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                  <text>•

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, May 4, 2004

www .mydailysentinel.com

Major League Baseball

...

American League

w

EAST

~~ ~

8ostor1
NYYs.nkHs

-,214

earr1more - -

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2

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9
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.615

12

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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
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ab r hbi
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4 1 0 0

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MBCI8S ph

Tot.l1

Chicago

St.loult

1 0 0 0

36 711

7

001
001

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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

.600

12
12

.500
478

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...

"
20

400
.231

Pet.

ChiCCIQ!J Cl.Jbti
Hooston

""

Mrlwaul&lt;ee

13
12

10
10
11
12
13
13

600
600
522
.520
500
...

WEST

w

L

Pet.

Los Angeles
San Drego
S11n Francrsco
Colorado

15
16

9
10

625
615

12
11

14
13

462
.458

14

417

12
13

Monel~ ··

j

10

...

P10

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...

GB
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wa

Chicago Cubs 7. St. lootS 3
C1oonna11 7. Houslon 5
~

6 -9

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7-3

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W1
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....

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L3
. Ll

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3
5
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l

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8-7

3-~

.

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
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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~

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ASrano 2b 5 1 1 2

000
800

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100

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9

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2

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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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GB

OlcagoSok

e

W6

4-6

Minnesol.!l

Kansas City

L•

6-4
6-4

10

T~!:f1pa_Bay---

CENTRAl

GO

Pet.

L

National League

...... ....,

Zouno

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
Rwandcl
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
09Nalt

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

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2
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Maroltt
L8YH'ie L2-2
OPatlerson
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CF'wla1b S 2 2 I

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Perclval s.a
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
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Cash 25: 3--+-8- 12-13-19

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Getting fit and
staying fit is in!

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INDEX
SECTIONS- 16 PAGES
Calendars
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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

'

.
,•

'

"

.

.

-

___ ,___
-

�•

I

Page·A2

NATION • WORLD

~The Daily Sentinel

Methodist court considers case of
lesbian pastor at national meeting
. . PITTSBURGH tAP) The case of an openly bbian
P,astor who won acyuittal on
charges that she violated the
United Methodist ban on gay
.pastors was before the top
church· s ~oun Monday.
' The Judicial Council was
to deliberate pri,,alel y over
·the case of the Rev. Karen,
' Dammann as delegates to the
Methodi st
General
Conference considered hundreds of prupu"'l' on church
poli cy. Several of the measure s addre ss the church's
'internal rift over homosexltality. but none wou ld repeal
the gay clergy ban.
The 8.3 milli on-memba .
'qenuminatinn . the thi rdJargest in the country. huhJ s .
its national \e_!!islativc meeting once every fo ur yea rs.

she tigured her case wou\cl he
\i gorously debated at this
year's l'onferenl'e. hut didn 't
expec·t such a review of the
ve rdict.
·
'
"Thi s son of secnb li ke an
end-run appeal process to
me ... she told The Associated
Press on Monclay in a phone
interview.
Damman n's
lawyer.
Lindsay Thompson. fil ed
briefs Mondav with the court.
challenging iis re view,of the
case and accusi ng the church
of brea\..ing. it~ nwn rul e~.
"Essentially. they are trying
to .:reat e a mean' of appeal of
something that is not appeal able ... he said, noting that
church rules , tate the church
c;,mnllt appeal a not guilt y
ve rdi ct.
Stephen
Drachler.
a
The g atherin g ha s h ~e n a
. spokes man f0r the church .
forum for bitter debate oYer
declined to comment on any
homosexuality for decades.
spec ifics of the l'a,e .
. · Responding to a yuestion
Other Protestant denominafrom delegates . the high ..:ourt
tion ~ ha\ e bee n struggling
·released a ruling Saturday
·that church \a\v clearl y with s imilar iss ues . An
of
lhe
declare s gay sex ··in l'o mpati ~ appeal s coUrt
ble with Chri stian tea..:hin2 ... Pres b) terian Church (U.S.A .)
The court said in its 6-3 deci- ruled Monday that a minister
'sion that violations cou\cl . did not violate church law by
'lead to removal from church marrying sam e-sex coLiples.
While the decision d ears
'oft1ce.
·the
record of th e Rev.
. In light of that rulin g. delegates directecl the council to Stephen Van Kuik en review the case of Dammann. pcncling a po,sible appeal a lesbian who was founcl he 'aid he ha' decided to
innocent of breaking church be~omc pastor of a nonclc,Jaw by a jury or )_
, pastor' in nominational congre gation
&lt;:etlled The Gathering. Its
Bothell, Wash .
, Dammann had admitted members will be former .c0t1she was in a relationship with gregauts of his Presbyterian
a woman. and the March ~0 church in Cincinnati.
In the Methodist case ·
verdict outraged conservatives. They have proposed i1ivolving Dammann. it' ~
legislation th11t would expand · unclear what action the high
the council 's power to inter- church court could take. since
the church cannot appeal her
vene in such trials.
.
· The court is expected to acquittal.
But
the
council
retained
rule on Dammann · ~ case
'before the meeting e nds jurisdi ction
over
the
Friday. ·
Dammann complaint when
Dammann said Monda y tl1ey ordered that she be tried.

and conscr\'ati ws hope that
will he enough to intercede.
M e thodi st~ on opposing side.;
Llf the i" ue have been preparing hricfs to acl vi'c the counci I members.
"I feel bad lor her." said
· Bonn ie Do~b lcy. a board
member of Transforming
Congregatiops. an independent group that aim' to help
gay Methodi sts turn away
from homosexuality. "But I
woulcln 't want someone on a
pulpit who i ' · an aduiterer.
She is ,·ery blatantly outside
th~ bounds of our cli sciplinc."
Delegates ha ve voted hy
li,irge margins ove r th_e years
against greater acceptance of
open\} gay pastors. That voting tre nd is ex pected to continue among this year\ nearly 1.000 de legates .
they
ha ve
Alread y.
afllrmed that trtarriage i' the
union of a man ancl a woman.
on a 624-184 vote Saturdav.
And. 'o far. mu&lt;.:h of the gayrelated legislation from liberal groups has effectively been
killed.
One liberal proposal that
has ' urvi ved so far would add
a phrase to the church Social
Principles acknowledging
that Christian s disagree on
homosexuality. The full conference wi II vote on that mea'ure this week.
Delegate s also will Consider a conservative proposal
making it easier to charge
openly gay pastor' with violatii1g church law.
"It i' discouragi ng." said
Marjorie
Carlson
of
Pittsburgh. who is among gay
advocates standing outside
the meeting each day wearing
colorful stol es to make their
presence known to delegates.
"But this is the church I
grew up in ancl this is the·
church thm taught me about
social justice ancl \' m not
going to leave.··

Wednesday, May 5,

2004

FARM SCENE: UConn taps interest in tainted
beef with course on mad cow disease
STORRS. Conn. (AP) A 'ingle cow in Washington
,tate has caused trade fri ction, economic worries and a
nationwide health scare .
Now. it 's behind a new educational initiat.ive at the
Uni versity of Connecticut.
The head of the school's
ani mal science department
decided to organi ze a new
class after the di scovery in
December of the first known
. case of mad cC&gt;w disease in
the United States.
·
"Once the ca&gt;e broke I
thought this is the perfect
-subject to 'how how complex this is." said· Cameron
Faustman. "It's been arouncl
10 to 15 years. When it hit
here. it was real for us.''
UConn officials believe
it's the only college-level
course in the United States
on mad cow disease. also
known as bovine spongiform
encephalopathy. or BSE.
The disease's appearance in
the United States generated
interest among 50 students in
a one-credit course on the
topic for the spring semester:
Thomas Hoagland of the
animal science department
said many students enrolled
in the course ' becau~e they ·
"didn ' t know much about
animals."
"They didn't know the difference between a cow. a
heifer or a steer,'' he said.
They learn plenty more
than that. The course focus es on science, public health,
international trade and nutri tion and feeding of cattle.
The class is a natural at a
university established in
1881 as a land grant school.
The link between food and
human health has stirred
public interest before. said
Faustman. In 1993. E. coli
bacteria was found in hamburgers sold by Jack in the
in
Box
restaurants
Washington state. In the late
1980s, there wa s concern
about the use of the chemi-

cal Alar on apples.
But he ,aid mad cow "
different.
provo kin g
a
greater public· response .
"This. I think. is of special
interest.'' he .;aid.
Fau stman said hiS n,JUrse
was~ in s pired by a book ,
"The. Pathological Protein."
by Philip Yam, an editor at
Scientific American .
Faustman invited Yam to
lecture in early March on
issues he researched for hi s
book - and the author said
he became aware of a fe w
issues himself.
Students. he said. "presented things I never even
thought of."
MUNCIE. Ind. (AP l The state's largest farm
group has backed the creation of a . new state
Department of Agriculture
that would oversee \i vestock
permits. an idea one environmental organization call s
outrageous.
The Indiana Farm Bureau
issued a report last month
urging the creation of a state
agriculture department to
· take over permitting of Ii vestock operations from the
Indiana Department of

En v ironmental

Management .
Indiana's lieutenant governor ser\'e s as the state 's
commissioner of agriculture
within the Department of
Co mmerce. but the Farm
Bureau wants a new departme nt overseen by a director
appointed by the governor.
The age ncy would be
rt!s ponsible for livestock and
poultry operations. except in
case&gt; of manure spills.
The
Hoosier
Eiw ironmenta\ Council said
tran sferrin g
permitting
authority to such an agency
wo uld not pro,·ide enough
pro tection for the environ- ·
me nt.
"The proposal to shift permitting for factory farm s
from IDEM to the new
Department of Agriculture is
an outrageous and transparent attempt to have the fox
guarding the hen house ,''
said Rae Schnapp. water
policy di rector for the envi ronmental council.
The Farm Bureau's report
said that the Department of
Environmental Management
.should be able to bring
enforcement against "the socalled bad actors.''

They· ve puhl ished gu iues
showing where the electric
components are on the ir models: on the Tuyotu Prius and
other hybrids. the high-power
cables are colored bright ·
orange to catch the eye of a
re,cue worker or a mechanic .
But there are concerns over
wh~t happens if something
goes wrong and the battery.
ignition and other points are
inaccessible.
"It's the ' what-if' that worries me," saicl Davicl Castiaux,
an instructor for · Mid-Del
Technology Center in Del
City. Okla .. who teaches rescue workers about hybrids.
Chri s Peterson. a service
training instructor for Toyota,
said the Prius· electric system
should shut down if anything
goes wrong. ''There should not
be hi ~ h voltage in those cables.
but I m not going to stand up
ard say there isn't," he said.
First responders are taught
to disconnect the battery and
turn off the key immediately
before cutting into a car, but
that's not always possible.
"Years ago you could juSt
cut with your extrication
tools through a post, but now
you have to look before you
cut," said Ken Nel sen, chief
of the Iselin Fire Department
District II in Woodbridge
Township, N.J . " It 's j ust
another thing you need to
worry about."

1 - SR~-45 1 - 2225

drjoeywilcoxon.com

Saturday, May 8
BURLINGHAM .
Burlingham
Modern
Woodmen will meet for a
potluck dinner at 6 p.m. at the
haiL Mothers will be recognized with a flower.
RUTLAND
Return

Saturday, May 8
LONG BOTTOM - Glad
Hearts from Parkersburg,
W.Va. will sjng at 7 p.m. at
Mt.
Olive
Community
Church.
MIDDLEPORT -Gabriel
Quanet at Middlepon Church
of the Nazarene, . 7 p.m.
Refreshments.
Sunday, May 9
LAUREL CLIFF- Bobby
Siders. of Columbus will sing
during morning worship service, 10:30 a.m., at Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church.
Pastor Glenn Rowe invites

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Thesday, May ll
MIDDLEPORT - Free
Appalachian heritage dance
class, 7:30 p,m., Family Life
Center, Middleport. Public
invited to attend in preparation for Appalachian Heritage
Festival in Middlepon on
May 21.

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

• Most Insurance Accepted lnchJdinl(j

United Health
New

ll o u r~ :

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Op.._· n

today • 992-2155

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NEW· USED FAJIM AND

16" l TOilDil

Other events

Sub~ribe

BUY, SEll, OR

Massey Ferguson • Farmhand
• Bob&lt;al • Shennlu
New Idea • Rhino
New Holland • Cub Clldet

the public.
Wednesday May 12
PAGEVILLE - Revival
services at Pageville Freewill
Baptist Church, 7 p.m.,
through Friday. Pastor Calvin
Minnis invites the public.

Proud to be apart of
·your life.

The annual Meigs High School Variety Show promises to entertain anyone starting at 7 p.m . Friday and Saturday. The show
features songs from yesterday and today as performed by the
music department. There will be everything from a Beatles
medley to more modern pop music. Dancers and 'singers will
work together against a musical backdrop performed by the
Meigs High School band. (J . Miles Layton)

J.

months. He said some of the
highlight s of the show
include a Beatlc s -medley
ROCKSPRINGS- Come , and '' Rocky Top'' song
one, come all to the ann ua\ which includes a medley of
Variety Show at 7 p.m. singers
and
dancers .
· Friday and Saturday in the Julianne Howard served as
Meigs High School gymna- the choreographer and
sium.
Susan Legg was the accomAs performed by more pani st ;::s well as the vocal
than 83 Meigs High School coach. The Meig s High
students:
songs
like School band wi.ll provide the
"Bohemian
Rhapsody," music to accompany a blend
"Sk8er Boi," and a Beatles of voices from soprano to
remix offer something for baritone .
everyone . The
Variety
"We have been practicing
Show's aptly titled theme is for the past two month s and
"listen to the music."
I think we are ready for the
weekend
," said Erica Poole,
"This is truly a variety
show because there is all a senior.·
types of music for everyone
The meager price for
to enjoy," Toney Dingu s, admiss ion is $5 for adults
director of the Variety Show. and ~3 for students which
Dingus said the students will be used to support the
have been practicing several music programs at the high
hours a day for the past two school.
BY

INDUITIUAL EQUIPMENT

•

\

MILES lAYTON

JLAVTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

1-tn u r~ :

M ~1n - Th ur\: I I :OOa m- I O:OOpm

LUCkJ

Wednesday, May 5, 2004

Promise without proposal is
last stra~ for hopeful bride
when she got out. so my
DEAR ABBY: I am a 39grandparents let her stay
year-old mother of four and
have lived with ·'Arnold" for
here for a while . They
kicked her out when she
18 years. Arnie has always
promised he· d marry me
came home high.
"someday." and 1. believed
Mom works at a strip club
'Dear
him - until last Valentine's
now. It embarrasses me to
Abby
have a mother who's a stripDay.
Before Valentine's Day, I
per, and we argue a lot when
had been dropping hints
she comes b)l'. She tells me
my . grandparents are to
about how romantic itw ou ld
be if he proposed on that
blame for what she does
day. We found a sitter and he ty. I'm turning old and gray because they didn ' t let her
·
took me to a fancy restaurant with every day that passes . live \Vith them. for dinner. I was thrilled, Should I continue to hang
I hate the fights. But I hate
because it was the first time onto the hope that Arnie will even more the fear that
we· d been out alone in a keep his "promise" - or is someone may recognize her
it time to leave' - MOTH- and think I'm like her. I'm
long time.
My heart was pounding all ER OF HIS CHILDREN IN not.
through dinner because I CANADA
Should I ask my grandparDEAR
MOTHER:
You
ents to move a long way
thought this would be the
night. Arnie kept repeating have been. patient long away, so I won't ha\·e to
enough. Arnold's promi se worry 0 Or should I ask to be
how much he loved me something . he . has a hard was an empty one and an put in a foster home in
time saying. But that's as far · insult. If marriage is what another state, or what~ as it went! When we were you want, please don' t wait . ASHAMED IN OHIO '
walking to the car, I finally until your grandchildren or
DEAR ASHAMED: None
said, "You' re not going to great-grandchildren are old of the abm·e. You are your
pop the question, are you ?" enough to be your flower own person, and you ha\·e
He then removed a tiny r.ing girls and ring bearers. I rec- done nothing for which you
from his pocket and said, ommend consulting ·an attor- should
be
ashamed.
"This is a promise ring. I ney to find out what your Concentrate on your grades
common-law rights are. and extracurricular activitie s
promise to marry you ..
You've put your money on where your talents can
some d ay.
shine. And if an yone menI was devastated. It was as the wrong horse.
DEAR
ABBY:
I'm
a
16though we were teenagers
tions your mother. hold your
and he was asking me to go year-old girl. My grandpar- head up and tell the person
steady. Arnie went on to add ents have raised me because her problems are her own
that he ''wasn' t ready" for my mom is a drug addict and you ' re living your own
·
marriage yet. Well, I don ' t who couldn ' t take care of life. It's true.
herself,
much
less
me.
Dad
think he'll EVER be ready'
Dear Ahb,- is 11Ti1ten hr
Am I wrong to expect this was an alcoholic and took Abigail Vair Ruren, also
known as Jeonne Phillips,
man to make a legal com- drugs, too.
Mom
The
police
caught
mitment' For heaven's sake,
and 1ms founded b,- lrer
we have four children with drugs several times and morher; Patdine Phillip,·.
together! We have been a put her in jail. Her parole Wrire
Dear AbbY
ar
officer
made
her
go
to
rehab,
couple for almost . two
WWII'.DearAbbl'.COr/1 or PO.
decades. Brides are sup- but it didn't work very well. Box 69440, uis Angeles, CA
posed to be young and pret- She needed a place to stay 90069.

FAMILY. MEDICIN .E
,

Reader's phobia·probably treatable with drugs and therapy
Question: How can I cure tion , such as fear of spi- people with social phobia most sufferers respond
arachnophobia? I've had it ders, snakes , dogs, ani - use alcohol to try and help well
to
treatment.
for years· and cannot keep mals, heights, small spaces them cope with their fears . Psychotherapy can also be
myself from b~ing severely , or !lying. These phobias People with agoraphobia -- very effective . especially
frightened by even the can be .so severe that they literally a fear of the market in the case of speci fie phomost harmless of spiders. change a person's life: A place -have anxiety about bias . So. I'd recommend
Is there any way I can rid person who is phobic ab.out being in places or situations you as k your family doctor
myself of it?
flying either never travels from which escape might for the proper referral to
Answer: A phobia is an by plane, or seeks medical be difficult or embarrass - help you deal wi th your
intense fear of an event, attention for help with the ing , or in which help may fear of spiders.
not be 'available if they
object or feeling . The fear problem .
Familr Mt'dicine® rs a
is so intense that is causes
Social phobias are a fear have a panic attack. u:eeklr ·colwnrr. 7ir submit
a person to change his or of embarrassment or humil- Examples of these fears question s, rrrire ro Marrha
her behavior. Phobias are iation in social situations. include being outside the A. Simp son. D. 0 .. M, B.A ..
quite common, affecting I 0 Sometimes this is·limited to home alone; being in a Ohio Unirersiry College of
to 20 percent of the adult specific 'ituations . . like crowd or standing in a \irie; Osteopathic Medicin e. P. 0 .
population in the United stage fright. or it may be being on a bridge; and trav- ·l)ox 110. Ar!rerr s. Ohio
States. As children, most of generalized to any social eling in a bu s, train. or 45701 . or ria &lt;'mail ro
us have a phobia or two automobile.
read e rq ues rions @(ami l_r like being afraid of the setting. These phobias also
Agoraphobics have panic medlcirrerrell's. org. Mi'dical
alter
behavior,
usually
~ark
or thinking the
attacks; trembling, racin g
"boogey man" is in ihe through avoidance of a heart, shortness of breath , infomrwim r irr this column
closet. But, we outgrow social setting . Thi s causes that force them to stay in is prorided a,· arr edu ca riorral sen·ice onlr. lr do es
these , The phobias that people to miss important
places
where
they
feel
safe
.
not replace ril e judgment of
affect us as adults usually events like school plays ,
be
the
most
severe
This
can
your
personal ph ysichm .
company
picnics
or
meetstart in the teenage years.
of
all
of
the
phobias
as
it
11'110 should M rdin l 011 ro
at
which
they
might
be
ings
No one really knows why
asked to make a report or can cause someone tO not diagnrHt) and recommend
these phobias develop.
drive a car, ride an elevaPhobias are actually a otherwise participate. In tor, go ·to the store. or even trearme/11 for a11r medical
condirio11s . Pasr column s
kind of anxiety disorder. some cases, the su(ferer leave the hou se.
are at a ilable oulin e at
Some authorities say there might also avoid eating in
w &gt;r II ' .fa m i I r m e d i c i 11 e public
or
shun
the
use
pubMedication
is
available
are two types of phobias for
all
types
of
phobias
and
neH 'S.O fX.
lic reslrooms . Oftentimes,
specific
and
social.
Others add a third type - tJf,.,llllt.fllirJ llFIIlrJIJIII~~~~'II•'illl~~~~ t.,~irl~FIIlrl~':J'iiii'II•JIIIIt.J~P t.l Pil:rllFIIlrfii'P8
agoraphobia.
Specific j;
·
phobia, also called simple
6~ 6

t., «

.~~~~:r;~_ar~~~~ k!~~ ~~~ . ,t 1 ~ t 1\ p
fear of an object or situa-

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Coming Thursday
in the Sentinel ...

DR. KELSEY HENRY

990 2nd Ave.
Gall ipolis, OH
(740) 441-0200

Clubs and
organizations

· Church services

Variety Show··
promises to entertain

From the Desk of
HEADACHES:
A DRUG-LESS APPROACH
Researchers have noted a direct
relationship between the spine and
headaches. One study even suggested that neck injuries (falls,
whiplash and even birth trauma)
may be the most common cause of
headaches.
Chiropractors are trained' to find
and correct spinal misalignments.
They have often observed ,that by
correcting these misalignments,
many patients with headaches
experience relief.
In other words, if you sutTer from
headaches, make sure your spine is
healthy-sec your chiropractor!

Wednesday, May 5
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees will meet
at 6:30 p.m. at the Pageville
town hall:
POMEROY - · Meigs
County Board of Health, 5
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.

'

Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters of the American
Revolution will meet at I0
a.m. on Saturday at the Meigs
Elementary School for a
building tour with Principal
Rusty Bookman . Pauline
Atkins, Sharon Jewell and
Donna Jenkins will serve as
hostesses.

Coming Thursday in the Sentinel ...

'.Rescue workers preparing for more
accidents involving hybrid cars
PHILADELPHIA (AP) The growing popularity of
:hybrid vehicles is a step
'toward cleaner air and les'
'dependance on gasoline. But
for rescuers at accidetil
scenes, they repre&gt;ent a potential new danger: a network of
'high-voltage circuitry that
'may require some precise cut,1ing to save a trapped victim.
· '"You don ' t want to go
crushing anything
with
hvdraulic tools," said Samuel
Caroluzzi , an assi stant chief
·With the Norrisiown Fire
.Department
outside
·f!hi\ade\phia. " It's enough to
·kill you from whai they're
.telling us in training."
. Hybricls draw power fro in
two sources, typically a gas
or diesel engine combinecl
with an electric motor. The
battery powerin g the electri c
motor carries as much as 500
\lolts, more than 40 times the
,1rength of a standard battery.
· That worries those who
must cut into cars to rescue
people inside.
·. "If you can ' t shut it down ,
you don' t know where the
high voltage is," said David
Dalrymple, an emergency
medical technician in New
Brunswick , N.J .
; Manufacturers have put in
place a laundry list of safety
checks that the car's comput~ must go through for the
electrical sy stem to run .

Community C~lendar
Public meetings

_PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

breast cancer.

Mon-Sat
9:30-5:00

I shop for

my
Mommy

Your guide to

AI Clark's

weekend

entertainment

In the 1'11-Stlte

Pomeroy, OH • 992·3671

- - - " " " 1:111-1:11

'

•

�'
• t

'

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 5, 2004 .

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co. .
Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make 110 law respecting an .
establislzmctrt of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
ofspeeclz, or of the press; or the right of the
pt•ople peaceably to assemble, a11d to pe(ition
tilt' Go11errzmwt for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
1'olLt\ i' \\ ~dne, Jay. May 5. the !26th day of 2004. There
"' c 2.+!1 Ja,' left in the year. ·
Tod;~~ ·, 1-11g il light 111 History: One hundred years ago. on
\ Ia) 5. 190.+. C~ Young pitched the American League's first
pc rkl'l gam~ a, th~ Boston Red So1t defeated the Philadelphia
.- \thkt ic:,. :1 -0.
011 til" date : 111 I~21. Napoleon Bonaparte died in e1tile on
tile ;, (and uf St. Helena.
In 1862. ~kxican forces loyal to Benito Juarez defeated ·
l'rcnc:h tr"'' P' 'em hy Napoleon Ill in the Battle of Puebla.
111 I') I~ . t h~ t'i,-,1 i"ue of the Soviet Communist Party newsp&lt; ~)~J Pra \lla '"" pu hi i 'hed .
In I'!~~- John T Scopes was arrested in Tennessee for
~~ ~chin~ Darwin\ thcorv of evolution.
in 19~2. Juring Worlu.War II. Japanese forces landed on the
Philippine isl and of Corregidor.
In 19-+~. "'k' nf 'ugar resumed in the United States under
a ~·atiuniug program.

In I')55. Wc, t Germany became a sovereign state.'
In 1 95~. rh~ baseball mu sical '·Damn Yankees" opened on

Don Hewitt just carne Ollt of
the closet.
In a recently publisheq interview. the e1tecutive producer
of "60 Minutes," the CBS
news magazine show, admitted his partiality to John Kerry. .
the presumed Democratic
presidential nominee.
"I would bet I'll probably
vote for Kerry." said Hewitt .
the octogenarian.
Of course. Hewitt insisted
he has no Democratic or liberal political leanings. Just as the
writers. producers and cOITespondents for "60 Minute&gt;"
deny
a
bias
against
Republicans and conservatives.
Never mind recent wellpublicized segments featuring
explosive interviews with former Treasury Secretary Paul
O'Neill , former counter-terrorism adviser Richard
Clarke and Washington Post
scribe Bob Woodward, aU of
which attacked George W.
Bush.
Now. if"60 Minutes" were a
news '~commentmy" show, it
could be as biascq as it wanted. But it casts itself as a
"news .magazine" program ,
suggesting to unsuspecting
viewers that its reporting is
nonpartisan and non-ideological.
So Hewitt and his crew are
guilty of the journalistic equivalent of false advenising.
And they are not the only
ones. In fact, most major news
organizations are guilty of the
same offense.
Their producers, their editors pretend to be "impartial,"
their cor·espondents, their

Joseph
Perkins

reporter~

feign "objectivity."
But the reality is most of those
who present the political
"news" on network television,
in the major daily newspapers
are both Democrat and liberaL
Just look at the empirical
evidence.
In 1996. the Freedom
Forum released a survey, conducted by the Roper Center.
of 139 Washington news
bureau chiefs and congressional correspondents. It
revealed that 89 percent of
reporters
Washington
responding said they voted
for Bill Clinton in the 1-992
presidential election compared to a mere 7 percent that
voted for Ge~rge Herbert
Walker Bush.
Fifty perceut said they were
Democrats compared to a
scant 4 percent who identified
themselves as Republicans.
Some 61 percent owned up to
being "liberal" or "moderate to
liberal" versus 9 percent who
considered themselyes "conservative\' or "moderate to

conservative."
And those survey results
were no aberration. Similar
media polls have yielded similar results, including, notoriously, a straw poll of reporters
covering George W. Bu sh's

tirst presidential campaign.
The poll was conducted by
Alexandra Pelosi, an NBC
producer at the time (who
happens to be the daughter of
Rep. Nancy Pelosi, the liberal
San Francisco Democrat).
Of · 31 reporters who
responded to Pelosi's straw
poll -- including representatives from such major publica·
lions as The Boston Globe and
Newsweek -- ~6 thought that
AI Gore would 1win the presidency. (~nd probably all
. hoped he'd win.)
Of course, the correspondents, the reporters who cover
politics for the news networks,
for the major daily newspapers, insist that their party
affiliation (or undeclared leanings), their political ideology
ha~ no effect whatsoever on
their work.
They claim to be fair to
Democrats and Republicans
alike, balanced in reporting
both liberal and conservative
positions on issues.
But that's a fiction.
There's r\o way Republicans
and conservatives can get a
fair shake by the major daily
newspapers or by the broad-.
cast networks when 90 percent
of political reporters either
vote or lean Democrat, when
an overwhelming majority tilt
liberal.
. The perversity of it all is that
most maJor news organizations profess their commitment to "diversity"; profess
their desire to have newsrooms that look like America
(or at least the readers or viewers those news organizations
serve).

But when they talk about
diversity, they mean race and
gender and se1tual orientation.
They couldn"t care less about
political diversity.
And that's why much of
political reporting in the major
dailies. on the network news is
so biased.
The news judgment of
those covering the presidential election, deconstructing
the Iraq War and reconstruction, the following the 9/11
commission hearings, analyzing the latest opinion
polls is colored by their
overwhelmingly
Democratic, preponderantly
liberal leanings.
So here's a challenge for
political reporters at major
newspapers. at the news networks: Follow Don Hewitt's
lead. Come out of the closet.
Tell your readers, tell your
viewers where you stand
politically.
,
Are you a Democrat or
Republican? Are you liberal or
conservative? Did you vote for
Gore or Bush in the last presidential election? Are you leaning Kerry or Bush this time
around?
TI'!e reading public, the
viewing public deserves to
know the politics of those who
repqrt the political news, who
shape public opinion, who
influence the outcome of elections.
For informed news consumers make good citizens.

Leiters to rhe editor are welcome. They should
he less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to
editin g and musr be signed and include address
and 1elephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters ..~hould be in good taste:
({(/dressing issues. not personalities.
Thr opinions expressed in this column are the
consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
edirorial hoard, unless otherwise noted.

s

The Daily Sentinel
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Correction Polley
Our main concern 1n all stories is to be
l accurate If you know of an error 1n a
: slory can the newsroom at (740) 992·
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News

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Reporter: Bnan Reed, Ext 14
Reporter: J. M1les Layton , Ext 13

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ClassJCirc. : Judy Clark, Ext 10
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District Mgr.: TBA , Ext 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoefl1ch, Ex112

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MIDDLEPORT - Middleport merchants have been invited to join in this
month's
Appalachian
Heritage
Celebration with sidewalk sales and
promotions .
Brenda Phalin with the University of
Rio
Grande
Crossroads/Youth
Employment Services program met
with
Middleport · Community
Association members Tuesday morn·
ing to di scuss plans for the May 21
street fair. which will include demon- .
stratioris of Appalachian crafts, music
performance and folk dancing .
Phalin said village officials have
authodzed the closing of a portion of
North Second Ave ., and Mill St. to
South Third -Ave ., for the festival,
whi ch will take place from 10 a.m. to 3
p.m., and asked association members

-·---

-=-----

Jim

Mullen

"·

walks over to Doc at the
saloon and interrupts the card
game by saying "Doc, it hurts
when I do this. Can I get a
'Handicapped' tag to hang on
my horse?" .
How did .Julius Caesar con·
quer Gaul without the benefit
of rehydrating energy drinks
and multi- vitamins? How did
the cowboys ever get by without sunblock? When I was a
kid the teenage fad at the local
beach was to rub Crisco all
over our bodies to get a nice
even tan. Sure, pow my skin
has the look and texture of
extra crispy Kentucky Fried
Chicken, but at least I had fun
at the beach and I'm keeping a
dermatologist off the welfare
rolls.
I spoke to a cousin who
works in a big office in the city
yesterday and she said that II
people in her office were out
with things like repetitive
stress injury or carpal tunnel
syndrome or allergies to the

carpet used in the office.
Everyone .eJse is on Prozac.
Can typing forms and pushing
around a computer mouse all
· day really be that rough on"
your body?
1 am always amazed at
how much our physical
work our ancestors used to
·do that would §Urely kill
most us if we had to do it
today. We complain ·about
driving to work at 60 miles
an hour in a nice warm car
with a radio· and a CD player while
drinking
a
Starbucks lane with a cell
phone within arm's reach ,
when our great-great grandfathers would have had to
saddle a horse and buggy
and drive out in the snow
and rain. The Iuxury and
comfort of one of today's
least-expensive automobiles
would shock them.
A 200-year-old maple tree
finally blew over on our lawn
last August. I've been working
on it with a little sixteen-inch
chainsaw off and on for more
than seven months and most
of it is still sitting where it felL
After each hour-long chainsaw session I sit down
exhausted; the tree still look~;
untouched and all I can wonder is, "How did they ever do
this with only hand-held saws
and axes?';

While I have been spared
Chainsaw Wrist and Riding
Mower Butt, I think fm coming down with Barbecue
Elbow. It's caused by the
repetitive motion of flipping
burgers and steaks with one
hand while drinking beer
with the other. It puts an
unnatural strain on the male
human body that is designed
for hunting and gathering
and 'not loafing and lip-flapping .
The question now is: who
should I go to ftrst? A doctor
or a lawyer? Maybe my doctor
could recommend a good
lawyer. What I am looking for
is a settlement against a deepp'ocket spatula manufacturer
that will give me enough
money to hire someone to barbecue for me and lift beer to
my lips.
But what happens when my
griller comes down with his
own case of Barbecue Elbow?
We can't all get sick. Who will
feed us? Who will change ow
litter bo1tes for us?
(Jim Mullen's latest book,
"My First Wedding: A Primer
for Modem Couples," was jusl
published by Simon &amp;
Schuster. He also contributes
regularly to Entertainmem
Weekly, where he can be
reached at jim_mullen@
ew.com)

Other business

· After meeting with a delegation from
Wahama High School. the association
agreed to donate toward the purchase
of new uniforms for the school's
marching band.
Association Vice President Tom
Dooley acknowledged the band's support of the association ·s Christmas
parade and other events. and the close
relationship between Middleport and
Mason, W.Va. communities.
'"Wahama has always been very supportive of Middleport and our events ,"
Dooley said. "We are one community
in the bend area, and we have a responsibility and a desire to support the b.and
and the school in any way we can.'"
The band hopes to raise $32,000 for
70 uniforms, and less than half of the

from Page A1
nent replacement.
'"I have inte rviewed a
number of candidates and I
hope to fill the position with
the right person:· he said.
Stqry sai d he is working
"within tight budgetary
constraints'· to attract J' new
person for the job. Unlike
· an elected office holder. the

· Suit
from PageA1
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funds needed have been raised. according to Band Director Chip Hendricks.
The a"ociation will determine the
amount of its contribution at a later
date.
The association's tree planting project is completed. and funds are still
being accepted for the project. The
assoc iation is offering sponso rship
memorials for the plantings. and tl10'e
who contribute $200 toward the cost of
planting and maintaining a tree will be
recognized with a plaque at the tree
si te . Accordin g to Dooley. 10 trees
. remain unspon sored:
President Dodger Vaughan said two
rece nt e' ents, the Yellow Flag Yard
Sale last weekend and the Bunny Hop
Bake Sale on the weekend of Easter
were successfu L and said the association plan s to !&gt;ponsor another ··Pops in
the 'Park" bceakfast in Dave Diles Park
for Father\ Dav.

Birth

pie concerned about their
weight. especially women,
she said: "'It's go ing to be a
CHICAGO - Coke and gal thing . Gal s are alway s
Pepsi, trying to put more fizz watching their weight."
into their soda sales, are
The sodas are designed to
about to launch new brands appeal to "people who would
that taste like their flagship like less calories but don't
drinks but contain half the want to compromise on
sugar, carbs and calories.
taste," Coca-Cola spokesman
Coke's C2 and Pepsi 's Mart Martin said in a teleEdge are to hit the market phone interview from the
nationally this summer. In company's headquarters in
·
'
advance, the companies Atlanta.
offered tastes to supermarket
Martin di smi ssed
the
exectjtives , restaurant owners notion that Coca-Cola C2
and other potential retail dis- . might become another, New
tributors at the
Food Coke, a new taste ·the c6mpa'
Marketing Institute's annual · ny introduced in 1985 as a
replacement for its regular
trade show in Chicago.
The new sodas are targeted soda, only to see it rej e~t ed
at people who don't like the by·consumers. Coke returned
calories in regular colas but to its traditional drink less
are dissati sfied with diet ver- than three months later. marsions.
keting it as Classic Coke.
These midcalorie ·sodas
''This is a completely difmay work, said Donna ferent proposition, an addiAlbertson, who co-owns The tion .to- the portfolio , not a
Good House, a steak and replacement," Martin said.
Pepsi estimates ;1 potential
seafood restaurant, with her
husband,
Buck,
in buyers' pool of more than 60
Ragersville, Ohio. Sipping million. It wants to keep
Pepsi Edge from a paper cup, them loyal to sodas so they
she said the soda tasted as don't drift into competing
good as regular and did not beverages such as teas and
juices, said David DeCecco.
have the aftertaste of diet.
It could be a hit with peo- a spokeslilan at Pepsi 's head -

Roughing i_t
As I cleaned out the odorfree, clumping, bacteria-free
cat box this morning, I couldn't help but wonder, "When
did cats get so sissified that
they stopped using the great
outdoors? Didn't the whole
planet used to be their litter
bo ?"
And for being odor-free it
was amazingly pungent. Each
scoop would raise up a cloud
of cat litter dust that smelled
like lilacs. Lilacs mixed with
week'old sardines. Just then a
cat jumped on my back and I
slicked in a giant lungful of cat
litter dust. That can't be a good
thing. If it's clumping in the
bo1t, it's clumping right now
inside my lungs. How long
will it be before I come down
with dreaded "Cat Litter
Lung?"
I have this fear of catching
modem diseases, diseases that
didn't even e1tist when we
were children.
Chronic
Fatigue Syndrome. Latex
Allergy. Repetitive Stress
Syndrome. Where did they all
come from? Wasn't milking
cows by hand repetitive?
Wasn't it stressful? Isn't coal
mining repetitive? Isn't it
stressful? . What about blacksmithing? Stressful and repetitive. But you never see a cow·
boy movie where the blacksmith puts down his tools and

to participate in the event with sidewalk sale s.

Michael Conway samples Pepsi Edge. a new product with half the
sugar of regular Pepsi. at the Food Marketing Institute trade show,
Monday, in Chicago. Pepsi Edge and Coca-Cola's C2 are new
reduced-sugar products marketed to people looking for colas that
contain half the sugar. carbs and calories, but do not like the
aftertaste of diet soda products. (AP Photo/Brian Kersey)

Coke, Pepsi to square off in.
summertime battle for dieters' dollars

Jcr .,~),

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REED

Lola Elaine Harrison, 89, of Depot Street, Rutland,
passed away Tuesday, May 4, 2004, at the Holzer
Medical Center. Gallipolis.
Born Feb. 14, 1915, at Middleport to the late Ray and
Leatha (Russell)' Russell , she was a homemaker and
member of Bradford Church of Christ, Middleport.
·
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by
her husband, Floyd Harrison ; brother. Everett Russell; and
three sisters. Loui se Lewis, Eileen Wood and Florence
NeaL
She is survived by her childre n, Jack ,Harrison of
Rutland; Ada Scott of Columbus; Elaine Quillen of
Rutland; and Don Harrison of Pomeroy; II grandchildren ;
14 greaq;randchildren; five great-greal grandchildren; and
several meces and nephews .
Funeral services will be held at II a.m. , Friday, May 7,
2004, at the Bradford Church of Christ, Middleport.
Burial will follow at the Bradford Cemetery. Middleport.
Friends may call from 5-8 p.m., Thursday at the
Birchfield Funeral Home. Rutland.
'

BY IRA DREYFUSS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

-----

J.

Lola Elaine 'Hanison

Sung Kim pours out samples of Coca-Cola 's new C2 cola along
with other Coke products at the Food Marketing Institute trade
show. Monday, in Chicago, Pepsi Edge and Coca-Cola's C2 are
new reduced-sugar products marketed to people looking for lower
calorie and reduced carb beverages. but do not like the aftertaste
of diet soda products. (AP Photo/Brian Kersey)

In llJt'il. '"tronaut Alan B. Shepard Jr. became America's
first ' P"''~ tm\ cl~ r "' he made a IS-minute sub-orbital night
in a ca1Nil c launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla.
In 19KI. Irish Republican Army hunger- striker Bobby
Sands lkd at the Mat.e Prison in Northern Ireland in his 66th
J;ty wi ll10u1 fnod :
i'c11 \e&lt;J rs ago: S·ingapore caned American 'teen-ager
.\hchael Fay for vandalism. · a day after the sentence was
r~ducc· J from ' i' lashes to four in res ponse to an appeal by
Prc,id~nt Clintc;m. who considered the punishment too harsh.
Fi,·e year' ago: President Clinton began a morale-boosting
trip to Europe that included a visit to Ramstein Air Base in
Germ~tnv. where he met the three American soldiers just
rdca,~d by Yugoslavia. The first Kosovo refugees brought to
the Un ited States. -+53 of them. arrived at Fort Di1t in New
One )C&lt;II. ago: Searchers using dogs and heavy equipment
"en! fmm one numb led home to another after tornadopac ked storm s t1ancncd communities in four Midwestern
.,wtc,, killing 19 people. In Colombia. a botched rescue
CJ ttcmpt rc,ulted in th~ death s of a state governor, former
dcf~ n 'c mini ster anJ eight other hostages · being held by
rc bcb: three hostages survived . Walter Sisulu, the quiet giant
ul· South Africa ·, anti-apartheid struggle for five decades, died
in Joh a nn c, hur~ at age 90.
Thought for -Today: ""Great minds discuss ideas, average
mir\d, di" :uss events. small mipds discuss people." AJ miral Hyman G. Rickover. ··rather" of America's nuclear
nil\ ) t 1900- IY86).

BY BRIAN

BR EEO@MVDAI LYSENTI NEL ,COM

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(Joseph Perkins is a
columnist for The San Diego
Union-Tribune and can be
reached at Joseph.Perkins@
UnionTrib.com,)

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

Association to support Appalachian celebration

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LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

www .mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

Journalists should reveal their biases

The.Daily Sentinel

£lwad\\'il\.

Wednesday, May 5, 2004

PageA4

totaling $3,369.96, represe.nt.ing funds collected and not
accounted for and personal
telephone service for the
Soulsby family.
The complaint also cites a
$14,962.80 finding against
Roush, Soulsby's former sec·
retary, representing funds
collected but unaccounted for
in the sheriff's department's
regular account.

Lentes is said to be responsible for a $1 ,841.13 finding
for car repairs paid . for
through the Vi ctims of Crime
Assistance fund, and $500 in
travel expenses paid through
the Law Enforcement Trust
Fund , a di scretionary account
controlled by the prosecutor.
Lentes sa id Tuesday he has
offered to re-pay the money
cited in the finding since it
was first issued in 200 1..
"The expenses referred to
in the complaint are all legitimate expenses, but were
paid
from
incorrect

Driving Record Bent Out
of Shape? Head Straight
to Nationwide.
To find out more about our auto insurance-·
Call me ... Stop by... -It's your d:oice!

accounts," Lentes said. "The
vehicle repairs were necessary because ·the car was
being used for county busi ness at the time the repai rs
were required, and the repairs
should have been paid from
the general fund, rather than
the VOCA account.''
"As for the travel expenses
cited, the problem ste mmed
from the fact that the trip paid
for from the LETF was for a
workshop for applicants of a
i:nen tal health grant which
was not eventu ally awarded
to' the cou nt y."

Lentes said he will personally pay the $1 ,841.13 the
suit demands, and expects to
be removed from the suit
later this week.
"I think if this matter were
to go to trial, the expenses l
incu rred would have been
determined to be legi timate
county expenses, but I don't
want county officials and
others to go through the trial
process."
The bonding companies
covering the three defendants
are also named in the state's
civil suit.

E
r--==-~

On the Net:
Food Marketmg lnstiture:
http://www.ftni.org/

A

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~tlonwlde'

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he said.
Another big difference is a
shift in consumer preferences. said John Sicher, editor and publisher of the trade
'publication Beverage Dige st.
in Bedford Hills, N.Y.
Americans are paying more
attention to their diets, espe·
cially to counting carbs and
calories.
"There's a whole different
consumer awareness now
that makes this a timely product, " Sicher said. ,
That new awareness shows
up in sale s figures , Sicher
said. TJ1e growth in beverages has been in sports drinks
and bottled water. Even in
soda s, sugared soft drinks
.have been losing market
share , slipping from 74.1 percent in 2002 to 72.6 percent
in 2003, while diet drinks
have been g'aining, he said.
The companies have a lot
at stake in keeping consumcrs happy. Even though
Coke and Pepsi make other
products that could satisfy
thirst, soft drinks are their
mainstays, Sicher said.

Hear the whole story

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.quarters in Purchase, N.Y.
The new drinks contain the
standard high-fructose corn
syrup that sweetens regular
soda but in smaller amounts.
The corn syrup is supplemented with Splenda, a nocalorie.
no-carbohy.drate
sweetener made from sugar.
The result is a soda with
fewer calorie s than regular
but more than no-caL For
instan ce , Pepsi says a 12ounce can of Edge has 20
gram s each of sugar and carbohydrates, ·and 70 calories,
~ompared with regular:s .41
grams each of sugar and carbohydrates. and 1.50 calories.
Although the products are
new, the midcalorie soda category is not. ·c oke sells a
midcalorie drink in Norway.
Martin said. Pepsi had tried
two other products in · the
United States, the late st in
the mid-1990s. and had to
withdraw both, DeCecco
&gt;aid.
Technology opened the way
for Pepsi to try again,
DeCecco said. Splenda was
not available for the earlier
brands. and the sugar-based
sweetener is a key ingredient
toward creming a lower-calorie soda that tastes like regular.

Insurance &amp;
Financial Services
Norlonwldlls On lbut ~

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NaUonwkle Mutual Insurance Company and
Affiliated Companies, Home Office: Clit'mbus,
• OH 43215-2220 ANS7 11/00

,,

assistant prosec utor's salary
is not set by statute. Story
was quick to add that if necessary, he could fill in the
position unti I someone was
hired.
Gilliland has served as an
assi stant prosecutor for
more · than a vear. Durin~
that time. ' he lla&gt; had a high
rate of convictions. Sto-ry
ha s high
praise
for
Gilliland's work and sa id
she is an asset to Meig-.
County.

Pomeroy
JEFF WARNER

113 W. 2nd Slreet
¥92·5479

•

�REGION

The Daily Sentinel

PageA6
Wednesday, May 5,

2004

•

These young poets wen~ recognized for outstanding entries in the University of Rio Grande/Rio
~rande Community College Meigs Center',s Young Poets Competition, a new poetry co.ntest for
area high school students. Lily Jacks, Keilah Jacks, Christina Miller, Chalsie Manley, Jessica
Durham, Taryn Lentes and Cory Shaffer. Meigs Center Director Gina Pines, a poet herself, is
pictured far left. (Brian J. Reed)

Rio Meigs honors young poets
daughter of John and Cathy
Lentes, in the 15-18 category.
with "Juliet Didn't Do
MIDDLEPORT - Chalsie Windows."
Manley and Taryn Lentes.
Manley is a freshman at
both of Middleport, were rec- Meigs High School •and
ognized as outstanding young Lentes is a sophomore.
poet.; at the University of Rio
Center Director Gina Pines
Grande/Rio
~ Grande
said she was "blown away''
Community College Meigs by both the number of poems
Center on Thursday.
submitted and the quality of
The university branch the work.
·sponsored the contest in
"I thought we'd be lucky to
.observance of Poetry Momh, hear from 20 students,'' Pines
and recognized winning said. ''Instead, we received
poets in two age categories at almost 350 poems from 114
·the center's Fourth Annual students. The students who
.
:Evening of Poetry.
participated were from all of
: Manley, daughter of Roger the local schools and the
·and Margie Manley of panel of judges and I were all
Middleport, was the . first- impressed With the high qualplace winner in the 12-14 cat- · ity of work that our local stuegory, with a poem, "No One dents submitted."
.Believes," and Lentes,
The poems were evaluated
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

by a panel of university
judges in a blind review
process, Pines said.
Alyssa
Newland and
Jessica Durham received second and third-place honors in
the 12-14 age category. and
Cory Shaffer third place in
the
15- I 8
category.
Honorable mention honors
were awarded to Brandi
Westfall, Lily Jacks, Keilah
Jacks and Brittany Bissell in
the · 12- 14 category, and
Jeanine Vanison, Jennifer
Grady, Jessica Amos and
Christina Miller in the 15-18
class.
The i:emer also hosted a
poetry reading by published
poets in the region, including
URG professor Jack Hart,
Joyce
Cathy
Lentes,
Richardson and Pines.

juliet Didn't Do Windows
A rose by any other name
: : would surely smell as sweet
·but I bet our dear Juliet
never had to weed
what light through yonder window breaks
might easily have been none at all
young Juliet didn't do windows
she found cleaning deadly dull
and when at last the time came
to fetch her true love, Romeo
Juliet stayed home to primp
and bade her nurse to go
given this evidence, it surprises me
- that when Juliet came to her tragic end
she was not too picky to fall to the dirty floor...
well no more time for Shakespeare
-I must go do my chores.

Taryn Lentes

Taryn Lentes

No One Believes
: :She don't do drugs
; :She don't date thugs
' :She does great in school
::and she's nobody's fool
: :Shines bright as a star
: . hits softballs to Mars
·: But no one believes
: : that she has dreams ·
::So happy on the inside, but it 's just a disguise
; . if her family knew what she felt, problems would arise
::She could tell her best friend everything
-: but even she doesn't always understand her state of mind
::Every night she wishes on some star
·
:· to her god way afar
·
; :To take her from this miserable place
::to put a real smile on her face .
•
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Chalsle Manley

Chalsle Manley

COLUMBUS (AP) Ohioans injured by a defective product or unsafe business could receive no more
than $1 million for pain and
sutlering under a bill Senate
Republicans were trying to
place before their House colleagues.
The Senate easily passed
the bill limiting lawsutts last
year but has watched in.frustration as it sat in the House
with little movement. . '· ·
House
Rep.
Scott
Oelslager,
a
Canton
Republican, has refused to
move the legislation quickly,
instead holding several hearings and trying to collect statistics on jury awards in
Ohio.
As a result, the Senate
Judiciary
Committee
'planned to take the bill
Tuesday and add it to legis- ·
lation limiting lawsuits
against fast-food restaurants.
The restaurant bill, to pro-.
hibit obese people from
suing restaurants over their
weight, already has passed
the House .
. The maneuver is meant to
place the jury caps before
the full House by taking
control of the legislation
away
from
Oelslager.
Oelslager wrote Senate
President Doug White last

"The justice system says
week protesting the move.
we'll
have a trial. a jury will
A vote by the full Senate
look at the facts of your situcould come Wednesday.
"Eleven members of the ation and then decide what's
Hou se of Representatives to be done," Montgomery,
have held that bill in a com- 58, a municipal records
mittee for over a year," said administrator. said Tuesday.
Sen. Steve Stivers, a "If you put an arbitrary cap
Columbus
Republican, on it, the judge and jury have
referring to Oelsla\ler's little say."
House Judiciary Committee.
Oelslager sa id Senate
"The other 88 members have Republican s should back
not had a chance to vote on it down.
·
or look at it or talk about it."
"We arc dealing here with
Ohio manufacturers say individu .tl righ!S and liberthe high cost of jury awards ties that 'ran most of Ohio
are at least partly responsi- history that gives the averble for the more than age person an opportunity to
200,000 manufacturing jobs have his or her day in court,"
lost in Ohio during the reces- he said. "The public expects
s10n.
us to analyze this issue very
"Taking a bill and just let- thoroughly before proceedting it hang for as long as it's ing."
·
hung over on the House side
House .Speaker Larry
is a kind of purgatory," said
Householder
said he doubt,
Davi d Hansen. public policy
ed
the
move
would chang~
services director for the
Ohio
Manufacturers' his desire to continue hear:
ings.
Association.
The proposed legislation
Some victims of accidents
oppose the maneuver and also would make it harder to
say Oelslager's deliberate file frivolous lawsuits and
gives a judge authority .to
approach should continue ..
The legislation "goes fine an attorney for filing a
against the very essence of law.suit deemed frivolous.
It does not cap damages
our justice system," sail!
for
economic losses such as
Sharon Montgomery of sublost
· wages or medic'al
urban Columbus, whose
husband, John, died after a expenses, · or in cases of
car crash in September 2000. wrongful death.

died as an infant.
The funeral directors association took over responsibility of the remains left in
the Sherrill-Harden Funeral
Home after it was shut down
last year.
The funeral home closed
after the eight bodies were
found on June 20.
Some bodies had been
gnawed by rodents and were
left for months. One was left
since 1996.

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 expect~d 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 Ser~ices at (740) 992-2177 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.
·

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2004

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eigs Cou

Academic Banquet

Eastern

Southern

Recognized for academic excellence from the Eastern Local School District were left to right.
seated, Cheyenne Doczi and Marie Powell, grade 4; Hannah Hysell and Wh itney Putman, grade
6; and IJack, Andrew Bissel l and Morgan Werry, grade 8; Taylor Russell and Charles Wilson,
grade 10: and Jessica Boyles, and Brittany HauiJer, grade 12. Alyssa Holter, grade 12, was rec·
ognized but was not present. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Presented trophies during the recognition program were these Southern students. from left.
seated, Andiew Ginther, Tiffany Francis, grade 4: Lynzee Tucker, grade 6: and Lindsey .Buzzard.
grade eight; and back, Sarah EI'Dabaja, grade 8; John Bentz and Kristina Williams, grade 10.
and Bethany Amberger, Codi Davis, and Katie Sayre, grade 12. Michael Manuel. grade 6, was
absent. (Charlene Hoeflich)

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Meigs

Meigs ·

court was canceled due to a
medical issue that landed
him in the .hospital over the
weekend. People close to the
case, speaking on condition
of anonymity, have said the
problem was minor, but didn't elaborate.
One juror was excused
before court convened
Tuesday,
but
lawyers
declined to discuss the reason, saying it was under
seal. He was replaced with
an alternate juror.
Court adjourned early
Tuesday for another juror's
medical appointment.
Adelphia was formerly
based in Coudersport, Pa.,
but has since moved to
Greenwood Village, Colo.
The company serves several
commumties
in
We st
Virginia.
·

Half of remains found at funeral home claimed
TOLEDO (AP) - Nearly claimed, said Mark Merz,
half:of the cremated remains president · of the Funeral
of 33 people found at a Directors Association of
funeral home have been Northwest Ohio.
claimed by family members
The association plans to
within the last week.
bury the other remains at a
The remains had been left memorial service on May
at the
Sherrill-Harden 26, but it wants to give famFuneral Home, which was ily members a chance to ·
closed last summer after claim their loved ones first.
eight decomposing bodies
One woman came from
were found there.
Baton Rouge , La., to claim
The cremated remains of the remains of her son,
18 of the 33 have not yet been Michael Jamil Crier, who

Wednesday, Mays,

.

Witness: Adelphia internal books
gave real and inflated results ·
NEW
YORK
(Dow mance, Brown testified.
Jones/AP)
Adelphia . ''On a number of occaCommunic.ations
Corp . sions over the years, he said
compared its real results and 'We don't want to fool ourits publicly reported, inflat- selve.s' ," Brown testified,
ed numbers in books given recalling discussions with
to many employees, includ- Timothy Rigas.
ing founder John Rigas and
For example, one internal
two of his sons, a former document showed that while
executive testified Tuesday Adelphia's operating cash
in the fraud trial of the flow was $177 million for
Rigases
and
another the quarter ended in
Adelphia executive.
September 1997, its publicly
James Brown, fonner vice
reported
operating cash flow
president of finance, said the
documents separating actual was $228 million, Brown
and phony numbers date said.
Timothy,
John
and
back to 1997 and weren't
on
trial
Michael
Rigas
are
disclosed to the cable· comhere on charges of conspirapany's auditors.
cy
and fraud along with forFormer Chief Financial
mer
Assistant Treasurer
Officer Timothy Rigas supported the system to keep Michael Mulcahey.
Michael Rigas was back in
employees aware of the
company's real perfor- court Tuesday, one day after

BYTHEBEND

:The Daily Sentinel

Senate pushing to pass
bill limiting right to .sue

PageA7

i!
-~ u
.I,VIeigs Elementary and Middle school students honored at last night's IJanquet were left to
~1ght , seated, Andy Fairchild, Travis Tackett, Olivia Cleek, and Emalee Glass, grade 4 : and Scott
Kennedy, grade 6; and back, Tyler Andrews, Darby Gilmore. grade 6; Bradley Jones. Talisha
~eha, Amy Barr, Kirk Legar and Rebecca Hanstine. grade 8. Not present were Erin Patterson
· ~nd Kristen Eblin, grade 6. (Charlene Hoeflich.

:food drive

Honored for academic excellence were Meigs High School students. left to right. seated.
Miranda Beha. Joshua Kennedy, Wh itney Thoene. Jacob Venoy and Joshua Veney, grade 10:
and back, David Barnes, Jaclyn Bradbury, Jaynee Davis. Maegan Dodson. Nichole Harper,
Randall Hudson, and Sarah Lee . grade 12. Recognized but not present were David Boyd and
Erica Poole, grade 12. (Charlene Hoeflich.)

Coming Thursday in the Sentinel ...

"PfaceJ ff9 ({fi (;

The "Prayer Box " i, an expression ui lovC' and
"
well as those who give I hem. ' ~~~
Simply write down a .prayer -~Ji:
on a small piece of papl'r, ., ~' ,-·
. ld .
J I
. . ~to 1t up, anc pace 1t 111 ·~

.fh;»Jr$ ,(9 ·JfJ(9"

'

bracelet, it will help remind

.'

Banquet
from Page A1
I

•

'
. :and
gifted coordinator,
:emceed the banquet and
· introduced Costanzo who
••commended the scholars on
' their accomplishment s an·d
:the parents and other family
; members for their support
' and encouragement.
~ Well , who is retiring this

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f.
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you to pray daily.

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.

year spoke briefly about his
career in education, and hi s
la st several years as superintendent of the Eastern
Local School District. He
conimented on how fortunate Meigs County is to
have three school districts
with new building;, each
with programs unique in
their own way. turning out
students who excel , like
those attending the academic excellence banquet.

When you 're wearing the

..~·.!:..
.

... l,

the delicate prayer box. \i,-~:'iu ~ .

Your guide to weekend
entertainment in the Tri-State
:L!ltter carriers from the Pomeroy Post Office will hold their
:annual food drive on May 8, collecting non-perishable food
:items along ' their routes for the Meigs County Cooperative
:Parish's food pantry. Pomeroy Mayor John Musser signed a
;proclamation Tuesday decraring an observance of the National
;Association of Letter Carriers Food Drive Day. Thcise on
;Pomeroy mail routes can leave food items at their mailbox for
:pickup, or drop items off at the post office lobby. Here, Mail
•Carriers Jim Pullins, John Henderson ·and Carl Carmichael, and .
•Postmaster Tom Sanders join Musser in his proclamation.
•
!(Brian J. Reed)

~

hope ior all who wear them &lt;1&gt; ./rl

finJ

NuY'Jje·~ 3};)ay

See us for our very specia{
Mother's Vay·or (jraduation
gift ideas...

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•

'

�•

Page AS

N ATION

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 5,

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

2004

Trimble beats Meigs in seventh, Page 82
Heat wins series with New Orleans, Page 83

Rumsfeld said those involved in abuse of
Iraqi prisoners betrayed trust of America

ewsChannel

A DAY ON WALL STREET
May4, 2004

Dow Jones
Industrials

Market watch

•

.
0

FEB

10,317.20
Pet clllngo

from p!Wiou8: +0.03

9.750

'N

9,.250

MAR

APR
MAY
. High
Low
Recolll high: 11 ,722.98
10,39632 10,26617
Jan. 14. 2000

2,200

Nasdaq
composite

~~
- ·· ·~
•;;;;
~
r ~
,.
,j
'·~"'

~-+t:H'If.-""~Pet c:llange

from prevtouo: +0.61

.•

~.

2,000
1,800

'

FEB

MAR

High
1,969.97

Low

1.950.48

1,933.60

APR

MAY

1,200

Standard·&amp; .:r_.~~~tj\.J\ ~
Poor's 500
"~
~- :

.

1,119.55
Pet clllngo

.

1.500

Rec:ord high: 5,048.62
March 10, 2000

May4, 2004

~--

!

10,250

May4, 2004

...,

I

10.750

~-~
f'TV

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'~20

fromp!Wiou8: +0.18

"'

WASHJNG1DN (AP) Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld on Tuesday con. demned the alleJ(ed abuse of lrd!ji
Rrisoners by o.s. soldiers as
'total! y unacceptable and unAmerican" and said the Pentagon
would take all steps necessary to
bring those responsible to justice.
"We're taking and will continue to take whatever steps are necessary to hold accountable those
that may have violated the code
· of military conduct and betrayed
the trust placed in them by the
/&gt;lmerican ·-people,"• Rumsfeld
told a news confereoce.
Rumsfeld called the allegations
of prisoner abuse at Baglidad' s
mam prison "deeply disturbing."
"I have no doubt that we will
take these c~es and allegations
most seriously, ' he said
Rumsfeld disputed critics in
Congress who have said the
Pentagon moved too slowly and
asserted that correct military procedures were followed.
"These things are complicated
they take some till)e," he said of
the investigations. " ['he s7stem
works. The system works.'
Outrage over tile allegation~
spread on Capitol Hill. And the
investi~ation mto the abuse of
Iraqi pnsoners appeared to widen
as lawmakers emerged from a
closed-door briefing with
Pentagon officials and said similar abuses - though "small in
number" - mav also have
occurred at other lmqi facilities
May4, 2004
llild in Alghanistan.
'There were some incidents in
Dow Jones
~20
Afghanistan," said Sen. John
Industrials
Warner, chairman of the Senate
10,317.20
Anned Services Comminee,
after
the panel's closed briefing
+11:71
Nasdaq
with Pentagon officials. "We did
composite
1,950.48
not get the full details but were
left with the impression that they
Standanl &amp;
were relatively isolaled and cer+.2.1111
lllinly small in number."
Poor's 500
1,119.55
He said briefers told the com:
mittee that the sexual humiliation
"'
Russell
'
t\1!,
photographed
in Iraq's Abu
2000
569.64
Ghraib prison - which has
drawn worldwide condemnation
NYSE diary .
- stands out among the other
alleged incidents and ''very little
Advanced: 1.899 New highs
parallels this elsewhere:" And he
added,
'Ths is as serious a probDeclined:
1,380 New~ows ·
lem of breakdown in discipline as
Unchanged:
159
122
I've ever observed."
·
.Volume: 2,045,437,370
Many of the alle!lations of
abuse were contained m an inter· Nasdaq diary
nal Pentagon repOrt completed in
February.
On Tuesday. the
Advanced: 1,867 New highs
Senate's top Democrat, Minoricy
56
Leader Tom Daschle, demanded
Declined:
1,283 New lows
to know why President Bush was
51
Unchanged: 342
not earlier informed of the report
and
why Rumsfeld and Joint
Volume: 1,842.648.579
Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen.
Richan:l Myers have not yet read
AP

.1. 1 ~

1.100

..

'

FEB

MAR

High
1,127.74

1,112.89

Low

1,050
1,000

MAY
llec;ord high: 1,527.46
March 24, 2000

APR

AP

the two-month-old report.
White House spokesman Scon
McClellan said Tuesday .that
Bush first became aware of the
allegations of abuse some time
after the Pentagon began looking
into it but did nor see the picrures
until they were made public and
did not learn of the classified
Pentagon report until news organizations reported its ex.istetice.
Rumsfeld said he hoped that
any damage to the image of the
U.S. military in world opinion
would improve over time, despite
the disclosures. ''I was stunned by
all of it" he said.
·
But, he said '1he world ha&gt;
seen problems of · thi s type
before ...People do things that
they ought not to do and that are
harmful ;md that are disappointing and in many instances m-e disgracefuL"
He said he didn't know
whether the abuse that had been
documented an10unted to torture.
"All of our rules, all of our procedures, all of our tmining. is
ag-ainst the abuse of people that
are detained," he said.
Gen. Peter Pace, vice chairman
of the Joints Chiefs of Staff.
denied any foot dragging on the
part of the Pentagon m pursuing
accusations made in the intem;il .
report.
'1here has been no attempt lo
hide this," Pace said, saying the
February repott was moving up
the chain of command.
•
National security . adviser
Condoleezza Rice said Tuesday
that Bush tias told the llcntagon
he expects prompt action to be
taken against those who committed the abuse.
_'1he president has told the secretary of defense that he expects
people to be held accountable and
that he wm11s, too. to know that
this not a systemic problem."
Rice told the Anti-Defamation
League during its national leader- .
ship conference. "In other words,
qwte apart from the specific cases
of those pmticular photographs.
Americans do not dehumanize
other people."
Members of the Senate comlllittee promised a full investigation of the abuses and said they
were oun-aged that they had not
been informed of the incidents
earlier.
Meanwhile, an anomey for a
military police officer being
investigaled in the abuse probe
said on NBC's "Today" show
that the photographs ot the Iraq
prisoners that have inspired widespread revulsion "were obviously
staged" in order to manipulate ihe
prisoners into coopemting with
mtelligence officials.

'They were part of the psychological manipulation of the prisoners being interrogated." said
Guy Womack, auomey for
Charles A. Gmner. Jr., a G t~ne
Councy. Pa. com.&gt;ctions ollicer
who was activated to tl1e militwy
in March 2003 and ,;erved at Abu
Ghmib.
''It was being controlled and
devised by tlJe military intelligence communicy and other govemmental agencies. including the
CIA,'' -Womack said. The soldiers, he said. were simply "l'ollowing orders." ·
On Capitol Hill. concem over
the abuses spt-ead. Sen. Edwm'd
Kennedy, · D-Mass.. emerged
from the btieting saying he tean.'d
allegations Tjlade pubIic so far arc
"the beginning ruther th&lt;m tl1e
end."
But Sen. John McCai n. RAriz.. told rej~Jrters out,ide tl1e'
hearing he was ""extremely hopeful that ... this wa&lt; not a widespread p&lt;~tem of abuse &lt;md that
the conduct of the oveiWhelmi ng
maJoticy of Americ;ms is honorable ;md decent. ..
McCain. whn spen1 5 1/2 years
a&gt; a prisor1er of w;u· in Vietnam,
said such abw;es would nol be
tolerated or excu.,;ed.
"ll1e mles for the treatmenrof
pris.mers of war ;u-e vety cJe,u·:''
McC un smd. 'There 1s no JUStlltcation for this kinJ of u-eatment."
On March 20. etiminitl charges
wct-e lilcd against six military
police otticcrs. As muny as three
of the six cases lmve been
1-elen-ed to military uial. and others arc in vmious st~gcs of pt-ehmmary heanngs. ofttc1als smd. ·
A seventh soldier, Lynndie
England of F01t Ashby. W.Va.,
has been reassigned to F01t
Bmgg. N.C. whet-e she's being
delained. It 's uncie&lt;rr whetl1er
she' lli,JCe chm-ges.
In addilion to the criminal
ca&lt;;es, seven others - all military
police - have _been given noncriminal punishment - in six of
the ca1es they got letters of reprimand. Some of the seven arc
membe1~ of tl1e Anny Reserve.
according to a defense otlicial
who direct knowledge of tl1e situation.
In other developmet1ts. the lop
U.N. human rights agency has
opened lli1 investi gation inlo civil ·
right&lt; in lmq. and urged the U.S.
military to prosecute soldie rs
alleged to have abused ptisoners.
And, U.S. ollici&lt;u' in Baghdad
ordered a halt to using hoods to
blindfold Iraqi prisoners. a military spokesman said, in tl1e wake
of the uprmrr over abuse of
detainees.

Local Stocks
ACI - 32.35
AEP- 31.06
Akzo- 36.72
Ashland Inc. - 48 . 18
BBT - 34.94
BLI-14.15
BobEvans - 31.11
Borg Warner - 82.96
City Holding - 30.52
Champion - 4 .39
Charming Shops - 7.29
Col - 31.91
DuPont - 43. 51
DG - 18.84
Federal Mogul - .32
Gannett - 86.64
General Electric - 30.43
GKNLY - 4.25
Harley Davidson - 56.52
Kmart - 43.93
Kroger - 17.53
Ltd - 20.74

NSC - 2402
Oak Hill Financial - 31.97
Bank One - 50.40
OVB - 34.41
Peoples - 23 .56
Pepsico - 54.38
Premier - 8.60
Rocky Boots - 21 .39
RD Shell- 49.76
Rockwell - 33.93
Sears - 40.00
SBC - 25 .38
AT&amp;T - 17.09
USB - 26.20
Wendy's- 39.07
Wal -Mart - 56.00
Worthington - 18.35
Dail y stock reports are the 4
p.m. clo sing quotes of the
previou s day's lran,action s,
provided by Smith Partners at
Advest Inc. of Gallipoli s.

•

.' 'You have our full attention.
In the event of~ heart arrack, you ha\'e our full

Unit under the care of nur internal medicine physicians,
critical care nurses, and imaging technologists . Ou r
medical expertise and technology will help give yo u the
special attention your heart deserves."

.
')

PORTSMOUTH
The
IOth Annual Shawnee State
Universoty
Spring
Bear
Run/Wal k 5K road race will be
held 6 p.m., today. beginning
on the SS U campus.
Registration is scheduled for
4:30p.m. The 11111 is free to all
Golden Be;rrs. 'tltdents (from
kindergarten and up) and thei r
families as well as SSU alumnu
~md 1heir families. There is $10
non-student fee and a $12 J~JCe . dity regisu·ation fee.
For more information, call
the SS U Di vision of Student
Afhtirs al (740)35 1-3280.

Eagle basketball
.camp scheduled
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
sixth annual Eastern Eagle
Basketball Camp will take
place June 8- 11 fmm 9 a.m.
until noon for boys and girls
entering grades seven through
mne.
Camp staff includes players
and coaches from both the boys
and girl s 2004 Southeast
District champions. The ·camp
will feature fundamental s
essential 10 produce winning
basketball. Most of the fundamentals are the ones that are
used by players of all levels.
Pre-registratioil is $30, or
$40 the tirst clay of camp.
Included in the cost is a camp
T-shi11, camp basketball and
the possibil ity of winning indi. vidual awards.
Those interested should ~o n­
tact coach Howie Caldwell or
coach Rick Edwards at Eastem ·
High School at 9S5-3329.

poll
55
48
45
31
30
30
28
28
26
17

1, LaGrange Keystone (7)
2, Spring. Kenton Ridge (2)
3, Poland Seminary
4 , Del1ance
Aichmona Edison

88
73
49
46
46

6, Celina

43

7 , Tallmadge
8 , Cuya. Fall s Wa lsh Jesuit
9 , Bellevue (1)
10, New Con co rd John Glenn

42
33
26
12

DIVISION Ill

t Archbold (1)
2, Sycamore Mohawk (2)
3 , Woodsfield MonrOe Central (2}
4, Bloom-Carroll (1)
5, N. Robinson Col. Crawford (2)
6 , Jeromesville Hillsdale (1)
7, Ironton Rock Hill
8, ·Portsmouth West
9, Delta
10, Rockford Parkway
Waynesville
DIVISION IV
1. Convoy Crestview (4)
2. Crestli ne (2)
·J, Strasburg-Franklin (2)
4, Gibsonburg
5. Cov1ngton
6, Maria Stein Marion local
7. Sugar Grove Berne Union
B, Cuyahoga Hts. ( 1)
9 , W1l low Wood Symmes Va lley
1O, S. Charleslon SE

O'BLENESS
Memorial Hospital

55 Hoapitll Drive, AtllCill, OH ~5701 ~2302
(740)593-5 ~5 1 • www.obleness.org

You've Got The Cutest Baby Facel
• Infant, maternity &amp; child fashion show
• Featured presentalions by PVH professionals &amp; me mbers of the medi cal staff
• Info rmational booths &amp; demonstrations of child safety products
• Door prizes, refreshments &amp; much more!

Sponsored by the Pleasant Valley Hospital Obstetric Department• (304) 675-4340, Ext 1230

84
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35
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30
26

17
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46
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20
18

Bruisers to
take on Wayne
County

Baby Fair • Saturday, May 8, 2004.10 a.m. to 2 p.m. • Nazarene Church

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

'.
- - - -- - - ----=----...,---- -------

MIDDLEPORT - The Big
Bend Bruisers footbal l team
will take on the Wayne Councy
Wrath at Middleport Stadium
on Saturday beginning at 5:30
p.m. Admission for the game is
$3.

·-

I

Prep Softball

Meigs wins battle of .division leaders
BY BurcH CooPER
bcooper@ mydailytribune .com
ROCKSPRINGS - When di vision
leaders go at it, it's bound to a good
·game.
Tuesday's Meigsffrimbl e. softball
game
pitted
the
Tri-Valley
Conference Ohio Division leaders
against the Hocking Di vision nrst
place squad.
.
.
Meigs jumped on Trimble early
and held off the Tomcats enough to
wm the battle to the top TVC teams,

7-6.
Jaynee D ~v i s was 2-for-3 with fo ur
RB! s for Meigs \12-7. 11 -4 TVC).
while Melia Whan was al so 2-for-4.
Alicia Andrews was 3-for-3 with two
RB! s for Trimble ( 18-3, 13- 1). while
Carri Woodgerd was 2-for-4 with two
RB! s.
Samantha Cole pitched the firsl six
full innings, allowing eight hits, lwo
walks and fi ve earned runs. while
striking out three. Hooper threw the
complete game for Trimble.
.
With one out in the seventh , Joey
•

·Hani ng came to relieve Cole and
quick ly recorded a strike out. Dav is
then t~e lded a hard li ner to g ive
Haning the save .
In the first inn ing. Cole drove in
Melia Whan wi th a base hit. Later in
ihe first. Cole. Eri ca Poole and Re nee
Bai ley scored on a double by Davis
to make it a 4- 1 Meigs lead.
The Marauders added a run in the
fo urth when Megan Garnes .scored on
a sac grounder by Samm y Pierce .
Trimbl e, though; scored· fou r ru ns
in the top of the fifth 10 put ' lhe

To meal&gt; up 6-5 .
Tha1\ when . in 1he Meigs· hal f of
. the- llflh. a double by CaS&gt;i Whan
scored Poole to tie the game and
Whan scC'red on a hase hi t by D av is
lo aga1n pul the Marauder; 111 ihe
lead . ·
·
Meigs _ tra\'eb to Vimo n Coumy
today w11h the Oh to Dt v1 s1on champ1onsh1 p on the Ime .
. Meigs 7, Trimble 6
Tr&lt; mble
1o1
o4 o o - 6 a 2
Me•gs
•oo
1 20
' -772
Hooper and Andrews Cole. Hanmg (7) ana Garnes
WP ~ Cole. LP - Hooper. Sv - Hamng.

Prep
Baseball

Shawnee
State SK Bear
Run today

DIVISION II

doys with.you!

'~

MARIETI'A - The 2004
Camp of Champs. which is
held by the Manetta College
baseball program, will take
. pl ace .over, the course of the
··
summer.
The day ca mps for grad es
2-8 will be held June 22-24,
Jul y 6-S and Jul y 20-22.
Meanwhile , the
residence/co mmu te r camp for
grade' 6-to-graduate will be
held lLt ly 25 -29 . ·
For more informal ion , conBrewer a-t
lac l Bri an
(740 )376-45 17 or go to the
Mari etta College website at
www.marielta.edu .

Marysville (1)
9 , Elyria (1)
10, W. Cheste r·Lakota West

Inr.e nsive Carc:/Coronary Care U n it Committee

Sunday Times-Sentinel
740-992-2155

• I

Ohio high school girls softball
DIVISION I
1, Youngs. Boardman (2)
2. Tot. St. Ursula (3)
3, Hilliard Davidson
4 , Gahanna Li ncoln
5, Sylvania Southview
Greenville
7, Medina

admitted to the O'Bleness Intensive Care/Cornnary Care

James Sa mmons, D.O., Chair

'-'Celebrating special

Marietta College
baseball camp
scheduled

Prep Softball

attention. Following emergency procedures, ynu may be

'

Wednesday, May 5, 2004

Eastern
girls
pound
Miller

Eagles
crush
Falcons
BY ScoTT WOLFE
Sports correspondent

BY Scon WoLFE
Sports correspondent

HEMLOCK
Pounding out 17 hit s, the
Easlern Eagles defeated
the Miller Falcons 2 1- 1
Tuesday night in boys
varsity
Tri -Valley
Conference
Baseball
ac1ion.
Eastern lifts its overall
mark above .500 at I0-9
and is now 6· 7 in the
league .
Eastern went ahead 5-0
in the first when Chris
Myers walked , Ryan
Smi th s ingled ,
Ken
Amsbary had a sac rifice,
Terry Durst doubl·ed
home a run , Corey
Shaffer walked, · Matt
Morri s singled,
and
Jonathan Owen walked,
Young had a sacrifice fly,
an·d and Du stin Riggs
singled, 1he score 5-0.
Eastern added· fiv e
more in the fourth
inning . and eleven in the
fifth inning.
Eastern hitter s were
Ken Amsbary who was
4- for-4 with four doubles, Durst 3- for-4 with
two doubles, and Ri ggs
three singles.
Ryan Smith had two
si ngles, Morri s lwo singles; Myers a sing le,
Steve Seme lserger. and
·Young each singles.
Luning, C. Luning , and
Gutri e each had singles
for Miller. .
Eastern' s
wmnmg
pitcher was Jonathan
Ow en who fann ed fi ve
and
walked
non e.
Bolyard suffered the loss
wi th re li ef fro m Wil son.
Easte rn ho st Trimbl e
Wednesday.
Trimble
defeat ed
Meigs, 6-5 Tuesday.

HEMLOCK - As if scripted b)' an award wi rmi no&lt;- novelist, the dra ma in the 1004
Eastern Lady Eagle sofl ball
season approac hed a hu ~e climax Tuesday· ni ght ·when
Eastern de feated Miller 15-0.
That wi n coup led with
Trim ble's loss al Meigs gives
Eastern a shot to contro l its
ow n destin y. Eastern hosts
Trimble Wednesday fo r all
the league laurels.
Eastern i.&lt; now I I-2 in the
Hocking Di,·ision and 13-5
overalL while Trimble is 121. 17-3 . Trim ble wo n the first
meetin g betwee n lhe twri
clubs in the fiN wee k of the
season . 2- 1. on March .1 1.
Meanwhile. Miller fall s 10 310 in the league. and -l- 11
overall .
Playing wi th several diflerem line-ups 1h is season.
Eastern and Coac h Pam
Douthitt ha ve over,·ome
many obstacles and yel pe'rseve red in a great effort.
Tu e~da y Ea~t e~·n \ . se nio rs
returned from their senior
trip. but the Ullllercl assmen
kep1 1hc ship we ll -allout in
their sen ior counterpart 's
absence.
Eastern wem up 2-0 in the
first inn ing, when wilh 1wo
nuL Krista- Whi tc reachcJ on
a wal k. and scored on a mi splayed bal l that allowed Sara
Barringer . to reach safely.
Barri i1ger then scored On ;J
dou ble by Ka" Lod wick .
Kalie Robert son · got 1he

Eastern 21, Miller 1
Eastern 500 5(11 ) - 2 11 70

Miller,

0 0 1 .QO

-

134

WP-Owen and Durst. LP- Bolyard and
Luning.

CincinRati Reds center fie lder Wily Mo Pena catches a fl y ball hi t by Milwaukee Brewers'
Gary Bennett to end the third in ni ng Tuesday in Cincinnat i. (AP

Brewers·slam Reds
BY JOE KAY
Associated Press
CINCINNATI ('1'\ P) - A fastball. and a
lou!. Another fas tball. another foul. With the
bases loaded and the count full , Lyle
Overbay settled into a rhythm of desperation.
Four times, Jimmy Hay nes threw him a
sinking fastball . All four limes. Overbay
foul ed it off. Finally, he straightened one
out.
On the II th pitch of hi s pi vota l at-bat

Tuesday night. Overbay hil his fi rsl career
grand slam. sending the Milwaukee Brewers
to a 6-2 victorv over the Ci ncinnal i Reds.
It was the kind of at-bat that slicks in
eve ryone's minds.
"Great at-bat." Brewers manage r Ned
Yost sa id. "He was just battling and kepl
foul ing otT pilches until he got one to hil."
11 eventuall y came.
Haynes (0-3) wasn' t about to walk
Overbay wi th . the bases loaded and the
Brewers already up by two ru ns in the thi rd

P!ease see Reds, Bl

Southern shuts out Federal Hocking
BY ScoTT WOLFE
· Sports correspondent
STEWART - In one of its best defensive efforts of the evenin~, tlie Southern
Lady Tomadoes won thetr second game
in a row by defeating Federal Hocking 70 Tuesday ni ght in girl s Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division soliball
action.
Southern is now 5-9 overall, 4-8 in the
league. Federal Hocking is 2- 1O, 2-9.
Southern ·went up 2-0 in the third
inning when Deana Pullins walked,
Brooke Kiser singled and Katie Sayre
had a two-run double. Southern added
single runs in the fourth and ftfth innings.
In the sixth mning Jordan Neigler
reached on an error, Deana Pullins singled, and pinch runner Allie Rees scored ·
on a 6-3 ground out. Pullins then rode

home on an RBI single by Sayre. the
score 6-0.
So uth~m added a single 111n in the 'eventh inning.
Throughou1 the game Southern made
some great defensive plays. One such
play came in the fourth inning when
Emil y Hill ran down a Fonider single in
deep center and relayed it to Pullins, who
fired on to Roush at third 10 nail Russell,
who was trying to advance. With the
bases loaded in ihe tifth inninl!, Pullins
snagged a hard shot deep in the hole at
shortstop and came up firin g to third to
get a big force out to end lhe inning.
To end the game, catcher Katie Sayre
played a carom off the backstop to tlrc to
Roush at thi rd in catching Dedden' coming into the base for the last oul of lhe
game.
Southern 's Kiser continues to get

f - - - - - - - - - -- - - - -- . . ~ ---- - - ---- - - -

'
stronger. stri king out four to po' t the win.
Kiser walked just one and scattered live
hits. TetTi Wolfe , utTered the los; with
1wo strikeouts. two walks. and elc\'en
h i t~.

Southern hi uing wa&gt; Jed hy senior
calcher Kat ie Suvre. who was 3-for--l
wi th a triple (llld three RB I's. :-Jicki
Tucker with 1hree s in ~ lc s. Deana Pullins
1wo singles.. Ashle y R~Ju sh a double, and
single' by · Brooke Kiser. and Jordan
Neiglcr.
Federal Hocking hillers were led by
Russell wilh a double and s in~ le . and singles hy Teni Wolfe. Forridcr. &lt;md
Am~Ulda Slover.

Soulhern hmh Federa l
Wedne,day in Racine.

Hockin e"

Southern 7, Federal Hocking 0
Southern
002
112
1 - 7 11 3
Federal HOC k1ng
000
000
0 ~ 05 3
WP- K 1 ~e r and Sayre LP -Wolle and Stover

startin g nod nn the mound for

Eastertl and sat \1 iller dnw n
1-2-.1 in each of the first two
inni ngs .
Robert st)n hi1
- Mall ory Allier 1he first
inning. blil Kass Lodwick
nai led her out at seconJ on
the steal attempt. Jenna
Mmphy wa I ked in the ' ccond
bu l Lodwick al so 10ssed her
ou t and th ai st illed any fun her
Mi ller &gt;tcu l utlempts .
Easlern plated l~n run.s in
the thi rd inning nn fi n~ h i r ~.
then pu lled oil the live-inning
mer''" rul e \\·ith llnc in the
founh and tii'O in the filth . 1he
score 15-0.
Rohcn , on fanned sn e11
Miller hallers. w a l ~ed l\\(1
and ~il t\\'ll in 11Ur l in ~ a 1\\ohi ner. All ie r sufl'ered' 1hc loss
in fa nnin~ three and walkin ~
three.

'"

._

Eas tern
hitl ers
were
Lodwick a doub le and s i n ~ lc .
Brinany Bisse ll 1wo ' ingles.
Kavla SiJcr' a dou ble. Jennv
Ani1e ~ a J ouhle. am.! '~in ~ lc·s

by Case\' Sm llh. K1~i s ta
While. , Barr inge r.
and
Morg.an \\\: her.

Miller hillers we re Al tier
and Emile Bra~ with a single
and double rcspecti,ely.
Eastern hosl.' Trimble
Wcdnesda) .
Eastern 15, Miller 0
Ea stern
2 0(10)
1 2 - 15 10 0
M1ller
000
00 - 028
WP, Aobc flson and Lodwick LP-AI IIer Jnd
Br ay

�.
· . Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Mays,
Wednesday, May 5,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Rams agree to four-year.
contract with Bulger

Prep Baseball

Trimble defeats Meigs in seventh
BY BUTCH COOPER

bcooper @mydailytribune.com
ROCKSPRINGS- Meigs rallied to
tie Trimble. the No. 10 team in the
recent Division IV coaches' poll. in the
sixth inning, but the Tomcats still pre·
vailed in the end.
Trimble scored a run with two outs
in the top of the seventh· as the Tomcats
escaped with &lt;I 6-5 victory Tuesday.
· Matt Christman. Trimble's starting
pitcher who wa., relieved in the sixth.
helped Anthony Dixon pick up the
Win.

Bruce Fouts, the Tomcats' No. 3 hitter. recorded his first hit of the day
wi th a ·buse hit to ri~htfield with one
out. He then advam:ed to second on a
sacrifice grounder to third b) Scott
Brown and then to third on a. passed
ball as Chr'istma11 stepped up to the
plate.

With two outs. Christman naikd a by Dixon. which seemed to be that the
li ner to left field to score Fm1h and put Marauders ordered.
the Tomcats on top by one.
Eric Burn:11n connected on a hard
Matt Holley singled for the shot to centerfield for a sac fly. scoring
Marauders witli two out in the bottom Davis . Qave Bnyd wa' then hit by a
half of the &gt;event h. hut that was the pitc:h· phtcing runners llll the corne·rs.
only hasc runner Meig' c:nuld produce.
Jeremy Blm'kston singled in Holley
Eric Cullums was 2-for-4 with a and Boyd came home on a base hit by
double and three RBls for thlh. Cullums to make to a 5-all gan)e.·
Marauders 1I.J-5 . 11-.J Tri- Valley
Doug Dill. the st:!rting pitcher for
Conference). while Cluistman was 2- ~c1gs. struck out s1x. allowmg five
for-3 and Ryan Nagucki was 2-for-.J h1ts. two walks and l~mr earne_d runs.
for the Tomcats 115-.J. 10-2).
Blackston hurled the llnal two mnmgs
Meigs w"a , down by three going into tor the Marauders.
the sixth i·1.1 n[ng. :i-2. when the
Christman 'truck out four, allowing
Marauders rallied.
·
·
·
three hits. four w&gt;~lb and three earned
Curtis Varian led off the inninri 1vith runs.
.
a walk and was replac·ed by pitd1 runMeigs travels to Vinton Couhty
ncr Chuck Davis. Holley then made it today.
tn first on a error al ~hurt. putting. run Trimble 6, Meigs 5
Tnmble
030
110
1-692 ners on fiN and second.
Meigs
0 02
003
o - 573
The runners advanced · on a wi ld Ctuistman. AOixon (6) and Noll . Dill , Blackston (6) and
pitch before Christman was relieved Holley. WP - AD1xori-. LP - Blackston

Southern falls to Federal Hocking
BY SCOTT WOLFE

Sports correspondent
STEWART- Playing ;mother good
game. the Southern Tornadoes gave
defending league champion Federal
Hocking a run for the money. only to
fall short at :l-11 Tuesday night during
boys var,ity Tri -Vallev Conference
ha,ehall action .
Southern fa ll s to .1- 1-l. I- ll while
Federal weighs in at 11·6. ~-3.
Right from the · start. an old-fashioned pitching duel developed between
Southern junior Cole Brown and

Federal \ Brad Grimm. Brown ended
the night with eight strikeouts, and
walked just two. Grimm struck out six
and. walked none.
Scoreless through the first three und
nne half innings, the game's fate was
sealed when Federal Hocking nothced
three runs in the 'fourth inning :
Nick Sprin ger walked. Aaron Rupe
was hit with a pitch, then after a strikeouts and error and two-run double by
Tyler Ch:Jdwell pushed the score to 30.
Southern had the bases loaded in the
third with ·one out. but failed to score

as a double play ended the threat and
the rally.
Jeremy Yeauger led the Tornadoes
with a double mid single, Chris Tucker
had two singles. Cole Brown a single.
and R.J. Harmon a single .
Federal Hocking was led by Joel
Gandee. Tyler Chadwell, and Zach
Little.
Southern hosts Federal Hocking at
Star Mill Park Wednesday.
Federal Hocking 3, Southern 0
Southern
000
000
0 - 063
Federal Hocking 000
300
x - 3 31
WP-Grimm and Poston. LP-Brown and Yeauger.

:Rio Grande hoops hold banquet
STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune.com
. ' RIO GRANDE The 2003-04
University of·Rio Grande Redmen bas'ketball team put the official cap on the
. :season with their annual post-season
banyuet on Sunday,
·
The program forma ll y said good-bye
to its lone senior, guard Seth 'Deerfield .
The Huntington. W.Va. native was
named the 2003-04 team Most Valuable
Player. Deerfield averaged 8.7 points
and 4.5 rebounds in helping the

Redmen to a 20- 11 season. He shot 36
( 103-284) percent from the field , 23
'percent ( 18- 79) from three -point land
and 62 percent (46-74) from the free
throw line . Deerfield dished OL!l 49
assists and swiped 28 steals.
Deerfield was 2nd Team All·
American Mideast Conference South
Division.
Juniors Matt Simpson (Guysville) and
Sean Plummer (Portmore, Jamaica)
were also recogni zed for being named
second team AII-AMC South Division.
Simpson and junior guard Cain
Vandall (Humington, W.Va.) were rec-

ognized for their accomplishments in
the classroom "' NAJA All-American
Scholar Athletes.
Simpson also cm.ne away with the RG
Sports Player of the Year award.
Simpson averaged I 0.1 points and 4.6
rebounds per game,. He shot 48 percent
(113-234) from the field, 40 percent
(22-55) froll'l beyond the three-point arc
and X4 (64-76) percent from the charity
stripe . Simpson dished out 39 assists
recorded 27 steals and led the squad
with 17 blocked shots .
Rio advanced to the semifi nals of the
AMC Tournament.

_OSU tight end held on probation vio.lation
: COLUMBUS (API - Suspended
·Ohio St&lt;Jte tight e.nd Louis Iri zarry
:remained in jai l on Tuesday after a
~udge ruled he violated his probation by
;being arres ted on a robbery charge.
: Irizarry, a 19-year-old sophomore
from Youngstown. appeared before
:Franklin County Municip&lt;~l Court
:fudge James Green on Tuesday.
· Buckeyes coach Jim Tressel suspend:ed Irizarry from the team on Saturday,
:hours after Iri zarry .and teammate Ira
,Guilford were· arrested and charged
:With felony robbery by campu s police.
: Irizarry was put on probation after he
-was found guilty of assault, ne gli gent
:ass;wlt and disorderly conduct for his
'.involvement in a fight in a campus dor-

mitory last October. He also spent three
days in jail.
.
Green ordered the 6-foot-5, 235pound player held without bond. He
and Guilfo.rd , an Ohio State tailback
who was also suspended after his
arrest, have a preliminary court date
Mav II.
Guilford was released Monday
evening after paying a $25.000 bond .
Kenneth
Whitwell,
20.
of
Brecksville . reported that he was
'assaulted on campus Saturday at 3
a.m .. according to police records .
Whitwell said he w&lt;ts attacked by two
men who stole his wallet and drove
away.
Iri zarry and Guilford were stopped in
'

.

~Tennis

~Roddick

loses .in _first
:round of Italian Open
ROME (AP)
Andy didn't directly point to the tire
Roddick's visit to Rome was a · as a distraction.
:rough one. starting with a fire in
On cout1. Roddick said. ".l
·his hotel and ending with a tir&gt;t- was rushing things. I definitely
,round upset in the Italian Open. don't think I put forth my best
: · ''It's tough to put it nut of eft&lt;1rt today, so it's a little disap·
you r mind . You know it\ goi ng pointing."
.to creep in.'' Roddick ., aid after
In contrast. top-ranked Roger
,losing to Guillermo Canas in Federer, playing his tirst clay~~lraight sets Tuesday.
court toumament of the year,
: The U.S. Open champion kept tocuscd and· eliminated
:was beaten 7-617),6-1. wasting Jonas Bjorkman 7-6 (.J). 6-3.
:rhree set points in the tiebreak- Federer 'was a finalist in Rome
:er. then putting up little resis- last year and has since won
:lance in the second set.,Not the Wimbledon and the Australian
:kind of perforn1ance Roddick Open.
:hoped for in his preparation for
Also advancing were last
'the French Open. the only year''
Itali an champiun.
:Grand Slam tournament played unsccued Felix Mantilla. No. S
!on clay.
Nicolas Massu, No. 12 Jiri
; Three tourists died in a dawn Novak. and No. 14 Martin
:fire Saturday in the live-star Verkerk.
:·hotel where Roddick and severRoddick was erratic. commitat other players and tennis ofli- ting J~ unforced errors to only
:.:ials were staying. They were II fo1 Cana,. who won the liN
:evacuated and moved to anoth- "'' when Roddick netted a 'hot
::er hotel.
at hi' feet.
~ "I wasn 't cont-entrating lor
Can&lt;b pulled away in the 'ec:&lt;Jne rea,on or another." the ond . 'ct. hrea~ing Roddick\
American 'aid. althou gh he 'cne three time''·

r

I

a car soon after; not far from where ·
Whitwell was robbed.
Ohio State athletic director Andy
Geiger said Monday he was particularly upset by the trouble Irizarry had gotten into after pledging to reporters this
spring that he had matured and learned
from his mistakes.
· ''Louis Irizarry had made hi s big
speech to the media about how he had
all this kind of stuff behind ' him,''
Geiger said.
Geiger said he and Tressel were both
upset .by the arres.ts.
·
"The coach deplores it. I deplore it,''
Geiger said. "And these gL1ys are gone.
They're done."

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

2004

2004

• Bv JIM SUHR
Associated Press
ST. LOUIS _ Marc Bulger
on Tuesday agreed to a fouryear contract with the St .
Louis Rams _ a deal that
could affect whether two-time
NFL MVP Kurt Warner will
be releaseJJ next month.
Cleveland Indians pitcher.Jason Davis pitches to Boston Red Sox
Brian Daubach in the second inning Tuesday in Cleveland . ·(AP)

1ndianswin
fourth straight
throw.
With one out and two on.
and the left-handed hitting
Damon coming up. the Indians
CLEVELAND •.- Manny needed to buy some time to
Ramirez's linal strut was back · get lefty Scott Stewart ready in
to Boston 's dugout.
h b 11
· Ramirez hit a 459-foot 1 eManuger
u J?en, Eric Wedge sighomer in the sixth innin~ but naled for catcher Victor
struck out,with the tying run Martinez to have Tadano
on in the ninth Tuesday night throw over 10 first, but
as the Red Sox lost their tifth . Martinez missed the sign and
&gt;traight, 7-6 to the Cle veland Damon drove the reli ever's
Indi ans.
r t ·, h
tl
II .
Boston. which had started Irs PI c ·over le wa 111
right.
the se;1son 15-6. hadn't been
"There was a miscommuni0-5 in May since 1976.
· .. wed ge sa1'd . .. we had
calion.
"Last week at this time. peo- a young catcher and a
. pie were talking about how Japanese pitcher and tile
awesome we were," Red Sox worst-•·ase scenario happened
ma.na -ge r 1'~1Ty Francona said. there. That can't happen
Rafael etancourt fanned a~ain."
Ramirez for the final out to ' soitt Stewa 11 came on and
earn his second save in two got 1he second out before
days as the Indians held on for Betancourt. the Indians· curtheir fourth win in a row. high- rent closer. stn1ck out Ramirez
lighted by Jason Davis ( 1-2) fur his second save- and secand Ramirez jawing at each ond in two nights.
olher.
··At least
gave i't a run,''
After Ramirez connected for Francona said.
his six1h homer - a drive that
Third
baseman
Bill
landed five rows from the top Mueller's two throwing en·ors
of the left-field bleachers - to allowed the Indians
score
make it 7-2, he and Boston's five unearned runs in the
bench ye lled at Davis, who fourth off Derek Lowe 13-2).
was apparently upset with who gave up just two earned
Ramirez for posing to watch runs but a season-high I0 hits
the ball's tli ght.
in five-plus innings .
"He·'s earned the right to do
Mueller took full blame for
that," Boston center fielder · the miscues and Boston's loss.
Johnny Damon said. "It was··rm stating the obvious
n'tlike it just cleared the wall. when 1 say I lost the game."
The ball was crushed. He has Mueller ·sa id . "Derek was
354 career hom·e runs. he can doing great and 1 niade two
pimp. I hope to see Manny bad throws.''
pimp a lot more this season."
ManineL drove in two runs
Ramirez wasn't available and Matt Lawton had three
for comment.
hits as the Indi ans won their
Davis was. but the right- fifth straight at home. and
bander chose his words care- sixth of seven overall. .
fuliy when discussing his onCleveland opened a 7-1 lead
field . conversation
with in the fourth. set up by
Ramirez.
Mpeller\ bad throws.
''I'd rather not talk about it.''
Mueller twice threw wildly
said Davis, who walked down trying to get the lead runner on
off the mound to challenge force plays at second base and
Ramirez~ " I don't worry about the Indians capitali zed on his
stuff like that."
generosity as Casey Blake,
It was just Davis ' second Jody Gerut and · Martinez
win in his last 17 starts. but he delivered run-scoring hits.
had to surv ive yet another
Lowe didn't fault anyone
hair-raising
ninth
hy but him,elf.
Cleveland's ' shaky bullpen to
"It's my job to make pitches.
get it.
so the imiing doe sn't continThe Red Sox played poorly ue," Lowe .,aid.
until rallying for four runs in
The lnuians never gave
the ninth otT Japanese rookie Lowe a chance to settle in durKazuhito Tadano, who gave ing the lirst inning as . they
up a three-run homer to scored two quick runs against
Johnny Damon on a pitch he the ri ght-hander. who needed
wasn't even supposed to 28 pi1ches to get three outs.
ToM WITHERS
Associated Press

BY

we

to

The Rams did not disclose
terms of the deal with Bulger.
· who . coach Mike Martz has
said would enter the pre season as the team's starling
quarterback.
In a statement announcing
Bulger 's new contract. the
Rams made no mention of
Warner's status.
LaSt' week, Martz said "at
this point, our focus (is) to get
someth1_ng done with Marc
and we II ~~ke the next step
from there.
In Tue s ~_ay 's . stateme_nt
Martz sa1d:. Th1s 1s good lor
Marc,. but is ?}so gootl for the
orgamzatlon.

Messages left with Martz
and a Rams spokesman were
not immediately returned.
Bulger, 27, has been a big
success in I 1/2 seasons as a
starter with the Rams . He won
his first six starts in 2002 and .
led the team to a 12-4 record
and an NFC West championship last year. then was the
MVP in the Pro Bowl after
throwing a record four touchdowns .
In 15 starts last season ,
Bulger threw for an· NFC-best
3,845 yards on 336-of-532
passing, with 22 touchdowns
and 22 interceptions for an
81.4 pa sser rating. Bulger,
taken in the sixth round out of
West Virginia. a lso gained 75
yards on 29 carries in 2003,
with hi s four touchdown runs
the most the most by a Rams·
..lJ.Uarterback since Pat Haden
nad four in 1976.
While suggesting there 's
still a chance Warner could
stay with the team next season, Martz 'said last month

that discussions on a longterm deal with Bulger could
impact what happened, with
reaching a deal increasing the
likelihood of Warner leaving
the team.
Warner's agent, Mark
Bartel stein, has said his client
ex peeled to be released after
June I and added he expected
a lot of interest around the
NFL in him.
Warner was the NFL MVP
in 1999 and 200 I, leading the
te;:~m to the Super Bowl each
year. But he had jusi three
touchdown passes and II
interceptions in an injuryplagued 2002 and lost his job
after fumbling six times while
su staini ng a concussion in the
opener last year.
The Rams quarterback
corps already includes 38year-old
veteran
.Chris
Chandler as a backup. In the
NFL draft last month, the
Rams chose Jeff Smoker of
Michigan State in the sixth
I
round.

Money

NASCAR Nextel Cup Money Leaders
Through May 2
1 Dale Earnhardt, Jr $2,967 .552
2 Tony Stewart $2,313,747
3 Jeff Gordon $1 .975,172
4 Matt Kenseth $1.891 .939
5 Kevin Harvick $1 ,754,234
6 Elliott Sadter $1,733,274
?.Kasey Kahne $1,599,747
8 Jirilmie Johnson $1,589.534
9 Scott Wimmer $1 ,5 12 ,893
10 Bobby Labonte $1 ,470 ,662
1 1 Ryan Newman $1.432,409
12 Dale Jarrett $1,416.877
13 Rusty Wallace S1 ,401 ,659
14 Sterling Marlin $1 ,22 1 ,974
15 Robby Gordon $1 ,207, 938
16 'Jeff Bu rton $1,176,962
17 Kurt Busch $1 ,168 ,937
1 B Michaet Wattrip $1,166.602
19 Terry Labonte $1,154 ,027

20Joe Nemechek$1 ,147.412

NASCAR Nextel Cup Laps Led Leaders

Through May 2

(number of races led in parentheses)
, Through May 2

1, Dale Earnhardt, Jr. 1,453. 2. Jimmie Johnson. 1,428. 3. Jeff
Gordon. 1,426. 4, Mall Kenseth , 1,357. 5, Kurt Busch , 1.316.
6, Kevin Harvick, 1,316. 7, Ryan Newman. 1,299. 8, Tony
Stewart, 1,2ey4. 9, Bobby Labonte, 1.265. 10, Elliott Sadler.

1,250.

f

NASCAR NEXTEL Cup Leaders
Points

.

11, Kasey Kahne 1 t ,209. 12, Jamie McMurray, 1.200 . 13 , Mark
Martin, 1,135 . 14 , Rusty .Wallace, 1.132 . ·15 , Sterling Marlin.

1.1 12. 16, Jeremy Mayfield, 1,106. 17, Casey Mears, 1,093 .
18, Dale Jarrett , 1,066 . 19, Robby Gordon , 1,033. 20, Joe
Nemechek, 1,014 .

Reds ·
from Page 81
inning. He noticed that
Overbay was having trouble
with hi s sinking fastball, and
kept throwing it.
"It was 3-2 with the bases
loaded, and he knew I was
coming
with fastballs,"
Haynes said. "I probably
could ' ve walked him and
given up just the one run, but
he wasn' t getting around on
the fastballs .
"Then I got one up, and he
got around on it."
Actually, Overbay was
expecting something other
than a fastball on Haynes'
lith pitch. He guessed wrong,
but still hit it over the 404-foot
marker in center.
" I was thinking he was
going to throw a changeup or
something inside,'' Overbay
said. "He was making great
pitches, and he just stuck with
Jt.,
As an extra thrill, the first
baseman got a compliment
from Barry Larkin after the
Reds shortstop reached first
on a single in the bottom of
the inning.
.
"He was like, ' Great atbat,"' Overbay said. "He said
it's an art, fouling them off. I
said, 'I don 't know where that
came from ."'
Right-hander Victor Santos
(1-0) allowed only one hit in
five innings to get his first victory since July 18, 200 I, when
he beat the Yankees while
with Detroit.
A Reds lineup missing Ken
Griffey Jr., held out because
of a tight hamstring, managed
only two hits off Santos and
Matt Kinney unt1l the mnth.
when Sean Casey had an RBI
single and Brandon Larson
doubled home a run.
Milwaukee ended a three&lt;
game losing streak by ~ating
a team it has bedeviled tor the

1. Dale Earnhardt Jr. 437 (7)
Gordon 408 (7)
2.

Jell

3. Matt Kenseth 395 (4)

past week. The Brewers came Javier Valentin let in the first
· a strange way to start a
from behind twice for victo· runries i.n ~4ilwaukee last week, big inning . Keith Ginter sinincluding a I0-9 win that gled home another run. and
could end up defining the Overbay followed with the
Brewers' tirst slam of the seaReds· &gt;eason .
Cincinnati blew a 9-0 lead son .
Overbay has been on a tear.
in that game, its biggest collapse in 74 years. The Reds goi ng 10-for-2 1 while hitting
haven' t recovered. losing six safely in hi s last five games.
Santos got a long-awaited
of their last seven games.
This .one didn't have~. much win by lasting five innings in
drama after the Brewers sent .a steady rain. He walked three
II batters to the plate for six and struck out six before leavruns in the third off Haynes, ing for a pinch-hitter, having
who has a 9.60 earned run thrown 77 pitches.
He ·was promoted from
average and might lose his
Triple-A on April 25, when
spot in the rotation.
"We have a staff meeting rookie starter Chris Saenz was
tomorrow." Reds manager sent back down. Santos has
Dave Miley said. ''I'm sure pitched ~for Detroit, Colorado
that will be one of the topics, and Texas.
He hadn't started a game
and we'll probably come to a
since
last June 17 and had lost
decision at that time ." ·
Catcher's interference on his last six decisions overall .

May 2004 Events

Friday. May 14
"April Love
In Concert"
Point Pleasant
Riverfront Park
Starting at 6:00p.m.

Flyers defeat Leafs to advance
to Eastern Conference finals
TORONTO lAP) - Jeremy Roenick
scored his second goal of the game 7:39
into overtime. giving the Flyers a 3-2 victory Tuesuay night over the Toronto Maple
Leafs and .sending Philadelphia into the
Eastern Conference finals.
Roe nick's first goal was hi s 50th in the
playoffs.
Radovan Somik also scored and Robert
Esche stopped 34 shots , allow ing the
Flyers to eliminate the Maple Leafs in six
games. That set up a matchup with the' topseeded Tampa Bay Lightn in g that begins
Saturday.
·
Philadelphia is in the conference finals
for the 14th time, tying Montreal for most
appearance s since expa nsion.
Mats Sundin had a goal and assist, and
Karel Pi tar scored for Toronto. which was
eliminated by Philadelphia for the second
straight year.
The Flyers jumped out to a 2-0 le ad, but
allowed Toronto to tie it in the final II

Sharks 3, Avalanche 1
DENVER (AP) - Evgeni Nabokov
stopped 28 shots. and Sa~n Jose scored
three goals in the second period to eliminate Colorado and reach the We stern
Conference finals fur the first time in its
13-year history.
Vincent Damphousse, Marcel Goc and
Jonathan Cheechoo had goals to help San
Jose avoid becoming the third team to lose
a best-of-seven series after winning the
first three games.
The Sharks will face .the Calgary Flames
for the right to . represent the West in the
Stanley Cup finals .
The Avalanche won Games 4 and 5 in
overtime to put pressure on the Sharks, but
Colorado was sl ugg ish early and cou ldn 't
beat Nabokov again after Mil an Hejduk
scored late in the second period.

E-mail us your local sports news:

Thursday. May 20
All County Band
Concert
Point Pleasant
Riverfront Park
Starting at 7:00p.m.

Sunday. May 23

P.P.H.S. Band ·
Concert
Point Pleasant
Riverfront Park

3:00p.m.

For further
information, call

T~e d{;j;.ifq ~enfine(~

.Af€-~fa-ro~

New Insertion
Date is
May 27,2004

School will soon be out, but IT'S NOT TOO LATE to
salute your athlete fr&lt;;&gt;m this post school year!
If your child is a \ I 1 1
"Star Athlete" .2". on\h ~/
in your eyes, ..;_ S\ Q.
include them in~~ ...,
this section!!
'' ·

Oi

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

*Golf
* GymnastiCs
Child's Name
* TQmbling
Child of: Par~nt's Name
Team Name
*Soccer
Message .
*Karate
&amp;More!!
This special section will run on
Thursday, May 27th in TheDaily Sentinel.
Hurry, Deadline for entries is May 20, 2004!

Fill 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
·
Make Checks out to: The Dally s'eittinel
-------Child's Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Parent's Name ___________________
Town ______________________
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"Come experience historic
Mason

PhoneNumbe~ --r---------------

Message (up to 10 words): _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ __
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I

minutes of regulation .

.sports@mydailytribune.com

4, To.n y Stewart 302 {6)
5. Kasey Kahne 293 (5)
6. Jimmie Johnson 264 {7)
7. Kurt Busch 20 1 (4)
B. Rusty Wallt;\Ce 147 {3)
9, Ryan Newman 138 (7)
10. Jamie McMurray 120 (3)

Frldav. May 7
Delta Queen
Point Pleasant
Ri verfroot Park
8:00 a.m. - I :00 p.m.

MIAMI lAP)- With the Heat running Hornet&gt; reduced a 16-point deficit to live.
from the start and New Orleans guard
Baron Davi s ·hobbled by halftime, Miami Kings 104, Timberwolves 98
extended its home winning streak to 16
games by beating the Hornets 85-77
MINNEAPOLIS (APJ _ Mike Bibby
Tuesday night to clinch . the first-round · had another big postsea so n performance
series, 4-3.
with 33 point&gt;. Ke vin Garnett wa' not up
The home team won every game. and the to his MVP standard, and the Sacrament0
Heat became the final NBA team to reach Kings _started the second round with an .
round two - and the most improbable . impressive win .
.
Sam Cassell sco red 40 points for the
They were 25-57 la st season, 0-7 in
November, 5-'1~ in December and 25-36 in Timberwolve s. who have never been thi s
Marco betore staging a late- season surge.
far in the playoffs. But Garnett. who held
.Miami advanced to the Eastern •up his MVP trophy in a pregame ceremony
Conference semifinals against the top- after remarks by commissioner David
seeded Indiana Pacers. who have been idle Stern, · had a quiet 16 points and 18
since comp leting a sweep of Boston on rebounds - plu s six turnove" .
April 25.
Garnett went 1-for-8 in the ,econd half.
Latrell Sprewellmi ssed all ,ix of hi&gt; shot$
Game I is .Thursday in Indianapoli s.
Smothering defense and a potent transi- after .halftime and Minne sota totaled 18
tion . game gave a crowd of 20,286 - the turnovers.
largest in Heat history - plenty to cheer
Bibby. who averaged 23.6 point ; in a
about.
five-game victory over Dallas in :he first
Caron Butler led the winner-take-all vic- round. was I 0-for-21 from the field .
tory with 23 points . and Rafer Alston made
The fourth period featured &gt;ix tie s. the
four free throws in the final 2:09 after the last at 83-all with 5:23 remaining.

I

1, Dale Ea rnhardt , Jr, $2,967,552. 2, Tony Stewart,
$2 ,313 ,747. 3, Jell Gordon, $1 ,975 ,172. 4, Matt Kense th,
$ 1,891 ,939. 5. Kevin Harvick, $1,754,234 . 6, Ellion Sadter.
$1.733.274. 7. Kasey Kahne . $1,599.747. B. Jimmie Johnson ,
$1 ,589 ,534. 9, Scott Wimmer, $1 ,512 ,893. 10, Bobby Labonte ,
$1.470,662.
11 . Ryan Newman, $1,432,409. 12, Date Jarrett, $1,416,877.
13. Rusty Walt ace. $1.401 .659 . 14, Sterling Marlin.
$1,221 ,974. 1.5, Robby Gordon, $1 ,207,938 .· 16, deff Burton.
$1,176,962. 17, Kurt Busch , $1 ,168 ,937. 18, Mie:haet Waltrip .
$1 .16q,602. 19, Terry Labo nte, $ 1,154,027. 20. Joe
Nem echek. St.147.412.

Feb. 15 - Oay1ona 500 (Dale Earnhardt. Jr.)
Feb. 22 -Subway 400 (Matt Kenseth)
March 7 - UAW-OaimlerChrysler 400 (Matt Kenseth)
March 14 - Gotden Corral 500 (Dale Earnhardt. Jr.)
March 21 -Carolina Dodge Dealers 400 (Jimmie Johnson)
March 28- Food City 500 (Kurt Busch)
April 4 - Samsung/AadioShack 500 (Elliott Sadler)
April18- Advance Auto Parts 500 (Rusty Wallace )
April 25- Aaron's 499 (Jeff Gordon)
May 2 - Auto Club 500 (J eff Gordon)
. May 15- Pontiac Peliormance 400, Richmond , Va
May 30- Coca-Cola 600 , Concord, N .C
June p - MBNA America 400, Dover. DeL
June 13- Pocono 500, Long Pond, Pa.
June 20 - Michig8n 400 , Brooklyn, Mich.
June 27 - Dodge/Save Mart 350. Sonoma. Cali1.
July 3- Pepsi 400, Daytona Beach, Fla.
·
.Juty 11 - Tropicana 400. J olie t~. Ill.
July 25 - New England 300, Loudo n. N.H.
Aug . 1 - Pennsylvania 600c ·Long Pond , Pa.
Aug . B- Bnckyard 400 , Indianapolis
Aug . 15 - SiriuS at The Gl&amp;n . Watk1ns Glen. N.Y.
Aug . 22- Michigan 400, Brooklyn, Mich .
Aug . 28 -Sharpie 500, Bristol, Tenn
Sept. 5 - Pop Secret 500. Fo ntana. Calif.
Sept. 11 -Chevrolet Monle Carlo 400, Richmond. Va
Sept. 19- Sytvania 300, Loudon. N.H.
Sept. 26 - MBNA America 400, Dover, Del.
Oct. 3- EA Sports 500, Talladega, Ala .
Oct 10 - Banquet400, Kansas City, K~n .
Ott. 16 - UAW-GM Quality 500. COncord , N.C.
Oct. 24- Subway 500, Martinsville, Va .
Oct 31 -Bass Pro Shops M8NA 400, Hampton , Ga.
Nov. 7 -Checker Auto Parts 500, Avondale, Ariz.
Nov. 14 '-- Southern 500, Darlington, .SC .
Nov. 21 - Ford 400, Homes1ead, Fla .

Heat ·finally cool down Hornets
to win first round series

Stanley Cup Playoffs

NASCAR Nextel Cup
NASCAR Nextel Cup Schedule·Winners

NBA Playoffs

...... - -.. --,..,., __ , ____ , __ .?',,.._, __

,..,,...;-r,.,.~------

...... ,...,..

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 5,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Bonds ·unfazed by BALCO

2004

Indians Baseball

I

Out of the starting lineup. Bonds spent
45 minutes at his locker talking about
posstbly reunng after the 2005 season. his
future and George Steinbrenner.
Sniftling to suppress hts cold. he
laughed at times and bnstled at others.
parttcularly "'hen pressed about BALCO
and Anderson
"He 'II always be a friend of mme
Always. We grew up together:· Bonds

Associated Press

~1::\\' ) ORK B,tn) Bonus was
.1dHma111 fla,eball'' stermds &gt;candal has
not a Ikctcd lllln one b11.
"Due, 11 Inn!-. i1i-.c 11,.. the San Franctsco
,l,n c~s,c·d ··11 dnc,n't f.tle rne at all."
~h &gt;nLh dtd nc&gt;t pl.t~ Tue sd~IY night
h~~·.tu:-.c ut .t ~IOU 'I 111kcllon He was senl
SatU
Illllll Sh~" St,Khum h.tck to the hotel durMore than halfway through the sess1on,
~~~~ the G1.111h (J - 2 lo" h&gt; the New York
Bonus cackled and added th1s ca veal:
,1;."
" Half the stutl·l say, I don't believe."
.But bcl01e the ~dlllC. the slugger leadBonds entered the three-game sencs at
Ill~ the m,qtll' "11h I() homers and" 4o 1
Shea Stadium on ly 88 homers from
h~~ung ,l\L't.JgL' hnhheU il)lde questions breakmg Hank Aaron's record of 755 But
.thout the dru~-d"tnbu t 1on case m whtch he claimed he wanted to leave the game
his peNlll.ll t'l.llllCI. Gtq: Anderson. has after next season. regardless where he
I"'~(' n JJh..l u..ll'd
stands on the homer list.
'Th,·t,· l•n't .nt1noll) 111\esttgatmg me.
"I want to leave. I want to do something
.1s · t.u '" I kn""· · Bonds sa1d. "[ ain't else," he said.
hc irH! 1!1\l'".ll~dtL'd."
Bonds declined to say exactly what else
1'\t. 11nc l'";nt. FlonJ, e1en lifted his T- he'd ltke to do. But as he approaches 40
-.hnt h) tL'\L',il h1" -.,Lomach
July, he satd he'd hke to spend more
"Du I lot1l. !1 k I got npped abs'1.. he thts
time watching hts two daughters and one
'-.d~d

son grow up
At h1s current pace, Bonds m1ght break
.hl'CIIsf.. t,trnl•hmg l1ts ,tccompltshments Aaron's mark before next season is over
- hto 't' ~lvP ·"'"rus and 66S career But if he' s close, Bonds satd he likely
hnm ...· nm-...
would not be tempted to return.
-!\1: rculrd.., .ttcn' t going an}where.''
"Probably not," he said. "Don't need
he ,,ud. I'l l be line. t1 ust me."
~"
--\ lldl'l-..lll11..., tm~ nt lour men L'harged m
Bonds ts stgned through the 2006 sea,m . tlk·~cd 1111~ 1111 uh mg the Bay Area son But tf he does not reach 500 plate
L1ht1lclltll) Cu-Opetall\e All tOUt have appearances next season, the G1ants can
pic deled lllllucclll ,md no ,!lhlele has been vmd the final year of his contract - he's
L"ll~ll ~L·d
set to make $!8 mtlhon tn 2006.
ll&lt;;llcb rcpc'alcdl) hc~' demed usmg tile'
If Bonds reaches 1,500 plate appear~,tl slCI'&lt;&gt;IJ' 1 hctc IS one supplement he
ances combined from 2003 to 2005,
doc . . takl'
mcluding 400 or more in 2005. the Giants
P olllllll~ '"!he tt&gt;p ot lm loc·kcr. he satd.
lose the1r right to vmd the deal. Despite
·1 h.11c c'tc.illllc ngh t up here."
that. Bonds would not gain the right to
BPnd . .

...,,llLJ

he

\\d'll t

worrteU aboul an

(U.

walk awav from hts contract.
"I don 'i try to predtct !he future." he
said
Bonds said he'd be amtnable to becommg a designated h1tter someday. meaning
a shtft to the Amen can League.
"DH ts fine for me ." he said. ,tddmg
he· d wan! lo do tt lot ,J Cahforma team
So does he see any chance of jommg
Stembrenne,·s coll ection of sta1s .tt
Yankee Sta&lt;.l1um 1
"If George wanted me. he would've
pa~u for me a long. lung lime ago," he
smd "''m a bad mtluence for Ge01ge, I
guess."
After he 's done playmg. Bonds sa1d he
wants to stay mvolved m baseball. on IllS
own terms.
'Til probably go help college k1ds ... he
satd ''I don ' t want to coach. l just wani to
help.''
For now. though. Bonds has plenty of
games left And while many people track
Ius home runs. others are wondet 1ng
whether he could become the firs! b1g le,tguer to htt 400 '!nee Ted Wtlhams in
1941
"''ve never seen ll done It's too dttficult," he said. "It could possibly be done,
but it'd take a lot."
Bonds said a lot has changed on and off
the tield since Williams achieved the feat .
Along with more hectic travel schedules.
there are d1 fferent strategies - opponents
usmg more pilchet s, plus Intentional
walks
Bonus has drawn 44 walks, mcluumg
22 mtenlJOnal passes, m the G1ants' 27
games. He said the game sttll was fun
desp1te teams taking the bat out of ht s
hands.
"Pick your pOlson:· he said "You can
me or see it go ..

"'"'k

Tillman remembered in hometown
SA'i JOSE. Cal 1! lAP) Pat
T1 ll m,tn 'dectstt1ll to wal k away from a
mult,mlillcltt-dol lal NFL contract to
l1~hJ ltll h1s cnuntn mack him a hero to
,,;me nt the people. k used to idohze
f..I.1n\ u·kh1 it 1cs ,1 nd politicians "'ere
,l!lltll, g the ·'JlJlltl \llllately 3,000 people
"hu C&lt;lll!C oul 111 hts hometo"' n Monday
l t ~ Jt:lliL'!Ilbl.'J ct llldn ..,o moveU by the
Sept II. ~00 I IeiTOJtst attacks that he
lett the A111ona Cardinal s to jom the
-\fill)

·1 "as wid he .tdnmed me but it's the
1"' crsc
Gov.
Arnold
SciHI.ll/c'llC~~er 11rote tn a letter read
b) !·11, \llic .' M,m,l Shnver. "Pat's jourIJC\'. lh,n·, the Amencan dream and he
s.tl'l tft ced 1h,11 Th.1t to me 1s a real
hc1 o ·
r1!lman . 27. dtell Apnl 22 tn
Alghant-tan 1n a l1ref1ght near the
1-'.1k1,t,tn horJc1 as he was leadtng h1s
,c ,1m to he lp nllnraues caught tn an

ambush. The Army gave few detmls of
how Ttllman was killed, but sa1d he was
fatally shot while ftghting "without
regard for his personal safety."
Shnver said Tillman epttomtzed the
message her uncle, John F. Kennedy,
del1vered in his prestdenttal maugurat!On 43 years ago
"My uncle once satll, 'Ask not what
your ·country can do .for you, ask what
you can do for your country.' You, Pat,
have lived those words," she said.
NFL commissioner Paul Tagliabue
and Hall of Farner Gene Upshaw, executive director of the players' union ,
were among those who attended the
public memorial at a mun1ctpal rose
garden.
"The underlylllg thlllg was h1s
courage and selflessness on the athletic
field, Ill hts community and now as a
soldier," Taghabue told reporters before
the service.

Last week. the mtl1tary posthumously
promoted Tillman, a member of the
Army 's elite Ran ger unit smce 2002.
from speciali st to corporal He also was
awarded a Purple Heart and Silver Star
"While many of us will be blessed to
l1ve a longe r l1fe, few of us wtll ever
hve a better one ,'' sa1d Sen John
MeCum. R-Anz .. who spent 5 1/2 years
as a pnsoner of war in Ytetnam " He
was a most honorable man "
Tillman attended San Jose's Leland
High School and was drafted by the
Cardlllals after starnng at Arizona
State. He became the Cardmals' starting
safety and hroke the franchi se record
for tackles 111 2000.
"It was an honor to coach Pat,'' former Cardtn.tl s asststant coach, Larry
Marmte satd " I learned a lot !rom l1im.
Players often look for the respect from
thetr coaches. I found myself trying to
earn Pat' s respect. ''

I

Reds Notebook

Griffey out of lineup
with tight hamstring
BY

JoE

KAY

Associated Press

CINCINNATI
Ken
Gt 11Tcy Jt. was out of the
Red\ !incup Tuesday as a precaution because of a ttght
h.tm . . tnng

The cenlcrllclllc l felt 1t
tl[!h!Cit .titer chasing a tl y ball
111 the outt 1dd dunng a 7-5
\ 11..:tt 11\

111

Huw.. ton

on

'vlond:l) n1ght. ,\nu he lei! the
~.unc

I he il'~ lelt better on
rucsJa:- . but manager Dave
vi lie) held h1111 111 rese rve as a
pinch-hille l
·It 's ._~cllinue better' .. Griffeys:ud. ·Jt.Jllsl tightened up and
11 e dun't \\dill to take the
Lh,mu~ t&gt;l dotn~ anythmg else
Ito 111.1ke ll woLSe) Hopefully,

thtlt·..,

It .. '

GttiiC)
J4
h,ts been
pla)!ued h) kg pt oblem' the
I,L't lew \Cal' He \lramed a
c,tlt "hile tu nntng out a
uro undcr the last 'week in
~rnng 11 .unmg, and mtssed
the "~d~on openl'r
V.trttlll\ tnjuncs limited htm
lo 92 st,1rh Ill 2(X) I. 51 starts
111 20112 .Jnd 46 sl.trt\ la'&gt;t &lt;,ea""'- "hen he di,Jocated hts
shoulder ami lmc ,Jn ankle
tcudun
G!!llt') '!1111ed up m the
outfield 11 !ten ltc realtLed l1e
1~a,n· t go1ng to get to Roy
0""'!1\ lh hall1n the boltom
nf the scc,)nJ mnmg. and felt
the h.11nstring ltghten up. He
cum~ tJLil of the gdme (lll
11111111!.! Iitle!

" I '"" tll!llkJIJg I m1ght be
I

diving (for Oswalt's single),
and realized l was not going to
catch 1t," he said. " Itju ~t ttghtened up "
Griffey IS one of four Reds
who have missed t1me in the
last week because of IllJUnes.
Outf1e luer Austm Kearns
broke hts forearm, catcher
Jason LaRue broke a finger,
and uttlity player Ryan Freel
strained hts neck.
Kearns was hurt when Ryan
Vogelsong's pitch hit him on
the left arm, just above the
wrist, on April 26. He had the
cast removed on Monday
the crack in the forearm
bone is small, and Keams is
hopeful that he can return in a
few weeks. He swung a bat on
Tuesday m the mdoor batting
cages with the wnst wrapped .
He' ll wear a brace when
he's not worktng out.
'The doctor is pretty upbeat
about It," Kearns said. "He
thought that maybe it will be
two or three more weeks."
Keams said the wrist is a Itttie stiff after a week in a cast.
"Once I get it moving, the
soreness goes away," he said
"The swelh ng's bastcally
down It looks normal "
LaRue broke the ttp of h1s
right mdex ftnger when the
ball hit it while he tried to bunt
last Wednesday. He went tln
the 15-day dtsabled list. and
the Reds w1ll have a better
tdea of how long he'll be s1delined later thts week.
Freel stramed hts neck
while dtving for a popup
behind second base on Sunday
and had to leave the game. He

didn't appear 111 Monday 's
game.
• FLAW DETECTED:
Rehever Ryan Wagner has
worked with pitchtng coach
Don Gullett the last fe"' days
to fix a flaw in hts deli very.
Wagner, the Reds' top ptck
m the amateur draft last June.
has been hit hard this season
He is 1-1 wah an 11.25 earned
run average, givmg up 20 hits
and six walks in only eight
. innings
Wagner was 1mpressive in
spnng training, postlllg a 0 61
ERA He has been htl hard m
the last few weeks, and Gullett
detected a flaw m the dehvery
causmg hts pttches to stray
over the plate .
The ,nght-hander has n't
been bending hi s back
enough.
"When mechanically there 's
somethtng wrong, 1t makes
you feel better,'' Wagner said
"You know it's not your stuff,
it's just your mechanics I
threw well in spn ng traming ,
but it JUSt takes one time
before it becomes a bad
habtt. "
Wagner hasn' t pttched smce
last Fnday. spending hts time
trymg to fix the problem.
"We'll get Wagner out there
soon," Miley said.
• LATE ARRIVALS:
Miley gave hts players a later
reportm~
!lme
before
Tue&gt;day s game so they could
rest up after a short mght.
They dtdn't land in Ctncinnatt
until almost 3 a.m. after completing a four-game senes in
Houston

BY

TOM

WITHERS

Assoctated Press

CLEVELAND- Nobody
has set a better table tht s season than the Indians.
Cleveland's leadoff hitters,
Ronme Belhard and Matt
Lawton, lead the majors w1th
a combined 387 batt1ng
average and 449 on-base
24
percentage through
games
In addition, Belliard and
Lawton have combined to
score 18 runs and dnve m 24
"They've been fantastic for
us," manager Eric Wedge
said "They have expenence
and they do a good job of
"'o1 king the coum." ,
Lawton batted leadoff
agamst Boston on Tuesday
mght, hts 13th ttme in the
No I hole Belhard has hit
tirst 12 t1mes
The leadoff spot has been a
sore spot the past few years
for the lndtans, who haven't
had a true leadoff hitter smce
Kenny Lofton left .
But the Belhard-Lawton
pl atoon has worked perfectly
so far thts year.
1
approached
Wedge
Lawton about leadmg off
durmg spnng trammg. and
the outtielder agreed to do ll
under the condition that he
could sttll be a free swmger
Taking pitches tS not one of
Lawton's strengths.
"That's not me,'' he satd.
"When the manager tqld me
he wanted me to lead off, l
satd, ' I' ll uo tl, but I'm gomg
to do tt the way l wam 10 do
tl."' Lawton smd "He satd,
'OK .,
Belliard spent &lt;ome time
batting 111 the leadotl spot last
season for Colorado and hit
there during his four seasons
with Milwaukee. He's said
he'll be happy to hit anywhere Wedge wants him to.
"II doesn 't matter where,"
sa1d Belliatd, whose .492 onbase percentage leads the
AL. "Ftrst, second, e1ghth.
nmth I JUSt want to do my
JOb"
Belliard says there's more
to betng a good leadoff hJtter
than simply gettmg on base.
''I just try to go up there
and see a lot of pitches for the
other guys,'' he said "I'm not
gomg to try and hit home

\!tribune -· Sentinel - l\egister
CLASSIFIED
WeCov·....
·c

investigation, talks of retirement Indians leading
off the pack
BY BEN WALKER

www.mydailysentinel.com

AndMaon
Countt• &amp;:.Ike
No9fte

I!IM c;:anl
G•llu (ouruy OH

'

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~AU
Flllplna-4-Love

Find your Philippine Lady
for love
1-800-497 ·8414
Flllplna-4-Love.com

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ANNolJNCEMF..NTS
C·1 Beer Carry Out perm 1t

'l2

YARDSAl£GALUPOus

Lw-------,.1
GIVEAWAY

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Lost Black Lab puppies,
while on chest, 6 months
old Last seen 5·2~04 297
Dully Rd 740·446·1264
Lost Female Husky m1x
dog Any tnfo pl ease call
(740)446·4610

r
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YAKDSALE

YARDSALE-

GALUPOUS

143 Second Ave May 6, 7
9·4
1467 Jackson Ptke,
Inside &amp; Outstde yard sale
May 6 &amp; 7 9am-5pm

AACO YARD SALE AT
STA.R MILL PARK Rac1ne
May 11 , 12, !rom 9 to 4pm
and M ay 13 from 9 to 2pm
All proceeds go to scholarsh 1p fund Clothtng shoes
purses cur!atns comforter
sets !mens pans clolhmg
1
d h
1
mce oys IS es g asswa re
b b 1
h h h I
a Y I ems tg c a r car
seat books sweepers TVs
hOliday decorattons, rugs
pillows, chatrs mtcroweves
lurn•ture &amp; lo ts of mtsc On
May 13 , all clothmg $1 00 a
bag and m•sc, 1tems onehalf pnce Thanks for your

YARD

Getting fit and
st'a ying fit is in!
A SPECIAL FEATURE

OF
mbe ®alltpo[t!) 1!9ailp Qrrtbune,
_Joint ~Iea!)ant ~egi!)ter and
The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, May 20
Advertising Deadlines:
Thursday, May 11, 2004
I'

---------- . ----· .- •

__, .

clothes 123 Park Dr

------~.- Yard sale 4 Ma1n St, ac ross
!rom Tu-End1e-We1 Fnday
9 00 l o 6 30, Sal 9 00 lo
3 00 Lots of M1sc •!ems, lew
clothes, marble end tables
needs work (304)675·7323

1

white church tn Dexter, go Signs posted

Fnday, Mav 7.
830 First Ave .
8·4 30

-----.------,__.,. ,....---

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication

Sunday In - Column: 1:00 p.m.
Friday Fo.- Sundays Paper

Sunday ~~~~~~~~~~~!~spP::'.;,
Thursday

MO\'mg sale- furniture. bedding, numerous Items, Thur,
Fri , Sat , firm 9·5 Rt 7 next
to old
Slate Htghway
Garage

Now you con hove borders and graphics
.til...\
added to your classified ads
-""
Borders 53.00/per ad
Grqphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for Iorge

•.,

• All ads must be prepaid•

RHJl·&gt; J'III

6-months
part-t1me
Chauffeur
valid dnvers
license Apply at 87 Spruce
Street with Mr Hubbard B·
10am

10

lwright@ic.net

Tlu•rn1n
Full-lime position Must be
Oh to licensed RRTICRT
Mu st be able to perform all
aspects of Aesp1 ra1ory Care
mcludmg EKG s and ABG s
Rural healthcare factltly
competitive wages good
benef•ts tle:Kible schedtlllng
Contact Doct ors Hosp1tal
Nelsonv1lle
CardiOpulmonary· D1rector
1950 Mount Sa1nt Mary
Drive
Nelsonvil le
OH
45764, (740)753·1931 .•,,
6262 EOE

D0

help daycares summer
leagues schools PTA s
coaches rat se money for
local are a Av/46 000 yr
813-779 4542
150

© 2004 by NEA, Inc.

I

II

0

1110

HfJ.P W.o\NTEll
LSW Needed

.

HELP WANlllJ

Part t1me employee needed
to clean lloors Commerctal
Licensed Soc1 al Worker Floor Care (740)367-0255
needed to provide case
management servtces and
Perfect Connectton your
counselmg servtces tor ado·
Local OlshNet and Dtrect
tescent male and female 1n
TV Store hiring Installers
restdent•at treatment settmg
and
Sales/ Reps
Call
m Gallia County OhiO are~ (304 )675-1400
Candidate must ha~e a
strong destre to work w•th PositiOn Open at Darst Adult
adolescents and a pos1t1ve Group Home (740)992 5023
personality Must possess or
be ehgtble lor Ohto Soctal
Work Ltcense Compettttve POSTAL JOBS
salary and great benef1t $15 44-$2 1 40/hr now hirpackage provtded Pl ease Ing Fo r apphcahon and tree
send cover letter and government JOb mlo call
resume to Alan Stebel 608 Amencan Assoc of Labor
Park Ave , Ironton OH 1·(91 3)599·8220 24 hrs
emp serv
45638 EOE

33 Acres
Ranch style
House on Eckard Chapel
Ro
Pt
Pleasant Area
(304 )895·3129
4 bedroom 1 112 balh 2
story bnck 2 car unatt€1ched
garage 537 500 Fourth St
New Haven WV (740)446·
4274

nlme
www orvb com
ode 42104 or call 740·
~ 8 9839
eau 1 u
ca
ttached 2 car unattache
arage w1th garage apart
ent 1n Gall1polls Vtev
hOtos/mfo
onlm
ww orbv com
Cod
2204 or call 740·446
1082

Youth Fundraising

ScHOOL'i
INSilWCilON

16x80 sttes avatlable S115
per mcnth Includes wa1e1
sewer &amp; trasn (740)992
2t67

70
1

Barn R emoval
All reference s &amp; full tnsur
ance Call 304 373 0011

rM
Affordable Serv1ces Haulmg
gravel dtrt ect Patnl!n g
Tree Tnmmtng , Dnveway
Repa1r, Gutters Ch1mney
Plumb1ng Jack Of All Trades
30yrs expenence (304)a82·
2196 (304)377-8266
Georges Portable Sawm111
don't haut your logs to the
mtll tust call 304·675-1957

Treatment
MmfSflf{f!
"f!tt&gt;rrtpi~t Res•dentlal
Fac111ty youth worker Pay Will care for your love one 1n
oeeded
tor
busy
based on expenence Call my home good care home
Ch1ropract1C reha btl1tat10n
cooked meals 28 years ol
(740)379·9083 to apply
Center
Must be OhiO
exper•ence. good referlicensed and wel l skilled 10
Rockspnngs Rehabilitatio n ences, (740)667·6577
all areas of therapeutiC mas_c_a_ll_8o_o_-6_5_2_·2_36_2_ __
Center IS lookmg fo r dedi·
sage Excellent pay and
·
W1ll do baby sttttng 1n my
Dnver for horse and buggy work atmosphere Please cated compassionate State
home Lots ot room lor chilTested
Nurstng
Assistants
Expenence W1th horses pre- fax resume to 740·886·1609
Compet1t1ve wages heal th dren to play 1 m1le· t ram
ferred
Fte .. tble
hours Attn Kathy
and
dental benefits and town Cal l ~740)446-925 1
(7401379-9096 1740)379·
401
K
ava1lable
We take
2316 leave 1~essage
Med1 Home Health Agency
Will Pressure Wash houses
pnde 1n o ur home and rest·
Inc seektng a fuiHtme and
mobtle homes metal bulidDnvers/OIOP s •mmed1ately
dents and naed great team
PAN AN s, and a PAN
mg s, and gutters Call
h1nng1 Home weekends Top
pla)'ers to JOin us
It you
Occupaltonal Therap1st for
(740)4 46-0151 ask for Ron
pay, Must be 23+ w/class A
have these quahftcallons
the Gallipolis Oh10 area
or leave message
CDL 2 yrs OTR expe11ence
apply
to
Must be hcensed both m plea se
11'\\,(1\1
w/6 mo flatbed. clean MVR
Ro
cksprings
Rehab111tatton
Oh1o and Wast Vtrgtma We
Les 800·826·3560 extenston
Center
36759
Rocksprmgs
olfa r a compet1t1ve salary,
10
Road, Pomeroy Ohio 45769
19
BUSJNt:SS
benefit package fo r full· lime,
EMtended
Health
Servtces
OPI'ORTIJr&lt;IT\'
and
40
1K
E
0
E
Please
Learn to Onve
Inc IS en equal opportunity
send resume to 352 Second
Tractor-Trailers
empl oyer that encourages
ABSOLUTE GOLOMINE!
Ave Gall tpolts, OH 456;}1
·wa 1ra1n Men and Women
wo rkplace dtverstty M/F DN
60 vending machmesJ
Attn
Dtana
Harloss.
Cltnu3'al
'Full and Pari T1me Classes
ng
peop e oca
excellent locations
Manager
·Job Placement
ho want to earn mone
all for $10,995
·coL Tra1111ng
htle losmg we1ght show
Need 7 lad1es to sell Avon
800·234·6982
'Fmancmg A~a 1 lable
ng
othe rs
how
Call (740)446·3358
AS SEEN ONTV
lnformallonal
DVD/C
Local bus•ness Prec1ous
AlliANCE
Now Htrmg quality people
vallable upon request 740 Memones" for sale Place
Tractor-Tratler Tramrng
Apply at Burger Kmg
41-1984
customer's phOtos on ch1na
Centers. Wythev111e VA
65 Upper Rtver Road
plates and othe r 11ems
1·800·334·1 203
Speedway Super A01enca
GallipoliS
Wou ld make a great add1t1on
www aii1Ance1raclortnuler com
Middleport Oh needs 3
to an ex1stmg bustness or
Local Home Health A';jency Nursmg Ass1stant Classes cashiers mostly evemngs, set up at car shows or any
seektng AN PCA'S and begtnnmg May 17, 2004 If 16-20 hours a week See event
$5 000 00 buys
Home Hoalth Aides. wt ll you enJoy elde rl y people and store management for appil· every thmg mcludmg web
tram the nght pe1son com- want to become a member catt on &amp; detaHs
S
I
I
e
pany ollors beoeftts. flextble of our health care team, - - - - - - - - , - www photosonch•na lorn
scheduling
-competltivo please stop by R~kspnngs Super a Mote l 1s accepting (740)9!2·4294
wages and a great work Rehabtlttatlon Center at appttcattons for PT house
atmosphere Please send 36759 Rocksprings Road. keepmg and desk clerk Mobtle Mlnt·Donut concesresume to CLA box 568, c/o Pomeroy Ohio 45769 and 1111 Must apply m person, No SIOn busmess for sale
Calls
Please Locally owned Easily make
Gallipolis Tnbune 825 Thtrd out an appttcatiQn tor the Phone
classes Extendtcare Health Quailfted applicants w111 be $1000 00 or mo1e at weekAvo, GalltpOIIS, OH 45631
end events Everything sets
Serv•ces, Inc IS an equal called for an •nterv1ew
LPTA wanted fo r home opportuntty employer that
up 1n a spectally destgned
health phystcatlherapy serv- encourages
workplace The Harold Dtspatch has 1OX 10 canopy Excellent
ICes Mottvated sell directed diverSity MJF ON
motor routes available If part-lime or full t1me oppor·
mdtvtdual wil l like flexible
Interested
can
Scott tu nlly S9 950 00 Donuts
scheduling, good mdepend 010 lookmg for dnver to pull (304)526·28 16
Galore
M1ddleport
ence and compensatt&lt;.n Relrtgerated Tratler 90%
(740)992 4294
OpportunitieS avatlable In mu!U SlOP WV. OH &amp; FL The Mason County Public
Athens Metgs Jackson, Average $1000/'vVk Drtver Library 1s seek1ng a Part·
VALLEY PUBLISH
Vtnton &amp; Gallla count1es does own Takes (304 )675- time Library Clerk The sue· lNG CO recommends tha
cesslul applicant must be
Cal1888· 464-1126
4698/(304)532· 1997
ou do bUstness w1th pea
tnendly, famtllar with com
Pie you know and NOT t
:\urrlti Northup Ood8t' Overbrook
AehabllttaiiOn pulers and able to lift up to
end money through the
Saturday and
Center Will soon be havmg 0:?5 pounds
mall until you have •nvestl
Now
hmng
Sales STNA classes II you world even1ng hours are requtred
a ted the otfenng
Professionals Must be high- like to parbctpate m the lnterest~d appltcants may
ly motivated wtlh excepttonal classes, please come m and ptck up and appltcat•on at
communtcatton
sktlls ftll out an apphcallon at 333 508 Viand Street Pomt PI PKutl--S;tlll\'t
SER\'Il'K~
Unlimited mcome potential Page . Street, Middleport, Pleasant EOE
Don t mtss th1s opportunity EOE
to advance your career Into
TURNED DOWN ON
htgh gear Come 1n for a per- ParamediCS
&amp;
EMT s
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
sona tmtervtew at252 Upper needed Apply at 1354
· No Fee Unless We W•nl
Rtver Road Galhpolls, Oh10 Jackson Ptke. Gailtpolts
I ·888-582·3345

PHIO"'

"'

BL'SL~J.Jo,';
\~)} BliiJ.DlNGS

__.,

Scnoals 12748

MtSCELIANEOtl'i

Tra11er for sale 2 bedroom
can remam on 101 1n Rac•ne
area 52 000 {740)992·5858

In a mce well 30x40 commerc1al bu1 ld1ng
1n
M iddleport
2 12x12
eslabhshed netghborhood doors
$ 275
montl"t
_
#br 1 5 B 2car garage
740 992 3194
extra garage m back Must ~::O:~;;:.:::;;.."'::
see to apprec1ate (740)446· 350
Lors &amp;
308 l
ACRI A(if

Accll:ldlled Member Accred iting
Counol lor loJependenl Colleges

r

Before you bu')l'
Does your dealer':!
Move h1S hOmes · Do Slle
preparat1on · bUi ld lounda·
liOns · Roll and set houses ·
Do heat1ng and a1r · i-lave 1n·
house serv1ce people ·
Instal l sept1c systems - Do
electncat plumbmg · Do
dr1veways If the answer to
any of these questtons 1s no
or •f they sub contract You
better see the oldest mosl
expenenced
dealer
m
Alhens County Smce 1967
Co les Mobtle Homes 15266
US 50 East A.thens Oh10
45701 Where you get your
money!_&gt; worth

Bnck Ranch

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayt 740-446·4367
1·800·214-0452
www ga111pol scareercollege com
and

MOHll E HOMF$
ftJK S\t.[

Hmu:s
FURS\LE

Tht&gt;rapn•t ~ H1 •!tp11 alon

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

trampoline . m •sc Items 9 4 4 Golf clubs ktds teens
Fn &amp; Sat
- - - - - - - - - clothtng m1sc
3 famtly yard sale - b aby =~.;,~'IJ(·~---0N_'_N_Il-.,
"
-•
"
1tems furmture, a~pllances,
Fl
EA !\'IAW.KtT
clothing &amp; much more, Sat
May 8lh 405 Lincoln S tre et,
Mtddteport
AUCTION· Modular House
and Tools &amp; Equtpment
5 lamtty 613 Elm St Racme Buckeye
Hills
Career
Apostolic Gospel Church, May 71h and 8th 8am-? new Center RIO Grande, Ohto
Eastern Ave Thursday· and used rtems Aa1n post- T&amp;E at 11 OOam House at
Sa turday Baked goods. hot poned to i 4 · 15
12 00 Noon q_n May 8 2004
dogs, lots of other stuff
740 245·5334
692 Art Lew1s, Mtddleport.
5·5·04 ·5·8-04. tools. d&gt;sh'
Wi\N'Jl:))
B1g Rummage Sale
Clay TOwnhouse
es, ciOthtng , porcelatn dolls '"---•liiUiioiiBiilii
iY_ _,.
&amp; much more
•
Lovers Lane
Wood bunk beds, g1rls
Alshtre's, 2100 Carroll Sl , Absolute Top Dollar U S
clothes 4-7, toys, linens,
Gold
C01ns
Syracuse May 7th, 8th, 9·4, St iver,
baby Items, 18 It pool adult
Proofsets, Otamonds, Gold
rain or s ~1ne
clothes home decor Fnday
Rtngs ,
US Currency ·
&amp; Saturday 9-5
Btg Yard Sale 7tn &amp; 8th, MTS Com Shop 151
Wnttes Hill R oa d
Second Avenue Gallipolis
·:community Yard Sale'
74G-446·2842
Carport Sale· Tnurs M ay
Oebbte Drtve &amp; Debbie
I \11'1 0\ \II\ I
6th, lee restdence Tyree
Chapel Fnday/Saturday 5!7,,. Ill IC I· S
Blvd, Ftacine, ctothtng, lots
5/8, 9·5
of ffiiSC
~~------.,
110
Encloted Porch Sale
Chesler Untied Methodist
6 miles from Rutland Worth
Church, May 7, 9·5 and May ~.o.-------,1
the tnpl Monday, Ma'y 3- 8, 9·1 Baked goods, and
$250·$500/week
Sunday, May 16, 11am 5pm tood avattable Proceeds go
Wtlltram to work at home
31966
McCumber
Rd . to mls~tons
Helptng the US Govt l1le
Dexter, Ohio
Antique s,
HUO/FHA morlgage
canoe, peddle beat. parrot HUGE Tool Sale, some
retunds no expenence
wlcage stove, gas grtll, fur- anttques May 7th &amp; 8th,
necessary, call
niture shaH umts, womens Friday Saturday aliOS Pearl
1·800· 778-0353
jeans m-xl, ltke new $5 a St Middleport, Ohio from 9·
pa1r, shorts, !-shirts shoes, 5 ·vard Sate• Rain or Shme --c--:.,-.,--:-c:.,--~
"ANEW CLINICAL
collectibles, CD s, cassettes
May 7 &amp; 8 St At 143 tn
PEELSI"
VCR
tapes,
TV s,
Hamsonv11te
9·5,
lurn
tture
•
Want
to
look
younger AND
microwaves,
surround
earn Money? Lets talk the
speakers, self propelled small appliances, clothing
NEW"AVON call
mower. electric garage door mise
Mar&gt;lyn
(304)882·2645
opener. cedar chest At 7N May 7th&amp; 8th6am-? Large
Joyce (304)6/S 6919.
to AT 124W 10 Langsvtlle tamlty yard sale Our ftrst
Apr&gt;l (304)882·3630
Take Dexter Ad to small evert Ktng sbury Rd CR 18
nght, then nght aga1n onto
McCumber Ad about 1 mtle

{li

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday - Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper

support
--------Aa1n or shtne 7th &amp; 8th

3 mile s out 141 , Fr1day, fromRt 7 on 143•HarleyT's Yard Sale Letart bestde old
Saturday
3
Famtly camptng supplies, large Grade SchOol Fr1 &amp; Sat 8
I wornFurmture , gtr Is 8 , pus
ens boysB-12
----.,.,--::---:
5f7 518, 2 mtles East of
Porter on 554 Household
Items, clothes , shoes, desk,
lounge chatrs &amp; prom dresses

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

Drew Fisher residence 5
mtnutes !rom Rac1ne Locks
&amp; Dam on 338 I am sellmg
my late husband tools plus
www.comtcs.com
1 01
d ler, teens Large vanety of _o_"__ _M_u_se_h:_o_
ld_'_
' •_m_s__:_
1tems
books
--:::--------.,
Rummage saleHe ath r;110
c·urtatnslhnens, housewares.
Church S 3rd Sl . May 61h
HB 1, W~N'Jl_ll
beantes stuffed ammals. lth, 8th, 9·3
collectibles, desk 9am-5pm -----~--~
Saturday May 8th Ratn or AVQNI All Areasl To Buy or
Movmg Sale
Saturday
Sh tne 9-? at Old 8a1t Shop Sell
Sht rley Spears 304·
518/04, 8-7 2 hvmgroom
AntiQUity
675 1429
sets, bed/bedroom lurn•ture
end table/ coffee tables, Yard sale behmd Masonic
BELIEVE IT '~
d•sheslpots/ pans, old Home Lodge 1n Racine Fnday &amp;
Earn up to $8 00/hr plus
lnte r1or 1tems
Saturday, boys mlant to
weekly bonuses
Mul t•· Fe.m•ly, May 6-7-8, )ad•es plus clothmg, furnlWe otler pa1d holidays
1853 Netghborhood Rd ture ca ndle tarts, ctrCie of
and vaca tions
Clothtng mfant-2x house- tnends ftgurmes lots of
Health Benefits avallabl e 1
wares, home decor.. lo!s &amp; _m_,._c_ _ _ _ _ __
Full or part t1me opemngs
lots &amp; lots of m tsc tlerns
Call today 1
Yard sale- 181 Beech St ,
1-877-463-6247 ext 2454
Sa1Urday
May a
9 -5 Mtddlep ort,
May 5·6·7
Apply on ltne
Junctton Rt 7 S &amp; Lovers :.
cl;:
ol~h•;;;•;;.·~lo:-Y';;.·;;;"';;;"~c---,
WWW tnfoCISIOn COffi
Lane Word processor, furm- rn 76
y MID SALE·
ture, WWII Atfle, K1tchen
Class A COL Orlvers
atds many 1tems clean
Pr. PI FA'iANT
Wanted
Ra1n or Shtne
Back Yard Sale Thursday •Mtn of 2 years e:Kp
Somethtng for every room Fnday
Saturday Home
•Medtcallns 401K
Glassware, toys, huntmg lntenor lamps
reclmer
bed and bath, carseat table\chatrs, 27 color televi- •Operat1on area 400 mtle
rad1us of Jackson OH
kitc hen etc. Clothes all SIOn cookbooks , novels &amp;
Sll8S Some NWT Sat &amp; old books trad 1ng cards • S1gn on Bonus
Sun 9 6 Pnced to sell 71 electnc hospttal bed Hoyt •34 cent per mtle
Mill Creek
hydrauli C lift, plus s1ze • 95"'o No IOuch

1640 Graham School Ad
5f7·5/a Gtrls clothes 0·5.
boys clothes 7-10, womens
clothes 8- 12 toys, m1sc
Items
Yard Sale i 2 mtle s out
Aouoe 218 May 5 6 , 7. 8
2 Famtiy Garage Sale
Variety olttems
May 8th, 330 3rd Ave. ,
SALE·
Galltpolls Dishes, oa k vam- P14
PnMERO\'!MJOOLE
ty, dog box and kennel. lawn
furniture. clothmg, mtsc
Ra1n or Shtne
2 Fem•ly yard sale 2 1/2 mile

FITNESS

Oeacllfir~

PuMt.RUYIMIDilJ.[

Garage Sale Frtday, May
7th , and Saturday May Bth
637 Po lecal Road
Gallipolis
Washer1Dryer Go Cart
Curtalf\5 Law n mower lots
of Miscellaneous Household
Items

---------

Or Fax To (304)675-5234

YARD SAtE-

MOV ING SA.LE Saturday
May
8 9 OOam-3 OOpm
Facemyer House 34575
Crew Rd Pomeroy beh•nd
fatrgrounds
Boys clothes.
baby 1tems some furn1ture

May 4th·8th 4867 S1 Rt 850
BtdwSII Clothe s 1oys CD s,
All white blue eyed , male
lots of e~erythtng 9 ?
kttten, ht1er tratned , about 8
weeks old (304)882 -22 11
May 7 8 3 mtles out 554 •
trom red light 1n Cheshire
Free to a good home 1112 yr Brand name clo thlllg , babyold beagle m1x Neutered, adult
house/broken, affectiOnate,
May 7·9, Multt·lamtly yard
genlle (304)675·4500
sale, 554 Jay Dr , Spnng
Male Schnauzer m1x dog 1 Valley All s•zes clothmg
112 years old (740)992 •nclud1ng boy/g trl mfantftod-

7335
1:1!1!"-~-----,
1 ...........,
~·AND
FOUND
..._

74

Fnday Saturday, Route 7
Soutn Rtght on Orchard Hill
Road,
follow
s•gns
Microwave, router band
saw bell sander clothes,
books CD changer

for sale. Chester Townsh1p,
Me1gs County send letters
of mterest to The Dally
Sentinel. PO Box 729-20
Garage Sale MA\• 6 &amp; 7 ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
_,
m~::;;;.::~~o:;;;:;;.;:,;;:.::;:;._, 9 00-5 00, 3498 State Route
~
~41

and

~·-~--------~-'""Til----.,.....,.-...--

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday

HEALTH

Reaching over 29,800 readers

County, OH

Melgs~Gellla,

•

runs. I'm trymg to hit the ball
to nght field, through the
mtddle."
• BALK, OON'T BALK:
Regardless of what Harold
Reynolds thinks, Rafael
Betancourt says he doesn't
balk.
Reynolds, a baseball commentator for ESPN, devoted
a segment on Monday's
"Baseball Tonight" to dissecting
Betancourt's
unorthodox windup in which
he taps his left foot before
making a p1tch.
Reynolds msists that
Betancourt was balking dur- •
ing Cleveland's 2-1 win on
Monday
"! respect his opinion,"
Betancourt srud "But l dtd
the same thing all last year
and nobody said anything. I
don ' t know why it's coming
out now. It 's the way I'm
going to keep pitchmg."
Betancourt says he taps his •
foot as a habit. It helps him
relax as he prepares to deliver the ball to the plate.
Indians manager Eric
Wedge qmckly d1smissed
Reynolds
claim
that
Betancourt ts gettmg away
wtth decet ving runners
"He does the same thing
every single ttme," Wedge
said.
Red Sox manager Terry
Francona bristled at ·a
reporter who brought up
Reynolds· segment, which
came after Betancourt picked
up a save in Monday's game.
"We JUSt need to get a hit,''
he said. "He 's not balking."
• BASELINES: LHP
Jason Stanford will start at
Double-A Akron on Saturdav
as he continues to recover
from a stramed forearm.
Stanford pitched in Buffalo
on Monday, but Indians manager Eric Wedge wants him
to make at least one more
start before deciding when to
activate him. ... RHP Jose
Jimenez, on the 15-day disabled list w1th a strained side,
will make another appearance for Triple-A Buffalo on
Wednesday.
C Victor
Martinez batted cleanup for
the second straight game on
Tuesday.
On
Monday,
Martinez homered off Curt
Schilling and went 3-for-4 in
his first game batting fourth.
"We'd like him to take it and

Display AdvertisingCall Today
Tribune- 446-2342
Register- 675-1333
Sentinel - .992-2157

Mt~S~

~

All real estate odvert1smg
In this newspaper Is
subrect to the Federa l
Fa1r Housmg Act ol1968
whtch makes 11 Illegal to
advertise ' any
preference, limitation or
d1scnmlnat1on based on
race color, religion, sex
fam111a1 status or national
ongln, or any mtentlon to
make any such
preferl!lnce, l1mttat1on or
dtscnmmatton
This newspaper will not
know ingly accept
advertlsemen1s tor real
es1ate wh1ch 1s m
VIOlation of the law Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings advertised m
lh 1s newspaper are
available on an equ&amp;l
opportumly bases
~ 3 bedroom Ranch 2

ar garage m ground pool
75,000 3460 State Rout
18. 740)256-1962
Pt Plea~ant/Sandh!ll Road
3Br 1Ba t 600/ sqft Ranch on
6 acre tevel 101 Oak floors
1st house on Rtght pas I
MarsMII
Untverstty
$103 000
!740)949 1131
after 5 OOPM

Lot on Sand Hill Ad 2 26
Acres n n1ce SubdiVISion
519 9000 1304)675 2995
Me rcerv111e Lots lor sale
shared entrance off St Rt
218 3·13 acres Phone
(740)256 1825
Two homesttes fo r sale Bolh
one acre m/1 3 1/2 m1tes
from Holzer Hosp1tal
620 Evergreen Rd $19 500
560 Evergreen Rd $18 500
Call
(740)446-8840
or
(7 40 )645-45 13
V(lu could f1sh your badlands
and 1ncrease property vatue
toot Make tand 1nto lakes
1740)388·8228

Rl· '\ I \I..,

lO

HOl'St.~
H&gt;R Rtxr

1 oedroom turn shed !louse
wtth atr condtttonmg No
smoktng (740)446 1759
1 Br poss•ble 2 located m
New Haven every lhmg 1n
walkmg dtstance appliances
lurntshect total Electnc $325
No
month S300 depos11
Pets call (304 )882 3652

Ranch style 3 bedroom 2
bath famrly room w/f1re 3 bedroom hOuse lor rent 1n
Ferry
$450
place large 2 car garage Gal ltpoils
DepoSit $450 pe r month
(740)992-6084

J3lO Moun F

(304)6 ~ ~·7155

Hmtt:'
HJR So\LE

3
bedroom
hOuse
1n
Pomeroy S400 a mo $400
1f2·acre lot on Racoon depos•t no pels (740 )9 49Creek , 14x65 ful lv fum1shed 7004
2 bedroom mq_b1le home
boat docks deck1flg boal 3 bedroom, 1 1/2 balh split
ramp 24 catport Askmg level No pets $500 mont!&lt;
$35 000 Ph (740)367· 7025 S300
dep ostt
Call
cell 740 645 0508
~7 40 ) 446 3617
1982 Double wtde EMcellent 3br Ranch w ga rage lg
slalter hOme Very good fenced yard e~c tamt ly
cond1t1on Well taken care 1ocat1on
mtPt PIP.asa r t
ot and clean 3 bedroom all $675 00 a month Clep &amp; ref
walk·tn closets, 2 baths With requ1red Call (304)273·111 2
garden tub m master BR t304 )638·7411
bath Includes underpmn•ng
All etectr.c w1th cent ral A C Ntce 2 bed room auadleo
Must be moved $12 000 ga1age Near Ro dney lease
Calll740)245-b144
ana Reference $400 tmontl1
2000 Oako~~ood Home 1 6M84 plus depos•l Call (740)446

2601

3b r 2ba all etectnc cent1a1
a1r Call anyt1me {30 4)675·
7157

!"21&gt; \IORJJ.EHo\lt~

28)(70 Rodman double wtde
3 bec:lroom 2 barn fireplace
w1th ven1 1ess gas logs
10M66 covered back porch
heat pump Must be mov9d
(740)245-9159

Mobtle hOme for re nt S400
month S400 deposit 6
monthS
tease ,
Call
(740)367 7762 01 (740)367

Customer cancellai!Onl'
New 14x70 3 bedroom 2
bat h lots of extras Save
SS$ Free lot ren t Free sktrt1ng k1t It won t last long 1800 637 3238

FOR Rt:J\1

7272
Ntce 2 and 3 bedroom
mobtle names tor rent
mc!uaes water sewe r &amp;
tra sh no pets depOSit &amp;
$300 pe• month, (740)992
2167

Used Tra11er tor sale by
owner
Outs1de Storage N1ce 2 bedroom mob•le
butld•r1g mcluded both m home
No
pets
Call
good shape (304)67 5 8638 (7 40\ 4.16-200 3

�Page· 86 • The Daily Sentinel

tt

~

In loving memory
of Neva M. Grimm
April 1st, 1914 •
May 5th. 1986
We lovt and miss
you more each day
You will alway., be
in our heart and
thoughts
Loved and missed
By: Family

required, no pets, 740-9922218.

1
bedroom
apt.
jVasher/dryer hookup, S290
deposi_t required. No
~ts . 740441-1164

.ieflt.

2 bedroom, just past Holzer

,t84.

$425 month. Call (740)441-

2 bedroom, near Holzer,
CIA., WID hookup, quiet
location. available 5/1/04 ,
$429 plus utilities. (740)4462957.
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from S344 to $442
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
740-446-2568 .
Equal
Housing Opportunity.

MtSCELlAN}:o!JS
MfJICHANill'iE

Twin Rivers Tower is accepting applications tor waiting
list for Hud-subsized, 1· br.
a ~artment , call 675-6679
EHO

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

l/u66ard 's qreenhtiUSe

I

•
•
•
•

Easter Flowers
Bedding Flowers
Veg~table Plant s
Blooming
&amp; Foliage Baskc1s
• Pouing Soil

SIDERS JEWELERS
Main St.; Pt. Pleasant
Wai-Mart Plaza. Mason

•
•
•
•
•
•

Porch Boxes •
Combination Pots
Perennials
Spnice Trees
Shrubs
(
.Peat Moss ·

9-5 Closed
740-992-5776

Monday- Saturday

Now At Our New
Location

"'

Sunday

Box

MUIUNL~O£~
650

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Ravenswood Chiropractic
.Center

Let me do 1t for ycul

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

Ta~e

Top • Removal · Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

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

.'.Iaiii/ \milrrhle

Storage

GRAVELY TRACTOR

for 2004 Meigs
County Fair.

29670 Bashan Road

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Racine, Ohio

204 Condor Street

45771
740-949-2217
'

,_, .Size~ ~·x1 O'
~ffii.~ to 10'x30' A
:.
'

..

~

Lawn and Garden Equipment is our
·busil1ess, not our sideline

FRurrs&amp;

All varieties of flowers and
garden plants. Caldwell's 1
mile south of Tuppers Plains
on SA 7, (740)667-3368
Kennebec potatoes, clearance $5.00 per 50# . 6500?
State Route 124. Reedsville,
Ohio

Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road , Porter, Ohio.
(740)446-7444 1-877-8309162. Free Estimates, Easy
'inancing, 90 days same as
cash . Visa/ Master Card.
Drive- a- little save alot.

IR\"\ ... POI~I \I H)\

AtrrOS
FUR SALE

$500!.Hondes,
Chevys,
Jeeps, etc ! POLICE
IMPOUNDS Cars from
$500. For listings 1-900·719·
300t ext 3901
-,-,.,--::--..,.--:---:::1989 Pontiac Bonneville,
. Thompsons Appliance &amp; good running condition
Repair-675-7388. For sale, $900.00 (740)742-2166
re-conditioned
automalic
wa·shers &amp; dryers. refrlgera· 1991 Mercury Cougar. All
· power, runs nreal,
slereo
1 tors, gas an d electnc
"'
~anges, air conditioners. and system, 140,000 miles.
wringer washers. Will do As~ing $900 090. 740·388·
repai rs on major brands in 048 1 or 740-388-049t .
~hop or at your home.
$3,500
1993
Bronco
(304)674-0133 .

Used Furniture Store.

130 Bula\.111e 1'1ke,
Mattresses,
dressers,
~ouches , recliners, much
tnore. Grave Monuments.
j740)448-4782 Gallipolis,
OH, HRS 10-4M-F.
·

r
•

'THE BORN LOSER

:P"

r.\Ot-IETI\IZ'{

fj- 1-\tc'( NZt:. tlfT&lt;/ftfT'{

DU.ISIC/1\D,£..-~

• If-1 OUK WJ&gt;..HD'\:'lHI p~CVL\) &amp;: f'IFI'(/FIFTY
PIW~O:'ll Tl 01'&lt;\:'l

PROPO~I T\Ot-1:':&gt; ...

1

!'

IH A
TIGERS
FAN .

Advertise in this
Space for
$50 per month

Pass

r,~;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;.....;;;;;;;;;~

·----ilii-iiiorJ

94 S- 10 Truck for sale $ j810
wh~l dri\le $2, 500
93 Toyota for sale $1 ,500
(304)675-2245

HOME

l\1PROVF1\1FNI'S

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
!AJWDsNS
...,.
Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. Local relerences fu r1987 Ford Aerostar Van , nished. Established 1975.
Call
24 Hrs. (740) 446goOd condition , $1 ,500.
36 Gun Liberty Gun Sate, 0870 , Rogers Basement
$1 ,700 Call (740)379-2150 Waterproofing

1993 Cadillac Deville PIS,
automatic, power seats, 96 Toyota 4 Runner, loaded,
trans .
$6.900.00
~IW , AJC, new ti~es, 141 k std
miles $4200 (740)949-2253 (740)992·2136

,' ILI...:L.JJ'-'----"---1-..J.J

:PEANUTS
l,V~AT WE'RE LOOKING FOR
15 T~E JUR'r' ASSEMBL'I'ROOM
ON T~E SECOND FLOOR ...

r Mmo~CYCLt:S I

on
SAVINGS

I

sale will be held at
211 W Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio . The
Farmers Bank and
Savings Company Is
selling for ceah In
.11and or .certified
check the following
collateral :
1996
Ctievro101
B. e r e 1 t a
1GILV1 54XTY114.523
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio , reserves the
right to bid at this sate
and to withdraw lhe
above collateral prior
to sale. Further, The
Farmers Bank and
Savings
Company
reserves the right to
reject any or all bids
submitted.
The
above
described collateral
will ba sold '"IS·I&amp;·
where-is" , with no

expressions

Shop e
Classifieds!

or

Implied
warranty
given.
For further Information. or for an appoint·
mentlo Inspect collet·
era I, prior to sole date

contacl
Cyndte
Gillilan, Diane Rector
or Randy Hays at 992·
2136.
5/5,6,7

Public

Notice

810 FOR BUS
.Eastern
.J.ocal
School Olatrlct. 50008
Stale Route 681,
Reedsville,
Ohio ,
45772 Is accepting
bids for a 71 passenger
school
bus .
Specifications lor bus
·can ba obtained by
calling lhe superln·
tendent'a office at
740·667-6079. Quotes
will be opened In the
treaaurer's office at
noon on Wednesday,
May 19, 2004. Tha
board reserves tha
rlghl to relacl any or
any part of the bid.
Bids
should
be
"Bid
for
labeled
School Bus" and
mailed to:
Eastarn Local
School Olslrlcl
Treasurer's Office

50008 Slate Rt 681
Reedsville, Ohio
45772
(5) 5,12 2TC

I SORT OF Wl5~ '{OU
HADN'T WORN TI-1AT OVTFrL

'{OU 6ET MORE RESPECT
IF THEY KNOW YOU SERVED
HONORABL'I' IN WORLD WAR I

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used

475 South Church St.
· Ripley, wv 25271

HOWARD l. .
WRITESEl

2000 Trail Harbor 30 ft .
camper. Excellent condition ,
fully equipped , used little
$9,500.00 (7401992·3301
Pomeroy. Best to caU morn·
ing or evening .

Pa s~

Pass

Pass

Thursday, May 6, 2004
Bv Bernice Bede Osol
The year ahead may be a wee&lt;.hng ·out
penod for you . Assoc1a te s w~ro don"t
measure up to yow h1gh standards wrll be
dropped from your rnne r Circle and be
replaced by tllose who ca n pass the test ·of
true lr1end sh1p.
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20) -Your m na ~e
organilat1onal ab• htres g1ve you the ed~
oVer ma sterm1ndrng th e alfa1rs of lllose
w1th whom you'll IJe rnvolved today. The
methodology you des1gn Will be readily
accepted .
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)- People w1th
whom you assoc1ate today will treat you
e•actly as you treat them . Fortun ately. harmony w111 preva1l because ot the coopera tive and cons1dera te spirit you di splay
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- Thu:1e ele ments must ca rne urto play today in order
lor you to feel a sense of accompl•shment
senSitiVIty to SOCIAl needS. produCIIVIIy and
indusrriousness.
LEO (July 23- Aug. 22) ~ Instead ot keep rng your IE*!Iings to yourself. let others
know ll ow much they mean to you Th1s
rnrght be the day to let your sent1ments be
known to someone to whom you·re attracted

~-

1989 Terry Resort Slh wheel
with hitch. Good co ndition
Asking $5,000. (740)416·
141 5.

'96 Coleman cam per. told·
Noctlce Is hereby
out
sleeps 7-8. stove &amp;
93 Nissan Pathfinder 4 WD.
given
that
on
refrigerator
&amp;
sink,
~
$2500,
S2,500.00.
86 Jeep
Saturday
May
8,
2004
(740)992-6084
Waggoner 4 WO $1,500.00
at 10:00 a.m. a public
(740)992-2136

"--------,J

. .
RockY "RJ"
IMPORTS
Athens

2002 F-350 SAW 5 1,400
miles XLT. $28,500, Fiflh
package,
wheel towing
many extras. (740)645·
2103.

"r"'"""--.,~-&amp;----

'i .''ffll!!
~-·"'
~·

••
•

i · ~t.lPP'~

CAMI'ERS&amp;

3NT

'"'

Pass

*ROOFING
diME
MAINTENANCE
*SEAMlESS
GUTTER
*Fne Es11mateb

IN TI-l~ 0:..\) DAI'S 1 '114~EW A

Few ia£VISIOI'IS OOT HOTEL
WINPOWS AND I'% !lEC.EIVEO

1-800-822-0417
. "WVs # 1 Chevy,

Pontiac, Buick. Olds

EKCEU.W SERVICE EVER

&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

SINCE

949-1405
Sunset Home
Construction
Bryan Reeves
New Homes,

Room Additions,

Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens , Drywall
&amp; More
FREE ESTIMATES!

740-7 42-341

Advertise
in this
space
for

$50 per
month

~ARFIELD

•

NORTHUP DODGE

252 Upper River Road • Gallipolis
740-446-0842 • 949-1155 Evenings

'fHERE ARE' Cl-AW MARKS
ON THE COUCH

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

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Gar•ee•
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutter~
• VInyl Sldin~ &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks

We do It all e•cept
furnact work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

ROBERT
BISSEll
CINSTIICDON

11 Informal

52 Picmc time

12 Travel

53 EKpiates
54 Skoing
event
55 Twinges
56 Animal

downer

trainer

Van Gogh
15 lowered
oneseH
16 Marie's
companion
17 Raison d'18 Sil-up targets
19 Guns lhe
engine
23 Out of work
25 Stay afloat
26 HBO
receivers
29 Excessive
32 P1as1ic-

-Beatty

DOWN
1 Frigh1en

20 Furry
45 Seldom '
"'Star Wars··
seen
·
find protons
creature
47 AAA
Bakery item 21 Grape plant
51• A''M•il
WHy
22 Melro haze 46 Retplte
24 Do !'lim
49 Use a ray
Actress
-Garr
.editing
gun
Frisky
26 Mix a salad 50 SFO info
mammals . - 27 Space
- 51 P.er1011a "The
-grata
.·.
Greatest"'
28 Nonfat milk 52 Kangaroo ;
German
30 Depend on
pouch
article
31 Inquire
Noncom
37 Mincing
BiaSI·
39 Boggy
fiJ rn ace fuel 41 Conten1ed
Berry
sighs
products
43 Clammy

3 Whereto
4
5
6
7

Band

33 Paneling
wood
34 PC memory

8

9

unils

35 Frat-party

16 Egging on 44 Peoee
18 Paetnenbeo
goddess

2 Organic
compound

10

order

11

36 Coas1ed
. 38· Sorts
12
40 Teamster rig

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Ct"IE'Onty C•oher mpl!qamo;. ~r~ createc ';om QI.IOI.iltiOns bt famous PI!O~ pasl !InC ~nl
Eacr ene• r~ the cl!l!"ler sta~s lor anottrer

Today ·s clue I equals C

." UH

IXFFBY

NHHEJFT

JF

AB0 H

FB0

WXKJFT

LHVYHO

SJKH

LHIBAH

YB

XT 0 H H X L S A

x·

ISHXO

YWXF

LHYYH0
V. W X F

1

J F

IBFNIJHFIH."

NBIOXYHN
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Wisdom a1,times rs lound 10 lolly . - Horace
"lf w1se men were hatrs. the world would need a wig .. - Austin O'Malley
(Ci2004 by NEA Inc 5-5

WOlD
OAMI

&lt;Your 'Birthday:

..
•

MmuRHOMES

North

,..--East
Pass

AstrcGrap:p_

PE~~NI\LLY,

1996 Mustang Red , V6 , CD
player, Sunroof, e~&lt; ce llent
shape $3,900 (304)675·
8878
2000
Yamaha
Warrior
red/white plastic. Ner1 bars,
t997 Olds. Cutlass, 86,000
loud pipe, new handle bars
Buy or sell.
Riverine miles. Loaded, e~&lt;cellent
&amp; grab bar, runs great.
Antiques, 1124 East Main cond. $2,700 (304)675·8165 $3000 obo (740)843-5235
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740·
992·2526. Ru$S Moore,
1998 Ford Taurus.
200t Honda SMdow Spirit
All extras. garage kept.
excellent condition, 92,000 motorcycle. VT1100, e)(celown 6 r.
lent condition 1 owner
M.scFJJ.ANEOUS
miles, $3 ,800.
'
Asking
$5,300. (7401446·
MERO«ND6E
____1~7~•o~)4_4_6_·4_o~
__
. ___
7668 .
2002 Mitsublshl Lancer ES,
Fqr Sale: Lap Top Computer, 31 ,OOO m 1tes , auto, co play· 95 PW 80 Yamaha , In real
$350. New Boat Cover,
er, rear spoiler. $5,900 OBO. good condition. $600. Call
1100. Call (740)441 -8299or 740 _256 • 161 8.
740·256· (740)446·9552 or (740)441·
1740)441-5472.
0694.
6200.

t

GOIINTO
THAT WOMAN \I

Open 7 daya
• weak daylight
to dartcf

r

I

8 6 3

W("st
Pass

COMPARE THESE PRICES!!
4"" pot of annuals 94e
4" pot of perennials $1.18 Buy 5 or more for~ t.ut1••t

~ ~

&amp; up; electric ranges, $95 &amp;
up; Frost tree refrigerators,
$150 &amp; up; Like new sideby~side with water &amp; ice in
the door, $~75 ; couch. $75;
full size bed, box springs &amp;
mattress, $150 ; full ~ize bed
bmc springs &amp; mattress,
$125; r8.ble &amp; ·chairs, $100;
glider rocker, $45; lamps,
$10.
Skaggs Appliances
76 Vine Street
' (740)441;.7398

BALLS 0'
FIRE!! WHAT'S

Meigs County's Larg_est selection of
annuals, perennials, vegetables,
shrubbuy, fruit, ornamental trees,
roses, rhotlottenttrons, anti azaleas.

VEGETABLES

rio

Good washers &amp; dryers, $9o

•
•

famous baseball achle\lemenJ? (I' m
guessmg, back 1n March whe n th1s was
wnnen , )hat 1t w111 be hard not to kn ow the
answer. following vast public1ty m all of
the tnedta .)
What 1s the best defens1ve play ever? No
one can answer that quest1on. But here IS
one · of my favorites . To test yourself.
cover the West and South hands In the
auct1on South ha ~ shown a balan ced 1315 po1nts and 4-4 1n the maJors. Agamst
South 's fou r spades your partner leads
the club lwo. fourlh·hlghest 1n prmc1ple.
Alter wmmng 1-\'llh the )Bck. how would
you conlinue ?
It looks forlor n. Declarer seems to have
4-4-3-2 distribution w11h the .ace-Jack of
spades, the kmg·QJ.Ieen o1 hearts and the
diamond ace Even 1f you sw1tch to a
deceptwe d1amond nme. 1! looks as
though declarer w1ll nse w1th the ace.
draw trumps. and cash four heart tr iCkS,
d1scard1ng dummy's d1amond queen.
Sitting East was Brazilian superstar
~abriel Chagas. He realized that lhe only
chance was to find partner wrth the heart
queen and declarer w!lh three clubs. At
trick two. Chagas cashed lhe dub ace .
Then . he shifted to the d1amond nine
Now look at it from South's perspect1ve:
Thinking that if he ~South) finessed m
d1amonds. West would wrh wrth lhe k1ng
and give East a club ruf1. South wt:1n w1th"
h1s d1amond ace_ drew three rounds ol
trumps. and played a club to dummy's 1a.
Imagine hrs shock when Chagas produced the queen and cashed the d1a·
mond king lor one down.
It IS the !DOth anniversary ot Cy Young ·s
perfect game.

..

n Mon·Frl9·5 Sat 9·12

I''

Good Used Appliances.
Reconditioned ·
and
Guaranteed .
Washers,
-;Dryers,
Ranges ,
and
Refr.igerators, SOme start at
$95. Skaggs· Appliances, 76
Vine St , (740)446·7398

of films

49 Peak

Today is the 1DOth anniversary of what

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2975
Manning K . Roush
Owner
0

1970 Ford F350 , 10 Fl.
EQuiPMENT
Grain bed, tow miles, many
For Sale Portable Smidley new parts. new tires/wheels.
Scales, new. Call (740)446· (740)245-0485.
6741 .
1979 Che11rolet 1/2 ton .
miles.
Body
Massey
Ferguson
255 129,000
Diesel with front loader, good/lair, runs great $400+
2800 hrs, $10,500 moving accessories. $1 ,000 firm.
(740)441-3 t31 leave masmust sell (304)674-0t33
sage.
Moving Locust Fence Post, - ' - - - - - - Must Sell (304)674-0133
1979 Chevy
112 ton
Scolsdale 4X4, 6in lift, 36in
tir6s, runs excellent. good
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body, 4spd. 1,700 080 must
•~-------• sel1 (304)675-8952
For sale Boer Goats for Fair
i99 1 Chevy Sil\lerado,
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Registered ANGUS and
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up payments (304)773-5177 or
(304 )593-3596
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J () y li ~
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unfurnished 1 &amp; 2 bedroom
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Open
Thu rs-Fri-Sat. 1354
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Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis,
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h8at lamp, cncket farm &amp;
supplies Paid $120 sell for

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pro1est

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Where: Tuppers Plains Fire
Department
Sunday, May 9 , 2004
Why:· Because You Care
Show your Mom that you care by
taking hm to dinner on Mother's Day
$6.00 per person
Menu: BBQ Chicken or BBO R1bs.
Baked Beans , Cole Slaw, Rolls &amp;
Drinks. Deserts are available:
Home Made Pies &amp; Cakes .
It all starts 11 :00 am

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Decorative BaKes • Scented Bears
1928 Jewelry • Cups
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Nice one GR · unlurn1shed MIF, cream &amp; sable. taking
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paid. Deposit required . Call blfs·. taking deposit, $400,
(740)696·1 085
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Lqcated at 1151 E\lergreen
Drive Point Pleasant, WV
Phone No is (304)675-5806.
E.H.O

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Gas cook stove- 3 yrs. old .
18,000 BTU, AC wlih
remote. 3 months old
(740)256-6809.

r

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

www.mydailysentinel.com

critters

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&amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300
~ern 1 Bedroom apt: Call
Truck tool box, three TV 's,
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old bottles. electric cords.
New 2 bedroom apartment. marbles, car radios's. old
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T6r rent Middleport. Oh .
$325/mo.. $300 deposit.
(740)596-2198 or 740:591 0649.

. ' .,

5, 2004

BULLETIN BOARD
T"column inch weekdays
•1s• c:oUm Inch Sat or SUnday

~.

r

~Wednesday, May

Gelvk~5L~

In Memory

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furnished and unlurnished, security deposit

Wednesday, May 5, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

:l3RIZZWELLS

!

WHOA! AN&amp;' t JUS'f
f'HE' COUCH!

C~AWEP

'fHA'f'S ONE SPOOKY

COINCI&amp;'ENCE, HUH?

.

VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept 22) - Tl11s 1s a
good 11me to make amends wrth •elat•ves
rn Siluat•ons where you co uld have been
more se ns1i ive to th e1r needs by let11ng
them know h·ow mu Ch they mean to you
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 23) - Yo.u have ·
eKcephonal skrll s as a pronroter. and thrs
could be espec1ally tr Ue today rn ilreas
wll'ere you ore espous1ng a c:ause 1n whiCh
you truly believe. Your smcen ty wrll win
supporters
SCORPIO (Oci. 24-Nov 22) """"7 Other s
aren't likely to hand you anyth•ng on a sri·
ver pl atter. butrl you really want something
and you g1ve 11 your best elfort today.
on loo ker s are 11kely to p1tch 1n and help
you acqUire 11.
SAGITTAR IUS (1\jov. 23-Dec 21) - You 're
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lrnd uplrttrng and 1nSp1rmg Today tllese
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U!:&gt;Ual .
CAPR ICOR N (Dec. 22-Jan 19) - The
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ness to them
AQUAR IUS fJan 20-Feb 19)--: Hommg 1n
on the baSIC motiVa!IOns ol tllOse With
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you an eclga on dealrnQ wrt11 them
Knowrng where they're commg !rom
enhances relat1ons
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) :-- To your
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today 1n S1luat1ons where you have aumorlly over ot hers You'll be both tarr and consrderate, yet firm when necessary
AR IES (March 21 -Apnl 19)
Although
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m the zod1ac , today your percepf•ve
rnstmcts cou ld be amazmgly accurate If
you get a strong hunch about $Omethrng.
follow 11 to the letter.

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l U"&lt;CH !'-\D"T() \'3
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Stop &amp; Compare

22 Yeara Loc•l EKperlence

•

l' I I

1·

.--:8:-;R:-;E;:-."'o;-.- v-.---, ~

" I've a lways wondered ."
the cuta? sat:l to her beau .
"wh v men ma,emdesofhlgnL-..J---'--'---'--' ·o • w ay·s the1compla1n oecause
---f-I-.A- X
__D
__F
:_-- ,- ----; they have .10 · · · ··to· • 1"

I 1· I

"'

0

e·~ 1re chuc kle cuorad
b-.' l,l .. r y m the '11 1 -,~ ' "9 word'
L_!__L.. . L -.L...J......J y'J"J ce·, e .:p trcrn sre:;~ "-.Jc J below

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FOR

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SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS ' ' ' ·· "

,.,ledwm . Wafer . Lofty. Future • TIME LEFT
"It doesn ttake much to make me happy " the lady told
he' fc; end "I fee l-great whe1 I can fmd a park:ng meter
with TI ME LEFT on 1('

ARLO &amp; JANIS

�Wednesday, May 5, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B8 • 'The Daily Sentinel

_T hree bombs explode
outide Athens police
station, leading to
Olympic woJ:-.ies, As

#

-

SmartY Jones
an Sl cover boy
with
new
,hooters
Eddington. Rock Han! Ten
Associated Press
and Water Cannon.
Trainer Bob Bat'fert said
Smarty Jones made quite Preachinanhebar is a possian impression with his ble starter.
Kentucky Derby victory 'on and off the racetrack.
~ulhall's Imperialism
. While the Derby winner timshed third in the Derby
:was on his way home to but
'' skippi ng the
Park
on Preakness to prepare for
Philadelphia
the Belmont Stakes on
Tuesday, hi s mud-splat - June 5. the final leg of the
tered mug became cover
- 1 f
S
Triple Crown.
boy mater.ta
or ports
Eddin~ t on and Rock
lll_ustrated. and yet another Hard fen missed the
potential Preakness challenger pulled out of the Derby because they did
not have enough gradc'd
race.
- The photo of Smarty stakes earnings to get into
Jones and jockey Stewart the lleld: Water Cannon is
Ellioll racing ahead of the based in Maryland and is
field in the Perby is coming off .a win in the
a.:companied by the head- Tesio Stakes at Pimlico on
line : "Wh y Everybody April 17 .
.
. .
Loves Smarty Jones ... The
Smany Jones populanty
Horse from the Wrong · keeps growmg as hts story
Side of the Tracks Looks ts told over and over aga m:
Fit for a Triple Crown ." · He 's a Pennsylvania-bred
It 's been more than 20 horse who nearly dted
years since a Derby winner when he slammed his head
made the Sl cover. Sunny's on an tron bar: hts !ramer
Halo was the last. on the and JOCkey are based at
May' 16, 1983, edition .
sma ll ~time Phill y Park :
With his _authoritati ve , 2 and ht s ,,wners refused a
. 3/4-length win over Lion blank c he~k to sell htm .
Hearl in the Derby to run . _Now he s the hrst u~de- _
his record to 7-0. Smany teated Derbyw mner smce
Jones is also chasing away Seattle Slew 111 1977. wtth
hi s rivals.
a chance to wm the .
Cheiron
trained by Preakness and enter the
Kristin M.ulhall was the Belmont Stakes with a
latest Preakness 'defection. shot at becoming the first
leaving six horses set to Triple Crow~ winner since
. .
take on Smarty Jones in the Afftr!lled Ill 78.
May 15 second leg of the . He s also made .mtllionTriple Crown. On Monday. atres of ht s owners. Roy
fourth -place Derby fini sher and Pat Chapman. They
. Lime house was ruled out collected a $5 mtlhon
by owner Cot CampbelL
b?nus from Oaklawn Park
Before Smany Jones left after Smarty Jones swept
Churchill Downs, trainer the Rebel Stakes. Arkansas
Kentucky
John Servis was beginning Derby and
to understand how popular Derby.
Servis. a na ti ve of
his colt has become.
"Thi s i s bigger than I Charles Town. W.Va., said _
ever imagi ned." Servis Smarty Jones wtll resume
said. " It ha s been crazy. but training Wednesday or
I'm having the best time of Thursday.
" He' s doing great,"
my life ."
Smarty Jones arrived at Servis said . " I see no reaBaltimore- Washington son why we wouldn ' t be
International Airpon on heading to the Preakness.
Tuesday evening and was This story is great for our
loaded onto a trailer for hi s industry."
trip
back
home · to
Lion Heart continued hi s
Philadelphia Park.
training with a jog around
Other
.confirmed Keeneland .
Preakness starters are
"So far, so good ," trainer
Derby horses Lion Heart, Patrick Biancone said.
The Cliff's Edge (fifth) "We are right on schedand Borrego (lOth), along ule."

~

All work, no play 100 days
before Athens Olympics

BY RICHARD ROSENBLATT

BY USA ORKIN

Associated Press

arches still ·mu st be moved
The TOC began to panic. In
into place. Attempts to glide 2000, then-IOC president
the two sides into place Juan Antonio Samaranch
could begin later thi s week. publicly sco lded Athen' for
Other key projects. includ- the delays .
ing a new tram line, are not
Then came Sept. II , 2001.
expected to be ready until Those attacks - and later
less than-a month before the terrorist strike&gt; in Turke y
o pening ceremony. And and Spain - turned the
progress on a roof for the Athens Games into the
swimming pool was so far bigge st sec urity ·e ffort in
behind , it was &gt;crapped alto- Olympics hi story. The price
gether.
ta g has reached nearl y $1.2
"Our ex perts who have billion and could rise if
reviewed the se plans say. threats escalate.
.
' Yes. it's feasible. It can be · Early Wedne sday. three
done,'" Oswald said. "But as bombs exploded outside a
long as it's not done. you .police station. but there were
never know if any unexpect- no report s of injuries.
ed difficulty will arise."
authorities said.
The . pre-dawn
blasts,
IOC president Jacques
Rogge put Athens organizers which occurred within 26
on notice that he· expects minutes. ca me before ceresome welcome surprises dur- monie s to mark I00 days left
ing next week 's visit.
until the games .
"I look forward to hearing - An anonymous caller to an
more news from them of Athens newspaper warned of
how much is being accom- the attacks in advance. but
plished in a short time," gave no motive or claim of
Rogge said .
responsibility.
"As we enter the firial
The overall Olympic budstretch together. most of the get is already more than $ 1
preparations are already billion above the planned
complete," he added. "More $5.5 billion.
work remains, however, and
For the lirst tim·e . the IOC
we are continuin g our close took out cancellation in sur"
cooperation ... to ensure that ance, which protects aga in st
everyth ing needed for the a terrorist attack . earthgames to succeed is tn quake s and other natural displa·ce."
asters. The $ 170 million polIt wasn ' t supposed to be icy wou ld give the IOC.
like thi s.
national Olympic commitWhen Athen s was awarded tees and sports federations
the Olympics in 1997, orga- eno ugh money to continue
nizers boasted that 70 per- operations.
cent of the venues were in
"We are doing .everythin g
place . The Athens Ganies, which is humanly possible to
the IOC was assured . would have the maximum security."
be organized on a "human Athen s
Ma yo r
Dora
scale," without grandiose or . Bakoyianni said. "We have
cumbersome projects.
to show that modern Greece
But the system cuuldn ' t is able to organize very good
shake its o ld habits. The Olympic Game s."
Socialist government (which
When her party. New
was ousted in elections in Democracy. won national
March) let three years slip by elections, it inherited the
with littl e progress on Olympi c headache s. The
Olympic work .
new
premier.
Costas

ATHENS. Greece - The
sprint to the Olympics is
being run through an obstacle course.
Fraillic work - including
on the main stadi um - slogs
on in mud . through rainstorms and at night. Roads
And squar.e' are ripped up for
repaving or new rail lines.
Cement mixers and cranes
snarl city traffic. Whirlwinds
of dust spin through neig-h borhoods.
Ready or not. the Athens
. Games wi II start I00 days
from Wednesday_
"My major ch.allenge is the
same as th at faced by everybody else involved in games
preparations: Stay focused
and make every- minute
count. becau se we don't
have a moment. to ·lose.''
chief At hens Olympics organizer Gianna AngelopoulosDaskalaki said .
Preparation s for these
games have been racked by
delays and_· glitches. Four
years ago. abou t the biggest
last-minute concern officials
in Sydney had was planting
flowers outside arenas.
And for Athens ' 4 million
residents, the frustrations
and burdens of li vin g in ·a
giant work-in-progress could
get worse before the Aug .
13-29 Olympics begin.
The International Olympic
Committee arriv es Monday
for its last major ·inspection
visit , hoping everything
comes together in the days
ahead .
"We won' t have much time
before the games, that is for
sure." Denis Oswald. the top
IOC overseer of Athens'
preparations.
told
The
Assoc iated Pre ss. "Some
time ago, we were also fearing that things would be
ready only after the games.
Now we are . confident that
· everything wi II be finished
before the games."
But just how soon before is
sti ll an open question.
·
Oswald and the IOC wani
all venues finished by the
end of June. That applies
even to the main stadium's
new roof, whose two huge

Caramanli&gt;. tonk re,pntl\ibility by making him,elf culture mini,ter - the official
in charee of cuordinatin2
Olymptc pr,paratinn .
Hi ' gol'ernment pre"ed
contractors to w,irk around
the dock and sign contract&gt;
promising to fini,h work &lt;In
time.'
·
"It is nol lime 1o blame or
criticize." deput y culture
minister Fani Palli -Petralia
said. "Many things could
have been don e. but at this
moment we are focu;in!! on
today and we are doing ~ - hat
has to do with today . We arc
not looking back. only forward ."
Palli -Petralia make' whal
she calls· "raid&gt;.. on contractors al night tn make . sure
they arc sticking to the light
de&lt;tdline,.
Each week. &gt;he tour&gt; th e
mu; t high -profile project:
the stcel-and-g la" roof on
the main ' tadium. The roof.
designed b~' Spani'h archi tect Santiaeo Calatrava. has
been so far behind ,c hedu le
that the IOC co nsidered .:an celing it .
Some Athenian' wish the
IOC would just ca ll oiT the
whole thing.
"I do nol care at all about
th e games . It '"'ulcl he he tter
to nut have them "' that we
could have our peace ...
Eftihia Liak&lt;tkou 'aid in the
seaside suburb of Palco
Faliron.
Re siden t.s there ' ta ged
protests and sue d to stop
construction of a train line
they say- will restrict access
to the beach.
Georgia Leilemiduu. who
works in a pastry &gt;hop in the
same nei ghborhood. just
wants life to get b:~.:k to normal.
"It is a hassle. Athen' is an
endless const ru ction sit e ...
Lei lemidou said. "When will
it end·.&gt;"
L

tne

L

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o (I :\TS • \ ol. .'i-1 - :\o .

• Reds dry Brewers.
SeePage 81

Appalachian c Ohio. The
money will be used to create
two separate c haritable
POMEROY- A success- funds: a component scholarfu l physician and surgeon in ' ship fund for graduates of
Omaha, Neb. never forgot Meigs High School and a
his strong tie s to his home fund to provide an annual
region. or hi s debt of grati- school and teacher award .to
tude to the educators and . Mason Elementary School in
schools .that influenced his Mason.
.life during hi s t'ormative
A contribution of $500.000
years growing up in wi ll fund th e Bac htel
Middleport and Mason. Scholarship Fund at Meigs
W.Va.
High School. and scholarBefore his .deat h, Dr. Harry ships wi ll be grallted ann ua lKeig put a $7QO.OOO bequest ly to students in honor of the
in motion th rough the Keig longtime teacher and coach.
Charitable Trust to · create · Forrest BachteL
two endowment funds withKeig additionally conIll
the Foundation for tribu ted $200.000 to estabSTAFF RE!'ORT

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Page AS
• Patsy Gwinn Ingels
• Raymond Blowers Jr.

The new truck rep laces
''top of the line" condition
and on ly has about 20.000 an old 1'172 truck thai
· Durst said l1 ad a leaky
miles 011 it.
REEDSVILLE - Meigs
'The truck i&gt; in excellent wate r tank.
Cour,;y just got alittle safer condition,'~ he said. "With just
"Our old truCk wa'
because a new fire truck 20,000 miles, the diesel engine falling apart and it was just
has just arrived and is ready is not even wom in yet."
a matter of time before it
for service by the · Olive
The truck, whic h holds really started 10 leak." he
Township Fire Department. 500 gallons of water. came said. "We were desperate."
The truck, which is worth fitted with $25.000 of fire
When the truck mTived this
more than $90,000, w.as a fighting eq uipment which week. Durst ~aid the dcpartgift
from
the Ohio included several axes. noz- mem was quick to thank state
Department of Natural' zles. hoses. a generator and · senator Joy Padgett. Rick
Resources
(ODNR). some ladders. The cab Maier wi th ODNR. Tuppers
William Durst, the captain holds seven fire fighters Plains Fire Chief Jeff Newell
and treasurer of the Olive and th e truck features a and many others.
" I lhink this new truck
Township Fire Department, foam deli very system
wrote the grant for th e. which is becoming more of will be a .hig help to area
li ke
departments
truck and said it was used a necessity in modern fire fire
previously at an atomic fig hting. Durst said the new · Chester, Tuppers Plains.
power plant which was pump is virtuall y brand Coolville." Durst said.
shut down a few years ago. new wi th only 436 hours of "Any place they cal l in
Meigs Cou nty. we wi ll go."
· He said the 1990 truck is in use time.

2 SECTION S -

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics

-

. BY

The Daily Sentinel

tall-growing trees in the utility right-of,way and trims trees growing

-1 '~
v,..J.."-;;ti.!l..L~o.co'. r
r'- ,.,fiT) ~-r ~" ~

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.

16 PAGES

A3
ss-6

B7

.A 3

Editorials

A4

Health

A7
~ As

Places to go

A6

Sports

B1

near power lines. Our tree serviceprofessionalsuse established clear-

Weather

AS

ing methods to preserve the health of trees that are trimmed. When it

© ao04 Ohio Valley Publi~hing Co.

---------

MILES lAYTON

Bv

KANDY

BoveE

KBOYCE@MY DAILYREGI STER. COM

vidin~ them wi th informa·
tiollafbrochure-, and welcome

bi.l~~.

POINT PLEASANT. WVa.
- Mason countian' can hai l
the
lege ndary
Nalional
Hi storic Landmark Della
Queen® Friday when il docks
at the Ri1wfm nt Park .
The te ntative scheuu k calls
for the vesse l to dock al 8
a.m., but a spokes man f&lt;&gt;r the
company said the boat sc hedul es are not set in stone
becuu'e of navigalional problems that may be encountered.
Represen tatives fro m tile
Masom County Tourism
Committee plan to welcome
th e passengers to Poi 111
Pleasant us they arri vc. pri)-

Two grmtp' will leave the
shi p by motcll-ct'ach to vi,i t
the West Vir~inia Farm
Museum. Fort RLanJolph and
the Jcnkin.s Plan!at ill n. j ust
mer the _Ca bel l ((&gt;!lillY line .
The tour will conclude ·\lith a
lour t hrou~h the hi,turical
Main Street districl.
Two nmre group' wi II take
a wa lking
tour
from
Ri1·erfront Park to Tu-E ndicWci State Park and 1hc Ril\'r
Museum. lhen down Main
Sl!·.eeL All lour' will end in
front of 1he Lo\\c Hot el.
11·herc the toUI·is is wi ll be
offered free iceu tea. Period

Please see Queen. AS

Variety Show

Legislation to benefit those ,
interested in genealogy
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

COLUMBUSState
Repre sentative
Jimmy
Stewart (R-Athens) has
introduced -legislation that
will lower the costs associated with vital records and
certificates of birth .
The measure, House Bill
466. will lower the cost of a

certified copy of a vital
record or btrth ccrtifi .:ate
from S 15 to no more than
$7, and allow the public to
obtain uncertified copies , a
practice previously not
allowed under Ohio law.
" I' ve heard from a num·
ber of constituents in our
district that these costs
were burdensome, particularly fur those individuaL'

conducting genealogical
research," Stewart said .
'"By lowering th ese costs
we can open the door to
history by helping more
folks gain acce'.&gt; to. records
of the past." .
Th e measu re wi ll also'
al low both the state and
local regi,lrar, un reyue~t,

Please see Benefit. AS

Anna Sayre and Courtney Van Meter. both juniors at Mergs
High School . are preparing for the Varrety Show at 7 p.m.
Friday and Saturday in the gymnasium . Admrssron is $5 fo r
adults and $3 for students. (J M1les La)'lon)

comes to reducing outages and keeping you safe, AEP is always there
working for you.

IMIIICAN. ·
IlK I RIC
POWII

.•

electrical safety, visit aep.com.

• Desianed for hlih school students • Technically challenging

•

•

Jlckson Olk HIU R1vtr \lalltV

•

Courses offered: Healthcare, Auto Service

Sautn GalUa Vinton County W.tlston U. of Rio Grande

and Information Technology

•

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a

• Hiaher Academics • Hands on trainina and experience • Seamless path to an Associates Degree or higher

For more tnformadon abour

Bucklyt H1UI GIIIIUclldtmy

•

J.

JLAYTON@MYOAtLYSENTINEL.COM

Dear Abby

Obituaries

power outages. To help maintain reliable electric service, AEP removes

These dignitaries are commemorating a new fire truck which wi ll be used in the Olive
Township Rre Department. (From left to right) Olive Twp Fire Department member Bill
Durst. state senator Joy Padgett, state rep resentative Jimmy Stewart. Olive Twp. Fire
Chief Rick Barringer, ODNR represe ntative Paul Wh)'le, Jack Westfa ll. Meigs County
Com missioner Jim Sheets, and Meigs County Treasurer Howard Fran k.

Olive Township gets new fire truck

INDEX

Tree branches that touch or fall onto power lines are the major cause of

Delta Queen arrival slated for Friday

OBITUARIES

Details on Pogo AS

.{';-~*~:-~·},

Iish the Mason Grade School budget.
Sdwlar,hip Fund and award
Award. which will provide
"Dr. Kei~ and hi' farnil v the \bson Grade Sl'hool
annual merit awards in the cared about thi s re~ion. and A" mJ lhi,) car:· added Lilly
furm i1f $5.\.lOO granh Lo a l1e never forgnt the lmponant
Dr.
Harr)
teacher or 1cam nf teacher' at people "ho made a differ- Kc i·g gn.~,, up· v. anttn g lo he
Mason Elementary Schcn)l. ence in hi' ltfc in his carl\' a dol'h&gt;r like . l1 is falh er. Dr
recognizing innovati ve cur- ye&lt;trs. " said Lc , Jic Lill v. Eu2ene R. Keig. \' hD al"o
riculum devehpment. out- President and CEO of the serYc d a' the mavor uf
standing imtructional tech- Foundation for Appalach ian Ma,on . The elder D.r. Kci2
nique and excellence in Ohio. "The Appa lac hian 'practi.:ccl medi l· ine during
molivalinu 't utlenl \ Uurino region need' scho lars hip' the Dcprc"ion, at a time
the immcdialely preceding and educa1ional improw- "hen there "ere on lv two
ment."
;Chool year.
. halhroorm in the Hm n:
The fund aJ,o will provide
Criteriit for the _,cholarHarr~
Kei g ·.., dau g hter.
an annua l schoo l award for ship&gt; arc now being devi,ed Martina Kcig Henderson.'
enriching th e ~.:urri.: u l um and scholarship, advi,ory ' aid communitv and edLtcathrough the purch&lt;"c of cdu- committee member' will be lion _h,,,-c lon g· been impor·
c:ll ional materials and/tJr announced in the near future . 1ant 10 her fami II·.
eq uipmenl that are nut with"We hope to announce lhe
Please see Keig. AS
in the elementary ~dlrn&gt;J', tirst awardees of the Bachte l

Ohio

matched all six numbers drawn

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

"'"' · "'~'lail~wlllilll'l.trrrll

:.!011-1

LO'ITERIES

None of the tickets sold tor the
Powalba/1 game Wednesday night

9:55a.m. Friday

I Ill KSJ)\\ . \1\\ h .

1-:.!

Keig honors Meigs, Mason·wjth endowment

SPORTS

WEATHER

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

Disabled student
could miss graduation
over vocational
training dispute, A2

•

•

Ohio Valley
Tech Prep

Contoct your high school coun!&lt;elortodayl

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