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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Apri128, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

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

Major League Baseball
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Weathers pl1aled to 2 batt~ l11he 8lh

·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.
It was his second homer of

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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

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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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City, State, Zip
1 Phone#

I
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1
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• Destaned for high school students • Technically challeng1ns

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NATION

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, April

29, 2004

·son seeks to have father credited for famous World War II photo
PEARL HARBOR. Hawaii
tAP) - When the air alerl
!!Ounded aboard the USS
Missouri that day in 1945 off
Okinawa, one of the battle· ~hip's cooks raced to a bridge
.armed not with a gun . but .a
161 mm catnera.
·. From his .perch s01i1e 70 feet
above the action on the main
deck, Baker 2nd Class Harold
'~Bu s ter" Campbell captured
.the fierce air battle. snapping
away as a single Japane&gt;e
;kamikaze pilot penetrated the
·ship's formidable anti-~ircran
fire.
The USS Missouri burns after a l&lt;amikaze strike ·on the battle·
· "He kept coming through ship during the Battle of Okinawa. April 11. 1945. Recent find·
the greatest ack ack I've ever ings suggest the historic photo was taken by Baker 2nd Class
.seen." reads Campbell\ jour- Harold " Buster" Campbell. one of the ship's cooks. (AP
nal entry of that day. April II.
f D c
b 11 1
;1945. " He then came direct at Photo/ Harold "Buste~ Campbell, " courtesy o an amp e
:the ship and hit us on the star- body of work and llrsthand lection in hand. Weidenbach
.board quarter on the main account of the attack. said has seen enougb to bel ieve the
. -deck, burst intv !lames. I was Mike Weidenbach . curator for sun's claim is credible.
shaking but felt relieved after the USS Missouri Memonal
"We saw !here was pho·he hit. "
Assm:iation .
tograph s of the kamikaze
It wasn't until last year. attack that we had never seen
• The entry continues: " I took
,a beautiful shot of him as he when Campbell's son saw the before." Weidenbach said.
hit ... "
photograph . in a souvenir
Using the photos. Missouri
But did 'he''
book his dau!!hter brought historians mah:hed feature s
The image of the A6M Zero back from a Hawaii vacation. and sig ht lines to pinpoint the
kamikaze taken · at the that Missouri historians were exact spot from where the
:moment of impact has alerted to the possible dis- photo was taken: a brid~e
become one of the most rec- crepanc y.
eight leve ls abol'e the mam
.ognized photos from the
Dan Campbell. a 52:ycar- deck.
Battle of Okinawa. It is fea- old government worker from
"We went back to Lennie
:tured prominently in books. Baltimore.
contacted Schmidt's descri ption of
souvenirs and aboard the Weidenbach about his father 's where he was:· Weiden bach
decommissioned Missouri , story. If the curato'r wanted said. ''He tell s it hiniself that
now anchored off Ford Island more proof. the son had_ hi s he's below th at level. He
as a museum and memorial.
late father's en tire collection couldn ' t have taken this pic: The photo is credited to of Missouri ·memorabilia - a ture from the perspective he
another man , the late Len small suitcase fu ll _ ·· that he ;ays he was at. All the pieces
.Schmidt,
one
of
the wanted 10 donate.
just started to fall in place.''
Missouri's official photograThe collection included his
Weidenbach, who's still catphers who also shot the Apr,il father's handwritten journal. a alogin~ and preserving . the
II ~attle and the kamikaze s Jetter opener made from the collectton, said the next step
colhs10n.
· kamikaze debris and more is to convince the Naval
But Navy ~i s tori an s say than 200 pictures. Dan Hi storical Center of who
-p.h~t~s weren t cred ited to Campbell . scanned some of deserves the credit.
mdlVldual photographers until the photos and sent them to
Officials at the Wash ington1973. Schmtdt has been gtven Weidenbach on a CD.
based center said Friday they
credit since then based on hts
Now. with the complete col- were
unaware of the

Military helicopter downed
in S.C. training mission,
three soldiers killed
FLORENCE. S.C. (AP) A truck driver spotted the
wreckage of an Army helicopter on a river bank after it
vanished during a training
mission in bad weather, and
searchers later recovered the
bodies of the three soldiers
who were aboard.
The wreckage of the UH-60
Black Hawk was found
Tuesday night near a bridge
off Interstate 95 , about I00
miles northeast of Columbia,
said Maj . Rich Patterson, a
Fort Bragg spokesman at the
. command post here. The soldiers' ·bodies were rec;overed
later.
The helicopter was reported
missing Monday night during
a · flight from Fort Bragg.
N.C. , to Florence that
involved training with night
vision goggles.' '
"The unit has spoken with
the families , however. we are
waiting for the official casualty notification procedures
before we release the names,"
Patterson said. He didn 't have

the exact time when the bodies were recovered or where
they were fmmd.
The helicopter was spotted
by a truck driver on hi s way
home along 1-95 who heard
about the missing airc'raft and
joi ned the search. On his third
pass through the area, he
noticed tree damage and what
looked like a wheel near the
bank of the Great Pee Dee
River and called am horities,
sa id Dusty Owens , director of
the
Florence
County
Emergency ManagePJent.
Heavy foliage in the
swampy urea just north of
Florence and ncar the North
Carolina state line made it
difficu lt to see the chopper.
Owens sa id .
Rain and thunderstorms
moved across South Carolina
on Monday evening, but
Army officials sa id the
weather should not have been
a factor in the helicopter's
disappearance. The Army is
investigating the cause of the
accident.

Today in the Sentinel ...
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Thursday, April 29 ·
POMEROY - The four
local chapters of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority will celebrate
the 73rd anniversary of the
founding of the international
women's organization and the
55th anniversary of the first
local chapter · with a
Founder's Day Dinner at the
Riverside Golf Club in
Mason. Social time will
begin at 6:30 p.m. The dinner
will be served at 7 p.m.
CHESTER
Special
meeting of Shade River
Lodge #453, 7 p.m., with
work in Master Mason

degree.
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
Garden Club will meet at
1:30 p.m. on Thursday at
Syracuse 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
and family invited.
Saturday, May 1
SALEM CENTER- Star
Grange #778 and Star Junior
Grange #878 will meet in
regular session, with potluck
supper at 6:30 p.m., and
meeting at . 7:30 p.m. Plans
for Meigs County Spring
Rally on May 16. All mem·
hers urged to attend .
Sunday, May 2
RACINE
Racine
Chapter OES will practice for
inspection at 2 p.m. at the
hall. All officers are asked to
attend.
Monday, May 3
RACINE
Racine
Chapter 134, Order of
Eastern Star, annual inspection, 7:30 p.m. at the hall.
Refreshments. All members
welcome
Thesday, May 4
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Eagles Auxiliary 21 71 will

meet at 7:30p.m. at the hall .
Officers will be elected.

Other events
Friday, April 30
MIDDLEPORT - A free
dinner will be served from 4
to 6:30 p.m. at the
Middleport Church . of
Christ's Family Life Center,
Fifth and Main.

Birthdays
Saturday, May 1
POMEROY- Garth Savel,
who had a stroke four years
ago and has not been able to
talk or use his right arm or leg,
will observe his birthday on
May 1. He is now residing in
Belpre with his daughter and
son-in-law, Thonda and Daren
Cogar. Cards may be sent to
him there, 1308 #2 Hocking
Road, Belpre, 45714.
Thesday May 4
CHESTER - Ethel Orr will
celebrate her 99th birthday on
May 4. Cards may be sent to
her at _the North view Senior
Living Center, 267 N. Main
St., Johnstown, Ohio, 43031.
NEW HAVEN- Mildred
Fry will observe her 90th
birthday on May 4. Cards may
be sent to her at P.O. box 75,
New Haven, W.Va. 25265.

Law You Can Use .

What you should know about
reducing medical errors
. Q.: A number of stories
about medical errors have
come out during the last coupie of years. What, exactly, 1s
a medical error?
A.: Medical errors include
such things as getting the
wrong type or dose of rnedicine, having surgery on the
wrong part of the body, or
getting an infection in the
hospital. As hard as medical
professionals try, they are
human and mistakes do hap·
pen. However, more attention
has been given to the risk of
medical errors since 2000,
when · an · Institute of
Medicine report estimated
that medical errors are
responsible for between
44 000 and 98 000 deaths
ea~h year.
'
Q.: Is the government
doing anything to try to
reduce medical errors?
A.: Yes. Various government agencies are taking a
numbc;r of steps, and their
efforts are being coordinated
through a Patient Safety Task
Force. One of the participating agencies the Agency for
Healthcare ' Research and
Quality, has invested $165
!llillion · over three years in
research projects relating ~o
improved patient safety. This
includes grants to study ways
to collect and analyze data on
medical errors, to analyze
how tecknology might be
used to prevent errors, an~ to
address the impact of working
conditions on patient safety,
as well as other safety initia·
tives. Further, this agency
funded a new report on patient
safety by the Institute of

Medicine, which ~as released www.ahcpr.go . Listed below
in November 2003. Thts are some of the ways you can
report provides recommenda- reduce medical errors.
uons fo~ red~cmg. medtcal
• Speak up · If you have
errors, mcludmg Improve- quesuons or concerns, or tf
ment of information systems you don't understand somewithin each ~ealth. care thing that you are t~ld.
provider orgamzallon, . and
• Know what medtctnes you
development of a natiOnal take and why you take them.
health mformauon mfrastruc- Ask about stde effects, and tf
ture to rud exchange_of mfor- you take _ot!Ier ~edicmes, ask
mation among providers and v.:hether It ts . safe to take the
collect patient safety data.
dtfferent med1cauons to~ether.
Q.: Are private healthcare
• Watch what medtcauon
organizations involved in try· you receive and tell_thenurse, ·
ing to reduce medtcal errors? doctor or pharmac1~t 1f you
A.: Yes; a number of orgam- thmk you are getllng the
zations are working on these wrong thing.
issues. For example, the Joint
• Make sure the nurse or
Cmrumsswn for Accred1tauon doctor confirms your tdenuty
of Healthcare Organizations before any procedure.
(JCAHO), which accredits
• Ask the doctor to mark
many of the nation's health- the area to be operated on if
care providers, develops spe- you are getting surgery.
ciflc. patient safety goals and
• Write down wh~t your
specific steps each year that doctor tells you so you can
accredited organizations must refer .to it later, and look for
implement. The goals for add1ttonal mformauon.
200&lt;7 are lis_ted below: . . . • Ask a family member or
• 1mprovmg patient tdentl- fnend to be your health care
fication;
.
advocate.
.
• improving commumcaLa!" You Can Use _1s a
tion among caregivers;
weekly consumer legalmfor•· improving safet~ i~ the mation column provided by
use of ~ertam medications; the . Ohw
State
Bar
and ehmmatnlg s,urgenes that Ass?cwtwn (OSBA) and the
are done on the wrong body OhiO State Bar Foundatwn.
part, or the wrong patient, or Th1s article was prepared by
using the wrong procedure.
Catherine T Dunlay of t~e
Q.: What can people do to Columbusfirm, Schottenstem
reducetherisko~amedicale~? Zox
&amp; Dun_n. Articles
A.: Suggestwns from the ~ppearmg m th1s column are
Agency for He~lthcare mtended to prov1de broad,
Research and Quahty . and general mformatwn . about
JCAHO to hel~ patients ~he law. Before applymg th1s
improve the quahty of care mformatwn to a specifl f
they receive are ayailabl~ legal problem, read~rs are
throug.h these ?rgamzatlons u.rged to seek the adwce of a
Web saes(wwwJcaho.org and licensed attorney.

Meigs students to exhibit at State Science Day

umber
Tl
F
L

Community Calendar

Clubs and
organizations

Subscribe today¥ 992-2155

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

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 session at
the Rutland Firehouse .
Wednesday, May 5
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees will meet
at 6:30 p.m. at the Pageville
town hall.

Sunday Times-Sentinel

)1aj. Rich 'Patterson, a Fort Bragg spokesman. talks to
reporters at a truck stop near Aorence, S.C. , Tuesday where
he told of the search for a UH-60 Blackhawk helicopter that
disappeared during a training flight with three soldiers aboard
Monday night. (AP Photo/ Lou Krasky)

l

Public meetings

A Japanese Kamikaze is shown just before eoll iding with the USS Mis souri during the Battle of
Okinawa in the Pacific Ocean , April 11, 1945. Recent findi ngs suggest the historic photo was
taken by Baker 2nd Class Harold " Buster" Campbell. one of the ship's cooks. (AP
Photo/ Harold Campbell courtesy of Dan Campbell)
Campbell collection and the ago. Pat Ferrigno. another oi' credit.
possibility that the p~oto ·was the ship's official photograBu ster Ca mpbell reveals
miscredited.
phers \i&lt;ho raced to the bridge that trah in a May 17 . 1945.
Spokesman Jack Green. with Campbell during the journal ~mry about a converwho also was the center' s April II banle, died sometime ,alion with F~ rri g no .
photo curator for six years. in the 1970s. Weidenbac h
"He .said the ·ex· l~x ecu tive
said the claim sounds like said .
nfficer) told him the picture of
so mething that would be
Buster Campbell died in the plan e hi lling the ship was
'·very, very difficult to vali- 1966 at age 43, but not before said to be the greatest picture
date."
sharing hi s wealth of war sto- so far of any action on a sh ip
If the center receives more rics with his son.
. to be tak en in thi s war,"
information and docutnentaDan Campbe ll sa id · hi s Campbell ll'rote . ·'A nd to
tion, its photographic section fa ther. who convinced " think I ~oo k it. .. . Of course no
could study the matter and friend in the photo shop to lei one kmm &gt; I took the picture
issue an opinion on who him shoot picture' as a hobb!. ~xcept some of my friends as
should get credit, Green said. was more concerned with the I told Pat to wke the credit. I
Schmidt died a few years · finished product than - the don 't care much ."

.

POMEROY
Two
Meigs High School seniors
will be among · more than
1 000 9tudents in grades 7·
12 from across Ohio who
have qualified to exhibit
their science research projects at the 56th annu~l
State Science . Day 111
Columbus.
The event will take place
on Saturday, May 8, at the
French Field House on The
Ohio State University campus. The students will compete for nearly 100 scholarships and awards valued at
more than $730,000.
The Meigs students are
Randy w. Hudson of rut·
land, and Justin T. Whitlatch
of Pomeroy, both with ~lant
tissue culturing proJects
which have already won
themdistrict
and
state
awards.
"Stale Science Day is the
pinnacle of student ori$inated inquiry-based sctence
ed~cation for Ohio's stu·
dents," ~aid Lynn Elfher,

chief executive officer of
The Ohio Academy of
Science.
The academic equivalent
· of a state athletic championship, this year's event is
one of the largest of its kind
in the nation . Drawing from
a base of 35,000 student
participants at . more t~an
I ,000 local SCience fall'S,
more than I ,000 7th to 12thgrade students from nearly
300 schools will be ~valuated on their sctenllfic
research and commumcation skills. More · than
45,000 students have partlcipated . in the a.nnual eve~t
since It was firSt held Ill
1949.
Ohio State President
Karen A. Holbrook, in a letter to Ohio Academy of
Science Chief Executive
Officer Lynn Elfher, lauded
State Science Day and said,
"Students who have the
freedom and encouragement
to participate actively in scientific research give their

•

communiti.es pride and. c_uitlvate their own am~1t10n
and abthty to succeed.
Among the many awards
at State Science Day are
Governor's ~wards for
Excellenc~
m Student
Researc~ 111 agnculture and
f1bod science, bwtechnolo~y, envi~onment~l science,
mformatlon science and
te~hnology, manufactunng
sc 1enc~ s, mater~als sctence,
r~cychng and htter preven\ion, and water resources
research
The Ohio Academy of
Science, Amencan Electnc
Power,
The
O~io
Environmental EducatiOn
Fund ,
. and
Roxane
Laboratl:mes Inc. spon.sor
State Sctenc_e Day: Jenntf~r
McDonald ts Oh•o St~te s
Science Day Site coordmator,. Questions about State
Sctence Day may be dtrect ed to _Ly nn Elfher, Chief
Executive Offtcer of the
Ohio Academy of Sctence,
at (614) 488-2228 .

"

PageA3

'

Thursday, April 29,

2004

Piercing debate highlights
emotional vs. physical scars
DEAR ABBY: I just fin·
ished reading the letter from
"Upset in Collegeville, Pa .. "
regarding the 15-year-old
girl who wanted to get her
belly button pierced. Your
response included, "As long
as the procedure is done
hygie ni cally. it shouldn ' t
cause any damage."
I am a gynecologist. I
have observed that navel
piercings often cause signi ftc ant permanent scarnng.
especially at the upper pierc ing site. These scars are far
larger than one would
expect. They can also be
associated with darkening of
the skin at the scar site ,
which makes them even
more cosmetically unacceptable.
I can't explain why other
piercings such as earlobes
usually have no scarring
while navel piercings often
result in unsightly permanent scars. Anyone considering a belly button piercing
should be aware of this
potentially permanent problem. - OREGON GYNECOLOGIST
DEAR OREGON GYNECOLOGIST: Thank you for
writing . Although I live in
Los Angele s, probably the
navel-piercing capital of the
United States. I cannot claim
to have seen as many bell y
buttons "up close and personal'' as you have, so I bow
to your expertise. Many
readers commented regarding that letter. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: May I add
a note to your response to

DEAR ABBY: In some
states. piercing isn't legal
before age t6. even with
parental co nsent. If the parents relent, I hope they'll
find out what the local laws
Dear
are and go to the most rep. Abby
utable person who performs
piercings. My advice · to
potential piercers: Stay
away from those who will
do the piercing regardless of
the parents who agreed to let state law. - SUZANNE.
their daughter pierce her PRIMEVAL INK TATIOO.
belly button, then changed MONROE. WASH.
their minds? I am 62 and
DEAR SUZAC\INE: Good
still can't quite forgive my advice.
father for much the same
DEAR ABBY: While I
thing . He was old-fashioned respect the right to change
and wouldn't let my . older one's mind. the relationship
sister drive. When I was 15, of a parent to a child can be
I begged to take driver 's ed permanently damaged by
and get my license at 16. He relatively small betrayal s. In
agreed ·_ on the condition today 's world. belly button
that I pay for the lessons piercing is little more than a
myself.
fashion statement. and the
Well. I did - and passed parents who are waf!ling
with flying colors. But when over their promise 10 let
I turned 16, he refused to their daughter pierce her
allow me to get my license. navel in exchange for good
When I asked why he 'd lied grades risk far more by
to'· me, he said he hadn 't1ied. breaking their promise than
He· simply thought I'd never by &lt;~llowing the piercing. be abl-e to save enough to GEORGE !A YOUNG
pay for the course. Even PARENT WITH CHILafter 46 years; I still think he DREN), SANTA MONICA.
lied to me.
CALIF
My advice to the parents:
DEAR GEORGE: I agree .
Do not break your word. It And you stated it very well.
could damage your relationDear Abbr is IITilfen br
ship with your son or daugh- Abiga il v,,;, Buren. also
ter forever. - . MARJ G., knmm as Jem111e Phillips.
WESLACO, TEXAS
and ll'as found ed br her
DEAR MARJ: I agree. morhe1: Paulin e Phillips.
She fulfilled her part of the Write Dear Abbr at
bargain, so the parents &gt;tw&gt;t:DearAbbr. com or P 0.
shouldn't have reneged on Box 69440. L&lt;is Angeles. CA
their promise.
90069.

Love gift goes to ministries
RACINE - A love gi ft
taken up at last month \
meeting of the Berthan M.
Sayre Mi ss ionary Society
will be given to the Trumbel
Neighborhood Ministries in
Yioungstown . the Dayton
. Christian Center in Daytoin.
the Kodi ak, Alaska Mi ssion
and the Bacone College.
Meeting recen tl y at the

home of Madrjorie Grimm .
the meeting oened with Mary
K . Yost giving devotions on
"Past Tense." Stobart had
devotbins and also ' the pro"vital
signs"·
gramon

Members rec ited the 23rd
Psalm. Cards we re sent to
shutins. Refreshments were
served. Next month \ meet- .
ing will be held at the ome of
Nonduis Hendric ks.

Proud to be apart of your life.
Subscribe today • 992-2155

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�'

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

'

Diane K. Hill

Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

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

Mod.erately Confused
TRY MY
II

PageA4

NEW
VINTAGE?

Thursday, April29, 2004

Bush: Finding the heartland.or losing his marbles?
Following Preside~! Bush's
stunningly incoherent press
conference, his media acolytes
reintroduced one of their most
useful fictions: the decadent,
blue~state "Beltway-elite" vs.
salt-of-the-earth.
red-state
"Real Americans'." Based
upon can1paign electoral maps
that colored Gore states in blue
and Bush states red. it's a
theme GOP imagineers have
exploited since Newt Gingrich
pronounced Democrats "enemies of nmmal Americans."
Even his admirers had to
notice that. Bush had no
answer for the humiliating
question of why he cart't testify
before
the
9/11
Commission without Dick
Cheney holding his hand.
In the Weekly Standard,
however, · Executive Editor
Fred Barnes invoked geography. The president's reat 'audience, see, "is outside the
Beltway -- the mass-- and he
does surprisingly well in
appealing to it. How does he
. do it? By being plainspoken
and amiable and down to
earth. By sounding more like
Midland. Texas, than like
Georgetown or Chevy Chase."
Ah, the heartland. After the
Supreme Court made Bush
president, see, conservatives
had to deal with the uncomfortable fact that he'd lost the
popular vote. So they seized
upon his popularity in counties
containing more livestock than
people. No more lampooning
what H.L Mencken called
"the idiotic hallucinations of
the cow states." GOP thinkers
contrasted the humble faith
and patnottsm of the
American yeoman to the snobbery and intellectualism of the

As Kan&gt;as author Thomas
Frank ha~ pointed out, the top
three
soybean-producing
• states -- Illinois, Iowa, and
Minnesota -- all· voted for
Gene
Gore. It's a strange map of
America that leaves Iowa out
Lyons
of the "heartland."
Me, I've hauled several generations of stubborn beagles
out of Arkansas soybe:)n fields
liberal "elite."
on rabbit hunting trips: Would
New York Times columnist that be Travis Tritt or RUfldY
·David Brooks has made a Trnvls that Brooks is talking
career of it, beginning with a about? Completely different
200 I Atlantic Monthly article breeds of cat. Last I heard,
titled "Are We Really One . Reba McEntire was starring
Country? A Report from the on Broadway, which blows
Red and Blue America." almost as big a hole in the
Brooks, who affects a thought- "two Americas" theme as the
ful. academic demeanor as a soybean nonsense. But no. l
PBS commentator. traveled to don't.care for Branson, nor any
a rural county in Pennsylvania "sport" involving gasoline
(actually a blue state) like a engines.
.
19th-century British explorer
As for LaHaye and Jenkins,
visiting the Hottentots.
I recognize them as · the
"We in the coastal metro authors of the "left,behind"
blue areas," he confessed, series
of
best-selling,
"read more books and attend "Christian" novels based upon
more plays than the people in apocalyptic themes from the
the red heartland. We're more Book of Revelation not terrisophisticated and cosmopoli- bly different from the doomstan ... But don't ask us, please, day "prophecies" of David
what life in Red America is Koresh and the Branch
like. We don't )mow. We don't Davidians. The end is near,
know who Tim LaHaye and and events in the daily newsJerry B. Jenkins are ... We paper -- specifically the
don't know what James Middle East -- prefigure
Dobson says on his radio pro- Armageddon. It's an absurd
gram, which is listened to by mish-mash of crackpot theolomillions. We don't know about gy and action/adventure meloReba and Travis. Very few of drama aimed at keeping turnus know what goes on in stiles clicking at cinemaplexes
Branson, Mo., even though it everywhere.
has 7 million visitors a year, or
How seriously people take
could name even five this stuff is questionable. I
NASCAR drivers ... We don't expect most still invest in life
know how to shoot or clean a insurance even as they giddily
rifle ... We don't know what imagine the end of the world.
soybeans look like growing in How it's supposed to make
a field."
them more authentic than

Democrats, I cannot imagine. I
doubt David Brooks knows
either; he's just patronizing the
· rubes for political advantage.
· At the Ann Coulter-Michael
Savage end of the right-wing
spectrum, moreover, the cartoonish "two countries" theme
gets ugly. Democrats are
essentially accused of .the
crimes of the Jews as Hitler
saw them: atheism, moral reiativism, Marxism, sexual
license, physical cowardice
and lack of patriotism.
Anylxxly who thinks I exaggerate should visit freerepublic.com or read my e-maiL
l can't imagine what I'll
receive next week in light of
my next impertinent question.
During his recent "60
Minutes" appearance, reporter
Bob Woodward was asked if
President Busti consulted his
father about Iraq. "I asked the
president
about
this,"
Woodward
said.
"And
President Bush said, 'Well, no,'
and then he got defensive
about it ... Then he said something that really struck me. He
said of his father, 'He is the
wrong father to appeal to for
advice. The wrong father to go
to, to appeal to in tenns of
strength.' And then he said,
'There's a higher Father that I
appeal to."'
My question: Is Bush himself pandering to the · "heartland," or is he really that far
gone?
(Arkansas
DemocratGazette columnist Gene Lyons
is a national magazine award
wi1111er and co-author of "TIe
Hullfing of the Presidem" (St.
Manirz's Press, 2000). You can
e-mail Lyons at ge~~elyons2@
cs.com.)

....

Thursday, April29, 2004

Obituaries

Ohio Valley Symphony takes musical hike
GALLIIPOLIS - The Ohio Valley
Symphony ends its 2003-04 subscription season with a musical trek,.. to
Europe's north country with a· program
of favorites by Grieg and Sibelius.
Music director Ray Fowler gets the
tour under way from the podium at the
hi storic Ariel Theater in downtown
Gallipolis at 8 p.m. Saturday, May R.
The concert is sponsored by Baker &amp;
Hostetler.
The journey starts with the dramatic
call of Norway's fjords, the gentle rustle
of its rugged natural beauty, and its rustic exuberance -- all wrapped in the
Piano Concerto of Edvard Grieg. The
concerto, AN · audience favorite for
decades because of its . easy-flowing
melodies and Romantic flair. is one of
the best -- and be st-known -- works of
Norway's greatest composer.
Musical guide for the concerto is
pianist Jenny Lin who has been recog. nized for her adventurous programming
and dedication to the music of our time.

Edward O'Connor Jr.
Edward O'Connor. Jr., 89. died Monday, April 26. 2004, at
the Camden-Clark Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.
He was born Jan. 11, 1915, in Brady, Mont. , the son of the
late Edward P. O'Connor and Catherine M. Bor~et O'Connor.
He was a riverboat pilot at J&amp;L Steel CorporatiOn and was a
member of the International Organization of' Masters, Mates
·
and Pilots.
He is survived by sons Elson D. (Jerry) O'Cm1nor and
Edward "Pat" (Elizabeth) O'Connor; sisters Catherine Schroll
and Betty (Jeno) Mangione .
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by Nelly
J. (Louden) O'Connor, Judy (Johnsdn) O'Connor and Irene
(Durst) O'Connor.
·
Calling hours wilt be Friday from 7-9 p.l)l. at the Ewing
Funeral Home . The funeral service will be held at 10 a.m.
Saturday, May I, at the Ewing Funeral Home .

Deaths
Marshall "Doc' Riley
Marshall "Doc" Riley, 85 of Mason, W. Va. died April 27,
2004, at Pleasant Valley HospitaL
He is survived by his )l'ife, Naomi Riley, Mason, W Va.
Military graveside services will be held at I p.m. May I at
the Graham Cemetery, New Haven. The Rev. Ron Branch will
officiate. Friends may call at the Foglesong-Tucker Funeral
Home in Mason from 6~9 p.m. Friday.

For more information contact
Dee Rader at 992-3317.

Smorgasbord
Saturday

POMEROY State
Representative
Jimmy
Stewart (R- Athens) invites
Meigs Countians to attend an
LONG BOTTOM - A
open door session he will be spring smorgasbord dinner
holding from 9 to 10 a.m. will be served Saturday
Friday at the Syracuse beginning at 5 p.m. at the
Village Hall to discuss state- Long Bottom Community .
related matters and issues on Building. Donation is $6 for
the minds of the constituents an all-you'qn-eat dinner
of the 92nd Ohio House including ham, turkey and a
District. He will be holding a variet,Y of side dishes.
similar meeting at II a.m. to
noon that day at the Coolville
Library. He encourages residents to attend and discuss
matters of concern with him.
MIDDLEPORT
Enrollments in the photography class to be taught by
Whitney
Ulm
at
the
Riverbend Arts Council
POMEROY
God's building on North Second St. ,
N.E.T. Youth Center will host Middleport, are still being
a barbecue chicken dinner accepted.
Sunday beginning at noon at
Classes will be taught from
the Mulberry Community 6:30 to 8 p.m. every Friday
Center qn Mulberry Avenue. for four weeks beginning this
Pomeroy week. The cost is $25 for all
the
former
Elementary School. Tours will · four weeks. The class is
be available of the building. sponsored by the Riverbend
Serving will take place there Arts Council. For more inforor orders may be, taken out. mation call Ulm at 992-1729.

Photography
class offered

~AHt~K
~-

Barbecue
planned

GTA~R.
© 2004 by NEA, Inc.

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addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in the column above
are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. 's editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

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·White House releases more
·details on Bush bus trip in Ohio·

Anniversaries

Inside Meigs County

13 Weeks ...... . .. . . . '30.15
26 Weeks . . ...... . .... '60.00
52 Weeks . .. . .. . ..... '11 8.80
Rateo Outslda Meigs County

13 Weeks .. . ......... .'50.05
26 Weeks ......... . ..'100.10
52 Weaks ........... .'200.20

BY MARTIN PERETZ
THE NEW REPUBLIC

World Trade Center, few felt
an urgency to respond to what
everyone knew: that a vast
Recently, the big news from lslamist conspiracy wanted to
the 9/11 Commission was the inflict hann. Not only on the
disastrous counterterrorism United States, but -- as a sucperfonnance of the CIA and cession of previously classified
FB l over many years. With intelligence memos now make
Bob Woodward's description clear -- in the United States as
of CIA Director George well.
·
Tenet's declaration to a skeptiAnniversaries haunt our
cal George W. Bush in late public personages. The Sunhi
2002 that the intelligence on rising in Falluja and Moqtada
Iraqi weapons of mass AI Sadr's lslamist Shia rising in
destruction (WMD) w·as a the south crune exactly a year
"slam dunk," Tenet now !]as after the fall of Baghdad, so
the dubious distinction of hav- there was little for Bush to celing utterly failed on the two ebrate. Instead, Bush has much
most important intelligence- to puzzle over -- if puzzling is
related issues of our time. And even something he does.
Tenet's certainty about WMD
By contrast, Kofi Annan tells
makes Bush's rather more us regularly that he puzzles;
understandable.
indeed. he even remonstrates
The intelligence agencies, it with himself. During these last
seems, were obsessed not with weeks. he would have· us
AI Qaeda, but with. protecting believe, his soul has been in
their turf. Their political supe- constant doubt and selfriors, unfortunately, had their reproach. We have just
own obsessions: Bill Clinton observed the lOth anniversary
with Monica, FBI Director of the Hutu extennination of
· Louis Freeh with AI Gore's the Tutsi, as many as 800.000
Buddhist temple fundraiser, of them, in Rwanda, which
and Condoleezza Rice with Annan, as head of the U.N.
Star Wars. (Gore, to his credit, Department of Peacekeeping
seems to have been obsessed Operations. on several occawith airport and airline security sions ordered his personnel not
and produced a prescient to impede.
report on the subject, the recIt wasn't as if the military
ommendations of which were force needed to block the vast
sabotaged by the airline indus- machete ·genocide
was
try and civil libertarians.)
unavailable. (Samantha Power
But fixation on other issues tells us convincingly in "A
is not the same as ignorance: Problem from Hell": America
Important facts about Osama and the Age of Genocide
bin Laden's network were (HarperCollins Publishers,
known. Richard Clarke and 2003) that, with appropriate
others were fnmtically trying and easy maneuvers, the
to get policymakers to focus on United Nations could have
them.
both staged rescue operations
Still, in the eight years of and confronted the killers.)
· Clinton's administration and What was unavailable was
the eight months of Bush's international will, for whose
before the leveling of the flaccidity Annan was both
l.

incarnation and tribune. He
played a similar role in the
Serbian carnage of the
Bosnians.
Showy apologies from such
a man are a bit indecent, rather
like Raben McNamara's sermons about just wars. One useful form of penance would be'
for Annan to do something
serious about another genocide
going on right now in Sudan,
where Arab militias are slaughtering or deporting hundreds of
thousands of Africans from
their own country. Typically,
Annan has uttered some highminded words. But he and his
organization have done almost
nothing.
Given the United Nations'
shabby record in so many
countries, over so many years,
it is amazing that John Kerry
still thinks the organization can
be the deus ex machina in Iraq.
To be sure, Bush himself is
handing over some power to
Ann.an's diplomats, in a reluctant concession to the political
realities in Baghdad, London
and Washington. But his
Democratic challenger -- a
longtime enthusiast for · all
manner of international institutions -- is downright enthusiastic about putting the United
Nations in charge of Iraq's
return to sovereig'nty. This,
despite the ongoing revelations
about the comJpt U.N. oil-forfood program. which has
earned the United Nations the
enmity of many of the lmqi
people.
Annan defends the United
Nations as merely the sum of
its nation-'&gt;tate parts. Perhaps,
but, in the case of oil-for-food,
as in so many others, it is the
lowest common denominator
of the five pennanent members
.,that make up il' Security

Council. No one should imagine, based on past experience,
that the United Nations will be
any more honest, effective or
democracy-minded in Iraq
· than France, Russia and China
want it to be. Luckily, however, we'll probably never fmd
out, since the United Nations - shaken by the bombing of its
Baghdad headquarters last
summer -- won't take up the
mandate Kerry waniS to hand
it.
Kerry has also suggested that
our Arab allies be invited to
assist With the Iraqi handover.
His suggestion echoes that of
Miguel Moratinos, the new
foreign minister of Spain, that,
according to The Wall Street
Journal, the present coalition
be supplanted by neighboring
Muslim nations. Let's be clear:
Inviting Cairo and Riyadh, not
to mention Damascus and
Tehran,-into Iraq to reml!ke it in
their authoritarian image
means
abandoning
the
prospect of a democratic Iraq
that brought American troops
into that country. In fact, it
could even mean abandoning
the prospect of a unitied Iraq -since Iran, Saudi Arabia and
even Turkey would likely
strengthen their religious and
ethnic Iraqi allies -- pulling
apart Iraq's always fragile
sense of nationhood lUld disenfranchising ethnic minorities
like the Kurds.
Things may look grim now,
but surprise in politics is no
stranger to me: and, amid the
present chaos and killing in
Iraq, what occurS in Baghdad
may yet astonish us aU. But
only if lrnq's immediate future .
remains in America's, not Kofi
Annan's, hands.
(Mani11 Peretz is editor-inchi~{ of The New Ref?!lblic.)

,.

WASHINGTON (AP) President Bush's bus tour in the
Midwest next week will include
stops at four Ohio cities, White
House
spokesman
Scott,
McClellan said Wednesday.
On Monday, Bush will visit
two cjties in Michigan, a state
he narrowly lost in 2000,
before heading to Ohio, a state
he wants to wm again this year.
Bush will attend a plUlcake
breakfast in Toledo, Ohio, on
Thesday and then do an "Ask
President Bush" event in Dayton.
He will then s~ at the Golden
Lamb Inn in Lebanon and at a rnlly
in Cincinnati before renuning to
Washiilgton that 1~ght, McClellan
said The inn is owned by the tiunily of Rep. Rob Portman, R-Ohio,
a staunch Bush supporter who

seiVed as a White House congressional liaison during the term of
tonner President Bush.
Members of Bush's campaign in Ohio have said the
president will discuss the economy and war on terror. It will
be Bush's 16th visit to Ohio
since becoming president.
The president's planned trip
follows Democrat rival John
Kerry's fow:day bus trip this
week through Michigan, West
Virginia, Pennsylvania and
Ohio. All four states are up for
grabs in the presidential race.
Ohio and Michigan were
close calls in the 2000 presidential race. Bush won Ohio
by 3.6 percentage points;
Democrat AI Gore narrowly
won Michiga n.

Beyond
from PageA1
Week. By taking the students into the field
and out of the classroom, she said it allows
them a better learning experience. .
"This has been a hands-on learning experience that has been a lot of fun and has taught
the students something about the environment," she said.
Eighth grader Ashley Weddle said she
enjoyed the biology lesson and d1dn 't seem to
nolice that it was raining the whole t1me the

She continues to receive accolades
worldwide as an orchestral soloist.
recitalist and chamber musician. Her
performances have taken her to ' uch
venues as New York's Carnegie Red tal.
Hall and Washington's Kennedy Center.
Last September she appeared in a 21piano concert · with works· by Italian
moderni st Daniele Lombardi at New
Yurk's World Financia l Center Winter
Garden -- a tribute to the victim'&gt; of
Sept. II.
Her current season include so lo
recitals in Belgium. Spain, Switzerland.
Taiwan and the United States. and conterto
performances
,;ith , the
Millennium Festival Orchestra. Spain.
the National Symphony of Taiwan. the
Taipei Symphony Orchestra and the
Royal Flanders Radio Orchestra in
BelgiUm. Among her mult!laceted
activities, she will tour thi' year with
Swiss jazz pianist Chris Wiesendanger
and appear as pianist/harpsichordist in
the new Opera "The Last of Manhatl:ul''

bv New Yorker Daniel Felscnfeld.at The
Kitchen.
From 1\'orway. the musical tour head'
East to Finland for the fire-and-i&lt;:c
majesty of the Symphony No. 2 by Jean
Sihelius. The , natio1wl fervor ot h1s
mu,ic ecllOC'&gt; the country\ zeal in it'
move toward independence from imperial Ru"i;J at the turn of the last centu ry. From 'its rustic beginning,. thro ugh
its int~nsely dark and Romanti&lt;: second
movement. and at last to the frenetic·
third mm·emem that lead; 'tra1ght tnto a
hb;ing and triu,mphant finale. the :symphony " a life'&gt; worth of expenence
packed into an hour of great mu-.1c.
The public is encouraged tu atteml
rehear;al'&gt; for free on Friday. May 7. from
7· I0 p.m . .and on Saturday. Ma) K from
1-4 P ·!~· Ttcketsfor the 8 p m. concenarc
$22. $_()tor 'emors. $10 tor 'tudenh and
are available at Tawney Jewelers. Purple
Turtle and O,tk Hill Bank,.
For mMc informat ion call the Ariel
Theater at 7.:10--l-+6-ARTS I:!787 J

Rutland Alumni Association sets reunion

Local Briefs
Stewart to hold
public meeting

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

RUTLAND - Officers
of the Rutland High
School
Alumni
Association met recently
at the home of Richard
and Carol Nelson of
Delaware to plan the
annual reunion .
The banquet will be held
at 6 p .m. on May 29 at the
Rutland Civic Center.
Invitations have been
mailed, it wa s reported.
Reservations of $15, dues ~
of $2, or contributions to
the scholarship fund may
be mailed to the Rutland
Alumni Assocation, P. 0.
Box 125, Rutland, 45775 .
The 50th , anniversary
class ( 1954) is trying to .
local classmates Jean
Reed and Mary Swan .
Anyone with infbrmation
on .e ither is asked to con- Officers planning the Rutland alumni banquet are front seated, John Jeffers. president: and
tact Bill Williamson. 740- back, left to right. Elaine Steele Dyer, secretary, Richard Nelson. vice president, and Betty
Jeffers Longstreth, treasurer.
742-2007 .
(

Church taking another look
at satanic abuse·aJ/egations

Asbury
UMW meets
SYRACUSE
Reflections on the Cross
was the theme of a program given by Ann
Sauvage at a recent meeting of the Syracuse
Asbury United Methodist
Women held at the
church.
Scripture was taken
from
Mark ,
Luke,
Matthew and John with
readers being Mary Listie,
Ruth Crouch, Jean Stout,
and Freda Wilson. The
story of six crosses was
given, songs including
"When I Survey the
Wondrous Cross" and
"Jesus Keep Me Near the
Cross" were sung.
Lisle presided at the
meeting and members
gave the urpose in unison.
Officers' reports were
given by Stout and Ann
Sauvage. Twenty sick
calls .were reponed. An
offering was taken and
· devotions were given by
Stout
· who
used
"Mysterious Reasons" as
her theme. Prayer to
clo.sed the meeting was
given by Sauvage, and the
birthdays of Sauvage and
Marie Houdashelt were
celebrated with cakes.
coffee and tea.

TOLEDO (AP) - The
Toledo Diocese is taking
another look at a woman ·s
previously dismissed claims
of satamc sex abuse by
Roman Catholic priests now
that one of the clergymen
has been charged with the
"ritualistic" slaying of a nun.
Police said the Rev. Gerald
Robinson strangled and
stabbed Sister Margaret Ann
Pahl, 71. about 30 ttmes over.
Easter
weekend
1980.
Another nun found the body
in a chapel, covered by an
altar cloth and surrounded
by burning candles.
The body was posed to ·
look as though she had been
sexually assaulted, but
investigators said Saturday
they found no evidence of
sexual activity:
A seven-member Diocesan
Review Board will consider'
allegations made by a
woman who told the panel in
June that she had been physically and sexually abused as
a child by several prie sts.
including Robinson , Bishop

Leonard Blair said.
The panel met for a reg~larly
scheduled
meeting
on
Wednesday. but what was discussed is contidemial, said diocese spokeswoman Sally
Oberski. She did not know what
was talked about and said it was
possible that they did not bring
up the woman's allegations. ·
The diocese said it could
not document the allegations , but police said .the
woman's
mention · of
Robinson spurred them to
take another look at the
nun' s slayin,g. Prosecutors
say new intormation the y
have refused to identify
became available that led to
a murder charge being filet!
against Robinson.
Three other people have
said thev were abused by
priests "in rituals. said
Catherine Hoolahan , an
attorney who represents
about a dozen people with
abuse lawsuits against the
Toledo diocese. They all
mentioned similar occurrences . she said, but she

Deficit
from Page A1

'

Podiatry

304-674·7289

:'kt\\"ork of tho:-.e

Commi ssion ha\ c nnt yet i.idoptcd a long

nmoe plan that "il l evcillually rl'turn the

dist~·ict to a sound finan,·ial condition . Wolfe

............................
.
.........
...........................
Nikola Bicak, DPM

Survivor~

Abused by Prie.sls in Toledo.

said the .on ly wa~ em~&gt; could be reuuccd
., furt)lcr is through better negotiatiom' · wit\1
least $188,000 next year. There were a num - the employees' unions and to cut fringe ben ber of other cuts that saved the district more efi ts. Wolfe also. said open enmllment.
which cost the distric·t at least 70 -tudenh or
than $67.700.
·
One of biggest budget expenditures is more than $100.000 in state fundin~. is also
transportation which cost the district more one or the main causes of tiK ddidt.
Eve n if the milla~e amount col leded on
than $433,923 last year for the 11 8.000
property
laxcs was increased with "dditi&lt;m miles traveled. Grueser said the district is
al
levies,
they would ha\e to he r;nscd
studying the bus routes and if it can elimibcvond
absunlitv
because ·.or an arc haiL·
nate one, it would save more than $36.281 .
Even before gas prices shot up. Grueser said school funding formula. Wolfe said an addiit cost the district $3.65 per mile on each bus tional operati ng levy is just ;, pn&gt;rosal ami
route because of a petroleum costs. the dri- not a plan and would hm·c a minimal impa,·t
on I he deficit.
ver"s salary and benefit packages.
Thi .' will be fourth vcar in a nm tilL' di s- ·
Even though the ' Comm i,&gt;ion approved
trict
has ohtaincJ a ~ ~ol\'cnc\ ~~ ..... i . . t i.U h.'~ ·
$265.000 in savings last year, the report "ud
the Southern Local School Board and the advance since it ''as dcc l ar~;d in Fi sGd '
Emergency status in N&lt;l\cmb~ r I'NlJ .

class was up to their ankles in the stream. Her
eyes lit up when she saw crane flies, may tlies
and other aquatic animals pulled from the
stream. Her group recorded three snails.
"!learned a lot about the environment," she
·d
sm ·
By giving students a chance to see up close
a natural habitat. Roush said it teaches them
how important the environment is.
"Children have the most important stake in
keeping our planet health y," she said. "That is
why it is important that we educate them on
· environmental awareness."

•
•
•
•
•
•

would not provide detai ls.
Not all of those who made the
claims have tiled lawsuits. and
none of the allegation&gt; were
against Robinson.s he said,
Hoolahan said the victims.
both men and women, could
not recall how many priests
abused them.
"Remember. .thev were
L"hi ldren.'" she said~ "They
were scared ·to death. but
they remember a bunch - a
large 'number:·
The woman who told the
diocese she was abthed by
Robinson and other priests
described satanic ceremonies
in which clergy members
placed her in a coftin tilled
with cockroaches. forced her to
in ~est what 'he belie\·ed tll be
a lluman eyebal l and penetrJted her with a snake ··to consecrate these olitices tll Saun."
The woman. '""' in her
40,. also said she "''" abused
by anot her Toledo priest.
Chet Warren. said Clauuia
Vcrcclloti. a direcwr "f

Fungal nails
Heel spurs
Foot &amp; ankle pain
Hammer toes &amp; bunions ·
Diabetic foot care
Diabetic shoes &amp; inserts

.

•
•
•
•
•
•

.

.

Sprains &amp; strains
Corns &amp; calluses
Fractures
Orthotics
Skin diseases &amp; infection
Laser surgery for ingrowns &amp; warts

'

..

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�PageA6

Jhe·Daily Sentinel

· PageA7

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, April29, 2004

Thursday, April 29, 2004

•

AC-130 opens up after Marioes, Sunni insurgents battle in Fallujah

.........
'

FALLUJAH, Iraq (AP) A U.S. warplane fired its cannons on targets in Fallujah for
a second straight night
Wtdnesday after a day of
fightin$ between Marines and
Sunni msurgents in parts of
the encircled city.
The American operations..carried on live televtsion with
images of fiery destruction,
brought n~w internati_o':lal
condemnauon,. and JOtn~
patrols by Mannes and Iraqt .
police that were to have started Thursday were delayed by
a day.
.
The nighttime attack from
an AC-130 gunship raised
smoke and flames above
FalluJah.
During the day, fighting
broke out tn. at least three
parts of the cny. In the afternoon, U.S. forces dropped 10
laser-guided bombs- mostly
500-pound bombs and one
1,000-pound born? - on
bu~ldmgs that guemllas were
firmg fr~m. Lt Col. Brennan
Byrnesatd. .
. .
Marme umts movmg mto a
position in southeast Fallujah
came under ftre, woundmg
one Amer_tcan m the shoulder,
Byrne sa1d. Warplanes were
called in and dropped the
laser-guided bombs, he said.
Insurgents also fued on
Mannes m northwestern
Fallujah near a train station,
and helicopter gunships were
c~lled to . join the battle,

'

were delayed until Friday to
allow for more training,
Byrne said.
"We don't want to rush into
Fighting outside Najllf
TURKEY ..
the patrols ," Byrne said.
· 0
tOOml
"We're doing it in a phased
Tuesday
...w~asllleso.lne.,.d,_the,.:&gt;:,-..""'1
0 100km
approach and we will have an
heaviest ua
additional day for training and
u.s. troops and .
the rehearsal of the Iraqi
militia to increase
forces."
IRAN
the pressure on
After sunrise, at least eight
gunmen loyal to
destroyed houses were seen in
the Golan neighborhood.
radical cleric
Hospitals
reported
·Muqtada al.sadr.
Wednesday that only two people were wounded. Militants,
SYRIA
however, often do not evacuate their casualties to hospitals, fearing that the injured
moved into a base
could
be
arrested by
Monday, abandoned
American forces.
Marine Maj. Gen. John F. JORilAN'1. by Spanish forces--;..,----,
Sattler, director of operations
..
for U.S. Central Command,
said the Marines face an estiU.S troops killed
mated 1,500 insurgents in
64 gunm.en and ---'"~~+----'
'
Fallujah.
destroyed an
UNrrEO '•
. They seem to be a loose
KINGDOM
' anti-aircraft gun
federation of Iraqis and forSECT9A
belonging to the
eigners, Saddam loyalists and
insurgents
jihadists,
Sattler
said.
Officials have not identified
any single leader.
The Marines' goal is not to
conquer Fallujah but to
In the northern city of Tel American firing on mosques
"establish Jaw and order," he Afar, a U.S. soldier was killed and other holy places used by
said.
in an ambush Tuesday, the insurgents in Iraq. Rejecting
Also Wednesday, a senior military reported.
criticism by U.N . . envoy
u.s. official said investigators The death brought to 116 Lakhdar Brahi111i, Powell
have recommended adminis- the number of U.S. troops said, ·~we are being very care- Smoke rises over the city during fighting in Fallujah , lr\lq·
trati ve punishment for 'a num- killed in combat this month, ful," but when holy places are Wednesday.(AP)
ber of commanders at the bloodiest for American used to shoot and kill civilians
Blair said there were large
tics in Fallujah , rejecting an
Baghdad's Abu Ghraib prison forces in Iraq. At least 725 and U.S. troops, "we have an opposition legislator's asser- numbers of well~armed insurKl.~mllt,satd..
after allegations of abuse of U.S. troops have died in Iraq obligation to protect our tion that, ,Tuesday's battle gents in Fallujah and "it is
W~at s gomgon are. some prisoners there. The official, since the war began in March men ."
amounted o the "murder or right that the American forces
terronsts and reg1me _elements speaking on . condition of 2003. Up to 1,200 Iraqis also
British Prime Minister Tony mutilation of hundreds of try to make sure that order is
·have been attackmg our anonymity, would not give have been killed this month.
restored to that city."
Blair
also defended U.S. tac- women had children."
forces, and o_ur forces h~ve details on the recommended
Saddam Hussein's 67th
been ,pomg m and ktlhng punishments or how many birthday was Wednesday, his
them, Defense Secretary commanders faced action.
first in U.S. detention since
Donald Rumsfeld tesllly told
Six soldiers at the prison being captured · by AmeriCan
reporters after. bnefing law- face criminal charges ·in con- troops in December. In his
makers on Capitol H_IIl.
nection with the · abuse, hometown of Tikrit, there
were no apparent signs of eelDesptte three strat~ht ~ay s Kimmitt said.
of battles and mghtume
In ·southern Iraq. gunmen ebration, and schools and uniattacks th_at produced.dramat- ambushed a convoy outside versities were closed.
lC . TV v1deo, U.S._ officl3ls the city of Kut on Wednesday,
Wednesday's fighting in
satd they were pushmg ahead killing two Ukrainian soldiers Fallujah came after a heavy
wtth negollat10ns to resolve and wounding a third. u.s. Tuesday night battle against
insurgents holed up in the
the standoff rather . than and Ukrainian officials said.
laun~h an all-out offens_tve. . . Shiite militiamen loyal to northern . neighborhood of
Bng. Gen. Mark Klmmllt radical cleric Muqtada al-Sadr Golan, a slum area of tight
s~td the cease-fire was contm- . drove Ukrainian peacekeepers alleyways. AC-130 gunships
umg and Marmes were not out of Kut this month, but and artillery pounded insurtakm~•. offenstve act1ons but U.S. troops later swept into gent targets for more than an
were m ~. senes of defenstve the city, pushing out most of hour.
re~.~n~es to the msur~entst the militiamen .
·
Kimmitt said the battle
0
American troops seek to began when troops saw two
e re gmng to contmue
pus~ the _poh!tcal track as far capture al-Sadr and suppress trucks traveling with their
as It s g~mg to take us. And~~ his militia. On Wednesday, lights off in an area where
11 ~oesn t take us far enoug · they began gradually expand- insurgents were active. T~e
we re prepared to use mthtary .
.
.
means," Kimmitt told ABC's . mg_ thetr ?perat10ns out of AC-!30s
destroyed
the
"Good Morning America."
.thetr base m the holy cny ot trucks, and ammunition in the
Nevertheless, the new fight- Na,Jaf. Soldters set up check- trucks exploded, he said.
The length of the Tuesday
ing was sharply criticized by POl!JtS outstde the base ·- the
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi matn route between the center night barrage suggested U.S.
Annan.
of NUJaf and the center of forces are seelcing to wear
"Violent military action by ne1ghbon.n.g Kufa.
.
· down the insurgents in Golan.
On Monday, insurgents
an occupying power against
The m1lttary has promtsed
inhabitants of an occupied to . stay. away from sacred attacked Marines in the neighcountry will only make mat- Shute Sites at the heart of borhood,
killing
one
ters worse," Annan said. "It's NaJaf. The base 1s about three American in a battle that
ended when a tank destroyed ·
definitely time _ time ·now mtles a~ay.
for those who prefer restraint
Attacks across. Iraq are a mosque's minaret from
and dialogue to make their down, compared w~th the first which U.S. commanders said
two _weeks of Apnl, as U.S. insurgents were firing. Eight
voices heard."
He said that if the U.S.-led ~ffictals seek negotmted solu- Iraqis were killed.
occupation is seen as harming 1tons m FalluJah and wllh al-- In Berlin, Secretary of State
civihans, "the greater the Sadr.
Colin
Powell
defended
ranh of the resistance
.--------------------------------------grows."
At the White House ,
President Bush said "most of
·Falluiah is returning to normal.'1
• "There are pockets of resistance and our military, along
with Iraqis, will make sure it's
secure." he said.
But joint patrols between
_Marines and Iraqi police that
In 1996 f had the symptoms, but could not believe that I was having a heart attack.
were due to begin Thursday
Almost immediately upon arrival at O'Bleness, I was surrounded by the emergency

'

the team at O'Bleness saved my life. In fact he said, They really know what they're •

Keeping
the Bend
Area
. informed

doing down there in Athens.' I told everyone what my cardiologist said and how much I
appreciated the wonderful care I received. I felt like I had a new lease on life and [still feel
that way. A lot of people at O'Bleness had my best interest at heart and [ than~ them from

10.342.60

Pttehqe
11om poevlous: ·2.12

April 28, 2004

11rursday, April 29

Evening:
Temperatures
will drop from 75 early thi s
evening to 63. Skies will
range from partly cloudy to
mmtly cloudy with 5 to I 0
MPH winds from the southwest turning from the south as
the even ing progre sse~.
Overnight: .A cloudy
overnigh t. Temperatures will
hold steady around 61. Winds
will be 5 MPH from the
south.

Morning: Temperatures
will climb to 70 with today's
low of 54 occurring around
&lt;"i:OOam. Skie'o will be mo,tlv
sunny with :; to 10 MPH
wind' from the south turning
from the sou thwest as the
n1orning progresses .

• Afternoon: Temperatures
:Wi ll stay near 75 with today's
high of 77 occurring arolind
~:OOpm. Skie&gt; will be mostly
~unny with 10 MPH winds
from the southwest.

Friday, April 30

Bv JOHN NOLAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CINCINNATI Police
used excessive force · in subcuing a 350-pound black man
:who died shortl¥ after the
struggle. a civil nghts leader
said Wednesday.
A forensic patholo!!ist hired
by the Nationul Assoctation for
the Advancement of Colored
that
People
concluded
Nathaniel Jones died of
usphyxiation after the vide~­
taped struggle Nov. 30, smd
~alvert Smith, president of the
group's Cincinnati chapter.
. The pathologist's findings
show police must share responsibilit' for Jones· death because
me struggle caused the death.
Smith told a news conference.
He said the NAACP was evaluating whether it could file a lawsuit.
: The Hamilton County prosecutor closed the case March 22.
~aying an investi~ation . per-

~uaded him thai oflicers wet'e
Uefending themselves and
comm itted no crimes.
. County Coroner Dr. ca·rl
::t'arrott said Jones. 41. sulfocat. ~d during the strugolc but
:2Joted that an enlargeJ he:1r1.
~besitv and drug usc also con"'ributed to his death, An mnop:iiv showed he had intoxicating
:2evels of eocaine. PCP and
;:tlcohol in his blood.
~ A videotape lium a police c•u·
~aprured Jones' stn1ggle with
"' lice in a ill't-food restalll&lt;mt
arkmg lot. 11 showed Jones
ockins over one oflicer before
-officers pbbed or struck him two
:&lt;Iozen t1mes witl1 nightsticks for
~most three minutes umil he wa'
':]1andcuf!Cd.
• Smitl1 said Jones' death
:!•reflects a pattern of behavior by
::the police that has resulted in the
:deaths of too many Afric.m~merican men in tl1is city." .
· • Jones was at least the 19th black
~nan to die in violent contiunta:':tions with Cincinnati police since
:'.1995. Polii:c union leaders said

Morning: It's goi ng to be a
cloudy morning. There is a
slight . chance of rain .
Temperatures will increase
from 58 to 69 by late thi s
morning. Winds will be 5 to
I 0 MPH from the southeast
turning from the south as the
morning progresses.
Arternoon: It wi ll remain
cloudy. There is a slim chance
that
it
could
rain.
Temperatures will linger at
73. Winds will be 10 to 15
MPH from the south.

'

tl1e men who died tl1reatened oflicers with weapons and in one ca-;e
beat an oflker witl1 his own nightstick.
In 200 I, there were three
nights of rioting after an officer
fatally shot a fleeing, unarmed
black man who wa' wanted on
misdemeanor charges when he
mn from officers. The officer wa~
Iuter tried and acquitted of criminal charges.
Smith acknowledged that
Jones bore responsibility for his
actions because he consumed
drugs that can produce aggressive behavior. But he said
police could have backed off
and let Jones calm down rather
than engage him and strike him
with their batons while he was
on the ground.

"Asphyxiation . cbuld not
have occurred and would not
have occurred had it not been
for the techniques used by the
police to subdue Mr. Jones,"
Smith said . .
Dr. Joye M. Carter, the
Houston pathologist hired by the
NAACP to examine the county
coroner's autopsy report, did not
attend the news conference. The
NAACP declined to release a
copy of her report.
.
. Smith said Wedne&gt;day that
he is unable to conclude
whether the officers' ·actions
rose to the level of a crime.
But he said "the culture of
Cincinnati
Police
the
Department must change so
that its practices ... in the
apprehension and arrest of

-15.70

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2.200

.

FEB
Low
2,026 44 1.985.54

Russell

·13.70 .

2000

577 06

NYSE diary

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

JAN
High

1.122.41

Advanced:

786 New highs
S5
Declined:
2.500
New lows
Unchanged: 152
156

MAR

APR
Record high: 5 04B 62
Man1110 2lro

- - - - -- - -- - - 1.200

. Volume: 2.464.576.230

Nasdaq diary
Advanced:
------------1~

'1,122.41

----=------1.(1))
JAN
FEB
MAR
APR
High
1.138 tt

·1 .38

Low
1,121.70

657 New highs

- --------

.~

Dec
_l_in_ed_:__...:2::::.5=2B New lows
Unchanged: 302
4t
Volume: 2.005 242 024

Reconlhigh: 1 527 46
Marctl 24. 2lro

~p

ACI- 31.50
AEP- 30.40
Akzo- 36.90
Ashland Inc . -48.25
BBT - 34.55
BLI - 14.50
Bob Evans- 31.33
· Borg Warner- 85.64
City Holding - 32.07"
Champion - 4.639
Charming Shops- 7.30
Col- 33.27
DuPont- 43.41
DG - 18.66
Federal Mogul - .35

Gannett - R7 ~7
General Electric - 30.0~
GKNLY ·- 4.50
Harley Davidson - 56.33
Kmart-45.16
Kroger - 17.31
Ltd -~ 1.27
NSC- 24.33
Oak Hill Financial- 31.89
Bank One- 49.78
OVB- 34.36
Peoples - 2-LO I
Pepsico - 53.89
Premier - 9.09
Rocky Boot&gt; - 26.99

RD SheU - 47.7.1
Rockwell - 33.2~
Sear' - 40.45
SBC - 25 .21
AT&amp;T-IH5
USB - "25 .76
Wendy·, - 3'l.5S
Wal-Mart - 57.98
Worthington- ll\.59 .
Daily qock repons are the-+
p.m. clo.sing 4uote' of th~
preYious day's tmn&gt;actions.
provided b1 Smith Partners at
Ad1·est lnc._of Gallipolis.

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PHAR~.ACY
Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Ph .
I 12 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Prescription

Mon ..

OF OFFIC

May 3rd, 2004

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nrled that the Yictim dit."d from
either a choke hold or the weieht
of ofticers piling on him. T\vu
police officers were tried o.n
criminal charges and acquitted
in that case. The city later fired
one of those officers and another who was involved in the
WTest.

Payments by check must be
made out to that utility.

p~~CTION

M

di scipl ine. either as a result of
the department's investigation
or a separate one by an mdependent citizens
police
review board.
In 2000, another black man
died when officers who tried to
arrest him piled on him in a gas
station parking lot. The coroner

American Electric Power - 74' fee ·
Verizon -74'fee
Columbia Gas - 65' fee

Fraternal Order of Eagles
Aerie 2171

~

African-American men du not
result in their demise:·
Police are still doing an internal investigation of the department's actiOns in Jones· death;
police spokesman Lt. Kurt
Byrd said. He declined further
comment Wednesday.
The officers could still face'

Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy is authorized
to accept utility payments for:

..••

..••

'

Standard &amp; '

NOTICE

..,.

•

'

Record high: 11 722 98
Jan t( 200)

1.989.54

NAACP questions prosecutor's decision to clear police in death

...

I

Low

..U.tt

Nasdaq
composHe

•

~

www.obteneos.org

High

10,476.95 10,333.87

APR

6()

Local Stocks

"
•

Memorial Ho1pital

10,342

AP

~

"Hoopilal Dri,;., Aollcol, OH .l101·2.!0l

MAR .

·15.10
Pt1. Cllqe
110m poevlous:

~

O'BLENESS

FEB

Standard &amp;
Poor's 500

v

Sundcry
Times-Sentinel

JAN

"""

1,989.54

~

He art attack surv1vor

- - - - - - - - - - - 9,250

-42.99

..

Nma Kirk

-1.29

Industrials

------------------97~

.

..'•

the bottom of mine."

(740)593·5551 •

...

.,

-13Ull

Dow Jones

Nasdaq ~b.~ 2.0Cll
composite _________;,,_
' ___ um

The Ohio River Bear Company
Middleport Dept. Store in Middleport
Weaving Stitches in Pomeroy
questions? 992-4055

bus where I had a heart catheterization and stcnt placement. My heart doctor told me

10 250

April 28. 2004

'Pick up a map tJiltlcidit~ns al:

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Dow Jones

April 28 2004

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friday &amp;Saturday ·April SO &amp;~ay 1
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11om pmlaul:

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April28, 2004

industrials

NewsChannel
.

6 Mile Yellow

' ' Thank you from the bottom ~f my heart.

Market watch

ADAY ON WALL STREET

·- - -----··

··---~----

---- -

---

--~

-

•

�Page

A8 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, April 29, 2004

-.mydallysentinel.com

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIJ)E
White Sox edge Indians, Page B2
Redmen baseball falls against Ohio, Page B3
Kentucky Derby pri!views, Page 84

Thursday, Apri129, 2004

Mr..Football
charged in
player's death
CLEVELAND &lt;AP) Two high school seniors.
including one recognized as
the best hi~h school football
player in o'hio. were charged
Wednesday in the shooting
death of a teammate. even
though they did not shoot
him. police said.
Running back Raymond
Williams. who has signed to
play . college football for
West Virginia. was arrested
along with a Benedictine
High School teammate, Jon
Huddleston . Both are 18.
They had been held for .questioning about the shooting
deach of Lorenzo Hunter, 16.
Hunter. a sophomore wide
receiver and safety for
Benedictine. died of gunshot
wounds to the chest. arm and
hip on April 16.
On April 21, police
charged Rodney Roberts. 20,
with aggravated murder in
Hulltcr 's death. Police said
then that a witness told them
Hunter was trying to rob
Roberts with a plastic gun.
and Roberts then pulkd out
a real gun and fired it.
Poli ce Lt. Linda Kaspar
said the decisi on to charge
Williams and Huddleston
with murder and i•ggravated
robbery charges was made
because they were "at the
scene and had some involvement in it."
Tt)ey remained in · CiiY
Jail. with an arraignment
likely Thursday. Kaspar
sa id .
Williams \vas named the
17th annual winner of The
Ohio Associated Press Mr.
Football
awa rd
111
November.
WVU intends to withdraw
its sc holarship offer to
Williams. pending the outcome of his criminal case.
said Shelly Poe. the school's
sports information director.
"This is a very tragic silllation," Mountaineers football coach Rich Rodriguez
said. "We share in the shock
of the recent tragedy with his
teammates. coaches and
school
officials
in
Cleveland.''

Prep.Baseball

Eagles rally to ground Tornadoes, 9-6
BY ScoTT WoLFE
Sports correspondent
RACINE - Scoring four runs with
cwo outs in the top of the seventh, the
high flying Eastern Eagles broke a 55 tie and posted a 9-6 come-frombehind victory over the Southern
Tornadoes Wednesday night during
boys varsity baseball action in
Racine.

For Southern in the · 'event h. the
walls came tumbling down . For che
Eagles. the comeback rally was glorious if not downright amazing.
The Eastern seventh started with
Matt Morris reaching on an error at
short, then Jonathan Owen sacrificed
him safely to second and Morris
advanced to third on a 4-3 ground out
by Derrick Young. With two out.
Dustin Riggs went to the plate
against Southern ~tarter Cole Brown .

who seemingly had the inn in g 11e ll at
hand.
Rigg' drew a walk. then Chm
Myer' worked the count full and
fin all y drew a walk. and Ryan Smilh
hammered a two-run double to ~i,· e
Eastern a 7-5 lead. But the Ea'21e,
were not done. Ken Amsbary doubled
hoine Mye rs and Smith for a Y-5 EHS
lead. Durst and Shaffer boch were hit
by pitches before R.J . Harmon L"ame
.on in relief to end the inning.

A new work for the stage, celebrating Appalachian and Celtic music, dance, folk culture and tradition will premiere in Oak Hill, Sunday, May 2 at 3 p.m. in the cafetorium of Oak Hill High School.
Wlid Mountain Thyme, written by MSU Associate Professor of Music, Or. Roma Prindle, will be presented by
Morehead State University OperaWorks and will feature Morehead's White Horse String Band. There is no
admission charge for the show, but an honorarium will be accepted during the performance.
Wild Mo.untain Thyme, a ritual springtime play, is the result of several years' research by Dr. Prindle. It is loosely, based on the genre that is found In England and Wales known as "wooing" plays. It recreates SO":Je of the
springtime and May Day practices brought to the Kentucky Highlands by Celtic peoples from southwestern
England and Wales and incorporates traditional Appalachian and Celtic springtime customs, folk dance and
music. The common root of the music of the&lt;;e two cultures will be highlighted by performances on mountain
fiddle, dulcimer, banjo, bass fiddle, guitar and mandolin. An English country-dance, two Appalachian dances,
and a version of the Kentucky Running Set will also be performed. All of the vocal selections are settings of
traditional music from Appalach ian and the Celtic areas of southwestern England and Wales.
The performance on May 2 will b.e a benefit to help offset the student expenses for the tour to England and
Wales. Mildred Bangert and Evan E. Davis have helped coordinate this presentation in Oak Hill. Wild Mo1.1ntain
Thyme has been dedicated to the citizens of Oak Hill in appreciation of their support in this project, and it is
also dedicated to the memory of Rita Howard. Her son Jeremy Is a member of the Wild Mountain Thyme cast.
We hope to see you all in Oak Hill on May 2 at 3 PM . If interested, please contact the Madog Center for Welsh
Studies for further information. (740) 245-7186.

Meigs football
golf tourney
scheduled

..

.

'twa;c;,oovanlut
Locations; ,
1/4
·North

CrOW11 Family R t urant
Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken
228 Main Sc.

•

Pomeroy, Ohio

•

I

'

· POMEROY · - The lith
annual Meigs Football Golf
Tournament will be held May
8 at the Pine Hills Golf
Course.
·
The four-man scramble
will begin with a shotgun
start at 9 a.m. with a entry fee
of $50 per person. This is a
bring your own team event.
There is a team handicap of
40-plus with one member
under 10.
Plus. there will be a sk ins
game with an entry fee of $20
per team.
.
There is also $50 for hold
spo nsor with a sign with
business name displayed.
Anyone playing in the tournament will receive one free
practice round at Pine Hill s.
For more information, call
Mike Chancey at 992-2158
(work) or 992-0064 (home ).

Please see Eagles. Bl

Prep Softball

Eastern
edges
Southern
Bv ScoTT WoLFE
Sports correspondent

RACI NE- Continuing their seasonlong !light toward yet another title. the
Eastern Eagles of ,·eteran coach Pam
Douthi tt p&lt;;sted a hard-fought 5-2 TriValley Conference Hocking Division
,·ktory nl'er the Southern Tornadoe s
Weunesday night during girls varsity
softbal l action in Racine .
·
Eastern lifts its mark to 11-4 overall
and 9-c in the league. while Southern
fall s to 3-X. 2-6.
The mid -i nnings became a pitcher's
dual between juniors Krista White of
Eastern and Brooke Ki ser of Southern.
When it boileu down to it. howeYer.
pitching was not the lone factor. but the
defense was. Southern made six errors
that led to Eastern scores.
White. who has hau double ACL surgeries to each knee. has to be cornmendcJ for iler gutsy enthusiasm and ability
to come back strong. White has been
one of the major cogs in Eastern's success this season after a long winter of
rehabilitation.
Eastern plated three runs in the tlrst
inning. Casey Smith walked to lead off
the game for Eastern. Jenny Armes sin~led then . Krista White reached on a
fielder's choice. Sara Barringer then
'in~led in what would have· loaded the
bases. hut a •mr ffed play in the outfield
let home a run. After a 2-3 bunt ground
out by Brittany Bi"ell sacrificed the
runners. Kayla Siders had a single up
tile middle. An outfield error allowed

Meigs Middle
School golf
team wins again
POMEROY - The Meigs
Middle School Golf Team
remained undefcaced in
league play Wednesday on a
cold. wet, and windy Hidden
Valley golf course.
Kirk Lager led the way as
medalist with a respectable
43 followed by Steven
Stewart's 44.
AI so scoriQg for the
Marauders were J. R. Greene
with a 46, Seth Perry 49, and
Daniel Runyon with 54.
Point Pleasant came in second on their home course
with a narrow victory over
Wahama, 198 to 202. Eastern
was fourth with a 237.
The next maich will be at
Pine Hills today.

Tied . at 1-1 early in the game.
Eastern broke the tie wi th tv.o runs in
the third innin~. Morri' walked with
t ,,.oouts. Owen reached on a tielder''
choice. and Youn~ reached on an
ermr that allowecl two run' to 'core.
.'-1 Ea&gt;tern.
A Wes . Burniws home run for
Southern made the score 3-2.
In the 'ixth inning. Ea-,tern went up

Please see Edges, Bl

Cincinnati Reds' right fielder Jason Romano ducks out of the way as center fielder Ken Griffey Jr., catches a
fly ball from Milwaukee Brewers' Bill Hall in the first In ning Wednesday In Milwaukee . lAP)

Reds blow big lead
MILWAUKEE (AP) · - The
Milwaukee Brewers' biggest comeback in franchise history came at
the expense of the Cincinnati Reds'
biggest collapse since 1930.
Bill Hall's squeeze bunt in the
IOth
inning
scored
Trent
Durrington from thir9, completing
Milwaukee's rally from a nine-run
deficit to beat Cincinnati I0-9
Wednesday night.
"To be able to persevere and keep

plugging away and win the ballgame, it's a tremendous win for us,"
Milwaukee manager Ned Yost said.
Hall tied the score at 9 with a
three-run double in the eighth
inning. one night after hilling a tworun home run with two outs in the
ninth to give Milwau kee a 9-~ vi(:tory over the Reds.
..
"I never had a walkott homer or a
walkotf squeeze, especially two
nights in a row," said Hall, a reserve

infielder. "I just wanted to get a
good pitch til at I could get down ...
Durrington led off the IOth with a
ground-ru le double olf Todd Van
Poppe! ( 1-1) that hit off the top of
the
ri ght-fiei LI
wall. · Scott
Podsednik. who had four hits. then
sacriliced DuiTington to third before
Hall bunted him in on the lirst pitch .
Yost said calling the squee1c

Please see Reds, Bl

Prep Baseball
'\

,..,.

Meigs errors lead to Spartans win
BY BUTCH COOPER
bcooper@ mydailytribune .com
ROCKSPRINGS - Meigs miscues in the latter innings provided
Alexander enough fuel to forge
ahead in league play Wednesday.
The Marauders committed six
errors in the final four innings I,IS
Alexander scored a run in each of
those innings as the Spartans
defeated Meig s, 4-2.
Alexander' had no earned runs
on the day against Meigs· pitcher

I

'.

Brandon Fackler. who threw a
complete game. Fackler struck
out 12 while allowing six hits and
only two walks.
Jake Hale also threw a complete game for the Spartans (8-7,
6-3 Tri-Valley Conference) as he
kept the Marauders (12-3. 7-4)
score less from the second inning
on, striking out seven and allowing five hits and three walks.
Doug Dill and Matt Holle y
were each 2-for-3 for Meigs.
while Ryan Thomas was 2-for-4
for Alexander.

A pair of Marauder error' led to
the go ahead run in the top of the
sixth.. Alex 'Abele got on by way
of an error to lead off the 'ixth. A
throwing error put Nic~ Bolin on
and 'cored pitch runner Brad)
Doudna to give Alexander a 3-2
lead.
The Spartan' added a run in the
seventh a' Thoma' 'in~led. then
Abele hit a shot to leftfielcl for a
base hit. but anocher error on the
play brought Thoma' horne 10

Please see Enors, Bl

Marauders
pound on
Spartans
BY BUTCH COOPER

bcooper@mydailytnbune.com
ROCKSPRI:-.IGS - Bv the end of
the second inning. Meigs left little
doubt on the outcome of Wednesday's
varsitv
,oftba ll game · a11ainst
Alexa;lder.
'
After 'coring six runs in the second
inn in~. the Marauders led S-0 and ~ven t
on to'a 11-3 victo rv over Alexander.
Ca"i Whan and Samantha Cole led a
L\ hit performance by the Marauders
(9-6. 8-3 Tri-Valley Conference) as
they each" ent 3-for-3 with Whan connecting on a pair of doubles and three
RBis .
Nikki Butcher and Renee Bailey
each went 2-for-3 with two RBI apiece
for Meigs. while Melia Whan also
drove in til \l runs.
Cole threw the fir&gt;t fil'e innings.
striking \lUt ,ix. "hilc allc1wing five
hits and four "alks. while Joey Haning
pitched the re't of the game .
SammY PicrL"e. "ho was walked to
lead of( the fir,t inning. ad I' anced to
third on a b;"e hit by Butcher. Pierce
anu l3utchcr then 'cored on a double by
Ca"i Whanto put the Marauder' up 20.

But it""' in the 'el'ond inning when
the Marauder' done 'omc real damage.
Chri't~ 1\.lilkr ,ingled and a double

Please see Marauders, Bl

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

'

Thursday, April 29, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, April29, 2004

Major League Baseball
Amert.nLeague
U$T
w
~";i"';&lt;;~;;;l;::----13
S.I!Wnore

TamPa Bay
-Toronto

6

8
11
1_ _11

_

CENTRAL

......,.

~-~so~

L

Pet.

GB

14

7

667

8

600

I

9

571

13
12

381
368

2
6
6

L

,

s011ie

10
7

11

,476

14

333

P10

7-3

S1rli
W2

·~

WI
WI

4-6

l1
W1

Pto

~ ·sResutts

6-6
5·5
5-5
1-8
Home
9-3
7-4

EAST

73

FlOrO.:~

5-2

Atlar&gt;ta

5-6
2-6
66

PMadelph.a

1·7

....,

Home

84

6-4

45
73

3-7

l5

4-5

66

4-6

l1

4-6

3-8

Balm1ore 3, Seattle 1
Detro~ 10,

Anahetm 2
8os1on 6, Tampa Bay 0
NY Yallkefls 5, Oakland i

Kansas. City 5, Te.ow 3
M111neSO!a 9. Toronto 5

· Totatt

37

'811 7

Houston

sb rhbi
WHarrs2b5t1 0
Unbess
3231
MOrdzrf
5212
Tt1mos&lt;t1 3 0 t 0
Gioad dh
1000
CaLeeH
51 2'
K11er1to 1b 5 0 0 0
Drnsllt pr 0 1 0. 0
Cl8de3b 52 3 2
TPerezc1 'S031
. SAimrc
4 01 1
Tota11
41 915 8

eb r hbl
B'9g10d
4
1
AEvrttss
3011
BgweH 1b 3 0 0 0.
JKenl2b
4 0 0 0
3010
Brk.mnlt
HidalgO rf 4 1 1 0
Lamb3b
40 "20
RChaV1C 31 21
OPimroph 1 0 0 0
Oswaltp
1000
Tottll
JO 2 B 2

000

602

Chiclgo

200

000

000 115 '-

8

t

' Two outs when winmng run scored.
E-V1z:quel (5). Broussard (1). JJOrdonez (11
DP-ch ~eabo t LOB--Cle..-eland 6. Chicago
10. 2B- &amp; ili1a.rd 2 (11). Blake (4). Ur1bB (3).
Thoma&amp; (2). Galee (5). SAiomar (11 HRVIZQUal ( 1). Uribe (3). MOroonez (61. Crede
(3). SB-WHams (5). $-Uube SF-SAiomar.
IP H REASBSO
Cleveland
.JaOa111s
6 2-3 B 3 2 2 0
Cressand
1 2 1 1 0 0
' AiWMe
1-3 0 0 0 0 0
Risii.B
1·3 3 3 3 0 0
Berancoun L.2·3 1·3 2 2
Chtc.go
Schoenewe1s
5 1·3 10 8 6 4 4
Takatsu
1 2-3 1 0 0 0 2
MJacbon W.1-Q
2 0 0 0 0
1

o o o

~

.

· lJmpras---Home. Angel Hernandez: F1rs1. M1ke
Eve11tt: Second. Malil; Wegner: Th1rd. Larry
Young. T -2 55. A-12,t89 140,6151 ..

Marlins 9, Rockies 4
Florida

Colorado

abrtlbi
. : Pierre ct
4 0 0 0
LCSlilto "2b 3 2 0 0
Cbrerart 5221
Lowell 3b 3 2 1 3
4 2 1 3
Cho1 lb
CMIOEIH 5020 RCstroc 5000
AGnzlz!1.3 3 1 2 1
Bed&lt;en p 2 0 0 0
MldcBiph 1 0 1 0
Benitez p 0 0 0 0 ·
Total•

35 . 9 9 8

13

L

13

8

Cmcmnatl
Houston

11

Mrtwaukee
St LOUIS
P&lt;ttsourgn

Pet.
619

9

310

GB

P10

Homo

Awa~

7-3

S1"'
WI

6-5

5-5
5-5

l2
l2

7-3
6-3

I

I

12

•a

ID

11

545
H6

3

g

10

474

3

L

Pet.
650

GB

9

591

'2

429

9

'2

9

'3

'"'

. 5

abrhbl
Hck.rng 2b 5 0 1 0
Clayton ss 5 0 1 0
Heltontb 3110
Castilla 3b &lt;I 1 1 1
Bl.llllrt.z cf 4 t 1 1
HIIIdayH
4t20
MaSwyrf 2011
Pellowrf
1 0 0 0
Greenec 4 0 1 1
JJn ngsp 2 0 0 0
Miles pn
1 o o ·o
RAeyes ph 1 0 0 0
Totals
36 4 9 4

Florida
301
110
003 9
CokH"ado
013
000
000 4
E-Lowetl (2). ACast10 ( 1). Holliday {2). DPFiorKia 1, Co~ora do 1. LOB-FI011da 7. Col·
orado 7. 28---Conme (5).- Clayton (5), Helton
(9), Casl illa (9). Bumitz (7). HR-Cabrera (9).
Lowell (6), Ch01 (7). AGonlalez t2) 58Pie rre (6), LCast1llo (4). 5-Beckett
IP H RERBBSO
Florida
Back.ett W.2·2
7 B •
4 2 7
I 0 0 0 ' 0 1
Phel&gt;'
I 1 0 0 0 I
Ben!lez
Colotldo
JJenn1ngs L,t-3
5 6 6 6 4 4
SAeed
110011
Harikkala
1 0 0 0 0 0
Fuentes
2 2 3 2 2 2
WP-8ecke!l . PB-Greene
Umpires-Home. Ed Montague: F1rnl. Jerr'y
La~n e: Second, Jerry Meals: Third, Paul
Schneber. T-2:5 1. A~27.402 (50.449).

6-6

;~

5-6

l2

3·9

7-2

WI

4-6

5-4

P10

51"'
W1

Homo
7-4

Away

6·4
5-5
55
4-6

W3
li

84
6-6

l1
W1

66
5-8

BAtlrts 20 4 1 1 0
Motalb 2000
Tiijiid.ilss4110
RP!mo 1b 3 1 1 0
Jvlopzc 2010
Gbbonsrt 3 01 2
SumortQh J 0 0 0
4 0 1 0
Maim; ct
8~gb4H
3010

5 0 0 0

Jt;l 3

Q 1 0

B8oone ?b 4 0 0 0
EMrtulfl 3 0 t 0
3100
4 0 10
20 0 0
3 00 0

A1Jr11la ss
OlerUll 1b
DW1Isnc
WIIYlcf

3011
1000
31 1 4 1

6·3

H

7
1

4

\

1

4

3

3

2

2

2

0'

Moyer ·
Hasegawa l.1-3
BaltimOf"e
Ainswo11n
Pamst\W.2·1
Jui10S.3
HBP-bj Am worth

5-5
3-6
36
4-5

Tuesday"s Resu lts
HoostM at PrttstlUigh. ppd .. Wl!ather
M;lwaukee 9. Clnctnnatl 8
Pnlladelph14 7. St LOUIS 3
Colorado 13. FlOrida 10
Anzon.a 10. ChiCago Cues'
San Dogo 3. Montreal 0
NY Mets 9 Los Angeles 5
A~lan!a 12 sa~ FrancPSCo 3

4

1

1

4

2

3

0

0

0

1

2

Taus

ab rh bi
TRdmnct
JW11sn ss
Kendallc
MndeSI rt
Mc:l&lt;wk· lf
CW1Isn tb
ANunszph
Hil' 2b
Foggp

4 1 1 1
3 1 10
31 1 1
4 12
4 0 0 0
3
1
t 0 0 0
3 1 1 0
1 0 0 0
s~nes3b 4
1
Totall
30 4 7 4

o
o o
o o

Houaton
001
000 100 2
Pittsburgh
100 010 02.. 4
E--Oswalt ( 1). DP-P11!sbu rgh 1. LOBHouston 6. P1ttsburgh 7 28-H1datgo (8).
RCh a ~ez \1 ). MondBSI (51. CWIIsqn (8)
AE116ret1 (11 Berkman \11. S--Oswatt. Fogg
SF-AEverett
lP H RE~BBSO
Houston
1 7 4 3 1 1
Oswa~ L2·1
Gallo
1·3
0 0 0 t
2·3 0 0 0 1 1
Pittsburgh
762234
Fogg
STorresW.1-iJ
1 1 0 0 0 0
MesaS.6
J
1 0 0 0 0
Osv.·alt p1tched to 3 banar-s 1n ltle 8th.'
HB P-tw Oswa~ 1CW1ISOnl. by Oswall (JWII·
sor 1. w.O-Brte
Ump.res-Home. KeV1n Kelley. F11SI. ..ltm Wolt.
Second F1eldn Culbrem. Th1rd. Tony Randaz·

cs-

c

"'""'

m

T-2 23 A---9.613 136.496)

CC~u~b~s~4!;:,~DJ'ba~~cEks~~3~~~======1
Chicago

Arilona

ab rhbi
1Walkr2b 3 2 2 0
CPttsond 4 1 1 1
3 0 o 1
SSosarf
Aloull
4 0 1 0
ARmrz3b 4 0 1 1
Del ee 1b 4 0 0 0
ASGzlzss 4 1 1 1
Bakoc
2 0 0 0
Mddu•p
1 0 0 0
Hlndsw ph 1 o o o
Frnswrp
0 0 0 0
Mardl:rp
0 0 0 0
Hwk1nsp 0 0 0 0
Mac,aspl11000
Brwsk1p
0 0 0 :J
Totals
31 4 6 4

ab rhbi
Kata2b
3 0 0 0
Sadlerss 50 0 0
LGnztzlf
50 1 0
Sexson 1b 3 0 0 0
Baergaph 1 0 0 0
Mante1p
0 0 0 0
SFonlsyd 4 3 3 3
OBtiStarf 4 0 t 0
Tracy3b
2 01 0
Hmck c
4 0 3 0
Oa1glep
20 0 0
Mayne ph 0 .0 0 0
Kplovep
0 0 0 0
Clbrnn1b 1000
Totals

34 3 9 3

Chicago
201
DOD
001 4
Arizona
010
001
010 3
LOB.- Gh1cago S. A11zona 9 2B-TWalker 2
{7]. CPanerson [7\. AAam t1ez (9). OBautiSta
(7). HR-ASGonza~z (3). SF1roley 3 (5).
SB-Hammock (1). CS-Tracy (1). 5--Maddu ~ . Mayne SF-5Sosa .
. IP H AERBBSO
Chicago
662223
MadduK
1 1 o o o o
Farnsworth
1
3 o o 0 o .. 1
Mereker
2·3 2 1 1 1 0
Hawk1ns W. t·O
1 0 0 0 1 0
Borowski S.S
Arizona
Oatgte
733335
KoploYe
120000
Manta,l.().3
1 1 t
1 0 1
Ump1res-Home. Ed Rapuano· F1r!!l. Ted Barrett : Secon!:l. AIIOnso Marquez: Thnd. RICk
Reod. T-2:33. A-34,761 (49.033).

l&lt;snus City

ab rhbi
M~'ongss 4 2 10
Blalocl\ 3b 5 0 1 0
ASrano2c 50 21
Perf\! 1b
5 0 2 ~
BJordn d~ 4
0 0
EYongH
4 1 2 0
Menchr1 4
31
N1• r:!
4
1 0
lamlc
3
1 0
Fllmerotl 1 0 0 0
Totals
39 313 3

a

a
a
a

ab rKbt
Grttnno2b 4 1 3 1
Be~rar ct

4 0 0 0

MiSwydtl
Harvey 1b
Ra.nda 3b
BSt1ag oc
Mlopezlf
Gu,el H

31
4 2
4 0
3 0
30
' 0
2 I
2 0

0Je9USr1

1
3
1
t
0
0
0
0

0
3
0
1
0
0
0

DeRosa Jb 5 1

MG1&lt;s2b ,

33

o1 1

JGarca 2b 1 0 0 0
JOrB¥irf

A.Jonesr:!
lroche 1b
Hss.mn1b
Holll-'ls ph
EddP1z c
JEs!Qac

OOiseH

~It 0

40

2 1

3 t
1
1
•
4
1

0
0
t
0
0

0
0

1

0
0
0
0
0 Z .2
2.2 0
0 0 0

Ru0f11Z P
Totals
)8 712 7

Snoo lb
4 1 I 2
Grssom ct 4 1 1 0
BoodsH
3110
Fe~z30
5221
Allonl o 20 4 1 1 1
Przynsc
502t
NPerez ss 5 1 2 2
Tcmkop
4 1 1 0
Eyre p
0000
FRdgezp 0 0 0 0

Totst1

391014 9

ABincoss
0
Totals
30 5 9. 5

A"anta
020
020 201 7
San Francisco 000
91 0 001 - 10
E-Hessman
(2).
OP-AUanta
1.
San
FranTens
100 001
001 3
CISCO 1 L08-AIIan1a 6. San FranCISCO 10.
Ke nsll City
000 04{) 0111 5
E-ABianc o (3). OP-Te•as 2. Kansas C1ty 2 28-DeRosa 2 14), JDrew (4). JEstrada (6),
LOB-Texas 1b Kansas C11)1 6. 28-BIIl.lock DV--11se 2 (3), Hassman {1). Tucker t3). A!fon·
(81 ASonano 2 (5). EYoung (31. Mench (8). zo-(5) . HR- Tucksr (1). SB-Snow ( 1).
IP H REFIBBSO
Gralfan no 12\. 39-Perry (11. HR- Harvoy
Atlanta
!21."58-EYoung 121. S-AB anco.
7 7 3 2
RuOri iZ L2·3
3 1·3
1P H RERBBSO
1 2-3 3 3 2 1
1
Texas
A!tonseca
2 2 0 0 0 1
Rogers L.3·1
6 2-3
7 4 4 3
t
Cunnane
I
Broca1l
2-3
2
t
1 0
1
NrtkOWSkl
1 0 0 1 2
Ram1rez
2·3 0 0 0 0 0
San Francisco
Ksnus City
TOOI~O W 1·1
6 9 6 6 2 . 3
GobbleW.1-Q
51 ·3 10 2 2 0
1
06823
2-3 0 0 0 0
1
Gllmsley
.2·3
1 0 0 1 0
Eyre
1·3 0 0 0 0 0
Camp
210002FRodnguez
110000
MacD.ougal S.t
t
t,, 1
t
Herges
1 2 1 1 0 0
HBP-by Rogers (DeJesus!
.Tomko pitChed to 3 batter;; 1n ltle 7th
Ump1res-Home. J1111 Reynolds: F1rst. Gary WP- AuOrtll.
Ceclerstrom: Second. Andy Fletcher. Th11d. T1m Umpims-Home, C B. Bucknor First, Eric
Coope1; Second. M1ke RBIIIy : Third, Chuck
Welka. T-2·53. A-15.530 {40 785)
Meriwether. T-2:57 A-36.210 ~ 4 1.584) .
'i

a

o o

--;::::;:::-;;;-;.-:;;;;;;;;o----1

T-;,i~g;::•;:
rs:--1:.:0:!'.:.A::n,g-=•l:-;:s~2=-----J Twins 9, Btue Jays 5

Anaheim ab r hbi
F,ggll)s d 4 1 2 0
Erstadlb 4 0 t 0
OVr.onrl . 0 0 0 0
VG rerort 4 0 0 0
Anugass 0 0 0 0
Glaus3b 4 1 12
Salmondh 3 0 0 0
JG41enH
4 0 2 0
BMolnac 4 010
Ha~erss
3 0 0 0
AKm1y2b 3 01 0
Totals 33 2 8 2

Detroit
ab r hbi
ASnchz cl 5 1 3 1
Vna2b
52 2 0
lntante2b 0 0 0 0
CGillenss 2 3 2 0
While II
J 1 1 3
Hggnsndh 51 3 2
CPsna 1b 3 0 1 2
She~on 1b 0 0 0 0
Monroerf 51 2 1
Mu11S0n3b 51 0 0
lngec
4 0 1 1
Tota11
37 101510

Toronto
ab r tlbi
HCiark rt
3020
Jhnsonrt 2 0 0 0
Ctlnotto H 3 0 0 0
VINells c1 5 1 2 0
CD1gdo1b 501 0
JPhlps dh 4 1 ! 0
Hmsk.e 3~ 3 1 I 1
OHudsn 2b 3 1 1 0
Cashc
4113
Wdwrd ss 4 0 4 1
Totsl1
36 513 5

Minnesota

ab rhbl
ShS!WrtH
Mntkw lb
Koskie 3b
THrrtercl
J.Jones rt
LForddh

4222
4 01 1
4 1 1 1
50 1 1
4020
4 1 1 0

HBinco

3 0 0 0

c

CGzmnss 3220
Punto2b 2 2 1 0
MRyanph 1 1 1 1
Tatsla
34 912 6

Aneheim
200
000
000 2
Toronto
000
001
CWO '"';"' 5
Detroit
205
DOD
2111 - 10
Minnesota
000
021
24x 9
E- BMolna ( 1), AKennedy (4) DP- Ana· E- THunter (1 \. DP-Mmneso1a 4. LOBhaim 1. Detroit 2. LOB- Anahe1m 5. Detr o~ · Toronto 9. Mtnneso1a 7. 28--H Ciarl&lt; (3).
10 2B-CGuitlen (4). White (6), Higg1nson Cash {6), Woodward (7). HR-Koskie (4).
(3). HA-Giaus (7). SB-F1991ns (71. CPena SB-THuntor2 (2), JJones (5). CS-JOhnson
(2). CS-ASanchez (2). SF--GPena
(1). CGuzman (1). S-HBianco.
IP H R ER BB SO
IP H R ER BB SO
Anaheim
Toronlo
5 8 3 3 1 3
ColOn l3·2
4 7 7 7 3 6
JMi:ler
1 0 0 0 0 1
1
Nakamura
Sele
2 3 0 0 0
0 1 2 2 2 0
Weber
t
5 3 2 2
1
Karshner
1 1-3
I 2 2 1 0
Gregg
1 0 0 0 0
t
F111sor L.0-1
2-3 2 2 2 1 0
Detroit
Adams
Marolh W.3·1
7 6 2 2
1 4
Mlnneeote
JWalker
110001
Lohse
6 7 112 1
·uroma
1 1 o
o o
Fultz
1 t
0 o 0
1
1 0
Wober pnci'led to 4 tlatlars m the 8th
Romero
2-3
4 4 4
HBP--by Colon'(Whne j PB-BMohna .
JRincon W,4·0
1·3
1 0 0 0 0
Umprss-Home, Jerry Crawford, Forst Bnan Nathan
1 0 0 0
1 2
O'Nora, Second, Ph1t Cuzz1, Th11d, James JMiller pitched to 3 baners mlhe .6th. Kershner
prtch&amp;d to 3 batters tn the 7th.
Hoye. T-2 42. A-17. 175 [40.120)
~=c:-:::;:--;;::::::::::-:;,-----'-J HBfL-b~ Lohse (JPhetps). WP........JMtller, Kat·
Giants 10, Braves 7
shne{. Adams 2. Nathan. Balk--Ke rshner.
~:::;:=---:==:.:.:c~-.-::;;--~ J Umpires-HOf'!19_, Greg G!Dson; Firnt, Bruce
AUanta
.
Sen Fran
Oreckman: Second. Gerry Davis: Third, larry
ab r hbi
ab r h bi
Ponc,no. T-2:55 . A- 15.t64 (45,423).
F u~ea l ss
51 2 0 Tucker rf
52 3 2

o

Bay

4220

0 0 0 0
2 D2 2

Dunn ~

1 3

o

6
2-3
'·3

8
3

.
Kotsa~

4
2

4 .,
2 0

Lbrthal c

4 0 1 0

DaBell3b 4 01 0
Byrd pr
0 1 00
ToPerz 3b ..0 0 0 0
ROllinS ss 2 0 0 0
BMyersp 1 o o o
Madson p 1000
l adee ph 11 01
BWgmp · OOOO

Bv

RICK GANO

Associated Press
CHICAGO
Ozzie
Guillen 's first month as a
major league manager has
given him reason to fidget.
The Chi'&lt;)lgo White Sox ' s
early-season success has been
anything but a breeze,
Chicago rallied for five runs
in the bottom of the ninth
Wednesday, beating the
Cleveland Indians 9-8 . on
Sandy Alomar's sacrifice tly.
It marked the third time the
White Sox overcame a ninthinning deticit to win, and five
of their seven home wins thi s
season came in their tina! atbat.
Guillen 's team is now 7-1 in
one-run games.
"It's fun to wat9h if you are
a fan, but if you are in the
dU£OUt it gets intense every
day. day-in and day-out,"
Guillen said.
"A win is a win, but I wish
. we would win one easy before
this thing is over," he said.
Chicago trailed 8-2 after six
innings. Still down 8-4, the
White Sox then stormed back
- it was the first time they'd
overcome u four-run deficit to
win in the bottom of the ninth
since June 4. 1988 .
. Juun Uribe led off with u
single und Magglio Ordonez
folfowed with 11 home run
uguinsl Duvid Riske. One out
Iuter, Curlo8 Lee doubled. und
Rafael
Betancourt (2·3)
relieved,
On a blustery day at U.S.
Cellular Field with wind gust·
· lng at 33 mph, Indians tirst
baseman Ben Broussartl who entered the s ame in the
ninth as a defens1ve replacement dropped Paul
Konerko's towering popup for
an error,
"The wind is blowing real

hard, but the ball still has to be
caught,'' Indians manager Eric
Wedge said. "There are no
excuses."
.
Joe Crede and Timo Perez
followed with RBI singles to
tie it at 8 and Alomar hit his
sacrifice tly to right to score
Crede.
After Wednesday 's implosion, the Indian bullpen stands
at 3-8 overall. and has blown
li ve of seven save opportuniti es.
Mike Jackson (] -0) gol the
victory with two hitless
innings of rel ief,
" I always lhink I'm going to
win and you have to get 27
·outs, but when you are behind
by that maqy runs, il 's very
diflicult,'' Alomar said.
"This teaml1as done il in the
past. You have to chip away,''
he added. ")'hey did the same
thing to us yesterday little by
little. They caught up and they
went ahead and beat us." ,
Cleveland overcame a 4-0
first-i nnin g deficit Tuesday
and beat the White Sox 11 -7
with fo ur runs in the IOth.
The Indians fell behind 2-0
Wednesday after the first, but
then scored six runs in the
founh . highlighted by Ronn ie
Belliurd's three-run double.
Cleveluml pushed the lcud w
8-2 on Omur Viz4uel',, tworun homer in the siKth off
Chh:ugu
,l tll rter
Scllll
S c hoen ~ wei s.

But Uribe und C1·ede l1nmc:red in the seventh unu eighth
innings 10 get the White ,SoK
in posilion to come buc-k with the help of a wind-blown
popup,
"When Bro ussard dropped
Paul's tl y. it seemed the wheel
started to turn in our favor
righl there." Crede said,
'' It played diffic ult every
inning. I feel sorry fo r
Bro u,sard because he came

into the game not knowing
what I did. We were out there
for nine innings and knew
what the wind was doing,"
Indians left fielder Matt
Lawton said.
"You can 't blame it on one
play. The game should -have
never come lo that"
Cleveland slarler Jason
Davi s wcnl 6 2-3 innings.
allowin g three runs and eight
hits, including Uribe's solo
homer in lhe seventh.
Lawton, Lou Merloni and
Alex Escobar hit consecutive
singles for Cleveland's first
run in the founh. After Tim
Laker walked to load the
bases, Belliard hit a two-out,
hard hopper past third (ln a 32 pitch, driving in three and
giving the Indians a 4-2 lead .
Bell iard _:;cored when
Ordone z dropped Vizquel' s
tly ball 10 right for an error.
After Jody Gerut reached on
an intield si ngle, Casey Blake
hit an RBI double.
·
The White Sox got two in
lhe ti rst when Willie Harri s
scored when Vizquel dropped
a throw during a rundown,
and Lee had an RBI single,
NOTES: The White Sox
scored six runs in the bottom
of the ninth ugainst Texas 10
win IO·H in thm 198!! ~um e, ,..
Bclliurd i.loubled tw1cc nni.l
drew lwo wul ks nnd is now
hutting .42.'L .. ,Luwton )IOl his
I,(KlOth c m~~r hit leudmg otT
the second hul wus lhrown out
Ill second trying In stretch II
in1n u double.... The field was
littered with hoi dog wrappers
und debri s. A couple of times
play hud to be stopped while
batter' tu rned their heads
away from the dirt be ing
blown .around .... Schoene we is
all owed I0 hits and eight run s
in 5 1-3 in ni ngs, giving up
more runs Wednesday than he
had in his prev i o u ~ three stans
(seven) com bined.

lrunss~

4 0':)0

Bldlev cl
ShGreh 10
LDucac
JE·:rcnrf
8eltre3b

3 0 S 0

Cora2b
QP!:!,ez p

4

2
3
3
J
2

o 1.0
0

-~

0

0 1 0
1 1 1
0 1 0

1 : 0

C: 0

'

1

4 4 0 5
0013

0
0

0
0

0
0

t

1

FtBe~ran J:·1Ci"lf&gt;d t~ 1 barter 1n thE' Bth. Eaton

ootchec to 4 banp· s 1n lhl" 61h
HRP--hy Eaton Pa~uccll WP-SKir'"l
Ur1PifBS~ome Jefi NeiSQrl F1rSI Many Fos·
ter SecO!lO Joe Bnnkrran TMO T1m T5Chtda
T-2 50 A-24 079 t42 4451

Bradley
rips Indians,
Wedge
CLEVE LAN D tA PI Otll fi elde r
Millon
ll radlev ila' ;aken a few
finlil - ~'' 111 ~" at the
Ck1·dand Indian,, savi ng
hi , be.,l nib fl&gt;r manager
Eric Wedce.
The tale nled bul temperamental Bradley. traded In lhe Lm Angele s
Dod ~ers la,t month after
a ~e'r1e..., of ru n - 111 ~ with

Gagne q
0 0: 2
Total&amp; 2a 3 5 3

Wcllge. har, hly cri licized

001

100003
100000

New York
Jeterss
Matsu1K
AFld1gl 3t
JaGbr lb
TClark tb
Shtl1eld rt
Posada c
S~erradh

Cill,o2b
Crost.)rcf

ab rhbl
4 b 0 0
3100

4 1 1 0

4 2 3 2
0 0 G0
3 0 2 1
3 1 2 1
20'1
411:0
4 0 C0

31 5 9 5

Tol ats

o o a·

hi .., forme r man ager anti

leam in thi' week's Sport'
lllu,l raled.
'- II wa' li ke a ' inking
ship.-- Bradley said of the
Indians. "and I was glad
to ·get my lik ran and ge
my second chance over
here. The rig h1 people
aren' l in charge 1here . and
I'm not the onl y person
on that team who feels
thi' way. There are a lot
of unhappy people over
the re, ju st working for a
p;tyc heck."
Bradley ,aid he enjoyed
pbying "for Cle\eland' s
fan ,. bul Jl(ll liJr Wedge
lhe Indians· second-year
mana!!er.
" It ~'"' ' trictl y a prob
lem wilh Enc Wedge,
Bradley told Sl. "Some
people want I ll be bigger
lhan lhey are. You have
no crede nti ab. you have

no history or ;lllything.
how are you going to lell
som eone else what he.
need s lo be lloing' lean t
respecl someboll y that
has nuth in!!. to uu on."

Wedge , re luctantl y
Bradle y's
addressed
Montreat
San Di1J9o
ab r hbi
ab r h bi
ing the
assert
ions
follow
Carroll3b 50 4 2
Eirrghs 3b 4 0 1 0
AFox ss
412t
LOreha 2b 4 0 a 0
lndi ans 9-R loss on
OCbere ss 1 0 0 0
3221
BGi:esrt
Thursdav in Chicago _
Navm1b
3111
V1dro.2b
5 .o 1 0
WlkrSfl1b 4 0 2 0
Rtlllson I! 0 1 ~· 0
" If he chooses to~handle
S 1 1 o. Klestto
4 0 1 0
JRivra If
Pscuctrt
310 o
Payton e1 4 0 2 1
things thi s way: I hat's up
EChvel ct 4 0 1 I
RaHrdz a 4 t 0 1
va,gasp 2 01 0
Greene ss 3 0 1 1
to him." Wedge said . "He
Eatonp
' 0 o·o
Clwayj:tl 1 0 0 0
1 0 0 o
lMgph
1000
kmm s the real story. like
Schnd1c 41 1 0
RVazqz1b 1 0 0 0
I know the real story. I
l'otals
J9 413 4 Tolab
32 5 B 5
'
will
lean~ il al that. My
Montreal
100
003 000 4
San Diego
000
110 03K 5
foc
us
ts with thi s orgam LOB-MontreaiiO. San D1ega 7. 2B-Car•oll
thi ' maJo r
(1), Klesko (6), Payton (3j. 38-Green e (2). l atio n anll
HR-AFox (t). BGiles (31. Nsv1n f4). CSleague
club."
Carroll(1).
1• " "•" •• so
Wed'!e alldcd thai
.Montreal
5 4 2 2 3 3
Vargas
Bradley
hall no right 10
SK1m
2 1 0 0
g :· speak on the behalf of any
0
1 I
ABehran
1·3 0 1
CCordero
6 ~ of hi s former teammates
Aya\a l ,0-4 '
2·3 2 1 I
Padres 5, Expos 4

~

hbi
2 0
1 0
0 0
2 t
1 0
1 0
1 2

ASndrs rf 4 0 1 0
4000
2 0 0 0
1 C0 0
0 0 0 0
0000
0 0 0 0

,

.

®

TAe d{;;a!Qq enf;xne ~ ~ l~w Insertion
· .-nJ//// _@
l Date is
· /ft ~ ~ _@) Fl. &lt;f'l~ May 27, 2004

f

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

If your child is a
I I
\'
/
"Star Athlete" ~.. on\t. ~
in your eyes, ..;. S\ o.oO,iinclude them in --A-~_.,.
. . . vv, , ,...'
this section!!
*Football
*Basketball
*Baseball
*Softball
*Track
*Swimming

*Golf
* Gymnastics
Child's Name
*Tumbling
Child of: Parent's Name
Team Name
*Soccer
Message
*Karate
&amp; More!!
This special section will run on

Thursday, May 27th in The Daily Sentinel.
Hurry, Deadline
for eQtries
is May 20, 2004!
'

Redmen fall just
short against Ohio
STAFF REPORT

1

O..kla.nd

t

1

Holf""l1ilnS5

1

OC-~0

Mulder l.2·2
6 7 4 4 2 6
1 0 0 0
CHammand
I 0
Rhodes
I
2
1
2 2
New York
C0n1reras W, 1·2
6 4
1 t
4
,
1
Ouamnl
I
Gordon 5.1
2 0 0 0 t
1
WP-Conheras
Ump1res-Home. la1 Q,az. F1rst Brll Welke
Secood. John H1rschbeck Th1rd. WaHy Bell
T-2:58 A---4-4.325 t57.47al.

3

2
1

Motao

553331

3 000

5 '0

L:netn~
~unaW.1·0

Dntor1p

ab rhbi
ct

Eaton

Cp~ek yoh

ab r
MAndn2tl 41
lnkfrd II
3 1
Tguct111t
0 0
Pujols 1b 4 1
Edmndcf 4 0
Rolen3b 3 0
Rntene ss 4 0
Mthenyc
Mrqwsp
Porto.rph
lincoln p
Kl•nep
Tvarezp

L os Angeles
ab r hbi
DRbrts~
3 1 1 2

Oakland
001
ooa odo - 1
NewYork
301
000 01x 5
E-Grosby (1). DP-Oaklana 1. Nev. vork 1
LOB--Oa~land 5. New York a HR-(; rostly
(3). JaG1amb (4). Posada (81 CS-Srertrel::l
(21 SF-S1erra
·
IP H RERBB SO

St. Louis
ab rhbi
3 2 1 0
2 10 0
4100
5 0 3 3
5012

100

Kielty It
3 0 10
EChav2 3b 4 0 0 0
Dyer!
4 0·00
Hltberg1b 4 010
Durazo dh 4 0 0 0
Crosby ss 3 1 1 1
OMillor c 3 0 1 0
Modlno 2b 2 0 t 0
Karros pt1 1 0 0 0
Scutaro 2b 0 C 0 0
Totala
31 1 5 1

Phlllies 6, Cardinals 3
Glnville c1
Planco 2b
BAbreurt
Thome 1b
Bu11eiiH

t

Yankees 5, Athletics 1

Rl8dl1ng
0000"0
1-3 I 3 3 . 2 1
TJones
2-3 2 0 0 1 0
AWagner
Poppel l .1·1
1 1·3 2
1 1 1 1
Milwaukee
Ktnney
21·3
7 6 6 2 1
AHernandez
1 2·3
3 3 2
1 2·
1 1 0 0 0 0
Obermu91k!r
3 0 0 0
1 3
K1Bschfiick.
Kol:l
1 . 1 0 0
1 1
Burba W.2·0
1 0 0 0 0
I
HBP--by PWJison (SpiVey). by K1nney (F1eel).
WP- Ret1h. AHemanOez 2. pa..........QBennett.
Ump•tes--tlome, Paul Emmel: F11st. Joe WeSt.
Second. Rob Drake: Third, Tarry Craft.
T-3:32 A-9, 103 (41,900).

Ph lie

3

Oakland

cmcinnati
303 300 000 • 0 9
Mllwsube
000 103 230
I - 10
One out when w1nnrng run ~or!KJ
E-spiwy (2). L08-CII"ICiflnal19. M1lwaukee
9 29-DJ,menez (4). Lark1n (5). Grrffey Jr.
(6). Ca!ey {11). LaRue 2 (4). PW1Ison (t).
BHalll\) . Jenk1ns (5). Ov~rbay (8). Dumngton (1 ). HA-Gr1e~e (2). CS-Freel (21.
BCIEirtl (2). S-PoctsQdnlk , AHernandez
IP H AERBBSO
Cinclnl"lltl

PW'"""
Ro~

5

2 1·3

6 7 2 2 2 4
' 1 ·~ 0 0 0 · 2
1
1·3 0 0 0 o 0
1 1·3 2 0 0 0 t
Urrtprres~Home . T1m Ti[TirTIOns. Fnst. Bwce
Froemmmg Second. M1ke W1nrers, Tt11rd
Hunl&amp;r Wendelstedt.
T-239 4-29.31 9 (56.000)

Milwaukee
ab 'hbi
Pdsdn~cf 52&lt;10
BHaNss
60 3 4
Sp1vey 2b 2 1 0 0
Kschnkp 2 0 1 0
Cunsalt pr 0 0 0 0
Jenkms !I 3 2 2 1
Ovrbay 1tl 5 1 3 3
HelmsJb 5 00 0
4 1 1 0
GBnnttc
G r ~BVerl
3 2 1 2
Dmgtn2b 4 110
Tolllls
391016 10

1

6

NawVorlt

Brewers 10, Reds 9, (10)

LaRuec
5134
Freel3b
4011
Rma11orf SOtO
PWilsnp 2010
WPena ph 1 0 0 0
Vlenun c
1 0 .0 0
Totals 42 912 7

100002

TraChsel l ,2·3
Jofranco
Stanton
l os Angeles
OPerez W.2-1
Dredort
Mota
GagneS.6

(35.095)

Clncirtnltl
ab rhbi
DJmnz2bS010
Lark111ss e220
GrlJrctS111
c asey lb 5 2 2 0

J 3 t
t
0002

000 2
los A ngeles
002
01 0 00~ 3
OP-Nev-; York 1 los Angeles 2 LOB- New
Yorh 9. Los Angeles 4 HR-Mcusu' 121
DAoberts ill Bettre (71 SB-Sper'lcer ·2•
Dunca n {31. DRoberts (141 SF-JPhlll·os
IP H RERBB SO

l6 612 6

-

ChiSox rally in ninth past Tribe

New York

4000
4 0 1 0

a

H""""-

8

o o

6 t-3
3 2
'
Harpel
1·3
1
I . 41 I 0
1 1·3 . 3
HendrO:soo
I
I 0
'
Boo1on
Schr&amp;ngw.3-1 7 1·3 s o o o 8
Embree
2·3 0 0 0 0
1
DinarOO
100001
Umpi1es--Home. Dana DeMuth, Frrst , J1m
Joyc.l: Second. Kerw1n DaniiiY. Thud . Marv1n
T-2:36 A-35.120

4

41

ebrh bi
Matsu1ss 51 2 1
Cmeronc15000
Plana c
3 12 0
Sprn:er"
3
1
Zetle3b
3 0 10
JPh~ps 1b 3 0 0 t
KGarcart 4 0 1 0
G1errez2b 2 0 0 0
IJIAI~sn ph 1 0 1 0
DGrc•a2b '0 0 0
Trchsep 2010
Valenfph 1 0 0 0
Totals
33 2 9 2

Tampa Bay
000 000 000 0
Boston
000 200 3 h 6
LOB-Tampa Bay 5. Boston 10 28-lugo
(4). Mueller (4 ). D0rt1Z (8). MRam1rer (7).
Bellhorn (2) . HR~Var!lek !31
IP H AERBBSO
Ta~Y1»8

REA BB SO

New Yofk

ab r h bi
Oamonct 51 1 o
Mue•er 31:1 5 1 2 1
DOmzdh 4 1 , 0

. PAbbort L.2·2

H

Dodgers 3, Mets 2

Boston

Totals

IP

""''"'

Red Sox 6, Devil Rays 0

4123.
4010

1 0·

T-2 55 A-2£.348 ISO 345J

Umpnes--Home. Da~e Scon. F1rst Roo Kulpa.
Second. Ctl11s Gucoone Th11d. B111 M111er
T-2:34 A-20445 {~ .2~

~AmrzW

6
3

'

bon•)

Varrtellc
M1llar1b
McCty tb
Bllhom 2b
Kapterrt
Crespo ss

003
000 -

Khne
'-3 1 0 0 0 t
Tavarez
1-3 0 0 0 0
I
BMyors o~ched1o 3 batters ~~ me 5•h
HBP-by Marou -s rPo,ancol. cy B~}'e's
(Rolen)
·
Ump,res .......Home . Lar!)l VanQ\Ii!r First San'
Holbrook.. Secu;d Paul Nal.l!'!rt Thud A21ndy

t00001
[Oie&lt;ud): by MC¥iH tGb-

Tampa Bay
abrhbi
Crwtrd~
4000
Baldelh ct 4 0 1 0
Hul13b
4010
Fld&lt;dtl
30 0 0
RoHsph
1000
TMrtnz 1b 3 0 0 0
EduPrz ph 1 0 0 0
lugoss
3020
JoCruzrf 300 0
THallc
3010
RSncnl2b 3
Totlls
32
5

020
010

Cs-Aollrns •. 1r. RSanders

Philadelphi-a
SMyers
Maoson w .1-1
BWagner S.6
StLouis
Map.JUIS
Uncolr&gt; L 2-2

AERBBSO

5

ooo
o o

1 ;:::::::;:-;;-;;;:::::::::-;;----I

SB-Gia111.111e 11

16 '

lP

100
200

34 3 9 3

111 S-Ro;l•ns

s.anle
000 100 000 1
Baltimore
tOO 000 02x 3
OP-Seattle 1 LOB-Seatlle 9 Ball -more 9
28-BRooerts 81. Tll)iitla (5 SB-BRobef!s

,...,.

Totals

CaBell 15) MAnderson 131 EdmorJds

29 3 7 2

Totals

lCQO

E-MarQu•s !11 OP-Pr:rtaaelph•a 1 LOBPtlrlaOOIDh•a e St Lou•s 5 29--BUirelt ·.:

Han~ph

Totals

12 6 7 6

F'tlllldelphla
St. louis

lb th bi

ab 'hbl

7-3

\',2

5-5
5-5

i-3
4
4

,,

Thursday's Gamer.
Hoo..SioYI 1Penrne 0-t) at P1ttsburgh !K Wells 2·21 12 35 p m
Ptuladeptna IM,I!WOOd 2·21 a! St lcuos {Carpenter 1·1 \. 1 10 p m
Florda 1Pef'lny 2-1 t at San Franc1sco !J W1"111ms 3·1 ). 4 05 p m
Montreai 1 0h~a 0-·Sl at San D1e90 (DWells G-2) to·DS p m
N "Y Mets (Sea Q-~) at los Angeles tWea....er 1·21. 10 10 p.m.

Pittaburgh

a o

..,

I

409

Ibanez~

4-6
2·7

571

7

4·7

li

5s0

w

SpieDO

4-4

Toblls

Baltimore

5-7
5-6

W2

9

Sesnle

lfuzukt rt

5-5

l3

Orioles 3, Mariners 1

8-4

6-4
3-7
37

9

13
13
9

6-3
6-3

4

6.

"'

.....

Home

W1
ll

3

.P=Ir=a=te~s~4::_•.::A:::s:::tro~s;i2;;;;-;;;;;~-- ~ ,R~oy!;a:::l::_sc::5:c_,,R,an"'g"e";rs~3;;;-;:;;;;--- l

· Chicago

CieWIInd

524
474
381

P10

6-4

P•tTSbiJrl11 4 Houston 2
-Mfl'.aukee tO Clnon'latr 9 1101
Pnlla:Jelpnla 6. St. LOUIS 3
CI11Cago Cubs 4. 1'\prona 3
&amp;In D1eg0 5. Montreal 4
San Franc,sco 10, A!lama 7
Los Mgetes 3. NY Mats 2

;:;::=;:~;-;:::;::::::-:;-----

White Sox 9, Indians 8
B1111rd2b 3223
VllqueiM5212
Gerut rf
5010
Blake3b
501 1
LaWIOn lt 5120
Merton11 b 4 t 2 0
Brssrd 1b 0 0 0 0
"-Escbr cf 3 t 2 1
· L.aker c
3 10 0
oCnspcl"l
4000

•O

GB

Florida 9. ColOr &lt;tOO 4

•
Tampa Bay (Zambr:ai'IO 3·1 ) at Boston (K1m Q-0). 1 05 p m 1St game
Anaheim (WaS11Dum 3-1\ at Detroo (Sonderman 2-1 l. 1 OS p m
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Oakland iZno 2-2) at N "Y. Yankees (K.Brown 3·0) . 7OS~
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'College Baseball
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the forn below and dtop off or mail
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sports@ mydailytribune .com
ATHENS
The
University of Rio Grande
Redmen baseball team battled
tooth and nail with the Ohio
Bobcats on Wednesday
evening. falling just short Ill 0 at Bob Wren Stadium.
Rio Grande (33-18) scored
four runs in t)le first inning off
Ohio starter Rob Harmon. A
key error by Bobcat second
baseman Jared Willis opened
up the floodgates fot the
Redmen, giving them a 4-0
lead.
Ohio (15-23) ripped Rio
starter Brent Watterson for
four hits on five hits to tie the
game in the bottom of the tirst
frame.
·
The Bobcats would take the
lead for good in the third
· inning on a two run double off
the bat of Phil Sabatini to

10

make the score 6-4,
Ohio added a single run in
the fifth to make .the count 74.
Rio fought back with two
· runs in the sixth cutting the
deficit to one run at 7-6.
Rio's defense plagued lefty
Tim Sutton in the bottom of
the si·xth as he gave four
unearned runs on two miscues
as Ohio grabbed an 11-6 lead.
The Redmen would chip
away with a solo home run
from Scott Peterman in the
seventh and would plate two
!l!Ore runs in the eighth and
one in the ninth to get within
a run.

homer off Reds starter .Paul
Wilson.
Brian Reith came on to pitch
for Cincinnati in the seventh
from PageB1
and gave up two runs with two
outs. Geoff Jenkins hit an RBI
made him "real nervous."
double scoring Podsednik, and
"You just take your chances, Jenkins scored on Overbay's
try to win the ballgame right
single. In the eighth, Grieve
there," Yost said.
and Gary Bennett walked to
The squeeze took the Reds open the inning. One out later,
by surpnse.
Podsednik singled for his
"It was a good move by fourth hit of the game to load
Ned," Cincinnati manager the bases off Todd Jones,
Dave Miley said. "We thought
Ryan' Wagner replaced
if they were going to squeeze, Jones, and Hall hit his basesit wouldn't be on the· fiTS! clearing double to tie the score
pitch,''
at9.
Dave Burba (2-0) pitched
LaRue had three hits and
the I Oth for the victory as four RBis and Adam Dunn
Milwaukee's relievers limited walked four times and scored
·Cincinnati to only-two hits the three runs for Cincinnati.
final six innings,
.
Barry Larkin and Ken
The Reds wasted a 9-0 lead Griffey Jr. hit consecutive
on Sept. 28, 1930, falling to doubles for a 1-0 lead in the
the Chicago Cubs 13- )[ at flfSt LaRue singled In Griffey
Wrigley Field,
and Ryan Freel had an RBI hit
Milwaukee's best comeback scoring Dunn.
before Wednesday was from
In the fourth, LaRue had an
an 8-0 deficit against RBI double, and Dunn and
Cleveland on May 20, 1986, LaRue scored on a pair of wild
when the team was in the pitches by reliever Adrian
American League. The Seattle Hernandez to make it 6-0. ·
Pilots also rallied from an
The Reds made it 9-0 in the
eight-run deficit in 1969 fourth. Larkin, who singled,
against . the Washington scored when Dunn reached on
Senators.
an error. by second baseman
"We had chances to win Junior Spivey. LaRue's double
both of these games, but basi- then scored both Casey and
cally pla~ed just good enough Dunn.
to lose,' Cmcinnati's Jason
Milwaukee catcher Chad
LaRue said,
Moeller was not in the starting
The Reds jumped out to a 90 lead with three runs in the
ftrst, third and fourth innings,
Milwaukee began their
comeback in the fourth when
Lyle Overbay hit a run-scoring
single to left-center. In the
BLOCK SAW
sixth, the Brewers pulled to 9Produce repetitive cuts in
. 4 behind Overbay's RBI doucinder block, brick or even
concrete. Fast and
ble and Ben Grieve's two-run
accurate cutting is simple.

Reds

from Page B1
make it-a two-run game.
The Marauders attempted
to rally in the bottom half of
the seventh as Michael
Davis was walked to lead
off the inning, then Holley
singled putting runners on
first :~nd second.
Meigs' next two batters,
though, hit into fielder's
choices as Alexander got the
runner out at third both
times,
With two outs, Jeremy
Blackston was walked on a
full count to load the bases
and put the go ahead at first,
but Hale struck out the next
batter to end the threat and
the game.
Meigs lit up the scoreboard first in the top of the
first as Blackston was
walked and scored on a
triple to rightfield by Eric
Cullums. Cullums then
· scored on a base hit by Dill
to give Meigs a 2-0 lead.
Thomas scored on an error
in the fourth and Cory Bran
got on by way of an error .
and scored on another miscue in the fifth to tie the _
game for the Spartans. .
Meigs plays host to M11ler
. in a make-up game today.
Alexander 4, Melgl 2

.- - - ---·------.......-.--_,...,,......,,. _ _ _....., , _ , _ _,,.-r,,-,.,._, , ....... ~ - .. - - ......,.r,-,...

·n

.Errors

Alexander 000 111
1 - 463
Meigs
2 0 0 000
0-2 5 6
Hale and Bran. Fackler and Holley. WP -

.,

Hale. LP - Fackler.

.

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Sophomore third baseman
Kyle Moriarity struck out
with the tying run at third
ending the game.
Watterson (3-4) suffered the
loss, lasting 2113 innings, giving seven hits and six earned
r.uns. Zeke Isaacs (1-1)
pitched 41/3 innings of fourhit, two run baseball to collect
his 'first win at the collegiate
leveL Derek Witt pitched the
final two innings to pick up
his second save.
Peterman led the Redmen
with a 4-for-5 performance
and three runs scored.
Moriarity had two hits,
including a double, two runs
scored and an RBI.
·
Rio had II hits In the game.
Rio Grande will return
home to begin a four-game
series with American Mideast
Conference South Division
leader
Mount
Vernon
Nazarene on Friday. Game
one is set to begin at I p.m,
lineup, one night after becomIng the frrst Brewers player to
hit for the cycle since Paul
Molitor did it m 199L Moeller
generally does not start when
Matt Kinney pitches and had
been suffering from flu symptoms.
Kinney lasted just 2 1-3
innings. giving up six runs and
his ERA climbed to. 8.61 five
days after giving up only one
run·in 6 1-311\nings against St.
Louis,
Wilson l!ave up four runsand eight hils in four innings.
Notes: It was the biggest
comeback in the majors since
Cleveland- fell behind by 12
runs .before ·defeating Seattle
15-14 on Aug. 5, 2001. ...
Reds RF Austin Kearns was
placed on the 15-day DL.
retroactive to Tuesday, with a
broken bone in his left forearm. The Reds purchased the
contract of I B-OF Jacob Cruz
from Triple-A Louisville to
take his place on the roster....
Reds SS Barry Larkin turned
40 Wednesday, becoming the
IOth active major leaguer to be
at least 40. The oldest is
Atlanta's Julio Franco, 45 .... It
was the frrst game ofthe year
at Miller Park flayed with the
retractable roo open, ,.. Reds
GM Dan O'Bnen will be
inducted into the Westerville
South (Ohio) High School
Alumni Hall of Fame on
Friday night.

Sand large lloor areas.
There's no faster
or easier way to get
the job done. Simple
to operate.

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Eagles

Edges
from Page B1
both runners to scored and Siders to advance
to third. Ki ser then struck out the last batter to
end the inning, the score 3-0.
Southern came back with two runs in the
fifth inning when junior tirst baseman Nicki
Tucker singled. Jenny Warner came in to
pinch run for Tucker and came to third on a
Jordan Neigler single to right tield . Neigler
stole second. then Holly Duffy had a 4-3
ground out to knock hume Warner with
Southern's first run. the score 3-1.
Southern fought back in the sixth inning
when Brooke Ki ser led otf with a single. stole
second and came to third on a 6-3 ground out.
Kiser then scored on an error that allowed
Joanne Pickens .to reach safely_ Nicki Tucker
then slammed a i.louble thai put runners the
tying run at third and go-aheai.l run at second,
but the next baiter was struck ou1 by Kr1sta
While to end lhe rally. the score 3_-2_
Eastern gained some insurance in the visitor's half of the seventh . Shana Snyder
reached on an·error. Casey Smith reached on

an error that allowed Snyder to reac h third
and Smith to advance to second.
Jenny Annes grounded tci third but wa&gt;put
out at first to knock home a run . then Kn sta
White tripled home Smith for a 5-2 tall y. · _
Southern went down 1-2- 3 at the hands of
the southpaw White. who won yet another
hard-fought game for the Eagle;_ White
fanned seven Tornadoes and walkell none.
while the Eagle defense made just one error
in a near perfect performance.
Southern's Kiser had a great game with one
earned run, four strikeouts. four walks. and
scattering five hits. Three of those hit&gt; were
the tirst inning.
.
Eastern hitters were Jenn v Armes. Sara
Barringer, and Kayla Siders
with singles
and Krista White a single and tnple .
Southern hitters were led by Nicki Tucker
with a double and single. Brooke Ki &gt;er two
singles, Deana Pullins a single, and Jordan
Neigler a single.
Southern plays at Belpre Thursday and
Eastern goes to Warren.

ali

Eastern 5, Southern 2
Eastern

3 00

a 00

Don'llry navigating
between ladders. The
rolling tower is a safe,
easy way to work at a
higher level.

Per Day

Marauders

a

E-mail us your local s.Ports news:

sports@mydailytnbune.com

There will be a Special Edition
on Friday, May 14th
saluting all
Meigs County Class of
2004 graduating Seniors
.:f1&gt;-":~~~~·~-

lf your business is interested
in participating in this
Special Edition,
Call Brenda or Daye
•
at 992-2155

The Daily Sentinel

Thomas

ATTENTION

rental
center
m 2 Locations. -

55 1

Whan to make it a 6-0 game . ·
Butcher, who advanced to third on a wild
pitch, scored on sac fly by Cass i Whan.
then Jaynee Davis, who was walked earlier.
from Page B1
scored on an error to put the Marauders up
eight.
. .
· by Cole pu1 runners on second and third. byThe
Spartans scored all three of thw runs
Bailey connected on a two-run double and· in the top of the third, but that wa., as close.
moved on to third on a sacrifice grounder by as they got.
_ .
Pierce.
Meigs plays host to, M1ller m a make'UP
Melia Whan th en altempted to squeeze in game today.
Bailey, but the third baseman held on to the
ball 10 keep 1he run fro[n sconng. putt1ng
Meigs 11, Alexander 3
Alexander
003
0 00
0
- 352
runners on first and third .
Meigs
261
0 1 0
)(
111 3 1
The defensive effort didn't matter as Miner and Hudnall. Cola, Haning {6) and CWhan. WP- - Cole.
LP
Butcher doubled in both Bailey and Melia -Miner

R1238

Per Day

-

0 00
011 •
0
- 266
Krista While and Casey Smith . Brooke Kiser and Kaue Sayre. WP
- Kr ista White . LP - BrooKe Kiser

R2060

sao

2

Southern &lt;&gt;

DRUM SANDER

ssa
GENERATOR

nation of curve ball s and fastballs. Smith then
got the last SHS batter to pop up and end the
game.
.
Southern
hitters
were
We
s
Burrow&gt;
wJih
a
· from Page ~1
home run and single. Joe y Phillip&gt; had a &gt;in gle, Patrick Johnson a single. and Cole Brown
5-2 when Chri s Myers reached on an error a single.
and rode home aboard a booming home run
Eastern hitters were Ken Amsbary, a home
by Ken Amsbary.
run and double, Terry Dursl a pair of single s.
Southern tied the score in the sixth inning Smith a double. Corey Shaffer a &gt;ingle.
when Jeremy Yeauger walked, Josh Pape Dustin Riggs a single, and Jon Owen a single .
walked, Patrick John son singled home a run.
In po;ting the big win . Ea; lern ·,. Ken
and Pape came home on an errant Eastern Amsbary fanned seven Southern batter; 111 &gt;tX
pick-off attempt before Chris Tucker knocked innings of work and walked four. wh1le Smnh
home two runs when he reached on an error. fanned 1wo and walked one . Smith garnered
the score 5-5 . That set the stage for Eastern's the save.
heroics in the seventh.
Southern's Cole Brown suffered the los;
After Eastern had gone ahead in the seventh with two strikeouts. seven walks. and three hil
inning, Eastern 's Ryan _Smith came on in
relief of starter Jonathan Owen. Sm1th walked batters.
I he tirst batter Burrow.,. then an error allowed
Eastern 9, Southern 5
1 02
002
4 - 983
Burrows to advance to third. Burrows then Eastern
Southern
0 1 0 . . , .o 1 (3 .
1 . - r6 5 •4
stored on a line-hugging singled down the Ken Amsba ry. Rya n Smtth and Terry Durst. Cole
Brown . R.J
third base line by Joey Phil lips.
Harmon (7) and Jeremy Yeauge r. WP Ke n A msbary LP Smith then got warmed up and struck out_ Cole Brown. S - Ryan Smith. HR - E Ken Amsbary. S: Wes
the next two Southern batters with a combi- Burrows

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

�.

'

Page B4 • 'The Daily Sentinel

1 3 0 T H

RUNN- ING

·
OF

THE

KENTUCKY

~lora.

Thll

for IIIIIINt time Iince the 20-lloiM n.M -

BY BETH

full 20

HARRIS
Associated Press

lnatllutad In 1984.

111113
...., ...._......
_ _ .,.. _ - • -....+ -

2001

.
~.
-1~ ~-~;~,ltrl . '
Mc,..c:loca · •· ·-• 11101 ·Sirike • •

j:~~ ::-~~~-;;----

-· ~--· -~-..... 1' ~

'

1988. '!'4!'•.1inq ~- .

1.!1?8 Real Quiet

1997 Silver Chann
1996 . Grindstone
1995 Thunder Gulch
1994 Go For Gin

1987 A~-1986 Ferdinand
1985 Spend A Buck
1994 Swale

Post positions
ODDS

JOCKEY

HORSE

1. Limehouse
2. Song ol the
Sword
3. Lion Heert
4. Action This Day
5. Wimbledon.

J. Santos
N. Arroyo Jr.
M. Smith
D. Flores

P. Day

7. Minister Eric
8. Master David
9. St Averil

47bams

10-1
30-1
15·1
15·1
30·1
12·1
30·1

J. Bailey
R Migliore

6. Friends Lake

Stables:
1,404 stalls

30·1
30·1

A. Solis
T.Baze
K. Desormeaux 15·1

tO. Imperialism

11 . The Cliffs Edge S. Sellers

12. Borrego
13. Blrdstone

E. Prado

~4.ReadThe

R.Aibarado

4·1

V. Espinoza

Footnotes
15. Smarty Jones
.16. Castledale
17. Pollard's VIsion
18. Tapti
19. Pro Prado

20. Quintana
Gold Rush

20-1
50·1
12·1

Main track:
t·mile oval

Kenlucky Derby
Museum ·

How the favorites
S. Elliot

J. Valdivia Jr.
J. Velazquez
R. Dominguez

J. McKee
C. Nakatani

9·2
15·1
20·1
6·1
30·1

tst
2nd

3rd

HORSE

YEAR

nME

49 Secretariat

1973
2001

1:59 2-5
1:59.97

-28

Monarch as

I

NMhem
Dancer

Out of the money

20·1

SOURCE: Churchill Downs

Fastest winners

have fared

10
41

S~endA

Buck
Decidedly

1964

2:00

1985
1962

2:00 1·5
2:00 2·5
AP

'·

Kentucky Derby

Zito's back, and
with a Derby favorite
BY

RICHARD ROSENBLAIT
Associated Press

LOUISVILLE, Ky. - Nick
lito's world revolves around
showing up for the Kentucky
Derby.
The trainer has won it twice
- but not lately. He missed
the last two, and there was a
brief time a few weeks ago
when it looked like he might
be out of luck again.
Yes, it's been quite an
ordeal for the New York trainer who fondly calls LoUisville
his second home, but Zito is
back in the Derby business.
j'le will saddle 4-1 favorite
The Cliff's Edse and 50-l
long shot Btrdstone in
Saturday's race. and either is
quite capable of\\ inning.
"I have two horses with
~t credentials," Zito said.
'If they get in the gate
Saturday, I'm just going say,
'Hallelujah!' and go from
there."
A fuU field of 20 horses was
entered for the l l/4-mile
Derby on Wednesday, with
The Cliff's Edge the slight
choice over undefeated
Smarty Jones, at 9-2. The
Cliff's Edge will leave from
the No. II ·post, Birdstone
from the No. 13 gate.
It wasn't until The Cliff's
Edge won the Blue Grass at
Keeneland on April lO that
Zito knew he was headed
·back to the Derby. Before the
race, Zito's two other Derby
hopefuls - Eurosil ver and
Birds tone- came down with
ailments and were pulled out
of the Blue Grass.
But a healthy The Cliff's
Edge saved the day with a
rousing ftnish to beat Lion
Heart by a half-lefigth, and
Birdstone has fully recovered
from an elevated white blood
cdl count that jeopardized his
Derby chances.
Eurosilver wasn't so lucky.
The colt who was high on the
list of most Derby polls developed a gland infection and
probably won't race again
until the fall.
Zito, 56, stayed optimistic
despite the setbacks, but once
The Cliff's Edge rebounded
from two losses by taking the
Blue GrdSS, the trainer couldn'r hide his joy.
He blew kisses to the

crowd. He bowed. He
punched his right fist.
Kentucky Derby here we ·
come.
"Nick was so excited," said
Shane Sellers,' who rides The
Cliff's Edge.
·
Zito has saddled 12 Derby
staners, winning with Strike
the Gold in 1991 and Go for
Gin in 1994. Add The Cliff's
Edge and Birdstone to the list,
and only three trainers have
had more Derbv starters.
"Both horses' have come up
great," Zito said, "and it's time
to be here."
In 2003, Zito won the
Kentucky Oaks the day before
the Derby with Bird Town, a
half-sister to Birdstone. Zito
spent Derby day in Lexington
and watched the race on TV
Two years ago, he turned
handicapper and correctly
picked War Emblet;n to win.
Now he can choose
between his own horses.
The Cliff's Edge, named for
Equibase chartcaller Cliff
Guilliams, is a big, stout son
of Gulch who was 2-for-2 at
Churchill Downs last year a 7 3/4-length win in the
Iroquois and a three-quarterlength victory in the Kentucky
Jockey Club.
·
With four wins, two seconds and third in eight starts,
the colt has earned $835,258
for owner Robert LaPenta,
who bought The Cliff's Edge
for $200,000 at the Keene land
yearling sale.
Bobby Frankel, who will
send out Master David in
search of his ftrst Derby win,
said The Cliff's Edge deserves
to be the favorite.
"If I was a betting man,
that's who I'd bet on," Frankel
said. "He ran so well here as a
2-year-old. That's a big ed~e."
Zito believes The Chff's
Edge is a worthy favorite, but
Birdstone's 50-l odds amazed
the trainer.
"I asked Mike if he had a
grandkids because it looks
like he's staning a collese
fund," Zito said of Churchill
Downs oddsmaker Mike
Battaglia. "50-l is insane! I
love Mike, but please!"
Birdstone is a small, still
maturing colt - his third
birthday is May 16 - whose
sire, Grindstone, won the
1996 Derby. Owned by

Saratoga socialite Marylou
Whitney, Birdstone became. a
top Derby contender after
winning the Champagne at
Belmont Park last year.
But there have been bumps
on the road recently. After
winning an allowance race in
his
3-year-old
debut,
Birdstone was ftfth in the
Lane's End at Turfway Park
on March 20. The high white
blood cell count was only a
temporary setback; Birdstone
was out for a morning gallop
the day of the Blue Grass.
Since then, the colt hasn 't
missed a beat, and Zito isn 't
womed about history that
says the last horse to win the
Derby without a race in April
was Needles in 1956.
"I know I have two Grade l
winners, one whose father
won the Derby and his sister
won the Oaks, and one Grade
1 winner who just won the
Blue Grass and two stakes
here," Zito said. "I couldn't
ask for anything else."
Neither could Sellers,
enjoying a comeback from a
severe knee injury that sidelined him for nearly two years
until2002 .
''If he improves from the
Blue Grass to this race like he
did from the Florida Derby to
the Blue Grass then I'm sitting
on the right horse," Sellers
said, referring to The Cliff's
Edge.
lito isn't the only trainer
with two horses in the fteld.
Richard Mandella and Todd
Pletcher both have two
chances for their ftrst Derby
victory.
Mandella has Breeders'
Cup Juvenile winner Action
Thts Day and runner-up
Minister Eric; Pletcher
entered the one-eyed Pollard's
Vision and Limehouse.
Action This Day, 0-for-3
this year and recovering from
a sore back, will be trying to
become the frrst BC Juvenile
winner to take the Derby; the
ftrst 19 failed.
Pollard's Vision, named for
Seabiscuit's jockey Red
Pollard, who was also blind in
his right eye, won the Illinois .
Derby in his last stan. The colt
will start from the No. 17 gate,
an outside post picked
because he can't see horses
running outside of him.

----.....------&lt;1%:

Thursday, April 29, 2004

2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

130TH

LOUISVILLE, Ky. - The -Cliff's Edge
was made the slight 4-1 favorite for the
Kentucky Derby and drew the No. II post
.
Wednesday.
A field of 20 3-year-olds was entered for
the I 114-.mile race, with undefeated Arkansas
Derby winner Smarty Jones the second
choice at 9-2. Tapit was the third choice at 81:
· In 2002. Harl-an 's Holiday was 9-2, the
highest morning line favorite since the line
was first published in 1949.
Churchill Down s oddsmaker Mike
Battaglia had a tough time picking between
The Cliff's Edge. trained by Nick Zito, and
Smarty Jones. who is 6-0 in his career.
"You can't knock Smarty Jones· record.
The Cliff's Edge got a littl e bit better (speed)
number in the Blue Grass:· Battaglia said.
"Nick Zito has won the Derby twice and The
Cliff's Edge has w(,ln two races at Churchill
Down s. Very, very close. but that's what
swung me."
Zito couldn't believe the 50-I odds highest in the race - assigned to his other
entry. Birdstone, the son of 1996 Derby winner Grindstone.
"50-I is insane. I love Mike, but please," he
said.
Zito added, "This probably will be the best
betting Derby ever. I don 't see any clear-cut
favorite."
Smarty Jones ' John Servis and Stewart
Ell ion will try to become the first first -time
Derby trainer and jockey combination to win
since 1979 when Spectacular Bid won with
Ronnie Franklin riding for trainer Bud Delp.
Servis. a native of Charles Town, W.Va ., and
the son of a former jockey and West Virginia
racing official, said he wasn't surprised that
Smarty Jones wasn't made the favorite.
"We took the route of least resistance . .We
only ran in one graded stakes," Servis said ..
The colt drew the No. 15 post.
"We like the idea of being the first horse in
the auxiliary gate," Servis said. "It leaves a lit·
tie bit of a margin for error in case he ducks in.
It keeps him from getting squeezed off."
Hall of Fame trainer Richard Mandella goes
for his first Derby win with two horses Breeders' Cup Juvenile winner Action This
Day and Minister Eric.
Lion Heart was the fourth choice at 10-1.
Master David, trained by Bobby Frankel. and
Read the Footnotes were the co-ftfth choices
at 12- 1.

"I just played it safe &amp;nd picked someplace

in the mi(4lle,'' Frankel said. "The race will
.set up with Lion Heart going to the lead. What
Smarty Jones does will dictate the whole
race."

Four horses were at 15-1: Friends Lake,
Imperialism, Wimbledon and Santa Anita
Derby winner Castledale.
Three-time Derby winner Bob Baffert
selected post five for Wimbledon. Baffert's

KENTUCKY

DERBY

CLASSIFIED
•

Twenty ,..,..,. - will start tho Kentucky Oo&lt;by lor lne first llme
since 1984 with The Cliff's Edge as the Sltghf 4· 1 favorite
U.-.aled Mansas Di&gt;&lt;by winner Smal1y Jones was tho seoond
choice at 9-2. wrth Ta.pct the tllird a1 8·1 .

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS

•
UrMftouM Song of the Sword
Jose Santos · Norberto Anovo Jr

Lion HMrt
Mike Smi1h

. 30·1

3()..1

1()..1

Wlmblodon

Ftienda t..b
Richard Migliore
15-1

lllntlater Elic
d'at Day

To Place
{ltrtbune
31.\egister
Sentinel
Your Ad,
(740) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call
TOday
•••
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234
~~--------~------------O~r~F;ax~To(740)44~3.D0~8~------~0~r~F~a~x~T~o~~~9~9=2~-2~1~5~7--.._

·

Jerry Bailey

1!&gt;1

-·

"Malt*Divld
AleiC Solis
12·1

30-1

O{tftee lloarcf&gt;

-

St. Anril

~~~_,.,

T)'ler Bale

Kent OesormeauiC

TfM Cliff'• Edge
$tlane Sellers

VIctor Espnoza

,. 1

15-1

4·1

20-1

Blrdi!OM Reacfllle FOOb'lotft Smerty JcM:tH
Edgar Prado
Robby Albarado
Stewal1 Elliot
50-1

12- 1

Jose Valdivia Jr.
. 15·1

~AI.S
rL--------'
Flllplna-4-Love
Find ""'' Philippine Lady
for love

FloHard'a Vlafon
JOhn VelazQuez

Taplt
RamonA .
Dominguez
8·1

20-1

""'·-

Quinton• Gold

John McKue

Auoh

30-1

Corey Nakatani
20·1

SOURCE Kin..IC COrporation

AP

horse, War Emblem, started there in 2002 and
won; last year's winner Funny Cide also broke
from No.5.
"I wanted an inside post. I was hoping to get
the five," Baffert said. "He's the kind of horse
that's going to be following , he'll be back in
the pack somewhere."
The last time 20 horses started the Derby
was 19&amp;4. That year a rule wasmade to cap
the field at 20, and since then the maximum
has yet to be reached.
The fteld in post position order from the rail
out: Limehouse, Jose Santos, 30-1 ; Song of
the Sword, Norberta Arroyo, 30-1; Lion
Heart, Mike Smith, 10-l; Action This Day,
David Flores. 30-1; Wimbledon, Jerry Bailey,
15 - 1; Friends Lake, Richard Migliore, 15-l;
Minister Eric. Pat Day. 30-1 ; Master David,
Alex Solis, 12-1; St Averil. Tyler Baze, 30-1;
Imperialism, Kent Desormeaux, 15-l; The
Cliff's Edge , Shane Sellers, 4-1; Borrego,
Victor Espinoza. 20-1; Birdstone, · Edgar
Prado, 50-I; Read the Footnotes, Robby
Albarado, 12-1 ; Smarty Jones, Stewart Elliott,
9-2; Castledale, Jose Valdivia Jr., 15-1 ~
Pollard' s Vision, John Velazquez. 20-l; Tapit,
Ramon Dominguez, 8-l; Pro Prado, John
McKee, 30-1; and Quintons Gold Rush,
Corey Nakatani, 20- I.

Friday-Tuesday 9·5 , 858
Kemper HollOw Ao8l1 . Lots
of
hOusehold
items .,
antiques, Ho'me Interior.
clothing. m1sc.

Friday/Saturday April 30/
May 1, B:OOam·? Cley IWP
Townhouse/ Love rs Lane .
Gallipolis. Lots of boys sum·
mer clot hes. sandals, some
C-1 Beer Carry Out permit wlnter sizes 2-6. children's
tor sale, Chester Townsnip, books. movies. toys, clothes
Me1gs County, send letters &amp; misc . items. Rain or Shine
of Interest to : The Daily
Sale
Bam- 7
~ntinel , PO Box 729·20. Garage
Saturday, May 1st. 432
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Hedgewood Dr.
Lakin Hosp ttal is currently
tak ing btds tor the following Garag e sale. 6 family. May
posil[ons : (Bids wm be 1&amp;2 from 9·5. 2 miles north
accepted until 2:00 pm May on 160 !rom Holzer Hospital .
7,
Chaplin. Good cloth1ng, girls bicycle.
2004 ):
Telephone Maintenance for Longaberger basket. furni·
Bu.siness lure , Parlor Table, Bed 1n a
Panasanic
Systems. Copier Machine bag, new books, tomato
I
&amp; ·1·_sc_._ _ __
Maintenance Agreement fo r _P_•_n_ls_m_
Sharp 802060, Rental of
O~Cygen Concentrators. )(.
Ray
Services.
D-ental
Serv1ces.
Testing
of
Sprinkler System : Contract
period: July 1,2004th rough
June 30 , 2005. For bid 1nformation contact Barbara
Long at 675·0860, ext. 104

rL--•G-1\•'E•"'•W•~•Y-_.J.II\/Omen

and kids
Huge 5 family yard sale. 945
Rous h Lane , Cheshire, April
52~ big screen TV, damaged
29 -30.
9:00am-6 :00pm.
by lighting, (740)742-2 158
Men's AE clothing. Children
golf
cl ubs.
7 week old Golden Retriever clothing .
miiC puppies to good home. Nintendo and sega games.
2 Nat1. gas heating stoves.
Call (740)367-0624.
2·125 gallon oil tanks with
pumps and many household
Lo!;r AND
items
FouND

r

Found: Small black &amp; white
dog with blue collar . Call
(740)446·0001 .

r
r

-a nd
FITNESS
Getting fit and
staying fit is in!
.

.

A SPECIAL FEATURE
OF

'Qrbe

1JBailp 'Qrrtbune,
~otnt ~lea~ant lL\egt~ter and
The Daily Sentinel
cl9a((tpoh~

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

\

Thursday, Frlclay &amp; Saturday.
SA 7S Near Lock &amp; Dam.
Baby furn iture , kids clothes,
furniture.
·

Dress Clothes 12-14 Petite
&amp;
Misses ,
Linens,
Glassware, Jeans. Route 2
North Rip ley Ad . 1/2 mile
past Paul's Exxon April 29,
Yard Sale 4/30-&amp; 5/1, 9am- 30 May 1, 8:30 ~m to ?
Spm. Take SA160 turn on
SA554 toward Cheshire
Garage sale 509 Parrish
3110 mile on left. Name
Ave. Pt. Pleasant May 1st. 8 •
brand clothing for men.
1 :30, Womens clothes. TV,
women, teens . roller blades.
Entertainment
$tand ,
some Nascar. waterbed.
Shoes, bikes, toys, too, etc.
Home Interior. cell ph one
and more.
Hugh Multi· Family Yard Sale

4 family yard sa le, -April 30 .
May 1st , corner Pomeroy
Pike/Flatwoods . furniture .
electronics, ·jewelry, dolls ,
tools, men's. women's plussided , children's clothes ,
baby items.

Yarcl Sale Multi Family, Baby
clOthes. movies , furniture,
househOld items. Beh 1~d
PPMS 106 VanSICkle Court
Sat May 1 from 8·00-?? re1n
or Shine
·

1!'!;,;.....;.....;.._____,

Lw--...:.lioiiillio.-.,J

3 Family Verd Sele. 1636 Cily, Ohio (Behind lhe Dairy
Chatham Ave. Toys, Kids Boy) Baby items, clothing,
Clothes, Baseball cards. _lo.:.y_s....:.._ _ _ _ __
4130/04-5/2/04, 10am· ?
·
Mens, ladles, children. toys.
State
Route
,
Sat.
etc. Somelhing for everyor:'e
141
3179
• . Clothing-mens, worn- Blu e/white metal building in
94
Cheshire · Look lor S'·n..,ns.
ens. Chlldr.ns. 118m-size 61.
F 'da 130 Saturdey/ 1
couch, household
n Y '
·
toy•,
r
i!ems, misc.
Multi Family yard sale. 537
Centerpoint
Ad.
May
Plymale Rd., Take At 7S. to
3683
rd thru ?th, 10_6. Clothes, Plymale Ad . turn right 1/4
3
mlle . Signs will follow.
Ph
toys , · and rno re .
one Thursday 4/29-Saturday 5/1 ,
(74 0)379 •2169 ·
9:00am-5:00pm . Antique
4 family Yard/Bake Sale, punched tin primitives, pie
Friday 4/30/04, Saturday safes, spice jars, salon furni511/04 . 95 C indy Dr.. Porter. ture, kids clothes, antique
Many misc. items.
patio furniture, refrigerator,
household Items etc . Too
4 Iamay, April 29-May 1st. much· to list11 Rain or
9am-5pm . Gun Cabinet, TV, Shina ll II
microwave , grill, clothes,
some plus size, lots of Multi Family Yard Sale : First
housE'hold misc . . Corner of driveway past Stone Harbor
Green Tree &amp; Bulavllle Pike. on 588. Friday &amp; Saturday.
(740)446·2927 .
April 30 Baby things, bar,
clothes, microwave, !lowers, Name brand children , adult
1
bed comforters set &amp; much clothing,
shoes.
more. 576 Orchard Hill Ad.
Housewares, table, recliner,
toys, carseats and lots at
April 30. May 1~ Large 2 misc. Items .
Friday 9-3:
family Sale. Name brand Saturday 9·12. 3500 Ingalls
kids clothes , toys, pools &amp; Road. Gallipolis.
100 much 10 lis1. Rain or ...,:.;_;:_..:.,_____
· or Shl ne
S aturd ay 511 RBin
Shin. 220 D.bb'·e Drive ,
BuIav Ill e P'k
4061
t
e. Games,
GaIllpo II s.
clothes, crib, bunkbeds,
April 30 ~May 1 at 752 washer &amp; dryer.
Jac~son Pike, Gall ipolis ...:.:_...:._:.:_____
beside U.S. Bank. Ra in can- Saturday and Sunday, Bam2pm. Table &amp; chatrs, coHee
eel.
and end tables. sofa ,
Aprox, 2 miles !rom Addison , microwave cart, summer
Ohio, 1888 Addison Pike . clothes , books , toys. At the
April 30, May 1·2
end ol Berger Ave. across
from McOonald's l
Aasorlmanl of elUft. pr~ed . : . : , _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
cheap . Saturday &amp; Sunday,
Teen Yard Sale
Mey 1- May 2nd. 153 Burger
Fnday April 30th &amp;
Ave.
Saturday May 1st Bam·
5pm. First Church of the
Nazarel"}e Family Life
Big Garage Sale: Mllchell
Rd. Saturday-Sunday May
Center. 1 110 1st Aven ue.
1·2, 8am·6pm . Ra in or Gallipolis. Ohio. (740)446Shlne. SEE BALLOONS !
' 1772.
Thursday 29th-May 1st,
U tile Kyger Ad. t mile
passed RVHS lollow Pink
signs . Baby and toddler
c lothes. men 's, women's,
much more.

" I 1n H 1 "
Racine, OH. Women, and
men clothmg . Girls jeans ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;;;;;;~
and shirts. Crafts too.
HF..LP WM'lllD
~-------- •
7th Annual 6·M ite Yellow
Flag Yard Sate , Fri-Sat, Apri l
'ANEW CLINICAL
301J:l &amp; May 1st. Only $5 to
PEELS!'
sign-upl We advertise for Want to lOok younger AND
you l Call 740·992-4055 or earn Money? Let's talk tha
740•992 . 3148 _
NEW AVON call
- - -- - - - - Marilyn (304)882-2645,
April 30th &amp; May 1st. New
Joyce(304 )67 5·6919,
Lima Ad., plus sizes &amp; wed·
April(304jB82-3630
ding gow'n size 14, mise
1tems , Carpenter residence.

L.--------"
1110

--------Clothes &amp; misc., Racine ,
1'18n Powell residence 5th
street, Friday 30th, aturday
May 1st.
- - - - -- - - Cunningham's in Syracuse ,
turn right at firehouse then
to Water St. , Fr i. &amp; Sat., B-? ,
girl$ 4T·6, bpys infant-2T
misc.
- -------Garage sale , Ap ril 29th ,
3oth, 341 Rutland St. ,
Middleport, adult and boys
clothes , bed liner, much
more.

s

Garage sate- 812 Matn St. ,
Racine, May 1-5, ratn or
shin8, tools, tool bo,.es, bed,
gas grill, chain link tence .
swing, lots more.
Garage sale~ Friday, Apr!l
30, 8am-5pm , lots of old &amp;
new. books too, 320 Condor
St.,
behind
Lumber.

Dettwiiler's

Garage Sale· rain or shine,
3202 Rou1e 124, Suracuse,
,
formerly Jo's Gift Shop, out·
door 5 piece nice rot Iron
table &amp; chairs, new play pen ,
high cha ir. stroller (like new)
tron skillets, 21 TV, large
men new &amp; used clothing
(2:~~ ) , women 's some new,
lots chi ldren clothing , whatnots, baby mattress. toys.
etc, April 26, 29, 30th.
---------

A le ading provider of sup·
port services to individuals
with MA/DD is looking for a
lull time QMRP and HOM~
SUPERVISOR. Supervisory
experience
required.
Benefits included. For more
information you may call
Roberta Van Gundy at 740- .
446·8145 or fax a resume to
740·446·3987 , An Equal
Opportunity
Employer
F/MIDN.

10

I'ROil'.'i.'&gt;lOML
SF.R\lCFS
DIESEL MECHANIC
One of Ohio·s leading motor
carriers has an immediate
opening in our extremely
active growing shop lor ~A "
Service Mechanic. The sue·
cesstul applicant must possess a high level of mechen ical aptitude and be able to
work with drivers. Three and
a half day work week , paid
vacatiOn , personal days,
health insurance. paid hOii·
days, overtime pay, 401 K
plan and uniforms are
among the many benefits of
worktng at Arctic Express.
Inc . This position IS open
now and you can begin work
inimediately. Fax. ema1ls or
in person app licants are wei·
come.

McDonalds of Rio Grande.
Gallipolis and Point .Pleasant
WV are now hiring . Paid
vacat ions. ho!tdays and
insurance available. Fle~Cible
hours . Starting above m·inimum wage. Apply with in.

Supenntendent Vacan cy
The Eastern Local D1stnct.
50008 Stale Route 7.
Reedsv ille
Oh 10
!S
announ ci ng the ret trement
res ignation
of
Superintendent . Deryl E.
- - - - - - - - - Well effective July 31 . 2004 .
Need 7 ladies to sell Avon . The 01stnct is seeKing applicants from qualified 1ndividu·
Call (740)446·3358
als that ~old a val1d supertn·
VI"AcG'"INniA•reDLEtoA1Y'· l EAESS;HlTIP
W
te ndent certificate. license or
can prov1de proal they have
FOR INDUSTRY LEAD·
lNG ATV'SIVVATEACRAFT the ability to ob ta1n suer a
l1cense . CaMidates may
SEEKING
RESPONS IBLEJMOTIVAT- contact Mrs Lisa M R•tch1e ,
Treasurer. a1 (740)667·3319
ED INDIVIDUALS
tor an apphcatm n package
TO FILL
and addiiiOnat .ntormation
THE FOLLOWING
Deadline to subm1t appl1ca·
POSITIONS
tion materials IS May 14,
2004 The Eastern Local
1· General Mana ger
School D1stncl IS an equal
: Finance POSitiOn
opportunily employe:.
· Sales
Certified to.ote chanic/
150
Tech lctans
·
S&lt;.li!JO[.';
Parts/Service Clerk
'l"l10:00

r:

Denver Fannin
M a i n t e n a n c e
Superintendent
4277 Lyman Drive
t:;ompet1t1ve Sala nes an
Hilliai"d, OH 43026
Performance
Bonu
Fa~ : 614-527-4114
Email:
mfo)!@arclicex· ~rogram Ava1lable. Pleas
end Res ume . Reterences ,
oress com
nd Salary Reqwrement
E.O.E./Drug free workplace
o PO Drawer 110 Ripley
Driver for horse and buggy. ~V 25271 . lmmediat
EJ~~perience with horses pre· boeninqs
!erred.
Flexible
hours.
(740)379:9098 (740)379· Norris NorthUI) lloctgr
:2:.3:.:16:.:1:::••:::v:.e.:.:m:.:•:::••::•:;:9:::e._ _
Now
h1rmg
Sales
Grill Cook. App ly in person
Professionals. Must be high Craw's Steak House.
:::.::::.-:.::::=~==--- ly motivated w1th e ~C c ept io na l
Help Wanted: Full time wa1t· communication
skills
ress apply in person at the Unlim1ted 1ncome potenlial
Holiday Inn, Gallipolis.
Don"t miss th1s opportu ntty
to advance you r career 1nto
HOUSEKEEPING AIDE hi gh gear. Come in ror a per·
so nal interv1ew at 252 Upper
Scenic Hills Nursing Center, River Road , Gall1polis, Ohio
a Tandem Healthoare
facility, is seeking a part
&amp;
EMT"s
Paramedics
time Housekeeping aide.
needed . Apply at t354
Responsible for cleaning aU Jackson Pike. Gallipolis.
areas of facility, equipment
Perfect Connection your
and c.arts. Knowledge of
Lo cal DishNet and Direct
sanitation , safety and
inlection control procedures TV Store hiring Ins tallers
and
Sales/Reps
Call
a plus.
(304)675· 1400
Housekeeping/Laundry
experience preferred.

POSTAL JOBS
We olfer perfect attendance S \ 5.44·$21 .40/hr. now hir·
incentives, shih differential
and much mo~e .
Please apply to :
Attn : Beny Stickler
311 Buckridge Rod
Bidwell , OH 45614
Email: admin .shn@
tandemhea llhcare.com
Ph: (740)446·7150
Fex: (740)44611248

fng . For application and free
government job info , call
American Assoc. of Labo r,
1_( 913 )599 _8220 , 24 hrs
emp. serv.
Residential
Tr eatmenl
Facility youlh worker. Pay
based on experience. Call
(740)379-9083 to appl,.

SFIDFI EOE
HA@ tandefnhealthcare.com

train Men and Women
"Full and Pa rt Time Classes
·Job Placement
'COL Traln1ng
'Financ1ng Available
AS SEEN ONlV
ALLIANCE
Tractor-Traile r Training
Centers, Wytheville , VA
1-800-334· 1203
www.alliancelractortraller.com

INSTRt

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740·446·4367.
1·800·214-0452
wWw gallpOIIScareercolk:!Qe CO"Tl
Accradotad

Counc•l for
ana Scnools

170

~we

STATE TESTED
NURSING ASSISTANTS
Scenic Hills Nursing Center.
a Tandem Health Care
Facility, is seeking a select
few to join our outstanding
team . We currently s~ek :

mp

on
SAVINGS

1(1 \II.SI\11

10

HO.\IES

fUR S·\I.E

Mtso:t.tANEOL'S
Barn Removal

P1 PleasanvSandhlll Road
3Br 1Ba 1600. sqft Ranch on
.6 ac;ie level tot Oak f loors .
1st hOuse on A1 QN past
Marshall
Umvers11y
1740)949-1131
103 .000
after 5 OOPM

s

1982 Douole w1de. E ~ ce11 e n t
s.ta rter nome Very good
cond1t1on Well tak en care
o1 and Clean . 3 DP.d!oorr. all
wa lk·tn ciose ts 2 baths wtt h
garden tuO m master BA
bath Includes underp1nmng
- - -- - - - - 2 bedr oom hou se m All etect r~c w 1tl1 ce nt·al A1C
Pomeroy, poss 1ble fmanc 1ng Must be move d. $12 .000
_c_e_
II _
I7-40:.:)_24
_5_-0_ 1_4_4_ _ _
wtgood c redit. (7 4 16 9

o a.

724 4
--------3 Bedroom Bn ck Ranch 1
Ac re lo t Reduced (304 )675·
171 4
3 bed room lull basement
New decorated 111 country
(740)379·2540

:J bedroom 2 balhs on 4 3

acres In lhe Co untry. Scen 1c
v1ew
S75 0 00
Ca ll
(740)709· 1 166

Somerville 's 40th Ye ar . by
oeoroom . 3oall1: 'TC
Sandyville. WV Post Olf1 ce.
eros in coun try, Btdwell.
Satellite Systems, 80 chan · p -hio
Vtew ph o1o'l'11'
nels including Locals
9 99
nlln e
www.orvb.CO IT
monlhly after prog ramm1ng f;:;ode 421 04 or call 740
cred1t. 1996 Tal on all wheel
88·9839
drtve. Turbo (304 )273·56 55
"eaulr1ul 4 bedroom. 3 ca
!!ached . 2 car un attache&lt;
arag e with ga rage apart
rnent in Ga llip oli S Vle'.l
Ass isted living openi'ng rn
hotos/info
on lln
my · ho me . Call (74 0) 388·
orbv com
Cod
011 B.
2204 or ca ll 740-446
1082.
----~---Dave ·s Home Mamlenance· Completely refmtshed home
lor all your home repair Great 1oca11on. 1n Gallipolis
need s. Roofing . pamt mg, OhtO . 3 bedroom. 2 fu ll
remodeling , electrtcat. land· baths. Pr1ced 10 sale now
scaping
&amp;
lawncare . Phone (H 0\446-95..3_9.
(740)742-2092

·s,

1985 141C ?O mobile home .
57500 (740)949·2486
2000 Oakwo od Home ~ 6x84
3br 2ba , all electnc. central
a1r. Call an~·t1me (304)675·
7157

Betme you buy l
Does yoL..r dealer?
Mo11e h•s name s - Do s11e
prepara tiOn - bu ld fou nda·
11ons · Roll and set no uses ·
Do heatmg aM a1r- Have tn.neuse ::;erv1&lt;:e peoole
Install septiC systems · Do
e:ectnca l piU:mbmg
Do
· d"lvowaliS 11 the an swer to
any of !!lese quest1ons1s no.
or If they ··sub-contract'". You
Detter see the oldest mos t
expenen cea
dealer
•n
Athens County. Smce 1967
Col es Motl1 le Homes 15266
US 50 East Ath ens Oh10
45701 ·w here you ge1 you r
money s wor fh ·
Trc:ul er to r sale 2 bedroom ,
can rema1n on tot 1n Racine
area. 52.000 (740)992-5858
Use d Trailf' l for sa le by
owne r. 6uts1 de S1orage
buildmg Included !;lo th rn
good shape (304 )67 5-8 638

[340

fNww

- -- - - - -- Handyman lor less. Need a
deck , some li ghts . got
leaks? 81g , small ea rly. late
(740)446·0422

W1ll cut · grass on weekly
basls Call (740)256-81 0 1

Mobile Mm1·Donut concss·
sian busmess fo r sa le
Locally owned. Eastly malo:e
$ 1000 00 01 more at week·
end events Everylhtng set's
up m a spec1a1!y des1gned
10 X 10 canopy E~Ccellent
pa rt-li me or luiH tme oppor·
1Untty $9.950 00 Donuts
Galore .
M1ddleport
(740)992·4294

~IOHil.E HO\If:&gt;i

HJKS.U.l

124 acres good wo rk1ng cat·
tIe Ia I m w1th a new 3 bed
room, 2 balh hom e. 2 ponds,
2 barn s and other extras.
$285 ,000 or will div1de inlo
development plots Farm
has lots ol road fron tage
i 740)367·715 6

All references &amp; ful l 1nsur- 4 bedroom. t 1 2 bath. 2
ance. Call 304 -37 3·00 11 .
s!ory briCk, 2 car unattached
garage . $37,500 Fourth St
New
Haven WV (740f446·
C~mouflage . Ong1nal Army
Sam '1 274
Co llect ible s.

Will ca re for your love one in
my home, good care , home
cooked meals, 28 years of
e~Cper l ence .
good refer·
ences. (740)667-6 577

Hmtt:S
FOR S\l.l

320

127-&lt;B

Will Press ure Wash house·s.
mobile homes, metal build·
STNA
Local utility seeks water
ings, and gutters . Call
Full
Tlmo,
Shift
2p·10p
plant operator with a mini(740)446-0151 ask for Ron
mum of a West Virginia
or leave message
Proper
ce
rttflcation
Class I Operators license.
req
uired.
We
ofler
compet
i·
Competitive wages and benI I \ \ \1 I \I
efits for the right Individual. live wages , sh ift dlHerent tal ,
e~Ccellent tlt:~neflts. perfect
Send .res yme to
attendance
Incentives and
TSC27
much morel PIEiase apply
200 Main St
to:
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550
Local business, "Pr8c1ous
LPTA wanted fo r hOme Attn : dianna Thompso n. HA Memories " for sale. Place
healtn physical therapy serv· Sceni c Hills Nurst ng Center cu stomer's photos on chin a
iceS . Motivated, self directed
plates and oth er Ite ms
311 Buckridge Road
Would make a gr&gt;9at addit1on
Individual will like flexible
Bidwell. OH 45614
10 an existin9 bu smess or
AVON! All Areas1 To Buy or scheduling, good IndependPh: 740/446 -7150
set up at car shows or any
Sail
Shirley Spears 304 ence, ~nd compensation.
Fax: 740/446-2438
'
• Opportunitles available in ,
675 ·-1429.
event.
SS .OOO.OO buy's
Email admln.shnC
- - - - -- - -ever yt htng includ 1ng web
Athens . Meigs, Jackson ,
.tandemhealt hcare.com
s
t
t
a
Cl111 A COL Drlvtrl
Vinton &amp; Gallia c9unties .
Wanted
ww
w.pho
tosonchma
com
Call 888·464·1126 .
SF/OF/EOE
HR C ta ndemhea ltheare com (740 )992·4294
LSW Needed
•Min. of 2 years exp.
L1censed Social Worke r
needed to p rovide case
management services and
counseling serv1ces for ad o·
lescent male and fe male m
residential treatment setttng
In Gallla County Ohio area
Candidate must have a
strong desire to work with
adofescents and a posittve
persona lity. Must possess or
be eligible for Ohio Social
Work License. Competitive
salary and _great benefit
package pr ovided Please
send cover letter and
resume to: A lan Siebel, 608
Park Ave .. Ironton , OH
45638. EOE

TURNED OOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We W1 n!
1-888·582·3 345

3 bedroom. 2 bath . 314 ac re
Member Ac:craclotong on Rock liCk Rd . $60,000
!nclependa111 Colleges PhOne (740)446·7 197

Lawn Service : Will do com·
plate yard service . Low
rates l (740)949-2722 .

Learn to Drive
Tractor-Trailers

~,

c••4

AS SEEN ON TV
INSTRUCTION
LEARN TO DRIVE
TRACTOR· TRAILER
NEW PROGRAM
No Experience Needed
Placement Dept
Financing Available
CDUTraining
ALLIANCE
Tractor-Trailer
Training Centers
Wytheville , VA
Call Toll
1• Free
1-800-334-1203

•Medical Ins., 401K
•Operation area 400 mile
radius of Jacttson, OH
•Sign on Bonu~
•34 cent pe r mile
Multi-Family yard sale. •95% No to uch
HobSon Ad. Middleport, by
Meigs Carpel &amp; Decorating. Call 800-652-2362
Friday 4130 and Sarurday .:.::,_.:_.:__ _ _ __
5/0 1
Household items, MQuage
Tlu?rapisr
Home
Interior,
girls, needed
lor
busy
women's, and maternity Chiropractic rehabilitation
clothes. Battery operated Center. Must be Ohio
Barbie Jeep, swing set, and licensed and well skilled in
much more. ·
aU areas of therapeutic mas·
sage.
Excellent pay and
- - - - - - - : - -Sale· Depot St. Rutland , work atmo sphere. Please
Wed . Thurs. Fri, a little bit of lax resume to 740·886·1609
Att n: Kathy
everything, ra in pr sh tne

•m

Now you can hove borders and graphics
oiiL..'l
added to your classified ads
/
-'"'
Borders$3.00/perod
Graphics SOC for small
$1 .00 for large

~~ It~~~

I ·

M ay ~st , 9am-5pm , ,c rown

All Dlapl•y: 12 Noon 2
Bualnea• Daya Prior To
Publication
sunday Dl•play: 1:00 p.m .
Thuraday for Sundays

• All ads must be prepaid'

Yard Sale Saturday May 1st
8:00-12 :00 2625 Lincoln
4 fami ly yard sale~ Fri. &amp; Ave . Pt. Plea sant. Clothes &amp;
Sat. ,
297
Ash
St .. Mi sc. Items
Middleport, tons -of ch il1
dren's clothing , boys &amp; girls, jOQ0
WANTED
Infant. children, adult cloth· lots of women's plus size
'10 BU\'
ing, Home Interior, books, clot hing.
misc. 1 mile be low Dam.
Abso lute Top Dollar: U.S.
4130·511·3.
4130 &amp; 5/1 , 379 State Aou1e
Silv er,
Gold
Coins,
Large 3 family yard sale with 7, Coolville , Oh, 9am-5pm , Proofsets, Diamonds, Gold
everything! All sizes 61 chil· depression &amp; antique glass, Rings ,
U.S. Currency, ·
dren's name brand clothes, Home Decor, toys &amp; collect· M.TS Coin Shop, 151
womens plus sizes, men's &amp; abies
Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
ntck kna'cks . 82 · Arnold
740·446-2842.
4130·5/1, 8·4 Bill Cross resDrive, Bidwell, 4/29-5/ 1.
I \11'11&gt;\ \II \I
idence. 806 Picken Street ,

GAlLIPOLIS

Friday &amp; Saturday 9-5,
Sunday 9~2 Rein or Shine.
Boy's &amp; women 's clothing,
slot machines, furnitUre and
·much more. 138 Northup
Rd .. f~ the signs.

D•llv In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Mond•v-Frld•v for J:n•ertlon ·
In Next D•y•a Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:oo· p.m.
For Sunday• Paper
·

JUST SAY
CHARGE IT!

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Dlsplav Ads

A.prii·30·May- 1 Bam Rt2
Yard Sale 48 Hubbarcl Ave. South just before Dam lots
(Kanauga ) Fri. &amp; Sat. 10·6. of Mise 576·3033
Clothing, Home Interior,
Moving
Sale
Thursday
much more
- - - - - -- - - Aiding mower &amp; Push
Yard Sale in front of Green mower. Sewing machine
Elementary
on
141 . sale, Home lntenor. small
appliances. glassware. a lit Saturday 8-t?·. Rain cancels
tle of everything At 2 Greer
fJf4 Y
S
Rd. 6 house on the left
Po ARD tft.~lmnu:
.F.e
MEKOYtl•
Ray's &amp; Son Complete Car
Garage Sale: April 29-30 3 family yard sale - April 30th Cleaning 2615 1/2 Jackson
May 1·3. 120 Maple prive 8·?, rain or shine, 2511 lee Avenue Yard Sale May lst.
Spring Valley area . 8:30· C1rcle . ·syracuse.
8-3
~:00. washer/dryer, mise
Yard Sa!e April 3oth May
Gigantic Yard _Sale : 5-1-04 3 family. Relay for Life items . 1st, 8:00 till ? canceled il
clothing,
Woods Mill Road , Bldwell - 04/30-Friday · 05/01 · rain
8-5
General KarokeSystem , Nursing uni·
Howell,
10am-4pm. Saturday.
P~rkway . forms, Nic Nac!Misc 188 N.
Electron fCS, scooters. name· Hartinger
Middleport.
Park Dr.
brand ctotnmg for men -

Missing from Burnt Run ,
Clay Chapel area, 4/23104.
Large male Boxer. Child 's
pe11 Rewa rd . (740)256· May 1st, 8am- 2pm @ 1136A.
1992.
St. At. B50 Bidwell. Ocean
AqUariu m baby swings,
bouncer,
playpen , baby
YARD SALE
clothes, toys, air mattress,
sw\eper, to·o ls &amp; home
misc., CO's, movies, subYARD SALE·
woofer, clothing.

HEALTH

I

IE

1-8()().497-8414

Lost: Black &amp; white long hair
older dog. Jay Drive area.
Call (740)446-0566.

Reaching over 291800 readers

~~

Oeac/~;rec

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.n1. to 5:00 p.n1.

t"
I

c..u.c~...

9-2

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

mribune- Sentinel- 31.\e ister

Full field of 20 entered
for Kentucky Derby

DERBY

year an lhe liNt Sllulda\lln May, Churcl1ll Downs spoUights the
E lldl
bell3-year-old
in lhe.llnd.
year will be host to a

~lora.

Thursday, April 29,

www.mydailysentinel.com

4 un1t apartment build ing or

3 apa rtments &amp; 1 off1ce. for
sale. Loca ted 111 dO\\nlown
Gallipolis lllcome poten!la l.
51 .300 per month In good
cond11ion $120 .000 . y.,d l
consider land cor· tract w1th
10°·b down. Please call 740·
710·0007.

r
All real estate adver11slng
In this newapaper Is
sublect lo ll'le Federlll
Fair Hooting Acl of 1968
which makas It Illegal to
advertise ''lin.,
preference. iimllatlon or
d!acrlmlnetlon bued on
r&amp;CII!!, color, religion , sex
famitl sl status or national
origin, or any intention to
make any auch
preference, tlml!a1i.on or
dl•crlmlnatlon ."
Thla newapaper will not
knowingly accept
adver11•emenla ro r rut
estate which Ia In
violation of the taw. Our
raadera ere hereby
informed that all
dwelling• adver1iaed In
thl1 newapeper are
avellable on an equel
opportunity baan.

8 IJSI:'&gt;T_o,s
Al\11 Bt•twl~t;s

LO'Ili&amp;
AcRFAr.E

16 ~C80 Sites ava•lable $1 is
per monlh mc!udes water
sew er &amp; Hasil . 1740)992·
2167

LQ\Q_DQ_S.......9 &amp; 10 Heatley's

a.QQlliQ.n to Btdwell to large
level lots Pnced to s!ae now
Phone !740 \446-9539
Mercer ville Lots ror sa le
shared entrance oil St At
2 18. 3·13 ac res Phone
i740)256·1B25
You could hsJ"1 you r badlands
and tncrease property val ue
100 1 Make land into lakes.
' 7401388·8228.

lll'\1\1:-,

10

IIOt 1&gt;'f:'i
FOR R E.'IT

1 Br poss1ble 2 located 111
New Haven ever)ithtng in
Great Buys, 03 ' new walkmg d1stance. appliances
Oak wood
Doubl ewtd e furn1shed. total E!ectr1c $325
Homes call fol details. 740· rnonlh $300 depos1 t No
446-348 t or 740·446· 1567
PBts ca ll (3041882·3652
·~ 3 bedroom R a~h, 2

ar garage, 10 ground pool
ts75,000. 3460 Sta te Rout
18 :· (7401256 _1962
a;.;.::.,..:.;~;:::;.~~....t
Move 1n cond 1t1on! ThiS

3 bed room
house
1n
Pomeroy, $400 a mo. $400
depOSit no pets. (740)949·
7004

3 bedr oom w1th gariiQe B
mil es from R1o- 10 m1les
qua1nt ra nch ho me 1s located 111 Racme OhiO nea r from G a ll1~1olis No pets
2 :.
5 4_:0:___ __
13::.7 :.
91:.
schools and Situated on a ~17:.:4::0c:

n1ce t l4 aoe la(ldscaped lot
3 bedroom t bath w1th
attached garage outbu• •dmg
and appliances stay Pr1ced
to sell at $69 900 00 call
(740}949-3090 tor appt

3b r AMt1h w garage. lg
te nred ya•d cxc tamlly
locatJon
n-' Pl Pleasant
$6 75 00 a month dep &amp; rei
requ red CJI! (3 04l2731tl2
(304)538 -7 411

- - -- - - - - - N1ce 2 bedroom house n 1 ce~
Need 10 sell your home? We yard n1ce r&gt;e 1gl1 tl0rhood
offer O"o down payment 1272 E Bethel Churcr Ad
lmancmg plans lor your 5390 mol11h 174 m38s- t 8 55
potent1al buyers Less than
1\lomt 1-. 1-t&lt;nn:.o.;
HlO VALLEY PUBLISH perfect cr edit accepted
1"OR Rt-.:o-•; 1"
lNG CO recommends tha lmag1ne how easy tt world
au do bus1ness w1th pea be for you to se ll tf you had a
so urce o! lmancmg 1m your
le you lo:now. anc:1 NOT t
3 bedroom mobile home It 1
end money through th . buyers We say yes whe n Mu:1 d1Pport $375 a month
all until you nave mvestt banks say no Ca ll lor plu~ depos1t t7 401992·3 1q4
details (740J 992· 429J
al ed the oftenn

""

"'

1420

Lw-------.,.J

Shop the
Closslfleds!

�•

PageB6•

TheDEa:il:y~S~e~n~ti~ne~l:Jijf"~~~~;;~~=-~~~~~·~m~y~d;ai~ly~se~n~ti~ne~l!.clo~m~~~~~~!!~~~=~~~!-~T~h,u~r~sd'a~y~,~A~p~ri~l2~9!,~2~0~04~

,4x60, 2 bedroom· AIC, Good washers &amp; dryers, $95
W&amp;D. S300month + deposit. &amp; up; eleclric ranges, $&amp;5 &amp;
On 218. Reference. No pets. up; Frost free refrigerators,
(7~0)256•1044 .
$150 &amp; up: like new sideby-side with water &amp; ice in
Nl'ce 2 and 3 bedroom the door, $375; couch, $75;
mcbile homes "'fer rent full size bed, box springs &amp;
includes water, sewer &amp; mattress, $150; full size bed
trash, no pets, deposit &amp; bex spnngs &amp; mattress.
$300 per month, (740)992· $125; table &amp; Chairs, $100;
21&amp;7
glider rocker, $45; lamps,
Nice 2 bedroom mobile $10.
Skaggs Appliances
home. No
pets. Call
76 Vine Street
(740)446-2003.
(740)446-7398
Pomeroy $300 a mo., $150
Top
Pillow
dep. , no pets. (740)667· King-Size
Matt;ress set. New. still in
3083 attar 5pm,
plastic Sale S299. Ce ll
phone 304-412-8098 304552-1424.
1 and 2 bedroom apartments furnished and unfurnished. security deposit ·
required, no pets. 74o-992 _
22 18
·
1 badroom apartment stove/
refrigerator, utilities included. $400/month + depos1t.
(740)245·5859.

bedroom
apt.
Washer/dryer
hookup,
·inCludes water, sewage and
trash. $350 rent, de.posit
required . No pets. 740-441·

11a4.
1 bedroom upstairs apart·
...
men I. $ 275 + u!11111es,
deposit requ ired, lor applicafion call (740)379-951 1 or
(740)379-2204

included. Requires 6 months
lease ilnd $395 security
depoSit. No pets. For application and to make an
appointment
phone
(740)44,-noa.
:_...:________
Apartment
fo r
rent
·
Huntington, 7 blocks from
Marshall. Kitchenette, bed-

BASKET BINGO
April 29
6:30pm
American Legion
Middleport

Queen size bed. New Oak
hea db oar d , like new box
springs &amp; mattress, $ 175 .
(740 }446 _7398 • after 5pm
(740 )367 _
.
7886
:__:_-'------Queen -Pillow Top Mattress

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

Set. New in plastic wlwar·
ranty. Will accept $199. Cell
phone 304-4~ 2-8098 3045
__52_.1_4_2_4·_ _ _ _ __

SPAGHETTI DINNER
Fund Raiser
Proceed to benefit Racine
Vol. Fire Dept

2 lots in Meigs Memorial
Garden $300.00. 30 inch
Wh irlpool Electric range ,
self-cleaning oven, $150.00.
Electric shampccer/buffer

Sponsored by Pomeroy Eagles
Club2171

3pm-6pm
Saturday, May 1st

$50.00. Call (740)985·3545

· $5.00 each
Call 740-992-1171 for delivery

AERATION MOTORS

room apartments at VIllage Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
. Manor
and
Riverside Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·
Apartments in Middleport 800-537-9528.
----,----NEW AND. usED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For · Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel

1.,.-------r

Deposit Required. Days:
740·446·3481; Evenings: Block, brick. sewer pipes.
740·367-0502.
windows, lintels, etc . Claude
Twin Rivers Tower is accept- Winters. Rio Grande, OH
ing applications fa r waiting IC!Ia!i-11,.
74;::0~-2~4:;:5~
-5~12~1:;,.- - . ,
list for Hud-subsiZed, 1- br,
PITs
apartment, call 675-6679
FOR SALE
EHO
·--iiiiioiiiiiiiiioo_.l

i

SPACE .

AKC Black Lab puppies, 6
wks. · Males and 1em'aies.
FOR RENT
First
shots.
$300.00
Retail or Office Space, _17_4_0_l9_9_2·_388_7_a_H_er_s_.- Prime Downtown Gallipolis
English Seller puppies.
location, call (740)379-9511 H 11 " A ·1 d
sOC!\. s egiS ere
or (740)379-2204 1or more b un mg
c ,
2114104
info
orn
· 200 · 8 11
(740)441-1892.

r

t f II
F'R
&amp;
vera
or ran ' am Y
UITS
type. 3 campsites, full L--·V·E:G
iliii
Ei
iii;\11-LiiES
-_.1
hOokup,nearrlver. 3 dD4::k- ,..,
el tes, no hookup. Call
All varieties of flowers and
(740)992-5956
garden paots. Caldwell's 1
·
'II In II\ \111-.;1
mile south of Tuppers Plams
on SA 7
Kennebec potatoes. clear·
ance $5.00 per 50# . 65002

State Route 124. Reedsville,
Full Size Mattress Set. New
Ohio
1n
Plastic
w/Warranty.
Sacrilice $119. Cell phone
KESSEL'S PRODUCE
304-412-8098 or 304·552·
Amish Cheese. Lunch Meat,
1424.
Fresh Fruit and, Vegetables
Good Used Appliances. Open Thurs-Fri-Sat. 1354
. Reconditioned
and Jackson Pike. Gallfpolis,
Guaranteed.
Washers, Ohio. (740)446-7787

•

words

ll4 29-L,

Tree Service

J 5 3
6 2
c$. A .J 2
•

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

Let me do 1\ for youl

316 Washington Street
-Ravenswood, WV 26164

AUTOS
FOR SALE
97 Neon $750.00. 94 Grand

or""" ' 1_ownseno snee
~nd goat Turntabla. Use
Pnly 2 times, like bran
rewl Cost $900, will tak
5001(740)245-0485

AM

$1,300.00 (740)992·

TATER

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

~;:=====~ ~ FOR SALE
11r
~----.-~
LIVESI'OCK

1970 Ford F350. tO Ft.
Grain bed, low miles. many
new parts, new tlres/wheBts.
For sale Boer Goats for Fair (74o)2 45 .048s.
ProJ'ects (304)675-1126
- - - - - - - - - -----~--1995 GMC 2500. Shon bed,
Registered AN GUS and extended cab, 4x4, 129,000
Crossbre~ bulls . Top blood- miles, 350 eng., auto trans,
lines, Slate Run Farm, AIC, cruise, power windows
Jac&lt;son.
(740)286·5395 &amp; door locks, towing packlook
up age, bed liner, new tires.
www.slaterun1arm.com.
$8,000 call (740)379-2789
SEED &amp;
evenings.

April 30 - May 1

FLEA

$5001. Hondas,
Jeeps. etc

Clievys,
POLICE

Self-Storage

Maplewood Lake
Between Racine

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

and Syracuse on
St. Rt. 124
Space Available

740-992-5232

949-2734

Friday days. (740)441-0816
nights and weekends.
199A. Dodge Stralus. $3.300
Y
OBO. NC. power everything
but seat, CO player. Call
(740)256-9095.
2001 "saturn, 4 dr, auto
trans, CO/radio. much more,
this car is like new w/oniy
28K miles; 2000 Grand-Am.
4 dr.. V-6. loeded w/power
options. sharp only $6995.
Many more. We take tradeins, f1nancmg available ,
Riverview Motors, 2 blocks
above
McDonald's
m
Pomeroy, (740)992-3490

SALES &amp; SERVICE
204

Condor Slreet

~---.

C.O"-U-1 LCT ME. BI\T
c.u:.I\NUP TOD/&gt;..'t' 1

Lawn and Garden Equipme/11 is our
Manning K. Rou sh
Owner
0

,..,

1\C\U"-LL't', HIE.'I' I'.E:.V(JZ Lt..\

""i&gt;ID '&lt;OU E.VI:.R GET TO (.II\ ""'
CLI:.I\NUP 01'-\ 't'OUI&lt;.

~\M

SCI-\OOL TEA.t'\, POP 7

business, not our sideline

Yaras

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50-per
month·

HAULING:

• Dirt
iAg Lime
740-985·3564

740-992-5594
740-992-6862

\-\IT, T~['( JU:'lT

LET f\IM.

cl£.1\1'.

ur'

n Mon-Frl 9· 5 Sat. 9·12

Meigs County's Largest selection of
annuals, perenniRfs, vegetables,
shru/1/ltrY, rrult, ornamental trees,
roses, r11oaoaenarons, ana azaleas.
COMPARE THESE PRICESII
4" pot of annuals 94¢
4" pol of perennials $1.18 Buy 5 or more for $1.00
Flat of plants $6.60
Hanging Baskets $6.60

Open? doyo
a w"k daylight
to derkl

HEATING fl COOLING

BUILDERS IRC.

Residential &amp; Manufactured Housing
Air Conditioners, Heat Pumps &amp; Fomaces
S
Eff' .
Eq Ulpmen
.
• uper 1
ICiency
-.,
• Free Estl'mates
. . •. "·'·

u·

llii:&gt;i&lt;

·

"'''• ___;" ;

.-.i.

Ventless'Fireplaces ~

G"b

_J__
so_n
._..

,.

(OAC.-H

.,
:

HOW'D
IT 00

\; A.T THE
• DISPERSAL

:

DR.I\FT?

"

.

r

YOU
WE
UH ... NO.
DI DN'T HATE r DIDN T
DRAFT BKAD 1 DRAFT
BRAD,
BRAD.

DID

AH ! SO

YOU

MU&lt;,T

H,l\TE

t-11 M,

YOU~

TOO!

WHA .. '

r

NO!

NO', OF

HATE
BRAD'S

F,t,,'Tt\ER .

COURSE r
DON ' T

HATE

BRAD(

WE'RE A
BRAD-FKEE
Z.ONE

1
•

"

TFN

.BISSEll

5 &amp; 10 yr Warranties
Huge Inventory

93 Nissan Pathfinder 4 WD.
$2,500.00.
86
Jeep
Waggoner 4 WD $1 ,500.00
(740)992•2136

r.,;;-:._.....

.

,. .
1.........;_.
•rcnrnawm.

Gallipolis, OH WVO 10212
446-9416 r 1-800-872-5967

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New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages

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' ep acemen
Windows • Roofi ng
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

IMPORTS
Athens

740-992-7599

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VANS &amp;
4-WDs

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used
Friday-Saturday Apr 30 &amp; May
Look for the yellow flags!

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MOIORS
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CAMPHRS &amp; ·
Moto H
R OM~

-98 Basstrea m Boat. 99
2001 29ft Sprinter 5th
Mercury 150 hp motor, 97 Wheel Camper. One Slide
trailer, cover Nice. $8,900.00 Out Excellent Condition
~~~~:.::::::--~-,
740 992·2136
$15,500 Phone(304)9373211
• AIJIOPARTS&amp;

~--Airiire&lt;EiiDiiiiiiiliiiirRiiiiEliir"';,.,.l - - - - - - - - -

2003 B Touring Cruiser
good. $2,800.00 (740)949- 431x1050R15Trai1Biazers, Motor Home, Length 22',
4 LT 265 X 75A16 Goodyear floor plan, rear balh, self
262 1
--------Wranglers. 4 P255 X 70R16 contained, fully equipped,
2001 Chevrolet Suburban Generals 304 675-3354
d' ·
exce 11 ent co n llton . (must
2500 4X4. Navy Blue, Cloth
see)
Ask1ng
$37.000.
C AJ\1PERS &amp;
interior. cruise. CD player,
(740)367-7070 .
M!JIUR HOMES
Air. Tow package. 52.000
miles
$25.000
Call
(304)675-3117
1990 24 foot, tr8.vel tra11er, 32'
Dutchman
classic
- - - - - - -- - no
leaks,
sleeps
6, camper. Sleeps 8, private
96 Toyota 4 Runner, leaded, upgrades, clean. (740)992· queen size bedroom, 24'
sld
trans.
$6,900.00 3394 or (740)742·3020
awning, tully self contained,
~(7'=41i-0);,;99.;.2;;,·.;.
21.;3.;.6_ _ __,
AIC, furnace , new carpet,
11998 Fleetwood 30 ft. Tip ceuntry curtains &amp; quills.
MO'IDRCYCLES
Out Camper excellent condi· Must see $6,000 Call
, lion (304)675-1499
(740)379·2789 evenings.
1999 Dutchman, 38', 2
" I IH II I "'
1996 Honda Rebel 250.
I 096 m1-1es, many extras. slides, front &amp; rear bed excellertt condition. Phone rooms (sleeps 8), loaded,
HOME
(740)446 -3869 leave mas- $16,000.00, (740)843-5240
IMPROVEMENTS
sage.
_•ve_ni_ng:.s_ _ _ _ __

i40

2000 Trail Harbor 30 ft.
BASEMENT
camper. Excellent cond1lion,
WATERPROOFING
fully equipped, used little
$9.500.00 (740j992-3301 Unconditional lilelime guar·
Pomeroy. Best to call morn- anlee Local references furnished . Established , 975.
ing or evening.
2003 Volusla Intruder 800,
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4461,000 m11es, sirverl whlle, 25 ft . Camper for sale 360 0870, Rogers Basement
garage
kept,
$5,200, Sportsman, lor more detail's Waterproofing.
(7401992-2849
please call (304)675-1631
2000 650 Yamaha Classic 2
windshields, saddlebags,
mustang seat 8000 miles in
perfect cond. 304-773-5109

\raliolll/1'\' 1-'twtl
.\ Iaiit! \railahl&lt;'

for 2004 Meigs
Cou11ty Fair.

. BETTY

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~AI TIN(; FOR \11£ WIF,f:. AT

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

T.Hf:. OPT0M8TRI5i5...

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1-800-822-0417
·w.v·s # 1 Chevy, Pontiac. Buick. Olds

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Van Dealer"

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South

Wt"st

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1•

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Pass

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Pass

z
Pass

Pass
Pass

60
00
uv

Serious
l11quiries 011ly

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Call
985-4159

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.:.GARFIELD
'

Sunset Home
Construction
Bryan Reeves
New Homes,
Room Additions ,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
SJdlng , Decks,

Kitchens, Drywall
&amp; More
FREE ESTIMATES!

7 40-742-341

HOWARD l.
WRITESf£
dOOFIIIG
*HOME
MAINTENANCE
*~EAMlESS

GUTTER
•free EsUmates.

949-1405

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

CARPENTER
SERV.ICE
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Pain ling
• Patio and Porch Decks
We do It all except
furnaet work

V.C . YOUNG Ill
gg2·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Years Lcx;:el Experience

ROBERT
BISSELl
CONSTIIUCTIOII
• New Ho.mes

• Garages

• Complete
Remqde ling

740-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

•

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'n4AT'S IT·
A~tN!

Welcome back to the Alde r Bridge
Cas1no. II you have been a big wmner
overthe last thr~e days, feel sorry for tt1e
management j:tnd return to the table tor
loday·s teaser. If you have lost money.
here is your chance to recoup those
funds
South is in three no-trump. West leads
the king of clubs. Would you bel on the
declarer or the; defenders?
Clearly. South musl duck the first trick,
trying the Bath Coup. (If ·South wins trick
one, when East gets in with the diamond
ace. he rel urns a club to defeat the contract) However. based an· East's club
four, West' realizes it is time to shift (If
Easl has J-x of clubs. he should play lhe
Jack: with J·x·x. he should either signal
encouragement with the higher spot·card
or contribute the Jack.)
F~rst. suppose West sw1tches to lhe
spade six. Declarer ta~es East's queen
with the ace and drives out the diamond
ace. The defense collects on ly four tricKs:
two spades, one diamond and one club.
Now lei's imagine that, a1 trick two, West
leads the spade king. Then the defe nders
can leap out of the Bath-Coup waler and
yell "Eureka!"
If declarer wins trick two and plays a diamond, East takes his ace. cashes the
spade queen . and leads his last spade
thn;1ugh South's remaining 9·5 inlo llle
jaws of Wes t's 10-7. The defenders gel
th ree spades, one diamond and one club.
If Soulh ducks the spade king, West continues with a low spade to East's queen.
Whether the declarer ducks (East shifts
ba ck to clubs) or wins. lhe defense
comes out on top .

G

BIG NATE

Morning Star Road • C.Rd 30 • Racine,

BENNETT'S

.

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Will Mow

Trucking

'fl!~.!:.'!!J

.THE BORN LOSER

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2975

1996 Ford Bronco XLT 302
automatic, power win~
dow, power locks, AJC,
Excellent condition. 49, 90P
orlninal miles, narage kept.
•
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$7,800. (740)742- 1900.

$3.495 . 1994 AerostarVan, V-6, PW,
Mondau- PL. R/AC . runs good, looks·
:1

GRAVELY TRACTOR

Racine, Ohio
4577 1
740·949·2217

Snapper

Gravely

4.~~:4.

IMPOUNDS Cars from
$500. For listings 1·800·719· 1987 Jeep Pioneer 4·Wheel
3001 ext 3901
Drive call afler 6 pm
(304)675-3424
199 t Che~y Geo Tracker - - - - - - - - 4x4. hard top. new transmis- 1991 S-10 Blazer, 4dr, 4wd,
sian. new tires and many auto, air. cruise. body fair.
th
v
od
o er parts. ery go . con~ ru ns
great,
$2,000
ditlon. $3.000 OBO 740- (740)645-0850
446-4616 or 740·446-1637.
- - - - - - - - !992 E 150 Conversion Van
1998
Buick
LeSabre rully loaded, front &amp; rear AC,
Limiled- black, almost every TV, VCR Asl&lt;ing $2,500
available option. excellent (304~882-2997
condilion. must· see to - - - - - - - - appreciate.
(740)441·1971

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Ro!td -· 1

MARKET

Vanguard

FIGGERED IT
WUZ TIME tt

(304) 273-5321

High&amp; Dry

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· YA L'ARNIN'

2136
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TRUCKS

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BARNEY

Dr. Kelly K. Jones

• Bucket Truck

R.B.

kRght

DOWN
1 Serpent
2 Billy -

pans
19 Give
approval
20 Fable writer
22 Flu
symptom
24 Yes,
.
to Angus
25 Microscop-

Williams

3 Have

4

Reads
aloud
5 Viking
name
6 Scissorhands
portrayer
7 Bqllring
· shout

31 Ms. Farrow
ol films
32 Gl show
sponsor
33 Nol cooked
35 Change a
8 Transmistext
sion part
37 Sixth sense 9 Pitch-dark
38 UneKclllng 10 Relaxation
40 Relired
14 First nome
41 Nalural
in jeans
resource
15 -Fe, N .M.
42 Pub .
17 Pols and

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: East-West

750 Easl S tale Streel rhone (74~1l5~13-ji671
Athens, Ohio

the road

19 Baseball
club
21 Of, to Fritz
22 Naulical
position
23 Modicum
25 Everything
28 Mural
· undercoat
30 AoundT-

t\95-J

+

57 Improves

whiskey

Are you in or out
of the Bath water?

Top • Removal · Trim
• Stump Grinding

~~

18 Some

¥ K

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

crown

16 Arctic sight 55 In a snit
(2 wds.)
56 Strangely

.

JONES'

• Sand

2003 Caviler 4door, 4 cyl.,
$95. Skaggs Appliances, 76 ;;.....---....- - - - ,
auto, 9,000 miles, lilt , cruise,
Vine St., (740)446·7398
-F~I
air cond., CD player, $6,500.
Thompsons Appliance &amp; L~--·EQu
-lill'l\1fNf
-~~,;,:..,J (740)441-Q337.
Aepalr-675-7388. For sale. •
-------re-conditioned automatic 1996 John Deere Backhoe 2003 Nissan Sentra SEA
washers ~ dryers, refrigera· 4~~:4. ext. hoe. Make offer. Specv, 6 spd. $12,700.00
tors, gas and electric Call (740)446-8044.
(740)9922136
ranges, air conditioners, and
wringer washers. Will do For Sale Pcrtable Smidley 96 Saturn SC1 , 2 door, red,
repairs on major brands In Scales, new Call (740)446· -great cOndition. Must Sell
6741.
shop or al your home.
$3.000. (740)256-6800.

riO

proseculors
43 Churchill
I Love madlr
geaiUro
6 Herd O&lt;phan 46 Force
11 Storm drain 48 Swallow up
12 "Maria - " 50 Dell
13 Scribble in
machine
15 Puts into
54 Small

Opening lead:$ K

Mowing, Trimming. Tree Trimming, Aeration, Fertilization,
Spraying of fence lines, Leaf Removal, as well as small
landscaping jobs such as planting and mulching.

• Limestone

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(Com mercif!!l and Residential)

8-12 Friday
8-12 Saturday

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Bring this coupon
Bu y $5.00
Bonanza Get
5 FREE

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

.

LAWN CARE DIVISION

Band Fast Eddie

Point Pleasant . (304)674- Grating
For
Drains,
0031.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Nice 2 bedroom apartment Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
for rent Middleport, Oh, Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
$325/mo., $300 deposit, Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
(740)598-2198 or 740·591· sun day. 1740)446-7300
0649.
Wheel chair, walker, bed rail,
NICe one BA unfurnished
apartment. Range &amp; refrlg. porta-pony. Li&lt;e new. Will
sell separately or all togeth·
t:'r. .................r...
provided. Water &amp; garbage or. Phone (740)446-1214 or
ruu~L~U.K
paid. Deposit required. Call (740)446-7124
after
(740)446-4345 aHer 6pm.
5:00pm.
Horse Manure Pick-up load
Tara
Townhous"
$25 loader ~vallable, Dump
Wizard 42 inch riding TruCk load delivered $75
Apart ments, Very Spacious,
4 12 l'l'ly 1 ·1 60
mower. x u 11 rater.
2 Bedrooms, 2 FloOrs, CA, 1 yards tan carpet &amp; pad .
t/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted, 1740)38a- 8997 _
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, ~~;;,;;~~;_--""''
Patio, Start $385/Mo. No
Bs~~
Pets, Lease Plus Security
v rrLir.;,

Dr~ers,
Ranges,
and
Refrigerators, Some start at

All pack $5.00

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

(Com mercii! and Rl!sidenti al)
Mobile Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Decks, Driveways,
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Degreasing of
Equipment, Boats, Campers, Tractor Trailers,
Dump Trucks, painting or Staining of your deck
or log home, Aluminum brightening.
.
Special rates' to Trucking and Dump Trucking Companies.

PGmeroy Eagles 2171

For Sale: Lap Top Computer,
$350. New Boat Cover,
$100. Call (740)441-8299 or
(740)441·5472.

Gracioua living. I and 2 bed-

HOOSEHOLD
G&lt;x.lDs
..____::;::;___,1

Last Thursday ul'
every month

675-2457

Free Estimat~ ·

I

JET

rto

PQWER WASHING

Crank It Up $1 ,500.00
StarQurst $1,200.00

_____""''

lor application &amp; Information.

It 88 f

6:30

Henderson, WV

Owner: Jeff Stethem

May 1
6:30pm
American· Legion
Middleport

Buy or sell. Rive rine
Antiques, 1124 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740S92·2526. Russ Moore.
owner.

MERCHANDISE

Porch Boxes
Combinati on Pots
Perennials
Spruce Trees
Shrubs
(,
Peat Moss ·

MYERS PAVING

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

BINGO

ANnQtiD;
L~--------'

MiscE:u.oo:ous

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Pomeroy Engles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursdoy
&amp; S undoy
Doors Opep 4:30
Eorly birds start

FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

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ACROSS

,J 8
¥ AQ2
. KQJifl!JK
... 7 3
Wt.'st
East
• K 10 7 6
• Q :! 2
• 9 ij
¥ 10 B 7 4
t 7 I
• A;, 3
.. KQIU96
... 8 54
·South

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

Used furniture .Store.

$375. Also Older Bulova
Accutro n Wrist Watch.
~space View• Series, 10-K,
Gold Case, 1971- Looks
New-$300. (740)533,3870.

Rl

Easier Flowers
Bedding Flowers
Vege1able Plams
Bloomi ng
&amp; Foliage Baskets
Pouing Soil

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

Oak dining room table with 6
chairs. Call (740}367-0002 .

CONVENIENTLY LOCAl·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE I
Townhouse
apartments,
ar'ldlor small houses FOR
RENT Call (740)441·1111

t

Now Open

Main St.- Point Pleasant
Wai -Mart Plaza -Mason

Illinois Ra ilroad Pocket
Clean 2 bedroom apart· Watch, Lever Sel, "Abe·
ment, security deposit &amp; ref- Lincoln Series", 21· Jewels,
erences, (740)949·2517
I4·K Gold Filled case.

From $295·5444. Call 740·
992·5064. Equal Housing
Opportunities.
New 1 bedroom 1umlshed
apartment. All utilities paid.

Syracuse, OH

SIDERS
JEWELERS .

rQom, bath , Uving-room Designer Bridal Gown by
$450 monthly · (304)675- Demelrios. Scalloped neck·
5813
line, cathedral lrain, bodice
BEAUTIFUL
APAFIT· skirted and trimmed in
MENTS
AT
BUDGET Battenburg lace. $250 Call
PRICES AT . JACKSON (740)742-2187.

E$TATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $344 to $442.
Walk to shep &amp; movies. 'Call
Equal
740-446-2568.
Housing Oppertunlty.

lluffaNL's qtunh~~Ue

Diamond
Heart Pendants
Starting at $69.00

Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road. Porter. Ohio.
(740)446 -7444. 1-877-8309162 .. Free Estimates. Easy
l1nanc•ng. 90 days same as
cash . VisaJ Master Card.
Drive- a- little save alol.

~;p:;,

NEA k::rossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

•

2 bedroom apartment In good, $150. Call (740)446no
pets, 31861eave a message.
Middleport ,

2 bedroom, just past Holzer.
$425 month. Call (740)4411184. - - - - - ·2 BA first floor apartment
yard.
24
·with
small
Chillicothe
Road.
$395/month, utilities not

The Daily Sentinel • Page B?

~ orth

i bedroom. kitchen appli-.
130 Bukwllle Pike.
ances fumished. AJC, refer- Mattresses ,
dressers.
ences, No pets. (740)446- couches. recliners . much
1370.
more. Grave Monuments .
1 BA, complele ~itchen , (740)446-4782 Gallipolis . .
OH, HAS 10-4 M-F _ __
IVC, Ral. &amp; dep. No pets. ..:_.:.__:__:__.:._
(740)446-0i 39.
Washer/Dryer set. Both work

(740)992· 5858

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALLEY OOP

Phillip
Alder

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,Thursday, April 29, 2004

AstroGraph

·s2

selle's
summer

slar
53 Th ing, ,
29 Royal
in law
symbol
34 StandoHish

36 Sweet wine
39 Word
on a towel
43 Reject

by Luis Campos
Cel~bnty

C.pher !l)'plogrims aH~ Cfl!ii led !rom

~uo ta~ on~

oy tarncus people past ana present

Eacn ~~~e r rn the o pller ~afld slor anolhe•

Today·s clue J equals L

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' lmag1nai10n IS more 1mportantlhan knowledge:
Knowledge is limited . Imagination enwcles the worltl.' - Alb ert Emslem
(c ) 2004 by NEA . Inc ~-29

S©RJ.:llA-~£~'0" =~~~

- - - - - - - hlittd

Frldav. April 30, 2004
By Bernice Bade Osol
Chances are in !he year ahead yoU w1ll
explore several new areas where you
have never trodden before. If you properly
sort out those ihat hold value from what is
useless. rewarding e~periences will add to
your material growlh.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - It's always
w1se to treat your prized possess1ons with
care. but today they could be pa r11cularly ·
vulnerab le. If you must transport valu·
abies. wrap them well and lock them in
your lrunk .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Duties and
responsibilities you owe to 1your family
today should tal&lt;e precedence over any
personal act1V1fleS in which you'd like to
partake. Think ol !hem first, not last
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- There's a
possibility today that you may be tempted
to fudge a little when 11 com_es to tell1ng the
tmth in order to ge1 others to see things
your way. Once revealed, you'll pay a
price.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Fr~endsh1ps can·
not be bought. so don't dece1ve yourselt
today mlo thinking you can get othe rs to
like you if you spend lavishly on them. All
you really have to do is simply be yourself.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) - Pals will
stand by you and come to your a1d today.
but you must allow them to t1o il the1r way
and m their own good time It you 1ry to
dictate the terms, they'll make a quick exit.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Switching
horses today in m1dstream m search of
grel!lner pastures Will not only get you OH
course. but you could lose the ground that
you already covered and get completely
lost.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) :- If you 're
too easily m!luenced by others today, w1th
the least amount o1 1,criticism you cou ld'
easily get discouraged and p1tch your
entire game plan and disregard workab le
1deis .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec 21) - Do
no! lry to take control of a situation away
lrom anolher who is presently doing a
competent job. Interference co uld gum up
the works and put yo u months beh1nd
schedule
CAPR ICORN (Dec. 22-Jan _ 19) - The
only way thai you wilt get the results you
desire m handling a complicated assignment 1S 10 use logical procedures at all
times. Shortcuts cou ld sabotage the ent~re
project.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Be careful today that you don't kid yourselt about
the value of either a person or thinQ that
others are trying to t•ll you IS ot dubious
worth . Chances a1• your pals will see
things more clearerly than you .
f)I$CES (Feb. 20·March 20)- It'• lmpor·
ttnt today In your Involvements with
frltndl that you don't lnadverllnlly lhOw
p1rt1ality or play flvorllta . Vou could hurt
tomtone'a feeling• who ~o11n't daatrv•
it.
A~IES (Ma"'h 21-Aprll 18) - Otltgotlng
roulll"'l tllkl vou could 111ily do your1111
todly len't at:U 10 work out too wall . Ev.n 11
vou get tomeont to do your bidding. thlt
pereon ltn '1 11!11 to do 1 c~dlltbltlob

46
47
49
51

Hoople' s
word
Sticky soil
Trim back .
Web addr.
Cleveland
NBAer
Mademoi ~

CELEBRITY CIPHER

THAT DAI~Y
PUll Lit

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ic animal
26 Rows
27 " Shane··

44 Sooner cily

45 Maj.

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lour sc ram bled words be·
low ro· form lour words

RACONE

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vov deve !or. ~· ::&gt;..., st!: No J ~e ow

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ANSWERS •- 29- a.

As/ern • Purge -Basic · Impa le-' ABUSING
My friends were amazed at the self control I showed
when I turned down a piece.of chocolate cal&lt;e. "Real self
control," I confessed, "is having a credit card and not
ABUSING it."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

11-'1 bORR'I' ll£.1 YOU IAlK II£, .
I!JTO THI~ CAM£.~,_ PHO).)E..'

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�Page B8 •

The Daily Sentinel

·Golf

NFL

Nicklaus nearly done
with competitive golf

Cooled-off Maddox expects
to ·be Steelers starter

BY PETE IACOBELLI
Associated Press
REST S C
TRAVELERS
· · ·
-It turns out Jack Nicklaus
might be finished with more
than just the Masters.
He spoke Wednesday about
giving up a game he once
· dominated, winning 73 PGA
Tour events and 18 major
titles.
·"I'm about done playing
golf."
the
64,year-old
at
the
Nicklaus
said
Nationwide Tour'S BMW
Charity Pro-Am at The Cliffs.
He's competing here with hi s
four sons: Jackie, Gary, Steve
and MichaeL
'' I haven't made up my
mind whether I' m going to
play anymore this year after
the Memorial tournament" in
June , Nicklaus said.
At the Masters this month.
the six-time champion said it
was likely that he would not
play at Augusta National in
2005 . And that was before he
shot consecutive 75 s. to miss
the cut.
Nicklaus has struggled with
arthritis. injuries and a faltering game the past few seasons.
"I know I can't compete at
the level I used to compete."
Nicklaus said. "If I go ·aut
and finish in the top I0. and
that's a great week. then I
know it's time to hang up
your spikes."
.
Player,
6R.
Gary
empathized with Nicklaus.
"It's hard spending all your

time playing golf. like you
tlid when you were a young
man," said Player. here with
his son Mitre ..
A year ago, the Goltlen
Bear was the only Nicklaus
·
arountl for the NatilJnwide
event's final two rountls. He
won the pro-am cllmperition
with son Steve and brietly
scared the younger pros .when
he got to within fi ve .shots of
the lead after 36 holes.
Nicklaus lert with a "nile on
his face. happy he was dose
to: again playing successful.
competitive golf
Time and his own high
standard&gt; have made it hard
to ma intain that momentum,
Nicklaus said.
People continually ask him
not to quit. ··But 1. tell them.
· 'Well, you're not in mv
·
body."' Nicklaus said.
A full day swinging clubs is
mar~ of a physical toll than
ever before .. "It takes me a
while before it wants to
k .. h
·d 1· r
wor.
e sm. ·· f _m not
play1ng golf. 11 ·doesn t hurt
too much . If I am playing
golf. that's . when it really
hurts."
Nicklau&gt; was on hand to
present the Nationwide's
2003 player of the year award
_ named in his honor - to
Zach Johnson. who claimetl
hi s first PGA Tour win this
year at the BeiiSouth Classic.
Looking at the sculpture of
a yo unger Nicklaus. he
quipped: "I was that thin
once''"
Johnson said Nicklaus was

BY ALAN ROBINSON
Associated Press

an idol to sn many young
players .
" He was the man I looked
up to in this game." Johnson
said .
Nicklaus started strongly
on the Champions Tour thi s
year. finishing sixth at the
Mastercartl Classic with
rounds of 6~. 66 and 67. But
he's only played two other
Champion events, none since
March.
''If you're not capable of
winning, then ym1're just
cluttering up the field. That\
the way I look at it.'' Nicklaus
said. ··Then again. maybe my
standards are a little higher."
His competitive fire still
burns strongly. He recalled
talking with Player after the
2002 Masters. when the
South African was pleased
with a 78 at a beefed up
Augusw National. .
"You 're Gary Player,"
Nicklaus chided his friend.
"You've won the tournament
h
·
d
·
d
t ree llme s.~_n you repro!'
to break 80'
·
Then
again,
maybe
Nicklaus just wants a break
after so long in the spotlight.
He returned to The Cliffs to
play with his children, one of
hi s life's great joys. Now.
Nicklaus says he's just as
happy to fish quietly with his
wife. Barbara.
" I spent all my weekends
the last 40 years in press
rooms at golf courses,"
Nicklaus said. "Frankly, I just
think it's time to ... do something else:·

PITTSBURGH
A
cooled-off Tommy Maddox
expects to remam the
Pittsburgh Steelers' start ing
quarterback now that he has
had a clear-the-air meeting
with coach Bill Cowher.
Maddox
insisted
Wednesday he isn ·t upset
the Steelers drafted Ben
Roethli sberger on the first
round. though his agent has
suggested otherwise~ and he
is rel!dY to help the rookie
become an NFL starter.
Just not right away, of
course.
"Until they tell me differently. I'm preparing. planning, and getting ready like
I aoi (playing this season),"
Maddox said.
Maddox was assured during the 45-minute meetin g
Tuesday that the Steelers
won ' t hand the job to
Roethlisberger. They also
plan to give Maddox a pay
raise after June I, once they
release or trade linebacker
Jason Gildon to free up
salary cap room.
' Maddox was due-to make
$750,000 this season under
the contract he signed whil e
still a backup. which would
have put him in the uncomfortable role of making less
than either Roethlisberger
or backup Charlie Batch. ·
Maddox was said to be
emotional when the meeting
with Cowher started, but
Maddox insisted the talk
wasn't heated or one-sided.
Cowher said Sunday he
needed to talk to Maddox to
judge his frame of mind .
"We had a good conversation," Maddox said. "I
appreciated the thing ' he
had to say and I appreciated
him listening to me. We had
a good. long meeting."
Maddox's agent, Vann
McElroy, had said the meeting would be Monday. but

Bobinski leaving position.as Xavier AD
CINCINNATI (APJ With Mike Bobinski running
athletics, Xavier moved into
a new arena, hired Thad
. Matta as basketball coach
and made its deepest run in
the NCAA tournament.
Now. the athletic director
is moving on - or, more
precisely, moving up.
Bobinski, 46, was named
Xavier's associate vice president for development on
Wednesday, expanding his
responsibilitie'&gt;. The university plans to hire a replacement within a few weeks.
" You hope that when you
walk away, you've made a
positive impact and it 's bet ter for you having been
there," Bobinski said, in a
phone interview. "We have
made progress. The program
is stronger today across the
board . We are in a better
position to compete at a
higher leveL"
During his nearly six years
on the job, the small Jesuit
school
achieved
more
national prominence than at
any time in its past. Much of
it had to do with deci sion s
niade by Bobinski , wh&lt;;J took
over a program on the rise. ·
Xavier's basketball program emerged in the late
1980s and 1990s under
coaches Pete Gillen and
Skip Prosser, who made the
Mu sketeers a Top 25 team .
Xavier also moved up in
conferences, going from the
Midwestern Collegiate to
the Atlantic I 0 .
Two Atlantic I 0 team s
reached the final eight of the
NCAA tournam ent this season - Saint Joseph 's and
Xavier, which enjoyed its
deepest run in the tournament and the national attention that followed.
"A good symbol is 1990,
when we went to the Sweet
16 for the first time." Xavier
pres ident Rev. Michael
Graham said in an interview.
"In many ways, we'd been at
that level ever since. It was a
high-water mark . Getting to
the Elite Eight and almost to
the Final Four is a good
symbol of what 's happened
over the last number of
years."
Bobinski , a Notre Dame
graduate and assistant baseball coach, came to Xavier
after five years at Navy and
four years as athletic director at Ak"ron . His legacy at
Xavier revolves around an
arena and a coach.
He helped design the
Cintas Center, an on-campus
arena
that
gave
the

Mus ketee rs a home after 17 Prosser moved along to
years at the Cincinnati . Wake Forest, and Bobinski
Gardens. The I 0.000-seat chose Thad Matta from
arena opened for the 2000- Builer to take over.
01 season.
Xavier has won 26 games
"What it's allowed us to in each of Matta's first three
do is recruit at the highest seasons. Forward Davi&lt;;l
level we've ever been able West was the national colto," Bobinski said. "It has lege player of the year in
created more of that spirit 2003. before moving on to
that goes along with big- New Orleans of the NBA as
time college athletics and a first-round pick. The
basketball in particular. "
Musketeers made it to the
After the first season at final eight in the NCAA .
Cintas. he had to make · his tournament this season
most important decision . before losing to Duke.

well. but he wasn'ttoo concerned with helj;\ing me out
a whole lot." Maddox said.
··He ami (coac h) Dan
Reen~~
weren't gelling
along &gt;O lhere was a lot of
tensi(lll between them. and
somet ime &gt; that carrieu over
to me a little bit. If I as(..ed
him somethin2 he !!ave me'
his input. but he w;sn't real
open with com ing up and
talki ng to me itbout it. "
Maddox won't be so distant with Roethlisberger, if
only bel·a use he understands
how -difficult it can be for a
rookie quarterback.
" ( uot Jrafted in first
round"and ·it only took ine
I0 years to get ready:· said
Tommy Maddox
Maddo .x. who became a
Maddox was too upset to starter only iwo year' ago .
Maddox said it is unrealattend then. Maddo x deni ed
that.
istic to expect any rookie
"I think there 's always quarterback to come in and
· 111
· th 1s
. b usmess
·
emollon
... · dazzle .immediatel y. be it
whether you're on the field Roethli sbe rger. the Giants'
or the things that go on off Eli
Manning
or the
it ,'' he said. "(But) 1 don't Chargers· Philip Riv ers. and
get that bad unless it's real- hopes they understand that.
Iy bad."
"Eli's in a tough spot in
So, if Maddox wasn't mad New .York." Maddox said.
and he understood a team "A lot of great quarterbacks
can always bring in a player came in and struggled. That
to challenge or unseat was probably the niost I got
another. why was the meet· from John ... him relaying
· the struggles he had as · a
ing held so quickly?
"Obviously, by (them) rookie. It's still-the NFL and
drafting somebody. yo u it' s a very tough league. a
kind of need to sit down and very demanding league ...
see where they 're at and
Maddox also isn't conwhere they want to go, and cerned his situation could
what part you have in it," eventually mirror that of
Maddox said.
Cincinnati quarterback Jon
De spite saying repeatedly Kitna. Kitna had a career
he was~'t mad. Maddox year in 200J. nearly leatling
said
he waitetl ~ntil the Ben ga ls to the playoffs.
Wednesday to talk to only to be told first-round
reporters because ··1 didn't draft pick Carson Palmer
want to say anything I did- would start this season.
n't want to say:·
"You can waste a lot of
Maddox. 32. now finds time worrying about it. but
himself in the same mentor- these situation&gt; work themcompetitor
role
with selves out:· Maddox said.
Roethlisberger that former '·J' m sure Jon's preparing
Broncos quarterback John himself like he·s goi ng to
Elway had when Denver play 16 games and. by the
drafted Madtlox in 1992.
time it rolls around. he
"John and I got along very might."

D~y, a heartfelt "Thank You" could be
coul~ ever give your mother.

ParmMns6nm

miss this opportunity to soy it.

Thfqaily

E·ng.',_ine';Shq_.·w_~:,
- .,

se;tinel

•.lu. , *'~)
"' , May l
· sarurda~
, ~unday, May 2
--_ ·-t:w· g~oo -· ::A.

·:F

Happy
Mother's Day
(Your
Mother's
Name)

Step Back In Time When Steam And
Bas
Were AWay Df Life.

Loveiohn,
joe and Susan

Volunteer Yard Sale
Items Donated To
Raise Money for
New PlaYii!round EquiPment.

• Lady Marauders mow
down Miller. See Page 81

(Your
Mother's
Name)

GALLIPOLIS FERRY Akzo No be I Functional
Chemicals has received an
otTer from
Ripplewood
Holdings LLC tor the sale of
its phosphorus chemicals
business for 230 million
Euros, free of cash and debt.
At the current exchange
rate of 1.19426 U.S. dollars
to one Euro. the conversion
equals
$274.6
million
American :

Love John,
Joe and
Susan

, , ,, J ,,l,

,,,;,,,I. ·•

-

The deal invol ves all assets
and current employees of the
·business.
lan Snow, a managing
qirector of Ripplewood. said
he is pleased with the acq ui sition of Akzo Nobel's phosphorus chemicals busine ss.
·This transaction will be
our second in the specialty
chemicars sector, followin g
our exit late last year from a
successful . investment in
KRATQN Pol yme rs . which
was purchased in 200 I from
Royal Dutch SheiL We look

forward to achieving similar
suc·cess with thi&gt; business:·
Snow said
Akzo Nobel , based in the
Netherlands. serves custome rs throughout the world
with healthcare products.
coatings and chemical&gt;.
Consolidated sales for 2003
totaled 13 billion Euros.
. Akzo currentl y employs
around 64.300 people in
more than 80 countries.
It s Mason County plant.
formerly operated by Stauffer
Chemical Co.. produces

flame retardant, _ph"li citer,.
func tional fluids and specialtie s chemicals. It employ&gt;
168 people. with I06 represe,nted by the United
Steelworkers of America
Union Local ~5'1-L. althOuQh ·
50 workers were recently ia\d
otT
The Gallipolis Ferry &gt;ite
has been in operation '1nce
1956 under several different
owners.
Ripp lewootl
Holding&gt;
LLC. with offices in :--Jew
York and Tokyo. manages

about S I0 billion of capitaL
focu,ing primarily on inW,t·
111&lt;::111' in the W.S.. Europe and
Japan .
Ripplewood \ U.S. portfolio holdings inclutle Asbury
Automotive. WRC Media
Inc. and Direc\ H(t)dings
Worldwide. the parent company to Lillian Vernon Corp .
and Time-Life Inc.
The portfolio companies in
its
Japan-focused
fund
include JapanTelecom Co ..
Please see Akzo, AS

BY J. MILES lAYTON

OBITUARIES
Page AS .
• Larry G Powell

A promotiona l video and presentationon a local business.
Jessica Rosier, seated, Steven Major and Sarah Lee, won Locker 219 in Middleport, won gold medals for Darin Horn,
gold medals at the Skills Ohio VICA competition with thei r left Jeremy Dingey. seated, and Corey Longstreth. Both
video and power point presentation on Morgan's Raid. teams qualified for the national competition to be held in
(Charlene Hoeflich)
Kansas City, Mo . (Charlene Hoeflich)

Meigs IT teams win state championships

·LorrliruEs·

Bv CHARLENE HoEFLICH
HOEFUCH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Two Meigs High
School tech prep teams were gold
medal winners in the Skills Ohio
Championship
competition
in
Columbus this week and have qualified for the Skills USA contest to be
held in Kansas City, Mo. June 20-26.
Awarded gold medals were a team of
three students, Jessica Rosier. Steven
Major and Sarah Lee whose project
was on · Morgan's Raid. It included a
video produced by the students on the

A6
Bs-6
B7
A6

A4
A2
As
A7

As
B1
AS

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Cu.

1r
1
Ads Must Be Prepatd

"" "

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTI NEL. COM

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Faith•Values
Movies
NASCAR
Obituaries
. Sports
Weather

I

.

;, , , , ,

Former mayor
drops charges
against Spaun

2 SEcrloNs- t6. PAGES

CIRCLE ONE: A. 1X3

I
I

BY KANDV BOYCE
KBOYC E@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

INDEX

r-------------------------------------,
I
Greetlng ...$10.00 B. 1X5 Greeting ... $13.00
I
I

j;'

Holding company purchases Akzo Nobel -plant

I

1 Mother's Name_~'---·----------~-------- 1
l ·vour Name (s):
1
I Your Address
1

675-5737

SPORTS

Happy
Mother's Day
(Picture)

All out the form below, attach It with your payment
and send It to
The Dai,ly Sentinel "Mother's Day"
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769
For more Information call992-2156

"' 11 c·1ty, state,1p
z·
1 Phone#

\1 ' 1~11

-

STAFF REPORT

Deadline far this Special Mother's Day Trlbute ts Thursday, April 30, 2004

Church Service SundaY, MaY 2. 9AM
GosPel Sine-Afternoon

l l ~ JJt\\

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM ·

Her·bal Seminar. SaturdaY I OAM Br 2PM Sundall, 2PM

t'OR ADOITIO'I.\L INFORMATIO'I

'\, ~ttl

Ohio Bicentennial reenactment of the 1700 VICA members competing for
Civil War march of Morgan and his the gold. silver and bronze medallions
troops across Meig s County in awarded to the top three finishers in
September, enhanced by a power point each contest area. They were scored by
presentation and tri-fold display.
a panel of judges on their presentaThe project of the other tean1 of tions.
three students, Darin ·Horn. Jeremy
As gold medal winners , the six
D_ingey. and Corey Long streth. was a se niors were awardetl expense-free
promotional video and presentation on trips to Kansas City. They will be
a local S/nall bu sit,ess. Locker 219 of accom panied by their teacher.
Middleport.
Skills USA· VICA is a national orgaT&gt;he tech prep students of SuLanne nization for hi gh school and post secBentz were earlier winners in local and ondary students training for careers in
regional contests.
trude, industrial. technical ami health
The state competition had nearly related occupations .

Eastern contracts approved

BettY Rimmey rweed WomanJ

ROUTF: 62N. FAIRGROUNDS ROAD POINT PLt:ASANl; WV

, J

Details on Page AS

\

featurini!:
• Delivered • Sonrise • Cundiff's
• Mary DaileY • Brian and FamilY Connection

•' )' 1 "'1" • \ , t)

POMEROY - The case
against a Pomeroy vi llage
worker charged with menacing
for allegedly threatening a former Pomeroy mayor was dismissed by Meigs County Coun .
Judge Steven Story Thursday.
Shannon Spaun. 29. an
employee with the village
water depart ment . was facing
a fuurth -degree misdemeanor
charge f(jr an incident Ill volving former Pomeroy Mayor
Victor Young IlL Young
alleges that Spaun threatened
him on March 10 while drivin£ outside hi s home .
According to Young·.; statement to police. Spaun was
upset about comments Young
had allegedly made about
Spaun's mother. Pomeroy
Council member Ruth Spaun.
Young asked the Meigs
Countv Prosecutor's office to
drop 't ile charges against
Spaun . According to court
documents. Youn£ said. ··we
have resoil·ed our' differences
and I feel the charges are not
nec~~sary at thi s ti~lle...
·
Please see Charges, AS

WEATHER

Published Greeting Examples ...
Frida¥·~M~v 7th .1X3 Greeting $10.00 1XS Greeting • $13.00

am&amp;tas:

en tne

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Daily 3 ~ 6-6·0
Daily 4: 9·1-9-2
Cash 25: 3·9·12·16-2t·24

l

~

at

West Virginia

•

Bears interested
in Tim Couch, B2

~

Pick 3 day: 5·6·5
Pick 4 day: 1·2·1·0
Pick 3 night: 5·6·1
.Pick 4 night: 3·8·9·3
Buckeye 5: 3-12-23-26·31

.

7o-~~
·
•

W6st V!rgln!a

.

Meigs mercy rules
Miller in six innings, Bt

Ohio

•

.,

•

Thursday, Apri129, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

I
I

~------------------------------------~~
Make Checks Available to: The Daily Sentinel

TUPPERS PLAINS The Eastern Local School
Board approved contracts
lor employees. including
teachers for the 2004-2005
school
year,
during
Wednesday's
regular
monthly meeting .
The board accepted the
resignations due to retirement of Dixie Sayre and
Nancy Barker.
One-year contracts were
awarded
to
Jennifer
Roush, talented and gifted
program teacher. and
Sarah Tibesar, high school
math teacher.
The board approved
two-year cont ra cts for
Tammy Adams and Gary
Johnson, bus drivers;
·Judith Camden, Josh
Fogel. Carman Mitchell,
Larry Heines, Betty C.
Kuhn. Heather Wolfe,
Bethan Turano, teachers;
and Nancy Morrisey, guidance counselor.
Three-year
contracts

were awarded to Chad
Griffith, librarian , and
Howard Caldwell Ill.
Teresa Lemons and Sharon
Wickersham ..teachers .
Five-year contracts were
approved lor Martie Bawn
and Susan Parsons. teac hers.
Continuing contracts were
awarded to Cathy Elliou.
library
aide:
Thomas
Pullins. bus driver. and
Dennis Durst, custouian.
The board approvetl
non-renewal of contracts
for Chad Milliron and
Jackie Wolfe _due to
license
requirements.
Sheila Connolly, Gwen
Hall ,
Amy
Smith.
Elizabeth
Martindale.
aides, due to funding cuts :
Joann Calaway, Drug:Free
Schools coordinator, antl
Dixie Sayre. Title I coordinator and lead mentor.
The _board approved the
non-renewal of all extra·
c urricu la r and student
activity supplemental contracts,
and
approved
Please see Contracts. AS

Flower power is big business for Meigs County
BY J. MILES lAYTON
JLAYTON@MYDAILYS ENTIN EL .COM

PORTLAND - The !lowers ~lre blooming and that
meam farmers all over Meigs
County are busy harvesting
their crop . .
Agricultural extension agent
Hal Kneen sai d prouucing
flowers is big business which
employs hundreds of workers
and brings in a ton of cash to
area farn'iers. He c.,timates that
80 percent of !lower sales
occur in April, May and June.
The peak harvest time will he
duritig the next two weeks so
that the tlower&gt; ami hanging
basket'&gt; can he in stores before
Mother's Day.
A growi ng season is three to
four weeks long for many
annuals and with any luck. a
farmer can get three turns during the peak selling months.
Kneen said there i' between 20
to 25 "inside" acreage under
cultivation in Meigs County.
··we are well known lor our
tlowers in Meig~ County
becau&gt;c ·of the entreprenelllial
spirit of the far'mer&gt; . easy

Dw ight Hill, owner of Virgi l Hill and Son's Farm and
Greenhouse , is busy carefully selecting the best blooming
hanging basket for overnight shipment to a store somewhere
in the South . Since 1991. Hill"s fa rm has grown mto a million
dollar a year business employing 14 workers who produced
more than 4.5 million annual~ last year on about two indoor
acres and four outdoor acres. (J . Miles Layton )
acces&gt; to 111arkets \1CGIU&gt;c of
our proximity In highways. antl

(1\"er the Atlalllic 'eaboard.
Kneen 'aiel markets in

a good climate:· Kneen saiJ.

Flower&gt; will be &gt;oltl all .

Please see Flowers. AS

The Holzer Medical Center Community Heallh
and Wellness De&gt;portment solutes the Gallipolis FACTS
(Family Addiction Community Treatment Services) Office and Ohio's
11

Parents Who Host Lose
the Most" Ca111paign

Dul-ing Prom and Graduation season, please
"Don't be a party to teenage drinking ... it's against the low."
For more information, please call FACTS at (740) 446-7866.
'•

•

MEDICAL CENTER
niscm•el' the I!olzel' DUfcrence
'WWW .holzer .org

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      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="18291">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="18290">
              <text>April 29, 2004</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3212">
      <name>o'connor</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="849">
      <name>riley</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
