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                  <text>•
Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, April14, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.coin

.....

Major L~ague Baseball

•

Around the Minors

'

National League
L

..,_

4

3
3
4

2

5

.571
.s11
.500
429
.286

w

L
2

Pot
714.

r!'~~-=--~L
NV~ee1

__

4 _
3

Baltimore

T0n;~Oto

-

-

CENTRAL

""'""

C~ego

4

5

Sox

3
3
4
5

4
4

Kansas City
M1nnesota

3
3

C-ond
WEST

l

Pet.

5

.714
625
500
.143

Ana harm

5

Texas

4

2
3
4

Seattle

1

6

•••

P1Q

EAST

AW"i

""""'

W2

4·3

2·2
O·U
2·2
1·2
2·2

1

~4

L1

2

2·5

W1

2·'
' ·3
2·2
2·2
0·3

GB

P10
5·2

Strl&lt;

H~

Aw"'

L1

2·2

3-0

W1
W1

4-3
I,

.571
571
429
375

w

Oakland

GB

Pet.

4-4

W1

•

GB

L2

3-3

().1

2-5
1·6

l2
LS

1-3

5

t).t

1-2
1-5

lPct.

GB

P10

Stri

Home

Aw~

2
3
3

-

5-2
5-3

4·2
1-2

4-1

4·3
4-5
4-5

WI
W3
W2
L3
L2

3-4

Ll

0·1

3,3
3· 0
3·3

GB
-

P10

Strk

Home

. Awa'j

5·3

W3

2·0

3·3

57 1
571
4:29

'
I
11

4·3

L2

4-2

0-1

4·3
3-4

WI

3-1

1·2

W2

1·0

2·4

2B6

2 1,

2· 5

L4

2·4

0· 1

3

Montreal
Pl"uladetpl'na

2

5

286

4

I

6

\43

CENTRAL

W

2·5

St Louos

~

Ch.cago Cl.bS

3

4

WEST

L
3
3

4

3

3

4
5

Home

Away

5·2
5·3

42
•·0

1·0
4·3

1

,.,

W1
W1

3·2

1·2

4

1·6

L1
L'

Sa11 FranC ISCO
Los Arig e es
Sal"\ D1ego

0·3

~ -3

Colorado
AIIZOM

~

714
625
571

.,,
,

• 5444
2
5
444
2
44292

W
5
4

Strk

Te~as

Bah1m01e at Boston. ppd ra111

3-4

4429

PIO

C~velano

!-0
3-3

3

Houst on

Pet.
625

T\.W:sday·s ~esul\1
Florda 5. Montreal 0

6, M nnesota 3

7. AnaheiiT' 6

San Franc1sco 4 . Mdwallllee 2
San D~o a. Los Angeles 3

Toronto 7. DetrOit 5

Oak.rand (Redma'1 0-01 at Texas (Odey 1-01. 6:05 pin
Seattle •.GarciA 0.01 al Anahe1M (Ra Ort12 0-1). 10:05 p.m.

t2, Royals 5

St, Louis

Kans.. City

Chicago

lib , hbi
Berroa ss 5 1 1 1
Beltrancf 5120

1b r hbi
Urrb82b 5222

4 0 0 0

ss 5 1 2 2
MOrdzrt 4010
Thmas dti 3 1 1 1
Viwllln

GaLee~

Totals

37 s 8 s

Kan••• Clly

3220
0000
Knerir.o 1b 5 2 2 3
Grede3b 4 1 1 1
Rwandd 3 2 1 0
OIIVOC
4122
Totala
36121411

GIOadH

Gu1el~
411 1
Grttnno 2b 4 1 1 1

003

too· 100 -

5

Chicago
030 043 20. - 12
E-Uribe 2 (2). DP-Chicago 1 LOBKansas C:ty 7 Chrcago 8. 2B-8eltran (2) .
Randa (21, Valontm 12), Galea (3). Olivo (2).
HR-Berroa (I J, MISweefley (!) Gu1el (3),
Gratlanmo ( 1). Unbe ( 1), Korw~o ( 1l S-

Rowand
IP

H

RERBBSO

5

8

3

Kansas City
Ma~· L.0-2
Carrasco
Cercta

7

1

4

7
3

2

2

2

2

6

7

5

5

Chlca&lt;"O

Loa1zaW2-0

11o

Houlton

000

0

'2 '1

MJackson
2
1 0 0 0
1
Kocn
1 0 0· 0 0
2
LoaiZa pt!cl1sd to 1 tat1er tn the 7th
HBP-by Carrasco (M0rdonez). WP.....-Cefda.
Koch

Ump1ros-Home. Ere Cooper: Ftrs1. M1ke Ae1~
ly. Second. Chudl Mer1wether: Ttmd. C.R Sue·

knor.

000

102 -

5

-

5 2B-JKen1 (2l. JV1ZCa1no 11), Edmonds (51
HA-AEvereM (1). Berllman (2 ). H1d111go (41.
Edmonds (2) Rolen (51- SB- RSandars 2
(3). CS-MAnoerson [ 1). S-B1ggto.
IP H R!RBBSO
Houlton
Cleme.JS W.2·0 6 2·3 2 1 1 3 3 .
DMtceh
11 000 0
DoteiS.l
11 ·3 2 2 2 0
1

St. L.ouis
7 6 2 2 0 1
1-3 3 2 2 1 0
Ktng
2·3 0 0 0 0 0
Stmontacch1
1 1 1 1 1 0
HBP--tiy Clemeos \MAnderson). PS- McKay.
Ump.res-Hcma. nm Timmons: Fu,;t, Bruce
Froemmtng: Second, M1ke Wm1e~s: Th1rd,
Suppan L,Q-2
Eldred

Hunler 'Wend~sted1

Athletics 10, Rangers 9
ab r hbi

6 1 3 0

Byrnes cf

5121
EGhavz 3b 3 1 1 1
Kielty~

Dyerf
Durazodh
Htlberg 1b
Crosby ss
DM1IIerc
Scutaro 2b

Totals

52 22
4 2 2 0

ab

t

hbi

MYongss 6 1 3
BlalOCk 3b 4 0 2
ASrano 2b 5 0 3
Parry lb
5 0 0

2
1
1

0
5000
51 2 1

Menchrf

3 1 10
5 0 1 2

Fllmerdh

EYangH

3 3 20

4 2 3 3

la1rdC

5 0 1 1

N.V:lr C1

5121
3 2 2 2

40 1011110

Nl)cf
Totals

2 100

43 916

a

T-2:48 A-37.706 (47.098).

Oakland

331

300

000 -

10

Astros 5, Cardinals 3

Texaa

033

000

300 -

9

E-Zito 111 . E¥oung (11 . DP-Qa~land 1.
Te~as 2 LOB--0aKiand 10 Te~tas 10 29K.a lt~ (4 '1, EChavaz (21, Dye 131. DM1IIer (1 ),
Scula1 0 (4), MYoung" (4) . Fullmer ':3). EYoung
(1 ). l arrd (21 HR-Dye (3) DMrller (1) .
Fullmer (11. SB- Byrnes t 1). EChave2 {1I.
IP H RERBBSO
Oakland
Z11oW,1: 1
511
6422
1 3 3 2 1 0
Bradllid
~.neon
2·3 1 0 0 0 1
Har~~tlle
1·3 0 0 0 0 0
10 0 0 0 2
Mectr
!
0 0 0 1
~hOdes 5,4
Te•a•
Callaway L,l} 1 1 1-3 7 6 6 4 0

Houaton

St. Louis

ab r hbi
B1gg10d 3 0 · 0
Laned
0000
AEvrtlss 4 2 2 1
8gwel11b .3 0 2 0
JKent2b 4 01 2

Brkmnll

4111

Dotelp
Htdalgo rt·
JVzcno 3b
Ensbrg 3b

0 000
4 1 1 1
3 0 10
2 1 10
1 0 0 0
3000

OPimro~

Asmusc

Clmensp 2000
Totals

33 510 5

,
abrhbl

~;rna:·l~b

·;.gg~-

Pulols 1b
Edmndcl
Aolen3b

4 0 0 0
4 1 2 1
3 2 1 1

Anlenass
ASndrsrf
McKayc
Suppanp
Eldredp

4 0 0 0

201 1
4000
2 0 0 0
0000
Klngp
0000
Hartph
1010
Stcdup
000 0
Total•
31 3 5 3

Beno&lt;

2 2·3

4

4

ab r hbl
PIB!led
51 3 1
LCst~lo 2b 5 0 0 0
Cbrerarl
3 2 3 3
Lcwell 3b 4 1 0 a
GOn1neN
Ch01 1b

V1dro2b
CEvr1t 'r1
OCoera ss
Wlkr!ir11b

3 0 1 1

Joao

3000
WCOero ph 0 0 0 a
Phelpsp
0 0 0 0

4

2

4

Total•

ab rhbi
3010
1010

81gron d
Lopezpl""

o

3 0 0 0

T8!sla 3tJ

3000
30 0 0

30 0 0
10 0 0
1000

Le-&lt;tne
DPanerson L,0-1

1a1
002 001 - 5
000
OCIO
000 0
E-Bt-·geron (2). CEveren 11 ). OP- Fionda
2. Monlreal 2. LOB-Fionda 6, Montr&amp;al 3.
2B-P1erre ~1 ). HFI-Cabrera 2 (5). C5RERBBSO

Florida
PennyW,1-1

8

0

Phelps

120000

2

0

D1az.
T-2 24 A-14.520 (19.000)

VWellscf

ab r hbl

50 0 1
GDigdo 1b 4 1 2 1
JPhlps on 4 1 2 1
H•nske3b 51 1 I

5 22 0
51 2 2
4132
3 0 10

1 000

33 510 5

.o

0 ' 0

0

1

1

0

0

0

6

4

3

3

I

1

San Fran

4 0 0 0
4 0 1 C
4000
3 1 1 0
1 0 0 0

Orngln pr

1 0,0 0

abrhbl

Drham 2tl 1 1 1 a

a

Ansom2b 2 0 0
Snov.• 1b 4 0 0 0
Grssomcf 4 2 2 3

3 0 12

4 0 0 0

BondsH

3121

AHonm "3b 4 0 0 0
Hmndsr1201 0
Przynsc
4
1
NPerez 55 4 0 1 0
Hrmnsp
2000
KWalkrp 000 0

o o

10 0 0

0

0

0

1

12·3
0
1·3

2

1
0
0

1
0

o
0

0

0

1
0
0
0

Chnsbatlsen

Milweukee

1

0

1 1 0 0 0
HergeaS,5
FAodrigu&amp;l pj(CheCI to 1 be.1fer 10 !he 8Ul.
HBP-b'j

Capuano

(Ransom).

Balk-

e"'"""'

Umpires-Home, Bruce Dfeclcman: Firs!, Ger·
ry Davis; Second, Larry Ponclno; Thl«&lt;. Greg
Gbson. T-2:45. A--42,040 (41 .584l.

Padres 8, Dodgers 3

Rochester (TWins)
Pawtucket (Rod Sox)
Wilke5·Barre (Phillies)
Ottawa. (Orioles)
Buffalo (Indians)
Syracuse (Blue Jays)
South Di11ts1on

ab

r

ab

hbi

r

hbl

~s3b4121

DRbllstt
IZIUMn:S
8rdley ct
ShGren 1b
LOIJCac
JEcrcnr1

4010
4 0 10

Loretta 2b 3 1 1 2

4 0 0 0
42 2 1

BGiles. rf
Nwin 1b

3021

Kleskolt

3 0 0 0

Valdesp

Be~re3b

3110
3000
1000

RaHrdl c 4 I 1 2
Greeoess 4 0 0

4~ 1

1 0

4 I 2 0
4 1

2

.o 0 0

Paytond

1
0

3 ' 1 1

a

oooo

Eatonp

2101

L:rrgll

0000

Totab

32 8 tO 8

010

000

110 -

000

800

2Dx -

3

RERBBSO

W
5
3

L
0
2

Pet.

OB

1.000
.6QO

2

2

2

.500

2':

2
1

3

.400

3

3

.250

31 ~

4

.200

4

L
2

Pet.
.600
.500
.500
.250

GB

W
3

Charlotfe (WMe Sox)

Durham (Devil Allys)

2

2

Richmond (Braves)
Norlol~ (Me1s)
West Di11iSion

2

2

1

3

San Diego

los Angeles

Weaver L.D-1

3 2-3

8

6

6

1

3

umo

1 1·3
2
1

0
2
0

0

0

2

2

0
1

0
2

0

0

1

0

EatonW,1·0

7

6

2 .2

0

6

Valdes

211100

Dreifor1

SancheZ
Son Diego

PB-AaHernandez.
Umpiras-Horne. Tim Welke: First, J1m
Reynolds; Second, Gary C8derstrom; Third.

Anri&lt;t Fle1Ct1er. T-2 :16. A-35, 156 (46,000).

Angels 7, Mariners 5
Semle

Anaheim

ab
!Suzuki rt
Winncf

p~,

Bonds (3) .

Capuano L. l-1

573335

Ford

2

1

1

1

0

0

.Crhbl

r, hbl

5 0 2 0

Eckslin ss 5 0 1 0

4221

Ers1ad 1b
VGrarodh
G.Mdsnd
JGillenlf
Salmonrf
0Vnont1
AKndy2b

8Boone2b 5o 2 o
EMrtnzdh 4 1 1 2

lbane.ltf

3 00 1

Aurllia ss

4 o 1 0

Olerud1b 412 D
DWil511 c 3 0 0 0
Blmqist 3b 3 1 1 0

Totall

·3

23

o

3222
4 ooa
4tt2
4011

oooa
4 1 11 0

BMotnac 4 1 1 :2
Ha~er3b

Hansen 3b 1 0 0 0

36 511 4 Total a

3010

34 7 t1 1

Seattt.

'201
100 010 5
Anaheim
ooo 022 aox - 1
E-AKennedy (2). Halter (2).l08--Seettle 9.
Anaheim 6. 28-Wion (4). BBoone (3),
Oltlrud (2), JGuillen (2), Salmon (2). HREManinez (1), VGuerrero (3), BMollna (1),
SB-Erstad ~2l. AKennedy (2). Hal1er ( 1)
C5-1Suzuki (2). SF-Ibanez
IP H RERBBSO

Seattle
Pineiro
ASoriano L.0-2

52-384432
1-3 2 2 2 0 1

MMyers

1-3

JMateo

2·3111a1
100000

Tuc1&lt;.e1ph 10 0 0 . Villone
32 2 7 2 Talala 31 4 a 4
Anaheim

Franc1sco 7 _HA--Griss·om 2

I

o

1000

SB-Podsedn1k (6). SF-spivey.
IP H AERBBSO

Muns.on 3tJ 4 o 0 o
Nor!onph

0

11

001
010 2
Milwaukee
000
San Franclaco 201
000
1Qx - 4
OP-Mtlwaukee 1. L.OB-Milwaulwa B, San

Detroit
ASnch2 cf
V1r.a2b
IAdrgzcWnttedh

3

?
111000
1·3 2 1 a o a
1 :2
1 1 0
1

Sptvey2b
Jenkins If
Ovrbay 1b
KGintr 3b
Gnevarf
Moelleic
Kschnk ph

Halph
Totals

Blue Jays 7, Tigers 5
ab rhbi

a

----1

Montreal

Jhnson r1 410 0
Ctlno"o If 5 1 1 0

2 01

Giants 4, Brewers 2

Vargas l.l-1
6 6 4
3 2 5
SK1m
3 2 1 1 ' 20
1-!BP-by SKm (WCordero).
Umprres-Home. Bill Wellle: First Jolln
Htrschbeck: Second, Wally Bell: Thtrd lu · cpuanop

Toronto

oo a
30 o 1
3

1
"T-,_2
- ' 5_ 1_. ......
...,....,
.804
_:.
140_._20_1:_,·;_
·

1 10

1·3

North Dlvlelon

IndianapOlis (Brewers)
Toledo (Ttgers)
Louisv1Ue (Reds)
. Columbus (Yankees)

W ·

L

Pet.

3

1

3
2

2
2

1

3

.750
.600
500
.250

'•
'•
1'.

'

1'

2

game
LoutsYi lle at Norfolk
Pawtucket at Rochester
Syracuse at onawa
Wettneaday'a Games
Buttalo at Scranton/WilkesBarre. 1st game
BuHalo at Scranton/Wilkes·
Barre,·2nd game
Columbus at Charlotte
Pawtucket at Rochester
Richmond at Louisville
Syracuse at Onawa
Toledo at Durharn

Monday's Games
Indianapolis at Aichmor'ld, ppd.,
rain
Buffalo at Scrantoni\'VilkesBarre, ppd., rain
Durham at Columbus, ppd., rain
Loulsville at Nor1olk, ppd .. rain
Syracuse 7, Ottawa 5
TOledo 1, Charlotte 0
Rochester 12, Pawtucket 3
Tu11day'a Games
Buffalo at Scranton/Wilkes-Barre
Charlene at Toledo
Durham at Columbus
Indianapolis at Richmond .· 1St

Middl~port
;o (I'\, IS • \ oL :;~. :\o , t.)&lt;J

• Cavs close season wtth
a win. See Page 81

KEscobar

6

0

9

0

4

0

4

0

2

0

3

Shields W.:2-0
1 1 0 0 1 9
FAodriguez
1 1 1 0 1 1
Percival s.2
1 o a o o o
RSoriano pi1Ched to 2 ba:1ers in the 7th.
Umptres-Home, Jerry MealS; First, Paul
Schrieber; Second, Ed Montague; Third. Jerry
La~na .

T- 3:10. A--43.443 (45,0301.

Firat Half
Northern Division

Rome (Braves)
Capital City (Mets)
Charleston, S.C. (Devil Rays)
Columbus {DOdgers)
Asheville (Rockies)
Augusta (Red Sox)
Greensboro (Marlins)
Savannah (Expos)
Monday's Games
Hickory at Hagerstown. ppd ..
rain
Kannapolis at. Delmarva. ppd.,
rain
Charleston, W.Va. at Lakewood,
ppd., rain
·
Charleston. S.C. 6, Savannah 5
Capital City 12, Greensboro 1
Lake County B. Lexington 1, 6
innings, rain
Augusta 51 Asheville 4, 12
mn1ngs
Rome 11, Columbus 1. su.sp.,
4th inning, rain
Tuesday's Games
Asheville at Augusta
Charleston. S.C. at Savannah
Charleston. W.Va. at Lakewood
Greensboro at Capi tal City
Hickory at Hagerstown, 1st game
Hickory at Hagerstown , 2nd

Pet.

GB

.750
.750

.sao

2
2

2
2
2
3

.400

1',

2

3

.400

1', '

1

3

.250

2

W

L

1
2
2

2

2

2
2
2

3
3
3

2

3

Pet.
.750
.600
.600
500
.400
.400
.400
.400

GB

3
3
3

.500
.500

1
1
1

'

'''

SAN FRANCISCO (AP)Barry Bo11ds outdid his godfather - and he has just two
more hillers lo chase.
Bonds hit his 661 st homer
Tuesday night, passing Willie
Mays to take sole. possession
of third place on baseball's
career list.
In the seventh inning, Bonds
hit a 1-2 pitch from
Milwaukee right-hander Ben
Ford over the right-field
arcade and into McCovey
Cove, reaching the water tor
the second straight day. The
San Francisco slugger hit his
660th on Monday to nearly the
same spot
bnly Babe Ruth and Hank
Aaron sti II loom above Bonds.
If Bonds maintains his unbelievable pace of the past four
seasons, he could pass Ruth's
714 homers early next season.
Bonds has said he can't
imagine passing Aaron, who
hit 755 homers. But there
seems to be nothing Bonds
can't do.
"I've never seen a better
player in my life," said former
Giants third baseman Matt
Williams, who threw 'out the
tirst pitch at Tuesday ni ghl's
game. "I don't think anybody
changes the course of a game
like he does."
· Bonds, who will turn 40 in
July, hit 213 homers in the previous four seasons, including a
major league-record 73 in
2001.
He hit.his 659th on opening
day in Houston ·- but as he
usually does, Bonds waited
until returning home to San
Francisco to hit his most historic homers.
Bonds dido ' t really celebrate his 66lst, calmly dropping his bat and circling 'the
bases as the sellout crowd
stood and roared. After touching home plate, he' pointed
into the s1ands at his family.
Bonds took a ;hon curtain
call, and he got yet another
'tanding ovation when he took

NEWA:s~::e~:~~ne

runs
were up slighlly, scoring was
the tield for the eighth inning. down a smidgeon and attenII was Bonds' 29th homer dance soared.
.The start of steroid testing
into McCovey Cove - where
with
penalties didn't seem to
the ball apparently was
retrieved hy the same kayaker have an effecl on sluggers durwho got Bonds' 660th and ing the tirst week of the season.
later gave it back to the slug-.
"Steroids and hitting, one has
ger.
.
nothing to do with the other,"
The park didn 't have quite San Francisco outfielder Dustan
lhe same buzz as it did Mohr said. "Slats are stals. You
Monday night, when Bonds can't ru·gue wilh them. Guys
smashed a fifth-inning homer should get more credit lor the
into McCovey Cove. The work lhey do in the offseason
media contingent was roughly rather than &gt;Omeone accusing
halved. and sports legends them of taking shortcuts."
Wayne Gretzky and Bill . There were 2.22 home runs
Russell weren't in attendance, per game during the tirsl week
as they were Monday night to . of tlte sea5on. That's up 2 percelebrale Bonds' sixth straight cent from the 2.18 average
MYPaward.
opening week last year but well
Bonds ' latest slatistical mar- below the 2.74 in 2000, accordvel has been accomplished ing to the Elias Sports Bureau,
under the shadow of steroids baseball's statistician.
and the criminal investigation
Alben Pujols and Scott Rolen
surrounding his personal of the St. Louis Cardinals hit
Even
Williams , four homers each, as did Adam
trainer.
Bonds' teammate in San Dunn of the Cincinnati Reds.
Francisco for three sea~ons,
"I don't think the steroid situbelieves the steroids contro- ation is going to limit the home
versy has given baseball "a runs being hit The ballpark and
black eye."
the bat5 are the factors," Dunn

WORKSHOP
Join your Purina Miils '' dealer

for the industry\ #I equine
event, HOW ' . The Horse
Owner's Workshop· .

said. "If I'm on them, it's not
going to make me hit the ball
any further, it's not going to
make me hit the ball."
One thing's for sure: The controversy over the use of performance-enhancing ·drugs didn't
keep fans away from ballparks,
where attendance was at its
highest level in three years.
Helped by a new ballpark in
San Diego and better weather
lhan last year, average attendance in the tirst week
increased II percent to 31 ,25"2.
That's the largesl first-week
level since 200 l's average of
31,876.
"The end of last season was
tremendous, the postseason was
spectucular," commissioner
Bud Selig said Monday at the
opening of Citizens Bank Park
in Philadelphia.
"There was a lot of interest in
the offseason, the debate about
A-Rod," Selig said. "Last year,
on Sept. I, there were 18 teams
·still in contention. This year, I
think it'll be around 20. As I like
to say, there's a lot of h'ope and
faith out there."
Baseball still is trying to reach
its record average attendance of
31,612, set in 1993, before the 7
1/2-month strtke that wiped out
the World Series for the first

time in 90 years. Last year's
average was 28,013.
The New York Yankees averaged 46,700 fans for their ftrst
four home games, while
Houston
with former
Yankees Roger Cle.mens and
Andy Pettitte - averaged
42,300 lor its frrst three. ·
San Diego had an average of
41,500 for its opening three
games in Petco Park, and the
Boston Red Sox extended their
home sellout streak to 67
games.
The Yankees already have
sold 2.98 million ticket~ and the
Red Sox nearly 2.5 millio.n. At
the new ballparks, the Phillies
have sold 2.3 million and the
Padres 2.15 mill ion.
"I think of it as a IOth player,"
Philadelphia outfielder Doug
Glanville said. "You love the
feeling of all the people suppaning you. It's a lot more
enjoyable playing in front of
thai type of crowd."
As for the scoring, it declined

,.,

Soldiers
receive
support from .
Meigs County

1'

1'.

game
Kannapolis at Delmarva, 1st
game
Kannapolis at Delmarva , 2nd
game
Lexington at Lake County
Rome at Columbus, comp of
susp. game
Rome at Columbus
Wednesday's Games
Ashevllle at Augusta
Charleston, S.C. al Savannah
Charleston, W Va. at Lakewood
Greensboro at Capital City
Hickory at Hagerstown
Kannapolis at Delmarva
·Lexington at Lake County
Rome at Columbus

3 percent, trom I 0.03 runs per
game to 9.71. But the overall
major league batting average
rosr 2 percent, from .261 to .
.f-67.
"I don't really worry or keep .
track of that," Chicago Cubs
slugger Sammy Sosa said. "I
just try to get ready myself."
So much for · the idea that
offense would drop significantly this year.
'The game is built on offense
and it won't drop," Minnesota
Twins manager Ron Gardenhire
said. "The ball is harder, the
bals are betler, the guys are
stronger. Everybody is looking
for pitching to stop some of it.
The offense isn't going anywhere."
(AP Sports Writers Rick
Gano. in Chicago; Janie
McCauley in San Francisco;
Dan Ge/ston, Rob Maaddi and
Ben Walker in Philadelphia;
and Tom Withers in Cleveland
comribmed to this report,)

BY

nexL door to the Extension Office
CONTACT: AI Dettwiller

my goal a&gt; an advisor 1s to
help them gel the 911 Plan
together and find th~
monev.
Warren · said:
"Whether or -not EmereiTech
i&gt; involved after the money
is secured is another story."·.
The county"s EMS system
currently operates on a total
annual budget of appmximately $825.000. according
to
Administrator
Gene
Lyons. S I 20.000 of which
goes directly to dispatchers~
wage s. Staffing communica-.
tions for a 911 service
would cost an estimated
$300,000 per year, Lyons
said.
·

Page AS
• Auburn Meadows

INSIDE
• Family Medicine.
SeePageA2
• DA charges Wisconsin
student for obstruction in
faking abduction,
See Page A6

WEATHER

Detalla on Pace A 7

INDEX
2 SECTIONS - .16 PAGES

Comics
Dear Abby

Editorials
Community
Places To Go
Obituaries
Sports
· Weather

SWEEPSTAKES
It's your chance to win!
NATIONAL PRIZES

A3
Bs•6
B7

A3
A4
A2

AS
As
B1

A7

© aoo4 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

EXISS' Event XT 300 Trailer

J-

German historian visits Pomeroy
BY

.MILES lAYTON

The ultimate home on wheel! for your

RACINE - As the days
turn into months for men and
women serving overseas, at
least those soldiers from
Meigs County still know that
there are . people at home
thinking about them .
The Racine First Baptist
Church will have a special
Enduring Freedom worship
staning at I 0:40 a.m. SIIIIday
with a luncheon to follow.
The music group "Soul 'd
Out" will perform the song
"Free Today." Jan Cardone, a
member of lhe Enduring
Freedom Support Group
(EFSG), said everyone is
welcome to attend. The
EFSG is aware of atleast 17
people from Meigs County
who are serving in Iraq.
"As long as we have men
and women serving over
there, we are going to continue to support ·them by sending care packages," said
Cardone,
Cardone has a son, Trevor,
·who is serving as a military
policeman in Ba~hdad. As
anyone can tell w1th images
broadcast via CNN, military
policeman are truly on the
front lines of this. urban warfare . She spoke with him
Sunday
by
telephone.
Cardone said .she misses her
son and hopes he comes
home soon.
"He told me things are
going to get worse before
they get better, but he is optimistic about the mission's
success. Still, he is counting
the days and months until he
gets home," she said.
In weeks past, the EFSG
has sent numerous items
overseas inc Iuding basic
hygiene products, letters and
handwritten cards. Most
recently, the group has sent
over mouse traps and fly
strips. Cardone said these
items were specifically
requested by the soldiers who
live in less than optimal quarters.
According to the EFSG and
other sources, this is a list of
the known men and women
who are serving overseas:

PIMse IN Soldlan, AS

BRIAN J.

REED

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

JLAYTON®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Calendars
Classifieds

TOPICS:

Horse Nutrition
Veterinary Care
Training Tips
DATE: April 28th
TIME: 7pm-9prn
PLACE: Meigs County Annex

is in place to show how 9-11 would be implemented if
they had the money:·
·-There are lots of thing&gt;
that must be pul togelher for
lhe
911 plan. including
location, a plan for cooperation between agencies and
other factors ."
Warren said he will also
advi se the local technical
comminee, once it forms. in
order to complete 1he plan
re4uired. Hi s ftrm provi"des
91 I service to several counties in Ohio. including
Athens,
Gallia.
and
Lawrence.
"In this situation, however,

1

Home runs up slightly, scoring
down attendance soars
~;lfoNALD BLU:

funding is available for starting 911 service, but may nol
be as ··readily availabl e" as
local officials have indicated.
Warren has volumeered to
act as a consultant for Meigs
County in developing its 911
plan and applying for granl
funding to operate the syslem once it is in place.
"In order to explore
options to obtain 911 service, and, the only way to
have any chance of getting a
grant or other linancial assistance is 10 have a plan in
place first," Warren said.
"No one will give Ihe coun.ty a gratll unless a solid plan

1''

OBITUARIES

Bonds hits 661st
home~, pas~s
Mays 1nto th1rd
place all-time

Sandy
Jannarelli,
and
Salisbury Township Trustee
Bill Spaun, who will, in
turn, select the technical
committee.
Commissioners hope to
secure state grant funding to
help purchase equipment lor
the transilion to a 911 emergency service, while other
equipment needed is already
in place at the centralized
county emergency medical
service oftices on Mulberry
Heights.
According to Michael
Warren, client relations manager for EmergiTech, a firm
specializing in 911 services,

REED

POMEROY - An expert
in setting up 911 emergency
service says grant funding
will only be, available to
Meigs County for such a
system if a good plan is in
place when funds are sought.
Thai plan will be developed by a · 911 Technical
Commitlee working on
behalf of county commissioners. The commissioners
last month appointed a 911
Planning Committee, made
up . of Commissioner Jeff
Thornton, Middlepon Mayor

South Atlantic League
L
1
1

J.

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Indianapolis at Atchmoild, 2nd

W
3
3
2
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lilt HSil \\ . \I'HII 1:,. :.&gt; o1q

BY BRIAN

~ame

Charleston. W.Va. (Blue Jays)
Hickory (Pirates)
Hagerstown (Giants)
Kannapolis (White Sox}
Lakewood (Phillies)
Lake County (Indians)
Lexlngton (Asrros)
Delmarva (Orioles)
Southern Division

• Pom¢roy, Ohio

Expert: Strong 911 plan needea for funding:

SPORTS

Loe: An;elel

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Pdsdnk ct 4 1 3 a
Cunselt ss 2 0 1 0

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Co"-.·er
2-3 1 1 1 1 . 0
HBP---t~y BoOOerman (JPhelps). ~ Bonder·
man (Johnson)_ WP-Adarns.

Florida
Montreal

2

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39 710 6 Totala

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(2) 38-ASanchez (1). HR-Hinslce ~2)
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away p•tcha..__ to 4 batters m the 2nd. Mahay
pr!ched to 1 batter m the 3111.
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Tampa Bay (Hend riCkson 0-0) at N.Y. Yankees (K Brown 2·01 1.05 p m
Kensas City (Atfeld! 0-1 ) at Ch~eago While Sox (Garland l ·Q). 2 05 p.m
8al!more (Ponson 1·0) at Boston !Wak.ef1eld 0-0). .7 05 p.m
Toroni:J (lilly Q.Q) at Detroii. (Robsrtson 0-0), 7:05p.m
Mrnnesola (SM O-Ol at ClevBiand (O'Amrco 1·0) 7:05p.m.

BSt•agoc

1

Wfldrieaday 's Games
Houston (M11i&amp;r 1·0) at St LoUis tCarpenter 1-01 . 1 10 pm .
Prtlsburg h (VOiJelsong 1-01 at Ch1cago Cubs (Clement 0·1). 2 20 p.m.
M1wauKee (Obermueller O· t 1at San Fr3n¢1SCO ( W.Frank~n o-a1 . 3:35 p.m.
F or~ da (WIIhs l ·OJ Y'S MontrealtOilka 0·1) at San Juan , 7:05p.m.
G•nctnna!l ,Acevedo t-0) at P111adelphia 1PacMa 0-1). 7:05p.m.
At!antlliThomson 0,0) 111 NY. Mets (Yalas 0-0J, 7 10 p.m.
An.&lt;:ona'o(Dessens 0-0) a1 Colorado (Kannedv D-0), 9:05 p.m.
Los Ange•es !ISh I( 1·0} al Sar1 Otego (D.Wells 0.01. 10·05 p.m.

Wednesday 's Games

5 1 12
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3020

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.A.nah81m 7. Seattle 5

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Oakland 10. Texas 9

White Sox

1-D

Monday's Results
NY Mets 10. Atlanl.!l B
C'nc1nnat14, Philadeptua t
Prtlsburgh 13, ChiC8go Cubs 2
San FranciSCo 7. Mr~ukee S.

Houston 5 St l OUIS 3

Tampa Bay at NY Vanlo.9es ppd . ran

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Gallery hopes to be
first pick in draft, Bt

International League

100000

LVImano

Universities to
students: Riot and you
can get kicked,out, A7

POMEROY - A German author's search
for the co-pilot of an American fighter plane
downed· near his hometown in Bavaria has
led him to Pomeroy. to thank his friend,
Guido Girolami , for helping in the s~arch.
Bernhard Rodig of Schrobenhausen,
Germany, has written "MCallister's Lasl
Mission," an account of a B-17's crash near
Schrobenhausen, during the final weeks of
World War II .
McCallister's fighter plane, "A lways
Available," was downed by anti-aircraft fire
about 60 kilometers from Munich during its
last mission from England on April 9, 1945.
All members ·of the experienced crew survived the attack by parachuling from the.
burning plane, including the co-pilot 2nd
Lt. Harry W. McCallister, who along with
hi s crewmates, was imprisoned for the last
two weeks of 1he war in Moosborg,
Germany.
Several crew members were injured .in the
attack on the plane.
A Schrobenhausen intermediate scl)ool
teacher and local historian with six books to
his credit, Rodig used material from the U.S.
Archives and the internet to compile his.
account of "A lways Available's" lasl
moments and the struggle of its nine-man
crew to stay alive, but also counted on
American
acquainlances,
including
Girolami, to assist in the search.
Rodig met McCallister, of Swarthmore,
Pa., near Philadelphia, earlier this week, and

Please see Historian, AS

I-

Guido Girolami, left. welcomed German historian and author Bernhard Rodig to
Pomeroy this week, after Rodig traveled to the U.S. to meet Harry W. McCallister
of Pennsylvania, the subject of Redig's latest book, "McCallister's Lost
Mission," ·an ·account of a B-17 mission which ended near Redig's hometown in
Bavaria. (Brian J. Reed)

'When I'm with You'

._,

.. '

'

The Southern High School prom is Saturday night in the gymnasium . Tthis year's theme is "When I'm with ~ou." The candidates
for king and queen are: (front) Emily Hill, Deana Pu ll ins , Amy Norman. Stephanie Bradford. and Bethany Amberger ; (back)
Tommy Shepphetd1 Jeremy Yeagur, Jordan Bass. Ty HilL Henry Rider is not pictured. (J. M1les Layton)

Blood Drive

horses. Plus.,.a bundle of high-value prizes.

REGIONAL PRIZES

sponsored by the HMC Laboratory Department
John Dtert~: Gators™
Eighl regim,al wi.lners will win the n·ew,
ver~aCile

ColilpacrSerits GacurTiwl_

DOOR PRIZES - FREE SAMPLES!!
RECiiSTER TODAY! ADMISSION IS FREE, BUT SEATING IS LIMITED!

Monday, April 1 9
~tno:•Pr coln~for (;hildnm 16-&amp;. under

Door Prizes-goldtft: sUyer coins
'

Buvln ·and Sellinit

u.s. Coins and Correne~

lll AM ·-;;-4 PM

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover ti]e Holzer Dil.ference

HMC Education -&amp; Conference Center

www.holzer.org

For more information, or to register, ~all (740) 446·5 1 71 .

•

�'

(

(

PageA2

·OMMUNITY

:The Daily Sentinel
..'

20,000 book goal achieved I
'

------------------

Thursday, Aprilts,

Psoriasis usually mild and treatable, but never curable
Quc,tion: I ha1e lhtu an
rt,·hl r;"h on Ill} "·"II' ,ince I
"a&gt; ;thout 30. ~1! dclL't&lt;'r says
I hcl\e p&gt;nria'i'. Can 1,,u tell
me ahmrt it".' Will I ah1a~'
h&lt;l\~ it ') \\ 'hat ar~ ~t)nle treatmL'Iit&lt;'

p,uri a" i"
~.:hrn!lJL' -.h.m ra . . h that
l mnnh cause.' a white.
· bui ldup on a reu. raised
,.-\n.., V·d~r .

1. . a
comseal\·
base .

1 Thc'l..' "plaqut•..., " or "lc'-.ioll' ''

t)pic".tll) bec·ome inflamed
ol!ld co1ered h1 sill en 11hite
'------' I ,,·alt-. Scllnetimes a ~utTerer
·
.Jennifer Robinson. a top reader. colors 111 one of the goals o f ha.., .·lu"t a fe\' le..,ion~. hut
20.000 books read by thrrd through frfth grade students at the muJcr&lt;llt' HI lar~t·.areas of
Me 1gs Intermediate Schoo l. Ther r next goal is 25.000. skin can be illlol1eu.
· con tes t .
l·ortunalel_l. fnr mo't l'e"l'k.
Jennifer has earned 375 points in the readmg
p,oria'i' tei!J, to be mild.
· RUTLAND - Swdents in &gt;he antl rrinripa l Rust\ Psmia,is appe.trs t(' be a
the
Mei~...,
Intermediate Bookman h:.i,·e. a~L·unlin~ to ~cnc:tiL· di . . ca..,c that run~ in
School third through fifth a relea&gt;e fmm the schc,ol. ;·,,mili,·s and affects the skin
grades ha,·e aL·hie,·cd a goal aorccd to ··J.._ j,.., a ~t,aL..
anJ/lu· lht· joint~ . ~1ore than
;of reading 20.000 books and e!\icholson ue;crihcd the · -1 .5 milli, )n people in the
:con1peting a compu ter quiz Acc~lcrateJ Reaucr Prn~ram l 'nitcd States ,uffcr' frnm one
•vn the111 .
as .t ~reat read in~ lot) I 1\1 of tilL' fc&gt;ur t~ flC&gt;.
: · Using the Accelerate&lt;.! dcvel&lt;·&gt;ll lifelonp re:tdcr' and
The mnsr L'llllllll&lt;lll is c;dl ed
:Reauer.Program.lhe students learner&gt;. "I am sure the 'tu - l'lct"LIC lhtlrias is. Other t\.'PC&gt;
.
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d
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'
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I
I

° -

"

!Law You Can Use

!Prepare to 'Face the Music'
~ when downloading from Internet
!

Q.: Is it illegal to down!load musicfrom the Internet''
i A.: Generally. yes. U.S.
!Copyright Act law allows
lonly the copyright owner to
tdistribute its sound reroru~i n gs. The copyright owner is
:l!sually · the company that
:produced the sou nd record:rng. often a record company.
; : [n some sit uations. it may
ibe legal to download songs
i!rom the Internet. su~h. as
· ·when you have permtsston
, from the owner. Web sites
i such as iTunes. Napster. and'
; Buymusic are now licen.,ed
:by record laheb to J istrihute
! music fil e~ online. \O it i~
!' not illegal to download
from
.
! these Web sites. 01 COLll·&gt;e.
i it cus ts about 5 I for each
(song you download.

.

~

.targe ted individual&gt; il &gt;uspeels haYe swappeu al kase
I,000 fil~s on peer· Ill-peer
netw·orks.
Q.: How can I pre\'Cnt the
RIAA from sum~ me·&gt; A.:
The be~l thing yuZ1 can du i..,
to stop downloading. But if
you already ha\'e cngagt:d in

illegal downloadin~ or think
you might get s"ued. you
should review the RLAA\
"Clean · Slate Program ." an
amnesty progran1 for file
swappers
1'ee
1\'WW. riaa.org) . Inc! i" idu a Is
(not husine"es) arc eligible
if they I) ha\'e not )Ct heen
sued. 2 J a~ree to de,trm all
illegal file~ they 6&gt;~ n..1j did.
not try to make monc} 1. and
-l) agree not to uownload
illegally in the future. More
than I,000 people ha1·e used
this program.

.Inc!

~rl'throJermic. cre;~ing

&gt;hcJuing and redness
of the skin.
The scalp. as in your ca&gt;e,
is the single m"'t common
,ite for pstJriasi&gt;. Other common . . ite~ arc the knee~.
elbo'" ... and tor~tl . But p-.uria...,i~ can tleYelop anywhere.
including the nail~. palm~.
sole s. genita ls . and. very
rarely. the face . Often the
je..,ion~

are

~vinmetrical

and

appear in "mirror image" on
hnth the right and left sides of
the body.
P... oria~.is. Jn immune-mediatcu problem. is helie\ed to
be the re&gt;uh of too rapid skin
cell •~ro\1 th. Normall -v. a skin
,·ell takes ahnu l a month to go
from the initial de1·e!0pmen·
tal ~tage~ to heing shed fr&lt;'m
the surface. Tbis cell turnOI'er
proce~~ i~

accelerated in psn-

riasi s so the cells turn O\'cr
C\ery three to six Jay,. This
,·,iuses the skin cells 10 build
up. causing the plaques and
scal ing. Part of this proce"
ma\' be lhe iihmune system
·
st imulating T-cell activity by
rllt· s·t,t'·e.
wllt.&lt;:ll ·rtl turn causes
~ "'
inllammation and increased
cell turnover. Genetic links
ha1·e been foutid for
psoria'i'. hut n&lt;: everyone

Alumni_P!ann1ng
65th anniVersary
' POMEROY - Plans are
forw ard for the 65th
reunion of the Pomeroy lli gh
·sc hool class of 19.'19 on May
29 at Me,igs Hi gh Sehoul.
Addresses are neeueu for
the,e cl;hs members. Paul
Brown: Virginia Harti ss
Cn1ert. Walter Ketter. Vivian
Mees Williams. Thomas
11101 in~

Mitchell . Marie Muntgnmery
Dicbon. Christine Savage
Downs.
Mona
Lee
Schwarllwalder.
Perry
Singer. and Lena Smalley
Venoy.·
Those who have the addre"
are asked to cont&lt;Kt Pauline
Mayer. 7 Oak St. Pomeroy. or
call 7-l0-992-3777.

T

[ . Q.: Can I download a song
iiQr educational use''
! : A.: It may be considered
!"fair use" to download · a
Q.: What happens if the
isong solely for educational RIAA sues me ·&gt; A.: copy£ilse. and assuming the song right law states that if you
.New5hoes
•!); not being used to make a infringe on someone's copy:profit. However, the law is right, you can be ordered to
Daii~I
:11ot clear as to what falls pay money to the copyright
:under thi s "fair use" excep- owner-as much as S 150.000
•tion. so ~ou may wish to per violation (or per down:eonsult wtth a copyright law load). These cases. however,
:attorney for advice before are often settled for less than
S5,000 per violation. and
~C.ow n loading.
•
courts may award signifi "Shoe; for the cn'!ire family"
:: Q.: What is the RIA A?
cantly
smaller
damage
Rt. 2 Bypass
Point Pteosanl, WV
:: A.: The Record Industry amounts. If vou have downFree hearing screenings.
304-675-7870
•P.,ssociation of America loaded illeg ally and are
Audiologists on staft.
:tRLAA) is a trade organiza- sued, consul t an attorney
Wide r1nge of technology and
~~ion
that represents the experienced in entertainment
Digilill and other hearing aids.
•largest of the U. S. record law.
Amplified telephone and TV devices
~tabe l s ,
inducting Sony,
435 S••••llllon• • lolll•ells, oa
: Berte lsmann,
Vivendi
Q.: How will the RIAA
:Universal, Time Warner Inc. prove I downloaded songs or
1140··1146··1618 ° 800-231·1716
·~nd EM I. It also certifies that I didn't copy tllc infrom
:~old.
Platinum, Multi - a CD that I legally own '1
:Piatinum. and Diamond
A.: The RUA nft~n can
:album awurds. based on tell whctl1er you copied a
•alb um sa les.
. song from a store-bought
: · Since September 2003, the CD or from the Internet by
: RLAA has been filing lawusing digi tal fingcrrrints
! suits against people who called "hashes." By reviewihave been fileswapping ing the fingerprints on music
I
, through peer-to-peer net- tiles on a person's computer.
(worb. Since peer-to-peer the RLAA often can deten\ network ' allow people to be nin e
whether
'omeone
; directly cunnecteJ to other recorded a song from a
!u&gt;e r&gt; through the u'~ of spe- legally purchased CD or
1ciul software, the network downloaded it online from
f ihel r has little control over someone ebe. The RLAA
f users who might download also is examining "metadata
:songs illegally. These net- tag&gt;." which are !1iddcn .
' work&gt; differ from Web sites &gt;n·ippcts or information
i such as Nap,ter. which uti- embedded within manv MPJ
Gallipolis
·
; lized a central database . music file.,,
,
Chiropractic
: Altl10ugh the cottrts ruled
UIH' · You Can U.\e is a
•lhat Nap,ler violated copy~ ...-~~.~ Center
: right law when it allowed wet&gt;k/y f'Oil.'llfllll!r ll'gal i11f'or:these "free " dowrlload&gt;. the matirm colum11 pru1·ided to
'comts have not found tl1at rhis neii'SfWfU' r 11s 11 .fllthlic
i the "peer-to-ped' networks servia of the Ohw .\[{lie
:t hemselves violate copyright Bn r__Auociation l/1/{/ the
:law.. The RLAA is thercrore Ohio State Bar Fo11ndario11 .
Diagnostic X-Rays
Personal
'l;lringing lawsuits direc'tly 7his arricle 1ra1· fll'&lt;'fllll'e(/ hr
Rehabilitation
:against the individual&gt; who Lt'oll
Da1·itl
lias .\,
a
Counseling
~se -peer-topeer ·ne1Wofl0&gt; to Cotmnbas an m ne1.~ 1tic /e., 11:-:~~;~:;~o;•~:ln/u
,:Y~
:download song&gt; illegally.
appearing in tit is c··olumn t.lrf!
Workers Compensation
Most Insura nce Accepted lnclud;r,•l
intended to prondt' hroad.
675-1812
IUr11\e'
&lt;tealtb
, : Q. : Might I be 'ued by the generai_1·t~j( J rnwthm nlnn11
Point
Pleasant, WV
"1:1~ Huw' \1,\\ I h. J 7: 1!1 -~ l){);
: RIAA lilr downloading '&gt;
rhe law. Befrm' applri11g thi1
ruc -7:J fl .7 00"i &lt;~ 1 X:IK) - 1::! :00
173-5536
: A.: The RLkA cah &gt;ue ltn inj(ll'mation ro u 'l"'ctfic
7
40-441-0200
Mason , WV
:individual . for
illegally lexalpmblem. teaders are
1-888-451-2225
Delivery re1trlcllona may apply. No! valid

Arriving

KIPLING
SHOE CO.

6@

•

inter~&gt;e

•downloading even one ~ong.

The RLkA, however. ha'

urgNI to seek the adrit·c r!f o
licensed wromer.

'

DILES

HEARING
CENTER

the u&gt;e of la&gt;ers: and systemic. which include&gt; med- ·
ication'. taken by pill or injection. The st'IWity nf the rash.
its location and its response
to pre' ious therapies are all
consiJcrcJ when lhe rhystl'l'-lll detl?rmine~ your treat-

with the psoria&gt;ts gene ge~s
the di,ease.
Psoriasi' is also known to
flare up and impnH e on its
own. Thing:::. that c:an bring nn
a psoriasi&gt; episode induJe
emotional &gt;tress. injur) to the
&gt;kin. dry sf..in due to &gt;ea,onal
dima1e change" and cenain
medications. Some blood
pressure medication - betabltxker' in particular - ,·an
maf..e p&gt;oriasis llarc up .
P:-.oria sis is not (Ontagiou~.
but many people are 1er!
self-con sciou&gt;
about their rash. &gt;o the\
shy away from con tad 11 nh
other,.
While psnria'i' is
treatable. it i&gt; t\tll curahlc .
Abo. about a ·quancr of the
people with the p&gt;nria'i' ra,h
also dewlop a spcc·itic form
of arthritis.
There are many treatments
for psoriasi,. depending on
tlw se\'erit\ of the rash as
well as tl1e location. The
treatments fall into one of
three Ci.HCU:orics : wpicul.
which refer~ 'to ' creams and
lotions to usc externall y: phototherapy. which ranges from
artilicial light source&gt; to carefullv
.
controlled &gt;Uil exposure In

ment.

Current research is aimed
at Je\'t"lnpin!! better drugs to
trl~;n th~ undcrl: ing immunerel;ncd cause anJ to under"tandin~ thl' ~enetia.::~ basi~
for thi'-~ 'Ji" L'•he~
rom ilr ,\ ledicine® is "
11l' eJ. /, • &lt; pfumn To .\ lthmit
'/lft.'.'lliull .\, II Tilt ' lo klor!lw A.
Simf&gt;.llm. D.O.. M.B.A .. Ohio
Unirersir\·
College
oj
Ost~opati1ic Medi,'ine. P.O.
Box 1/0. J\till' lll. Ohio .J5701.
or ,·ia email to rl.)aderquest ions @ f"amilnnedicinenel\ ".'1. o
rg. M~dical infommtion in
thn cu tumn is prorided as an
educ ·of if I!WI . sen·ice lm(, ·. It
do,;_, 1101 ret&gt;lace the judgmenr oj' rolfr 1wr.wmuf physii'ian. 1;·ho lll&lt;mld Ill' relied 011
to thogno.\t' wul recommend
lrt'ulm&lt;'IJI .ff•r any nu:diccil
('Oflditinll .\ . Pu.\1 co f(mm s art'
m·ailahlc· onliw· dl u·H·\r.fam-

.

i!rmedic ·ine11e11·s.m:~.

ell at 'mall tables cul'erecl
with lablcdoths and natkins.
There 11·ill he a S I &lt;:hm'gc
for. those who wanl tn (.kcorate a hat.
In order for tiHJ., e hostin!!
the tea to · kno w how many
tables. chairs and lea set&gt;
are neeueu. rc,en·ations are
to he made hy calling Kay
Fick . lJX5 --11 15 by Mnntlay.
Dre" for the tea party can
he alll'thing from e1 cryda~
clothcs 10 Jre,·up dothes
with while gim es.

,,,,

$
'lf(JU/1, e0111pkt.
.,1/0#He

Girl with big dream is encouraged to go for it

Public meetings

DEAR ABBY: I read the
letter from " I Ha\'e a Dream ...
the 13-ycar-old girl who
want\ to be president of the
Cnited States. while en route
to meet with our state assemblyman and senator. I haw
never written a Dear Ahbv
letter before: however. that
girl\ letter touched my heart .
I am angry ~he is being
ridiculed.
When I was in elementarv
school and told people that ·1
wamcd ro be a doctor. the\
told me that my Jream wa~'
also impossible. There were
lew women doctors then. We
were poor. S&lt;l I started my
career in nursin~ schnol. I
worked my way throu.gh college and meuical "·hool.
Today. I am not onl) a doctor.
but .also a teacher in medica l
school.
Please · tell that young girl
to ignore those who are jealous of her and to s1ri \'e for
her goals. She can do it!
Today. I met a young man
in his 20s. He is the legislati ve director to Sen. Nick
Spano of the New York state
Senate. I asked his advice for
"I Ha ve a Dream." He said :
(I) First. do not listen to
those who laugh at you or

6294 by Wednesday.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrison
ville Lodge 4 I I
Thursday, April IS
will
meet
at 8 a.m. Saturday
POMEROY Salisbury
at
.
the
hall.
Breakfast will
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m. at the Rocksprings be served and highway
pickup of trash will follow .
hall.

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, April 15
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters will meet at 6:30
p.m. Thursday at the home
of June VanVranken. Cohostesses will be Vera
Crow, ·Carol Jean Adams,
and Jane Brown.
RACINE - The Sonshine
Circle will meet at 7 p.m.
at Bethany Church.
PomeroyRACINE
Racine Lodge 164 F&amp;AM
will meet at 7:30. p.m.

Monday, April 19
ATHENS
Southeast
Ohio Woodl and Interest
Group, 7 p.m.. Athens
County Extension Office. W.
Union St. Topic will be
Controlling
Invasive
or
Non-Desirable Specie s in
Woodland. Everyone interested is welcome to attend.
Information is available . by
calling 593-8555.
- Southern
RACINE
Band Boosters will meet in
regular session Monday, 7
p.m. at the high school
band room. All band parents
and supporters in vi ted.

Concerts
and plays

Friday, April 16
MIDDLEPORT
Brooks-Grant Camp Sons of
Union Veterans of the Civil
Monday, April 26
War and the Maj . Daniel
RACINE - The Southern
McCook Circle Ladies of Band spring concert wi II be
the Grand Army of the held Monday, April 26 at
Republic will hold their Southern High School. The
annual Appomattox Day concert will · feature music
bean dinner at 5:30 p.m. on performed. by grades · 4
the James Mourning farm at through 12 under di rection
the end of Railroad Street of Band Director Jeanette
in Middleport. A large tent · Oldaker. The public is invitwill be provided in case of ed to attend.
rain. Beans will be provided. Members are to take a
dish to go with the meal ,
and lawn chairs. Civil War
Friday, April 16
music will be provided.
REEDSVILLE
.
A
Anyone interested in mem- spring revival service will
bership is invited to attend. be held at the · Eden
Call 992-7874 for additional United Brethren in Christ
information.
Church, at 7 p.m. nightly
Pomeroy- through Sunday. Eric Ro ss
RACINE
Racine Lodge 164 annual is pastor and there will be
inspection with work in the special music by The
entered apprentice degree.
Ro ss Family. At · th e
HARRISONVILLE
Saturday night se rvtce
Harrisonville Eastern Star there will be a creation
annual inspection, 7:30 p.m. museum display including
at the Masonic Temple . a I 0 foot scale model of
Members reminded to take Noah's ark and fossils.
potluck dish.
POMEROY Revival
services at the Pomeroy
Saturday, April 17
Church of the Nazarene
POMEROY - The Meigs will begin tonight and
County Retired Teachers continue through Sunday.
will meet - for a noon lun- The Rev. Harold Ma ssey
cheon at the Trinity Church, from Belle, W. Va. will
Second and Lynn Streets. be the evangelist a nd
State Representative Jimmy song evangelist. Me etin gs
. Stewart will discuss health will begin at 7 p.m .
thro ug h
: care and other legislative Wednesday
of concern
to Saturday and I 0:30 a:m.
issues
6
p.m . Sunday.
retiree s. Guests are wel- and
Jan
Lavender
come. Call luncheon reser- Pastor
vations to 992-3214 or 378- invites the · publi c.

I

Dear .
Abby

uon·t support you.
(2) Stay involved in your

knowleu~e
of currem events.
( .\ J RcaJ the newspaper.

1-+1 Become involved in
vour communit\'. This is .how
·
•
you meet people. You may be
able to volumeer .tor someone
during this election year.
R
for
school
(&lt;1
·'
un
·
office/student government.
It is also a e"ood idea to
ha' e a mentor - someone in .
government or politics - and
always stay in touc h. wtt· h h'tm
or her.
As 1 was leaving the New
York State Capitol building.
there was an e~hibit showi ng
photographs of women in
New York state senior government positions. They
numbered 47!
I hope this inspires that girl
and gives her the courage to

'·

ThUJ'8day, Aprilts, 21)04

follow her dream. I wish her laughed. They said I was silly
all the best- and hope she' ll to think a girl (and a poor one
let us know when she runs for at that) could ever become an
her first office. - FRANCES astronaut or even study sciMCGILL,
M.D., ence.
Due to vision problems, I
BRONXVILLE, N.Y.
DEAR DR. MCGILL: I never became an astronaut.
concur with you on all points. But 1 did earn a Ph .D. in a
Bl ess you for the "Wonderful scientific field. I am a tenured
pep talk. I'm betting your let- professor at a research-orientter inspires many more young ed univer &gt;ity. So, who's
women than the one who laughing now? 1 am! ·wrote. You're a wonderful
E PhD
RHONDA A. HYD , . .
role model. Read on:
DEAR DR. H·YDE: And
DEAR ABBY: This mes- ' I'm laught'ng wt'th yo u. A
sage is for the little girl who woman can trave l as far as
dreams of being president. 1 her dream can take her saw a bumper sticker once
·
that shou ld 'encourage her: " A and sometimes even beyond.
nn tht's· ·subj·ect tomorwoman's place is in the More
row
House ... the Senate ... and
·
the Oval Office." _ FEMIDear Abbr i.f u·ritten br
NIST IN AUBURN, ALA.
Abigail Van Buren:·-also
'II '
DEAR FEMINIST: I agree. known as 1eanne PI
b11 tps,
1
A woman's place is wherever and was founded 1_,. 1 1er
she wants to be, and feels she · mother, Pauline P 1il ips.
can make a contribution.
Write . Dear
Abby
at
DEAR ABBY: When I was www.DearAbbr. com or P.O.
II , I decided I wanted to be Box 69440. Los Angeles. CA
an astronaut. Peers and adults · 90069.
property's appearance with many
ornaments, planters and rurniture aV11italol~at

~,..,_&lt;.!

Furniture Plus.

POMEROY .
-Gospel A luncheon will follow. The
si ng 7 p.m. at the Poplar public is invited.
Freewill Bapti st Church off
State Route 554. Builders
Quartet
and
Gloryland
Believers will be. singi ng.
Monday, April 19
For more information call
RACINE - The TB clin740-593-7390.
ic personnel will be at the
Racine Fire Department
Saturday, April 17
from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. for
POINT PLEASANT ski n testing . They will
The Fourth An nu al Bo return 4:30 to 6 p.m. on
Rickard Memorial Gospel Wednesday, April 21, to
Sing will be held at 7 p.m. read the tests.
at the First Ch urch of the
Naza~ene in Point Pleasant.
wi ll
be
by
Singing
DaySpring. a new group of
Monday, April 19
Athen s.
The
Gabriel
POMEROY
Rose
Quartet · of Dexter. The
Grimms of Pomeroy: and Sisson will celebrate her
the Glorybound Quartet of 84th birthday on April 19.
Cards may be sent to her at
Point Pleasant.
LONG BOTTOM - A the home of her son and
hymn sing will be held at 7 daughter-in-law. 761 Heise
p.m. Saturday at the Mt. Park Lane. Ga lion, Ohio
Olive Churc h. Long Bottom. 44833.
"Delivered" will be singing.
The public is invited.

Other events

Birthdays

Sunday, April Ill
RACINE
En~vring
Freedom Sunday will be
observed at I0:40 a.m. at
the Racine First Baptist
Church. Famil ies of military
personnel wi ll he honored.

•••

9:55a.m. Friday

,.

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2nd Street

Mason, WV

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'02 Olds Bravada

.'

•

must cover every number on your card to win.

with other offers. Llmlled time

Community ~alendar

Church services

Children's tea planned for May 1
CHESTER -A children·,
· tea . party an &lt;.I l\1a) pok
wrappi t.lg will take place al
the Chesler Courthouse at I
p.m on May I.
The
Chester -Shade
Historical A"ociation e1·cnt
is for both bovs and £irk
Another acti\'it y will in~lulk
hat uecorating for ch.iluren.
The hat and materials · l'nr
decorating wil l be pro1·ideu ·
for $1. There is no charge
to altend the tea party.
The children wi ll he seat -

BY THE BEND

2004

Family Medicine

PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

CHINESE

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AEP removes tall-growing trees in the utility right-of-way and trims
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electricsl ssfety, visit aep.com.

.,

�'

.

-(

•

.

-

'

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentin~l
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

·

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill

Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thursday, April 15, the 106th day of 2004. There
are 260 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
In the early hours of April 15, 1912, the British luxury liner
Titanic sank in the North Atlantic off Newfoundland, less than
three hours after striking an iceberg. About 1.500 people died.
On this date:
In 1850, ihe city of San Francisco was incorporated.
In 1861, three days after the Confedernte attack on Fort
Sumter, President Lincoln declared a state of insurrection and
called out Union troops.
In 1865, President Lincoln died, several hours after being
shot at Ford's Theater in Washington by John Wilkes Booth.
Andrew Johnson became the nation's 17th president.
In 1945, during World War II, British and Canadian troops
liberated the Nazi concentration camp Bergen-Belsen.
In 1959, Cuban leader Fidel Castro arrived in Washington to
begin a goodwill tour of the United States.
In 1989, 95 people died in a •erush of soccer fans at
Hillsborqugh Stadium in Sheffield, England.
In 1989, students in Beijing launched a series of pro-democracy protests following the death of former Communist Party
leader Hu Yaobang; the protests culminated in the Tiananmen
Square massacre.
In 1990, actress Greta Garbo died in New York at age 84.
In 1998, Pol Pot, the notorious leader of the Khmer Rouge,
died at age 73, evading prosecution for the deaths of 2 million
Cambodians.
In 2002, retired Supreme Court Justice Byron R White died at age 84.
Ten years ago: · Ministers from 109 countries signed a
26,000-page world trade agreement known as the "Uruguay
Round" accords m Marrakesh, Morocco.
Five years ago: A gunman opened frre at the Mormon
Family History Library in Salt Lake City, killing two people
and wounding four others before being shot to death by
police.
One year ago: Looters and arsonists ransacked and gutted
Iraq 's NatiOnal Library, as well as Iraq's principal Islamic
library. In the Netherlands, Volken van der Graaf, the killer of
politician Pim Fortuyn, was sentenced to 18 years in prison.
Umptre Laz Diaz was attacked by a fan during a game
between the Kansas City Royals and Chicago White Sox; the
fan, Eric Dybas, was later sentenced to six months in jail and
30 months' probation.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Michael Ansara is 82. Country
singer Roy Clark is 71. Rock singer-guitarist Dave Edmunds
is 60. Actress Lois Chiles is 57. TV producer Linda
Bloodworth-Thomason is 56. Actor Michael Tucci is 54.
A~tress Amy Wright is 54. Columnist Heloise is 53.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in this column are the
consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. s
editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

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Thursday, Aprilts, 2004

Saying Iraq is·Vietnam hurts US. troops
Americans should · stop
Shame on Sens. Edward
fightmg.
Kennedy, D-Mass.: and
Prompted
or
not.
Robert Byrd, D· W.Va., for
s"o rn
America's
new
picking a moment of high
enemy, Shiite firebrand·
danger for U.S. troops in
Muqtada AI Sadr. picked up
Iraq to declare, in essence,
Morton
on
the vhemc. calling on the
that their activities are in
Kondracke
Amencan people to align
vain.
with him or "Iraq will be
And shame, tqo, on foranother
Vietnam
for
mer
Republican
Gov.
Thomas Kean of New · Institution in which he America. "
Fortunately.
1\kCain
Jersey, chairman of the accused Bush of lies .
Sept. II, 200 I, investigating smears. despicable cyni- responded to Byrd. "I hap·
pen to know something
commission, for issuing a cism.
of
undermining
prejudgment that the terror- national security, the econo- about Vietnam. and I know
ist attacks that day could · my and "our very democra- that we do not face another
Vietnam."
ha ve been prevented.
cy."
At the same time, kudos
He's entitled to his opin- . He made 1he points that
are in order for Sen. John ion, although it's doubtful Iraqi in surge·nts have no
McCain, R-Ariz., who that his colleague Sen. John superpower backing or off·
countered the Kennedy- Kerry's, D-Mass .. presiden- limits sanctuaries. us North
Byrd claim that Iraq is tial campaign is helped by Vietnam had. and that the
"another Vietnam" and to. having Amenca's most iden- enemy is a fraction of the
National Security Advisor tifiable liberal as his chief Iraqi popu lation. not the
whole.
Condoleezza Rice, who can- attack dog.
He didn't add, but might
didly expla.ined that, to have
Kennedy certainly can
prevented 9/11, the whole energize the Democratic have. that Bush docs not
culture of the U.S. govern- base, but he's equall y sure to face u Dcmocratic-dominat·
ment would have had to be energize Bush's, and he per- ed Congress, which turned
different.
suades no independent s. . hard against the Vietn.un
once
Republican
Kennedy and Byrd have swing voters or moderates War
Richard '-Jixon became
often and vociferously whatsoever.
president
and ultimately
expressed their opposition
Kennedy didn't stop with
to President Bush's Iraq pol- merely equating Iraq· and pulled tile rug ou t from
icy. History may prove them Vietnam . Recen tly, with under South Vietnam.
"If we fail, rf we cut and
right.
\lJ.S. troops furiously fight ·
But it's unconscionable ing both Saddamist msur- run. the resLilts can be disasfor two senior senators to gents m Fallujah and trous." McCain sa id. There
declare, amid the most seri- Ramadi 'and radical Shiite will be "a fragmentation of
ous combat that U.S. troops thugs elsewhere, he expand- Iraq ... (and) an unchecked
have faced in months, that ed on the poinL
hotbed of training ground
'
individuals who are
for
they are engaged in, in
Wh1le expressing "enorKennedy's words, "a quag- mous admiration" and committed to the destrucmire" ·- i.e .. a war that "whole-hearted support " for tion of the Uniled Stales."
Ame;rica should be pulling the
he
said, Amen.
troops,
Meantime , Kean said on
out of.
"Vietnam ended up in a
NBC's
",\llee t the Press"
Before someone claims quagmire. lniq is ending up
I'm impugning their patrio- a quagmire .... We need a recently that "the whole
tism .. it's standard practice new start in Iraq (to) bring story (of 911 I l might have
been d1fferent" if intellifor Democrats to clatm their our troops home safely."
loyalty is being questioned Kennedy didn't fully spell ge-nce and law enforcement
. I'm not. I'm questioning out the logic of his argu- blunders hadn't occurred
their timing, their discretion ment: If you're in "another beforehand. That may he
and their good judgment.
Vietnam," you pu ll out. right. but it's a conclusion to
Both of them seem to hate Byrd did so. however. be drawn by h1s entire comBush so much that they "Pouring more U.S. troops mission. not the chatrman.
Kean's &lt;:omment was put
couldn't restrain themselves into Iraq is not the path to
from comments that, when extricate ourselves," he satd. in correct perspective by his
He · advised international- co-chairman. former Rep.
broadcast to the Middle
East, could only demoralize izing the Iraqi occupation to Lee Hamilton. D-lnd., who
U.S. troops and embolden "take U.S. soldiers out of said. "Yotl can string togeth·
the crosshairs of angry er a whole bunch of ifs. if
Iraqi insurgents.
Kennedy first used the Iraqis." This may be a wise things had broken ,right in
line that "Iraq is George policy, but why express it all kllllls of different ways ...
Bush's Vie1nam" as part of a when U.S. so ldiers are anu. frankly. if you'd had a
vitriolic speech in early directly in the crosshairs'' little luck, it probably could
April at the Brookings The implication is that have been prevented."

Thursday, Apri115,

Deaths

ev;n

.

Numerous cases resolved ing. $100 and costs; Valerie
in Meigs County Court

WEST COLUMBIA, W.Va. - Auburn Z. Meadows, 84, of
West Columbia, W Va., formerl}' of Bozoo, W.Va., died on
Tuesday, April 13, 2004. at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point
Pleasant, W Va.
He was Born on Sept. 28, 1919, in Freeburn, Ky., son of the
late Elby and Bessie Davis Meadows.
·
A graveside service will be held at 2 p.m. on Saturday, April
16,2004, at Sunset View Cemetery in Bozoo, WVa .. ·with Re.
Kellie McCiarity officiating.
.
Arrangements are under the directiOn of Tucker Funeral
Home, in Mason, W.Va., where friends may call from 6 to 8
p.m. on Thursday.

G. Fowler. New Castle, Pa.,
speeding, $30 and costs:
Leslie V Frank, Pomeroy,
overwidth lanes, $20 and
costs; Wayne E. Fridley.
Ravenswood, W Va., speeding. $30 and costs;
John J. Ginther, Racine.
DWI with intox over .I0,
$350 and costs: Timothy P.
Grady, Pomeroy, seatbelt,
$30 and costs: Todd R.
Grover. Patriot. speeding.
$21 and costs, driving
under suspension. $100 and
costs: Craig S. Heath.
Lancaster, speedi ng , $50
and costs ;
Jen M. Hill, Racine , failure to control, $20 and
costs: Kathy L. Jackson,
Charleston. S.C.. speedfng.
550 and costs; Justin G.
Jeffers, Rutland , assured
clear distance, S20 and
costs; Matthew W. Keaton,
Coolville, speeding, $30
and costs; William A.
Kropf,
Vinton,
driving
under FRA suspension.
$200 and costs; Dreama L
Langley, Columbus, $25
and costs: Richard A.
Laudermilt,
Gallipolis.
speeding, $17 and costs,
DUI. $350 and costs. driving under susp/revoc ..
$200 and costs; Tanglia L

POMEROY
Cases
resolved in the Meigs
County Court of Judge
Steve Story between March
29 and April 7 are as follows: Cynthia K. Arnold,
Buchtel, speeding, $30 and
costs; Jennifer L. Bays.
Vinton, physical container
vehicle intox, $850 and
costs. failure to control,
costs only; Timothy R.
Bell , Farmington, Mich.,
speeding, $10 and costs;
Zachariah
C.
Butcher.
sation for property owners in Middleport, speeding, $30
eminent domain proceedings. and costs; John C. Buzzard,
Padgett's bill, S.B. 226, $20 and costs; · Eric M.
POMEROY Vehicles
Chalupt. Butlter, speeding,
~ and boats or other items in would require st~te agencies $50 and costs;
storage in buildings on the to pay a property owner's
A.
Cremeans,
June
Rock Springs Fairgrounds attorney's fees. court costs Middleport. reckless operaare to be moved Saturday and other related expenses tion. $100 and costs, seat·
between 9 a.m and noon. when a jury determines that
belt-passenger, $30 and
Debbie Watson, fair board the property in question is
worth at least I0 percent costs, use of unauthorized
secretary announced today.
more
than the , highest plates, $50 and · costs;
For those unable to get
their possessions out on that amount offered to the proper- Yvonne Darst, Pomeroy.
day, a fair board member ty owner by the state agency. phys control/under influ "This is an issue of fmmess," ence, $250 and costs, seatshould be contacted. There
Padgett
said. "Ohioans have a. belt. $30 and costs; Nichlas
will be an additional fee for
right to expect a fair amount of C. Dillon, Albany. speeding,
special removal times.
govemmem reimbursement for $30 and cosls; Troy G.
their property. There's no rea- Edwards. Cheshire, failure
son for a property owner to to register, $20 and costs:
have to shoulder court costs
Tommy
J.
Ferrell,
and attorney tees if their prop- Middlepon, improper passPOMEROY - Beginmng eny is legitimately worth subclogging classes will be stantially more than what the
offered at 2 p.m. on Saturday, state has offered to pay."
~eadline
If enacted, S.B. 226 would
April 24. at the Pomeroy
Municipal Building. For only apply to situations in
Bv MARY DALRYMPLE
ing out paperwork," he said.
more information contact which agencies and property
AP TAX WRITER
"It's a &lt;·eal deadweight in
owners have followed negoVivian May. 992-7853.
our economy."
tiation procedures outlined in
WASHINGTON
Even the simplest Form
currentstatute without reachTaxpayers
working
feverishI 040EZ tax return takes 3
ing an agreement on' an
ly
to
meet
the
April
15
ftJ.
hours
and 43 minute s to
amount of ompensation for
i
ng
dead!
ine
can
take
some
complete.
the property.
comfort knowing they are
Some of this year's paperSenate
Bill
226
will
now
be
ATHENS - The Southeast
not
alone
when
it
comes
tu
Ohio Woodland Interest referred to a Senate commit- scratching their heads over work burden stems from
changes in the taxpayers '
Group will meet at 7 p m. on tee for further consideration.
year's
forms.
Tax
thts
favor. such as new laws that
MondHy, at . the Athens
returns
are
getting
more
reduced the rates on capital
County Extension Office, W.
campi
icated.
gains
and dividends and
Union St.
,
The
government
estimates
inneased the &lt;:hild tax crcd·
Topic will be Controlling
that
the
average
1axpayer
it. The Internal Revenue
Invasive or Non-Desirable
tax
return
filing
a
typical
Service reported Wednesday
MIDDLEPORT The
Species
m
Woodland.
Everyone interested is wel- Athens-Meigs Educational with !lemized deductions that the average tax refund
come to attend. Infommtion is Service Center preschool reg· and income from interest, increased 5 percent this year
available by calling 593-8555. istration for the 2004-05 capital gains and dividends, to $2.090.
school years will be held Apirl has to spend 42 minutes
Occasional ly, taxpayers
26 at the Bradbury Learning more than lnst year doing may spend hours tilling out
Center. Appointments are nec- the math and paperwork.
forms, only to discover their
essary and can be made by
The total est1mated time work leads to a dead end.
calling 992-1740.
to finish these common
To test for alternative
forms
is
28
hours
and
30
tax liability. for
minimum
CHESTER
- Ches-ter
minute,.
example. the average taxTownship Board ~ Trustees
It is not only frustrating. payer can spend 3 1/2 hours
will hold their regu lar
monthly meeting at 7 p.m. on · POMEROY In the but economically counter- filling out a worksheet on ly
Thursday at the Chester Pomeroy
David to find out no extra tax IS
Merchants productive, said
Town HHII
Association story regarding Keating . senior counselor owed. The alternative minithe Gold Wmgs and Rtbs for the National Taxpayers mum tax prevents wealthy
Festival the person reporting Union and author of a new taxpayers from sheltering
too
much
income.
on plans for the June 4-5 study on tax complexity.
Increasingly,
however,
it
"This
is
something
that
COLUMBUS - · Ohio event was incorrectly identiSen. Joy
Padgett. R· fied. The correct name is hobbles the nation 's produc- affects more middle-income
Coshocton. introduced legis- Paul Darne ll , chairman of the tivity because we have a lot families.
The paperwork estimates
of very talented people · filllation to ensure fair compen- event.

Local Briefs

Time to move

Clogging
classes to start

April 15 tax

Be it recorded that as all
hell broke loose in Iraq last
week, costing the lives of
60 brave U.S. soldters, their
commander in chief went
fishing ,
For readers naive enough
to imagine that ole Dubya
just slipped on down to the
fishin' hole to ease his
mind, it should be stipulated that he was hard at work
filming an episode of
Roland Martin's program
for the Outdoor Life cable
TV channel .. in effect, a
free campaign commercial
to be shown next August.
According
to
The
Associated Press, Martin
brought his . crew to
Crawford, Texas, at White
House invitation. It's even
been reported that the president landed a 4-pound
largemouth, although if
press accounts were as
truthful as Condoleezza
Rice's testimony to the 9/11
Commission, so mebody
probably had to thaw the
lunker out before hooking it
to George W Bush's11ine.
But never mind, fellow
rednecks. All you're supposed to notice is that ole
Dubya phoned Condi from
his official Texas "good ole
boy pick 'em up" truck to
say she done good.
Well, she done bad. So
bad that in an administra. tion IITIOre concerned with
reality than symboli sm.
Rice would be headed back
to Stanford University to .
compose her· memoirs and
preside over faculty senate
meetings.
Academia is clearly
where she belongs . I once
taught courses at a college
that allowed itself three

- -------------·---

Gene
Lyons

years to make the transition
from a quarterly to a semester system. Judging by last
week's testimony, that'd be
about Rice's speed.
With the CIA director
running around Washington
with his hair on fire, as they
say, and counter-terrorism
chief
Richard
Clarke
demanding to know if it
· would lake hundreds of
Americans lying dead in
the street 10 wake up the
White House, Rice testified
that she couldn't remember
if she'd told Bush about
active AI Qaeda cell s in the
United States. She'd also
forgotten whether the president met with the FBI
director. Translation: Of
course not Bush was too
keen to head for his Texas
bass pond.
Luckily, Rice was ta lking
about the Bush administmtion's pre-9/11 failure to
comprehend the terrorist
threat and not something
truly important like sex.
Otherwise, people might
have noticed that her testi mony made Bill Clinton's
accounts of his Oval Office
exploits look comparatively
straightforward. After all,
when Clinton told lhe
nation that he "did not ha ve
sexual relations with that
woman, Miss Lewinsky. " it
was
technically . true .

Sexual intercourse hadn 't preparations for hijackings
occurred.
or other types of attacks,
But when Rice, &gt;llliling including recent surveilinappropriately lrke a poor- lance of federal buildings
ly rehearsed Miss America in New York." It added that
contestant , repeatedly testi· the FBI and CIA had intelficd under oath thai an Aug. lige nce that "a group of
6 presidemial daily brief· (Osama)·bin Ladin supporting. or PDB. "was histori· ers was in the U.S. planning
cal information based on attacks with ex plosives ."
olu reportrng. there was no This in the wake of 40 pre-' ·
new threa t information. and vious briefings warning the ·
it did not. in fact , warn of White
Hou se,
as
any coming attacks inside Commissioner Fred F.
the United States." well, Fielding put it , that "the
that wasn't even technically upcoming attack would be
true . Secure in the know!- spectacular,
something
, different
edge that the document was quantitatively
classified. she even conde- from anything that had
scendingly offered to read been done."
it aloud to Commissioner
Alas. we have a president
Richard Ben-Veniste, cur- who, ·even after the Aug. 6
rently under attack by GOP document , titled
"Bin
shills for being rude to dar- Laden Determined to Strike
ling Condi .
in U.S.," became public,
Rice even brazenly insist- blithely told reporters that
ed that. "there was nothing it "satd nothing about an
in this memo that suggested atta&lt;:.k on America. "
that an attack was coming
That president has a
on
New
York
or national security advisor
Washington. D.C ." Now who, when she wasn't
that the White House has obfuscaiing in the commisyielded to pressure an(! sion's face, filibustered
declassified the Aug . 6 about her scholar ly interest
PDB , however. everybody in "structural" and· "culturcan. see why Ben-Veniste a!" barriers preventing
was so impatient.
White House action.
In fact. New York and
We'v e got a structura l
Washington were the only problem, all right: a presigeographical
lo.&lt;:ations dent who doesn't know
apple butter from Shinola,
specifically mentioned .
In only 17 -;entences -- and a pathologically evashort enongh for even Bush sive national security advito read -· the C:::IA warned sor who would evidently ~
exactly who planned to have to be "tasked" to call :
attack the United State' and the Fire Department if her :
L·amc- tuntuliztngly dose to own -hairwere ablaze.
·- ..
This White House began
stipulating lhe hov. and the
where
di;~emblmg on Sept. II,
The document 'aid the 200 I, proclaiming it had
FBI had detected "patterns . "no warning" o~ terrorist
or suspicious activity in . attacks. No wonder it wantthis country consisten t wtth cd no investigation.

J

Woodland
group meets

Registration
announced

Meeting
changed

Correction

Bill introduced

Soldiers
from Page A1
Trevor
Cardone,
Mark
Bostic, James Gheen. Shari
Wright. Derek Warden, Rick
Baker, Bradley Dudding,
Justin Gilmore, Zane Beegle;
Anthony Deem, Jeffrey
Russell, Jered Hill , Arthur
Nease. Eric Hill. Michael
Sterrett. Chuck Hoffman ,
John" Willbarger, DeeJay
Richard s, Curtis Cook,
Robert
Bentz,
Joshua

Historian
from Page A1
then traveled to Pomeroy to
visit Girolami and his wife,
Leona. Girolami, coincidentally, »'as stationed . at
Schrobenhausen at the tune
of the attack on "A lways
Available ." He first met
Rodig in 1992.
McCallister, meanwhile,
has returned to the scene of

Environmentalists sue over operation
of Wayne National Forest

Hooten, Charles Wolfe ;
Jeffrey Crum and Joseph
Macinko. Cardone said
Thomas
Sowders,
C.J.
CINCINNATI (AP) - An ment, by allowing logging
McKnight. Jerry McCabe
and Don Eynon hctve come environmental organization projects in the forest, is
an
endangered
home from serving overseas. IS suing two federal agen- putting
If anyone is interested in cies to challenge the govern- Indiana bat species at ri sk.
The lawsuit asks U.S.
helping out, perhaps even ment's approval of timber
District
Judge
Herman
adding a name to a growing sales in the Wayne National
list of package recipients. Forest in southeastern Ohio. Weber for an order to stop
Forest the challenged programs
Cordone said she can be con- , The &gt; Buckeye
tacted either at 949-2512 Counc11's lawsuit also chal- until appropriate environ(J.D. Drilling Company) or at lenges the government's mental assessments are
·home 949-2449. Generally. overall management plan for done.
Mary
Reddan.
forest
the group meets on Mondays the forest. The organizasupervisor
of,
the
Way
ne
at the First Baptist Church 111 tion's suit. filed Tuesday in
Cincinnati federal court, National Forest who is
Racine .
alleges that 1he U.S. Forest named as a defendant in the
Service and the Fish and lawsuit, satd Wednesday that
the attack. ·where a re-enact- Wildlife
Servtce
gave she had not seen the lawment was staged to honor approvals for the projects suit.
him and his fellow airmen.
A telephone message
Rodig said pieces of the air- without the environmental
plane arc still being found in impact assessments that fed- requesting comment was left
Wednesday afternoon- with
the countryside outside of eral law requires.
The environmental group the Columbus office of the
Schrobenhausen.
This was Rodig 's, second contends that the gov~rn- Fish and Wildlife Service.
visit to the U.S .
"This is a story about the
enemy in war times and how
it relates to today's friendship
between the German people
Subscribe today • 992-2155
and the people of the
U.S.A.," Rodig said.
.

Nikola Bleak, DPM
Podiatry

304-674·7189'

Proud to be apart of your life.

•
•
•
•
•
•
___ I - ·

Laudermilt.
Middleport, Huntington. W.Va.. speedseatbclt. $30 .and costs;
ing. $50 and costs: Thomas
Tonya L. Lawson. Racine. E. Schuler. Coolville. no
seatbelt, $30 and costs; driver.; license. SI00 and
Kat~leen
T
Lohan. co»ts. seatbelt. $30 and
Charleston, W.Va .. speeding. co;ts: Eric D. Shoulb.
S30 and costs; Robert K. Racine. speeding, $30 and
Lute, Coolville, phy. cont. costs: David T Snodgrass.
· veh. intox .. S350 and costs. Logan. failure to control.
left of center. $50 and 520 and costs: Craig D.
costs: Jennifer L. Mankin. Sune. Lancaster. disorderlv
Racine ,
no
operators conduct. 550 and cost;;
license. $200 and costs: Steven P. Stinson. no operDonald D. McClead. Cutler. ators license . S I00 and
failure to control. $25 and costs:
Mary J Stowr. Racine.
costs. overload. SI00 and
costs: Charles G. Meccum. . assured clear distance. $20
Jacksonville, fatlure to con- . and costs. seatbelt. $30 and
costs. Ted C Stroupe .
trol. $20 and costs;
William
N.
Morri s. Grover. N.C. seatbelt. 530
Pomeroy. diu,derly conduct. ar.d costs: Jo;.cph S. Trllis .
$70 and costs. Angela D. Lang" ille . seatbelt. S30
Mozingo. Rutland. phy. and costs: f'&lt; oah B. Turner.
control/under
intluence. Portland. speeding. 530 and
S 100 and costs. 1m proper costs. seatbelt. 530 and
passing, $50 and costs; costs:
Blaine Wil son. Clendinin.
Amta M. Nelson. Racine.
seatbelt , 530 and costs: W Va.. speeding. 530 anu
Robert
C.
Parker. cost&gt;: Kareem A \\'right.
Columbus. possession. $50 Dale City. Va.. &gt;pe~ding.
fine . seatbelt-passen~cr. S~O S25 and co'i,. dri 11ng
and
costs:
Alv1n
D. under suspen,1on. S200
Pennington.
Cloverdale. fine: Jason R. Wyant.
Ind.. speeding. $30 and Albany. &gt;p~edmg. 530 and
costs: Chris A P~&lt;:kens. costs. se atbelt. 5.10 and
Middleport. $30 and costs: CO&gt;h: .Charles R. ' Young .
Hollie J. Rose, Pomeroy. Pomeroy. left of center. 550
and costs. drugs of abuse.
speeding. $30 and costs:
Melante
J.
Sanders. SLOO and costs .

underlines complex forms, longer chores

0

Bush tells afew fish ·tales

The Dailv Sentinel • Page As

~

Court News

. Aubum Meadow$

'

Leading
Democrats,
including Kerry. have kept
dear of blaming the Bush
administration for 9/11, but
in flurries of e-mail traffic
the supposedly nonpartisan
Cenrcr
for
American
Progress and emphatically
partisan America Coming
Together have charged that
Bush had sufficient warning
to
have prevented the
atta&lt;:ks.
Rtce countered effective·
lv, admitting 1hat neither the
Clinton nor the Bush administration had adequately
altered the government's
inte lligence
and
law
enforcement structu res to
deal with · the threat of
attacks inside the United
States.
One can only tmagine the
howl s that would have
arisen from civil hbertanans
and Democrats if. say in
March 200 I. Attorney
General John Ashcroft had
recommended that the CIA
and FBI begin sharing intelligence and that Congress
pass the USA Patriot Act.
Anu. can anyone believe
that Congress would have ·
authorized an invasion of ·
Afghanistan before 9111,
if suc h a thing had
been possible·&gt;
It's clear from commission staff reports and public
testimony ·- even that of
~~mesis
Richard
Rice
Clarke -- that neither the
Clinton nor the Bush adn1inis1ration took adequate steps
to deal with the Al Qaeda
threat.
Rice testified that ' what
Bush is doing now in ·traq is
an attempt to deal with the
root causes of that threat:
the lack of democritcy and
opponunity in the Middle
East. The United Slates is
trymg to build a model in :
lrHq.
It may not work. If 1t
doesn't, those who opposed
the effort will succeed politically and Bush will fail.
But in the midst of serious
col)lbat.
1esponsible
Americans shouldn't say
things that will help the
enemy.

-

www .mydailysentinel.com

2004

do not capture time spent m
tax planning while mak ing
financial decisions, Keatin g
noted. "It's a year-round
worry you've done something the tax slupid 1\ay. ·not
the tax smart wav.'' he said.
To cope with ihe burden.
taxpayers turn in droves to
a professional or a software
program to do the work. the
National Taxpayers Unltln
sllldy said. More than 88
percent of taxpayers have
used a paid professional or
purch,tsed tax software so
far this year.
The popularity of tax software shows up in ·1R_S statistics 1hat measure a 20
pcr&lt;.:cnt int..:rea~e thi~ )t:ar in
taxpayers using home computers to file electronicall ).
Even the professionals
rely on software.
Kathy Burlison, dtrector
of tax imp lementation at
H&amp;R Block. said the soft·
ware is particularly helpful
with this year's capital gatns
tax calculations. Cap 1tal
gains can he taxed at multi ·
pie rates this year. depend·
ing when the asset was
bo'Ught and sold .
"We are all grateful for
good software. It's not a

calculation wc~d 11ant to be
making tl\er and O\ er on
our own." Burlison ,aid.
H&amp;R Bloc~ \\Tole 1ts own
software program to break
through the complexn: in
education tax credits and
deducuons . The education
calculator pre1ent' taxpa)ers or t,1x professionals
from havtng to fill out their
tax return ciS man\ as four
different ,;avs to f1nd out
wh1&lt;:h ) ields the !011 esL
taxes
Joseph
Anthon:.
an
enrolled agenl 11 hn prep.1res
tax returns in Ponlanu. Ore ..
said he does lm b' hanu
every year as an educational
exeruse . before tut ning to
the computa.
He sa1d ile has 'ccn the
complcxlt) rise with each of
Preside111 Bush's ta\ cuts.
and he blames tile firepower
of mouern compLiter' for
., maktng tile ,.,,1nplications
possible . Tax cuts passd
during Bu sh·, adi11111!Siral!(111
start c~nu &gt;lop. pho~se in anJ
phas~ out. and apply to &lt;&gt;nly
pans of the t&lt;r.,pa) 1ng pnpu !arion .
" I hlamc Intel part!) r,,;·
the compkX~tv or ta'
returns.'' Anthon) sa1d.

Email engagement wedding or annivetSary
announcements and photos
to news@mydailysentinel.com!

1..,...1

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of Racine
hlitll3e #lolling

Freedom Sundar II

Apri/18, 2004
/0:40AM

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Fungal nails
• Corns &amp; calluses
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I

�PageA6

NATION • WORLD

·The Daily Sentinel

•

Thursday, Aprilts, 2004

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

·Army to
·DA charges Wisconsin student for obstruction in faking abduction
Bv JENN.Y PRICE
according to the complaint. and cold medicine she claimed
extend Iraq
She told officers the man had her abductor used to restrain
a knife and a gun.
her. They also obtained a warcombat tours Audrey
MADISON,
Wis.
Her claim touched off a rant to search her laptop comSeiler, the University
: WASHINGTON . (AP)
The Pentagon plans to
extend the combat tours in
Iraq of more than I0.000
soldiers from not only a
armored
Germany-based
:unit but also and a cavalry
regiment from Loui siana.
'd'efense
officials
said
Wednesday.
· The move breaks a
pledge given to all soldiers
'When they (,!eployed to Iraq
last year. They were .told
they would be kept there
no longer than 12 months.
The recent ri se in anti. occupation
violence
in
restive areas in and around
Baghdad and in the south
di srupted U.S. commanders· plans to reduce the
U.S. force by about 20.000
soldiers this spring.
Defense Secretary Donald
H. Rumsfeld was fine-tunIng the new plan and his
spokesmen declined to disBY CURT ANDERSON
cuss· details.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Other officials said it
would extend by at least
three months the tours of . WASHINGTON
soldiers from the
I st Enormous intelligence ·and
Armored Division as well .law enforcement · gaps that
as
the
2nd Armored contributed to the Sept. II
attacks are being filled. but
Cavalry Regiment, who
had been sc heduled ·to it will take years more for
America to build the needleave Iraq this month after
ed systems to effectively
year
spending a full
combat terrorists, the heads
engaged in combat and sta- of the FBI and CIA said
bilization operations.
Wednesday.
· Fort Polk, the Army base
CIA Director George
· in Louisiana that · is home Tenet. and FBI Director
to
the
2nd
Armored Robert Mueller went ,before
C:ava lry, issued a news the ·commission investigat'release last Thursday quot- ing the 200 I hijackings
ing the regiment's com- after the panel's staff
:mander, Col. Bradley W. released statements harshly
.May, as saying "elements'' criticizing the CIA for failof his unit "will remain in ing to fully appreciate the
tbeater longer than initially. threat posed by al-Qaida
announced." He did not prior to Sept. II and quessay how many soldiers tioning the . FBI's reorganiwere affected, but another zation efforts.
official said Wednesday it
"It was a damning report
·would be about 3,000.
of a system that's broken,
One squadron of the 2nd that doesn't function," said
Armored Cavalry recently commission member John
returned from Iraq, but the Lehman, a former Navy
rest of the lmit will secretary, referring to naws
·remain.
found in the intelligence
The 2nd Armored com- system.
.
mander did not say how
Tenet, making his · second
much longer his unit appearance before the comwould remain in Iraq, but mission in . three weeks,
other officials said family said that in the t 990s . the
members were told the sol- CIA lost 25 percent of its
diers probably would be personnel, was not hiring
back at Fort Polk in about . new analysts and faced disfour months.
array in its training of clanWelcome home cere- destine ofticers who work
monies ~t Fort Polk have overseas to penetrate terror
been canceled.
cells and recruit secret
A recent spike in vio- informants.
lence has killed at least 83
Although strides have
· U.S. troops this month as been · made since the
U.S. forces fight Sunni attacks, Tenet said it would
Muslim insurgents in · the take five more years to
::city of Fallujah, Shiite ·"have the kind of clandes:militiamen in the south and tine service our country
; gunmen in Baghdad and needs."
The
National
•oo its outskirts.
Security Agency, which
:: ' Bush said at a ~ews con- handles electronic surveil:1erence Tuesday night that lance, and U.S. mapping
:tu: has told military com- and analytic intelligence
:,uanders to be prepared to agencies also need time and
: u~e "decisive force" against sustained
to
funding
: ilisurgents and that he was improve, he said.
•leady himself to provide as
"You can ' t build this
::niany extra troops as U.S . community in fits and
:;commanders on the ground starts. It won't happen and
::say they need to defeat the the co untry will suffer,"
: ~ ns urgents .
Tenet said.

major
manhunt,
which
authorities said accounted for
most of the money they spent
on the case. The Madison
police department last week
estimated its costs at $96,000.
According to the criminal
complaint, Seiler told police on
March 31 and April I that a man
had entered her room at 2:15
a.m. March 27 while she was
doing homework and forced her
from her room at knifepoint,
telling her to leave the building.
Seiler told police that once
outside, the same man grabbed
he~ and put her into a car with
threats that he had a gun,
according to the complaint. She
also said the man used duct tape
over her mouth and would
sometimes give her Nyquil pills.
Police concluded Seiler's
story was fake after obtaining a
videotape that showed her buying the knife, duct tape, rope

puter and cell phone records.
Seiler had also reported an
unexplained attack in February,
saying she was struck from
behind and left unconscious,
but the complaint does not say
whether police believe that
attack was also fabricated.
A message left at Seiler's
home in Rockford, Minn ..
wasn't immediately returned.
The family's attorney, Randy
Hopper, was traveling and
didn ' t immed.iately return
messages left at his office and
on his cell phone.
Seiler had been under a
doctor's care since she was
found, but returned home to
Rockford, Minn. , last week.
Hopper did not release any Audrey Ruth Seiler, 20. is shown in this undated fam ily photo.
details of Seiler's condition or Sei ler. the University of Wisconsin-Madison student accused of
say what type . of treatment staging her own disappearance last month. was charged
she was receiving. "Dateline Wednesday with two misdemeanor counts of obstructing officers.
NBC" reported that · Seiler . Each charge carries a jail sentence up to nine months and a maxwas in a psychiatric facility.
imum fin ~ of $10,0000 .. (AP Photo/ Madison Poice Dept, File) ·

.

NewsChannel

CIA, FBI say post-Sept. 1t changes will take more time

·----.

·

Mueller recounted a range
of steps the FBI has · taken
since the Sept. II attacks
to improve its intelligence
capabilities, sharpen its
focus on terrorism and
replace outmoded technology. He urged the panel to
let those improvements
continue and not to risk
derailing them by recommending creation of a new
domestic
intelligence
agency outside the FBI. ·
"We don' t want to have
hi storians look back and
say, ' OK, you won the war
on terrorism but you lost
your
civi l
liberties,"'
Mueller said. "We have
become, since Sept. II. a
member of. the intelligence
communi ty in ways we
were not in the past."
The commission has been
gathering information for
more than a year and will
release a final report in
July. Among the issues ·it
will consider is whether
fundamental changes in
U.S . . intelligence gathering
is needed.
The staff report on the
CIA credited the agency
with collecting a vast array
of intelligence on Osama
bin Laden and al-Qaida,
which resulted in thousands
of individual reports circu'
lated at the highest U.S.
government ' levels . These
carried titles such as "Bin
Laden
Threatening
to
Attack U.S. Aircraft" in
June
1998 and "Bi n
Laden's
Interest
10
Biological and Radiological
Weapons"
in
February
2001.
Despite this intelligence,
the CIA never produced an
authoritative summary of
al-Qaida's involvement in
past terrorist attacks, nor
did it fully appreciate bin
Laden's role as the leader
of a · growing extremist
movement. Even though aiQaida had been formed in
1988 after the Soviet Union
abandoned Afghanistan, the
CIA didn't recognize it as
an organization until 1999,
the report said.
"Before the attack we

found uncertainty among ment officials have access
sen ior
officials
about to its products , he said.
whether this was just a new
The director of the cen. and especially venomous ter. John Brennan, told .the
version of the ordinary ter- panel that the recent
rorist · threat America had December-January increase
lived with for decades. or in the U.S. terror risk level
was radically new, posing a from yellow to orange and
threat beyond any yet expe- the · close scrutiny of pasrienced," the commission sengers on international
statement said.
nights marked the first
Tenet strenuously took major
counterterrorism
issue with that conclusion effort by the center. The
. - "That's flat wrong," he center is also acting as the
said - noting that the CIA . focu s for intelligence relat' put in place a plan to com- ed to terror threats against ·
bat al-Qaida in 1999 that the Summer Olympics thi s
included clandestine intelli- August in Athens. Greece.
gence inside Afghanistan
"It is only through such
using 25 people and move- integration of effort that we
ment of a spy satellite to will he able to pre ve nt
increase coverage of the future 9/ 1Is," Brennan said.
terror training camps.
As with th e CIA, the
The staff statement noted commission stall' gave the
Meigs • 992-2155
that several · threat reports FBI creuit for beg inning a
produced by the intelli- series of changes aimed at
gence apparatus had "men- focu sing on terrorism pretioned the possibility of vention, intelligence gatherusing an aircraft laden with ing and information sharexplosives," suc h as the ing . But its statement said
terrorists used on Sept. II there remain&gt; skepticism
in attacks that killed nearly and confusion in the 56
3,000
in
New
York . FBI field oftkes about the
Washington
and chan ges
ant.l so me
Pennsylvania.
instance\ where old habit s
Yet the CIA counterter- continue to surface.
rorism center "did not analyze how a hijacked aircraft
or other explosives-laden
aircmft might be used as a
weapon," the report said.
Life goes by pretty fast: especially your last year
Tenet acknowledged that
of high school. So much lo do to get ready for
the CIA lacked a governlife out on your own. Deadlines, pressures ... but
. ment-wide ability to comwe can help tn one area though, you still have
bine foreign and domestic
plenty of time to order your senior announce·
intelligence in a way that .
ments and accessories. Wilh our wide variety
might have sharpened the
of styles to choose from , you can custom taylor
focus on how a foe might
your order to suit your style instead of settling
strike.
for what everyone else has. Stop in today and
"We all understood bin
see. Now open Saturdays from 9 - 12 far your
Laden's intent to strike the
.convenience. Mon- Fri 8:30 • 5:00
homeland but were unable
to translate this knowledge
Since 1948...
into an effective defense of
the country," Tenet. said.
The Quality Print Shop, Inc.
Mueller and Tenet said a
255 Mill Street
key step has already been
Middleport, OH 45760
taken to improve the situa(740) 992·3345- Fax: (740) 912-3394
tion through last year's creation of the Terrorist Threat
Integration Center, in which
124 FBI and CIA personnel
work side-by-side to compare overseas and domestic
intelligence reports on terrorism. Some 2,600 govern-

Keeping
Meigs
·informed
· Sunday
Times-Sentinel .

occurring around 4 p.m. Skies
will be sunny to partly cloudy
with 5 mph winds from the
southwest.
Thursday evening
7-midnight
Temperatures will drop from
61 earlY.._this evening to 51.
Skies will range trom mostly
clear to partly cloudy with 5
prngres~e~ .
Thursday afternoon
mph winds from the south.
overnight
(1-6 p.m.)
1-6 a.m.
Temperatu res will stay near
61 with today's high of 63
Tcmpcratu~es will fall from

A DAY ON WALL STREET

Market watch

----- ····-···--------·-------------------------------------······-------··---------·--·······---·- ····-------------- .. ---- . -----,

Apnl 14 , 2004

Dow Jones
Industrials
Nasdaq
c.omposlte
Standard &amp;
Poor's 500

Apri114. 2004

Dow Jones
Industrials

-3.33
10,317.95

• P&lt;t ohonge
· hom PfOVIous.' ·0.03

Record high' 11.722 99
Jan 1 ~. 2000

2,000

I

2,024.85
Pet

ehlnoe

hom pn!Yioua' -0.26

1 251

New hlgha
61
~D•:::c,;ll::.:n:::ed:.::_-"
1 9:::5:..:.
1 New lows
Unchanged:
253
29

- - - - - - - - - - - 1,600
JAN

FEB

High .

Low

ReCord high: 5.048.62

2.014.24

March 10, 2000

2,040.15

MAR

APR

1,200

Standard &amp;
Poor's 500

..,..

1,128.17

:::'"m~'

1,797,330,924

·011

-..,...,.--=---:=·--c::-::-1.000
JAN
High

FEB
lOW

1.132.52

1,122.15

MAR

APR

Rec:ord high' 1,52H6
Mard124,2000

AP

AP

Local Stocks
ACI-30.87
AEP - 30.48
Akzo - 37.27
Ashland Inc. - 45 .70
BBT- 33.81
BLI- 14.21
Bob Evans- 31.79
Borg Warner- 82.98
; City Holding - 33.44
' Champion - 4.799
, Charming Shops - 7.40
·Col- 32.55
· DuPont - 45.00
. oG - 18.22
: Federal Mogul - .375

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r1 2 East Main Street- ---=--Pomeroy, Ohio
uuoeu

Weeknights 'Till9 •

HOURS
- Mon - Fri Sam - 9pm
Sat. Bam - 5pm

Sun. CLOSED

CINCI:"JNATI
IAPI
Universities are warnin~
students about - a new Ohio
law that requires expulsion
and elimination of their
tinancial aid for two vears
if they are conv.icted . of
rioting.
·
The
Univer&gt;irv
of
Cincinnati plans to inail lei- ,.
ters and distribute doorhanger cards about 1he law
in anticipation of an annual
otT-campus celebration of
Cinco de Mayo. Students
and visitors burned couches. overturned ca" and
threw beer bottles at police
the last two years on the
May 5 celebration.
Other universities say Tanya Doup, 21 and a Univers1ty of Cincinnati student sets on a
friend second floor porch in Clifton Heights. Doup. a junior nursing
similar warning~ .to ~ludenh
since the law was enacted student also from Rndlay. said she is inclined to skip a C1nco de
last year have helped cut Mayo party this year. (AP Photo/ C1ncinnati Enquirer. Tony Jones )
down rowdy behavior at
Michigan
"The state ,houldn't get
beat
the
ce·Iebrations.
V\.'o
h
e
rin
e~.
leadin
£!
to
mulin\·oh·eU
in st udenb getting
At Ohio Uni, ersit y in
tiple
arrests
and'
suspendrunk
and
ha,i ng too much
Athen s.
where
annual
SIDns.
fun
on
the
weekend." .said
Halloween
celebrations
Bill Hall. Ohi o State's Klein . an electronic media
have been. marred hy fights
vice
president for student major fram Findlay:
and multiple arrests, the
affairs.
e-mailed students
Hi s friend Tonya Doup.
administration e-mailed st udents and mailed letters to two week~ ago reminding a junior nursi ng ~ tudcnt
students' parents this spring them that partying that gets · also from Findlav. said she
to alert them to the law. out of control can result in is inclined to skip a Cinco
The messages were distrib- criminal ' conv ictions and de :\byo pa rty thi s year.
"Mav be freshmen would
uted before the annual student conduct code violatiom
.
Either
one
ca
n
oet
think
"it's a big deal. but
spring switch to daylightstudents
kicked
out
~f
it's
not
all that it\ cracked
saving time. which has led
up to be... she sa1d.
to arrests in past ·years school. Hall noted.
"S
tudent
s
who
VIOlate
Cincin nati police say they
when crowds spilled out of
either
could
be
in
serious
plan
to ha1·e e .~tra ofll cers
bars closing early.
There were no problems trouble ... Ohio State spokes- near the ·University of
fo r
at Ohio University during woman Ruth Gerstner .said . Cincinn ati campus
The
law
wa.
l
intended
Cinco
de
Mayo.
the
10
the time change earlier this
·
Mexican reme nibr unce . of
discourage
the
kind
.of
celemonth.
university
I g6:: ,·ictory 0\·er
spokesman Jack Jeffery . bra10ry riot in "&lt;&gt; tll at has ha p- troops·
French ,oldi ers in the
said Wednesday. Students pened nat ionwide . on col, Battle of Puet&gt;la.
have told the administration lege campuses and resulted
Campu s police say they
that being alerted to the in violence. property dam- plan to \ ideot ape students
.
consequences made them age- and mul tiple arrests.
part icipatmg in the street
reconsider gett ing rowdy.
It requires that students celehralion next month. The
he said . .
co nvicted of rioting mus t university would be willing
"That was the intention. be expelled immediately. be to sllare the videotapes with
just so they're aware of all denied access to any state- city police and Yiew the
the consequences of poten- supported institution for tapes 10 identity rowdy stutially inappropriate behav- one year and lose financial dents as il diu last year.
ior." Jeffery said.
aid for two. Conviction on campus po lice Chief Gene
At Ohio State Umversity charges of failure t&lt;) . dis- Ferrara said .
· ht peop 1e were conin Columbus. disturbances Perse or misconduct at an
E1g
have occ urred in recent emergenc y will res ult in victed of ·crimes. including
years ahcr significant foot - lms of financial aid .
agg ra,·ated
ri oting
and
ball vi ctories. In "lovember
University of Cincinnati stu- attempted arson . a!'ter tile
2002. students rioted oil- dent Drew Klein said expul- celebration last year.
campus after the Buckeyes sion is too stitf a punishmem:

- - -- - - - - -- - 1.600

April 14, 2004

1911 ,549,410

~~~'--~·~

Volume :'

LoW

10,322 94

Nasdaq
composite

735

Nasdaq diary
Advanced:

Hlglt
10,415 28

2,200

-&amp;.23 ·

New highs
~D~
ec~l~
ln~ed~:~--2-61~7
27
==='----''New tows
Unchanged:
117
203
Volume:

---c=----,=--:-=--:-:=9 .250
J AN
FEB
MAR
APR

April 14, 2004

NYSE diary
Advanced :

10.250

=~:::-.::::.::.::::::::::::'.::::::::::::::::....n::::~-..:..::::::.::=::::::··-·::::::::::'.:::====-·--·===···----···-······-·:.. .:..:..:.....~_:;:._::;:;:;::.:~~::;:

1,128.17

582.02

~ - ,l'v..
~

·

9,750

10,377.95

-1.27

-3.81

10,750

•

2,024.85

2000

~

-3.33

-5.23

Russell

50 early overnight to 44.
Skies will be mostly clear to
partly cloudy with 5 mph
wihds from the south.
Friday morning
7-noon
Temperatures will climb
from 43 to 64 by late this
morning. Skies \viii range
from mostly sunny to partly
cloudy with I0 mph winds
from the south turning from
· the southwest as the milrning
progresses.

Gannett- 89.75
General Electric- 30.48
GKNLY- 4.60
Harley Davidson - 59.50 .
Kmart - 42.68
Kroger - 16.95
Ltd- 19.98
NSC- 21 .89
Oak Hill Financial - 3.2.24
Bank One - 51.50
OVB - 35 .64
Peoples - 26.00
Pepsico - 54.91
Premier- 8.70
Rocky Boots - 24.52

AD Shell- 48.73
Rockwell- 34.00
Sears- 42.19
SBC -24.16
AT&amp;T-18 .83
USB -25.80
Wendy's - 40.25
Wai-Mart - 57.42
Worthington - 18.69
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the previous day's transactions, provided by Smith Partners at
Advest Inc. of Gallipolis.

~ ---~~~~-----==-=--:-:-~--:----,

Out Our

COior-coordiNIMd g.... window doOr

Th11rsday morning
7 a.m.-noon
Temperatures will rise to 56 ·
with todav's low of .17 occurring aroui1d 6 a.m. Skies will
range from sunn y t\' most ly
sunny. \\·ith 5 mph winds from
the west turnin~ from the
so uthwest as tl1e morning

2004 GRADUATES ...

We're
CINnlng

Thursday, Aprilts, 2004

Universities to students: Riot
and you
. can get kicked out

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

of · Wisconsin sophomore
accused of staging her own
disappearance last month,
was' charged Wednesday with
two misdemeanor counts of
obstructing officers.
Each charge carries a jai I
sentence up to nine months
and a maximum fine of
$10.0000.
Dane
County
District
Attorney Brian Blanchard tiled
the 16-page criminal complaint two weeks after Seiler.
20, was discovered in a marshy
area within a mile of her campus apartment, when she told
police a man with a knife and a
gun was in the area. She was
reported missing March 27 and
found March 31.
When officers attempted to
assist Seiler to her feet she
said "I can't leave the woods
- a bad man will kill me,"

PageA7

Notice of Second Public Hearing

,. The Meigs County Commissioners intend to apply to the U.S.D.A., Rural
• Development, for funding under the U.S.D.A. Rural Housing Preservation
Program . Meigs County' is eligible for up to $90,000 for Housing
: Pr~servatlon , the average award in recent rounds. of funding, provided the
~ County meets applicable requirements. On April 1, 2004, the County
conducted its first public hearing to inform citizens abut the Rural Hous1ng
.. Preservation program, what activities are eligible, and other important
.
requirements.
A second public hearing will be held on April22, 2004 at 1:15 P.M. at the
Meigs County Commissioners office , Meigs County Court House,
:. Pomeroy, Ohio, to allow citizens an opportunity to review and comment on
the County's proposed Rural Housing Preservation application.
" Written comments will be accepted until 1:00 P.M., April 22,2004, and
may be mailed to the Meigs County Commissioners, Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
If a participant will need auxiliary aids (interpreter, brailed or taped
material, assistive listeAiR_!t~evice,-Qther) dua-w a...disability.,. pleasa.contact
Gloria Klees, Clerk, prior to April 22, 2004 at (740) 992-2895 in order to
ensure tl"tat your needs will be accommodated. The Meigs County
Courthouse is handicapped accessible.
Jeff Thornton. President
Meigs County Commissioners

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Page AS • the Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Apri115, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com
'-J"

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Eastem honors basketball teams, Page B3
Browns, Bengals schedules released Page B3
Baseball scores and standings, ~ B4

G

tT

Thursday, April•s, 2004

Reds vs. Phillies
postponed

Ohio Valley Symphony captures spirit of youth
GALLIPOLIS - Rc;gain
a 'tDuch of youth on
Saturcby. April 17, at a per"
form,mce by the Ohio Vall ey
Symphony titled "Fnr the
spon~oreJ

Young at Heart"

in part by by Ernst &amp; Young
ami the Calha Co. Medic.tl
Society. R.ty Fowler. the
or...:hestrJ S music Jirector,
1

co nduct~

the performance

at 8 p.m. in the historic Arid
Theater

~

in

dowtltO\VIl

Gallipolis.
The program opens wirh
Peter vs. the Woli a c·atchv
drama wrapped around
Sergei Prokofiev's music of
"Peter And The Wolf." Peter
and the Wolf is the classic
tale of a young boy who
ventures out into tht· wood.;,

de.spite his Grandfather\
·Warnings about .1 wolf. Petc:r
eventually captures the wolf
(but not before the wolf eats
the duck) ,md with the help
of some p&lt;tssing hUnters.
L"scorts the wolf to the zoo.
Each character is represented by an instrume-nt or.

group of instruments and and orchrstr.l toss musicJI
has their own musi.:al theme · portraits of ditt(:rent animals
and
thl'f~
is narration back and forth with some
throughout
the
·story wicked p.1rodies by St. Sa en's
on some oi the well known
explaining tht" action.
With Peter vs. The Wolf, rnmpn~ers of the day.
Brin~ the entirt" family
Justin Locke has expanded
on the original by putting ,tlong for a spring Iltght of
the wolf on trial' tOr eating; great. familiar music and
the duck. He ·does this by '$ee ·the animals for your.:;df.
The publi,- is encouraged
having: t"ach instrument give
"testnnony" (by playin~) in to attend rehec1rsals for ti-ee
an atts·mpt to prove his culi- on Friday, April lti, lrmn 7nary illl10Ct"tlet'. The wolf's lll p.m . anJ on Saturday,
ongoing indigestion is a bit April 17 from 1-4 p.m.
of &lt;t ~IVL'away. It is \Vritten by Tickets for the ~ p.m. conJusttn Locke, a bassist with cert are $12, S20 tlu seniors.
the woTld renowned tloston $10 for stud.en ts and are
Symphony Orchestra who avai labl e at Tawney Jewelers,
has writt~..• n SL.'veral composi- Purple Turtle and Oak Hill
ti ons for you ng people of all Banks.
The
Ohio
Valley
ages. The entire ·original
Peter and the Wolf is con- Symphony is ti.tru.led in part
tained within this court- by the Ohio Am Council, a
state agency that se~pporrs
room drama.
The OVS will be• joined public programs in the arts
by pianists Nakao Tabo and and the Ann C. Dater
Silvam S.unolini in a daz- Foundation.
For more information call
zling displ'av of virtuosity on
Cam ille St. S;~en's "Carnival the Ariel Theater at (740)
of the Animals." The pianos 446-AR.TS.

RIO G RANDE
The United States Air
Force · Band of Flight
Night
Flight
jJZZ
ensemb le is co ming · to
the Fine .md Performing
Arts Cen ter at 8 p.m. ,
Thursday
at
th e
University
of
Rio
Grande, to present their
unique music. The concert is bt·ing spo n sored

by

Takao

State

College, 11- 15 miles on mountain biks•
NELSONV ILLE, Ohio - The Ohio miles through Athens County.
I3ig time mountain bike racing returns trail~. kayaking for a mill' 011 the Hocking
Trdils Expo has a new nam e and expanded activities. This one of a kind get-togeth- Saturday at I p.m. with the Rocky River, 2-.'l miles of orienteering and spePORTSMOUTH er for muScle-powered sp,orts enthusiasts is Mountain Classic,·a cha11enging fiV&lt;"-mi]e . · cia] events skill challenges tn test the mind
Every year, Springie st,
now Hocking Outback Trail Adventure course through the hilly, steep climbs and as well the body.
the annua l post-winter
Other activities throug;hout the week and will be held May 15 ami .16 on mud bog; of the Hocking College" camce le bration
held at · Hocking College's campus, Nelsonville.
pus.
end include d!;monstration:i._l'f rly-fi shing,
Shdwnet·
State
This race follows son;e of the trails for- kayaks ami canoes, mountain bikes and
Activities ger under way at 8 a.m. each
merly
traveled by riders in the DiDi Mau horse back riding at. ne.1rby Smoke Rise
University, gets a little
day and three major events are part of the
bigger.
· Saturday line-up. The Hocking halt: Moumair:&gt; Brke Classic. one of the most Ranch. There will be exhibits by Hoc king
popular mountain bike races in th e region, College T:txidenny Studio. Rocky Shoes
marathon and 5 kin run begin at 9 a.m.
This year, it j ust got a
acconiing
to Gaty Uerg;trand, Hocking and Uoots, Athens Bike Shop. Ohio Trail
The
Hocking
5
km
run
is
out
and
back
lot bigger. Shawnee
State's
Student · on the paved and flat Hocking-Adena. The College professor and member of the Information, outdoor art, outdoor gear.
wood carvers. wild game cooking, wildlife
Hocking half-marathon begins with three HOTA steering committee.
Programming board, in
On
Sunday
at
8
a.m.
th
e
Hocking
products, ODNR, Wayne National Forest
miles
on
the
bike
path,
winds
along
and
conjunction
with
comes back along the old railroad right of College Adventure Race opens Ohio's and more.
MTV and Pepsi-(ola,
way.
season of adventure racing. The race
For additional inform ation con\act
is hosting one of the
The Hocking bike tour also begins at· 9 includes a 4-6 mile trail run on very chal- Hulls at hhullss@frognet.net nr on the
biggest events to ever
a.m. and participants will ride about 40 lenging trails surrounding Hocking web at www.trailadventure.org.
come
to
Shawnee
State:
the
MTV
at 7 p.m. Wednesday,
April 2!&gt;.
The tour, which will
culminate in a concert

i:)y three of today's
hottest
bands
Hoobastank,
Jma
Robot,
and
Lostprophets
is a
Sign of Springfest's
growrng
popularity,
according to Tiffany
Weaver,
Shawnee
State's student activities coordinator.

The event will be
open to the public, and
will be surrounded by
a week o( activities at
Shawnee Stat.e. Tickets
are available from the
student activities office
for SIS for students
(purchased in advance;
limit two per Shawnee
State !D) and $20 for
general admission.
For more information call (740) 3513217.

At Hocking's 'Shoot the Hills' photographers take aim for that perfect shot
"Shoot the Hills," the 3rd
annua l photo competition in
the Hocking Hills will have
amateur and professional photographers traversing the Hills
April 16-18 looking for the
perfect shot.
'
Competing for more than
$3,000 in prizes and awards,
photographers will be given
one roll of film and 24 hours
to "shoot" the Hocking Hills.
Participants register and pick
up their film at the Hocking
Hills Seasotial Dining Lodge
at noon on Friday, April 16.
Pre-registration is also availab le online at www.shootthehilkcom. The competition
officially starts at 1 p.m. on
Friday.
·
Participants
take
off
throughout the Hocking Hills
region for the weekend, taking
pictures of the area. On
Saturday, April 17 at 1 p.m.,
they turn in their roll of film,
which will be processed and
returned ' Sunday mornmg.

From pictures on this roll,
photograph ers may enter five
photos in the competition,
which has divisions . for amateurs
and
professionals.
Judging categories in clude
landscape, flora, wildlife, people in nature a.nd abstract.
Winners are announced at an
awards ceremony on Sunday,
April 18 at 3:30 p.m. at the
Dining Lodge.
Entry fee is only $30 in
advance ·(and $35 same day
registration ) and includes filtri,
processing, and a variety of
programs and handouts.
The Centers not on ly have
brochures and maps that will
help you get to where you
want to go, but a wealth of
information on the region 's

many fascinating shops, galleries and studios.
To learn more about the
Hocking Hills call 740-3,859706 or 1-800-HOCKING.

Crow's Family Restaurant
Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken
m Main St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Drive·Thrv W!Ddow

992-5432
I

the

Gallia County

l3 . i L'enrennia l
Co mmi ssion. acCording ·

MTV
Hocking
Hills
headed ·to ·
Shawnee Ohio Trails Expo expands activities to include marathons

Campus Invasion Tour,

·U.S. Air
Force 'Band
of Flight' to
perform at
URG

to Marianne Campbe ll,
charr oi , the event. The
full United States Air
Force Uand of Fli ght
performed as a part of
the Bi ce nt enn ial cele))Tati on LISt September.
''We look forward to
the Night Flight jazz
ememb le fro m the Band
of Flight returning lo
Gallia County," said J an
Thaler. · Chair of the .
Ui c e n t e n n i a l
Commission. "Last fall's
concert attra cted a full
house. and we anticipate
dll· same enthusias m for
th e jazz ensemble. The
Bicentennial
Commission is delighted
to

again sponsor
co nc er t."

th is

sp~.:.·cia l

Nigh t Fli~ht is the
larbe.;; t eno:;e mbl e. from
\\'it hin
the
Conct"rt
Uand. This twenty-piece
j azz group com bine s the
best in traditional and
co ntemp ora ry big band
j .tzz . They perform a
diverse and exci ting
program consisting of
sw in g music of the "Big
hand" era, jazz, Latin ,
and funk cll mpo sitions
from contemporar y big
bands. They are much in
demand , performing for
military ce remonies and
social functions, community concerts and festivals. nationally and
internationally.
The first half of th e
concert on May 6 will
feature · the favorites of
Duke Ellington, while
t he second half will
focus on rh e Glenn
Miller so und .
Tickets for the concert
are required, but are
free, and are now available. Tickets can be
. picked up at the offices ·
of the Chamber of
Commerce, the Ga lli a
County Convention and
Visitors Bureau , the
French Art Colon y. the
Gallipolis Tribune, 101.5
the ·
R.iver,
th e
Administration
R.e ce ption
desk
at
Holzer Medical Center,
and
from
Connie
McNerlin
at
the
University
of
Rio
Grande.

PHILADELPHIA (AI')
Wednesday night's' game
between the Philadelphia
Phrlltes and the Cincinnati
Reds was postponed after
day long rain.
The gates to Citizens Bank
Park had not opened and a
steady rain was. falling wheo
the game was called two
hours before its scheduled
StaJ1.
The Phillies have lost six of
their . first seven games,
mcludm¥ 4-1 to the Reds in
Monday s ballpark opener.
No makeup date was
announced . The Phillies and
Reds are to conclude the
series Thursday.

Adu's coach emphasizes discipline~ · plays no favorites
Bv

JosEPH WHITE

Associated Press
WASHINGTON - Freddy Adu
and his coach jokingly debated the
pros and cons of rap music and the
Bee Gees during their long walk to
RFK Stadium after a particularly
grueling practice.
The light moment wasn't what
you~d · expect from Peter Nowak,
the supposedly strLct, no-frills D.C.
United coach who insists on bring·
ing Adli along slowly, despite all
the hype and sellout crowds for the
phenom.
"He's ·my coach, but he's also a
great guy that I just like to talk to
and have fun with," the 14-year-old

forward said. "That ju st makes me
feel very comfortable."
Up close the 39-year-old Poland
nati ve is tough but fun. strict but
full of personality, a constant
stream of energy as he tackl es his
first coaching job under scru tiny
unparalleled for a league socce r
team in the United States.
_
"When it comes down to business
... you've got to do whatever he
wants you to do." Adu said. "When
you're off the field and over and
.done with , he's a very open guy.
You can joke around with him . ...
That's how I am, too ."
Nowak has already rubbed so me
of the veterans the .wrong way with
his set of rules. Wake- up time is 8

a.m. on the road, where the team
eats all its meals together. Pl ayers
must arrive by 9:45 for the 10 :30
practices at home, and they are no
lo nge r allowed to drive the several
hundred yards from RFK to the
practice field - as they did in
years past:
"We hav e to do everything
together.."
midfielder
Bobby
Convey sa id . "There' s not one
thing that yo u do by yourself. If
you try to do so mething by yo urselL he thinks ybu'Je trying to be
an individual. so he's all about the
team . Sometimes it's too much , but
I guess too ·much is better than not
enough.''
Midfielder Earnie Stewart sa id a.

Bengals re-sign
Houshmandzadeh

BY CHRIS SHERIDAN

Associated Press

Morehouse
hired as assoc.
Marshall AD

Marshall signs
fifth recruit
HUNTINGTON , ' W.Va .
(AP) Forward Collins
Okafor signed a national letter-of-intent to play basketball
at
Marshall
on
Wednesday.
The 6-foot-7, 230-pound
Okafor averaged I 0 points
and eight rebounds during the
first half of his junior season
at Countryside High School
in Clearwater, Fla., in 2002·
03. He suffered a shoulder
injury that forced him out of
action the rest of the year.
He did not play his senior
year after the Florida High
School Association ruled him
ineligible because of an
administrative error.
Okafor was a part of group
of four Nigerian National .
Team/layers to come to tho!"'
Unite States to play basket·
ball two years ago. He's not
relilted to Connecticut allAmerican Emeka Okafor.
Wednesday was the first
day. qf the late recruit signing
penod.
Other
Marshall
recruits signed earlier are
Ryan Lamb of Mableton,
Ga.; Joe Miles of Forestville,
Md. ; Casey Wohlleb of Baca
Raton, Fla.; and Jesse
Oglesby of Lithonia, Ga.

I

Please see Adu, 81

Cavaliers close
season with win.

CINCINNATI (AP)- The
Cincinnati
Benga ls
on
Wednesday signed wide
receiver
T.J .
Hou shmandzadeh, one of the
team '·s restricted free agents,
to a one-year contract.
Contract terms weren't di sclosed.
The
Benga ls
drafted
Hou shmandzadeh in the seventh round in 200 I from
Oregon Siate .
He did not have any catches or kick returns in 2003. He
piaxed in only two games
whrle spending most of the
season recovering from a
severe hamstring pull in the
preseason finale.
In his two previous
Bengals
seasons,
Hou shmandzadeh ·has a total
of 62 catches for 720 yards
with one touchdown, 23
kickoff return s for a 20.6yard average and 36 punt
returns for a 7.8-yard aver·
age.

HUNTINGTON,
W.Va.
(AP) - Scott Morehouse
was hired Wednesday as
associate athletic director for
game tiperations and facili·
ties at Marsflall .
More house replaces David
Reed , who was named
Marshall's associate athletic
director for com pi iance in
February.
Morehouse, a native of
Mineral Wells, earned a
bachelor's degree in. sport s
management and marketing
at Marshall in 1999 and a
master's degree in athletic
administration
in
2002.
During that time he served in
a variety of roles within the
athletic department.
Morehouse recently served
as director of event management and operations and
assistant athletic director at
Wi chita State.

dose of discipline was badly need ed after tw o less stringen t seasons
under . coach Ray Hud so n . But
Stewart also grew up playing for
tough coache ' in Europe. and he
sees why an America-reared athlete
might bristle at Nowak's egalitarian philosophy.
"The way they grow up over here
is a little bit different.'' Stewart
said. "The way it'' being done is
·the way it 's always been done for ·
me. but yo u can 'ee there are people that need adjusting to it.''
But Nowak's approach just might
be the perfect fit someone like Adu.
Instead of favoritism, th e star kid

Cleveland Cavavliers' Jeff Mcinnis, center, passes the ball beh ind him to CarloS Boozer. left,
as New York Knicks' Tim Thomas defends during the second quarter Wednesday in New York.
(AP)

NEW YORK
LeBro n James finished his rookie
seaso n on a winning note, scoring 17 points as the
Cleveland Cavaliers defeated the New York Knicks
I 00-90 Wednesday night.
It was a quality season-ending win for the Cavs. g iven
that the Knick s used their starters throu ghout the fourth
quarter, hut were outplayed by a lottery -bound team that
had lost 12 of its previous I 5 games.
James scored Cleveland's final two points on a
crowd-pleasing breakaway dunk with 30 seconds Jefl,
then ·exchanged hugs with players from both teams aftt:r
the final buzze r.
.
..
James will move on to hi s first summer vacation as an
NBA veteran, while the Knick s will head into a firs£"
round playoff series against the New Jersey Nets begirt~
ning Saturday.
_:
New York had a chance to move up to sixth place in
the conference. but needed u victory and a Joss by New
Orleans, which defeated Wa shington 94-78.
The result of the Hornets- Wizards game was known
by the time the fourth quarter got underway. but it was
clear much earlier that New Orlea ns was on its way to a
victory.
James had only I Q points though the first three quar·
ters of a lackluster game.
New York pulled to R8-82 on a floater by Penny
Hardaway with 4:41 remaining. but Tony Bailie bad a
dunk for an eight-point lead . and DeSaguna Diop converted a putback with 3:03 left for a 92-82 edge.
Jeff Mcinnis led Cleveland with 19 points. and Carlos
Boozer and Ira Newble added 14 apiece. The Cavs won
their.third in a row.
Stephan Marbur y had 27 points, eight a~sists and six
rebounds for the Kni cks. playing 44 minutes after seeing a combined 34 minut es in New York's previo us two
games.

Please see Cavs, 82

April brings back fond baseball memories
With all of the min and cold weather
·swirling around outside, we've all had
to take an unintentional break from the
spring sports season.
Fortunately. what we can't watch
right outside our house, we can catch
on TV, as professional· baseball is now
in full swing, with plenty of games to
. go.
After the whole steroid fiasco that
went on prior to the season, I really
thought that I wouldn 't pay much attention to baseball this year. However, it
seems like the harder I tried to stay
away, the more it pulled me in. With
intriguing story lines like Bonds pursuit
of the home run record, the Tigers

'

Andre
Tirado
RAMBLINGS
jumping to a 5- 1 start, and the Reds sit·
ting in first place and looking like a
so hd team, .it s hard to stay away.
There also a certain mystique to
baseball that other spons just · don 't
seem to have. Baseball is a more

relaxed game that you really don't have
to be on the edge of your seat t&lt;'l enjoy.
. Whether it's watching the Marlins Josh
Beckett throw a heater right past Jim
Thome. or watching Ken Griffey Jr..
Austin Kearn s, or Adam Dunn crush a
home run, it can all be taken in and .
enjoyed.
I di stinctly remember watching Cubs
games on TV in the afternoon and lis·
ten ing to Harry Caray go through the
seventh inning stretch. I remember
go ing to Cincinnati as a kid and watch·
ing Ron Oester, Rob Dibble, Eric
Davis, Chris Sabo and other Reds players from the 1980's.
It seenis Iike those thoughts of the

p&lt;ist pop up every time April rolls
around . even though I never see it coming. With the current turbulence going
on in the world. it is nice to si t down
and immerse myself for a few hours in
a sport that truly is 'America's game '.
For all of it's faults. it's still the game
that most of us grew up with, and from
little league to major league. it's a game
all of us can enjoy.
Hopeful ly. the weather here will con·
tinue to improve and the local teams
can get hack on the lield. because. it's
nice to se~ the pro"s play on TV. but it's
even better to see the prep players continue to excel in a season that often is
all too short for the fan s.

Gallery hopes to
be first pick in draft
BY CHUCK SCHOFFNER

Associated Press
IOWA CITY, Iowa
Spring planting on ttie
Gallery farm will have to
waft this year. New York
City and the NFL draft are
calling.
Roben Gallery, the massive offensive lineman from
Iowa, is expected to be one
of the frrst players taken in
the draft April 24 - maybe
the vel1' frrst. And when h!s
na~e IS c~lled, Gallery s
farruly - hiS parents, thr~e
brothers and a Sl.ster - Will
be there at Mad1son Square
Garden with him.
"Their exj&gt;enses will be on
me this time," said Gallery,
}

soon to be making more than
enough to oover their bill.
As for getting that crop in
the ground, what's the ru sh?
The seed and tractor will sti ll
be there when Mike and
M
Gall
h ·
ary
ery return 10 t err
farm near the tiny northeastern
Iowa
town
of
M
·
1 · 129
asonvrlle, popu atwn
.
"Dad was kind of upset
!hat the draft landed in this
part of the year," Gallery
said Tuesday. "It is right
when he 's getting ready for
p1anting and stuff. ·But r
think he can miss a couple of
days. I think he 's gladly
-shutting it down for a day or
t 0 "
w ·

PluM IH G•llery, Bl

Former Iowa footba ll player Robert Gallery answers questions about his chances in the
upcoming NFL draft during a news conference Tuesday in Iowa City. Iowa. (AP)
·,

-·- -- - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- ---------

.,

�'
\

1b111'8day, AprillS, 2004
Page B2 •

The Daily Senthlel

. www.myd ailysentinel.com

_:Parents of girl killed by hockey
\puck receive $1.2 million
BY ANDREW WELCH-HIGGINS

Print in~ Co. of Cn\umbus. "hich &lt;&gt;lin' WB\:S . The c·om1''"1~
ha, a I() percent ,wke in the Blue Jac~ch.
"If" c had lost this case. it 11 uuld he even more of an ·
npl'n '-rt_' ,I'.Oil on puhlic rccnrd . . in Ohi o than it i-.. now.··
Curtin s&lt;~id.
Cuntn said the ,·om pall\ ·s sta~c in the Blu,• JaL·kets didn' t atk~..·t it--. dc~o: i . . ion w pur . . ue lhl' \Lttkmcnr.
Britt~111ic·, death"''' the fir,l ,ucll'latalitv in :--IHL hi'ton. After the acciJent. the NHL required e1erv team to

'"'D

Assoc•ated Press
COLUMBUS - A judge wanted 10 to prc,cnc the privacy of a family rcc~iving a financial ,elllement from
profe"ional huckc1 ~mup' after their daughter 11 '" '" JlcJ.
by a puck. The deci,ion didn't 'it v.dl v. ith tlw ,tat,. ·,
highest court.
The Ohio Supreme Court on WedtiesJay
onlereu the 'ettlemcnt &gt;vith the family of
Brittanie Cecil be made public. ruling
.Preble Cmilltv Probate Jt•due Wilfrid Due'
'madt: a-mi·..takc in ~rcaling·'""aJi L'\l'Cptit:H1 ttJ
,the 'tate·, public reconh Ia\\ ' ·
. . Ceeil·-.. par~nh and -..un i\·in!2 ..,jblin!!~
split S I.:&gt; mill JOn lrlllll the ~ettkmc~n
reached with the National Hockc1· Lea~ue
and other. group~. a~~..·orJing to thc ~etlkment.
Cecil
The cmard apprll\cJ in Febntar) 200:1
by Preble Coull!) Probate Judge Wilfriu Dues re,oheJ
claim' brou~ht on behalf of the fannlv of Cecil. a I_, _, earold girl hit hy the puck in March 20&lt;i2 during a Coiulnht"
Blue Jackeh ~ame.
Due~ maJ~ the selllement public after the Ohio
Supreme Court ruled ti- l WeJne"la\ in L11 nr of WB'\s·:
TV of Co lumbu,. \1 hich had 'ued ru; detail' u(the ""a rd .
The 'ettlement wa' 11 ith the NHL. the Blue Jadet.' and
Natio nwide Arena. It prol'ided $705.000 to Jody Sergent.
.t he girl's mother. and $-l70.000 to D&lt;tl·id Cecil. the ~irl\
fu ther
•
Britlllnlc's brother and sister were aJ,u incluJed in the
~ettlement. said Timothy Chappars. a 'uburban Dayton
lawyer who represented the familY.
·
Atto rneys for the familv receiveJ &lt;tn adJition~\1
$538.000."the 'ett lement said .• lt aho included S 1.1.000 for
fu neral expenses.
· Sergent. who liws i'n Preb le Count\. ueclinecl comment
Wed nesday. A message v.as left wi th.D&lt;tl'id Cecil.
· The ruli ng was an unfortunate case of a television sta'ri on's comt~1erciu l in terests prevai ling over the .fami ly·,
wish fo r privacy. C'happars sa id.
The public's rights to ope i1 gon rn ment v.ere at sta~e.
.cou ntered Mike Curtin. pres ident, of Tile Di .spcl!ch

h~mg net1Jng tu prc\ent in_iuri~.., frum flying pucb~ .
Rritlanic. '' ho \\a~ an ei~hth-!.!radL"r at a ~chool in \Vest

AlC\&lt;Illuria ncar Davton. ~~as' attenJin~ the Blue Jacket&gt;
~a me \1 hde ,·isiting.hcr father in the Columbus area. He
had ~i1c n her the ti cket t;, cckbrate her 1-lth birthuay that
1\Cek .
.
After Brnt antL'.s Lkath. attorney' for the family brought
da11m ag~11nq the Blue Jacket'. the NHL. Nationwide
Arcn ... Children's . Hn,pit~.J and 1arious doctor,. but
'topped short of filin~. a la w,uit. acc.ordin~ to the .'ett le-

-

men! .

The ~irJ·, p&lt;~renh 'ued Children·, Hospital in Mar,·h
200~ claimin~ doctor' failed to \ec the extent of
Brittanic·, iniuriL'' in time to 'ave her. A tria l i&gt; scheduled
fur Fehruar~ ·2005. The hthpita l dedined to comment.
An1 rcwrd "'" d by a jucl,i!e to make a decision i, &gt;UbJect Ill the qat,· puhl1c recurd' Jaw. the court 'aioJ in
\\'cd 1icsda\ \ rutin~.
·
--w,· l1&lt;11:e not aulhori;cd court' or other record' custodian' to ·ueate new exceptions· to the law. the court said .
The court al~o said that state and federa l constitut ional
prolections prohibi ting the re lease of some personal informauon . 'uch as Sot:ial Security numbers. did not extend
to the \ettlemcnt.
·
·
Judge Alice Robie Resnick dissented without comment.
"We're disappointed in the court's decisio n," said Mark
Weawr. a Columbus lawyer who re prese nted the j udge
before the OhiO Supreme Court. "We think the law allows
a judge to seal a record in a case whe re the fami ly's privacy can be violated."
· ·
The Blue Jacke ts said in a state ment th e team was disappointeu by the rul ing. "We rema in respectfu l of the ir
wishes for privacy v. ith regards to her tragic pass ing," the
statemcm said. referring to Brittan ie and her family.
A spokesman for the NHL said he had n' t seen the ru lino
e
and couldn ' t co inment.

Thursday, Apri115, 200 4

Local ~ports

.

Gallery
from Page 81
Ami wh' not'.' Hi' 'on \\ LHl
the 2003 Outland Trophy "'

the nation's top lineman. and
he's one of the most high\~
regarded prospect&gt; in thi'
)Car's draft. April 24 and 25.
If the San Diego Charger'
don't take Galkrv with the
first pic-k. the. Oakland
Raiders ju,t· might at No. 2.
Only two offensive linemen
have been the No. I pick. The
St. Loui&gt; Ram' took Orlando
Pace in 19'!7. and the
Minne&gt;ota Vikings selected
Ron Yary in 1968.
"I know a lot of the top
teams reall y like me."· Galkn
said. ·There's trade' and di1'feren t thing' that could h&lt;~p­
pen. Who know, ·• It dne'n ·1
happen very often . But that· s
my goaL I want to be the first
p1ck .
"But wherever I enu up. it's
going to be good for nic. It''
reall y up to t ho~e tcatm - if
thev decide thcv.want me and
l' ni their guy. We'll ,ee what
happe ns."
· There's a Jot to like about
Gallery. startin g wit h hi'
buil d: 6-foot-7 and 320
pounds. He ha&gt; run the -lOyard dash in under 5 second, _
Growing up on a farm. he
learned the value of discipline
and hard work. ·He spent a
semester at Iowa student
teaching in an elementary
schooL
His character is as solid as
· his bodv.
J
..
"I rea ll y think that·,
Robert's best attri bute," Iowa
coach Ki rk Ferentz said. "Hi'

prett~

ph: sica\ ahilitie' are
"-if.!nifiL·ant.

nl..'~dlc...,..,

'.
''..

''·rw1. th

from Page 81
the $500.000 sa larv

:~nd the $ 1 mi llion Nike

:~eal is ge tt ing da il y lessons
:in the va lues of disc·ip line.
;ieamwork an d camaraderie
•at an impressionable age.
:: " It help s us bo nd toget her
;~ lot more." Ad u said . "We
;ge t to spend a lot of time
;off the field with our team·: mates. and it he lps the
•team . You 2et to know eac h
:,,llher. anti "it tra nslates on
:the fie ld ...
; · Nowak's sty le can frus:'rate anyone · unfam iliar
•wi th soccer. No t a day goe'
:9y in whic\1 he i, n·t as ked
:!'-'hen Adu is go ing to start ,

'

•
••

••

.

EASTERN SPECIAL
AWARDS - Team
members earning
special team awards
were. front. Enn
Weber (Don Jackson
Sportsmanship
Award );
Alyssa
Hotter (Best Free
Throw Percentage
72.7 percent); Katie
Robertson (Coach :s
Award ):
Mo rgan
Weber
(Most
Rebounds -1811: In
back are Kn sta
White
(Coach·s
Award ); Jen Hayman
(Most ASSISts - 59);
and Jess Hupp(Best
Defensive Player).

Bin I thin~ the J..inJ of flt'&lt;'Un

he is. the ~ 1nJ of pride he has.
the 11 or~ .:tim·. those intangibles lhdt he pmsc&gt;,,es. the
\\ ay he \\a... rai . . eJ. to me

those are his hcst attribute, ."
AI\\ a1' a popular pia: er at
i&lt;ma . Galk11·, fame ha&gt;
'i"·caJ. Repo.rte&lt;' from all
"' cr call for inten iews. He
"alh thrc&gt;ugh airport' and
-.~c... him . . clf on inagaLine
c,m ers. Pwple 'top him to
'"k if he real!I is "ho the\ ·
think he is.
·
·
Then d!!ain. Galler\ is a
hard ~ u\ ._ tn fur!:!et \».~ith hi~

si?e. th~ ion ~. dark hair he
hasn't cut in .2 112 years and
he ha' pulled bac~ into a
ponytaiL and the two 'iller

Eastern honors girls basketball teams

hoop-.. hangi ng from each ear.

Once. he was 'eateu on a
plane nnl to a man \\'ho was
rcaJin~ a 'tun &lt;~hout Ciallen.
The "~'Ill 11 oLiid look at his
ma gatinl'.

lnu k

o\cr

BY Scon WOLFE

Holter and Katie Robemon. \\'ho earned senior
awards for the team .
.
Earning all Tri -Vallev Conference All TUPPERS PLAINS _The Eastern Lad Academic were _ Alys'sa Holter. Katie
Eagles varsity and reserve basketball ~ Robertson. Jenn1fer Hayman . .and Morgan
recently' held their awards ban uet and cere- Weber. To be constdered for th~1 award. ,tumonial dinner at Eastern High S~ool. Parents . dent-athletes mu st achJC\C a J) grade pu1m
fans, family, and friends ~athered to honor th~ average accumulauw. lener m lier .''ar&gt;ny ·
2003-04 Sectional and Dtstrict Champions. . spon, and.must be a sophomore or greater. .
Eastern posted a 17-7 overall record under
Recogmzed for eam 11~g Southeast D•&gt;tr1ct
second year mentor Rick Edwards and came AssoCiated Pt ess Honorahle Ment1 on .were
on late in the season 10 be one of Ohio's "Sweet Erin Weber, and Alyssa Holter: eammg D11tnct
16'',_ losing to Morale Ridgedale in the 13 _First team was ~olter. and Mor~an :Weber..
Regtonal semi-finals at Pickerington
.
whtle Weber also was the Dtstnct 1.' Player at
Team members eamin s ial ~awards the Year. Robertson was a second team Allwere Erin Weber-Don Jfc~ S rtsmanshi Dtstnct 13 h onoree and Spectal Menuon AllAward; Alyssa Holter-Best rr'ee Thro~ ' TVC normnee:. and Jenmfer Hayman wa'
Percen!-"ge 72.7 percent; Katie Robertson, ~~~~ 3 Spectal Ment1on and Second Team
Coach s Award; Morgan Weber Most
H
·
·
·
alter was ;ecogmzed tor eamm~ first team
Rebounds (181); Krista White, Coach'; Award;
Jen Hayman, Most Assists (59); and Jess Hupp, All-Tn-Valle) Confer::nce alan_g. wtth Mo:gan
Best Defensive Player.
.
Weber, who also was AII-On1o Honorable
Edwards praised each team member for Menuon: and Oh1o Val ley Prc~s OVP to~ Ten
putting forth great effort and much sacrifice to Ftrst team. Je s~te Hu J;&gt; p was Dl&gt;tnct 13
put forth an outstandin season He also Honorable mentton. whtle Hupp ~md Weber
raised the leadership ofghis sem·a· AI
~ere Tn-Val ley Conference Honorable me nP
rs, yssa tlon.

at

Galler,' ;1111J then ha.:k at the
maga;inL' .
"He uiu11·1 reall1 "l) anythin~ until the end of the
ride'· Galler' said. "He uiun't rea litc· it was me .
Actual!\. I as~ed him if I
CllLliJ read it."
Elen " ith all th'e attention.
(i,dlen· insi'ts he\ the 'ame
per'&lt; Hi "hu showed up at
lov..-a a' ~~ "kinn' tight end in
1'1'1'!. He .still ut:i,·e~ the 198-l
Buick LcSabre he h~1d in high
"'huol. It reflects who he is.
Galien ,aiLi. thnu2h the last
ttme h~ lla&gt;hed it..he discoYered the 11 ind,hield leaks.
"I don't think any of th is
·experience will change me a
"hole lot. be,ides pos,ibly
the ,i;e uf m1 bank account:·
he said.
·

Eastern honors boys basketball teams
TUPPERS PLAINS _ The
Eastern High School Jr. and
Sr. High basketball banquet
was held recently to honor
members ·of the respective
boys basketball
p
f
f -1squads.
arents, ans, amt y, and
friends gathered to honor the
2003-04 Sectional and District
Champion varsity squad and
cheerleaders.
Tim . Baum gave the weicoming address with the invocation given by Debbie
Chevalier. The meal was buf~
1
f · hed b th
et stye as urms
Y e·
Eastern athletic boosters.
First Coach Jeremy Kehl
honored members of his 7th
grade basketball team. Team
members were Derek Griffin,
Zach Hendrix, Casey Hannum
Codey
1-!annum, Josiah
Hayman, · Michael Riffle,
Ketth Aeiker, Josh Hupp,
Action Facemeyer, Daniel
Miller,
Buckley.
N and
h Ben
· hth
ext t e etg
grade was
honored by Coach Jeremy
. Casto. Team members were
Dalton
Jenkins, Nathan
Carro II • Corey B urgette,
Daniel
Buckley,
Kyle
Rawson,
Kyle
Edwards,
. Jordan Kimes Tony Roush
Josh Collins ' ryler Kearns'
and Zach Ne~ell.
•
Ju ·or H' h chee leader
111
tg
r
s.
were then honored by Becky

The Daily Sentinel

$250 Gord{!n

;: T he res t of New York's
·~tarter' and key re.s erves
:~I so played a norm al num -

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

:eer o f m inu teS a~ l:UaCh

l

·Sports correspondent

~HANNON ~PAUN

•• •

:Lenny Wi Ikens looked to
· ~e t them back into the ir
:Q sual rotat io ns in adva nce
: ~f the Knicks' fi rst postsea:~on appeara nce in th ree
•yea rs.
;; It will be the th ird a\ 1liime
playoff
meeting '
:ee tween the Knicks and
:Nets. whose cros,-river
rfiva lry has never been all
fthat intense. New York
i~efea t ed New Jersey 3- 1 in
i~h e fi rst round in 199-l en
(ioute to the NBA Fina ls.
:and 2-0 in \983 when the
ftirst round was be,t -ofi!hree .
t: No tes: James sa·id he
;would like to be co nsulted
•over the summer on persontnel moves ... . With their
t~Sth victory. the Cavs more
tChan doub led their win tota l
~o f 17 from 'las t season ....
:!&lt;.nicks forward · Yin Baker
:bruised his left knee 'and
; ~ ip in the first half and did
~itot return. X-rays were
~ O egative .... Knicks G Allan
~Houston said his injured
ileft knee i.s not feeling
tin uch better. He is unsure if
~ he will be available for the
•series against the Nets .
:&gt;'J"ve been -kind of playing
:injured and doing a lot of
;aamage to my knees for a
•tong . time. It's something
lrhat fs not reany where it\
!going to be, where it should
;be or where I want it to be
;tight now. But I don't want ·
•to miss out on an opportuni:ty to play in the playoffs.
il've been wailing for this
'for a long time.''

Bv ScoTT WoLFE

Congtatulation!!

from Page 81

.

If your child is a
I I
~&lt;star Athlete" ~, on\b ~....
in your eyes, ~ s
include them in -..:
this section!!
~/\-" ''....
'

Clr\C I"l;'\ATI (API- The
Cincinnati Bengal&gt; are being
rev. arded for the team'&gt; turnarounu "ith their first
Monday night game in I 2
years.
The Ben2ai&gt; 2004 schedule. relea,ed Wednesday by
the .'\FL. includes the team 's
firq Monday night game
'1nce the' lost 20-0 on the
road at Pimbur!l:h in 1992.
The team hasn~t played a
home game on Monday night
since " 2 1-14 'ictorv over
Clneland un Sept. 25: \989 .
ABC' · Munday Night
Football "ill return · to
Cincinnati un Oct. 2S. when
the Ben2als ho&gt;t Demer at
P;wl Bn;"' n Stadium.
The Ben ~a h· schedule also
include' :, ·Sundav• niue ht
home opener. It will be the
first Sunday night game they

Sopl 12·- - · 1 pn&gt;.
Sopt. 19 -·8:30p.m.
S.CX. 26 PeS' 1101e, 1 p.m.
O&lt;t. 3 •~. 1 p.m.
Oct tO ()pon 0..
Oct 17 • etew.land, 1 p.m.

Oct25 o.n-. 9 p.m.

OcL 31 aiTen• en e e. , p.m.
Nov.7 -. 1 p,m.
,
Nov. 1~ ot Weohinglon, • oOS p.m.

have. hosted since 1996. They
are scheduled to play the
home opener against the
Miami Dolphins on Sept. 19.
That game wi ll be aired
nationall y on ESPN.
The 2004 schedule is the
first in the club's historv with
two prime-time home games .
. "This is the national spotlight, and we're excited
about the opportunity," said
Bengals head coach Marvin
Lewis. "If you're in the NFL
you want to be playing on

Nov. 21l'ltlollu!Vh. 1 p.m.

- - 28 ~ . 1 p.m.
- -5 .. BaJI....... 1 p.m.
0.:. 1211!- ~ 1 p.m.
0.:. ,9 BuiiU&gt;, 1 p.m
O.C. 2 5 - - Gl0111s. 1 p.m.
- · 2 at Phi!D[phia. 1 p.m

Monday and Sunday night. ..
The Bengals finished 8-8
last season under Lewis.
They will open the season on
tht: road for the first time
since 1999. visiting the Nev.
York Jets on Sunday. SepL
12.

Sports correspondent

"Media and fan&gt; thi nk
" Honest work," Nowak
yet Nowak keep' hi' roker
Subscribe todar.
face and sticks by an he's guing to co me on and said. " I be lieve not in pub992-2155 .
unwritten ru le that ""' the perform miracles." Nowak Jici ty, ta lk ing. I believe in
starting
lineup · isn't said. "Professional sport' work. hard wo rk. And that's
annou nced unti l just hefore don't work thi' way. f'reddy what this team i' starti ng to · 7)1'\-..;JrJIS;;s;;OOI'._.""'"~;;;;;j::::l\'~T/'~~
under.stands this. He's a reali ze. It 's go ing to be II
kickoff.
Nowak resisted the L'al\s l'ery )Ou ng ma n. and he has · determ ined in the prac ti ces
to stilfl Adu in the fir't two nn' e' and his ability. Of who's goi ng to start . This is
games and has in,tcad fol- ct&gt;ursc he", go ing to ge t about fai r competition . Th is
lowed a standa rd plan for a more min utes and more is not abo ut who I like and
who I do n' t like_ 'pro mi si ng ruuki e. Adu gu t game' every s.in gle week.''
Nowak re tired as a playe r
F6r A(l u, that means a
hi s feel we t by playing a
nervous 29 min utes a' a onl) two years ago. a nd coveted startin g spot won ' t
second-ha lf 'ub,titute in there arc day' w"hen he be his until it's absolutely
the open in g ,·ictory a,gain~ t Joob as if he shou ld st ill be earned.
" I don' t nece'5;u·ii y have
Sa n Jme. the n showed more in the lineup. After o ne
in tu ag ree w_i th him.'' Adu
confidence when he pl~iyed spirited workm1 t the em ire seco nd hal f in Ja, t 11·hich he scored ofT an sa id. '· Bu t yo u have to
week's t ic
with
Lo' . a"i't from Adto - Nowak respec t him because he's
jok ing ly proclai med . "I was yo ur coach, and lle's tryi ng
Ange les.
to Loo k out for the wel lAdu's · fir'! · start " MVP."
inev itab le. although only
Being on the fie ld he lps bei ng of the team. All I can
Nowa k knows if it will hap- him learn more about his do is to work ha rder. pracpe n
Sa turday
agains t players. The trait
he tice and try to earn a startMe troS tars.
admire" most? "Honesty."·
ing ~pot._"

Cavs

Bengals to play 9n Monday night

to ..,av.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCALFOLKS.

Adu

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www.mydailysentinel.com

~gg Winn(!t

The Golde n Egg
was at the VFW
Memorial Park in ..-Racine!
.-

Grate, Cheerleading advisor. and .District
Champion
Jr. High Cheerleaders were Eastern Eagles were honored
Lindsey Grate, Sarah Wachter. by veteran me ntor Howie
Tina Drake, mascot Lacey Caldwell. Cald well praised
Grate, and Samantha Welch. the team for their efforts this·
NelCt the reserve cheerlead- season and challenged them to
ers were honored by advisor improve in the off sea,on.
Betsy Kearns. Honored were
Varsity team members were
Unsee
Davis,
Amanda Derek Bau m. Nath an Lee
Witndon, C~ Steger, Ashley Grubb. Alex Simpson. Adam
Welch, Jesstca Howard, Kayla · Dillard. Mark Gtless. Chris
Nave, and Kim Castor.
Carroll . Chris Myers. Derek
The varsity cheerleaders Roush . Robert . Cro's and
were then honored by advisor Cody Di ll. Statisticians were
Sheryl Roush. Cheerleaders Darcv Winebrenner. Jill ian
were Andrea Grueser, Abbie Brannon. Erin Webe r: and
Chevalier, Sara Wiggin s, · managers Devon Bawn and
Kayla Siders. Brittni Hensley. Kell y Wi nebrenner. The team
Alyssa
Baker,
Dyana was coached by Howie
Hawthorne. Managers were Cald well. Tim Si mpson. Chris
Mandy Roush and Chelsi Lyons, and Matt Bi ssell .
Kearns.
· Senior Awards we nt to
· cheerleading Nathan Grubb and Alex
Special
awards went to Kayla Siders. Simpson. Special . Awards
Most
Improved; Brittni went to Nathan Lee Grubb;
Hensley, Most Spirited: Best Defensive Player and
Dyana Hawthorne, Most First team AII-TVC: Derek
Creative; Andre a Grue ser. Baum, Coachfs Award and
Most
Outstanding TVC All -Academic : Robe rt
Cheerleader; Sara Wi ggins. Cross. Best Fr.ee Throw
A11 TV C All-Academic: and Percentage and seconJ team
Abbie Chevalier, Don Jac k'son AII-TVC: Cody Dill. Ist Team
Award.
AII -TVC and
TVC ·AllNext, the reserve basketball Academi c; Adam Dillard.
team was honored by · Matt Bryce Buckley Award. TVC
BisselL Team members were All-Academic: Chris Mvcrs.
Mark Guess, Justin Browning. Bryce Buckle'· Award. C'llris ·
Ed. Beatty, Akx McG rat h. Myers: Don Jackson
'
Award.
Bnan Cas~or, ~tchael Owen, Alex Stmpson and Chris
Chns Davts, Ntck Kuhn. Ryan Carrol l. Stmpson was also
Davts, Derek Ro ush, and T VC AII :Academt c. and
Taylor Boyd.
Chns Canol! was TVC AllFinally, 2003-04 Sectional Academic.

arowns 2004 schedule opens at
home against Baltimore Ravens
CLEVELAND &lt;A P! - The
Cleveland Browns will open
the 2004 season at home Sept.
12 against division rival
Baltimore - and their schedule won't get any easier after
that.
The Browns will spend the
next t.hree_ wee ks play ing
'\JFC East opponents. They
travel to Dallas on Sept'. 19
for coach Bmch Davis' first
appearance against hi s former
team. then travel to New York
on Sept. 26 to face the Giants
and return home Oct. 3 to
play Washington.
Cleveland's
schedu le
incl udes two nationally -tele\'ised Sunday night games on
ES PN - at Baltimore on
Nov. 7 and at Miami on Dec.
26.

The Browns lost 26-20 to St.
Louis at home.
Two highlights of the
Browns' home schedule are
Donovan McNabb) Terrell
Owens and the Phi 'adelphia
Eagles at Cleveland B~wns
Stadiurn on Oct. 24 and . e
Super Bowl champion Ne
England Patriots on Dec. 5.
The Browns travel to
Pittsburgh Oct. 10 and the
Steelers come to Cleveland
on Nov. 14. AFC North ri,·al
Cinc innati plays in Cleveland
Oct. 17 with the Browns _traveling south on Nov. 18 .
The Browns also host the
New York Jets on Nov. 21 and
San Diego on Dec. 19. They
travel to Buffalo on Dec. 12
and close the season at
Houston on Jan. 2.

Sept. 12

·f!e:'flft't011 8, 1 p.m.
Sepl 19 - II o.tl!ll. 4:l 5 p.m
Sept 26- lit N.'f. - . 1 p.m.
Oct 3 _ • .,.. .. 1 p.m.
OCt. ·10 -11 Pl!l!lburltl. t p.m.
Oct. 17 - Cinomoll, 1 p.m.
OCt. 24 - l'l1itodoll&gt;hla 1 p.m.
0Ct31- ~

Nov. 1 - • . 1r 1oe. 8:30 p.m,

Nov. 14- Pi!l!lburltl, 1 p.nt
NaY. 21-N.'f.Joll, 1 p.m. .
- -28 - a1 Cindnnall, 1 p.m.
Oec. s - New England, 1 p.m.
Oec. 12- a! Bullolo, 1 p.m.
D&lt;&gt;c. 19 - San Diogo. 1 p.tll .
Oec . 26- a1 Miami, 8;30 p.m.
Jan. 2- ~~- 1 p.m.

The Browns were left off
the Monday Night Football
schedule. They made their
first appearance on Monday
night last season since their
return to the league in l999.

I

\0. 0f

special days

*Football
· * Basketball
*Baseball
*Softball
*Track
*Swimming

*Golf
* Gymnastics
Child's Name
*Tumbling
Child of: Parent' s Name
Team Name
*Soccer
Message
*Karate
&amp; More!!
This special section will run on
~
·
Thursday, April 29th in The Daily Sentinel.
Hurry, Deadline for entries is April 23, 2004!

~

~

Fill out the forn below and drop off or mail
(along with your payment an d photo) to:
The Daily Sentinel "All-Stars", 111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769

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••

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l

'
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2004 Chevy Malibu .........................S12,450

•

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1998 Olds C'utloss GLS..................... $6,950
200:J ('hevy Express Cargo Van .•$15,500

992-2155

IVALUE PRICED USED CARS

- Egg is not at a place of business
- Egg is not at a private residence
--,. Egg is not inside a man-made object
- Yo u w ill not need digging tools
- You w ill not need to climb or the use of a ladder

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200 I Buick Regal.. . ........................ S10,900

S'unday limes-Sentinel

Child's Name _

Parent's Name c----c-=-c----=----- - - - - - - - - Town ~~=c------~- c;_:-:-_;:-:--::-------'~----•
' Team Name - - ; - - - ' - - - - - - - - - : : - - - - - - l
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2oos Buick centu,.................,....... S10,900

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200:J Pontiac Grond Am .............. $10,900

Fraternf:tl Order Of Eagles
Aerie 2171
Nomination of Officers

'

HOLZER CLINIC

DOWNI NG

CHILDS MULLEN
MUSSER
INSURANCE
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RADIO SHACK
&amp; Picture Gallery

•

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2000 Chelly Astlvnn ............................. $6,999
1919 s-10 llhiDr 4x4 2Door._............. S7,950
JJ•a $-70 4x4 Pickup .._ , ,,,..................S9,999
2001 Dodge Rcrm 1500 2wd ................. S9,999
2001 Chelly Tahoe 4X4 .............. :.........S20,900
2003 5llverGdo Reg cab 4x4 'f, ton .... J ..I:U,'!IUU

,,,. Olds 8rorodrl ................................. ,.,.~,.,.,

NONE HIGHER THAN $5,995J

2002 FOI'd Escort.............................. :..$5,975
1994 Ford Tempo ...............................$ 1,l$0

1Jtl s-10 Ext Ceb.-. .............................. $5,200

2001 Chevy Cavalier 4dr.................$5,750

2000 ford
Reg cab 4X4 ........ $S,975
It !IT Ford 1ttmger 4X4 ............:.......;.... $4,495
JiJB Dodge 1$00 Reg cab ............... $3,950

1999 Plymouth Bree.re .................... $5,950
1999 Olds Alerv ..................................$4,200

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19111 Jeep C'herakH.............................$5,999

2000 Ford Focus ................................ S5,950

1Jt~ur tow 'Price leader "" lhe Riuer...

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Major-League odds and ends
......

Thlo Date In - I I

11011- Leon Ames or the New 'lb1c. Gl&amp;l'lls Di!Checla
no·tutter tor • 1·3 irM'ungs on operung day. b\11081 J...O to
&amp;OOI&lt;Iyn in 13 nnlng$.
1111 - RUbe Marquard of the New Yor\1: Giants no-h~
tne Brookl'yn Dodgtn, .,..;nnng 2&lt;1.
1147 - J&amp;clue RobNon pllyeCI hiS tirsf majOr league
game, for f1e Qodoers. He wenl (}lor-3. but $OCf$d 1he
d8cldng run 111 a S.J victory over the Boston S.......n
Broclt&lt;tyn. He wa&amp; 1h&amp; ftrSI tMck to appear ll'llhe ma,ors
Sli'lOt , 884 .

1167 - Pre&amp;KJenl E158nhowef opened !he 1956 eeason
by 10WlQ 01A the Ill'S! ball at Gnffilti Sl8diUm in Wutrmg~ort

1168 - M8jOT teague baseoaJI came to Calltomla when
tranBPianled Giant$ played U'le Dodgers. RUben
Gomez btanked Lot Anoetes &amp;1J at Seall Slaef\ITI in
SM FfMCilco
1flt8 - Houston and It\&amp; New YOOc: Meta l)la',.cl 24
Inning! In a nlgtlt game In lhe Aslrodome before the
Aatfos won 1..o. The game lasted mere than $llll10unl.
lf'l&amp;

,..,. - New YOO, opened 1he re1urblshed YlwliUI&amp; StacHum wl11'1 an 11-4 i'OIA of 1t1e Pw'innellola Twt11.
1887- Juan Niews lhrew !he tirS1 no-nmer 11'1 BfeWefl
hiiiOiy as MMaukee Cell Balbmcre 7..0.
1913 - ~ Andef'8on earned h~a 2.1XXl!h viclory aa
a manager. 9u0ng !he Detroit TIQM 1)81\ 1he Oal&lt;land
Atllaticl 3-2.
11193 - Ar&lt;re Dawscn beCame 1he 25th player to hll
400 hOme r111s as the Bolton Rad Sole Deal tie CkW&amp;IInd lndiane 4-3

1111 -The firs1 A.L·NL doublehaeder • held II New

'lbfk'1 Shea Stl&lt;lum, 'Nitti the New York ¥11ntoeee beat·
ong lht And1elm Ar1gels &amp;-3 al1d !he ll1aw Yc:rll Mats ec!O-

ng lht ChiCagO Cutlll2· 1 The Yr~kees draw a CI'O'fiOd of
40,743: only 16,0121h!M 104' 111e Met! game at noght
2000 - Cal RlpMJl became 1he 24!h player to reach
3.000 hils when he tined a lingle 10 center off lWr\1

relieY81" Hector Canuco. Ha read~«~ thl mllaltone """"
hislhird hllrl a e-. ....:tory ,.,. lhll Minnaeota lW'na and

T~

"""'Yio""
3.000 hila and 400 hcrM iU'Il.
Todly's binhdlyl: Jeromy Bumlz. 35: Millon Bradley,

a1

"'Baoeball Today

Roger Cleman! won ho!l 31211'1 game Tuesday 'J~ht.
p&amp;aalnQ. fOrmer teamms1e Tom Seaver lor 161h place
on the career list Clemens allowed )U511Wo hits 1'1 6 2·
3 imingalo lead Houaton 0\ler St. LOU I!I 5-3.

"""""""' _..,-. "'*'· Scod

d

Th~,Aptl1!5

-

Altanta at New Yoril: Matti AI Leiter pitches tor the Meta
111 a ma1chup of NL East rival!.

.....

-Barry Bonds, Gianll, hit h~
. 66111 horN! run to pa..
W~18 Mays lOr third on the career list Iii San Francil·

CCI'I 6·2 Victory over Mi~i.ukH.
..-...MIQuel Cabrer.t, Marlin&amp;, homered tMca and added
an A8t ll'lgle to ~d Flor!da to a S...O Win a.&lt;&amp;r Montre-

al.
......f'aul Konerko, "WMe Sox, hit a lhrH-i'lll homer in
ChiCago'! 12-5 'o'lcl~ OY8I' Kanau City.
--Kevin Cash, Blue Javs. went 4-lor..f with three double$ and two ABia as "toronto beat Detroit 7·5.
AtoM In Third

Bany Bonde hit his 661at homer Tuesday night, pa,u·
~ godfather W~i&amp; Mrfl 10 takl 80ie PQIIH&amp;IIIon of
third ptacs on basebalt'l car•ar !lat. Bondi hi! a 1·2
pltcn ctt MiM«uKee's Ben Ford Into McCcvey Cove In
lha .....enlh inntng of San Francisco's 4-2 VCIOf\1 over
the Brewer~. Babe Ruth 1714) anc:1 Hank Aaron (755)
ere ahead Of Bonda.
VICtory
Barry Zrto tmpi'O'o'td 10 12·1 In 19 career lllrtl agamll
Taxa! when Oa~laf'ICI held on lOr a 10·9 win Tuesday
ni(tlt. The 1011 was m a 2·1 game IUt wea+l... On

North Otvlalon

W L
Rochester
Buffalo
Ottawa

Pawtucl&lt;et
Wtlkes·Barre
Syracuse

7 0
3 3
3 4
3 4
2 4
2 5

Pel. GO
1.000 .500 3'1
.429 4

·429 4
.333 4 '7
.286 5

South Oivlllon

W L
Charlotte+
Durham
Richmond
Norfolk

5
3
3

2
2
2

2

3

Wttt OlviiiOn

_.,.,

Pel.
.714
.600
.800
.400

3

4

2

4

Pel. GB
.750
.4'29 1',
.333 2

1

4

.200

W L

G8

1
1
2

Indianapolis
Toledo
LouisviUe
Columbus

3

1

Henrv
CLEVELA:"\D tAP)
Blanco and Carlo\ Siha ~Jre enjoying
their ne" role,_
Blanco emerged as a big hitter
Wednesday night, dri,·ing in three
runs with a career-hi~h four hib and
Silva earned hi' fir&gt;t \,in "' a 'tarter
for the Minnesota Twin,_ defeating the
CJe,·eJand Indian, 10-6_
""It feels pretty good:· Blanco. a
career .219 hitter. &gt;aid aher going -tfor--1. ··Hopefully. I can do it again
tomorrow.""
Blanco. pre;sed into regular dUly
last week when catchers Joe ~Iauer
and Matt LeCrov went on the disabled
list. scored three runs. · hit a two-run
homer off Jeff o· Amico (I: I I in the
third innin2 and had an RBI double in
a three-run~ ei2hth. He rai,ed his 3\'erage 142 points to .."\64.
Only J-t.237 were on hand - the
smallest cro"d in the hi,torY of
Jacobs Field. which opened in 199-+. It
was the fewe't fan' at an Indi ans
home ~ame since 11.751 were at old
Clevel~nd Stadium on Sept. 20. 1993 .
Siha t l-0). acquired in the trade
that sent Jeft-hander Eric Milton to
Philadelphia in December. ,rarted for
lhe third time in 132 career appearances. The right-hander ga\c up three
runs and &gt;even hits O\er fi,e -plu'
· inning' in his second start for the
Twins .
" I like starting now. it is an ·opportu nity;· said Silva. who improved to 9-1
in his career. '" I felt strong every
inning. but I lost command and started
falling behind hitters.'"
He left with a 5-2 lead aher putting
the first two batters on base in the
sixth.
Aaron Fultz got out of that jam by
allowing· just one run and pitched a
perfect seventh. J.C. Romero pitched a
scoreless eighth.
.
'·Aaron was the key. getting out of
that.'' Silva said. ··I know Henry can
swing the bat, too. He hit a homer off
me once. Of course. that tim e he was
lucky. "
Minnesota closer Joe Nathan came
in for the ninth with the score 10-3 and
gave up a homer to Victor Martinez.
and RBI singles to Matt Lawton and
Omar Vizquel. He was removed for
Juan Rincon with runners on first and
second and two outs.
"Joe hadn ' t pitched in a 'while and
we wunted to g1ve him some work,"'
Twins manager Ron Gardenhire said.
"He got plenty."

Rincon ,truck out Casev Blake for
hi' f)rst career sa\·e and 'the Twins"
fiN thi, season.
Lawton and Ben Broussard each
drove in two runs for Cleveland.
Broussard put the Indians. ahead 1-0 in
the second with an RBI single.
M1chael Ryan opened the third with
a &gt;in~Je and scored on Blanco's third
homer. Cristian Guzman followed
with a triple to right-center and scored
on a &gt;acrifice fly by Shannon Stewart.
Two Cle,·eland errors Jed to two
Twins runs in the fifth. when
\1inne,ota also - ran it&gt;elf out of the

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
\ \ '\,01 \ t I \It

1w
.

\ I '-~

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ 1
~

•

C·1 Beer Carry Out permit
for sale . Chester Townsh1p.
Meogs County.. send letters
of 1ntere~1 to. The Dally
Sent1nel, PO Box 729·20.
PomeroY, Ohoo 45769

Gl\'fA\\W

inning.
Blanco sine.led and took off for second "hen first baseman Broussard did
not hold him on the bag. He made it
sal"el\ when D'Amico's throw was
mishimdled by ~hortstop Vizquel for
an error.
Guzman doubled home Blanco. then
tagged up when Shannon Stewart hit a
tly ball to left tield. Lawton's throw to
third ba'e hit Guzman. who scored
easily.
Nick Punta followed with a one-out
sin~Je. but was doubled off when ·
Dou~ Mientkiewicz !lew out to
·Lawton in left. ending the rally.
·-we\e been catchi ng the ball pretty
good . . but made ton many mistakes
tonight,'" Indians manage r Eric Wedge
said. ··11 was a sloppy night.··
Lawton 's two-out RBJ sine.Je made it
5-2 in the fifth.
'
A fielder"s choice grounder by
Broussard got Cleveland to 5-3 in the
sixth. but ' doubles by Blanco and
Stewart put the Twins ahead 6-3 in the
seventh.
Jacque Jones and Lew Ford added
RBI singles in the Twins' eighth. and
Corey Koskie hit his second homer in
the ninth to make it 10-3.
o·Amico allowed five earned runs
and nine hits over 6 2-3 innings, striking out three without a walk.
r.My
command was good."
o· Amico said. " I might have thrown
too many strikes for them to hit."
Notes: Guzman ·s triple was his 58th,
passing Hall of Farner Kirby Puckett
for second in Twins history. Hall of
Farner Rod Carew hit 90 triples for
Minnesota .... Indians 3B Blake went
2-fl'lr-4 and is batting .423 ( 11-for-26)
during a seven-game hi tting streak . ...
Indians DH Travi s Hafner went 1-for3 and is batting .57 1 (8-for-14) with
two homers and six RBls over his last
four games.
·

Banney Rooste1 for gove·
away. Call (740)441,0189.
Free Sturdy Movmg Boxes

1304)674-0121

'Found on Neighborhood Ad
Black Lab pup, 3·4 months
old. collar but no tags.

(740)446-0754
Red/brown Doberman m1x.
Female-spayed. Lost or
stolen from Rio Ae!:iervo1r.
Rewaro for intormat1on leading to recovery of dog.

(740)245-5060.

1
70
-.

YARDS,\LE

t
Fnday. 16th. Saturday 17th,
April. Children's clothes
toys, etc Computer printer &amp;
scanner. Kitchen chairs,
range hood, double slainless steel s1nk, motorcycle
helmet , leather JBCke t &amp;
Honda dual exhaust pipes
and much, much more.

(9: 00·5:00) 1294 . Kemper
Hollow Road.
Yard Sale Fnday April 16th
9·4 1140 1/2 Second Ave.

PJ74

YARD SALE·

PoMEROY/MJDill.E
7th Annual 6·Mile Yellow
Flag Yard Sa!a, Fri-Sat, April
30th &amp; May 1st, Only $5 to
sign-up! We advertise for
you 1 Call 740·992-4055 or

740-992·3148.

clothing

Lo ng abe r g er / baskets ,
Pottery&amp;etcessories, other
Misc. 3 112 miles out
. Sandhill 5 Ridgewood Dr.
April 16-1 7 9-2

LOOking AMid
Rain postpOned games In Fenway Pa~ and Yankee
Sl&amp;dtum on Tue9dll't. shakln~J up lhe 8Uirtmg ro1!11ons
lor this weelcend's matd'lup tletWe9n lhe New York Yan·
keea and Boa!on. The Yankees w!R start newcomer
Jlvler VlzQUez &amp;g&amp;lnat rrn WaKefield on Friday nighl
in the opener ollhe four-game series, lhe first nmo tne
clubs meet since last fairs ALCS. lt w!ll be f1e firsl reg
ular-Ha1011 nigh! game on national network tell!'llsloo
since 1998.

Moving Sale Chestnut Ridge
across
Rd . from Church
14th until ? nearly all must

go
Yard Sale 1 1/2 m11e out
Jericho Ad . Antique &amp;
Collectibles Fn-Sat 16th ,
17th Still?

Speaking

"(Mays) Wll always be my men1or. He woll always be lhe
one !look up 10. He wi~ always be the best baseball
player of all time. That ian11Mt going to change: S1n FranciSCC'! B.vry Bonds, after paiSing godfather
Wille Mays with hiS 661st homet. Bondalook over lh11d
place on· !he carHr li&amp;t 1n the Glints' 4·2 wlfl over Mol·
waukee.

t
~I

Display Ads

Daily In-Column: 1 : 00 p.m ~
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next. Day's Paper
Sunday In-Columri: 1 : 00 p . m.
friday For Sundays Paper

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays Paper

APAR'OI~Xt~

HELP WANfED

&gt;DR R!;'T

lwrlghl@ic.net

10

All real estate adver1ising
in this newspaper is
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes it illegal to
advertise " anv
preference, limitation or
discrimination ba!lled on
race, color, religion, sex
familial atatut or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such
preference, limitation CN'
dlscrlmlnatlon."

0

This new spaper Will not

knowingly accept
advertltements tor real
estate which os In
violation of the law. Our
readers are hereby
In formed that all
dwellings ad11ertised in
this newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity bases

© 2004 by NEA, Inc.

L

www.comics .com

_.JIIUJD
. .

Res~1ratory

Therapist

FIT Home Respiratory/OME
Dut1es inc. F/U with home
Respi ralory patients.
Assess Chart. recommend,
educate. Work with 02.
bipap/cpap. n1ppv Vent.
neb/mad .
Hrs. 8:30·5pm, M·F
Apply in Person/ send
Resume to

BOWMANS HOMECARE
21 OHIO RfVER PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS OHIO 485631
EOEIAAE .
Drug Free Workplace
Employer

Handyman· yard work , no
1ob 10 big, S8nl0f diSCOunt,
T1m Kern (740)992·2741

Plano Tuning 33 years expe·
rtence in tri·county area.
Charles Scott (740)446·
2932 Gallipolis, OH.

Now Accepting Resumes for
Management Pos1tiOn in a
local
Convenience
Store/Gas Station. Please
send Resumes to TCS ·200
Main St Pt. Pleasant, WV

25550
NURSES

Scenic Hills Nursing Center,
a Tar1dem Health Care
Galtia-Meigs
Com munity Facility, 1s seeking a select
Action Agency is currently few to join our outstandmg
accepting applications for a team . We currently seek:
part·llme home buyer edu·
cator for Gall1a and Me1gs
STNA
Counties. Position requires
Full Time, Shift 2p-10p
public speaking to various
size groups. ability to work We offer competitive wages ,
with persons of all socioshift differential, excellent
economiC levels Minimum benefits, e11cellent work1ng
qua!ifacal!ons; H1gh School
env1ronment and much
Diploma· . 2 yeiJrs college
more! Please apply to:
degree preferred, understanding of the home buying
Attn · 0 1anna ThOmpson , HR
process, computer skills,
SCenic Hilts Nursmg Center
valid driver's license, ability
31 1 Buckr1dge Road
to work with minimal super· ·
81dweU , OH 45614
vision
be
bondable.
Ph . 7401446·7150
Occasional travel, even1ng
Fax 1740/446-2438
and weekend hours will be
Email:
reqwred. •
admin.shn@tandemhealth·
Resumes will be accepted
care com
until 4 OOpm on Monday,
April 26, 2004
SF/DF/EOE

45631.

2004 The Eastern Local
SchOol District is an equal

Roofing, Siding, porches, No
Job to small, Free est•mates,
20+ yrs. e11p . Reasonable,

(304)773-5028.
2095.

304-862·

Wit! Mow &amp; Weed-Eat small
yards in Pt . Pleasant area
Reliable &amp; Reasonable

ment. approx . 1 9 acre
$32,000 apprQx. 114 m11e out
B~r~d Chattin Ad (304)6753144

ceuroom.

&lt; oam, &lt; ca

garage, 1.9 acres SR141.
~iew photos/info onlin
I ww.or\lb.com Cod 3310
or call 740-446-7633.
~uroom ,

2

cam,

Riverview access, prlvat
~oat dock 1n Gallipolis. 1
~ere lot. View photos/in!
~nli ne
www orvb.CO IT
P?de 90303 or call 740

kM&gt;-0531.
11

•

FlO

BUSL~

OPPOIUUNITY
"'

NU ll&lt;;t " '

1230

I'ROI~lONAL
SERVIL'ES

I
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Win I
1-888-582 -3345

(740)386-8228.
I~ I

ar oarage. SA 554.
175,000. View photos/inf
nlme
www.orvb.co
ode 32904 or c:aU 740

67-7619
60Hilda Or. 1.5bath , 28R .
utitityroom, lanced yard , new
porch , 81116 outdoor bldg , 1·
car garage. (740)367·7188 .
8 room Ranch , full basement, 3 bedroom, 2 S. bath ,
2 5 acres. lamliy room , covered deck., 599,900 No land
contracts . {740)446·2196.
House for Sale: Good rental
investment. Duplex . two
rentals or one large home,

30x40 healed polo bwld,ng,

645·2088.

\I I "' I \ II

3

50.

•

Sandhill Road 3Br 1 Ba
1600/sqtt Ranch on .6 acre
level lot. Oak tloors . 1st
house
on
Right
past
Marshall
Univers1 ty

$103.000 "(740)949-1131
afler 5'00 PM

MOBILE H O"K'
IUR SAI.J-:

St•Ao:

HlR R!:~T

Aprox 13.000 sq 11. located
on Eastern Ave. Wou ld be
3 bedroom mobile home 1n great for recreational use br
Middleport Depos11 and ref· warehouse soace OptiOns
erences reqUired No pets are hm1tless . 'call 740-245·
5060. 11 am-5pm Monday·
(740)992-5856
Fnday
N1ce 2 and 3 bedroom
mobole homes lor re nt Conveniently locate d on
mcludes water sewer &amp; Jackson P1ke on Spnng
trash no pe ts . depos1t &amp; Valley area Great for small
$300 per month, (740)992- ous1nesses
01
me01cal
2167
off1ces Fu lly lm1shed &amp;
newly carpetea Great loca·
Pomeroy $300 a mo., $150
t1on . 740·245·5060 11am·
dep., no pets_1 (740)667·
Spm, Monday-Fnday
3083 afte r 5pm.

sage (301 )697·1341

1985 Na~a mobile home
for sale , has appliances/
nice porch . no smoke or

~u 1 ldings , Mitchell Ad.
all1potts. VIew photos/lnf
enlme
www.orvb .cor:r
pede 40704 or call 740
!441 · 8299

w orvb.com
0603 or call 740· 992

._.....

ductwork furnace.
$230 00 month {740)698·
7002

EHO

2Br Mob1le Home all electnc.
part1allylfurn1shed. very n1ce
. no
pe ls.
S325month
{304 )593·1939 leave mes-

AI\\KT.\lENl~

mRRF.fi;T

~q . ft . Ranch Style. 2 out

Cute 2 story home on a 5
acre wooded lot located on
Mt Carmel Ad . 213 BR 2
Bath , FA. LA . Kotchen , DR.
Aprox . 1800 sq fl . 3 m1nutes
Bedroom Br~ck Ranch
from Rio Grande College
Acre lot Reduced (304)675· Anx1ous to sale . Make me an
1-714
-offer (140)446-.654;l

Ha1•WANTID

CIA,

6954.

ooaroom. • oam._ &lt;,U'1J pels. (740)949-2466

new root, siding, windows .
very good neighborhood ,
You could fish your badlands 1140 Second Ave Gallopol1s
Asking
$1t9 .000
and increase property value Ohi O.
too! Make land Into lakes. 060, call Karen @ 740·

In IC I ..,

3-Br. 1-Ba:, new carpet , pamt

2 bedroom 14x60 mobile Twm R1vers Towe1 ts accept·
home m Sprong Valley area. 1ng apphcatoons tor wa1t1ng
$325/month. $250 depos1!. IISl to r Hud·SubSIZ6d . 1· br,
(304)675-2900 or (740)441· apartment. call €75 -6679

Of! oce space downtown
Pomeroy, approx. 1800 sq
ft.. street level near court·
house. $450 mo (740)592·

a

-----

f"..&lt;XliJS •

Publication Sales Co. h1nng !oHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
1NG CO. recommoods til a
18 sharp enthusiastic
ou do business With peo
Individuals to travel the U.S.
pte you know. and NOT to
Travel, traintng Lodgmg and
end money through the
transportation furnished.
mail until you have investi
Return Guaranteed. Start
aated the otferlno.
Today 1-800-781-1344

, GMCAA
8010 SA 7 North, PO Box
272, Cheshire , OH 4{)620
Attn: Keith Rom1ne

Momu;
Rf:"T

FOR SALE

Hot

TRAVEL U.S.A

HR@ tandemhealthcare.com

month Call Nao;cy (.:04)675 ·
4024
(304 )675-5540
Homestead Reali ty Broker
Pt. Pleasan l WV

1 and 2 bedroom apart· 1758
2000 OakwoOd Home 16x8a ments, furn1shed and untur·
3br, 2ba. all electnc. central n1shed . secunly depoSit Rlversltes tor rent. tamily
Wlll Pressure Wash house's,
air. Cal l after 8 :30 \ pm re qu1red. no pets 740-992· 1ype . 3 campsites, full
mobile homes. metal build·
hookup, near river. 3 dock(304)458-2048
· 221
mgs. and gutters. Cal!
sites. no hOokup . Call
(740)446-QtSt ask for Ron
97 doublewide, 28x48. on 6 1 BA . complete k1tche n (740)992-5956
or leave message.
4 bedroom 3 bath, Buckeye acres near Henderson. AJC , Ref. &amp; dep. No pets
Hills Rd. In ground pool. 1 $25,000, 304·642·9142 or 1740)446-0139
Will work Night Shift tor
aero. (740)709-1 166.
(304)335-0528
the Elderly 8·,0·12 hre.
10
2 bedroom ap t. ,., R10
'SEHOLll
oxp. &amp; ref. (304)675-7961
acres.
Grande $325 rent. S325
Before you buyl

(304)895-3400

~op~p_o_rl_u_nr~~-·-m~p-lo~y_o_r.____

Wanted , Bartender, lull time
Apply m pe rson at the
Holiday Inn of Gallipolis.

3
bedroom
hous e
'" Pleasant Valley Apartme nt
Pomeroy, $400 a me .. $400 Are now takmg App lications
depos1t no pets . (740)949· fo r 2BA 38A &amp; 4BR .
7004
Applocat 1ons
are
taken
Mor day thru F11aay from
3 bedroom . 2 bath on 775,
9 00 AM -4 PM Ott1ce IS
20 1T11nutes from Gallipolis &amp;
Located at 1151 Evergreen
R1o Grande Clean. great
Dr1ve Po1n t Pleasant WV
oondoi!On , large pnvate oack.
Phone No 1s \304)675-5806
yard S400 month . 1nclude s
E.H 0
water No pets. no smok1ng
(740)379-9465
Small Houst! 52 75. 00 a

'R

2506

Superintendent Vacancy
Tbe Eastern Local District .
50008 State Route 7.
Reedsvi lle.
Oh10.
Is
announcing the retirement
resignation
o1
Superintendent, Daryl E.
Well effective July 31. 2004·.
The district is seekinQ appli·
cants from quai1Ued ind1vldu·
als that hold a valid supenntandent cerliflcate/hcense or
can provide proof .they have
the abtlity to obtain such a
license. Candidates may
contact Mrs. Usa M. Ritchie.
Treasurer. at (740)667-3319
for an application package
and additional information
Deadline to subm1t appl!ca·
lion materials is May 14,

Grac1ous l1vlng. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments al V1ll age
Manor
and
Rwers1de
Apartments m M!ddleoon
From 5295 -$444. Call 740·
992·5064 Equal Housmg
Opportu111t1es

Br possible 2 located 1n
New Ha11en eve ryth1ng m
walking diStance apollanccs
fu rms heo . total Electric $300
montll $300 depos1t
No
N1ce two bedroom apart·
Pets call 13041882·3552
ments Large roor;ns Fully
2 bedroom hOuse m City. equ1ped kitchen Central
5500
month . ' secumy heat1 1 g 1 COOI1ng
deposit
&amp;
references Washer/dryer
hookup
required. no pets (7 40)446· (304)882-2523
4053

River
'.new. 3 bdrm , 2
baths. basement ano, deck
All electnc . Loca ted m
Galilpot1s
Ferry,
WV
For Sale-House one &amp; 1!4
$700/ month , no pets By
ac:;res. 3000sqf1 3br, 2bh, lr
appt (740)446-348 I
dr, tvr, fsb (394)773.-5984 or
593-3702
20
H~tr..s

All types of masonry br1ck , 0% Down payment poss1ble
block &amp; stone 20 yrs and financmg available lor
Experience free estimate
bad credit or good credit on
1-304-773-9550, 304-593this beautiful home 4 bod·
1007
rooms,2 baths, garage ThiS
ar garage, ,1n ground pool.
Carpentry, odd JobS, floor· is your chance to ' own and
75,000(:. 3460 State Rout
not
rent.
You
w1ll
not
see
ing, siding, roofing, remodel·
18, 740)256-1962.
eas1
er
qualifying
reqwre·
ing, decks. no job to big or
ments.
You
can
buy
th•s
smallt
Ask
for
Matt
Hartford \NV. 4·br 1·ba. 2
1304)882-2978. 304-377- home for about $450.00 to lots, n1ce garden space, all
$500 00 a month W1t1 not
4633
utilit1es
available ,
last long. (740)949·2547
$13,000.00
080
(740)742Georges Portable Sawmill.
don 't haul your logs to the 2BR House. Uvmg &amp; Dining 2535
mill just call304·675· 1957.
Room , Kitchen &amp; 1/2 base- "N_o_m-.o-n-oy-do_w_n_M_a_s_on_W_V

J1m's Carpentry and small
landscaping. Call (740)446·

c ..

H4lL'SES
f"OK R L'T

Ta1a
Townhouse
Apartm en ts. Very Soac•ous .
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors. CA. 1
112 Bath Newly Carpeted .
fUR
Great
Buys
03 , new
Ad ult Pool &amp; Baby Poo l.
Pa tiO, Start S3851MO N o
OakWood Modular Homes.
1 Br Tra•ler m Letart Pets, Lease Plu s Securoly
· c all for details. 740·4~6·
Furn1shed . all ut1hlles pa1d Deposit Requ1re d Days
3481 or 740-446·1567
$300 month $300 depOSit 740-446-3481
Evenmgs
(304)882·2858
3 bedroom Ranc)1. 2
740-367-0502

HOMES

WANTFn
To Do

I10 _ _
H ELP W ANH:Il

.._

Merchandisers

Send resumes and three rei·
erences to:

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
{p~l
m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

740-446·2842
I \I I'll&gt;\ \ I I ' I

Thursday'• Games

-··t -------.-----------~---

roBUY

Word Ads

• All ads must be prepaid'

Absolute Top Dollar: US
Sliver.
Gold
Coms ,
Proofsets. Diamonds. Gold
Rings,
U.S. Currency,·
GMCAA
i~
an
Equal
M.T.S . Co in Shop, 151
Opportunity Ef\lployer
Second Avenue , Gallipolis,

Ottawa 4, Syracuse 3. 2nd game
Durtlam 9 . Toledo ..t

friday's Ga!TieS
Columbus at Durham
Norfolk at-louisville
Ottawa at BuMalo
PawtuCket at Syracuse
Richmond at IndianapoliS
Rochester at ScrantooW•Ikes-Barre
Toledo at Charlene

WANIDJ

11w
.

"'-NEW CLINICAL
HEY DRIVERS!! !
PEELS!"
Here is a great opportunity
Wan1 to look younger AND
to come grow with us.
earn Money? Let's talk the ·
Kuntzman Trucking. an 80
NEW AVON call
year old, Regional Truckload
Marilyn (304)882·2645 .Carrier w1th term1nals in
Joyce (304)675·691 9 .
Alliance and Columbus Ohio
April (304)882·3630
has opened a new termmal
in Piketon. Ohio. Only hard
work1ng. experienced drtv·
Are you tired of your
ers with a clean MVR and a
current JOb and loOking for
m1nimum of two years expe·
sometn1ng bet1er?
r1ence need apply.
We offer excellent
We have openmgs for .
employment opportunttes.
15 Company Drivers .
You can make up to
15 Owner Operators
SBihour calling on behalf ·
For 1nfo call Ray
of maJOr non-profit and .
1-866·436·1 0 13
pOlitical organizations.
We .also offer paid training
Home Health AidS needed·
holidays and vacations.
PT &amp; FT av81table, no expeTake advantage of the se
nence necessary (will tra1n).
opportunites and call
(740)949-276 1
us today!
1·877-463-6247 ext. 2454 Mak.e ?0°{. selling Avon .
L1m1ted
ttme
ONLY.
AS SEEN ON TV
(740)446·3358 F1rst 5to call
INSTRUCTION
recetves a g1f1
LEARN TO DRIVE
McDonalds of Rio Grande ,
TRACTOR· TRAILER
Gallipolis and Point Pleasant
NEW PROGRAM
WV are now hiring Paid
No Expenence Needed
vacations. holidays and
Placement Dept
tnsurance available. Flexible
Financmg Avatlable
hOurs Start1ng above mmi CDL!Tra1 ntng
mum wage Apply With 1n
ALLIANCE
Tractor-Trailer
:\1erchandiscr Jlt'edcd
Train1ng Centers
Servicing Gallipolis &amp; sur·
Wytheville, VA
rounding area 20 hr/wk .
Call Toll Free
Hourly plus m 1leage. 21
1-600-334·1203
years of age. leave mes·
Cashland Gallipqhs
sago @ . 1·800·962·3207
Full time teller posit1on avail· ext. 8328.
'
able. Excellent pay &amp; bene·
fits
package
included
Customer serv1ce &amp; cash
Part-Time
handtinQ
experienc~
required . Please fax resume
Earn Great SS
to 740-441·8940 m stop by
1312 Eastern Ave. Gallipolis
National Marketing Services
and pick up an application
seeks parHime people to
Domino.'s Now Hiring all help merchandise products.
paperback/color1ng
locations great pay, flexible ie
h'o urs
Pt.
Pleasant. books , m National Retail
Gallipolis,
Pomeroy
&amp; Stores in POMEROY and
the
surrounding
areas.
Eleanor
Flmoble hours available.
Faat growing buslneaa. Lifting and ladder cl1mb1ng
hlers and cooks need- required . EOE Please apply
ed for all thiHs. Full and by calling 1·888·407·4488.
part·tlme. s8nd resume to die I 8900 (Ad Code #065);
Dally Sentinel, PO Box or
apply
online
at
729·8, Pomeroy, Ohio WWWNATLMKTG.COM.

Garage Sale· 41,6.04, 9·4.
Roma Cremeans' residence, 45769
Beechgrove Rd ., Rutland.
Full T1me Employee dut1es
Garage Sale· Thursday and will include warehouse work!
Fr1day. 2 miles past S.H.S. truck driving. No COL
112 mtle on Tanners Run at required. Applicants must
Flndleys, 9:00, exercuse have clean driving record,
equipment, overhead pro- and will be required to pass
jector, dog hOuses, jointer, a Dot physical, and drug
Home Decor, TV, l1nens. test. Send resume to P.O.
queen ma ttress. Little Tyke Box 278, Gallipolis, OH

(304)675-5516

last year.

liEu• W-\.vtm

r A'~~CEMENTS_ I·------'

Carolfna. Flea Market now
Ope(l Fn Sat Sun across
lrom
McDonald's
9· 5
Accepting
Vendors

..,_kin
Anahemllugger Garret Anderson agreed Tuesday lo
a !-'8 million, tour-year conlrac\ extensipn through
2008. The deellf'ICiudes a team optkN'\ for 2009 wl1h a
S3 milliOn buycul. Andersen. a two-'t1me AII·SI!r, 11~
.315 wnh 29 hOme runs and 116 ASis last vear. He I&amp;
lhe Angels' career hn! leader.... Montreal pileher LNan
Hemand&amp;z lOfeed 10 a three-year contract extension
through 2007. Hernandez weot 15·10 wth a 3.20 ERA

Buffalo 4 , ScrantonWilkes-8arre 2, 2nd
game
Charlotte 3, Coh.1mbus 0
Rochester 6 , Pawtucket 5 . 9 inmngs, 1st
game
Rochester 1, Pawtucket 0, 2nd game
A!ChmQnd 4, LouisviUe 1
Syracuse 7, Ottawa 2, 1at game

I

Minnesota pounds Tribe

U ilu!OfMI

gomo

'BUffalo

Weclnetdey't Gamel
, SCramonWilk&amp;FBarrv 1$, 1'St

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

the Padra1 won 8-3.

Columbus at Charlot1e
Norfolk at tnd1enapolis
~awtucket at Syracuse
Rtchmond at LouiSVIlle
Roohestur at SctaffiBRWtl-kcs-Barr-o
Toledo at Durham

2',

OrFax~To~~~6~75~-~5~23~4~--------------~~

toys , children's
18mths-size 12.

night at San DI8QO, Adam E.tlon mpmV!Id to
5-1 In hill career against los Angeles with a 2 13 ERA

Around the Minors
International League

(304) 675-1333

Minnesota Tw1ns' Cnst1an Guzman. left. slides into third with a third inning triple
as Cleveland .Indians third baseman Casey Blake takes the throw Wednesday in
Cleveland. (AP)

Sn.naro 2b -4 1 2 C

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.... s..c.
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In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

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CLASSIFIED
We Cove

- -.. ... - ..... .
..........
.
......

t11Mc III'M{p•

•
•
•

ThurSday, April 15, 2004

~rihune

Major
League Baseball
..
.

Thursday, April 15, 2004

-.mydaiiYsentinel.com

Does your dealer?
Move hos hOmes · Do Site
preparahOn · build foundations - Roll and se1 hOuses ·
Do heat1ng a net a1r · Have in·
hOuse serv1ce people
Install septic systems • Do
electrical/plumbing · Do
driveways. If the answer to
any of these questJOns ts no.
or 1f they "sub-contract" . You
better see the oldest most
experienced
dealer
m
Athens County. Smce 1967
Cotes Mob1le Homes 15266
US 50 Eas t Ati1ens. Oh10
45701 "Wh-ere you get your
money's worth"

~r=~-~-~--.,

l.o1S &amp;

ACRFN;E

depoSit Call (740)245-9060

.

.
2 bedroom apt St At 160 Fng1dalfe e!ectnc stove. w1tb
past Hol zer. $475 mo sell clean1ng oven Good
condition $250, (7 40)367·
(7 4Q)441 -0 194
7123 .
3 rooms and bath. upsta1rs
newly decoraled . Aefl deo Good Used Appliances.
requ1ted No pets. (740)446· Reconditioned
and
1519
Guaranteed
Washers.
Dryers
Ranges .
and
4-room house. 260 State St Relnge rato rs. Some start at
$350 dep .. $350 per month S95 Skaggs Appl1ances . 76
plus ut1litles &amp; references v 1ne St {740)446·7398

17 40)446-3667

Mollohan Carpet , 202 Clark
Apartment for rent 1 bed·, Chapel Road, Porter Qh 1o.
room, LR furnished Kitchen .
4 o).t 46 .74 44 t ·877-830·
1 bath, (74014 46-1370.
9162 Free Estomates . Easy

a

BEAUTIFUl
MENTS
AT
PRICES AT

APART· lonancmg. 90 days same as
BUDGET cash Vosa Master Card
JACKSON Drove· a· H1le save alot

ESTATES, 52 Westwood Thompsons Arp iiAnre &amp;
o·rtlle from $ 344 to 5442 Repaor-675·7388 Fo1 sale
Walk ta shop &amp; movoes Call
re·cond1t1oned
automatol::
7 40-446·2568
Equal
wasners 1'!. dryers refngera2167
Hous1ng Opportunity
tors , gas and e1ec1r1C
63 acres tor ~ale on CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· ranges a1r conamoners and
wrmger washers W11\ do
Btessmg
Ad
Let art EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
(304)862·2567
Townhouse
apartments repa1rs on mater brands on
and or small houses FOR shOp 01 at your horne
Lot 17 1n Meadow · Holls
RENT Call 1740)44 1· l1 l1
De'llelopment 2 1 2 m1 ies tor apphcat1on &amp; K1lormat1on Used Furn1ture Store 1:30
Bu av1lle
P1ke
Grave
from Red L•ght at 28th St
out Sandhill, o!f ~nto Oshel Furn1sl1ed 1 bedroom hOuse MonuMents t-740\446-4782-.
fl.lo smoking GaiiPOIIS OH Hrs 10-4 (M·
Ad
Some Restr 1c110ns w1th A C

16x80 s1 tes available $1 tS
per month oncludes w.Jter.
sewer &amp; trash . (7 40)992·

Apply (304]67s-6277 Olill"l11 Appncanorrs trem-g- 1a11:en

s'

Evenmgs or (304)675·3000 (740) 44 6-1759
Wh 1rlpool eleCIIIC Range
leave message
N1ce one BR unlurnosh'E!d almond $150 Wood table 4
You coukf fis"h ycmTbadlandi &lt;iijjaitme.nt A.ange-.&amp;-relng-etnnrs::Sn5~w,n hf!d-cCITTI"'"
and 1ncrease property value prOVIded Water &amp; garbage plete S50 Ches t oi draws
too• Make land 1nto takes pa1d Oeposot requned Ca I $25 All m good cond1t1on
(740)446-4345 aite1 6pm
(7~01 4146-3617
(740)388-8228

•.

�Thursday, _A pril 15, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, April 15, 2004
ALLEY OOP

Announcements

_ Announceme'irts

J

www.mydailysentlnel.com

' )OOZ'( "V''t&lt;n;
V l-IE. COULDN'T F=IN D

I CAN' T FIND

DESPAIR!

Pastor Jan Lavender
invites evervone!
Help Wanted

RN POSITION AVAILABLE
Holzer Senior Care Center has an
opening for a full-time RN. We are a 70 ·
bed long-term care nursing facility
located in Rural Galli a County whose
mission focuses on quality care for our
residents.
Benefits include:
• Competitive Wages
• Experience Credit ·
• Health Insurance .
• Life In surance
• 401 K (after I year)
·, $1000 Sign on Bonus
If working in a friendly, "team-ori~nted" facilty appeals to you. please
come see us at: 380 Colonial Dr.
Bidwell. Ohio or call 740-446-5001 and
ask for Christina Hook. DON.
Come be a part of:

#/u66ard 's qreenht~use

BaskeVHare
Exclusive Hartwell Hare in each
Basket Tuesday, April 20
·
Door~ open 5 pm
2t games- $20.00 Pomeroy Eagles
Sponsored by
United Fund For Meigs County

Syracuse, @H
Now Open

Easter Flowers
Bedding Flower&amp;
Vegetable Plants
Blooming
&amp; Foliage Baskets
Potting Soil

A male black and tan
Yorkie puppy that.
answers to "Buddy"

-C•ori•t2 People...

Porch Boxes
Combination Pots
Perennials
Spruce Trees
Shrubs
1
Peat Moss

MYERS PAVING

6:30

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

·Last Thursda,\' of
C\'ery month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon

....

Bm· $5.00
Bominza Gt·t

Monday-Saturday 9-5 C losed Sunday
' 740-992-5776

5 FREE

North

Henderson, WV

675-2457

MONTY

"'¥ ·I

K Q

FRANK &amp; EARNEST .

lcHivRo;~T#

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

Tree Service

Let me do it for youl

Top • Removal • Trim ·
• Stump ~inding
Bucket Truck

liNDA'S PAINnNG

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

Ta~e

JONES'

•••

~all~~~

Self-Storage

He]p Wanted

Help Wanted

ri:;b rr~
CJlJN

Pleasant Vall~y Hospital is currenrly accepting
resumes for Full tirne and Per Diem·
Registered Nurses in the ICCU Department.

Applicants must have a current West Virginia
license. Previous ICCU eX;perience preferred.
Flexible "scheduling, excellent salury, holidays,
health insurance single/family plan, dental
Plan, life insurance, vacation. long-tenn

disability and retiremenl.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
clo Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive, Point Pleasant, WV 25550
(304) 675-4340
AA/EOE

r. .__

ANTI
_ _""'QUI'S_...I

siloo·r

••

Forked Run
Sportman Club

Rim Fire
Rifle Match

April 17th

TRUCKS
IURSALE

Buy
or
sell. Riverine New seven plec:e
Antiques, 1124 East Main Ludwig drum set
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740· (304)882 .. 2200
992-2526. Ru ss Moore ,
owner.
Police seized property from Dairy goats- Registered
$10.001
Alpine· Doe, Buck and
TV, computers &amp; more lor Wether Kids, call (740}988·
2073.
.
more info. call 800· 7~9-5953
II~ \ \-..I'OU I \Ill)\
2003 Kawasaki 360 Prairie, ext.P509.
4 Wheeler, 4 WD, Automatic , --.,--~--,---,::-- 11'11:-"-~----,
150 hrs of use. 2 years left Stackable
Washer/Dryer . rto
.... •uo
~n
warranty,
excellent (Frigidaire) Large capacity
shape,
$4000
Firm (304)675-7271
(304)882-2099 it no answer
Chevys ,
reave message'
- - - - - - - - - $500t. Hondas,
Stove/Fridge
$100 Jeeps, etc I POLICE
from
Washer/Dryer .
$450, IMPOUNDS Cars
4-Padded Patio Chairs.
Formai&amp;Wedding
dress $500. For listings 1-S00-719·
Elac/Mount
Fireplace,
$100, Rockford Fosgate 3001 ext 3901
Mattress/Boxsprings
&amp;
400s/800wt amplifier $250, - - - - - - - - Frame, Bathchair &amp; 3 12"Bandpass
Bol&lt;$75 $500I.Hondas.
Chevys.
legged/cane (304)675-6633 (740)645-1269
Jeeps, etc ! POLICE
after 5pm
IMPOUNDS Cars fiom
Bs!!!'~
$500. For listings t-800-719Agco·AIIis (simplicity) 1718
v..-rldi:.D
3001 ext 3901
Garden Tractor 50~ deck, ..__ _oiiiiioiiiilo-,..1
)1ydro, 637 hours, new block,
1973 Chev. Nova 1993
ag
tires
$2,100 Block, brick, sewer pipes, Dodge Shadow $3.500 for
(304 }6755253
windows, lintels. etc. Claude both (304)675 63 3 after 5
Winters. Rio
. OH pm

IUAR•~SALE-

.a

Estate Sale· 2 bookcases,
1984 Mere. Marq, body
Flex·steel wall~hug recliner,
good, runs Qood. $650
wooden rock ing chair, 8)11 0
rug w/runner, roll-away-bed, ..__ _iiiiiiiiiiiioo-,..1 (304)675-5103 or (304)8822269
21arge dressers, 1 cordu roy AKC Registered Lab pup·
hide· a· bed couch. 1997 p1e's . Chocolate &amp; Yellow. 1995 Grand Am, 99K.
Compac Persario Pentium t1 Parents
on
premises. $2. 195; 1997 Neon Sport, 4
w/wlndows 98, CDIDVD Wormed and first shots. door, 74K, $2,795 : 1993
drive,
printer/fa)(,
scan 740·992-4174.
Caravan, 105K, $1 ,995.
mfiker, desk &amp; chair,
Others in stock, we take
[740)949-260 7, 740-992 trades. COOK MOTORS
VEGETMILI'li
3856 (message)
(740)446-0103.

JET

FRurrs&amp;

'KESSEL'S

PRODUCE

Large capacity, Maytag ,
electric dryer, excellent con·
dltion $125.00. (740)992 1121
.

UPEX Powerhouse Olympic
Sfeal Weight Set 45 Lb Ba r,
250 Lb Weights, Curt Bar.
Dumb Bell Bar, Weight Tree.
Adtustable Bench like New·
$125.00 Phone: (304)593·
2301 (Leave Message )

1 \tnt"'' 1'1'111 ..,
,\ 11\1 -.,IIH I-.

ro\ ~I

1996 lsuzu Rodeo , 4 dr.,
4X4, V-6 , auto, air, tilt , cruise,
plw, pfl , loaded, $4995; 1996
Ford Ranger super/cab, V·6,
auto, air, $3995, and many
more to choose from, Trade
in's welcome, Rivervi ew
Motors , 2 blocks above
McDonalds, Pome roy, Oh,
1740)992-3490

740-992-5594
740-992-6862

1.,-------.,J
miles,
new
condition,
$14,500, 740 992-6154

M010RCVU.ES .

i

Auro PARTS &amp;
Aa..~RIES

1415.

,., ..;,r.·' '

... c_ _

I

j

Alrro PARTS

· Lawn and Garde11 Equipment is our
· busi11ess, not-our sideli11e .

'Wl\1&gt;-I f.\1\I'PE.~E.O \0

~

I"'551-\ 1/1\N'i\i\

\1.1\0 1-\ER
FN:..E LIFTE.D 1

YOU~(. r-"101\I.C~~ \ACE. 7

LOOK':&gt; /1\0R£ ll K£

~011\(0!'IE. OCOPI'£D II 1

Manning K. Roush
Owner
0 en Mon-Frl9-5 Sot. 9-t2

r

10

\I·

'..

I•

Pm;:;

~ t
54 ,

Pass
Pt~ 8 t:.
pa~s

All

to dark!

OK,

FIRST

POSSE RULE :

NO LAME

tl'\ -P"!&gt;!tE - BL E ~

PUNS .

'
.' PEANUTS

; Hupp ' '

Ti-llS 15M'( REPORT

ON OUR FIELD_TRIP ''

IMPORTS
Athens

TKE BUS lOOK
US INTO TJ.lE

''IT RAINED.

AND WE

COVNTRI'"

ALL

GOT WET''

Dean Hill
New &amp; Used

spc:ace
for

$75
per

'10\1 ~IN I&lt; 'IOU'R~ l-OOK·
lNG fOR~ SC.iSSORS

1-800-822-0417

IN 1\-\E

JUNK tJAAWE!l.
BUT Y9U'RE REALLY

Chevy, pontiac, Buick. Olds
&amp; C u stom Van Dealer"

SO I OON'T NOTICE. 'TijEN\
e.€CAU5E t Dpt&lt;l'T HAVE
TO. IS THAT IT&gt;'

AHHH f SO ITS Lli&lt;E YOU
AN~1\4c CAR'S GAS GAUGE
OR '!1-\E 01 L 'I'EMP!;flA'TURE
'

LIGHT

JUST PAU&gt;IfJG \JN'TIL
l ~IND -ruEM FOR YOU

•

"'

month

HOME

BETTY

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

,

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

740-7 42-341

HOWARDL
WRITfSfl

I *IOORIIJG

*HOME
GUTTER
*free EsUmatau

949-1405

.GARFIELD

NORTHUP DODGE

THIS CAME tN THE
MAIL- FOR YOU

252 Upper River Road • Gallipolis
740-4(6-0842 • 949-1155 Evenings
800-446-0842

t,&gt;OU'VE BEEN Cl-A551FIED
A5 A SMAL-l- PL-ANET/

MAt,&gt;6E NOW YOU'l-LCON51DER DIETING.

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

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garage•
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; GuHeAJ• Vinyl Siding &amp; Paintihg
• Patio and Porch Oec .. a

We do It all except

J!!!nact work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
. Pomeror. Ohio

22 Years Locai.Experlem:e

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTIICnON
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1111
Stop &amp; Compare

GRIZZWELLS

'

20
21
22

brewer

6 -Perce

"'23
24
25

tribe
7 Week

filler

35 Fancy
8
36 Young horse
37 " - to Billie 9
Joe"
38 Cornhusker to

st.

fractions
Jane

Austen title

28
29

Cereal

31

grains

Kipling

33

novel

39 New plants 11 Maintain
42 Opposite
(2 wds .)
of cheer
12 Wooded

35
37

ahernative

auction going. Here, North has mne
points. Soulh has shown some 12·17

CELEBRITY CIPHER

r11 f01&lt;6rmE\-.\ 1-l::*J ~ &amp;M7Y

Wl&lt;.t'5'
l'n\l-Y

s~s

~ERE

I

·

by Luis Campos
Gelebnt,o C1Dher Cl),:tograns are etealeo lrcm quotaoons b·rtamous
Eact1 1ene• 111 ne opner stand~ lor another

"JMEYSDE

game. Here, when South does continue,
showing a good 5·5 in the minor suits.
North jumps to live clubs.

YGPRUNE
ES

If you hold a two-sutter 1n your own hand.
it is usually best 10 establish the side suit

E G F. "

Friday, April 16,2004
By Bernice Bede Osol
Take advantage of any opportumt1es you
ge t in the year ahead to fu rther your ec:lu·
cation in your chosen field of endeavor
Anythirig you can add to you r reservoir ol
knowledge can lead to advancement and
financial reward
ARIES (March 2 t -Apnl 19) ----'- Substantial
achievemen ts are poss ible today through
matchi ng wits with others. Nobody is betler
than you at bold, imaginative thinking , so
use all th at's m your artil lery to gain the .
upper hand .
TAURU S (Aprol 20-May 20) - Keep your
own coun se l today, especially if whal's on
your mind has anylhing to do with busl·
ness or finances . Don 't discuss your alfa1rs
even with one ol your closest lriends.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20)- F1nding time
to attend a social gathering today cou ld
prove to be of substanti al value. Someone
may 1ntroduce a topic and impart valuable
inlormalion that you'll be able to put to
good use.
CANCER (June 21·July 22) - Don't allow
yourself 10 get bogged down by petty
issue s or nonessential housekeeping
today. You can achieve an 1mportant ObJ8C·
tive it you k:e6p your mind on what's ~rnpo,r­
tant
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)-'- When it comes to
matters that are personally , significant to
you today, chances are you'll be more
VISIOnary and farseeing than those with
whom you 're assoc1ating . Keep you r own
counsel
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ) - Be Ooubly
alert today to t1db1!s ol 1nformahon bemg
1mparted to yOu by a confiOant. What is
be1ng sa1d IS meant for you personally and
could turn a hdy prolil1f acted upon
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct 23) - Put your per·
sonal 1mpnnt on any ag reement or trans·
act1on you lind yourself involved in today. It
may take a bit ol boldness. but being pas·
s1ve could be lhe only thing thai wouk:f
defeat you .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) '--- Before calling 1n any e11penswe repairman today tor a
m1nor jOb , see il you can correcl lhmgs
yourself II you put out lhe ewlra efforl to
•ry. you may not have to put out the extra
bucks.
·
SAGITTAR IUS (Nov. 23-De c 2 1) - 11"11 be
your magnet1c personality tha t could help
you get your po1nts acr"oss today when
deallrlg w1th those who aren't 1n the hab1t
ol hsten1ng . You'll 1n111ate way s 10 gel tl1e1r
atten tion
CAPRICORN (Dec_ 22-Jan t 9)- When II
comes to dealing with a 1am11y Issue today.
il may take common sense and practicality ralhe• than emot1on to settle the matleL
You 're the one who can delermme whats
besl lor all
AQUAR IUS (Jan. 20-Feb 19) - Now •s
the day to furthe r develop any •dea or pro ject you have been mull1ng ove1 lately Your
sharp m1nd and crea11ve im agmat1on w111
be partiCularly percept1ve and lflSIQh!ful.
P1S9ES (Feb. 20-March 20) - By lettmg
common sense prevail m your matenal or
flnanc1 al alla~rs today. every1h mg Will work
out 1n your favor You'll know how to sepa·
rate what 1s of real value from wtiat IS
super11CI81

SOUP TO NUTZ

~::.pie

oast and present

Toctay-s ch.Je. 0 eQuals C

South bids a thi rd time . promising 16 or
17 points, the North hand will be worth

&lt;lbur&lt;JIIrt~:

YES , ONE MIGHT
T~AT IT 'S .. '-' '~'J' '""

a week daylight

:i$1

26 Leo mo.
27 Clucking
sounds
30 Rutabaga
32 Rose pest
34 Light bulb

40 Furniture
ttems
Chielly
41 Edge past
Gawked
42 Holy terror
Cable
43 Surprised
channel
cry
44 Orchestra
LAX info
Domain
member
Conse47 Specify
quently
48 Pause
Kublai49 O,Cimal
Position
base
Webster or 51 Subzero
Wyle
comment
Rookie
52 Vane dir.
socialite
54 Tablet
Detestable
D.ot-Gom
valley

11 Tote

King ·
This is a key buil ding block ol bidding: If
game is still poss'ible, you must keep the .

Graph

' BIG NATE

Open 7 doya

S...f...it;,
Rocky "aJ'' .

in this

I

Ct~SSIF

t:ast

Astro-

Advertise

CAMPERS&amp;

I

~urth

first. Dnve out th ~ diamond ace, ruff the
third heart, cash the diamond queen, ruH
a diamond high , draw trUmps. and claim .
Giving preference can be both false and
correct.

Meigs County's Largest selection ot
annuals, perennials, vegetables,
shrubbery, fruit, ornamental trees,
roses, rhododendrons, and azaleas.
COMPARE THESE PRICES II

740-992-7599

"I I&lt;\ 1t l ..,

1998 Ford Taurus SE, only
tully/loaded power/moon·
roof, 6 disk CD. cost new
135 Massey Ferguson : 8 $25,175 $4500 OBO 575 .. 1999 Fishe r 16ft. V-bottom
with
galvanized
trailer.
horsepower. Troy bu ill and 3354
$2,000 080. (740)441 lawn tractors . (740)449·
3505.
2000
Mercur~
Sable 7632.

Ouratec V6. 46K, loaded, 4
doo r, immaculate, $7,000. Bik1ni Top fils 22-28 ft Cabin
2001 Murray lawn mower. 21 (937)592·9294.
Cruiser Pontoon boat never
~W AND USED STEEL HP, 46 cut. Like new. Call
been used (304)675-3354
Steel Beams Pipe. Bebar (140)256..6574
.93 Toyo1a Corolla _ Clean.
For
Co ncrete.
Angle ,
good conditiOn, greet gas
&amp;
Channel, Flat Bar. Steel Locust Post,
ACDX50RIES
14.10 Case m11eage. · Call (740)44 6·GrJ~ting
For
Dra1ns,
9 4_7_.- - -- - - D'ri"Jewayr&amp; Walkways. l&amp;L Tractor.._ gas &amp; oil swabber.~-1Call (740)245 .. 5535.
!n:hevy oed- wltlrtallgote.
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
97 Dakota 4 X4 , 56,000 m1. Will fit 89·97 mode l, good
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
SLT club cab. Loaded, new condi tiOn . Askmg $550.
Friday. Bam-4:30pm. Closed Vermeer round baler and paint . pyt $135. Retails (740144 6_9358 _
ThurSday.
Saturday
&amp; Bush Hog d1sk mower. Call $ t 1,000. Sell for $6 ,400
(740)446-1127.
(740)245-5064.
Punday (740)446-7300

THE BORN LOSER

0

1

i

Pomeroy, Ohio

992.-2975

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Windshield , reer
ends
IMPROVEMENTS
Trans.
axles,
$25
&amp; up:
2002 Harley Davidson 883R
BASEMENT
Sportster, 1 ,050 miles. per· Motors &amp; bodies, $1 00 &amp; up.
WATERPROOFING
1740)388-8228.
feet
condition,
$7,000.
Uncondi tional lifetime guar(740)379-2601 . .
antee. Local references lur·
nished. Established 1975.
BoAlS &amp;
MUIORHOMES
Call
24 Hrs . (740} 446·
~
IURSALE
.
0870, . Rogers Basement
1995 Classic Dutchman Waterproollng .
18'
Pontoon
Boat travel trailer. 30 ', loaded,
Sun T r a .c k e r B)(Cellent condition. trailer
Signature/Series Year 2000 located in Long Bottom
Mercury out board 40 hp, area, $8,495, 740·350·6913
power lilV trim , oil injection, leave message.
TraiiStar trailer, all li~e new
must see before spending to Cougar Model 276 EFS
much some where else. 2002 Fifth Wheel . e!lcellent
$11 ,500 Or reasonable offer condition $20,000 (304)882 ..
(304)675·6277
Evenings 3369

M~W&gt; I r

204 Condor Street

Siding • N~:!\.V Garages
• Replacement
Windows • Roofing

1986 TRX70 lour wheeler,
n~w tires. seat, brakes. etc.
$1,200 call (740)367-7433.

2001 GSXR 600, Excellent
condition. Call (740}416·

\\'est
!'aS'!

1 Spanish
lady
2 Ferber
of "Show
Boat"
3 Florida port
4 Mara's tldb~
5 CoHee .

urge
23 Riviera
summer

bitity : He should rebid two d1amonds . This
IS called false preference, because he
really prefers clubs to diamonds. II South
passes, it is possible that th e partnership
will be in the wrong partscOre. However, if

SALES &amp; SERVICE

N,cw Homes• Vinyl

Friday-Saturday Apr 30 &amp; May 1
Look for the yellow Oags!

1996 Banshee. drag bike to
much to list, $2,000. Call
(740)367-7433,

GRAVELY TRACTOR

BUILDERS InC.

Middleport-Pomeroy
Yellow Flag Yard Sale!

2000 S·10, ext. cab, loaded

&amp; topper &amp; bedliner, 38000

II

BISSEll

0.
7th Annual 6-mile

• 0

Vulnerable : ~eit h e r

t 8 Airlfne to
Stockholm
19 Sudden

points (maybe even 18 when short in
spades, the responder's tirst-bid su1t). So,
since the partnership could have 25 or 26
comb1ned points . North must try to find
. another bid . And there 1s only one possi·

TFN

Gallipolis, OH WV010212
446-9416 r 1-800-872-5967

4-WDs

'DRESS CODE
NOW, EBBY? 1

Morning Star Road- C.Rd 30 • Racine, OH

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

(740)441 -

FER YOU, YEAH-SHORT SLEEVES· !1

THAT,
SMIF

Flat of plants $6.60
Hanging Baskets 56.60

• Vanguard Vent less Fireplaces ~ -~!L

For Sale: 1999 Dodge Truck
4)(4, lull size with topper,

Snapper

Gravely

4" pot of annuals 94~
4" pot of perennials $1.18 Buy 5or more for $1.00

De!lnis Boyd
740-992-1189
740-992-2902

• Huge Inventory

1-r01lO!Ill·2~1-.-~-~-....,
VANS &amp;

i

Will Mow
Yards

Decks-Etc.
For Fast Courteous
SeiVice, Free
Estimates
&amp;Affordable
Prices, Call....

Residential &amp; Manufactured Housing
Air Conditioners, Heat Pumps &amp; Furnaces
• Super Hi Efficiency Equipmen...
• Free Estimates
• 5 &amp; 10 yr Warranties
. · • 1;;;:,,.,....

_

Hours
AM - 8:00 PM
111411 mo. pd

HEATING fl COOLING .

99 Dodge 1500 Ouad·Cab.
SLT package, loaded, many
recent updales, very Cl$an,
garaged. $9,500, (740)256·
6936.

miles.

7:00

BENNETT'S

1993
Dodge
314
ton
Cummins Diesel Emerald
green excellent condition
$5500 (304)675·5324

69,000
..

'tcr 1b'~o· i ··

Painting-G utters-

• Limestone
• Sand
• Dirt
•Ag Lime
740·985-]564

Available Meals
To Go.

12:00 Noon

Sizes 5'x1 0'

Aoofing·Si(iing-

HAULING:

$6.00 includes
Drinks, Hot Dogs

r ~~

AERATION MOTORS
Amish Cheese, Lunch Meat,
Repaired , New &amp; Rebuill In Fresh FrLJil and Vegetables
Stock. Call Ron Evans, l· Open Thurs-Fri-Sat. 1354
8()().537 ·9528 .
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis,
Ohlo.(740)446-7787

Trucking

Saturday

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-22t7

SI~"AL 11'
t:ONS'I'Il1Jt:1'ION

R.B.

All You Can Eat
Fish, Cole Slaw,Baked Beans

32nd Annual Benlley Pig
1 Sale, Friday, April 16,
7:30pm. Fayelle County Fair
ground . Washington C.H.
black
Selling 200 head·of Barrows
$375
and~ Gilts. Roger Bentley
(937)854-2398.

t

740-992-5232

Rutland American

Hill's Self
Storage

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

33795 Hiland Rd..
Pomeroy, Ohio

Su11day 4118i04
1/AMTiiSPM

RNNURSES
ICCU

!! YA GOT A

GAME
DRESSED
LIKE

(304) 273-5321

DOWN

play? West leads the heart Jack. East wms
with the ace and returns a hear! to your

BARNEY

30 Yrs. Exp. • 1ns. Owner: Ronnie Jones

head

Once you have dec1ded. look also at the
South hand If you were South . the declar·
er 1n five clubS. what would be your line of

•• • •

Pomeroy Eagles 2171
Band

58 Over one's

We are studying responder's g1vmg pref·
· erence . to one of the opener's two su'11s
F1rst, though, loo~ at loday's Norih hand.
Your panner opens one diamond. you
respond one spade. and he rebids two
clubs. What would you do now? (I hope it
1sn't too taxing on Tax Day')

YA CAN'T
COME INTO
TH' CARD

High&amp; Dry

Oc&lt;Jicr: South

Preference can be
false and correct

IRS

750 East State Street Phone (7410)~i93-61;7II
.Athens, Ohio
A Bener

Serving begins at 11 :00 am

Announcements

KQ J52

,. AQtlllJB

LARRY SCHEY

FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED lOWEST PRICES

rtunily Employer)

.. i 4 3

Pas~

57 Yonder

processor

wing

.. Q 10 9 5
• .A 6 3 2
• 8 3

,.'"'

56 lo• source

14 Food

16 Building

.. l\ ~ :!

•

13 Nalural

address

Openmg lead :· • .1

(Commercial and Residential)

D!ffrrmcr

i 4

East

;.

Mowing, Trimming, Tree Trimming, Aeration, Fertilization,
Spraying of fence lines, leaf Removal, as well o¥.i small
landscaping jobs·such as planting and mulching.

-~~~

•

45 Arrogance
46 Technical
1 Ftoot model
sch.
5 Hypnotized 50 Massaged
10 Dangerous 53 Remodel
bear
55 Squirrel
12 Wonderful
hoard
·J

15 Polile

\\'('~t

South

LAWN CARE DIVISION

;:,.;....:..,,.,J'&gt;'.'

~:; .j

lH)..J

South

(Commercial and Residential)

"SYMMES CREEK"

•

+

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Mobile Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Decks, Driveways,
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Degreasing of
EquipmE-nt,. Boats, Ca mpers, Tractor Trailers,
Dump Trucks, painting or staining of your deck
or log home, Aluminum brishtening.
Special rates to Trucking and Dump Trucking Companies.

Syracuse Fire Department
Serving begins at 11a.m.
Contact Mary Pickens @
81 for
ahead orders.

A J 7fiJ

A lll 9 G
.. 5 z

• Driveways • Tennis Courts
t Parking Lots f"Piaygrounds
t Roads • Streets

Office: (740) 992-2804 Cell: (740) 517-6883
POWER WASHING.

CHICKEN BBQ
Sunday, April 18

A

¥ J lH 9 i

Owner: Jeff Stethem

CHICKEN BBQ
Sunday, April 18th
Racine Fire Dept.

•N

"- K J 6

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

in the Middleport area near
the radio station. This is my
children's dog and he is
sadly missed. I will be
offering a reward. If you
have any information,

7:00 to 11 :00 Saturday
Members and Guests
(Equal Op

•
•
•
•
•
•

Pomern)' Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Tilursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Earl)' birds start

8:00 to 12:00 Friday

.

Phillip
Alder

11'-\AG.INE. M'V

Sunday morning, 6:00a .m. eve.

Help Wanted

ACROSS

~E~~~.

will be having a revival beginning:
Wednesday April 14 through
Sunday April 18, 2004,
Rev. Harold Massey From Belle, W.V
: will be the Evangelist. and the song
Evangelist.
Meetings will begin at 7:00p.m.
Wed-Sat, and 10:30 a.m.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

~ Ao.ND DOLF...

The Pomeroy
Churth of the
Nazarene

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - " When ·oo no evil' has been understood. 1Then
the harder. braver rule. ·oo good.·· - Arthur Guiterman
·
(ci2004 by NEA. Inc. 4·15

learn

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A fellow worker has a V!f'{
bleak outlook c~. :;!~ He . ~I.­
ways th;nk~ the worst will haf!pen. Our bess say : any man
, - - - - - - - - . that wears -a belt ana :;~spen11 I S 0 P E
ders is a true ---"·----

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CoiT't:dete t 1·e c'l\lt~le quole~ :
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7

IIIIIIIII
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

'-: ' ' 0'

Vicuna - Delve - Berth - Keenly - HAVE the BELL
First old gent: 'I love to lie in bed and ring for a v,alet·
Second old gent : "I didn't know you had a vale! F;rst
old genl: "I donl I just HAVE the BELL. "

ARLO &amp; JANIS

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•

Arwna Football League
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
C4ntral Dlvlalon
w. L Pel PF PA
7 2 778 504 396
·Chicago
7 3 .700 460 474
Colorado
5 5 .500 489 420
Indiana
4 5 .444 434 451
Oetroit
.111 327 473
8
Grand Rap1ds 1
Westem Divia&amp;on

w L Pet PF
2 .778 536
4 .556 516
5 .500 512
7 .300 526
NATIONAL CONFERENCE

7
San Jose
Los Angeles 5
5
Arizona
3
Las Vegas

PA
455
460
492
544

Eastern Division

w
6
5
4
3
3

L
3
4
5
6
7

Pet PF PA
.667 475 456
556 471 425
.444 410 391
.333 420 480

Dallas
New York
Ph1ladelph1a
Columbus
.300 466 544
Carol1na
Southern Division

w L Pet
2
.778
3 .667
5 444
6 .400
7 .300

New Orleans 7
6
Austin
4
Orlando
4
. Georg•a
Tampa Bay 3

PF PA
389 383
484 477

420 414
436 517
467 490

Friday's Games
Chicago at San Jose. 10:30 p.m.
Detroit at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
Saturday's Games ·
lndia"na at Grand Rapids. 7:30 p.m
Philadelphia at Carolina,.7:30 p.m
Sunday's Games
Austin at Tampa Bay, 3 p.m.
Dallas at Anzona, 3 p m
.Columbus at New Orleans. 3 p.m.
Colorado at New York, 3 p.m.
Orlando at Georgia. 3 p m
Frkfay, Apri123
Grand Rap1ds at Colorado, 9 p.m
Saturday, April 24
New York at Phlladelphta, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, April 25
San Jose at Georg1a. noon
Tampa Bay at Columbus, noon
Dallas at Orlando, noon
Anzona at Indiana . 3 p.m.
Detroit at Las Vegas. 3 p.m
New Orleans al Austin. 3 p.m.
Los Angeles at Ch1cago. 3 p.m

yz·Minnesota
x·San Antonto
x-Oallas
li:·Memphis
&gt;&lt;-Houston
x-Denver
Utah
Pacific Division
y·L.A. Lakers

w L Pel
58 24

57
52
50
45
43
42

.707

25 .695
30 .634
32 .610
37 .549
39 .524
40 .512

55 27 .871
41 41 .500
37 45 .451
37 45 .451
29 53 .354
28 54 .341

1
1~

19
19
27
28

x-clinched playoH spot
y-dinched division
z-clinched conference
Tuesday'• Games
Toronw 87. Detroit 78
Dallas 110, Memphis 103
LA.. Clippers 98, PhOenix 96
L.A. Lakers·109. Golden State 104
Wednesday 's Games
Boston 137 . Atlanta 132
New Orleans 94. Washington 78
Orlando 95. Philadelphia 89
Miami 96 . New Jersey 84
Cleveland 100, New York 90
lnd1ana 101: Chicago 96
Toronto 89. Mtlwaukee 87
Minnesota 107. MemphiS 90
San Antonio 93. Denver 67
Phoentx 89. Utah 84
Dallas 92, Houston 89
L A. Lakers 105, Portland 104. 20T
· Seattle t 18. L.A. Clippers 87
Golden State 97 Sacramento 91
End of Regular Season

Pro Hockey
Playoff Glance

FIRST ROUND
(Beot-of·7)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Tampa Bay vs. N.Y. Islanders
Thursday, April 8
Tampa Bay 3, N.Y. Islanders 0
Saturday, Apri~ 10
N.Y Islanders 3, Tampa Bay 0
Monday, April 12
Tampa Bay 3, N.Y. islanders 0
Wednesday, April 14
Tampa Bay 3·, N.Y. Islanders 0, Tampa
Bay leads sel'ies 3-1
.
Friday. April 16
N.Y. Islanders at Tampa Bay. 7:30 p.m.
Satun:tay, April 17
Tampa Bay at N.Y. Islanders. 7 p.m., il
necessary

Monday, April19

N.Y. Islanders at Tampa Bay. 7:30 p.m .. if
necessary

National Basketball Association
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
w L "Pet GB
47 35 .573
y-New Jersey
42 40 .512 5
x·Miami
39 43 .476 8
,.;-New York
36 46 .439 11
x·Boston
33 49 .402 14
Philadelph ta
25 57 305 22
Washington
21 61 .256 . 26
Orlando
Central Division
w L Pet . GB
61 21 ·.744
yi:· lndiana
54 28 .659 7
x·DetrOit
41 41 .500 20
x·New Orleans
41 41 .500 20
)(·Milwaukee
35 47 .427 26
Cleveland
33 49 402 28
Toronto
28 54 .341 33
Atlanta
23 59 .280 38
Ct11cago
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwest Divis1on

x-Sacramento
Portland
Golden State
Seattle
Phoenix
L.A. Clippers

National Hockey League

Pro Basketball

GB
1
6
8
13
15
16

w L Pet GB
56 26 .683

Boston vs. Montreal
Wednesday, Aprll7
Boston 3, Montreal 0
Friday, April 9
Boston 2. Monlreal t , OT
Sunday, April 11
Montreal 3. Boston 2
·
Tuesday, Aprll13
Boston 4, Montreal 3, 20T, Boston leads
series 3-1
Thursday, April 15
Montreal at Boston, 7 p.m.
Saturday, April 17
Boston at Montreal, TBA , if necessary

'

IPageBS

SCOREBOARD

.The Daily Sentinel
Pro Football

'

Monday, Aprll19

Mon1real at BoSton, 7 p.m., il necessary
Philadelphia vs. New J&amp;rsey
Thursday, April 8
Philadelphia 3, New Jersey 2

Salun:lay, April 10

Philadelphia 3, New Jersey 2
Monday, April 12
New Jersey 4. Philadelphia 2
Wednesday, Aprll14
Philadelphta
3. New Jersey
0.
Philadelphia leads series 3·1
Saturday, April 17
New Jersey at Philadelphia. 3 p.m.
Sunday, Aprll1 8
Philadelphia at New Jersey, TBA. II necessary
Tuesday, April 20
New Jersey at Philadelph ia, 7 p.m., if nee·
essary
Toronto vs. Ottawa

Thumloy, April I
Ot1a"''4, Toronlo 2
SOiunlay, April 10
Toronto 2. Ottawa 0
Monday, April 12
Toronto 2. onawa o

Wedneaday, April14
Ottawa 4. Toronto 1, ser•es 11ed 2·2
Friday, April16 .
Ottawa at Toronto. ?-p.m.
Sunday April 18
.
Toronto at Ottawa. 7 p.m.
Tuesday, April 20
Ottawa at TQ(onto, 7 p.m.. 11 nec~sary

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Detroit vs. Nashville
Wednesday, Apri11
Detroit 3, Nashville 1
Satun:tay, April 10
Detroit 2. Nashville 1
• Sunday, April 11
Nashvtlle 3, Detroit 1
Tuesday, April 13
Nashville 3. Oelr01t 0. senes lied 2-2

Thursday, April 15

Nashville at Detroit. 7:30p.m.
Saturday, April 11
Detroit at Nashv1lle. 3 p.m.
Monday, April 19
Nashville at Detroit. 7:30 p.m.. 1f necessary
San Jose ,vs. St. Louis
Thursday, April 8
San Jose 1, St. Louis 0, OT

Saturday, April10

San Jose 3. St. Louis 1
' Monday, April 12
St. Louis 4. San Jose 1
Tuesday, April 13
San Jose 4 . St LoUis 3 . San Jose leads
series 3·1
Thursday, April 15
St Lows at San Jose . 10 p.m.
Saturday, April17
San Jose at St. LoUIS. TBA.. 11necesSary
Monday, April 19
St. Louis at San Jose. 10 p.m.. it neces·
sary
Vancouver vs. Calgary
Wednuday, April 7
Yancouver 5. Calgary 3
Friday, April 9
Calgary 2. Vancouver 1

Sunday, April 11

Vancouver 2, Calgary .1
Tuesday, April 13
Calgary 4. Vancouver 0, series ti~ 2·2
Thursday, April 15
Calgary at Vancouver, 10:30 p.m.
Saturday, April17
Vancouver at Calgary. TBA
Monday, April 19
Calgary at Vancouvef, 10:30 p.m .. 1f nee·
essary
.Colorado vs. Dallas
Wednesday, April 7
Colorado 3,, Dallas 1
Friday, April 9
ColOrado 5, Oallas 2
Monday, April 12
Dallas 4. Colorado 3; OT
Wednesday, April 14
Colorado 3, Dallas 2. 20T; Colorado
leads series 3-1
·
Saturday, April 17
Dallas at Colorado. 3 p.m.
Sunday, April 18
Colorado at Dallas. TBA, 1f necessary

Tueaday, April 20

Dallas at Colorado, TBA. it necessary

CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS
(Besl·of·7)
CONFERENCE FINALS
(Bes1·ol·7)
STANLEY CUP FINALS
(Best-of-7)
ECHL Playoff Glance
WILD CARD ROUND

Thursday,April15,2004
Idaho 4, Las Vegas 3. OT, series tied 2·2

Northern DIYIIIOn

Wod"'!aday, April14

Mondlly, April 5

Idaho at Las Vegas, 11 :30 p.m.

Reading 2, Johnstown 1

~

DIVISION FINALS

DIVISION SEMIFINALS
(Beo1-ol·5)

Atlantic City vs. Peoria
WBdnesda~. April 7
Atl antiC C1ty 3. Peona 2
Friday, April 9
Peona 6 . Atla ntiC C1ty 3
Monday, Aprll12
Peona, 2, AtlantiC C11y I. OT
Tuesday, April 13
Peoria 2. A11antic C1ty 1. OT, Peon s wins
series 3-1
SOuthern Division
Columbia vs. South Carolina
Tuesday, April 6
Columbia 4. South Carolina 1
Friday, April 9
South Carolina 4 . CCllumbia 2
Saturday, Aprll1 0
South Carolina 3, Columbia 2, OT
Tuesday, Aprtl 13
. South Carolina 3, Columbia 0. South
Carolina wins series 3-1
Roanoke vs. Florida
Tuesday, April 6
Floriaa 4. Roanoke 3
Thursday, April 8
Florida 6. Roanoke 3
Friday, April 9
Roanoke 5. Flonda 3
Monday, April12
Florida 3, Roanoke 2. SO, Florida wins
series 3·1
Central Division
Louisiana vs. Pensacola
Wednesday, April 7
Louisiana 8. Pensacola 4
Thursday, April 8
Louisiana 6, Pensacola o
Saturday; April 10
Pensacola 2, Louisiana 1, OT
Tuesday, April 13
Pensacola 3. Louisiana 1. senes !ted 2·2
Wednesday, April 14
Pensacola at Louisiana, 8:05 p.m ..
Mississippi vs. Gwinneft
Wednesday, April 7
GwinnQtt 2. Mississippi 1, OT
Friday, April 9
Mississippi 4. Gwinnen 3
Saturday, April 10
Gwinnett 6, Mississippi 3
Monday, AprU 12
Mississippi 3. Gwinnett 0, se ries tied 2·2
-wednesday, April 14
Gwinnett at Mississippi, 8:05 p.m.

'

Pacific Division
San Diega vs. Alaska
Tuesday, April 6
A.laska 4, San Diego 2
Wednesday, April 7
Alaska 4, San D1ego 3. OT

Friday, April 9

Alaska 5, San Diego 1,
series 3-0

Al~ka

Las Vegas vs.. Idaho
Tuesday, April 6
Las Ve~as 4, Idaho 2
Friday, April 9
Las Vegas 3. Idaho 2
Saturd$y, April 1 o
Idaho 2, Las Vegas 0

Tuesday, April 13

·wms

Northem Division
Reading vs. Peoria, TBA.
Southam Division
South Carolina vs. Florida

Friday, April16

0 0 2 2 0 0
1 3
2 3
w L T Pis GF GA
1 0 1 4 4 3
1 1 1
0 0
1 1
0
0
0 0
0 0
1 2
0

NOTE . Three po1nts tor v1ctory, one point
tor tie

South Carolina at Flonda. 7:30'p.m.
Saturday, April 17
Sou th Carolma at Flonda. 7:30 p.m.
Th!lrsday, April 22
Fionda at South Carolina, 7'05 p_m_

Saturday's Games
at MetroStars. 4 p m.
San Jose at New England . t 30 p.m.
Dallas at Chicago, 8:30p.m
Columbus ·at Kansas City, 8.30 p.m.
Los Angeles at Colorado. 9 p m.
Saturday, April 24
Chicago at D.C. United. 5 p.m.
Kansas C1ly at Dallas . 8:30p.m.
San Jose ar Colorado. 9 p.m.
Columbus at Los Angeles. 10 p.m
Sunday, April 25
New England at MetroStars. 4 p.m.
D.C. United

Friday, April 23

Flonda at South Carolina; 7:05 p.m .. il
necessary
Sunday, April 25
South Carolina at Florida, 5 p m., •f nee·
essary
Central DivisiOn
Louisiana-Pensacola winner ·vs.
MISSISSippi·Gw•nnett winner
TBA

Transactions

Pacific Division
Alaska vs. Las Vegas-Idaho wmner

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
•" I

I'\ 1..., • \ ul

, I '\11

American league
BOSTON RED SOX-Sent INF Brian
Daubach and LHP Bobby Jones outright to
Pawtucket.

CONFERENCE FINALS
(Best-o l-5)

Bv J.

(Best-ot-7)

Baseball
Eastern League
North Division

·w L Pet . GB
B1nghamton (Mets)
6 1 .857
New Hampshire (Jays) 3 1 750
Trenton (Yankees)
2 1 667 2
Norwich (Giants)
3 3 500 2',
4 .200 4
New Britain (Twins)
1 4 200 4
Portland (Red Soli: )
South Division
w L Pel, GB.
4 2 667
Altoona (Pirate$)
Akro11 (lnd1ans)
3 2 600
3 2 .600 ''
Reading (Philltes)
2 3 400 1' i
Bowie (Orioles )
Harrisburg (E,.;pos)
2 3 .400 1''
1 5 .167 3
Erie (Tigers)

"

-,

Wednesday's Games
Binghamton 3, Ene 2. 1st game
Binghamton 5. Ene 2, 2nd game
Akron 3. Harrisburg 0
New Hampsh•re at Trenton , ppd ., weather.
1st game
New Hampshire at Trenton. ppd ., rain , 2nd
game
Norw1c11 B. Altoona 0. 1st game
Norw1ch '3. Altoona 0, 2nd game
Por tland at New Bntain, ppd., weather
Reading 4. Bowie o. 1st game
Reading at Bow1e, 2nd_game.
ThUrsday 's Games
Akron at Reading
Altoona at Harrisburg
Bmghamton at Portland
Bowie at Erie
New Britain al Norw"ich
Trenton at New Hampshae
Frlday·s Games
Akron at Reading
Altoona at Harnsburg'
Bmghamton at Portland
Bow1e at Erie
·
New Bntain at Norwich
Trenton at New Hampshire

·

Ugueth Urb1na from Lakeland of the FSL.
Des1gnated OF Andres Torres for assign ment
NEW YORK YANKEES---£,.;tended the
contract ot Jean Atterman . vice prestdent
and assistant . general manager. through
the 2007 seascio.
SEA.TTLE MARINERS- Recalled RHP
J.J. Putz from Tacoma of the PCL.
.OpliOned RHP Ratael Soriano to Inland
Empue ol the Cai1IOrn1a League
TEXAS RANGERS-Placed RHP M 1c~ey
Callaway on the 15-day OL. Recalled AHP
Ryan Drese lrom Oklahoma of lhe PCL.

TORONTO BLUE JAYS-Recalled AHP

Jason Frasor from Syracuse ot lhe IL. Sent
RHP Scan Douglass outright to Syracuse .
National League
ATLANTA BRA.VE8-Activated C-OF Eli
Marrero lrom the 15-day Dl.. Optioned INF
Mike Hessman to Richmond ot the IL.

Major League Soccer
Easlern Conterence.

WLTPtsGF
0

1

4

3\

0

0

3

3

GA
2

BASKETBALL
BOSTON CELTICS-Piaeed G-F Paul
P1erce and F Kendnek. Perkins on the
Injured list. Signed G Dana Barros and F
Ernest Brown .
OALLA.S MAVERICKS-Placed F Josh
Howard on the injured list. Act1vated G Tony
Delk from the mjured fist.

FOOTBALL
National Football League

CINCINNATI BENGALS-Re·si,gned WR
T.J. Houshmandzadeh to a one-year con tract.
.
DALLAS COWBOYS-Signed RB Ave10n
Cason. C Matt Lel"lr and LB Markus Steele

HOCKEY
National Hockey League

OTTAWA SENATORS-Assigned RW
Josh Lan'gfeld to Binghamlon of !he AHL.

COLLEGE

OBnuARIES
Page AS
• Lavada Woodyard
• Sybil French

INSIDE
• Infamous kidnapper of
Steven Stayner gets 25
years tci life.
See Page AS
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A2
'

'

WEATHER
'

Sprin g js finally here, and Alabama's beautiful Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail is ready to play. We bet you are too. So swap gloves , dust
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lS ONCE AGAIN A 3 WOOD,
off the clubs, and go outside to play. Special spring packages now available. Call 800.949 .4444 or· visit www.RT JGolf.com for details .
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,

TURE.

~

'

Details on

THANKFULLY, 15 DEGREES

.,, 1

MILES lAYTON

JI.AYTON~MYDAILY5ENTINEL.COM

When the jury rendered a
verdic t in Durham\ favor.
Jud ge Story thanked the
jurors for lheir civic service.
An01her case lhat is working ils way lhrough Meig s
Counly Court involves a lit·
tie voodoo.
In ·Marc h, Portland residenl
Sharon Phelps filed a complaim ·with lhe Meigs County
· Prosecutor·s Office againsl
Pam King who has now been
c ha rged with aggravated
menacing- a misdemeanor.

Prior to lhi' complaint.
King had filed c·harge' with
the Meigs Cou nt y Shenff\
Office when she discovered
voo doo ilems in her fronl
yard in Portland such J' a
pentagram ci rcled by li t can·
dies which greeted her lao,t
New Year's E\'e. Later. a
chicken's foot wa&gt; found
inside her car which had 666
painted on the rear windshield. A tin y doll decoraled
with pins and needles was ·
found nearby. The Rev .

Walter Heinl at th e Sacred
He an C. hur&lt;:h in Pomcro,·
went OU~ 111 Ole " I he hOLhe ,
ih e proper!) and ihe car. No
sti'pe cts were e\·er arrested .
Prior tl1 the pre-trial hear·
mg Thur:-,da\ 111 t-•1 ei u~
County Ctn1;1. King a1;d
Phelp' had 111 be ' eparated
tl\' la1.1 enforc·emenl a£e nb.
King pled " nol guilt y"'
the
t:hargc-., . A tnal \\ J .., \Ched uled for I I a.m. in June :1 111
Mcig' Count) Coun .

to

BY J. MILES LAYTON

National Basketball Association

Whitesell men's basketball coach .
PEPPERDI NE-AnnounceO the resignation of Mark Trakh , women's basketball
~oach . to take the same posi1ion at
Southern Calitornia.
TOWSON-Announced the res1gnat10n
of Michael Hunt. men's basketball coach.

"'

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

LOYOLA OF CHICAGO- Named Jim

Soccer

\1'1{11

Flood waters subside

CHICAGO CUBS-Qplioned LHP Andy

Pratt to Iowa of the PCL. Recalled AHP
Francis Beltran lrom Iowa .
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS-Purchased
the contract ol AHP Brian Cooper from
Fresno of the PCL. Optioned OF Tony
Torcato to Fresno.

DELAWARE-Signed K.C Keeler. tootball coach . to a contract exleilsion through
the 2009 season .

IIU II\\

era! thousands of dollars in
da.mage to the golf course.
Ass istant Meigs Coun1y
POMEROY A jury Prosec utor Dana Gilliland
delivered a verdict of not said O' Brien allege s thai
guilty 10 Bryan Durham who Durham damaged sandtraps;
was charged with criminal pine lree s, rakes and two
mi schief, a .misdemeanor, golf carts. His attorney
Tuesday in the Meigs Charles Knight said there
County Court of Judge was no driver's log for the
Sleven Story.
golf carts 10 prove who was
The owner of lhe Pomeroy driving the cart that may
Golf Course; Pat O' Brien, have done the damage.
filed
charges
against 'O'Brien said he saw Durham
Durham claiming he did sev- driving lhe golf cart.

• Southern falls to RV, 7-0.
See Page 81

DETROIT TIGERS-Rocalled RHP

KELLY CUP FINALS

th»

Jury delivers'verdict in Pomeroy Golf Course case

SPORTS

BASEBALL

TBA

D.C. United
MetroSta.rs

Tontadoes blow
past Raiders, Bt

0 0
0
Columbus
1 0 0
New England • 0
Weetern ConferenCe
Los Angeles
Colorado
Dallas
Kansas City
San Jose

(Best~f·5)

Northam Division
Wheeling ve. Reading
Thursday, Aprlt 8
Wheeling 3. Reading 1
Friday, April 9
Readmg 3. Wheeling 2
Saturday, A.pri110
Readmg 4. Wheeling 3
Tuesday, April13
Wheeltng 3, Read1ng t
Wednesday,·April14
Readmg 4, Wheeling 0. R~ad 1n g wins
series 3-2

Chicago

Government to go with
plans to ship wastes
to Nevada, A7

1

POMEROY - After sever·
al days of rain, the sun came
out Thursday and the Ohio
Ri ve r crested ju&gt;t in time tD
lhwart more road closings in
the coumy.
1 Flash flood waters covered
roads in Meigs County earlier
this week including several
state hi ghways. On Tuesday
many motorisls were trying
to detour around Burlingham
o n Stale Route 33, closed to
even the·largest vehicles, tried
using State Route 681 east or
west, but to no avai l. State
Route 124 was closed for
high water because there were
at least two places where the
water crossing the highway
was something to be taken
very seriously. There· were
several low lying valleys
between Pomeroy and Racine
that had become lakes.
Charles Stewart, head Iockman at the Racine Lock and
Dam, said this was the fourth
flood this year. He said the river
had crested at 41 feet at 6 p.m.
Thlll'Sday. A few miles away in
Pomeroy, high waters were just
barely touching the bottom of the
dept!) gauge at 45 feet. The parking lot was underwater but the
new walkpath was dry. SJewart
said it will take at least a week
before the waters completely
subside and go back to nonnal.
"Because the water is up, this is
really going to mess up the boating for the weekend." he said.
Despite this, the weekend
should prove to be a dry one
with highs reaching into the
70s' until Monday when
thunderstorms return .

1

BY

BY BRIAN

2 SE&lt;:riONS -

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
pear Abby
Editorials
Faith• Values
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Nas.car
Weather

J. REED

BREED@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

16 PAGES

A6
B4-6
B7
A6

A4
A2

As
As

B1
BB
A7

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY - Emergency
personnel and local officials
wi ll meet next month to
begin preliminary planning
for 911 service in Meig s
County.
At Thursday's regular
meeling of Meigs County
Commissio ner s,
Commissioner Jeff Thornton
set a meeting with representatives of vi llage police
departments 'and local fire
stations, EMS and sheriff's
representatives, mayors and
communi ty representatives
for May 3 to discuss the

sis.
·· T h e
dialv ~ i\

The high water mark just barely hit 45 feet in Pomeroy Thu rsday when the Ohio River crested
at about 6 p.m. Thursday. (J . Miles Layton)

.

needs of the communities,
and to determine what and
how much money is needed
to put the system in place.
The meeting will be fol·
lowed by a smaller meeling,
made up of,the 911 Planning
Committee, which the commissioners appoinled last
month . The planning com·
mittee is made up of
Thornton, Mayor Sandy
Iannarelli of Middleport, and
Salisbury Township Trustee
Bill Spaun.
Commissioners
has
charged the committee with
preparing a 911 study, examIning the costs of purchasing
equipment, hiring personnel

"bul our study may shG.w C&lt;N ·
saving. be nefits to lhe comiliu·
nities tile syslem &gt;erves.''
Commissioner
Mick
Davenport said communitie'
may be asked to share · the
cos1 of operating the system.
but could ~ee a cosl-savings
in wages for di spatchers anti
other emergency personnel.
"Those costs and saving s
will nol be known um il 1he
plan
is
completed : ·
Davenporl said . "The co;t of
$300,000.
. providing 911 service to the
"The basic benefit of911 ser· coun1y is the primary goal of
vice is convenience 10 the pub- the sludy the commiltee wi ll
lic," Thorman said Thursday, complete:·

and operat ing a 911 emer·
gency dispatch system,
before seeking slate granl
fundi ng for lhe system.
A second, larger commitee.
a 91 1 Technical Committee. '
will also be formed to help
with the planning prbcess.'
Based on a study cnmplet·
ed last year using funds from
the Governor's Office of
Appalachia , commissioners
estimate the cost of es.tablishing the county-wide 911 service at a half-million dollars.
and annual operating cost s al

Wednesday, April 28, 2004 • 1 PM - 4:30 PM
Hol;zer Medical Center Education &amp; Conference Center or
Holzer Medical Center - Jackson Education-Room-

v. as sti hard
on
me:·
Will is said.
··1 had needles
the
siLe of ink
pen.; put in
my arms. It
was really
p&lt;ii nful. ··
Willis's
heallh was fai lmg rapidly.
She had 13 opera1ions to correel prohlem s caused by a
lack of functional kidneys
which the body uses to filler
the blood 11ith. Things were
looking grim. but -then a
prayer was answered.
The day after ThanKsgiving
l:tsl year. Wil lis got a call at
5:30 a.m. in lhe morning
from a doc tor who asked her "
when she could · make it to
Colum bus for a transplant
operation. The t.loctor w id her
the hosp iia l might have a
matchu1g Kidney. Within
momems Willis and her hus·
band Troy wen: on their way
to ·the hospila l.
"We heal the kidney 10 the
hospilal." 'he said.
Willi s . disco\'ered the kid ney was donated t'rom someone who had died in New
York. She saiJ she doesn 'I
know much more tha1i !his
beca'usc th ere is .1 six month
period before information
abou t the cth nor can be
rel eased to l1er. Willi., said
~he

wanb to know about him

and thank Ihe man ·s famil v
for his [!enerosit y.
·
The tran splan t ope ration
look lhree hours. Willio, said
the d&lt;ic iOrs and nurses \\-ere
'onccrn ed th at the kidnev
might nol be a good enou gh
match . lt!lenllv, 1hev watched
Willis for several li'ours after
the operation. Fortunalely .
th e kidn ey was a perfec1
match and il has changed
Willi, ·, life forc•w r.
,
;The kidne\ has made a
di ffe rence in 'nn life:· she
'aid. "TI1cre i' nt i more dial y-

Piease see Future, AS

MEDICAL CENTER
- Di.'icover the Hiltzer Dft/e ,~encc

Sponsored locally by Holzer Hospice and the HMC Chaplaincy Department

Moderator: Colcie Roberts • ABC News
Featuring a panel of experts on rhe sub;ecr • CEUs ore available
fo&lt;

.-

I

•'

- -·-

-- ---- --

-

lAYTON

LONG BOTTOM - F01
nearly IUyear, , Kath) Willi, .
.J5. ent.lured pain heyonL
belief · because she had · nc
working kidneys. Three day'
.a week. she would make ''
triip 10 Parkersburg for dialy·

.

INDEX '

J, MILES

JLAYTQN@MYDI\IL'I'SENT;NEL COM

911 Committee to meet next month

Page A7

The gift of a
kidney
changes local
woman's future

mont

information or IQ regisler,.coll (740) 446·111074 or toll•t... 1 • 800·500· 4150

www.holzer.org

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