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                  <text>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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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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Mother's
Name)

~

"' 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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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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the best gift you could ever give your mother.
Don't miss this opportunity to say it.

J.

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Weather

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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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PageA2

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NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel
.

Wednesday, April 28, 2004

Community Calendar

-

Worried about losing foreign students, universities lobby for simpler visa process
BOSTON (AP) - A steep
decline in graduate school
_applications from foreign students has university administrators. pushing the fe.:leral
government to reform the
visa process. Their argument ~
The trend could cost U.S.
· schools much-needed revenue and research help, and
make America seem isolated
in the eyes of the world.
International graduate student applications for this fall-'
are down 32 percent compared with a year ago.
·· , ·according to a rec.ent survey.
and schools are extending
application deadlines so they
don't lose students still negotiating ,U.S. bureaucracy. .
Meanwhile, in public comments and private lobbying.
universities are urging federal officials to speed up visa
applications, stressing that
America's role as a beacon to
the world's students could be
in jeopardy.
Officials from several
California schools and the
Department . of Homeland
Security discussed foreign
student matters Tuesday at a
gathering in San Diego. ·
And representatives from a
handful
of
prominent
schools, including the presidents of Yale and Princeton.
met in New York recently to
explore ways to use the influence of their trustees to help
make their case.
Universities acknowledge
that the importance of foreign
students is not obvious to the
public, which has security
concerns after one of the
Sept. II hijackers entenid the
country on a student visa.
Some may wonder why foreign students take up 600,000
slots in American universities
in the first place.
But administrators insist
those slots are as important
now as ever.
"This is one of America's
most effective forms of
diplomacy," said Douglas
Kincaid, vice provost for
international
studies at
Florida
·1nternational
University in Miami, where
foreign enrollment is down
I 0 percent. "We're educating
people who will be in intluential positions · in science
and industry and government
around the world.''
More than 90 percent of
graduate schools reported
their foreign applications for
this fall declined, according
to a survey of 113 universities last month by the Council
of Graduate Schools.
Undergraduate applications
also are down, but not as
much, likely because fewer
undergmduates plan to work

Fewer visa

•PIIcatlons
Since a-n

-

.

,/

Issued

-

Wh&lt;le applications tor
student visas declined
in recent years, the
proportion granted was
similar and. the total
number ot tore1gn
students in the United
Slates continued to r~se
Foreign students
enrolled In U.S. schools

2001

2002

2003

2004
•

Through March 31

600,000

Clubs and
organizations

500

400-"f"""!~r
300
200

es-ss 90-91 92-93 94·95 96-97 98-99 oo-ot
' SOURCES·eo-87
_.._.
U.S. Departmenl of State: 1nst11u1e ollntematiOna! Educahon
-----~---------------~---·--·

on sensitive technologies that
require a more thorough
background check.
Feeling the effects are big.
public universities and elite.
private ones like Harvard.
whose president. Lawrence
Summers, reported a sharp
drop in international application s to each of Harvard's
nine schools in a recent letter
to federal oftlcials.
Many schools count on foreign students to teach classes
and fill labs.
"We don't have domestic
students to take their place.
mostly in tields like science
and
technology."
said
Stephen Dunnett. vice president for international education at tne University at
Buffalo, part of New York's
state university system. The
school has 3.600 foreign students. with applications
down one-third this year.
Foreign students often pay
higher tuition, and soak up
little financial aid because
they must demonstrate financial self-reliance to get a visa.
More than 75 percent of their
funding comes from outside
the country. according to the
Institute .of · International
· Education.
Foreign students also contribute $ 12 billion to the U.S .
economy, according to II E.
Experts cite several factors
for the dip in applications,
including diminished esteem
for America abroad, rising
tuition at U.S. schools and
increasingly
compettttve
alternatives in Europe and
Asia.
But the difficulty, or perceived difficulty, getting a
student visa quickly appears
to be the primary cause.
"It's really frustrating

missing in South Carolina;
three soldiers aboard ·- .

,

Applications

Florence. Patterson said he
didn 't know if weather was a
factor in their deci sion.
The missing Blackhawk
was assigned to the l st
Battalion , !59th Aviation
Regjiment and had left Fort
Bragg about8:30 p.m. Its last
known position was 20 miles
northeast of Florence in
northeastern South Carolina.
Buckncr said.
The search area is swampy,
thickly vegetated terrain
along the Pee Dee River, said
Dusty Owens, director of the
Florence Couoty Emergency
Management Division .
Ordinarily, air teams look
for damaged trees for clues to
an aircraft's location , but
many of the trees in the
search area were damaged by
an ice storni months ago,
Owens said.
The search operation
included the Civil Air Patrol,
helicopters crews and soldiers on the ground from Fort
Bragg, Florence County officials, emergency medical and
fire services, state Natural
Resources Department ofticers.

PROUD TO BE APART
OF YOUR LIFE..
The Daily Sentittel
Subscribe roday • 4992-2155
www.mydoilysencitlel.com

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Wednesday, April 28
POMEROY Regular
meetmg of the Soiuthern
Consortium for Children will
be held at 10 a.m. at the
office. The meeting is open to
the public.
Saturday, May 1
PORTLAND
The
Lebanon Township Trustees
· will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the
Township Building.
Monday, May 3
RUTLAND Rutland
Township Trustees will meet
at 5 p.m. in regular ~ession at
the Rutland Firehouse.

Student visas applied
lor and Issued

Fort Bragg helicopter
FLORENCE, S.C. (AP) An Army helicopter with
three' soldiers aboard vanished during a training !light
in bad weather, and a search
was unger way Tuesday in a
swampy, wooded region,
authorities said.
The UH-60 Blackhawk
was on a !light from Fort
Bragg, N.C., to Florence
when it was reported missing
about 9:50p.m. Monday.
It wasn' t known if the helio:;opter crashed or made an
emergency landing, but there
had been ,no distress signals,
Lt. Col. Billy Buckner, a
spokesman for the 18th
Airborne Corps at Fort
Bragg, said Tuesday . morning.
There were also no sigl}als
from radios that crew members carry on their flight survi val vests, Buckner said.
Rain and thunderstorms
moved across South Carol ina
on Monday evening.
"Obviously,
it
was
inclement weather but our
aircraft and crews can tly in
that," Buckner said.
The missing Blackhawk
was accompanied by a second helicopter, which landed
at the town of Dillon near the
North Carolina state line,
Buckner said.
The crew of that helicopter
decided to land when the
chopper lost contact with the
missmg Blackhawk, said
Maj . Rich Patterson, a Fort
Bragg spokesman at the
search command post in

Public meetings

...........

'02-03

·- - ·-·---"•----· .. · ··---·--··- -..-·-- ---·"""""

AP

bccmtsc there is no basic
logic to g.~ting a visa." said
Moussa Dao. an FlU computer engineering student whose
·two broth~rs htive been
unable to get visas to follow
him here. and who hasn't
returned home to Ivory Coast
s inee 1999 for fear he would
not be -readmiited .
The State Department.
which is giving some students priority interview slots.
issued 474,000 student visas
last year, accepting 74 percent of applications. That's
pown from 560,000. or 80
percent , in 200 l. Secretary
of State Colin Powell and
Homeland Security Secretary
.Tom Ridge called last week
for Congress to review visa
restrictions, and Ridge discussed visas at a recent meeting with college presidents .
"We all want foreign students to continue to come
here," said Russ Knocke, a
. spokesman
for · the
Immigration and Customs
Enforcement division of the
Homeland
Security
Department. "We want the
United States to continue to

Moussa Dao of Ivory Coast walks on campus Monday. at Florida International University in_
Miami. International graduate student applications for this fall are down 32 percent compared
with a year ago, according to a recent survey, and universities are stretching deadlines to easethe logistical burdens on foreign applicants. (AP)
Still, schools s&lt;iy more is welcome here - beliefs that
be the destination for educahelp is needed for interna- visa delays only fuel.
tion."
"They say, 'I can go to.
There continue to be more tionals, including an ombudsintcniational applicants than man to investigate cases that Canl!lla. Australia. Why do I
spaces avai lable for them, seem to disappear in the sys- need to co to the United
States and put myself in a
with no evidence the total tem.
number of foreign studeius
Experts say many foreign place. where I'm not welstudents feel ihey won 't be come?" Dunnett said.
here has yet dec! ined.

Jr'LL.

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guardian, and shot records
and medical cards must be
provided. A donation will be
accepted for immunizations,
but no service will be denied
because of inability to pay.
POMEROY
The
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church will host a fellowship
dinner with serving from
4:30 tp 6 p.m. at the church.
Fnday, April 30
MIDDLEPORT - A free .
dinner will be served from 4
to 6:30 p.m. at the
Church · of
Middleport
Christ's Family Life Center,
Fifth and Main.

Birthdays

.
Other events

Family Medicine

Tree and Grass pollen common
sources of spri~g allergies
Molds, animal dander and
dust mites can cause problems all year round.
From whatever source,
these allergens.. cause problems by the same basic mechanism. Your immune system,
sensing more danger than .
these allergens actually present; revs up and produces
antibodies that circulate in
the blood and attach to mast
cells. These cells -· located
in greater number in common
allergy ·siles like the nose,
throat, lungs and Gl tract then release histamine and
other chemicals. It's the histamine that causes the symptoms like sneezing, runny
nose with clear mucus. nasal
congestion, itchy eyes, nose
and throat, and watery eyes.
Allergies tend to . run in
families. It is not uncommon ·
to see other allergic medical .
problems like eczema and
asthma in people with allergic rhinitis . . It's likely that
you have developed an allergy to additional pollens, and
that's why you are having
symptoms in the spring this
year. I would recommend,
however, that you make a trip
to your doctor to rule out
other possible causes and
confirm the diagnosi-s.
Physical findings of aller- ·
gic rhinitis are fairly straightforward, such as bluish circles under the eyes (allergic
shiners) plus the heavy, clear
nasal discharge. But there can
be other illnesses that cause a

similar runny nose that
should \Je excluded. Allergic
rhinitis is not usually associated with thick, or highly colored nasal discharge, sore
throat or fever. Problems
such as nasal polyps, pregnancy and low thyroid can
cause nasal symptoms similar
to allergic rhinitis. Many
medications, such as aspirin,
beta blockers, and oral contraceptives can cause similar
symptoms. Once you and
your doctor have decided that
you have allergic rhinitis,
using antihistamines or nasal
steroids can control or prevent many symptoms, Of
course, you want to avoid the
allergen that is causing the
reaction when possible. In
some cases, getting "allergy
shots" or desensitization therapy is indicated.
Family Medicine® is a
weeklv column. To submit
questi'om, write to Martha A.
Simpson, D.O., M.B .A., Ohio
of
University
College
Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
Box 110. Athens, Ohio 45701,
or via e-mail to readerquestions@Jam i lymedicinenews. o
rg. Medical information in
this column is provided as an
educational service only. It
does not replace the judgmeht of your personal physiciarl, who should be relied on
to diQgnose and recommend
treatment for any medical
conditions. Past columns are
available online ac www.familymedicinenews.org.

Wedne!:day, April 28, :wo4

Husband .called.on -abuse
Shows no sign of changing
DEAR ABBY: I am a 23year-old mother of three .
Ever since our marriage five
years ago, my husband.
"Kurt," has been verbally
and emotionally abusive. He
has cursed me at least once a
day. At times, he is emotionally abusive to our.kids., who
are 2, 3 .and 4. I have asked
Kurt to leave , but he refuses
-and I don't know if I really want him to.
A couple of weeks ago. I
lold Kurt I am no longer in
love with him , and if thing~
don't change, I want a
divorce.
Things went well for a
couple of weeks, but now
the abuse has resumed. 1
don't know what to do. l
have tried everything. I
asked him to go for marriage
counseling. He refused. I
just want him to change. anc
I don't think he ever will.
He calls me terrible names
in front of the kids. When
my little girl asks him to fix
breakfast, he'll say "no" just
to make her cry. He claims
he' s "just playing," but he
. knows what it does to her.
Please help. - CRAZY 1'\1
TENNESSEE
DEAR CRAZY: As far
back as 1996, the American
Psychology
Association
reported that 40 percent to
60 percent of men who
abused their female pm'tners
also abused their children. Is

Dear
Abby

this the kind of atmr"phere
in which you want your children r&lt;ti&gt;ed '' Yom hu,bantl\
refusal lu sed\ marriage

counseling intl icat~s that .he
has no imemion of changing
his pattern. It 's bad enough
that he takes his hostilitv out
on you daily. But for hi'm to
take pleasure in making
your daughter cry i, sick.
Please don ' t let your husband's rdu"ll to ~o for
counseling deter vot&lt; from
getting p&lt;:ofession ill i1elp t11
aid you in deciding how best
to protect yourself and vnur
ch ildren. Cruel word; ~roue
the sel f-esteem like the
ocean eats awav the shr\re.
And fo r children to be
exposed to it day after Jay
can cause lifelong damage .
DEAR ABBY: I am 17
and have been going · out
with
my
boyfriend,
"Johnny." tor about a year.
A few months ago. we start)d having sex. ant! since
then. we've been having sex
every day. sometimes up to

four time~ a J ay. .Ahb). I
dun 't want to he dumg thi,
;o regularly. but Johnny
~~em&gt; to want it ALL the
time. I like making loYe with
him. but not all the tim..: . H~
'"Y' it\ ;pecial ·and mean ingful. but it'' \Ianing to ·
seem like he\ U&gt;ing me .
The other tlav. l tolu
Johnn Yf dicJn ' t \\ant to do it
but it. happened anyway . I
didn't re'i't. 'o it wa,;n't : i~ e ·
he rapect me or an) thin ~. hut
it wa:-;n·r right. \V'hat shPU IL~
I do'! - TOO "'1UCH SEX
1!\ VICTORVILLE
DEAR TOO MUCH: Wake·
up. honey. You ARE being
used. You are heing treated
like a cum·enience. not a person. and thi &gt; i;n.tlnle. Am.! I
ha1·e more bad ne"'- when
'' per,on say &gt; .. no" to 'ex and
it "happens anyway." that i'
the definition of rape.
l urge ) nu to pick up rhe
phone ant! call R.A.I.!'I .N
(Rape.
Abuse.
Incest ·
National Network). The tollfree number i' 800-656-'
4673. The) can help you to ·
clearly understand what happened ant! lind counseling,
Dear A!&gt;hr is ll'rirren hr
Abigail ~&lt;, it B11ren, also
kno~&lt;·n as l&lt;'WIII&lt;' Phillips. ·
cwd ,..a.\ fimndt'd bv her ·
111othe1: Pauline Phillips.
WriTe
Dmr
Ah/)1'
aT
1nnr.DeorAhhr.com rJr PO.
Bo.r 69-NO. Los Angeln. CA
9001)9.

Court news
POMEROY
Ca~es
costs: Glenn A Robens. and cost'. \C'dtbelt S30 •u1d cost,,
resolved in the Meigs County · L a n g ·s v i I l e . left of center. $20 tmd 'Cost':
Court of Judge Steve Story phy./cont rol/under/in tl uence . Bohby R. Stxy. Dexter. speed- ·
between April 8 and April 18 are $150 and costs, no operdtor; ing. S20 mxl costs. DUl .02-.m
as follows: 'Ilmothy A. McClure, license, costs only:
(Bet. J 8-20l. cost'&gt; only: Kathy J.
Middleport, driving under susDonlee
A
Robinson. Stanley. Pomeroy. reckless oper. pension/revocation, $200 and Pickerington. speeding. $30 &lt;mel ation. $20:) ~md costs:
costs, seatbel~ $30 and rosts; costs; Randy Rocthi, Langsville. · Ryan
H. Terzopplous.
Martin
C.
McDonnell. assault. $50 fine: Michael l Chd1i1e, fieein£1., s; I(() &lt;UKi costs.
Sweetwater, Texas, speeding. Russell, Racine. seatbelt $30 tmd umlic cant dev/si_gtls. S50 and
$30 and costs; Carolyn S. Oliver. costs: Nancy E. Sc•u·bmuoh. C\bt': Lester L. Thaxton.
Pomeroy, no driver license, $100 Racine. speeding. costs o1ily: Sissonville. W.Va .. speeding. $:10
and costs, failure to control. costs Dav1d E. Scou. Atrens. speetlmg. 'md costs; James B. vinson.
only;
$50 and costs. seatbelt $30 ml&lt;.l G a l l i p o l i s .
Michael P. ONeil, Shade. dis- costs; Paul · R. Similihki, p~ y.contra l/u ncle r/i nflue nc e,
orderly .conduct, $50 and costs: Renfrew, P.a .. speeding. $30 and S~~O and msts: Kevm J. Whtte.
Remo R. Palombo, Rutland, costs; Jennifer S. Skolet~ky. Racine. &lt;e.:kless operation of
criminal ~ $70 and costs: P.dl111ll Height,, seatbelt. $30 ~mtl vehicle. $200 m1d costs;
·
Chti\lopher
L.
Wilson,
Brett E. Price, Long Bottom, costs:
Bill 1. Smith, Pnmemy, Wl- Re..'tl.wille. speedinn. S30 and
expired operators license, $70
and costs; Joshua Rathburn, tributing/delinquency/child. costs co,t.s: Christopher M. Wilson,
Pomeroy, traffic cont dev/signs, only: Karla 1. Smith. Reed.wille. seatbelL $30 and costs: Brenda S.
speeding, $30 mxi costs; Steven Wolle. Syracuse. timed glass.$20
costs only: Terry M. Reynolds,
Middleport, speeding, $30 and Smith, Racine, seatbelt. $30 m1tl ~u1u co'b; Tw11my K. Wnght-.
costs: Larry ~ E. Rinehart, co&gt;'ts. display pl~He!Jvalid stder, Hutton. Langsville. failure to
Colwnbtls, speeding, $30 and $20 m1d costs, tinted gla". 520 conunl. S20 ~mJ costs.

,.

-~~

SALE PRICESON ALL ,
SERTA

Bevins birth

.must cover every number on your card to win.
'lfDwJ, eOHrplel.
t:ilome

Master Mason degree.
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
Garden Club will meet at
I :~0 p.m. on Thursday at
Sy'l'acuse Community Center.
Extension Agent Hal Kneen
will have the program.
RACINE - The Racine
American legion auxiliary
will host a birthday party for
the American Legion Post
602, 6 p.m. at the hall. Dinner
and entertainment. Members
attd family invited.
Saturday, May 1
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange #778 and Star Junior
Gral)ge #878 will ·meet in.
·regular session, withofotluck
supper at 6:30 p.m., and
meeting at 7:30 p.m. Plans
for Meigs County Spring
Rally on May 16. All members urged to attend:

Wednesday, April 28
RACINE
-Shirley
Appleby of Racine will
observe her 93rd birthday
Wednesday, April 28
Thursday. Cards may be sent
MIDDLEPORT The .
to her &lt;Jt 44210 Yost Road,
Middleport Literary Club
Thesday,
April
27
Racine, 45 771.
wi II meet at 2 p.m. at the
POMEROY - A hearing
Saturday, May 1
home of Frankie Hunnel.
POMEROY - Garth Sovel,
Phyllis Haeken will have a · specialty clinic will he held at
the Meigs County Health who had a stroke four years
poetry review.
CHESTER - • Special Department. An ear, nose and ago and has not been able to
meeting of Shade River throat specialist will be see- talk or use his right am1 or leg.
Lodge #453, 7 p.m. Practice ing patients with current or will observe his birthday .on
suspected hearing problems May I. He is now residing in
for Master Mason degree.
along with a hearing screen Belpre with his daughter and
Thursday, April 29
POMEROY -The four test for children, ages birth to son-in-law, Thonda and Daren
local chapters of Beta Sigma · 21. Sherry Weese should be Cogar. Cards may be sent to
Phi Sorority will celebrate contacted to· schedule an him there, 1308 #2 Hocking
the 73rd anniversary of the appointment 992-6626. The. Road, Belpre, 45714.
Thesday May 4
founding of the international · clinic is offered free of charge
CHESTEREthel Orr will
women's organization and the by the Ohio Department of
55th anniversary of the first Health and the Meigs County celebrate her 99th birthday on
May 4. Cards may be sent to
local
chapter
with
a Health Department.
Founder's Day Dinner at the
POMEROY ' Meigs her at the Nonhview ·Senior
Riverside Golf Club in County Health Department Living Center, 267 N. Main
Mason. Social time will will conduct a childhood St., Johnstown, Ohio, 43031.
NEW HAVEN - Mildred
begin at 6:30p.m. The dinner immunization clinic from 9 to
II and I to 3 p.m. on Tuesday Fry will observe her 90th
will be served at 7 p.m.
birthday on May 4. Cards may
. CHESTER- SjJecial meet- at the health department.
Children must be accompa- be sent to her at P.O. box 75,
ing of Shade River Lodge
#453, 7 p.m. , with work in nied by a parent or legal New Haven, W. Va. 25265. ·

Question: It is spring and I
am sneezing and my eyes are
watering. l have had this in
the late summer before, but
never in the spring. What am
I allergic to? How do I know
'if this is a cold or an allergy?
My head. is all plugged up. Is
' there anything l can take?
Answer:
What
you
describe sounds a lot like
"allergic rhinitis."Some people call this hay fever, when
they get it in the late summer
or early fall. A runny nose
due to allergies is the .most
common .chronic disease in
the United States. It affects
over 35 million people and
causes adults to miss work
and children to miss school.
Allergies commonly start in
childhood and early adolescence, but they can start at
any age.
An allergy develops when
you come into contact with
an allergen, that is, a protein
that causes an allergic reaction. These include pollens
from trees and various grasses as well as mold, pet dander
and dust mites .
Pollenstypically cause seasonal allergic rhinitis that
lasts for a Yew weeks. In the
northern and eastern parts of
the country, spring allergies
are usually due to pollen
from trees or spring grasses.
In the fall, culprits are often
the pollen of fall flowering
native .grasses that are frequently described by the
derogatory term "weeds."

PageAJ

BYTHEBEND

The Daily·Sentinel

-.

Betsy and Donnie Bevins
of Gallipolis are proud to ·
announce the birth of their
seventh grandchild, Lexie
Allissa Cassandra Bevins,
who was born Feb. 8, 2004.
She weighed 5 pounds, 6
ounces, and was 19.5 inch,
es long. She was welcomed
home ·by her parents,
Shannon D. and Shannon
Joy Bevins, and her sister,
Madison.

PROUD TO BE APART
OF YOUR LIFE.
The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today • 992·2155
www.mydailysentinel.com

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c-andra S.vln&amp;

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
l

'

Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

!

Wedflesday, April 28,

Crime victims have rights) too

·-· The Daily Sentinel
; '

PageA4

OPINION

;The Daily Sentinel

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

_
Moderately Confused .
.'

I JUST HOPE

TRUMP ISN'T

SITTING IN HERE.

!

The mother of Kobe
Bryant:s alleged rape victim
spoke publicly for the first
time this week at a Colorado
event marKing national
. Crime Victims' Rights Week.
Joseph
'Victims' rights are about
Perkins
changing and rewriting laws
. to give victims equal protection under the Jaw,' she said.
Last month, the mother
sent a letter to the judge pre- notified of any puhlic prosiding over the trial of the ceeding involving the crime;
Los Angeles Lakers star and not to be excluded from
beseeching him to set a trial any such proceeding.
It also establishes a vicdate - sooner rather laterso that her daughter can get tim's right to be notified of
her ordeal over with and any release or escape of their
move on with her life.
offender; to be heard at any
As it is , the mother . public proceeding involving
informed the judge, her a release plea, sentencing,
daughter's life was in peril reprieve or pardon ; to confer
- in fact, she has been the . with the government prosetarget of at least one con- cutor in the case; and to full
tract-murder scheme - and and timely restitution from
she has been forced to move the convicted offender.
· from state to state to escape
If those plank s sound
private investigators hired familiar, it's because they
by Bryant, not to mention have been included in a prothe ravenous news and enter- posed constitutional amendtainment media.
ment that Sens . Dianne
Against that backdrop, the Feinstein, D-Calif., and John
U.S. Senate this week agreed Kyl, R-Ariz., have tried to
to move forward legislation get their fellow senators to
that would codify certain pass since 1996.
right s of crime victims, ... Yet another effort to win
whose advocates complain passage of a Victims' Rights
- rightfully so - that the Amendment failed to muster
scales of justice are tilted sufficient Senate support thi s
decidedly in favor of Jhe week, so supporters settled
criminally accused.
for victims' rights legislaThe legislation would give tion.
And even a federal victims'
crime victims the right to be
'reasonably protected ' from rights law - rather than a
their accused offender; to be constitutional amendment -

has drawn the fire of groups
who place the legal interests
of criminals above those of
crime victims.
Like. of course, the
American Civil Liberties
Union. While the demise of the
Victims' Rights Amendment is
'welcome news,' ACLU legislative analyst Terri Ann
Schroeder told the Associated
Press, the alternative to which
the Senate compromised 'is
still problematic.'
By granting rights to those
who have been raped or
robbed or assaulted or mur: ·
dered, Congress will 'inject
raw emotion into what
should be as calm and rational a process as possible,'
Schroeder lamented.
Like most opponents of
vkt im ;' rights laws, the
ACLU analyst is guilty of
fallacy. She sugge sts that
givi ng crime victims standing under the law will somehow undermine the constitutional protections afforded
the criminally accused.
But a federal vi ctims'
rights law will not deny the
criminall;' accused of their
right to couns,l , to due
process, to a speedy trial, or
to a jury of their peers. It will
not . deprive them of their
protection against unreasonable search and seizure,
against se lf-incrimination,
against double · jeopardy, or
against excessive bail.
All the victims' rights Jaw
would do is strike ·a slightly

We~nesday, April 28, 2004

2004

Rose nearly fades from teaching at Southern Elementary

•

•

. BY J. MILES lAYTON

more equitable balance
between the rights of the
criminally accused - like
Kobe Bryant - and crime
·
victims.
Those who oppose legql
codification of victims)
rights: who almost alway~
profess to empa~hize with
crime victims, argue that the
nation's founders would ,
have set forth those ri ghts in
the Constitution if they
deemed it necessary.
But Feinstein noted during
previous Senate debate on
victims' rights that 'In 1789,
there were not 9 mill ion vic.
tims of violent crime each
year. Jn fact, vic1ims of violent crime each year in this
country now outnumber the
country's entire population
wlien the Constitution was
written.'
· lnd.eed, not in their wildest
imagination
could
the
nation's founders have forec
seen just how lawless, hoW
violent, this country would
become. Otherwise , crime
victims wouldn't have beeo ·
overlooked in the Bill of
Rights.
The nation's crime victims
are worthy of a constitutional amendment setting forth
their rights. A federal victims' right law is the least
they deserve.
(Joseph Perkim is a
r:olwnnist for The Sa11 Diego
Union- Tribune· and call be
reached at Joseph. Perkins @
U11ionTrib. com.)

RACINE - After nearly an hour and

a half of discussion behind closed doors
in executive session Tuesday, the
Southern Local School Board decided
that sixth grade teacher Martha Rose
could keep her job.
Southern Local Superintendent Bob
Grueser a nd Southern Elementary
Principal Micki Kucsma rctommended
to the board that Rose·s contract not be
renewed. Since this is a personnel matter. no reasons were given publicly as to
why the board should take this action.
School districts do not have to give a
teacher, who has worked up to three
years for the district. a reason why a
· contract wi ll not be renewed . Grueser
had no comment on the administration's
recommendations to the board.
Since the motion against renewing
Rose 's contract failed, Rose can contin ue to work for the di strict nex t' year· if
she chooses. Rose, who has taught at
Southern Elementary for nearly two
years, said she was only informed of the
proposed acfion against her last week.

-

Banquet
planned
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Eastern High School Alumni
Association will hold it s
annual .alumni banquet May
22 in the Eastern Elementary
.Cafetorium at 6 p.m.
Entertainment will be provided by Dwight Icenhower.
All alumni are encouraged to
attend. For reservations, call
Lyle Swain at .. 985-4216 or
Nancy Co llin s at 667-3484
by May 13 .

.

'. E
. 0

~

u

STAHLER.

~
~

NOWAVAILABLE .
IN SOFT

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

COVER

w.......:.:~__t:::~~~- ·

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
~e less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to
~:

.

'

~diting

BALTIMORE - When it
comes to patients ' health
records,. the United States hasn't
left the "buggy era," President
Bush said Tuesday at a veterans
hospital .
'"On the research side. we're
the best," Bush told about 120
guests. including veterans,
health care professionals, doctors from Johns Hopkins
Hospital and the staff from the
Veterans Affairs Medical Center
· in Baltimore. "We' re coming up
with more innovative ways to ·
save Jives .... On the providers'
side, we're kind of still in the
buggy era."
The president has set a goal of
assuring that most Americans
have electronic health records
within the next 10 years. To
address issues of privacy. Bush
said enrollment would be voluntary: "Your records are private if
that's the way yqu want them to

NEWS

© 2004 by NEA , Inc.

,

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

TODAYS

..
E
. 0
:

and must be signed and include address

:and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
'
'

7be
. published. Letters should be in good taste,'

-

:_addressing issues, not personalities.
,,

.

The opinions expressed in the column above

Age bifore booty

;are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing
:Co.

s editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main concern In aU stories is to be
accurate. If you know of an error in a
story. call the newsroom at (740) 992·
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
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Postr&amp;.ster: Send address cOrrections to The Daily Sentinel, 111
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:, Reporter: Brian Reed , Ext. 14
·, Reporter: J. Miles Layton, Ext. 13

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Board

the current academic year.
Several tea.chers at the elementary
scliool rallied behind Rose at the school
board meeting. Nine teachers signed a
Jetter of support addressed to the board
ot education, the superintendent and the
principal at Southern Elementary.
" It is bothersome and threatening to
the staff when a fellow teacher with
good evalu.ations is nonrenewed,'' the .
Jetter said . "Will the next teacher o n a
limited contract be renewed when
he/she has good evaluations? Will anyone ever be given a reason when they
are nonrenewed?
We know Martie Rose personally and
professionally and we feel that nonrenewing he( contract would be unjust.
Some staff members will not voice their
opinions because, of fear of retaliation.
We feel it is necessary for us to support
Martie because we feel we must stand
up for her as well as ourselves."
By voting against the administration's
recommendations, Rose feels the school
board made the right choice.
"I feel the board did what was right
not ju st for me , but for a lot of teachers," she said.

Bru'ce Sw.ift reported the fol - •
lowing police department
activi ty for March : 32 traffic
arrests, 34 crimi nal arrests,
45 mayor's cases, 19 county
cases, two juvenile cases, ·
three accidents and 19 incident report s.
Patrolmen reported 2.359
road miles for the month.

Philanthropy
expert to speak
NELSONVILLE - The
Foundation for Appalachian
Ohio a nd the Hill s of Ohio
Planned Giving Council will
host a professional advisor
se minar pre sented by national
philanthropy
expert
Christopher Hoyt. "Family

and Charitable Planning with and Eckler; and AG Edwards
Retirement Aecounts, " . a &amp; Sons.
To register contac tThe
half-day seminar, will take
place May 18~ 2004 at the Fopndation for Appa lachian ·
Longaberger Golf Club in at740-753- ll I I . Complete
details for conference attenNashport. .
Professional advi sor cred- dance and sponsorships can
it s have been approved for be found at www.appalachithis, event forattorney s, certi- anohio.org .
fied
insurance
agents,
accounta nt s, bankers, · and
finan cial planners .
Sponsors include: Rea &amp;
Associates:
Kerr
Distributing:
The
RACINE - A spaghetti
Longaherger
Foundation ; dinner fund raiser to benetit
Isaac, Brant , Ledman &amp; . the Racine Volunteer Fire
Teetor;
Clinton
Stone: Department will be held at
Raymond James Financial and is being sponsored by the
Services;
Bank
On e; Pomeroy Eagles Club 2 17 I 3
Knowledgeworks to 6 p.m. Saturday. Dinners
Foundation ;
Jones. are $5. For delivery call 992Cochenour &amp; Co. ; Bricker 11 71.

Spaghetti dinner
planned

Bush: America's medical recdrds
system is stuck in 'Buggy era'

&gt;

.

Grimm ,
boy s
Middle
School basketball ; Danny
David
Davis,
head
wl'f!stling; Try
Bauer,
from PageA1
assistant wrestling ; Nick
McLaughlin ,
Middle
and the final day of the School wrestling; Marisa
sc hool year is May 25 .
Drenner. girls assistant
Superintendent William
· b k b 11
Buckley said that all three varstty as et a ·
Other contracts not
sc hool di stricts in the renewed pending results of
co unty will be o n the sa me reposting were Linda Lear,
sc hedule for the 2004-05 led
mentor:
Jennifer .
school year.
Hanson
and
Sandra
In staffing, the board Walker, mentors; Rick
approved adding to th e list Blaettnar and Carl Wolfe,
of substitute teachers the co-athletic directors .and
names of Jessica Wright , co-a thletic treasurers.
Misty R. Nixon. James
The re signation of Kathy
Earl
Pyle ,
Elizabeth Reed as student couocil
Sabey. Adam Remnant and advisor effective at the end
of this year was accepted.
Emily Finsterwald.
Coaches hired on supOther business
plemen tal contracts for
Ralph Werry. cheernext year !Nere Mike leader advisor, met with
Chancey. he ad football
d
and athletic facilitie s care; the board of discuss gra e
requirements and request
Rick Bl aettnar and Ron that the cheerleaders' conHill , ass istants varsity stitution be modified to
football; Rick Blaettnar. make those requirements
reserve football ; Jesse Vail follow the athletic guideand Bryan Zirkle, 7th and lilie s. The board approved
recommendation
8th grade football : Carl the
Wolfe, boys varsity bas- which requires that a p~ketball.
.
t' · t'
d t h
• Rick Ash, boy s' ass istant
lctpa mg stu en
ave
varsity basketball ; Travis passing grades in a miniAbbott, boys· reserve bas- mum of five . one-credit
ketball ; . David Deem , courses or the equivalent
boys' freshman basketball ; in the immediately preceding grading period.
Mike Kennedy.
cross
Robert Butcher, Scipio
co untry: Matt Fields. high Town ship tru stee , again
sc hool go lf; Rick Ash. · met with the board. to disgi rl s' ' vo lleyball ; Dale cuss the ri ght-of-way and
Harrison . girls' assistant
~ewer ease ment on proper. volleyball ; Paul Brannon, t)'
which Meigs Local
·girl s' varsity basketball ;
School District gave to the
Darin Logan . girls' assis- trustee s for development
tant vars ity basketball : Jeff
B h
Haskins. girls· reserve bas- of the ball park . utc ·er
ketball ; Vicki . Chancey, said that the right -o f-way
girls Middle School vol - and easement are preventle yball ; Mike Chancey, ing the trustees from getath leti c facilities car: ting grants for ball park
work.
Steve Ohlinger. Middle
Following a lengthy
School athletic director.
discu ssio n. the board
Others hired on supple- advised Butcher that the
mentary contr.acts "we re problem would have 10 be
~u s ty. Bookman , safety re solved by the involved
coordmator. Ron Drexler. parties because at this
Mtddle School .Yearbook. , time s ince deed s have
Robyn Hawk. hl g ~ sc h~ol been re corded it no longer
newspaper, L1nda Lear. involve s
the
sc hool
d
M1ddle School new spaper: b
Ralph We rry, high scho~l
oar"The board has done
cheerl~ad~rs: .
Ceha eve rything they can do,''
McCo).drama ,
De mse sai d member Norman
Arnold: ~umor class advt- Humphreys, with Buckley
sor. Tra\ IS Abbott. semo,r adding that the "board no
c l ~ss advtsor. Joe Batle) , longer has a say, that it is a
NatJOnal Honor Soc 1ety 'done deal' insofar as the
ad vtsor: J1m Ohphant. board is concerned."
,qu fz team adv t ~or.
. . .
Recog nized at the meetToney Dtngess was htred in, for ac hi evement were
as band dtrectO.r: Dav 1d M~ega n Dodson. Wesley
Dee m· as asst~tant band Fie ld s
and
Andrew
dtrector; V1ckt Chancey. Henderso n
who were
Cli ff Kennedy, Kathryn se lected t~ plav in the
Htll Whtte . Mtke Wtllong . District 17 Hono'r Concert
and S_hawn Bu~.h as gu.td- Band at Ohio University.
Attending were Roger
ance counselor: and Mary
Lou .. Moeg hn, . . hb~ary Abbott , Victor Young,
s upe~H,~r. Ttm Slm~~on. Humphrey s Ron Logan ,
vb-a, teacher. was , l,en and Scott Walton , meman extended serv1ce ~on - ber s.
and
Mark
E.
tract tor 50 days .
Rhonemus. treasurer.
Supple mental contracts
not renewed since the
positions wil l be posted
High
we re Rick Chancey, Tyso n Definition Hearing
Lee. Derek Miller, assistant varsity foolball: Jeff SM80 Dlv•* Is C/lniCII/Iy
Allen and· Brian Allen. Proven To lmprow Your HNrlng
girl s Middle School baskt- In S.clcground Noise~
ba ll ;
Dehbie
Evans.
Middle School cheerlead ers·. Rick Chancey, re se rve ill
Otlly s.n.o 01.,1111:1-·
rM•IMIIINt:
football: Carson Crow and • Unique Diva locator,.
Don Dixon. 7th and 8th • tOO% Digital S1goal PrOC8SSing
grade footb all: Jere my • Conipletety Automatic Performance

Local Briefs

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Police

.

"I'm still at a loss as to why this happened,'; she said .
,
According to state law, a teacher can
only be removed for "gross inefficiency
or immorality: for willful and persistent
violations of reasonable regulations of
the board of education." Ann Si sson,
the union · representative, said Rose
received good evaluations and was
showing improvement . Sisson said this
action cou ld have a chilling effect on
morale .
,
"This has really lowered morale particularly' at the elementary school."
Sisson said. "If this could happen to
her, then it could happen to them ."
Rose, who graduated cum laude from
the University of Rio Grande in 200 I,
has been teaching for nearly three years.
Prior to her assignment at Southern
Elementary, Rose taught for a year at
Pomeroy Elementary before signing a
one-year co nt ract to teach third grade at
Southern Elementary. Sisson said Rose
has roots in the community through her
husband Jeremy, who is a Southern
alum nus, and that they live in the
Racine area. The di strict renewed
Rose 's contract to teach sixth grade for

JLA\'TON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CO M

Report issued

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

in

advance direct to The Daily
Sentinel . No subscription by mail

permitted in areas where home
carrier service is available.
Mall Sublcrlptlon
Inside Melga County
13 Weeks .... :, ...... .'30.l5
· 26 Weeks . ........ .. .. 160.00
52 Weeks .
. .. 1 118.80
Rates Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks ............ .'50.05
26Weeks ............' t00.10
52 Weeks . . .
. .....'200.20

'50 is the new 30.' It's on
all the magazine covers and
in the Style sections of the
newspapers. Which makes
70 the new 50; 90 the new
70; ae:d 150 the new 130.
Great. It means we'll get to
spend 20 more years in a
nursing home that took six
tries to meet some ridiculously low government standards. I can't wait.
The magazines that tout 50
as being the new 30 will
never actually put a 50-yearold on the cover because that
would kill sales. To illustrate ,
that 50 is the new 30, the
magazmes put Britney
Spears on their covers.
Because if there's one thing
50-year-olds want to read
about, it's a 23-year-old pop
star. It seems people who run
magazine-land are confused.
They think 50 is the new 15.
Whenever anyone says
'50 is the new 30,' the conversatio n naturally turns to
Cher, who is nearing 60, and
actress Joan Collins, who
·celebrates her 300th birthday this year and, well, that's
about it. Cher and Joan. The
only two people out of 6 billion on Earth who don 't look
their numerical age1 Wow,
talk about a ~nd. '

Jim
Mullen

. Sometimes, after looking
at the magazine racks full of
thi s so rt of non sense, I
dream of starting a magazine
called
'I'm Over 50,
Dagnabit! ' The first cover
would be a picture of an old
man sq uirting a group of
kids off hi s front lawn with a
garden hose. The magaz ine
(&gt;;auld be full of stories like
'I don't care what Britney
thinks about anything!' 'I
don't care what the young
kids are wearing!' ' I don't
want to know what club the
stars are going to m
Holl ywood! '
It'd have advice on how to
cut ungrateful children out
of your will, and how to buy
reading glasses in bulk.
There'd be stories on how to
get out of baby-sitting the
grandchildren, and reviews
of riding mowers .
In the fashion section, I'd

do stories about wearing any wounds. None of this was
o ld thing to the grocery store particularly
shocking,
as long as it matches the revolting or even interestweather. Your winter jacket . ing . We've seen it all before .
has little rips and tears all Jf. anythin g, the kid was
over it? There is something behind the times. Hick
. sticky in the bottom of one punk.
of the pockets? Wear it with
The interesting thing was
· pride.
his attitude. It was obvious
Gone would be those ads that he was embarrassed to
for clothes in the glossy be· seen with his khaki-wearmagazi ne s that make you ing, '40 is the new 20' midthink, ' Exactly on what dle-class parent s. He was
planet would I wear that?' walking I 0 steps in front of
Face it, if it looks like crap them, pretending that they
on skinny, well-built IS - belonged to someone else.
year-o ld models, imagine Why he would be embarwhat it's going to look like rassed to be seen with them
on a schlub like you?
and not the other way
. I was in the mall the other around is the puzzle.
day and in front of me was a · While I'm watching them,
normal-looking cou ple with I caught sight of myself in a
their 15-year-old teenage shop window and wondered
son. The kid had on jeans for a second, 'Who is that
three s izes too big, so long crazy old fool and why is he
that the heels were dragging wearing
my
clothes?'
on the floor, already show- Sounds like another story
ing fray marks. He had half idea for 'I'm Over 50,
his head' shaved bald and Dagnabit!'
the half with hair was dyed
(Jim Mullen's latest book,
pink. He was wearing a T- 'My First Wedding: A
shirt with the sleeves cut off P rimer
for
Modem
and nver that a denim vest. Couples,' was just published
Hi s skinny little arms were by Simon &amp; Schuster. He
full of tattoos. his face also contributes regularly to
many times you Entertainmellt
pierced
Weekly,
couldn't tell what was acne where he can be reached at
and what were just festering jim_mulle11 @ew.com)

so

Bank
from Page A1

'
I

Turnbull. Officers e lec ted
were
Reed,
president,
Turnbull, vice preside nt, and
George Parker, cas hi er.
The bank opened its doors
for business on Court Street
in Pomeroy - The Daily
Sentinel 's current offices on Dec. 4, 1904.
"There were fo ur em ploy-

be."
Noting the president's appearance at the VA hospital, Bush's
rival, Democrat John Kerry, said
the · administration "shortchanges•· the nation's military
veterans.
Bush's 2005 budget calls for a
new annual $250 enrollment fee
and an increase in prescription
drug copays from $7 to $15 for
middle-income · veterans, said
the Kerry crunpaign. Kerry said
the VA instituted a policy that
blocked 164,000 veterans from
enrolling in the VA health care
system.
"George Bush ... says -he's
grateful for the service of veterans, but then charges them more
for their care," said Kerry
spokesman Phil Singer.
The Bush admin istration is
considering closing some VA
hospitals and portions of others.
The administration also is looking at building new VA hospitals
in Rorida and other states and
opening 150 outpatient clinics.

To push his patient records initiative, Bush is creating a national health infom1ation technology
coordinator, a sub-Cabinet-level
position, at the Health and
Human Services Depm1ment.
He said the fedeml government
will set technical standards for
tlre switch from paper io electronic medical records by the
end of the year, so that doctors
and hospitals can share patient
reeords nationwide.
The
Veterans
Afhtirs
Department began automating
infomJation systems in its medical facilities in 1985, and its
hospital in Baltimore implemented a computerized patient
record system for clinical use in
'1997, White House press secretary Scott IV!cClellan said.
Health and Human Services
. Secretary Tommy Tl!ompson,
who accompanied Bush to
Baltimore, said the standards are
being set so that doctors and
other medical personnel nationwide use common tenninnlogy.

ees, leadership with a vision
"Success is a journey, not a
lo be a great bank, and stock destination," said Reed, then
th at sold for 40 cent s a co mmended e mployees and
share," Reed said.
shareholders for their support
He compared that to 2004 and contribution to makin g
with the bank in four locations the Farmers Bank an outopeniting in two states, with 78 standing ban ki ng institution.
Directors elected were Paul
employees, stock selling , for
more than $ 125 a share, and E. Kloes, chaimtan, John F.
that same vision to be a great Musser, Ben H. Ewi ng,
bank. He spoke of the new Theodore T Reed,.lll, Douglas
location for Credit Express. the W. Little, Thomas W. KruT,
bank's finance company, and Fem1an E. Moore, !. Carson
the 'new ban k building under Crow, rutd Paul M. Reed
constrUCtion iii Tuppers Plains . ., ' Ofticers elected were Puul

" If you're traveling from
Baltimore to Washington. D.C..
or to Texas cuJd you have iUl
accident, you' re going to go into
the hospital. you may be
knocked out, but what's going to
be able to happen - ·once we
get this unifom1 medical records
and tltis automation - you· re
going to be able to go into the
hospital in Texas and they"re
going to be abl e, to down load.
immediately. your record."
Veterans Affai" Secretary
Anthony Principi, who also was
with Bush, said medical records
for veterans often m-en't available to health care professionals
when and where they need them.
lndust:Jywide, "one in every
seven hospital admis.,ions and
20 percent of lab tests occur
because the medical infonnation
- the health records - are not
available to the clinician ,"
Princi pi said. "More than one of
every se ven hospitalizations is
complicated by medical prescription errors.''
M. Reed, president/chief
executive officer; Roger W.
Hyse ll. exec utive vice president/chief operations officer;
Edward W. Stines. exec utive
vice preside nt/c hief lending
.• . .
. .
o tflcer, Mtc hael R. Llevmg, .
~xecut1ve _v1ce pres1denVp~·es1de nt ot . West Vfrgtnfa
DfVIston; Shawn Amott, con- ·
troll er; Donna J. Schmoll,
vice president; Rand all C.

• Revolutionary Diva, No15e Reduction

Hays, assistant vice president:
Betsy Kearn s, assistant vice
president: and Edna Weber.
assistant vice president.
Financial and other reports
were presented by the bank
off1cers to the a pproxtmately
125 shareholders att e ndin g
who the n enj oyed a dinner in
the Family Life Genter of th e
Middleport Church of Christ
where the meeting was held.

~,.,

Pho.w

lt.cl11and

~,..

•

At~ . Ot.I0~\701

(7~0) w• ·~ .J .n

• 800-451 -9106

Water

"If we put the softening syste m off until
later, it's not going to get any cheaper, and I
think we should do what we can to provide
from Page A1
the people of Middleport with the best water
quality we possibly can. It seems that $2 or $3
including the system in plans for the treat- a month is something that anyone in the' village can afford.''
ment plant, Shutt said.
Shutt noted the next ro und of grant and loan
Anderson said adding a softening system
applications is due in June, ·and suggested that would save residents money in the long run,
council decide the softenmg 1ssue before the especially those who already have home
'
water softening systems in place.
May 10 meetini(.
"Not only will those customers &gt;ave on
Village Adnunistrator Bradford Anderson
recommended that council include the soften- supplies for their system. but everyone will
ing system in ~he engineering plans, sa~ing it save when you consider the cost of replacing
would dramatically improve the q~ahty of coffee makers and buying cleaning supplies
Water produced for Mtddleport resfdents at needed when the water supply is hard."
the new treatment p.'ant.
The village has already applled for funding
"The new plant w11l produce water of better for the plant through the Sniall Government
quality than we have no~, but mcludmg a ' Commission and
the
Ohio
Water
softening system ~ould tmprov_e t.~e water Development Authority. and plans to submit
quality even more ,' Anderson satd . The dtf- an application through the Community
ference would be much more noticea~le.''
Development Block Grant program in June .

'

'10-10% OH

Sltirew;de

Slwp now

tor 6ed
Seleclion I
--------

�PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Redwomen sweep Shawnee State, Page 82
MLB standings and boxscored, Page 86

Wednesday, April 28, 2004

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

State boosting efforts to repay Medicaid
by checking estates of deceased
·
CLEVELAND (AP) .The state has hired 22 more
lawyers to search for money
from the estates of Medicaid
recipients to help pay off
charges to the state-federal
health care program for the
poor.
The hiri ngs are par1 of an
expanded pilot project that
started in 1999' with two
lawyers . Federal Medicaid
rules require Ohio to collect
the money.
The · attorney general's
office reported collectiog
$14.6 million from estate~
last year. Between 2,000 and
2,500 people on Medicaid i11
Ohio die every month.
The state collects any
money that might be available from bank acco unts or
the sale of propeny.
Nursing home res.idents
who -receive Medicaid are
allowed to have no more
·than $1 ,500 in a bank
account.

NewsChannel

After they stay s1x
months, they must sell houses they own. unless the ir
spouse or disabled child
lives there. Any income they
receive also is taken to pay
Medicaid. minus a $40
monthly allowance.
Tit.; lawyers hired by the
state get 20 percent of the
money they collect.
Gloria Selvaggio was
upset when she opened a letter from the Ohio attorney
general with her dead sister 's name and the words
" Amount
Due :
$131,938.79."
"When I saw that amount
of money, I grabbed my
chest," said Selvaggio. 72, a
cancer survivor in Gcauga
County who is recovering
from hean surgery.
Her sister,Antonia Fer! ito.
entered a nursing home a
few years ago after surgery
and died penniless at 79 last
June of cancer. Medicaid

paid the bills.
Selvaggio contacted Lisa
Goddard. a con ~umer advO-/
cate for the elderly in
Cleveland. who said she
owed nothing because she is
only the next of kin. not the
person responsible for her
sister's finances.
The letters are needlessly
intimidating and misleading. said G~dard , at the
Long
Term
Care
Ombudsman Office in
Cleveland, a consumer
advocacy group for nursing
home residents · and other
elderly people.
The attorney ge neral' s
office says the leners are
·
clear.
"We ' ve gotten them as
soft as we can without compromising what we are
required to disclose:· said ·
Bob Byrne. a senior ass is- .
tant attorney gene raL " It
says it is a claim against tht;
estate. not a person."

Wednesday, April28, 2004

Moeller hits
-BrewCrew
past Reds
MILWAUKEE (APl Chad MLl&lt;'iler hit for the cycle.
and pmch-hitter Bill Hall's .
two-run homer with two outs
in the ninth inning gave the
Milwaukee Brewers a 9-8 victory over the Cincinnati Reds
on Tuesday night.
Moeller homered in the second inning. doubled in the
founh. tripled in the titih and
singled in the seventh. becoming the tirst Brewers player to
complete the cycle since Paul
Molitor in 1991.
Still. the Reds led 8-6 entering the bottom of the ninth.
Milwaukee rallied against
closer Danny Graves. who
blew his third save in 13
chances. and Cincinnati's
shaky fielding kept the
Brewers in it.
Wes Helms reached on an
infield single with one out,
adv;mced to second on a wild
pitch and to third on a throwing error by catcher Jason
· LaRue.
Moeller's grounder to third
with two outs could have
ended the gwne. but Bnmdon
Larson shon-hopped the throw
to tirst for an error that made it

Priest charged with murder
described as shy, dedicated·
A DAY ON WALL STREET
April 27, 2004

~,./"vv~\

Dow
Jones

10,478.16

April 27, 2004

.

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2,032.53

.

April 27, 2004

'

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Pet. change
from previous: +0.23

APR

Low
2.027.64

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JAN
High
1 , 146.84

FEB
Low
1 ' 135.53

2,200
2,000
1,800

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APR
Record high : 5,048 .62
March 10,2000

FEB

,.,,.,' +2.68

1,138. 11

9,250

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JAN
High
2,053.57

-0.21

Standard&amp;
Poor's500

-

Record high: 11,722.98
Jan . 14,2000

'
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-------------··--·

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..-4.24-

Pet. change
from previous:

9,750

MAR

Low
10,441 .75

10.25d

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compost
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JAN
'High
10,537.35

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from previous: +0.32

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+33.43
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1 ,200
, ,150

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APR
Record high: 1 ,527.46
March 24, 2000

AP

Local Stocks
ACI- 32.89
AEP- 30.59
Akzo- 35.89
Ashland Inc. - 48.87
BBT - 34.92
BLI - 14.78
. . Bob Evans - 31.66
BorgWamer ,- 87.12
City Holding- 32.99
Champion - 4.46
Charming Shops- 7.54
Col-33.59
DuPont - 44.52
DG - 18 .95
Federal Mogul - .36

Ganneu ·- 88.88
General Electric - 30.55
GKNLY-4.35'
Harley Davidson - 57.46
Kmar1 - 45.99
Kroger- 17.50
Ltd - 21.45
NSC- 24.48
Oak Hill Financial- 32.24
Bank Om! - 50.64
OVB- 34.40
Peoples - 24.73
Pepsico - 54.64
Premier - 9.00
Rocky Boots - 26.83

RD Shell- 48.58
Rockwell - 34.02
Sears - 41.69
SBC- 25.49
AT&amp;T-18.14
USB-. 26.18
Wendy's - 39.60
Wal-Man- 58.60
Wonhington - 19.00
Daily stock repons are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the
previous day's transactions,
provided by Smith Panners at
Ad vest Inc. of Gallipolis.

TOLEDO
(AP)
Standing behind a casket
dmped with a white cloth and
alongside 10 Roman Catholic
priests. the Rev. Gerald
Robinson celebrated the
funeral Ma5s for a nun brutally killed in his hospital chapeL
Now, 24 · years later.
Robinson is charged with
strangling and stabbing the
nun about 30 times in a "ritualistic" killing. Anothe'r.
nun found the body, covered
by an altar cloth and surrounded by burning candles.
In the years after his coworker's murder, Robinson
never mentioned the death.
friends recall, even though
police say he was a suspect
at the time. He later became
pa,stor at several parish.es
and administered to the sick
and dying in .nursing homes.
Friends and parishioners
see Robinson as a dedicated
priest who rarely ventured
outside without his collar.
"To see him in prison garments is such a shock," said
Bea Orlowski, his former
secretary at St. Anthony
church. "It's unbelievable."
He never turned down a
call for help or a donation
for charity. "Sometimes, I
thought he was too generous," Orlowski said.
He was painfully shy. Yet
he was enormously popular
in the city's Polish neighborhoods, and parishioners
often asked him to perform
marriages and baptisms.
Robinson
sometimes
delivered sermons and
heard confessions in Polish,
which he speaks fluently.
For the last six years, he
celebrated Mass on Easter
weekend and Christmas at
St. Anthony, ·a landmark

inner-city church founded in whom she descrihed as
extremely introverted.
1881.
Police could never gather
Members of St Anthony
set up a legal defense fund enough evidence to bring
for him . The 19-county charges against anyone.
Diocese of Toledo says it is Robinson, meanwhile. was
saddened by Robinson's appointed pastor at three
arrest but has decided patishes . in Toledo a year
agaiqst paying his legal bills. later.
His duties over the last
Robinson was born in
decade mainly have been Toledo and has spent his 40limited to visiting patients at year career there.
hospitals and nursing homes
He lived a quiet life, never
an.d giving last rites. He also getting as much as traffic
performed Mass once a ticket, according to court
records. He lived just steps
month at a nursing home .
For several years, Robinson from a police station. It was
and Sister Margaret Ann Pahl, there police questioned him
71. worked closely at Merry before charging him with
HospitaL He was the hospital murder on Friday.
chaplain and she was the
Robinson, 66, a sl~ht
man who weighs just under
chapel's caretaker.
It was Robinson who 150 pounds. was being held
presided over her funeral on Tuesday on $200.000 bond
a stormy after.noon three at the Lucas County jail.
days after her body was disInvestigators re-examined
covered.
the nun 's killing after' a
Some hospital employees woman told a Diocesan
told police they suspected Review Board in June that
the priest may have been she was sexually and physiinvolved in the death cally abused as a child by
because he was one of the Toledo diocesan and relifew people near the chapel, gious-order priests during
·
which was tucked away in her childhood.
the hospital.
Authorities said that while
Jan Schaeffer. a nurse in they could not substantiate the
the hospital' s emergency allegations. her mention of
department. said she had a Robinson spurred police to take
bad feeling -about the priest, another look at the slaying.

CINCINNATI (APl - Reds
outtielder Austin Keams got a
small cast on his leti foreann
Tuesday atier breaking a bone
when he was hit by a pitch.
Ryan Vogelsong's pitch hit
Keams just above the wrist in
the first inning Monday night
in Pittsburgh. X-rays detected
a break in a forearm hone.
While the Reds headed to ·
Milwaukee for a series,
Keams returned to Cincinnati ·
and had more tests that con. tinned the break. The Reds
will have a better idea of how
lung he'll be sidelined when
Keams is examined again next
Monday,
It's the second year in a row
that Keam.s has been hun early
in the season.
He played in only 82 games
last year because of a shoulder
injury. He hun his right shoulder while sl iding into home
May 2 1 and later had surgery
to lix signilicant damage.

•

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gr.-:1 re-opening celebration on Friday, May 71
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•

You

ROCKSPRINGS - River Valley
jumped on Meigs early, but Jeremy
Blackston and the Marauders didn ' t
stay down for long.
Blackston . Meigs' staning pitcher.
helped his own cause as he connected
on a pair of home runs, including a
grand slam, as the Marauders defeated River Valley, 18-4, in five innings
Tuesday.
Blackston was 3-for-3 with seven
RBis. ·

Also
for
the
Marauders ( 12-2).
Eddie Fife was 2-for4 with a double and a
pair of RBi s, while
Michael Davis went
2-for-2 in hi s only
two plate appearances.
For River Valley
( 1-12), Josh Eddy
Blackston
was 3-for-3. while
Joey Graham and
Riley Rice each went 2-for-3.
The Raiders hit the scoreboard first
as Rice singled and Eddy doubled

with one out. Rice scored on a tielder's choice hit by Derek Smith and
Eddy came home on a wild pi!ch to
make it a 2-0 game.
The Marauders. though. came back
lighting. even though it took a couple
of outs in the tirst inning to do so off
Ri ver Valley pitcher Randall Sharreu.
With two outs, Jeremy _Blackston
scored on a wild pitch . Fife and
Brandon Fackler \vere both walked.
and a base hit by Davis drove in Fife.
Matt Hollev was then walked to
load the bases and Eric Burnam took
a base-on-balls to score Fackler.
Another walk , thi s time to Da\e

Boyd. scored Da\'iS before Blackston
'lepped. up to the plate to nail a grand
slam o\er the It!t'tfield fence .
With the score 8-~ . Sharrett was
relieved by Josh Murphy. who struck
out the lirst batter he faced to quickly
end the inning.
In the s;;cond. it was more scoring
for the l'vfarauders as Fife doubled
and caine home on a base hit hy ·
Fackler. After two more Meigs' runners came across the plate, Blackston
. hit a three-run shot close to where his
tirst one went out to make it a 14-2
Please see Meigs, Bl

CoUege
Baseball

Red men
edge
OVCat
home
STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune .com
RIO GRANDE The
University of Rio Gr:inde
baseball
team
Redmen
scratched out a 4-3 win over
NCAA Division If foe Ohio
Valley College on Tuesday
evening atRoben Evans Field.
Rio Grande (33- 17) used a
three-11111 sixth inning to grab a
4- I lead and then held on for
the win as Ohio Valley College
( 15-34 J punched across two
nms in .the ninth and had the
tying on hase when the final
oul wa~ recordell.
Sophomore third baseman
Kyle :vloriarity went 2-for-4
and drove in a run to lead the
Red men attack. Junior · Kris
Schuler tied the ga me at 1- 1 in
the bottom of the founh with a
double that scored Gabe
Devono. Schuler was 1-for-2
with two walks and Devono
went 1-for-3 with two runs
scored. Senior shonswp Brent
Ewing went 1-for-3 wi th a run
scored.
Freshman leti-hander Nate
Chau lasted 'ix innings to get
the win. Chau (4-3) struck out
six. walked three. scattered six
hits and hit two batters while
yielding an uneamed run.
Senior Chad Wolfe pitched
the tina! three frames to pick up
' his tir&lt;t Sa\'e.
OVC haJ seven hits and lead
brielly 1-0 in the top of the
fourth. Brad Gardner. Chad
Bloss and DJ . Schrekengost
,ingled and Gardner scored
when
Goolsby
allowed
Schrt'kengLJst·s hit to roll under
his glove "Bioss led tl.e visitors
with three hit&gt; in four at-bats.
Burkhan
11-2)
Ryan
alN&gt;rbcd the lo" for the
Fighting Swts. Burkhart went

Kearns fitted
for cast on
broken arm

I

Better ACCESSI ·setter PARKINGI A BIGGER, BE II ER LOCAOONf

BuTcit CooPER

of the game.
Hall followed with a liner
over the left-center wall. and
the second-smallest crowd in
Miller Park hi story (8.9 18 )
went wild. Hall was mobbed at
hoi11e plate by his teammates.
Jeff Bennett ( 1-0) got one
out for the win.
Graves (0-2) allowed three
runs - none earned.

Blake, Indians
march past .
ChiSox in 10th

Conveniently louted right next to the
Do//al" Gm«'a/ Stom/

•Bv

bcooper@mydailytribune.com

It was Cincinnati's fifth error

740-949-2882
Alignments • Brakes • Tires .

518 East Main Street~ Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 740.992.1771

Blackston homers twice as Meigs rolls

8-7.

JIB&amp;7'
Jlulll
3rd Street • Racine, Ohio ,

Welcome to Our ewDig

Prep Baseball

CHICAGO (AP) - Casey
Blake hit a go-ahead RBI double in the IOth inning and
Omar Vizquel had four hits
and drove in two runs to lead
the Cleveland Indians over the
Chicago White Sox 11 -7
Tuesday night.
After striking out Matt
· Lawton to star1 the I Oth, Jon
Adkins (2- 1) gave up 6ack-toback singles to Vizquel and
Jody Gerut. Blake followed
with double off the left-lield
wall, scoring Vizquel to make
it 8-7.
Adkins then intentionally
walked Travis Hafner to load
the bases a~d walked Victor
Martinez to score Gerut.
Ronnie Bell iard followed with
·an RBI single scoring Blake.
and Hafner came around to
score after center fielder Aaron
Rowand bobbled the ball for
an error to make it I 1-7.
Rafael Betancourt (2 · 2)
pitched two scoreless inning
for the Indians and had three
strikeouts.
David
Riske
pitched the lOth.
Magglio Ordonez ;md Frank
Thomas hit back-to-back
homers for the White Sox in
the first inning and Paul
Konerko also homered in ,the
tirst for Chicago.
I

Eastern's Ryan Smith successfully steals third base in front of South Gallia's Eddie Lamphier during the Eagles· 11·6 victory
Tuesday. South Gallia rallied to pull to within two runs, but Eastern scored four in the seventh to secure the win. (Brad Sherman)

Eagles fly over Rebels late
BY BRAD SHERMAN

bsherman@ mydailytribune.com
MERCERVILLE - Eastern added
four runs in the seventh innin'g to quell a
South Gallia comeback and .take an 11-6
ilon-league baseball victory Tuesday.
The visiting Eagles had just a two-run
edge entering the final inning, bul capitalized on two South Gallia errors coupled with four base hits to pull away.
A Jon Ow~n intield single accounted
for the first run of the frame, then two

straight errors allowed another pair to
cross. Ryan Smith rounded out Eastern's
scoring with a bloop single to shallow
left tleld that gave his team a six-run
lead.
"
The win is the second straight for the
Eagles. who ran their overall record to 79. It also completed a three-game regular season sweep of the Gallia
Coumians. Eastern swepl a doubleheader earlier this month by identical Il - l
scores.
The Rebels fell to 4-8 with the setback.

Prep Softball

Eastern's Ken Amsbary picked up the
complete game victol)' on !he mound.
and was also his team 's leading hitter.
The junior went 1-for-3 at the plate
includin g a two-ru1j dnuhlc, and .
knocked"in four runs.
Team mate Matt Moni s added a pair of
1ingles, S1i1ith and Terry Durst each had
an RBI base knocks. while Owen, Derek
Young and Dustin Riggs had a single
ap1ece.,
Six of South Gallia's nine hits
Please see Eagles, Bl

Prep Baseball

Tornadoes fall
Southern girls
roll over Wahama to Ravenswood
Bv

ScoTT WoLFE

Sports correspondent

Bv

5 1 ; innin g~. yielding. four hits

am.! four mns. :-. trik.ing oul one

and walking two.
Rio win' the season series
\\ ith OVC a' the Redmen won
3-1 when the two s4uads met in
Parkersburg. W.Va. on April 6.
Up next for the Redmen a
road uip to Athens for a matchup_ with the Ohio Bobcats .
Game time is .set for 5 p.m. at
Bob Wren Stadium.

ScoTT WOLFE

Sports correspondent

" ·-·------------~------~-----------------

MASON, W.Va. - Scoring six runs in the first inning.
the Racine-Southern Lady Tornadoes held off a late
Wahama White Falcon mlly to claim an 8-7 non-league win
Tuesday.
·
Southern is now 3-7 overall and Wahama is now 6-6 on
the season.
.
Southern scored six runs in the first irini ng when Deana
Pullins walked. Brooke Kiser singled, and Jenny Warner
had a bunt single to score a run. Katie Sayre walked, Nicki
Tucker had an RBI single, Jordan Neigler walked home a
run, Holly Dutl'y walked-home a run, and Joanne Pickens 1·
had a two-run double for a 6-0 SHS lead.
Wahama scored two runs on four Southern errors and a
single by Beverly Rusk who knocked home Nancy Brinker
and Brooke Hankinson.
Southern scored what proved to be the winning runs in the
founh when Brooke Kiser singled, Jenny Warner walked,
Katie Sayre reached on a fielder's choice. and Emily Hill
had a two-run double to push the score to 8-2.
'
In the fifth inning, Wahama's Veronica Ohlinger walked.
Whitney Knight reached on a fielder's choice. and Keith
Ann Sayre slammed '! home run down the right field line.

RACINE - The Rave mwood Red Dev ils jumped on
. the Southern Tornadoe&gt; early. then co ntinued to play
devili sh havoc on the home tC&lt;1111 in an 11 -2 non -league
romp over the Tornadoes, now 2-11 on the 1eason. The
non-league ti lt was played at Racine's Star Mil l Park
Ttlesda y night.
Ravenswood 'cored first in the first inning. -when
G(ccn singled, then with lwu ouh an error allowed a
runner to reach safely. Herd reac hed on fie lder's choice.
Adkins had an RBI si ngle. and Scritchfield singled
home another 2 runs, the score 3-0.
Ravenswood then blew it opei1 in the second i'nning
when it plated seven runs to push &lt;lhead 10-0. The Red
Devil s added a ~ingle tally in the sixth and Southern had
two in the fourth .
Raven swood hitters were Greene two hits. Holstein a
single. Anderson two singles. Wolfe three singles . Herd
a single. Deitz a single. Jett a si ngle. Scritchfield ,1 'ingle,and Yeseta a &gt;i ngle.
·
Southern hitter' were Wes Bu rrows. Jeremy Yc;wge r,
and Jm.h Pape ~ingies .
Ravcmwood pitchers were Herd and Ad kin' \I hn

Please see Southeni, 81

Please see Tornadoes, Bl

Redmen miss
out in losses to
Ohio Dominican
After a rainmn on Sunday.
the Llniversitv of Rio Grande
and Oh io D,iminican resumed
their .,cne.., ' in American
\1ideasl Confere nce South
Di' is inn baseball on Monday
with the Panthers scoring 8-5
and
I .\-1
victories
in
Columbus.
Rio Grande 111-9 AMC
South ) missed plenty of opporPlease see ~edmen, B:Z
\

�•
Wednesday, April 28, 2004
Page 82 •

James unanimous pick for NBA rookie team ·

Redwomen sweep double
dip from Shawnee State

NEW YORK tAP)
LeBron
James.
Cannelo
Anthony and Dwyane Wade
were unanimous members of
the NBA All-Rookie Team
announced Tuesday.
Chris Bosh and Kirk Hinrich
also made the first ream in voting by the league's 29 head
coaches.
Jmnes won .111 six Rookie of
the Month ,\wards in the Eastem

PORTSMOUTH - The University of Rio
Grande Redwomen softball team drummed up
some late inning magic to collect a key double·header sweep over Shawnee State at Doctor
Singleton Park on Tuesday afternoon winning
10-8 and 6-3.
Rio Grande (28-10, 8-4 AMC South) overcarne an 8-2 cjeficit in its' t1nal two at-bats of
game one. 'The Redwomen were aided by poor
Shawnee State defense and a clutch pinch-double off the bat of sophomore Stephanie
Broccolo. The Lady Bears committed three
errors in the three-run Rio sixth inning and had
one more miscue in the fateful five-run seventh.
Broccolo delivered off the bench w1th a tworun double in the seventh, scoring Brandi Jones
and Annie Tucker.
Jones and Kristen Chevalier had two hits each
to lead the Redwomen offense. Jones had a
triple and a run scored. Chevalier smacked a
double, scored a run and stole a base.
Krista Tucker, Amy Conn and Lauren
McQuirt all had RBI 's for the Red women in the
opening game triumph. McQuirt drew a pair of
walks in the seventh. including one with the
bases loaded.
Sophomo~e hurler Andrea Lotycz managed to
get the win despite giving up eight runs and 12
hits in seven frames. Lotycz ( 17-3) struggled

•

with her control as she issued eight free pa~ses.
In game two. tl)e score was tied twice a! 1-1
and 3-3. Rio would score three runs in the
eighth inning to get the win.
Sophomore right tielder Jenny Olding led off
the inning with a double, Conn followed with a
single anti Jones plated Olding ""ith a hit. Annie
Tucker drove home Conn and Michele
Dettwiller executed the suicide squeeze to perfection scoring Jon_es to give the Redwomen a
6-3 win.
Senior second baseman Emily Cooper had a
big game. going 3-for-5 at the plate with t""o
runs scored and three stolen bases. Knsta
Tvcker went 2-for-4 and had an RBI double,
McQuin was 1-for-2 with a walk and a sacri·
tice.
Broccolo ( 11 -7) had one of her best outings of
the yem· in the pitcher's circle. She pitched a
complete game (eight innings). scattering six
hits. giving up three runs. striking out one and
walking four.
Shawnee State falls to 15-13 overall and 5-7
in the AMC South.
With the doubleheader sweep Rio Grande
keeps the pressure on the frontrunners in the
South Division.
Rio will play its· t1nal non-conference doubleheader on Friday hosting. Mountain State at
the Stm1ley Evans Field. Gan1e time is set for 3
p.m.
Rio swept a double dip from Mountain State
in Beckley, W.Va .. April 16.

Prep Softball

McFann tosses no-hitter as
River Valley blanks Marauders

I

!

I

Wednesday, April28, 2004 ;

www.mydailysentinel.com

College Softball·

STAFF REPORT
sports@mydailytnbune.com

J

..

The Daily Sentinel

BY BUTCH COOPER
bcooper@ mydaitytnbune.com

'

ROCKSPRINGS - River Valley was able
to get some big hits and pitcher Geri McFann
threw one of her better games Tuesday against
Meigs.
McFann hurled a no-hitter, allowing only
four walks and striking out 12, as the Raiders
defeated the Marauders , 6-0.
Meigs' pitcher Joey Haning struck out five,
while allowing seven hits and three walks.
The Raiders (5-6) also had five extra-base
hits, including triples by McFann and Nicki
Tracewell, who was 2-for-3. Leslie Ward was
also 2-for-2 with three runs for River Valley.
The Marauders dropped to 8-6 with the loss.
Ward started off the Raiders' scoring as she
was walked and later came home on a passed

ball in the first inning. McFann then tripled
and scored on a double by Kyla ·Adkins to
make it a 2-0 game.
In the fourth, Krystal Adkins doubled to
lead off the inning and scored on a sacrifice
grounder ·by Jennifer Giles .
Ward doubled in the top of the fifth and was
dri.vin ' in on a triple by Tracewell. A sac
grounder by Kyla Adkins scored Tracewell as
the Raiders led 5-0.
The Raiders added one more run in the seventh as Ward stole home after getting on base
with a walk.
River Valley plays host to Rock Hill today,
while Meigs entertains Alexander.

Conference
this
season:
Anthony won all six in the West.
Jan1es. taken No. I overall 111
last year· s draft by the
Cleveland Cavaliers, is just the
thtrd rookie to average at least
20 points, live rebounds and
five assists (Oscar Robertson
and Michael Jordan are the oth·
ers). He won the Rookie of the
Year award last week.
Anthony led all rookies in

Eagles
from Page 81
belonged to · the combination of Eddie
Lamphier and Jake Workman. who logged
three hits and drove in a pair of runs each.
Dusty Halley, Bernie Fulks and Zack Lee also
h1t safely.
Both clubs scored a pair or runs in their tirst
turns at the plate. but the Eagles added three
more in the second inning and never relinquished the lead.
Morris scored the go-ahead nm after a throwing error on h1s steal attempt at third base.
Amsbary followed with a two-out bases loaded
double that brought home two and made the
score 5-2.

Southern
from Page 81
the score 8-5.
Southern pitcher Brooke Kiser was at her
best Tuesday. Kiser who was hit with a hard
line drive, battled bact&lt; from the third inning
drive to get out of several jams and overcome
the Tornado fielding errors.
Wahama fought back in the sevctnth inning
when lead-off batter Veronica Ohlinger singled,
then Kiser struck out the next batter and the
third batter of the inning flew out. With two
outs, Keith Ann Sayre doublet!, and Mirinda
Simpkins knocked home two runs with a single
and error. The last batter grounded out to Kiser
to end the game,

Meigs
from Page 81
game.
Eddy drove in a run in River Valley's half
of the third. but a two-run single by Curtis
Varian in the third and a two-run base hit by
Fife in the fourth extended the Marauders
lead to 18-3 .

200
120
1-670
ODD
000
o - 0 00
McFann and KrAdkms Hamng and Garnes WP - McFann LP Hantng.

Tornadoes

NFL

combined for six walks and four strikeouts.
Patrick Johnson and RJ. Harmon were the

Bengals' cornerback Weathersby
improving, long recovery ahead
CINCINNATI (AP) - Dennis Weathersby Angeles last April. Police said he was an innowas moved out of an intensive care unit Tuesday, cent victim of gang violence. A bullet entered his
but. the Bengals cornerback still has months of back. passed just below his lung and lodged in
therapy ahead as he recovers from a severe head his arm. He wa~ so weak from the loss of blood
injury suffered in a car accident.
that he could only walk a few steps on draft day,
Weathersby had been in a special neurological prompting him to slide to the founh round.
unit at Umversity Hospital since his car went off
a highway ramp and hit a utility pole on April 12.
He was upgraded from serious to fair condition
1\Jesday and moved out of the 20-bed unit.
Patients must be awake and alen to leave the
unit, which typically treats people who have sufSan Jose State quarterback Scott Rislov and 17
fered head mjuries and strokes, said Dr. Lori . other undrafted free agents si~1etl two-year deals
Shutter. Weathersby, 23, will remain in the hos- Tuesday with the Cincinnati tlengals.
pital while gening therapy.
Running back Nick Ayers. who attended a high
He will be evaluated every few months to mea- school in Cmcinnati and played at Georgetown
sure his progress, Shutter said.
College in Kentucky, was among the group. The
"Some people never wake up from an injury Bengals hold training camp at Georgetown.
like this," said Shutter, who directs the unit and
Also signing contracts were I0 offensive playtreated Weathersby. "The fact that somebody is ers: gum·ds Tyronne Armstrong of Pittsburg State
moving on this qwckly to rehab is a good sign in in Kansas and Ibrahim ..Obby" Khan from
general. Where the ultimate endpoint will be is Simon Fraser in Canada; receivers Jamall
hard to know."
Broussard from San Jose State, Jeremiah
Head trauma patients tend to have some per- Cockheran from Hawaii, Marlus Mays from
manent change as a result . of their injuries, Nonhem Iowa, and Lance Young from Iowa
Shutter said.
State; center Michael Powers from Penn; tight
"Most of the data suggests that for people with ends Michael Woolridge from Eastern Kentucky
severe traumatic brain injury, 90 percent to 100 and Jonathan Pritchett from Houston, and fullr,:rcent have some residual disabtlity," she said. back Alex Wade from Duke.
'It may be as minor a~ their personality is a little
The defensive players were end Derrick
different or their memory is a little worse."
Crawford from Texas A&amp;M; tackles Mondre
Weathersby had been looking forward to a Dickerson from Tennessee m1d Eric Johnson
prominent career in the NFL before he suffered from Mount St. Joseph in Cmcinnati: linebacker
two significant injuries unrelated to football.
Larry Stevens from Michigan, and safety
The fast cornerback from Oregon State was Wendell Williams from Louisiana-Layfayette.
projected as a high draft pick befm:e he wa&lt;;
Punter Kyle Larson from Nebraska ruunued
wounded in a drive-by shooting in suburban Los out the group.

Bengals sign 18
undrafted free agents

Red men
from Page 81
tunities, stranding II runners in
the first game.
Sophomore lefty Brent
Watterson failed to get out of
the ftrst inning. Watterson &lt;3-4)
~ave up five runs (four earned)
m ~ of an inning. Fellow sophomore Dustin Gibbs kept ·the
Redmen in the game.
Gibbs pitched 5}, innings,
striking out eight and walking
only one. He gave up six hits
I

and three runs.
Junior center fielder Scott
Petennan went 2-for-3 at the
plate and drove in two runs.
Junior third baseman Kris
Schuler went 2-for-3 with a
double and junior left fielder
Charlie Kabealo was 2-for-4
with a solo home run.
The Redmen scored two runs
in the seventh to make the
score 8-5 and lett the bases
loaded when the third out was
recorded.
Game two was all Ohio
Dominican (30-15-1, 17-7
AMC South) as they recorded
the easy five-inning win.
(

Senior southpaw Tim Sutton
couldn't lind his control as
hrbored through 3', innings.
Sutton (4-3) had four walks and
a hit batsmen with only one
strikeout during his stint on the
mound.
Junior lefty Justin Ros sWalker cou ldn 't stop the
Panther onslaught. Rio Grande
Head Coach Brad Warnimont
had to go to senior right-hander
Brent Ewing to clo.oie out the
game.
The Redmen missed opportunities in the seconu game as
well. leaving ti vc men on base
in only five innings.
t

C L A S S I F I E D·

helped the Denver Nuggets
reach the rlavoll's fnr the tirst:
time since Jl)l)).
Mi;um 's Wade ranked aniong :·
the top li' e nx&gt;~ies in live statistic;d
l'at~gt)fics.
while .
Toronto\ Bosh led first-year
players Ill rebounding (7 .4 per
game) anti hll&gt;eks ('I AI). and
C'h1cago's Hinrich led them in ·
assists (6.SJ.

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

South Galli.1 answered when Workman\
double down the left field line plated a run in
the thiru inning. but the visitors padued their .
cushion again with a pair of scores in the fourth.;
The Rebels chipped av.ay at lead with a run:
in three of the linal four innings. but only got as·
close as two in the hottom of the sixth.
South Gallia had the bases loaded with two
outs. but Amsbary got out of the jam by forcing a ground out. South Gallia had bas~ run-.
ners in every inmng, but stranded 12 tor thegame ..
South Gallia is at Wahama today. while:
Eastern returns to Tri-Valley Conference play
at county rival Southern.
Eastern
SouthGallla

230
201

200
10 1

4
1

Your Ad,

(740) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
o.:.r;,;F""aiiilx
To (740) 446·3.oo""a,......_ _ _o_r_Fa_x_l_o.:..(7_4o-')_9_92_·2_1_s7......,._

Offtei !loaF~

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Southern 8, Wahama 7
Southern
600
200
0 Wahama
000
230
2 WP-t&lt;1ser and Sayre. LP-Aoush and Bnnker

885
760

The Raiders tried to prevent the game from
ending with the mercy rule in the tifth.
Graha111, Rice and Eddy led off the fiftll
with singles. Graham scoring, but tile Mei~s
defense held to end the game.
·
Meigs plays bost to Alex ander today, while
River Valley entertains Rock HilL
Meigs 18, River Valley 4
Ar~o~erValley

Meigs

20 1
862

01
2x

-

472
18101

Sharrett, Murphy ( 1) Shultz (3) and Ward . Blackston and Holley.

WP- Blackston LP - Sharrett . HR - Blackston 2

Ravenswood 11, Southern 2
Ravenswood
Southern

370
000

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235

WB- Herd and Wolfe LB- Johnson and Yeauger

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

\\\01 \C I \II \ I '

r.___

r

Publication
Sunday Dl•play: 1:00 p.m.

For Sunday• P•p•r

ANNouNCEMENTS

May 1st. 8am-2pm 0 1136A
St At 850 Bidwell. Ocean
Aquanum baby swings.
bouncer, playpen. baby
clothes. toys, air mattress,
sweeper, tools &amp; home
mrsc .. CO's, movies, sub·
woofer clothing

C-1 Beer Carry Out permit
lor sal~. Chester Townshtp,
Metgs County. send letters
of tnterest to The Datly
Sentinel, PO Box 729·20,
May 1st. 9am·5pm, Crown
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
City, Oh10 (Behind the Dairy
c.aldweU's Fresh rroctuce Boy) BabY items. clothing.
Thursday Friday &amp; Saturday toys .
Ad
McCormtck
GallipoliS Qh(O

1102

Laktn Hospital is currently
takmg bids lor the following
poStttons· (Btds will be
accepted unltl 2·00 pm May
7 1 2004)·
Chapltn ,
Telephone Matntenance tor
Panason1c
Business
Systems, Copter Machine
Maintenance Agreement for
Sharp S02060, Rental of
Oxygen Concentrators, XRay
Servtces,
Dental
Servtces,
Testtng
ol
Spnnkler System Contract
period July 1, 2004 through
June 30, 2005. For bid tnformation contact Barbara
Long at 675-0860, ext 104

r

Found Black &amp; whtte short
hait dog around Klycher Rd.

Multi Family yard sale. 537
Plymale Rd ., Take At 7S. to
~lymale Ad turn right 1/4
mtle. Stgns wtll follow
Thursday 4129-Saturday 511 ,
9 ooam-5 oopm .
Anttque
punched tin pnmtt1ves, pte
safes, spice Iars, salon furnt·
ture ktds clothes, antique
pat1o furniture. retf1ge rator.
household items etc . Too
much to list! I Rain or
Shinettt!
Saturday 511 Rain or Shtne
4061 Bulav1Ue Ptke Games,
c lothes, crtb, bunkbeds,
washer &amp; dryer.
Teen Yard Sale
Frtday Apnl 30th &amp;
Saturday May 1st Sam·
Spm. First Church of the
Nazarene Family Life
Center. 1110 1st Avenue,
Gallipolis, Ohio {740) 446 1772

-

Lost· Large black long
hatred cat near Le Grande

Blvd (740)446-2233
Missmg from Burnt Run.
Clay Chapel area, 4123/04.
Large male Boxer Child's
pel' ReWard
(740)256-

1992.

r
r

Babv furniture. ktds clothes ,
fu rmture

e~v~l
4 fam1iy yard sale. April 30,
May 1st, corner Pomeroy
Pike/Flatwoods, furmture.
electronics, jewelry, dolls,
tools, men's, women s plusstded, children's clothes,
baby items

4 family yard sale- Frl &amp;
Sat. ,
297
Ash
St ,
Mtddteport, tons of chtldren's clothing, boys &amp; gtrls.
lots of women's plus stze
clothmg.
3 Fam1ly Yard Sale. 1636
Chatham Ave. Toys, Ktds 4/30 &amp; 511. 379 Stalo Roule
Clothes, Baseball cards. 7, Coolville, Oh, 9am-5pm ,
4130/04-512/04, 10am-?
depresston &amp; antique glass,
Home Decor, toys &amp; collect4,: lamtly, April 29-May 1st.
ables
9am-5pm. Gun Cabtnet, TV,
microwave. gnll , clothes, 7th Annual 6-Mile Yenow
sOme plus size, lots ol Flag Yard Sate, Fri-Sat. April
hOusehold misc. Corner ol 30th &amp; May 1st, Only $5 to
Green Tree &amp; Bulaville Pike. s1gn-upl We advertise for
you! Call 740.992·4055 or
Apnl 30, May 1- Large 2
740·992-3148.
tamlly Sale Name brand
kids clothes, toys , pools &amp; April 30th &amp; Mav 1st, New
tQo much to list. Rain or Lima Aa:. pius sizes &amp; wedShme 220 Debbie Drive, ding gown stze 14, mise
~allipolls
Items, carpenter residence.

Getting fit and
staying fit is in!

April

A SPECIAL FEATURE

OF
\!rbe @alllpohs 1JBailp m:rtbune,•
~oint ~leasant ~eglster and
The Daily Sentinel
'

Thursday, May 20
Advertising Deadlines:
Thursday, May 11,2004
- Display Advertising- ·
Call Today
Tribune- 446-2342
Register- 675-1333
Sentinel - 992-2157

'

110

twright@ic.net

L.S
_ _.I Large a family yard sale Wlth "'D·re·,·,.C.lo.th·e·s·t·2-1·4·P·e·lit...
e

older dog Jay Drive area

FITNESS

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

~~It~~

--------Thursday. Friday &amp; Saturday.
Lost Black &amp; whtte long ha1r SA 7S Near Lock &amp; Dam

and

• Ads Should Run 7 D•y•

POLICIES. Ohio V.lley Publishing ,..,..,-v. . the right to lkltt, rejkt, or cancel any ad aleny time. Errore muat be report..:! on the f!r"l day of
will be AIIJIDnalblel'or no mon~lhan the coat of the apace occupl.cl by the error and only the flrat lnMrtron We ahall not
any lOla Ot' . ..,..,. . that re.utta from tM publlcaUon or orn1111on·or an advertlaament Correction wilt be mede In the rrrat aiiQ ilable edition, ·Boll "':.~:~.";.: t
are IMways conttct.ntlal. • Current rate card IPfllll" • All '"' ..t.ta advertluments are aubtKt lu the Federal Farr Houalng Act of i 968 • Thla n
only help wented ~~ mMtlng EOE .Underda. We will not knowingly accept any ad\lertlslng In violation of the taw.

Trlbu,_s.ntlnet-A-s~laltlr

PERsoNA_
·_ _ _

(740)446-6630.

HEALTH

Thuradav. for Sundays

• All ada muat be prepaid'

• Include Phone Number And Addreu When NHded

M•sses,

Flllplna-4~Love
dren's name brand clothes . Glassware, Jeans
Find your Phflfpplne Lady womens plus s1zes, men's &amp; North Riple')l Ad
for love
ntck knacks 82 Arnold past Paul's E:o:on
1-800-497-8414
Drive, B1dwell, 4/29-5/1 .
30 Ma')l ( 8:30am
Fill lna-4-love.com

30·May \ at 752 Garage sale, April 29th,
Jackson Ptke, Gallipolis 30th, 341 Rutland St ,
beside U.S. Bank. Rain can· Mlddleoort, adult and bOys
eel.
clothes, bed liner, much
Friday/Saturday Aprfl 301 more
May 1. 6·1JOam-? Clay TWP Garage Sale· rain or sh1ne,
lownhouse/Lovers
Lane,
Gallipolis Lots of boys sumf'T1er clothes, sandals, some
winter s1zes 2-6, children's
books, movies, toys, c1othes
&amp; misc. Items. Rain or Shine

3202 Route 124, Syracuse,
formerly Jo's Gift Shop. out·
door 5 piece nice rot iron
table &amp; chairs, new play pen,
high chair, stroller (like new)
Iron skillets, 27~ TV, large
Garage
Sale
Sam·? men new &amp; used clothing
Saturday, May 1s1. 432 (2x), women's some new,
lots children clothing, what·
~odgewood Dr.
nots. bab')l ma"ress, toys,
Garage Sale April 29-30 etc, April 28, 29, 30th.
May 1·3. 120 Maple Drive
Spring Valley area . a·ao- May 1, 8-4 Btll Cross res l·
dence. 806 Ptcken Street.
5:00. Washerldryer, mise
Racine, OH Women and
Otganhc Yard Sate: 5-t·04 men clothing. Girls jeans
Woods Mill Road, Bidwell- and shirts. Crafts too
10am-4pm .
Howell,
yard sale .
E:'ltctronics, scooters, name- Multt·Famil')l
tfand clothing for men- Hobson Rd . Middleport, by
Metgs Carpet &amp; OecoQ~ting
1 women and kids.
Friday 4/30 and Saturday
Huge 5 family yard sate. 945 5/ 01
Household Items.
Roush Lane, Cheshire. Apnl Home
Inter ior,
girts,
29·30.
9 ·ooam-6:00pm . women's, and maternity
Men's AE Qothing, children clothes. Battery operated
golf
clubs, Barbie Jeep. swing set, anel
clothing,
Nlntendo and saga games, much more.
2: Natl. gas heating stoves,
2·125 gallon oil tanks w1th Sale· Depot St, Rutland ,
p~mps and many household Wed, Thurs, Fn, a little bit of
8\ierythlng, ra in or shine
nems.

Route 2
112 mtle
Aprjl 29,
to ?

STNA

0

/
Attn dtanna Thompson, HR
Scen tc Hills Nurstng Cerlle1
311 Buckrtdge Road
Btdwetl. OH 45614
Ph: 740/446-7150
Fax· 7401446 -2438
Ematl· admtn shn@
landemhealthcare com

HA@tandemhealthcare con1

~~

DIESEL MECHANIC

One of Ohio's leading motor
earners has an immedtate
opening in our extremely
actiVe grow1ng shop for ·A"
Servtce MechaniC. The successful applicant must possess a htgh level of mechan740-446-2842
ical
aptitude and be able to
I \11 ' 1 fl' \II'\ I
work w1th drivers. Three and
.., tin Itt ...,
a half day, work week, paid
vacatton , personal days.
health msurance, pa1d holtdays, overtime pa')l, 401K
plan and umforms are
among the many benefits of
$250-$500/woek.
Wtll train to work at home working at Arctic Express.
Inc This position Is open
Helping the US Govt file
HUDIFHA mortgage
now and you can begm work
tmmedtately Fax, ema1ls or
refunds, no exper•ence
necessary, call
tn person applicants are wei. come .
1·800-776-0353

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Silver,
Gold
Coins,
Proofsets, Diamonds. Gold
Rings ,
U S Currency,M T.S
Coin Shop, 1_5 1
Setond Avenue, Gallipolis,

--~--

F/M/DN

19

1740)379·9096

2316 leave message.

Help Wanted : Full time waitress apply in person at the
HC!Iiday Inn, Gallipoli s

•• HOUSEKEEPING AIDE

CDL/Trainin~;~

Scenic Hills Nursin~;~ Center,
a Tandem Healthcare
Tractor-Trailer
facility,
Is seeking a pan
Training Centers
t1me Housekeeping Bide.
Wylhevlllo. VA
Responsible lor cleaning all
Call Toll Free
areas of facility, equipment
1-800-334-1203
and carts. Knowledge ot
AVON I All Areasi To Buy or
sanitation, safety and
Se\1, Shirley Spears, 304· infection control procedures
675-1429
a plus.
Housekeeping/Laundry
Cl1a1 A COL Drtvera
experience pr~ferrad .
Wanted

ALLIANCE

Call BQ0-652-23"2

POSTAL JOBS

We offer per1ect anendance
mc·enllves, shift Cllfferenttal
and much more.
Please e.ppty to:

Alln. Baity StH:I&lt;I.,
311 Buckridgo Rod
Bidwell. OH •5614
Email: admln.shnO
tandemhealthcare com

Ph: (740)448-7150
Fax: (740)44611 248

St5.44·$21.4oihr. now hirSFIDF/EOE
Ing For application and tree
HROt•n~healtt.c.r• com
government job Info. call
&amp;
EMri
AmeriCB.n Assoc ol Labor. Paramed iCS
1·(91 3)599-6220. 24 hrs . needed. Apply at 1354
Jackson Pike, Ga!tipolie.
emp. serv.

1
----~--------------------·-

0we tr!lm Men !lrld Women

"Full and Par1 Ttme Classes
'Job Placement
·CoL Training
"Financing Available

AS SEEN ONTV
ALLIANCE
Tractor-Trailer Traintng
Centers, Wytheville. VA ·
1~334-1203

www alllancetractortraller com
Local utility seeks water
plant operator wtth a minimum of a West Virgmla
Class I Operators license
Competitive wages and ben·
eftts for the right tnd1v1dual
Send resume to

TSC 27
200 Main St
Pt Pleasant, WV 25550

(740)379·

Gnll Cook. Apply m person .
Crew's Steak House.

•95% No touch

Learn to Drive
Tractor-Trailers

LPTA wanted lor home
health phySICBilherapy S81'\1ices Motlvated, _sell directed
1nd1Vtelual wtll like flextble
scheduling, good lndepend·
ence, and compensation
Opportunities avatlable 1n
Athens, Meigs, Jackson,
Vmton &amp; Gallta counties
Dnver for hOrse and buggy. Ga11888-464-11 26.
Expenence 1\'ith horses preferred .
Ftextble
hours
LSW Needed

Dnvers/OIOP's, lmmedl8tely
hlrtngl Home weekends Top
pa')l, Must be 23+ w/class A
COL, 2 yrs OTR expenence
w/6 mo flatbed, clean MVR,
Les 800·826·3560 extension

•Sign on Bonus
•34 cent per mile

e

Denver Fanmn
Mainlena n c o
Superintendent
4277 Lyman Dr1ve
Hlll1ard, OH 43026
Fax 614·527·4114
m!ox@ arct1cex·
Email .
oress.cpm
E.O E./Drug free workplace

A leading prov1der of support serviCeS IO IndiViduals
with MAIDD is looking tor a
full time OMAP and HOME
SUPERVISOR. Supervisory
experience
required .
Benefits included . For more
Information you ma')l call
Roberfa Van Gundy at 740446·8145 or fax a resume to
740·446-3987. An Equal
Opportunity
Employer

•Operation area 400 mUe
rad1us ol Jackson, OH

230

I'ROFE.&gt;SIO~.U.
SER\KEli

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wtn l
1-888 -582 3345
~1'\USI\11·

10

HOM~;&lt;;

FORSAn.

~~:~v=,:,:-~:_e_~~~:~··~·-"t_._cl-ot_"_··-&amp;., ~.,r.to-·HELP--w-ANIE}
__,..,II'1o

•Min. of 2 years e~tp .
•Medical ins , 401 K

SF!DF/EOE

@ 2004 by NEA. Inc.

www .comics.com

Yard Sale Saturday May 1st
8.00-12:00 2625 Linco ln

No Expenence Needed
Placement Dept
Financing Available

1740)992·4294

Proper certiftcatJon
requtred We olfer compe l!· l;r:;G CO recomll"ends tha
ou do bustness wtth pea
11ve wages. shtft dtfferenlial.
~1e you knew and NOT t
excellent beneltls. perfect
en C "''oney through lh
attendance mcenttves ano
rn ad '.:nl1l you have invest1
much morel Please apply
ated lhe olfe r~ no .
to

~· ~.

Yard Sale April 30th May
lst. s·oo ttl! ? canceled 1f
rain
ciothtn g.
KarokeSystem . Nursmg untlorms, NIC Nac/Misc 188 N
Park Or.

AS SEEN ONTV
INSTRUCTION
LEARN TO DRIVE
TRACTOR· TRAILER
NEW PROGRAM

Mobile Mtnt Donut concesston gustness for sa le.
Locally owned Easily ma~e
S 1000 00 or more at week :

hHIO..,VA~'uiv"p u':usH

0
D

6-3

NEW AVON call
Marolyn (304)882-2845.
Joyce (304)675-6919.
April (304)662·3630

BL'SLW';';

a JO

We are hiringt
You could earn up
to S81hour plus bonuses.
We also offer paid
tra1ntng. holidays
and vacatiOns
Full or part It me
Shttl avatable.
Call today.
1-ln-463-6247 ext. 2455

r-!m~l!!!!'!!'r'WI~""'I
VIRGINIA DEALERSHIP
FOR INDUSTRY LEAD·
lNG ATV'SIWATERCRAFT
SEEKING
RESPONSIBLE/ MOTIVAT·
ED INDIVIDUALS
TO FILL
THE FOLLOWING
POSITIONS
1· General Manager
F1nance Postt1on
. Sales
: Certifted Mechanic/
Techictans
. Parts/Service Clerk
ompettttve Satanes an
rformance
Bonu
Program Available Plea
end Resume , References,
nd Salary Requirement
o PO Drawer 110 Rtpley,
v 25271
tmmedtat

Norris Northup Dodge

150

124 acres gooel worK1ng,cattie farm Wllh a new 3 bed·
Galltpolts Career College room 2 bath horne . 2 po nds
2 barns and other extras
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4361, $285.000 or w1il dtvtde 1nto
development plot s Farm
1·600-214 ·0452
www gallipollscareercotlege com has lots at road frontage
Acctedoted Membt.r Accred•t•ng (740) 367~7156
Council tor lndepencent Colleges
and scnoos 1&lt;!74B
2 bedroom
house
tn
Pomeroy, poss1ble frnanc1ng
1
1 71)
wlgood credt' (740)698-

MISU~L\NEOUS

All relerences &amp; full tnsur·
ance. Call 304-373-0011
Camoutlage, Ongtnal Army
Col lectibles.
Sam
Somerville s 40th Yea r oy
SandY\ ,lfe WV Pos1 O 'f1CO.
Sateil1te S yste ~,l S. 80 Ci'?..''lnels mdueltng Locals 519 99
monthly after programmtng
credit. 1996 Talon all wheel
dnve, Turbo (304)273-5655

Maasage

Tlterapisl

needed
for
busy
Chiropractic rehabilitation
Center. Must be Oh1o
llcensed and well skilled in
all areas of therapeutic massage. Excellent pay and
work atmosphere. Please
fax resume to 740-886-1609
Attn . Kathy
MGOonalds of Rio Granele,
Gallipolis and Point Pleasant
WV are now hiring. Pa1d
vacattons, holidays and
insurance avatlabte. Flexible
hours. Starting above mtni mum wage. Apply with In,

\ VA.N'fEl)

.

I
·--•loi
'o
iioiiJoiiiio_ _..1
'
Ass1sted ltvtng opentng •n
my home Ca ll (740l3A80118
Handyman lor less Need a
deck, some ltghts. got
leaks? Btg, small early. late

Supertntendent Vacancy
The Eastern Local Otstnct.
50008 Stale Route 7,
Aeedsvtlle,
Oh10,
ts
announctng the rettrement
resignation
ot
Superintendent. Deryl E.
We!l effec1ive July 31 . 2004.
The district is seeklnQ applicants from qualified lndt~ u­
als that hOld a vaUI1 supertn·
tendent certtfmate/hcense or
can provlele proof lhey have
the ability to obtam such a
license . Candidates may
contact Mrs. Ltsa M. Ritchte,

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

ar garage If' grouno poo•.
75 000 3460 State RoUte
18 (740)256-1962
Move •n conel t'IOn' Th 1s
qu a1nt rancn home tS locat·,
ed m Racrne Ohto ne ar.
schoo 1s a'1 d SI!Jated on a·
ntce 1/4 acre landsca:::ed lot
3 bedroom 1 ::;ath wtthanacned gara ge outoutldmg:
ard appt:anc.es stay Pnced.
to sell at $69.900 00 call
[740 1949-3090 tor appt
Need to sell yo ur home? 'Ne
offer
dowr, p a~ 1lent
lrnanc1rg pl ans fo • yo u1
ootentta l buyers Les s tha ,
oe rtect cred 1t accepte d
lmagme how ea sy ,t wo rld·
be for you to sell tf you had a'
sou rce ot ftnanctng for your
buyers We say yes whe,
banks say no Call to r
deta1IS , (.740)992-4294

ono

Ntce Bt·Level 3br 1 baH1
lotchen . livtng &amp; addttlonal
l1vtng
room
downstatrs
579 900
(3041674 -0090
o :er 6 CO
Pleasant' Sandh•l' Road '
3Br ; Ba 1600/sq·t Ra ·:::t: on
.6 acre ieve, c: Q g,., ' 1oo 1s.
1st house on Rtg r:t past
Marsf'lalt
Un versny
5103 000 (740\ 949 - 1131
alter 5 OOPM
Pt

1;.;:~~.........:-:---.,

MoRn.i' 1-lo•IF!';
ma S-\ U

-·

b BB·9839

area 52.000 ,(;' 401992·5858

II\\\( I \I

8USIN~~

OPI'Otm INm'

ABSOLUTE GOLDMINEI
60 vending machines/
excellent locatio ns
all for 510.995
800·234-6982.
Loc al bustnes s. "Prec1ous
Memor1es" tor sale PI A.CB
customer s photos on chtna
plates and other 1te ms
Would ma~e a great add ttton
to an extsttng bustness or
set up· at car shows or any ~
event
S5 000 00
buy's
everythtng mcludtng web

s

1

t

e

www phOtosonchma com

1740)992·4294

Treasurer. al 1740)667-331 9
tor an app/tcat1on package
and al1dlttonal information
Deadltne to submit appllcatron materials tS May 14,
2004 The Eastern Local
School District ts an equal
opportunity employer.

~.1:4 3 bedroom Aanci'l 2

(7 40)446·0422

Residential
Treatment f!ID
Faethty youth worker. Pay
baseel on experience. Call

!

2000 Oakwood Home ' 6x84
3br. 2ba. all ele:::tr1c. ce ntral
a1r Call anyt1m t&gt; t3C4)675·,
3 Bedroom Bnck Ranch 1 7157
Acre lot Reduced 1304)6759efore you t&gt; '~ 'o '
17 14
Does '{ our j e 1 1~ r ?
Move 111&amp; '1omc s Du Sl!e
3 ::,edrootr: ~ L·ath 3 4 acre
Ct.. l l'~ •au'1dq_on Roc~ Ltck Rd S60,000 prP.08'81'0'1
tiC"S ·RaP a.-,d S'? r · .·";e '&gt; ·
Phone (7A0) 446 7197
Qo h e ~' ng a· J 1'" · ~---&lt; ., . e "'l·
3 De:lroc m ;;, baths on 4 3 house SE'fv c~ •e~ ... 'e ·
~0
acres l:-t the ':cuntry See nrc lnSh11i S6j:'!IC 5 \SI !•f" ~
ro
\/ leW
575 ,000
Call eleclr tc a:fol_.lumbr'l;J
drt veways II lhP c. ns" e r · 0'
(740)709-11 66
any ol these quest Jn~- _, 1 J
or 1lthev "sutl-cor.: ra:::·· Y.: ...
4 bedroom . 1 112 bath 2
story bnck 2 car unattached beae r see tre alaao:::; 1lOJI
cea1 e1
..,
gdrage S37 500 Fourth St e,pertenc ed
Athens
Co.;n
ty
S1nce
1967
New Haven WV (740}446Ccles Mobile Homes ·~ 5266
~ 2 74
US 50 Eas1 Atht1n s Oh1 C
oec ,oon; J oam, ' ~
45701 Wl1 er9 you ge your
~c - es tn count1y ' Btdwell,
moneys \\ Onh'
p h1o
\ ~w
pholo 1tnfc
p n11nr
www or vb corr Tratler tor Sfl le 2 oedroom
~oJe 42104 or call 740 can rema 1r on lot m Ra cm e

eau 1u 1 ueuroom .J ca
ttached. 2 ca r unaltached
Lawn Serv1ce· Will Clo com ·
Now
hinng
Sales
plete yard se rvtce Low ~arage wttn garage apart
Professionals Must be highretest (740)949-2722 Ask ~en l tn Gallipolis Vtew
ly motivated with exceptional
Pnolosl lfllo
on ltne
for Oantel Hensler
communication
skills.
~ww. orbv. com
Code
Unl1mtted 1ncome potenttal
2204 or ca ll 740-446
Don 't mtss thts opportunity W1ll care for your love one tn t062
•
to advance your career tnto my home. 900d care, home
high gear Come 1n for a per- cOoked meals. 28 yea rs of Completely refm!Shed hpme
sonal mterv1ew at 252 Upper expe rience. good refer- Grea t tocatton , tn Gall tpolls
Ohto. 3 bedroom . 2 full
Alver Road , Gallipolt s, Ohto. ences. (740)667 -6577
baths. Pnced Ia sa le now
Wtll Pressure Wash hOuse's , Phone 1740l446·9539
Perfect Connection your mob1le homes. metal buildLocal D1shNet and D~rect ings. and gutters. Call
TV Store hiring lnstallsts (740)446-0151 ask for Ron
and
Sales/Reps
Ca ll or leave message.

(740)379-9063 to apply

Ho,m,
1\JR SAt.E

7244

Darn Remo\•al

Licensed Social Worker
needed to provide case
management services and
counseling services for ado·
leacent male and female In
restdanllal treatment setting
in Gallla County Ohio area
Candidate must have a
strong de$re to work wtth
adolescents and a positive
personality. Must possess or
be eligible for Ohio Soc1al
Work License. Competitive
salary and great benefit
package provideel. Please
send cover letter and
resume to· Alan Siebel. 608 (304)675-1400
"Park Ave ., Ironton, OH

45638

SUJOOL.S
IN.~&gt;RUC'llO~

HK)

~10

OPPORTIJNrrY

Full Time , Shtft 2p-1 Op

Ray's &amp; Son Complete Car
Cleaning 2615 1/2 Jackson
Avenue Yard Sale Ma')l 1st.

Want to look younger AND
earn Money? Lefs talk the

12 10

HELPWAMID

. Sc entc HillS Nurstng Center,
enel events Evt!rylhtng set's
8 Tandem Health Care
up tn a spectally destgneo
Factllty, tS seektng a select
10X10 canopy Excellent
few to jom our outstandtng
pa•l-!tme or full·ttme oppor·
team . We currently seek.
!Unity $9 .950 00 Donuts
Galore.
Mddleport

Moving
Sale
Thursday
Ridtng mower &amp; Push
mower. Sew1ng machine
sale, Home Interior, small
appliances glassware. a little of everything At 2 Greer
Ad 6 house on the left

"ANEW CLINICAL
PEELS!"

.
1

STATE TESTED
NURSING ASSISTANTS

Linens,

Hugh Multi-Family Yard Sale
Aprii-30-May-1 Sam Rt2
South JUSt before Dam lots
ot Mise 576-3033

t

£•;.

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2
Bu•lneaa D•v• Prior To

In Next Day'"a Paper

• Stllrt Your Ads With A K~ord • Include Complete
Detcrlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevl•tton•

e&lt;Jerythtng! All stzes of chit· &amp;

Now you can have bo rders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
""'
Bor ders $3 .00/per ad
Graphics SCHor small
$1 .00 for large

Display Ads

Sunday :In-Column: 1:00 p . m .

Ken Amsbary and Terry Durst Steve Pelfrey and Jak~ Wort&lt; man

WP- Ken Amsbary LP- Steve Pelfrey

Or Fax To (304) 675·5234

Oeacl~lre4

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Mond•v-Frld•v for ln••rtlon

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00

- 1192
-696

Southern hitters were Nicki Tucker a double
and single, Kiser two singles. Emily Hill a double, and Joanne Pickens a double: and Jenny.
Warner and Katie Sayre singles.
Wahama hitters were Keith Ann Sayre a double and home run, ;uid singles by Veronica
Ohlinger, Beverly Rusk. Mirinda Simpkins.
and Brooke Hankinson.
Kiser was the win ning pitcher. Kiser fanned
six batters, walked two. and gave up just six
hits. Ashley Roush suffered the loss in going
two thirds of an inmng with relief from Brooke
Hankinson.
They combined tor live strikeouts anu
walked tive.
Southern plays Eastern at Racine Tuesday.

Register

Sentinel

...,c. . .a_I_I_T_o_d_a_y,_
.
••_.__

Calf (740)446-0566

Reaching over 29,800 readers

m:rtbune

To Place

Eastern 11, South Galli a 6

Southern pitchers, fanning three. walking·
three and hitting t"Wo.
Southern hosts Eastern Wednesday at Star
Mill Park.

from Page 81

m:rthune - Sentinel - 1\egi!iter

:'-IL'Oring a'verage ill 21 points and

River Valley 6, Meigs D
RiverValley
Metgs

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Local Candle Route- Make
1OOk per year stmply restock
tn-store dtsplays No sellmg
Accounts . mventory. tra1n ·
1ng, support and protected
temtory tor $13.950 trwest·
ment. 888·324·1014

All real ntate advertising
in th is newspaper Ia
subtect to tl'le Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes It illegal to

advartiaa ·any
preierence, limitation or
dls crlml netton bul'!d on
race, co lor. rehgton. sex
familial stat'JI or nat1onat
origin, or any intention to
make any such
preference,lim!tallon or
dlscrlmmetton. ·

BL 'Sl.\~:o;s

-"11 Bt'IIJ)t:\GS
4 un!t apartment bulid1ng or
3 apartmen ts &amp; 1 ott1ce . for
sale Loc aled tn downtown
GalltpOIIS Income potential
$1 300 per month In good
condltton S120.000 wtll
constde r lane! contract wtth
10% down Please call 740710-0007

t

lAm&amp;
ACRUl;E

t6x80 sties avatlable 51)5
per montf'l. 1nclud es water.
sewe r &amp; tra sh (740 )992-,
2167
Lots nos 9 &amp; 10 Heatley's
add111on m BJC!well to large
teve! lots Prrced to slae now
Pl'lone ~ 446 -953 9
Mercerv1 'le Lots tor sale
sha red entrance otl Sot At. 2 18 3-13 ac res Ph one

(740\ 256· t625
You could 11sn your badlands
and 1ncre as e property \. Slue
toot Make laM mto lakes

1740) 366 ·6226
Th!a nawaP&amp;P'Jr wlll not
knowlngtv accept
advertisements for re11l
UtiUe WhiCh IS in
violation of the law. Our
r.. ders are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings advertised In
this n&amp;wspaper are
&amp;\lallaola on an equa l
opportunity bu ea

H.l,l\IS

10

l-101 'Sf'S
lOR RL"NT

3

bed roo m hOuse tn
$4 00 a mo $400
depostl . no pels. (740)949~ me ro y.

7004

Great Buys, 03. ne~ N1ce 2 bedroom ~ou se ntce
O akwood
Doublew•de yard n1ce r etghborhood,
Homes. call lor detatls 740· 1272 E. Bethel Ch urch Ad
$390 month (7 40) 388- 1655.
446 -3481 or 740-446·1567

•

�I

Page 84 • •T he Daily Sentinel
Cerd of Thank.l

Wednesday, April 28, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

;Wednesday, April 28, 2004
OOP

Card of Thanks

www.mydailysentinel.com

from

Phillip
Alder

We would like to express our
sincerest thank you to all those
Involved In with the benefit at
Eastern Elementary School
on April 1Oth.

llu66artl's q~ee~~lttJwe
·

Saturday, May 1st Racine
Donations go to
Meigs Coop Parish
Food Pantry

We appreciate everyone who
stopped by, d onated items.
organized, and assisted in any way.
A special thanks to all the bands,
Dwight Icenhower and his crew for
making the day such a success.

Easter Flowers
B edding Flowers
Vegetable PI ants
Bloom ing
&amp; Foliage Baskets
• Potting Soil

and donations have meant more
than anythb1g to us. We truly have.
been blessed with such wonderful
family, friends, and a special
community.
Please continue to keep Todd
and our family in your prayers.
God Bless you all.

April 29

6:30pm

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH

American Legion
Middleport

Office: (740) 992-2804 Cell: (740) 517·6883

~posit,

t

(740)742·2210

M~~.l:xrOMtS

I

2 bedroom- an electric
mobile hom e. W indow air$325, deposit $250. Spring
Valley area. Call (740)441 -

69541304-675-2900
3 bedroom mobile hom e in
Middleport, $375 a mon th
plus deposit, (740)992-3194

r

Twin Ri~Jers Tower is accept·
· ing applica tions for waiting
list lor H ud·subsized,· 1· br,
apartment. ca ll 675-6679

EHO

i:!:'-"""":S:PA-C-E"- - ,

r

~

roRRENr

r

221 6

1:17=40;,;1.;;38;,;80:
·8=-99.;;7•. _ _ _,

I

i____

1995 Geo Metro. 2 door,
runs good. grea t ga s
mile age, $900. (740 )256·

6800.
1 998 DOdge StrattJ s, $3,300
OBO, AIC, power everything
but seat, CD player. Call

1740)256-9095.

12 700 00

~~~
High 8l Dry

SeR-Storage

Maplewood Lake
Between Racine
and Syracuse on

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992·5232

::======~

R.B.
Trucking

.__
~~6

FOR "··~ r
i"-~---~--r

741)..949-2217

wlil

Space Available

949-2134

1/1411 mo. pel

- , - : - - - -- - - - Ki ng- Size
Pill ow
Top
S8.000 call (740)379-2789
1 BR. co mple te kit c hen,
Mattress set New, still ln All varieties of flowers and evenings .
AJC, Ret. &amp; dep. No pets. plast ic Sale $299. Ce lt garden pants. Caldwell's 1
01 39
~·17_4_0 _14_46_._
___
· _ _ _ _ phone 304-412-8098 304· mile south of Tuppers Plains 1996 Ford Bronco XLT 302
4x4 , auto matic. power winon SA 7
•1br. apt Pt. Pleasant.
552-~424.
dow, powe r locks, A/C,
:1br. house.'Ohio central ai r/ Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
KESSEL'S PRODtiCE Excelle nt cohdltlon. 49,900
·hea t no pets dep req . 446· Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.
Amish Cheese, Lunch Meat, original miles, garage kept

:2200

1740)446·7444 1·877-830·

$7.800. (740)742·1900.

Fresh Fruit and Vegeta bles
- - - - - - - - -- 9162 . Free Estimates, Easy
12" bedroom apartment in financ ing, 90 days same as Open Thurs-Fri-Sat. 1354 93 Nissan Pathfinder 4 WD.

pets, cash . Visa/ Master Ca rd. Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, $2 ,500 .00.
86
Jeep
O hio. (740)446-7787
Waggoner 4 WD $1,500.00
Drive- a· little saVe alot.
(740)992·21 36
1 \lnl"l t'l'tlt"'
'2 bedroom, just past Holzer. Queen size bed. New Oak
,\
ll\1"11111\
:s425 mon1h. Call (740)441· headboard, like new box
·1184.
sprin gs &amp; mattress. $175.
no·
'Mi ddleport ,
:(140l 992 -5858

:2-

BR lirst floor apartment
•with
sma ll
yard .
24
Chillicothe
Road.
1$395/month , utili ties not
IJnc:luded. Requires 6 monthS
:lease and $:395 sec urity
.deposit. No pet a. Fo r appli ·cation and to make an
:appointment
phOne
441 1108
·(740)
•
·
:eEAUTIFUL
A PART•MENTS
AT
BU OQET
:PRIC ES AT JAC K SON
.eSTATES, 52 Westwood
·Drive from $344 to $442 .
:walk to shop &amp; movies. Call

(740)446·7398. alter Spm
(740)367-7886.
Queen-Pillow Top Mal1ress
Set. Neyt in plastic wlwarranty Witt accept $ 199. Ce il
phone 304·41 2·8098 304·

552·1424.

CONVENIENTLY L OCAT·
ED AFFORDABLE!
,Townhouse
apar tments .
and/or small hOuses FOR

a

wash ers &amp; dryers, refrigerators. gas and electric
ranges, air conditioners, and
wringer was hers. Will do
repa1rs on major brands in

.:_
' "..:o.cp_:o_r _" .:.Y.:_Ou.:_r_h_o_m_e_. __
Used Furniture Store.

130 Bulavllle l'lko,
Mattresses,
dressers,
couches , recline rs, much
more . Grave Monuments.
{740 )446-47.82 Gallipolis ,

i

"RENT. Call (740)441 · 1111 OH. HAS 10·4 M·F.
~ r application &amp; information .

'

or ~a1e : ':'wnsano snee
nd goat Turntable. Use
nly 2 times, like bran
~~~ Cost $900, will tak

740-992-5594
740-992-6862

New H omes • Vi nyl
Siding • New Garages
• Re pl acement ·

r

r~

~~!~

Morning Star Road- C.Rd 30 • Racine,

IMPORTS
Athens

HAv&amp;

r MmoRCVm~ I

CAMPER'&gt; &amp;
MuroR HoMES

(304)675·1925

THE 60LF
P~O SAID HE
SIJ66ESTED
SOMETHIN6
TO IMPROVE
YOUR ~A~~t: J

OTHE.I'- KID' l:' t1
NUI'\BER E.16 HT'

--

.' BETTY

1'1.1- SE ABOOT

"W.V's # 1 Ch eyy, Pon tiac . B u ick, O ld s
· &amp; C u s tom Van D ealer "

30 MINUTeS

NORTHUP DODGE

Advertise in this
Space for
$50 per month

Kitchens, Drywall
&amp; More
FREE ESTIMATES!

740·742·341

$37.000.

HOWARD l.

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

WRITESEl

25 ft. Camper for sale 360
Sportsman, for more detail's
please call (304 )67 5- 1631

1

dOOFIIII
*HOME
MIINTEIIIIICE
dEIMlESS
GlmR

I FEEL. 50
FUL.FIL.L.e:D

252 Upper River Ro1d • C111ipolis
740·446· D842-• 949·1155 Eveninss

New Homes,
Room Additions,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding; Decks,

- - -- - - - - 2003 B Touring Cruiser
Motor Home. Length 22',
Uoor plan, rear ba th, self
contained, fully eq uipped ,
excell ent cond ition. (must

...,, In II I "

j--'.!p". .1f_~

• Room Addltl ontl 6
A•madellng

• NewG• r•gq
•
•
•
•

El.ctrlcel &amp; Plumbing
Aoorlng &amp; Gutter•
VInyl Siding • P• lntlng
P1tlo and Porch O.Ckl
Wa do It all ex cept
f urn ac t work

11'fnll Estlmllll11'

V.C. YOUNG Ill

949-1405

992-821 5
Pom.,.oy, Ohio

ROBERT
BISSELL

CDIISTIIICTIIN
·New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

740-912-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

"22 Yl8ra Loc•l Experience

'

•

&gt;; i4rl',yoU

U\.l'OT

:.~ MI~~W A ~"R.tAT
::: oLD ~ PYi..Al'l
~

•

~I

~ r-:-7/-'

0\.\ ,'lbU Kl--\o'N,
1\.\t ~t \li\\tl&lt;£
\\t MUMBLE\:&gt;
Alc:5T

AstroGraph

out of
42 Choir
voicfl
43 SubWoy
entrance
45 Reglirdlng
(2 wds.)
47 Dr88ded
CZIIf

48 RN'a forte .
49 Fonnlll vofl!
SO Golf 1ICOfll
52 Today

53 Porteble

initials

28 Butglar"s
target
29 Intelligent
34 Swarming
wHh

bed

54

S~

widllts

36 Weasels

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by luis Campos
Celebfrty Ciphef eryptograms ¥ ~ created tram &lt;lJI)Iallons !IV fl!lmtM p&amp;or.ie. past .wt p1esent
E&amp;Ch ~@Tier ll'llhe opt';lr stands 101 8~

TCiday '$ clue. Wequals M

" BWCSBOCRBND
BWUNMRCDR
FDNZAXPSX
B WC S B 0 CR

BT

RLCD

WNMX
. FDNZAXPSX . .

BT

ABWBRXP .

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~IN

Z N MA P . "

CAJXMR

Rl X

XBOTRXBD

Blltv\ Mn~.... I

/:&gt;.lW/:..YS

Lll&lt;.tt&gt; i\lAT
~~

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Loved people are lovmg people.' - Ann Landers
Love is all there is. / ls all we know o! Love." - Em1ly Dickinson
(C) 2004 by NEA. Inc. 4·28

"Thai

4\'

1MATDII\Y C.~"O
(-f)~ ~Ce o WOlD
PUIILU \J\!:J l'QU l"~
~ l:.J(,f' &gt;J GAMI
- -- - . . , . . - ldited ill,

-

-

'llll"thda!Y:

Thursday, April 29, 2004

1-800-822-0417

Bryan Reeves

$15.500 Phont (304)937·
3211

32 '
Dutc hman
classic
campe r. Sleeps 8. privale
quee n size bed roo m, 24'
awning, fully self conta1ned,
AJC , lurnace, new carpet ,

• 1)1SPERSAL
; t&gt;~AFT .
· EH COACH ~

AND llON'r PR!Jt115oE t1Y
NUM8EII. T o SOr\E.

:PEANUTS·

Sunset Home
Construction

Out Excellent Condition

t A~ I

• OFF T O TH E

985-4159

2001 2ift Sprinter 5th
Wheel Cemper. One Slide

see) Asking
(740)367-7070.

:rs~o~¥~ou
~·~~~E~--r=77.~.,

Serious
Inquiries Only
Call

n

2001 Chevrol et Suburban 24FT Pon too n boat , 86
good
condition
2500 4X4 . Navy Blue, Cloth model
interior, cruise, C D player, (304)675-3818
12 Good Fa1r Pigs for Mason Air, Tow package . 52,000
Call
$25,000
and Meigs County. Call miles
98 Basstream Boat. 99
(304)675-3117
(740)388·9Q33 aftar 8pm.
Me reu~ 150 hp motor, 97
For sale Boer Goats tor Fair 2002 Ford F· 150, supe r trailer, cover N1ce. $8,900.00
crew short bed, 4 door. ton· (740)992·2136
Proiec1s (304)675·1126
neau cover, XLT Triton, 8
Regi stered ANGUS and cyl.. 19,000 miles , $24,200,
Crossbred bu lls. Top blood· (740)992·3981
li nes, StBte Run Farm ,
(7 40)286· 5395 96 Toyota 4 Runner. loaded, 4 31JC10 50R15Trall Blazers,
Jackson .
trans
$6,900.00 4 LT 265 X 75R16 Goodyear
up std
look
(740)992·2136
WWH.slateruntarm.r:om.
Wranglers, 4 P255 X 70R1 6
Generals 304 675·3354
Yo ung heavy breed laying

G

:SIG NATE

•
·•

Stationarr 1- ootl
\laud \l'ailahlt•

2002 Honda Shadow 750 1990 24 foot. travel trai ler,
A .C .E., like new with many no
leaks.
sleeps
8,
e&gt;et-ra's, Adult ridden $5,000 upgrades, clean. (740)992·
firm Racine (740)949-1 131 3394 or (740)742·3020
•
attar 5pm

1740)992·2849

0

Dean Hill

2000 Challenger
with
11 987 Jeep Pioneer 4·Wheel
slide. 32' like new, electr ic
2003 Volusia Intruder 800.
Drive call after 6 pm
jack, new
tires/ batt ery,
1.000 miles, silver/ white,
1304)675-3424
$20.000.
(740)245·5130.
garage
kept,
$5,200,
t991 S-10 Blazer. 4dr. 4wd,
auto, air, cruise , bOdy fair,
$2,000
runs
great,

·11you bel on the declarer. you.

VIP&amp;

13 Sympaihize
19 Treceelemen! In san
20 Vossars
oath
22 Swerved
24 Whiskers
25 Plan In
detail
(2 wds.)
26 Ceramic
square
27 Glasnost

won.

••

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

Every day this week. you place a makebelieve bet on either th e declarer or the
defenders.
Today. South is in three no-trump. West .
who opened one heart. leads hts fourth·
highesl card in that suit. Who should
come out ahead?
Note South's one-no-trum p overcall. In
the balancing (fourth) positi on, it shows
12-14 high -card po1nts (perhaps a good
11 ), not the good 15 to bad 18 it woul d
promi se in the second position (or fourth
if the responder had bid). North's two
clubs was $ layman. South 's reply denying four spades. (He doesn't show four
hearts when West is known to have at
least five cards in that Suit.)
It South wms th e lirst tnek 1n hand, he is
history. He can cross to dummy with a
sp ade and - run the cl ub jack, but West
wms w1th the queen and plays a heart to
dummy's bare ace. Thon. when West
gets in with the club ace, he takes three
·
heart tricks: one down.
if East is allowed to win the f1rst trick with
his hea rt 10, he returns a heart to
dummy's ace. Then West. when in with
his first club tri ck, drives out South's
heart queen to defeat the contract.
However. if declarer makes th e st rangelooking play of the heart ace from the
board at trick one. he survives (assuming
West hasn't underled the K-J-10 ol
hearts). South loses Irick two to West 's
club queen . but what does that de fender
ctO~ If he leads a. low heart io East's 10,
South ducks. If West plays the king and
another heart. South scores three heatt
tncks.

0

•~ -·~~--, r:;E;7_.,L!,......,.,...j

740--992·7599

~.,r__M·u·ro·KCY--CLES-·1 r M~~ I

or sell . Aiver1ne
Buy
2000 650 Yam aha C lassic 2
oounlry curlains &amp; quills.
GRAIN
Antiques, 1124 · East Main
w indshields, saddlebags , 1987, 32' Itasca Class A, V6, Mu st see $6.000 Call .
on SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740·
'
mustang seat 8000 miles in 19K. $1 3,500 . (740)446· !74 0}379-2789 evenings
992- 2526
Ru ss Moore, Straw tor sale $2 so a Dale pertecl cond 304-n3-5109 9355 .

'

COMPARE THESE PRICESII
4" pot of annuals 941!
4" pol ol perennials $1.18 Buy 5or more lor $1.00
Open 7 daya
Flat of plllnla $6.60
oweokdayllght
Hanging Basket• $8.60
to dartcl

Windows • Roofin g
COMMERCIAL and
RES IDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

lrlflllTII8IM.

"1

N'l~ ~ I T:'\ 1 .

n Mon-Frl9·5 Set. 9-12

Meigs county's Largest selection or
annuals, perennials, vegetables,
shrubbery, fruit. ornamental trees.
roses, rhollollenllrOIIS, IIIIIIIIZIIItllS.

for 2004 Meigs
County Fair.

1

...-~0 .. I 1&lt;\E.N'\ [ WI\::&gt; 51\HIN&amp;
MD l DIDto\'1 Gf.T .

BUILDERS me.

,!.:
....,.· ·
't;;,;,,,

LMSTOCK

hens, (740)992·7042

owner.

Manning K. Roush
Owner
0

Yards

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

Reside ntial &amp; Manufac tured Hous ing
Air Conditioners, H eat Pump s &amp; Furn aces
• Super Hi E fficiency Equ ipmenJt• F ree Es timates
:. ,

1740)645.()850

"--------,J r

Graciou s living 1 and 2 bed· ___
.room apartments at Villag e
Manor
and
Rive rsid e
Apartments In Middl eport.
From $29 5-$444 _ Call 740·
992·5064 . Equal HOUSing
Opportunities.

FAR\1

5001(740)245.()485-

Thompsons Applia nc e &amp;
Repair·675-7388. For sale,
re-conditioned
automatic

•740·446·2568 .
Equal
:Housing Opportunity.

"'~- •EQuiPMo i i i ioi i i .li.....
r

r10

THE BORN LOSER

Will Mow

Friday-Saturday Apr 30 &amp; May I
Look for the yellow nags !

&amp; door locks, towing package, bed liner, new tires.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Lawn and Garden Equipmwt is our
business, not our sideline

1o 19'x30' '

Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

l

992-2975

' SfMs•iio•

BISSEll

I

204 Condor Street

45771

St R.t. 124

TH' HECK WIF I-IlM-·
I MISS MY
SISTER !!

SALES &amp; SERVICE

29670 Bashan Roa d
Racine, Ohio

BENNETT's

f!!!:.!?.'!!J

AJC, cru ise, power windows

V EGETABLES

,-------ii

GRAVELYTRACTOR

born 2/14/04. $200. Call eKtendll\l cob, 4K4. t29,ooo
(740)441-1892.
miles, 350' eng., auto trans,

t

I

Snapper

Gravely

Hill's Self
Storage

HEATING f/ COOLING

v.--..-...•

FRurrs&amp;

..

(304) 273-5321

FLEA
MARKET

•5

1 bedroom, kitchen appli - $10.
ances furnished, AJC, refer- • Skaggs Appliances
76 VI ne Street
ences. No pets. (740)446(740)446·7398
1370.

~

~

HAULING:
• Limestone
• Sand ·
• Dirl
• Ag Lime ,
740-985·3564
~~=::;;;,;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::::~ r~~~~~~~-,

$1 ,000. Call (740)446·2248
after s.

740-245~.

. ,.

BARNEY

Good Used A ppli ances,
BS~~
·
an d
1 bedroom apartment stove/ Recon ditioned
1:0:1
96 Saturn SC1, 2 doo r, red,
Washers ,
refrigerator. utilities Includ- Gu aranteed .
great 'condition. Must Sell
·"·····' •
Ranges.
and Block, brick, sewer pipe s,
ed. $400Jmonth + deposit Dryers ,
H&amp; I01 yr Warra nti es
~
$3.000. (740)256·6800.
Refrigerators,
Some
start
at
windows,
linlels.
ale.
Claude
'
uge
nventory
.
,,. ""'
(740)245·5859.
$95. Ska ggs Appl iances, 76 Wlnlers, Rio Grande, OH 97 Neon $750.00. 94 Grand • Vang uard Ventl e_;;s F1replaccs "~!ll!li'·
bedroom
apt . Vine St., (740)446-7398
Cell
$1.300.00 1740)992·
Was herld rye r
hookup,
Good washers &amp; dryers , $95
includes water, sewage and
&amp; up ; electric ranges, $95 &amp;
1
TRUCKS
Gallipolis, OH WVOI02 12
trash . $350 rent. de posi t
up; Frost free refrigerators,
_.miirRiiSALEiiii._
.
.,.·
·
L----'-44.:.::
6:....
-9:.:.4..:;16,_r:...:...l·,;.:80"'0_,
-8:..:.
7=..
2 -=59'-'6:..:.
7 _ __,
required. No pets. 740-441 $150 &amp; up; Like new s1de11 84.
AKC Black Lab pu ppies, 6 ..
by-side with water &amp; ice -In
wks . Males and femal es. 1970 Ford F350. 10 Fl.
· 1 bedroom upstairs a part- the door, $375; co uch, $75; First
shots.
5300.00 Grain bed. low miles, many
. ment, $275 + util ities, full size bed. box springs &amp; (740)992-3887 after 5..
new parts, new ti res/Whe els.
manress, $150; full size bed
deposit required, tor applic:
(740)Z45·0485.
tion call (740)379-951 1 ·or boX spr ings &amp; manrese , English Setter puppi es.
$125; table &amp; chairs. $100: Hunting stock. Registered,
(740)379·2204
1995 GMC 2500. Short bed,
glider rocker, $4 5; lamps,

I

,

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

youl

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

$ . .
1 and 2 bedroom apart· in
Plast ic
w!Warranty. W izard 42 inch riding
ments, furnished and unfu r· Sacrifice $1 19. Cell phon e mower. 4x 12 utility trailer. 60 92 Ford Temp. Power seats,
nished, securi ty deposit 304-41 2-8098 or 304·552· ya rds tan carpet &amp; pad. windows, locks, 4 ely. atJIO,
1424.

'

~

~

r~~~92~1~d

Full Size Mattress Set. Now

Le: me do 1t for

Ravenswood ChiropractiC:
Center

1

(740)441·5472.

Illinois Rail roa d Pocket
W atch, l eve r Set. "Abelincoln Series ", 21- Jewels.
14-K Gold Filled Case.
$375. Also Older Bulova
Acc utron
W rist
Watch,
"Space View" Series, 1O-K.
Gold Case , 1971- Looks
New-$300.

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTINGI

Apr1130 - May 1

Ant wer to Prevk)ua Puzde

42~1

Up or down;
home or away

N~w PATitNTS"?-·l&gt;O l. LOO~ NtW
TO YOU?

• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

991 Chevy Gao Tracker
(7 4 0)742·21 ~ 7 .
4~~:4. hard top. new transmis·
sia n, new tires and many
For Sale: Lap Top Compu ter. other parts. Very good con$350. New Boat Cover. dition. $3, 000 O BO 740·
$100. Call (740)441-8299 or 446-4616 or 740·446·1637.

Sunday. (740)446-7300

required , no pets, 740-992-

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Tree Service

$5001.Honda s,
Chevys,
Jeeps , etc I POLICE
IMPOUNDS Cars
from
$500. For listings 1-800-71 9·
3001 ext 3901

-

ACROSS

2.

Top • Removal • .Trim

"~

10

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

SFREE

· JONES'

2000 Grand Prix GTP, silver

r

Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get

FREE EmMAnS • GUARANRED LOWEST PRIUS

Chan nel, F lat Bar, Steel Pomeroy, 1740)992·349Q
Grat ing
Fo r
Dra ins, 2003 Caviler 4door, 4... cyl.,
"'~---liiiliiiiilo_ _.
Driveways &amp; Wal kways. L&amp;L auto, 9,000 miles, tilt, c ru ise,
dep., no pats, (7.40 ) 667 - En gland Co rsair so la &amp; Scrap Metal s Open Monday.
al rC9nd ., CD player, $6, 500.
3063 affer 5pm.
chair. Dark green excellent Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
(740)441·0337.
APAKI"MEi'ITS
condition. $450 OBO Friday, Bam--4:30pm. Closed
Thurs day,
Saturday
&amp;
~
roR RENT
1740)446·1663.
2003 Nissen Sentra SEA

'-740_14_4_6_·2_00_3_
. ____
Pomeroy $300 a mo., $150

Bring this coupon

(Commercial .!lnd Residentio51)
Mowins, Trimming. Tree Tr imm.ing. Aeration, Fertilization,
Spraymg of fence lines, l eaf Removal, as well as small
lan dscaping jobs such as planting and mulching.

Retail or Office Space ,
JET
23,000 miles, $12,000 . Call
3Br, 2Ba, Mobile Home . Pr ime Downtown Gallipolis
AERATION MOTORS
Caruthers Mobil e Home location, call (74 0)379-9511 Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In 1740)388-9804.
Park (304)675·3818
or (740)379-2204 for more Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1- 2001 Saturn , 4 dr, au to
into
trans, CO/ radio, mUch more;
800·537·9528.
Nice 2 and 3 bedroom
this
car is like new wionly
mobile homes for rent Rlveraltes for rent, family
28K miles; 2000 Grand-Am,
mcludes water. sewer &amp; type. 3 campsites, full l aw nboy mow.er with grass
trash. no pets, deposit &amp; hookup, near river. 3 dock· catcher. $90, caH (740)949· 4 dr_, V-6. loaded w/power
options; sharp on ly $6995.
~300 per month, (740)992- aitea, no hookup. Call 4000
Many more. We take trade2167
(740)992-6968
NEW AND USED STEEL Ins. fina nci n~ available,
~ ice 2 bedroom mobile
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar Riverview Motors, 2 blocks
McD onald's
10
hom e. No
pets.
Call
Con c ~ete,
Angle. above
For

\

- Dr.iveways • Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots t Playgrounds
• Roads t Streets

{Comme1C1td and Rnidential)
.
Mobile Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Decks, Driveways,
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Degreasi ng of
Equipment, Boats, Campe rs, Tractor Trailen;,
. Dump Trucks, paint ing or staining of ~our deck
or log home, Alumi num brightenin11.
Special rates to Trucking and Dump Trucking Companies.

S300 deposit. Electric s'h8mpooerl bulfer
or 740..591· $SO.OO. Call (740 )985-3545

740·367·0502.

~ .

.Last Thursday of
every month
All pack $5.00

MONTY

Phone 674-3311 Fax 304·675·2457

PQWER WASHING

$4,500.00 in baskets
Door open at 5:00 pm

B ea utiful Ivory Weddin g
N1ce one SA un furnished
gown Size 5 never been
apartment. Range &amp; refrig
worn $300 · Inez Smith
provided. Water &amp; garbage
(304)675·6518
paid. Deposit required . ·call
(740)446-4345 after 6pm.
Designer Bridal Gown by
Oemetrios. Scalloped neckTara
Townho use
line, cathedral t rain , bodice
Apartments . Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors, CA. 1 skirted and t rimmed in
112 Bath , Newly Carpeted, Battenburg lace . $250 Call

i

Cell

LAWN CARE DIVISION

Adult Poo l &amp; Baby Pool,
Patio. Start $385/ Mo. No
~ 14x60, 2 bedroom- AIC ,
Pets, Lease Pl us Se&lt;:urily
: w&amp; o . $300month +deposit. Deposil Required , Days:
On 2 18. Refe rence, No pets. 740·446·3481,: Evenings :

1740)256·1044.

6:30

Owner: Jeff Stethem

a month dep &amp; ret, (740)596·21 98
·required Call (304)273·1112 0649.
: (304)638·74 11

'-----------------

·a7H4&amp;7

AND LAWN CARE

2 lois- in Mei gs Memoria l Horse Manure Pick·up load
• •
Garden $300.00. 30 inch $25 loader ava ilable. Dump
t)br Aarch w/garage, ig . Nice 2 bedroom apartment Whirlpool Electric range , Truck load delivered $7·5
~4nced ya rd, eXc. family lor ren t Middleport . Oh. self-cleaning oven, $150.00.

~ N ice 3 bedroom house in
~co un try,
references
"oQuired, no inside pets,
}ruD approved. $500 per
.month plus utilities, $500

Henderson, WV

Doors Open 4:30
Early birds siHrt

Porc h Boxes
Combination Pots
Pere n nial S
Spru ce Trees
Shrubs
(
Peat Moss

Monday -S at urday 9-5 C losed Sunday
740-992-5776

:~:=io::::m~";~:RENT===~I~r;;=A=~=&gt;\=~=Rmr~IEM"Sc: ::,1 ~~ I
in/Pt.Pieasa nt $325/mo.,

•
•
•
•
•
•

MYERS PAVIIG

Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday

Syracuse, OH
Now Open

•
•
•
•

BASKET 81 NGO

All of the thoughts, prayers; cards,

)location
--$675.00

Pomeroy F:agles
BINGO 2171

•

1 Phony
town
6 Remove,
43 Mec:h 1
otpalnt
••~
12 Win over
.44 " Bien'"
14Tructced
opposh
I
15 Walle time 46 Telegraph
~orth
04 28 04 \ 16 - signal
17 underwater 48 Ofilce
A A K 3 2
ahocker
worker
• A 3
18 Oil0fdeo1y 51 Make plain
• 9 6
crowd
55 Sheck
. Jt 0 974
19 Possibill·
(hyph.)
West
Easl
ties
56
Western
• 8 5
• J 10 9 6
21 Gladiator's
movie set
¥ KJH 65o
• 10 7
hello
.
57
Ship"s
. 10 8 7 -1 2
• Q J '
23 PC maker
loads
• A Q 2
• 53
26 One of ten 58 Salamandets
South
27 Passne11
• Q 7.
Pikes Peak
DOWN
• Q. 42
28 Skulk
t A K 3
around
1 Theorem
... K II 6
30 Bolse"a st.
ender
. 31 Gellhe
2 Prefix
Dealer: west
message
for verse
Vul nerab le: Both
32 Wide open · 3 Say further
33 Hums
4 Grants
South' West North East
happily
5 Green
Pass
I•
Pass
35 TKO
vegetable
1 N"1'
Pass
24
Pass
official
6
Pity
·Pass 3 ~T
All pass
37 Flsh·lo-be
7 Hunter's
38
PC
key
wear
Opening lead: · 6
39 Festive
8 Massaging
night
9 Yeasty
40 Demand
brew
payment
tO Each
41 Needle
II Magazine

The Todd Hawley Family

~~'!"'-..;iiiiioiiiiiioo_.l

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Special Thanks

THE
TODD HAWLEY
FAMILY

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

By Bernice Bede Osol
II behooves you to set largtt r object ives for
you rsell in the year ahead lhan you have
in the pasl in order to fu rther your interes't s. Bigger things can be. accomplished
because Dame Fortune is now blessing
your efforts .
TA URUS {April 20-May 20) When
selec ting a tun activity to do today, cti oosing one that gi ves you an opportumty to
eMtrCISe bo th your mental and physica l
faculties will be the most sat1sfying lor you .
GEMINI (May 2 t -June 20) - Mate r~ al
ISSues tend to favor you today, especially
·matters where you al ready have something going lor you . You should be able to
expand upon 11 m ways th at could be lastmg.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) - Thi S may
be one of th ose days where, unles s you
have con slanl actiVIty gomg tor you dur1ng
the day and well 1nto 1he evening. you
could end up be1ng re stles s. Plan a full
agenda.
LEO (July 23- Aug_22) -Turn your back
on fmanc•al opportun111es that come out ol
the blu e today and stick to tried end true
aven ues of gain. Unless you have 11me to
tully investigate something tirst it could be
a bummer.
VIRGO !Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - One ot your
better abilities tod ay is to be able to ingra tiate yours eltto people who could be help•
ful to you in mulliple ways. Use your charm
to win an important ally over to your side .
LI BRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) - Al though I
doub1 that you will seek it. you. neverthe less, may sti ll be the center of attention
among your peers. It's you r qu1et. unobtrusive manner that makes you so appealing.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) - You r hopes
can be fulfilled beyond you r e~~:pect al ion s
today d you concentrate solely on situation s you 've visited before that you were
qu ite succes sful in handling.
SAG I TTA R~ U S ( Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Competitive situations might be your cup
of tea today, espec;ially where the slake s
could be quite substantial. You're smart
enough to avo1d fooli sh nsks and concen)rate only on sure things.
CAPRICORN (Oec. 22-Jan. 19) - You
have a specia l kna ck loday for bringmg
divergent in1erests 1ogether in a manne r
!ha t would benefit all part1es concerned .
Others will 1urn to you in hopes yo u'll use
your skills tor 1hem.
AQUARIU S (Jan. 20-Feb. 19. - lf you
want to get your juice s tlowi ng today, concentrate on your material needs and you'll
lind yourself greatl y st1mulaled and mohvated 10 accomplish most anything you
wan I.
PI SCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Soc1al
arrangemen ts are likely to be more successfu l today if you include many ol your
o ld fri, nds and not JUS! your newer
acqua intances. They 'll add a degree of
coziness to the galhenng.
ARIE S {March 21-Apnl 19) - St1 ck to
core issUes at work today and chances
are you'll get things done faster and better
By a lfi~~: i ng yourself to th e heart ol mailers,
you won 't be Sidetracked from what makes
lhmgs lick.

. SOUP TO NUTZ
VJHaf CouLD Be Be1'11!R 11-181"1
laY•n' Ol~G\'&amp;3son a
SProt"16 Dd'( waTcH.n 1He._

Cl9000 Go BY ·-;

POlLAN

0

Wfll'!tron~:·8 iener! d
leur t cror~"~ b l e d words . be
low 10 form !ov r wc rds

[ V( r1s1,]
r, I~

liTE ·-;-1
we re amaz ed at
r;;" thel turrMyseedlltnends
contrail s h owed whe n
oI I I j lale ca kedownapiececfchcc
. "'Real self control,' I

S CA8 I

h''---'-.....L-J.._J........J
s

'

.--- - - - -- - --"'..,' confessed , '"is hav1ng a credil
El H p A I L
I card and not--·-·-- it .,

-'-,.,,7:-'
-rl• =-r,--1
0
.
•
.

I~-;-..:;....:__,.;!
E
.

Co,...olere 1'H!' c!-1cc~ le Qval~d
by fd iong 111 lhc ,...,, !$, 11 '1 ...,.o t ds
'--'--l...--'--l...-....1.--' 'fOu de velop f ·om llep No J be lcw.

@ POINT

NUMSEHD lE TT ERS 1
IN tHESf SQUARES

€)

~~fc;~~~~rR tETms 10 I

IIIIIII

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS •' 2 7-' 4
Hybrid· Truth- Shawl - Steady - DEBT WISH
A ne1ghbor can not pass up a sale of an y k1nd . She

even s ho ps from home us1ng lhe phone . Her husband
says that s he's a compulsive buyer who has a DEBT
WISH.
.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

,AIYr4U T.~'
IT!fY!i4tltT!

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Apri128, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Cooled-off Maddox
expects to be
Steelers' starter, B8

Major League Baseball
Amel'

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i I

12

ti

10

•
,,
10
13

•
7
7

....

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.667
.558
.410
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•

Pet.
.650
.579

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8

:SSQ_

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8

12

.400

5

6

12 .

.333

6

Pet.

L

12 -- __!
12
8

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13

.350

5

Strt'

7·3

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2-5

5-5

1-8

6-5

5-5;-----;•c;l

6~ -

5·5
5-5
2-8

4·5

5-~

-- l2_
W2
L2

-

5-41
6-4

.&amp;-7

5-5 - -,.7

P1D

- 4-5

~

----

8-3

Bay at Bosttln, ppa .. raw~
Seams 7, Balrlmore 5
NY "t'lri'.ees 10, OekJand 8
Cl8wland 1 1. Cflca9Q Sox 1. ( 10)
Uimescca 7. Toronto 4
TeJtaS 3, Kansas aty 2

......,.
c-

Toron1o (J.\t1lerO.Oj at Mimesota (LC!f\se 1-2), 8:10p.m.
Texas (Parw. 1-31 at Kansas Qy (Gobble Q-{)). 8:10p.m.

NewYottc
llbrhbl

..Ieier ss

3 {) 0 0
• 2 1 1

B"Nt'ns c1

ECtevz3b • 1 1 1

AFittgz 3b 5 1 1 1

~rf

JaGbi cf1
St1!ield T1

3 1 1 1

Posadac

3 1 1 1
3221
-4110
3 1 12
1012

c;

0 I 0

ltilerg 1b 5 2 3 1
Ounl2v cf1 5 3 2 1

Sa.ilaro ss 4 1 3 2

McM~phlOOO

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·International Lea~ue.
Kelly doubled m two runs
in a five-run third inning and
hlt a three-run homer in a
five-run eighth.
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Br.lcXnor. Second. Ert Cooper: Third, Mike Reilly:
T-l{Y2. A-36.371 (41 ,584).

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.

Eleme111ary School building on Pearl
Street.
Tl)e village plans 10 convert ihe
MIDDLEPORT- The new direc- Pearl Street school into vi llage
tor of the Ohio Governor's Otlice of offices, and to construct a new jail .on
Appalachia has pledged to help the back of the building. The village
Middleport village officials secure is now seek ing federal gran\ funds
for construction of the jail, which is
funding for a new jail facility.
to·cost between Sl.5 milexpected
Mayor Sandy lannarelli said TJ ·
Justice, who attended an open house lion and $2 million .
Plans call for a 16-bed jail. and
reception in his honor in Pomeroy on
Monday, toured the current include · space for four female
Middleport Jail and reviewed plans inmates. The village hopes revenue
for a new jail at the Middleport from the county and surrounding viiBRIAN

REED
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Umpires---Home. Hl,l'lt9r Werdelstacll: F~ Tm
T11T111'1Clf'1S: Seoond. Bruce Fr-oemming: Thni. ~ioe

""'"'

T-3:36. A-2B.S24 156.000).

BATIING-Belllolrcl. CkNeland. .416. Harvey.
Kansas Crty. 396. MRarrnez, Baston, :392;
.M.ooez.. Balbmore.. .373 M'rol.llg, TaGS. .372;
lAoOOguez. Delran..362: Mora. Babnorv. .342;
ASorwlo. ~ .342
RlJNS.----Belnn. Kansas c~. 2 J : WAle. Detrot.
19: MVoung.TQ1(85. 18; Mora. Ballrnora 18;Cf'vna. Dfllmrt. 17: BAOOertS. Ballmore. 15: CGu;18n,

DetroA 1s: VULIOifBfO. Anaheim. 15: ~-oak­

lages which will use the jail will help
offset operating wsts.
_
Meigs Couniy Sheriff Ralph
Trussell .currenlly hoL"e' some pri&gt;oners for I he ;,hort term in the
Middleport JaiL which houses four
prisoners. because ihe county jail is
no longer operating . Oiher \'illages.
inciLidin~Meig;,County,illage&gt;anu

Galli pol" , also house pmoners
there.
··11 was a \'ery productive vi;,it. and
rm pleased (Justice) is imerested in
offering assistance from ihe qate,"

'

lannarelli , aiu. ··He agreed thai this .
is something \hal is needed. not only
for Miudleport. bul for the county:·
lannarelli ;,aid Justice plans to send
a t~um fmm hi&gt; office to ass ist her
and Police ·Chief Bruce · Swift in
developing a ··sound·: funding applicaLion.
·
The propo,ed jail also includes
areas for police offices, interrogation
facililies. a recreation room for prisoners. and a full kitchen. Plans for
ihe jail have been approved by the
Ohio Jail Commission.

land. 15.

RBI---lawl.on. CIEM:Iiand. I 9; F'lx.ada. New Yorl&lt;,
19: 'Mlile . Detroit. 19: Blalcdl, Texas. 18: Dye.
. Oaldar.d 18. L.Fad. Mnnesota. 17: JJones. Min-~ 17. Beli'arl. KansaS~- 17: Gla!S. Ana1-Ewn. 17: RPa!metro. Bal!mOro. 17.
HOME RI.JNS--Bellran. .Kansas City. 7: Dye,
Oakland. 7. Pcsadil. ·New Yorll. 7: Glaus. Ana·
!-ern. 6: 8 are lied wiit1 5
'STOLEN BASES---Crawlord. TIITIPB Bay. I 1;
Beltral'l. Kansas City 7. Fggns. Al\ahelm, 6:
BFk:tlerts. Batrmore. 5: Matos. Baltlr'OOrfl. 5: Bare

BLOOD DRIVE

...,..,,

PITCHING (2 Deciaicnl)---14 are tied wrtt1
LOCI)

STRlKEOUTS-Hal!aday. TCX'011o. 31 : Scl1illng.
Boslm . 31 Robertson Oetrorl. lJ: f'Martrlez.
Boston. 28; Zarrb-ano. T11mpa Bay. 24: S&amp;rltana,
M!nnesc:U. 24. Nazrp&amp;. New '1M. 24

NL~
BAlllNG--8oncls. San Frwlcisco..500 Lo Duca,
Los Angeles, .452: casey, cmnan . .423: m~
. OOn. ~- .397: 03aL.tisla. Anzooa. .390:
MGIIes.. AIIMia. 387: CWOOI. ~- .38:2.
RUHS-lGonzalez. Mzooa. 22: Sexson. MZI:Tia. 20: Hel!cr'l. Colorado. :!): BagNell. Hol&gt;Sion.
20: Gabrera. Flonda. 1B; PuJ(lls. St. LouiS, 18.
Podsednik. Milwaukee. 17: AE~. Houstoo . 11:
Bumlll. Ccbado. 17: Bc::rlcls. Sal'! Francisco. 17.
Rm-----Rolen. St Louts.. 27· Sexson. Anztr.a. 22:
Hdai)o. Housb'l. 22: Gastilla. Colorado. 20:
Boo:is. San Frarasco. 20: Cabrem. Ronda. 19: 5
am bed wth 1B.
HOME RUNS---S&amp;son. Anza'la. 9: Bo-ds. San
Frarosco. 9: Cabrl!la. Florida. 8: Dim. Cncmah.
8. Rol!.¥1. Stlouis. 8: PUjOIS. Sl LOllis. 7: GJohnSCil, Colorado. 7. ·RSan!Ws. St louiS. 7: Alou.
01~7

Cooper

STOLEN BASES--OAoberts Los Ang9ies. 13:

F'oclsam*. """"""ulr.ee. 12; Wcmedc. SU.ou!!.. 7:

AS8ndets. St. l.OI.Is. 6: MGies. AtiarM 5: Pieml,
Aorda. 5;Cameroo, New 'mOt. 5
PfTOfiNG (2 Deriaiona}-13are bEKtwilh 1 001
STRIKEOIJTs.--R..Jot-. Anzona. 42: Wood,
Chbq:l. 32; Bel.*ett. Fkma 31 : Clarnerll. Oica·
.,. 30 """" Fb'da .... ....., """""· 27:
BSheets. Milwa~ . 27

LorrERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 2-7-0
Pick 4 day: 4-2-2-2
Pick 3 night: 4-7-9
Pick 4 night: 4-7-7-1
Buckeye 5: 3-13-23·28·36
Super\.oltD: 5--24-27-28--32-41 (29)
Kicker: 7-9'3-7 -2-3

West Vtrginia
Dally 3: 0--2-9
Dally 4: 5-7-7--0
Powerball: 27 -34-42-49-52-(23)

the season.
Caonabo Cosme added
two hits and three RBis,
while John Rodriguez had
two hits and drove in a pair
for the Clippers.

Power Play: 2

OBITUARIES
'

, a heartfelt '1hank You" could be
:7'JIIJ&gt;.ru
could ever give your mother.
this opportunity to say it.

FrldaY.\M,V·7,th
Se~tiqei

•

.:r"--;,;...J..'l.:~~.iL.,.-Jr
---,--#'.ifi:Y) ~.,. ~\.'\.. - ,

If your business is interested
in participating in this
Special Edition,
Call _Brenda or Dave
at 992-2155

WEATHER

Happy
Mot'her's Day

RACINE
Eighth·
grade students at Southern
Elementary did a little environmental analysis on a
nearby stream 'last ,week.
With help from the people at Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation (MSWC) district, students in sc ience
teacher Dave Barr' s class
conducted water samples to

Mother's Day
(Picture)

.
Details on Page A 7

(Your
Mother's
Name)

Joe and Susan

2 SECTIONS -

Calendars
Classifieds

.Love John,
joe and
Susan

Deadline lorthlsSpeclol Mother's Day Tribute Is Thursday, Aprll30, 2004

Ail out the form below, attach It with your payment
and send It to
The Dally Sentinel "Mother's o.iy"
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769
For more Information call992-2156

16 PAGES

A3
Bs-6

Comics

B7

Dear Abby .

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Places to go

AS

Sport;s

B1

Weather

A7

•

determine how heallhy the ·
habiiat in the stream was.
Students wore rubber
boots and waded in the
stream in order to sweep I he
bottom. They were SLirprised to discover salmanders, mayflies and other
aquatic life in the clear
water just a , few inches
deep.
" I found that big, fat, ugly
thing," said Jessie Chelky,
who discovered a wiggly,

black and brown salamander about an inch long.
Cythia Bauer, a MSWC
biologist, said aquatic life is
a good sign that the water
and the habital is healthy.
She said taking samples
from the stream is the fun
part of her job.
The event was organized
by Amy Roush as pan of
Environmental Awareness

J1m Freeman donates blood Wednesday afternoon at the
American Red Cross bloodmobi le's spring visit at Southern
High School. Freeman has donated three gallons in his life. (J,
Miles Layton )

~\lietg~J

prom candidates

Please see Beyond, AS

·Southern Local still faces deficit

INDEX

(Your
Mother's
Name)

.

The Daily Sentinel
ATTENTION

Bv J. MILES LAYTON ·
JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Happy

Love John,

"'~~~~!},

Students ,discover life beyond classroom

1X3 Greeting $1 0.00 1X5 Greeting· $13.00

~"~1JY

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

Southern Elementary eighth-graders toke their c~assroom outdoors to a stream nearby.
Their assignment was to determine whether or not the stream was healthy enough tor
aquatic life. (J. Miles Layton)

Page AS
. • Edward O'Connor Jr.
· • Marshall 'Doc: Riley

Published Greeting Examples ...

Parents, Grandparen!s, Aunts,
Uncles, Friends... you can
congratulate your graduate with
a personal ad of your own!!
Call Today!!
Deadline is Friday,
May 7th at 5:00 p.m.

• Reds blow big lead.
See Page 81

Mota

Kelly homer hoists Clippers over Toledo
COLUMBUS (AP)
Mike Kelly homered and
drove in five runs Tues'day to
lead the Columbus Clippers
to a 12-7 victory over the
Toledo Mud Hens in the

Justice pledges help with jail funding

SPORTS

31 3 8 3

1-30

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(61_ 38-DRobert.s (1). HA- Piau:a (4).
SpEn:ef (1 ), ZMe (1). JHemandeZ (1). SBMatsw (1). Cameron (6), Duncan (2). CS-Cameron 11). &amp;-DGareia .

HA--Lorelta (4).

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ChiSox rally in ninth
past Tribe, B2

© ::1004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

BY

J.

MILES LAYTON

JLAYTO N@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

RACLNE - Despite significant budget cuts and
careful spending measures,
Southern Local will still be
operating with a sizable
deficit next year forcing the
state to again advance
money to keep the district
afloat
The state auditor's office
predicts an operating deficit
of $671,000 for the fiscal
year ending in June. The
Southern
Board
of

Education certified this
amount at Tuesday's 'meeting and approved a request
from the Ohio Department
of Education to release an
interest free advance on the
money the district expects
from the state next year.
Needless to say, this does
nothing to eliminate the
ongoing debt the district
h_as faced for the past three
years said Bill Wolfe, the
chairman of the Financial
Planning and Supervision
Commission.
"The deficil is almost

equal to the debt payments
ihe district has to make
each year,'' Wolfe said at
the Commission meeting
Tuesday
morning
at
Southern LocaL
Southern
Local
Superintendent . , Bob
Grueser has outlined a savings plan that should save ·
the district money thi s year.
Several staffing positions
have
become
vacant
ihrough retirement which
should save the district at

Please see Deficit. AS

The Meigs High School Junior-Senior Prom will take place
Saturday at the school. "Time of Your Life" is the theme of
the Hollywood-style prom where students will walk the red
carpet at 7 p.m. The prom will be held at 8 p.m. and the
queen and king will be crowned at 11 p.m. The candidates
are, left to right front, BJ Marnhout. Doug Dill. Kevin Butcher.
Steven Major. and Phillip Murdock, and back, Kelly Freeman,
Katie Ch ilds, Page Bradbury, Aubrie Kopec, Erica Poole, and
Bobbi Napper. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Ir-----------------~--------~----------,
CIRCLE ONE: A. 1X3 Greetlng ...$10.00 B. 1X5 Greeting ... $13.00
I
1 Molher's Name
1
1 Your Name (s):
1
I Your Address

I

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I

I

City, State, Zip
1 Phone#

I
I

1
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. Ads Must Be Prepaid

·

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Make Checks Available to: The Dally Sentinel
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• Hands on trainins and experience • Seamless path to an Associates Degree or higher

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