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                  <text>Thursday, April22, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B8 'The Daily Sentinel

Bengals keep
helmets, change
rest ofunifonn, Bt

O
NFL teams will adapt once decision
comes down on Cl_
arett, Williams
BY RusTY

MIWR

Associated Press
COLUMBUS - While Maurice Claren
and Mike Williams await word from the
U.S. Supreme Court on whether they'll be
mcluded in this weekend's NFL draft.
seouts, coaches and general managers are
ready for whatever comes down.
"I think everybody has their boards set,"
said Gil Brandt. an NFL draft. consultant
and former Dallas .Cowboys personnel
director. "They put Williams in there, they
put Claren in there. And if the ruling is
overturned and their choice comes up,
that's when they pick one of them"
Clarett's lawyer expects Justice Ruth
Bader Ginsburg to rule before Saturday· s
draft whether the former Ohio State tailback and Williams. a former Southern
California wide receiver. can enter the
draft.
· Claret! appealed a stay issued Monday
by 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
putting a hold on a lower-court ruling that
said the NFL can't force players to wait
three years after "high school before turning pro.
.
·
Claren argued in Tuesday's tiling' that
the NFL wouldn't suffer any· harn1 if he's
allowed in the draft - but he would be
harmed if he is blocked.
. t:Jarett led Ohio State to a national ti tle
as.a freshman. but was ruled ineligible as
a sophomore for accepting money- from a
fiunily friend and lying about it to NCAA
and university investigators. Williams
declared for the draft after a lower court
ruled in Claren's favor.
Claren. 20 and out of high school· two
years. would be eligible for the draft next
year under the current rule. He dropped

out of clas~s at Ohio State after the winter quarter.
·
Williams played two · seasons for the
Trojans. After Claren received a favomble
ruling in a federal court. he hired an agent
and said he would aho come out for the
draft early.
The legal wrangling has not forced
teams to make dmmatic changes to their
plans.
" It doesn't wmplicate matters at all."
Buffalo Bill s assistant general manager
and chief scout Tom Modrak'said. "We
processed it. We did the infom1ation. We
hung them on ·the board. Now if they're
nm there. they· re not there."
Most NFL teams have been developing
dr.Jli scenarios since the first of March.
Brandt said. Some give a higher priority to
need. others to the best players available.
Players move up and down on teams'lists
based on their physical and mentaJ evaluations trom private workouts and the NFL
combine. Teams also must factor in who
the teams making se lections ahead of
them might pick. ~
Cincinnati Bengals coach M&lt;}fVin Lewi~
attended Clarett's workout day at Ohio
State earlier this month. where ·scouts
timed. measured, tested and weighed the
20-year-old.
·
Since Clarett has played only nine
£ames in the last 29 months. Lewis said it
is diftlcult to estimate what he can do in
the pros - or how high a draft pick to use
on him.
'The interesting thing is that of the
youngest 25 guys in this year's drati,
Maurice is like the fifth -youngest, he's not
the !lrst."' Lewis said. "You have to project
him down the line. the maturity level.
That's why teams have spent a lot of time

with Maurice, and he's been very busy
visiting tean1s because they want to get to
know him a little more. You don't have his
experience on campus. This year he basically wasn't on can1pus, so you really only
· have one year exposure there at Ohio
State."
Most dr.Jli experts believe Williams is a
first -round choice. They cite Claren 's
pedestrian 4.6-second time in the 4-0·yard
dash and predict he could wait until the
third round to.hear his name called.
Ginsburg is not bound by a ·deadline.
even though the NFL drati begins on
Saturday afternoon. She can make a decision on her own or can refer the issue to
the entire Supreme Court. On Wednesday .
she asked the NFL to file a response to
Clarett's appeal by Thursday morning.
Should Ginsburg and the Court rule
against Claret! - and other players like
him - the teams will have to erase their
names and move up those below them on
their charts.
'
"I don't know what it's going to mean
long-term. but for us immediately it's just
two more people out of the mix , that' s all."
Modmk said.
Ginsburg or the full court could rule that
the players should be in the draft. that they
should be excluded or also could direct the
NFL to include them in a special. supplemental draft
No matter which way the ruling goes,
the teams will not be taken by surp(ise.
''It doesn 't mean that all of a sudden the
teams start over from square one," Brandt
said. "You've accumulated all this data, all
this infom1ation, and you've watched the
tapes .and put them through personal
workouts ... Every team has put their
board in order."

It's hard to
keep Hawk from
hitting the field, Bt

Community Development Block Grant allocation cut for 2004

SPORTS
• Claret! thrown for loss.
· See Page B1

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY . Meigs County
Commissioners
have
received
$153.000
in
Community
Development Block Grant formula
funds for distribution to townships.
villages and non-profit agencies, but
the amount available continues to
drop each year, according to Meigs
County Commissioner Jeff Thornton .
The amount granted to commissi(;mers tor distribution this year is
$1.000 less than in 2003. but is
$31.000 less than was given to Meigs
County in 2002 - an amount equal

to a full y-funded CDBG project for a
local community, Thornton said.
" I hope this is not a sign of thing'
to come." Thornton said. "Local
governments in Meigs County rely
on this money each year for small
projects which would not likely be
funded by other sources."
The fund s are awarded to six projects for local communities. including paving pmjects. tire ,equipment
purchases. water ex pansion and
other projects. Thornton said April
30 is the deadline for appli cations to
be submitted to the county gra nts
office tor consideration.

Gml)l' adr1inistmtor Jean Trussell c(mducted a second public hearing on the
county\ proposed application fo r
$90.000 in housing preservation funds
from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
TI1e application will use $83.~)() in ·
Community Housing lmproveme m
Progrd!TI funds to pmvide home repai"
ftJr 15 very-low income households now
on &lt;I waiting list tor repai".
Commissioners accepted bids from
Home Creek Enterprises of Pomeroy.
in the amount of $19.775 for th~
replacement of the roof at the Chester
Academy. Can-Do Maintenance of
Pomeroy in the an1ount of $7.525 fm

rl)(]f replacemem at the Dcpanment of
Job and Famil\ Sen ices. and
$_, 1.0-+6 -+U fm1i1 Shellv Co.
· Thom,·ille. tor paving in Che~ter. torn:
paid for from CDBG formula funds ..
Commis~ione r~ abo:
• Appnll·ed pa 0 melll of bill , in the
amoun t of 5297.520.83. '
• Appnl\cd a second-quaner appropriation reque'l from the exte nsion
sen·ice in the amount or SJUJJOO.
• Approved a tnUJsfer request trom the
county engi neer in the amount of ~JUJHJ.
• Accepted a bid for bituminou'
material s fo r Ma y from Asphalt
Materials. In,·. of Marietta

STRUMMIN' MY SIX STRING

Miami's Roethlisberger anxious for draft
him. Agent Leigh Steinberg figures six or
seven teams have an interest. depending
upon how things work out
''My 30 years of doing thi s have· convinced m€ that anything is possible in the
process,'' Steinberg said.
Eli Manning, Roethlisberger and Philip
Ri vers are the top three quarterbacks
available in a draft class that is loaded
with receivers and cornerbacks.

BY Joe KAv

Associated Press

The workouts are t1nished. The meetings with NFL teams are done. There's
th' 1 ft ' B R thl " be
d
no mg e .or en oe ts rger to 0
but wait
Th e
quarterback
from
Miami
University is antsy to find out where he' ll
wind up in the first round of the NFL draft
on Saturday. He's had a few days to relax
There is always a lot of speculation in
th · f
the days leading up to the draft. Teams are
wi hts amily in Findlay. Ohio. and tol- waiting to see if San Diego, which as the
low the draft speculation on television .
first overall pick, trades down.
Waiting has turned out to be the toughThere's also speculation about which
.
est part of all.
"It's nervousness," Roethlisberger said . teams are interested in a player. someWednesday night, in 3 phone interview thing that Steinberg warns his clients to
from his home. "I don ' t know if I have •gnore.
Roethlisberger is trying to enjoy the last
enough words to describe how 1 feel
inside. 1 feel like a balloon, and Saturday few days betore the draft instead of fretI'llllnally get to let it all out.
ting about them. Former Marshall quar"There's a lot of anxiousness just to terback Byron Leftwich , who was
learn where rIll going to play football and Jacksonville's first-round draft pick last
to find out where I'm going 10 be_. spend- year. called him a few days ago with some
advice.
ing the next few years of my life."
It could be just about anywhere.
"He said it's going to be everything and
Roethlisberger worked out for more than you thought," Roethlisberger
Cleveland and Pittsburgh last week, the said. ''I'm trying to absorb it all because
last two teams that wanted another look at it's only going to happen once."
After working out for the Browns and

then

~oing

to Pittsburgh last week.
had a chance to relax. He
went to Oxtord to watch Miami 's spring football game and see some friends.
"There were mixed emotions," he said.
"It was great to be back and see those
guys and hang out. It was tou gh because l
know deep down I could sllll be out there
playing, I had another year."
Roethlisberger, who left Miami after his
junior season, will tly to New York for a
draft luncheon on Friday with other
prominent prospects-- Manning. Rivers,
tackle Robert Gallery, cornerback
DeAngelo Hall. receiver Roy Williams
and tight end Kellen Winslow Jr.
Roethlisberger's family and Miami
coach Terry Hoeppner will be with him
Saturday, when the suspense ends and the
draft begins.
Until then. he's trying not to think about
how it will all play out.
· "I don't know what teams are going to
do," he said. "I don't know if they fully
know what they're going to do. There's
no reason for me to sit there and wonder
and put my hope one way or another. That
way you get di sappointed or upset.
"It' s a once-in-a-lifetime experience.
I'm just trying to take it in stride."
Roethhsber~er

2003 Ford Mustang
Convertible

PONY PACKAGE
LoTTERIES
Pick 3 day: 3-8-5
Pick 4 day: 3-3-3-3
Pick 3 night: 4·3-2
Pick 4 nlg~: 7·1-4·9
Buckeyes: 10-11-12-19·21

"It was a very dift1cult conversation ,
the hardest one I've ever had with a
pl ayer," Martz said. "He asked what his
future was. I think from that point on it
just kind of took on a life of its own."
Bartelstein said Tuesday his client
expected to be released aFter June I and
added he expected a lot of interest
around the NFL in Warner.
Martz blamed him self for not making
it clear to Warn er, the NFL MVP in
1999 and 200 I, that he still cou ld be
back. He also said he expects Warner to
continue participating in offseason
workouts and minicamps.
" I' m afraid in my discussions with

Kurt that I got carried a.way and led
him to believe thi s was it," Martz said.
It's still likely that Warner will be
released. But Martz reiterated that di scussions on a long-term contract with
Bul ger could impact what happens.
Any Bulger talks also could impact
whether the Ram s select a quarterback
in the first round oJ the draft on
Saturday.
Bulger has been a big success in I 12 seasons as a starter with the Rams.
He won hi s first six starts in 2002 and
led the team to a 12-4 · record and an
N FC West championship last year, then
was the MVP in the Pro BowL

Daily 3: 5-1-0
Daily 4: 9-4-2-6
Cash 25: 1-7-9-15-17-25

LEATHER!

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#004942

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Details on Page A2

INDEX
2 SECI'IONS- t6 PAGES

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BY BRIAN

J,

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

WEA'I)IER

Calendars

Center

Day of Prayer set at courthouse

West Virginia

rer Sport

Southern honors students
for academic excellence ·

One of the most popular string instruments in America today is the guitar. Yet very few
schools offer instruction in guitar as a part of the ir music curriculum . Meigs Local is an
exception. This -is the fifth year for class g4itar lessons there. Toney Dingess teaches the
class to 17 students this year. Seated here in a hallway strumming-on their instruments are
four of those class members. left to right. Brittany Powers, Nathan Argobrite , Andrew
Henderson, and Anna Sayre. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Ohio

Martz: Warner departure not yet guaranteed
ST. LOUIS (AP) - St. Louis Rams
coach Mike Martz said Wednesday that
Kurt Warner's agent overreacted to a
conversation he ·had with the quarterback, and emphasized there's still a
chance the two-time MYP could stay
with the team.
Martz characterized his conversation
with Warner on Monday as a necessary
"t1rst step'' in the process after he
decided to go with former West
Virginia standout Marc Bulger as his
quarterback For next seaso·n . He said he
had promised Warner and hi s agent.
Mark Bartel stein , that he would inform
him when he had made a decision .

. Sara Cammarata. a junior at Southern High School. has JU St
been presented an' academic ac hievement award by Don
Smith , president of the Southern Local School Board. at t11e
annual Southern Local Academic Banquet rhursday at
Southern High School . (J. M1les Layton)

POMEROY
- Meigs
County
Commissioners
authorized the use of the
courthouse steps for the
National Day of Prayer
observance on May 6,
allowing a county-wide
prayer servi ce on behalf of
government 1 officials. the
county, state and nation.
Members of the Mei gs
County National Day of
Prayer Commillee, Gladys
Cumings,
Brenda
Barnhart,
Rev.
Rod
Bruwer and Peggy Crane.
attended Thursday's regular meeting of the commissioners as the board signed
a proclamation setting the
Day of Prayer and permit ting the use of the co urthou se for the observance.
Events for the Day of
Prayer will begin at 3 p.m.
on May 2, when residents
,will form a circle of
prayer around the co urthouse itself. The Day of
Prayer service will be held
from II :30 to 12:30 p.m.
on May 6, and will
include
inspirational
mu sic . testimonies, and
prayer for all elected officia ls.
The committee will host
a prayer breakfast for offi-

Meigs County· Commiss ioners Jim Sheets and Mick
Davenport display a banner made by Jane Abbott of.
Middleport to hang at the county courthouse during the
National Day of Prayer observance. while President Jeff
Thornton signs a proclamation declaring May 6 as a day of
prayer in the county. National Day of Prayer Committe ·members Rev. Rod Brower, Peggy Crane and Gladys Cumings are
also pictured. (Brian J. Reed)
cials at 7:30 a.m. on May
6 at Rejoi cing
Life
Church, and the day will
co nclude with a Concert of
Prayer at 7 p.m. at Ash
Street Church. sponsored
by ·
the
Middleport
Ministerial Assoc iation.
''It 's a real statement that
the COmmiSS IOners are
willing to cooperate wi th
us in observing a Day of

Prayer in Meigs County."
Brower said. "It's a ble ssing to the communit y that
thi s is sti ll happening. and
the committee and the
co mmunity appreciate it."
The Day of Pra ye r was
first proclaimed by the
Second
Continental
Congress. and was revived
in 1952 by President Harry
S Truman .

BY J. MILES lAYTON
JLAYTON@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE - The !lest and
bri ghtest stuJenh were hon ored at the annual Southern ·
Local Academic AwarJs
Ban~uet
Thursday
at
Southern High School.
Superintendent
Bob
Grucscr ope ned the , ceremonies with a quick itnecdote that summed up the
ban4uet's theme of techno!- .
ogy. Grueser talked about a
kindergarten student who
· was computer whiz able to
inoculate a virus. Grucscr
said when he hears 1he word ·
"viru,:· he takes a few step'
back from his com puter. The
C(lmparison
being Ihal
today\ yo un g people are so .lcrcmv Yca~u r.
completely immersed and
Gracie II hniH)ree, inl"ludunafraid of tedmology than e(! : A, hton Brown. Sara
their parents arc.
Cammaral&lt;L Hea th er Duffy.
Dr. Mike Beaver-. a profe,- Hull v Duth . Jmdan Nei~ler.
sor at the Un iversitv of Rio . Cr;ti~ RaiHilllph. AslJic)
Grande. gave the ·keynote Roush . Chr is Tuc~er and
address tellin g students th.ilt Nidi Tul·,cr,
technology will play impor.l'
Grade I 0 honur,·es includtant part in their future . ed : Brad Crou,·_ ll. Nicole
Us in g a stream of common Jnne' and Krislin a Willianb.
words which ha\'e chanued
GraJe lJ hr\noree' incluJmeani11g like "v iru~·· ._or ed : Amber Hill. Mallm")
"google:·- Beaver made the Hill. Jacob Hunter. Adam
observiltion that technol og) Phillips and All ie Rcc s.
has changed 1hings from
Grade 8 honorees includyes terday's world of bonks ed : Bonnie Allen. Moman
to loduy ·s world of lhe Brown. Lindsey Buu;lrd .
Internet.
He ather Cundiff. Stephanie
" You are the best anti Cundiff. S;1ral1 El Dahaja .
briglllcst, and we expect you (ourtne\ Ginther. Wh1tnev
to usc technology for a good Riffl e ·· and
ls:a) Iyl1
purpose:· he said.
Spradlin~
Robe rt Beegle presented a
GraLk 7 hrlll&lt;&gt;recs includMiddleport-Pomeroy Rotary ed: 1\•lerri Collins. BrnLh
saving ., bond of S I00 to Flint.
Br) an
HarTi&gt; .,
Jainw Warne r. a se\·en th Christopher HLJitcr. Emma
grader. Beeg le then presented another S.IOO savi ngs
Please see Honors, AS

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bond to J&lt;•e Smit l1. a third
2rader. on behallol he and
iii, wife Jane. Kodv Wol fe. a
third ~i·ader. als(J won a
$100 ,:1vi ngs boi1J on behalf
of Nancy Grue,er ami . her
hu ,band Bob .
MorQan Brown. a ei~hth
~ rade r~ won a four-war- full
ttlition scho l;mhi ~) worth
more tl;an 52-+.700 lo !he
Un iw r,il\ of Rio Grande .
Grade i 2 hunurecs includ ed: Bethanv AmberQer.
Stephanlt' Bi·adford. C-odi
Davi s. Chelsea Dilchc r.
Sarah Ha11 lev. Emilv Hill .
Tabitha
Jri nes. ·Paige
Mth&gt;Cr. Amy . :-.lorman.
Deana Pull ins . Henry Rider.
Katie
SaHc. · Mar ia
Schaefer. Andrew Sinith and

jM)III assisted livir19 community has
• • aarst.nts on duty 24 hours a day to
lnd J*So,nll uslstance with suctt. !t'*1QS
~- fl11188iii'O and medltlalion admlriistratiOfl ...
in a hol••h environment.

�•

·Ld~~~

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, April23, 2004

PageA2

THE BEND

The Dail) Sentinel ; Page -\.1

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Friday, April 23, 2004

Old nude photos from friend's
past have new life on the net

NewsChannel.

northwest as the afternoon
Friday. April 23
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
pro!!ressc..;.
E'vening
(7
p.m.·
Expect a cloudy morning.
hold Midnighll
. Temperatures will
It will continue to be
· steady around 63. Winds will
be 5 MPH ' from the south cloudy There is a goml
turning from the southwest as c)Jance of snme rain.
Temperatures will hover at
the morning progre»es.
Afternoon (l p.m.-6 p.m.) 62. Winds will be 5 MPH
It should continue to be from the north.
Overnight (I a.m.-6 .a.m.)
cloudy. There might be a bit
of rain around the area.
It should continue t1&gt; be
Temperatures will linger at cloudy. Temperatures will
66 with today's high of 6 ~ remain armmd 60 with
. occurring around I :OOpm. today's low of 59 nccurrin12
Winds will be 5 MPH from. around 6:00am . Winds will
the west turning from the be I0 MPH from the north .
I

Monday, April 26
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Library's regular
board meeting wi II be held at
3 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Library.
·
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Veterans Service
Commission will meet at 9
a.m. on Monday at 11 7
Memorial Dr., Pomeroy.

Concerts
and plays
Sunday, April 25
POMEROY - The River
City Boys Quartet wi II be
appearing in concert at 7 p.m.
at the First Southern Baptist
Church. 4 1872 Pomeroy
Pike. River CitY features
Dale Chambers singing lead.
Rusty Ballinger as baritone .
Calvin Thompson singing
bass and Clacy Williams as
tenor. The public is invited to
attend.
Monday, April 26
RACINE - The. Southern
Band spring concert will be ·
held Monday, April 26. at
Southern High School. The
concert will feature music
performed by grades 4
through 12 under the direction of Band Director
Jeanette ·Oldaker. The public

Saturday, April 24
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperature&gt; will Jrop
fro m 57 early this morning to
55 bv 7:00am then rise back
up to 65' late morning. Skies
will be mostly sunny to mostly cloudy with 5 to I 0 MPH
winds fro m the north turning
from · the- northeast '" the

morning

progre~scs.

Afternoon (I p.m.-6 p.m.)
Temperatures will stay near
6H. Skies will range from
sunny to mostly sunny with 5
tn I 0 MPH winds from the
northeast.

is invited to attend.

Dear
Abby

ence. It taught you what ynu
DON'T want in a relationship. and that's a valuable
lesson. Please don't give up
now. You have only jltst
begun. You may have · to
''kiss a few frogs." but it will
all be worth it when you
finally enc,ounter Prince .
Charming. Just cull me ...
"BEEN THERE IN BEVERLY HILLS"
DEAR ABBY: My husbund und I have no ch ildren .
Our friends' children are
teenagers aud are good kids.
We often include them when
we in vite their parents to
dinner at our home. or when
we meet for a bite after
work. We 'enjoy doing this
on occa,ion. but our friends
tend to a"ume that . their
kids have a blanket invita-

(

n

beautiful person I am - that
· t have a great personality
and I should begin dating
again. They are always trying to set me up with someone. Sometimes the thought
is appealing. but when the
time comes to call or
approach a guy. I get scared.
I have, been asked out. but I
never go.
A pU11 of me likes being
single, but sometimes I get tion to come along.
lonely and wish I could find
I would like to have an
the courage to ask a guy out. adults-on ly dinner gathering
My mom keeps asking me if at our home. Is it OK to say,
I've met anyone. I know she that when I extend the i nviwants me to be happy. but tation'! - HOSTESS. ANYI'm scared of being hurt WHERE. USA
again. so I lie to everyone
DEAR HOSTESS : Of
and tell them I'm fine. But I course it's all right. If you
can't lie to myself.
choose to host a dinner
Can you give me some party. you are within your
words of advice to boost my rights to specify that you
confidence? - BURNED want · the evening: to be an
IN VICTORIA. TEXAS
adults-only affair. And since
DEAR BURNED : Only you make an effort to
this: Nothing ventured. include the children at other
nothing gained. A&gt; my dear times, there should be no
mother used to say. " If you hard feelin2s.
want a place in the sun.
De11r Abl&gt;r is H'l'irtm br
sometimes you have to put Abigail Vi1i1 Bwen, a/s(,
up with a few blisters ."
krWII'II as lmllll&lt;' Phillips.
Dating is a selection a11d 11·as follnded br her
process. an~ hopefully we mothe1; Pwt!int' Pliillips.
learn from our errors. Write
D&lt;~llr
Ahhr at
Although you parted on bad .www DewAbbr. com ,;,. P 0 .
terms. the relationship you Box 6'!440. Lris A11ge/es, CA .
had · was a learning experi- 90069.

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SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
PARADE ........................................... 10:00 am

The Southern
Band ..................................... 10:30 -11:00
Blue Jeans
_Band ..................................... 11:00- 12:00
Crowning of the
Flower Queen ...................... 12:00 ·12:15
Rock·N-Country
Cloggers ........... :..... : ............... 12:15 • 1 :00
Blue Jean Banc;L ........................... 1 :00 • 2:00
Rocky Mountain Blue Grass

Band ..... .-................................... 2:00- 2:45

PRIZES I
CRAFTS
FOOD
fREE
ADMISSION
.~BEE I'ARKINQ

Ross Sisters &amp; Clyde ................... 2:45 • 3:30
Rocky Mountain Blue Grass ·

Band ......................................... 3:30- 4:15
Ross Sisters &amp; Clyde ................... 4:15 • 5:00
There will be games for children and lots of food.

Sunday Times-Sentinel·

Proud to be ,a part of
· your life. ·.

Community Calendar
Public meetings

,

DEAR ABBY: When we
were in our 20s, my best
friend "Debbie" was an
uctcess in several movies
und television shows. Then
she married. started a family
and retired to be a stay-athome mom. However. when
she was just starting out and
was desperate for work. she
had a nude role in a movie . It
wasn't pornography, but it
was graphic.
Her sons are now in high
school and college.
Last week. I was searching
for her new e-mail address
and did a Web search on the
Internet. I found several pictures of her thill had been
taken on rhe movie set - and
those pictures could definitely be called pornographic. .
I doubt if Debbie knows
they exi,t. much less have
been posted on the Internet.
She is .not much of a Net
surfer: \lut,. her sons are .
Sl)ould I tell her'' Or shou ld
I keep my mouth shut and
hope for the best''- WORIN
WOOSTER,
RIED
OH IO
DEAR WORRIED: If
there were nude pictures of
YOU o.n the Internet, would- ·
n' t you want to know·&gt; Do
unto others as you wou ld
have them do unto you.
Better she should hear the
news from you.
DEAR ABBY: I am a 23ycar-olu single woman who
was in a serious relationship
for three years with a n1an I
had known for nearly a
decade -. . since we were
children . We parted on bad
terms a year and a half ago.
My friends and family tell
me what a wonderful, funny,

Courtesy Of

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Church services
Monday. April 26
CHESTER
Bethel
Worship Center will he host ing a week of ··G reat
Expectations". a spiritual
renewal revival. 7 p.m. each
nigh!

continuing

RACINE AND SYRACUSE

through .

May I . Guest speaker will be
Blaine
Bowman
from
Lebanon. There will be special music cat:l1 night with
·:Them Bowmans" will be
our special music on Friday ·
and Saturday night. A nursery
will he availahle. The Center
is located on S.R. 24K. at the
former Che,ter Elemel1lary
Scho(&gt;l. 1/4 mile from State
Route 7 in Che,ter. For more
details. please call the church
office at 1740)667-6793.

Other events
Friday, April 23
POMEROY - A community supper Wi II he ., c rved
from 5 JO to 7 p.m. at the
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OPINION

Daily Sentinel

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 ofgrievances.
Amendm~nt

Friday, April 23,

to the U.S. Const~tutlon

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, April 23, the !14th day of 2004. There are
252 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight il) History:
April 23 , 1564, is believed to be the b~rthdate of English
poet and dramatist William Shakespeare; he died 52 years
later. also on April 23. ·
On this date :
In 1348, King Edward Ill of England established the Order
of the Garter.
In 1789. President-elect Washington and his wife moved
into the 'tirst executive mansion, the Franklin House, in New
York.
In 1791, the 15th president of the United States, James
· Buchanan, was born in Franklin County, Pa.
In 1904. the American Academy of Ans and Letters was
founded.
In 1954. Hank Aaron of the Milwaukee Braves hit the tirst
of his record 755 major-league home runs, in a game against
the St. Louis Cardinals. (The Braves won, 7-5.) .
In !969, Sirhan Sirhan was sentenced to death for assassi:
natlng New York Senator Robert F. Kennedy. (The sentence
was later reduced to life imprisonment.)
In !985, the Coca-Cola Company announced it was changing the secret flavor formula for Coke (negative public reaction forced the company to resume selling the original version).
In 1993, labor leader Cesar Chavez died in San Luis, Ariz.,
at age 66.
In 1998, James Earl Ray, who'd confessed to assassinating
the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968 and then insisted he'd been framed, died at a Nashville hospital at age 70.
Ten years ago: Mourners left red roses, burning candles and
cards at the Richard Nixon Library and Birthplace in Yorba
Linda, Calif., in memory of the 37th president of the United
. States, who had died the day before at age 81.
Five years ago: On the first day of a 50th anniversary NATO
summit in Washington, Western leaders pledged to intensify
military strikes against Yugoslavia and vowed "no compromise" on demands that Slobodan Milosevic withdraw his
troops from Kosovo.
One year· ago: Global health officials warned travelers to
avoid Beijing and Toronto, where they might get the SARS
virus and export it to new locations. U.S. negotiators met with
North Korean and Chinese representatives in Beijing for the
first three-way meeting by the governments since the Korean
War. American Airlines repOrted a $!-billion first-quarter loss.
Thought for Today: " ... We are such stuff/ As dreams are
made on, and our little life/ Is rounded with a sleep."- From
'The Tempest," by William Shakespeare (1564: 1616).

The hair is snow white.
The years, creeping in their
petty pace from day to day,
have reached 95. But God
has left George Beverly
Shea's golden larynx intact.
Soloist on · the Billy
Gralham Crusades since their
inception in 1949. Shea still
looks forward to taking part
in the crusade's 55th
anniversary in Kansas City
in June and Los Angeles in
July.
Until recent years, it was
rare for Shea to miss a crusade performance. But he
missed three in a row in
Boston in 1964. ·
·J had never tried lobster
stew before,' Shea says, 'but
when I had some this particular night in Boston, I liked
it so much I had several
more bowls of it.
'The next morning wh~n I
woke up. my tongue was all
swollen. I called my doctor
in Chicago. He wasn't in, so
whi le waiting for him to
return my calL I phoned
room service and ordered a
bo~~Y I of lobster stew to be
brought up' '
The doctor immediately
diagnosed Shea's case as an
allergy to lobster stew. Bev
was lost to the crusade for
three nights.

·

George
Plagenz

Shea once gave me a private concert in hi s hotel
room Juring the course of
one of the crusades. One of
-the songs he sang was
'An1azing Grace." Or should
I say ·we· sang'
Shea staned out singing
alone. with instrumental
accompaniment on cassette.
But then he asked me to join
in. I think I may even have
drowned him out in the rousing last stanza. 'When we've
been there ten thousand
as .we sang with our
arms around each other's
shoulder.
It has gone down in my
memory - and will remain
there - as 'The Day I Sang
'Amazing
Grace'
with
George Beverly Shea.'
There is something I want
to ask Shea the next time I
see him. I want to ask him
whether Bilfy Graham can
smg.

years:

.

had written, it suddenly
occurred to me that I had, in
fact. never heard Gralham
sing. When the Graham crusades are on television in
Kansas City and Los
Angeles this summer, I will
listen closely (and you can,
too) to see whether Billy
joins in with the crowd in
singing ·Just' As I Am,' the
finale of every crusade
broadcast. ·
In the foreword of 'Songs
that Li.ft the Heart,· Shea
lists 'The Favorite 50' -the
most popular gospel songs
of the time as picked by th~"
readers of Christian Herald ·
magazine.
. They are songs that would
probably still top the list in
2004, more than 30 years
later. The top five are 'The
Old Rugged Cross.' 'What A
Friend We Have in Jesus,'
' In the Garden.' 'How Great
Thou Art' and 'Sweet Hour
of Prayer.'
Let's. sing them now.
C'nion Billy, you join in. A
lot of us are afflicted with
'the malady of no melody.'
It's what' comes from the
heart, not the larynx, that
God hears.
But even God must smile
when George Beverly Shea
sings.

SA~H~

BOOK· OF- THE· MONTH
EDITION HAS ·ARRIVED

DEAR,

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The Daily Sentinel
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POMEROY
Meigs
County Health Department

Community news
will conduct a childhood
imrriunization clinic from 9 to
I I and I to 3 p.m. on T u~sday
at the health department. ·
Children must be accompanied by a parent or legal

guardian. and &gt;hot record'
and medical cards must he
provided. A donation will be
accepted for immunizations.
but no service will be denied
becau&gt;e of inability to pay.

For the Record
'------------------------~----------------~------~--

Dissolutions
POMEROY Actions
for dissolution of marriage
have been tiled in Meigs
County Common Pleas
Court by Joy Day. {,Jpper

Sandusky, Ufd Eric Day.
Syracuse, and by Roy W.
Proffitt , Long Bottom. and
Dori s J. Proffitt, Louiwille.
A dissolution has been
granted to Tamara Jean Wise
and Kenneth Eug.eoie Wise.

Divorce
POMEROY - A divorce
action has been filed by
Michelle
L.
Hutton .
Rutland. against Christopher
M. Hutton. Rutland .

·.Easter coloring contest winners
STAFF REPORT

NEWS®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
· POMEROY - Winners
in the annual Easter coloring contest sponsored
by The Daily Sentinel and
several merchants have
been selected.
They are Abigal Houser.
first, Brittany Durst, second, and Skyla Coleman,
third in the 4 ,to 8 year
old category; and Kyle
Johnson , first.
Brenna
Holter, second, and Julie
Tillis third in the 9 to II
year old category.
The prizes •were $15 for
first, $ 10 for second. and
$5 for third.
Merchant sponsors for
the "Colo rs of Easter"
contest
were
Valley
Lumber, Downing Childs
Mullen Musser Insurance,
Crow 's Restaurant, Brogan . Checks were presented to coloring contest winners by David
Warner Insurance , Farmers Harris, advertising representative for The Daily Sentinel. The
· Bank, Shoe Place/Locker winners, left to right, were Skyla Coleman, Brittany Durst.
219, and Swisher and .front, and Kyle Johnson. Abigail Houser ana Julie Tillis, back.
Not pictured is Brenna Holter.
Lo hse Pharmacy

Honors
from Page A1
Hunter. Tosha Jones, Brittany
Meldau, Chelsea Pape,
Samatha Patterson, Rachael
Pickens and Jai me Warner.
Grade 6 honorees included:
Michael Manuel, Cyle Rees,
Breanna Taylor, Lynzee
Tucker and Katie Woods.
Grade 5 honorees included;
Katie Barr, Eric Buzzard,
Dakota Imboden, Zachary .
Manuel and Katie Patterson.
Grade 4 honorees included :
Martina Arms,
Tiffany
Francis, Andrew Ginther and
Demonstrating a commitment to academic excellence early
Andrew Roseberry.
on,
these Southern Elementary School students show a lot of
Grade 3 honorees included:
Rachael Bauer, Christopher promise for the future. Each won an academic ach ievement
Chaney, Maggie Cummins, award at the Southern Local Academic Awards Banquet
Timothy Elam, Michelle Thursday at Southern High School. (J. Miles Layton)
Henry, Jaclyn Mees, Shelby
Pickens, Stefanic Pyles. Joe
Smith , Jessica Stines, Cody
Taylor and Kody Wolfe.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All/etters 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 the column above
are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co.'s editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

Immunization
clinic

Schwarzenegger and .the danger ahead
Arnold Schwarzenegger
ture, and the Democrats must be made up either by
continues to ·amaze those
predictably dragged their cutting spending or by raiswho thought . Californians
feet. While negotiating with ing taxes. The Democrats
were turning their goverthem , therefore , the gover- don't greatly care which
norship over to a muscleSchwarzenegger
nor bega[) circulating a peti- way
bound airhead when they
tion
to
put
workers'
comjumps:
He
must either slash
William
elected him last October.
pensation reform on the expend itures on highly popRusher
The wealthy Austrian-born
November ballot as an ini- ular programs, or break his
actor has spent the last six
tiative for adoption by the solemn campaign promise
and a half months demonvoters - which wou ld , of not to raise taxes. Thus far
strating that the state's
course, bypass the legisla- the rumors that he is leaning
financial problems, though since
Schwarzenegger ture . At the last minute, toward a tax increase are
huge, were not impossible would then be forced to with fi ve hours to go before only that, but they are getto solve; they just required a choose between major tax the deadline for legislative ting louder.
governor tough enough to increases (which he had action,
the . Democrats
Schwarzenegger has a
insist on solving them .
vowed, during the cam ~ crumpled and accepted huge amount of political
Within days of being paign, not to impose) and Schwarzenegger's
final capital with the voters of
sworn in, Schwarzenegger highly unpopular cuts in compromise offer.
California, and he could
had kept his campaign state expenditures.
Note that it was a com- probably expend some of it
pledge to reverse $4 billion
But the legislature had not promise. As in the case bf on a tax increase that conin car tax increases imposed reckoned
· on the legi slative spending servatives would detest and
by
the
spendthrift Schwarzenegger's populari - caps, Schwarzenegger did- still remain fairly popular.
Democrat-controlled legis- ty and resourcefulness. He n't get quite everything he But the history of politilature. Just as quickly, he campaigned tirelessly · for wanted, but he got most of cians who break that partierescinded
the
drivers' both proposals, explaining it. He knows, in other . ular promise
from
licenses the Democrats had ' in TV commerCials why words, that politics isn't George H. W. Bush ('Read
given to illegal immigrants they were essential. And the just a matter of having your my lips ... ') and former
in a cheap bid for Hispanic voters rewarded him by . way ; it is often necessary to New Jersey Democratic votes. And then, as a first passing both ·by husky mar- let your adversary win a Gov. James Florio to the
step in reducing a state gins.
point or two. Or, as the disgraceful
renegade
.deficit bigger than those of . Next , Schwarzenegger great Sun Tzu said in his Republicans in today's
all 49 other states com- turned his atten tion to 4th century treatise on 'The Virginia legislature - is
bined, he put before the vot- California's bloated work- Art of War,' always leave hardly encouraging. So the
ers a proposal for a state ers' compensation system. your enemy a line of jury is still out on Arnold
bond .issue totaling $ ! ~ bil- which (as he warned during retreat.
Schwarzenegger. . Is he
lion , and another to limit the campaign ) was driving
So
the
verdict on something genuinely inspirstate expenditure s to the businesses out of the state Schwar Lenegger to date is, ing - a politician who
amount of revenues taken in droves. As late a, 1997, 'So far. so good - and then makes tough promises and
111 .
claims had totaled $6.5 bil - some!' But there is. on the keeps them- or just anothAt first, poll s indicated lion . Last year, it is estimat- horiwn , one dark cloud that er light that failed?
that these two measures ed, they amounted to $30 is begi nning to trouble con(William Rusher is a
would be rejected by the billion the nation 's lervative observers. For all Distinguished Fellow of the voters - an outcome that costliest.
the gove rnor'1 efforts, the Claremont Institute for the would have delighted the
But reform required the state budget is still some $4 Study of Statesmanship and
Democrati c
iegislators, cooperation of the legisla- billion out of balance. Thi s Political Philosophy. )

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Local Briefs
.

In one of his books ·songs
that Lift the Heart· (f.H.
Revell, 1972). Shea says, ·1
would not be one to telltales
out of school but a well. known evangelist friend of
mine. with whom .I have
been associated for over 25
years. has been afflicted with
Dwight Moody's problemthe 'malady of no melody. "
(Moody was a famous evangelist of an earlier period
who had no sense of pile~ . or
harmony.)
Shea added. ·This friend
of mine has a beautiful
sonorous speaking voice and
most would i,magine an
equally good singing voice.
But suc!J is not the case.'
While Shea doesn't mention
Graham by name, when he
wrote that in 1972. he had
been
associated
with
Graham (·a well-known
evangelist·) for 28 years
('over 25 years.')
They met in 1944, when
Graham was doing a
Saturday evening radio program. Shea was doing a daily
15-minute program on ·the
same station in the Chicago
area. Graham heard him and
· invited him to sing on his
program. The two have been
together ever si nee.
When I read what Shea

YOUR

Friday, April 23, 2004

2004

Can Billy sing?

The Daily Sentinel

-The First

PageA4

literary club
members hear
review Booker
Prize winner

April 28 at the Hunnel home .
After tl-e re''iew 15 memterand our guest an~wered mil call
by r=lling an example of sibling
rivalry the}' hal observed or experienced The next meetino will be
on A¢128 ru the hotre oi"Fr.mkie
Hunnel. Phyllis Hackett will present a fXJeUY re\'iew. For roll call
n-embers are to take a favorite
JXlCm to re:d Also planned for
that meeting is an o!Rrvance of
the Midllejxxt Liter.n)• Club\
nOh anniversary.

HO&gt;tess Shirley Hanun served
a SlllO!'Jasbord of &gt;alads, nut.1.
r..tzZ!eberry pie. coffee. and tea.
Present wete members Janet
Theiss. Shirley Hamm. Evelyn
Hollon. Debboe Jones, Peggy
Moore. Nancy 1\'eutzling. Sara
Roush. Linda Rus~. ll . and Joy
Bentley. Welc~guests were
Linda and Mary Hamm.
The next meeting will be at
held at I p.m. at the Syracuse
Community Building on
April 29th with guest speaker
Hal Kneen presenting the
program on pruning shrubs.

MIDDLEPORT - ··The
Blind Assassin" by Margaret
Atwood was reviewed by
Nadine Goebel at a recent
meeting of the · MiddlepOrt
Literary Club held at the library.
Published in 2000. the novel
won the Booker Prize. a prestigious award financed by the
Booker
McConnel
CorpOration and administered
by the National Book League
in the United Kingdom. Books
chosen for the award are novSYRACUSE
els written by a citizen of the Wildwood Garden Club
United Kingdom. Margaret members learned how to
Atwood is a Canadian. born in create rock gardens at their
Onawa in 1939. educated in recent meetin2 held at the
ATHENS - When considerCanada and the United States, home of Shirley Hamm .
ing the future of an area the
earning a Ph.D. at Harvard.
Linda Russell. a Master youth are definitely one of iL'
She has written more than 30 · Gardener. presented the pro- most \'al uable resources. In
books ranging from novels gram on rock gardens. She Appalachian
Ohio..
the
through pOetry. literary criti- emphasized that ideally. a Sojourners Care Network recogcism. history. and even books southeast-faci ng slope is nizes the importance of providfor children.
needed for rock gardens. ing suppOrt and opp0numtics for
In "T11e Blind Assassin." the though some do well facinc children and youn~ adult&gt;.
central character. elderly his north. She discouwged buildTue sdav
Tnis
Time
Chase Griflen. .weaves to2ether ing west and south facmg rock Around: Rein,·enting
three stories--her own lifeIn the gardens because of the after- Community. airing at 8:3b
present. d1e history of her past noon sun ·s drving effects.
a.m. on the WOUB Radio
mcluding her family, and a
Russell ernphasized that Network. will explore how
story-within-a-story. called the soil for rock ~ardens this organization is leading
"The Blind Assassin." Her nar- should retai'n moisture. but our youth into the future .
mtion takes the fonn of a mem- drain well. Bury rocks at
Listeners are in\'ited to join
oir written 50 years·after World lea st half to two-thirds Producer Jennifer Cwry as she
War II in Canada which tells of underground. Burying them \ isiL' Vmton County and discovthe rise and fall of the Cha..e partially makes them look ers
The Sojoumers Care
family's fortune. the tmgic sui- natural and also provides a
cide of her younger sister Laura place for the plant roots to Network. Curry interviews
at age 25 just after the end of d1e stay cool. Rocks shou ld tilt founders Richard and '\1arcus
Gan1es:
Director
of
war, and Iris's tall from grJce.
back into the soil so that Communications
Shell\
The reviewer S&lt;tid that Iris rainwater can seep in. A
was maneuvered into an brick and a crowbar with a Horvath: and foster parent Mary
arranged maniage mainly to length of pipe over the han- Anne Taylor. Allo. Cuny speak&gt;
save her family 'from financial dle extends Its length so that with a recently adopted foster
ruin and shortly aJter the mar- it can effectively oe used as child, Ccecce: Yputhbuilder
riage, her sisler Laum went to a fu lcrum to aid in moving Ricky . Simon: Youthbuild
Progmm Coordinator Steve
live with d1em. After Laum's heavy rocks. into place.
Young; and Appal youth Program
suicide just a few years later. Iris
Alpine plant\ various annu- Director
Timberly Singly.
submiLs a novel called 'The als. bulbs, and perennials can be
The
Sojowners
Care Network
Blind Assassin" to be published. planted into the niches of a rock
is
located
in
McArthur.
The
identifying Laum as the author. garden. she said. Annuals such
The book tells the story of an as lobelia. sweet alyssum. creep- organization began with the
illicit love aflillr between a young . in_!! zinnia. verbena, love-in-a- vision of two brothers. Richard
woman and a shadowy left wing omst. China pink and Cali lomia and Marcus Gan1es. Their first
b~an i7.er, and she and her lover
pOppy !!fOW well in rock o;u·- phase of development was
write a novel. The novel within a dens. S'uggested bulbs to plant responding to kids in crisis by
novel is a science tiction tale were allium, crocus. reticulated providing foster care. Currently
about a blind slave bov who is iris, and .cyclamen. Perennials 63 foster parents serve thts
planning to kill a king and over- mat adapt well in rock gardens region through the program.
The second phase of their
throw the oppression of his coun- are rockcress, basket-of-gold.
~rowth
is you~~ development.
try, thus the title of both novels snow-in-summer, yellow coryYouthbuild"
X~ one program
"The Blind Assassin".
dalis, dianthus, creeping baby\
that
provides
GED preparaGoebel beg&lt;m her review by breath, .coralbells, stonecrop.
tion
courses,
as
well as trainreading from the book a fic~on­ woolly thyme, and phlox.
ing
in
the
field
of
construction
al news clippin? .about the
President Evely11 Hollon
to
16to
24-year-o!d,.
inquest into Laura s suicide and announced coming dates for
1l1e third and newest role of ·
then reading the prologue to the regional and county mectLaura's novel "The Blind mgs. Members should report Sojoumers is that of intennediAssassin" as well · a~ several at 6 p.m. on April 23 to set up ary: they award "Appalyouth
other news items and obituaries. for the regional meeting the grant1" to high school students
In tltis way she set up the vari- following day. . Favors and who develop original projects.
ous threads that were woven by centerpieces should ~e t..'lken These srudems work tor nonAtwood into Iris's complex nar- at that time. she noted. She. profit organizations for one year
rative. As the novel draws to a also reminded members of the and often serve on thetr boards.
This
Time
Around:
close the reader tinds out that Annual Spring Fling. sponeverything is not as it has sored by the Master Gardeners Reinventing Community i&gt; a
appeared m the sepamte tales.
and the bus trip to Cincilmmi. year-long series that explores the
Goebel said that it was a dilti· Janet Theiss read devotions fabric ot community. how and
cult book to read because of the from Helen Steiner Rice. Samh · why Lummtulities change, and
abrupt shifts between the three Roush repOrted dtat now is the what the future may hold for
stories and the relationships time to spray donnant oil on Appalachian Ohio.Tite pmgrmtb
which are not clear until eveoy- roses, trees and shrubs to pre- are repeated at 4 p.m. on Tuesday
thing fal ls into place just at the vent infestation. test garden soil allemoons. The empha,is of me
end. She quoted one revtewer and terti Iize. add organic i11aner piugr,muning is to emich the lives
who said that the novel would to soil. check cold fran1es daily, of children adult' in soiuthera'tem
have been improved by elimi- and lD aerate and mke·!awns.
Ohio, westem West Vi~nia and
nating nearly all of the first 200
Joy Bentley, · beautification ea'ter Kentucky throuan ·~ualitv
pages of me book. However, the chairperson, a'ked for volun- prognuns m1d educanon !&lt;:rsmne complexity that some- . teers to help weed and clean up vices that infom1. enlighten.
times causes diflicult y tor a the Syracuse Park flower beds. inspire, and enteotain.
reader are the same complexities that may unfold the story in
many mysterious and enjoyable
layers, she said.
Ptior to the review members
shmed comments on books
April 23'&lt;1
thev 'd read recently or films
thev had seen. Frankie Hunnel ·
presided at the meeting attended by 15 memhers and a guest .
1 Love You
who answered with examples
of sibling rivalry they had
Dr. Doolittle
observed or expenenced.
Next meting will be held on

Gardeners
learn about rock Local program
gardens
looks to next ·
Appalachia
generation

"'

Happy Birthday

Douglas C. Grover

These Southern High School
students are among the best
and the t&gt;rightest Meigs
County has to offer. Each
won an academic achievement award at the Southern
Local Academic Awards
Banquet Thursday at
So,uthern High School. (J.
Miles Layton)

The Daily Sentinel
Sf'HIW&gt; ~A~ Lf'Y, ,
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7

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FRI4123104 ·Sun 4125/04
12:3DPM AT I SUN For Mllln

Box Olllce Opens 0
8:30PM Nl htt •
13 GOING ON 30

First Bike Out 11 :00
Last Bike Out 1:00
THE PRINCE AND ME (PG)
1 :20 3:30 7:20 &amp; 9:30
WALKING TAL.L (PG13)
SCOOBY DOO 2 MONSTERS
UNLEASHED (PG)

1 30 3 30

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Last Bike In 5:00
Awards 5:30

((;€;€;J T»nze~

Pon~erCIY.

OH • 992·7986

.

�•

PageA6

FAITH •VALUES
New multi-purpose facility - A Hunger For More

The Daily Sentinel
/

Friday, April

Friday, April 23, 2004

23, 2004

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

•

•

At 4: 15 a.m. last TUesday
morning, our telephone shattered the quiet dreaming of
our slumber. My sister-inlaw was phoning us to tell us
that my father had stopped
breathing and, m spite of her
and my brother's attempts to
save him with CPR and the
EM;r's best efforts, there was
nothing that could be done.
He was gone .
His death caught us by surprise actually. In spite of several serious surgeries (one
major one being only a week
prior to h1s passing) and his
ongoing fight with throat
cancer, he seemed to be gaining strength rapidly. His
doctors had even shared with
us their optimism for his
recovery.
There are times, however,
when our expectations disappoint us and the unexpected
mvites itself into the living
room of our lives .. . often
not even wiping as feet ftrst!
It is easy in these moments
when we find ourselves dealin~ with death, loss and
gnef, for us to lose our sense
of perspective.
Death is especii!lly like
that. As it is the most mysterious of human experiences,
and because of the lack of
empirical data regarding the
soul and its final destiny, thi s
perceived vacuum of knowledge begs to be filled.
And filled it is. We will
speculate things unknown.
fabricate things unfounded,
and regurgitate the speculations and fabrications of oth-

Trustees of the Syracuse Church of the Nazarene recently broke ground on a new multi-purpose
area. to include a social room and gymnasium. Pictured are Kevtn Grueset. Scott Kimes. Rob
Cunmngham. 811 1 Rizer and Jack Offenberger.

Religion briefs
Revival planned
by Bethel
CHESTER
Bethel
Worship Center will be hosting a week of "Great
Expectations", a' sptritual
renewal revival , 7 p.m.
Munday night and continuing through May I. Guest
speaker will be Blaine
Bowman from Lebanon .
There will be special music
each night with "Them
Bowmans" will be our special music on Friday and
Saturday night. A nursery
will be available. The Center
is located on S.R. 248, at the

former Chester Elementary
School, 1/4 mile from State
Route 7 in Chester. For more ,
details, please call the church
office at (740)667-6793.

Concert Sunday
POMEROY - The River
City Boys Quanet will be .
appearing in concert at 7
p.m. Sunday at the First,_
Southern Baptist Church,
41872 Pomeroy Pike. River
City features Dale Chambers
singing lead, Rusty Ballinger
as
baritone,
Calvin
Thompson singing bass and
Clacy Williams as tenor

Community
supper tonight
POMEROY - A community supper will be served
from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Friday at
the Pomeroy church of
Christ.

GALLIPOLIS - The first
ever Tri-County Gospel
. Homecoming Concert is
coming to the Ariel Theatre.
Scheduled ·for 7 p.m ..
May I , this "Gaither Style"
conc-ert will feature several
local gospel anists.
Those
featured
are:
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Together 4 Christ, White
Oak
Trio,
New
City
Singers, Truth, Martie Short,
Earthen Vessels, Gabriel
·Quartet,
Aaron
Grate,
Proclaim, Mercy, Gluryland
Believers, Evelyn Rou sh,
Freed by Christ, Dan and
Faith Hayman, Eternity,
Glorybound Quartet, Just 4
Him, Joe McCloud, The
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Apostolf~

'

Dinner to
be served

RELIGION NEWS IN .BRIEFS
More than half of
Washington state
residents pray daily,
poll finds

POMEROY
The
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church will host a fellowship
dinner with serving from
4:30 to 6 p.m. Tuesday at the
church.

SEATILE (AP) - The
Pacific Nor:thwest is considered the least churchgoing
region
the country, but a
new poll says more than half
. of Washington s.tate residents
pray at least once a day.
The survey released last
Sunday by The Seattle Times
found that 53 percent of residents Said they pray at least
once a day and 31 ' percent
prayed several ti.mes a day.
In a CBS/New York Times
poll conducted in February,
36 percent of people said they
prayed several times daily.
Seventy-two percent of
those polled identified themselves as Christians.
The poll of 500residents was

Tri-County Homecoming
Concert coming.to Ariel
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Fellowship

from God. we KNOW that it
will he fullv accomplished.
The last couple of years of
my father's life were overshadowed by pain and sufPastor
fering. much of it related to
Thorn
the cancer. How wearying
Mollohan was his fight 1 How heavy
was his burden' How merciless was the ogre of despair
as dad labored alon g thi s
path .
Yet, he never fully sucers until we have either
piecemealed some odd cumbed to it Instead, I heard
shaped ideology together (a him penodically affirm his
theological "house of cards" confidence in Christ. hi s
if you will) or until we've trust in the Sav10r's love and
mixed ourselves up so much hi s reltanc c on God's perfect
that we have absolutely no will. He h.td plemy of
sense of assurance at all "downs" and only a few ups,
but he kept commg bac k to
about our spir!tual destiny.
But when •one crosses the God \ g rac e ~
But now my father no
threshold of forever, it is
awfully nice to have ~ome longer ftghts. He is no longer
weary. He no Iun ger has
assurances .
In I Thessalonians 4 it is patn . Even hts heartaches
wntten in verses 13 and 14 and fears have vamshed like
that, "Brothers. we do not wi sps ot smoke. A man canwant you to be ignorant not be more "healed" than IS
about those who fall asleep, my father as he stands now
or to grieve like the rest of in the presence of the heavmen, who have no hope." enly Father.
hope,
friend,
How important it is then to . Such
understand God's provision belong s to all who will truly
for hope in our lives . Hope, place thm trust in Him. Such
according to the Scriptures. hope can be yo urs today.
can only really be found in
(Th om Mollohan has
Jesus.
ministered in sorahern
Ah, but what a hope we Ohio the pa st eight y~ars
have in Christ! "And so we and is currently til e pa stor
will be with the Lord fore v- 4 Patlnri1y Co11111111nitv
er!" (I Thessalonians 4: 17b Clwrch. He and his .t•'ife
NIY). God's promises are are the parent s r~f three
our true hope. What is his childre11 . He nun· be
promise here? That in Christ reacl1ed hr &lt;
' mail at paswe will be with Him forever. ·lo rt lwm @path wa.\ ga IIi poAnd because it is a promise li.\.com).

in

Grimm's, Ray and Delores
Cundiff, · Randy
Shafer.
Beaver Family, Scott .~nd
Rachel Fraser.
No admission will be
charged, but a love offering
will be received for the
Ariel Theatre. The theatre is
located on Second Ave.
For more information, call
(740) 446-ARTS.

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conducted March 19-23 and adults w.ts conducted March
has a margin of error of 4.5 per- 15-2 1. About 23 percent of
voting age adults identify
centage points.
themselves as Catholic,
A separate ~ urvey on U.S.
Polls track voting
angelicals released Tuesday
patterns of Catholics, ev
found that 74 percent of white
evangelicals said they favored
evangelicals
Bush. whi le 23 percent said
they
would vote for Kerry.
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
Sixty-nine
percent of white
survey released Monday found
evangelicals
ident1fy themthat U.S. Roman Catholic voters are about evenly split selves as Republican, while
between President Bush tmd 84 percent of black evangelipresumed Democratic presi- cals say the y're Democrats.
And while white evangelicals
dential nominee John Kerry.
The poll by the Center for overwhelmtngly oppose gay
Applied Research in the marnage and civtl unions for
Apostolate at Georgetown homosexual couples, about half
University found 45 percent of swd in the poll that they would
likely Catholic voters support- preler that state laws be changed
ed Kerry, while 41 percent to ban gay mamage mstead of
backed Bush. ·The margin of mnendmg the U.S. Constitution.
error is 3.5 percentage points. " The swvey of I ,610 adultS was
The split is similar to that found condu~'led betWeen March 16 and
by the same swvey in 200), when Apnl 4 tor U.S News &amp; World
Bush tilced Democrat AI Gore.
Report and PBS' "Religion &amp;
This year's poll ' of 1.001 Ethics Newsweekly."

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The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our co~munity

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rues In local business

Rooting &amp; Building Work
••

Pomeroy,OH
740-992-6215
"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear
before God and man."

Acts 24:16

''I

wonder why that car In front of me]ust
swerved In the road. Let me sea/ Could there
be so.methlng, oh, a turtle/ I'm glad I didn't
hlltha poor little thing. I would have felt so sed."
In some instances a good example can make a
great difference. As children, we learn by the
example o( those closest to us. As we grow, we /Iva
·end Interact with our peers according to those
observations. Our future Is already greatly
Influenced while we are still young children.
We read In John 13:15 end 13:34 as the Lord
Instructs, "For I hsve given you an example, that you
also should do as I have done to you ... love one
· another; evan as I have loved you. "
Wouldn 'I you Ilks to ensure a better life for
yowselvas, your children, and the next generation?
Titus 2:7/nslructs "Show yourself In all respects a
model of good deeds." You can begin setting the
example now. Worship as a family this week.

Located less than 30 minuies from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkers burg
We offer phys1cal, occupational
speech, art &amp; music lherapies

740-~~7 -31 s~
"Nest and Res/"

llill~idt llnplt~l { l~.urd1 ·
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Ill

Third
Ractne, OH

740-949-2210
"A Home &amp;tnk for
Home People"

Hills Self Storage
-29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH
P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohto 45769-0683

740-949-2217
Sizes avatlabte

5x10

to 10 x 20

If ye abide in M.e, and My

499 Richland Avenue, Athens
740-594·6333
l-800-451-9806

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew5:8

words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be done unto you.
John 15:7

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A : JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 Mulberry Hei~~;hts
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Antiquit \ Hnph~t
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(740) 992-3279

To! Free 1-1177-5113-2433

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Mi[[ie 's :J(estaurant

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Open 7 da y.s .1 week
740-992-7713

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"Let your !Jghl so ,hine helfor~'l
men, that they may sec
works and glonfy
I F'HJI1er in heave n ··
M.tllhcw 5: I

Middleport , OH

740-992-6128

Local source for trophies,
olaoues t-shirts and more
"Do not steal. Do not li e.
Do not deceive one
another.''
Leviticu s 19; II

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............. ,
212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

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992-3785

1858 .
174Lnn.Simi'P0 8oxl70
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l.#atthew 5:8

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Bill

9 Fifth Street

P.t~m r Bnl&gt; Rol'lm,on.
.t. m \\'ur,hlp - 111 ,1111

7 pm

Davis·Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, mul My Brogan-Warner
Full line of
INSURANCE
NSURAN CE
words abide ill you, ye shall
SERVICES
ask wlral ye will, and it shall
214 E. Main
be doue unto you.
992-5130
Joh11 15:7

Since

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Appl~

Hot11e Cooked Meal' &amp; l&gt;aily Specials

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

...t~ lor

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Blessed·are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

Holiness

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ARCADIA NURSING CENTER
Coolville, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page A7

www.mydailysentinel.com

'lp

Ill

Chl'S icr t ' lmn:h of the Nuza rcnt•
P,t,lnr Hcv l h:rhcrt ( ,r,tlc . Sund,t) S~hunl
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I

ROCKSPRINGS
Crow's Family Restaurant
REHABILITIION CENTER
"Featuring Kentucky Fried
Tile cart! ) 'flU

de~·erve,

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy
"So 1 stri ve always to keep

Acts 2.J.: 16

EastMa1n

W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432
Cod solon·d the 1mrld
gotten

.\Oil ...

.lvhn 3:/6

~~

my conscience clear before
God and man ."

M L' I!!' C1lllll t\ · .., Old~'l F l{ lfl'l

Chicken"

close t~J lwme

36759 Rocksprings Rd .
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-6606

!francis Florist

o•WPOU•

4, ..,,..,.,,

&amp;nonflrr's
,;,::,~~::.:..

jfire &amp; &amp;afrl!'
ex

MIDOL£POaT

",• .,,..,,,.

.... _ _ _.._.__

Pomeroy, Oh

e_
'W

1'

"lt•l t 1c ~~ ~~~ tjilll thought~ Wilt\ ~~PCI.III rerp"

I

740-992-2644

740-992-6298

MY erace is sufficient
for thee: for mY
streneth is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

Office Service &amp;Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

992-6376

Furelhouihl~u~ne~ra~II~,,~"".;n~gL.----~-1'1'-----..L-...;..,;,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,__ _...;-;;;;;,-;,;;;,.•..._ _ _ _..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .
I

�•
;9age A8 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, April 23, 2004

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Indians defeat Kan5as City, Page 82
Bowyer wins Busch pole, Page 83
MLB standings and boxscores, Page 84

Friday, April23, 2004

Browns may
move up in top
spot in NFL draft
_NEW YORK (AP) - Eli
Manning doe&gt;n·l wa11110 play
in San Diego. The Cleveland
. Browns could make that moot
by allowing the Chargers to
get out of the 1op spot:
Just more intrigue in the
200-l NFL draft, one of the
more interesting of rece nt
years. It already has involved

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the U.S. Supreme Co url.
which on Thu"day declined to
&lt;lllow Maurice Clare lt and
Mike Williams in.
Cleveland. which desperately wants offensive tackle
Robert Gallery of Iowa. was
talking to the Chargers 1on
Thursday ahoul moving up
from seyenth to take the first
pick in Sat urday\ draft. That
wouiJ leave Manning for
Oakland, which picks second.
or the New York Giants, who
· have the fourth pic!-:.
Manning was in New York
with his star quarterback
brother and
father on
Thtmday. He continned that
he'd prefer to be chosen by a
team ·other than the Chargers.
He did11't &gt;&lt;IY he wanted that
team to be the Giants. but that
seemed to be the con&gt;ensu&gt;
among general managers,
scout&gt; an d several a2ents.
Eli's father. Archie. said
Eli's desire nt&gt;t lo play for the
Chargers wa.s communic'-lted
to San Diego general manager
AJ. Smith hy Tom Condon,
agent lor both Eli and brother
Peyton. the NFL's co-MVP
la&gt;l season.
The Browns would probably
have to give up next year's.
No. I and possibly unhappy
wide
receiver
Dennis
Nonhcutt.

V-6
AUTOMATIC
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DARK TINT

Randolph
named NBA's
Most Improved

•!1 l&gt;tl"

-

--··

-.. -·-·- -

LOADED.
SHARP

PORTLAND. Ore. (AP)Portland Trail Blazers forward Zach Randolph was disappointed when he didn't
make the All-Star team.
Winning the NBA's Most
Improved
Player award
Thursday took some of that
sting away.
Randolph. who became a
starter thi s season and averaged double figures in points
and rebpunds, easi ly heat
Cleveland .Cavaliers forward
Carlos Boozer in votin g by
sports writers and broadcasters with 59 first-place voles
and 379 points.
" I wanted. to be on the AllStar team but it feels good to
win thi s awa'rd," Randolph
said with a big smile. "It fee ls
good .'.'
Randolph averaged 20.1
points, I0.5 rebounds and 2.0
assists for the revamped
Blazers. who went 4 1-41 to
tinish IOth in the Western
Conference. two spots out of.,
the playoffs.
·
The 6-loot-9 forward had
43 double-Joubles, tying him
for fifth in the league. He had
20 or more point~ in 42
games. and 30 or more points
in three games.
Last year. his·second season
in the NBA, Randolph averaged 8:4 points. 4.5 rebounds
and 0.5 assists .

Sifford breaks
another barrier ,
NEW YORK (A P) Charlie Sifford broke another
barrier Thursday.
Sifford, who cracked the
PGA Tour's Caucasian-only
clause in 1961 and was the
first black member to win on
tour. is the firsi black chosen
for the World Golf Hall of
Fame.
Sifford will be inducted
Nov. 15, along with 1992
U.S. Open champion Tom
Kite. Japanese &gt;tar Isao Aoki
Canadian
amateur
and
Marlene Ste\vart Streit.
"This is very wonderful ,"
Sifford said from the ceremony in Savannah, Ga. " I th'ank
all these wonderful player&gt;
for accepting me. I know I
had some bad days and tough
days. But it looks like everything worked out fine."
J

4
I\

I

Clarett thrown for loss · Reds

win five
1nn1ng
game

Supreme Court rejects
Clarett's appeal in
effort to enter NFL draft
8v

'

I

GINA HOLLAND

Associated Press

WASHINGTON ·_ Maurice Clarett
lost two Supreme Court appeals on
Thursday to enter this weekend's
National Football, League draft, but still
could try a third eftort to bypass a rule
that players wait three years after high
school before turnin g pro.
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg rejected
his first request. saying she saw no reason to let the 20-year-old, former Ohio
State tailback into the draft while his
challenge to the rule is unresolved .
Clareu filed a second emergency'
appeal with Justi ce John Paul Stevens.
who quickly tumed it down .
Neither justice ruled on the merits of
Clareu 's claim that the NFL's rule was
arbitrary and anticompetitive, robbing
young pl ayers of an opportunity to ente r
the multimillion-dollar marketplace . His
attorneys had relied on a court ruling letting major league basebal l players move
among teams. and other court decisions
opening up the Nationa l Basketball
Association. National Hockey League
and now-defunct Uni ted States Football
League to younger players.
The NFL contends younger players are
not physically ready to play professional
footba ll and may ·harm themselves by
over-training or resorting to steroid use.
"From the NFL's perspective .this was
never really about Maurice Clarett. It
was about a rule that has served the NFL
well. served fans well and served_players
well tor many years." said NFL attorney
Gregg Levy.
.
Some teenage athletes have flourished
in pro leagues. LeBron James was
named the top rookie in the NBA this
season, just one year out of high school.
And 14-year-old Freddy Adu is the hi ghest-paid player in Major League Soccer.
Clarett led Ohio State to a national college football title a' a freshman in 2002,
but he was ruled ineligible as a sophomore for accepting money from a family

Please see Clarett.. Bl

I

Bv JoE KAv
Associated Press

Cl"iC I:-1!\Ari
Jaret
Wright wi,lleJ it ""ould ha\'e
neYcr ,lllppcd rain mg.
The ra1il let up ju&gt;t long
· e nou~h Thur,daY for the ri~ht­
hanJcr to ha,·c ·a costlY n1cltdown. He ne,·er got a grip nn
the strike tone. ,ell in~ 1he
Cincinn,;ti Reds up for a ~hort­
ened 5-.\ ,·icton m·er lhe
Atlanta Bra1e,. ·
.. , didn't e1·en gi1·e them ~~
chance to heat me... said
Wri~ht 1 1-1). wh\&gt; failed to
lll&lt;tk.._e

ond

it Dllt uf a f)\·e-rUil \CL'-

i nnin ~.

"With lhe wa lh. I

wa~ beatirl!.! Ill\ self:'
There \;,,.., · "ome que~tion

whether the ~ame woukl last
Ion£!.
for an\'onc
to ....~et
... enouuh
._
.
beat.
The 'tan 11 a&gt; de laved an
hour by rain. whicil lei up for
the fi rst th'rce inning,. As soon ·
a:-. Wri!:.!ht was i!One. it !.!Ot
heavier.. Wright didn' t e1 en la&gt;t as
i on~ as the first delav. He was
g01!e afte r only ~:i minulesafter ni1Je of 1.\ bauer' he faced
reac hed b•L'e. TI1e ri~llt-hanJ e r
gave up fou r

The U.S. Supreme Court rejected Maurice Clarett's appeal in his effo rt to enter
the NFL Draft ea rly. Clarett is seen here during the 2002 season. (AP fi le)

-;i r;g \e-.. and

walked fi ve in I 2-J inning ....
lbrowin~ only 23 ~t ri ke~ oul of
s3 pitdie,. ·
"He was just off." Bra1·es
manager Bobby Cox &gt;aid. '
By the founh inning. Cory
LiLlie I "- 1) was lrying lo gel
yuil'k puts so 1he Red' cou lu .
gel i rt' one more inning and

Please see Reds, Bl

It's hard to keep Hawk from hittin'g the field
8v RusTY

MILLER

Associated.Press

COLUMBUS - A.J. Hawk will
never be one of those workers who calls
in sick and then ,sneaks out for a round
of golf
·
To begin with, the stubby, thicknecked Hawk doesn't appear to be a
candidate to win a PGA Tour card any
time soon. On top of that, the junior
linebacker from Centerville doesn' t like

to acknowledge that he is
ever unheahhy.
"You grow
up never missing anythin g
and 1hen you
come here and
it's tough to sit around and watch the
guys," Hawk said last week after a tuneup for Saturday's an nual Ohio State
spring game. '·Now I'm one of the older
guys. It's just tough having to watch

everyone out there."
Hawk had a monster year in 2003
when he led the Buckeyes with I06
tackles. He also had tour sacks. two
interceptions and 13 tack les for negative yardage.
Even as he was piling up those
impre"ive slats. however. his knees
were hurt ing. He had surgery in January
to repair the damage. whi ch lim ited his
wDrk this spring.
That did not sit we ll with Hawk.
" Luckily they've let me do a linle bit

more than I thought I w~" going to be
allowed to do." he said with an cd2c to
his voice. "Coming inlo the spring.-they
told me. ' We 'r.: not going IU let you hit
at al l. · Butthev'w seen that I feel gmxJ
and I want to run around. I' ve been-able
to hi t. Most of the time at practice they
let me do almost all of the 1eam stuff.
They might pull me out here and there
when they think I' m cluing loo much ...
The thing is. Hawk usually does l\Xl

Please see Hawk, Bl

1

NASCAR

Bengals keep helmets,
Gordon,
and
~hange rest of uniform

everyone else, is
ch~sing .team DEl

'

CINCINNATI (AP) - The striped helmets
stay. Marvin Lewis isn'lmessi ng with those.
But the Cincinnati Bengals are making other
sartorial changes this season for only the second time in franchise history.
Fans who buy the expensive seats in Paul
Brown Stadium got a look at the new uniforms Thursday in an invitation-only fashion
show.
"We've been trying to get new unilonns
ever since we opened up the stadium," said
linebacker Brian Simmons, one of several
players who modeled the new look . ·
Combinations of predominantly black,
white and orange jerseys and black and white
pants give the Bengals six uniform options,
all with black shoes.
"It's impottant that we kept the tradition of
the stripes and colors," Lewis said. He said
the new uniforms give a feel of "energy,
movement and speed."
When the Bengal s took the field for the
tirst time in 1968, they wore uniforms similar
to the ones worn by the Cleveland Browns
when Bengal s founder Paul Brown coached
there. The main difference in the orange helmets was that Cincinnati's had "Bengals''
stenciled on the· sides.
When the team made a radical change
before the 1981 season, goi ng for striped helmet' and pants, player&gt; joked that they would
have to play well so opponents wouldn't poke
fun at the new, gaudy design.
They made it to the Super Bowl that season, losing to San Fmncisco.
Only minor changes were made tor the
next several years, such as adding a leaping
tiger logo to the uniform sleeves.
·
Players lobbied for a dilferent look la'l sea-

•

Bv

MIKE I-IARRIS

Associated Press

Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Carson
Palmer, left, and wide receiver Chad
Jo:1nson pose on stage in two of the team's
new uniforms during an unveiling for fans
Thursday. (AP)
son, their first Lmder Lewis, and he got the
NFL\ penni"ion for the team to wear hlack
panb for the tiN and last games.
It was the first time the Bengab wore hlack
jerseys and pallls. and the games were disasters - lopsided losses to Denver and
Cleveland at home.
The season-ending loss to the Browns
eliminated Cinci11nati from . playoff contention. and the Bengals tini&gt;hed their 13th
stmight season without a winning record.

"We

seem

In

ha1 e

Talladct!a
fkurcd
nut.
b1rnha1~dt said thi' wet•k.

TALLADEGA. Ala._ Jell "We're going there "ith c·autiou s optimism ...
Gordon is racin g for more
Earnhardl won the Da\ tona
than third place ~~ Talladega 500 in February \Vhi le Waltrip
Super&gt;peedway.
cra,hcd. Bul thcv gn into
But the four-time NASCAR s
. unua; ·s Aarnn ·s -,
-.49· as co''hampion
,·111tl ev··ryone
else favnnte..,
·
· • - agau1
· - Je~p1tc
·
...
..
may have to be satisfied with both u,ing new. unt ricJ
that unles; they figure out Chc 1 rnleh.·
how to beat Dale Earnhardt , Tl1e car ·111 w111c
· 11 Earn 11arct1
Jr. and Michael Waltrip.
l\llll at Da\ ttirw " now on
The two teammate' have displa' in .Da)IOrt&lt;l. Waltrip·,
domin~tted since 200 I at era she Ll car could not he
Talladega and Daytona At repaired .
th ose
tracks. · NAS AR
Richie Gilmore. heal! of
requires horsepower-sapp ing · ra.:in g upcratio1" for DEI.
carburetor rcstrictor plale, , prnmiseJ 1he ne11 Monte
keeping the Ncxtd Cup cars Carlm "ill he just as ,trnn~.
unde~ 200 mph in the irttere'l That's nol good news for the
of driver and fan safety.
rest of the lield.
Ea.-nhardt and WallFip ha+e - "I think ~~~ work harder
won 10 ·of the last 13 plate nm1 than "hen 11e fiN ,tartrace~. inclllding the IOJ~t fhe ing ,,innint! re"trictor plate
- fotir in a row by Earnhardt races: · Gilmnre ,aid . "We
before Waltrip won Ia'! fall take a lot nf pride in that.
- on Talladega's 2.66-milc
"\\'c. a' a mmpan~ . Jo thai
OI'UI. They have finl'hcd 1-2 fnr Dale ... GilnHlre adJed.
four times in th •it 'pan. rc·fcrrin ).! ''' team founJcr
including last Scplembcr''
· Please see Cordon, Bl
race.

�\

..

-~

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, April 23, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Bonds' fast start at the Vizquel hits No. 2,000 as
plate. has many in awe Tribe scalp Royals, 5-4
Bv

JANIE McCAULEY

Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO
Hall of Famer Orlando
Cepeda 'told
everyone
almost a decade agL1 that
he'd never seen 'omeo ne
swing a bat as well a' Barry
Bonds.
··A nd people looked at me
funny:· Cepeda recalled.
Nobody's \lrguing now.
not with Bonds batting .500
- yep . .500° - and connecting for nine home run'
among his first 19 hit,. He
even homered in se ven
straight games, one , hy of
the major league record.
"What he \ doing is pretty
special." first baseman J.T
Snow said.
Bond,. a 'ix-t im e NL
MVP. got a much-needed
day off Thursday when the
Giants concluded a fourgame serie~ against the San

Diego Padres. He is expet·ted to play all three weekend
games in Lo s Angelc~
against the Dodgers.
"He is really tired.'' manager Felipe Alou said ... You
can see it in the outfidd.
He's been busy ...
That's fur sure.
Bonds'
homer
streak
ended Wednesday. ju't short
of tyin g the mark shared by
-Dale Lon~ ( 1956). Don
Mattingly (1987) and Ken
Griffey Jr. (1993 ). With the
·game out of reach - the
Giants . lust I I -0 - Bonds
asked to be taken ou t in the
eighth inning.
Bo.nds , who turns -tO in
. July, has 667 homers. behind
only ,Hank Aaron (755) and
Babe Ruth (714 ). If he stays
healthy and keeps up hi s
pace, Bonds could reach 700
this season.
He set the si ngle-seaso n
home run record of 73 in
2001. This season. he's performed fantastically at the
plate while dealing with
questions about his personal
trainer's drug distribution
i::ase and whether Bonds has
used steroids .
" His weapon is hi s mind,"
said Cepeda. who hit 379
homers in 17 major league
seasons. ·'He 's brilliant. .He
amazes me the way he plays
the game of baseball. In all
his years, I've see n him look
bad at the· plate two times.
Guys look bad at the plate
five times a day.
"He has the best sight. It's
incredible. People should
come to the ballpark just to
say, ' I saw Barry Bond s.· I
. played with Hank Aaron.
·willie Mays and Frank
Robinson . There's nobody
better than Barry Bonds, and
he's nearl y 40 years old."
Rich Donnelly, now a
third-base coach for the
Brewers, was a .coach for
Bonds from 1986-92 when
the slugger first came up
with the Pittsburgh Pirates .
Donnelly points out that
Bonds has made his mark as
more than merely a great
hitter.
"T he
I wo
grea tes t
baserunners I' ve ever 'seen
are Larry Walker and Barry
Bonds ," Donnell y said. ·'it 's
not always about stol en
bases .... Nobody make s a
-play down the left -field line
like Barry Bonds. He's still
the best at it. "
Huw does he keep his
body going at this late stage

San Francisco- Giants Barry Bonds . seen here watching the
.flight of the forst of two home runs against Los Angeles
Dodgers pitcher Jeff Weaver. Sunday in San Francisco .. has .
been dominating at the plate, not just hitting homr runs. but
collecting hits on general as he's batting over .500. (AP )
in hi s. career'.'

"Talent," Giants train er
Stan Conte said. "Ta lent
sums up sk ill. genetics and
psychological all in one."
His teammates can appreciate what Bonds is uuin~.
even if the defending Nt
West champion Giants are
havin g a rough April in the
win co lumn. That seems to
be wearing on Bonds. who
fell six outs short of winning
the World Series in 2002 .
·' I only tak e co mfort in
wins." Bonds said.
In · hi s last two games.
Bond s saw 29 pitches and
only five stril&lt;.es. He swung
once - connectin g for his
ninth homer of the season. a

4-2 in the eighth.
But Griomlcy couldn ., protect the lead. He walked
Belliard to open the eighth
bett&gt;rc Vizqtiel. who stao1ed
his care~ with Seattle.
slapped his 1.469th 'hit for
Cleveland through the left
side ..
Jody Gerut walkel) to load
the bases anu Goimsley was
lifted for Carrasco. who gave
up an RBI single tu Casey
Blake that brought the lhdians
within 4-3 .
~
After Matt Lawton hit into a
double play. Mm1incz lilied
his double over Aaron Guiel's
head in left.
•
Grimsl.ey wasn't happy
about any of hi s pitches.
" It's not a ''ery gcxld teeling

CLEVELAND (AP) Mark Shapiro didn 't want to
Omar Viz4uel reached into his speculate on Sabatl:lia's status
locker m1d pulled out two bot- until the test result s come
ties of expensive red wine. back.
gifh from Indians teainmate
··we don't have all the inforJohn McDonald.
mation in at the moment," he
A few moments earlier. said. "Bottom line. we won a
Vit4uelled a champagne toast game where the odds were
in Cleveland's clubhouse in stacked against us. A good
honor of his 2.000th career hit. MRI reading will make it
The wines were· a tine vin· about the best day we've had
iage. So was the single.
in a while ...
Vizquel's milestone hit
Before the eighth inning, it
helped set up Cleveland's appeared the Indians were
three-nm rally in the eighth headed for a third straight loss.
. inning Thursday. giving the
But after Ronnie Belli;ord
Indians a 54 win over the walked, Vizquel became the
Kansas City Royal s.
230th player to reach 2.000
"What made it so special hits when he singled off Jason
was that we came from Goimsley ( 1-1 ). Three hatters
behind.'' said . Vizquel, who later, Victor Mmtinez hit a
started his career with Seattle . . game-winning RBI double off
"That's something we've D.J. Carrasco and Cleveland
struggled with all year."
got its first -come-from-behind
ViLquel then
proudly win this season .
showed off his, Napa Valley
"I knew he wanted tu uu
wines from McDonald.
that at home. and for uur
'·Good wine.'' Vizquel said. squad," Indians manager Eric
"and a good win."
Wedge said.
But it remains to be seen if
On Monday. Vizqucl asked
it's a costly one for the Wedge to pinch-hit for him in
Indians, who are awaiting a I0-41oss so he would have a
medic.al test results on ace chance to reach 2.000 at a
· C. C. Sabathia 's sore left more meaningful moment.
shoulder.
"I was afraid to ask.''
Sabathia was pulled from Vizqu~l said. recalling hi s
what would have been his conversation With Wedge.
IOOth career start about 15 "''m just glad Wedgie knew
minutes before he was sched- where I wa' coming from.
uled to make his tirst pitch. · This couldn 't have worked out
Jeff· D' Amico tilled in for the better."
left-hander, who was immediRafael Betam:uui·t ( 1-2)
ately taken for X-rays.
pitched une inning for the win.
Pitchinv coach Carl Willis and David Riske ueave the
" threw. about 20 Indians · bullpen a lift by
said Sabathia
warmup pitches in the center- working the ninth tor his sectield bullpen when he felt ond save.
some soreness while tossing ll
Kelly Stinnett's home run
changeup.
off Jack Cressend gave the
.. Hopefully it was a freaky. Royals a 3-2 lead in the sevtluky thing," Willis said.
enth and Andres Blanco's RBI
Indians general manager triple put Kansas City ahead

knowing you·re the reason we

lost the ball game ... he said.
..Getting the ball over the plate
shouldn't be a problem.
There's nu defense for that. I
coulun't get it over. ..
Ken Harvey had four hits
for the Royals.
Kansas City starter Jeremy
Affeldt held the Indi ans without an eamed run and just two
hits in seven innings. and was
six outs away from his tirst
win as a starter since July 2.\·
when his bullpen blew it. · .
"We wasted a great outing
by Affeldt." Roy:l!s manage!·
Tony Pena said. "It\ the best
I've seen him throw as a
starter...
D'Amico was uettim.! ready
to leave the clubhouse when
he was told he was st&lt;utin g.
There was no time to be nervous and barely enough to get
loose. Fortunately. plate
umpire Joe Brinkman pushed
the start back eight minutes so
D'Amico coull wann up on
just two days rest.

two -run shot off Rrian
Lawrence on Tuesday. Only
36 percent of the pitches
Bonds saw last se&lt;~~on were
strikes. the lowest frequency
in the majors . He walked
1-tX times in 130 games.
"They have to get him in
another reaguc:· shortstop
Neifi PereL said . "He's not
fur this le ttgue. They need to
make another big league for
him . It's unbelievable.''
Cepeda agrees .
"To me, he's one in a mil lion: · Cepeda said. " You
won't see anything like· that
again . The thing s he's doing
are unreal. He thrills me
every day. I'm praying I can
be like him in my next life.''

Friday, April 23, 2004

The Daily Sentinel • Page B:l

www.mydailysentinel.com ·

Inexperienced
Bowyer wins
Busch• pole

Gordon

Reds

from Page 81

from Page 81

Dale Earnhardt, a six-time
plate race winner who was
ki lied in a crash at Daytona
in February 2001. "We feel it
keeps hi s legacy going."
Gordon would like to at
least slow DEI this weekend .
TALLADEGA. Ala. (AP)
Truex has been a force in
Last September, he was
- Inexperience at Talladega the series. He has two poles
rumling third on this track on ·
Superspeedway proved no and won in March at Bristol
the final lap as the lead pack
deterrent to Clint Bowyer, Motor Speedway.
entered the turn three .
and he won the pole
"I've got probably one of
Instead of staying in line and
Thursday for the NASCAR the best cars out there, no · virtually guaranteeing himBusch series race.
doubt, and the best teammate
self a third-place finish ,
The rookie from Emporia, to draft with," Truex said .
Gordon made a move to try
Kan., got the first pole of his
Earnhardt has won six of
to win.
career, driving-- a Richard the lasfl3 Cup races ateither
"I don't race to finish
Childress Racing Chevrolet Talladega
or
Daytona
third,'' Gordon said. "I had
around the 2.66-mile oval at International Speedway, tl)e
some help behind me as we
184.253 mph. What made tracks where NASCAR
entered turn three and got a
that so impressive was a lack requires the horsepower-sap_.
run on Dale. Michael pulled
of practice
time
on ping carburetor plates to
high to block me and I left
NASCAR 's biggest track.
keep the cars under 200 mph .
too much room on the inside .
"On my end of it, it's pretBut Truex will have to wait
Kevin (Harvick) pulled
ty cool to only have 12 l'!Ps for Earnhardt to arrive. ifhe
alongside and it just stopped
under your belt here and run boss qualified IOth in a held
mv momentum.
so good," Bowyer said after of 43 .
:., ju st had to fight for the
"I' on going to bust on him
locking up the top starting
best finish possible after that ,
spot for Saturday's Aaron's a little bit about that toni ght."
Y{hich was fifth.''
312. "That just shows you Truex said, "As soon as that
Talladega, wider and more
what a superspeedway pro- green flag drops, he ' II be the
steeply
banked
than
Daytona 's 2.5-mile oval,
gram Richard Childress first one to come to the
lends itself to three- and
has."
front."
Bowyer is running a limitCup
regular
Robby · sometimes four-wide racing
at speeds hovering in the
ed schedule in the No. 21 · Gordon qualitied tourth at
!90s. Thanks to the plates, ·
Chevy usually driven by 183.494. He was followed
the cars all have about the
Kevin Harvick, RCR's ace by Mike Bliss and Jason
same power and it's hard for
on the Nextel Cup circuit.
Leffler, giving Chevys a
anyone to break away:
"I'd like to thank ourfabri- swept of the top six posiSomehow,
though ,
cation shop and our en~ine tions.
Earnhardt Jr. and Waltrip
shop," Bowyer said. "Th1s is
Mark
Green,
Paul
always seem to be at or near
their day to shine at these Menard, Cup rookie sensathe front at the end.
superspeedways and shine tion ' Kasey Kahne and
"DEl has hit on something
Earnhardt completed the top
they did today."
in their restrictor-plate proIndeed.
10.
gram and we're all playing
Ron Hornaday Jr., gave
Casey Atwood and Tim
catch
up.'' Gordon said.
RCR a sweep of the front Fedewa, qualified 12th and
Gordon struggled early on
row with a speed of 183.737. 14th, respectively, but their
at Talladega, posting no top
"Bridesmaid
again," timc;s were disallowed after
IOs and leading only I0 laps
Hornaday said of another both FitzBradshaw Racing
in
hi s first four events at the
second-place
qualifying Chevrol\:ts failed a posttrack.
Since then. he has two ·
result. "Last time, Daytona. qualifying
inspection.
victories ( 1996, 2000), nine
And now, to my own team- NASCAR said the team
top
fives and 12 top lOs . He
mate. That's the only plus placed spacers under the
has
led 464 laps in 18 race s.
about it."
roof flaps in an effort to get
"Thi
s track isn't physically
Martin Truex Jr., the pole- air to pass over the rear
demanding. but lT1Y eyeballs
sitter at Daytona, will start spoiler - and help the car
seem to hurt after each race,"
third. Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s cut through the air faster.
Gordon
said. "Your concenChance 2 Motorsports teamThey were forced to take
tration level is so hi~h for
mate and protege got around pnivisionals. Fedewa will
an extended penod of
such
at 183.522.
·
start 39th and Atwood 40th.
time."

make it ot'ticial.
"The way it was commg
down eao·Jy on. there was a
question whether we were
going to get in tive inninl\s:·
Reds manager Dave Moley
said . "It could huve gone either
way. and it went our way...
A downpour forced the
umpires to halt the game··with
two outs and two on in the bottom of the fifth. By that time.
the infield was a muddy mess
and pans of the warning track
were submerged.
·
NobodY. disagreed with crew

Hawk
from Page 81
much. H~ ' s like a pinbalL
bouncing off blockers and ball
carriers until the whistle blows.
He is in almost constant motion
during even inconsequential
pmctices. encouraging teammate s. sacking quarterbacks
and shadowing receivers.
So much for limiting his
work during the spring.
"I don't know how the heck
you could ever keep him from
going out there every chance he
gets," Ohio State coach Jim

Clarett
from Page 81
friend and lying about it to
NCAA and university investigators. Clarett, out of high
school two years. would be eligible for the 2005 draft under
the current rule.
If allowed into thi s weekend's draft, Clarett is projected
to be a late second-round or
third-wund choice. NFL
teams are wary because he's
only played one year of college football and had what
most · scouts considered a
mediocre workout earlier this
month.
Ginsburg was assigned the

ctiief Tim McClelland\ deci'ion to call it an hour and 47
minutes later with rain still
coming down~
"You hate to lose in 4 1-2
innings when you ' re on!~
down two runs, but it was just
raining too hard to continue 10
play," Cox said.
Cincinnati sent 10 batters to
the plate for its live runs in the
second. the biggest inning
against Atlanta this season.
Two ·o f the runs scored on a
passed ball by Johnny Estrada
and a bases-loaded walk 10
D'Angelo Jimenez. who was
in an 0-tor-22 slump at the
time.
Slumping Ken Griffey Jr.
had a bases-.loaded single for
Tressel said ... , might hide his
shoulder pads.'' ·
That isn 't so far-fetched.
When he got stitches on the
bridge of his nose last season.
the training staff hid Hawk's
helmet so he couldn't practice.
That ploy didn 't work. He
found his helmet and stormed
off to the field.
Hawk will likely take on
added responsibilities this season , since last year's defense
was stocked with seniors who
had been through countless Big .
·Ten battles. Hawk is a natural
choice to make defensive calls.
In fact, Tressel has been riding Hawk to assert himself
case because she oversees
appeals from New York.
where the NFL is based.
Stevens may have been the
next choice because of his
expertise in antitrust law. the
basis for Clarett's case.
Clarett could ask any of the
remaining seven justices to
look at his case, but his lawyer,
Alan Milstein, said he would
not ask.
"That's not the route we're
going," said Milstein, who
refused to elaborate.
The outcome would also
affect wide receiver Mike
Williams
of
Southern
California, who is expected to
be a forst-round pick if ruled
eligible.
The NFL had said in a filing·
with the Supreme Court that

tWO run,. and s~an Ca..e\ 'Ill ·
gled home another ui coid
·
Wright\ outing .
Lidk pitd1ed throu ~ h the
rain. chan~in~ h1.., . . hu1 ~tt ,~n~
point

pitchi1~g

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Since 1948...
200:$ Ponti«
2003 Buidl Century........................$10,900
1999 Olds lntrlgue ............. ,....:.......... $1,900
2004 Cl!evy Malibu ......................... $ 12,450
1998 Olds Cutlass GLS.....................$6,950
2003 Chevy Express Cargo Van,.$15,500

'u

cum in ~ JU\\ Il

Mon- Fri 8:30- 5:00

255 Mill Street

\~ ..1....

Adam LaRod1e haJ an RBI
double II ith til&lt;&gt; OUt'. ai1U
E'trada douhkll h•HliC tW&lt;'
more.
,:The, hell thin ~ \OliLdOI Jo i'
keep a good ~ltt l.ttidL· ..1hnut it."'
Lidle 'aid . " In the too111h. it

Life goes by pretty fas~ especially your last year
of high schoOl. So much to do to get ready for
life out on your own. Deadlines, pressures ... bul
we can help in one area though, you still have
plenty of time to order your senior announcements and accessories. With our wid~ variety
of styles to choose from, you can custom taylor
your order to sutt your style instead of settling
for what everyone else has Stop in today and
see. Now open Saturdays from 9 - 12 for your

The Quality Print Shop, Inc.

11

game m.

2004 GRADUATES ...

convenience.

becau . . c

drenched. He ~ "' ,, up thr~c
runs in the 1&lt; &gt;un h. "h,·n ti\Lrain inten"lled .uoJ he ' tarlc'd

• Spe&lt;ialldi~on Paiat &amp; Interior • Porfarm•ce Han.ing Pkg.
• Heads Up 'Speed Disploy

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

'Friday, April 23, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

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To Place
laegister
\lrribune
Sentinel
Your Ad,
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today•.. Or
Or Fax To (304) 675·5234
Or Fax TQ (740) 992·2157

0

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Monday t:hru Friday
8:00 a.m. t:o 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WR.ITE AN AD

23 6 are 1iad Vrllltl 22
HOME RUNS B011ds. S.., Fr!n::lsoo. 9: Rolen
St Louts a Ol.nn Cn:lnlb 7 Gabrenl. Flonda 6 Pujol$ St. loutS 6 BeirB Los AAgelel 6
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Successful Ads
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To Help Get Response •.•

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..

\ '\ '\C II \( I \I I \ I\

oo 5 MMa Piltsb.Jr!tl 5 Bdd&amp; Montreal 4
Kob M•lwaukee 4 Nathan Mrrnesota 4 Looper New ¥00. 4 BW&amp;!Jler Philadel!;tua 4

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MYoong T&amp;Mas Je6 IRodn;loez. Delrol 369
MW!IktaWICl MI'II'IMOIII. 358 Ta;acta Balhmooo 350
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l.aW'Ion CIBYela'ld 16 'Nnile 08IIJoit 15 MOr·
dotlaz. Chicago 1-4
Kansas Cily
14 MYoung Taxas 1:3 JJones. t.liMEI&amp;O!a 13
OOrtll Boston 13
HIT'S-MYoUng T8A8S. 27 Beliald Oweland
27 MAarn~rez. Bosltof1 24 .M..opeZ 8allinore
24 IFiod~uez. Oefroil 24 Dye Qak!ancl 22
Blalock. T&amp;'(81 21 ASorill.no. Texas 21 Tejada
Ballmore 21

u.sweenev.

1•
C-1 Beer Carry Out perm1t
tor sale Chester Townshtp
Metgs County send letters
of 1nterest to The Da1ly
Sentinel PO Box 729-20
Pomeroy Oh10 45769
1

t

GIVEAWAY

2 yr old solid wh1te beautiful
female cat spayed Call
740 441 1560 after 5pm
New ma1lbox on the post

(740)446 7124
Ronwetle r m111ed pupp1es
tree to good home' Call

(740)367·0624

HOME RtJNS-£¥1 Oaldand 1 Posada Nerw
'(or1(. 7 Belran KansasC'ty,6 Glaus Anal1em
5 llrMon CleYelaod 5 8 are tied with 4
STOLEN EIASES-Cim'Aord Tampa Bay 7
BeHran Kartsu Cll)l 6 Fwns, Anaheim 4
WHarr•s ~ 4 BRobBr1s BattJnore 4
Matos Baltinore 4 JJones MinoHotll 4
Erstad ~ 4

STftii(EOUlS--Scllli'lg
8ooOon
Toronto 2!l Robertlon Detrott
24 "Bonderman,
Detroil 21 PMal'ti"lel. Boston 21 bmt:.ano
Tampa Bay 20 ~ 08lkland. 19 Colon
AnahEWn 19 Park, Texas 19
SAVES--Rhode&amp; Oakland 6; Fout.e Bollen
S MRiYera New Yoltl 5 FCorOero TOIIU 4
Nathan Mtnnesote :3 Perc:Mil AnaheWn 3 5
are bed with 2

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Bracelet found

4 16 04 I
Tw1n Towers apt parking lot
call to ldarttJty (304)675

1333
Found mothe r dog but she
•s miSstng her pupp1es m
R10 Grande M cDonald s
area (740)446-8508 1t pupPieS are found
Found· m ale black Lab 8
mo -1yr
Sharon
Ad
Portland area (740)843
5174
Found puppies at Holzer
Cllnlc area 4-5 days old
morher's m1ssmg (740)446
8508 1f fo und

• -- ••l•llc....~c.:»L•-

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Home National
B~nk will auction the
foUowlng Item on
Saturday, April 24,
2004, at tO:OO a.m. at
the bank 's parking
lof
Kawasaki
200t
4·whealar
JKBLF·
BAt2tB784806
The Home National
Bank reserves the
right to reject any and
all bids.
For an
appointment to see,
call 949·22t0, ask for
Sheola.
(4) 2t, 22, 23 3TC

Public Notice
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT
MEIGS
COUNTY
OHIO
Cltlllnancla .l
Mortgage Company,
Inc
Plaintiff
VI,

Slaven Craig, et of.
Defendants.
Case No. 04·CV·032
Judge Fred W. Crew
Ill
LEGAL NOTICE
Unknown Spouse, If
any, of Tanya S Burt·
Hess 1
whose
last
address Is unknown,

will taka notice that
on March t9, 2004,
Cltlflnanclal
Mortgage Company,
Inc
flied
Ita
Complaint In the
Court of Common
Pleas, Melga County,
Ohio,
Case
No04 CV.032 The object
of, and demand for
relief
In,
the
Complaint Is to fore·
close the lien of
plaintiff s mortgage
recorded upon the
real estate described
below and In which
plaintiff alleges the!
the foregoing defen·
dant has or claims to
have an lntareat.,
Situated In the
VIllage of Middleport,
Meigs County and
State of Ohio, and further described to wit:
The East One-hall of
the Lot No. t24, baing

a strip of land fifty
feet on Lincoln Street
and fifty feet on an
alley and also four
feet off the South
side of the East OneHalf of Lot t23 being
a strip of land lour
teet lacing the allay
and running from \he
alley towards
Fourth Street on Lot
No. t23 for a distance
of fifty feet, all situated In Palmer Addition
to
VIllage
of
the
Sheffield now Incorporated Into the
VIllage of Middleport,
Ohio.
The
defendants
named above are
raqulred to answer
tha complaint within
lwenly·elghl
(28)
days after the last
publication of this
legal notice, This
legal notice will be
published once a
week for six aucces·
alve weeks.
(4) t6, 23, 30, (5) 7, 14,
21

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
Thomas
Darst ,
whose last place of
residence Ia known
as t18 Union Avenue,
Pomeroy, OH 45769,
but whose preaant
place of residence la
unknown will taka
notice that on August
20, 2003 at 2:53 p.m.,
LaSalle Bank, N.A.,
lka LaSalle National
Bank, as truatee
under the pooling
and oervlclng egrM·
mant
dated
12/01/1999,
Series
1999-4
flied
Ita
Complaint In Case
No. 03-CV-G95 and on
September 23, 2003
0 8·30 a.m. Iliad Ita
Supplemental
Compliant In the
Court of Common
Piasa Meigs County,
Ohio alleging that the
abave ~ n•med

Defendant(a), have or
claim to have an
lnteraat In the reel

estate
described
below:
The land referred to
In this Commitment
Ia situated In the
State of Ohio, County
of Meigs.
Situate In the VIllage
of Pomeroy, County
of Malga and State of
Ohio:
Beginning at the
Southeast corner of a
lot formerly owned by
Lucinda Starkey on
Union Avenue In said
VIllage of Pomeroy;
thence north 20 dog.
East along the North
line of sald lot 1 00
feet, thence south 70
dog east 50 feet;
thence south 20 deg
weal tOO feet to the
line of said Union
Thence
Avenue·
along the line of said
Union Avenue, North
10 dog. West so feet
to the place of bagln·
nlng. Said premlsea
being a pert of Lot
No. 425 olsald VIllage
of Pomeroy, and
being !he same premIses
deeded
by
Margaret Nurst to
Theodora Elaelateln
by
deed
dated
November t6, 1885,
recorded
In
and
Volume 61, Page 224
and 225 records,
Meigs County, Ohio,
and
deeded
to
Elaalataln
George
and wife to Elsa S.
Lea by deed dated
November I 9, 189t,
and
recorded
In
Volume 73, Page 21t
and 2t2 of the
recorda of deeds of
Malga County, Ohio.
Seve and except a
small tract of reel
estate conveyed to
Loula Reibel, beginning at a polnt26 feet
North 20 deg from the
Southeast cornar of
the M. E. Church
Pareonage lot, thence
north 66t/2 deg. Well
3 feet and 9 Inches;
thence north 20 deg.
eaot t7 feat and 4
lnchaa; thence south
66 t/2 deg east 3 feet
and 9 lncheo; thence
aouth 20 deg weat t7

feet and 4 Inches to
the place of beginning, and containing

about 65 square feet,
more or less 1 and It Is
further understood
that no part of the
wall on said plusonagalotla hereby conveyed.
Parcel No. t6-Gt943
And currently set
forth In deed book
335, page 95, record ad 5.tt.93
Also
commonly
known as: tt8 Union
Pomeroy,
Avenue,
Ohio 45769.
The Patnloner further alleges that by
reason of default of
the defendant(s) In
the payment of a
promissory
note,
according to Ita tenor,

the conditions of a
concuOTent mortgage
deed given to secure
the payment of said
not and conveying
the
premises
described, have been
broken ~ and the same
has
become
absolute.
The
Petitioner
prays that the defendant(a) named above
ba required to answer
and sat up their Intereat In aald real estate
or ba forever barred
from asserting the

aame, far

foreclosure

of said morlgage, the
marshalling of any
IIana, and the oale of
eald real estate, and
the proceeds of said
aale applied to the
payment
of
Patltloner'o Claim In
the proper order of Its
priority, and for such
other and further
relief as Is just and
equltabla
The dolandant(a)
named above are
required to answer on
or before the 28th day
of May, 2004.
By. Reimer, Lorber &amp;
Arnovltz Co., L.P.A
EMC
Mortgage
Corporation
Ronald J. Chernek,
Attorney at Law
Attorney for Plaintiff·
Patltlonar

IFC.Ia.c;l'll.t-

P.O. Box 968
Twinsburg, OH 44087
(330) 425-420t
(3) 26, (4) 2, 9, t6, 23,
30

Public Notice
Sherrlf' Sale Real
Estate
Case Number
03-cv.Q98
U.S Bank N A. lka
Flrstar Bank, N A.
Plaintiff
vs
Rory M. Robinson, et
al
Delendents
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
In pulsuance of an
order of ssle to me
directed from said
Court In the above
entitled action I will
expose to sale at
public auction at the
Courthouse on May
2t, 2004 attO.OOa.m.
of said day, the following described real

e..~

-....;;:.-.c.&gt;~.

35364 Loop Road,
Rutland, OH 45775
Appraised
at
$46 ,000.00
Terms of Sale· tO%
Cash on day 111 sale
and full amount due
by Confirmation of
Sale.
Raph Trussell
Sheriff,
Meigs
County.
(4) t6, 23 , 30

Public Notice
Tille
of
the
Workforce
Investment Act of
t998 (WIA) requires
each local workforce
investment area to
establish a one·stop
system to provide
support and educational services to
their
community.
Each area Is to sub·
mil a five-year plan
how
It
detailing
intends

to accom·

pllsh this goal. The
plan
Is
effective

,..._,_,a.a~~-

W&gt;~ll"~•-eclt

beginning

July

t,

2004. Services are

targeted to youth, dis·
located workers who
have been laid off,
and adults. To provide
these services local·
ly, Ohio's Area t4
conststs of Metgs,
Athens,

Vinton, Perry,

and Hocking coun·
ties. Some services,
such as job search
and use of resource
roop1s,

are universal

services available to
the general public.
Other services, such
as tuitton assistance

and support servlc·
esl are contingent on
eligibility criteria
A DRAFT of the
Flve·Year Local Plan
lor the Workforce
Investment Area t14
will be available for
review and com·
ments on the Meogs
County
Commissioners'
office at tOO E.
Second

I•-.

~l...:::;l,.,t

_r....r~.......-sp.-,•p~•-8.

tc&gt; ~~ ... . - ][&gt;c&gt;e&gt;-.

for a 30-c:lay period
beginning April 23,
2004 lhru May 23,
2004.
For more Information
contact
Michael

Swisher, Director of
Meigs
County
Department of Job &amp;
Family Services (740)
992-2tt7.
(4) 23, (5) t2

p7'l00king For~
ANew Home?

Trv the
Classifieds!!

Street,

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

estate

The
following
described promises,
situated
In
the
Township of Rutland,
County of Meigs and
State of Ohio:
The following real
estate, altustad In
'Rutland Township,
Meigs County, Ohio
baing In Section t7,
Town

6 1 Range

14 1

Ohio
Company's
Purchase .
Beginning at a
point In tho Township
Road whore the west
llna of the Dale
Bachner farm Intersects
the
same,
thence westerly In the
road 1 30 rods; thence
north 8 rods thence
easterly parallel with
road, 30 rods; thence
•outh on Bachner 1s
well line, 8 rods, to
the point of begin·
nlng, containing one
and one hall

acres~

subject to all legal
highways.
Prior Instrument
references: Book t1t,
Page 9t9
Property
address.

110

HELPWA~TID

"""- 4

STRIKEOUTS--R.Iohnso Artzona. 32; 6801
et1 FlorDa. 27 WOod Chcago. 23 WeCO. Alizona 22 Pemy Fbnda ~ OP&amp;ral, Los Artgt!tles. 22 Oswil~ Houston 20 BStteeb. Milwaull.ee 20 KW&amp;IIs. Pittstlu~ 20

Public Notice
Verozon North Inc. os an Eltgtble Telecommunocat1ons Carrier m Ohio
and, under Federal Communocattons Commosston (FCC) and Public
Ut11it1es Commission of Ohto (PUCO) guidelines, it receives federal
unoversal serv tce fundtng Thos ts to nottfy all customers wtthm the
Venzon North - Ohto servtce area of the availability of basic telephone servoce

'

Restdenttal custo mers can rece1ve s1ngle party, voice grade tale·
phone servtce, 1nclud1ng touchtone and access to 1) long dtstance;
2) operator services; 3) directory assistance, and 4) 9-1·1 emergency servtce (where avaolable) for Just $13 93 a month for flat rate ser·
vtce ($27 86 for Single ltne bus1nesses), or $8.36 a month for usage
sensttove servoce (16 74 for songle lone bustnesses). These rates are
based on Band 3 rates and do nolonclude the federal subscnber line
' Charge There are SIX rate bands.
charge or the Access Recovery
lndovodual rates could be hogher or lower than the example, dependIng on tndtvldual rate band
Also , addotoonal monthly dtscounts and free toll limitatiOn services
are avatlable to restdenlial customers who are enrolled tn certatn
low-mcome asststance programs
For more 1nformat1on on these servtces and beneftts , contact your
Verozon representattve at 1·800-483-4000

OH

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

l.Anktord (5) Ro6an (3)

SAVES--Benw FlOrida B GI'B'Je8 Cn::rmtt,
7 Gagne Los Ar'lgeles 5 ~ S.. ffcn:::ls-

Whhe Sox 4, Yankees 3

S.erttHI'1

20 0 0
, 0 1 0

aoo

NLL.aadanl

Bolton
201
000 000 3
Toronto
001
000 24x 7
OP-Tomnto 1 LOB-Boston 13 TOI'onto 7
28-0amon (3) MRemtrez (5) COelgado (2)
38-Crespo (1) ~udsol'l (1) HA-OOrtll
(4/ Gomez (11 SB-OHudson (1)
!PH RERBBSO

4 1 20
ooao

20 0 0
0000
00 0 1

2

8ATT1NG-Boodli S., FrallCilco 500 Lo

Gomezss 4225

ARdrgz 3b 4 0 1 0
Sllflleldrl 4 0 0 0

COuntJ• u ..-,.,.-

10 0 0

0000

0Hudsn2l:l 3 3 2 0

ab r hbi
Jelerss
4001
BWimscl 4 0 0 0

:2

5041

5 0 2 1

WeCo11r7
l.lelgs, a-Ula,

aoo

51 1 0
5010
2 0 0 0

U~~e

Toronto

ster
And ......,..

Second
Gwy
c-mm
AIYI'/
Flell::hef
T-a 34
A-33
708 (40,950)

lb rhbi

36 310 3

•

w,._.,.,.

~ A-19250 (A8 190)

Damonc!

0
0
0
0
0
0

Matheny (5) 58---RSartder! (5) S-Womack

RERBB SO

Gaudin l 0;.1

0

o

E~entena (3) Ausmus (2) OP- St L.o\Jis 1
Houston 1 LOB-St Lou•s8 Hou61on-, 26-'--

H

JoSoM
TreMtller

o

m

IP

2 1 0 2
Guardado
0 0 0 1 0
HBP--t:y JMateo (Menactnno) try Moyer (Kol
sa~)

3 0 1 0

l..l.nl Jtl
Eklredp
t&lt;np

......

0 00 0

P\.itOII lb

Matosct
B¢1eM
30"00
"'"" 2b 32671 Teall
33 7 I 7
Hall c

Ftlsadac

Athletics 8, Mariners 2
Oalllend

........

Bl.. Jays 7, Red Sox 3

SnCNI lb

4 1 1 1
3022

~~~~~~~~~--~~~
ab rhbl

2

DIM'T1 2b

''

Loe Angell
8b r h bl
Cora 2b 3 0 0 0
LDuca~
31 10
Brdleyct 3 0 0 0
St'Gren lb 2 0 0 0
Bellre3b , 2011
JEcrcnrf :2 0 0 0
Jl-lm.1zss 2 o a o

AriZOna

1
2

SonF~

San otego
523
YaiOes w2-o
113
FAOOriguez
0 0 0
0 Os\lla
Peroval s 3
1 0 0 0
1 0
lnEibrmk
Webdf prtched to 2 ba!lflrs n the 8tt1
Oopesa
HBP-by Park (Glaus) t1)' Par11. (Edtsle o)
SRI Fntnct&amp;co
Ul'!lplres-+!Ome. Randy Mar!Vl F1rst Umy RuetBI' L 0-2
4
1/anover Second Sa-n Holbrook Th1rd Paul Cooper
1
Nauert T--2 53 A-JJ 725 (45 030)
WFtankhn
1
,--.-,--:-:::-,,--.,..,~---1 FRcduguez
1
Roddes7,0odgers1 , (6)
Eyre
1

SF111\evef
Kata 2b
LGnzlz H
C11tronss
OBliSia rl

0

1

5 13 8 5 5 1
1230202
23

Bchnanrt
Klaslto Jt

w

EstesWJ-1

'

0

1

1133111
Kotl
1
000
AHef~zL0-2
5 6 2 2 2 3
Ump1B8 I IOITW larry Young Frrsl AnQBI Her
flilndaz $8oond Mike E\191'tt, Th¥d Mario. Wegr181 T-52:2 A-13879(41 900)

Wf!li»

Loo-

0

0
3

200004
200002

LV!Zca~ne

11·310002
11310010

UmaL:21
WAivafllz

5

Ford

51367621

WAIYrlp

'

MltwauMe

......m
Coloil 3-1

Totals

1

200016

Bulba

000 020 5
ANihefm
330 010 Olhl -,
E-Bialodt (1) Frgg•ns (2) Colon 12) LOBTexas8 Anahem6 28-ftggtns( t) 36--Ftg
gtns (1) HA-Dellua:r 2 (2) Ntx (3) Oal/anoo
(l) Glaus (5) 58-EVoUng (11 Eckste•n (3)
Ftggtns 214) Cs--Giaus (1) SF---OaVenon
IPHRERBBSO

-J-

H

3 1 1 0
4 , 2 1

F.. "'

53 9 8 7

IP
23

Otlefmueller

021

ParkL13

·--.........

v,.....
Sparks w 1 1

4 1 1 0
&amp;itasc AOOO
:2 1 2 0
AGnztz 1b 4 0 1 0 Al&lt;.ndy 2b 3 o o a
Toll.. 36 5 8 5 Totals 31 7 8 T

....

Tatat.

Arizonl
OfO 004 211 000 002 - 11
liliftnukM 000 140 103 000 000 g
E---cntron 12) Tracy (1) Cc::u'tsell (1) 0\lerbay
11) DP-Ntzona 2 MllwatMee 1 LOB-Arizona

Loretta 2b

4113

Tu••

2000
4000

KG~30

I 000
631120 9

......
""'"'

lib r hbl
50 0 0

c-•

1000
7000
7000

sa 1
50 1
sa 1
• 0 1
0 0 0
5 0 1
3 10
0 0 0
10 0

• 1 , 0

0"0 0 0
WmU;pfl 0000
Har12b
0000

Orioles 7, Devil Rays 6

1000

Gennetc
Obrmtrp

2 0 0 0
~ph 1000

WeiJt:l p

._...

1000
1 1 1 2

Padres 9, Goants 4

~220

EYongll

Ntxcf

10 0 0
1000

San Diego
sb rhbl
BfT'\lhs3b5111

4 2 22

[)lk)co rt

Daigle ph
5parll.6p

Gneve~

6 3

36
33
36

~7

Ksctlnk ph
Hallss
DmQt\2b
BClarlo.r!

0

HR---DSautJSta 2 t4l Jenlol.ns (3) KI8Sdnck
(1! SB--OBautEtlJ (21 Tracy l11 ~ 2
\111 C~lntron (21 5---Mayne SF-CK1trt'f'

' 3

42

804,
30 10

5-6

·-

Home

TrJCY3b
Sactled

SeKSOn lb 7 2

L;1ld!d If
L.ro:*1 p
Tguchlll

Secon.:i t.Ab OMJro Thltd Rob Qrali;e
T-3 07 A-33 627147 447]

15 MtlwauKee9 ~a(3l ~131 Qn
troni5J DBauttstat4 / Tracy(l) Ha,mm()Cjo.p l
Podse&lt;tljo, (4) Overbay 3 (6) 38--l'.ala (11

Mi!waiJkee 10 Ar~a 6
Los Ange~ 9 Col01&lt;1do A
S&lt;W1 DIQQO 11 San Fraoosco 0

New Yonl:
001 OOQ 20x 3
E-TBalisla (1/ Spencer 111 Guuerraz {1)
DP--New Vofll 1 LOB-Montreal 7 Nf:IW 't'oOt
12 ~ (3) Paua 2 (S) Cameron

12-345552
2 1·3 1 0 0 0 1
23 o o o 2 a

000

6&lt;
64
37
37

37

Fncs.y's G.mM
N Y. Met&amp; (Seo D-2181 Chago CuD&amp; (Maddix 0 2) 3 20 p m
Clncinnati (PWilsOO 2.0) at Pi1tsburgh (01 Perez1.(1) 7 05 p m
o\llanta {Au Ortiz: 1·2! al Fboda (Bedceft 1 I) 7 35 p m
Ph•ladelptua (t.lii'IIIIOOd 1 21 at Montreal (VarQBs 1 1) 7 35 p m
St l.ouil (C.rpitl11ef I 1) at MilwaukeB (KIIlney 0 2) 8 05 p.m
fblston (Duckworth (}OJ at Colorado (Jeon•ngs 1 1) 9 05 p m
San Diego (Eaton 1.(1) at AriZona (DaiQie ().1) 10 D5 p m
San Franctsco (Tomko ().If at Los Angeles (Od Perez 1 1) 10 10 p m

UdleW2 1
5 5 3 3
2
ffi..--.JEstrada
UmPires--Home TOf"r1 RandaZZo First Kevil
Kelley. Second. Ttm Ucelalland Third Jim WoN
T-1 40 A--19909(42,271)

Montretl

..."

P10

51

23
33

().nt)ay 1b 6 1 4 •
Helms :1:1 3 0 0 0
Burbsp
0000

1

B 1 1 0

TOUQ

Ctucago Cubs 12 Pttlsburgh t
St Lours 12 HOU1lton 6
Flonda 8 Ptlliadalptl.a 7 (12)
Mont111Hf 2 NV Mvts 1
Atlanta 9 Cnc1nnat• 5 (1 01

Fblda 9 Philad81phta 7
NV Mets :3 Montreal2

'

ab r h bl
Wlkrill cf 2 0 0 0
OCbera ss 4 0 1 0

"

~c

a oo
1 ooo

Hlnbr1 q::t!
lirrOo: c

Cbmnptl

w.d~1RnufU

Anzona 11 Milwaukee 9 (1 5)

AUanta
000
lO
3
Cincinnati
050
00
To,w outs whvrt wtnntng run scored
DP-A1hmta 1 Cincrn nall t LQB....-AUanta 2
C nc•nnall 6 28-laroc::tw (31 JEstrada (4)
JCast1o (2) Cs-oJim&amp;Oflz (2)

Meta 3 ,
Montresl

63

"

6-4

1'hl.trscl-r's AMulta
CIOCifY)IJ.\1 5 Atlanta 3 (5 ra111

JuCruzp 1 ooo
JGarca pn 1 0 0 0
Ntkwskp ooao
Totals 11t J 5 3 TocaMt

""""""

53
33

563
563

Colo&lt;ado
San Francisco

Reels 5, Bnlves 3, (5)

·-

43

T

45
24

;:::":;::,7""::::::'::~~~----1 """"""

IP

W3

...

ti

4-3
4-&amp;

ter

3000
3 0 oo
2 I 10
2 110
2·0 0 0
L.ro.::r. 1b 2 1 1 1
JEstdac 1012
DeRosa :1:1 2 0 1 0
JSWrhtp 0000

Aw.,

g

11,
3

T-246 A-tS 720 (43 368)

Furcal&amp;&amp;
0Wi5tl ~
MGillls 2tr
JOr8w rt
AJones d

' 5

Home

_9
9
7
8

563

a 05 p m

23

·~

Wl
L3

7

lUI

"
"

51
6-3

Wl
L3

"

600

9

D'*

••

Homo

63
2-&lt;
33
'5
37

6

45

~an

Sut&lt;
W3

'

Pet.

Clnclnnoti

Cnspcl
1000
Stnnetlc 4 1 2 1 Hafuer dtt 2 1 0 0
Bl.v.oo ss 4 0 1 1 Marlonr1t:l 2 0 0 0
Brss«!1t:t 0000
38 411 4 Tot1f1
28 55 4

"'"'""

533

9
9

F£,7

0 0 1
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S1 louts 2, Hooliton 1 (12)

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1 1J at NY Yankee&amp; (Contreras o-1 l 7 05 p m
~and (Je DaV1S 0 1) at Oelron (Sonderman 1 1) 7 05 p m
Toronto (Hentgen D-2) at Ba~1more (0u8oslit 1 2) 7 35 p m
SeaWe iPtnerro 1 I) at TaMas (Ofese D-0) 8 05 pm
Tarripa Bay (Zambrano 3 11at Cl1tcago While Sox (loa1Z8 3-0)
M.nnesola {Lohse 1 2) at Kansas Crty (Appie1 1) S 10 p m
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Tarnpa Bay 7 Baltwnore 3
Kansaa Crty at CleYeland ppd
NY Yar«a&amp;s 3 Chteago Sox 1
Delroil t1 Mtnnnota 8
OAkland 7 Sealtle 4

Cleveland 5 Ka11sas Crty 4
M1nnesota 4 Oetron 3
QaiCtand 8 Seanle 2
BaldmDfe 7 Tampa Bay 6
Toronto 7 Bos!on 3
Chta:~ SOli 4 NY Yanltoos 3
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'&lt;!tribune - Sentinel
CLASSIFIED

'

~ajar League Baseball

Lost· a male black &amp; tan
York1e the Midd(eport area
If you have any mfo, please

call(7 40)992 0206
Lost Bracelet 4 / t 2/04 m
Galltpolts One s1de white
gold othe r s•de yellow go ld
Phone 740·441-5025 or

740·256·6535

~r

YARD SALE

r

YARD SALE·
GAU.IPOLJS

One Day Ya rd Sale at 1722
Neighborhood Ad on Sa!
Apnl 24 th from Bam 2pm
Clothe s toys etc
Saturday
4/24 /04
9 4
Centenary Umt&amp;d Methodist
Church State Route 141

~4

YARDSALEPoMEROY!MIDDLE

7th Annual 6·M tle Yellow
Flag Yard Sale Fn-Sat Apnl

:lOih &amp; May 1st, Only $5 to
slgn·up l We adverttse for
youl Call 740-992·4055 or

740-992·3148
Our f1rst yard sale· La sher
Ad off 124 Rutland, hrst
house on right, tnstde cash

only, Apnl 23·24 (740)742·
2821

t

WANTtD

roBUY

Absolute Top Dotlar U S
Sliver
Go(d
Coms
Proofsets 0 1amonds . Gold
Rings
US Currency

MT S

Coon

Shop.

151

Second Avenue. Ga ttl poll~;

740·446·2842
Boston Terrier young dog

(740)742·2326

No Exper1ence Needed
Placement Dept
Ft nanctng Available
CDUTra1nmg
ALLIANCE
Tractor· Tratler
Tra1n1ng Centers
Wytheville VA
Call Toll Free

HII!0-334·1203

and much more
Please apply to
Attn Betty StiCkler
311 Buckr1dge Rod
B1dwe11 , OH 45614
Email admln shn 0
ta ndemhealthcare com
Fax (740)446/1248

SF/DF/EOE
• HAOtandemheam,care com

LAWN LABORER· Woll be
Want to 1001&lt; younger AND
earn Money? Let's talk the
NEW AVON call
Manlyn (304)882•2645

Joyce(304)675·6919,
Apdl(304)882·3630

respons1blu for fawn ma1nte·
nance Have the ab1llty to
perform proper maintenance
on eqUipment Must have a
valid operators licen se high
school diploma or GED
Send resume to Metgs
lndustrtes. Inc PO Box
307 Syracuse Oh10 45779
by Apr11 23 2004

Legal secrel!lfY, ~parlance
&amp;
EMT s
preferred Send resume 1o ParamediCS
Apply at 1354
The OaMy Sentmel PO Box needed
729·40, Pomeroy Oh 45769 Jackson P1ke Galhpohs

•

'

1

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prtor To
Publlc ..tion
Sunday Display: 1 :00 p.m.
Thur-sday for Sundays Paper

• All ads must be prepaod '

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publtahmg ~- the nght to edit reJI!Ct,.g(_cancel any ~ at •nv time Errors must be r~rt.cl on the tnt dey ol
Tr1buna-Senunet-Regt1ter Will be- r~1ible tor no more th•n the cOil' of tha a~ce DCcupied by the erTOt' •nd onty the fnst •nsertron We shall not
any loss or expen.e that re1ulta from the pubbcatton or omlulon of an •ctvert1sement COrrection wtll be made tn the first BVBia.bte edition • 801
are •lwayl confidential • Current rMe card •PPIJH. • All real HWW adVIIrtiHmfirta • • •ubtect to the Feder•1 Farr Houa4ng Act of 1968 • Th11 - •..~o&gt;H
accept• only help wanted ad1
EOE atandarda We will not knowtngty aecept any advertiSing 1n Ytol~1on Of the lllw

KIT llo CARLYLE

~.,r.1o--f•!•o•~.~.u.._,.~l t'o

HELP W,\Nilll

net
Learn to Drive
Tractor-Traders
·we tratn Man and Wo'11en
·Full and Part T1me ClasSiils
•Job Plocemenl
COL Tra1mng
"F•oaoc.ng Ava•labla

AS SEEN ONTV
ALLIANCE
Tractor Tra1ler T•a1nmg
Centers Wythevrlle VA
www alhar'1Cet•a'i)0•1ra•lar com

()

MANAGER·IN·TRAINING

0

mg For appltcatton and tree
The Ctly of Pomt Pleasant IS
government lO b 1nfo call
accept1ng applicatiOns and
Amencan Assoc ol Labor
resu mes fo r the !ollow1ng
1 (913)599 8220 24 hrs
POSitiOns
emp serv
Park Pool
1
Harmon
(Parll1me
Manager
ReSidential
Treatment Summer)
Fac1llty youth worker Pay , 2 Summer Help (Part-11me
based on £11(penence Call Summer)
(740)379·9083 to apply
3 lifeguard at Harmon Park
Pool (Part t1me Summer)
Applications
may
be
ho want to earn mone
hlle tos1ng wetght show obtained at he C1ty BUIIdmg
ng
others
how 400 V1and Street Po1nt
Pleasant
West V1rgm1a
Jnlormal1onal
DVO/C
Monday through Frtday 8 00
vatlabte upon request 740
am
4 00 p m We are an
1-1984
Equal
Opportunity
Spare t1me work ~Full ltme Employer We do not diS
mcome use our catalogs to criminate on the bas1s of
-get big orders call (740)446· race rettg1on color sex
7053 No Fee, No Obligation age nat1onal on g1n or d ts
ab11tty

Ntce 2 bedroom hOuse n1ce
yard n ce netghborhood
1272 E Bethel Church Ad

N1ce one BR unturn•shed
apartment Range &amp; refrtg
pro11tded Water &amp; garbage
patd Depos•t reqwred Call
~ 740 ) 446 4345 attar 6pm

N1ce 81 Level

3br

1bath

k1tchen h111ng &amp; additional
1v1ng
roo m
downsta1rs
S79 900
(304 )67 4 0090
after 6 00
Pt Pteasant/Sandhtll Road
38r 1Ba 1600/sqtt Ranch on
6 acre tevel lot Oak. ftoors
tst house on Rtght past
Marshall
Un vers1ty

S103 000
(

150

&amp;11001-~
b .."&gt;-rRt ICllON

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today' 740 446 4367
1 800-214 0452
www gall poi•SCII.fee{U)(lege com
Accrcd led

Member

Accredl1tng

Counc•l lor lndepeneont COlleges
and Schools 1214B

170

1

'

MI.-.. H.L&gt;\NEOUS
W1rn

Removal

All references &amp; full tnsur·
ance Call 304 373 0011
Camouflage Or g1nal Army
Collecltble s
Sam
Somerv11Je s 401h Year by
Sandyville WV Post Otl ce
Satelllle Systems 80 chan·
nels mclud1ng Locals $19 99
monthly after programm1ng
cred1t 1996 Talon all wheel
dnve Turbo (304)273 5655

1110

ASSISied liVing opening lfl
my home Call (740)388
0 118
Cnrpentry odd JObs floor
1ng s1d1ng rooftng remodel
1ng decks no JOb to btg or
Ask
for
Matt
sman•
(304)882 2978
304 377

4633

W11l do Lawn mowmg &amp;
weed eatmg m Hartford
New Haven &amp; Mason area
3048821119
W II mow town yards m Pt
Pleasant area Please call
Adam Watson at (304)675·

3795
Wtll Pressure Wash houses
mobile homes metal bUild·
and gutte rs
Call
tngs
(740)446 0151 ask for Ron
or leave message

Busoo.ss
0l'I'ORTIJNITY

"'

"'

HIO V"LLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends tha
ou do bustness w1th pea
le you know and NOT t
end money through th
a1l unhl you have lnileStl
ated the otfenn

r
TURI'IED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We W1n1

1 881! 582 3345

I SHOP CLASSIFIEDS FOR BARGAINS I

(740)949 11 31

alter 5 OOPM

(740)388 1855

Sman 2 bedroom house on
Pal(ton Ad $325 month +
ullhttes &amp; deposrt (740)446 Sm Etl Apa rrment •ncludes
utllittes part ally furn shed
2515
tn Pt Pleasant 5285 month
$150 depostl {304)675-7783
MOBUJO H O\If:'i

!42"

fUR REl\T
Tara
Townhouse
Apartments Very Spac1ous
2 Bedrooms 2 Ftcors CA. 1
W&amp;D S300month + deoos!t
On 218 Reference No pets 1 2 Bath Newly Carpeted
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
(7 40)256 1044
Patto Start S385 M o No
1979 Bayv1ew wttl1 expando Pets Lease Plus Secur 1ty
Must be moved S2 500 Call Depostt Requtred Days
(740)388 9125
?40-446 3461
Eve ntngs
740 367 0502
2 bedroom Tra•ler Flatrock
area $300 00 Call afte r
5 OOpm
!304 )458 150~ Tw1n Atvers Tower s accept
1ng appl•cattons lor wa tmg
leave message
hst fm HuJ·Subs tzed 1 br
2 bedroom
all electnc apar(men
call 675 6679
mobile home Wmdow mr EHO
5325 depoSit 5250 Spnng
S~\CE
vaney area Call 1740)44 1
fURRr.,T
6954f304-675 2900
14 xSO

2 beoroom

AJC

Sandhill Road 3Br 1Ba
J6001 sqtt Ranch on 6 acre
level lot Oak. floors I st
house
on
A1ght
past
Marsh all
Un1vers1ty
$103 000
(740)949 1131
2
bedroom
hOuse
m al ter 5 DO PM
..
Pomeroy posstble l1nancmg ....-~--~~--., 3 bedroom mob1le home m
w/good credtl (740)698
MoRn_£ HO\G1ri
Middleport S375 a month
7244
FON.
plus depos11 (740)992 3194

Ill II fSI\11

f320

S.u:t:

~

Great location 1n Galhpohs
OhiO c 3 bedroom 2 full
baths Pr1ced to sale now

Phone

l11.QH4~J~

r

161180 sties ava1lable $1 t 5
per month Includes water
sewer &amp; trash (740)992·

2167
63 aqes
Blessmg
"II real estate advertising
10 thl1 newspaper Ia
subject ro the Federal
Fair Houa1ng Aet of 1968
which make• It lllegal1o
advertiH any
preference, Hmltet lon or
discrimination bated on
race, color, religion, •u
P•mlllal status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any auch
preference , llmlt•Uon Of
dlacnmlnatlon •

Th-1111 newspaper will not
knowingly •ccepl
•dvertl..menle tor re•l
estete which Ia In
violation ot the lew Our
reatt.ra •r• l'lareby
lnl ormad that all
dwelllngl advertised In
thlt newapaper •r•
•Y•IIab .. on an equal
oppor1unlty baua

fo r
Rd

sale on
Letart

(304 )882·2567
Lpts nos 9 &amp; 10 Heatlev Iii
ac::!d lt(on 1n BJdwell to large
level lots Priced to slae now
PhOne 174Dl446 9539
Tra1ler lot for rent $75 00
month phone after 6 00 pm
(304)67 5 4874

124 acres ~cod workmg cat
tie farm w1th a new 3 bed
room 2 bath horne 2 ponds
2 barns and other extras
S285 000 or w1tl drvtde m to
development plots Fa1m
Great
Buys
03
new has lots ol road frontage
Oakwood
Ooublew1de 1740)367 7156
Homes call for cfeta1ls 7403 br Ranch w 'garage lg
446 3481 Of 740 446·1567
fenced yard ei(C famrly
3 bedroom Ranch 2
1ocat1on $675 00 a month
dep &amp; ret reQwted Call
bill garage 1n ground pOOl

g.-

75 000 3460 S1aoe Route
18 (74~56 1962

(304)273·11 t2
7411

1304)638

Al11ers•tes for rent famtly
type 3 camps1tes, full
hookup, near nver 3 dock·
s1tes no hookup
Call

(740)992· 5951i
\IIIH 11\\DI\I

10

8 p1ece Oa~ dlntng room
sutt Call {7 40)367 0002
Gooa Used Appliances
Rccondtttoned
and
Guaran1eed
Washers
Dryers
Ranges
and
Refnge ra 1ors Some start at
S!)S Sl&lt;aggs Appl ances 76
V1ne St (740)446 7398

Good washers &amp; dryers S95
&amp; up electnc 1anges $95 &amp;
up Frost free relngeralors
S150 &amp; up L1ke new s1de
by Stde \l.lth water &amp; 1ce tn
the door $375 couch S75
!uti s11e oed boll spnngs &amp;
bedroom
apt manress S150 lull s1ze bed
Washer/dryer
hookup box sprmgs &amp; mattress
rncludes water sewage and $125 table &amp; chat rs $100
trash $350 rent Oeposrt glider rocker S45 la1Tlps
required No pets 740 441 $10
Si&lt;aggs Appltances
1184
76 Vme Street
1 bedroom upstatrs apart
(740 )446 7398
ment
5275 .... ut1i111eS
depoSit requ1red for app ltca
MollOhan Carpet 202 Clark
!ton call (740)379 9511 or
Chape l Road Porter Oh10
(7 40)379 2204
1740)446 7444 t 877-830·
1 BR compl ete kt1Chen 9162 Free Esttmates Easy
AIC Ref &amp; dep No pets 11nanc1ng 90 days same as
cash V1sa Master Card
(7 40)446 0139
Drtve A ltttle save alot
1br apt Pt Pleasant
1br house Oh1o central atr/
Movtng Sale Household
heat no pets dep reQ 446
appliances Call (740 )441 ·

2200

You could ftsh your badlands
2 BR ltrsl lloor apartment
and mcrease property value
w1th
small
yard
24
tool Make land 1nto lakes
Chillicothe
Road
(740)388 8228
$395 /month
utrl1t1es not
mcluded Reqwes 6 months
lease and $395 secunty
depos1t No pets For applt·
cat1on and to make an
H ot.'SES
appomtmen t
phone

mRRFNr

r

Retail or Olf1ce Space
Pr1me Downtown Ga llipoliS
1ocat10n call (i 40J379 9511
Mobile Home or (740)379 2204 for more
Mobile Home mfo

3Br 2Ba
3 Bedroom Br ck Ranch 1 2000 OaKwood Home 16~84
Caruthers
Acre lot Reduced (304)675 3br 2ba an electnc central
Park (304)675 3818
17t4
' a1 r Call after 8 30 p,m
Mob1le home lor rent
(304)458 2048
$375/month $375/deposlf
3 bedroom 2 baths on 4 3
acres In the Country Scentc 78 Shultz 14~ 70 three bed Call 740 367 7752 or 740·
v1ew
$75 000
Call room all electnc must move 367 7272
S2 500 ~304)675 7783 or
(740)709 1166
N1ce 2 and 3 bedroom
(882)882 II 08
roo m
a
mob1le homes for rent
Before you buyl
q ft Ranch Style 2 out
1ncludes water sewer &amp;
Does your dealer?
wldmgs
M1tche lf
trash no pets depostt &amp;
Move h s homes Do Stle S300 per month (740)992
alhpOIIS Vtew photoSJtnf
bwld lounda· 2167
preparalton
nltne
www orvb co
11ons Aotl and sel houses ode 40704 or call 740
Do heat1ng and a1r Have m ~ Pomeroy S300 a rna S150
~·1 8299
no pets (Ul0l667
hOuse serv1ce people • dep
3 bedroom A frame 2 bath Install septtc systems
Do 3083 after 5pm
laundryroom new roof std electncalfplumblng " Do
Still
lak ng
app1t cat1on
mg &amp; waterlme
large dnvcways If the answer to
14)(70 2 bedroom nergh
garage $67 000 (740)256 any ol these quest tons IS no
borhood Ad No pels refer
6928
or rl they ·sub contract You
ences depOSit (740)446
better see the oldes t most
6890 after 6pm
4 bedroom 3 barh Buckeye e~per1enced
dealer
m
HIts Rd In ground pool I A1hens County Smce 1967
APART:\ nsrs
acre (740)709 1166
Coles Mob1le Homes 15266
HlR IU-'~
US 50 East Athens Ohto
4 bedroom t 1/2 bath 2 45701 Where you gel your 1 and 2 bedroom apart
story br1c~ 2 car unat1ached moneys worth
ments furnished and unfur
garage $37 500 Fourth Sl
secunty deposit
n1shed
New Haven wv
Mobile Home &amp; Lot tor sale
or lrade for small House 1n reqUired no pets 740 992
Pt Pleasan t \304)675 3282 22t8

C.Qffillloteh' r•ll!"'bed_!oomo
Georges Por table Sawm11l
don't haul your togs to the
mt!IJUSI ca.ll 304-675 1957

It
GraCIOUS l1v1ng 1 and 2 bed
room aoartments a1 Vtltage
Manor
and
Rrvers1de
Apartme nts m Mtduleport
From 5295 $444 Cali 7 40
992 5064 Equa l Housmg
Opportuntl!es

645 2088

© 2004 by NEA. Inc

I

Home tor sale 116 Mabellne 3Br House w1th detached 2
Dr
3 bedroom 1 bath car garage S400 monlh plus
basemen! garage d1rect depos11
m
Glenwood
access 10 hrlc.tng &amp; bllt1ng (304)743 8584
trails
S63 000
Vtew
pho1o.rnfo
onl•ne
at House for ren1 Rac1ne area
no
pets
www orvb com Code 41504 3 bedroom
(7
40)992
5858
or call (30 1)591 2488
House tor Sale Good ren1al
Duplex
two
nvestment
ren1ats or one large hOme
30x40 heated pole bUilding
new roof Sldtng wmdows
very good netghborhood
1140 Second Ave Galllpol s
Ohto
Ask.ng
5119000
080 call Karen @ 740·

()

1 .80().334-1203

HOUSEKEEPING AIDE

"IIHitl"

•AI'IEW CLII'IICAL
PEELSI'

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

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
DeKriptlon • Include A Pnce • Avoid Abbre'4'iatlons
• Inc:lude Phone Number And Addren When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

. ~\o

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
oddedtoyourclossifledods
.f.;'L
Jm
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for Iorge

Display Ads

'

Ph (740) 446·7150

IIELPWANfED

Oeacl~ir~

AVON! All Areasl To Buy or
HEALTH CARE SERVICES
Sell
Sh irley Spears 304
c urrently
has
a
675 1429
Ia undry / h ouse ~eep tn g
super'.'tsor 1n trammg pOSI·
Oispatcher
IIOn open Aotatmg schedule
Local truck1ng company 1s w th on call dulles requaed
took1ng for an expenence Must possess strong super
d1spatche r Ouahf1ed candt· v1sory SkillS be hard work
dates must be able to work 1ng and dependable Benefit
1n a hectiC customer dnven package ava1table EOE
environment and posse ss Send apphcatton/resume to
adequate computer sk1Us
The Arbors At Gat11pol1S
Fam1ilar11y
with
!he
170 P1necrest Dnve
OHNVV/KY tn state area IS a
ATIN Ltnda Denn1s
www comtcs com
must Salary wrll be based
(740)446·9088
on e.:penence
Benef1ts trlCiude pard holt
days vacat1ons and SICk
for
busy
days hfe health and dental needed
Chtroprachc rehabllltatton
1nsurance and 401 K plan
Must be Oh1o
Interested
cand tdates Center
SlUE TESTED
should send the r resume licensed and well sk1lled 1n
NURSING
ASSISTANTS
and salary h1story to CLA all areas of therapeut c masbox
555 c/o Ga lhpohs sage E11cellent pay and
Scen1c HtliS Nursmg Center
Tnbune
PO
Box 469 wor~ atmos,:here Please
a Tandem Health Care
fax resume to 740 886 1609
Gall1pof15 OH 45631
Fac11ity 1s seek1ng a select
Attn Kathy
Fa1t growing busmess
few lo 101n our ou tstandtng
Cashiers and cooks needteam We currently seek
ed for all thltts Full and McDonalds of RIO Grande
part-time Send resume to Gallipolis and Po1nt Pleasant
STNA
Dally Sentinel , PO Box WV are now hmng Pa1d
FuiiTime, ShiH 2p·10p
holidays
alld
vacatiOns
729· 8,
Pomeroy, Oh1o
1nsurance ava1lable Ftex1ble
4571i9
Proper cert1ftcat1on
hours Start1ng above mmt
requ1red We offer compet1
Hams Steak house Now mum wage Apply w1th tn
ttve wages shllt differentlaf
Hmng (304 )675-9726
eMcellent benefitS perfect
Help Wanted Full 11me wan Need 7 ladleS to sell Avon
a1tenclance 1ncent1ves and
ress apply m pe rson at the Call (740) 446 3358
much more 1Please apply
Hol1day Inn Gallipolis
10
VIRGINIA DEALERS H IP
HEY DRIVERS! ! !
FOR INDUSTRY LEAD
Attn d1anne Thompson HR
Scen1c Htlls Nurs1ng Center
Here 1s a great opportur11ty lNG ATV SIWAT ERCRAFT
SEEKING
311 Buckndge Road '
to come grow w1th us
81dwell OH 456 14
Kuntzman Trucking an 80 RESPONSIBLE /MOTIVAT·
Ph 740/446-7150
ED INDIVIDUALS
year old Reg1onal Truckload
Fax 740/446 2438
TO FILL
Carner w1th termmals m
THE FOLLOWING
Ema1i adm1n shn@
Alliance and Col umbus Oh10
tandemhealthcare com
POSITIONS
has opened a new term1nal
1n Piketon Oh1o Only hard
SFIDF!EOE
General Manager
worktng expenenced dnvHR @tandemhealthcare com
ers w1th a clean MVA and a
Fmance Pos1t10n
m1n1mum ol two years e1xpe
Sales
Suponntendent Vacancy
Cert1f1ed Mecham cl
r1ence need apply
The Easte rn Local D1stnct
Tech1C'1ans
We have openmgs for
50008 State
Route 7
Parts/ServiCe Clerk
15 Company Drtvers
1s
Ohto
Reedsville
t 5 Owner Operators •
announctng the ret1remen1
ompett 1ve Satanes an
For •nto call Ray
restgnahOn
of
Pertormance
Bonu
1-866·436·1013
Supermtendenr Deryl E
Program Available Pleas
Well elfecfPole July 31 2004
end Resume References
The
d1stnct 1s seektng appli
nd Salary Reqwrement
can ts tram qualll1ed md1v1du
o
PO
Drawer
110
R1p1ey
Scenic H1lls Nursmg Center
als that hold a valid supenn
'v 25271 lmmed1at
a Tandem Healthcare
tendent cerhf1cate/llcense or
facility Is seeking a part
can prov1de proof they have
time Housekeeping a1de
Aesponstble for clean1ng all Now Accepllng Resumes for the abtftty to obta1 rr such a
areas of facllliy equtpment Management Position m a l(cense Candidates may
local
Convenience contact Mrs L1sa M R1tch1e
and carts Knowledge of
Store/Gas
Station
Please Treasurer at (740}667 3319
sanitation safety and
tnfectton con1rol procedures send Resumes to TC5 200 for an app!icat1on package
Matn St Pt Pleasant WV and add11tonal mformat on
a plus
Deadline to submtl applica25550
Housekeeping/Laundry
tiOn matenals 1S May 14
experience preferred
2004 The Eastern Local
POS TAL JOBS School D1stnc1 1s an equal
We offer per1ect attendance
$ 15 44 $21 40/hr now htr opportumty employer
lncenttves shift differential

I \ll'li,\\11 ' I

116
.1

AS SEE"i ONTV
INSTRUCTION
LEARN TO DRIVE
TliACTOR· TRAILER
NEW PROGRAM

Word Ads

(740 )441·1108
BEAUTIFUL
MENTS
AT
PRICES AT

APART·
BUDGET
JACKSON

ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Dnve tram S344 to $442
Walk to shOp &amp; movtes Call
Equal
7-40 446 2568
Houstng Opportunity

8272
Queen s1z.e bed New Oak
headboard like new bo11
sprmgs &amp; mattress $ 175
(740)446 7398 after 5pm

(740)367 7886
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repa1r 675·7388 For sate
aut omahc
re-cond1honed
washers &amp; dryers retngera
tors
gas and electnc
ranges a1r cond Ironers and
wrmger washers Wtll do
repa1rs on ma1or brands tn
shop or at your home

r

ANilQtrf:-i

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Buy
or
sell
Atvenne
Townhouse
apartments AntiQUes 1124 East MRtn
and or small hOuses FOR on SR 124 E Pomeroy 740
RENT Call (7 40)441 ·11tt 99::! 2526
Russ M oore
lor appllcat•on &amp; tnlormatron owner

�Friday, April 23,, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

P.age B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydaiiysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel .• Page B7

ALLEYOOP .

Card of Thanks

Announcema1ts

Friday, April 23, 2004

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
The family of
Laura Fields would
like to e~tend our

illne..;s and recent
death. A special

Broad Run Gun CI!Jb
Saturday the 24th
Party for Members
lime???

thanks to Mike
Putman of White-

Swartzel Funeral
Home. V.F.W. of

Tuppers

Plains.
Nonh Bethel

Saturday
April 24th

Church and RC\·.
George Homer.

Pomeroy Eagles 2171 ·
Band County Road 5
Friday 8-12
Saturday 7-11

Vanderhoof loll)
Workers .

12:00 Noon
· Card of Thanks

ln Memory

7

•/

11

BINGO

ln Memory of

Robert N.
Clark

April 24
6:30pm

who passed away
April 24. 19SO

American Legion
Middleport
All Racks $5.00 each
Starburst $1,150.00

u:oufd hare been

We lo\'e

dntro\·ed. TlranJ.:.s so

very· much for
your aSJiHan(·e.

Bonn;l' Marhews

In Memory

1·~

DairY ' goats- Registered
Alpine- Doe. Buck and

· To my loving
husband and besT
friend, Frir: Sayre,
on his 63rd
binhda,·, April 23.
2004. You are
deeply missed and
will be loved
forever.
·•
Su:anne
•

Wetller Kids. call (74())9882073.

Registered ANGUS and
Crossbred bulls. Top blood·
lines. Slate Run Farm,

JOct&lt;son .

Henderson, WV

A~

Very

CheyYs,

87H4S7
Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

NEW AND USED STEEL 1987 Cu11ass, runs good,

to Benefit

body

Steet Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle ,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Gi-ating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L
&amp;,rap Metals Open Monday,

solid . 1986 Ford
Explorer, 4x4, $1,200 each
080. (740)742·8716.
-------1989 Pontiac Bonneville,
good running condltfon

2004 Relay for Life

Saturday, April 24
2 pm to 5 pm

&amp; 5900.00 (74())742-2166

Open to the Public
Take out orders available
$6.00 a plate

Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed 1991 Chevy Geo Tracker
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; 4 114, hard top, new transmis·
Sunday. (740)446-7390
sian, new tires and many

i

BUII.DING
SUPI'uEs
L,_______,J

other parts. Very gooQ condition $4 ,000 060 740446·4616 or 740·446-1637.

Block. brick, sewer pipes, 1992 Ooelge Spirit, 58,400
windows, lintels. etc. Claude miles, runs &amp; looks good.
Winters, Rio Grande. OH $1,200. (740)446-2668.
Call740-245-5121.

r1·,-------rl

['10

MOJ'ORCYCUS

1992 Plymouth Laser TUrbo.

FOR~

'I R\ H I"
l ·=..tO;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.......;_,

•

for part $200 will not part 2003 Vol usia Intruder 800,
_ou_t_.1_304_16_75_·_46_1_7___ 1,000 miles, silver/white,
garage
kept,
$5,200,
1998 Grand Am 2D Auto, (740)992·2B49
.
$2,895: 1995 GMC full size
shortbed truck , $3,495: Used stock Dunlop 1ires
1997 Z-24 , $2,995 . 18 oth· from Kawasaki 650 Prairie.
ers in stock, starting $995.
Tire life aprox. 75% on front
COOK MOTORS
aprox. 60o/o on back. Front
(740)446·0103
tire- 25"x8"xl2 . Back tire-

7 week old Toy Poodle,
black, $250. ask lor Sandy
or Daniel. (740)245·9261.

Baby rabbits tor sale. $5
each. Small white mate don·
kay, $150. Call (740)256·

r:

"r

.,OME

antee. Local references furnished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing .

2000 Dodge Neon, auto, air. 25"x10"x12. (740)645·5186·
puppies. $3,100060.
1
..o;•;;in;;:fo~.-...,..,..,--.., r-,--,.....,----,

Hunting sloe~. Reg istere~ . 1998 Dodge Mini Caravan.
· born 2114/04. $200. Call needs paint work, $2,3oo-

• BoATSFOR&amp;SMALEmORS

I

~

miles. $12,000.

(740)388-9804.

· lAWN

W KQJ
t A 10 6 3
"' i 4

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

750 [ast State Streel Phone mi0)!593·-61i711
Athens, Ohio

MowitlJ Trimming. Tree Trimming. Aefation. Fertilization,
Spraytng of fence lines. Leaf Rem011al, as well ~small
landscaping jobs·such as plantinz and mulching.

A Bl!rter

FREE ESIIMAJB • GUAMNTE£11 UMBT PRICES

JONES'

·

:he P~IN
out ~f PAINTING'

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

Ta~e

BARNEY
MAW CAN FIX
J
THAT SHOE FER !
~

YA LUI&lt;EY !!
30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. owner: Ronnie Jones

(304) 273-5321

Free

Highll Dry

SeU-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232

R.B.

Aprll30 - May 1

FLEA
MARKET
Maplewood Lake
8etW een RacJne
and Syracuse on
St. Rt 11A
Space Available

949-2134
SEAL IT

CONSTRUCTION
Roofing-Siding·
Painting-G_utters·
Decks-Etc.

Trucking
HAULING:
• Limestone

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road

Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

Hours
7:00AM - 8:00 PM
1/14/1 mo. pd

Yards

740-992-5594
740-992-6862

Servicli, Free

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Street

Dennis Boyd

no-985·3564

BENNE'ft''S

HEATING fl COOLINC
Residential &amp; Manufactured Housing

• Super Hi Efficiency Equipmen._
• Free Estimates
-·,·
• 5 &amp; 10 yr Warranties
"'· ,... :.
• Huge Inventory
-'· ... -i/w~c::&lt;:"
• Vanguard Yentless Fireplaces •li~j";i ·

'!..':.••..,....

!!!~£'!!! ~~.!'!!! 1~.
Gallipolis, OH WVOI0212
446-9416 r 1-S00-872-5967

Pomeroy, Ohio

THE BORN LOSER

992-2975

P'

l

~f&gt;,IJE

&amp;REf&gt;...I

.
""'
CCNC.Cf4.1~ 1\00l!\

P'[ FEN&lt;.~(,~~

Owner

""'
CAI'~Lt-

PROJHI
Of P\JLLI 1'\G TJ-1(. WOOL OVER

'iOl!IZ 1'\E.\-.1 It'i \E.Rt-1, 0\IE.f ...

'iOUII.E..'if.S.I

Manning K. Roush

P'&gt;.UO.LL, !(&gt; [

1'\E""'

N..Wf&gt;...'iY'&gt;/\'1: FOOL
OI&lt;ICE., S.l-\1\/o\£ 01'&lt; 1-\1 foil , f'ODL M.E
TWICE, SAAME Ot'i M.C.; fOOl ~&lt;'E.

Tf\REL Tlfo'E.~f&gt;...t&lt;\0 l'LL f\IKE

n Mon-Frl9-5 Sat. 9-12

0

Meigs County's Largest selection of
annuals, perennials, vegetables,
shrubbery, fruit, omamental trees,
roses, rhododendrons, and azaleas.
COMPARE THESE PRICESI!
4" pot of annuals 94e

. . ._, r- I.:"PTO 00 M.'i 11&gt;.'(£)1

OTHER KID~ HAVE
THEIR OWN WAYS OF
RELIEVING

to dark!

'&gt;Tfi..ES~!

Morning Slar Road - C.Rd 30 • Racine,
T&gt;N

BISSEll

BUILDERS IDC.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement

···;"' see /'~

'

PEANUTS

Rocky "AJ'1
Hupp ·•

Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

IMPORTS

FREE ESTIMATES

Athens

740·992-7599

YOU'VE DECIDED
YOIJ DON'T li.IANT
TO BE KIN6 OF .
TJ.lE JVN6LE?

l
~

TJ.IEN YOV SJ.IOULD PASS
'I'OVR. CROWN ON TO SOMEONE
WJ.IO IS STR.ON6 AND SRAVE,
AtJD WJ.IO WILL D,P JUSTICE TO
ALL ITS ROVAL TRADITIONS!

j

On

,\ I I \ ! 'Hit I'

Advertise
in this
space

·~ ~~~1. l__:~~==::~~~~~~~
~~~~-r-:~'
f
~ L~~~~-~~~~L~--------~--~·~n~,~~o~•

Dean Hill
New &amp; Used

BETTY

475 South Church St.
JUDGING

Ripley, WV 25271

for

DISTANCE ...

1-800-822-0417

AT NIWT, So

~eliDING

SfRE.El' .

"W.V's #I Chevy. Pontiac. Buick. Olds

1 DON'T !.IKE.

&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

iO t:IRI'IE

SIGNS ...

y

'I

ITS PflDI!AI3LY
'TIM"- toP. M~
TOGO 'FOR

ANOTHE!l.

SO 1/J(.IY
OON'T
'{O\J'?

E.~ E;' ~ )I,M'. ...

l 'D RA't\1EP-

HAVE. TROOSt£
9eEING \WIN
SETOL.Dl'M
GOINGSL\ND

y

2001 2911 Sprinter 5th
WhHl Camper. Ono Slide

r~

(740)446-4999.

i

1.JvEs1ocK

I

1 112yr otd Mare and a n1ce
pony 1 112yr old. make offer.
callf74())742·9217
8 'I' o ld Pal Mare Well
broQ $1 ,600
3 yr old Geldmg green

b&lt;olle $500 (7401446-0367

•

.,

MOJ'ORCYCUS

I,

please call {304)675-1631

32 '
Dutchman
classic
camper. Steeps a, prl\late
2000 650 Yamaha Classic 2 quean size bedroom, 24'
windshields, saddlebags, awnmg, fully self, contalfled,
mustang seat 8000 miles 1n A/C, furnace, new carpet,
perfect cond 304-773-5109 country curtains &amp; quilts .
Must see $6 .000 C81J
2002 Honda Shadow 750
(740)379-2789 evenongs.
A C.E., hke new with many
extra's. AcJult riOden $5,000 35 ft. 5th Wheel, sleeps 6
l1rm Racme {740)949·1131 Call (740)645-2729 for more
after 5pm
Information.

GARFIELD

Sunset Home
Construction

ontltll

inter1or, cruise, CD player. Park (304)675·4230 days
Air, Tow package. 52,000 (304)675·4853 8\ienings
$25 ,000
Call
miles
Massey Ferguson 50, 4 cy!. 304 )675 3117
25ft. Camper for sale 360
gas. Price $2,850. Phone (
•
Sportsman , for more detail's

All pass

u

The
Daily
Sentinel
992·2155

18

Engrave
in game
20 Bakers'
shows
61 Newspaper
musts
22 Final
execs
authority
62 Female rei.
(hyph.)
63 Wet
24 "Vive le -!"
thoroughly

25

Immense

26
28
32
.33
34

High spir~s
Like Kojak
Ms. Hagen
Norse king
Adams ·o r
Brickell
After
midnight
Cosmetics
brand
Deli units
Raised ,
as rabbits

35

Bryan Reeves
New Homes,
Room Additions,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roots,.
Siding, Dec:.ks,
Kitchens, Drywall ·
&amp; More
FREE ESTIMATES!

740·742-341

HOWARD£.

I WRITESEl

*IlORIS
I *lOME
MIIITEIIIJICE
*SEAMLESS

BOnER
I•frulldmlllh

949-1405

If

1 HI'ARD
THAr CANDY
WRAPPI'R!

WHAT
MAKE'S

YOU
THINK

IT WASN'T
A CI'I.J:RY
STAl-K

WRAPPI'R?

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

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp; ·
Remodeling
• New Osr•e-•
• Electrh;al &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gunera
• VInyl Siding &amp; Palntlng
• Pstlo and Porch Decks

Oo

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages

V.C. YOUNG Ill

740-992-1811

Pomeroy, Ohio .
22 Y11r1 Local E1pertenca

ANDOVER
AHD OVE-R
AND ct.fER

Al4D...

WHAT :rnt "\1
~#/!

ARE 'ItO

ll

DOWN
1 Army VIP

2 Fuss
3 Common
vine

4 Risky
5 State north
of Ind.
6 Pizarro's
quest·
7 OH-Iimils

36 Imported
cheese .
38 Less mes&amp;y
44 Has on
46 Horses
have them
47 Geremonial
. fire
48 Praise
49 Luau banjos
50 Contented
murmurs
53 Osaka yes ·

55 Give it

starter

27 Place for a
gutter

- -!
56 Hush·hush .
org.
57 Disapproving cluck

29 Improvise
(hyph.)
30 Virgo
neighbor
31 Kind of job

a -aula~

"Primal

41

host
1o Pats on
12 Turns loose
(2 wds.)
19 Tissuepaper ar1
21 Intuition
22 Ravi's
instrument
23 Striped
stone
24 Changes
25 Daffodil

9 Valhalla

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

by Luis Campos
a·ci.;tCaiCd !!"orr'! Q JOt~ IIOM 0', IJ..,.OJJS pel: PIC
Eacn IC1!Cr n !'lC ctpt&gt;cr sla na~ lor JnoN·•

Cclctltlty G11)11C' CrytlllllJf"J'I15

03SI aNI OICS&lt;Jnl

Today s c•'ua: FC'Qllals Y

H

VGRU

TF

MLUKHBL
LPRHIE

HEIGKPIMU,

HZ.

HZ ' B

VHYU

MLHVX ' 6

P

WUKBWUMZHRU

KUIUU

Gl

ZLU

OGKVX .

AUVVDUfUK

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ·we must never forget that an 1s nol a to rm ot
propaganda ; it 1s a lorm of truth .'"- Jorn F. Kennedy
tc)2004 by NEA. Inc. 4·23

'Ill~:

lite them away tor future reference
because they will come in mighty l l&lt;'!ndy.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) - It would
oeho&lt;We you to take a mOre active role
today in an arrangement where you share
a vested interest with another. You have
what it takes to make it successful.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - A lost alliance
with someone with whom you once were
very close can be rejuvenated today. A
new arrangement with this person will now
produce mutual benefi tS it failed to yteld
previo us !~.

SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 22) - Today you
are likely to be much more effective 1n creative endeavorS than yOU have been In the
past. If there . are some steps you would
like to retrace , don 't t1esitate to do so.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec . 2 1) Th1ngs should run exceptionally smoothly
tor you and the object of your heart 1n the
romance department today. This 1s
because two archers wilt be nght on tar·
get: both you and Dan Cupid.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22 ·Jan. 19) -Try to
use your talents tor at least part of today
for doing someth1ng constructwe that you
feel is more fun than work . The more
·imagina tive the protect is, the better you'll
be at 1!.
AQUAR IUS (Jan . 20·Fe b. 19) Someth1ng m which you are presently
.nvolved may suddenly need some reor·
ganizat1on today. Fortunately, 1i will be
yolrr strong suit at this t1me ancl everything
Will turn out be!ler than belore
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - You could
be rather 1ortunate today In bemg the
recipient ol some kmd of ma te rial devtll·
opment that occ urs w1th relat1ves .
Whatever it is, 11 won't be a run -of· the-mtU
happenmg.
ARIES (March 21· Apri1 19)- You're l1kely
to be exceptionally rmagmat1ve today, wrlh
some of your ideas bemg better than
usual. Put them to good clean fun when
out w1th tnends and have a happy t1me

0 lour

'~•orronge !elfers o! the
~ ro rrbled word3 be.
low 10 form lour word s

T A [ NG

I' I I' I
K R

' I T~·
I I

uN 0

I

5

I

•

DI

' The mom frened about her,
young daughter playing in the

~~

.

yard. An older mom consoled
her, "Kids can grow up &lt;n al;
most any- --- of----.·

I

L E R0

f---r;~,r-r:le~~r-;lr--,1-1

0

Coi'Tl P;~I!!

t he

chLCckle quoted

ny iol l.ng on the ·ffl!~'!1'19 word~
L-L-L.....ll-.J.........l--' ·,-(; u d eve lco !•o'T1 s1ep No 3 below
•

&amp;'!. P!? JNT

1

.

.

NUMCE~ED

1

-&lt;;l~
·~:::S=O~L~J,,~&lt;=f5::;:=:=::;::::;=:;:::::;=:;::~~
":; · =·~l.f;T~T~E~~~~~;
€) :~. .". 's' ~,,~fA~~..\e Lt FOli! 1
OF
1

.. ,...,

~

.

I I I I I
.

.

.

.

SCRAM -lETS ANSWERS

.

Lo · -

1 :! -0

It

G1mlet- Ideal- Rusty- Beaker- AISLE
.
Gramps says that life 1S full of ups and downs, especially
if vocire at the theater and have the AISLE seat.

ARLO &amp; JANIS
l HAi~ f&gt;IEO!. (il\g!'&gt;\G.E. 1&gt;16:6 YOU
HAVE: fO fll:, UP.' YOO KIJOW I LIK~
f&gt;IE ))2,0,W-o!KIUG&lt; ffiii.IGJi£5.'!

YOU !lUY ffi~z GA~BAG£ 8io4
Ju!&gt;r ro "&gt;Pi f.: ME.'

SOUPTO NUTZ

TALK\1'16

A~~

• Complete

Re'modeling

992-8215

~

' COOL

We do It all except

lurnact work

GRIZZWELLS
't!lU KWN 11\IS
R.EitiCAR\-\Al"P\-1
51\liT $q,ll-\\)S

39
40

AstroGraph
&lt;Your

Terrier

' - offilmdom
51 Shaggy
beast
novel
52 Gotcha!
15 " Dubliners" 54 Pass.
autho~
in cOngress
16 Male swan 58 Weep over
17 Small
59 Fan shout
untruth
60 First name

Samuel Johnson wrote. '"Our brightest
blazes of gladness are commonty kindled
by unexpecled. sparks .~
tf you spot the unexpected move needed
in Ieday's deal. you will feel uncommonly
bright blazes of gladness because almosl
everyone would go wrong . South is in
three no-trump. West leads his fourth·
highest spade. Who should come oul
ahead w1fh best play On both s1des?
South begins with a 15·17 no-lrump.
Opening with one no-trump usually
eases .the auclion . The responder knows
immediately that his partner has a bat·
anced hand with a narrow point range.
More often than not. he can plaCe the
final contract with confidence. So. Open
one no-trump every chance you get. And
remember that you pick up 15 high-card
points 25 percent more often than 18.
This is the besl reason for using the 15·
17 range in preference to 16·18
let's suppose declarer takes East's
spade nine with his JBck and plays a club_
East wins with h1s ace and returns his
second spade. If South ducks. West over·
la.kes with his eight and continues with
the king to drive out declarer's ace. Now
the defenders must lake five tncks : three
spades and two clubs. An ident1cal result
occurs if South wins trick lhree w1lh his
spade ace.
Sa. is the defense in con1rol? No. South
can make the contract by coming up with
a very strange-looking play: He lets East
win the first trick!
Easl can return his second spadj. but
declarer covers with his jack (or 10). This
retams two stoppers, and when East gets
in with his club ace. he doesn't have
another spade to lead.

up a not
number
good
today
you
_may
haveofusft
lo r ideas
noW,·bUt
youthat
should

I \It\ I ...,I 1'1 '1 II "'

2001 Chevrolet Suburban 2002 Jayco 29ft trailer war·

EasL ·

3 ~T

feather

50

rival
13 401(k) kin
14 Nabokov

Saturday, April 24, 2004
By Bernice Bede Osol
The year ahead could be a rather umque
period in your life. where a number of
small opponun1t~s cOu ld Collectively grow
into something grand. Each will be an
important p1ece of the whole that pulls the
entire thing together.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Although it
mighl be the lurthestthing from your flllnd .
a development of an unusual nature could
occur today that would spel l financial gain
for you . Pay heed to anything d1tleren t.
GEMINI (May 21 ·June 20) - The nest of
your leadership qualllle!? Will be very much
in ev1dence today w1lh those with whom
you'll be involved. You can be assert1ve
when called for. but also sensitive when
necessary.
CANCER (Juno 2 1-July 22) - Your
desires to win at whatever you involved
yourself with today will be fa r stronger
than that of your competitors and. aS
such, you will fare rather well in all com·
pet1live elements.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - '(ou could p1ck

~OU LET SETH Gli!. tNt&gt;
HIS TEETH' YOU LE 'I
GINA TWII'.L HER HAIR~

per
month

2500 4X4. Navy Blue, Cloth ranty, setup on lot at Krodel

North

Pass

G

BIG NATE

Open 7 dayo
a - k daylight

Prices, Call...

740-992-1189
740-992-2902

I

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&amp; Affordable

•Ag Lime

DONE!!

~

4" pot of perennials $1.18 Buy 5or mor~ for $1

EsNmstes

• Dirt

WHEN SHE'S

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For Fast Courteous

• Sand

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AN' YA GIT A
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the play is hard

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Even thinking of

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olo A 5

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SH!ewalk&gt;, Cas Station Awnings, DegreosillJI of
Equipment, Boats, campers. Tractor Trailers,
Oump Trucks, patnting or staining of your deck
or log home, .Aluminum brightening.
Special rates to Tnrli~Dump Trucking Companies.

L,-.IIMPRO--VEMEIVI'S-iiiii.il_.l Air Conditioners, Heat Pumps &amp; Furnaces
BASEMENT
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Unconditional lifetir:ne guar-

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· • Drive)Nays • Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads t Streets

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47 Showy

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DINNER

door, 4 cyl. 4WD. Phone:
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•
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Opening lead: •

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Office: (740)992·2804 Cell: (740) 51Hi88J
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in a gold basket this
Mother's Day!
From Siders Jewelers

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SFREE

MYERS

TRI - STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

11-~~

Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1- 1947 Jeep Station Wagon , 2

Seller

Monday-Saturday 9-5 Closed Sunday
740-992-5776

Le: me :k 1: fer ycul

up

look
www.stateruntarm.com.

JET
3001 ext 3901
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In - - - - - - - - , -

English

....

Tree Service

(740)286-5395

POLICE
Cars from
IMPOUNDS
$500. For listings 1-800-719·

1652.

• Porch Boxes
• Combination Pots
• Perennials
• Spruce Trees
• Shrubs
&lt;
• Peat Moss ·

Every Thursday
&amp; Sul)day
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30
Last Thm·sda!· of
enry month
.AU pack SS.OO
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get

RIVERSIDE

Grilled Lamb
BBQ Chicken
(304) 773-5354

S900. (74())44 ,_, 716.

good condition. (740)992- $500!.Hondas,
Jeeps, etc . !
2892

Wednesday

Easter Flowers
Bedding. Rowers
Vegetable Plants
Blooming
&amp; Foliage Baskets
Potting Soil-

Friday, April 23rd
Dinner Specials

Gelding. Cutter Bill blood·
lines. Pretty norse. Blaze 3
White socks. Ready to train ,

For Sale:. Gibson st0110 and

Tuesday,

Now Open

Mason, WV

Reg . 0Uarterhoree . 2yr~

r~~~to
(While)

· Syracuse, OH

Pomeroy Eaglts
BINGO 2171

staffer

wmy word

8 -liver oil

. North

OWI1er. Jeff Stelhem

On Marrl• 16. 2004
My house was
damage4 brfire. If
not for the pmmpt &amp;
efficiem anion hy rhe
Racine &amp; SyracuSe
Fire DepH. My -home

refrigerator

llu66aNl's q_,,_

Fear" actor

42 Exasperate
43 Impress

1 Hotel

5

sincere (or

heanfeh l thanks 10
all those who
helped during her

Rim Fire
Rifle Match

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Stop &amp; Compare

I

·.

�ALONG THE
•
. RIVER

I

SPORTS
Rudd gives Woods
first pole position
in 20 years, 85

Mission in El
Salvador serves physical,
spiritual needs, Cl

.

. .

'

,,

~

'

'

'

'

LIVING
2004 Dodge
Durango, Dl

-

.

~ 11 you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, C/o The Gaston Gazette. P.O. Box 1893, Gastonia, NC 28053
•

,.. ,:- .;;

···-

'

'

ended a personal 105-race What: Aaron's 312
What: Aaron's 499 .
Whe,e: Talladega (Ala.} Su· losing streak. No Dodge driv· Where: Talladega (Ala.) Su·
perspeedWay (2.666 miles). er had won at Martinsville perspeedway (2.666 miles}.
188 laps/501.288 miles · Speedway .since Dave Mar· 117 laps/311.922 miles
When: Green flag drops just cis in 1975. When Wallace When: 2 p.m. Saturday
pulled into victory lane - at Last year's winner: Dale
after 1 p.m. Sunday
Earnhardt Jr.
Martinsville,
it's more like a
Last year's wlnne1: Dale
Track
qualifying record: Joe
d.
i
splay
rolled
up
.
1
n
front
of
Earnhardt Jr.
Nemechek.
Chevrolet.
the
grandstands,
on
the
Qualifying record: Bill Elliott.
·
1
93.517
mph,
April 24,
Ford, 212.809 mph. Apnl front straight - losing had
1997
gotten old for everyone. He
30. 1987
hadn't won in almost three Race record: Mar~ Martin,
Rate record: Mark Martin.
years.
He hadn't won in a Ford. 168.937 mph, April
Ford. 188 .354 mph. May
Dodge. No Dodge had won 26. 1997
10. 1997
Most recent race: Everyone this year. ' I got really sick of Most recent race: Chevrolet
in Martinsville Speedway's heanng, Why aren't you win· driver Michael Waltrip won
race
at
victory lane had that lean ning?'" Wallace said, "But it Saturday's
Nashville.
Johnny
Sauter
fin·
and hungry look. Rusty Wal- made me look at the pit
lace's victory '" Sunday's Ad- crew. myself. my driving 1shed second. followed by
vance Auto Parts 500 was a style. It made me look at a Kasey Kahne, Clint Bowyer
and Robby Gordon.
long time coming. Wallace lot of things."

,•

a.'&gt;llhall '~ not to ilke abo~t Mar-

tin!ovllhe? wen, it wouldn't hurt to
have pavement that stays in
place. They already had a
' · repaYing sctleduled, and It won't
( ~ .a problem in the faiL
' •It took an extraordinary bit of
r...'J;&gt;;·. bad• Mk.
• ' •to deprtve' Jeff Gordon
:.''qt.his.thli.g victory in a row at
:• On6 of NASCAR's tougher traeks
~.- ... and tre won his third straight
.; i\llartin~ville pqle.
·
;. ,. Honestly, thougll, It was abOut
•• time Rusty wallace got a decent
;. bleak. He actually got two: Gor: . don's'car being hit by a chunk of
; cqncrete and Jimmie Johnson in'. , explicably electing not to pit
; ' When everyone else did.
"' Now the circuit moves fro m
Martinsville. where Dale E~rn·
, hard! Jr. almost always nearly
: wins, to Talladega, where Earn·
; hard! almost always wins.
· .,. Here's hoping new R&amp;D h~re
; Brett Bodine comes up with
: some ways to save teams mon',- ey. No one else in NASCAR has
; paid this anything but lip service.
· •tn the overlooked category, now
; about the fact that Morgan
Shepherd, more than 60 years
old. drove around and around in
the Martinsville heat all day long
and .got a 32nd·place'finish out
of equipment that was nowhere
c

BUSCH SERIE5

· eFIM'TSMIIN

TRUCK ·

What: Ohio 250
Where: Mansfield (OhiO} Motorsports Park (.44 miles).
250 laps/110 miles
When: 2 p.m. May 16
Last year's winner: First race
at this track
Mcist recent race: Rick Crawford, 1n a Ford, won Saturday's race 'at Martinsville.
Crawford broke his left foot
1n a frightening crash five
weeks ago at Atlanta. There

BY

• NFL Draft coverage . .
See Page 61
• Graham, others
honored at banquet.
See Page 61
• 2004 Prep football
schedules. See Page

were no truck races be·

tween Atlanta and .Mar·
tinsville, giving Crawford
time to mend. Dennis Setzer
finished second, followed by
Jack Sprague. Jon Wood and
Mike Skinner.

83
• lronmen hurdle Blue
Devils. See Page 81

v
Nextel Cup Series, No. 24 DuPont Chevrolet r-Jionte Carlo

JEFF GoRDON

R

••

Kasey Kahne for an inc1dent that ru·
ined his run in Sunday's Advance

Auto Parts 500.
'We were all right un til .we got to
the lapped car of Kasey Ka hne,"
Rudd sa1d. ' I don't know what he
wa's doing . He was rclc ing us really

NASCAR This Week
When Jeff Gordon won back-to-back races at Martinsville Speedway in 2003, there was some degree of luck invo~ved.
,
It's said that luck- good and bad- evens out 111 the long run.
Bad tuck prevented Gordon from making it three in a row at
NASCAR's oldest track, although he still fi~ished sixth:
· Gordon dominated yet another Martmsville race unlil a chunk of
concrete stopped him dead iii his tracks. The fact that the track
"came apart" caused Sunday's Advance Auto Parts 500 to be delayed for more than an hour, and the fact that the chunk dented
Gordon's Chevy cost him a likely victory.
.
Gordon, born in Vallejo, Calif., and reared in Pittsboro,, Ind., IS
still only 32 years old, yet his accomplishments make h1m
seem like the most seasoned of veterans. He's already
won 64 races and'£our championships.
His Jist of accomplishments already make him
a shoo-in for every motorsports hall of fame
imaginable. For many years, rumors circulat- ·
ed that he might give up his stock-car racmg
career for a shot at the international acclaim of Formula One . The truth is that
Gordon made a commitment to NASCAR
seven years ago .
"I'm too old to go Formula One and
start all over again," Gordon said.
"After driving that car for one day
(at Indianapolis la st year}, I realized what kind of dedication it
would take to start from scratch to
learn all new tracks, all new cars,
all new people and take my whole
life in the U.S. and move to Europe. At one time would I have
liked to try that? Yes. But that's not
the case today."
Gordon stiU has wor Ids to conquer.
He'd like to revisit the heady days of
the 1990s. The level of competition keeps
getting higher, and Gordon has never suffered from an exaggerated estimation of his
own abilities.

WHO'SHOT
·
AND WHO' S NOT '

• • HOT: Jeff Gordon, Jamie Me·

: • Murray and Rusty Wallace have
; : each· posted three straight top·
i 10 finishes .... Bobby Labonte
: · collected his second runner·UP
•: finish of the season Sunday at
! '' Martinsville .... Rookie Brian
: ~ Vickers postetl a solid 13th·
• p·lace·finish In his first trtp to the
,... narrow short track.
:.;.:: ~tot: Jimmie Johnson finished
1'. fourth at Martinsville, but an Inexplicable d.eclsion not to pit ..; .When all the leaders did - prob; • ably cost him a victory.... Wal·
•: .lace's victory was ttle first this
:·~~ ~easqn for Dodge. The Intrepid
~; tr8H~·FQto.(four) and Chevrolet
:.~. (three); ... Mar1insville Speed( :. Yllr(, for .having a. pqthole during

•'

!:

Superstar ages wisely
in ·storied
career, and
he's primed
for more

hard. He was. a lap down. and we
were on the lead lap, and we got together. He wouldn't get ou t of the
way.
"Afender cut our t~re down, and
we had to pit and lost two laps."
Rudd ended up finishing 20th - .
only one spot ahead ol Kahne
NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton gives his take: . Kahne obv1·
ously has extraordinary talent. g1ven
h1s record so far. Of all the tracks on
the ClfC Uit, though. Martinsville is the
toughest for a young driver to do well
on. Kahne w1ll do better when he re·
turns to Martinsville 1n the fall."
,. · ·VGlJR ·Tt::IRN . . ·
• lflTERS fROM OUR READERS ·
Thr~e

•

question,

.w

John Clark/

NASCAR
This Week

hy don't they do something
about these tires before
someone gets killea? They
want Dale Jarrett to drive the truck why don't they paint the "88" car the
same color as the truck? Is is possi·
ble to get Ryarr Newman's address?
Terry Atkins
Argos, Ind.

OBITuARIES
Page AS
• Billy Grant
• Bonnie Hendershot
• Jay Swisher
• Gary Starcher
• Charles T. Sprouse Jr
• Richard H. Roy
• Charles T. Crump
• Clifford Ivan Dunn

WEATHER

By "these rires: we assume you
mean the ·softer· tires implemented
this season. Not everybody agrees
with NASCAR's vis ion that the new
compound is improving the quality of
Jarrett's car -already

Details on
Red Byron won the first maJor
NASCAR race at Martinsville Speed·
way. It was a dirt track then. on Sept.
25. 1949, when Byron won a 200·1ap
race in an Oldsmobile.
Buck Baker drove a Dodge to vic·
tory in the traGk's first 500·1 ap race,
the Virginia 500 of 1956.
Pnoi to that' year. all the races at
Martinsville we re 200 laps, and it
1956 that the trac k was

Page

A2

INDEX
4 SECTIONS- 28 PAGES

Calendars

A:3
A:3

Celebrations

C4

Around Town

Classifieds

D3-5

insert

Editorials

A4

&amp; Sup·p ly

Obituaries

A6

A2

Co.

Region
Sports

Bt

Weather

· A2

© :zoo4 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

555 Park St • Middleport

Guide dog trainer Eric Loori shows Tina Barnes and Dugan , an SO-pound Labrador. how to
work as a team by walking together down Court Street in Pome roy. (J. Miles Layton)

201h anniversary of the pasBY MIL~ISSIA RUSSELL
MRUSSELL@MYDAfLYTRIBUNE.COM sage of the Victims of Crime
Act. This legislation estabGALLIPOLIS - · Nobody lished thousands of victim
asks to become a victim of a assistance programs across
violent crime, but each year, the country similar to
the number of murder and Grady's.
· domestic violence victims
Grady's job, through the
increases.
Gallia
County
Victim
After the crime occurs, Assistance Program. is to
some victims feel victim- act as a liaison between the
ized again by the criminal justice system and the vicjustice system, said Gallia tim .
County Victim Assistant ,"Many victims don ' t real Susan Grady.
ize that they have the right
Last
week
marked to meet with the Prosecuting
National Crime Victims Attorhey and voice what
Rights· Week, a week used to their issues and wishes are
acknowledge the courage as to the outcome of the case
and strength· of those left in and a plea agreement,"
the aftermath of crime, Grady said. "It's my job to
Grady said.
Please see VIctims, A6
This year also marks. the

Rio students raise 'ruckus'
BY STEPHANIE JENKINS

SJENKINS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
RIO GRANDE - If Rio
Grande resident&gt; cou ldn 't
hear the music Friday night,
thev most likelv weren't in
the· village.
•
Starting at 5 p.m. and ending at I a.m .. Ruckus in the
Weeds, held at the University
of Rio Grande. featured
seven bands from the local
area, competing in a "Battle
of lhe Bands" concert . The
band that received the loudest applause by th e end of the
night went home with a good .
amount of prize money.
But the event wasn't just
for the bands - il was for
everyone.
Elaine Armstrong, URG\
dean of students said. "it's
spring. and this is the perfect

The loca l band Sleep is Dead was the third band to play at
Ruckus in the Weeds Friday night. Left to right are members
Adam Thompson. guitars: John Polcyn, drums: Morgan
Halley. lead vocals; and early France. bass guitar.
•
excuse to get outside . For Rain doesn't 111aner. since
the students , it's a celebraPlease see Ruc~us, A6
tion of the end of the year.

April is National

992-6611
tkHe &amp; 1/latd th

~aee 1/lid-

Occupational Therapy
Month

'tU

(), ·Stt~~da~~

'/Skills for the Job of Living/'

SUMMERFIELDS
106 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

POMEROY
·-While
Meigs Cnun1y lost $20,00{)
in sa le' tax . reve nue in
, 2003. collections for 2004:
to date, are 55.000 over
collec1ions a year ago.
April receipts of sale s tax
revenue are repo rted at
$70,13 U I
nearly
$8,000 more than was collected a year ago - bringing the co unty's 200~ collections 10 date to 55.714.87
more than what was collect·
ed last year at thi s time.
Collection&gt; of lhe county 's one-percent sales tax
have dwindled since 2000.
· In 2000, the county collected $1,191.746.15. and last ·
year.
collected
$1,103.182.38.
The Ohio Department of
Taxation pays the county il s
sales tax revenue two
months behind. meaning
collections for April represent tax . paid by co nsumers
in February. Coun1y officials rely heavily on those
payments of sales tax re\··
enue for cash flow, and the
drop in collections has· him
the county\ operations.
especially when combined
with losses in local government operating revenue.
which the state legislature
has frozen due to the state's
tight financial condition.
County officials have
blamed the reduction in revenue from the sales tax on
a number of local economic
declines. including a general
decline in retai l sales in the
·county. and specifically the
2001
clos ing
of
Middleport's Ford Motors
dealership. · the closing of
the Pam ida discount store.
and a loss of retail bu&gt;in~.;,
10 Mason. W.Va.'s Wal-Marl
Supercenter.

POMEROY Man's
best friend just made life a
little easier for Tina Barne s.
Dugan, a lovable white
Labrador retriever, ha s
, granted Barnes. who is blind
and has Down Syndrome.
the gift of independence by
serving as he r new guide
dog . In stead of using a
striped cane to get around
town, Barnes will be able to
go to the store, work and do
other things that used to be a
lot more difficult. ·
"I think the dog will
change my life," she said. ·'t
will be able to get around
better.''
Dugan was donated by
Freedom Guide Dogs for
the Blind, a non-profil organization that trains ,the dogs
in Cassville, N. Y
Unlike most other guide
dog companies, this organi·
zation is unique because it
takes these special dogs t&lt;Y
the hometown of the recipient to teach both the aog
and the new owner how to
work together.
Eric Loo6, a guide dog
instructor, has been showing
both Dugan and Barnes how
to work as a team . Dugan is
learnin~ to stop and start at
Barnes command and to
watch for traffic and other
obstacles. Both Dugan and
Barnes are learning how to
trust one another.
"The dog is my best

Grady: Crime victims
often overlooked·

circling the track anytime soon.
We don 't have Newman's home
address, but you can read about his
fan club at ryan12newman.com.

Comics

...........,_.._

B'l' BRIAN . J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

carries the

'

I

revenue
up from
year ago

J. MILES lAYTON

Please see Dog. A6

colors of its sponsor. UPS. Its unlikely
you 'll see a strictly brown stock car

Contact Monte Dutton at hmd4858@Peoplepc.com

Valley

Although the GCCVB has already
sponsored several events this year, the
formal touri st season begins next week
with National Tourism Week. GCCVB
Director Bob Hood explained.
Rally in the Valley,·a day-long musical celebration, begins the morning of

Flight. Night Flight Jazz Ensemble. at
8 p.m. at lhe University of Rio Grande
Fine &amp; Perform ing Arts Center.
Thefollowing evening. the GCCVB
will host its annual dinner meeting al 6
p.m. in Holzer Medical Center's
Education and Conference Center.
The guest speaker will be Francis
Strickland, wife of U.S. Congressman
Ted Strickland.
On May 8. the Ohio Valley
Symphony will performing at the Ariel
Theatre beginning at 8 p.m.
A
Please see CV 8 • 6

racing .

~ {. ~~n(JWs ~ace. . ·
t•:·'-:. :~'· ·.
fJ·
•''· ' '

Kasey
Kahne

Martinsville winner. blamed rook1e

By Monte Dutton

attr&lt;~ctions.

May 6 wilh the arrival of the tloating
luxury hotel, the Delta Queen.
A Captain's ceremony will begin at 8
a.m. and local hi gh school bands and .
choirs will perform in the Gallipolis .
Oty Park throughout the day.
Other activities. available during the
Queen's visit include horse and buggy
rides, wagon rides. crafters. Civil War
and period re-enaclors. the Model A
Club. face painting. and food booths.
At I p.m., there will be a balloon
launch to send off the Della Queen, and
the day will end with a performance of
th e United States Air Force Band of

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Neither driver had a particularly
good day. but R1cky Rudd, a former

: They took two hours to reconsid·
• er the provisional rules after
; ' qualifying and told Todd Bodine
: he could stay and Kirk Shelmer·
dine he had to go home. What a
• way to run a senes.
• I&gt; Think NASCAR has some van·
· ely? The circuit moves from
quaint. tiny Martinsville to
sprawling, ultrafast Talladega .
The speeds will go up by nearly
100 mph in the span of a week.
•A Freudian slip from NASCAR's
: publicists. Last week. they is·
. . sueil a release saying that Hen·
: ·· drtek Motorsports had 10 Ma r·
•• tlnsville victories, the most of
: : any active team and third behind
; · Petty Enterprises and Jun ior
;; Johnson. Petty Enterprises may
; not be very active, but don't tell
: • Kyle Petty and Jeff Green the an• , cient team isn't still around.
; ·• Kasey Kanne, this year's boy
' ' wonder. had a rough afternoon
: ' at Martinsville. Almost every
; ; young driver finds the old track
; : impossible ... at first
·

s

QALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County
Convention and Visitor's Bureau is
kicking off its 2004 summer tourism
season with full schedule of events and

Bv

s
u

MIWSSIA RussELL

MRUSSELL@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Guide dog leads way toward happiness for Pomeroy woman

E

Ricky
Rudd

S 1. 2:; • \ ol. ;~H. :\o . ;;H

Gallia CVB kicks-off season with full slate Meigs tax

SPORTS

•

'

l'omer·o) • 'liddlqmr1• (;allipoli' • ·\pdl2;;. 200~

Ohio \ 'all&lt;") l'uhli,hin); Co.

: near competitive.
• 1&gt; Those wacky NASCAR officials.

•
•

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

· · !AU:AGEGA IJAJA · ·

46435 St. Rt. 248

For more information about occupational or other
therapies offered at Holzer Medical Center, please call the
Holzer Medical Therapy Center at (740) 446·5 121 or the
inn:,ti ..,nt Rehabilitation Unit a1(740) 446·5070.

Chester, OH

740-985-3857

•

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Dif{el'ence

www.holzer.org

•

'

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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