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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday,. May 3. 2 004

,.

Mafor League Baseball

.

American I.Mgue
EAST

W

l

Pet.

Bos1on

15

9

.625

. 14
12

11
10

--~

.5&lt;45

Tampa Bay

8

15

Toronto

B

17

NY Yankees

Baltimore

CENTRAl

W
15
15
13
10

Chcago Sox
"A1nnesota
DetrOit

I

. '

Cleveland

"'ansas City

Sttk

Home

6-4

L3

B-3

1 !,

6-4

4-6
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9·5
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2
61,

W6
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320

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4-6

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47·9

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9
12
13
16

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625
625
520
4'35

GB

304

WEST

W

l

Pet.

Texas

16

640

ll.naheim

15
12

9
10
13

600
480

9

16

360

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Suattle

...,

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L
9

7

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7

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3. Ba~tm ore

''

5-10

Saturday 's

BaiiiiTlOU!I at CleVeland. ppd ra,n

Detroit 4 , 9aatt~ 2
NY Yar1kaes 12. Kansas C11'r 4
ChK:ago S.:.;x-4. Toronto 3. (101, lsi game
·roronlo 10, Ch~eago SoK 6. 2nd game
Teltas 4, Boston 3. 1st game
T9KiiS 8. BoSIOfl 5. 2nd Qilfll@
Oakland 6. Tampa Bay 5

Seallle 12 Detrort 2
-~ y Yanketis 4. Kansas City 2
Tampa Bay 8. Oakland 2
A.nahem 3,

~1me.sota

1

ChiCago Sox 3. Toronto 2
Texas • · Bos1on 1

W

L

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15

10

600

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12

12

500

Phlla~pt-;a

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12

476

NY Mats

10 ·
6

15
20 .

400
231

CENTRAL

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L

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Ch1cago Cubs
Pmsburgn

15

9
10
11
12

14

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12
13
12

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12

St

LOUIS

P1D

51111

Home

L3
ll
WI
WI

6-3

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3
5

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4-6
6-4
4-6

9 /,

2-8

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Home

583

1

6·4
6-4

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l1

7-6
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522

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520
500

3
3i

480

P10

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L1
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9·6
i1·S

4

5-5
7-3
6-4
5-5
6-4

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9
10
' 14

625
615

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11

4

10

13
14

&lt;~58

An.zona

&lt;117

5

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San Franosco

462

S. Frmcilco 050

5-7

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&amp;pne&amp;cl ... 1 2 1
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40 10
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6 1 3 2

1
BWQIV p
I
Glnv111e ci 3
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0
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6
5
6
5

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0
0
0

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0 I 0 0

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DBtista rf
Tra:y3b
Hmd&lt;c

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3000

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Thomo &lt;o

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3000

AolfiS 5S

6 1 ~ 0

T"""' 30

4

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Roct~p

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o1 ao

0000
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10 0 0

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Choalep
Cb-,--lnph
Mantur p

ooao

0000 Mihoo p
SO 5 11 5 T"""'

Arlzons
Phila.

010 003 000 000
000 000 202 000

rwo outs v.t~en Wf1nn;J

2

0
0
1
0

0
0
0
1

1 2

10 00
47666
01 02 -

5
6

r111 SCOI'OO

E-Tracy(31. Byrcl (ll. Aolifi1S (2).0P-Anzcna 1.
Philaclelph~.S~

1 LOO--Anrula 9, Pl1~aa 12
28-----0ntron (6\. H1llenbrarld 2 (2). OaBei r6t.
Thome (71 HR--SFnle'f (61, ToP9rw: (1\, Burrell
1J) SB--SF~nie\1 (5). OBaullsla (3), Ledee rt 1.
Roll1ns (2) CS-PolallCO (1 ). 5-SFrnley. Tracy,

GlanvilM:!

IP

H

RE R BBSO

Arirono

WOOb

62·3
1
1-3

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Choate
Mante1 _

1

Ranc!Ollh
'lnl\teroe

1.1·3

V~larroal

1 2·3

1 2·3

LQ-2
Philadelphia

Millon

'1
0
2

02
0
2

0

c

1

2

0'
0
2

0

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2

1

4

1
0

2
0

31
1
3

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2
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Worrell

654446
11a00 0
100000

B'Nag"~er

2

0

0

0

0

3

relemaco
1 2 0 0 0 0
3 2 1
2
MadsonW.2·1
HBP------0, Villarreai 1Liebal1hal1.
Ump~. KB1.1n I&lt;Bkr,': F1rst, Jin Well
Second. Fretln CrJI:lrett\ Third. TCJr1Y Randazzo
T--4:27 A----43,025 (43.500\...

c o

Pirates 4, Brewers 3, (1 1)
ab r h bi
Tf\:lmn d s 1 1 o

Milwaukee
llbrhbi
Pdsalkd 4 2 1 0

JNilsn ss

Cunsel

Pittsburgh •

5 I 10
Kenda~c · 5130
Mndes1rf 50 1 0
CW11Si1 10 5 1 :t 3
ANunezpn 1 0 0 0
JD~M
3aao

'

.'

5 1 1 0

Spr.oey 2b

5 0 3 1
10 0 0

Jeflkf1S ~ 4 0 1 1
Ovrbay 1b 3 0 1 1
KG!Iltr 3b 3000
Gri1Mlr1
3000

2000

~H

ss

Helms~

~r1

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1000
2 o

Castillo 2b

5 0 2 0

Moelerc

so

vg~sogp

2

DDavts p

2

Bnmgrp

000 0

HHiph

Totals

a 1o

_o o o

Dmgtnj:t! 1000
Ksctmk oh 1 0 0 0
Total1 . 38 3 9 J

1000
43 4 13 3

P1ttaburgh

100 020 000 01 4
000 101 1DO 00 3
DP........Pillsburgh 2. M ilwau~ 2. LOB-Prtts·

Milwaukee

burgh 8. M!lwBukBf!l 9 28--Stynes (3) Sptwy
(9). Moeller (3). HA--GW~son (6). SB-TRed·
man (1). Kendall (4). POOsednlk 2 (1 4). Spl'o'8)'
(2). C$-CW~&amp;an {1). &amp;-VogeloonQ, KG111IEH.
S~--&lt;Ne&lt;bay.

IP

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Milwaukee

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2

4

0

1
0

0 '0
1 0

0
'

0
0

0
0

0
0

7 ,'

3

3

6
1

5
2

2
1

1

1

2

200

00a

2 2 1 • a
\MJ........{)DaviS. T-3.36 A.-16392(4 19.:())

Phila

ArilOIUI

'

6

2
1
2

3

Mhtneaota
abrhbi

llbrhbi
423 0
4 01 1
31-0:J

Figgmss
Erstad1 b
VGre.-ol1
G~us dl

3000
40 1 2

JGIIoo~

BMOinac
OVnorct

4 020

LForcN

40 C O

Mnlkwlb
Koskie 3b

4 0 2 0
4 0 2 0

THntercl

4 0 0 0

JJonesl'f
Cc:l&lt;¥lr 11'1

4 0 10
3 1 1 1

CGzmnss 3 0 D 0
4 000 , MRyanpr- · 1 0 0 0
HBineo c 4 o 0 0
30 00

.; ooo

Haner3b

AKM;2b
Totals

RIVaS2b
2 0 10
Tota11
33 .1 1 1

33 3 7 3

Anahe im
100 000 020 3
MinM$olll
000
100 000 1
OP- Anahe1m 1. Minnesota 1. LOB-Anat'\em
6. Minnesota 7 2B-BMotina (1). 3S-F 1ggrns
(4) HR--Cuddy~ t2) SB-Frggfis (8). Cuddysr ( 1 ~

'

..........

IP

H

7

FAodngue.z

6
0

PefcMII 5.7

l..itckey W2·3

Minnesota
Santana

7

Romero L.1-1

1

Mutrotlana

1

.l.Cruzp

Hawpert · 1000
Totllls
40 13 14 10

0000

Totals

l4 4 11 4

Atlanta
Colonldo

Angels 3, Twins 1
Anaheim

RER BB SO
0

1
0

0
0

5
1

1

0

0

2

0

5

1

1 2 6
2
2
2 I 1
00002

WP-f'e&lt;oMII
T-2:39 A--20 ,744 i45,423).

100 001
200 4
330 204 01 k - 13
E-DeAosa. 4 (51. MG1Ies 2 (7). JGarCia (1).
DP-Colol'ado 2. LOB-Atlanta 6. ColoraOO 11 .
2B-Holl1ns (2) . JOrew (5). Hassman (2].
Cast1~a t.11). HA--MG1Ies (3). LuGon.zaleZ (3) .

CS-LuGonzatez (2). $-DeRosa, Clayton .

SF--MGiles. Hatton.

"''""
"""""""
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HRamrez L.0-3

IP

H

3 1·3

5
1

8
0

0
0

'

4
1

'
1

2·3
2

,M;ru,

Cunnane

St. Louis

abrhbi
1Walr2b

abr. h bi

4 . 1 0

CPttso:-r d
SSosar1

4 0 1 0
4 000
A.k:lu~
40 0 0
ARmrz3b 3010
Oelee1b 301p
ASGzlzss 4010
Godw!n ph l 0 0 0
Barren c
4 000
Zmbmop 2000

Talala

Wmact 2b

4 1 1 0

Lnidfd H

10 0 0
3000
3 a0 0
1000
3000
5a31

Momsp
Pu)Ois1b
Porter~

Edmndd
Roten3b
Rr~:eri!!.

ss

'4 0 2 0
4000

ASndrsrf

33 0 5 0

Mlheny c
4 000
Totals
32 1 6 1

Chicago
000 000 000
0 0
St. Louis
000 000 000
1 1
One Oi.JI wh€1'1 wmmng run scored
E-A9Gonzalez {3). Rolen 1.21. DP-St. lows
2. LOB-Chrcage 5. St. Lours 12. 2B-Womado.
(7 ). Rolen (41 S-Delw TaguctJ12
IP H A ERBB SO

""'"""

Zambrano
M"""'

7

Hawkl11s
Fmsw1 L.D-2

0
2
1·3

3

0

0

3 12

0

0

1
3

o o a o

1

1
0

St. Louil .
Morris
940014
lsmtj'ls W.2--0
1 1 0 0 0 ' 0
Marder pittled to 1 batter nlhe 81!'1 .

Umpi'es-Home. A.ngel Hetnar.dez: First Mlkl!
E\lerrtt:SacMd. MaikWegner Tli1rd. LarryYoong.
T-2:48 A-47.757 (50.3451.

Rockies 13, Braves 4
C~Ofado

Atlanta
8b r h bl

Hotirlsn · 5121
DeRose 3b 3 o o o
Hssmnl::l 2 1 I 1
MGtles 2b 3 1 1 2
AJones ct 3 0 1 0
OWIS8 cl
JO!-ew .-1
JuFICOib

10 0 0
4
2

a o

3010
4 0 1 0
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EddPrz c

HRmrz p
Alfnsca p
'Hmptnp:1

10 00
0 0 0 0
1o a o

ab rh bl

LL.Gnzl 2b

6 3 3 3
Ctaymss 3200
Mleti2b

Helton 1b

1011
424::2

MaSwy 1b 0 0 0 0
Castilla 3b 4 1 2 3
G..Jlson c
a1o
Fentas p
0000
Hllday l
4 1 1 0
flellcroy rf
4 1 1 1

s

Hcklngd

4 1 1 0

Estesp
FS5efop

· 4220
0000

3

1

0

1
4

2
0

3

7 10 4 4 1 2
100000
Fuentes
110003
H8P-by Cunnane (P81iow) Bal-+iAanllfeZ
Umpre!.---Home. Ttm T1nY11011S: FKSI, Bruce
Es1esW,4-1
Fassero

Froemmi"lg: Secord. Mike Wfitel's: Thin:t Hunter

'T"""""'""'
-2:~ .

A-35234 (50 .449)

White Sox 3, Blue Jays 2
Toromo

~lb

6-3

88J

-

(B) . 36--FICk (1): HA-Byn'les (3). Baldelli (~) .

5-5

4-5

--,:o---4·8

SB---Oawtort:l (14). Cs-Blim (1 ).
IP

THudson L.3-1

ab rh bi
I-ICiat1&lt;rf

ab r hbl
Wt-iarrs 2b 3 1 2 1
Uribess
2aoa
M()-dzr1
2001

4 1 0 0

Ctlnotlo~

5 0 2 0

\rWellsct

4 1 10

COigoo1b 4

0

1 I

H•115118 3b 3 o a o
.hlSCKl r1 0 0 0 0
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Thmast:;h

3 1,1 1

CaL8elf
Kneno:o 1b
Crede 3tl

3 ,0 1 0
3 oa o

RwaR.:Id

3 1 1 0
2010

4040
Oivoc
Gomez ss 4 o 2 a
Totals 35211:2 Total&amp;

'

IP
CinciMati
Ldle
T.blesL1 ·1

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3

6 6 2 2 0 3
21aaa3
1 0 0' 0 0 0

OBaez .

3

a0

0

GUZZI. Secood. Jan8s

Hl¥i: Third, .Jerr¥ Craw-

bd.T-2:21 . 11.-10.1n (43.999).

Gallo
Ha.Mle

100
101

T""""o
MBatlsla LD-3

8

""'"""

Ga~W.2·1

000
100

6

3

3

1

7 10 2 2 1
2-30001
,1·3 0 0 0 0

Marta

Poli!W

Kod19,3

1

1

a o o

T-2·5,. A.-38.313 (-40,~).

1

DJesusW

4000

"'""'"'

0
0
0
2
2

0
0
0
0
0

"'l.a1SC'1.,
1111"

3 2 1 1
4 I 2 1

W1'ono'
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3 0 1 2

4
0
2
1

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0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

34 5 8

""""'

Totals

34 2 9 2 T -

=

Biggio cf

AI:::Vrttss
Bgweft1b
JKom2b
Brl&lt;mn~ -

Hidalgo rf
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4

0 0 0

0 p0
1 2 1

3 1 1

3 22 1
2 0 1 1
1

1 1

28 4 8 4

2

4

3

\00002

"""'""'

MJssna w.2-4

7

B

2

2

2

a

2

100011
1 1 o o a ·2
H8P-----O,' MRMlra (RanOO~ WP-----Aiteldl P6-

Gordon
f.f'IM)f8S .9
8Samogo.

f h

ISurua rf

'

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lb tt'lbl ·

BBoone 2b 3 3 2 3

4 1 1 0

32 2 1
4 2 2 2
3110
40 10
2 0 0 0

0000

Hgglsnrf

~1b

~

0 2 3

CPana1b

31aO
3110
401 ' 0

10 0 0

Monroe"

Munson3b 3 o 1 2
Totals
29 2 4 2

240 -

12

29---Splelio (2), BBoone (5), Ibanez 2 (8),
W'hlte (7), Munson (3). 38-ISuzuki (1), 'Mnn

1012
0
0000
Asmus
c
3001
0
0 AO::JP;jp 1000
0 JVzcno3b 200 0
OPimro~ 100 0
4Tol81a
31698

Clnclnm~ti

02 1 100 010 5
Houston
000 300 03k 6
E-JCastro (1), Hidalgo (1), JV12Ca1no {2)
LOB--Cinc1nnat1 8. Houstoo 6. 28--larson (1 ).
V81entin (1), Bagwell (7) . HR-Oann (9). JKflnt
(3). SB-Frool 15). Cs-B~gg10 (1 ). 8---Ensborg.
Ausmus. SF~vatanttn .

-."""""
•,
""""'

Cornelol,1·3
K11oft•

1

2

0

0

0

1

--(- ).

100000
2-300000
TyWallaW.2.fJ 1 1·3 0 0 0 2 3
Herges pik:had to 1 blnlar 11 the 10th

Eyre

T-4:11 ,t.,------'\1283 (41.584).

H RERBBSO

6 4 2234
100001
10001 . 0
100012
41-3 6 4 4
22·3 5 4 2
1·3 3 4 3
12·3 0 0 0

2 3
2 1
2 1
00

LGnzlz~

Hr'rO.C
A...hscM'1 p

Rosse
Cora2D
Nomop

4000

Baerga ph

3120

l&lt;pkwep

2000

Mayneph

1 oao

Wflo!Nrzp

0 0 0 0

Mantep

0000

Pscuci~

2010
1000

Drilort p

CCn:tro p

1

Saenzph

0 0 0 0
0001
36 4 10 4

C'Mtayr1
JAivmr1
SleO;Je K
,SKm p

20(10
2112
4 1 2 0

T.a.

a oo

35 61 2 6 Tam!s .
tOO

01 1

6

02 1 -

010
100
002 4
LOB-Mootreal 1a. Los Angvles 10. 2B-Sdlnelder (3), Sludge (2). HR-Wilkerwn (2),
OCabr9ra (3), JAiwfa (1), JEncamaqon (4).
SB-EnChaw.z (5), OCabo--era (4), Sledge (1).
SKim (1) CS-Wibrson (_1) S-VIdro, Cal-

loway. SF-TBatiSta . Saenz
IPHRERBBSO

_

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5
2-3
1·3
2
1
5

1 2·3

Orabl

2
0

2
0

0

0

0

2
3

0
2

0
2

1-3

2

4

0 '2

,,

0

,

7

3

3

3

o o. a
0
0
2

0
1
1

0

TMartr1
1·3
Mala
2,3
Sanchez
1 3 1 1
Nomo plched to 2 batlers 11 lhe 6t1.

,

0
2

1

2

0
I
·o

,
0

First. Eft: Coop.

T-3:16. A-35.351 (56,000).

S.n Diego
ab r hbi

ab rhbi

Matsui ss

3 0 0 0

8-rgls 3b

4 1 1 0

Zede3b

41 1 1

Loretta 2b

30 1 1

Piazza 1b • 0 0 0 ' ooilesrt
Otn::.:wr j:A1 1 0 0 0 Nevin1b
KGarcarf 5 12a Pa)1on d
Sfn::w~
5 1 3 2 Bdvlanf
Cmernnd 4 1 1 a LCJ1"9lt
3 00 1
3 2 1 1
1 0 1 1

Totals

4 o1 a
4110
4 0 ,. 1
30 0 0

10 0 0

AVazqzph 1 0 0 0
CJtedac
, 401 o
Greene ss 2 0 0 0

lvakleZ p

Gte!T82 ph 0 0 0 0

10 0 0

Eatoo ph

aoo o

33 6· 9 6 Totalt
03 1

1

oa o

32 2 6 2
001 000 -

100

--

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'='Dtlgo

6
1·3
1_ 2·3

IValdezL3-1
Szt.mllskj

6

5

2

2

1

6

1

0

0

0

0

0
0

0
0

0

1

0
0

0

1
0

5

7

5

5

2

1

1-3 0 0 0· 2 0
OropEisa
1 1-3 0 0 0 2· 1
W!la&amp;tck·
2 1--3 2 1 1 1 5
Umpire9-Home. Rick R8ed: Firsl Ed R8.j:a.lano:
Se::x:JOO, Ted Barren; Thrd, Ab)so Mwquez
T-3:01. A--41,965 (42.445).

WCoero1b 61 1 0
eoono~
Ea~ss

~2

31

51 2 0
1000
ooao
1
6121

4000

DCn.Lzph

AGnzlz: ss

5221
1

TyWkrp

Choiph

10a o

Wsyoop

1000 · Motrl

4221

Actmdc

5 1 10

5 1 3 5

T/te

0

OaBeiJb

ToPorz3b 100 0
Woolen 10 3 0 0 0

oo a

Bonds p11
DIL'nre2b
Trralbac

4 0 0 0

1 1 1 3

Mchels~ - 1010

Aolrtsss

4 1 1 1

Padllap

1 0 0 0
100 0

£¥-dph

36 6 12 6 Totals

Arizona

000

35 4 9 3

004

200 -

6

PhiladelphW
002
100 0 10 4
E-antron ·2 (4) . DP-Phlladelphla 1. LOSAriZona 11. Phlade1pl¥a 1. 2B-Korta (4). Holmmodo; 2 (5). Polanco 2 (7), BAbrEIU (6), Rollins
(5). 38-SF'IIlley (1) HR-Baerya (!). S--f'acl~­
la. SF~ut1sta 2, Burrel

--..._.
Pitdilla L0-4

5 2-3

9

'4

4

2

1

RHemandez

1 1·3

2

2

2

2

1

PH

RJohnsoo W.3-2

V o"""'
ManlfM S.4

Madson

R ER BB SO

5

4

3

1

1

0

'
0

'
0

9
0

2

2

1

2

1
0

'
0

0
0

3
0

1100

1a

o o o o a

1
HBP-b,- Pedila (Hillenbrand). WP-AHeman·

dez PB---f-lln'I1'\0dl..
T-3:20. A---44.048 (43.50Cl).

lib r hbl
5 12 2
~3b 4011
DO!tiz1b,5010

o oo

MYongss
Blalock 3b
A.SrarQ 2b
Flrngr ell

51 2 2

Perrylb

5 1 1 1
4 I 1 2

o1 a
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•

BhJm2b
Kaple-rf
·Crespo ss

3 1 1 1
3000

MurdlM

4a OO
42 30

4 00 0

Brajas c

423 2

Totals

37 81. 8

1DO 001 003
1D4 l OU 02x

-

5

B
OP-Texas 1 LOB--Bostoo 7. Texas 6 26--

0amon (71. McCarty (2). MYoung 17). ASonaoo
(7)." Delluccr (4), M&amp;f'dl 2 (10), Barajas 2 131
38-0amon \1). HR-Varitek (51. B1alodl t51
SB-8Jord8n (1). SF-Mueller ·

......

-

496613
320001
1 3 2 2 0 1

"""""'
Touo

Benoi1W.1-0

7 6 2 2 1
.a.rnarw.1 4 3 3 a
.JF\:JrM
1·3 1 0 0 1
FCon:!ero S.9
2-3 0 0 0 0
Arnanza-- pik;hed to 3 batters rn hr 9d'
T-2:58. A--44,596 (49,115)

3
1
1

1

Padres 3, Mets 1
NowY...

Son Diego

Crrrercw-1 d 5 0 1 0

4 02a
3 1 10
4010
4 0 0 0

3020

DGrct!! 2b

• 0 2 1

LBrterp

2 0 0 0

Greene 55

Peavyp
Totals

3 0 0 0

2000
31 3 1 3

NewYork

000 HIO 000 -- 1
S.n Diego
000
01 2 OOx 3
OP-San Otego 1. LOB-New York 10. San
Oego 12. JB---KGarcta {2). HA--6GIIes (5).
Bud'lanan (1).
IP H R ERBBSO

JoFranco LD-2

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loope&lt;

3 1 2 1

Miies2b

2 1 1 0
51 1 1
4
1
3 11 0

AJonesd

3 1

Clay!MSS 4 0 0 0
Hello1 1b 4 2 2 o
Castilla l::l 5 1 2 2
Bumrtzd 50 t 1
HIIOayM
51 2 I
Hav.per1 4?32
Gltw\eC 4021

oo

a0

4112
Lrtlche1b 3210
JCiarca ss 4 2 3 2

.JESidac

Thmsn o
JJFrcoDh

Smoltzp

Elartm p

o a o 0

3 1 1 2

loGo'u:! ph

1o 1 2

SReWp

1 a o o
o a o o

MaSy,-y~

0 0 0 0
35 1112 11

Totala

51 t 0

.attanti

200

10 1 0

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

38 714 1

Totals

030

060 -

11
1

:;o t 1 " 1 s

Colorado
200
102
200 E--MG•Ies (5). DP--Colorado 2 LOB-Ananta

-

.....

Ntkowskr W.1.0

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5m&lt;&gt;1Z

1

10

01a

Jrt.opez Plfct\eCI to 1 banef ., the 8th
wf'-flarion T-2:58. A- 24272 {50 449) .

Blue Jays 10,White Sox 6
Secon&lt;l Gome
Chicago
ab rh bi
abrhbi

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HCiarkrt
Jhnsonl1
Chl!lon
\/Wells ct
C~ l b

JPhlps r11
Hn;ke3b
ZaiSI ~

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2o a o
431018 10

Totals

030

Toronto
Chicago

4 1 1 0

1
5
4
4

0
0
0
0

1
1
2
0

0
0
0
0

e&amp;.. ,
Knerico 1b 4 1 1 (I
Cn"" :1&gt; 4 1 1 0
Awandd 3 0 1 0

3220

Wdwrdss

Ganezss

5 1 1 2

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WHo"'
Tl'
rna•.,
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1 oao
6262
3 12 1
51 1 1
6 a2 1
4 1 1 2
5131

38

..,_,....;-~.....1."-~,t:;YL _.,•:...•,~-.
-r-- ~·/~'-.. ,..,(C..,\. .,- ""'

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

The Daily Sentinel
&gt;~'&gt;-&gt;"~*~,.......;'~-&gt;

ATTENTION
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 5:00 p.m.

i

541112

2-3 3 2 2 1 0
1 1-3 0 0 0 0 ' 1
" 100000

a{;;a!fq ~enf;ne($

Tru,ell said tharin g 1he
course of the sheriff 's
department'' in\·e,tigati on.
Soul sby admined to pan ici··
paling in a brea king and
entering at the Ernest
Wh itehead res idence 111
Recd"·illc . and alle~edh
impliLa1ed Church.
Trussell · said anmher
break-in. al the ForkeJ Run
Sport,men 's Club. w·;~,
'olved when information
pro,·icled to officers led them

IP

H

REA BB SO

l.JiyW2·2

5 2-3

""""""'
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1

7
2
1
1

5
1

5
0

2
0

0

0

1

1 1·3

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4
1
1

ChiCago

CM'rr;;tl1L~

Ati&lt;IIS

M..Bdtsorr
Gotts
Takatsu
Koch
C'Nn~tll

3 9 6 6 3 2
2 2·3 4 1 1 3 2
2·3 1 2 2 I 1
2-331100
1 0 0 0 1
100 a01

the

lAYTON

f'B--&lt;ll&gt;o

UmpreS------tiape. Tim Welke: Rrst Jm Reynolds:
Secatd. Cdy Cederstrom : Thii'O'. Mike Fichter.
T~3:23 . A-22 .07'2 (40.615).

Dodgers 5, Expos 4
Los . ......
!lb rh bi
DRbrts d 4 0 0 1

lb r hbi
EChwzc!
Vi&lt;to2b

4 2 2 0
4000 . lztuns ss
OCbera ss 3 0 1 0 Bel!re 3b
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Cpd&lt;yM
30aO J Ecrcnl
JRMarf
1000 Vntura 1b
Sledgert 4 0 1 0 Ccwa2b
Schndn:
A 1 1 o
LJr:1ap
LHmctzp 2 0 0 0 GrbwSkph

50 0 0
5 2 3 3
3 0 1 0

3000
4 2 3 0
3 0 1 0
3000
2021
1 1 1 0

-_

lztuns {2)

5---lHarnandez. OAoberls
IP

H

RERBBSO

LHertlBfldez

....

7

9

4

4

•

5

Ayala L,0-5

1

2

1

1

0

0

LJma

574423
1 0
0 0 0 -1

WPM.rez
lM!irtln "

OBITUARIES

100010
MotaW,1 -0
1 0 0 0 0 0
Gagne 9.7
1 o o a o ~
TMart1n pitct1eG lo 1 batl!lf lfl th8 8th

Page AS
• Frances Reuter

HBP----0! LHernendez (Coral .

T-2'40. A-52,900 (56,000).

New Insertion
Date is
May 27, ~004_ ~-"'

Daily Sentinel re po rte r J. Miles Layton takes a 50,000 vo lt Taser blast as part of a trainmg simulation -at the Pomeroy
Police Departme nt. Even though Layto n was instantly paralyzed, he was alert enough to know never to resist arrest fro_m
an officer holdi ng a l aser.

WEATHER

Tasers jolt crime_in Pomeroy
BY

INDEX
2 SEL'TIONS- 12 PAGES

*Golf
* Gymnastics
Child's Name
* TUOiblitJg
Child of: Parent's Name
Team Name
*Soccer
Message
*Karate
&amp; Morel!
This special sec(l•n will-run on
Thursday, May 21th in The Daily Sentinel.
Hurry, Deadline for entries is May 20, 2004!

Fiil out the forn below and drop off or mail
(along with your payment and photo) to:
The Daily Sentinel "All-Stars", 111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769
Malee Chocks _
out_,_to:....The
Daily Se nti~ el
_....__...___,
______
.....,.._..
- . -------

:_-~-----

Child's Name ---------~-----Parent's Name _________________

Town ___~------~--------------------Team Name.-------------------------------Phone Number ----'--------------------------Message (up to 10 wo rds) : _____________

..- --- -- ..--. --.....,_
... ...-

J.

MILES LAYTON

. JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Detail s on Page A6

....

from

are ongoing."· Tru ~:-.ell "aid.

Bv J. MILES

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

....

renn ·~reJ

\\a..,

'' ;ner,_
Tru,el l 'aid add ilional
L' h ~1rges are apected to be
ti leJ again'! bmh Soulsby
and ChurL·h in that case.
"The 1 n1e &gt;ti~ a tion oftho,e
ca&gt;es and others in 1he area

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

pnched 10 4 batters r1 me 41t1

Calendars

-,...~-

to Forked Run Lake. where.
1111h the Jssistance of the
Oli1.: Tolln,hip Volunteer
Fire Deranment. a change
mdL·hine ' '"len from the cluh

Southern's
•
sen1or
play is 'Up
in the Air'

(21. Unbe (4). Olrvo (2). Cs-Hr1skll (2)

T""'"'o

AQQ-®far-~

----·--·------,--. ----.

dent. Trussell said.
"' I · received · information
1ha1 Soul sb\ had po"es,ion
of some prescription mcdi·
cine stolen in a burglary at
1he Sylvia Causey residence
on Coolville Rd ., " Tru&gt;Sell
said. "Dep1.11ie.s recowred
the medicine and a .22-caliber rifle thai Soulsby had in
his possession. stolen from a
break -in at the Larry Jones
hunting trailer on Number
Nine Rd."

10

If your child is a , , 1 '
"Star Athlete" ~' on\h -j_....
inyoureyes, ~s10. 0£
indude them in - h ... ,.,,...,-:
this section!!
· V'' '

*

'

611 5

School will soon be out, but IT'S NOT TOO LATE to
salute your athlete from this past school year!
There will be a Special Edition
on Friday, May 14th
saluting all
Meigs County Class of
2004 graduating Seniors

REED

4 2 2 3

300 -

310

J.

counts of breaking and entering and two counts of bur·
glary. and Shane Church . 23.
REEDS'vJLLE
-Two with one count of burglary in
Reedsvi lle men have been Meigs County Court. Deputy
arrested and charged with Scott Trussell said Monday.
burglary in connection with
Trussell said additional
a series of break-ins in th a1 charges are likely agains1
community, and the recovery Church. and additional
of a stolen change mac hi ne charges have ·already been
from Forked Run Lake filed against Soulsby in
migh t lead to other charges.
Middleport Mayor\ Cnurl in
Pa1rick S. Soulsby, 19. has. connection with another
been charged wi th two breaki ng and entering inciBY BRIAN

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CDM

1 10002
2·3 1
0 0
00 11 \0
1·3 3 4 4 2 0

VNunez L.3-1
Wendell

"" " . ,""' , 11, -.·",, "'' ... ,"

Two arrested in Reedsville burglaries

• Belpre powers past
Meigs. See Page 81

665521

Jrt..opez

n 1 s n \' . " '' _. . :! o o-t

:;-t. "., . ,-:1

SPORTS

62·3 10 "7 7 1 4
1·3 o o o o a
12 0001
120002

Colonodo
Elartoo
Fassero
SRr:e:J

• \ ·., 1.

.._
ab rh bl . QMoay P'l 1 0 0 0 JHmdZph 1 000
Totate
34 511 5 •
32 4 7 3
Bng-.s 3&gt; 5 1 2 0 Totals
Loretta 2b 4 0 0 0
BGilesrt
513 2
Montrea l
002 110 000 4
Navil1b
1 oo a
Lo1 Angeles
110 001 11k 5
~and
3010
E--OCat:rera (2). W~t..&amp;rSO!l (2), Be~re J3).
Bdlrw1H
3 1 I 1
OP-los Angeles 1. LOB-Mol'ltreat 5. Los
RtmonN
200a Angeles 11, 28----Grabowski (1\. HA- TBal!sta
Hltmanp 0000
12). Belue 2 (9). SB-EnChavez 2 {4\, OCabtRaHrdz:c 3 0 0 0
era (3). Wilk&amp;r$0f'l l31. JEncamac!Cfl (11. cs-

abrhbi
Matsui ss 5 o o a

---

lib rhbi

C¥/rse f
Holrnsf
DeRosaJb
MGIIes 2D
JDrl!Wrt

IPHR EABBSO

PMartnez L3-2

Piazzac
KGarcarf
~"
JPhl~ 1b
Z&amp;ile3b

7

SF----Hif1ske

4120

Bo8ton
Tekas

2

Cokndo
lb rhbi

ab r hbi

36 51 1 5

1

Second Garno
Allanl•

son

Mccty-1

Totllls

1

002
300 1 DO 6
E-Nakamura .[1). DP-Toronto 1 LOBTof0n1o 14, Chcago 8 2B-Catela11011o (7).
ZalXI (1 ). Thomas {4). HA-Hiflslw {3), OHud·

2nd Game
Tell•

Damoncl

6

Braves 1 1, Rockies 7

OHude.n 2b 4 1 1 2

1000
Glem!l 3b 1 0 1 0
Totals
36 110 1

Grssom c1 6 1 3 o
Fehz:b
Hrmdsr1

3 1 1 0

0
0

vaJenl(:tl

Giants 9, Mar11ns B, (11)
•
ebrt'lbl
P~&amp;rre ct
4 13 l
LCsttllo.;:b s 1 1 2
Ctrerart 3 1 1 a
l.ow813b 6022

3001

lbrlhal c

2

MAmrzrll 4 0 1 0
llanl8k c
4 2 3 1

Mots 6, Padnls 2

Valent ph

TotW

4 0 1 1

0000

Botton

er: Second. Miw Reilly; Thin), Otud&lt; Menwe1her

VW-Jsn c
DGICI82b
TGivinp

Tracy l:l

BAbreutf
Burmlll

Rangers 8, Red Sox 5

0

WP--Biltle .

.....,...

llbrhbi
4 1 1 0
1 0 1 0
f\lnco2b · 51 3 o

WorM~~ ,

NomoL3-3

WAMJrez

•
1

3 0 0
3 1 0
412
2 01

6

Lnebmk
10000
OISllc.a
1 0 0 0 0 1
HotmanS.7
1 1 0 0 0 0
~- Allonso Man:paz• F~ Ad
Reed: Secorld. Ed A.apualo: n-.-d Ted Barrett
T-2-50. A--42:.C64• t-42 .445)

(1) SB-JDrew (3! C5-JGcma (I) s--ctay·
ton. Elarton 2. SF-MG1Ies
IP H RERBBSO

G11'1vte ct
l.adoo ph

3 1 1 0
4 I 1 0
5 1 2 1

P9avyW.2-1

Valentin shot
lifts Reds, B6

Eastern lashes
I .ancers, Bt

... Oiego

4 . Colorado 8. 28--0Wrse f4) DeRosa (5).
Tha"nSon {1), JuFranco (4 ). Cast1lla (1a). 38CM'~ (41. Hav.pe (1). HA-Cas1~1a (7), Hawpe

D'dbacks 6, Phillies 4

S12 1
4 0 2 1

ab r htM
NPerez ss 5 0 1 1
Snow 1b . 4 o a o

p "'

1

JEcrcnlf
lJritufa 1b

(5). CS-Winn (2), Monroe (1 )- SF-Auril1a.

~-

0

DBiista r1

San Fran

MecheW 1·2

0

5021
3 1 o 0

{1). HR--Spie.zio {3), BBoa1e (6) . SB--ISuzuk1 Fkwlda

1P

0

Betnt3b
ShGfenrt

TGiavine W,4-1

3010

000 020
000 2
E--cGuillen (2). CPena (31. Monroe (5). OPSean!e 1, Oelroit 2. LOB-Seattle B. Detroit 5.

Lamb~
Oot~p

0

3 1 1 1

•2000
0 0 0

040

2

1

9Fneyct

3000

Wh~ecl'l Shelton~

200

4

1

5 1 1 0

'""''
Grnlen 5S

30ao

513a
5 2 3 1
3 10 a

Seldtle
Detroit

6

1
0

1zrunsss

ASnchzd
V"na2b

Winnd
!banal. I
EMrtnzdh
McCknl11

Auriii!IS 40 01
BDav!sc 5o 0 o
Totals 391214 11

7

1

3 o o 1

S.n Diego
011 .000
2
E-8G1Ies (2), Szuminski (1 ). DP~ San DiegO
1. LOB---New Yurt 12, San DI&amp;QO 5. 28-Zeile
151. KGarcia 2 (4), CM'teron (6), BGi~s (4).
Nevin (41, PaytOn (4). 38--Burroughs (1), HR-OGarcla (1). SB-Cam&amp;fon (7). 5---Matsui 2.
Zeie, TGMle. 9F-WJilson, Loretta
IP H AERBBSO

t1b r h bi

Spem3b _6 2 2 2

8

Vldro2D
WJ&lt;r.;n 1b

NewYOfll

ab r hbi
53 2 1

WfraoiOO
FRoclrQ.Jez
Harges

41 ·3
12·3
1

.b rhbl
5030
Cntmnss ~ o 1 0

............

Ump~res----1 1~. G.B. B~:

2·300001

Moriners 12, Tigers 2

bt
30 1 0

l!lb

8

Sln FIMCiKo

Rueter
8rUM!f

Hnbm1b

r.""""

Kanaa• City
101 000 000 2
New York
001 100 20x 4
OP--Kansas City 1, Ng,vYofl(; 2. LOB--Kansas
Crty 7. New York 4 , 28--Betran (6), BSan!iago
(4), Posada (6), Matsur (5). Srerra (4). 3S--&amp;1tran (2). HA-JaG131T1bi (51 58--Cairo (1)
SF-Sierra. Carro
p · H R ER BB SO
61-3

~
,.,..,

1 0

=....

rhbi
0 0 0

4 0 10

Sh1l&lt;ld '
Pooadao

1
0

Houoton

1
0
0
0
1

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TC»&gt;&lt; 1b

o o. o

S!rurs ~

ab
4
4
3
4

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caro2b
a

40 1 2
JGnztzrf 402a
Harveylb 4 01 0
Rao:1a 3b 3 0 0 0
BSbaQOc 3020

T-2:45. A-t9,20B (57,47!1)

Astros 6, Reds 5
2
2
JCaslro ss 3
Grt Jr. ct
5
casev 10 5

EM&gt;n•d

3 2 2 0

M•S"t&lt;Ydh

5

T-2:17. A-15.550 (40,615).

,... ,

Now Y""'

Poene. Sr&gt;ow. Rueter SF--NPftr&amp;Z.. Motu
IPH R ERBBSO
F1orido
6 6 5 ' 1
o4 2 2 ' 0
2 0 0 2 0
2 0 0 0 2
2 1
PertSho L2-2
' 0

50

Sl&lt;imW,1.0

.......

WCordero (3), FeU ~31. MOOr t1 ). Torrealba 12)
38-Pierre (3§,fafY (t\. Gnssom (1) HR--Tonealla (1).
as1ey (2). Gnssc:rn ( 1) 5---

DFbtn1

""""""

Yani&lt;Ms 4, Royals 2
lib r hbi
4 0 0 0

(2). OP-$an Flli~ISCO 1. LOB--Fiondll 12

San FrarPCISCO 13 28-lCastlllo ~31. Lowell161

Kata2b

LotA~

1-1-

Berroa S5
Beltran c1

20001-t
Cht 01.11 wtlen Wf'lf'II\Q 11,1'1 scored
E--l.OWel (4), f'.Ferez (3}. Feliz (2), Oallwoofe

ECh\18Z. e! 5 1 1 0

Mon1ru1

v.,__

.......

ab r hbl

5

u~. Larce Bartsdale: FW$1, Sam
Holb'ooK: Second , Paul Nauer!; Thin:!, LatTy

4

Garland pitched to 1 batter rn the&amp;"!.
WP--"arte
.
Umpt~es-Home, Jlfll Reynolds. Fr-st. ~ Cedsrslrom: Second. Andy Fletcher: Thrrd Trn

Clnclnnlti

2

..._ c.,

24 3 6 3

010 2
OOx ..... 3
OP-Torooto 1. Chugo 2. LO&amp;-T01onlo 9.
Cticago 2. 2&amp;--VWegs (!I ). OHudson (8).
WHarns (6). Rowano 17). HR- Thomas (5).
GS-Unbe (2). 5-Unbe. OlivO. SF--QHudsen.
WHams. MOrdonez.
IP H RERBB SO
Chicago

4

DMK:el1W,I·I
2 1 1' 1 0 3
DoleiS,4
I
1 0 0
1 0
~ pildled to 2 banetS'" tl8 4Ch .
HBP-lly Lde [B&lt;gg&lt;o). " ' , _ ,
IJmpr'es--Home, Paul Schnebw: F'm. Ed ~
~ague, Secaid, ,lefTy l..ayfle. Th.-d, Jerry Meals.

Kanaa1 City

2lO • ooooo--a

100

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Classifieds
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Dear Abby
, Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A6

© 2004 Ohio Valle)' Publishlna Cu.

POMEROY- The intense paralyzing pain inflicted by a Taser does not
even begin to describe what 50.000
vo l1s will do to a person.
Start ing this week, each officer in
the .Pomeroy Police Department wi ll
be carrying a Taser. At $800 a piece.
Tasers cost more than regu lation
sidearms bul are safer and more effective. A Taser works by shooti ng two
needles, which are about as 1hick as
fi sh hooks, into the skin. The need les
are connected by a thin wire to the
Taser which emi1s a five-second
50,000 volt bu rst of electricity.
Maybe somebody who has been shot
by a gun can limp away, but a Taser
blast will ins1antly paralyze anyone for
a few minutes. PPD officers have been
trained in differen1 tactics oil how best
to use the weapon effectively which
also doubles as a stun gun.
For instance in one training scenario, imagine a PPD officer 'walking
into a bar 10 arres1 someone who is
enjoying a trip to margarita ville a lillie
too much. Scanning the joint. the offi-

cer seeks his drunk and belligcre111 tar- like so as best to empathize with anyone
gel who begins 10 charge. The officer shot with a Tascr. Each oflicer blacked
then whips out the Taser and loudly oul and fell l(mvard like a power switch
wa ms the man of 1he doom 'to come if to I he hody had been 1Urned off.
··1 don't want i1 m•ice." saifl Cpl.
he doesn't back off. The target ignores
the oflicer and steps forw ard. The otli· Ronnie Spaun . '·It fell like burnmg ."
Assistant Chief Joe Kirov. Jr.. was
cer mkes aim. unci icks the safety and
yel ls, "Taser! Ta&gt;er! Taser!"
shot in the back by Chid' tvhtrk Proffin.
··1 knew i1 was coming &lt;Uld I suu1ed
Two needles tly thmugl1 the air at 180
feel per second lo hit 1heir mark. The tar- ·"re;uning. 1l1~Ulks old tiie;1d." Kirby said.
Seveml (ifticers said the blast hurl and
get g()('s down . His Busch Lite "buddy"'
it
felt like gelling beal up on the inside.
nearby may think thai since .the blast has
"It felt like a thotNind people were
been tired, 1hat the otllcer is ou1 of
ammuni1ion and vulnerable. Buddy then beating tne up all at .mcc." said Proffin.
Dars1 said the use of Tasers reduces
charges the otlicer who quickly disofticer injury by RO percent and suspect
patches him with the stun gun.
Worth noting. PPD officers are crack injury by 67 percent. Tasers limi1cd the
shots and in mosi simulations hit their need for letha l force hy 7~ percent.
Proffill said there is a verv 1hornu~h
targe1 square in the che st with one nee -·
die, however. the other needle oflen wril!en policy in pl &lt;(l'e th:tl offic~rs
landed unceremoniously below the must adhere 10 when depl oving a
belt. While some places are beuer than Taser. If a Taser is fireJ . it emits sCI'·
others for getting hit by a Tascr. it just era I tiny pieces of confeni each with a
doesn "t malter where a person gets hit: serial number printed oil them &gt;O as 1o
According .to Jen·y Dars1, an instructo r ide ntify the officer who fired th e
with Tactical Training Unlimited. weapon . Each officer i&gt; ceni ficJ and
trained 10 carry th e weapon .
Tasers are 95 percent effective.
··Tasers wil l change everything by
While it was optional. each membe r
law enforcement more sal'c
nurking
of the PPD decided 10 take blast during
thei r training to understand what it feels and cffecti\e." Profl\11 said .

RAC INE - The Southern
High School •enior play will
be "L'p in the Air" at 7 p.m.
Friday. \1ay 7. at South~rn
High School.
The play. which was writlen by Don Dudding"s drama
·class. interweaws four stories
into a funny tale about life
and loYe for pa"engers wait·
ing fur their llighh to arri,·e
in-..ide an airport hangar.
"This script is ouhtanding
and I ha1·e some ,-ery good
actor; thi' year." Dudding
said. ·· 1 think it is a funny
script that promises an excellent performance ...
One ,tory in1·olws a man
who gets fired because he
leaves IHlr~ Ill drop his moth·
er olf al the air-port. His moth ·
er anJ her frienJs plot to get
the man\ job hack as the)
\\ait for their flight to atTive.
Anot her story describes a
romance which has bios·
somed through the lmerne t.
The lo1 ers are set to mee1
each other for the first time.
bul late sadi&gt;lically inter ·
ve n e~

through mi-.taken ide n-

tity. Gotta lo,·e 1hal I nterne!~
A third storv involl'es h0\1
two new I) weds wpe with an
airhead 1il'kc1 agent who has
screwed up the ir !light rcser' at ions. A final &lt;lllry is about
a meeting hetv.. een &lt;I falher
and Jaughter \\ hn h;l\ e ne\ er
... een

c~tdl other hefim.~.

Dudding s~1i d the cast . has
been writing and preparing
for the performance since
early February. The set&gt; arc
realistic. Dudding &gt;aid the
cast member&gt; know their
line' h) heart and the ) are
rrcpareJ to g il\~ a memorable
perl"nnn at \ce .
"The drama cl'"' has pul a
lot nf \\Or'k into 1his." he said .
" l 1p in the Air" lasts 111 ll
hour.-.. and 1here is lhl ... ct prk·c
for aJmis&gt;ion . just a dona·
tion .

. I

Diabetes Paograms
The HMC Diabetes Support Group will meet Sunday, May 9 from
2:00pm • 4:00pm altho HMC French 50Q Room .
Speaker · Nancy Stevens, RN , of the HMC Diabetes Educali(Jfl Deportmenl

Diabetes Self·Management Proara;, - May 17, 18 and i 9
9 AM · 12 Noon • HMC French 500 Room
PleoM3 bring a lisf of home medications

/o

class and have prescription from your phy~ician to attend.

Fibromyalgia Support Group

MEDICA L C E NT E R
Discot'CI" the Holzer n([f"crcnce

This FREE support group is sponsored by fhe Arthritis Foundation and Holzer Medtcol Center

Tuesday, May 11 • 5:30PM · 8:00PM • HMC Education &amp; Conference Center Room A
Topb discus~ w~l include .potn control , exerci~. relaxation, fottgue. chpre~~~on and doctot- / pohent reloh011sh1p

For mare information, or to

call Missi Ross ot 1740) 446·5121 or 1·8()().816·5131

www .h olzer.org

-

.

�The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

Tuesday, May 4, 2004

New virus snarls hundreds of
Virginia communi~
questions DNA testing of black thousands of machines worldwide
men in rape investigation .
CHARLOTTESVILLE. they do not have to give a
Va . . (AP) - Steven Turner sample. If th~men refuse. the
wondered who officers were officers will need to get a
looking for when a police van court order.
pulled up as he was riding his
Of the 197 black men who
bicycle around dusk in his had been stopped by police
neighborhood
near
the and asked to gi1e a sample.
University of Virginia.
1H7 complied and all were
It turned out police were cleared. Longo said _police
looking for him. in response would return or de'&gt;troy the
to a call about '·a suspicious samples.
person ·riding a bike ...
In Turner\ l'a&gt;.C. t\\oO omcer'
showed up at his home
The U.Va. graduate student
had become the latest target in M~rch requesting a sample
of a DNA dragnet for a serial auain. He contacted Rick
rapist. In a practice decried as T~rner. U.Va.'s dean of black
racist, police have stopped ,tudies. who put together a
nearly 200 black men to ask cnmmunitv forum after
them for cheek-swab ti"ue receiving ~ntller complaints
abnut the testing.
samples.
"The Afric-an-American
Turner. 27. said he refused
to give the officers a check men in this community had to
swab that August night. then tell their storie&gt; about the
refused again when pol ice humiliation they felt, .. said
showed up at his home seven Rick Turner. who is not relatmonths later. because he felt ed to Steven Turner.
his rights were being violatNot everyone has objected
ed.
to the testing. The officers
"The question Wlls not my "were just doing their job."
guilt or innocence... Tumer said Gary Spry. a black barsaid. "I know where my DNA becue shop owner who has
has been."
not been stopped by police .
U. Va.
student
Kasie
Police begm1 stopping
black men for DNA tests in Scopetti said police have
November
2002.
then mishandled the investigation.
stepped up the program last "I want them to do their job.
year after a victim got a good but I also believe · there are
look at the rapist and certain individual liberties
described. him as a 6-foot that can't be infringed on."
black man in his early 20s Scopetti said.
with an athletic build and
Je;sica McGrane of the
unnaturally white, bulging Sexual Assault . Resource
eyes. The rapist is being Agency said the police invessought for six· attacks in the tigation has damaged race
area between 1997 and 2003. relations in Charlottesville.
After black community best known as the home of
leaders complained to Police Thomas Jefferson and the uniChief timothy J. Longo that . versity he tounded. The city
the tosting amounted to racial by the Blue Ridge Mountains
profiling. Longo agreed in has 41 ,000 residents. 22 permid-April to place limits on cent of them black.
the tests.
McGrane, a counselor, said
Poiice can no longer .the case perpetuates a rape
request cheek swabs from myth.
"There is a myth that black
black men simply because
they look suspicious or men rape and they rape white
resemble a police sketch of women they don't know. The
the rapist. Officers now must truth of the matter is the pernotify a supervisor first, then petrator and the victim are
inform the men stopped that usually the same race and 85·

percent· of the victinis know
. their attacker:· she said.
Kent Willis. executive
director of the American
Civil Liberties Union of
Virginia. said it is unlikely
the ' D:&gt;&lt;A dragnet will catch
the rapist.
"DNA dra2net' are ineffective and a \vaste of police
resources... Willis said.
"What they tend to be is a
way for police to demonstrate
to the public that they are
doing 'omething. that they
are taking steps to solve the
crime."
In the Baton Rouge. La ..
area. police took more than
1.000 DI\A samples from
white men. baseJ on a psy"
chological protile and witness accounts. while looking
for the killer of five women.
A black man ultimately was
arrested last May in the slaymgs.
"They . wasted
huge
amounts of money. and that
process did not get them any
closer to the killer," Willis
s;~id.
·
Longo said DNA testing is
the most efficient way to
eliminate suspects. and the
approach in Charlottesville is
more focused than the DNA
dragnet in Louisiana.
··we. weren't approaching
and accosting black men on
the street." he said. Instead.
officers had to have a reason
to think the man was suspicious, such as a tip to police.
the chief said.
Longo said last week that
Turner is not considered a
suspect in the rapes.
Turner said authorities
need to emphasize the right
to refuse.
"They are allowed to use
DNA testing." he said. "But
they are not allowed to misuse it, and that's what's happening here."

NEW YORK (AP) - A
pesky computer worm
snarled hundreds of thousands of machines worldwide Munday in the latest
virus-like outbreak to take
advantage of a known flaw
with the Windows operating
system.
Because the new worm,
.dubbed "Sasser:· does not
require users to click on an
e-mail attachment to activate; it spreads more rapidly than most viruses. It was
discovered late Friday and
spread
as
employees
returned to work and booted
their machines.
The worm caused some
computers to continually .
crash and reboot. apparently the result of bad programming by the virus
writer rather than intent .
secur-ity experts said. Sasser
. does not cause any permanent damage to files or
machines, they added.
Among victims were
large
companies
in
Germany, Britain and the
United States that are
clients
of
Network
Associates
Inc..
said
Vincent Gullotto, a vice
president at the .company's
anti-virus research lab. ije
would not name the companies.
A large television network in Europe also was
hit, two security sources
said. speaking on condition
of anonymity and refusing
to elaborate.
Finland's third largest
bank, Sampo, closed 120 of
its oftices for a few hours as
a p,recaution Monday while
technicians updated antivirus programs. E-banking
services and the bank's
automated teller machines
worked normally.
Keynote Systems Inc ..
which tracks Internet performance, reported no traffic degradation, but security

experts say some users tions for removing the
from
machines
could experience .slow- worm
downs if machines running already infected.
Security experts said the
Web sites or key Internet
Sasser worm was spreading
oateways ;~re infected.
"' Though Microsoft Corp. rapidly, but it still was not
announced three weeks ago as widespread as last sumthe flaw that Sasser exploits mer 's Blaster outbreak.
- it's a Windows function which infected millions of
called
Local
Security computers.
They said network operaAuthority
Subsystem
Service - many computer tors have gotten more diliowners had yet to apply the e&lt;&gt;ent about properly apply,
software tix the company ing the necessary secunty .
fixes , and many used the
had released.
to
complete
Once Sasser infects a weekend
updates
be(ore
employees
.computer, it automatically
scans the Internet for other arrived .
Some Internet service
computers with the flaw
and sends a copy of itself providers also were able to
filter out traffic generated
there.
David Perry. director of by the worm.
"It looks like many big
public education with security vendor Trend Micro. companies learned the lessaid Sasser continues a son already." said Mikael
trend in which virus writers Albrecht. a product managof er with F-Se-cure Corp. in
take
advantage
announced flaws more and Finland. "But there are
companies. and even large
.
more rapidly.
In' the past, he said. it corporations, that did not
would take months or even patch the system. and they
years to widely exploit a have been hit pretty bad."
Stephen Toulouse, a secuvulnerability not the
rity
program manager at.
weeks it took writers of
Sasser.
Microsoft, said four times
Microsoft recommended as many .computer owners
that owners of Windows downloaded the latest
2000 and XP computers patches as they had for fixes
install software patches by before last fall. He said the
visiting http://windowsup- company recorded more
date. microsoft. com. than !50 million successful
Firewall and anti-virus pro- down loads before the weekgrams that have the latest end's outbreak.
Toulouse said the compaupdates can also help contain or prevent infection. ny has been working with
Sasser does not affect older the Northwest Cybercrime
versions of Windows.
Task Force to identify the
The Web· si tes of anti- culprit.
virus vendors have instruc-

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

Relatives, Mississippi
town celebrates civilian's
escape from Iraqi captors.
MACON, Miss. (AP) Thollla'&gt; Hamill's father raised
his · hands skyward and proclaimed it "a beautiful day" upon
hearing that his son, a civilian
contnK.tor kidnapped in Iraq, had
escaped his captors and was safe.
Leo Hamill said he fell
asleep Saturday night while
watching a television newscast
and woke Sunday to a bulletin
reporting his son's escape.
"I knew when I saw him on ·
TV, I knew it was him," the
teary-eyed father said. "I hor,ed
they would retum him safe. '
Leo Hamill promised when
his son returned he would
"grab and hug his neck."
Hamill. a truck driver for a
subsidiary of the Halliburton
Corp., was kidnapped during
an attack on his supply convoy April 9. He escaped
Sunday from a house south of
Tikrit and ran to a nearby
U.S. patrol , the U.S . military
announced in Baghdad.
Hamill 's cartors
had
threatened to kil him unless
the United States lifted its
siege on the city of Fallujah.
His wife, Kellie Hamill, said
she got a call at about 5:50
a.m. telling her that her husband was free. He later called
home, "the best wake-up call
l'veever had," she said.
"He saunded wonderl'ul, so
wonderful. He said he w.t&lt;; tine,"
she told The A~sociated Press. "He
said he wa~ more wonied about
his mom, his grandmother, me
andourkid~. The first thing he said
to me was, 'How are you doing''"
Kellie Hamill said her husband told her he pried a dour
open at the house where he
was being held after he heard
a U.S. Army patrol nearby.
"He said he ran half a mile
down the road and got with
the convoy. Isn't that something?" she said.
Hamill. 43. was "in good
health," snid Army Brig. Gen.
Mark Kimmitt. A gun shot
wound to his left arm , possibly from when he was cap-·
tured. appeared to be infected.
Maj. Neal O'Brien said.
Hamill was on his way to a
military hospital in Germany
for a checkup early Munday.

according to. a senior U.S.
official in Iraq who wished to
remain anonymous. Relatives
said Kellie Hamill left
Monday morning for Jac k~on,
where she was planning to tly
to Houston and then on to
Germany. Her children were
not makmg the trip overseas.
Hamill's mother. Phyllis
Hammil, spoke to her son
Monday morning.
" He said he's doing good
but that he had lost a little
weight in all this. Hi s kids
looked at the picture on television and said with the beard
and all. it didn't look like
daddy," she said. "But he
looks pretty good to me."
Phyllis Hami ll , 63, said her
son told his wife he attempted
an escape earlier and had managed to get out of the building
where he was being held.
"He said it was really dl); and
he had no food or water,' she
said. "He said he heard a helicopter !lying around and ttied
ro attract attention and couldn't
do it. He felt his best chances
was tu go back where they had
held him. They moved htm to
another place and let\ him alone
and that s when he escaped."
About 200 community mem_&amp;ers gathered Sunday night to
celebrate Hamill '; escape.
Several pastors spoke and
Kellie Hamill wept as those in
attendance sang "Amazing
Grace" tu honor their native son
and his eventual homecoming.
Mayor Dorothy Baker Hines
said she told Kellie Hamill that
as lOOn as her hu,band is back
"we're going to have a parade
that will not end."
Earlier in the day, news of
Hamill's escape spread rupidly around Macon . a town of
about 2,500 people.
Church deacon and Sunday
school teacher John Gauntt,
36. said he was in bed when
his wife ran down the hall
yell ing "Tommy is free 1''
At chu rch. well-wishers
greeted Ke\lie Hamill with
JOyful hugs and tear,.
,
Worshippen, at Calvary
[lapti't Church had prayed for
Han till around the clock, said
choir member Shirley Battle.

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The Daily Sentinel

tu11., ~les Bank.

Sunday, May 9
LAVREL CLIFF - Bobby
Sid~r' of Columbu' will sing
during morning worship ser' ice. HUO a.m.. at Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Chttrch.
Wednesday May 12
PAGEYILLE - Revival
"'r"ice' at Pageville Freewill
Baptist Church. 7 p.m ..
through Friday.

Support Groups

Clubs and
organizations
Tuesda1·
. ' l\la1. 4
POMEROY - .Pomeroy
loiau les Auxiliarv 2171 will
me~t at 7:30 p.ni'. at the hall .
Officers will he e lected.
MIDDLEPORT- Middlep.)rt
Community Association, 8JO

Thursday, May 6
POMEROY
-Holzer
Hospice
Meigs County
Dinner with Friends. 6 p.m.,
Crow's Family Restaurant.
Information at 992-7463.

Public meetings
Thesday, May 4 ·
ALFRED - Orange township Trustees will meet at
7:30 p.m . at the home uf
Clerk Osie Foil rod.
Welfnesday, May 5
. PAGEVILLE
Scipio
Township Tru~tees will meet &lt;11
6:30 p.f\1. at the P.&lt;~,oeville town rudl.
POMEROY
Meigs
County Board of Health, 5

$~

With new vehlde purch•se.
See lllmplke for details.

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t l .. '
~MERCURY
HOURS:
Mon - Fri 9-7; Sol. 9-5

www.turnplkeflm.com

•

Point Pleasant, WV

MASON
FURNITURE
COMPANY

304-675·7670

screenings.
on sl.lfl.
ranee of technolocr and
I• Dioribl and otller hurincaids.
I• Ariiplilio!lf tellephane and TV devices

•Quality • Selection • Service

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304-773-5592

III141o-4•&amp;·11&amp;1B• &amp;DD-237-m&amp;

2nd Street Ma,on, WV

llelln: Mon-T~• 1:111-11:00

•

p.m .. health department conference room at the Meigs
County Senior Center.
Monday, May 10
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains Regional
Sewer Distric Board, 7 p.m.,
sewer office.

Other events
Thesday, May 4
POMEROY - Childhood
Immunization Clinic, I to 7
p.m.. health department. Child
must be accompanied by parent or legal guardian, provide
shot records, health and medical card. Donation accepted
hy not required for service.
Parents of kindergarten
enrollees who need TB skin
test should plan to attend by 4
p.m .. since the TB Clinic
closes at that time.

'

Yeast bread baking
easier than you think
POMEROY -· Some . people may think that making
yeast bread is a lost art. It
shouldn't be becau'e baking
homemade breads can be fun,

healthy and tasty. What is the
Becky
'ecrct to making fresh-baked
hread without a breadmaker''
Baer
Read on t'o discover the diftcrcnt type' of mixing methnds and reasons for certain
ingredien ts and procedures
. board: Form it into a flat ball.
when making bread.
There are several basic Imagine that the ball is the
methods of mixing yeast face of a clock. Starting at 12
breads. Follow the method o'clock. fold the dough down
that .is indicated in your to 6 o ·clock. Push the dough
recipe. · The one most often with the heel of your hand.
used is the traditional or Turn the dough one-quarter
straight-dough inethod. It turn. Again fold the dough
involves dissolving the yeast from 12 o'clock to 6 o'clock,
in warm water (I 05 degrees then push with the heel of
Fahrenheit). The rest of the your hand and turn. Continue
ingredients are added, then doing this for 8-10 minutes.
the .dough is kneaded and Add more !lour only as it is
allowed to. rise. The cool-rise needed - a little at a time.
method is very similar, The dough should not stick to
except that there will proba- the board or to your hands,
bly be more yeast and salt but you do not want the
added to the dough before it dough to be dry, either. This
is mixed. After kneading, the is why yeast bread recipes
dough is allowed to rest a few give the flour as a range.
After kneading, grease a
minutes. then refrigerated 2bowl
and the dough with
24 hours before shaping. The
shortening.
Place the dough
dough actually rises a little in
in
the
bowl,
then
cover with a
the refrigerator.
The sponge-dough method towel. Place the dough in a.
cumbines the yeast with warm area (about 85 degrees
some uf the liquid, !lour and F.) away from a draft. Let the
sugar. The dough is set in a dough rise until doubled,
warm place to form a sponge then punch the dough down
before the remaining ingredi- by making a fist. This gets
ents arc added and kneaded. rid of air pockets. Shape the
The batter or "no-knead" dough into a loaf, a braid,
method does not require individual rolls (crescents,
kneading. Because of this. bowknots, Parker House,
less !lour is used. and the clover-leaf. etc.) or whatever
product results in a coarser your recipe says. Place in a
greased loaf or mutfin pans
texture.
or
on a cookie sheet (dependIn the rapid-mix method,
upon · the shape). cover
ing
the yeast is combined with
let rise again until douthe dry ingredients. The liq- and
bled.
·
uid ingredients are heated to
Bake
according
to the
125 to .135 degrees F. before recipe.
they arc added to the dry
Almost . all yeast breads
ingredients. The dough ts have similar . ingredients that
kneaded and then allowed to are necessary when making
rise The dough rises f{lster bread. The ll ur used in
0
because of the warmer liq- yeast bread recipes
will probu itl~.
~
ably be an all-purpose or
Why must yeast dough_ be bread flour. Wheat or rye
kncadeJ'' The kneadtng flours may he used, but probprocess helps develop the ably not as the entire amount
gluten. The gluten 1s a protem of flour - all-purpose will
that is found in wheat !lour. usually be added, too. Do not
A' the kneading is done, the use ·self-rising !lour unless
dough becomes elastic apd you have a specific recipe for
smooth , allowing for the it.
characteristic high volume
The yeast that gives the
lound in yeast breads.
bread its characteristic tlavor
How do you knead dough? is a microscopic plant that
When some of the Hour and feeds on sugar. Together they
all other ingredients have form carbon dioxide gas that
been added to the dough, add makes the dough rise. Yeast
just enough tlour to make the needs to be used before the
dough easy to handle. Place expiration date or the bread
the dough on a !loured bread

Coming Thursday in the Sentinel ...

"CJ?~rl(~~ f@ ~ &amp;
7/)tmg~ f@ JP@"

Tuesday, May 4, 2004

Husband's sneak attacks
could mean ·danger ahead

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

DILES

dJ~

BYTHEBEND

Community calendar
Church services

PageA3

may not rise. If you choose
to use the quick rise yeast,
follow recipes that have been
designed for the quick-rise
method. That yeast is very
active and can reduce . the
bread-making time by half.
Water and/or milk may be
the liquids listed in your
recipe. They moisten the
glu ten-forming proteins in
the !lour, dissolve the salt,
sugar and yeast and help
form gas. Milk not only adds
tlavor and a creamy texture,
· but also improves the nutrition of the bread by adding
vitamins, calcium and other
minerals. Water gives the
bread a crisper crust and a
heavier wheat tlavor. .
Fats in the bread make the
product tender, soft and gives
tt a silky crumb. They may be
in the form of shortening.
butter, margarine or oil.
Sugar is needed as the food
lor the yeast. It also adds flavor, sweetness, tenderness,
browning of the crust and
volume. Too much sugar.
though, will inhibit the development of gluten, thus keeping the bread from rising as it
should . .·Salt enhances taste, ·
as well as hetps control the
yeast action. Too much salt
will slow down the yeast
action. · causing a compact
and dense product; too little
salt will make it rise too
quickly. resulting in a coarse
texture.
Other ingredients such as
eggs. dried fruits, nuts and
flavorings may be added to
give the different breads their
characteri stic tastes and richness. Particular ingredients
may even associate breads
with certain bolidays, such as
the candied fruit in a
Christmas stollen.
Yeast breads are not difficult foods to prepare .- they
just takes a little time (three
to five hours). By making
your own breads, you can
add variety and nutrients to
your diet. The kneading and
shaping processes can also be
a fun and creative outlet for
the entire family.

DEAR ABBY: "Krista in
Jacksonville" complained
that her husband sneaks up
behind her when she's alone
in the house and scares her.
He also appears out of
nowhere when she's in the
shower. You advised her that
his behavior is ·hildish and a
touch sadistic - and told
her to hang be l.ls on her door
frames and lock the bathroom door.
While your answer was
good, you may have overlooked something. Sneaking
up on ·someone, especially a
spouse, could be considered
, a precursor to an abusive
relationship. The person
. doing the sneaking has the
control and is doing it to
scare the other person. I
think Krista and her husband
should get marital counseling. - SEEN IT BEFORE
IN BOISE
DEAR
SEEN
IT
BEFORE: While I did not
consider · the hu sband's
behavior to be ominous.
your point is worth considering . Read on:
· DEAR ABBY: My father
used to do the same thing to
my mother (and me and my
siblings) until he caught her
off guard one night when she
nearly slapped him back into
the previous week. (She
claimed it was a reflex.)
He's never sneaked· up on
any of us again.
ANDREA IN BARSTOW,
CALIF.
DEAR ANDREA: He
should have considered himself lucky. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: It was with

,;·nee that itll'ident. and I
rccellll) heard him tdling
our kid; the 'tor) ol 11 h) not
I::VER to 'care \1am a. . PATRICIA I~ . \1A~HAT ­
TA:'&lt;i [lEACH
DEAR PATRICJ ,\ : It

Dear
Abby

-.~t&gt;m\

I u ... ~J to ··\urpri...,e··

his pre ...enc~ . A ... a

tin!!

·

matter of fact, he kind ·ur
reminds me of the old TV
series where the husband
would walk in the door ;utd
holler, "Honey, I' 111 humc ,..
- MEGAN IN WYOMING
DEAR MEGAN: That·,
one way to get your "po int"
across.
DEAR ABBY: Mv husband also liked to .,c.ire me .
One night he came up from
behind as I was Ica1 · in~ the
bathroom. The hallwav "!i~ht
was off and. nut J.d1owlng
who or what wa'&gt; behind me .
my reaction wa.' one of selldefense. I turned and hit a'
hard as I could.
Ten yea rs h:11·e pas..ed

t:'\L'fl

to Ill\ . . elf thal I

c.xpectc·d tc&gt; ftn~l Iter 11 ith
'omeone el,c. - I'OR\1ER
1:\
TIPTOER
G.~JNESVILLE. FLA .
DEAR FOR!\1EI~ TIPTOER . It 11nu\J he intcrc ,t ntg
ln knnv.. \\ helhl'r vour kar..,
11erc ju,tifieJ. Tlic ~inJ of
in~ecUrit\
\ uu cJe,cribt!
kelb u6on ·i"clt·. and tW
amount of n:;. J~ . . ur:nlL't' l:an

make it

~l) tJ\\ '~ l\.

~

~

\\'ritl'

/)('(//'

~

A/J/11·

111

tl'H'It'.Dt~t~I'.-\!Jhr.&lt; :U/11 or PO.
Bo.r M-1-10. Lo·., A11gcl&lt;'s. CA

9006'!.

TUPPERS PLAINS Connie
Rankin
of
Tuppers Pl ains was recognized as the Southern
Ohio division and state
queen for the most
weight loss at the TOPS
Area Recognition Day at
Lancaster High School.
She received a crown
and sash, two award
plaques and yellow silk
roses.
She will be recognized
and honored at the state
level in Pittsburgh, Pa.,
in July, where she will
graduate .
into
the
Keeping Off Pounds
Safely program.
She is a member of
TOPS #OH 2013 of.
Coolville.

Connie Rankin

EDWARD C. BEITER, O.D .
INDEPENDENT DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY
Located In

WAL-MART VISION CENTER

(740) 441-2151

'

Thank vnu rnr ]a\ Ill~ it on
tilL' line" and pru,·· ~dlll._~ food
for t/lllllght tU rL'&lt;t'dcr.., of
hoth ... ~ .\l''-.
Dmr Ai&gt;IJI' 1.1 11 n//&lt;'11 In
Al&gt;iguil \lri1 Bill &lt;'//. u/10
kftmln tl\ J, )tlllflt ' PlullitJs.
und 1nn j(mnclt'd hy her
motil&lt;' l: Paulin, · Pltill1ps .

State TOPS winner

Gallipolis, OH

It i-. tel lim!

that you u,,. the P"'' lethe tn
u~-cribe that rclatlllll,hip.

Evening &amp; Saturdays Available
Walk-ins Accepted As Schedule Permits
Appointments Preferred

I

111}

uirlfrienJ l i~c that. hut in
~c!rli"PL'CI. I \\a . . n·l ~tdllli t ­

evening \\'hen I wa-. in thc-

announ~.:es

);. p.. tin cs:

11nprc"ton
DEAR ABBY Rruardinu
th~ letter l'rnm "Kt~i-ta ilt
b c ~'lli1\ illc.'· and her hu'- .
hallll 11 hu ;ne:th' up he hind
her 11 hen 'he·' alone 111 the
hnu'c I notice 'he cliJn't
mention \\'h) he pcr"l"' t' in
Jning lL

a knowing smile that 'I read
Krista 's
letter.
Unfortunately. sneaking up
on her could put her hu., band\ li fe in dan~er. !\h
husband used to enjuv doinu
that. too. that i,. ·u~til one
kitchen cuttin~ 'ome meat
for dinner. and-he 'cared me.
Wi thuul meanmg . t~l . I
almmt
stabbed
him .
Thankfully.
mi"ed .
Needles&gt; to say. it h""'. t
happened again . her 'inc·e
that in.cident. he a\11 "Y'

m;_u_k a

\ 'OLI

~

�PageA4

_O PINION

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, May 4, 2004
J

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley r-ublishing Co.
Ojane

K. Hill

Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no larv respecting an
establishment of religion, or proh(biting 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 petitio11
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the

U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, May 4. the I25th day of 2004. There are
241 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History :
One hundred years ago, on May 4. 1904. the United States
began building the Panama Canal.
On this date:
.
In 1626, Dutch explorer Peter Minuit landed on present-day
Manhattan Island.
In 1776 ' Rhode Island declared. its freedom from England.
two months before the Declaration of Independence was
adopted.
.
In 1886. at Haymarket Square in Chicago. a labor demonstration for an eight-hour work day turned into a riot when a
bomb exploded.
In 1932, mobster AI Capone, convicted of income-tax evasion, entered the federal penitentiary in Atlanta.
In 1942 the Battle of the Coral Sea, the first naval clash
fought entirely with carrier aircraft, began during World War II.
In 1945, during World War II, German forces in the
Netherlands, Denmark and northwest Germany agreed to surrender.
. In 1961, a group of Freedom Riders le ft Washington for
New Orleans to challenge racial segregation in inter~tatc
buses and bus terminals.
In 1970, Ohio National Guardsmen opened fire on anti-war
protesters at Kent State University, killing four students and
wounding nine others .
In 1980, Marshal Josip Broz Tito, president of Yugoslavia,
.
died three days before his 88th birthday.
Five years ago: Work crews strugg led to restore electricity
across Serbia after NATO strikes on major power grids left
Belgrade and other cities in the dark. Five New York City
police officers went on trial for the torture of Haitian immi grant Abner Louima. (One offtcer later pleaded guilty; a second was eventually convicted of perjury,; the remaining three
were acquitted of brutality charges. Two of those three were
later convicted of conspiring to obstruct justice; those con vic- .
tions were overturned.) Tornadoes roared across the Plains for
a second straight day.
.
One year ago: Tornadoes swept across the Midwest, causing
death and destruction across a wide swath of eastern Kansas
and nearby Missouri. Police in Iraq's capital returned to work
· in force. Pope John Paul II proclaimed five new saints before
: a crowd of I million people in Madrid. Two American astronauts and one Russian cosmonaut ended up nearly 300 miles
otl' course after returning from the international space station.
Thought for Today: "Nothing worth doing is completed in
our lifetime; therefore, we must be saved by hope." Reinhold Niebuhr, American theologian ( 1892- 1971 ).

-

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
'

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

The Daily Sentinel
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Our main concern in all stories is to be
accurate. If you know ot an error in a
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992·

2t5.6.

·

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Tuesday, May 4, 2004

·obituaries

It's a tie: Bush loses on Iraq, Kerry on image
Right now, the presidential
race boils down to a question
of which issue will sink the
candidate faster: President
Bush's public suppon on Iraq
or Sen. John Kerry's (DMorton
Mass.) image as a potential
Kondarcke
commander in chief.
After furious pounding of
both cont~nders - Bush, by
events in Iraq and K~rry. by a
combination of his own errors the Bush campaign, by .
and Bush attacks - the two impugning Kerry's Vietnamstand in a virtual dead heat in era record, is playing to
Kerry 's strength - the . warthe polls.
.
llle CBS-New York Times hero status that he has made a
poll. whi~h has a reputation mainstay of his c;unpaign and
for slightly oversampling · is .beginning to re-emphasize
Democrats, gave Kerry a lead in a series of biographical ads.
A' a citizen and profession(JVer Bush uf 46 percent to 44
al kibbutzer.l think Vietnam is
perwu last week.
The liberal Democracy being totally overplayed as a
Corps poll conducted April 200:1 issue. Yes. Kerry was a
19-22 gave Bush a one point decorated her11. Yes. Bush
lead. 49-4K and a Fox News dodged Vietnrun service and
poll conductedApril21-22 put tllil)~ have missed some i11eetings as a National Guard pilot.
Bush up 43-42.
So what? What really coums
The CBS poll showed a
is
the two candidates' capacity
sharp and broad decline in
domestic support for Bush's to solve America's problems.
and domestic, in .2005
Iraq policies, while the foreign
.
Dcmocraq Corps reported and beyond.
The domestic economy
th&lt;tt Keny h&lt;LS yet been unable
seems to be improving to the
to capitalize on Bush's woes.
Some Democratic activists point where it will ·eventually
tell me they think Kerry has work to Bush's advantage as
allowed himself - or, speciti- an issue. even if it doesn't yet.
callv. allowed his activities The CBS poll showed that 55
aftei· returning from Vietnrun . percent of voters think · the
and his voting record on economy is nciw in good
dctcnse issues - to become shape, but only 39 percent
the main topic of tlie cam- approve of Bush's handling of
paign. rather than Bush and his it.
failures.
Iraq is emerging as the cnt'We shouldn't be talking cial issue of the campaign. It
about Keny's anything,' said • deserves to be. It is the centerone experienced pro. ·we piece of Bush's entire foreign
should be talking about Bush's policy of pre-emptive war and
record. ·But we aren't.'
Middle East conversion to
This is not a unanimous democracy. If the United
opinion among Democrats. States succeeds in Iraq, Bush
Some Kerry advisers say thai will stand as one of America's

.

great foreign policy presi- only 28 percent of voters have
'a lot' of conlidence in Bush's
dents.
.But the stakes are so high that ability to make right decisions
if U.S. policy fails, Bush will about Iraq, only 18 percent
stand as a catastrophic failure. have contidence in Kerry.
By overreaching and falling Kerry's basic plan for Iraq shan. even in a noble cause, he to turn civilian management
will have left Iraq in chaos, over to the United Nations and
emboldened America's enemies · other countries - does not
and undermined America's seem to be winning overwhelming popular support.
standing in the world.
Moreover. Bush's attack!;
At the moment, if the CBS
poll is to be believed, and Keny's own mistakes
Americans are losing faith in have taken .a toll. The
the enterprise, although there's Democracy Corps poll reportno evidence that Kerry is seen ed that ·overall. Kerry's peras having better answers than sonal standing has continued
10 weaken and his negative
Bush does.
On the one-year anniversary ratings ha' c jumped 14 points
of Bush's declaration of the over the JXht two months.·
Democrats allege that the
end of major combat operaBush
campaign has leveled
tions - but with U.S. casualvicious attacks ·on his service
tics continuing to mount the CBS poll shows that more in Vietnmn. but that's not true.
Ame1icans (48 pef~:ent) now Some veterans have ques"
think it was a mistake to have ti&lt;ined his deserving one of his
gotten in volved in Iraq than three Purple Heart awards. but
former Bush aide Karen
not 14' &gt;ercent).
The poll indicates that a plu- Hughes and other GOP · oftirality of voters think Iraq was cials have concentrated on his
post-service anti-war acti vinot - as Bush has claimed a threat requiring immediate ties.
The heaviest oflicial critiaction or a major part of the
war on terror. Sixty percent cism has been directed at
think efforts to stabilize Iraq Kerry 's voting record . on
are going 'badly.'
defense. which is fair game .
By 58 percent to 32 percent. Kerry seems to have lost his
voters think Bush lacks a plan cool under atta~k and has stal1for rebuilding Iraq and a simi- ed blasting Bush's National '
lar number doubt he knows 'Guard serVice. which he said
how to transfer power to the he'd never do.
So. bottoin line - which
Iraqis.
cuts
deepest'' Iraq or Ke;,-y's
Bush's approval rating on
handling Iraq has dropped !laws'' I'd say lmq. But at the
from 57 percent in December moment, despite the bad news
2003 to 41 percent now. His from over there.- the latest
rating .on foreign policy has state-by-state polls imlicate
dropped from 54 percent to 40 that in the electoral college
percent. And his overall job race, Bush is ahead. 310-::!28.
(Mor1011 Kondracke.is execapproval is at 46 percent. the
lowest of his presidency.
llli•·e editor of Roll Call. the
On the other hand, while itei\'SJWJ&gt;er of Capitol Hill.)

THERE MIGHT
STILL BE AFEW
BUGS IN THOSE
TOUCH- SCREENS

Frances Reuter
Frances Eileen Reuter, 85, Middleport, passed away on
Monday. May 3, 2004, at Friendship Village of Columbus.
She was born in Middleport on November 4, 1918. daughter of the late Albert Van Cooney and Sarah Ella Lewis Van
Cooney. She was a graduate of MiddlepQrt High School. She
was a homemaker and a member of the Ladies Auxiliary of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion of Middleport .
She was a member of the Middleport Baptist Church.
In addition to her parents~ she ·was preceded in death by her
husband. Raymond C. Reuter, her brothers : Charles, Norwood
and Lewis Van Cooney; and her sister, Clara Elizabeth Van
Cooney:
·
She is survived by a very special niece, Bonnie Eileen Hoy. .
and her husband, Robert. of Dublin; a son and daughter-inlaw: Tom and Janice Reuter, Pomeroy; her grandchildren:
Rhonda (Danny) Davis and Terry (Mandy) Reuter all of
Pomeroy ; great grandchildren, Ryan and Rachelle Davis and
Reece C. Reuter: nieces: Judy (Terry) Stuber. Iris Y. Stanley,
and N. Kay (Jim) Manley: a nephew, James A. Van Cooney;
cousins, Marcella Frazier Cousin and Ernest Frazier; and several great nieces and great nephews.
A graveside service will be held at 2 p.m. on Wednesday,
May 5. 2004, at Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire with Judy
·Stuber otficiating.
.
The family will conduct private calling hours.
Arrangements were handled by Fisher Funeral Home in
Middleport.
·

Local Briefs
Reunion planned
POMEROY - Meigs High School Class of 1984 is plan-·
ning its 20th reunion on May 29. Graduates of the class who
have not received an invitation are asked to contact Mike
Kennedy at 992-7552. Lynn Epple Curl, at 992-6775 , or Patty
· Duffy Taylor at 949-2381.

Bingo planned
MIDDLEPORT - A basket bingo game will be held at 6
p.m. on Thursday. with proceeds to benefit the Meigs County
Council on Aging Technology Fund. Tickets are $20 at the
door. Those who purchase a ticket by Wednesday an he Senior
Center will be registered to win a 2004 Father's Day basket.
Information is available by calling Tammy Queen at 9922161.
Doors will open at 5 p.m.

For the record
Divorce
POMEROY - A divorce has been granted in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court to Melissa M. Carpenter from Clinton
W. Carpenter.
•·

Dissolutions
POMEROY -. Actions for dissolution of marriage have
been filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Shelba J.
Lucas. Racine, and James E. Lucas, Middleport; and by Henry
W. Rider. Racine. and Sandy L. Rider, Syracuse.
Dissolutions have been granted 'to Carl L. Smith and
Jeanette M. Smith and Michelle McClary and Ryan McClary.

Marriage licenses
POMEROY - Marriage licenses have been issued in
Meigs County Probate Court to Nathaniel Lee Calhoun, 28,
and Jaymie Marie Osborne, 23, both of Cleveland; Daniel
Thomas Fowler, 26 , Middleport, and Kelly Joann Minor, 27,
Shade; and Charles Wayne Thomas, 56, Gallipolis, and
Kathryn Diane Johnson, 5;!, Middleport.

Investigations

The Patriot Act in trouble
President Bush has repeatedly
emphasized
that
Congress must renew Patriot
Act key sections, due to expire
Dec. 3 I , 2005, because they
are central in fighting terrorNat
ism and protecting our liberHentoff
ties. Citing two years of 'confusion and misinformation
about the Patriot Act, we can't
wait until next year,' says
Deputy Attorney General instances of the abridgemem
James Corney. ' We need the of the freedom of the people
by grad ual and si lem
debate about this now.'
In Salt Lake City, where encroachment of those in
Utah's Republican Sen. Orrin power than by violent and
Hatch. chainnan of the Senate sudden usurpations.'
To further buttress his conJudiciruy Committee, held an
April 14 tield hearing on the cerns about the Patriot Act Patriot Act. the debate turned which many conservative libertarians, in and out of
into tiery attacks on the acl Congress, share - Bradley
mainly by conservatives.
Scott Bradley. of the Utah quoted Thomas Jetl'erson: ' In
branch of !he conservative questions of power, let no
advocac)l group Eagle Forum. more be said of contidence in
reminded Patriot Act champi- man (in governmem office).
on Hatch !hal several weeks But bind him down from misafter Sept. II , Osama bin chief by. the chai ns of the
Laden. during a BBC inter- · Constitution.'
Bradley criticized the
view, said !hat 'the battle has
Put
riot Act because it ·dramatmoved inside America ... freedom and human rights in ically expands federal governAmerica are domDed. The ment powers of surveillance.
U.S. government will lead the search, and arrest,' that set
American people and the 'harmful precedems for future
West in general inlo an encroachments on personal
unbearable hell and a choking ·libel1y. ' And he objected to the
lire.'
act's reduction of the 'judicial
Bradley said 'the Uni ted oversight in · the gathering of
State&gt; i&gt; stronger and braver evidence.' But what harm,
than that,' but 'we must mHkc Hatch asks, has the Patriot Act
absolutely cenain that the ntsh · done?
for 'ecurity doe~ not ... de&gt;troy
Bradley a~swers that 'many
what we really chcri&gt;h about of the areas which could be
this great natioO. · He also cited abused are kept secret by the
James Madison's 1788 wam- · provisions of the act.'
ing:
Frdnk Mylar of the Utah
' I believe there are more Grassroots, a conservative

caucus, testi l'ied that 'of crucial impOrtance among conservatives is not how the
Patriot Act powers might be
employed by Presidem Bush,
but how it could be co-opted
to stille conservative voices in
this country under a liberal
administration.' After all, there
is no telling how long this war
against this deadly enemy
lurking in loose networks
around the world is going to
last. ·
An April 16 editorial in The
Salt Lake Tribune was directed at Sen. Hatch:. 'The senator's view ... that the only
opposition to the Patriot ' Act
comes from elements of the
fringe left and right is palpably
untrue. And it betfays an arrogance of power that only
emphasizes the need for the
public to keep at least as eager
a watch on our government as
it keeps on us.
'llle law (applying not only
to foreign tenorists) gives federal agents unprecedented
power 10 search anywhere and
to seize 'any tangible things'
from any person, based simple
on the say-so of an FBI official
that the search is the furtherance of an· anti-terrorism
investigation.'
Moreover, llle Salt Lake
City Ttibunal editorial continued: 'Under the law, a terrorist
is whoever the FBI says it is,
and an investigation is what·
ever the FBI thinks i' should
be.· Anu in an obbligato
shured by many conservative
organizations, the editorial
emphasized
'conservative
fear., that, under a more left-

leaning administration. antiabortion and gun-rights
groups could be so labeled and
so investigated.·
It's relevant to remember
that. President Clinton was
hardly a civil libertarian. The
1996 Anti -Terrorism and
Effective Death Penalty Act,
enthusiastically signed by
Clinton. included some nf the
building blocks for what later
became John Ashcroft's
Patriot Act.
,
'Of cour&gt;e ,' saiu Frank
Mylar, 'our Constitution will
not be completely discarded
and shredded by one law
such us the Patriot Act.
Instead, it will be the constant chipping away, piece
by piece, .act by act over
time in the name of the public 'good' until we are no
longer free people. Certain
provisions of the Patriot Act
constitute an unacceptable
eros ion of our unalienable
righh that have bee n recogni zed in thi s ~ountry before
its birth .·
The debate about renewing
sections of the Patriot Act is
certainly needed. and will
become much more intensely
educational to the citizens :\t
large, despite the president's
repeated in5istence that it
remain intact.
(Nor Hmtoff is a nationally

POMEROY - Meigs County Sheriff Ralph Trussell reported the followmg calls for mves1tgat10n to hts office:
• David Hobbs, Langsville, reported that a beer bottle had
.
been thrown through his vehicle's windshield.
• Joseph Dillon, Racine, reported the theft .of four aluminum
four-wheeler ramps, a tool kit, ash tray and cash stolen from
his truck.
• John Riley, Long Bottom, reported the attempted break-in
of his building.
·
.
.
• Shelly Co., Reedsville, reported the theft of $40 m cash 111
a breaking and entering at its plant there.
• Jimmy Lee, Pomeroy, reported a tire slashed while parked
at the Mizway Tavern, Pomeroy.
.
• Edward Sigler, Langsvi lle, reported the theft of a firearm
from his residence.
• Larry Laudermilt, Rutland, reported the theft of a Stihl
chainsaw.
• Robert Morris,.Racine, reported the theft of aluminum irrigation pipe.

Arrests
POMEROY - Sheriff Ralph Trussell reported the follow ing recent anests:
.
• Gregory Cole, Tuppers Plains, on a charge of driving
under the influence and not dnvmg Wlthtn marked lanes.
• Kelly Turner, Por!(and, on a charge of dorilesu~ vt?lence.
• Kimberly Payne oero~, on a a charge of domes~tc vtolence.
• Lee Hulme, Kirkersville, on charges of speedmg .. possession of marjuana, and possession of drug paraphernalta.

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Subscribe today • 992-2155

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Hartford mayor presses for recall election
Bv

KEUY

around town:·
Crouse said he had every
intention of iSiuing the recall
HARTFORD - Frustrated request before the meeting,
with di ssension between where discussion aro'e over
himse lf and the town council, the mayor's dismi.s'&gt;&lt;ll of police
Hartford Mayor Robert officer Jeremy Eddy last week.
Crouse has called for citizens
Eddy attended the meeting
to push for a reqli election. and asked for a reason for his
. . "'This is IKII benefiting tlJe town firing. Crouse responded that
the way we;re going," he said. . he. had directed Eddy. while
Crouse. who was elected on duty. to remain in
mayor in July 2003, made the Hartford and not make trips
announc.ement at Monday 's to New Have n or surroundregular council meeting. and ing communities.
otTered to do the research
;'I'll give you a reason."
himself on how a ·recall vote Crouse told Eddy. "You
can be conducted.
wouldn't stay in Hartford .
;•1 want a recall eledion of That car be(ongs in Hartford
the mayor, the recorder and and you were told that when
the council so the town will you begari."
have what it de &gt;erves."
Eddy, who had been on the
Crouse said. "I ' d like for job for thtee weeks prior to
everyone to spread this hi s April 26 dismissal.
KEVIN

KKELLY@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

protested that the job wou Id
take him to New Ha ven on
occasion for u'e of the town· s
fax machine and other tasl-.s .
Crouse and Eddy had al'o
disagreed o,·er a lrafllc arrest
made by Eddy in which Eddy
took the su&gt;peu to New
Haven . Crouse had 'directed
the suspect be brought back
to Hartford becau;,e the arrest
took place there.
Crouse had also advhed
officers to onlv write ticketwhen nece,sary, and to people
who continually committed
traffi c violation&gt; in the town.
That prompted council
member PattY Neal.. who
voiced her concem with the
town's fiscal status. to question why the town had a police
force to begin with if oftlcers
could not write tickets.

"We've paid out $3.000 in
!he past month and we· re not
writing ti(k.eh."' ~he ~o,oid . .
Discu»inn continued until
the mayor called an end. noting
that ··we ne'er get Wl~ thing

accomplishedb) arguing:·
Town Recorder Chervl
Oldaker said she would look
into the reca ll qu"tion. The
town's ne~t r.:gular election
will be in July 2005.
Following the "meet in£,
Crouse said' there have beeJl
disagreements between himself and some of the counci l
members since they tuok
office last vcar.
One of them is o\·er the propo&gt;ed placement of a privately-owned 32-unit apartment
complex in the town. which h~
said. a majority of counci l
members h•ne no) approveu.

Kick Butts Day Artfest winners announced
POMEROY - More than
250 Meigs County school children expressed their thoughts
about the harmful effects or
tobacw use in art work displayed at the 2004 Kick Butts
Day ArtFest. held recently at
the Pomeroy Library.
Meigs County Tobacco
Use Prevention Coalition
. and
member
agencies
Holzer Medical Center
Tobacco Prevention. GalliaMeigs Community Action
Agency and Meigs County
Health Department sponsored the contest.
Winners received gift

cards donated by Holzer"s
Tobacco
Prevention
all
Department.
while
entrants were presented with
a participant prize bag that
includes items from each of
the sponsoring agencies.
Winners in the kindergarten
through
second
Grade "Drawings" category
were
Eric:
Chapman .
kindergarten,
Meigs
Elementary;
Mackenzie
Kennedy,
kindergarten.
Meigs Elementary: Ashlyn
Wolfe. first grade, Southern
Elementary: Josiah Beha ,
second

grade.

Meigs

Elementary: . Daman Jones.
second
grade.
Meigs
Elementary: and Danny
Morman. second grade.
Meigs Elementary.
Honorable mention was
made of the entries by Jesse
Morri s, kindergarten. Meigs
Elementary:
Jenna
Thompson. first grade. Mid
Valley Christian School:
Kay lee Rowe. second grade.
Meigs Elementary School:
and Taylor Hood. second
grade. Meigs Elementary.
In the third through sixth
grade "Drawings" category.
the winners were Ashleigh

Duffy. fifth grade. Eastem
Elementarv: and Zari Rm"h.
fifth
Grade.
E~,tern
ElementarY. In the thircl
throu gh

· '-lix th

grade

"Po"'ter..:;'' ca tegur~. winne r-;
were AshleY Edwards. filth
Grade. l\1e·i~s Elemental'\.
Honorabl e • memion ".i&lt;
made of ~lun i na ·""'"' ..
fou rth ~rade. Southem
Elementar\.
Alexi" ·Smith. se\ en til
Grade.
Riwr
Val le v
Chrislian School. \\a' I ll~
\\·i nner

111

the

throug h
eighth
Drawings category

..,e\t-111 11

grade

Nine suspected members o_
f a/Qaida-linked group charged in
alleged plot to bomb NATO summit
ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -. A
Turkish coun on Monday
charged nine suspected members
of a group tinked to ai-Qaida in
an alleged plot to set oft' a bomb
at a NATO summit in Istanbul
next month that President Bush is
scheduled to attend.
Private CNN-Turk television
said three of the suspect-; had
been planing a suicide auack on
Bush and other Westem leaders
at the suinmit. but officials could
not confirm the report
. Authorities detamed 16 alleged
members of Ansar al-lslam on
· lllursday in the northwestern
province of BW'Sa, Gov. Oguz
Kagan Koksal said. The suspect~
also planned to anack a synagogue in Bursa and rob a bank to
mise funds, Koksal said.
A Turkish coun that deals with
terrorism cases charged the nine
with "membership m an illegal
organization." Conviction on the
charge carries a sentence of up to
IOyears in prison.
Prosecutors earlier relea&lt;;ed the
other seven suspects after questioning them. It was not clear if
they could still face charges. No
tpal date has been set.
Nine others were questioned in
Istanbul but also were released,
officials said.
The crackdown on the group
comes amid heightened security
·in the run-up to the June 28-29
meeting of NATO alliance leaders, following a series of bombings in Istanbul in November.
More thru1 60 people were
killed when suspected members
of a Turkish ai-Qaida cell
bombed two synagogues, a
London-based bank &lt;trtd the
British Consulate. Turkish officials have chmged 69 suspect' in
the bombings. Their trial stans
later this month.
Istanbul, which will also host a
European song contest this
month and a meeting of lorei ~Sn
ministers from Islam1c c,puntnes
m June, ts safe. sa1J Gov.
Muammer Guier.
"'There is IKI question of a situation that will aftect the (NATO)
meeting," Guier said. '.?le have
taken every precaubon.
The Ans:u· ai-Islam suspa;ts
appeared Monday in a coun in
Bt.irsa. where they could faa:
charges .including membership in
a terronst group, possess1on ol
explosives, violating gun laws
· and holding fake identity doculllellt'. They were caught after
yearlong police surveillance,

Governor of Bursa Oguz Kaan Koksal, left, accompanied by the city's police chief Huseyl!l
Capkin, talks to the media as they display the seized materials during a press conference o\
police headquarters in Bursa. western Turkey. Monday. Tu rk ish police have detained 25 su spected members of a group lin ked to ai-Qaida who were believed to have been plannmg a
bomb attack dUring a NATO summit in Istanbul in June . which President George W. Bush 1s
expected to attend. Police detained•16 suspects in an operation on April 29 in the nortl' ·
western province of Bursa. local Gov. Ogu z Kagan Koksal told reporters. They were also planning to attack a synagogue in Bursa and rob. a bank to provide funds for the group. Koks al
said. Nine other suspected members of the group with explosives training were detained in
a simultaneous raid in Istanbul. Turkey has heightened secunty ahead of the meeting,
launching security sweeps throughout the country. (/lP Photo/ lhlas News Agency)
Koksal said.
The group ·s leader. idcntitied
&lt;tS Alpa-;lan Topmk.. was ;unong
those detamed. he s;.ud. Local TV
showed him being esconed by
police, grinning.
CNN-Turk said one of the suspa:ts had been b'ltined at a c•unp
m Pakistm, where he stayed for
six years.
Koksal said police also seized
equipment to mHke remote-controlled bombs. guns. books on
bomb-making. 'torged identity
docun1ent~ and CDs that served
as o'aining manuals.
'The group, which wa-; in the
middle of ;m attack pl;m,
been
rendered inelfective," Anatolia
quoted Koksal a~ saying.
Some of the suspect' sun'eyed
the site of a synagogue in Bursa
as well as that of a txmk. Koksal
said.
He said the.suspect-; plmmed 10
tlee to lmq to tight U.S. troOps
th;re once they had carried oot a

h'''

re11ml'lled wllhoritv 011 tile

First Amendment mid tlte Bill
(}{ Rig ills and alii/tor of se,·er"' boo!..\, including his Clll'l'&lt;'llt
•mrk. , 'TI1e l#tr on tile Bill qJ
Rights a11d the Gatlteriltg
Resistance' (Snm Swrie:o;
Press, 2003 ).

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

USY PAYMENT PlAN*
$10 DOWN· $10 PEIIINTH FOR ONE YEAR
'SEE STill fiiiEIIIII

major attack in Turkey.
. . rounded up Lkllens nf alleged
An lsltunic gruup lxLsed 111 members of tl1e Remlutionmy
no1them Iraq also goes by tl1c . People's Libe1:ttion Party-Ft\ltlL
mune Ansar al-lslam and is sus- or DHKP-C. in simult;meou'
pected in the Feb. I homhings in mid' in TlUkc;. ~~~~' · Gcnn;mv,
Belgium and tli~ 1\elherlands. ·
lrbil that left 109 dead.
li1e Cl:tckdo\\ n W&lt;LS «c&gt;en a-;
. A police ofticial. spe;lkino on
the
re.. ult nf incn.:~a-ed intemarinnoond1tion of m1onym1ty. said tl1e
al
security
co..•pe1:ttion before the
Turkish group tuld the nonhem
NATO
sununn
;md the Athens
lr.tq group shared .'.'the 'tulle teleology ru1d tacncs. The Ttuk!Sh OlympiL's in Au~u&gt;t. .
Accordin~ to rurkish tli;Wsp:tgroup inm:ao;ed in si1e in reaction 10 the U.S. war in lr.:ti.j. the pers. nmn~ thtul 30.0.() j)llice
•md otl1er s....:tuit\ lor,:es. includotlicial ;aid.
Dogu Ergil. a prule~sor . of ing hundreu' (,r snipers. &lt;W
political science at Ankara expected to he on duty a1 tl1~
Umvers1ty. stud such plot-; were summit. Police also reponedly
not unusual ahead of hi~h prolilc :.u~ \\ atchim.! ;.mti-\var. ~mti- !.!.loh­
other lefti~t grOup..,.
events such ''' tl1e NATO sum- :.dil~ltinn
te&lt;~ing tlle) c:oulu st;tge piXltc,ts
mit.
'1l1e stage is imponwu. TI1e 11r anad;.s.
TI1e NATO summit "ill h: the
number of s(X'CWtors is itll(Xlrtirst
sin~c Rnmania. Bulgati 'L
tant. TI1e 1\ ATO st1mmi1 in Latvia.
Estonia. LithL~tlna,
lst;mbul is &lt;UI ideal stag.: lor such Slmenia and
Slmakia j&lt;lined the
(a terrorist) act to he staged." he alli•u1cc in Apnl
to incn:a"' its
said. ·
mcmbcl'-hip
to
26
'''Lltlltics.
E&lt;u·lier this 1rtontl1. autho1ities

.ma

�PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, May 4, 2004

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Geiger doesn 't blame Tressel, Page 82
Reds, Indians pick up wins, Page 86

County boards say voting machine
money may be too late for November
COLUMBUS (AP) way from the beginning." ber. "As a result of the balSome counties say they may said Janet Brenneman, lot committee. we' rc much
not have enough time before director of the Delaware funher in that process than
we were before."
November to install new County Board of Elections.
The 31 counties are not
voting machines because of
A House bill close to pasthe delay in releasing feder- sage would require the required to have machine~
al money to pay for them .
voter-verification system, in place this year but should
have enough lime if they
~he
state Contrqlling paid for by the state.
Board on Monday approved
About $127 million in choose to move· ahead, said
spending $38 million on federal money to replace the David Kennedy. legislative.
machines and voter educa- state's punch card ballots affairs director for Secretary
tion programs. a month after did not include the cost fur of State Kenneth Blackwell.
holding up a larger request voter receipts. The smaller · " You're addressing a
because of security con- amount
was
released comfort level issue with cercems with the new technol· Monday, while the bill tain counties,'' Kennedy
ogy.
allows for the rest to be, said·. 'They have to make an
individual decision on what
Lawmakers "pm a severe spent next year.
crunch on local boards of · Hardin County planned to their capacity is to handle
eleclion to implement in the switch to the new machines these projects.··
Counties should probably
fall of '04," Jeff Wilkinson, for the November election
director of the Richland because it already disposed get started buying and
County Board of Elections. of its lever machine system, installing the machines.
said Monday. "Had lhey not director Anne Boston said ·even .on a precinct-bygot in at the II th hour, we Monday. Boston said she precinct basis, said Michael
. Mahoning
would have had funding hates to move ahead during Sciortino.
a presidential election, "but Coumy elections director.
over a month ago."
"If a county was to move
Delaware. Fairfield and circumstances are such that
forward, if it wan1ed to do
Richland counties
are we're going to."
among 31 counties hoping
Lawmakers
delayed some kind of incremental
to install the machines even releasing the money for the implementation. time wot1ld
lhough their election board machines while a legislative permit it,'' Sciortino said.
The 31 counties are
directors say they may not committee reviewed conhave enough time.
cerns that they could be Adams. Auglaize. Brown.
Carroll ,
They ' re also concerned tampered with electronical- Butler,
Crawford,
about having to get the ly. The intent wasn't to stall Columbiana,
machines retrofitted after the process. Senate Finance Darke. Delaware, Fairfield ,
the election to provide paper Chairman Bill . Harris. an Gallia. Hardin. Harrison,
receipts allowing votery to Ashland Republican. said · Henry. Huron. Jackson,
Logan , Lorain . Lucas.
Monday.
verify 'the ballot they cast.
"We have a concern that if
" We've done what we can Madison, Medina. Mercer,
we purchase something or do to ensure that we have a Morgan. Paulding. Portage.
go into ·contract that we safe and accurate and secure Putnam.
Richland.
Tuscarawas,
wouldn ' t have the quality of voting system," said Harris , Trumbull,
machine if it were made that a Controlling Board mem- Washington and Williams.

NewsChannel

Market watch

A DAY ON WALL STREET
May3, 2004

~-~.
tVV

ilow Jones
Industrials

May3, 2004

10.750

Dow Jones
Industrials

10,250

'

+I8.,G •

.,....,

10.314.00

9,750

·~43

.._

FEB

10,314.00
Pet Cl\ange
"""'_..,..., +0.86

MAR

High

10.329.05

· APR

MAY

P&lt;""wvb.~

composite
,.!18.17 '

FEB

MAR

.High

LOw

1,954.62

1,926.09

1,938.72
Pet "'-118

from_.,_: +0.97
.....

----

.

;

'

~~.

...

--

APR

MAY

• ..a

/,: rj

~-

::..=..:

+092

FEB
High

MAR
.._

===-...:..c·1313
=

Unchenged:

1,1 18.72

1,107.30

AEP - 30.87
Akzo - 36.88
Ashland Inc . - 47.70
BBT-34.%

GKNLY - 4. 19
.Harley Davidson Kmarl-43 .12

' Kroger -

"BLI-14.31

Bob Evans - ·' 1.22
Borg Warner - 82.80
City Holding - 30.90
Champioo - 4.51
Ch111ming Shops -?.J!
Col- 32.0 1

DuPont - 43.(»! .
.J.t'i

Advancecl:

DecHIIfld:·
Unchanged:

Volume:

1,740 !lew highs
49
1 429 New lowe
78
275
1.882.328,868
AP

""

Gannett - R6. I 5
General Electric -

ACI-31.82

Nasdaq diary

MAY
R-rd high: 1,527.46
March 24, 20QO

.

149

31
New lowe
107

Volume: 1,970,017,430

1.000

APR

565.48

O.CIIned:

RD Shell -49.28
30.30
.56.94

17.40

Ltd -10.94
NSC-23.99
Oak Hi!! Financial- 31.62
Bank One- 49.R.5
OVB - :,:\4.39
. Peoples- !3.90
Pcp~icu - 54.87
Premier - 8.QI
Rocky B001 s - 20.9 1

Rockwell- 33.00

Sears- 40.53

SBC -15.13
AT&amp;T- 17.09
USB - 25.85
Wendy's- 39.43
Wai-Man - 56.54
Wor1hington - 17.85
Daily s tock repor1s are the 4 p m. closing
quotes of the previous day's transactions, provid~d by Smith Partners at Advest Inc . uf
Gall ipoli s.

Priest out of jail after being indicted in nun's death
TOLEDO (APJ A
Roman
Catholic
priest
accused of strangling and
stabbing a nun in 1980
walked out of jail on bond
Monday afler s upporters
posted their property for his
release.
The Rev. Gerald Robinson,
locking arms with one of his
lawyers and a supporter,
smiled .slightly for a moment
but said nothing as he was
led into an awaiting sports
utility vehicle.
About a dozen supporters
gathered outside the jail to
wait for him.
Robinson has been in jail
since his arrest April 23 in
the
slaying
of Sister
Margaret Ann Pahl during
Easter weekend in 1980.
Her body was discovered
in a chapel at Mercy
Hospital . covered by an altar
cloth. Investigators have
described it as ritualistic
slaying that has the Toledo
Diocese looking inlo claims
of · satanic sex abw;e by
priesls.
Earlier on Monday, it was
announced thai a county
grand jury indicted Robinson
on an aggravated murder
charge. The grand jury had
met Friday to consider the
charge.
Robinson was released
from jail Monday after supporters put together four
pieces of property to post a
$400.000 property bond to
cover his $200,000 ba.il. The
diocese has said it is not
paying the priest 's legal bills

Sunday Times-Sentinel
.
.

Subscribe today¥ 740-992-2155

1,117.49

;..:Ad:::.ve=n.::;ciM:;.::dc..:_1..:..,9'-7-'6 New highs

1.050

Local Stocks

DG - IR.FIIl
Federal Mogul -

1,600

1,100

~

.

NYSE diary

1,150

.

''

1,117.49

~, ;v.J"·

1,800

.

Standard Be :;r' ~"':' \r- ?;n.
·Poor's 500
~ fi'1~~, i
+ti.tt
=

Russtll

1,200

.. ~

..

1,938.72

2000

Aec:ord high: 5,048.62
March 10.2000

May 3,2004

l'J

·~&lt;'!' .1ji.J~.f"'

2,000

'

.

Stand1nl'
Poor's 500

2.200

Nasdaq

...

9,250

Re&lt;:ordl!lgll: 11 .722.98
Jan. 14, 2000

10,227.13

May3, 2004

.

Nasdaq
composite

The Meigs County Department of Job &amp; Family Services
is seeking proposals to provide a summer youth program to
eligible youth age 14-18 consistent with federal, state and
local guidelines for the Temporary Assistance for Needy
Families (TANF) program. Youth who reside in Meigs
County and whose family income does not exceed 200% of
the federal poverty index are eligible for participation.
Program costs must not exceed $160,000.00 for the period
beginning May 24, 2004. It is expected that the program
will enroll 75 youth and provide employment at $6.15 per
hour. Actual enrollment is expected to begin no later than
June 1, 2004. Administrative costs may not exceed 15% of
the total contract award. For a copy of the Guidelines for
Proposers, Profile of Propose and Proposed Budget Format
contact Jane Banks at the Meigs county Department of Job
&amp; Family Services at (740)~92-2177 ext.106. . .
Proposals shall be submitted to Jane Banks, Meigs County
Department of Job &amp; Family Services, P.O. Box 191, 175
Race Street, Middleport, OH 45760 no later than May 12,
2004 at 12:00 noon. The Department reserves the right to
reject any or all proposals. In accordance with 29 CFR part
31, 32 Meigs County Department of Job &amp; Family Services
is prohibited from discrimination on the basis of race, color,
national origin, sex, age, religion, political belief or
disability.
·

•
because it was a personal ed the nun 's murder said
crime and had nothing lo do some type of ceremony had
with operations of lhe
taken
place
and
that
church.
He wore a black su it and Robinson acted alone.
his collar and greeted his ~JXIXXXXIIXIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIXIIXXXIIIIXIIIIIXIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIXIXIIIIIIIIIIIXIIIIIXXIII;l ·
lawyers with a handshake
~:
.
'
.
~~
and a slight smile.
His attorney, Alan Konop,
sa id his client will plead
innocent at his arraignment,
.
~i
which has not been set yet. ~i
~
~
Robinson can ' t face the ~
~ ·
~
·.
~
death penalty because it was
~·
not in etfect at the time of
~l~i
~l~.
the killing.
Robinson was arrested
~·
~:
~i
after investigators analyzed ~i
blood patterns and concluded ~
~
the murder weapon was "in ••
••~
~
the control of the suspect,"
police have said. They wqn 't
~
say what the murder weapon ~
was or who owned it.
Robinson was always a suspect in Sister Pahl 's death.
Police say a woman who
alleges she had been physically and sexually abused as
a .child by several priests, ~:
~:
including Robinson, spurred ~·
them to take another look at
the nun 's slaying.
Investigators reopened the
murder case in December
A ..
after the county prosecutor's
office received a letter, prosecutors said. They would not
say who sent the letter or
what it said.
Following
Robinson 's
arrest on April 23, three
o1her people have come forArt
Deadline is Friday,
.:
ward to claim they too were
abused by priests in rituals
Other Sizes Available ·
May 7 at 5:00p.m.
years ago.
~
~
Detectives who investigat- ~tiiXXIIIXXIIXIXII~IIIIIXXIIIIIXXIIIIIIIIXXIIIIIIIXIIIIIIIIIXIIXXIIIXIIIIXIIIIIXXXIIIXXXXXIt!
'

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PARENTS· GRANDPARENTS U
• FRIENDS
r::

!:

Don't Forget to congratulate
your special graduate with
a personal ad in our
Special Graduate Edition.

!l

.!l!:i

II.

~

8
~

8
:1

~Brenda or Dave

Pi~~re

With or without a picture and
Your Special Message Here!
for only $20.00 ~~~~e

TODAY at
(7 40) 992-2155

!J
U

..tl
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Tuesday, May 4, 2004

AHA hoop
shoot/jump rope
GALLIPOLIS - Coach
Jim Osborne·, and Adkins·
physical education classes
are conduuing a basketball
shooting and jump· rope fund
raiser for the American Heart
Association .
·
The st udent ~ are searching
pledges
today
through
Thursday. and on Thursday.
will make as many baskels as
Ihey can over a lime limit and
!hose thai prefer will jump
rope . Approximately 300 stu·
dents will participate.
Anyone wanting to make a
pledge and not asked by a
student may call either coach
at 446-3212.
Prizes will be given to
those students that reach cer·
tain le vels of money contributed . .
Hean altacks and relaled
heart problem., are lhe No. I
cause of death in the United
States.

Tri-State Junior
Golf Circuit set
PROCTORVILLE - The
22nd Annual Tri-Siate Junior
Golf Circuit is schedu led 10 •
begin play June II at lhe
Riveria Golf Club in Lesage .
W.Va.
There will be lhree age
divisions (I 0-12. l.l-15. 16'
I8) with golfers playing in
the ir appropria1e age division
asofJune II .
There is a $33 e111ry fee fur
ages 13-15 and 16-18 (S38
for the Guvan tournamem on
July 30) arid $27 for ages I012 (w hich plays nine holes).
Entry.fee includes green fees
and lunch. The entry deadline
is 3 p.m. on the Wednesday
before each toumament (June
26 for lhe Sugerwood tourna·
ment on June 29)
The circui1 will be making
a stop at the Cli flisidc Golf
Club July 16.
For more information. call
director Ed Wilgus al
(740)886-8910 .

Marietta College
baseball 'camp
MARIETTA - The 2004
Camp of Champs. which is
held by the Mariella College
baseball program. will take
place over the -course of the
summer.
The day camps for grades
2-8 will be held June 22-24.
July 6·8 and July 20-22.
Meanwhile,
the
residence/commuler camp for
grades 6-to-graduale will be
held July 25-29.
For more information. contact Brian
Brewer al
(740)376-4517 or go to the
Marietta College website at
www.marietta.edu.

Shawnee State
SK Bear Run
PORTSMOUTH The
IOth Annual Shawnee Slate
Universoty Spring Bear
Run/Walk 5K road race will
be held 6 p.m .. May 5. begin·
ning on the SSU campus.
Registration is scheduled
for 4:30p.m.
The run is free to all
Golden Bears, students (from
kindergarten and up) and
their families as well as SSU
alumnu and their families.
There is $10 non· student fee
and a $12 race-day registration fee.
For more information , call
the SSU Division of Student
Affairs at (740)351-3280.

Eagles soar over Federal Hocking in seventh
BY ScoTT WoLFE

Sports correspondent
TUPPERS PLAINS - Scoring
1wo runs in the lop ·of the sevenlh
inning. the Eastern Eagles defeated
.Federal Hocking 5-3 in an important
Tri'· Valley Conference baseball game
Monday.
Wilh the win. Eastern improves to
. 9-9 overall and 5· 7 in league play.
Federal Hocking drops to I0-6 over-

all and 7-3 in the TVC Hocking .
The game was 9ri gino II y to be
played at Federal Hocking Hi gh
School. bul was swilched 10 Eas1ern
due to damp fietd conditions. Still
Federal Hocking represe nted the
home team.
Eastern hitters were Ken Amsbaty
who led all Eastern hitters with three
hits. including a double. and two
RBI. Terry Durst added a double and
RBI. Ryan Smith singled.
The Eagles scored the game·, first

three runs. collecling 1wo in the first
inning and one in the third . Chri'
Myer' walked in lhe first. Amsbary
doubled Myers home. Corey Shaffer
walked. aml Man Morri ' had an RBI
single.
In the third inning. Amshary sin·
gled. and Dur'l had an RBI doubl e.
Federal Hockin2 w:h held scnrele"
unlil 1he sixlh" innin~. when lhe
Lancers received RBI hits from
Brandon Barnhart. who hit a solo
home run. and Tyler Chadwell. who

drme in the other tv.o runs.
Chadv.e ll ll&lt;ts the lone Lancer "ith
multipk hits. us he finished 2-2 with
a Joublc .
But EN~rn broke lhe .1.J tie in the
'le\enth. -.,Lo rin ~ I\\O ru n.-...
'v\'ith l\\·n uul Rigg . . reached tm a

fieiJe(, choice. Chri s M,·ers 11 alked
rur lhe men of Brian Bowen. anJ

Smilh had an RBI sin2k. Smith lhen
.scored on an Amsbar)- single to com·

Belpre powers past Meigs
BY BRAD SHERMAN

Please see Meigs. 82

I

Prep
Softball

Eastern
lashes ,
Lancers

bsherman@ mydailytribune.com
ROCKSPRINGS- The
first and last innings went
well enough for Meigs those in the middle did
not.
. Meigs scored two runs
in the first frame and four
more in lhe seventh . but in
the meantime. home runs
by Tum Wolfe and Luke
Nolan helped power visit·
ing Belpre to an 8-6 Tri·
Valley Conference base·
ball victorv. ·
The wit! all but clinched
a TVC-Ohio Division
championship for lhe
Golden Eagles ( 12-4 ). who
remain perfect in the con·
ference at 12-0. The
Wa~hington
Countians
need just one win in !heir
next four games to cli.nch
at least a tie.
place
The
second
Marauders (14-4) fell to
11 -3 in the Ohio.
Wolfe's two-ru n homer
in the third inning erased
an early deficit and gave
Belpre a 3-2 lead. Nolan's
shot , which came in the
fiflh. knocked in three
more and made lhe score
8·2.
The Marauders got to
within a pair in their tina!
at-bat. and had the tying
run on base , but Wolfe
struck out his sixth batter
· to extinguish the come·
buck.
·
Wolfe allowed six runs
on seven hits in picking up
the complete game victory.
All but one of the hits off
the big lefl hander came in
either the first or seventh
mmng.
Brandon fackler started
and suffered the loss . He
allowed three earned runs
on 10 hits and struck out
seven. including fiv e in a

Please see Eagles. 82

BY ScoTT

STEWART ...,... Hammering
nine hits &lt;tnd ~~ttin~ a four-hit·
ter from pill'l'ier Krista White.
lhe Easlern Eag.les rolled to a
9-1 win over Federal Hockin u
Mimday nigh! in Tri· Valley
Conference Hocking divi sion
softball action.
Ea!-~tern i~o, now 12-5 overal
and 10-2 inlhe leallue.
Eastern wenl up' J.() in the
first when Jenn} Armes
reached on an enw and sc·ored
on another ~rror and hil by
Krista While. After a scoreless
~ecund

inning.

Ei.i~tern

two ~ingle~~ Kri~ta White a

Please see Eastern. 82

Meigs pitcher Brandon Fackler completes readies a pitch to a Belpre batter during the
Marauders ' 8·6 loss to the Eagles. (Brad Sherman)

Southern
downs
Falcons

'Does beat Miller Marauder girls
WoLFE

Sports correspondent
HEMLOCK Behind
&lt;mother good starting pitching
effort from sophomore Brad
Crouch,
the
Southern
Tornadoes edged the Miller
Falcons 7-5 Monday night in
buys ' varsity Tri-Valley
Conterence baseball action.
Southern is now 3- 13 overall and l-1 0 in the league.
Soulhern went up 2·0 in the
top of the third. but Miller
fought back to 2-1. Southern
added a single run in the
fourth and Miller fought right
back with a single markerin
the bottom half of the inning.
After a scoreless fifth
inning, Southern plated four

runs in lhe sixth when Joe
Phillips walked and wa'
replaced wilh pinch runner
Jake Hunter. Brad CrouL·h
si ·tgled, Josh Pape · singled.
Patrick Johnson flew out btil
drove in a run. Cole Brown
had an RBI single, J.R . Hupp
a run -scoring .single. and
Chris tucker and Jerem y
Yeauger each singled for a 7,
2 Southern lead. Miller ~ame
back with three in the scvemh
10 make it 7-5. as Crouch held
on for lhe win.
Southern banged oul : 12
hits. Tornado hitters were
Jeremy Yeauger witil a 3'for~
4 night and lwo RBI's, Josh
Pape 2-for-3. Cole Brown 3for-3 and two RBI's, J.R.

Ple1se see 'Does, 82

fall to Belpre, 8-1
STAFF

REPORT

sporls@mydailylribune.com ·
ROCKSPRINGS - Belpre us.eu lhree runs in the
fourlh and lhree more in 1he se,·enlh to pull away from
Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Divi sion leaders Mei);s.'X·
I.
With the Marauders dowi1 2-0 in the bonom of tl1e
second inning. Meigs' Chrissy Miller walked and later
scored on a double by Erica Poole to cut the lead in half.
Bul, Belpre pilcher Tessa Adams held Meigs score·
le" for the resl of the game to secure I he win for the
Eugles.
Jpey Haning pitched the firs! f uur innings fpr lhe
Marauders ( 11 -7. 10-4 TVC ). while Samantha Cole
threw the tina I three i nnincs .
Vinton County. which was second in the division.
only one game behind lhe Marauders. were off
Munday.
Meigs. meanwhile. plays host Ill Trimble today.

WOLFE

Sporls correspondenl
IIEMLOC K
The
Soul hern l. :td y Tornuuoes
pulled huL·l into I he" in c·nl·
urnn in a hi!! wav tiv de feo l\-

in~ the ~Iiller L;,J,; Falcon&gt;
I tf-4 Monda r ni ~ li t in Tri ·
Valle'\ ConfcrenL~,. !Iodi n~

Di\i s.ion snflhall aL'l io n. "
Snu·ther n llllll·e.s 10 .J-9
'"·erall and ..1 - ~ in lh e
ka~u c. while \1illcr.falh to
J.J1J. 2-lJ.
Bac:k to hack Llouble s b'
Soutl1ern's Brooke Kiser a n ~!
Kali e S•n're. and consec:u·
1iw ·Dea n·.t Pullins and Nicki
Tul.'l\.c r

r

'

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in£.1C\

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U

• Thursday, May 13, 2004
r:l!t:l: t71r:T T()
• Noon to 6 p.m.
4.LL ()()I'IJI()I!§!
• Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
• Sponsored by the Pleasant Valley Hospital Auxiliary

YVU t4~ M41\f 4 l)lfff[)f~tl.

~; t\' e

Southcnl an ,.,;,.._ 3~0 lead .
hu t Mil In l'ame. hack " ·uh
two runs _on a Co urtne y
Wri~ht 'in~k in the hollom
hal(nf the 'inntn ~. the &gt;c'ore
.1. 2

Please see Southern. 82

.i
~:

plateU .

two runs in the · third when
White and Barrincer reached
. un errors. Brin,li1y Bisse ll
walked 111 lnau !he ha,es. and
Morcan Weber hammered a
two-l·un sing k. the score 3.().
Easlern added three runs
behiml a Weher triple in lhe
fifth. and add~d three n]{Jre in
1he sixth inning.
Eastern hiller' were Casey
Smith wilh a single and triple.
Sara BarriMer a double and

BY Scon

BY .scoTT

WoLFE

Sports correspondenl

PLEASANT
VALLEY

HOSPITAL

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysen tinel.com

Geiger says Buckeyes'
legal problems aren't
reflection of head coach
BY RusTY

MILLER

OSU football legal,
disciplinary problems
under Jim Tressel

Assoc1ated Press

COLUMBUS - Oh10 State athletiC d1rector
Andy Ge1ger sa1d Monday that despite a growmg hst ol leg.•l problems unolvu1g tootb,lll
players, he does not hold coach J1m fresse l
responsible
The arrest c,uly Saturday of ught end Lotus
lnzarry and tailback lm Gutltord adds to .\
growmg ltst ot pld)ers who have gotten mto
legal or d1 sCiphnaJy trouble 111 T re"el s W 1/2
months on the JOb An AssoCJ&lt;~ted Press search
ot court records reve,lis ,u least I1 1nc1dents
mvolvmg 14 football players 'lnc:e Tressel was
h1red 111 January ot 200 I
"The d1mate m the prog1am. the etlort to
address these kmds ot 1ssues " extraordm.lrv."
Ge1 ger s,ud "These kmus ot thmgs
11e1e
addressed at a (te.un) meetmg .Js recelllly as I,ISt
Thursday We wou ld h&lt;~ve -..!Shed there was "
httle more carryover"
Tressel declined an mtcrv1ew 1equest on the
subject ol h" pl,lyers' beha' 10r
After 13 years as Oh1o State\ heau co,1ch.
John Cooper was tired atte1 the 2001 Outback
Bowl Ge1ger sa1d at the tune tl1at there was a
'detenorat111g chmate -..1thm the football program." wh1ch took mto account academics.
legal problems. diSCipline and compeuuveness
nessel was h1red to replace Cooper and tS
w1dely seen as a tougher diSClp!manan who has
cut down on the Buckeyes' off-the-field ITIISsteps
Yet the search of court records shows there
have been more problems over Tressel's first
three seasons than Cooper's ti na! three years
Tressel recrutted s1x of the 14 players who
have gotten mto trouble wtth the Ia-.. wh1le he
has been head coach, the rest were brought 111
by Cooper
Ge1ger was asked 11 there has been a change
111 the number of playe rs gettmg m trouble
under Tressel as opposed to Cooper
"I don' t know that It's better or worse," he
sa1d
Dunng the 2002 season, Tressel gu1ded the
Buckeyes to their first national champ10nsh1p 111
34 years
The problems 111\0ivmg players m the past
three years mclude underage dnnkmg. drunken
drivmg. disorderly conduct. assau lt. talsltlcauon of a police repon to thett. robbery. felony
drug abuse and carry111g a concealed weapon.
Some of the players are no longer w1th the program (quarterback Ste&gt;e Bellis,m, tmlback
Maunce Claret!), wh1le others are still on the
roster and proJected to be stars (runmng back
Branden Joe. w1de rece1ver Santomo Holmes,
quarterback Troy Smuh)
lnzarry and Gu1lford. sophomores who were
expected to see plenty of pl,1ymg t1me this fall,
we1e arrested at 3 ,, m Satwday c~ tter an Oh1o
State student sa~d two men JUmped h1m and
stole h1s wallet They each pleaded mnocent to
charges of second-degree robbery on Monday
Gutlford was released after postmg $25 000
ball , wh1le lnzany was held 111 ja1lunt11 a Judge
can determme 1f he had v1olated h1s probation
from an earl1er convictiOn for assault, negligent
assault and d1 sorderly conduct
In a statement 1ssued hours alter the arrests,
Tressel smd. "It appears likely they could lose
the1r pnvtlege to play for Oh10 State m 2004"
Ge1ger smd Oh1o St,lte pl &lt;~yers do not getmto
trouble more often than pl,1yers at other piOgrams of s• m•lar stature and "ze He pomted to
the mcreased profile Buckeyes football players
have m Columbus. -..here the NHL BlueJackets
are the only local team 111 one of the four maJor
professiOnal sports
More IS made ot arrests ot football pi aye• s
here than elsewhere, Ge1ger smd
··on a recent ne-..s sho-.. , Gull ford and
lnzarry were the leadmg story The sccoodleadmg story was a murder And the thlrd-lcadmg story was the tact that the murder rate m
Columbus 1s way up," Ge1ger sa1d ''Thdt was
the order of 1mportance that that particular news
mstlltltlon g&lt;~ve those three pwt•cula~ stones
Oh1o State toot ball lretjuently IS the top story
on local television. regardless ot season On
Sunday mght. one ot the local statiOns checked
m wuh several former Oh10 State players who
were taken m the recent NFL dr.llt as they went
through rook1e camps -.. 1th tl-e•r ne"' teams
MaJOr League Baseball rece1ved scant ment1on
and the NFL and NHL playofls were 1gnore&lt;.l

COLUMBUS (AP) - Players whO have had legal or diSCI·
phnary proble ms dur ng J m Tressel s tenure as Oh o Stat es
head coach {does not 1nclude comm on traffiC oflenses)
May 1 2004-SophOmore backups Lo u1s lnzarry and Ira
Guilfo rd are arrested and charged wllh robbery after a stu
dent IS assault ed and h1s wallet IS stolen at 3 a m They are

held 10 Frank.hn County ra1l through the weeloc.end Both plead

1nnocent to the robbery charge w th Guilforel released after
pay1ng a $25 000 bond lnzarry IS held pend1ng a heanng to
determrne rt he had vrolated hrs probatron fr'om an earher
assau lt convrcflo n
Nov 16 2003-At 3 am after a wm- over Purdue and srx
days before the M1ci"Jrgan game wrde recerver Santonro
Holmes and qua rterbac~ Troy Sm th are charged wr1h mrs
demeanor drsorderly conduct after a lrght rn a parkrng lot on
campus A wrndow rn a car rs k eked out and one woman
reported her taw was broken Holme s IS held out of the start
rng lmeup at Mrchrgan Out returns to play most ot the game
Holmes also started rn the Buckeyes Fresta Bowl game He
pleads rnnocent to the clrsordarly conduct after the team
returns to Columbus The drsorderly con duct cha rge s drs
mrssed agarnst Holmes on March 30 2004 Smrth rs tound
gwlty of the charge
Oct 27 2003-lrrzarry s charged wrth three counts or
trrsl degree mrsdemeanor assault after three people sustarn
mrnor nturres dur ng a flghtrn a Park Hall dorm room lrrzarry
IS suspended two days later Hers tound gurlty ol one chcirge
each of assault negligent assault and drsorderly conduct
and pays $404 court costs and rs put on probatiOn He ts
later rernstated to the team and rs llsled as lhe second-team
trght end on the 2004 spnng depth charl before he IS sus·
pended rndelmltely after the May 1 2004 arrest
Aprrl 2003--Runmng back Maurrce Claret1 reports that a
car he has borrowed !rom a local used-car dealer was bro·
ken rnto and thOusands of dollars n cash COs stereo equip
ment and clothing was stolen The car was rn the parkrng lot
at the Woody Hayes Athletrc Center and Claret! calls polrce
from a telephone mTressel s office Clarett was later charged
wrth lymg to pollee about the value of the stolen 1tems land Is
charged wrth mrsdemeanor lalsrfrcatron of the pollee report
on the theft Claren pleads gu1tty on Jan 14 2004 to the
reduced charge of farlure to ard a law enforcement offrcer He
rs ordered to pay the max mum I ne of 5100 and serves no
jail trme The charge does not appear on hiS crr m1nal record
Oct 13 2002-lmebac~er Fred Pagac Jr s charged wrth
persrstent diSorderly conduct Pagac was arrested at 3 45
am after pollee sard he was rruoxrcated and had a role rn a
frght rnvotvmg two women outsrde a campus area bar about
12 hours after the Buckeyes homecomrng VICtory over San
Jose State The pot ce report sad an otfrcer tolel Pagac to
stop but he continued to frght Pagac was suspended for the
teams next game at Wrscons1n Pagac pleaded rnnocent In
December before the teams natrona! champronshrp game
agarnst Mramr m the Fresta Bowl Pagac was acqu1tted rn a
tury trral
1
Aug 17 2002-0efenslve lineman Qurnn P1tcock rs
charged wrth underage drlnkrng 1n hrs hometown of Ptqua
He s suspe nded from the team for the th ree weeks of pre·
season workouts then worked out wrth the team and IS not
held out of any games He pleaded no contest to a reduced
charge of diSOrderly conduct
Aug 24 2002-Fianker Chris Vance the Buckeyes sec
ond leadrng recerver from 2001 IS suspended lrom the team
berore the season opener for what Tressel called a vrolat1on
of team poliCy Vance was w1th the team on the srdel nes but
cl1d not play against Te)Cas Tech He reJOined the team for
pract1ce the followtng week but d d not play rn the second
game aga nst Kent State Athtetrc Cl1rector Andy Gerger later
sard Vance s unspecrfled vlolatron took place the prev10us
winter Vance returned lor the thrrd game and ended up as
the teams tourth-leadrng rece1ver
July 29 2002- Wlde receiver Angelo Chattams IS lnvestl
gated lor the alleged theft of a set of golf clUbs from a sport
ut lrty vehiCle m West Carrollton Prosecutors approve but do
not file a theft charge permlnmg Cha ttams to enroll m a pro
gram for nonv1olent hrst t1me offenders and avord a charge
He was e)(cused from the team to deal w1th the legal matter
then reins tated and played rn th e season opener He does
not play agarn for the Buc~eyes
July 26 2002-Polrce frnd Branden Joe a sophomore full
back asleep rn a car on a hrghway ramp near campus The
polrce report says he refused to ta~e a Breathalyzer test He
was suspended for the three weeks of preseason camp and
the teams season opener agarnst Te&gt;cas Tech then returns
to the team although his playrng trme rs llmrted by rntunes
Aprrl 27 2002-lrnebacker Marco Cnoper rs arrested
hours after the Buckeyes annual ntrasquad scnmmage and
charged With felony Clrug abuse and carry1ng a concealed
weapol) rn hrs sports·utrlrty vehicle COOPfJ pleads gurlty to
two charges rn November and rs put on '?f'ballon
March 2 2002- Trght end Aedgre Arden IS arrested on a
charge of drunken dnvrng rn hrs hometown of Ironton The
redsh1rl lreshman IS found gwlty and IS sentenced to three
days rn Jail and frned Suspended 1ndefrn.tely from the team
he does not part1c1pate rn summer workouts before the 2002
season Out IS rernstated before the start of the 2002 season
and played 1n ~ 1 games He rs a member of the 2004 team
and s lrsted on the two deep roster at defensrve end
Nov 15 200~-Qua rterback Steve Bellrsan rs arrested two
days before the lllrnors game lor drunken drrvrng Tressel
suspends the Buckeyes three year starter rndefrnrtely and
th en reinstates hrm to the team th ree days later A sen•or, he
practrced With the team for the M1chrgan game but drd not
play then came oft the bench lo play most of the teams
Outback Bowl loss to South Carolina He later served a
weekend rn JBrl
March 21 2001-cornerback Derek Ross IS arrested on
charges of dnvmg wrthout a license and provrdrng false mfor
matron to pol1ce g1v1ng an rncorrect name when pulled qver
lor speedrng He was sentenced to 30 days rn JBII He IS sus
pended !rom Oh10 States 2001 spnng practrces then played
most of the 2001 season leadrng the Brg Ten rn rntercept1ons
and earmng second team all conterence honors Left tEiam
to make h1mselt available lor the NFL draft a yea r early
Jan tQ 2001-Tressells hrred

except tor scores on a crawl at the bottom ol the
screen
"We'1e absolutely and completely the headlme story, good or bad TIMI "the ll.ltlll e ot the
beast he1e," Ge1ger sa1d "We' re gomg to be the
No I de,•l and we hke 11 when 1t's good &lt;~nd we
don't hke 11 when It's bud. I'm not bcmoanmg
that That's the way 11 1s "

Two Ohio State football players
plead innocent to robbery
COLUMBUS (AP) - T-..o
Oh10 State football player&gt;
pleaded mnocent Mond.ty to
charges they ass.lUite&lt;.l " tel low student and took h1s wallet
Louts I nzarry. a secondteam ught end. and backup
Ira
Gu•l ford
tailback
appeared
separate ly
in
Franklin County Mumcipal
Court before Judge James
Green

Eac h sophom01e spent
about a mmute 111 the courtroom , wa lkm g 111 " s1de door
anu then standmg w1th their
back; to a wall Attorneys
entered the pleas tor them
lnzarry and Guilford are
charged with felony robbery
They spent the weekend m
the county Jail
Guilford was released
Mond.ty .1fter paying a
$25,000 bond

'Does
from Page 81
Hupp wllh two s1ngles. and smgles by Chns
Tllcker and Brad Crouch.
Doup had two Singles for M1ller. whtle
Aichele doubleu, C Lunmg s1ngled, Boly.lfd
stngled. and Osbourne doubled

,

I11 Zarry rema1ned 111 Jail
" heanng to deter,
mme If he h,1u f&lt;11led to meet
the te11ns of p10bat1on from
.m earl1er arrest lor ll!lhtmg
Both have prel1mmary
heanngs set for May I I
Coach J1m Tressel has suspended both players mdetimtely Ohio State 'athletic
d1rector Andy Ge1ger said
Monday. "These ~uys are
gone They're done.·
pendm ~

Miller pitching struck out e1ght and walked
two. while Crouch p1cked up the wm wuh
seven strike outs and two walks 111 JUSt h1s
'econd v.u Slty start Crouch also p1tched well
a 3-2 loss to Belpre l.~&gt; t week
Southern goes to Federul Hockmg Tuesday
and hosts the Lancers Wednesday
Southern 7, Miller 5
Southern •

Mdler

002

001

104

100

Tuesday, May 4, 2004 .

Eagles
from Page 81
plete who~t would become the two gamewm lllng ru1ts the score 5-3 The Eagles
then held the Lancers otf m the botto m of
the seventh to secure the wm
Federal Hock1ng h1t mto tour double
plays 111 the contest, a compl ement to the

Southern
from Page 81
Southern broke the game open with s1x
runs 1n the fifth tnmng on smgles by K1ser,
P1ckens, Roush, walks to Sayre, Pullins
and Emily Hill and a 4-3 groundout to
Duffy, the score 14-2 at the 11 me
Southern went on to score four 111 the
Sixth, and Mtller added smgle run s 111 the
fifth and s1xth to push the score to 18-4 at
the f1msh
Southern h1ttmg was Jed by Kat1e Sayre
and Brooke K1se r who both went 4-for-S
on the mght, Ashley Roush was 3-tor-4
wllh three RBI's, Deana Pullin s had t-..o
s111 gles, NICki Tucker a double and s mgle,
Joanne P1ckens two smgles and Jordan

Eastern
from Page 81
smgle, Morgan Weber two smgles and a
tnple. and Halhe Brooks a single
Federal Hocking hitters were Tern Wolfe
w1th two smgles, A Fomder a smgle, and
Am,mdd Stover,, smgle
Knsta Wh1te agmn hurled the v1ctory m
another exce llent eflort. Wh1tc struck out
seven and walked JUSt one m posting the b1g

0
0

-

18 16 3
463

wm Tern Wolfe suffered the loss, fannmg
nme and walkmg four
Last Thursday. Warren defeated Eastem 41 on a one-hitter by Clatterbuck. Eastern's
lone h1t was a smgle by Casey Smith
Warren went up 2-0 on smgle runs 111 the
first and thtrd mnmgs, but Eastern fought
back w1th one 111 the fourth Warren added two
runs m the tifth for the 4-1 final.
Eastern 9, Federal Hocking 1
Eastern
102
033
Federal Hockrng
0 00
100
LP-Wolte and Slover WP Whrte and Smrth

0 0 -

990
149

E-mail us your local sports news:
sports@mydailytribune.com
New Insertion
Date is

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\
include them in -:;:.-z.,..,
. "V V\ , ,
this section!!

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS ¥OUR AD
ONLINE
&gt;

To Place
laegi~ter
mrtbune
Sentinel
Your Ad,
992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today••• {7 40) 446-2342 (740)
Or Fax To
992·2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

Otfftee 11o~~
Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Items·
;

r

1.
PI:Jt-'olNAL'i

Flllp lna 4 Love
Find your Philippine Lady
lor love

1-800-497·8414
Flliplna-4-love com
~:.)

A1\NOUi\CF.' lE:.V'lS
Ball Ja r Lamps Mothers
Day Plaques Cookbooks
The Mason Jar 406 Man
Street (304)675 4477
C-1 Beer Carry Out perm t
lor sale Chesler Townshrp
Me1g s County send letters
of rnterest to The Da1ly
Sentrnel PO Box 729 120
Pomeroy Oh o 45769
lakm Hosprtal 1s currenllv
to krng brds lor the tollowmg
POSi tr ons (Brd s wrl1 be
accepted untrl 2 00 pm May
7
2004)
Chaplrn
Te lephone Marntenance for
Panason•c
Busmess
Systems Cop1er Mach ne
Marntenance Agreement for
Sharp S02060 Rental ot
Oxygen Conce ntrators X
Ray
Se rvrces
Dental
Serv1ces
Testr ng
ol
Spnnkler System Contract
penod July 1 2004 th rough
June 30 2005 For brd rntor
matron contact Barbara
Long at 675 0860 ext 104

r

(;1\ f_\\1',\\

/

-:. -

LosrAND
hllNil

-

A A

Lost Black Lab pupp1e s
whrte on chest 6 months
old Last seen 5-2-04 297
Dully Ad 740 446 -1264
lost Female HusKy mr)(
dog Any 1nfo please call

(740)446 4610

YARJ) SALEGAII II'OI L~

Ull

.........

143 Second Ave May 6 7

9-4

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

*Golf
Gymnastics
Child's Name
*Tumbling
Ch1ld of· Parent's Name
Team Name
*Soccer
Message
*Karate
&amp; More!!
This special section wilt run

*

on

lhursday, May 27th in The Daily Sentinel.
Hurry, Deadline for entries is May 20, 2004!
Fill out the forn below and drop off pr mail
(along with your payment and photo) to:
The Daily Sentinel "AII·Stars8, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769
Make Check&amp; out to: lht Daily Sentinel

------------Child's Name - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ---------~-------

Parent's Name --'---------~--'----Town _________________________
Team Name - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Phone Number __________~------Message (up to 10 words) : - - - - - - - - - - - , --

WP Crouch and Yeauger LP-Ooup and Lunln~

\

I

(

1467 Jackson Pike
lns1de &amp; Outsrde yard sale
May 6 &amp; 7 9am-5pm

'Community Y•rd Sale
Debbre Drrve &amp; Debbl&amp;
Chapel Fr day/Saturday 5/7

518

9·5

Encto1ed Porch Sail
6 mites from Rutland Worth
the tnp l Monday May 3
Sunday May 16 11 am 5pm
Rd
31966
McCumber
Dexter
Ohto
Antiques
canoe peddle boat parrot
wlcaQe stove gas grllt fur
n1ture shelf units womens
jeans m·xt l1ke new $5 a
pair, shorts t-shrrts shOes
collectibles CD s cassenes
VCR
tapes.
TV s
microwaves
surround
speakers self propelled
mower electrrc garage door
opener cedar chest At 7N
to AT 124W to langsvrlle
Take Dexter Ad to small
white church rn De&gt;eter, go
right, then nght again onto
MrCurnber Ad about 1 mrle
Friday May 7,
830 Flfst Ave

8·4 30
Garage Sale Fnday. May
7th and Sa turelay May 8th
637 Polecat Road
Gat11po1ts
Washer/Dryer Go Cart,
Curta ms Lawn mower lots
of Mrscellaneous HousehOld
Items

Word Ads

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday- Frh:lay for Insertion
In Next Day•• Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1 : 00 p.m .
Friday For Sunday• Paper

All Dleplay: 12 Noon 2
Bu•lne•• Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dl•play: 1 :00
Thureday for Sundays- Pioper!

• All ads must be prepaid'

POLICIES onto Valley Pubii1Ming rtMrVM tht right to tdlt, rejec1, or cancel any ad at any time Errore must be reported on the f1rst day ot publication and
Trlbune-S.ntlnai·Aeglat.r will t:Mr reaponelbla fOI' no mote thlin the coet of the apace occupied by the erro r and on ly the Jrr•trnsert1on We shall not be liable
any loaa or ax~nte thai reaulta from the publlcelion or omltllon ot an tdYertlttmtnt Correct1on w1!1 be made In tho flrl! ava.lable ed1t1on • Bo)( number
• • alwaya confkJilntlal • Current rala card eppllae • All real eetata advertlaementa are tubject to the Federal Faor Hou&amp;1ng Act of 1968 • Th1s
acc.pta only help wanted ec:l1 meeting EOE Nndlirdt
will
1ccept any advenr1lng n vrolatlon of the law

"""'''P"'I

8r1ck Ranch 1n a nrce well
establrshed neighborhood
#br 1 5 B 2car garage
extra garage rn back Must
see lo apprec ate (740)446

Kitchen Aide/Meat
Transporter

Alshrre s 2100 Carroll St
Syracuse May 71h 8th 9 4
rarn or shrne
Carport Sale· Thu rs May
6th Lee res1dence Tyree
Blvd Aacme clothrng lots
of mtsc

1-800-334-1203

www all1ancetractonra ler com

Local Home Health Agency
seek1ng AN PCA S and
Home Health Ardes wr11
trarn the rrght person co m
pany offers benelrts fle)(rble
scheduling
co mpetitive
wages and a great work
atmosphere Please send
AUCTION Modular House resume to CLA bo)( 568 cfo
and Tools &amp; Equ1pment Gallrpolr s Tnbune, 825 Third
Buckeye
Hrlls
Career Ave Gallrpolrs OH 45631
Center Aro Grande Ohro
LPTA wanted for home
T&amp;E at 11 OOam House at
health phys1cal therapy serv
~ 2 00 Noon on May 8 2004
rces Motivated sell directed
740)245 5334
1ndrvrdual w II like fle&gt;erble
scheduhng good 1ndepend
"""
WA~'I'I'Il
ruBUY
·
ence and co mpensatron
Opportunrtres avarlable rn
Absolule Top Dollar U S Athens Mergs Jackson
Cons Vmton &amp; Gatlla count1es
Srlver
Gold
Proofsets Otamonds Gold Call 888-464· 11 26
Arngs
US Currency
LSW Needed
MTS Corn Shop
151
Second Avenue , Gallipolis
Licensed Socrat Worker
740-446 2842
needed to provrde case
I \ll'ltl\\11 '\I '
management serv1ces and
" 11{\ltl'\
counsehng servtces for ado

110
1.

HEl-P WANTED

'ANEW CLINICAL
PEELSI'
Went to look younger AND
earn Money? Lets talk; the
NEW AVON call

Marilyn (304)882-2645,
Joyce (304)875·6919
April (304)882·3630

lescent male and tamale In
restdential treatment setting
rn Gallra County OhiO area
Candrclate must ha11e a
strong desrre to work With
adolescents anel a posltrve
personality Must possess or
be ellhtlble for Ohio Social
Work license Competltrve
salary and great benefrt
package provided Please
send cover lette r and
resume to Alan Siebel 608
Park Ave
Ironton OH

AVONI All Areas! To Buy or 45638 EOE
Sell
Shirley Spears 304
!Uaau1ge
Tl1ernput
875-1429
needeel
for
busy
BELIEVE ITII
Chiropractic rehabilitation
Earn up to $8 00/hr plus
Center Mu9t be Oh io
weekly bonuses
liCensed and well skilled In
We offer paid holidays
all areas 'of therapeutic masand 11acatlons
sage Excellent pay and
Health Benefits available!
work atmosphere Please
Full or part t1me openings
fax resume to 740·886-1609
Can today!
A«n Kalhy
1-877·463·6247 ext 2454
Meelt Home Health Agency
Apply online
Inc seeking a full·tlme and
www rnfoclsron com
PAN AN s and a PAN
Cllll A COL Drivers
Occupatronal Theraptst for
Wanted
the Galtrpolrs, Ohio area
Must be licensed both In
•Min o12 years exp
Oh10 and West Vrrglnta We
•M edrcallns 401 K
oHer a competitive salary
bene1ll package tor full lime
•Operation area 400 mile
and 401 K E 0 E Please
radiUS of Jackson OH
send resume to 352 Second
•S1gn on Bonus
Ave GallipOlis OH 45631
•34 cent per mile
Ann Diana Harless Clrn cal
•95°o No touch
Manager

Call 800 652-2362
Dnver tor horse and buggy
E•per1ence with horses pre
Fte•1ble
hOurs
tarred

(740)379·9098 (740)379·
23161eave message

Grlll Cook Apply In person
Crows Steak House

3081

All real estate advert1slng
In thrs newspaper 1s
subject to the Federal
Fair Housin g Act of 1968
wh1ch makes 11 Illegal to
advertise any
preference llm1hHron or
dlscnmtnat1on based on
race, color retlglof1 se)C
familial status or national
or1gln, or any rntent 1on to
make any such
preference, llm1tatron or
discrimination

'i-'f

Need 7 ladres to sen Avon

Call (7 40)446·335ll

This newspaper wrll not

~
© 2004 by NEA, Inc

Tractor-Trailers
'We trarn Men and Women
"Full and Pari Trme Classes
•Job Placement
"COL Tram ng
"Frnancmg Ava1lable
AS SEEN ONTV
ALLIII.NCE
Tractor Tra1ler Trarntng
Centers Wythevrlle VA

FUR SALE

lwroght@lc net

Gallra Co Counc1l on Aging/
Semor Resource Center IS
currently acceptrng
appl catrons lor Krtchen
Aid/Meal Transporter
mm mum ol 32 hours/week
Must have valid drivers
license and tnsurable rrsk
Yard Sale 1 2 miles out Must be able to read wnte
and follow directiOns
Route 218 May 5 6 7 8
Needs to ass1st rn meat
Varrety ot 1tems
preparatron clean up anc;l
be a suitable meal drrver
Deadhne for appl catrons to
be subm tied May 7 2004
3 Famtly garage sa le Many A complete JOb descrrptrori
and apphcatron ava1lable
ltoms plus longaburger
and/or send resume to
Baby terns Ne)Ct to Carleton
School rn Syracuse Look for
srgr1s May 6lh 7th 8th Rarn Gall a Co Councrl on Agr ng1
Sen or Resource Center
I shrne
PO Box 441
3 tamlly vard sale· baby
Gallrpol1s Oh10 45631
rtems rur mture apphances
An Equal Opportunrty/
clothmg &amp; much mo'e Sat Arfrrmatrve Actron Employer
May 8th 405 lmcoln Street '-----,-~-­
Middleport
Learn to Ortve

110
.
1

www.comtcs com

.
1

11'\\,(1\1

HELrWAN'IID

The Harold Drspatch has
~nrris ~orrhufl llodg t·
motor routes ava1table If
ca ll
Scali
Now
turr ng r Sa les rnterested
Prolessronals Must be h gh- (304)526 2816
ty motrvated w1th excephonat
The Mason County Public
commun1cat1on
skrlls
Lrbrary IS seekrng a Part
Unlimited rncome potentral
trme Library Clerk Th e sue
Don 1 mrss this opportunity
cessful applrcan t must be
to advance you r career rnto
lnendly lamllrar w1th comhrgh gear: Come 1n for a per
puters and able to lift up to
sorralmtervrew at 252 Upper
Rrver Road Gall1pbhs Ohro 25 pounds Saturday and
,
evenmg hours are requrred
Interested applrcants may
Nursrng Ass stan! Classes
pick up and applrcatron at
begmnmg May i7 2004 If
508 Vran d Street Point
you en1oy elderly people and
Pleasant EOE
want to become a member
ot our heal th ca re te am
please stop by Rocksprrngs
Youth Fundraislng
Rehabrlltat on Center at
help daycares summer
36759 Rockspnngs Road
leagues
schools PTA s
Pomeroy OhiO 45769 and lrll
coaches 1a1se money for
out an applrcatron lor the
local area Av/46 000 yr
classes E&gt;elendrcare Health
Serv1ces Inc IS an equal
opportun1ty employer that
workplace
encourages
dlVerslty M/F ON
loo~rng for driver to pull
Aefrrgeratad Tre.rlar 90%
multr stop WV OH &amp; FL
Average $1 000/Wk Driver
does own Takes {304)675

0 10

46981(304)532·1997

813 779-4542
SrnOOLS
1150

Ir&gt;smurnoN

Gatllpolle Career College
{Caree rs Close To Home)

Call TOdayl 740·446-4367
1·8Q0-2i 4 0452
www ga llpollscaretrcollege com

Accredited Member A.ccredlllng
Coundl tor I

College•

Paramedics
&amp;
EMT s
needed Appl y at 1354
Jackson Pike Gallipolis
Per1ect Connection your
Barn Removal
Local DrshNet and Direct
All references &amp; full lnsurTV Store hiring Installers
1
anel
Sales/Reps
Call

(304)675·1400

POSTAL JOBS
$15 44·$21 40/hr now hlr- Affordable Services Hauling
tng For application and free gravel dirt ect Painting
go11ernment job Info call Tree Trimm ing Driveway
American Assoc of Labor Repair Guners Chimney
1 (913)599 8220 24 hra Plumbing Jack Ot All Traces
emp serv

10

BuSINESS

Speedway Super America
Middleport Oh neeela 3
cashrers mostly evenrngs
16-20 hours a week See
store management for appll·
catron &amp; detail&amp;

ABSOLUTE GOLDMINEI
60 vending mach1nesl

excellent locallons
$10 995
800-234-6982

all for

Local busrness Prectous
Memorres tor sale Place
cus tomer s photos on chrna
plates and other rtems
Would ma~e a great add1tron
to an ex1slrng busrness or
set up at car shows or any
event
$5 000 00 buys
everythrng mcluclrng web

s

1

t

e

www photosonchma com

(740)992-4294

opportumty bases

!..:.

3 bedroom Ranch 2
ar garage rn ground pool
75 000 3460 State Rout

18 740)256·1962

"'

..,

lNG CO recommends tha
ou do business wrth peo
le you know and NOT t
end money through th
all untrl you have Invest!
ated the otferm

r

PROFESSIONAL

SERVICl'S

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Wlnl

1 888·682 3345
HI \11 -. 1\11

HOME'!
FOR SALE

Lawn Service Will do com ·
plete yard aer11ice Low 33 Acres Ranch style
House on Eckard Chapel
rateol (740)949-2722
Ad
Pt Pleasant Area
Will bAbysit In my home 1st (304 )~95-3129
and 2nel sh1ft Call (740)286-

7623

4 bedroom 1" 112 bath 2
storv
brick 2 car unattached
Will care for your love one ln
my home good care home garage, $37,500 Fourth St
cooked meals 28 years ot New Haven "NV (740)446e)(perlence good refer- 4274

ence• (740)667·6577
Will Pressure Wash houses
mobile homes metal build
tnga, anel gutters Call
(740)«6-0151 ask for Ron
or leave message

w orbv com
2204 ~or calt

1082

535 000

Ph

(740)367·7025

cell 740-645-0508
1982 Double wrde Excellen t
starter home Very good
condrtron Well ta~en care
of and clean 3 bedroom all
walk m closets 2 baths w1th
garden tub rn master BR
bath Includes underprnnrng
All etectrrc with central AJC
Musl be moved :S 12 000

Call (740)245·0144

2000 Oakwood Home 18)(84
3br 2ba all electnc central
air Call anytime (30 4)675

7157

\1'\Rl'IF.~ I'S

IORRE'T

Tra ter for sa e 2 bedrOOm 1 and 2 bedroom apart
can reman on lot rn Ra e ne ment&lt;; 'urn shed and unfur
area S2 000 (740)992 5858 n shed securrty deposrt
req~.,. red no pets ""o..O 992
Used Trarler tor sale by 22t8
owner
Outs de Storage
oedrQOm
apt
bu drng nc ludE'd bOth f1
hookup
good shap e (304)6 75 8638 Washer dryer
nciJoes water s~wage: a1,d
340
trasn S350 en depos1t
requrrerJ No pets 740 441
1184
301140 commerc1at burld1ng
1 bedroom krtchen appli
1n Middlepor t
2 12x12
ances IJI rsr1eo A..C refi:l'
doors
5275
month
ence~:o No ;.Jels !740)446
1740)992 3194
1370
4 unrt apartment bwldrna or 2 bedroo"'

1us

t=&lt;JSl -iolz:er

3 apartments &amp; 1 oftrce for S425 moflt'l Cal 7 JQl44t
sale Locate:.~ rn downto \n 1184
Gall1po11s lrrcomP pot~nt al
S1 300 per monlh In good 2 be::Jn.JJr- near holzer
cond lion 5120 000 Will C A W 0 r coku~ quret
corsrder land contract lr\lth ocauor :lVarlaOie 5 1 04
S429 plus u! litres 740)446
10 ~c down Please call "'40
2957
710 0007
BEAUTIFUL
APART
M~NTS
AT
BUDGET
..-\l IU \ (ol
PRICES
AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 WE'stwood
16x80 srtes fhflllaOif! S11 5 Dr ve tror:; 5344 to :;442
per month lflCiudES wa1er Wal~ to S"~OP &amp; mo\ es Ca ~l
se .... er &amp; trC'lsh 74 0199C 740 4C6 25b8
Eoual
2167
Hous r y Oppor•un ly

350

I ~HS

&amp;

Lot on Sancl Htll Rd 2 26 CONVENIENTLY LOCAlAcres rn n1ce Subdtvtslnn EO &amp; AFFORDABLE'
$19 9000 1304)67 5 2995
Towntr--use
apa In ents
and or small houses FOR
Mercerv1lle Lots lor ~ale RENT Call r740H4 1 1111
shared entrance oil S At for appl cat un &amp; rr1ormatron
218 3 13 ac res Phone
GraciOUS lVI q 1 dfld 2 bed
17401256·1825
roan "'Panments al Vrllage
M.1r1o1
and
Arvcrs de
Two homes1tes lor :;ale Both
Anartments 111 t.llddloport
1
one acre m 1 3 1 2 m1 es
From Sc9:J $~44 Cal ""-lCI
from Holzer Hospr1al
992 SOb~ Eau,ll Housn1~
620 Evergreen Ad $19 SOD
Oppo• turllhe:.
560 Evergteen Ad S18 500
Ca ll
~7 4 0) 4 46 8fl40
or N ce
bearoom con1~1ett:
t740)645 45 t 3
krlcl,en fl. C Aelerence and

Need to sell yoUI home? We
offer 0% down pay men!
f nancrng plans tor your
potent at buyers less than
perle ct credrt accepted
1mag1ne how easy 1t world
be tor you lo salt 1t you had a
source of lrnancmg tor your
buyers We say yes when
banks say no Call for You could t1sh your badla.11dS
deta Is (740)992 4294
and 1ncrease prcperty \Cllue
too Make and 1nto tal..es
Pt Pleasant/Sandhill Road (740)388 8228
3Br 1Ba 1600/sqtl Ra nch on
6 acre level lot Oak floors
1st hou se on R1ght past
Un 1 versr t ~
Marshall
$103 000 (74Q)91l9 113 1 10
He ll'SI·;,
after 5 OOPM
Hll&lt; RL'I

Mobile Mrnr-Donut conces·
sron busrness ror sale
locally owned Eas1ly make
$1000 00 or more at week
end events Everythrng sets
f32U l\10RIU: HO\U;~
up rn a spectally designed
mR SAlE
10X10 canopy Excellent
parH me or lull-trme oppor
tun1ty $9 950 00 Donuts 1/2 acre lot on Ra coon
Mleldleport Creek 14x65 fully furn rshed
Galore
2 bedroom mobrle home
(7401992·4294
boat docks Cleckrng boat
ramp 24 carport Ask1rrg
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH

30yrs experl&amp;nce (304)882·
2198 (304)377-8266

FIND AJOB
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

dwellings advertised In
this new spaper are
available on an equal

0PI'OtmJNITY

Residential
Treatment
Facility youth worker Pay 13eorges Portable Sawmill 3 B&amp;droom Brick Ranch
based on experience Call don't haul your logs to the Acre lot Reduced (304)6.75
mlll lusl call304-675·1957 H14
(740)379·9083 lo apply
Rocksprrngs Rehabilitation
Center Is looking lor dedi·
cated compassionate Slate
Tested Nursing Assistants
Competitive wages health
and dental beneUts, and
40~ K ava1lable
We take
prlde In our home and real·
dents and need great team
players to join us
If you
have these qualifications
to
please
apply
Aockspnngs Rehabilitation
Center, 36759 ROCksprings
Road , Pomeroy Ohro 45769
Extended Health Servtees •
Inc 1s an equal opportunity
employer that encourages
workplace dlverslty M/F DN

knowmgly accept
advertrsements for real
estate whrch ts 1n
violation at the law Our
readers are hereby
rnformed that all

110
HELP WA1'ITED

H O\Ib~
FOR SUJ

I\IOHII f

HOMES

fiELI'WAr-'IID

Somethrng tor every r-oom
Glassware toys hunlrng
bed and bath carseat
kitchen etc Clothes all
srzes Some NWT Sal &amp;
Sun 9 6 Pr ced to sell 7~
Mrll Creek

692 Art Lew1s Middleport
5·5-04·-5 8-04 too ls d1sh·
es clothing porcelarn dolls
&amp; much more

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ods
&lt;,. ~t.
lr1'
Borders 53-00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Ru mmage sale·
Heath
Free to good hOme Ltter Church S 3rd St May 6th
tra rned lovable grey/whrte 6 7th Blh 9 3
month old female k tten
AucnON AND
(740)446 2984 ca n alter
FLEA M~KK£1
130m

0694

o.oO£-

May 4th-81h 4867 St At 850
8rdwell Clothes toys CD s
lots of everythrng 9 ?

Oearltirlhf'

• Start Your Ad• With A Keyword • Include Complete
Descrlptton • Include A Price • Avokt Abbrevl~tlons
• Include Phone Number And Addreas When Needed
• Ad1 Should Run 7 O•r•

110

Lost Reward Walker Coon
dog blf'\Ck!whrtelbrown Lost
around Yellow T(Jwn Ad Call
(740}446-9552 or (740)441

'\ I

OH

c;,u,~ Ct~un11

May27, 2004
-r~ -'"

OH

Else can!

Eastern 5, Federal Hockmg 3

Southern 18, Miller 4

M••&amp;S Co unl~

Counti•Uke
NoOne

Eastern
201
000
2
561
Federal Hockmg 0 0 0
003
0
37 1
WP Ryan Sm th and Durst LP Jeremy Cundrff and Poston

Southe n
311
36 4
Mrller
200
011
WP-K1ser and Sayre LP·Ait1er and Bray

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Melp, Glallla,
And Muon

Eastern defense
Federal's Jeremy Cundiff struck out 12 ·
and walked tour batters 111 the los mg effort
tor the Lancers Ray n Smnh was the wmning p1tcher 111 relief of Brandon Goeglem
and Steve Semelserger Desp1te a threa t by
Federal 111 the seventh . Smnh stl uck out
four 111 two mnmgs of work

Ne1gler a smgle.
M11ler h1tters were Courtney Wnght
with a double and smgle , Em1le Bray a
tnple , and smgles by S1era Toth , Mallory
Alt1er, and Angela Doyle
Courtney Wnght started the game for
Mtller and gave up three stngles before
Mallory Alt1er came on to fmish the game.
1\lll e~ fanned two and walked e1ght while
hlttmg two and giVIng up f1fteen hits
Brooke K1 ser once agam pitched a good
game and p1cked up the wm w1th a s•x-httter, f1ve stnkeouts, and four walks
Southern goes to Federal Hockmg
Tuesday and ho sts the Lancers at home
Wednesday

www.mydailysentinel.com

UL:ribune - Sentinel
- laegi~ter
.
CLASSIFIED
We Cove·---r

Meigs

12 3
565

3

Tuesday, May 4, 2004

Belpre cut the lead to 2-1 wuh a Shane
Colv1n RBI s1ngle, then Wolfe-s two-run
homer gave the Eagles a lead they never
rehnyu1shed
'
from Page 81
Belpre
added
two
more
runs
m
the
fourth
I
on RBI smgles by W1le and Colvm, then
row to st,lrt the g,1me M1ke D.1v1s came on rounded out 11 sconng w1th Nolan 's blast 111
111 the "xth and threw two scoreless mmngs the tilth
111 reltel
Allot Belpre s 1uns were scored with r-..o
Fackler put Me1gs on the scoreboard f1rst
wuh a two-ru n smglc 111 h1s team's m1tial at- outs
Me1gs' four runs 111 the bottom of the sevb.n A Jeremy Blackston double. Doug Dill enth also came w1th two aw.1y Co llums
•nt1cld smgk and hu bats man loaded the
to the gap 111 lett cente1 lleld to
bases. then F,tckler smgled up the m1ddle to doubled
score Blackston and Chuck DaviS, then RBI
pl.ne a p.ur
smgles by Dill and Grover pulled the home
Dill '"'" the lone Marauder w1th multiple team to W1th1n two
hus he also had " run batted 111 Enc
Me1gs plays host to Tnmble today. wh1le
Cul lums • added a two- run double
B1.1ckston. Dav1s and Brandon Grover all Belpre t1avels to Alexander
added a hn ap1ece
Belpre 8, Me1gs 6
003
230
0 B 13 2
Kurt Wile had three h1ts and a run batted Belpre
Metgs
200
000
4 672
111 tor Belpre Nolan had two h1ts and three
Tom Wolfe and Justin Cline Brandon Fackler M1ke Oav1s (6)
•• RBis. Dustin Ad,llll and Shane Colvm had and Matt Holley WP- Tom Wolfe LP- Brandon Fackler HR
-BEL (2) Tom Wolfe 1htrd one on Luke Nolan 1lflh two Oil
two h1ts eac h
· ·· '

7

0

-

depcs11 No oets
0139

'"'-l014.J6

N1Cf' ~ Ot"On)CY'1 f10a11ment
to •t nt M·ddlepor t Ql;
S325 rno
S300 &lt;1epos11
740 t5Q6 2198 or i40 591
0649

Nrce one SA t nfu n shed
apartmenl Ar.1r1gE' &amp; •elrru
crovrded Wd.eJ &amp; ac:~rbage
1 bedroom 'urn1shed Muse pa (! Depos 1 ·e~urrea Call
v.rth a1r cond t1onmg No 1740\446 4345 alter 6pm
smokrng (740)446 1759
Pleasanl Valley Apallment
Are now taking Aoplr ca• ons

1 B· pass ore 2 located m
New Haven everymmg 1n
wal~1ng d stance app11ances
fu rn1sh ed total Electrrc $325
month $300 oepcs t No
Pels call (30&lt;1)882 3652

lm

2BR

3BR &amp; 4BR

App11cat ons
arP
tal&lt;ef1
Monday t'&gt;'u Frrday tram
900 AM 4 PM Offce rc:;
Located at 1151 Everg·een
Drrve Porn! Pleasant WV
Phone No 1S (304)675 5806
3 bedroom house lor rent 1n EHO
Gall1pol s
Ferry
5450
To~Nnt'Jouse
Depos1t $450 per mon''i Tara
Apartments V.ary Spac ous
1304)675 7155
2 Bedrooms 2 Floors CA. 1
3 bedroom
house 1n 1 2 Bath Newly Carpeted
Pomeroy $400 a mo $400 Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Clepos!t no pets {740)949 Patio Start $385 Mo No
7004
Pets Lease Plus Securrty
DepoSII Re qurred Days
3 t&gt;edroom 1 112 batn spl t 740 446 3481
Evenrngs
level No pets S500 month 740 367 0502
S300
depostt
Call
Twrn A1vers Tower s accept
(740) 446 3617
rng applicatr0"1S lor wa trng
Jbr Rancn w garage lg list tor Hua suosr:zed 1 br
fenced yert:t 8)(C lam1ly apartment call 675 6679

28•70 Redman double wide
3 bedroom 2 bath l1reptace
with venttess gas logs 1ocat1on
tn~P1 Pleasant EHO
10..:66 covered back porch $675 00 a month Clap &amp; ref
heat pump Must be moveel reqUired Call (304~ 27~ 1112 unlurn1shed 1 &amp; 2 oedroom
apts Porter 01'110 740 367
(740)245·9159
. (304)638 7411
77&lt;16 or 740 367 7015
Before you buy\
N1ce 2 bedroom attached
SNn
Does your Cleater?
garage Near Rodney Lease
HIR Rf\1'
Move h1s homes Do srte
and Refe rence $400 month
preparatiOn
bUild founda
plus deposrt Call 1740)44 6
t1ons - Aon and set Muses
Rlver t ltes tor rent, fam:ly
2801
Do heatrng and a r Have 1n
type 3 c amps ites full
house serv1ce people
!""' l\1011tl.li Ho' n:1 hookup near river 3 dockInstall septic systems Do
l ites no hookup Call
FOil.
etectr lcal/plumbtng
Do
drrveways If the answer to
Mobrle home tor rent S400
any ot these questrons rs no
mon th S400 dePOSit 6
or II they ' sub contract" You
Jl tli'SfHOill
months
lease
Call ~IO
bener see the ol dest most
(740)367 7762 at {740)367
Gon1~
experienced
dealer
m
7272
Athens County Srnce 1967
Full S1ze Maltress Set New
Coles Mobrle Homes 15266
Past c
w Warranty
US 50 East Athens Ot11o N1ce 2 and 3 bedroom
mob1le
homes
tor
rent
Sacr1f1Ce
S'
19
Ce ll pnof'le
45701 "Where you get your
304
412
eocm
01
.)C4 552·
rncludes
water
st&gt;wa
&amp;
money's worth"
trash no pets depos t &amp; 1424
$300 per month 1740}992
Customer cancetlatK&gt;rl''
Kmg Srze
Prlow
Top
New 14x70 3 bedroom 2. 2167
bath lots at extras Save - - - - - - - - - Mattress set New s1r11 rn
SSS Free tot rent Free sk1rt N ce 2 bedroom mob1le p dSI1C Sa e S299 Cell
No
pets
Call p ~ one 104 412 8098 .304
lng kit · It wont last long 1 home
~ S2 1424
(740)d46 2003
800 637 3238

R•:...,-

~

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, May 4, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, May 4, 2004
ALLEYOOP

www.mydailysentinei.com

in Memory

In Memory

IT "HfJHT DO

~y

GOOD

ATTH:K. ~I( IN i..£M .'

wtalrtaya

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

·

otS&amp;inda}'

';MJ,-

North

llu66ard 's qreenhtJuse

BASKET BINGO
I

to purchase you r tickets now

HUGE YARD SALE

Si sters. re latives and fri ends.

r~..,.

Wednesday, May 5th
8:00-?
5h &amp; Main St.

r ~~r:s I

".,;=~:::
· ·U-)_.11

__

g~y~~s~teedAange:ash:~sd 6~~nne~. ~1:teBar, A~~~=i jft;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;....;~

. r10

PhiS

i

Skaggs Appliances
76 Vine Street
(740)446-7398

Al.~

fUR SALE
$500LHondas.
Chevys,
'Jeeps_.
etc ! POLI CE
IMPO UN DS Cars
from
$SOO. For listings l -800-719300 1 e)(t 390 1
--------~
1989 Pontiac Bonneville.
good runni.ng conditiOn
$900.00 (740)742-2166
199 1 Mercu ry Cougar. All

-'--'---=-------

dressers. - - - - - - - - Kennebec potatoes, clear·
couches, recliners, much
$
500
ance 5.00 per 50# · 6
A
· 12
more. Grave Monuments. S
tate RoUte 124, eedsv11e.
(740)446·4782 Gallipolis , Ohio
·
QH, HAS 10·4 M·F.·
~;,;;;~:...;;:;,;;,;;:..;....;_ _, - - - -- - -- -

r--•Aml-•QUES--_.II·

·-------pl

Fresh Frutt and Vegetables

Buy or sell. A!verine Open Thurs-Fri· Sat. 1354
. P'k
G II' I.
Antiques, 1124 East Main J k
;h~o~(f40)4~'
na:
rpo IS ,
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740992-2526. Russ Moore,
I \ k \ 1 ' ' 1'1'1 II "
owner.
,\ II\ l ..., l(H 1,

M&lt;mlRCYO.ES

2001 Honda Shadow Spi rit
motorcycle. VT1100, excellen t condrtion 1 owner
As king $5 ,300. (740)4467668,

;,:;;50~.--~~--

1994 18 loo t Islander Baja
with t rai ler. garage kept,_
very low hours, lik e new. call

$7,500 . {740)992·2268
1995 Suntracker 24 II.
PO ntoon Boat, 60 hp. motor
&amp; trailer. Camper lncloser.

Jutl canvas cover, porta
potty, changing room, gas
grill. $7.500. 740·367-7025.
celt 740-645-0508.

98 Basstrea m Boa t. 99
Mercury 150 hp motor, 97
trarler, cover Nrce. $8,900 :00

Auro PAtm; &amp;
A&lt;.:Cl)&gt;'iORtES

·

- - - - - -- - General s (304)675-3354
2003 Nissan Sentr a SEA
SpecV. 6 spd. $12)00 oo Are you looking for Eng1nes
o r Tran smissions? Or for
(740)9922136
10
FARM
someone to replace 1hem?
96 Saturn SC 1. 2 door, red, Give me a call at (740)446·
~
EQuiPMENT
great cond ition. Must Sell 0519.
For Sale: Lap Top Computer,
i:i:~"""!C~A·M·I'E-Rl·S~&amp;:"""-,
· $350. New Boat. Cover, For Sale Porlable Smidley $3,000 1740 1256-6800 ·
$100. Call (740)441 -8299 or Scales. new. Call (740)446- 97 Neon $750.00. 94 G rand
MutOK HUI\U·~
(740)441 -5472
6741
AM $1 .300 .00 (740 )992- ~-iiiiiiiiiiioiiliiiiii-rl

r~~~

Gas cook stove- 3 yrs. old.
18.000

BTU, AC

(;:o~~~6-6~;onths

wtih

Repaired . New &amp; Rebuih In
Stock. Call Ron Evan s, 1·
800-537-9528.

Truck tool bo11., three TV 's.
old bottles, electriC cords,

marbles, car radios's, old
tools . (740)256·6400.

42

inch

,

.21""36.
· ----.....,

TRUCKS
I"OR SALE

Projects (304)675·11 26

AERATION MOTORS

Wiza·rd

Ln~.
i~------_.J
i

old. ; or _sale Boer Goats for Fai r

JET

•

'-.=;:.--._.1
ni'..."HV\...n.

ridiRg

mower. 4x12 utility trailer. 60
yards tan carpet &amp; pad.
)740)388-8997.
'

1970 Ford F350, 10 Ft.
Grain bed, low miles, many
Registered ANGUS and new parts , new ti res/wheels.
Crossbred bulls. Top blood- (740)245-0485.
line s, Slate Run Farm,
Jackson.
(740 )2S6-5395 1979
Chevy
1/2
ton
look
up Scotsdale 4X4, Sin lift, 36in
www.slaterunfarm.com.
tires, runs exceJient, good
body, 4spd. 1.700 OBO must
Sm&gt;&amp;
sell (304)675-8952

r

FEKIUJZER

1989 Terry Resort 5th wheel
with hitc h. Good condition.
Asking $5,000. (740)416 141.5.

2000 Trai l Harbor

30 11.

camper. Excellent condition,
tully equipped, used little
$9.500 .00 (740)992-3301
Pomeroy. Best to call morning or evening.
...11{\111 ...
.,.,.;....-....;;........;_ _..,
10
HUM[

2002 F-350 SAW 51.400 L,.-.ilr.liltPiiiiROiiViiEiilcMEiiiiN"-I'S.iop1
Horse Manure Pick·up load mites XLT. $28 ,500. Fifth
BASEMENT
$25 loader available. Dump whee l· towing package,
WATERPROOFING
s.
(740)645many
extra
Truck toad delivered $75
Un co n~iti o n al tiletime guar2103.
(304)675-8052
antee. Local references furnished . Establ ished 1975.
Call
24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870, Rogers Ba sement
Waterp roofi ng.

-·

VI.

Richard L. Hunt, etal.,
Delendante
Court or Common
PI••·
Malga County, Ohio

In plirauance of an
· order ol Sale In the

•

Robart

R.

HOOII

Llu M. Michaela
10068818
Mlcl!aal
L. . Wlery
t0068898
5601 Hudaon Drive
Suite 400
Hudaon, Ohio 44236
(330) 342·8203
(4) 27, {5) 4; 11

•

Public Notice

above entltlled action,
PUBLiC NOTICE
I wilt offer lor eale at
The Area Agency
public auction In the
on Aging al Buckeye
above country on the
Hills-Hocking Valley
18th day ol June, R e g i o n a l
2004 11 10:30 a.m. at
Oevelopment Dlatrlct,
the door ol the court245 M litera Lane ,
houae, the lollowlng
Marietta, Ohio 45750
described real eatato:
will be lioatlng a
Said premiHI atao
Blddar'a Conlerence
known aa 42820 State for anyone Interested
Routa 124
In submitting propooPomeroy. Ohio 45769 . ala to provide oervlc·
ea to persona 60
PPN: 11Hl1290.000
Appraised at: $5,000
years af age and
older within the AAA
' and cannot be sold
Planning and Service
lor lees than twothirds (213) ol that
Area . The counties In
PSA6 are Athena,
amount.
Hocking,
Melga,
Terms or Sale
Morgan,
Sheriff
ol
Melga Monroe,
Noble, Perry and
County
Washington.
John
D.
Clunk
Funding aourcaa
N0005376
are Title-Ill B, Title-Ill
Ted
A.
Humbert
C· I , Title-Ill C-2, and
10022307
the
Community
Timothy R. Billick
Service Block Grant
10010390

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Ravenswood Chiropractio
Center

Tree Service

Let me do it for youl

Top • Removal • Trim ·
• Stump Grinding

UNIIIS PAINTING

316 Washington Street
Ravenswood, WV 211'164
Dr. Kelly K. Jones

JONES'

. '·

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

for 2004 Meigs
. County Fair.

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992-5232

~·

Serious
l11quiries 011ly
Ca.ll
985-4159

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan RoadRacine. Ohjo

• 45771
740-949-2217

Sizes S'x10'
to 1O'.x30'
' Hours
7:00AM-8:00PM
1/ 14(1 mo. pd

Gravely

· ()f.ff~~ATf)
•

-

•

MY BIRFDAY'S COMIN'
AN' I SHORE DO LOVE
THAT
HAT!!
ME'BBE

R.B.

Advertise
Jrucking
in this
HAULING:
• Limestone
space
• Sand
for
• Dirt
$50 per
• Ag Lime
no-985-3564
month
._____..___ , ________.

YOU

COULD

Snapper

HINT
TO
PAW!!

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Street

Pomeroy, Ohin

THE BORN LOSER

992-2975

~

~

.

\'Rotfi\:':&gt;E. tfl( YOU 1-JOt-1'\ l'&gt;\ IT.

Lawr~ ar~d Carder~

Equipme111 is our
busiuess, 1101 our sideliue

OFF MtY-E T\-\1\1\1 YOU
I\IE:.00TII\Tlt-\G

Manning K. Roush
Owner
Operi Mon·Frl9·5 !;lat. 9·12·

WITI-\0\JR

::,UPI'U E:.i&lt;S !

1

HEATING fl COOLING

.

Residential &amp; Manufactured Housing
Air c_nnditioners, Heal Pumps_! furnaces
• Super Hi Efficiency Equipmen~,
• Free Estimates
• 5 &amp; I0 yr Warramics

· • ~· "
,
~ ~,·'
• Huge Inventory
, ..
··
• Vanguard Ventless Fireplaces ~~\,·;
&lt;

'!!!~!!.1!!!

Gibson

--·---

'"''"'''

...

INiiimm:.

Gallipolis, OH WV0!0212
446-9416 r 1-800-872-5967

·Yards
740-992-5594
740-992-6862

Meigs County's Largest selection ot"
annuals, perennials, vegetables,
shrubbery, fruit, ornamental trees.
roses, rhoaoaenarons, ana aialeas.
COMPARE THESE PRICESII
4" pot of annuals 94~

4" pot of perennials $1.18 Buy·5 or more for $1.
Flat ol plants $,6.60
Hanging Baskets $6.60

THI ':&gt; l1EAN&lt;; WE CN-J
HAKE l!P ANY NAME
WE W~T ! THE WORLD
G.IVES '(OU LEMONS. YOU
TURN IT INTO

Open 7 days
8 week daylight
to dark!

'

G

BIG NATE

'

LEMONAl&gt;E!

Morning Star Road • C.Rd 30 • Racine,

Of
e

BISSELL

BUilDERS InC.

New Homes • Vinyl
Gamges
• Rcplacemcnl
Windows • Roofing

'

Siding • New

, see

PEANUTS

Rocky "RJ'~

Hupp
IMPORTS
Athens

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES
740·992~7599

1

NO, MA'AM,I MNOT CALLING
FOR M't'SELF ... I'M CALLING
FOR M'&lt; D06 ... I Ti-l INK
T"ERE'S 6EEN A MISTAKE •.

·"

PARKIN6? NO, MA'AM, I'M
NOT CALLING ABOUT PARKING ..
I'M ... I-1ELLO? HELLO?
'{OO Dl DN'T
A5K HER
ABOUTT~E

COOKIES ..

Advertise in this
Space for
$50 per month

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used

HOWARD l.
*ROORIIIB
diME
. MIIIIITEIIIANCE
*SUMLESI
BOnER

BETTY

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

Pass

••
5¥

Pass .

Pas;;
All pass

1·800-822-0417
"W.V's # 1 Chevy.

P~:mtlac ,

Buick, Olds

GARFIELD

Sunset Home
Construction

The
·Daily
Sentinel-

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

740·742·341

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

OUR NE:IGH60R'5 AR!:.
CIRCUL..A1'1NG A PE:1'11'10N
COMPLAINING A60UI AL-L.
1'HE ANNOYING. 1'HING6
YOU PO

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

I

~
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• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plum bing
• Roofing &amp; Guner a
• VInyl Sid ing &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Ooeka
We do tt all ex cept

furnact wor·k

V.C. YOUNG Ill
Po meroy, Ohio
22 Years Local Experience

•.. -

..

. GRIZZWE.LLS

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
· Ga rages
• Complete

Remodeling

740-992-1871
Stop &amp; Compare

" paleo"

AstroGraph

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Cele;b'lly Cirtrer cryptogram! are C'!!illed r·om ouota11011s tly IBmous PfhJl'l e ~ast ind p!t•o;pn:
Eocll letlerrn the crpner srarn~s t(l( &amp;nrt"er

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base hlt and you·u th1nk he just got back from Lourdes .. - Joe Garag1 ola
(cl 2004 by NEA, Inc 5-4

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Wednesday, May 5, 2004
icu~ ~c":::!'. o·l ~ o wc·~s
1c w ·c l::rl':' ic;.' wcr::1
By Bernice Bcde Osol
Be pati en t: Your goal s co ul d 1a1&lt;e a little
time to accomplish 1n the year ahead
However. as long as you keep plu ggrng
away. you're gorng to be able to make
some rmpor tant changes !ha t writ resull rn
greater security and happrn ess
TAURUS (A pril 20-May 20) - A lorcetut
person who lrkes you wrl l be st1ckrng up lor .
you today against someone who may be
1ea1o us ot you H1s or her clout wrll be
effec!Ne
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - TasKs or sit·
QLT 1 -~~
it Jos-sn ·t ta-&lt;e m...:c~ tr
uatrons that may have been too tough tor
you to deal w1th yesterday can be ha ndled
make me hoP~Y ' the Ia: 1
wrth relative ea~e to day_In tact . ct'ialle.nges
to1d her friend ··1 feel are .:-::
wrll now sti mulate and rnv rgorate you
wnen
! can fmd c park rnc:
CANCER (June 21-Jul y 22) - Dea lings
.--R_;_
:
_
F_T_._
U_
E-~
meter
w
lh- -- - ---en :t
you have wr th members ot the opposrte
gender today wi ll work out qurte tav0rably
~~
':':c~"r'o:o 'e ' he C'l•.c ~ lf! Q .NP.d
tor yo u. In tact. one relatrons hip in partrcut:~ !,U "'::] .., "'" T-· ~~ ·ng "' ·•·,
lar may t a~e on a new meaning for you .
L__i._..L__!_...L__Jc___j VCL' d1· ... ~ icp f~·~·n ~!f";l No J t'f' ...,
LEO (July 23-Aug 22} - The needs of
those tor whom you feel responsrble
should be given prrority over any of your
personal goals today. You won' t regret
ma king the hme to t~ nd to !herr problems
and questrons
VIRGO (Aug, 23-Sept. 22) - Complex
men tal chores or activrlies that require
SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS ' J- p
total att ention sho uld be a snap for you
BumperEnsL·e
-Droop - ~lgwom- NUMSS :1,e WRD
today. Pu t !hem to good use while your
We J,ve •n :i mild chma!e so dunr g tl1e w1nter we g·;:
·powers of concentratiOn are operatmg at
tull lorce.
visi ts from our northern relal rves One year an ~Lint gave
LI BRA (Sept. 23-0ct 23 } - l'he possrbrlrme a bumper slicker th at read · Wirter ' NUMBS :he
ti es ot adding some thing of wor th to your
WORD I "
holdrngs today are par trcularly tavorable.
However, nothmg will b~ handed to you·.
you'll have to be tenacious rn going aft er
whal you want.
SCORPI O (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Whether
you want to or not. chances are you're
gorng to attract attentron wherever you
today, so appearanci:Js wr ll be rmpur tant.
Any impressron you ma~e. good or bad,
•.
wrll be a lastrng one
SAG ITTA RIUS · (Nov. 23-Dec 21} Objectives that are rmportant to you can
be ac hieved eas1er today by lettrng cowor~ers b€1reve that something good
yo u'rt:1 rn t11e midst of accornplrshrng IS
gorng well because ol !herr mpul.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ---. It's
~- - - --v---- - - -- L
qurte possrble thai several close lrrends
may be dependrng on you a brl more tha n
€&lt;.,. . , .,. ... - usual today. Don 't let l hem down . Be pre pared to shoulder some ol lherr responsr ·
brlr ties.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - As long
as you ilon 'l get uptrgh1 m 1t1rnk neyat1vely
today, you (;an !Un a far sw'1fter race than
your challengers. If you f1r1rl yourself rn a
competrt rve sr tuatr on. keep the fai\11 .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March diJ) - If you'll let
it, your willpower l:an work wonders tor
your rmag1natron today rn crealing productrve actrv1tres. See yourself rn posrtJVe CHcums tances and proceed accordrngly.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - Dt;rn't ignore
your cammercral alfarrs rn lreu ol oth er
activiti es today. because you wrll be more
perceptrve than usual rn comm erce
Personal garn IS highly likely II you concentra le in this area.

R

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Advertise in this
·Space for
$50 per month

·G-.

cia

Van-Dealer"

• Chore

34 In shape
35 Sooner city
'' 36
veggie
37 Nanny
from abroad
(2 wds.)
39 Cast a ballot
40 Unit
of energy
41 Opposite of

worker

42 Pays tor
43 Hydrox
rival
44 Refuge
46 Microwave
47 Kilgallen
panelmate
48 - over
(capsize)
51 Puppy
noise

ARLO &amp; JANIS

*Fn11 Elllmlleb

992·2155

F:ast

treat
32 Lab animal

yo u must follow upbyruffingyourloseron
lhe board .
The opening piece was written by William
Cobbel1 , an Erlgllsh journalist and
re former. in 181 2

,~

BENNETT'S

,.

North

2 ~T

24 Rover's

1 Peasant
greeting
2 Slate firmly 25 "' Star Wars"
3 Pedro's
princess
coin
26 Ballet
4 Goose ·
costume
down
27 Caiilornias
jackets
- Woods
5 Hide away 28 "' Nuts!"
.6 Solar wind 29 Type
compo-nent • ' ol •lock
7 Dolphins
31 Snide
quar1erback
giggle
6 Knighted
33 Sen .
Guinness
- Kennedy
9 Small job
35 Get a salary
10 Droop36 - &amp;the
nosed fliers
Gang
13 Offense
38 Inhabitants

ted.

949·1405

strongly encouraged
to attend and to submit b ids. Technical
assistance will be
available .
Raglstratlon forms lor
the conference are
available by ceiling
{740) 374·9436.
(5) 4

Q J .\0

19 Trim a photo 39 Thin layer
21 Cheerytooe 41 Medical

DOWN

cheer

24 Low voices
27 Tune
30 Enlist again
(hyph.J
31 Bird-feeder

Onc e spades were agree9 , control -bid·
ding (cue-biddinQJ 'started, S outh signing
off in five spades to make. it plain that he
had no top Qiamond. Holdmg that ~ey
kin g, North went on to s1x spades. ·
There ara two lose rs: one in each red suit.
The bast line -and simplest- is fo win
trick one (preferably on the boa rd ) and
play the diamond krng . East wrll probably
take lhe trick and return h1s secon d heart.
Win with your k1n g and cash your two diamonds, discarding dummy's last heart.
Then , rufl yo ur remaining heart with
dummy's spade 10, draw tru mps, ar.td
claim.
Remember, il yo u di scard a los er !rom
you r hand, that is the end of the problem
Bul if you disca rd a los er from the board.

Will Mow

• Tranoportatlon
• Medical Eacort

are

K 7 2

•

55
56
57
58

Whe n do you t h m ~ this was writtsn? ''Th e
very hirelinGs of the press, whOse trade rt
1s to buoy up the sp1nts of the people ...
have uttered falsehoods so lo ng. they
have played oH so many trrc ks, lhat lhe1r
budQet seems, at last, to be quite em pty."
At the br idge tabl e, if you bi d up, you must
know how to play ott the trrcks that you
need - as in this deal. How would you try
to bring home six s pa d e~ after We st has
led the heart queen?
Following South's strong and art ificial
two-c lub open ing, North's resp onse
showed a balanced hand with at least
eight po ints. Norma tty, one w ill not have a
live -card suit, but a weal&lt; minor is permit·

/JOT

BARNEY

(304) 273-5321

Stationm)· /· ood
Slant! ,\raila/Jic

r,_ _

...
(IUT WE'/lE

•

'D ·

Bucket Truck

Services

businesses

¥

54

Simon or

Diamond
Gentle
slope
Before
Achy
Each
Packers
org.

23 Uproar

If you bid up,
play up too

• (

NoW
~~~lNG

f~
· i l.

A

Program. Services ell•
glble lor funding are:
• Adult Day Care
• Peraonal Care
•
Homemaker

• Congregate Meals
• Home Delivered
Meal a
The '
Bidder's
Conference will be
hald on May 26, 2004 ·
at the Lafayette Hotel
In
Marietta, Ohio
beginning at 10:00
a.m .
Topics
addressed during this
conference
will
Include details ol
services, 4undlng and
reporting
requlr•·
menta, coat allocation
and unit rate ot servIce. In order to be eligible to submit a proposal
you
m uot
attend lhe Bidder's
Conference. Minority
and Woman owned

South
or. A KQJ 9

Opening lead: ¥ Q

WRITESEl

10074544

+ A 9 6 5

· Pass

•

~··~

7 6 3
l0 3

"'Q I O B5

Pass
Pass'
Pass

740-843-5264

High 81. Dry .
Self-Storage

•
•

Dealer : South
Vulnerable· Ea st-West

Box 189 • Middleport

'

Ea~t

"' A K

Rocky Hupp Insurance
\ and Financial S.•ervice~lt ~

~~~

cry

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

BLIC
NOTICES
Sherltl'1 S1l1 ol
Real Eatate
CaM Number
04-CV.001
Mortgage Electronic
Regl1tretlon
Syatem1, Inc. Plaintiff

15 Thing, In law
16 Rajah·s
spouse
17 Take 10
18 Dresses
20 Oily films
22 Stadium

8 7 4 2

"' 9 2

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

HOAl'S &amp; MoTnR'I
FON. SALE

31 ,000 mites, aulo, CD play- 4 31x10 SORtS Trail Blazers,
er. rear spoiler. $5.900 OBO. 4 LT 265 X 75R16 Goodyear
256 16 1 8 740. 2 56 - Wrangl ers, 4 P255 X 70R16

-

•

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

a Free Quote or Appointment
Call:

·-------"

we

~~g;

For

&amp;
4-WDs

4 dr. , V·6, loaded w/power (740)992-2 136
option s. sharp only $6995.
Many more.
lake trade- v bouom At boat, 13' 9"
ins. finan crng avarl abl e. tra1ler. small trolling moto r.
RivervieW Motors, 2 blocks $350. (740)388-8280 .
above
McDonald's
in

KESSEL's PRODUCE
Pomeroy. (7401992 -3490
• Amish Chee se, Ll~nch Meat. 2002 Milsubrsh i Lancer ES,

MONTY

875-2497

a firel

VA~S

system , 140,000 mtles. std
trans.
$ 6 ,900 .00
Asking $900 OB O. 740-388_
740 992 2136
04B I or 740-388-0491 .
~~~~:::..---.,
199 6 Mu stanq Red. V6. CD

Manrecses,

I.

oower. runs grea t. stereo 96 Toyota 4 Runne r. loaded.

40

Fl)R SALE

' .~l~A~

94 S·10 Truc k for sale $
wheel drrve $2.500
93 Toyota lor sale $1.500
(304)675·2245

30

t K 3
"' J7fl 4 '
We st
• B 4
¥Q.J 9R~I

We can insure you valuables! •

$2,500.00
86 Jeep
Waggoner 4 WO $1.5 00.00
(740)992-2 136
·

~

Henderson, WV

sweater

53

source

05 -0oi-04

14Melodrematic

West

93 Nissan Pathlinder 4 WD

• Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark 2 AK C Pomeran ran puppies, playe r, Su nro of, e)(ce ll en t
-. Chapel Road , Porter. Ohio MIF, cream &amp; sable, taking shape $3,900 (304)675.
8 8
:_::___ _~---(740)446 -7444 1-877-830· deposit. $4 00: AKC min1a- 8-_::_7
91 62. Free Est1mates , Easy lure Schnauzers. MlF. sip. 1998 Dodge Stratus, $3.300
financrng . 90 day's same as bl/s, taking de posil. $ 400 · 080. AJC. power everyth ing
cash. Visa/ Master Card. (740)69 !?·1 085
bul se al . CD player Call
Drive· a· linle save alot
t740 )256 -0095
AKC Black Lab puppies. 6 :.:..::.:.:_::_:_.:..:.:_::____~_
Queen-Pillow Top Mattress wks. Males and females.
1998 Ford Taurus.
Set. New in plastic w/war- First
sh ots .
$300.00
All e)(tras, garage kept .
ranty Will accept $199. Cell (740)992·3887 after 5.
excellent condition. 92,000
phone 304· 412·8098 304- ~------m11es, $3,800.
552-1424.
CKC registe red male Cocker
(740 )446-4053.
;,
Spaniel, ta il docked , dew·
Thompsons Al-'plianc e. &amp;
1999 Ale ro. $3. 695.
claws reinOved . shots &amp;
Repair-675·7388. Fo r sate,
1998 Neon Sport. $2,795:
wormed , ask ing
$17 5.
1993 Caravan. $1.995; 1998
re- conditioned aut omatic
(740) 742-252 5
washers &amp; dryers, refrigera- ;,.,;;,;...;;..;,;;;;;_..__ __, · Grand ,Am. $2.895
FRum &amp;
Others in stock
tor s, ga s and el ectrrc
ranges, air conditioners , and
V.:t.~ETARIJ1\
Cook Motors
wringer washers. Will do
(740)446-0103.
repairs on major brands in All var ietie s ol flowers and
shop or at your home .
2001 Saturn , 4 dr. auto
garden plants . CaldWell 's 1 t ran s. co/radio, mu ch more.
Used Furniture Store.
mile south oi Tuppers Plains this ca r is like new w/o nly
on SA 7, (740)667-3368
28K miles; 2000 Grand~Am ,
130 Bulavitle Pike,

4

r

~~

! 1\.D

MYERS PAVING

pressure

meas.
50 Bronte
7 Gets tangled
governess
11 · Festive nlgh1 52 ChurcMI
12 Energy
gesture

Io 5 1
A 6 4

•
•

IF YOU RENT
would you lose if there was

0

r

• Porch Boxes
• Combination Pots.
• Perennials
• Spruce Trees
• Shrubs
(._
• Peat Moss

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

Downtown Pt. Pleasant, WV

Good Us ed Appl iance s, NEW AND USED STEEL
Reconditio ned
and Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar

Refrigerators, Some start at Gratin g
For
Dram s,
S95. Skaggs Applianc es, 76 Driveways &amp; Wal kways. L&amp;L
VIne St. , (740)446-7398
Scrap Matals Open Monday,
Tu esday, Wedne sday &amp;
Good washers &amp; dryers. $95 Frid ay, sam-4 :30pm. Closed
&amp; up; electric .ranges, $95 &amp; Thursday_,
Saturday
&amp;
up; Frost free refrig erators, Sunday. (740)446-7300
St 50 &amp; up: Like new side- .,...--~----.,
. by-side witl'1 water &amp; ice in
BUIIDINt~
· the door, $375; couch. $75.
SUPPLIES
· full srze bed , box springs &amp;
- mattress . $.150; full size bed
bO)( springs &amp; ma ttress. Bl ock , brick, sewer pipes,
$12S: table .&amp; cha 1rs, S100 windows. lintels·. etc. Claude
glider rocker, $45; tamps. Winlers. RIO G rande. OH
Call 740-245·5 121.
510

Syracuse, OH
Now Open

Easter Flowers
Bedding Flowers
Vegetabl e Plants
Blooming
&amp; Foliage Baskets
Potti~ g Soil

Call 992-2161

Your loving wife. Frona:
Children. Grandchildren..Brothers.

16

·

May 6 , 2004
Middleport Ameri.can Legion
Sponsored by the Meigs Se nior Center

God took _vou in His arm.,· a year ago
to rest in peace in Ht!aven. We miss
you more each day and send our Jove to
you.

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30
Last Thursday of
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy$5.00
Bonanza Get
5FREE

42 Kind oltea
45 Open up
49 Coat or

1 Tr0111tuld
4 i~re

... iu 67ti
~­
:W..,3..t

Page BS

Sentinel •

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

T'a£P DOt.F FUil Ti.'!'tN '
.A.NYJNI~ IF HE'S GOT A
WHOI..£ NIMY WAITIN' TO

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�•

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, May 4, 2004

www .mydailysentinel.com

Major League Baseball

...

American League

w

EAST

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8ostor1
NYYs.nkHs

-,214

earr1more - -

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Philadelptua

~5

Sunday'• Re1ult1

CtHC4ijO So~ 5, 8ah1more l!
CleVeland 2. Boston 1
Kansas C~tji3. lOfonto 2. (101
Texlls 9. TampB Bay 0
AAahetm 11. Oet&lt;ai1 9

Ba.Himore at Cleveland. ppd . ra1n
Seanle 12 Detron 2
NV Yankees 4, Kan!KtS C1ty 2
Tiiimpa Bay 8. Oakland 2
Al)ahelm 3. •Minnesbla 1
CniCago Sox 3. Torooto 2
Texas 4, Bos1on 1

TWa!k.r 2b
CPtt1000 cl
SSosarl
Alou lf
ARmrz3b

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5 2 3 3
50 t 0
4122
1000
4 1 0 0

Oel.E18 lb 3 1 2 2
ASGzlz ss 4 0 t 0
Bakoc
4010
Mdduxp 2210
MBCI8S ph

Tot.l1

Chicago

St.loult

1 0 0 0

36 711

7

001
001

oai
001

022 -

E-ASGonzalez (4). DP-5t. LOIJiS 1 LOBChic&amp;~ 7. St LOUIS 8 2B-SSosa (10) ,
ASGOI'Izelez (6 1. _
Bako ( 1). Mall')eny (8) HR-

10

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12
12

.500
478

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...

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20

400
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ChiCCIQ!J Cl.Jbti
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Mrlwaul&lt;ee

13
12

10
10
11
12
13
13

600
600
522
.520
500
...

WEST

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Los Angeles
San Drego
S11n Francrsco
Colorado

15
16

9
10

625
615

12
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14
13

462
.458

14

417

12
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Chicago Cubs 7. St. lootS 3
C1oonna11 7. Houslon 5
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6-9
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Sunday"• Reaults
Philad81pi11B 6. Arizona 5, 114)
Hous1on 6. Cincinnati 5
PJ!tsbo.Jrgh 4, M•lwaukee 3, (11)
StLOUIS 1. Crnct~go Cl.lbG 0. (10)
Cobrado 13. Atlanta 4
NY Mats 6. San D1e00 2
San FranCISCO 9." Fiords 8. (1 1)
Montreal 6. Los Angeles 4

DOr.llz dh

5 0 1 1

Gerut rt

MAmrz~

3000

VMrtnzc
Hafner dh
81118rd 20
Brssn:l lb
Blake3b
AEscbr cl

Dubaeh1b5010
Var!lakc 4 0 2 0
M1tlarl1
3010
Cresposs 0000
Btlhom2b 4 01 0
Reesess 2010
Mcetyrt
1000
Totel• 34 1 8 1

Totet.

4 1 1 0
4 13 2

Westbrook W.2-1
R1slle

3
3
3
3
2

AiWhite

0
0
0
0
0

2
0
0
1
0

0
0
0
0
0

000

000

100 -

1

Cleveland

200

000

001. -

2

E-Vizqu&amp;l (6), VMartll'leZ (3) DP--cleve
land 1. LOB--Boston 13. Cleveland 5. 28-DOriiZ ( 111. Daubach (2), Varitek (3),
'fMar11nez (3) . HA- VMartlnez (5]. 58Damon (4), Reese (3) . 5-Reese.

IP

H AEABBSO

Boston

Boaton

Cleveland

ab r hb l
Damoocl 4 1 1 0
Mueller Jb 3 0 0 0

LawtonH 4000
VlzQuel ss &lt;1 0 0 0

SChilling L,3-2
Embree
Cleveland

ebrhb'

772216

100002

2

KMINS Cfty
000 100 010 1 3
Toronto
000 000 002 0 2
E-Randa (3). Gomez (2), Hinskrl (1). DPKanSas City 1. LOB-Ka.nses City 7, Toronto
8. 2~ande (8), CDelgado (8). HR--&lt;3u.t
{4) Cs--JGonzale:t (1), Aelabid (I). SbHudson
tp

H AERBBSO

3

1·3
1 2·3

o
1

1
0

1
0

2
1

1
4

1

1

0

0

1

1

Ump1re~ome.

Sam Holbr'ooh; First. Paul
Nauert: Second. Lany Vano...er: Th1rd. Lance
Barksdale.
T-2:52. A-1 6..285 (43,389).

Kan••• Citya&amp;rhbi

Toronto

eb rhbl

4211

Jhnsonrt

4 q 20
4 0 1 I
50 1 0
4 0 2 1
4010
0000
4 00 0
4 00 0
4 00 D

Gomezss 501 0
V'Wellsct
CDigdo 1b
JPhlps dh
HCiarildh
HinSk:e 3b
Cashc
Cllnano H
OHudsn 2t1
BergH

5000
4000
5 1 1 0
4 0 1 1
01 0 o
40 2 o
30 . 10
000 0
200 1
3010

IP

5

H F4 ER B8 SO

Reds 7, Astros 5

Rangers 9, Devil Rays D

.Cincinnati
ab r hbi
DJnTll 2b 4 2 2 1

Texas

lib thtH
5 2 2 3

FUrner ell
Txeua 1b

11 0 0

400 0

E'r'oog "

4 1 1 0
4 1 1 3
Menchrl
4120
lalfdc
3110
Total•
34 t10 8

o•ucci ct

:J1 0 &amp; 0
ea~

M'*'og-ss

Blalod.. 3b 4 1 2 0
ASrano 2b 5 1 1 2

000
800

DeiiUCCI

000

000 -

100

OOx -

0
9

(5) . .

IP
2

:!10 -

Ch~

T-3.06 A-13.007 (50.598) .

H

REABSSO

Tempe Say

0

001

100 000 012 4
E--Mera (9), Tejada (5). DP--Baltlmorv 1
LOB-Chicago 13, Bal11mor8 8 . 28BAobens (9). HR-Cred11 (5). SB-Calw
(2), BAoberts 2 (9).

o.,

13),

0

ool:l

Chic.oo
Balttmore

l3 4 8 4

"'•"'"""'

Ba~ 6, Te.-:as 6. 28-..JoCruz
3), MYoun~ (8) HA--MYouny (4), ASoriano

6

31 5 I 4 Total•

7
2 1 1 3 3
Schnws W,3-1
Gobble
82·3 5 2 2 0 1 P o l i t l e
1-3 3 1 1 0 0
0 10020Mane
1-3 0 0 0 0 0
F'lllld W,1-Q
2·3 1 0 0 I 0
Takatsu
1·3 0 0 0 0 0
Cerda S.1
2-3 0 0 0 0 0
Koch$,4
1 1 2 2 3 2
T"""'lo
Baltimore
.JMillet
6 4
1 1 1 5
Aln&amp;wotth
6 5 1 1 5 6
Fmsor
110001
D6Jean L.0-3
2·3 3 3 1 2 1
delosSantos
1·3 1 1 1 2 1 Groom
1·3 0 0 0 0 0
Spe.er
12- 3 0 0 0 0 1
Bauer
·201013
Adamsl.2-1
1 2 1 1 0
1
HBP-by Bauer (Calea). WP-Koctl;
MacDouGal pitched k&gt; 3 batlel'$ in lhe 9th.
Arlswof1h, Ba1)91'.
WP-Adams.
UmPires--Home, Greg Gibsofl; Firs1, Bruce
Ump~res--Hcwne. Mat1 Hol'k:Jwell; First, John Dredanan; Second, Gerry Da'Jis; Third, larry
Hirschbeck; Second. Wal~ Bell; Third, laz Poncino. T-3:10. A-18,849 (48,286).

ramp•

6

Totlll

• ' ·

...... c.,

Teu•
LOB-Tampa

Bel&amp;ncourt 5.1

Guiell!
Aanda3b
Beltran c1
MiSwydh
Harvey 1b
JGnzlzri
DJesusl1
BStiagoc
Rlalonl 2b
Berroa ss

• a1

1100

Sumot!rl

10 00

37 3 8 3 ToWI

Totat1

30 2 7 2

BOlton

Totllll

Tampa Bay
lb t hbi
CtvAn:td 4 0 I 0
JoOuzrl 402-D
Baldelli dh 3 0 0 0
Huf13b
4000
EdllPrz 1b · 3 0 0 0
l ugoss
400 .0
Rolls ~
3000
THeile
3000
RSnchz 2b 3 0 1 0

Tutlday "• Gamn
Colorado (Jennings t-3)at Montreal (Varg:u: 1-1). 7:05pm
LQs Angeles (Od Perez 2·11 at Fklnda {Beclien 2·2) . 7 05 i).m.
St. LOUIS (Carpenter 1· 1) at Ph1ladelph1a (Myers 0· 1). 7 05 p.m.
San Frarc1sco (Tcrnko 1-1) at N.Y. Mats {Trach~ 2-3). 7:1 0p.m.
MolwaukM (Sanies {}{I) at Cinc11na11 (Haynes D-2). 7.10 p.m
San Otego (Eaton 1-1) at Allanta (Ru.Ortiz 2-31. 7:35p.m.
Ar!zona (Sparks 1·1) at CniCAgo Cubs (M1he 1·1), 8:05 p.m
P1"sOOrgh (Fogg 0-3) at Houslof' (Pettine 1-1), 8:05 p m

Indians 2, Rod Sox 1

1

010 - · 3

GO

w

Crncmnatr

TWalker (3), SSoSa (6). Delee (3) Purols (B).
Edmonds (6) . SB--Maddwo (11 MarQUIS (1).
8------Maddu)(. SF-Womack.
tP H R EA'BB so
Chicago
MadOOx W.2-2
1 7 2 ~ 0 6
Beltran
2·3 1 1 1 1 1
Mercker
t-3 o 0 0 o o
Borow&lt;;l\1
I 0 0 0 1 0
SL louil
Marqu1s L.1·2
61-3 1 3 3 2 5
Kl~ne
• 1-3 1 0 0 0 0
Lincoln
11 -3 1 2 2 2 1
Kmg
1·3 1 1 1 0 0
Eldred
2·3 1 I 1 0 0
HBP~ Madau• (lanldord l. WP- Marquis
T- 2:53. A--40.340 (50.345)
·

ab t hbi
Wmadl2b 4 0 0 1
LnkhdH
4010
PuJo lslb 4111
Edmndcl 4 1 2 1
Aolen3b
3 0 0 0
Rntana ss 4 0 1 0
RSndrsrl 3 0 0 0
Mthenyc 31 2 0
Porter. ph 1 0 0 0
MAndn ph 1 0 0 0
Mrquisp
20 t 0
Tguch 1rl . 1 0 0 ll
Total•
34 3 8 3

Pet

CENTRAL

St LoUis

Tuesday'• Game•

Stloul•

10
6

P1nsbur~h

· Boslon ( lowt~ 3- 11 a! CleYeland ( 0~1YI6 0-2). 7.05 p.m
Kansas City (May 0-3) at Toronto (Hen1.g.3n 0-2). 7 05 p.m .
ChicaQo Wh~e SOl( (lomza 4-tJl a1 Baltimore (DuBose 3·2). 7:05 p.m
Tampa Bay (Zambrano 3-2) at Texas ( Pari~ 1·31 . 6:05p.m
Mmnesota (Lohse 1-2) a1Sean~ (Moyer t-2). 10:05 p.m.
Detroit (Robertson 1-1) at Anahetm /Washburn 4-1 ). 10:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yl'lflkees { Conlrera~ 1·2) at O~kland (Mulder 2·2): lO:OS p.m.

Chicago

11

..,~

Monday'• Rnultt

Cubs 7, Cardlnais 3

12

NV Uets
Montreal

Away
&amp;6
11-5
8-8
5-10

L

"

7-7

8-3

P10
7-3

15

w

EAST

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W6

4-6

Minnesol.!l

Kansas City

L•

6-4
6-4

10

T~!:f1pa_Bay---

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GO

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L

National League

...... ....,

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PAbbotl L;2·3

3 1-3

DGorualvz
TreMi»er

2 2·3
1
1

lCarter

T•uo

8 9 9 2 2
10014

o
1

o

o

0
0

1
1

0
0

RogersW,4-1
9 4 0 0 1 4
HBP~ Ragen; (Baldelli). WP-OGonzalez.
Umpires---tlome, Ed Montague: Firat, Jeffy
Layne: Second, Chris Guccione; Third, Paul
Schrieber.
T-2:22. A-18,116 (49,1151.

White Sox 5, Orioles 4
Chicago

.
eb rhbl

WHarrs2b
Uribess '
MOrdzrt
Thmasdh
CsLeelf
Gload 1b
Crede3b
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SArnrc

4 02 0
4 2 10
3000

51 1 0
2 1 t 1
l! 0 0 o
51 1 t
50 1 t
4011

Baltimore
abrhbl

BRbrts 2tl 3 2 2 0
Mora3b
5022
Teiada ss 4 0 1 2
RPWno 1b 3 0 1 0

400 o
Gbbonsdh 310 0
Jvlopzc

Matosc1
Bigbie II
MCdnldl1

4000
4 00 0
2000

•b f hiM
B' · c1
5
11
Larltin5S 4 1 1 0
4010
GrlJr. cl
2000
Bg.wtl 1b 5 0 2 0
Amana cl 2 0 .0 0
Jl&lt;lin1 2b 5 0 1 0
Casey 1b . 5 0 2 2 Brto:mnlt
3100
Hrdalgorl 4 1 1 0
D1.1nn~
3100
laf$01'1 3b 4 1 0 0 Lamb3b 3220
AChav.zc 3 1 1 2
JCastro 3b 0 0 0 0
JaCruzrl 3 t 2 2
Oswahp
2011
WPenart 1000 OPimroph 1 a o o
Vleotin c
4 12 2
Lldgep
0000
PWilsnp 3000 JVzcno ph 1 a 0 0
3&amp; 510 4
TQtal• 35 7 9 7 Total•

o

A~ss

200 002 021 1
010 103 000 5
E--cesey (1), lamb (3). DP-Houston 2.
LOB--Cincinnati 7, Hooston 9. 28--Casey
Cincinnati

Hou11on

(12), JeCruz ( 1). Valentin (2), Biggio (111.
8a~well (8), Hida~o (10), RChavez (2) . HADJimef).ez (31, Valenlin (H. S-RChavez . ·

Cinclnna11
PWilson
RiedllngW,l-0
TJones
GravesS,11

IPHAERBBSO
'
52-3 8 5 4 3 5
1 1·3 2 a o o 2
1

1

Ho\0&amp;1on
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0

o

o o o
0

0

0

1

0

6 6 4 3 4 "7
Harville
2·3 0 0 0 1 o
UdgeL,Q-1
1 1·3 1 2 2 1 3
Dotal
121102
HBP--by Graves (AEverett).
Umpi1es--Hori1e. Roo Kulpa: First, Bill Mille!:
Second, Brian Gorman; Third, Da~ Scott.
T-2:52 . A-30.657 (40.950)

Angela 11, Tigers 9 •
Detroit

Anaheim

lb thbl

1b rhbl

ASncnz c1 s 1 3 1
Vina2b
5110
IR drgzc
52 3 2
Whitalf
4120

Eekst1n ss
Erstad 1b
Flggtns c!
VGierorl

CGIIIen

3 1
s 2
2 1
52

o
2
1
2

o
1
0
2

ss 4 1 3 2
4 000

Hgglsnrl

Norton o11 4

oa o

Munson3b4t10

Indians win
fourth straight, B2

5322
3121
4023
20 0 0
2 0 0 0

Eastern girls pound
Miller, Bt

Muga3bOOOO
Totall

40 915 6

AKncly 2b 4 1 3 1
Total•
35111410

Detroit
210
003
003 g,.,_..eim
000 203 33J: - 11
E-Whil:e {1 ), DPattersOI'I p). VGuerr&amp;IO (1)
DP-OetrOII 1. Anaheim 1. LOB--Derrort 8 .
Anaheim 6. 2B-AS!Inchez [2). CPena {3).
CGulllen [6). Munson (41 , Erslad [8). Glau5
[B), AKennedy [4) . HR-IRodrlgUez P}.
Glaus (B) SB-Whrte (11 CS-ASanchez
[4), Eck.ste1n (2) . 5-F..ggms

IP

H

RERBBSO

5 t-3
1

5
6

5
3

5

4

4

3

0

1

1, 2-3

3

3

2

1

1

Colon

6 10

6

4

2

4

GraggW,1·0

1

1

1 1-3
2·3

3
1

0
3
0

0
2
0

0
2
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Maroltt
L8YH'ie L2-2
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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

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PB--8Mcl1na.
Umpires-Home. Ed Rapuano: F1mt. Ted 88rr911: Seconct. AHonso Marqut~z; Thrd. Ado:

•" t

I~ IS • \ ol. ,ol :\u

I

\II I&gt;NI Sll \\

I

1\1\\ , " " " I

HOUSTON (AP) - The
slumping Cincinnati Reds
needed a big hit. They got it
from an unlikely source.
Backup catcher Javier
Valentin hit a two-run homer
in the . eighth inning and the
Reds snapped a five-game losing streak Monday night, bealing the Houston Astros 7-5
despite losing Ken Gritley Jr.
to a stiff right hamstring.
"We had a tough week. We
needed this game." Valentin
said. "I feel really happy. I feel
really big. I feel like Reggie
Jackson."
Valentin has played in only
207 games during six major
league seasons, but he put
Cincinnati ahead 6-5 with a
home run off Brad Lidge (0-1 ).
D'Angelo Jimenez added a
solo shot in the ninth for the
Reds, who ended Houston's
four-game winning streak and
went 4-6 on thejr longest road
trip of the season.
Things were so bad in
Cincinnati's clubhouse afier a
6-5 loss on Sunday that short-

stop Barry Larkin held a playBut Cincinnati rallied on
ers-only meeting in an attempt Valentin's soaring shot to ri~ht­
to bolster the team's sagging center. The ball dropped nght
into the Astros' bullpen spirits.
appropriately enough.
Apparently, it worked.
'This win showed a lot of
Jimenez homered to right
character," said Jacob Cruz, tield in the ninth, and Danny
who hit a two-run double. "We Graves got three outs for his .
could have folded. If we had major league-leading II th save
let this one get away, it would in 14 chances.
have been tough."
The Reds went through a
The only bit of bad news few tense moments, however,
came when Griffey, hampered when Graves hit Adam Everett
by a string of injuries the last with a pitch and gave up long
three years, leti in the third . drives to sluggers Jeff
inning after striking out against Bagwell, Jeff Kent and Lance
Roy Oswalt. The center fielder Berkman. .
.was replaced by Jason Romano
Each ball fell just short of the
and is day-lo-day.
wall.
Otherwise, Cincinnati final"He had to go through the
ly showed a little late-game teeth of their order," Reds
grit.
manager Dave Miley said of
The Reds, who led in each Graves. "The one Berkman hit
of their past five defeats. worried me because he was at
couldn'l hold a 4-2 lead the wall."
because starter Paul Wilson , John Riedling ( 1-0) earned
slumbled in the sixth.
the win, allowing two hits in I
Raul Chavez doubled in two l-3 innings.
runs, and Cra-ig Biggio added · Oswalt, who is 8-0 in 12
an RBI single, putting career appearances against the
Houston up 5-4.
Reds, had a shaky outing.

SPORTS

This Data In Baseball

• Brewers slam Reds. See
Page 81

May4
1910 - The Browns al'ld Ca~ls played
hOme games in St LOUIS, •nd P1esident Taft.
not wan~ng to olfend either club. 58W parts ol
Sd(:h game a1 Robinson F.eld and Sportsman's
Pali( .
1969 ~The Houston Astros set an NL r!ICord
by turning seven ctoubls plays aga111st the San
Franc1500 Gants. F11'91: basemen Curt Btefl)i
pa'rticipaled 1n all 58\len
1975 - Bob Watson o! tna Houston Astros,
S&amp;nslflQ baseball hlstl:lr)'. raced around the
bases on MiK May's home run and crossed the
plate at Cand'estick Paril1n time to !!Core major
league baseball's 1 millionth run, seconds
ahe&amp;d of Dave ConcepciOn of C1oonna1i
1981 -New York's Roo DaVIS strudo: out 8lljJ1
consecutlva ~ngels in relief as me Yankees
deteatsd California 4·2.
1989 - Toronto's Jun1or FeH~ became the 53rd
player in major lee.gue history to h" a home run
In his l1rs1 at·ba1 with a thwcJ.inmng. dfiVI:I off Califomie,'s Kirk McCaskill as the Blue Jays lost 32 1n lO innflgs.
1991 - Chns James drove In mne runs with
two hom~ and two singles. brealo;1ng Clev&amp;land's cll.tl record lor RBIS in a game and leac1fl9 the Indians to a 20·6 victory 0\lef tl'le Oak
tend AThletics.
Todlly'a blrthdlya: Eddie Peiez. 36: Joe
Borowski, 33; MigiJQI Cairo. 30; Ben Grieve. 28
Jason Michaels. 28

David Riske, the club's deposed closer,
walked two in the seventh inning before Rick
White came on. David Ortiz followed w1th an
RBI double to deep center that probably
should have been caught by Alex Escobar on
the warning track.
,
But after walking Manny Ramirez to load
the bases, White struck out Brian Daubach
and Jason Varitek to keep Cleveland up 2-1.
White struck out two more in the ei~hth
and Rafael Betancourt took over in the mnth.
Betancourt gave up a leadoff single to Johnny
Damon, who stole second when Bill Mueller
struck out and went . to third on catcher
Martinez's throwing_ error.
Betancou11 then induced Ortiz to ground
out to second and walked Ramirez before gelling Daubach to fly out left to for his 1"1rst save
- and/·ust the Indians' third in nine tries.
Schil ing didn't have his best stu IT, but
other than giving up Martinez's homer. the
right-hander pitched well enough to win. He
allowed two runs and seven hits, walked one
and struck out six.•. -

HEALTH

BY JEREMY

W.

SCHNEIDER

JSCHNEIDER@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS Local
employees of GKN Sinter
Metals left work Tuesday
facing an uncertain, but not
promising, future.

cuss the plani's fulure. Closing
lhe Gallipolis plant is one
GKN SINTER METALS ailcrnative the company may
take. company officials said.
On Tuesday. lhe company
Because of poor tinancial ' met with salaried and union
performance and concerns employees 10 explain the situaboul lhe fuiUre viability of alion . In a telephone i.merview
the operation, the Auburn last nighl. Kristyn Godlew.
Hills, Mich.-based com pany ' GKN's corporate communicawill open discussion s wilh tions manager. said lhe comlocal members of United Aulo pany w1ll discuss a number of
Workers Union 1685 to dis- possibfiites with the union

,.j

Bv BRIAN

1
i

I
.1

•

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Lola Elaine Harrison

LO'I"I'ERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 0-3-3
. Pick 4 day: 0-0-4-1
Pick 3 night: 5-1 -5
Pick 4 night: 9-5-1-6
BuckeyeS: 2-3-7-31-35
Daily 3: 1-9- 1
Daily 4: 3-4-5-9
Cash 25: 3--+-8- 12-13-19

/

Details on Page AS

Getting fit and
staying fit is in!

,._..,_,J,
:!&lt; ~t.; li'.LR~I f,
r - .fi'P) &lt;J_,_rP ~'-'-, ~

INDEX
SECTIONS- 16 PAGES
Calendars
A3
2

1f your business is _
i nterested
in participating in this
Special Edition,
Call Brenda or Dave
at 992-2155

A 'SPECIAL FEATURE
OF

Classifieds

m:be ~alltpoli~ tJBailp m:rtbune,
l@otnt l@leaMnt l\egi~ter and

Dear Abby

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

.:t•·,.._..,,___.,~,1r'~...~,.k-e'J , ....~~'r
~-

Thursday, May 20

''

ATTENTION

Comics

Editorials
Obituaries
Sports

BI

Weather

AB

@ 2004 Olaiu Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY
The
accomplishments of 50
top scholars in Meigs
County sc hools were celebraled Tuesday night at
the 20th Annual Academic
Excellence Banquet held
in the Meigs High School
cafeteria .
Trophies were presented
to the students who were
joined by their parents and ·
other relatives . friends
and teachers to ceie6rate
their scholastic achievements.
Struble,
a
Michael
. member of the governing ·
board of the Athens-Meigs
Educational
Service
Center, presented the trophie s as , the students'
names were called by
Dcryl Well. Eastern Local
superintendent ; William
Buckley, Meigs Local
superintendent. .and Dr.
John Costanzo, superintendent of the Athen s- Eastern fourth grader Cheyenne Doczi was the first of 50
Meigs County students awarded trophies at the Meigs
Meigs Center.
Nominees
for
the County Academic Excellence Banquet Tuesday night at
Franklin B. Walter Award Meigs High School. Michael Struble of the governing board
which is annually given to of the Athens-Meigs Educational Service Center presented
the mos1 outstanding the trophies. (Charlene Hoeflich) 1
se nior in lhe county were
recognized . They were
Jessica Boyles of Eastern
High School, Maegan
Dodson of Meigs High
School, and
Bethany
Amberger of Southern
High School.
· Selected lo receive the
award and presented a
plaque was Amberger.
who today along wiih her
p-arents, Bill and Becky
Amberger of Racine , and
Gordon Fisher. Southern
High School principal. are
in Columbus allending a .
recognition luncheon honoring the state '.s 88 coU111y
winners of the award.
Amberger's talk at last Bethany Amberger of Southern High School, center. was
night's banquet was on- selected to receive the Franklin B. Walter Award as the top
Robert Frost's poem "The senior student in Meigs County. She accepted the plaque
Road Not Taken" 'and the from Michael Struble, Educational Service Center board
message ii has for seniors ·member, arid Carol Hatem. secondary supervisor..
about choices.
(Charlene Hoefl ich)
"As we go through life ,
She concluded with a
we have choices. It is our right choi ces." Amberger
God-given right to chose. spoke of the com fort of thought from Pythagoras,
Usually, lhere is a right taking the path many oth- the father of mathematics.
choice and a wrong ers have taken , "lhe com- "Choose wi,ely lhe way
choice," said Amberger, fortable way." she said. or that seems best. however
adding .that "the path we "choosing the one less rough it may be. Custom
choo-se stays with us and traveled which may be will soon render it easy
harder ro cross but the one and agreeable ."
will have consequences."
Jacinda Yonker, lalented
She continued . "We in the end which will take
you
where
you
should
make our own destiny and
Please see Banquet, A7
part of thai is making the be."

J.

REED

,BREED@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Twd former
counly officials and a form er
coun1y employee have been
named as defendanls in a
liiwsuit. dem&lt;~nuing repayment of pub Iic funds.
Ohio
Anorney
The
General's office ha' filed a
civil lawsuit in Meigs County
Common Ple&lt;ts Coun &lt;~gain'l
Former Sheriff James M.
Soulsby. hi s former employee. Lisa Roush, and former
proseculor John Le11les. The
suit dep1ands Jllinl repaymenl

· by lhe three of 521.000.0-+
determined in a qate audil to
have been ill~gal.
A crim inal inve&gt;~igauon
11110 1he e.xpense., found no
wrongdoing again~t Lente~
and Soulsby. but the Meigs
County Grand Jury later
indicted Roush. and 1he
charge:-- remain pendmg ,in
Common Pbrs C&lt;&gt;Urt.
According to the ci\iilpl&lt;~inl
fi led M&lt;1 nuct~; ., . 11,tate &lt;~ uuit
resu lted in a finding against
Soulsby for ill~gal expendilure of general fund money

Please see Suit. AS

Birth may cause vacancy in
Meigs Prosecutor's Office
Bv

J. MILES LAvroN

JLAYTON@MYDAitYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - There may
be a vacancy in the Meip
Counly Pro.secutor's Office
in the very ncar fulllrc.
Assiwmt
Prosecuting
Att01,nev D;ina G iII iland is
very close lo lhc moment of
truth because· she is mere
days. perllaJ" hours. away
from giv ing hirth. Gilliland
works primarily in the Meigs
County Coun which hears an
cstimaled average · of 6.300
cases each year. These cases
ran ge from minor lraffic
offenses to misdemeanors. In
addition 10 her dulies as a

prosecu10r. Gilliland is abo a
partner wi 1h a law firm in
Wellslon and she praclices
law ir·1 five counties.
Proseculing Allnrney Pal
Story has heen diligently
searching for a full-time
rcplaccn1cm tor several
He
belie\'es
monlh .s.
Gilliland will not relurn 10
lhe posilion becau'e of 1he
demanus nf a prospemus prirate practice and rai-sing a
new babv. While Ston saiu It
is far fr(m, a cenai1i1v who
will rill lhc po;.iliOil after
Gilliland gives birth. he did
say he is looking for a perm a-

Please see Birth, A5

God's NET receives donation

Tiffany Day. a junior at the Univers1ty of Rio Grande. presents
a $50 check from the Social Work Student Council to Keith
Rader. director of the God 's Neighbo rhood Escape tor Teens
(God's NET ) and the Meigs Cooperative Parish . Rader and Day
are standing in front of a crew of volunteers who are busy
blasting concrete to make way for a hand1cap ramp at the new
Mu lberry Community Center wh ich will house the God's NET.
(J. Miles Layton)

'

Parents, Grandparents, Aunts,
Uncles, Friends... you can
congrat11late your graduate with
a personal ad of your own!!
Call Today!!
Deadline is Friday,
May 7th at 5:00p.m.

Advertising Deadlines:
Thursday, May 11 , 2004

Reaching over 29,800 readers

. ---

• Display AdvertisingCall Today
Tribune· 446·2342
Register· 675·1333
Sentinel· 992·2157

••

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The Gallipolis plant manufacture;. powder forged transmi"ion race&gt; and other transmission components for aulomOiin~ OEMs and Tier I 'uppliers. according 10 the company\ Web sile located at
· \\ ww.gknsintermetab.cum.
Today. the company is
1he world·, leading prod ucer of powder , metal
components. G KN operales 37 plan" g_lobally.

named in civil suit

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

WEATHER

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

worker,_ bul 'he did not 'peculate on the actions 1he company cou ld po"ibly lake.
The last few year' - wilh
a sour American economy has taken its toll on the company. Godlew 'aid the loc·al
plant has operated al a lo"
for eight years - lhe most
recent live year; under GKN
ownership and the three year'
prior when it was owned by
Borg-Wanier Automoti\'e.

Meigs County academic .
County officials
achievers honored at banquet

West Virginia

and
FITNESS

"'

Future is uncertain for local GKN Sinter employees
_/

Tribe edge Schilling, Red Sox
CLEVELAND (A.P) -· Jake Westbrook
pitched six more shutout innings and Victor
Martinez hit a two-run homer off Curt
Schilling, leading the Cleveland Indians to a
2-1 win over the Boston Red Sox on Monday
night.
Westbrook (2-1) strengthened his case to
win a pennanent spot in Cleveland's rotation
by holdinj! the Red Sox to six hits and outduelin" Schtlling (3-2).
Martinez connected in the tirst for. the
Indians. who have won live of six.
Cleveland has a surplus of starters, and
with Jason Stanford set to return from the disabled list, manager Eric Wedge ha' some
decisions to make.
Westbrook may have made one for him,
giving up just two runs and eight hits in his
last 22 inmngs. Using his sinker to perfection.
the right-hander got 13 outs on groundballs as
the Red Sox lost their fourth straight.
And for one of the few times this season,
Cleveland's bullpen didn't have a late-inning
meltdown.

"'' " '' "

Roed.

T-3:04. A-33.683 (45.030).

BY CHARLENE HoEFLICH

Valentin ,shot lifts Reds

"•" .. .. 1 .. 1

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