the moping for five months, they improved
fun last year and wants to be part of it this the lineup and rotation, aiming to finally
year," Alou said.
break out.
Sosa went 0-for-4 wiJh a walk. failing to
"All the things they say about Chicago
get the ball out of the infield in his first is going to be over pretty soon," Sosa said
three ~t-bats. He put his mark on the ball- bt;fc;lre the game ..
park Ia" season - a dent in the top of the
The Reds are just aiming for
hatters' eye in center- but couldn't put respectability in their second season at
his mark on the game.
Great American Ball Park. Fans staged a
Neither could Wood. who needed 95 near-mutiny last year when they moved
pitches to make it through live innings. into the taxpayer-financed park. tmded
The right-hander gave up live hits and stars to save money and lost 93 games.
O.wner Carl Lindner was booed when
four mns. striking out six. and repeatedly
worked deep in the count.
he walked ot)to th~ field before the game.
"I got a little out of whack- not bad." a measure of the lingering discontent.
Wood said. " It was first-game adrenaline. Lindner slashed $15 million off last year's
payroll - it's now around $42 million opening Jay and all of that."
Alou dnubled home three runs in the leaving little hope of a quick turnaround.
It probably was the last home opener
third inning off Coty Lidle. who took the
loss in his tlrst opening-day stan. Joe . for Larkin, who turns 40 later Lhis month
Borowski g&lt;it three outs tor the -save. pol- .and .cxpects to retire-after. the.-season. He
ishing off an upbeat opener for a team try- went 0-for-4 wrth a walk m hr s 17th
· Cincinnati opener. matching Pete Rose
ing to shad il'; legacy as lovable losers.
Onlv live outs from their tlrst World and Bid McPhee lor most in franchise
Series appea rance since 1945. the Cubs history.

'

•

.Prep Baseball

Trimhle's starter was Matt Christman.
Southern threatened in the sixth but
failed tu bring the runner home from The winning pitcher was Anthony
Dixon who came ,in during the fourth
second.
Fouts reached on an error in the sev- inning. striking out seven consecutive
enth inning. advanced on wild pitch. batters. nine total, in three innings of
Brown had a 6-3 put-out that advanced work. That duo combined for ten strikeFoul to third. Christman walked and . outs and one walk . Cole Brown took the
stole secund. !hen James Snyder struck loss for Southern in a fine three hitter,
out and advanced to first on a dropped walking five and nine strikeouts.
Trimble had two errors arid Southern
third strike. the score 4-3. Matt Dixon
then lined a two-run. two-out double to had nine errors. Additionally, Southern
had four passed balls and three wild
make the score 6-3.
Southern hitters were Jeremy Yeauger pitches.
.
a single, Wes Burrows a double and sinSouthern plays Hannan at home
gle. Joey Phillips two singles and two Tuesday, while Trimble hosts Eastern .
RBiis. Andrew Philson three sing les
· Trimble 6, Southern 3
and an RBI.
Trimble
0 1 1
0 1 0
3 .- 6 3 2
Trimble hitters were Scott Brown Sou1hern
200100
0-388
with a single. James Snyder a sing le, Brown and Philson . Dl~eon and Snyder. WP - Dixon. LP
-Brown.
and Matt Dickson a two run double .
toward the b••~ket. Yellow 1ackets coach
Paul Hewitt buried his head in his hands '
and turned around toward the crowd. He
couldn :, believe there wasn't a foul -or
maybe he just couldn't stomach what was
happening to his team.
By that point, the lead had grown to 20,
and although Tech 's furious rally cut the
deficit to seven in the tlnal seconds, the
outcome was never in doubt.
Of course. UConn has more - much
more ·- than Okalor, and every element
was working.
Gordon, a junior who led the team in
scoring. hit all three of his 3-pointers during the firs t 20 minutes to help the
Huskies take a 15-point lead at halftime.

.
His backcourt mate, Taliek Brown,
bounced back from a rough game- in
UConn 's semitlnal win over Duke to tinish with nine points, six rebounds and
four assists.
·
Josh Boone, Rashad Anderson, Charlie
Villanueva ... the list goes on and on. No ·
fewer than I0 UConn players' made sigilificant contributions in this one.
Anderson celebrated at the end of the "
game by running around the court with
the game ball, laughing and holding his
index finger in the air as Okator chased
him. They eventually hugged - a fond
farewell for Okafor, a junior who earned
his degree in three years and will almost
. surely leave for the NBA.

Marauders roll over
Nelsonvil.le-York

'•·

In his tlrsttrip to the dish,
sports@ mydailytriburie.com he tripled down the, right field
line to give his· squad a 2-0
lead. He later singled another
NELSONVILLE - .Meigs run in after his team batted
starter Eric Burnem threw a around Brandon Fackler and
complete game one-hitter as Mike Davis also had RBI si nhi s Marauders annihilated
Nelsonville-York .
25-2. gl~~lsonville- York was also .
Monday on the loser's tleld. hampered hy three passed
Burnem notched five balls in the opening frame.
strikeouts in the mercy ruleThe Bucks used four pitchshortened game - It was ers in the ~ame. with
mercifully stopped after the Madison Connery sutl'ering
mandatory tlve innings.
·
.
.
.d
M
.
the lo".
Th e wm nnprove
e1gs
Meig, was scheuuled to
to 3-1 on the season and 2-0 take on Gallia Academy
in Tri- Valley Conference today. hut will instead host
Ohio Division contests. The Vinton county in a Tri-Valley
game served as both the con- Conference makeup contest.
ference and season-opener First pitch is slated for 5 p.m.
for the Buckeyes.
The Mamuders scored 10 Meigs 25, Nelsonville-York 2
runs in the top of the lirst and Meigs
1101 17 7 o-2s111
. Nelso.-York 0 0 1 0 1 - 2 1 4
Edd
k
I
k
d
b
never 00 e
ac , •
Je Eric Burnem and Matt Holley. Mad1son
Fife had three RBI in two Carler. Dan•el Fo. (1 ). Ryan
lat_e appe,arances in the Cunn.ngham (3), Adam WagoMr (5) and

•

I,(

I '"" ' \" '

1

I

., ..

• ·Meig5 suffers first
setback. See.Page 81

Jared Bun!ing _ WP -

BY

from Page 81
Mei~s was scheduled to
take on Gallia Academy
today. but will instead play
a makeup game at home
versus Vinton County. First

Enc Burnem LP

Prague. Czech Republic .
The 19-yew·-old Nash tied
for the NHL-goal scoring
title in his second season.
Nash. llya Kovakhuk of.
Atlanta and Jarome lginla
of Calgary each finished
2003-04 with 41 goals to
share the Maurice "Richard
Trophy. awarded annually
to the league's highest goalscorer.

0- 1618

0-253
Samanlha Cole and Megan Garnes.

McQuaid, B1shop (4) and Cranford. WP

-

Samantha Cole LP- McQuaid

I.

I,
,,

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Norman C. Will, 91
• Frank J. Knotts, 73

i

• Mason gives nod to
sewer rate increase. See
page A5
• ODNR taking
applications for wildlife
officer. See Page A6

WEATHER
, .A:sh Street Church
Ash Street
Middleport, Ohio

EASTER SERVICES
6:30a.m. Sunrise Service
9:30 Sunday School
10:30 Morning Worship
For More Information,
Call992-6443
Pastor Greg Sears

State Route 124
-1&gt;
Syracuse, Ohio
6:30pm- Good Friday Co,nmtmionl
11:00 am - Saturday, April .
Easter Egg Hunt
EASTER SUNDAY

6:00am- Sunrise Service
7:00 am - Breakfast
9:30am -Sunday School
10:30 am- Worship with special
singmg and children's bell choir
For more information
call 992-2514
Pastor Mike Adkins

First Southern
Baptist Church

397ZA SR 143 • Pomeroy

41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pomeroy, Ohio
£ASTER SEBviCES
7:00am- Sunrise Service
Breakfast to follow

740-992-6768
1:00 p.m. Good Friday ::.en/Ice
Come and enJoy our
EASTER SUNDAY
PROGRAM
April 11, 2004
starting at 10:30 a.m.
It will be presented by the
Hillside Baptist Church
Sunday School Department.
Parents, be sure to come
and see your child
In the program ..
Pastor Acree Invites all to
and i us this ...,,,rer

servic"e

9:30am- Bible study for all ·
ages
10:45 am- Worship Service
7:00pm- Evening Worship
Service
For more information
call 992-6779
Pastor Lamar O'Bryant

I .

Trinity
Congregational
Church
Second and Lynn Streets
Pomeroy, Ohio
Sundar, Aoril4. 2004
Palm Sunday Service
10:25 am
Thursday. APril 8

Manudy Thursday Service
7:30pm
Easter Sunday, Aprilll
Easter Sunrise Service
Easter Service
10:25 am
Rev. Johnathan Noble. Pastor

Sacred Heart Church
Pomeroy, Ohio
Ho(J Wtck SeryU:es

Palm Sunday Mass 9:30am
Hqi} Thyndqy

Mass of the Lord's Supper,
Holy Communion and Procession:·
7:30pm
VisiiS to Repository umil II :OOpm
Grmdfrldgy

· Stations: 12:00 noon
Confessions I:OOpm to 2:00pm
Liturgy of the Passion and Death of
Our Lord, Holy Communion:
7J0pm

. '

Racine
First Baptist Church
404 5th Street
Racine, Ohio
Easter Stryjces

6:30 Sunrise Service
Breakfast to follow
9:30 Sunday School
I0:40 Morning Worship

Bradford Church of Christ•
38260 Bradbury Road
Corner of Bradbury Road ·
and Ohio 124
EASTER SERVICES
-Sunrise Service
Sermon "Why did the
Father for5ake Him?"
· Breakfast served
following the service
- Ertster Program
"At The Cross"
10:30 - Worship Service
"Why did Jesus come
back to life?"
7:00p.m.- Worship ~f'Jice
For more Information call
992-5844
Pastor Doug Shamblin

endorsed by the American
Association of Retired
Persons (AARP). allows
seniors to choose either to
continue with Medicare or
have their prescription drug
coverage needs addressed
by
· private
Health
Maintenance Organizations
(HMO). The law allows for
multiple grades of income
se nsitive coverage which
will cover far more senior
citizens than before and
gives them more of a choice
in their prescription drug
needs.
Strickland condemned the
Medicani law for two reasons. First. he said more

..••

\
l

POMEROY - · With a
goal of assisting Meigs
Countians to integrate faith
and heaLth, the Meigs
Cooperative Parish has established a parish nurse ministry.
Lenora Leifheit, R.N.
with certification in gerontology has been named to
the position funded by the
Sisters of St. Joseph
Charitable Fund and the
· Parish. Her office is in the
Condor Street building and .
sbe can be contaCted at 992- .
7400,
The emphasis of the ministry. according to Leifheit,
will be on looking at the
individual wholistically body, soul and mind.
Christ's
mtmstry
was
always wholistic, treating
the whole person, physically, emotionally and spiritually," she said.
"Becoming a parish nurse
has been on my mind for
sometime and this is the right needs, and assist individuals in
time for the ministry to move obtaining needed health ser'
forward. God led me to vices and adapting to lifestyle
this.," she added, noting that changes, as well as coordinatit is funded for three years ing volunteers to assistr:u ·
She explained that a ish
with a $60,000 grant from
nurse
does not replac other
the Sisters of St. Joseph .
Leifheit said that a parish health care professionals but
nurse .does .not do "hands-on- works collaboratively with
care" but does assess the public health and home care

senior citizens would. seek
HMO's
which
would
decrease the number of people in the regular Medicare ·
program. With fewer people
in Medicare , prescription
costs wou ld · inevitably
increase. Strickland said
southeast Ohio and many
other places would not have
the same or any HMO
options that other regions
offer which would again
limit coverage.
Second. Strickland said
the Medicare plan limits the
ability of the federal government to negotiate prjces with Congressman Ted Strickland addresses Meigs County sen1ors
aboiut the new Medicare law Tuesday at the Senior Center. IJ.
Please.see Medicare. AS
Miles Layton)

Detallo on Pace A&amp;

BY

Lenora Lellhelt, R.N.
professionals.
screenings and prevention
The role of a parish nurse programs.
also includes being an
The vision of the parish
advocate by connecting nursing program, Leitbeit
people to appropriate com- ·said,. is to establish a netmunity
and
health work of faith communities
resources, teaching about in the county to · work
health care, prevention and together through sharing
disease prol:esses, and orga- time, resources, talents and
nizing health education, the gospel with others.

BY BRIAN

BY

INDEX

J.

MILES LAYTON

JLAI'TON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

2 SEcnONS- 12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3 '

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

Bt

Weather

A6

© 2004 Ohlo Valley Publishing Co.

SYRACUSE
A
$49,550 grant application
took center stage at the
Syracuse Village Council
meeting last week.
Syracuse Fire Chief Eber
Pickens Sr., asked council's
approval to submit .the grant
application to the Federal
. Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA) for the purchase of 10 sets of fire ge(U'
and six self-contained
breathing apparatus tanks
used to allow frrefighters to
enter smoke-filled buildings.
Pickens, who has been

fire chief for decades, said
the grant requires a I0 percent match in local funds
which will come from the
fire
department's
tax
money. Council approved
·the grant for submission and
Pickens is optimistic the
grant will be awarded.
Council member Mike
VanMeter made the motion
to sell village property
located on Snow Ball Hill
Road for a minimum $5,000
with the right to reject any
and all bids. Village council
approved the motion.
Eber Pickens Jr., said the
Please IH FEMA. AS

Middleport
women support
troops with
basic necessities
J.• MILES

lAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Syracuse applies Deputy named in
injury
lawsuit
for FEMA grant
J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY- A Vinton
man has sued Meigs
County Sheriff Ralph
Trussell, Deputy Bill
Gilkey and others, alleging
he was injured while being
transported to jail in a
sheriff's cruiser in June,
2002.
The county commissioners and an unnamed
deputy are also defendants
in the case.
Johnny Coughenour of
Vinton filed a complaint in
Meigs County ·Common
Pleas Court alleging he
suffered "severe" injuries
as a passenger after Gilkey

wrecked the crurser on
Price-Strong Road in
Salem Township.
. Coughenour was arrested on June 16. 2002, on a
bench warrant, according
to his complaint, filed
Tuesday. He was placed,
handcuffed, in the back
seat of the sheriff's cruiser, ·
with his hands behind his
back, and without his safety belt fastened.
"On the way to jail,
while traveling at an
excessive speed on PriceStrong Road. or an
unknown road in Meigs 1
C~:mnty, Gilkey negligently, recklesslly, willfully,
Please see Lawsuit. AS

MIDDLEPORT The
Middleport ~zarene Church
women 's group is solidly
behind the soldiers serving in
Afghanistan and want to
show their support and appreciation by sending along
some personal items . they
need.
Katie Gi lmore's nephew.
Joshua Hooten, 22. is serving
in the U.S. Marines and is stationed in Afghanistan. She
said the soldiers are clamoring for basic hygiene products like Vi sine. tissues. chapstick and sunblock. Wet
. wipes are in high demand
because .soldiers and sailors
cannot shower at a moment's
notice which also makes
deodorant a necessity.
''We thought it would be a
nice idea to show that we care
and lift their spirits." said
Gilmore. "We just want to let
them know we are here for
them ."
Hooten 's mother is Alicia
McDonald , who is also a
member of the Nazarene
Church. She has talked with
her soil since he has been
deployed to Afghanistan and
said what he really needs is
the wet wipes because he is
stationed in the desert at the
moment.
"We hope he comes home
soon:· she said. ·'J think these
thing s will make hi s life and
everyone else 's life easier."
Due to an odd coincidence,
the son of another member of
the church is also serving
with Gilmore' s nephew in
· Afghani stan . Gilmore said
Cliuck
Hoffman 's
son ,
Joshua, is also serving over-·
. seas and was aboard the ·
U.S.S. Wasp at the same time
Gilmore 's nephew was when
they were being deployed . By
sending care packages to her
nephew and to Hoffman's
son, Gilmore said she knows
it will do some good and
shows that the people at home
· support the troops .
"We are very supporti ve of
the troops and President
Bush's · mission .'' · said
Please see Troops, AS

.Fibromyalgla Support Group
This FREE support group is spon.sored by lhe Arthritis Foundation and Holzer Medical Cenler
•

Groundbreaking ceremony

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BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

1

Nelso.-York 0 0 0 1 1 0

\1'1'11
-· .~IJUJ
'\

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Meigs 15 . Nelsonville-York 2

5 4 DO 4 3

111'\l Ll)\\
-,

Meigs Cooperative Parish establishes nurse ministry

pitch is slated for 5 p.m.
Ne lsonville- York is at
Eastern Wednesday.
Meigs

MILES LAYTON

POMEROY
Congressman Ted Strickland
in
discussed
changes
Medicare with senior citizens Tuesday at the Meigs
Senior Center.
Strickland opposed the
Medicare mf;!asure which the
Bush administration and a
bipartisan congress recently
passed that seeks to cover
pr~cription drug costs for
senior citizens.·
•
"This is the first step
toward the privatization of
health care:· he said.
The law, · which was

Blue Jackets' Nash will play
for Canadian national team

.Meigs

J.

JLAYTON@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

-Madison Carter.

COLUMBUS (AP) Columbus Blue Jackets left
wing Rick Nash has been
selec.ted to play for Team
Canada in the world men's
hockey championships, the
team said Monday.
Nash.
a
native
of
Brampton. Ontario. makes
his debut for the team at the
tournament, · which runs
from April 24 to May 9 in

\\

.

P.

tnnmg.

I Jo'

Strickland .co.ndemns
Medicare law
.

SPORTS ·

,

Syracuse
. Nazarene Church

Eagles finish second
at RV meet, Bt .

Middleport • Pomeroy; Ohio

'

HILLSIDE .
BAPTIST CHURCH

Marauders conquer
VIkings in five
innings, Bt

STAFF REPORT

INSIDE

7:00pm- Good Friday
Services

'

Tuesday, April 13, 2004

5:30 • 8:00 PM • HMC Education &amp; Conference Center
~,..---iC)plGS~di.S&lt;;;tJissed-~v•ll-tnr;lude.....f=IClu:l.

control, exercise, relax.otion,
fatiguE!, depression ond doctor/potient relationship.
-

Talce a more active role in'your health!
For more information, or to register, call Missi Ross at
(740) 446-5121 or 1-800-816-51 3L

MEDICAL CENTER

--rriscover thet16lze1~ D(tferen

www.holzer .org

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