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                  <text>•
Monday, April

www.mydailysentinel:'c om

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

26, 2004
•

Major League Baseball

•

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that he· s done that to us,"
said Detroii'.s Brandon lnge,
who went 0-for-3 and saw
hi s I 0-game hillin g streak
ca me to an end. ''When we
were in Cleveland. every: ·
lhing he threw was right
where he wanted it. Today
he was no different. He didn't leave one pitch up in the
zone to me. or to anyone
else th at I saw."
The seconu straighl strong
performance by Westbrook
allowed the Indians to re sI
their woeful b,ullpen. On
Friday night, Indian s reli evers gave up II runs in the
sixth inning of a 17-3 loss at
Detroit.
On
Saturday.
~ Randell White hit a threerun ho111er off reliever Chad
Durbin in the ninth inning of
a 5-3 Tigers win.
The · Indians snapped a
three-game losing streak and
avo ided being swept at
Comcrica Park for the 'first
time since May 20-22, 2002.
Cleveland got the scori ng
started in the third off
Detroit
starter
Jason
Johnson ( 1-4 ). After Ronnie
Belliard walked with one
out, Ben Broussard drove
him in with an RBI double.
Broussard scored on a single
by Alex Escobar to make it
2-0.
Gerul made it 3-1 with a
homer in tlie third.
The Tigers cut tl1e le ad to
one in the seventh. White
walked. went to third on a
Higgin,on's 'ing le scored
on Pena\ sacrifice rly.
Johnson went' six innings,
giving up three run&gt; on five
!Jits and two walh while
striking ou1 one.
Before the game, I he
Indians acquired reliever
Rick White from the. Los
Angeles
Dodgers·
in
exchange for minor league
oulfielder Trey Dyson. To
make room for While. pilcher Jason An!lcrson was
rcturnetl
to
Triple -A
Buffalo. II was the lndi&lt;tns'
third hullpen-relaietl transaction in as many days.

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1150 Eastern Avenue

E

740-441-0200

Gallipolis, Ohio •

44&amp;-9m or 446°2484

Not Yllid

lin dueling

1-888-451·2225
990 2nd Ave. •

•New owners
• New Management
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L

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www.turnpllleflm.com

1

Rl. 2 Bypass
Point Pleosanl, WV

304-675-7870

304-773-5592
2nd Street _ Ml!§on..}YV _

Members of Donna Jenkins' fifth-grade class at Meigs Intermediate School signed up to
help clean Little Leading Creek at Rutland Saturday morning. The youngsters were part&gt;ci~
paling in the fourth annual Leading Creek Stream Sweep. (Jim Freeman)
and to help peopl e take
more of interesl in the
streams. While the exact
amount of trash collected is

unknow'n at .this lime. volunteers co ll ected enough 'to
entirely fill the Rutland
Township dump truck "

B1

Weather

A6

ning, media re lations and othet ski ll s
needed to lead volunteers in the
community toward a specific goal.
According to· lannarelli. the program in Middleport will focus on
training a diverse citizens' task force
in developing a plan for downlown
revitalization that may be used to
secure grant funding.
Once the program is succes;fully
completed, the ·village will rec eive a
$10.000 mini-grant from the
Appalachian Regional Commi."ion
to help implemenl a re\italizalion
plan, lannarelli said.
,

MIDDLEPORT - A new program developed to strengthen local
leadership will address downtown
revilalization in Middleport, Mayor
Sandy lannarelli lold Middleport
Village Council Monday evening.
lannarelli and Meigs County
Commissioner Mick Davenport
have selected a commiuee which
will begin meeting on May II for a
21- hour
training
program,
LeadershipPlemy, developed by the
Pew Institute for Civic Change and
funded
through
Buckeye
·Hills/Hocking Valley Re gional
Brenda Phalin and Colin Rou'h of
Development District.
the Universi tv of Rio Grande
The program teaches pa11icipants Crossroads Pro'gram reviewed plans
co~riict managemenl. slrategic plan- for
an • Appalachian Herilage

Other business

'

•Qualiry • SelectiorJ • Service

4351econtl A-"" • laMIPOMI. H
I

·r

numerou .\ pothole~. cleaning
1l1e park.s. weeding :tnd other
Uhilletlc change~ ... t·o the _vil~

]aQe.

'Voun2 said one ual' last
week. he .&gt;a \I ihree ·streel
dcpanment wnrl&lt;cr' riding in
circ les around town for
Youn2 &gt;aid ih.e., e wmkers are
lazy."
"They are n(&gt;t doing diddly
squat•·· he said. "I hJvcn·l
seen Jack {Krautttr ) and his
guys do a thing iri this town ."
Young blames Kraulter and
said hi s worl&lt;ers shou ld either
be Jtsdplined or replaced.
Young adYocateJ that council
"jump on him (Krautterl once
a month .. to !.!et thin~~ done
or th ings will continue 10
ueteriorate in the \'illage,
As to the "aler uepanmem.
Young also alla&lt;.'ked ihe
worker.s for loafin~ . He 'aid
one employee li e"d tn him
about Wi.lter pn::'\~Url~ ~oin~ to
bi, hnme whi~h forced hint
lO do a lot of unnece-.. . . an

For tl1cir sen ice. th~ vollltlteers were rewmdeu with
Siream Sweep T-shirts and
pizza &lt;tfterwarus.

work jusl to disc'oYcr ih~ ·
lruth.
·
~~ If 1l1n· did 1his 10 me. then
1 know ihey are uoing it ((t
0\hl!r CLI...,tnmer .... " 11~ said.
Council m~mbcrs . f11u~ht
hctck .
"
"The mayor l)ohn ,\1uS&gt;er J
i-. Joing a gnuJjnb. D(~n·r put
rhc

hLtm~

on

th__...... aid

1140·-446·161&amp; ·BOD·231-m&amp;

Please see Mayor. As

Festival. to be held at the Rio Meigs lcms at the \ il!agc \ ~ewer treatment
Center from 1'0 a.m. to 3 p.m. (~11 facilily. ~;her~ gate' ha1e been
May 21.
e111creu unlawfully.
Phalin said the vill•iQe has authoCouncil aho Ji,cthsed Yandali ., m
rized closing North Seconu Aw .. -at General H;rninger Park .
from Race St. to Mill St.. anu Mill
CounL·il aho:
Sireet in front of the center. to allow
o Appruveu paym~nt of !:&gt;ills in the
. for musical performance.-. craft amnunl ol· S 15.060.23 ,
demonstralions. a dance demnnslrao Appro1wl1rathfer of S l-+3 ~.'i6 fnr
lion and other c1·cn1s (.ksigneu Ill final JXI) mcnt of natural t!a" . . en ire
educate resiuellls aboul Appalachian at the \1idulepor1 Higb School.
heritage ~
·
Cenlral Building :t nJ clernenlar)
A dairce lesson for tho,e interesleu building.
in dan cing at the celebration will be
Present 1n·rc lannardli. Council
offered free of charge al 7 p.m. on member' Siephen Houcl1m,. Ro~c·r
~1ay II a11hc Family Life Cc111er in
Manle1. Katlr1 SetHI and Bob
Middlcpon. and the public is invit - Roi:&gt;in:on. and ·Fi.-c·al Officer Linda
ed. Phalin .said.
Hanson. C nunri I !111!111 bcr~ Bob
Village
Admi~istralo r
Brau Pooler and Laurie Reed were
Anderson di s~uss~u 1 ancbl ism prob- cx.cl1stxi from th~ meeting .

www.holzer.org

hln: Me•Thur 1:3p'5:DO

•,

coun-

. cil member R111h Spaun. "We
are tr} ing our be"t !"

'

For the latest healthcare information and to
learn more about the programs and services
Holzer Medical Center provides,
log onto our, website:

"Shoe&gt; for lhe entire family "

~M ERCURY

Yo.un~ ...... aiJ are en\ t"rcd in
dirt :anJ gra~~~ repairing

Information at your fingertips ...

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FURNITURE
COMPANY

Sports

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

~~ KIPLING

With new Yehlcle purchase.
See Turnpike for debolls.

A3

Classifieds

must cover every number on,your card to win.

POMEROY
Former
Pomero'
.\Ia) or
Vic lOr
Youn g Ill cundemnetl the
street anu II ater Jcpartmenl'
al ihe Pnmeroy Village
Council mee1in~ Monuav.
Young ~·um( ._ \\ ith a .. long
laundn· li'l of thin~s 1he
slrcct · JepanmetH ha.-- failed
tO ULT&lt;Hllpl ish either UUe 10
h11iness or a lad of leader'hip from long lime street
'upcn is or Jack Krautter.
lth·ludcu in thi' Ji,t :tre
repair" anU impro\ ~ment~ to
B~ech
Grll\'e Cemelen.
ckan in ~ ihe Sidewalks th:n

~

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

SEcnoNs- 12 PAGilS

Calendars

•••

By J. MILES lAYTON
J LAYTO~ @ '.l YOAI LYS ENTIN EL~COM

Middleport to implement training program

Delallo on Page A6

•

Mon -Timrs: I I :00;1m· I0:00pm
Fri-Sa1 . I I :I lOam- I 0: .'Uprn
Sun: 11 :30am- 10:00pm

umber

lazin~ss

1

hour ..... In no unct'rlain tenn~.

.

INDEX

I

RUTLAND - A small
army of volunteers, assisted
by pleasant spring weather.
participated in the fourth
annual Leading Creek
Stream Sweep Saturday
morning
at
Rulland's
Fireman's Park .
Approximately 43 people
-youth and adults alikeshowed up to help clean the
banks along Leading Creek
and Little Leading Creek at
in
selected
locallons
Rutland and Salisbury
lownships.
The entire SWCD assisted with the sweep, which is
also supported by the Meigs
Office of Recycling and
Liller
Prevention,
the
Rutland Township Board of
Trustees,
the
Rulland
Volunteer Fire Department
and the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service aleng with
other agencies.
The stream sweep is modeled after the successful
Ohio River Sweep, which is
held in June and the timing
coincides with Earth Day,
which is April 22.
The goaL of the sweep is
10 help clean up the
Leading Creek watershed

181 Up.. r River Rd.

GIRIHIIS. OhiO 45&amp;3f
Open l·lotJI"'.;:

1

JiM FREEMAN
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

Dally 3: 3-94
Dally 4: 54-9-7
Cash 25: 1-9-15-16-19-22

;~~~n~FARM AND

be facing,''' he said .
Justice. 37. said his first
order of busine&gt;s is lo
familiarize himself with the
issues facing Meigs and
other counties in the 29
member district. Civic leaders said whal Meigs County

1

Bv

West VIrginia

$

T.J. Justice

i

needs most is a hospital ami matters to see what coulu be
a jai I.
done in the fu tu re. He took a
"Healih care is a hu~e parti cu lar intere.-t in the jail
concern for us in Mei'gs situation and .-aid he wt)uld
County."'
said
Mike visit limnarelli befoi·e llc left
Swisher. director of Mei·gs for his home in Wellsion ~
County Job and Fam ily
Perrv Varnadoe hriefeu
Services . "Hilving a h ospi~ Justice on the stren~ths ihc
lal is one of the 1hings com- coumy ha~ to oiler prchpec panies are interested in:·
tive business inJu~trv. He
Middlepon Mayor Sand~ mentioned the inJtistrial
la nnarellt expre ssed co n- park. the spec bui l uin~.
cern aboul the need for a infrastructure
impnneproper1ail in Meigs County. ments amlyuality etlucalion
Since ihe county jai l is from llote local schoo l Ji,defu nct. pri .,o ners mu .q lricts which boast a hiol1
e
either usc the ._jail in graduation and college
Middleport. whicll L·an only acceptance rate.' .
hold four prisoners. or they
Juqice is no stran~er to
mu't be incar~erateu in local and state ~o1·ernment.
other jai ls like tile one in . Prior to lh is clppointment.
Ja c:kson or Athens counties. he served '" the Governor's
lannarelli. said· it cu.-Is lhe Regional
Econom ic
cou111y money when pri so n- Developmcnl
l:!r!-1 are incan:craled· e l se~
Represenlatiw
to
where.
Chi ll i&lt;:othe. In thai capacity.
Jusli cc saiu he an'U lli s
slaff would look into these
Please see Justice. AS

Teams join in Leading Creek 'Stream Sweep'

2

emandez .

Szumi'lSki
Wrtasd&lt;

MILES LAYToN

Former mayor
condemns street
and water .
departments for

1

I

7

-110 000 -

(1), SFinley (3). s-Dessens SF-BG1les. RaH·

IP

Bv J.

2010
34 2 9 2

E-Poerre ! 1). LCaStllk:l (2) LOB-Atlanta B.

......

\\\\\\111,,ftth-.,tllttt.-Jt.,ll l

20 00

Florida 8 26-AJones (4). WCort:IQro (21 38JDrew \1 ). PJerre (11. HA- DeRosa (1). 56-

Son [);ego
lJiwr91Q1 L.2-2

..!-.:.!UO-l

Justice comes to Meigs County
POMEROY
TJ.
Justice, the new direclor of
the Governor's Office of
Appalachia, paid a visit to
Pomeroy to meet witli community leaders at the Meigs
Coun1y
Chamber
of
Commerce Monday. ·
The Governor's Oflice of
Appalachia (GOA) serves
as an advocate for the
l'egion by developing policy
and promoting specific projects and proposa ls that
originate from the region 's
residems. The GOA advises
local groups and residents
of possible funding so urces
and methods for addressing
problems and acts as a liaison to connect people and
resource ?.
~
"We're here to support
you and lo help you overcome challenges you might

t

0

Elm-

Ill~()\, . \J'I{JI

'\tl . l(l -

JlAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

t

• 1

5 2 2 2

34 712 7

• Reds win, but may lose
Kearns. See Page B1

4
3

RERBBSO

w"""

Hardeo L0.2

=~D ~; ~ ~ ~

2 1 1 1
2 1 1 3

000 000 -

H

D8tista rf
TracylJ

RaHitllc

003
111

Atlanta

c.,tron ss

Pao,-toncl

SPORTS

Braves 7, Martins 2

BGIIesrf
Lo"gd

-1

Oakland

7
0

abrhbl
llllaiqz 3b 4 1 1 0
Loratta 2b 5 1 3 0
New11b

1

3

1P

FRodriQVI!l

D'backs 12, Padres 7

Kleskol

0

E-Glaus 121. Scutaro !1), Menechono (1). DPAnahelm 2. LOB-Anaheim il . Dak!and 6 2BKarros (2). Hatleberg (3) DMiller (3) HR-

~15 .5

3

3001
.. 1 2 0
4 2 2 1
2000

1
0

Salmon 12: SB- fpgg111s 2!6)

Edmonds (4). ASanders (7). KGnter (4 1 SBE~(1) . cs--MAndftrson[2).&amp;---SupPan.
SF~teraa.

""'[);ego

'
0

KarTOS (tl 3 0 1 1
·McMin d'1 , 0 0 0
Httberg 1b o1 , 2 0
Scwruss 4 000.
DM~Ierc
4 o , a

4000
4 0 2 0

Anaheim
Oakland

4. 2S--lanidord (6,, Ect-nonds {8). McKay ~ 1)

7
2

2

Clu-azo ~ 1 0 0 0
32 3 I! 1
:J6 4 7 3 Tolals

Tctabl

000 012 5
000 011 2
DP-St LouiS 2_ LOB-St. Louis 3. M1lwallkoo

72-3

}O(J:\IS•\oJ ..)-t .

z

6

2 2 0 4

Mnchno2t:l 3 0 0 I)

200
000

72-3
I 1-3.

4

4 1 1 0
4 1 10

BMOOa c
AKni:t)' 2b

BCWKrf 2000
0 Moelelc 2 0 0 0
0 ElShet.-; p 2 o a o
0 KGIIllo3b 1 1 1 1
29 2 $ 2
5 Totals

2

2

Samon cto 2 1 1 3

3 0 1 0

Hetns 3tl

vSiwltsp o·a a o
Kso::Mk p11 1 o a o

1

1

6

Edcltn ss
Erstad 1b
Figgnsd

Pdstttk d 3 0 0 0
CL.nSei ss 4 0 0 0

PH

6

abrhbi
ab rhbiKotsar cl 3 1 1 0
5 10 0
Byrnes~
30 10
5 0 10
5010 · EChavzJb 400 0
2100
Gklus:JJ 3000 Dye rf

Mitweukae
abrhbi

3 o 10

~p

5

4

Angels 4, Alhletlcs 3

Cardinals 5, Brewers 2

ECIMdcl

3

9

lshiiW,3-1

"""

ltbrhbi
MAroo12tl 4 0 ' 0
LJ*fn:U
4 0 1 1
Tgud111
000 0
Pl4ols lb ... 1 1 1

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Iztu"s (1). Bradley 2 [4]. Cora Hl SB-OAOOerls (13). SF-A0$5.

B
1

Roethlisberger:
Manning, Rivers have
nothing on me, B2

422 2

Loa Anv-i"

~ ~
1
1

Elfl:klyd

JHrn:.td

Sen Francisco

38----&amp;lmoidcr [2i. SB-Cepictty (1). C&amp;-

OGabrera (1). Sc:hneider(l)_ 5---Padtha Day.

1
10 10
0000

,

Loa~
lbrllbi
~~
523 0
tzturl&gt;SS
51 2 2

HA-Mackowiak 131. Cola [21. GastiiO (2). 5..10Ac8Yedo. OIPerez
IP H RER88SO

Arizona

32090

oco

Cocoerp
Corroop

32 610 6

ooo

2000

oo a o

1 1 0 2
0 0 2 1
-.
t ,.--• - "- ' - '

0P-CrlCII1flato 1. Prttsbur'gl 1 LOB-CII"'Crl·
natt 6. P!lt!b.lf915. 28--Casey (91, NJ•l5cKl (71

7

abrhbl

2
1

GiantS 0

Ortwn2b

011

0

Expos 2, Phillies 0

Tot*

Cincinnlltl
Pittatugh

0

Pokte
1-3 I 0 0 0 0
AIJ&lt;J1s W.2-Q
1 1 0 0 0 0
Q8aez pt:hed 10 3 bfi!lei'S I'! h . !ln. TreM*r
pitched to 3 batlets ., the 9th. LCMer pitched IQ 1
batter il the 91h .
~- Ted Bimft: Ff'SI. Allnso Mar~- Secold. Aidl Reed: Ttm:l. Ed Rapoaoo. T2:43. A---17,497 (40.615)

By&lt;dd

(.Wt;n1b

Mciwk.

0 6 0

000010

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t.fndesol1

~

Indians edge
Tigers, 3-2
DETROIT .(AP) - Jake
Weslbrook completely dom inated the Detroit Tigers
agam.
After throwing seven perfeet innings of relief against
Detroit
on
Monday,
Westbrook. held the Tigers to
two hits in Cleveland's 3-2
win Sunday.
"It's two great performances in a row," Indians
manager Eric Wedge said.
"We needed so meo ne .to step
up today, and he was . the
one ."
Weslbrook a11ov ·ed only a
second-inning home run to
Carlos Pena and a seventhinning single to Bobby
Higginson on a grounder
thai originally was scored as
an error.
Westbrook had retired 27
slraighl batte rs over hi s last
three appearances before
Pena's homer with 1wo o uts
in the second,
" I k.new I tiad to go after
them again." Westbrook
said . "The way I pitch, I've
got to go after them and get
them to hi I ihc pitches into
lhe ground. They know what
I throw,' but not when ."
Westbrook ( 1-1) got, the
start in part because of
Monday 's performance. and
part ly due to injuries .
One
starter,
Jason
Stanford, is on the disabled
list with a strained left forearm. Another, C.C. Sabathia.
hasn't pitched since he was
pulled before a scheduled
start on April 22.
"He definilely pickeu up
where he left off,'' Wedge
said. "Detroit is a good hit ring ballelub. which makes
his performance all the more
impressive ."
The right-hander slruck
oul three and walked three
in his second career complete game. He had a complcie-gamc loss against the
Tigers lasl September.
The Tigers cou ldn't help
but be impressed by the
Cleveland righ1-handef
"That's 1he second time

1
1

BAbreurl

2·3 . 0 0 0 1 0
1·3 0 0 0 1 1
MR:wra
1 0 0 0 1 1
HBP---t¥ .Nazquez (Millar) WP--Gadon.
Um~. Phil GUZZI: First, James Hoye:
Second, Jerry Cra.vbd: Tllild. Brwo O'Jiba
T-2:48.A-55.338\57.478J

Houslan

0
0

1-3
1·3
0

"'-

4 0 1 0

TRdmd
JN'Isrlss

Spiv':JY [8\. Jenkons 14) HR-Putols 17).

lCart"

40 0 0

GWhlle
Gon:k.n

Rockies 4,

0
0

IPHRERBSSO

TrefMerll)-1

40 0 0

H

1 OJantnll

2 t 1 2
MYlroet 3 o o a
Ml.ffl:f13b 2 0 0 0
lnged
3000

Totals

ab rhbl
4 0 0 0

7
2

.NazQ~L2-2

0
0

lJrtJe ss

~

IP

T-_:'_:":._·_A.,..,.
-oa ,635
._ 1_39_.345
.,-l:_ _ _ _
1 NowV""'

4

abrhbi
WHans2b 4030

Ge.OO

000

Boston
F'MartlnezW.3-1
W1brnsonS.1

2

g-:=1~1)1~= (2). JoC~ (2).

200 000 2
New Vorii;
1XKJ 000 000 ---- 0
E-Jeter [31, Posada (3). DP-New 'fork 1.
LOB---Boston 7, NtN~ York 5. 28-00rtlz (7),
ARodrogucz (51. Soerra (',I HA-MRarmrez (5).
SB-AAodnguez 12) CS-M~Iar (11

.... _ .
Cleman1W.3-1
Bortwskl S.4

1

o o o o
o o o t

100 100
120 5
001 DOD
113 6
Two outs ....m.n Wllllllll9 rUI"l ~ ­
E-J9Gonzalaz 11). DP--Tampa Bay 1. Chcago 2. LOB-Tampa Bay 6, ~ fi. 28Cr.Mbd (I). \NHarTis (4). 38-lugo (1). HA-Hull (2). Hall (II. Unba (2), Kone!ko (4). SB-

r.,.,...,

""""''
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3' 2 4 2

1

31

~ 9,

.......,....
S..Frw1
.tlrhbl

lb rhbl
400 0
4011
3 1 2 0
4010
4111

0

lampe~

0

""""
~~

3 0 0 0
' Bion3:J 3100
(X)rtz d'1 4 0 2 0
~~
3122
32 410 -4
~11
J 0 0 0
K1!J,!II;NI1
0000
New Vork
000 000 100 1
Vantelu;
40 0 0
Chicago
001
200 . lOx 4
~lb
3000
LOB-New 'r'orll 3. ChiCago 4. 26-Barren {21.
Crespo'&lt;!b 4 0 0 0
HR-t&lt;Garaa {3). ARamorez !61 58--CPAlterReesess 4000
son {3)

0

---·

8b r hbi

0

Chicago

o o o Red Sox 2. Yankees 0

F't:n9cw"IL,2- 1

51·3 10 9 7 2 4
Pamst1
212242
D&amp;Jean
1·3 4 4 J
1 0
Bauer
1·3 0 0 0 0 0
Groom
1:?0002
HBP----by DsJean 1Catalanotlol. by Ponson
(J~ t PS---Casr.

2

0 2 1
lB.'Ine
1·3 1 0 0 0 0
Ump.-es---Ho-ne Jrn Woll: Fwst. T!YI'J' Randazzo:

p 3oao

Totals

3 1 1 2
t.Qrdzrf
300 0
Thmas ct1 4 1 I 0
E&lt;iiPrz 1b 4 0 1 0 Cal..ool
300 0
..klCrta: 11 3 1 0 0 Knertto 1b 4 1 3 ,
l.i.q:l ss
4 0 2 2 Gloedpr 0 I 0 0
Hale
· 4121 Ovde3b 4001
Blun:!!
4000 AwMI:id 300 0
TPerez p-t 0 0 0 0
Drnsftt ph 1 1 1 1
OIM:Ic
2100
Toblla
:r1 5 13 5 Tollll:ll
31695

CPttwld
SSo:;a r!

cn-.oo~

0

~

______:_____ I -....,-....,...,--.
1
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=

0

Clticogo

lib rhbi
Ciwfldf
5 1 4 0
Rots3b
5000
EW:Ield ' 4 I 21
Hufl&lt;to
o1 1 2 1

2

11·3

0

2-3
2

\lilcmal

T------2'25 A-------8.267 (4ti.iii)

•
0

U11pow funs, Er~: Cocper: Fif$1., t.4M Raitj:
Seccn1 O'udo. ·~ T'hi'O. C B. Bl.d!nor.
T-2·16 A-----3J912 {50.449]

r.....,...,

9
11·3

1

While Sox 6, Devll Rays 5

4 000
4021
4 0 1 0

ASGm ss 3

oo o

DPat1ersal
()::Jref

2

2

--(-1.

,.,

San Francosco 5. Los Angeles 3

AEMbztb

2

2

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~W.3-0 61-3 5
Haridl3la
2-3 a
Vl'Uiel
2-3 a
FIR!ltes
1-3 0
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PageA2

NATION • WORLD

1he Daily Sentinel

Tuesday,April27,2004

Michael Jackson says it was his Some straight couc·les choose
domestic partners ip over marriage
decision to replace attorneys
just days before arraignment
LOS ANGELES (APl Less than a week before his
next arraignment. Michael
Jackson said Monday he has
replaced his high-protile le,gal
team in his child molestation
case because .. my life is al
stake."
Attorneys Mark Geragos
and
Benjamin
Brafman
"decided to step down., from
Tepresenting the pop star.
Brafman said Sunday. He
would not reveal exactly what
prompted lhe mnve.
Jackson said he had tenninated their services.
"Contrary to reports. this is
a decision that I haw personally made ... he said ·in a statement issued by spokeswoman
Raymone K. Bain.
.Jackson did not give a specific reason for dismissing
Brafman
and
Geragos.
However. Geragos has been
busy with the Scott Peterson
murder case in Northern
California.
"It is imperative that I have
the full attention of those who
are representing me .. My life
is at stake:· Jackson smd.
"Therefore, I must feel confident that my interests are of
the highest priority. I al)l
innocent of these false
charg-es, and will aggressively
seek to dear my 11aine."
Thoma., Mesereau J,r ..
Jackson's new lawyer, represented actor Robert Blake in
his murder case until they
recently parted company. citing irreconcilable differences.
Mesereau has met with
Jackson in the Orlando. Fla ..
area. where the singer is star
.· ing with his children. He said
he would join the singer in
court when Jackson is
arraigned on chi ld molestation charges outlined in an
indictment handed down last
week.
"''II have no comment on
the developments until I
appear in c.ourt Friday,''
Mesereau said.
Gerauos. said he: Brafman
and M~sereau would notify
Santa
Barbara
County
Superior Court Judge Rodney
Melville of the substitution of
counsel during a conference
call Monday, He and Brafman
would not discuss· reasons for
the change.
"It was a decision that sort
of has been happening over
time, and I think at the end of
the day it is probably better
that it is resolved this wav,"
Brafman said Monday ·on
ABC's "Good Morning
America.''
Dana Cole. an attorney who
has worked closely with
Mesereau on cases including
Blake's, said Mesereau was
approached by Jackson soon

Former lead attorney for Michael Jackson, Benjamin Brafman,
left, talks to Diane Sawyer, about the ,ponflicts that had been
brewing between the legal team. family members and
Jackson 's advisors. during an interview on ABC's Good.
Morning America in New York, Monday. Brafman and Mark
Geragos are no longer representing Jackson in his child
molestation case.(AP)
after he was charged with
child
molestation.
but
Mesereau
was
initially
unwilling to take the case
whi le he was tied up with the
impending Blake case.
'"Michael Jackson has
always been very impressed
with the pro bono work and
contributions Tom has made
in the African-American community," Cole said.
Mesereau provides free
legal services at the prcdominantly black First A.M.E.
Church in Los Angeles. where
he was hon.ored· recently for
his contributions to minority
communities . .And every year
he chooses" a death penalty
case in Alabama to defend at
his own expense.
Loyola University law professor Laurie Levenson said
the chanoe could mean
Jackson lo~ faith in his attorneys, or they in him. She also
noted that Geragos' represenliability
trying could
to findbeana
tation of inPeterson
unbiased jury, and that
Mese.reau would bring less
baggage to the case.
"Prospective jurors would
be asked how they feel about
Jackson being represented by
someone who represents
Scott Peterson;" she said.
"'And Mark is also going to be
very busy with the Peterson

lewd or lascivious conduct
involving a child under 14
and w·it.h administering an
intoxicant. reportedly wine, to
a child under 14.
ln . his ABC interview.
Brafman turned as-ide suggestions there · was contl it f '
between Jackson and h1s ·
lawyers over antics such as
the dance he performed atop
an SUV in front of the cuurthouse at hiS l1rst amugnment,
· or over the reported mtluence
on Jackson I rom adv1sers In
h1s tmmly or the Nation of
Islam. · . .
.
.. , don t thmk there IS tension." Brafman said. But he
did say of Jackson's advisers:
" Ithink the team has to understand that. it is not business as
usual. They have to be
focused. They have to understaM if you win this case,
nothing else matters. If you
lose this case, nothing else
matters."

calls their decision "a good,
first, small step."
"The lirst thing you do is
you move in. The next thing
you do is get a dog," he says,
chuckling. "And then you ' ll
find out who's responsible or
not..,
Others are making a political statement. And some
groups are even callin~ for a
"marriage
boycott'
to
protest a proposed constitutional amendment defining
the institution as_between J1
woman· and a man.
·"!just don't think the state
should be in the position of
. sanctioning who should be a
family and who shouldn 't,"
ays Jennifer Gaboury,
another New Yorker.
She and Jacob Goldfinger,
both 33, registered as a
domestic partners last year
and, instead of having a
wedding, invited family and
friends to their ''commitzvah." The cetemony included the traditional Jewish
breaking of the glass after
they exchanged vows. There
was no minister or justice of
the peace.
Gaboury says she arriv"d
at her decision not to marry
in college, after realizing

that a lesbian friend couldn't
do so. Goldfinger grew to
share her views. He says getting married ''would have ,
been like eating at a segregated lunch counter."
Those calling for a marriage boycott applaud the
decision, even if dissuadmg
couples from · legally tying
the knot is ditficult.
So far, Phoebe Rosenberg
Jones - a straight, single,
26-year-old
from
Los
Angeles, who recently posted the site Boycott-marriage.com - says she 's perswided one couple to postpone their wedding and has
others considering it.
"[ would just like to get
more
straight · people
engaged in the issue - no
pun
intended,"
says
Rosenberg Jones, whose
opposition to a constitutional amendment inspired her to
act.
Dorian So lot says she 's
also heard from several couples who are boy cotting
marriage. She's executive
director of the Alternatives
to Marriage Project, a nonprofit that provides information and support to couples
who don't wish to marry.

Verdict in lesbian minister's trial to
be central topic at Methodist meeting
(AP) After three decades of
disagreement over what the
Bible says about homosexuality, the church trial of alesbian minister has sharpened
the debate for the United
Methodist Church as it prepares for a national meeting
that occurs once every four
years.
The church's General
Conference, which starts
Tuesday in Pittsburgh and
lasts until May 7, will take up
the question of gays' role in
the church amid bitter feel-

ings over the case of the Rev.
Karen Dammann.
Last month, ~jury acquitted Dammann - who had
disclosed she was in a committed relationship with a
woman - of pmctices the
denomination has declared
are
incompatible
with
Christianity. The church bars
ordination of sexually active
gays and lesbians. '
Traditionalists have called
the ruling a "schismatic act"
that flouted Methodist law.
Their anger is expected to

infuse the assembly.
"There's an enormous
sense of upheaval across the
church,:· said the Rev .. James
Heidinger, publisher of Good
News, a magazine and organization for . evangelical
Methodists.
Adding to the tension is the
nationwide debate over gay
marriage in courtrooms and
state capitols. and the growing rifts over homosexuality
in other mainline Protestant
churches.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=======­

· - - - - - - - - -. . . .

'''
•••

case."

Santa Barbara District
Attorney Thomas Sneddon
had no comment. according to
Jason Karpf of TeHem
Worldwide, a firm handling
media inquiries for Sneddon
in the Jackson case.
Jackson is free on $3 mil,
lion bail.
Jackson, 45, was originally
charged with seven counts of

CHINESE

All You Can Eat/
MIIIHy hi'JUIDR ...... h•ncl

which he laughs about the 1999
shooting rampage by one of his
followers. Benjrunin Smith. Smith
targeted minorities and killed two
people.
including
fanner
Northwestem University busketball coach Ricky·Byrd&lt;;Ong.
. Smith's three-day rampage
across Illinois and Indiana
left.nine people wounded and
only ended when he shot himself as police closed in. bringing the death toll to three.
In Hale's trial. prosecutors
focused on one .tape of a brief.
veiled exchange re~orded. Dec.
17, 2002, when the FBI mtormant, Anthony Evola. showed
up unannounced at Hale's East
Peori a home. Lefkow had
issued her order a month earlier.
"Are we gonna extenninate
the rat'J" Evola can be heard
asking Hale on the tape, whi ch
Evola testified meant Lefkow.
"Well; whatever you want
to do, basically," Hale replied .
Moments later. Hale added:
"My position has always been
that, you know, I' m going to
fight within the law and, but,
ah, that information's been
provided if you wish to, ah,
do anything, yo urse lf, you
can. So that makes it clear."
"Consider it done,'' Evola said.
U.S Di strict Judge James
T. Moody did not immediately set a sentencing date.
Solicitation of murder canies a
maximum penalty of 20 y~ in
prison. Hale could abo get a maxImum of 10 ycurs on each of three
counL' of ob&gt;tmction ofju;ticc.

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Illinois white supremacist
.Hale found guilty of trying to
have federal judge murdered
CHICAGO !AP) - White
supremacist leader Matthew
Hale, whose gospel of "racial
holy war.. was linked to a follower's deadly shooting rampage rive years ago, was
found guilty Mondayoftrving
to have a federal judge killed.
Hale, 32, was found gui lty of
four of the ti ve char,ges against
him. He was found mnocent of
one of two c(lunts of soliciting
the murder of a federal judge.
The judge was not attacked.
Prosecutors said Hale was
furious after U.S. District Judge
Joan
Humphrey
Lefkow
ordered him to stop using the
name World Church of the
Creator. Lefkow had ordered
Hale to stop using the name
because it had been trademarked
by an Oregon-based religious
group that ha~ no ties to Hale.
Hale sat with hi s hands
clasped on the table as the
verdicts were read. He dipped
his head slightly but showed
no otfter reaction.
Hale never testified during
the two-week trial, and chief
defense counsel Thomas
Anthony Durkin called no witnesses, saying the prosecu tion's evidence was the weakest he had seen in a major case.
The defense argued that
Hale never asked anyone to
kill the judge and that the FBI
used an informant to draw
him into a murder plot.
Owing the bial. Jurors heard
more than a dozen tapes of Hale
using mciw slurs, including one in

CHICAGO (AP) - As
same-sex couples tight for
their right to marry, ,some
straight couples are deciding
against it. Instead, they're
registering as ''domestic
partners," an option offered
by some cities and counties.
mainly with gay and. lesbian
couples in mina. .
National . statistics aren't
available. since some municipalities don't track .domestic.
partners' gender or make
their re_gistries p!lblic. But
experts are noting early
signs that, while the marriage . rate continues to
dec! ine, these alternative
arrangements are piquing
some straight couples' interest.
Some heterosexuals, followi.ng a trend already popular in such countries as
Sweden and France, choose
domestic partnership for
practical reasons.
Christopher Price and
Bonnie Fletcher, both 25,
did so in New York City last
fall so they could qualify for
student housing for courles
at Mount Sinai Schoo of
Medicine, where they are
. ·
graduate students. .
Not ready to marry, Pnce

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and medical cards must be
degree.
SYRACUSE- Wildwood provided. A donation will be
Garden Club wi II meet at 1:30 accepted for immunizations.
Tuesday, April27
p.m. on Thursday at Syracuse but no service will be denied
RACINE
Southern Community
Center. because of inability to pay.
Local Board of Education, 7 Extension Agent Hal Kneen
POMEROY
The
p.m. at the school.
will have the program.
Pomeroy United Methodist
Wednesday,Apri128
RACINE - The Racine · Church will host a fellowship
Regular American legion auxiliary dinner with serving from 4:30
POMEROY meeting of the Soiuthern · will host a birthday party for to 6 p.m. at the church. The
Consortium for Children will the American Legwn Post dinner is open to the public .
he held at I 0 a.m. at the office. 602. 6 p.m. at the hall. Dinner
Friday, April30
The meeting is open to the and entertainment. Members
MIDDLEPORT
- A free
public :
and family invited.
dinner will bt: served from 4 to
Monday, May 3
Saturday, May· I
6:30 p.m at the Middleport
RUTLAND Ru'tland
SALEM CENTER - Star Church of Christ 's Family
Township Trustees wi ll meet Grange #778 and Star Junior Life Center. Fifth and Main .
at 5 p.m. in reg ul ar ~~,~ ion at Grange #8n will meet in regthe Rutland Firei)pu,e. · .. _ ular session. with potluclsupper at 6:30p.m., and meeting
at 7:30 p.m. Plans for Meigs
County Spring Rally on May
Wednesday, April28
16. All members urged to
RACINE
- Shirley
attend.
Appleby of Racine will
observe
her 93rd birthday
Wednesday, Apri128
Th.ursday.
Cards may be sent
The
. MIDDLEPORT to her at 44210 Yost Road,
Middleport Literary Club will
Racine, 45771.
meet at 1 p.m . at the home of
Thesday, April 27
• Saturday, May I
Frankie Hunnel. Phyllis
POMEROY - A hearing
POMEROY
Garth
llackett will hal'e a poetry specialty clinic will be held at
review.
the Meigs County 1-\ealth Sovel. who had a stroke four
CHESTER
Special Department. An ear, nose and years ago and has not been
meet ing of Shade River throat special ist wi.ll be seeing able to talk or use his ri~ht ann
Lodge #45.1, 7 p.m. Practice patients with curre nt or sus- or leg , will observe his birthfor Master Mason llegree.
pected hearing problems day on May I. He. is now
Thursday, April29
along with a hearing screen residing in Belpre with his
POMEROY - The four test for children, ages birth to daughter ·and son-in-law,
local chapter&lt;. of Beta Sigma 21. Sherry Weese ,should be Thonda and Daren Cogar.
Phi Sorority will celebrate the contacted to schedule an Card' may be sent to him
7:lrd anniversary of the appointment 992-6626. The there, 1308 #2 Hocking Road ,
,
founding of the international . clinic is offered free of charge Belpre; 45714.
Thesday
May
4
women's organization and the bv the Ohio Department of
CHESTER- Ethel Orr will
55th anniversary of the first Health and the Meigs County
celebrate
her 99th birthday on
Health
Department.
local chapter with a Founder's
Day Dinner at the Riverside
POMEROY
Meigs May 4. Cards may be sent to her
Golf C'luh in Ma;on. Social County Health Department at the Northview Senior Living
time will begin at 6:30 p.m. will conduct a childhood Center, 267 N. Main .St .. ·
The dinner will be served at 7 immunization clinic from 9 to Johnstown , Ohio, 43031.
p.m.
II and I to 3 p.m. on Tuesday
NEW HAVEN -Mildred
at
the
health
department.
Fry will observe her 90th
CHESTER Special
meetino · of Shade · River
Children must be accoillpa- birthday on May 4. Cards may
Lodge "'#453. 7 p.m .. with nied by a parent or legal be sent to her at P.O. box 75 ,
wo rk 111 Master Mason guardian, and shot records New Haven. W. Va. 25265.

Birthdays

Clubs and

organizations

Other events

.

TIME OUT FOR TIPS
0

Parents should weigh feediJlg options
New parents need to decide
if the mother will breast feed
or bottle feed . Both options
should be weighed carefu lly
before making the decision.
Breast-feeding has many
advantages. To begin with,
mother"s milk is more nutritious than formula. It is
exactl y what the baby needs.
Even though companies have
tried to duplicate breast milk.
they have not be able to perfect it.
During the first six months
of life. an infant cannot pro- ,
duce certain immunities. The
breast milk supplies the.se
immunities to ward off illness. Breast milk. of course.
helps to increase the bonding
that occurs between mother
and child . Not only is the
bre~st milk nature's way of
feeding babies , but there are
also other advantages. Breast
milk doesn't cost anything.
You don't have to run to the
store to get it - it is always ·
there. There are no bottles to
wash or prepare . The milk (s

POMEROY - Members
of the Meigs County
Retired
Teachers
Association discussed pension funding for the five
public retirement systems
in Ohio during the association's recent luncheon
meeting. held at Trinity
Church.
State
Rep.
Jimmy
· Stewart, R-Athens, wa s
~uest speaker. and was
introduced by President
Gay Perrin. He reviewed
llou se Bill 227. and highli ghted "Buy Ohio,'' a portion of the bill opposed by
1he Ohio Senate.
·
Stewart also discussed"
eq ual funding for schools
and th e need to reduce
reliance on property taxes.

II :00am- 10:30pm ·

LUCQ
·Number
Tl
F
L

meetings

DILES

Maxine Whitehead and
Jean Alkire reported on the
spnng conference . The
Meigs County chapter
received the only two
awards presented at the district
meeting:
the
President's Award, and an
award and $25 for the successfu I retirement planning
seminar for active teachers.
Joan Corder, Ida Diehl.
Nadine Goebel, Janice
Weber and Barbara Tripp
also attended.
Perrin thanked members
who brought items for
Serenity House, and reported that Kate Jarrell , a for mer member. ha11 died.
Debbie Roush 11&lt;lted that
some retired teachers are
not eligible for Medicare

Pat A and the need for
increased pensions "for older
retirees.
Eileen Buck and John
Riebel, Sr., thanked the
association for cards they
had received.
Potted pansies donated by
Roush were given to
Kathleen Scott , Vinas Lee,
Elma Louks, Helen Maag.
Nellie Parker and Eileen
Buck, all of whom began
their teaching careers in the
1920's and 1930 's.
Tlie next meeting will be
held May 20 at the Wild
Horse Cafe, with Jane Ann
Aanestad as guest speaker.
Dana Kessinger gave .
devotions before the meal.
served by members of the
church to 3{) in attendance.

Coming Today in the Sentinel...

SHOE CO.

With Mw vehicle purchase.
See 'lllmplke for dotallo.

some advantages. Bottle
feeding allows the mother
more freedom. She doesn't
have to be available for every
feeding or pump her breasts.
The father and other family
Becky
members and friends can
Baer
, help with the baby's feeding .
This will help develop a
closeness between the entire
family and the baby. Bottle
feeding can be done anyalways the right temperature. where.
The disadvantages of bottle
Nursing . a baby also allows
the mother to recover from feeding include the fact that it
childbirth more rapidly by is very expensive. It may be
helping the uterus get back hard to fi nd th,e right formula
for the baby. The formula
into shape.
The disadvantages of won't be as healthy as breast
breast-feeding include the · milk. It also takes time to prerestrictions placed on the pare the bottles, store them
mother. She has to be avail- properly and clean up afterable. She has to watch her wards.
To breast or bottle feed is a
diet by eating right, drinking
lots of milk and avoiding personal choice that parents
spicy foods and medications will need to make . The
(including birth control pdls) . advantages of both methods
If she feels stress, she may shou ld be considered, but the
not be able to produce health benefits of breastfeeding shou ld be of primary
enough milk.
Bottle feeding also has concern.

Retired teachers discuss pension$

81111111111. 1111145831'

Tue· 7:30-7:00 Sat s·:oo · t2:00

Community Calendar
Pu~lic

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PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, April27, 2004

·Being chosen as bridesmaid
can .become a costly -honor
DEAri ABBY: I am writing regarding your response
to "Re-Fit to Be Tied ,"
whose daughter has been
asked to be a bridesmaid.
You advised her that as long
as a bridesmaid's dress is
.. identical." it doesn't matter
where it is purchased. You
went on to add that if the
bride insists the dress be
purchased from a particular
store in her area. then the
bride should foot the bill. I
disagree.
I am a former wedding
-orgaAizer. Dye lots are
extremely important when it
comes to bridesmaids' dres'es. If the fabric isn't from
\he same dye lot. the chances
of the ''odd-dre ss-out ..
matching the others is very
slim. In fact , it's recommended that the shoes be
dyed all at once and that
they be matched to an actual
swatch from one of the
dresses ·_ not a samp le
swatch from the bridal .,hop.
As to alterations. I have
never seen .a bridesmaid's
dre ss that fit "off the rack''
Alterations are par for the

Dear
Abby

on thi' one. I wa' inundmeJ
wi1h similar kiter,. I suspect
that the burllcn .on bride'&gt;·
maids increa&gt;ed around tile
time thai bride&gt; began using
their '' edding' a, platform'
to lil'e ou1 their fantasie, .
Read on:
DEAR ABBY: I read your
column every da1 and usually. anrec
1\ itJi •I OUr aJI'iCee
but not thi , time . To' get
dre"e' that are perfectly .
mat~hin~.
thev .muq be '
orderell cal Ihe· 'a me time
fmm" the 'arne d1e lot.
Otherwi,e .•the ,haJe...;;an .be 'nuticeahh different. Tru\t
me. nuthln~ look" \\ or~e in
picture' th~tn ha1 ing three
nl\;tl-olue dre'"~' and one
,11-~hlil teal. That brille i' not
bci1i~ ·unrea,onahle. Thanb
for Ji,tening ~ 11nd keep up the
~ood work. OFfEN A
BRIDES!viAID. 0'\CE A
BRIDE I\ ll.LI:\OIS
DEAR OFfE:"J: ;-,/m\ vou
tell me~ From the omlau"ght
of letter' I hm e recei1·ed on
'thi' \ubjcct. I mu't remind
readers ihat if 1(&gt;U a~ree tC1 be
" hricJe,maiJ . it 'is yo ur
responsibility to 'boulder the
co,t of the dre" and alter;Hion,. Otherwi,c. 1ou ,hould
decline the honor hccau'e of
tinanciitl hard,hip.
Dear Ahl&gt;r i.1 Hriltm br
Ahigail \lair Buren. ,r/s(,
kno1, .,, as l ea/lilt' Plrillijll·. and
1ru\ tinmded In her morhet:
Pauline PlrilliJ&gt;:,. \\l-ire Deur
Abbr til li 'm d)eurAhl" .cum

your answer carefully.
-r2J Don 't be afraid to ask
the bride if the maids· outfits
are going to be moderately
priced. By simply asking her
in a 'tactful wav. the bride ·
will hopefully take the cmt
of this '"honor.. into consideration before making her
choice .
(3) If you are distant. find
a local bridal 'hop that ,eJh
that particular line of bridesmaids· drc'sses and have
your lllf001suremenh taken.
· Once vou are certain abmit
the size of the drc" l'ou ·11
need. based on the manufa~­
IUrer's size chart. ,end that
information to 1hc shop
orderinu the drc S&gt;e,.
(4) B'e prepared for additional costs such as altercourse .
ation\, pantyhose anll 'hoe,.
When a woman agrees to and plan accord ingly.
be in a wedding, the costs
I'm not sure "hen the
·can be prohibitive, but they honor of being a modern ·
are the responsibility of the day ·.. lad y in w~iting .. got to
per&gt;on being given the place be so expensi\e. hut it d1d .
of '·honor." I suggest that Good luck to vour reader, .
potential bridesmaids do the Abby! - JENNIFER M..
following:
MANCHESTER. N.H.
(I ) Make su re the bride
DEAR JENNIFER \1. :
knows how flattered you are You arc a sweetheart to lend or ·p 0. Bo.\ fif! ..J.IO. l.o.1
to be asked. but consider your professional experti&gt;e Angeles. C4 9!1069. ·

Russo named editor for WOUB ·
ATHENS-· Cheri Ru,so
has been named news .managing editor/reporter for the·
WOUB Newsroom.
Russo is a 1996 graduate of
Ohio University with a
degree in broadcast journalism. She leaves a job as
bureau chief at a station in
Youngstown. Russo also has
had news anchor and reporter
, experience . in Rhinelander,
W1sc., and Mansfield.
Russo's principal role i~
the newsroom is to supervise

the students in the production of Newswatch. WOUB ·
TV's ni ghtly tel ev ision
newscast. Her goals center
around encouraging the stu·

dents to grow in journa lism
whi le continuin~ to make
NeW';watch an out,tanding
n ew ~ ~ource

.

Celebrating special
days with you .

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

•

The Daily Sentinel
(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 110 law respecting an
• .or.pr&lt;O 111'b'rtwg
· .t1lC -- "" ' • e..staa blts• hnteltt.OJ,(.rel'tg.wn,
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
o* speech, or of the press; or the right of tile
:J
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grie11a11ces.

...• ,lf · ~1min~· 1 ~1erJ1• in&gt;cnsi1i,··i-

-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Moderately Confused
A LE;S~ER­

KNOWN FRATERNITY...

\DELTA &amp;AD HAND.'

I
I

Tuesday, April

Tuesday, April27, 2004

t) ·· ~And ~NAACP Nation al
Chairman Julian Bond pmc·laimcd that "a vote for
Pickering is a vote against
ci,il rights."
Most damaging · has been
the charge - · carelesslv cir. c•ulated ·nationwide by inany
in the media
that
PiLkering weilt to Jextraordinar) lengths 10 years ago to
lessen the sentence for one
of three white men who
burned a ctms at the home
of an interracial• couple in
tvl i;.si"ippi.
But. at last. in a March 28
"60 Minutes" segment. Mike
Wallace reslored Pickering's
reputation in a report from
Mississippi showing 16 mil"
lion CBS viewers the actual
facts of Pickering's record on and off the bench.
As for Pickering's "glaring
racial insensitivity": In 1966,
al'ler civil rights leader
Vernon Damer was killed by
a lirebomb. a Ku Klux Klan
commander, Sam Bowers,
was charged wilh the mur-

Nat
Hentoff

der. As a county prosecutor,
Pickering. at considerable
peril to his life. teslilied rhat
Bowers had a history of violence . When Pickering was
suhSequently defeated. in a
~ re-e"ie€tion •bid Jor ·Ihe ,stllle
legislature. the Klan braaged
it l1ad cau,ed his defeat."
Moreover. Pickering said
to Wallace. that when racism
was rife in Mississippi. "We
sent nur children to rhe inteor&lt;lled schools, even though
~here was a good privale
schoolle" than a block from
our home. We supported
integrated public education."
A' a defense lawyer during · the early
1980s.
Pickering continued. he took
the case of "a young black
man who was charged with
robbing a young while girl at
knifepoinl. And il was not a
popular case for me to take
on. But I thought he was
innocent and !hat he needed
a defense. I didn't think he
would have gotten a good
attorney olherwise. He was
acquitted."
With regard to the crossburning case, the fact (as
journali sts from The New
York . Times,
National
Review, Atlanta JournalCon.stitution and I have

..

reported) i' that Pickering
Pickering told Wallace that
acted in rhe interest of jus- "To accuse a white southernlice.
er of being a racist is about
Two of the white cross- the worsl thing you can do. I
burners accepted plea bar- have worked for more than
gains and served no jail time. three decades lrying to proOne of them was the ring- vide better relations between
leader, who had shot into the· the ra~es. ~rying to protect
house before the cross-burn- equal rights. That's my core
ing took place. and had a his• being. And they've attacked
tory of violence against that." ·
blacks.
Yet. in a series of ongoing
The third de(endant. editorials on Pickering, The
Daniel Swan. who had no New York Times continues
such record. was offered a to find him wanting on civil
much harsher plea deal with rights and keeps ~epeating
.jail lime. and went to trial that his :tction· in the c~oss..., llliitearL Rtckllrmg .told ,Mike .... bummg •: :tse.. cltsqul\ltfte~
Wallace that il was the worst him fro m , itting on the 5th
case of disproponionale sen- Circuit Cnurt of Appeals,
tencing he had ever seen.
despite .:ontrary facts raised
Accordingly. he pressured by the paper's own reporlers.
the federal prosecutors to
As for Charles Schumer,
drop part of Swan's convic- the Democrats' httman on
lion under the federal "hate Pickering- he told Wallace
cnme''
laws
so
that that "the bottom line is if
Pickc ri n~ could sentence Judge Ptckenng were so sen-:
him · 27 months in jail sitive to the long and sad·
rather tllan 7-1/2 years. The racial history in Mississippi,National Review reported he would never have done
thai one of the prosecutors what he did with the case of
eventually wrote thai "he cross-burning."
personally agreed with the
Paraphrasing what a
judge !hat !he (original) sen- defense attorney said lo Joe
tence was draconian."
McCarthy in the ArmyAlso on "60 Minutes." McCarlhy - hearings on .
Mike Wallace emphasized alleged communists in our'
that, "many black attorneys land: At long last. Sen.
who practice before him say Schumer, have you no sense
Pickering is fair and first- of decency?
rate." One of them. Deborah
(Nat Henrojf is" IW(iana/Gambrell , a Democrar. said lr renoll'ned awlwritr on the
she has appeared before him First Amendment (md the .
year after year. including Bill of' Rights lind author of
representing the NAACP in se1·eral books, includi11g his
a case, and was "shocked currmt 1rork.. ''The War on
and appalled" at the charges tlte Bill (){ Rights a11d the
that Pickering is "insensilive Gathering
Resista11ce"·
on racial issues."
!Sam Stories Press. 2003) . .

E~plosion levels suspected chemical weapons

Charley Chaffins

l

I

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

27, 2004

Obituaries

Pickering's reputation_restored

For two years. Federal
District Court Judge Charles
Pickering. a Missi"ippi
Republican. has suffered
continuous character assassination bv Senate Democrats
who ha\e filibustered his
nomination by President
Bush to the 5th Circuit Court
of Appeals. He is on that
bench now only because of a
temporary recess appoint m.:nt.
The assault&gt; on the judge
haH' been led by Sen .
Charles Schumer of New
York. who ha' accused hun

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

IT~

PageA4

building in Baghdad; fighting erupts in Fallujah

BAGHDAD. Iraq (AP) - ducing and supplying chemiPOMEROY .- Charley Chaffins, 73. Pomeroy. passed
A
suspected
chemical cal agents" to Iraqi insuraway at hts restdence on April 22. 2004.
weapons warehouse exploded gems. but did nol elaborate.
He ~as born on March 19. 1931. in Wayne County, W.Va ..
in flames Monday momenls
The blast leveled rhe front
son ot Thomas Chaffins of Crum. WV, and the late Bessie
after U.S. troops broke in to half of the one-story building
Chap!Jlan Chaffins. He "'as a veteran of the U. S. Army. He
search it, killing two soldiers arid set ablaze four Humvees
was lormerly employed,l1s a Master Mason in Michigan and
and wounding five. Jubilanl parked putside. A U.S. solhe relired from General Motors.
Iraqis swarmed over !he dier .was Iuken away on a
In addition to his mother, he was preceded i~ death by a
Americans' charred Humvees. stretcher. her chest and face
brother, Wrlltam Harnson Chaflins.
.
waving fooled machine guns. severely burned. Several
Besides his farher, he is survived by his wife: Judy·Chaflins
a bandolier and a helmet .
Iraqis were pulled from the
of Luther, Mich.; his sons: Charl~s (Lotlie) Chalins- of
In Fallujah. U.S. troops wreckage,
inclu(ling
a
Crossville, Tenn., and Luther (Karen) Chaffins. Orian·
came under a heavy insur- woman who wept as she was
Township. Mich.; a daughter. Mona Clark of Pomeroy:
gent anack a day after U.S. carried over a man's shoulnumerous grandchildren and great grandchildren; a brother, ·
officials decided to extend a der to safely.
Glenn: and four sisters: Mary Lou, Geraldine, NeJiie and
cease-lire rather than launch
Afterward. dozens of
Cordta. .
·
·
a full-scale offensive on the cheering teenagers started I(\
Private services will be conducted for !he family. There will " cily. One Marine and eight
be no· calli'ng hours or visitation.
·
··
.smash.
abandoned
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!~
insurgents were killed .
Humvees. lhe
One child
climbed ·L
Arrangements are under the direction of Fisher Funeral
Marines battled Sunni on a hood of one of the vehiHome in Pomeroy.
guerrillas around a mosque in cles and bear it with a stick. A A British Army soldier guards the area near a damaged tanker
On-line condolences may be scm to www.tisherfuneralFa,llujah's Jolan dislrict. a man held up a photo of radi- truck after an attack on a convoy in Basra. southern Iraq,
homes.com
poor neighborhood where cal Shiite cleric Muqlada al- Monday. One British sotdter was wounded in the attack. a
insurgents are cbncentrated .. Sadr. Iraqis stripped the vehi- British military spokesman said. (AP Photo/ Nabil AI-Jurani)
Helico'pter gunships joined cles of equipment one carry- on steps the coalition was city, except the Jolan area,
the battle, . which sen! heavy ing a heavy machine gun, ready to take to do so. He probably on Thursday. There
black smoke over the city. another waving a U.S. hel' noled that in the case of mili- was lillie guarantee that guerTank fire demolished a met. One man sporled mili·
1
·
tary
actton.
"t
1ose places of rillas. who Marines say have
tary
headphones.
minaret from which officials
'This
is
for
the
madman
worship
are
not protecled not abided by other parts of
said gunmen were firing.
under
the
Geneva past negotiated agreements,
shop
quartet,
"Under
The U.S. troops met "a real Bush, for the madman convention" if they are used won't allack the palrols.
Construction," will entertain.
nasty bunch," .said Lt. Col. Bremer~" said one youth as lo store weapons.
In Najaf, the Spanish ba;e
Reunion
years
will
be
Brennan Byrne, commander he waved a rifle, 'feferring to
· RACINE
_
Racine
Shiite
militias
remain
a
is
pockmarked with shells
of !he 1sl Battalion, 5th Presidenl Bush and the top threat in other cities.
American Legion Post #602 1934, 1944. 1954. 1964,
and shrapnel from earlier
Marine Regiment. Bui he American adminisrrator in
will have a pub Iic ham and 1974. 1984, 1994, and 2004.
Miliriamen
ambushed
attacks.
The golden domes of
said the violence would nol Iraq, L. Paul Bremer.
1urkey dinner on May 2. Members of the Class of
Spanish
troops
in
the
city
of
the
Shiite
·shrines at NaJ·af's
In the south, outside the Diwaniyah. south of Najaf. center - a no-go zone for
deter plans to begin joint
beginning at 11 a.m. The cos! 1954 will be special guests
for their 50th reunion.
U.S.-Iraq patrols in the city. holy city of Najaf, Shiite and in rhe ensuing battle. six the Americans - were visiis $6. '
The cost is $1 7 - $1 0 for
The patrols are a key part militiamen in cars fired rock- Iraqi gunmen were killed . ble from inside the comthe meal and $7 for dues.
of the U.S. effort to establish et-propelled grenades at a Insurgents in KarbaJ.a fired at pound. Spanish troops are .
Reservations must be made
a semblance of control over U.S. position. wilnesses said. Bulgarian President Georgi due to leave within days. and
by May 15. Information is
Fallujah withoitt a wider Apache helicoplers and U.S. Parvanov's
motorcade the Americans moved in to
CHESTER - A special available from Wilmarine
Marine assault, which would troops opened fire and set the Sunday as he made a brief ensure al-Sadr militiamen did
meeting of the Shade River Hill al (304) 773-5836 or Dee
revive the bloody warfare cars ablaze.
visit to his country's troops. not overrun the site.
Lodge #453 will be held at 7 Bumgardner at {304) 773The clash came as around No one in !he motorcade wa&gt;
seen earlier this month. The
The move also gi\eS U.S.
p.m. on Thursday, with work 5488.
Uniled Stales decided to try 200 U.S. troops and Military hurt.
forces
a foothold in NaJaf
in the Masler Mason degree.
the patrols after President Police made their firs!
The deaths of the two sol- from which to pressure alA special meeling will be
Bush consulted with his com- deployment inside NaJaf. diers ii1 Baghdad and the Sadr. He is holed up in the
held at 7 p.m. on Wednesday.
manders over the weekend. moving into a base that Manne
· 111
· Fa11 UJa
· h broug ht to center ul· the city near the
with practice for Master
the
cease-fire
was
and
Spanish troops are vacating ·114 the number of U.S. shrines. where his militiamen
RUTLAND - Staff of
Mason degree.
about five miles from holy troops k'll
extended
in
part
to
allow
for
- 1arge 1y control t he streets.
1 ed ·111 com bat so Jar
Meigs County Tuberculosis
to
be
organized.
patrols
shrines
at
the
heart
of
the
city.
this
month
nearly
as
many
· The base. which houses
Office wi ll be at Rutland
U.S. cotJlmanders have as· the 115 Americans killed Salvadoran and · Spanish
Brig.
Gen.
Mark
Kimmitt
Firehouse from 4:30 to 6:30
did not say what sort of said they will not move during the invasion that top- troops. is in the modern part
p.m. on May 3 forTB resting.
RUTLAND Rutland The staff will return from
chemical munirions were against the shrines in order to pled Saddam Hussein a year of Na.J·ar. an urban extension
ai -Sadr.
The ago.
·
Township Trustees will meet 4:30 to 6 p.m. on May 5 to
believed to be produced at capture
· that melds with the neighborthe Baghdad warehouse. Americans say they 're aware
in regular session at 5 p.m. on read lesls.
The fighting in Fallujah ing city of Kufa.
May 3 at the Rutland
After the blast. the re was no that doing so could turn the was the latest violence to
The U.S. military will take
sign of precaulions against cleric's limiled revolt into a shake a two-week-old cease- over security dutie~ throughFirehouse.
chemicals. ·'Chemica l muni- wider anti-U.S. uprising by fire.
oul Najar province and the
tions could mean any number Iraq's Shiite majuriry.
Stil l, U S. officials said neighboring province . of
of things:· including smoke
In Baghdad. however. they wanted to press forward Qadisiyah after the wilhgrenades. he said.
Bremer heightened warnings with a political track, a day drawal
of
Spanish.
POMEROY- A 30-target
The cause of the blast also about the reported stockpil- after abruptly toning down Doniinican and Honduran
was unclear. Kimmitt said a ing of weapons in "mosques, threats to · launch a fttll-llut forces this month, said a
SALEM CENTEJ- Star 3D archery shoot will be held
01i
Sunday
at
the
Chester
large number of explosives shrines and schools" in Najaf assault on the city.
Polish spokesman. whose
Grange #778 and Slar Junior
his spokesman noted
'W ·11 k h ·
· 1·
1 d
1·
were in the building, locared -thaiand
Grange #878 wi ll meet in Bow Hunters and Archery
such actions make the
· e wt ta e I e 'It me nee- counrry s orces ea mu t1Club
on
Pomeroy
Pike,
with
in
the
northern
neighborhood
regular session on Saturday
essary to see if there is not a nalional peacekeepers in tlfe
of Waziriyah.
s.ites fair targets for military political solution." Secretary area.
with a potluck supper al 6:30 proceeds lo benefil the Meigs
County Relay for Life.
• Asked about reports that action.
p.m., and meeling at 7:30.
The extension of U.S•.
of Stale Colin .Power s·aid
Registration
is
at
9
a.m.,
the
search
team
included
"The
coalilion
cerlainly
Monday.
~·But
as
you
saw
forces
wou ld be a major
Final plans for the Meigs
with
the
180
and
bow-hunter
members
of
lhe
Iraq
Survey
will not tolerate lhis situa- today, when our s.oldiers and reversal of American efforts
County Spring Rally, 10 be
Group- the U.S. team look- lion," Bremer said in a state- our Marines are attacked, to hand security duties in the
held May 16, will be made. style shoot beginning at 2
ing for weapons of mass ment addressed to residents they will respond and · they soulh to its allies. But the
All ·members are urged 10 p.m. The cost is $7 per adult,
wilh
a
maximum
pay
of
lhree
destruction
- Kimmitt said of Najaf. "The resloration of will respond with force lo coalition has been frayed by
allen d.
players per family.
only: "The inspeclion was by lhese holy places to calm protect themselves."
the Spanish-led pullout and
Refreshments will be availa number of coalilion places of worship must begin
U.S. lroops and Iraqi secu- the eruplion of lighting in the
able.
forces."
tmmedialely."
rily forces are .to start previously more peaceful
Bremer's spokesman, Dan
Informalion is available by
He said the owner of rhe Senor.
would not elaborate patrolling mosl parts of !he south.
· calling 992-7393.
site · was "suspected of proMASON,
W.Va.
Wahama
High . School
Alumni
Association
is
preparing for rhe annual
reunion and banquel, to be
Barrell. Ahbie was born at
Mall and
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
held May 29 al the high
8:32 a.m .. March 2, 2004.
Jessie
Garden Club will meet at
.school cafereria.
at
Holzer Medical Center.
Barrett
of
Doors will open at 5 p.m .. I :30 p.m. on Thursday at
Langsville
She weighed 6 pounds.
and dihner. prepared by Syracuse Community Center.
7
ounces and was 20
are
proud
Order of Easrern Star, will be Extension Agent Hal Kneen
inches
long . Maternal
0
served at 6 p.m. The barber- · will have the program.
announce
grandparent~ are Gary and
Pam Lyons of Gallipolis.
the
birth
Paternal grandparenls are
of
their
first child,
Dave Barrett of Gallipolis
and measured 18 and threeHagy of
A b b i e Abbie Baree and Ginny
CROWN
quarlers inches long. She has
Cheshire.
CITY
B a r e e
Barrett
black hair and blue eyes.
Mark
D.
· Her father is Spc. Mark D.
and Crystal
Bostic.
He is employed by the
Bostic of
Development
. the commercial plant at that is atl ad hoc member to the Bu&gt;iness
3664th Mainlenance Co ..
Crown City
location. Justice previously board of directors lo The Center. He served as a memArmy Nalional Unit. Point
are proud
University ber of the Wellston Board of
worked for the Ohio Ohio State
Pleasant. W.Va. and is . curt
0
Endeavor
Cenler
business
Departmenl
of
from Page A1
Education from l994- 1997
rently deployed lo Iraq for
announce
tn incubator in Piketon.
Transportation
Operation: Iraqi Freedom.
the arrival
Justice received the Ohio and 2000-2003. and was
Chillicothe.
Justice successfully manHer mother, Crystal , is a
of
!heir
Regi()nal vis:e presidem of the board in
Justice is currenlly a mem- Valley
aged Ohio's sire selection ber of the Southern Ohio Development Commissim1's
daughter. Alslynn Evette beaulician at Fantastic Sam's.
1997. 2002. and :!003.
leam leading to USEC's Agriculture and Community 2003 Area
Maternal grandparetlls are
Aislynn
Bostic
Leadership
"I undersrand the ki'nd of
2002 decision to locate !he Dcv'elopment Foundation Award and wa s named
Jim Gooderham of Crown
Evette
Lead Cascade in Piketon and economic
Bostic. Aislynn was born at City and Debra Gooderham
development Advocate of the Year in problems local gove.rnments
!heir
2004
decision
to
locale
grandparof
Vinton;
paternal
9:58 p.m., Dec. 19. 2003, at
committee in Hillsboro and 2000 by the Ohio Small face:· he said.
ems arc Mark and Lenora
Holzer Medical Center.
She weighed six pounds Bostic of Gallipolis.
the fact that Young was previously on ing to work these problems out and it
council for more than three years and has repeatedly a&gt;ked tioth Krautter and
did little to change things then.
John Anderson, the village adminislra· from Page A1
Young said he does not blame tor. to attend council i11eetings to
Musser~ but instead said council
an~ wer que&gt;tions about the progress of
!he mayor to make changes
empowers
Council member Mary McAngus
The Daily Sentinel
. project&gt; in the vi II age - but to no end.
said there are some good workers in lhe and that it should do more about the
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Council member Jim Sisson said nol to departments.
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blame council especially considering
Spaun shot back !hat council was try' the &gt;trcet department get to in lime.

Local Briefs

Dinner planned

Lodge meets

Clinic offered

Trustees to meet

THEY CAN HIDE
THE COFFINS,
·BUT...

Grange sets
meeting

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The Daily Sentinel

Archery
shoot set

ran lhe oil supply company
before George W. Bush
An Internet ad is showing asked him to join the 2000
up on John Kerry Web sites ticket. A company subattacking a U.S. contractor sidiary, KBR (formerly
whose subsidiary workers known as Kellogg), has
are driving supply trucks in truckers driving the roads of
Iraq. and somerimes paying Iraq.
The bodies of rhree of
for it with !heir lives.
The ad ; hows a billboard Halliburton's drivers were
sign emblazoned with the found last week not far from
name "Halliburton," the where their fuel convoy was
multinational that has won auacked in Iraq. While not in
&gt;everal U.S. humanilarian the U.S. armed forces, they
conlracls to help wilh Iraq\ nevertheless were part of the
reconstruction. Next 10 the effort to bring peace , freebillboard picture is this cap- dom and democracy to this
tion : "For the firs! time in war-torn country.
Stephen Hulett, 48, of
hislory, a corporali~n was
Mich .; . Jack
allowed to invade a nalion." Manistee,
. This is a low blow against Momague, 52. of Pittsburg,
an American corporation IlL ; and Jeffery Parker, 45, of
whose workers are ;acrific- Lake Charles, La. were in
ing life and limb lo help sup- every sense of the word
ply food. medicine and other American heroes - doing a
crilical rebuilding supplies to dirty job rhat needed doing
and that few olhers, no matter
the Iraqi people.
Halliburton has become whal !he money, would dare
Kerry's favorite corporate to do. A fourth Halliburton
whipping boy because of its driver In rhe convoy, Thomas
association
wilh
Vice Hamill of Macon. Miss., seen
Prc&gt;ident Dick Cheney, who on news videotape just before

BY DONALD i.AMBRO

Barrett birth announced

Sunday Times-Sentinel
740-446-2342

Bostic new arrival.

Justice

' away, attacking a legilimale, for- ·
his captors took him
was still missing as of this profit U.S. contracror who,
among other things. is sim~·
writing.
It's extraordinarily doubt- ply trying to keep Iraq's vital' ·
ful that these men saw !hem- supply. lines running, is not
selves as "invaders" rather an agenda for change; it's
than people helping a nation gutter politics of !he worst ·
kind.
in the ·throes of chaQge.
And !his is what Kerry's .
Kerry has been working
Halliburton into his stump · campaign surrogates are
speeches, trying to persuade doing with rheir silly implivoters that Bush's war and cations that !his war is also
rhe Halliburron contracl are aboul Lraqi oil.. As of last
all about Big Oil and higher week, the U.S. Coalition
gas prices and illicit deals- Provisional Authority runwhen this is really all aboul ning Iraq deposited more
defeating terrorism and than $7.54 billion in Iraq's
building a democratic gov- Development Fund, money
ernment in rhe heart of rhe from the country's oil exports
Middle East to serve as a role . since the fall of Saddam
model lor the· rest of !he Hussein's regime. Under a .
2003 U.N. Security · Council .
region.
In a recent column, I quol- resolution , all of the oil reved one of Kerry's national enues mus1 be spent on the
security supporters and other country's reconslruction.
And that is in fact where
analysts who complained
that on the issues of terrorism Iraq's vast oil wealth is
and the war in Iraq. he was going . If Halliburton can.
all attach and no solutions. help Iraq produce more of;
all pessimism and no opti- !hat wealth, all the bener fiJF!
rhe Iraqi people -. and for ,
mism.
Running Internet ads America's national ;,ecurity.

-..,.

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PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, April 27,

2004

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
~aseball scores and standings, Page B2

Rio track finishes seventh, Page B6

Parishioners support priest
charged with killing nun
,

NewsChannel

Market watch

A DAY ON WALL STREET
---------·· --·--·· ···--···--

_______________ __________
.,_

---------

----------

Apnl26 2004

10,750

Dow Jones
industrials

10,250

Apnl26.2004

10,444.73

Nasdaq

·13.00

composite

2,036.77

Standard &amp;
Poor's 500

.fi.07

- - - -- - -- - - - - 9,750

-28.11
10.444.73
Pet. cnange

lrom previous: -0 27

- - - - . . . , - - - : c - 9,250

JAN
High
10.512.79

FEB
Low
10.41 812

MAR

APR

Record high: 11,722.98
Jan 14 . 2000

=·----~"'--=-=·---==·'--·=·
··~=--~~
Apn126 , 2004
2,200

'
l

-2L11

Dow Jones

Industrials

Nasdaq
composite

~Pv

Russell
2000

2.000

-----------1800

·13.00
JAN

Prt chqe

FFR
Low

High

MAR

APR

,

Record high : 5,048.62

-~~ pre~~~~-~~---=~~59 ~--:~:~-~~-~-~rdl~:!~-----~
-

· Apnl 26, 2004

Standard &amp;
Poor's 500

-

-

-

•

1

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

1,135.53
Pet chatge
from pnrvlou" -0 .44

1.229 · New highs
126
~~~--·New lows
Unchanged :
165
213

"
oe"'c"'ll~ned
=,~-2-0_5_5

Volume : 1.658,345.690

Nasdaq diary

1 , "'

1.100

1,322 Newhlgho
147
Declined:
1.829 New lows
25
Unchanged :
264
Volume : 1.701.380,925

Advanced :

- - - -- - -- - - - - - 1.000

-5.07

JAN
High
1,145.08

FEB
LOw
1. 132.91

589.45

Advanced:

- - - - - - - 1.200

-pr:"""
~
., 'rrc;
c,J"""'A-~1~r~c-,c-z:-r"'..if....-..- ·

,·UII

NYSE diary

1 600

2,036.77

1,135.53

1.000

MAR
APA
Record high: 1.527.46
Mardl 24, 2000

AP

AP.

Local Stocks
ACI - 33.24
AEP -· 30.g2
Akzo - 37.22
Ashland Inc . - 48.9 1
BBT - 34.70
BLI - 14.62
Bob Evans - 31.2 1
Borg Warner- S7.17
City Holding- 33.15
Champion- 4.50
Charmin~; Shops - 7.36
' Col - 3L.96
DuPont- 44.99
DG - - 18.71
Federa l, Mogul - .355

Gannett- 89.00
General Electric- 30.75
GKNLY - 4.40
Harley Davidson- 57.46
Kmart - 46.17
Kroger - 17.50
Ltd - 21.07
NSC- 23.93
Oak Hill Financial- 32.02
Bank One - 50.60
OVB- 34.40
Peoples - 24.70
Pepsico - 54.69
Premier- 8.75
Rocky Boots - 28.34

RD Shell - 48.45
Rockwell - 34.41
Sears - 41 .56
SBC- 25.50
AT&amp;T-18.31
USB -26.00
Wendy's- 39.85
Wal -Mart - 58.14
Worthington.- 19.04
Daily stock reports arc the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the
previous day 's transactions,
provided by Smith Partners at
Ad vest Inc. of Gallipolis.

Sunday Times-Sentinel
Subscribe today ¥ 740-992-2155

TOLEDO
(AP)
Parishioners and friends of a
Roman Catholic priest
charged with the 1980
kil ling or a nun began col lecting money Monday to •
pay for his release from jail
and legal bills.
TI1e Rev. Gerald Robinson.
appearing
tired
and
unshaven. made an initial
appearance but did not enter a ·
plea to the murder charge ·
Monday in Toledo Municipal
Court. Judge Mary Trimboli
set bond at $200.000.
Robinson,
66,
was
charged Friday with killing
Sister Margaret Ann Pahl. The old wing rof Toledo's
Hospital, shown in this aerial
who was strangled and view Monday, is where the Rev. Gerald Robinson used to be
stabbed about 30 times on chaplain. Robinson, 66, was charged Friday with killing Sister
Easter weekend in 1980. Her Margaret Ann Pah l, who was strangled and stabbe.d about 30
body was found in a hospital times on April 5. 1980. Her body was found i~ a hospital
chapel , surrounded by lit chapel, surrounded by lit candles with her arms folded across
candles with her arms folded her chest. (AP)
,
across her chest.
Robinson 's former secre- case in December after the
Robinson later performed the
funend for the 71-year-old nun. tary said he was dedicated to Lucas County · Prosecutor' s
office received a letter.
·
Robinson,
wearing a the church.
"If you needed a priest in the assistant prosecutor Gary
brown jail jumpsuit. said
nothing during the brief middle of the night to give Cook said Monday. He
hearing. His lawyer. John someone their last rites, he was would not say who sent the
letter or whal it contained.
Thebes. told the judge his there," Bea Orlowski said. ·
Investigator~ began look client was not a flight risk·.
Investigators re-examined
"He's not going anywhere. the nun's killing after a ing through files and found
He hasn' t·gone anywhere in woman told a Diocesan old evidence that grabhed
24 years," Thebes said. He Review Board in June thm their attention.
Based &lt;mold ev idence and
was hopeful that enough she was sexually and physimoney wou ld be raised to cally abused as a chi ld by tech nology that allowed
Toledo diocesan and reli- them 10 analyze blood patget Robinson out of jail.
"We will take any finan - gious-order priests during terns. thev conc luded that
the murder weapon. which
cial, emotional and prayer her rhildhood .
support we can take,"
Authorities said that while was not ident ified. was " in
they cou ld not &gt;ubstantiate the control of the suspec1 ...
The bes said.
Members of St. Anthony the woman's allegations, her said police detective Steve
Robinson Forrester. ·
church, where Robinson was mention .of
"Sometimes. a tl·esh set of
·
spurred
police
to
take
anotha pastor after the nun 's
death, were setting up a er look at Sister Pahl 's eyes allows you to begin rnak- .
legal defense fu nd for him . de.ath. Robinson had always ing connections."' Cook said. ·
They said they were sur- been a suspect in her death.
The dioces~ said it did not
prised anyone would accuse
The woman. now in her -turn over the woman's alleto
authorities
the priest of murder.
40s, described Satanic cere- gations
''I almost passed out," said monies in which priests because they had been made
Mary Ann Plewa. a distant placed her in a coffi n filled earlier and investigated.
.... cousin of the priest. "There· s with{cockroachcs·. forced her
The woman. though, was
no way he could've done to it gest what she believed "told by lhe diocese thai evetythis. I' d have to hear it from to be a human eyebal l and lhing _, tumed over." to prospenetrated her with a snake ecutors, said Claudia Vercelloti.
his mouth .
" He couldn't have lived "to consecrate these orifices a director of the Toledo olllce
lor SLtrvivors Network of tl10se
24 years and had that on his to Satan.''
In vestigators reopened the Abused by Priests.
mind," she said.

Indiana man admits to
robbing 43 banks in six states
The Ohio bank robberies
mum 20-year penalty. But
federa l prosecutors and the included seven in the
defense agreed that in Cincinnati area, two i.n or .
exchange for the pleas. he ncar Dayton and one in
would be sentenced to 21 Columbus from October
years in prison and ordered 2002 to November 2003.
authorities said.
to repay $175.141.
Brankle also robbed eight
Judge Sandra Beck with is
not bound by the recommen- banks in Indiana. II in
seven
in
dation . Brankl e remains Kentucky.
jai led will court officers pre- Tennessee. six in Missouri
pare a report for hi s sentenc- and one in Florida. authori ing. which wi ll be in two to ·ties said.
Fl~{!a.
three months.
Indiana
State
Police
He also pleaded guiliy to
A II the bank branches arrested Brankle on Dec. 31
one count each of carjacking were inside larger stores. in Knox 'county. Ind .. on a
and using a firearm during a leading authorities to dub charge of possessing a stolen
crime
of
violence. the culprit the "IBM bandit ," automobile . He was quesAuthorities said he stole a standing for "interstate bank tioned and turned over to
1999 BMW in Louisville, mart.'' Authorities said the federal authorities on Jan . 7,
Ky .. in March 2002.
thief used the same pattern the returned to Ohio later
Each count carries a maxi- and similar notes.
that month.

CINCINNATI (AP)- An
Indiana man pleaded guilty
Monday to federal charges
that he robbed 43 banks in
six states over two years and
. used a gun to steal a car.
David W. B rankle, 47, of
· Vi ncennes, Ind., entered the
pleas in U.S. District Court
to 43 co unts of unarmed
bank robbery in Ohio.
Indiana,
Kentucky,
·Tennessee, Mi ssouri and

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Tuesday, April27, 2004

Prep schedule
Today.'s games

Baseball
Ga1ila Academy at Ironton . 5 P.m.
A1~er Valley at Meigs 5 p.m.
Eastern at Sou1h Gallia, 5 p m
Ra11enswood at Southern . 5 p.m.

·

Softball

Chesapeake at Ga1ha Academy, 5 p.m
River Valley at Me1gs. 5 p.m.
Southern at Wahama , 5 p m
Tennis
Athens at Galha Academy. ·4·30 p m.
Track and Field
Gallia Academy at Fairland Meet
River Valley at Jackson Ouad
· South Galli a at Vinton County
Wednesday 's games
Baseball
Point Pleasant at Gallia Acader_ny, 5 p.m.
Rock Hill at A1ver Valley, 5 p.m
South Gallia at Wahama. 5 p.m.
Alexand er at Me1gs. 5 p.m.
Eastern at Southern. 5 p.m.
Softball
South Galli a at Waharna. 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Point Pleasant. 5 p.m.
Rock H1ll at R1ver Valley. 5 p.m
Alexander at Me 1gs, 5 p.m.
Eastern a1 Southern , 5 p.m.
.,
Tennis
Gall Ia Academy at Mmford. 4:30p.m . ·
Thursday 's games

Baseball
Fa.rland at Gallla Ac.ademy, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at River Valley, 5 p.m .
Sou1h Gallla at Hannan. 5 p.m

Softball

Fa.r land at Gallla Academy, 5 p m
Eastern at Warren . 5 p.m. ·
·Tennis

Ga111a Academy at Jack ~on. 4 30 p m.
Track and Field
South Gallla at Ate&gt;cande r Meet

Frldav·s games

Baseball
Gallia Academy a1 Logan , 5 p.m .
Chesapeake at R1ver Valley, 5 p m.
South Galita at Buffalo, 5 p. m:
Meigs at Wellston. 5 p.m.
Miller at Easterp, 5 p m. ·
. WaterfOrd
Southern. 5 p.m.
Softball
Logan at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m
Chesapeake at R1ver Valley. 5 p.m .
Meigs at Wellston, 5 p.m
Miller at Eastern. 5 p m.
Waterford at South ern . 5 p.m
1
Track and Field
Gallia Academy at Ripl ey Invitational

at

Saturday's games

Baseball
Eas1ern at Millersport (D H), noon
Softball
Easlern at Po1nt Pleasant (DH) . noon
Track and Field
R.ver Valley, Sou th Gallia at Ra1de rs
Invitational

Eastern boys
mercy Waterford
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Eastern Eagles mercied the
Watford Wi Ideals. 14-4. in
four innings Monday ni ght
during boys hi gh schoo l
ba,eball action at Eastern.
Eastern took a 1-0 lead in
the first on a leadoff double
to C~ris Myersand singles to
Ryan
Smith and
Ken
Amsbary. Eastern added two
more in the second on a walk
to Derek Young a Dustin
Riggs single. addsingles to
Myers. Smith. and Amshary,
the sccire 3-0..
Eastern added six runs in
the third. and one in the
t(JUrth and three in the fifth
for the 14-4 win.
Eastern hitters were Myers
4-4 with two doubles. Smith
three singles arid a double.
Ken Amsbary three singles.
Terry Durst a single, Corey
Shaffer a single. Morris a single. Young two singles. Riggs
a single &lt;ind Guess a double.
Semelserger posted the win
with four strikeouts and two
walks.

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Eastern

126 23

BY ScoTT Wou=t:
Sports Correspondent

GLOUSTER- A squeeze bunt in theJast inning gave the
Trimble Tomcats a 7-6 victory over the Southern Tornadoes
Monday night at Glouster Municipal Park .
Southern had gone ahead 5-0, then 6-3 going into the
sixth inning. when the beglnning of the end came for the
Tornadoes. Southern pitchers hit three batters and wa lk ed
three in the last two innings to set up the dama ge.
In the sixth inning Trimble pulled to 6-5 on a si nlge by
James Snyder, a Matt Dixon single, two 'hit batters to forced
home a run, then a wa lk from reliever Cole Brown to force
home a run and another hit batter, 6-5 Southern.
Matt Christman started the Trimble seventh wit h a walk.
Snyder reached on an error, Dixon walked. and Trent Nott
reached on a fielder's choice in whic h Christman came
home with the tying ru n, 6-6.
'
Pinch hitter Chaz Mohler then cam off the bench and

-

42 4
14182

WB - Semetserger and Durst LP K911h and Wagner.

Cavs to play
preseason game
. in Dayton
CLEVELAND (AP) The Cleveland Cavaliers will
play an Oct. 20 preseason
game against the expansion
Charlotte Bobcats at the
University of Dayton Arena.
The team said tickets wi ll
go on sale on May 3.
The .Cavs have previously
announced three preseas·an
games: at home agai nst New
Jersey on Oct. 18, at
Columbu&gt; again&gt;! Boston on
Oct . 25 and in Pittsburgh
against Atlanta on Oct. 28.
Other preseason games will
be added later.

work ed the count full. previously fou ling off a potential
squeeze . With the count full. Mohler laid dov,.n the perfect
bunt and. Dixon came hume with lhe wt nnin g run . .
Trimble hitt ers were Bruce Fout s with a double and single. Snyder two singles. Matt Dixon two ' inglc ,. McElfr~ s h
a single. and Mohler a single.
Southern hitters were Joey Phillips with two . sin~ b .
Patrick Johnson a double. Josh Pa1le two singles. and singles by Chris Tucker. Brad Crouch. Wes Burrows. and R. J.
Harmon .
Southern pitching 1WesBurrows and Cole Brown) strul·k
out four and walked three. while hittin g four hatters .
Trimble 's Christman was the winning pitcher with five
strikeouts and two walks.
Southern hosts Ra venswood Tuesday.

i

BY ALAN ROBINSON
A.ssocif!led Press ·

PITTSBURGH - The
Cinci nn ati Reds must have
known this was too good to
last. Off to an unexpectedly
good starl, they mu st deal
with yet another injury to
their star-crossed outfield.
Sean Casey's two-run
homer
backed
Aaron ·
Harang 's effective pitching,
and the Red&gt; beat the
Pittsburgh
Pirates 5-2
Monday night despite losing Austin Kearns indefinitely with a broken fore arm.
Kearns, the right fielder,
was hit on the left arm and
wrist by Ryan Vogelsong's
pitch two batters after
Casey's
homer
put
Cincinnat i up 2-0 in the
first. Kearns played defense
in the first , but was lifted an
inning la ter.
" l knew someth ing was
wrong." Kearns said after
the Reds impro:ved to 12-7.
"Usually you can shake it
off running • to first . but it
fe lt right otlthe bat like it
was different f10m every
other time I' ve been l1it ."
Ke arns will return to
Cincinnati on Tuesday to be
exami ned by tea m doctors
fo ll owing his second significant injury in two 'seasons.
He inj ured his right shoul-

Softball

BY ScoTT WOLFE
Sports Correspondent

Tl ' PPERS PLAINS
Beh-ind another butstanding
pertormance from pit cher
Krist:t White . the seniorle"
Eastern Eagk' posted a 6-1
Tri-Valle1 Conference win
01 er the · Wate r1'ord Wildcats ·

Trimble 7, Southern 6
Southern
104
001
0
Trlmble
002
10 2
2
WB - Chnstman and Not! LB- Brown and Yea uger

Prep ·

Eastern
girls win
•
aga1n

694
78 1

Reds win, but
may lose Kearns

1

Eastern 14, Waterford 4

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Trimble _squeezes out win over Tornadoes

1

Monday nig ht.

Waterford fal l' to ~-1 1 .
\\·hile Eaqern rai "'..:" it." lllilrk tn
I0 -·l. 8-c in the league.
While "as near i'e•iec:t once
she got p:bt the liN inning. In
the first innin~ Waterford \
Wallace opened tip 11 nh :i leadoil si ngle. Collin ' 11alked. and
('Murph~· singled. White then
buc·kleJ down to fan .13 batter'
fur the game afte r getting out
uf the inn i n~ with no tbJm~H!.C
Jonc. \\'hitec 11 a! ked three b~l ·
ter..., ti.11· the !..!Jil1e.
\\'atcrforJ\ Cunningham
wa:-, jtht a~o, tough in th~ ~earl~
going . She fanned l&lt;&gt;ur of the
f'irst c si\ batters she faceu
.hcfon: ~cttin!.! hammered · in
the thrrllinr\in-g.
Morgarl w;hcr and Hallie
Bn&gt;ok ~ each led oil with single' then Daniclle Carroll sacriliceJ lhem to second ami
third. Case\' Smith. Jcnrw
Arm~s. and , Sara Barringer
each ,i n~lcJ . Brittanv Bis;cll
walked and White il;td a run

der in May and mi&gt;sed
about half the 2003 season.
'' It just seems lik e it can't
get niuch worse right now.
with the start I got off to."
said Kearns. whose 2-for23 slump has lowered his
average to .137.
The injury comes on ly
three week&gt; after the Reds
finally reunited their everyday outfi eld of Adam Du nn .
Ken Griffey Jr. and Kearn s.
which appeared in just 2 1
games together last seaso n.
" It's just so unfortunate.
and ·n1li st be so frust rati ng
for him ,'' Casey said. ·.. lt .s
ju st bad luck. I c:ould feel
the frustration when I carne
up here (to the clubhouse)
in th e six th innin ~ and
found out il was broken.··
Kearns sa id th e best-case
scenario for hi s return is
three tn four .weeks.
Harang 12-0)· gave up lwo
runs in six innings, i"nclud ing Cra ig Wilson's solo
homer in the sixth. hut
worked out of seve ral jams
to heal Pittsburgh for the
second time in two starts.
He gave up seven hit s.
struck out five and wa lked
one.
Dann y Graves pitched the
ninth for his IOth save in 12
opportunities and his thin.!
in th e fo ur-game seri es. Cincinnati Reds ce nter fielder Ken Griffey Jr. 11auls in a frrst·
John Riedling and Todd inning fly ball. by Pittsburgh Pirates' Tike Redman Monday in
Pittsburgh. (AP)
Please see Reds, Bl

.-.. (..'orint:!

~round

out f()r a 5-0

Easterit lead.
Eastern plated another run in
tile sixth inn·ing when AIY"" ,
Baker walked. Linsee D;n i.,
si n~ led . and a run scored on a
hit bail by Shana Snyder.
Eastern hitter&gt; \\'ere Ca"''
Smith. Jenn y Armes. Krislit
White. Sara Barrin~cr. Mor~an
Weber. Danielk (:uwll. and
Linsce Dal'is.
Eastern 6, Waterford 1
Waterford
00 00 0 1n ~ 12 2
0 0 50 0 1 ;.: 681
Eastern
WB- Knsta While and Casey Sm1th LB
CumMgham and Barth

'Does fall
short
at
Lady Marauders .shut out Nelsonville-York
Trimble ·
. BY BRAD SHERMAN

bsherman@ mydailytribune.com
NELSONV ILLE - Meigs scored a
quartet of runs in the fou rth inning
Tuesday, and pulled away for a 6-1 TriVallcy Conference softball victory over
host Nelsonvill e- York.
The game was originally scheduled
to be played at Meigs. but was moved
to Nelsonvi lle to due field conditions
caused by heavy rains in Meigs County.
The Lady Marauders improved to 8 ~
· 5 overalL and 7-3 in the TVC following

the win. The victory. combined with a
Wellston upset of leag ue -leading
Vinton County. moves Meigs to within
a game o r first plal·e.
For Nelsonvi lle-York. the struggle.s
continued as it fell to 1- 10 and 1-6 in
conference play.
Meigs hurler Samantha Cole threw a
complete game thre e-h iller 10 earn the
win. meanwhile striking ou1 I0 Lady
Buckeves.
Jenn-ifer Bishop. who &lt;ilso went th~
distance. suffered the loss.
Cassie Whan and Erica Poole each

doubled. whi le teamm ctles .\kli;r
Whan. Chrissy Miller. Nikki Bulcher
and Renee Bailey all n:c iu"Lkd hi ls for
the ·w inner~.

Latisha Hannin~ had two single' 111
led Nc!s(li1Villc-YZu·k, Kaitlyn Fm had
the only other hit otT Cole.
Meigs plays hc&gt;st t(&gt; Ri1 er Valley
today.
Meigs 6, Nelsonville-York 0
Me1gs
100 410 0
66 0
N-Y
000 000 0
032
Saman1ha Cole and Cass1e Whan. J enn1ler B1shop and
Shasta McOua1d. WP - Samantha Cole LP- Jenm!er
B1shop
0

Prep Baseball

Marauders crush
'
Nelsonville-York, 18-3
STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailylribune.com
NELSONVILLE ·- Meigs
scored seven runs in the seventh inning to pull away from
Nelsonville-York and post an
18-3 Tri-Valley conference
baseball victory.
The game was · originally
schedu led to be played · at
Meigs. but was moved to
Nelsonville to due field conditions caused by heavy rains
in Meigs County.
The Marauders improved to
11 -2 overall and 7-3 in TVC
contests.
Eric Cullums went the distance on the mound to earn
the victory. while Madi son
Carter sullered the loss for
the Buckeyes.
Jeremy
Blackston
led

Meigs in hittin g with a
double
and
··4"'· ·,. '; '
'. .. ·. .·....
. .."'
.•. •, . s i n g I e .
'~~ ,.
Cullums and
Chuck Davis
'.&gt;\. ... each tripled as
well.
NelsonvilleYork's Ryan
Cunningham
Cullums
hit a double
and
single
while teammates Will dickerson, Carter and Charlie Wend
had a pair of singles each .
Meigs plays host to River
Valley today.

;_., ~
e·,·_
~
:r'!

~j

Meigs 18, Nelsonville-York 3
Meigs

4 1 1 1o4 7

-

18 11 1

N-Y
0 11 0 10 0
39 4
Eric Cullums and Matt Holley. Mad1son
Carter, Ada m Wagne r (6 ), Dantt::l Fox (7)
and Ryan Cunmngham WP Enc
Cul1ums. LP - Mad1son Car1er

Redmen sign River
Valley's Chris Brown .
BY MARK WILLIAMS
Special to lhe Daily Sentinel

RIO GRANDE - The Unil'ersity of Rio Grand~
baseball program ~taycd clo~e "7hnm _e to ..,ign it:-;' f~r~t
recruit fo r the 2005 season 111k111g R11·er Valley 1-'11gh
School 's Chris Brown to a n'ational letter of int ent.
Brown , a right -handed pitcher. is a
four-year lette rman for the Raiders .
He was I st Team All-Ohio Valley
Conference .performer las t season and
was nam ed the team\ best defclhive
player.
.
Brov,.n·s accompli,hmcnts in l1igh
school a'nd on the baseball diamond
have bee n published in the 200-l iss ue
of Who 's Who among America's High
School Athletes ma gatine .
Rio 's newest re~·ruit was happy
Brown
about signing with the Redm en. " It
feel s good to ha ve a place to play." Bnn1 n 'aid . " l'rJ1
really-excited about playing next year."
. .
On hi, choic:e of Rio GrarH.k he encd th~ pro-..tll1111
and si"e as ke) fac:tms . "Justlthatl it's a "nail col kg~
in the area where lli1c. l lik ~d lhat." l1c said .

Please see Brown,;Bl

I

Bv Scorr. WoLFE
Sports Correspo ndent

GLOUSTER
The
l...td) · Tornadoc'
g.a\ L' quite .t light to th-.~ h:agLic
kadinu
Trimble
Lach
Tornc .~s . hut Trimble I noiv
12·2. X- I I pulled oul th~ win
to 't:r) al&lt;1p th~ Tri-V:tlk)
Conkn:ncc Hod, i n~ Dt\' hlllll .
South~rn

T ri mhil' -..col\.'0 lhL' \.!a nw\

first run in th~ tl1ird 11he'n Jul rc
Trac~ \\';liked ami 'cun~d on a
Janelle c-Jil'lll&gt;l, ,in~le. th e
~core

1-0. · Trimbl e 1!aincJ

,orne i n..,1.t ranl·~: in the "i\lh
11 ilen Sondra Brol&gt;b "alked.
Allm1 H 0op~r singled. and
Alici:·l And re", reaL· bed nn a
fil'ld.:r' . . ~.":hl,icc.
.-\ . Ja~o
J\.\11:hcd on an cn·pr that "(~,r~d
a run . anJ Lind"·' J a ~&lt;' had a
1-.1 bunt pui out tliat ,,~orcd the
oth~r run. tile scor~ .1-ll.
Snuth~rn tilrcatc·nc,! 111 th~
'i\th and sc1·e nth in nings hut
c·mrld not push acTL&gt;ss a run.
hotil times le a1 1 n~ runner'
strand~d &lt;&gt;II 'ccond Z111d tlmd.
Snuthcm hitters 11 ~re Deana
Pullins . Kat ie SaHc. :\ickr
Tuck~r. and Jnrd an·c-J~i~der al l
ll'ith 'ingles. Trimble ' hitt ers
"ere :'\ 1~hok A llnr-, Ho&lt;11'&lt;'L
and Carrie WoodgenJ as
Amoke Kiser pilc:hed a solid
three hitt~ r for lhe Tnrnadoe,.
Kis~ r fann~d l(&gt;ur and ll'alkeJ
tilrec in . 1 ~real effort.
F, •r Tri n'ibk. Honpcr fanned
ci~ht in tile" in.
Sout11L'I'I1 is at Wa.hama
toda)
~- I
Trimble 3, Southern 0
Sou1ht'nn Ot\'0 0000
04 3
Tnmb1£'
001 002x , :- 331
WB - K1ser and Say•e LP - Hoops1
and A.ndrf'WS

�Tuesday, April 27, 2004

Page B2 • The Daily Sentmel

I

-

L

Pet

2

6

567

Balttmo e

0

7

588

NY 'fank!l41 s
Tampa Ba~

8

11

421

7

10

4 2

Toronto

7

t2

368

W
2

L
7

Pet
632

)

'

CENTRAL
M nnesofl

PIO

Strlc

4
4
5

82
7 3
3 7
3-7
4 6

W3
L2
l4
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W3

PtO
73
64

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L1
Wt

GB

Home

Away

EAST

~

28

'

37

Home

Away

W
12
12

L
7
7

Pet
632
632

GB

P10
73
73

1

8

579

I

55

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46

~·
~·
72

10
10

9
0

526
500

2
2

64
55

\\0

3•
54
36

72
56
54

Home

Awoy

63
54
55
55
37

63
55
36

oJ

CENTRAL

73

~ 4

CncagoCubs

5-4
64
37

Cn
at
Housto"
Stlous
MwdukeE!

353

5

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t.t

54

17

l

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GB

PlD

Strk

8
1

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55
73

W4
W3

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7 3

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579

Home
4 :l

0

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526

46

6

13

L3
l:J

1

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6

46

8

0

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W
12

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6

"3

45

SanD~Jgo

a

e

45

64

A zen~

16

2

Cooado

8
8
7

11
11
12

421
421
368

WEST
Los Angeles

Mondays Result!
C nc nna 5 P nsourgh 2

Sunday s Results

Cleveland 3 Del art 2

an )

Bosto() 2 NY Van~ee~ 0
Too to 5 Balt1mo~3
Se~n e

~12

Pet
667
526

FJor da 6 Colorado 3

A zonn 9 C~ cage Cubs 0
Mon reill a San D ego
A !anta a Sar. F anc sec

6

41 7 05 p m
11 1 805pm
To or o (Ba s1a 0 2 a M nesola (San1ana 1 0) 8 0 p m
TaKas Roge s 3 0 at KanSiiS C1y (Ailed! 0 1) 8 10 p m

Marlins 6, Rockies 3

TAdmncl 5000
JW~sn~
51 4 o
Kendal c 5a01
Mndes H 3010
M~kwk3b 4000
cwsnrl413
Rvera1b 300.0
Castto.C!b 4 01 a
TJonesp 0 0 0 0 Vgsngp
1010
100a
Gavesp 0000 Hlph
LaRusc 2000 Vldowsp 0 0 0
Harangp 3 0 0 0 JOavsph 1 00
Aeofingp oooo Gat&gt;owp 0000
JCastro 3o 1 0 0 0 Bhrngp 0000
Vlesao
0000
ANunez ph 0 0 0
Totals 32 S 7 5 Tot•ls 37 210 2
Cincinnati
201 000 200 S
Pinaburgh
000 011 000 2
A vera reached f rSJ on a c~e s 111 arte s cs
E ~LaRwe t1] Cas1II012t DP PnSbu rgh 3
LOB--C nc rpet B Pnsb~.;rg n 0 28-0ur~n
3) 38-Freel 2) JW son (1) CW son 1)
HA--Casey 3 CW son (5 SB-O t..nr (2
IP H R ER BB SO
Crncmmrtr
1 5
Harang W2 0
6 1 2
Redl~g
TJone~
Grai/SS ~

0

0

0

0

0

3

10
1 a 0 0 0
Ptttaburgh
Vogelsongl13
4 4 3 1 6 6
Meadows
2 1 0
0 2
GrabOw
1 2 0 t
8oehrnger
0 0 0 0 I
Mesa
10002
HBP--by Vogelsong Kearns
Umpues-Home Twy Randazzo F st Kev n
Ksllay S&amp;eond Feldm Culb ell Th rd J m
WoN T-2 58 A-8 579 [38 4961

Blue Jays 6, Tw1ns 1

5 1

0

Mlnneaota
eb r h b1
ShStwrtll 3 o o o
CGzmnss 4 0 I 0
~ntkw1b 4 0 0 0
THn!e1 dh 3 0 0 0
JJones rt 3 0 0 0
LForo cf 2 0 0 0
Cddyer 3b 3 1 t
HBincoc 3 0 0 0

4a 2
Hnske3b 4 1 2
GMyrsc 3000
OHudsn 2b 4 t 3 1 Awas2b 3 0 0 0
Wdwrdss 4 0 1 0
Totals 39 614 6 Totas :28121
JPhl~dh

Colora do

Florida

Toronto
002
002 020 6
Minnesota
000 001 000 1
E-Cuddyer (3) DP-Toronto 1 Mnnesola
1 LOB-To onto7 Mnnesoti'l2 ?B-HCiar~
( 2 ~ Caliillaf"IO to [6) CDslgado (5 JPhe ps
(31 0Hudson 2 (51 HR-Cuddytt (1 CSOHudson (11
1P H AERBBSO
Toronto
UllyWl 2
9 2 1 1 2 8
M1nnesota
Radkel22
704d03
Funz
13~210
Mulholland
1 1 0 0 0 1
Umpt as-Hom~: Garry Oav s Frs1 La ry
Por'IC no Second Greg G bson Th1 d B uce
OrecMman T-2 22 A-13 859 (45 4231

ab rhbi
Gnzalez 2b 3 0 1 0
Cla)'ton ss 4 1 0

•b r hb1

ab r hbl

ab r tl bi
0Jmnz2b 4 0 10
laknss 411 0
GrtJrd
5110
Casev1b .. 3 1 2
Dunn!
3012
Kearnsrt 0 C 0 0
Freelrt
30 11
Larson 3o 3 0 1 0

Per e d

5

10

LCsto2b4 11
Coerarf 4 1 2
Lowe~3b
4 ooo
Cho It
3 :2 1
Conme If 4 3 a
ACstroc 4000
AGnzl.zss 41 2 2
Pavanop 3 0 0 0
LHarrs ph 0 0 0 0
Easeyph
a00
CFo~p
0000
Tot•l•

He~on

1b

4 0 1

Caslla3b 3 0 0 0
Bunrtzcl 422
Hlc'ayl 40{)0
Pelowrt 401
Greenec 3000
MaSwypM 0 0 0 0
Elartonp 2 0 1 0
Hrilalap 0000
R~es ph 1 o 0 0
CJhson ph 0 0 0
36 610 6 Total• 33 3 7 3

Ftodd•
600 000 000 6
Color•do
101 000 001 3
OP-Fio da 1 Colo ado 1 LOB-Flo da A
Coo ado 6 2B-Con ne 121 Clayton (4) He
ton 8) Bu nU (61 38-Perre (2) HRCabrea 1 Cho tiS) AGonzasz(1l Burntz
14
IP H RERBBSO
852210
23

2

I

1

1300001
eeeeo3
100a01
2

ab r hb1
Macac2tJ 4000
CPttsor cf 4 0 0 0
SSosart 3000
AouH
4020
ARmrzJb 4 0 0 0
Delee !b 3 0 0 0
ASGz zss 3 0 0 0
tv'e c,.; p 0000
Baenc 30 1 0
Zmbrnop 1 0 I 0
REMtzss 1 0 1 0
GOO.Vn ph100 0
Totals 31 0 5 0

w•
u

3

46

u

P10

Strk

73

WI

'

,,

W2

4
51

'6
28

Ll

,,

u
u

73

"

36

36
' 5

Sundays Rnuhs
Montr&amp;al 2 Phlladelptua 0

P ttsburgh 6 C11'1C1nnat 0
St LouiS 5 M !waukee 2
Ch cago Cubs 4 NY Mets 1

Cobrado 4 Hous on 1

los Angeles 9 San Franr !leo 0
Ar zon11 12 San Dego 7

0

0

0

1

0

0

Arizona
Kata2b
Cmronss
Choate p
LGnzlzlf
Sexson1b
SF-,Ieycl
DBtstart
Tiacy3b
Hmckc
Este!ac
RJhsonp
Se~dless

Totals

ab r h bl
5011
412 l
00 0
4 0 0 0
423 2
3 1 1 0

3210
4122
2 2 1 1

0a0
3011
1

0000

34 912 8

Ch c11go
000
000 000 0
Arizona
002 232 OOx 9
DP Ch cago 1 A zona 1 LOB- Cn cago 6
A zona 7 28-REMa tnez 1) Tracy (2)
Hemme k (2) 36 C ntron (1} HA- Sexson
(9) SB-Delea (2)
JP H RERBBSO
Ch1cago
Zamba nol21 4 3 10 7 7 2 1
Wuertz
2300002
Bela
22222::.
Macke
I 0 0 0 1 1
Ar zona
RJohnsonW22
7 2 0 0 0 0
Choa!e
230010
HBP-tly lamb ano (DBaut sla 0') AJohnson
(OeLoc WP-Wuer12
Ump res--Home AHonso Marquez F 1s1 Ate!&lt;
Reed SeGond Ed Rapuano Th rd Ted Barren
T-2 45 0.-33 564 (49 033)

In Baseball

NL Leaders

Th1s Date

BATTlNG---Bonds
Duca Los Angeles 452 Casey Cnc nnat
~25 JWilso'l P ttsbu {;
397 DBau ~18 A 1zona 386 CW Iscm P ttsburgh 382 H dalgo
Houston 371
RUNs--Bagwell Houston 20 LGonzalez A '"
zona 20 PuJOS S Lous 18 &amp;lx'iOn A ..
zona 18 Po:lsednl&lt; M lwaukse 17 AEve ell
Hous1on 17 He~on Colorado. 17 Bonds. San
Franc sco 17
RB1-Rolan St Lou s 26 Hidalgo Hous1on
22 Sexson AT zona 20 Bonds San Frarn: s
co 20 B adl9)' Los Angeles 18 ARa m~ ez
en cago 18 Casey C nc nnat 18 ASanders
St Lous 18 Aou Chcago 18
HIT$--Casay C~nc~nnall 31 JWtson Pmsb\J 111 29 La Duca Los Angeltls 28 l!Xatta
San 0 ego 28 Rolen St Lours 27 DBaut lila
A lzone 27 6 .. a ed wttl 26
DOUBLES-Casey Ctnc: nnat 9 SSosa
Cn1oo.go 9 Bgg o Houston 9 SpiVey M !waukee 8 ARam rez Chcago 8 Edmonds Sl
Lous89ae 8dwith7
TRIPLEs-OW se A ~anta 3 JanM ns M J.
waukee 3 Free C nc nnat 2 TAe&amp;nlln
P ttsbu ~n 2 Podsadnlk Mlv.aukea 2
Schne cier Montreal 2 Cora Los Angelos 2
HOME RUNS-Bonds San Franc sea 9
Dunn C nc nnat 8 Sexson Ar zona 8 Roen
S Lous 8 P os S1 lous 7 RSMders S!

Apnl27
1909- The ChugoWhne So~ won ther hrd
stra ght o game 011e St Lou s n three days
1918- The BroOklyn Dodge sgo1 n1o the wn
coiiJmn sfter a maJOr lsague eco d 0-9 start
wrth s .5-3 llidOf}' 0\IEir the New York Gtanls n
!he opening game of a doubleheader
1929- Brook~n ale pitcher Clse OI.ICIIey
homer!KI on !he first mapr league pitch he saw
11 Philadelph~e's Baker Bowl
1944 - J m Tob n of the Braves ptlched a no
hlltar aQamst the Dodgers m Bas on wnn ng
2.0 He also h~ a home
1947 - Babe Rutl1 Day at Yanke&amp; Stadwm
drew a crowd or mo ethan 58 000 to hono the
atl n~ star In the game Sd Hudson ol the
Wash ngton Sena ors beat Spud Chand er 1.0
1968- Tom Phoebus of the Oro85 no-h! tlie
Boston Red SO)( 6 o at Ban more
1i73 ~Kansas City's Steve Busby p1ched h s
Irs of two career no-h n'l s w lh a 3 0 viCtory
ove the Tigers a De o t
1983- Houetons Nolan Ryan eclipsed Wei e
Johnson s 3 508 caree stnlteouts a Kord
whteh stood lor 56 ysars Ryan fanned Mantra
a p nch-hitter Brad M b n thee gh!h nn ng as
the Astros beat the E~pos 4 2
1994- Seen Erctson wno snowed the most
hils n the mao s the p fiV ous season p~~hed
M nnesota s firs! .no hiller n 27 yea s as tne.
1\vtns beat Milwaukee 6 0
1996- Barry Bends became only the fourth
ma10 lsaguer to o al 300 homers and 300
sleals wl"ien he homer8d n lhe h rd nn ng of
the San F anc sco Gll!nts 6 3 \llctory over the
Fonda Martins Hs falhor Bobby Bonds god
lelher W l1e Mays and An~e- Qewson also
,ached 30o-300
2000 - ChiCago Wh te Sox shortstop Jose
Valentin hi! for lhe eye e and drove mflve1uns
m a J.4 vctory ove1 !he Bah more 0 10les
Valen n s ng ed n he r rst doubled n lhe sec
one! tr pled n ttle lh rd and homered n !he sev

Diamondbacks 9, Cubs 0
Ch cago

Wl

GS

2

63

Tuesdays Ga~s
Hous on (Redd ng 0 3) at P ttsbu gh {Fogg G-3) 7OS p m
C c al L:de21la1MiwauMee(DDavs1~) 735pm
Phladalphra (Miton1.() a1S1 Loos (Mo sJ..1) 810pm
Fl nda (Ohve 2 1) a! Colorado (Esles 3 1) 9 05 p m
Chic a~ Cubs 1M 1e 1 0) a AriZona (Webb 1 1) 9 35 p m
'Aon real Patterson
a San D~ego (Valdez 2 O) 10 05 p m
NYMets(Gavne21)a!LosAngees(Nomo31) 10 Opm
1\1 anta {W tght 1) a1San FranCISCO (Rue e 0 2) 1o 15 p m

Cle wan d(0 Am &gt;eo11)eiChJCago V.hle So ~ ( Garand

Reds 5 P1rates 2
Plnsburgh
C nc nnat

55

Atanta7 Fo da2

Oakland (HuUson 3 0 a N Y T'Bn'\ees (Muss na

I 2
51 1 0

PITTSBURGH
Ben
Roethlisberger arnved Mond 1y tn
Pntsburgh as the No 3 quarterback
m the NFL draft and for now no
better th,m No 3 on the Steelers'
depth chart
He doesn t expect e1ther s1tuallon
to last very long
Roethh sberger,__ only the second
Steelers quarterback drafted 10 the
f1rst round m 33 years d1dn t predict he would beat out mcumbent
Tommy Maddox or backup Charlie
Batch 1mmed1a tely He didn ' t
prom1se to h,tve better rookie year
stausucs than MISSI SS ippi s Eh
Mannmg or North Carolina State 's
Ph1lip R1vers, the two quarterbacks
drafted ahead of htm
But he sa1d he lack s nothmg
Manmng and Rtvers posse ss - he
d15111J Sses talk the Mannmg family
lmeage g1ves Ell an edge -and IS
eager to show 1t Even 1f he must
wa1t a httle longer to play than
Manmng does with the Gtants or
R1vers does wtth the Chargers
'Ell's been gettmg a lot of hype
leadmg up to thts, but I sa1d comtng
10 II all bot!s down to thts 11 s JUSt
football," Roethhsberger satd
'That's what I've been wanting to
do for a long t1me , JUSt get on the
fteld and start playmg '
Roethhsberger d1dn ' t cntiCIZe
R1ver s or Manntng, but sa1d 'I
thmk I bnng a little more athlettCism than both of them , but I guess
we"ll have to watt and see
'E\ eryone seems to thmk they
have better systems, better teams
they played on 111 college, were born
mto a football famli), satd
Roethhsberger, who played at
M1am1 of Oh10 "Once I get tbe
held my Will to w1n IS much greater
than both of them "
Roethhsberger has already created
more buzz 111 Pittsburgh than any
Steelers quarterback draft p1ck smce
Terry Bradshaw m 1970 The
Steelers haven ' t yet started selling
Roethltsberger s No 7 Jersey but no
doubt they w1ll qu1ckly order up a
batch to sat1sfy fan demand
They m1ght want to order a lew m
ex tra extra large, too, obv1ous ly not
accustomed to havmg 6-foot4 1/2,

6

A. naMe m (Lackey 0 J a LJel o~ Co neJO 1 1 05 p m
TampaBay(Abbol12
11 Boson (Wakefeld &lt;},.OI 705 pM
Seat!le [Moye
21 a1 Ball mo e A nsworth 0 1) 7 05 p m

:l

Associated Press

368
263

Tuesday s Games

0

73
63

7
5

1

Ar.ahe m 4 Ortklar.o 3

10

Awoy

Pnaclepna
NVMets
Mcneal

Cnteago Sox 6 Tcm pa Bay 5

4 1 2

Ho~

56
25

l1

Texas 4

HCiark rt
Jhnson rt
Ctlnotto ti
VWalsc!
COigda 1b

37

35
55
18

Mmesoa4 t&lt;ansasCI') 2

ab r hbl

36

46
27

556

Wt

nnesota

Toronto

44

L3

664

8
10
2
4

San Franc sco

To CillO 6

u

6

10

55

Mondays Result s
Seattle at Ba1t1010 e {ppd

63

w

13

A~nta

Prt!st':l rgn

Amohe m
Te)[as
Oakla d
Seattle

Wl

2
5

..,

Florda

4 6

W

WEST

6'
64

PIO

RUNs-Bel ran Kansas Ctty 20 WhJie
Del ot 19 MYoung Texas 17 Mo.-a Baltl'!lore 7 CPena Detroit t 6 Dye Oakland
15 Sare!adwnh 14
RBI-WhRa De rot 19 Dye Oakland ) 8
Po:&gt;ada NI:IWYork 18 Blalock Tttxas 17 Bel
an Kansas C ty 7 LaW1o Cleveland 6
RPamero Bah mae 16
HITS----MYoong Texas 3 Belllard Cleveland
29 MAamtraz Boston 29 Aodnguez Detro t
27 Blalock Te~as 26 ..Nlopez Bait more 26
ASo e 10 Te•as 25 Dve Oak and 25
DOUBLES-Bell a d Cleveland 9 Men
tkewcz M'1n€lsota B EMa tnez Seane 8
...Wells Toronto 7 DOn z Boston 7 Ronda
Kansas CrtY 7 tAodr guez Delrott 7 Offer
man MflllQsota 7
TRIPLEs-LFo d Mnnesota 2 F gg ns Ana
hem 2 CPena Detro~ 2 Woodwa d Toronto
2 30 are bed With 1
HOME RUN B-Balt an Kansas City 7 Dye
OaillaPd 7 Posada New York 7 G aus Ana
hem 6 N x Te~as 5 VGue rem Anahe m .J
Lawtoo Cleveland 5 MAam ez Boslon 5
WMe De o 1 5 BBoone Seattle 5

·~h

2002 - Derek, Low·e who struggled to keep
h s JOb as a closer last season p tched a no
hitler aga nst Tampa Bay Brent Aberna hy was
the only beserunner Lowe allowed n Boston s
O.a vctory spal~ng ns chance at a perlect
game
2003 - Kev111 M~t.orood plched h s firs ca ee
no-n!He to lead he Ph1 ad'elph a Ph 11es ave
the San Fr'l'nc sec Giants 0 MI wood struck
oul 0 and waked thrse
Today a blr1hdaya Olad Zerbe 32 Frank
Catalanotto 30 Chns Garpenle 29 Pedro
Fehz 29 Aunalvys Hernandez 26

Baseball Today
SCOREBOARD
Tueeday Aprll27
Oak and a N9W Yor~ Ya keel&gt; T m Hudson
and Oaldand face the Yankees who were
swept at home by Boston over the weekend

BY ALAN

ROBINSON

240-pound
quarterb,lcks
the
Steelers badly
ltnderest Jmated
Roethhsberger s s1ze and gave hun,\
much too-small
un1 fo rm
tor
Monday s pholo shool
Now thev ve got to tmd out how
Roethh sberger tits mto &lt;ill already
crowded quarterback lllJ X
Maddox. a starter who JS edrmng
backup lik e wages
apparently
wanted to meet Monday w1tb
Steelers chamnan Dan Rooney and
coach Bill Cowher to d1scuss h1 s
future. hov.e\er short tt may be
But there was no meet1ng, w1th
Rooney say1ng one was ne\er
planned , and no h1nt when there
m1ght be one It s poss1ble Maddox
and Cov. her m1ght talk on 1he phone
later th1s week thou gh Cowher
prefers to talk 111 person
While Maddox 1s underpaid tor an
NFL starter at $750 000, he now has
l1ttle barga1n1ng power The Steelers
won't pay Roethh sberger m1l!wns to
s1t very long, and that means
Maddox may remam the starter only
one more season - or less Maddox
could fmd hunself playmg th1 s sea
son for the chance to earn a contract
elsewhere next year
Roethh sberg er v. as diplomatic
when d1scussmg playmg t1me , at
leas t for th1s season
'I'm wtllmg to do whate,er the
team asks of me. whethe1 that s pl ay
nght away or sit ' he sa1d I want
to talk to Tommy and Charlie a httle
bn about what's gomg on Whatever
they ' re willing to help me w1th I m
gomg to take n all m
W1de rece1ver PlaxJCO Burress
who 1s s1gned onl] through th1s season and could also be playmg for a
contract I S cunou s to see how the
quarte1back SJtuat1on play s out
Cowher
hasn t
ruled
out
Roethli sberger' s starling thi s season
' The best man s gomg to wm
That s the r'l!lllson why we have mm1
camps and trammg camps · Burress
smd I don ' t really have an 1dea
who n·s gomg to be, but when you
bnng a quarterback 111 that h1 gh, I
guess It kmd of se nds a red light up
to Tommy I guess he s k1nd of down
about the situatiOn, but I \ e been
play1ng wnh h1m lor two )ears and
I' m su1e he II step up an d defend h1 s
postt1on

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscnbe today.
992-2155

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

Reds
from Page 81

below ave~age sau.l Vogelsong who has a
9 00 ERA ' My stult IS too good nght now
to get hn hard like th,lt Tins 1s Ill} fourth
start ,md I tee! I ve had great stuff three
t11nes and th,lt s what s frustratmg '
Alte1 Vogelsong left Dunn took adv,mt&lt;~ge
of second baseman Jose Castillo 's throwmo
error on d g1ounder by Casey - ht!tmg ~
two- run doub le 111 the seve nth Casnllo
ranged Ltr 10 h1 s left to make a diVIng stop,
only to make a wild throw
Pitt sbu rgh scored 111 the hfth on Jack
Wilsons t11ple ,md J,tson Kend,t ll 's RBI
g10undout l&lt;~ck Wil son matched a career
h1 gh w1th lour h1ts m h1s IOth ntult1ple- h1t
game th1s scdson ratsmg h1s a~eragc to 397

Jones preceded Graves with .t ,care less
mmng each
Ryan Freel , Kearns replacement tollov.ed
Casey\ walk w1th .111 RBI tnple 1n the thud
1-ree l had started eveiy Reds g,une thiS sea
son unul bemg hn 111 the he.1d by .ldson
Boyd s p1tch Saturday mght torcmg hun to
s1t out Sund,ty He returned to ,J utJiny 101e
Monday when 1~1rd b,1seman B1andon
Larson was acll\ated from the dtsabled ltst
Now Freel JS ltkely to get .t lot ot pi.Jy1ng
t1me unlll Ke.Jrns 1eturns
Notes: The Reds took three of fo ur m the
The Pirates. 2 5 ,,g,u nst the Reds lo.Jded senes
,md are 4 fl 21 11 then fnst SIX sen es
the bases v.lth two outs m the tlmd bu t The c1owd of 8 'i79 Wds the P1r,1tes' second
Harang got Rob Mackow1ak to ny out They sma llest at home smce PNC Park opened m
had two on w1th one out an mnmg i.Jter but 200 1 rhey d1ew 8 565 agdmst Cmcmn,ltl on
pmch h1tter Bobby Hill struck out and T1ke Sept 15
The P1ra1es are 1-5 du1111~ a
Redman gro unded mto ,, tmce pl.1y
nme-game homestand that ends w1th a threeVogelsong ( I l) walked SJx 111 tom mnmgs game senes aga in st the Astros
Haran g
While iOSIIlg hiS tlmd Ill ,\ row gJVIIlg up also beal the P1rates 'i I on Ap1 II 9 allow
1n g
three ru ns and four hns He has allowed 21 one run 111 SIX 11111mgs He JS 1 0 aga mst
h1ts and 18 runs m 12 1nnmas dunng h1 s los- them the last two seasons hall of the SIX &gt;ll
In g streak, wh1ch ulcludes two lo"'es to the tones he has w1th CmcJnthlll
Casey IS 15Cubs 111 wh1ch he hel1eves he lipped h1s lor-29 with three homers and n1ne
RBis durpitches
a SIX·game h1tt1ng streak He 1s from
"I'm t1red of bemg average ol p1tchJng Ing
Pittsburgh and h1s parents were 111 the stdnd s

Brown
from Page 81
Brown IS a three·pttch pitcher featunng a
fastball a curve ball and a change up "I ve
been workmg on my curveball to get 11 bet
ter for next year,' he added
Rto Grande Head Coach Brad Warmmonr
hkes what Brown bnngs to the Redmen
baseball program ··we lo&gt;e f1ve arms after
thts year, we feel Chm can come 111 and pro·
duce," he said "He lead our fall season 111
stnkeouts 111 our wooden-bat Fall League ,
we had Chns as hi~h as 86 on the radar
gun. we feel he's gomg to fit real well'
Brown·s s1gmng 1s a trutt o! the Fall
League that Warnmmont started three
years ago
"Chns d1d play In our fall
league and we had about 75 10 th1s past fall
league and Chns d1d an outstandmg JOb
there "
Warmmont compare, Brown to another
R1ver Valley.product currently play1ng for

•

•
I

the Redmen ·Much il"ke Duston Gibbs
Dustm came 1n and was throwmg 77- n,
we re already ahead of that (w 1th Brown ),"'
Warn1mont sa1d ""H1s best years are gmng
to be ahead of h1m 1t's go1ng to be a plea
sure to have an opportun ny to coach h1m "
The Redmen boss envisions Brown ult1
mately be1ng a closer for h1s team
"Ongmally we saw, with h1s stuff and h1 s
break1ng ball bemg the way 1t 1s, as a closer-type" he sa1d
"Asking that out of
freshman, we'liO probably bnng h1m along
con!idence·wtse, we'll run h1m out there 1n
several facets (1n the fall exhibition sea·
son) 111 reltet and also gtve h1m an opportunity to start once we get h1s armm shape
through the fall "
"We'll beef h1m up a httle bit 1n the
wetght room and w1th that1s gomg to come
a httle more velocny and hopefully we ' ll
get h1m to dominate ltke he did m our fall
program,'
Warmmont added
Brown plans to maJor 111 nurs1ng and IS
the !Jrst recruit to ~1gn With the Redmen
bas!!ball squad for the 2005 c.unpmgn

'

CLASSIFIED

Roethlisberger: Manning,
Rivers have nothing on me

"-

GB

52

1

6

Pet

13

5

8
12

L

53

579
368

1
7

1

W

55

63
54
45

Chtcago So•
Detroit
C e...e and
kansas Cry

GB

.

...

Nattonal League

,.,~~;v~··b·

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in participating in this
Special Edition,
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at 991-2155

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are always confidential • Current rete c1rd applies • All raal estata edver1iaamenta ara aubjacl to the Fader• ! Fa1r Housing Act of 1968
help wanted ade
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accept any advert aln; 1n vlotat1on of the law

\~NtH

1\11 I

\IL~

IS

4

y ;\RJ) SAl F
JluMEROl/MIDDLE

110
•

1.,1

-Hu-•P•W•&lt;\N•rrE-tJ_.II

A:-&lt;NOl~ffi\1~ I«TS

7th Anr.~ua 6 M1le Yel low
Flag Yard Sale Fr Sat Apr(l
C 1 Beer Carry Out permll 3oth &amp; May 1st Only $5 to
lor sate Chester Township s1gn up' We advert1se for
I 1e gs County send etters youl Cal 740 992 4055 or
of nterest to The Da ly 740 992 3148
Sentinel PO Box 729 20
Pome oy Oh o 45769 "'
Garage sale Apnl 29th
30th 341 Rutland St
Middleport adult and boys
clothes bed I ner much
more
Lak n Hosp tal s currently
tak ng b1ds fo r the fo low ng
poslons (Bds w
be
ac~.;ep t ed until 2 00 pm May
""
2004)
Chaplin
fe lephone Ma ntenance fo
Panason c
Bus ness
Systems Cop er Machme
Ma ntena~ce Agreemer 1 to
Sharp S 02060 Rental of
Oxygen Concentralms X
Ray
Serv ces
Dental
Ser v1ces
Tes tm g
of
Spr nkler System Contract
per od July 1 2004 through
June 30 2005 Forb 9 ntor
mat on contact Ba ba ra
Long at 675 0860 el(\ 104

r

Garage Sale ram o sh ne
3202 Route 124 Syracuse
lormerty Jo s Gtlt Shop out
door 5 ptece n ce ot ron
table &amp; cha1 s new play pen
high chatr s1 oiler (Ike new)
1ron sk llets 27 TV large
men new &amp; used ctothmg
(2x) women s some new
tots children cloth ng .vhat Gall polls OH 45631
nots baby mattress toys
Fast growmg busines s
etc Apnl 28 29, 30th.
Ceshters and cooks need
ed tor all sh1fts Full and
6
YARDS\IF·
part time Send resume to
~~ Pl£~'&gt;\1\~·
Da1ly Sentmel
PO Box
729 8
Pomeroy
Oh1o
Movmg
Sa e Thursday
45769
A1dmg mower &amp; Push
mower Sewmg mac.t·Hne Gnll Cook Apply 1n person
sa le Home Inter or sm a t Crows Steak House
appl ances glassware a ht .::_:._:._:....:_:.:.::_:_:_.:..:.::::__ _
tie of everyth 1ng At 2 Greer Hams Steak house Now
Ad 6 house on the left
Htnng (304)675 9726

W

t

Lost Large black long
ha red cat near Le Grande
Blvd t740)446 2233
Mtss ng from Burnt Run
Clay Chapel area 4!23/04
La ge male Boxer Childs
pett Reward
(740)256
1992

Y\RIJ SALE·

GAWI'OLIS

*ANEW CLINICAL
PEELS!"
Want to took younger AND
earn Money? Lets talk the
NEW AVON call
Marilyn (304)882 2645
Joyce (304 )675 6919
Apnl (304)882 3630

Apr11 30 May 1 Large 2
fam11y Sale Name brand
k ds ttothes toys pools &amp;
too much to hst Ra1n or
Sh ne 220 Debb e Drive
Gathpohs

SFIDFIEOE

RESPONS BLEfMOTIVAT
ED IND IVIDUALS
TO FILL

THE FOLLOWING
POSITIONS
General Manager
F nance Pos111on
Sales
Ce rtified Mechamcl
Tech1c1ans
Parts/Serv1ce Clerk
ompet t ve Sala 1es an
Perlor mance
Bonu
Program Available Pleas
end Resume References
ml Salary ReqUirement
o PO Drawer 110 R play
V 2527 1 tmmed1at

port se v ces to 1nd v1duals
w1th MR/DD 1s oo~lng for a
full t1me QM R~ and HOME
SUPERVISOR SuperviSOry
experience
requtred
Beneltts Included For mare
InformatiOn you may call
Roberta Van Gundy at 740446 8145 or fax a resume to
740 446 3967 An Equal
Opportunity
Employer

LEARN TO DRIVE
TRACTOR· TRAILER
NEW PROGRAM

No

E~tperlance

Needed
Placement Dept
FmanclnliJ Ava labte
COLJTramlnlil

ALLIANCE
Tractor Trailer
Training Centers
Wytheville VA
Call Tot Free
1 SOD-334 1203

Barn Removal
All references &amp; full msur
ance Call 304 373 OOt 1

i.o--------

POSTAL JOBS 1180
$15 44 $21 40/h

now h r

ho want to earr mane
hlle 1os1ng we ght show
ng
others
how
lnforma ttonal
DVDIC
va1 able upon request 740
41 1984

STATE TESTED
be NURSING ASSISTANTS

respons ble for awn mamte SceniC H Us Nurs ng Center
nance Ha11e the ab l1ty to
a Tandem Health Care
perform proper maintenance Fac hty 1s seek ng a select
on equ1pment Must have a few to JOin our outstand ng
valid operators 1cense h1gh
team We currently seek
school d ploma or GED
Send resume to Meigs
STNA
l ndustrtes Inc PO Bol(
Full Time Shift 2p 10p
307 Syracuse OhiO 45779
by April 23 2004
Proper certftca!IOn
requtred We after comper
Learn to Drive
t1ve wages shill dlfferenttai 1
Tractor-Trailers
excellent benellls perfect
"We 1 am Men and Women
attendance mcent1ves and
Full and Part T me Glasa••
much morel Please apply
Job Pl1cement
COLT alnlng
IO
F1nanelng A.va labia
HR
AS SEEN ONTV
Ann diann a Thompson
ALLIANCE
Scenic H1lts Nursing Center
Tractor Tra1ler Tratmng
311 Buckrldge Road
Centers Wytl'tevllle VA
Bidwell OH 45614
1-800-334·1203
Ph 740/446 7150
www al~&amp;ncatrl'lctortrsllar com
FaK 740/446 2438
Email admtn shnG
L~TA
wanted lor home
tandemheatthc&amp;re com
health physical therapy serv

SFIDF/EOE
HR C tandemheelthcare com

A Jump
on
SAVINGS

M"'"'ll"

Shop
Classlfleds!

\1oou ~ Hm1Es
IOK

Need to sell your home? We
otter oo., down payment
ftn and1g plans for you r
potent al buyers Less than
pe feet cred I accepted
magme how easy 11 Norld
be for you to se 111 you had a
source of fmanc1ng lor your
buyers We say ,es when
banks say no Cal to
deta1ts (740)992 4294

• This

"''"Pipo•cl

\ P\JH'\f£' I"S
HJK RE.~l

RJ.'I

14x60 2 bedroom A C
W&amp;D S300mon th + depos1t
On 218 Rete ence No oets
{7 40)2::&gt;6 1044

Sm Etf Apar ment ncludes
Jlltes patal'l ''" shed
t Pt Plea&lt;=ant "285 mo 1th
S150deoos i304t675 7783

al e ect c
mobt e home W1nd011 a
S325 depos t 5250 Spr ng
Valley area Ca I {740)441
6954 304 675 2900

2 bed oom

Ta a
To nho o.Jse
Apa tments Ve y Spac1ous
2 Bedrooms 2 Floors CA
1 2 Bath New~ Carpeted
Adu t Poo &amp; Baby Pool
Pat c S art $385 Mo '\io
Pets Leas e Plus Secur ty
CJepos 1 Reou rec Days
40 446 3J81
Even ngs
740 36- 0~02

_________ _

Pt Pleasant!Sandh I Road
3Br 1Ba 1600/sqft Ra ch 0
6 acre level lo t Oak floo rs
Home
1st ho use on R ght past Caru th e s Mob e Home
-~------Marsha
Un vers ty Pa K !304)t:i75 38 18
5103 000
(740 )949 1131
N ce 2 and 3 ted room
after 5 OOPM
mob le homes In
t€1
ncluoes
v..at
er
sowe
&amp; apart~em cJ 1 57:J 6679
~louu i" H0\11 ~
.
trash no pe s depos t &amp; EHO
Hl~ S,uJ:
5300 per month 7 40\992
j460
SPilT
2000 Oakwood Home 16x84 2167
HlR R~.'\1
3br 2ba all electr c central Pomeroy $300 .J mo S 150
a r Cal! any! me (3041675 dep no pets {740\667
Reta
o 0 t ce :.:Jpace
7157
3083 alter ::~prn
0 ..,e Down tow' Galllpol s
ocaton oalt740)3799511
78 Shultz 14x70 three bed St n
o 1740)379 2204 for more
roo T1 a I "lectr c m st move
$2 5CO ,j04)675 T'83
(882)882 1108

o

' fc

A1Verstles for rent famtly
type 3 camps1tes full
hook.up near nver 3 dock
s1tes no hookup Cal l
1740)992 5956

~-------- ~~~-:o------

Befo e you bU}
Does yo r deale ?
j+lU
A P \ IU\IE'\TS
Move hs hOmes Do ste
HlH. Rf'l
p1epar&lt;tt on
bu ld ounda .__ _oioioiiioioiioiioi-.-

BLSI~ .. , ....
\Nil Ill ll)JIM S

1 and 2 bed oom apar
nenls u1 ISilud a 1d w fur
n1st1ed
secu ty depos1t
eou red no pets 740 992

MERCII ,\~IliSE

10

II&lt;»" no1 n
"'l,ool~

22 18

1 bedroom apartmen sto11e
ret gerator ut I es nc ud
ed S400 month + depostl
1740)245 5659

E=nglano Co o;,llr sole B
char Da k g eer e~ce ten!
COf"d ton
~-!:,0
080
(740 446 o63

1
bedro om
ap t
Washer drye
hook p
New
tncludes water sewage and n
Plast c
w wa ranty
trasl S,1SO &lt;Fl de post! Sac Ice S11... Ce I prone
re~u ell No puts 74C 4-1
304 412 8048 o 304 552
1184
142-t

To Do

Handyman for less Need a
deck some ltghts
got
leaks? 81g small early late
(740)446 0422
Lawn Service Wll do complete yard serv1ce Low

nline
www orvb co
de 42104
88 9839

arage w th garage
eat n Gallpo1s
hotoslmfo
ww o bv com
2204 o

apart
Ve
onIn
CQde

call 740 446

1062 _____...l
t.;::;::;.,_

ratesl (740)949 2722
for Dame I Hens er

Ask Completely rehn1shed home
Great locatton 1n Galllpolls
Oh10 3 bedroom 2 full
W II Pressure Wash houses baths Pr ced to see now
mobile hOmes metal t&gt;u1ld Phone C740l4 46 9539
ngs and gutters Call
(740)446 015 1 ask for Ron
or leave messaliJe

11'\, '\ 11\1

BUS!NfS';
0PI'OtmJNIIY
ABSOLUTE GOLDMINEI
60 vending mechlnell
excellent loce11ona
all lor $10 995
110().234·69a2
Local business ~ Prec1ous
Memor es tor sale ~lace
customer's photos on chin a
plates and 01Mr 1tems
Would make a great adell! on
to an 9X1SIIng bUSinBS'S or
set up at car shows or any
event
$5 000 00
buys
everyth ng mcludlng web
S
I
e
www photosonchma com
(740)992 4294 '
Local Candle Route Maj(e
1QOt\ per year simply restock
n store displays No selling
Accounts 1nYentory train
ng support and protected
temtory tor $13 950 1nvest
ment 868 324 1014
Mob If M1n1 Donut conces
s•on bu&amp;lntn for sale
Locally owned Eas ly make
$1000 00 or more at week
end events Everythmg sets
up In a specially designed
10X10 canopy Excellent
part time or fultt lme oppor
ILJ nlty $9 950 00 Don~..ots
Gator&amp;
M ddteport
(740)992-4294

All r..IIIIBtt ldVtrtlslng
ln thll newap•FMr II
1ubject to the Fed1ral
Fetr Houelng Act of 1968
which makes It Illegal to
1d111rtl1e any
p,.fer•nce limitation or
dlecrlmlnatlon baled on
race color religion IIX
r•m111111111UI or national
origin or any Intention to
maka any 1uch
preference llmltet lon or
discrimination
Thll new1paper will not
knowingly accept
advertl1amenta tor real
111111 whl~h l1ln
vlolallon of lha lew Our
reeders are hereby
Informed that 811
dw111tnge ad~t~ertlsed In
tl'lls newepaper •re
•v•ll•ble on •n equ•l

':~o~p~port~u~n~lty::;;b•:•~..::~

4 un t apa tme 1 bu d 1u o
3 apartments &amp; of ce fo
sate located 1 down owl
Gallipolis Income pofe 1a
I tedroom k !chen appl
$1 300 per month I good
dDC~:;:S tun shed A C refer
cond 1on S120 000 w11
e ce~ No pets 740)446
consider land cant act "th
1370
10".: down Please call 740
710 0007
1 BR camp ete k tchen
AoC Ref &amp; dep No pets
350
I..ors &amp;
(740)446 0139
A( Rb\1 f
lbr apt Pt Pleasant
16x80 stes ava1abe $115 1br house Oh o centra l a r
per month 1nclvdes water heat no pe ts dep req 44 6
sev..er &amp; trash (740 )992 2200
2167
I' bedroom ust past Holzer
Lots nos 9 &amp; 10 Heatley s 5425 month Call 1740)441
add1!ioo m Bidwell to arge 1184

• 3 bedroom Ranch 2
ar garage 1n ground pool
75 000 3460 State Rout

~:,1:,:6:...o7:,:4:;;0:o:2;;5:;o6.,1:_;9::i6~2-...J
Nice 8 1Level 3br I bath
k1tcl'ten hvmliJ &amp; addtt anal
IVtn'l' room
downsta1rs
$79 900
(304)674 0090
Bite! 6 00

W.1sners
Guata 1\C't:d
D yer~
Ran~es
a 1d
nerr yera to s Some sla 1 at
595 Si~.aggs Aopl a es 76
v ne S! (740 4-16 7398
Good washe s 8 dryers S95
&amp; up etec tr c ranges S95 &amp;
up F est t ee re l r ge ators
5150 &amp; up Lke new sde
by s de w1th water S. tee n
the doo S375 couch $75
full s ze bed box spr ngs &amp;
mattress S1SO lull s ze bed
nux r JS &amp; mauress
t:i 125 tabe &amp; cners 5100
gl1de rocker 545 tnmps

S10
Skaggs i4.pp ances
76 V ne Street
(7 40!446 7398

level ots Pnced to stae now
Phone 17401446 9539
Mercerv1lle Lots lor sa le
ut Illes not
sha ed entrance off St At Included Requ res 6 months
218 3 13 acres Phone lease and $395 secunty
(7401256 '825
depostt No pets For app 1
cat on and to r~a ke an
You cou dIsh your badlands
appo ntment
phone
and mcrease pr operty va ue
(7 40)441 1108
too l Make land nto lakes
(740)368 6228
Apartment
to
ren t
Hunhngton 7 blocks from
1{1"\I\IS
Marshal K tchenene bed
oom
bath
1v ng room
545'0 month y [~0 4 )675
5813

HOlSf:S

K ng S ze
P llow
Top
Mattress set New st1l 1n
plast c Sa e $299 Cel
phone 304 412 8098 304
552 1424
Mo Iehan Carpet 202 Ctar~
C"'apet Road P.orter Oh10
(740)446 7444 1 877 830
9162 Free Est1mates Easy
I nancmg 90 days same as
cash V sa Ma.ster Card
Or ve a I ttle save a ot

mR R El\1

3 bedroom
hous e
n
Pomeroy $400 a mo S400
depos11 no pets (740)949
7004

BEAUTIFUL
MENTS
AT
PRICES AT

APART Movmg Sa e HousehOld
BUDGET appl ances f Ke nmore stove
JACKSON IS eitc lean.n~) GE elr gera

ESTATES 52 WestWQOd tor deep freeze sed anal
Or ve tram $344 to $442 etc Cat (740)441 o2-2
Wa lk to shop 8. moves Call
Equal
3br Ranch w garag~ lg 740 446 2568
Queer s ze bed Ne"" Oak
fenced yard a11C 1am11y
headboard I 1\e new box
1oca\lon
1niPI Plear.ant CONVENIENTLY LOCAl spnngs &amp; mattrEss $175
$675 00 a month dep &amp; ref ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
(7 40)446 7398 alter Spm
reqUired Call {304)273 1112 Townhouse
apartments {740 )367 7886
(304)638 7411
and o ' mall hOuses FOR
-~_;__

Great Buys
03
new
House for rent Racme area
Oakwood
Ooublew de
3 bedroom
no pets
Homes call tor details 740
17 40)992 5858
446 3481 or 7-4Q--446 1567

- - - - - - - -- ---•

20

ttons Ro I qr d se t houl:&gt;es
Do heatmg and a1r Ha11e tn
house ser11 ce people
3 bedroom 2 bath 314 acre Instal sept1c s~ stem,
Do
on Rock L1ck Ad $60 000 etectr ca llplumb ng
Do
Phone (740)446 7 197
dr veways !I the answer to
3 bed oom 2 baths on 4 3 any ot these quest1ons s no
acres In the Country Seen c or 11 the\ sub con rae! You
v ew
$75 000
Call bette1 see th e oldest most
experienced
deale
m
(740)709 1166
Athens County S nee 1967
4 bedroom 1 1/2 bath 2 Coles Mob le Homes 15266
story br ck 2 car unattached US 50 East At he s Oh10
garage $37 500 Fourth St 45701 Where you QP.t your
New Haven WV (7 40)446 moneys worth
4274

WANTED

1ng For apphcat1on and free
government JOb mfo call Ass1 sted llv ng opemng n
Amencan Assoc of Labor my home Call P40)388
1 (9 13)59 9 8220 24 hrs
0116
emp serv

ee ng

Ices Motivated self directed
Individual w (I like flextb e
scheduling good )ndepend
AVON All Areasl To Buy or once and compensation
May 1st Bam 2pm C 1136A Sa 1 Sl'tlrley Spears 304
Opportuni!IBS available n
St At 850 Bidwell Ocean 675 1429
Athens Meigs Jackson
Aquanum baby sw1ngs
Vmton &amp; Gatlla. counties
bouncer
playpen
baby MANAGER·IN·TRAINING
Call 888 464 1126
c othes toys a~r mattress
sweepe r tools &amp; home HEALTH CARE SERVICES
T!1erapul
m1sc CD s movies sub currenlly
has
a needed
fo r
busy
woofer clothing
I au n d r y / h ou sake ep 1ng Ch~ropract tc rehablhlatton
supervtsor 1n training posl
Thursday Fnday &amp; Saturday tton open Rotat ng 9chedu e Center Must be Oh o
SA 7S Near j..ock &amp; Dam with on call dut es requ red licensed and wet ski/ ed In
Baby lurnllure k1ds clothes Must possess stronliJ super all areas of therapeutic mu
sage Excellent pay and
furmture
vtsory ek1IIS be hard work work atmosphere Please
ng and dependable 6enef1t fax resume to 740-886 1609
J014 YARD SALE·
package available EOE
Attn Kathy
Pu~IEROY/MIOOLE
Send application/resume to
Res1Clenttat
Treatment
Tho Arbors At Gallipolis
Sale Depot St Rutland
Facll ty youth worker Pay
170 Pinecrest Orwe
Wed Thurs Frl a ltt1te bit of
based on expenence Cal
ATTN Unrta Denms
everythmg ra111 or shine
(740)379 9083 to apply
(740)4411 9088

Supenntendent Vacancy
10
"'
The Eastern Loca 01stnct
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
50008 State Route 7 lNG CO recommends tha
Reedsvll e
OhiO
15
u do bustness w1th pea
announcmg the ret1rement
le you know and NOT
res1gnat1on
of
end money th ough th
Supenntendenl Oeryl E
a ( unt1l you have 1nvest1
Well effect ve July 31 2004
ated the offerm
The dtstnct IS seek ng app 1
cants from quah f ed tnd1v du
PRoFE.~IONAI
als that hold a val d supenn
S
tendent cert1f1cate!ltcense or "---oiiiiEiORiivtioCESiiii--,J
can prov1de proof they have
the ab1l ty to obta n such a
TURNED DOWN ON
tcense Candidates •may SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
cont act Mrs L sa M A tch e
No Fee Unless We Wm
Treasurer at (740)667 3319
1 888 582 334 5
for an appt1catton package
and add Ilona! mtormat1on
Deadline to subm I appilca
10
HO:\U:S
t on matenals 1s May 14
fl)R SAlE:
2004 The Eastern Local
School D1stnct s an equal 124 ac es good wort&lt; ng cat
opportun ty emp oyer
tie farm w1th a new 3 beet
room 2 bath home 2 ponds
ISO
ScHOOLS
2 ba ns and other e&gt;:tras
$285 000 or w II OIV de nto
l 'ISI'RUCnON
development plots Farm
Gallipolis Career College has lots of road frontage
t740)367 7156
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today' 740 446 4367
2
bedroom
house 1n
18002140452
Pomeroy
posstble
fl nanc ng
wt~.,. ga I pol sea eo coiiiCJil com
w good c ed1t (740)698
A c~ro d ed
Memt&gt; e Ace edt ng 7244
COlH'ICll lor ndepeM en Colleges
anCI Scnoos 1274B
3 Bedroom Br ck Ranch 1
170
Acre lot Reduced (304)675
MISL'l-l~ \NHJLIS
171 4

Camouflage Ong nat Army
Collectibles
Sam
SomervJIJe s 40th Year- by
Sandyville WV Post 0111ce
Satell te Systems 80 chan
ParamediCS
&amp;
EMT s nels nclud1ng Locals $19 99
needed Apply at 1354 monthly after programmmg
Jackson P ke Gall pol s
credtt 1996 Talon all wheel
drve Turbo (304)273 5655

HROtandamheatlhcare com
A leading prov der of sup- LAWN LABORER Will

3 Fam ly Yard Sa e 1636 FIMIDN
Chatham Ave T-oys Klds
AS SEEN ONTV
Clothes Baseball cards
INSTRUCTION
4130104 512104 1Dam 7
4 famtly Apnl 29 May I st
9am 5pm Gun Cab net TV
m1crowave gnll c othes
some plu s size
ats ol
household mise Corner of
Green Tree &amp; Bu1av1te P1ke

Attn Betty St ckler
311 Buckrtdge Rod
Bidwell OH 45614
Emall adm 1n shn@
tandemhealthcare com
Ph [740)446 7 150
Fax (740)446/1248

VIRGINIA DEALERSHlP
FOR INDUSTRY LEAD
NG ATV $/WATERCRAFT
SEEKING

10

BUSINF-'i~

OPI'OR11JNI n

lhli'WANlUJ

McDonatds ot A o Grande
Gallipolis and Potlil Pleasant
Local truck1ng company IS
WV are now h r ng Patd
lookmg fo r an e~~:pe11ence
vacai!Ons
holida ys and
d spatcher Ouall11ed cand
nsurance available Flex1ble
dates must be able to work
hours Starting above m1n
tn a hectiC customer driven
mum wage Apply w1th tn
envtronment and possess
adequate computer Skill s
Need 7 tad1es to sell Avon
Fam111a nty
w th
the
Call (740)446 3356
OHNVV/KY In state area IS a
ee a JO
must Sa(ary w1l be based
We are h1nng
on exper ence
You could earn up
Benef1ts mclude pad hoi
to S81hour plus bonuses
days vacatiOns and s1ck
We also offer pa1d
days lite health and denta
1ra n ng holidays
tnsurance and 401 K plan
and vacat ons
lnte ested
candida te s
Full or part t1me
should send the1r resume
s~ It ava1ab a
and sala y h1story to CLA
Ca I today
box
555 c/o Gall pols
Tr bune
P0
Box 469 1 877 463--6247 ext 2455

2 yr old sold wh te bcaut1ful
Help Wanted Fullt1rne wa t
lemale ca
spayed Call Yard Sale Apr I 30th May
ress apply m person at the
40 441 1560 alter 5pm
1st 8 00 111 ? cance ed 1f Holtday Inn Galhpo IS
ran
clothing
3 pupp es Beagle m x 1 KarokeSystem Nurs ng um
HOUSEKEEPING ~IDE
mae 2 female 7 wk!i old forms N1c Nac/M sc 188 N
(7401992 3516
Park Dr
Scen1c H1Hs Nursmg C~nter
a Tandem Healthc&lt;ue
1000
LOST \Nil
\hNlllJ
fac1!11y 1s seek1ng a part
~Ol l ~l)
m Bm
11me Housekeeping a1de
Respons ble for cleamng all
Found mother oog but she
Absolute Top Dol ar U S
areas of factllty equ pmenl
s mtssmg her pupp1es n Silver
Gold
Coms
an d ca rts Know edge of
R1o Grande McDonald s Proofsets Dtamonds God
san1t8!10n safety and
area (740)446 8508 11 pup Rmgs , US Currency
InfeCtiOn
control procedu es
pes are found
MTS Com $hop
151
a plus
Second Avenue Gal1pohs
Housekeeping/Laundry
Found Black &amp; while short
740 446 2842
e&gt;tpenence preferred
ha r dog around Klycher Rd
I '11 ' 1 ()' \ II \I
(74014 16 6630
~ I R\ HI · ~
We offer perfect anendance
1ncenttves shift differential
Found pupptes at Holzer
Chn c area 4 5 days old
and much more
mothers m s~ ng (740)446
HEI P WAVTEJ&gt;
Please app y to
8508 11found
•
Lost B a(.;elet 4/ 12/04 m
Gathoohs One s1de whtle
gold other Side yellow gold
Phone 740 441 5025 or
740 256 6535

ro

10

Dispatcher

rm-------1110

There will be a Special Edition
on Friday, May 14th
saluting all
Meigs County Class of
2004 graduating Seniors

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

m:ribune - Sentinel - ~egister

NFL Draft.-

American League
W

Tuesday, April 27, 2004

www .mydailysentinel.com

Major League Baseball

EAST

www.mydailysentinel.com

N•ce 2 bedroom house ntce
yard n1ce ne Qhbo rhood
1272 E Bethel Church Ad
$390/momh (740)366 1655
N1ce 3 bedroom house n
country
relerences
requ ired no tnstde pets
HUD approved $500 per
month plus u\111! es $500
deposit (740)742 2210

____

RENT Call (740)Jd 1 t 11 1 Queen P now 1op Mattress
tor apphcahon &amp; ntormatron Set New n ptast c w war
aNy W ll ac._:ept S199 Cell
Grac ous h'll1ng 1 Md 2 neel p~"~one 304 d 12 8098 304
room apartments at Vtllage 552 1424
Manor
ana
R1vers d€
Apartments n Mtddleport - : - - - - - - - - From $295 $444 Cal 740 Thompsons Appl ance &amp;
992 5064 Equal Housmg Aecatr e75 7388 For sale
Qpportun t1es
re conditiOned
automat c
- - - - - - - - - washers &amp; dryers refr gera
N ce one BR unfurn shed tots
gas and eleclt c
apartment Range &amp;: refng ranges a r cond1 t10ners and
provded WB.ter 8. garbage wr nger washers Wtll do
pad Oepos t requued Call epa rs on maJOr brands m
(740) 446 4345 af!er 6pn
shop o at your home

�....

Page 84 ~ The Daily Sentinel

'

Business Services

Get Your Metsagt Aci'O$S
With A Daily S'4ntinel •

RECEPTIONIST

BULLETIN BOARD

Established busy optometrist's office
is see~ing a reliable friendly
:i ndividual for receptionist posttton,
:25-35 hr/wk. Duties include basic
~secretarial/receptionist duties and will
be cross-trained to perform patient
:pre--testing and .eyewear selection.
'Honesty, dedication. &amp; attention to
detail are required. Minimum of 2
years work experience and/or I year
post-high school education are also
req uired . Salary based on
qualifications. Please send a complete
resume including. job/school
references and salary requirement to:

•15"' column Inch Sat. or SUnday

'B""oolumn inch weekde.ys

'

;
BULLEN~ BOARD DEADLINE
: 2 00 PM DAY BE~ORE PUBLICATIO~'

-----

Please respond by May I.

Abso lute!~

Don't Forget "MOM"

ATTENTION
THE EMPTY NEST

ll!i!OH=.H-RS10- ·4 -M·-F. - - ,

L

Owner:

~·I

..

All pack $5,00
Bring this coupon

....

Buv$5.00
BoOlin~a Get
5FREE

l'

°

Beautiful

worn $300 Inez
{304)675·6518

All'lUI&lt;

JONES'

TRUCKS

mn SALE

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

~=======~

Stock.
Ron Evaris, 1- '"
800·537Call
·9528

Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle ,
Channel. Flat Bar. Steel
Grating
Fer
Drains.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open. Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Sam -4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday. {740)441&gt;-7300

or Sale: Townsend shee ~
~nd goat Tu_rntabte . Usee
f:mly 2 times. like branc
new! .c.os~.$900, will lakE
~500! 17401245·0485.

1992 Dodge Splrit. 58.400
miles. runs &amp; looks good
$1,200. (740)446-2668

r

4-WDs

1998 Dodge Stratus. $3.300
080, AJC, power everything
L~
..............,..J
but seat, CD player. Call
12 Good Fair Pigs tor Mason (740)256-9095.
and Meigs County. Call
-1998 Grand· Am 2D Auto.
(740)388-9033 after 8pm.
- - - - - - - - - - $2,895; 1995 GMC lull Size

LIVESI'OCK

i~

2001 Cnevrolet Suburban
2500 4X4 . Navy Btue, Cloth
1ntenor, cruise, CD player,
A1r. Tow package. 52,000
m1les
$25 ,000
Call
cl3:_0_4):..c6_7S:..·.:c
31_1_7__,_____

__

s.

••

--·- -

"'o
•

Look for the yellow flags!

Public Notice
Shariff'• Sale of
Real Eotale

Can Number
04-CV-001
Mortgage Electronic
Registrat ion
Systoma, Inc. Plaintiff
va.
Richard L. Hunt, alai.,
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas,
'!'alga County, Ohio
In pursuance of an

for

less

than

two-

thirds (213) of that
amount ,
Terms of Sate
Sheriff
of Malga
County
John
0.
Clunk
10005376
Tad
A . , Humbert
10022307
Timothy A. Billick
10010390
Robert R. Hoose
1Hl074544
Usa M. Michaela
110066918
Michael
l. Wiery
1Hl068898
5601 Hudson Drive
Suite 400
Hudson, Ohio 44236
(330) 342·8203
(4) 27, (5) 4, 11

$6.60
Baskets $6.60

~~. . . M•cr•ro
. ..n.cv
..
cu
..~'_.

2003 Volus1a Intruder 800,
1.00Q miles. sllvertwhlte.
garage
kept.
$5,20~
{740)992·2849

~

· I GOT 1\. 1·\\T IN /'1\'( 01'\L'( A.\5fo.-\ I N OUR F I1&lt;.~\ GI\/'1\C: Of

~

II"'

POP Sf&gt;.-YS Tf\1\T MEF\NS ( '/'1\ "''
~HI t-l(, Ot&gt;IE. Tf\OUSM\D FOR

THE YEI\R. ...

carding a club on the third round.
Things ·look grim, but what iS West's dis-

..

\o.l(LL, [

WI\~ \WO FOR 1WO, SO

I'M 51\TT\ NG TWO

Tf\~ S~Ot-11

...

H\OUZ&gt;fo.NI&gt; .1

tribution? It · must be

days
a week daylight
Open 7

to darkl

Ro~ky ~~RJ:'

· Hupp '

IMPORTS
Athens

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

CO~C.+1'
'fiE ~UST
~EARl&gt;

'(UP TM ON
1'\Y WAY To
1~£ DISPERSAL
DI:IIFT.

*
0

Food

.\1111111 \1 rtilrrbil'

for 2004 Meigs
County Fair.

*
Q

lloATS &amp; Mmuws
mRSAU:

25 ft. Camper tor sate 3601
Sportsman, tor more detail's
please call (304)675-:1631
.
24FT Pontoon boat . 86
32
Dutchman
classic
model
good
condition
camper. Sleeps 8. private
3()4 675·3818
queen size bedroom. 24'
AIJll) PAR1S &amp;
awning. fully self contained,
AJC, furnace, new carpet,
ACQSSORIES
country curtains &amp; quilts.
4 31x10 50A15 Trail Blazers, Must see $6 ,000 Call
4 LT 265 X 75A16 GoOdyear (740)379·2769 evenings.
Wranglers, 4 P255 X 70A16
-.. 1 I ~ \ II I '"Generals 304 675-3354

CAMPERS&amp;
MOTOR HOMES

740-742-341

fliOWARDl.

I ..WRITESEl
I *ROOFING
I

1987, 32' Itasca Class A. V6 .
WATERPROOFING
19K, $13,500 (740) 446·
Unconditional lifetime guar9355.
antee. local references furnished. Establ1shed 1975.
2000 Chal (enger TT with Call
24 Hrs. {740) 445.'
slide. 32" 11\ce new. electric 0870, Rogers Basement
!ires/ battery, . waterproofing
Jack, · new
$20,000. {740)245·5 130 .

1-800-822-0417
Chevy, Pontiac. Buick. Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

·

foryou.~

BETTY
,
I'MO~F TO

DR WINK't''S

i

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

*HOME
MAINTENANCE
dEAMlESS
GUTTER
*Fr81 Estnates.

949-1405

.
'

THAT

ARE

_ ___. LEFT DRAFT
PLI\'(ERS FROM THE
TEAMS TH~T FOLDED.

latest medical report
says that cool\ies are

' Call
985-4159

2003 B Touring Cruiser
Motor Home, Length 22',
floor plan. rear· bath , self
contained, tully equipped,
excellent condition . (must
$37,000.
see)
Asking
(740)367·7070.

DRAFT'

TE~MS

--......~

"

•

Serious
Inquiries Only

2001 29ft Sprln1or 51h
Wheel Camper. One Slide
Out Er:canent Condition
$15,500 Phone (3041937·

DIS PEI&lt;SAL THE

PEANUTS

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used
475 South Church St .
Ripley, WV 25271

NORTHUP DODGE

252 Upper River Road • Gallipolis
740-44'6'-0842 • 949-1155 Evenings
800-446-0842

Advertise In this
Space for
$50,per month
YOUNG'S

CARPENTER

SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garag••
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Fiooflng &amp; GuHera
• Vinyl Siding &amp; P•lnting
• Pallo and Porch Decks
We do It all except

furnact work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Vaara L!X=al Eaptrlence

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete

Remodeling

features

5 Not phony
6 Ventilate
7 Steer or
ram
8 Close friend
9 Flight dir.
10 Big fuss

good nor

31

What

person .

32 Me Kellen
and Holm

33 Sitar kin
35 Orchid·
loving

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Cash

GARFIELD

•' 50 EAT LOTS OF COOKIES !
6UV T~t:M FOR 'fOUR D06!
61)'( Ti-IEM B'( TI-lE MILLIONS!
51-tARE Ti-IEM WITH
YOUR D06!
'' (~
;...:..=..::..__

Celellnty C1pher cryptograms are cn~a ted ITem QuotatiOns Dy !anioos peo~
Eacl\ ffittl!r 10 lhe CIOhe ' S1anlls for another

" ZJSLT

ALJAZL

HWL

ALJAZL ."

HCC

that suit. h_e must lead away from his J10-8 of clubs into dummy's K-9·6 and

"PFHP

BR

0-4-2 . South

collects the last

AstroGraph
'ltlur &lt;Jllrthday:

Wednesday, April 28, 2004
By Bernice Bede Osot
Chances are yOur popularity will be on the
nse 1n the year ahead. Don't be surpnsed 11
you lind yourself much more in demand
soc1a1ty. and , if you $0 desire. thi ngs could
start hopping in the romance department .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - To assure
yoursell ot g1eat happiness and personal
satisfaction loday, tirst do everything you
can to make others happy. Thoughtfulness
promotes reciprocal joy and kindness.
GE MINI {May 21-June 20)- Be of good
cheer because a situation that has caused
you some lrepidation 1n the past weeks
could take a turn lor the better today. The
end results will be more than you had
hoped lor.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) - Th1s mighl
be a good day to lake some lime out jusl
lor yourself il you can. Today, aspects oller
OVERDID
you a change of pace. like happily partak·
ing in fun ac.tiv1!1es with good friends or
associa tes.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - Those overall
conditions that relate to your material
Stlf;;urily look e.11ceptionalty promis1ng lor
you today. It would behoove you to operate
in those venues where yQu can generat~
growth.
VIRGO (Aug . 23·Sep1. 22)- Methods or
procedures t11at work lor ypur associates
can be successfully put to work lor you
today, so be a keen observer of people you
respecl and imitate their modus operandi.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23)- Slarting today,
, some sublle changes could beg1n to s\11
~---:::=::::=---~ that would make 11 possible lor you to reap
a greater harveslthan you ever have previously from seeds sown by both you and
others.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov 22)- Do not turn
down any social invitations you get today
where you could get the opporlunity to
meel new acquainlances. Someone in the
group cou ld rlecome a val_uable contact tor
you
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23· Dec. 21) - You
m1ght be luck1er than usual today in being
able to rub shoulders With influential people who could do your caree1 a lot of good .
Be lnendiY and d011't be int1midaled by
lilies.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22· Jan. 19) - By all
means do not take any foolish or outlandiSh gambles, but do striv.e 10 be a bl1
bolder than · usual today. because a wellcalculaled r1sk could produce larger than
HOW ABOUT
usual gains lor you.
01/~R 'T'HfR~ ,
AQUARIUS
(Jan . 20-Feb
19) GARl-IC 6Re:ATH
Coordinate Your efforl!j and des1res w1th
anyone You hnd yourself shanng a com·
mon goat w1th at Ihis lime. II you purposes
are· the same , that which you both want
can be readily attained.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)- This IS one
of those days when you're apt lo receive
far more than you give. tt will be 1n cons1d·
eretion for all that you've done lor others in
the past. and people Simply went to reciprocate .
ARIES (Merct1 :21-April t9) - Devole all
your attention todEiy to any mailers that
could ~enerate 11nenclal growth for you It's
a better lhan usual day for reaping tar more
tund1 thin you might lma~ln e .

I Tl-l!NK

'(OU
IT ...

I

ZJSL

BR

HZZ

LEBZG

NL

presi!ll'lt

"

ZJSBCO

ZHCTLWR
H ·z z

UCJN

PFLWL

f O

BR ,

ZJSL."

TBIUBCRJC

PREVIOUS SOLUTION -"There's only one brighl side ollosing- the phone
doesn 't nng as much the follow1ng week ." - Coach Lou Ho!tz
Ic) 2004 by NEA. Inc. 4·27

s

_:T;_:~~~::.:t.:_;~_T_'0:.::._©:::. .l::~C~I- ~ t ~ ~
0
be·

WORD
GUll

~eorrcnQe le.llllrl of the
·four ~crombled words
low Tc form lour words

DRYHIB

I I' I I' I
b:

I

u RTT

1

1

II I

I' I'
~

WH A L S

5

1·; 1

If

A ne1ghbor can not pass up

:" a sale or any kind. She even •
shops from home using the

.
.
.
.
.
. ~ phone He; husband says that
. . - - - - - - - - - - - - she 's a compulsive buyer who

~_A,. .I

;-~...--·~ hO ~~;o;.~.. ;h~ -,h"~~~ """'

..;.T,...;I;--o,_l_v,..:.1

.
.
,
.
.
.
.
bl' t o!lor~g in tl"l!! m1nmg WOld!
L...l.-L-...l.-L-...l.--.J ,.:::u de.,.l!lop hom !lep No j belc.w

I'
~ '" """
. .. ~....~"'"
tht
e.
. .,..
.',' J$\ ',f~

.
FORI

!

I •

I'•

~..:..:...;__---"--L-..L--.1..-

I I
.

IJ

SCRAM·LETS . ANSWERS &lt;- z 6- o1·
Unmask-' Radar - V1deo ·Jersey- DREAMED
A recently marned couple were so happy about moving inlo the ir dream house. "They got their dream house.
alright," my husband laughed. ''it cost tw ce as much as
they DREAMEDI "
ifj..

ARLO &amp; JANIS

AUOTHt.R G.OCO ~P'
5POiL.W 5Y

~

I!JbW.IT ( ';
~IC~
,,,
I

'

SOUP TO NUTZ
"lt!s Ar1txaW ... Goo .s
!-\Oft ~rilAL THen

a~'~~~ lNG . 1--\e c~sr~o
T~ U!'l1~1'!ie aND
~u•&lt;G ir"\ IT He
1S dLL.

p&amp;$! ana

~equals M

TOday"$ clue

dummy's diamond ace. then ex1t wtth a
,heart. After West takes four winners in

G

BIG NATE

Sefi . ,,

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

.\trtlirlllll/'1'

2-5·1-5.

starting witR.three rounds of hearts. So, 11 ,
you bet on the defense, you won

LE~GUE'

New Home,o; • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement

CAMPERS &amp;
Maroa HoMES

BASEMENT

Pa~

Pa!;s

throwS a diamond, declarer takes
dummy·s three top spades, West dis-

TfiEY'RE

BUILDERS InC.

3211
Used stock Dunlop tires
from Kawasaki 650 Prairie.
Tire lite aprox. 75% on front
aprox. 60% on back. Front
lire -25"x8"x12. Ba ck tlre25"x10")C 12. {740)645 ·5186·
for 1nfo.

3¥
Pass

black-suit break would be suffiCient, so
South cashes his club ace. When East

(ONTRAC.T·
lNG THE
LITTLE

Windows • Roofing

Call 992-4055 for Info

111&amp;1

Pass
Pass

stopper. South was happy to oblige.
Suppose West leads h1s fourth-highest

COMPARE THESE PRICES!!
4" pot of annuals 94e

BISSEll

Maps available Apr 28th

If«~

'DON'T !!

Meigs county's Largest selection ot
annuals, perennials, vegetables,
slrrubbery, fruit, ornamental trees,
roses, rlroaoaenarons, ana azaleas.

7th Annual 6-mile
Middleport-Pomeroy
Yellow Flag Yard Sale!
Friday-Saturday Apr 30 &amp; May 1

34

.

4 Trouser

diamond and three clubs. A favorable

o•

o

2.

3 Dapper

heart. This gives South eigh t top tricks:
three spades, one heart (trick one), one ·

n Mon-Frl 9-5 Sal. 9-12

1

'

Dbl.

three tricks.
West can stop this endplay, though, by

IH••nntnlo

~-

I.

wrner

36 Frau's
abode
37 Baseball
stat
38 Hodgepodge
39 Thunder
Bay prov.
40 Neither .

lwo no·trump (but il wouldn'l be a bad
choice, and North would raise). However,
when South volunteered three clubs.
North cue-bid three hearts to ask his
partner to hid three no-trump with a heart

SINCE IT

'
Pomeroy, Ohio

Morning Star

1·

East

2 " Ghosts"

35 Minimum-

support a·nd a void , is well worth his single raise. South is a P9int shy of .biddi~g

992-2975

Manning K. Roush
Owner
0

~orlh

mystic

26 Sci. class
27 Kind
ol dollar
28 Close
30 Opposite
of " paleO"

handle

promising. North has an automatic takeout double. East, with three-card heart

SALES &amp; SER'1liCE

LawIf a11d Garde11 Equipmellf is our
busi11ess, 1101 our sideli11e

1 Bucket

The auction was exciting. We st should
open., despite three of h1s 12 points being
a singleton king: a 5·5 shape is always .

GRAVELY TRACTOR
204 Condor Street

DOWN

The contract
is 1hree no-trump.
"Mesdames et messieurs, faites vas jeux .

•

.

MIZ PRUNELL Y'S
, GONNA L 'ARN
US ALL 'BOUT
HOW GOV'MENT
WORKS !!

4" pol of perennials $1.1 BBuy 5or more lor $1.00

740-992-1189
740-992-2902

o.o.o,.

Route 124
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
PPN : 18·01290.000
Appraised at: $5,000
and cannot be sold

740-992-5594
740-992-6862

Gallipolis. OH WVOI0212
446-9416 r 1-800-872-5967

Your Right to Know, Delivered Right to Your Dour.

Said· premlsaa also
know~ as 42820 Stale

Yards

Dennis Boyd

Gibson

'' .

22 Indolent
25 Scale
29 Many

20 DA's
degree
23 Intensity
24 Hindu

money on South (the declarer) or ·East·
Wesl (lhe defense).
·

Snapper

Gravely

West

sourc ~Js

indicator

1

dete&lt;:tlve
40 "The
Greatest"
41 Northam
lights
43 Out of town
45 Of durable
wood
46 Landscape
411 Roman foe
49 Quay
50 london
park
51 - Mohal
52 Melodrama·
tic cry
53 Swabbie
55 Gel a move
on

All th1s week, at the Alder Bridge Casino,
you have to decide _whether to place your

f:L~C.TION
\'~A/l.

Will Mow

Service, Free'
Estimates
&amp; Affordable -"
Prices, Call...

• 5.&amp; 10 yr Warmnlics
, V'
• Hu ge lnvemory
· ,, •
• Vanguard Vemless Fireplaces ·~ •. ·
rRPPRn
.,__

JVST
L-1~~ TO SLH:P
Tti/lOVGI'I Tti~

name

opppsite

millennia

3 NT

declarer's

• Free Est1matcs

Public Notices in Newspapers.

In the above country

1/14/1 ·mo. pd

Residen tial &amp; Manufactured Housing
Air Cond itionex,;,_H'-'1t_Pumps &amp; Furnaces
• Supdlli Efficiency Equipmen . ,

0

on the 18th day of
June, 2004 at 10:30
a.m . at the door of the
courthouse, the lol·
lowing described real
estate:

7:00AM - 8:00 PM

BEATING fl COOLING

a

order of Sale In the
above
inlilllad
action, I will offer for
sale al.publlc auction

Hours

BENNETT'S

truck; $3,495: 2002 Ford F- t5o. super
1997 Z·24. $2,995 18 oth- crew short bed. 4 door. ton~
ers m stock, startmg S995.
neau cover. XLT Tnton.
COOK MOTC&gt;RS
cyl , 19,000 miles. $24,200,
{740)446·0103
(740)992·398 1

Langsville,
Ohio
45741-9707 and were
appralaad
at
$20,000.00 and can·
not be solei for less
than two-lhlrds of
that amount, to wit:
$13,333.34.
TERMSOFSALE:
10% cash In hand at
day of sale with balance be pal&lt;! by Cash
"or , Certified Check
upon delivery of
dead.
Ralph E. Trussell
Shariff .of
Meigs
County, Ohio
Mark K. McCown,
Anorney
311 Park Avenue
tronlon, Ohio 45638
740-532·8744.
~4)13, 20, 27

·· to tO'x30'

ForFasfCourleous

• Dirt
• Ag Lime
no-985-3564

•

Sherlff't Sale of northerly right of way
line of Route 124;
Real Ellata
thence leaving aald
Cau No. 03•cv-1 02
Th• State of Ohio , right of way and
along a severance
Melga County •
Mid Truot,IV
llna Ihrough tho proparty
of
Douglas
Plaintiff,
Va.
Chapman, D.B . 309,
Mary J. Hawk, ET Al
Pg. 395 (four callaO
Deftndanta.
and following the
In pursuance of an
centerline of a small
creak for (two calls),
order of sale In the
above antltlod action I N. 2 Deg. 25' 13" E.,
94.17 feet, N. 35 Deg.
wilt offer for sale at
public auction · at the
20' 37" E. 60.51 feet to
door ·
of
the
a point; thence laav·
In
lng aald creak,
54
Courthouae
Pomeroy, Ohio In the . Deg. 08' 43" E, 313.52
above named County
feet passing an Iron
on Friday, May 14, pin at 20.00 feet to an
20041110:30 A.M. the
Iron pin, S. 41 Deg.
following dllcrlbed 28'39" W,. 164.01 leal
realeltata.
to an Iron pin In the
Situate
In
the
Northerly right of w~q
Town1hlp of Rutland, line Route
t124;
Melga County, Ohio: thence along said
BEGINNING ate point right of way line, N. 48
In the centerline of
Deg. 31' 21 " W., 246.21
Route 124, 11ld point fHI Io the point of
It where the canterBEGINNING and con·
line of Corn Hollow talnlng t .00 Acree,
Road lntaroecto with
more or leas.
FORLAST·
Route 124; thence
with the centerline of SOURCEOFTITLE·
Route 124 S. SODag. SEE D.B&gt; 324, Pg. 511
33' E., 153.&amp;7 fHIIo 1 of the Malg1 County,
point at the cenler of Ohio Recorda of
a brldga; thence N. 37 Deeds. Parcel No, 11·
Deg . 11'32" E., 24.92 00025.001.
fHI to the true point
Theaa
(Vemlaea
of beginning, laid are loeatad at 31586
point Ia alao In the
Red
Hill
Road,

" 'Sims 5'x:1 o· ·

Roofing-SidingPainting-Gutters- ·
Decks-Etc. ·

HAULING:

0

•

740-949-2217

SllAI.. 11~
t;OJVS'flliJI:'I'ION

Trucking

I
·r

UBLIC
NOTICES

Maplewood Lake
Between Radne
and Syracuse on

45771

949-2734

R.B.

7 112yr old Mare and a nice shor tbed
pony 1 112yr old. make offer,
call (740)742-921 7 ·

MARKET

• Sand

1995 Geo Metro, 2 door, 1991 S-10 Blazer. 4dr. 4wd.
great Qas auto. air. cru1se. body fair.
runs Qood,
mileage. $900. (740)256- runs
· $2,000
great,
6800.
(740)645· 08SO

Hill's Self
Storage

St. Rt. 124
Space Available

• ~imestone

VAI\S&amp;

Registered ANGUS and
Crossbred bulls. Top blood2000 Dodge Neon, auto. a1r.
40
lines, Slate · Run Farm ,
$3,100080
MmunLYCIHi
Wizard 42 inch riding Jackson.
(740)286-5395
mower. 4x12 u1ility trailer. 60 look
up 1998 Dodge Mini Caravan, 1..,.. . . . . . . . . . . . . .,..1
needs pam! work , $2 ,300·
yaa;Js tan carpet &amp; pad. www.slaterunfarm.com.
2000 650 Yamaha Classic 2
080.{740)256·1233.
(740)388·8997.
windshields,
saddlebags,
Young heavy breed laying 2000 Grand Prix"GTP. silver
musta ng seat 8000 miles in
hens, (740)992·7042
23,000 miles, $12.000. Call perfect cond . 304-773-5109
{740)388·9804.
' HAY&amp;
2002 H0nda Shadow 750
2003 Caviler 4door, 4 cyl. ,
BlOCk, brick, sewer pipes,.
GRAIN
A.C.E. , like new with many
attto, 9,000 mile s, tilt , cruise,
windows, lintels, etc. Claude
extra's, Adult ridden $5,000
Winters, Rio Grande, OH Straw for sale $2.50 a bale air cond., CO player, $6,500. firm Racine (740)949-1131
{740)441-0337.
Call 740·245-5121.
{304)675·1925
after 5pm

~=

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

:29670 Bash an Road
Racine, Ohio

740·992-5232

riO

r

Let me do it for youl

(304) 273-5321

FLEA

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage

rvc.

NEW AND USED STEEL

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

T~/lM ... ~·{)

14 Is, to Fritz
15 Jurist
-Warren
16 l!!argarine
17 Deadly
19 Gnome
21 ""Da"

31 Rugged
34 Color

It is time to decide
on the second d~al

BARNEY

April 30 - May 1

~'R~

$500!.Hondas.
Chevys.
Available now a1 Charles
Jeeps, etc
POLICE
McKean Farm. (740)446IMPOUNDS
Cars from 1995 GMC 2500. Short bed,
Illinois Railroad Pocket 9442.
$500. For listings 1-800-719- extended cab. 4lC4, 129,000
Watch, Lever Set, "Abe·
3001 ex1 3901
m1les. 350 eng. , auto trans.
Lincoln Series~. 21· Jewels,
KESSEL'S ·PRODUCE
cruise. powef windows
14-K G,old . Filled Case. Amish Cheese, Lunch Meal, 1987 Cutlass, runs good, &amp; door locks. "towi ng pack$375. Also Older Bulova Fresh Fruit and Vegetables body solid . 1986 Ford
age. bed liner. new tires.
Accutron
Wrist Watch, Open Thurs-Fri-Sal. 1354 E~Cplorer, 4x4 , $1,200 each
$8.000 call {740)379·2789
"Space View" Series, 1o-K, Jackson Pike. Gallipolis, 080. {740)742·8716 .
evenmgs
Gold Case, 1971· .Loo'ks Ohio. (740)446-77'87
1991 Chevy Geo Tracker
New-$300.
1996 Ford Bronco XLT 302
I \ll\1 Sl 1'1'1 II s
4x4, hard top. new transmis4x4 , automatiC, power win+
,\11\1 ... 1()( ...
sion, new t1res and many dow, power locks ,· A/C,
other parts. Very good conJET
b:cellent condition . 49,900
dition.· $·3,000 OBO 740AERATJON MOTORS
FARI'&gt;l
original mites. garage kept.
446-4616 Of 740-446-1637.
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In
EQuiPMFNr
$7,800.{740)742·1900.

Lawnboy mower with grass
catcher, $90, call (740)94g..
4000

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

HJRSAI.E

HOME GROWN
ASPARAGUS.

Smith

/

Phone (740)593-6671
Athens, Ohio

750 East State Street

Ta~e

96 Saturn SCt, 2 door. red,
great condition. Must Sell
$3.000. (740)256·6800.

"

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

0!'1, NOTtitNG L-ONG

river

56 Enler data
57 Mariner's
greeting
58 Row
59 Stop
60 Task
61 WifeOfZaus 13 Settee
62 ·Maiden18 River

contents

Opening lead:..,?

/cHiVRO,~T/

54 Pinsburgh

owner

6 4 3
Q J 10
t I0 6 3
.... A Q 42

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

I

10

South

wear, once

attire

12 R2-D2's
13 Hourglass

• 10 \1 8 :;
., 9 7 6
• ·QJ9H52

t K
•
•

:n-o~

East

4 J I 087:i

FREE E5TIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

SHOP CLASSIFIEDS

04
A K f.l i
oi :l
A. I 4
K ~ 6;:.

Wf"st
• J 2
V AK,.85t

MONTY -

LARRY SCHEY

Top • Removal • Trim

garden pants. Caldwell's 1
mile south of Tuppers Plains ,..;;;;;;;;;;....;;;;;.;;;;...;.._ _

gown Size 5 never been

•

t Driveways t Tennis Courts
t Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets

iolriiiriiiiii.iiirro..

Ivory . Weddmg on SR 7

878-2457

+

South ·

Tree Service

0

MEKL'HANU!St

•

Jeff Stethem

(Commerc1JI and Re!iidential )
Mowing, Trimming, Tree Trimming, Aeration, Fertil iz11tion,
Spraying of fence lines, Leaf Removal. as well as small
landscaping jobs such as planting and mulching.

for more information

r

Henderson, WV

47 Hairpie&lt;:e
49 Moralize
51 Senator's

vegetable
11 Bedouin

I

Dealer: West
Vulnerable: Both

Hunting stock Registered ,
SF..ID &amp;
710
Atrros
BUy or sell
A1verme born 2114104 · $ 20
Call
f'ER'fliJZI-:1-l.
FOR SALE
30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones
Alltiques, 1124 East Main 17
,.4;;;0;.1•,.•-1·-18;.9;.;2;..
. ---., ~
. L,....
,.J
4
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 7 0·
FRUITS &amp;
Horse Manure Pick-up load 92 Ford" Temp. Power seats. '::=====~~~~~~====~
9~2-2526 . Ru ss Moore.
VEGt.:lABI.J·~
$25 loader ava1lable, Dump w1ndows. locks. 4 cty aulo. , , . - - - - - - - - owner.
Truck load delivered $75 $1,000. Call (740)446-2248
alter 5.
Ml'iCUIA~EOUS
All vanet1es ol flowers and
--

month

LAWN CARE DIVISION .

Call 740-441-1259

HJRSALE

-E-ng-l-is_h__S_e11e_r__p_u_ppies.·
-

el·eQ'

•

topics

for nanny

8 Pod

North

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

and ~e§idential)
Mobile Homes, Houses, log Homes. Decks, Driveways,
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Degreasing of
Equipment. Boats, Campers, Tractor Trailers,
Dump Trucks, paintins or stai ning of your deck
or log home, Aluminum brightening.
Special rates to Trucking and Dump Trucking Companies.

(Next to Summer Image)

Call (740)2S6·

"/

bad

42 Make
1 Coal storage
wdlerprool
4 Wheels
44 Tablold

;

(Cornrnercic~l

NEW LOCATION

PITs

::~ 2 $150

Last Thursday ol

NEA Crossword Puzzle

Phillip
Alder

Office; (740) 992-2804 Cell; (740) 517-6883
POWER WASH INC

will be closed
Wed. April 28th thru
Sat. May 1st for moving.
We will be open at out

more. Grave Monuments . Baby rabbits tor sale. S5
(140)446-4782 Galt1polis, each. Small white male don,

6:30

'

ACROSS

TRI - STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

1 mile from Holzer Hospital

r

• Porch Boxes
• Combination Pots
• Perennials
• Spruce Trees
• Shrubs
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• Peal Moss

Mondu)·Suturday 9-5 Closed Sunday
740-992-5776

AKC Black Lab puppies, 6
·Used furniture Store.
wks. MaleS and females .
. 130 Bukwille rlke.
First
shots. · $300.00
Mattresses,
dressers ,
(740)992-3887 after 5
cOuches. recliners, much

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• Easter Flower~
• Bedding Flowers
• Vegetable Plullls
• Blooming
&amp; Foliage Ba&lt;kets
Poning Soil

4279 St. Rt. 160

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&amp; Sunday
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Syracuse, OH

Ma1n Street Poi~t Pleasanl
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phone calls

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Place your order now!

Receptionist
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443 Gen. Hartinger Pkwy.
Middleport, OH 45760

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Tuesday, April 27,2004
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lilt.:

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�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, April

www.mydailysentinel.com

27, 2004

Olympic officials seek help in banning drug cheaters College Track
BY ROB GLOSTER

Associated Press .
SAN FRANCISCO - Exactly 108
days before the start uf the Athen'
Games, U.S. Olympic officials are
pleading with federal authorities for help
m trymg to make ~u_re no drug cheaters
qualify for the Amenc:an team. •
"We're concerned lrr&gt;tlhat we hm c a
clean team participating in the game,.
Secondly, we are concerned we ha,·e a
team th at is free uf speculation about
\\hether it is clean in the'e games." U.S.
Olympic Commiuce chief executi\ e Jim
Scherr ~a id in a telephone mien re" w1th
The A"ociated Pre" .
·
"And we do not want anv' lin~erin~
'
'
,uspil· ion~ ur po~iti\ t ll.~ ... h coming OlJt
of the games:·
The USOC i' not jthttar~ctin~ athlctt''
who ha ve failetl drt1g t esh~ ltbtead. official' hope to uti li1e ' a L· iau'e in the l i.S.
Anti-Doping Agcnt:y ·s ru les tn har at h-.
le tes who ad now ledge the use ot
steroid, anti nlhcr ban;1etl ,uh,tance,.
including in granU jur) le~timony .
Section 9 0t tht• l!SADA's ·protowl

gives that agency the authority to hring a
drug ca~e against an athlete _i n lieu of a
positive dru~ test .. "hen L SADA has
other reason' tp believe that a potential
doping 'iobtion ha,.; oc~urrL~d. such as
admilled dopin g...
"Our image is going to be just fine if
we send a clean team." a..:ting LSOC
president Bill Mariin said in a tdephone
intcr\·iew Monday. "Tiw. la't thing 'J.C
want to happen is to 'elect -the wrong
folks.
"America does nnt walll to 'end a dirty

team to Athen,, but the ban·, not in our
hand&gt; ri.~ht now. Time i' truly of the
essence.
Man in and Scherr waht the L'SADA to
get acces' tu grant! jury transcripts in the
Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative case.
involving the allegetl distribution of
'teroids to top athlete, .
While suL·h grand jury proceedings are
secret by law. the Senate Commerce
Commi ttee chaired ~y Sen . . John
McCain . R-AriL. ha' i.ssued a subpoena
for the BALCO testimony.
That could merride the secret·y provision . according to Rorv Little. a H&lt;tsttn~s
Colle~e of the. Law scholar and a timner
federal pn"ecutor in San Francisco.
Little .saitl it wou ld be "highlv unusual
for the Department of Justice io be giving up gran&lt;ljury material in th~ middle
of an in\ l!sliuation. ·· But e\'en if the
Ju , ti..:e Dep•u1mem .:hallenged &gt;uch a
,uhpoena. Lillie said. a &lt;:oun could order
that such Jocurnenh be relea,ed .
Justice Department spokesman Mark
Corallo saitl Mondav he doesn 't know
whether any material h:b been turned
over tu ML~Cain's committee. Rebecca
Hanks . it 'pokeswoman for McCain,
declined to comment.
According to an AP poll released
Monday. 92 percent of Americans
believe the use of steroids and other perfnrmarll·e-enhancing drugs by Olympic
athlete' is a probl em.
.
Forty-three percent of those responJing to the 'urvey called it a major problem: another 49 percent see it as a minor
problem. Only 6 percent don't consider
it a problem.
·
Craig Ma sback. th e head of USA

Track &amp; Field, hopes evidence of any
drug use is unveiled as quickly as possible ··so that the guilty will be runished
and the innocem will be cleare(J of suspicion.
·That is all we can do.:· Masback said.
"We did not do the tests, we did not test
the samples. We did not do the federal
investigation, we do not have the affidavits. we were not in the grand jury."
Last weekend. two U.S. track stars Marion Jones and her boyfriend. Tim
Montgomery - were connected in.
reports to BALCO founder Victor Conte.
The San Francisco Chronicle and the
San Jose Mercury News. quoting
sources who requested anonymity.
reponed that Conte told federal agents
he gave steroids to Jones and
Montgomery.
Jones. who won live medals in the
2000 Olympics, and Montgomery, the
world record-holder at 100 meters.
repeatedly have denied steroid use. An
attorney for Jones said she never
received steroids from Conte. An attorney for Conte said he never provided
steroids to Jones or Montgomery, and
never gave such information to federal

agents.
Jones and Montgomery were among
dozens of athletes - including baseball
sluggers Barry Bonds and Jason Giambi
- who testified before the grand jury
that indicted Conte. No athlete s were
indicted.
Conte and thrc.e other men. including
Bonds· personal trainer. have been
charged with providing steroids to professional athletes. All four pleaded innocent.

.Police questioning West Virginia recruit
in high school teammate's death
·
CLEVELAND (AP ) - A
We&gt;t Virgin ia Unh ers ity
football recruit is being
ques.tioned by police in the
shoot in~·
&lt;.Ieath
of
a
Benedi ctine High School
teammate .
R·u nnin g back Raymond
Williams. the rei gning Ohio
Mr. Football who let! the
Bengals to the Division 111
state title in November. was
arrested Monday along with
a teammate. but neithe r
player has been charged.
said Ll . Linda Kaspar. a
police spokeswoman.
Williams and defensive
back ' Jon Huudleston . both
' 18. were at the City Jail.
Police believe the y were at

the ,ccne or LnrenLo Huddleston. bot.h seniors at
Hunter\ death earlier th is the parochial boys school.
month. Kaspar &gt;aid.
Police took them into cusPol ice charged, Rodn ey tody at the school. The Plain
. Roberts . 20. with agg ravated Dealer reported.
murder
last
week in
The school's principal. the
Hunter's death about 2 a:m. Rev. Gerald Gonda. said in a
April 16.
slatemenl that Williams and
Police have said a witness Huddleston were suspen.ded
told them that Hunter. 16. indefinitely.
was trying to rob Roberts
Williams was named the
with a plastic gun. Roberts 17th annual winner of The
then pulled out a real gun. Ohio Associated Press Mr.
a..;cortling to police .
Football award just days
Hunter. a sophomore wide before he rushed for 237
receiver and safety. died of yards and two touchdowns
gunshot wounds to the chest, in .a 12-0 victory over
arm and hip.
Kenton in. a state title game
Kaspar ., aid she did not · in Canton.
,
kn ow if charges would be
Williams also was named
fi led again't 'Williams and first-team All-Ohio and

Division Ill offensive player
of the year after rushing for
2,099 yards and 2 7 touchdowns in the 2003 regular
season. Huddleston also
earned first-team honors.
Williams signed a national
letter-of-intent to play for
WVU. However, he has not
qualified academically and
is expected to either attend
WVU as a Proposition 48
player or initially play at a
junior college.

Redmenedge
OVC at home, Bt

Rio Grande finishes
seventh at the ·AMC
Championships

•

ST.t.Ff REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune.com
ROCHESTER, NY - Both Uni,·ersity of Rio Grande
men's and women\ track and field squads earnctl seventh
place finishes at the American Midea't Conference
Championships at Robens Wesleyan College on Saturday.
The Redwometl scored 50.5 potnts anti the Redmeo garnered 41.5.
Sophomore sprinter Brandon Brown torched the field in
both the men's I 00 and 200-meter dashes to claun the AMC
Championship in both events. Brown timed out at 10.96 in
the .JOOand 21.91 in the 200.
·
Freshman Carlesha Chambers was AMC Champion in the
women's 400-meter dash with a time of 57..19. Chambers
teamed up with Tory Jortlan. Cara Ratcliff an~ Niesha Fuller
to win the 4 x 100-meter relay wrth attme of 49.05.
Other scoring performances for the Redwomen : Jordan.
3rd. in the 100-meters (12.16) and 5th tn the 200 (26.05 );
Alicia Smith. 3rd in the discus ( 129 feet. 4 inches ): Fuller.
6th in the 100 meters ( 12.50): Hope Jagodzin ski . tied for 7th
(with Erin Brown of Maione ), in the pole vault t8 feet. 6
inches); Nicki Thomas. 8th in the javelin ( 102 feel) and
Dawn Naole. 8th in theiO.OOO meter run (42:48.99).
The 4 /400-meter relay team finished sixth with a time of
4:13.40.
Other Red women resu,lt s: Shannon Soulsby. 9th in the -100
(I :03.67 ): Fuller, 1Oth in the 200 ( 26.46) and Rate! iff. 15th in
the 200 ( 27.32 ).
Malone won the women's meet with 173 points. Robens
Wesleyan was 2nd ( 156) Cedarville was 3rd t 130 ). Wa"h.
4th (93.5 ) and Geneva was 5th t89.5). There were mne
schools competing.
.
'·
On the men'.s side. in addition to the outstanding etlort&gt;; of
Brown, senior Brian Mitchell fini shed third in the II 0-meter
hurdles wi th a time of 15..:13. Freshman thrower Gastin
Green earned a 4th place finish in the discus ( 1-13 feet. 7
inches) and 6th place in the shot put (45 feet. 7 inches).
Other scoring performance&gt; for the Red men: Brad Gilders,
6th in the 800-meter run ( 1:59.40): David Brodeur. 7th in the
javelin ( 156 feet, 2 inche&gt;): Jonathan Hunts berger. ti ed for
seventh (with Jesse Braswell of Houghton) in the pole \'ault
(12 feet) and Michael .Conger. Rth in the 110 hurdles ( 16.25).
Other results for tLe Red men : Conger. 9th in the long jump
(20 feet, 4 3/4 inches): Nate Hall. tied for 11th' in the high
jump (with Matt Hill of Roberts Wesleyan) with an effort of
5 feet. 8 inches and Tim McCoy was 12th in the -100-mctcr
dash (53.83) and 18th in the 200 (23.85 ).
Tiffin won the men's meet with 196 points. Cedarville wa&gt;
runner-up ( 156.5). Malone. 3rd ( 142.5). Geneva, 4th (92.5)
and Walsh was 5th UO .5 ).
There were nine teams competing.
'.
~
Rio will head to Ohio University to compete on May 8.
•

Middleport·· Pomeroy, Ohio
.)O(),IS•\ul.,)~ . :\o.lhX

• Eagles fly over Rebels
late. See Page 81

BY BRIAN

0
%
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To Be j:)ublished
Friday, May 7th

Farmers·Ban·k's
1OOth anniversary
BY CH.t.RLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

The Daily
•
Sentinel

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Happy
Mother's Day
(Your
Mother's
Name)
Love John,
Joe and S~Jsan

• Bush: America's medical
records system is stuck in
'Buggy era'. See Page AS

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2004 MERCURY MOUNTAINEER

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Fill out the form below, attach It with your payment
and send It to
The Dally Sentinel "Mother's Day"
ttl Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769
For more Information caU 992-2t56
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RUTLAND - Making
art enjoyable for -all cbil-'
.ctren'is one of Jan Haddox's
goals as an ,art ~acher at
t~ . Meigs
Elementary
1: Sch()Ql iifid pe!s apparently
...· succeeding aJ that.
;; '· .... don' f. have a )tid thi11
can't .. enjoy art. I have
· some ;that can't dtaw very
· well, but they still enjoy
tlie ex~erience,"
said
. Hact.dox, who · has been
teacbing ~art to elementary
. ~(ud.~nts. for ." the past five

WEATHER

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(Your
Mother's
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~

"' CHAR~E HOEFticil

2004 FORD EXPEDIDON

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(Picture)

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Happy
Mother's Day

,;

Pre,ident of the United
States. and commended the
oftlcers for ably serving its
etistomers for a century
through period.\ of economic
depression and world war
while continually showing
steadfast commitment to the
communities it served .
Dwing the meeting Reed
g&lt;iYc a brief history of the
bank's organization on Aug.
6. 1904 when it was chartered
and·threc days later when five
men ~ot together to choose
officers C!nddirectors.
Tho&gt;e men were W. F.
Reed. George H. Parker. Dr.
J. W. Hysell. Dr. L. F.
Rousl1.
and
Thomas

Zac:hlity,Sayre, left, arid·J~!tffrey, Roush, ~th fourth grade art students of Ja11 Haddox at
the Meigs Eleml)n.tilr}' "School point with pride to their creations in the hallway Art Gallery.
(Charllt~ Hoeflich); · .. ·1.
••
•
• .
.

ffi

I
1 c'tty, state , z·1p

. POMEROY - A plaque
from the Ohio Banke"
League · commemorating the
I OOth anniversary of the
Fanners Bank and Sa\·ing
Company was presented tn
Paul tyl. Reed. president. anti
Paul E. Kloes. chairman. at
last· week's 19th annua l
shareholde" meeting.
The inscription on the
plaque cpmmended the bank
for its history and continuing
strong tradition of excellence
over the past I 00 years.
It noted that the tirst annual
n'ieeting of the bank was held
when 'Theodore Roosevelt
was in his first term a~

INSIDE

Er $1JOOO REBATE

1X3 Greeting $10.00 1X5 Greeting- $13.00

Paul E. Kloes. chairman. left . and Paul M. Reed. president
and chief executive officer of the Farmers Bank display a
plaque presented to them by the Ohro Bankers League in
commemoratio n of the 100th anniversary of the bank.
(Charlene Hoeflich)

MAKING ART ENJOYABLE

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Greeting Examples ...

REED

in plans for the $1.825 mil- rrient in the plans will cost
lion plant.
an additional $473.500.
Tentative plans for the . while · including provisions
MIDDLEPORT
new treatment facility have for the system. but not the
Middleport Council will ·
been
submitted to the Ohio equipment. would cost
decide by May 10 whether
Protection $152,000. Including . the
Environmental
to include a half-million dollar water softening system in Agency. Shull said, and the softening equipment at conplans for a new water treat- EPA has sent the application struction would raise the
back with comments, a stan- cost of the project to S2..+
ment plant.
At Monday evening's reg- dard part of the approval million. ·and would impact
ular meeting of Middleport process. The plant will be customers· water bills by 52
Village ·Council . . Jay Shutt, constructed on property now to 53 per month.
president of the village 's owned by Dr. Haro.ld
The engineering firm
engineering firm, · Floyd Brown. on Page Street, next would charge .I he village an
Browne Associates, dis- to Overbrook Center.
additional . $35.000 just ·for
cussed the cost involved in
According
to
Shutt.
Please see Water, AS
including a softening system . including softening equip-

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This Mother's Day, a heartfelt "Thank You" could be
the best gift you could ever give your mother.
Don't miss this opportunity to say it.

J.

BREEOOMYDAtLYSENTINEL.COM

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Council to decide on water softening

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.

Teaching circles, . boxe$,
triangles and rectangles foi:
desi!{ll aq~ lior~on!al ljnes
· across ~ sheet of a paper
, for . · perspective
was
described by Haddox as the
"basic, stuff" to cre~ti.ng art
· work. "l:elll:li the basics of
• ·a rt !!Dd cypq, ~a11 (Jraw," be

~

Comics

Recognized .for outstanding ·achievement and presented
pins by president Scot! Walton at Tuesday night 's meeting
of the Meigs Local Board of Education were from the left.
Andrew Henderson.• Wesley Fields and Maegan Dodson.
(C harlene Hoefli ch)
"

'd . '
SalJ.

'

430 third, fourth and .fifth
graderS once a week:.-· He
s~d t~at some ~ezy talented
ktds are b;emg found,
"Some of their "(Ork is ~ally exc¢ptional, · they're
findjng their nic~e" h'l
~omrnenied as he pointed
to several drawin_gs on display in the hallway · litl

© 2004 Ohio Valley PublishJng Co.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYOAtLYSENTINELCOM

.

Haddox, t\laches ab()ut

.

Scheduling, staffing dominate
Meigs Board meeting
.
Fourth grader i&lt;rassandra Mullins using the basics of
circles. boxes, triangles and rectangles taught her in
art class completes a picture of a rabbit selling carrots. (Charlene Hoeflich)
gallery.
.
A rule for posting art in
the hallway gallery is that
the work must be totally
original and complete.
The
.

pictures are changed every
couple of weeks and the
challenge to the students is
to follow tlie rules to get
their work posted.

POMEROY - With the
cu rrent school term winding down. most of the
action taken by the Meig'
Local Board of Education
at Tu estlay 11ight's meeting
wa' directed toward sc hed uling and staffing for the
200=1-05 year.
The ·' 'hool calendar
atlopted showed tc&lt;trhe"
reporting for work on Aug .

2~. with the fi"t day for
quJenb being Aug. 25.
Than's~ivitw break begins
'
'
on We dnesday. Nov. 24.
wtth ,tudc nts"re turning to
,c]H)(ll &lt;'n the following
MnlllLrv. For Christmas
'acatroi1 the fiN day o'ut is
Dec. 20 and students go
back to "·hool on Jan. 14.
Spring break begins on
March 25 with students
returning on Man;h 29,

Please see Board, A5

1

OR

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..
RELAY

FOR LIFE•

Attention Cancer Survivors!
And those interested in the fight against cancer
The 2004 Meigs County Relay for Lif~ ·will be held

June 4 and 5
at the Eastern High School Athletic Field on State Route 7

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Jlolzcr Ditfe7'ellfe

A concer survivors' reception will take place ot 6 PM on June 4

For more information, please contact Courtney Sim ot 992-6626 .

All.are inviled to attend .and join us in the fight against cancer!

www .holzer .org

For more information, please call Chairperson JoAnn Crisp ot(740I 992-2136.

•

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