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Page 06 • &amp;unbap t!timtl -&amp;tntintl

:

Sunday,

Pomeroy • Middlepon • Gallipolis, OH • Pt Pleasant, WV

May 9, 2004

u.s. tanks push . .

Part of hospital comes
tumbling down, A6

into stronghold of Iraqi

cleric's mllitia, As

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Price.

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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

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SPORTS
• Bonds stili hurts Reds.
See Page 81

, i Boneless Beef
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Rib Eye

lb

Kroger Boneless
Skinless Chicken
Breasts

•
.

lb

By BRIAN

Danish
Pork
Spare Ribs

peatt

J.

REED

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

NELSONVILLE
P.
committee appointed to oversee state funding for new
highway
projec·ts
has
a·pproved funding for the
bypass of Nelsonville, considered an important leg of
the
corridor
between
Charleston.
W.Va .
and
Columbus.
The corridor also includes

USDA Inspected Sold In
10 lb Box for $9.90 ea

USDA Inspected
Individually Frozen .

Funding approved for .Nelsonville bypass

' ' -'

. BY BRIAN

P&amp;.#

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTIN"EL .COM

POMEROY - Thiny years
ago. Larry and Jean Powell
opened their Super-Vatu
supermarket rn a former
Kroger store on ·Pomeroy's
West Second St.
. Now. Jean Powell and two
sons, in partnership with a
Huntington, W.Va . wholesaler. have taken over another
Kroger building - one four
times larger. and in a retail elimate far different from that of
30 years ago.
Powell's Fooi:lfair opened
Fridav in the East Main

OBITUARIES
USDA lnapected

Gold Leaf ·
;t J Chicken Leg
. "i

··.:,·

Quarters

Frozen

Jumbo

Snow Crab
Clusters

lb

four-lane highway to bypass
Neborl\'ille . The total project
cost i' S 130.5 million .
The Ohio Department of
Transportation expects the
bypass to be completed in
2008.
Money for the projects i' a
resu lt of Gm. Boh Taft's Jobs
and Progre's Plan. according
to ODOT The plain. unveiled
·last summer. identifies lar2e
projects in ewry region of tiie
state.

'The

governor·~

pLJ.Ll repre-

sents the largest and mo't
l'Omprehen~i ve CU!hlruction
prograHl to i mprow Ohio\
highway sy~tem -.inn~ the
llJCation of the lmerstate
Highway program in 1956:·
., aid ODOT Director Gordon
Proctor.
The Ncbonville projet:t is
the final portion of the
Capital Corridor supported by
local and regional economit:
development leaders. It has

been subJect to nitici'm from
1\et.:oll\·itle residents and
hu~ines~ owner(O,. who have
quc'lioned the road \ location
and fea r its impact on ·
Nebom·itk\ retail economv.
In addi tion to the twn
Meig s Coumy proJect' and
the
r-&lt;elsonville
bypa.ss
approved for funding last
week_ the corridor al'"
.includes the · bypass of
Lancaster. a project now
unden\ a\ .

Powell family opens new Foodfair
I WITH

Frozen USDC

two Meigs County higlmays
the
Ravenswood
last
Connector.
opened
December. ai1d the new partion of U.S. 33 ' between
Darwin and Athens. slated for
completion later this year.
The Transportation Review
Advisory Committee last
week approved 53.6 billion in
highway funding for six
major projects ancl other
smaller ones. including
$126.7 million for the new

Page AS
• Betty Eynon
• Goldie Graham
• Shannon Stobart

Holte.n
Extra Value
Beef Patties

INSIDE
• Rumsfeld tenure
marked by highs and
lows. See Page A2
• Community Calendar.
See Page A3

Select Varieties

6-20

OZ

111&gt;

Pkg1

Stouffer's Red Box or
Fresh Florida
In Husk

WEATIIER

Lean
Cuisine
Entrees

Bi·Color
·sweet Corn

St.bultding vacated by the groeery gian t in November. A
grand opening celebration is set .
for today, and those who hav,e
invested in renovating and
stocking the new store hope
local ownership, competitive
priCes tmd a much larger selection of groceries will attmct
grocery shoppers interested in
supporting a convenient and
established local business.
The new venture is a partnership between Jean Powell
and her sons, Lee and Todd,
and Forth Foods, Inc .. the groeery wholesaler which has
provided inventory for the
·
Powell's Super- Vatu store.
The panners have completed
extensive renovations to the 30
year-old Kroger store. including new lighring and tlooring.
a new roof, and new refrigeration units. The new Foodfair
store will also include fresh
meats and a full-service deli,
and plans are underway to
eventually staff the pharmacy
Kroger operated there.
·
Totlay 's grand opening is

also a 30th · anniversary celebration for the Powell fam ilv.
but ' sadly. LatTy Powell will
not be there to help cel"bmte
- he died jt"t a week ago.
Hi s wife. Jean. remembers the
opening of .the Super-Vatu ·
store viv idly. n01 only because
of its signiCrcance for her family. but also because it was an
historic day for Ohio.
The Powells . moved to
Pomeroy from Ashland. Ky ..
where Larry had been
involved in a chain of SuperVatu groceries. When the
opportunity to open a store
here presented itself. they
took advantage.
"We opened in April, 1Y74.
on the day of the tornado in
Xenia:· Mrs. Powell remembered. "Some of the SuperValu people who were here for
the grand open ing had to
return back to Dayton immediately because of the tornado."
That store became a regular
stopping point for most groeery shoppers, in no small part
because of its convenient
downtown location. Customers
of the familiar and convenient
Super-Valu store will notice
many changes at Foodfair.
according to Store Manager
Lee Powell. but different prices
won't be one of them.
"The price structure will
remain the same." Powell
said. ''I think our customers
will find that we can l'Ompete
in price with any store in the
comm uni tv ...
The store will hold a drawing for a John Deere garden
tractor, a 27-inch color televisian and a gas grill for its
grand opening.

'

Thirty years ago, the Powell famil y moved to Pomeroy )o open a supermarket in a former Kroger
location. Now, they've done it again ,· opening Powel l's Foodfair in the Kroge r location on East
Main St. Here. Lee, Jean. Todd. Scott and Kelsie Powe'll look over the frozen food department
in the family's new supermarket. which opened Friday. (Brian J. Reed ) ·

Southern fab five beat the academic heat to graduate in top seat
Details on

Pa~e

JLAYTON@ MYDAJ LYSENTIN EL.CDM

INDEX
',,

p&amp;A
'

.

""'

pe«A

2 SECTIONS ~.:

A3

Classifieds

82-3

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3
A4

'

Buy any 4 .
General Mills
Cereals and receive
$6' OFF Your Grocery Bill!
530 E. Main St. Jeckaon Kroger Stores
M8Y II thru May 15 , 200.t.
•

Some Items may require a deposit.

Vlalt our Webalte at www.Kroger.com or

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY;
WE RESERVE THE RtQHTTO UMIT QUANTITlES. Each of theM advertlaedltema Ia required
to be available tor ..... If we do run out of an adwrtleed Item, we will ofhtr you your choice of a
compar.tMe n.em, when av.llable, rwft.crtlng the same aavlnga, or a ralncheck which will entH..
vou to purch. . . the •dvertiMd ttam •t the advertlftd price within 30 deya. Only one vendor
coupon will be accepted per Item. Copyright 2004 . The Kragar Company. No aalaa to .d ealer..

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

12 PAGES

Calendars

Editorials
Obituaries

As

Sports

B1

A6

Weather

J. MILES lAYTON

lege adm issions test).'' said
Gordon Fisher. principal at
Southetn Hi gh SchooL
RACINE - The fab five
Generally,
r'nost
high
valedictorians are slated to schools have only one or
graduate from Southern High maybe two valedictorians
School this Sunday.
except for Jack son Hi gh
The live students, all from School which had 19 one
Syracuse, are Codi Davis, year. There are many hurdles
Bethany Amberger, Jeremy to achieving a perfect grade
Yeauger, Katie Sayre and point average including tak· .
Sarah Hawley. Never in the ing 13 college preparatory
. · history of the Southern Local classes. While students may
school district has there been excel in one or more subjects,
five valedictbrians who each they are bound to take a class
have a perfect grade p~tnt which doesn ' t agree with
average. Nerther Me1gs Htgh them. Math and science classSchool nor Easter~l High es can trip a lot students up,
School has ever had ltve vale- . but not so with the fab' five.
dictorians either.
·"My best subject is calcu"These are good students Ius," said Hawley who will be
who have made the grades attending Ohio University in
and have also done very well
on the ACT (a national col- , Please see Valecllclorians, A5
BY

A6

;-

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishinp,: Co.,

Three grrls
study.together
for exams in
the closing
hours of the
school year at
Southern High
School.
Tabitha Jones
is class salutatorian and
both Codi
Davis and
Sarah Hawley
are valedrctorians. (J. Miles
Layton)

�•

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

Monday, May

10, 2004

Soldier who reported abuse did:
not seek limelight, friends say
BY DAVID B. CARUSO '
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, left, watches as
President Bush talks about the devastation at the Pentagon in
Washington in this Sept photo. His second .tenme as secretary
of defense has been marked by highs and lows, from tensions
with Congress to the Sept 11 attacks and the wars in
Afghanistan and Iraq and now - the prisoner abuse scandal.
(AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

Rumsfeld tenure marked
by highs and lows
Bv KEN GUGGENHEIM
ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITER

•

WASHINGTON - It is
clearly the low point of
Donald Rumsfeld's more
than three . years at the
Pentagon : He was rebuked
by President Bush, called to
testify
by
angry
Republicans and pushed . to
resign by some Democrats.
But the brash defense
secretary with the famous
finger-pointing glare has
had his share of highs and
lows - from tension with
Congress before the Sept.
11 attacks to widespread
adulation during the successful Afghan and Iraqi
military campaigns.
Yet it is the postwar
occupation of Iraq. which
he has largely control led,
that has proved to be the
toughesi challenge. Violence
in the country has not abated
and
photos
have
emerged of American soldiers abusing prisoners.
. If there were any doubts
ti;Jat he grasped the seriousness of the Iraqi prison
abuse scandal, Rumsfeld
eliminated them with tlve
words at a congressional
h;earing Friday : "I offer my
¢epest apology."
· It was a rare admission
from the straight-talking
Rumsfeld, whose powerful
personality, supporters say,
h;as allowed him to overhaul the Pentagon's vast
bureaucracy
and
lead
· American troops to victories over Afghanistan's
l:aliban government and
Iraq's Saddam Hussein.
It also was a deliberate
effort to reach out to critics
who have described him as
arrogant,
alienating
of
allies,
disdainful
of
c 'ongress and disregarding
of advice that might have
resulted in less turmoil in
Iraq.
Rumsfeld was a surprise
choice when nominated for
defense secretary in 2000.
He was 68 years old and
had held the position 23
years earlier in the Ford
administration. He later had
become a wealthy businessman, with occasional stints
for the. government. Among
them was
serving as
President Reagan's Middle
East envoy in the 1980s,
when he once met with
Saddam.
When
nominated,
Rumsfeld had broad bipartisan support. But he sti II
had a rocky start. Hi s
hawkish stands on Russia,
China and North Korea
placed him at odds with
Secretary of State Colin
Powell :
Conservatives
accused him of not seeking
enough defense spending.
Liberals opposed his advocacy of missile defense.
Almost · everyone
in
Congress detested hi s base
closing plans.
Everything changed after
the
Sept.
II
auacks.
Rumsfeld emerged as a folk
hero, a confident, paternal
figure regularly appearing
on television news, reassuring shaken Americans about
the strength of their nation .
Rumsfeld's
popularity
grew with the rapid victory
in Afghanistan.
As Bush turned his sights
on Iraq , Rumsfeld and the
Defense
Departtrtent
planned the war. made the

case to the American public
and began preparing for the
occupation .
But going into Iraq was
more
contentious
than
attacking Afghanistan, and
Rumsfeld frequently came
under criticism.
He referred to Germany
and France as "'old Europe"
at a time the United States
was trying to build a broad
coalition. He refused to
give Congress estimate s of
how long U:S. forces would
likely have to remain in
Iraq or how much a war
might cost.
· During early fighting in
Iraq , Rumsfeld accused
Syria of allowing busloads
of anti-American fighters to
cross into Iraq, testing
chemicili
weapons and
sending night-vision goggles
and other military equip'
ment .to Iraqi forces.
Rumsfeld's
anti-Syria
rhetoric became so heated
that the foreign secretary in
Britain, the chief U.S . ally
in the war, made a public
denial that the coalition
planned to take 1 the war
into Syria.
Further, the Pentagon paid
little heed to a postwar
planning project conducted
by the State Department.
Rumsfeld rejected the top
Army general 's claim that
several hundred thousand
soldiers would be needed
for a postwar occupymg
force in Iraq.
The U.S.-Ied coalition's
rapid advance on Baghdad
to
vindicate
seemed
Rumsfeld's position.
But postwar theories did
not turn out to be on target. Americans were not
overwhelmingly greeted as
liberators. The postwar
insurgency was deadlier
than imagined. The coalition did -not benefit from an
influx of foreign troops.
A Iso, the Pentagon had to
reverse plans to scale back
the number of its troops.
Now, 13S ,OOO troops are
expected to remain in Iraq
until the end of 2005.
. Sen. Evan Bayh, D-Ind .,
credits Rumsfeld for effons
to overhaul the military, but
faults him for assuming that
security problems would.
quickly subside in Iraq.
"Anyone . who had an
understanding of the history
of the place and the divisions in Iraqi society should
have known better." he
said.
Lawrence Korb, an assistant secretary of defense in
the Reagan administration, ·
said Rumsfeld is "so into
total c'ontrol and so arrogant, he doesn' t pay attention to the experts."
But
Sen.
Saxby
Chambliss, R-Ga ., _ said
Rumsfeld is a self-confident
person who constantly has
to make difficult decisions.
"I don 't see that as arrogance. I see that as someone who has stepped into a
very tough position and
who has made tough decisions that sometimes a lot
of people don ' t agree
with," Chambliss said.
Throughout, Bush's support has remained str.ong until the public rebuke over
prisoner abuse. Even so,
Bush said last week he
supported Rumsfeld. "He'll
stay in my Cabinet," the
president said.

The military policeman
who blew the whistle on
fellow soldiers who were
photographed abusing Iraqi
detainees has an indepe·ndent streak and knew
"right from wrong," say
people who know him .
Spc . .Joe Darby was
commended in a military
report for promptly alerting superiors after discovering photographs of fellow 372nd Military Police
Company personnel taking
part in abuse of prisoners
at the Abu Ghraib prison.
Darby, 24. who is still
on duty overseas, "didn't
worry about what people
sa id
Robert
thought,..
Ewing. Darby's hi story
teacher and football coach
at North Star High in
Jenners, Pa. "He wasn' t
one that went along with
hi s peers."
Darby 's tip led to an
investigation of prisoner
abuse that has outraged
people around the world
and changed the tenor of
America 's war effort in
Iraq .
The military said Sunday
that Spc. Jeremy C. Sivits,
24. of Hyndman, also from
Pennsylvania, will be the
first soldier to face a court
martial in connection with
the abuse. · He faces trial

May 19 in 'Baghdad.
Darby "didn't realize
that he had done anything
'that was super · special ,"
said sister-in-law Maxine
Carroll. '"The way he
look s at it , he was just
doing hi s job."
, Carroll said the family is
concerned· so111e people
will view Darby 's deci sion
to turn in fellow soldiers
as traitorou s, rather than
heroic
especially
10
Cresaptown. Md ., where
he lives and where the
372nd is based.
'"It scares you a 'little,"
she said.
Friends
and
former
neighbors in Pennsylvania
said they are proud of
Darby.
'There is just so much
violence in the world. and
someone has to stop it,"
said Gilbert Reffner, SO.
who lived across the street
from Darby when Darby
Was growing .up . "Joe, he
did · his part. " 1 .
The family 1 moved .to
Jenners . in the early 1990s,
neighbors said. in southern
Pennsylvania coa l country
just a· few miles from the
spot where an airliner
hij acked
by
terrorist s
crashed on Sept. ll , 200 I.
In Jenn ers, the Darby s
probably had a tougher
time in the blue-collar
town than most. His stepfather was disabled from a

U.S. Army Spc. Joseph M.
Darby of . of Corriganville ,
Md .. is shown in this 1997
family photo. Darby 1s credit·
ed with alerting officals about
the alleged torture of Iraqi
prisoners · by members of his
Cumberland-based 372nd
Military Police Company. Six
soldiers in the unit were
charged in March with phys ical and sexual abuse of 20
prisoners at a pnson near
Baghdad.
(AP
Photo/ Johnstown TribuneDemocrat)
construction accident. His
mother sta yed home to
care for hi s yo ung brother.
and money was . tight.
Darby worked evenings
after school. He attended
North Star High in nearby
Boswell. then left to 'study

fore stry
at
Somerset
CoLmty Vocational and
· Technical Hi gh School.
After he married hi s
wife. Bernadette, the couple inoved to Virginia.·
where he worked us an
auto
mechanic
before
enlisting .
Reffner desc ribed Darby
as polite and respec tful.
He .s&lt;lid the .famil y had lit- ·
tle mune y when he was
growing up .
"He didn't have much at
all ," Reffner said . "But he ·
was brought up properly.
He was brought up to
know ri ght from wrong."
Jennifer Pettitt, mother
of a high-sc hool girlfriend ,
called him a "regular kid ,"
but one who was not particularly concerned with
being popular.
"They say he did .have a.
temper. But in stead of hit- ·
ring people, he ' d hit towel
dispensers in the school
bathroom ," she said.
Carroll said her brotherin -law does not realize
that ·he probably changed
the course of history when
he alerted a superior to the
photographs
of
Iraqi s·
being abused.
·
"We told him we were
on our way to New York
to do the 'Today· show.
He didn ' t believe it ," she
sa id. "I think he kind of
thinks
we · were
just
putting him on. "

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Monday, May 10
TUPPERS . PLAINS tfr
, Tuppers Plams Regional
Sewer District Board, 7 p.m..
sewer office.
Tuesday, May II
DARWIN - The Bedford
Township Trustees will hold
· their regular monthly meeting at 7 p.m. at the township
hall. .
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Genealogical Society
will hold their regular monthly meeting at 5 p.m. at the
Meigs County Museum. The
public is invited. ·

ular meeting , 7:30 p.m ..
Salem Township Firehouse.
RACINE - The Southern
Local School Board wil hold
a special board meeting at
7:30 p.m. for the purpose of
di scussing the establishment
of
a.
guidance
counselor/music position at
the elementary school.
POMER..OY
The
Athens/Meigs ESC preschool
will be holding a final
preschool registration for the
2004-2005 school year at
Bradbury Learning Center.
Please contact Betsy for an
appointment at 740-992 1740.
.

. You Csn Est/
M8H8Y Ftii'JUIOft • F•rmh8nd
• Bobcat • Shennlu
N•w Ide• • Rhino
New Holl•nd • Cub C.det

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Church services
Monday, May 10
LONG
BOTTOM
Revival through ·May 14 at
Faith Full Gospel Church, 7
p.m., with Dave Dailey as
guest speaker.

Clubs and
organizations

Support Groups

Awarded scholar~hip Earns
scholarship

RUTLAND
Amber
Snowden. daughter of Jeff
and Carolyn Snowden of
Rutland. has been awarded
the Rev. Dr. Robert Crawford
and Son Scholarship by the
Department of Political
Science at Ohio University.
The scholarship was established by Edith C. Crawford
in 1994. to honor her husband. Robert, and her son,
Douglas.
The scholarship is awarded
to an outstanding political
sc ience major, chosen by a
committee of professors
within the department, to be

used during his or her junior
year. The award is $3.400.
Stl'Owden is a sophmore
politi ca l science major at
O.U., and is employejl as a
legal research assistant at the
Lavelle Law Offices in
Athens. She has also
received the Ohio Univesity
Presidential Scholarship. the
Ohio Academic Scholarship
and the 2002 McDonald 's
Employee Scholarship.
After graduation. she plans
to attend law school.
'
She was honored Friday at
a department awards ceremony on the O.U. campus.

POMEROY
- "The
Living Soil" was the theme
for the 2004 Soil and Water
Conservation fourth grade
poster contest recently completed in area school districts
by Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation
District
Education Coordinator Vicki
Morrow.
Jenah
Sampson
and
Brianna Hensley of Eastern
Elementary and Kassandra
Mullins
of
Meigs·
Intermediate
Elementary
were named county co-champions in the contest. Each of
them received $25 as cochampion and $10 as the firstplace winner in their classes .
One poster will be chosen to
represent Meigs County in
the State Auxiliary competition.
Posters will be displayed at
Vaughan 's Supermarket in
Middleport.
A total of $313 was awarded to winners in each panicipating fourth grade class.
First-place winners in each
class received $10 and second- and third-place winners
received $5 and $3. respectively.
Wmners were: Eastern
Elementary (Jewell): Kayte
Lawrence and Robert Reel II;
(Lisle): Jenah Samp'son,
Jacob Zuspan, and Danielle
Cline;
(Weber): Brianna
Hensley, Kelsey Myers, and
Luke Kimes . .
Meigs
Intermediate
Elementary (Barnes): Cory
Curtis, Joseph McFarland,
and · Dow Soureevong;
(Gillilan):
Dustin
Lee,
Darienne
Betzing, · and
Brianna Markin; (Haley):
Harley
Young,
Ashley
Runyon. and Jesse Smith;
(Hill) : Kassandra Mullins.
Brady .Norville, and Haley
·
Tripp;
(Korn): Michael Davis, Tori
Wolfe. and Emalee Glass;
(Ramey ): Chaden Casto,
Tiffany McKinney, and
Raynee Herman ; (VanMeter):
Wes
Davi s,
Jonathan
Donohue, and Kim Curl.
Mid Valley Christian:
Colton Stewart.
Southern
Elementary:

POMEROY
-Alyssa
Holter of Pomeroy has
been awarded a Dean 's
Scholarship for studies in
agriculture and
natural
resources at The Ohio
State University.
The scholarship program
in the College of Food,
Agriculture
and
Environmenta l Sciences at
OSU · awards incoming
fre shmen· and first-quarter
transfer students in the college sizab le scholarships,
some of which may be
renewable based on continued high achievements.
Holter is a graduating
senior at Eastern High
School. and the daughter
of Ed and Jan Holter of
Flatwoods Road.

KeepJng .
Meigs ·
informed
1

Brlanna Hensley

. Sunday ·
Times-Sentinel
Meigs • 992-21~5

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COMPANY .

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DEAR ABBY: I have been
married to "Ron" for II
years. Throughout our marriage he has been unfaithful.
We have three children under
age 12. I work a minimumDear
wage job and nave no family.
Abby
nowhere to·go, and no one to
turn to.
A few months ago, Ron
brought home a sexually
transmitted disease, which he
gave to me. I feel trapped, . been blocked by a flatbed
alone. and tembly depressed . tow truck with its lights
I reahze the chtldren must be flashing .
The drunk driver went
sensing my tension and pain.
As Ron is not physically abu- around the tow truck and
sive, I cannot go to a shelter. never slowed down. He
and thi s has taken a toll on already had a prior DUI from
my health and well-being.
seven years ago. From my
Should I stay until I'm re search, the law s are too
financially able to leave? Or easy on these people.
should I flee now and hope Offenders are getting five
for the best? - LONELY years, often reduced to one or
'AND SAD IN LOUISIANA two or community service.
DEAR LONELY AND for taking an innocent life.
SAD: If you haven't already The vehicle is their weapon.
done so, contact your physi- This should be seconddan and be treated for the degree
murder,
not
STD. Make a list of Ron's manslaughter.
assets, as well as his Social
How . can we get the laws
Security, driver's license and changed? Whom do we conbank account numbers. Next, tact to get results? It won 't
call the National Domestic · bring my wonderful, loving
Violence Hotline: (800) 799- son back, but these verdicts
7233. Although there may are nothing but a slap on the
not be room for you at a shel- wrist to the drunk drivers.
ter, they can help you formu- and a slap in the face to famlate an "escape plan." Once ilies who lose their children.
that's in place, consult an My son was my best friend.
attorney who specializes in He had his whole life ahead
family law. You've sutfered of him. This man took it
enough.
.
away becau se he made the
DEAR ABBY: My 19-year- choice to drink and drive.
old son was killed by a drunk Please. Abby, help me make
driver. Garrett was hit at free- a difference. - GRIEVING
way speed as he got out of a MOTHER, SANTA ROSA ,
disabled · vehicle that had CALIF.

Ul leceRIII..••• •ll8l.elll. II

1140·446·1619 • 800·23J-n1B
IHn: •••-111• 1:31-5:10

DEAR
GRIEVING :
MOTHER: I offer my deep- :
est sympathy for the tragic :
loss of your son. One way ro· :
channel your grief would be ;
to join a co~munity of other :
grieving parent s who are also
determined to put more teeth
into the punishment meted
out to repeat offenders.
I recently became a mem "
ber of the advisory board or .
Moth ers Against Drunk
Driving (MADD ). It is a nonprofit. grassroots organization that 's a leader in the
tight against drunk drivin g
and
underage drinkin g.
Because of MADD , more
than 2.300 anti-drunk driving
law s have been passed. public awarene ss ha, increased.
and thousands of drunk-driving victims have receiwd
assistance. With their help.
you can work within your
own community to cha n g~
the law s regarding repeat
offenders in yo ur stat e. The
toll- free numbe r is (.ROO )
438-6233. and the Web site i'
www.MADD.org. Call and
you will rece ive the support
you need .
Dear Abbr is IITirt en br
Abigail Van Burm. u/so
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and 1\'G.I founded In her
morher, Pauline Phillips . .
Wrire
Dear
Al&gt;br
or
u·ww.DeaJAhln.com or PO.

Box 69440, Lris Angeles. CA
90069.

Holter is scholarship winner
POMEROY
Alyssa
Holter has been selected as a
2004 winner of the Ohio
Valley Bank 4-H Scholarship.
She is the daughter of
Edward and Jan HolteF and a
member of the Meigs County
Better Livestock 4-H Dairy
Club. She is a senior at
Eastern High School and
plans to attend The Ohio
State University and study
agribusiness and applied economics.
The Ohio Valley Bank 4-H
Scholarship Program was
created in 1986 to reward
outstanding high school
seniors for their accomplishments in 4-H. When the proAlyssa
gram began, four scholarships, were awarded each
year. However as the bank bers through the program.
grew, so did the number of
Current recipients will
scholarships.
receive their scholarship
Now, nine graduating . money during the county
high school seniors annual- fairs.
ly rec_eive a scholarship valThe winners are deterued ·at $2,000, over four mined by anonymous comyears. To date, Ohio Valley mittees of 4-H advisors and
Bank
has
committed volunteers. 4-H experiences
$214,000 to 123 4-H mem- make up SO% of the score,

Holter

while the other half is
derived from experiences in
other groups and actiYities.
academic accomplishments
and potential for success.
A banquet honoring Holte r
and her fellow winners was
held Tuesday. May 4 at the
Lewis Family Restaurant ' in
Jackson.

' ' You have our full attention.
In the event of a heart attack, you ha ve our full
attention. Following emergency procedures, you may he
admitted to the O'Bleness Intensive Care/Ccmmmy Care
Umt under the care of our internal medicine physicians,
. critical care nurses , and imaging technologists. Our
medical expertise and technology wil l help gi\'e '""' the
special attent ion ynur heart deserves."
Jenah Sl!mpson
(Barr): Timmy Warner. Olivia
Murphy.
and
Kayla
McKnight;
(Carpenter):
Emily Ash, Emma Powell.
and Jessica Riffle; (Evans):
Martina Arms and Andrew
Rpseberry.

J
J amc.~ Smnmons, D.O., CllHir
Intensive C&lt;lre/Coronary Care Un tt Committee

Free huring saeenlnp.

Audiolo1ists on staff.
Wide range of te(hnology andprict!l~
Dlcfllland ather hearing aids.
Amplified lelephone and TV devlcu

Monday; May 10, 2004

Wife has nowhere to run :
from unfaithful husband

·"Shoes for the entire family"

'

HOURS:

HEARIN
CENTER

SHOE CO.

With new ••hid!' purch•se.
See lllmplke for details.

Mon - Frl 9-7; Sat. 9-5

DILES

Thursday, May l3
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters to meet for ritual tea
at 6:30 p.m., home of Clarice
Krautter. Social committee as
hostesses.

Tuesday, May II
- M~ig s
POMEROY
County
Chamber
of
Commerce will hold its
monthly Business Minded
Friday, May 14 ·
Luncheon at noon on Tuesday
Monday, May 10
MASON ,
at the Wild Horse CJfe.
W.Va .
POMEROY Meigs Theresa Lavender of the Widows' Fellowship , noon, at
County Republican Party reg- Meigs County Depanment of Bob Evans Restaurant. ·

Poster contest
winners announced.

'''
•••

Joll and Family Services will
speak about the One-Stop
Employment and Training
Center and employment
opponunities.

PageA3.

Email engagement wedding or anniversary
an'nouncements and photos
to society@mydailysentinelcom!

O'BLENESS

Memorial Hospital ·' f.

SS Hoapiul Drive. Atbena, OH ·~701 -llO:Z

(740)593·5551 • www.oblenes6.org

�"

OPINION

·The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com
1

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill

Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor
·,

'

PageA4

'Congress shall make tio ·law respecting an
. establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
~ free ex,ercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
~ of sp~ech, or of the press; or the right of the
: people peaceably to assemble, .and to petition
.l the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

:Moderately Con,fused
LET~

PLAY

COSMETIC
.SUR6EON.

Monday, May to, 2004

Monday, May to, 2oo 4

www .mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

TJ1e media stampede

U.S. tanks push.into stronghold of Iraqi cleric's
,
militia, battle Shiite militiamen in Baghdad

Betty Eynon

detines the American military
Forgive me, but the head
for
a lingering generation of
reels. A prison scandal in lray
media,
Dt:mocratic and
already investigated,
Hollywood
elites. According
already in repair. but only
to watchdog group Media
recently and sensationally
Research Center's account of
publicized - is now our
Diana
the
CNN report, images of the
nation's destiny, not to menWest
My Lai mayhem were toltion our national character.
lowed
by images of the naked
City on the Hill? Abu Ghraib.
backsides of abused prisoners
Life. libertY and the pursuit of
at
Abu Ghraib. 'We all cany
happiness' Abu Ghraib.
Yorktown. Gettysburg, San women are already against with us the potential to be the
Juan Hill, Verdun, Midway, both our laws and our sense of killer and the victim,' said
Hamburger Hill. Baghdad'? decency. There is nothing here CNN's Bruce Morton . reading
Abu Ghraib. M.ark Twain. to settle (but please ~ no the words of a Vietnam-era
-Mickey Mouse, th\' Salk vac- , more women in combat the- medic, adding : 'Maybe that's
cine and bubble gum&lt;' Abu aters) Criminals will be pun-· the lesson now. too. '
Sorry. that wasn't the lesson
Ghraib. Abu Ghraib, . Abu ished. That is why this is not a
then.
and it's not 'the lesson
Ghraib.
Big Story, at the top of the
Why'? Because Abu Ghraib president's list. the focal point now. But it's one the media
love to teach. 'As a Washington
is, more than anything else. the of the world.
fultlllrnent of the media
Or, rather, it shouldn't be. Post writer opined, ''These
dremn. the Vietnam they think But here is where the insa- t prison) photos are us. .. .
they never had (or had a very tiable media desire for fulfill- These photos show us what
long time ago), the abermtion ment comes in. With Abu we may become, as oc\:upato obsess about, the disgrace to Ghraib. the old antagonisms tion cn tllinue~ . anger and.
between the media and the resenl l' enl grows (sic) and
exult in and the opportunity ral... · and so, hysteriand this is key~ to shift the military return. with the costs
political landscape. That is counter-cu lturally -minded cal), _ ••n. Woe to us all if we
why 30-some instances of media exulting over a high and buy' this again, that American
abuse at Abu Ghraib. which mighty military slip. More soldiers - we - are the
range from aets resembling than the hard-luck hunt tor enemy. Such twistedness lost
extreme tratemity hazing to WMDs. more than the stale- us Vietnam at home. and it
actual sexua l assault. have mate in Fallujah, more than may lose us lmq, also at home.
Just as.the media stumpede
sucked all the oxygen from the the death of Pat Tillman. Abu
contlict's urgent questions of Ghraib is · a setback that to depict the U.S. military as a
life and death. truth anti false- retlects badly not only on the bunch of war criminals came
hood. and civilization and bar- war effort. but on American sweeping by, a posse of good
barism.
serviceman, and in that there is guys in white hats - Swift
Boat Veterans for Trutl1 BL!t isn't Abu Ghraib just political opportunity.
such an LJrgent question' No.
CNN. for example, couldn't stood up to "'Y it wasn't so. ·
The humiliations and assaults and didn't wait to usc Abu That is. it wasn't so in
perpetrated by a 'handful' Ghraib as a 'segue' into a nos- Vietnam. they said with great
and how the media hate that talgic, sicko reminiscence of seriousness at a remarkable
non-collective word ~ of My Lai, the 1968 civilian mas- Washington press conference
American serv1cemen and sacre in Vietnam that stil l ,(which 1he Associated Press.

incidentullv. failed even to
report). directly contrJdicting
everything John Kerry has
maintained since jump-stw1ing his public career with tales
of unproven wm1ime atrocities
in I971. ·It is a faL·t that in the
entire ·Vietnam War we did not
lose one m&lt;\ior battle.' saiu
Robe11 Elder. a member of this
organization of sailors who
served with Mr. Kerry anti
who believe he is unfit for the
presidency. ·we lost the war at
home. · Mr. Elder continued.
'and ut home John Kerry was
'the field eC!lC I~!l. .
Stran~ : that a man who
once m:11 haled the l(m.:es of
the Vict!l:ll n antiwar movement to transform. symholi..:ally. the American. soldier
from good guy to baby-killer
would vie for the presidency
at a· time when the stil l
inchoate li&gt;rces of the Iraq
antiwar movement seek a
poster boy. &lt;Ill atn&gt;city. a way

to pull the plug . That slander
long ago. amplificu by a willing media. eroded su pport !i1r
the Vietnam War. leading WI
our uncoilsci(inabk abandon·
ment · of
the
South
Vietnamese people in I 975.
No wonder the rush to tar our
armed forces as 'tortun~rs· .
today has that sick-making
'70s ring. Abu Gh raih. however. daes11'1 h&lt;ll c lo he a
turning point ~ unk:-." we let
them make it on~.
(Dimtrl Wtsf ;.v o columni.1·t

fin· Till' Washing/oil Tiiii&lt;'S.
S/t(; nm he contoi..'Ted t·w
dianm t·est (g) l'Cri:on.lwt. )

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

NAJAF, Iraq (AP) - U.S.
forces stepped up pressure on
Shiite gunmen loyal to radical
cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, pushing with tanks into the holy
city of Kufa and assaulting
militia positions in the narrow
streets of a Shiite enclave in
Baghdad, At least 34 Iraqis
were killed.
The U.S. military also said
a 24-year-old military policeman will be the first soldier to
face a court-martial in the
abuse of Iraqi. prisoners at
Abu Ghraib prison.
· .Spc. Jeremy C. Sivits, a
member of the 3 72nd Military
Police Comptlny, has been
charged with conspiracy to
maltreat subordinates and
detainees, dereliction of duty
for negligently failing to protect detainees from abuse and
cruelty and maltreatment of
detainees, Brig. Gen. Mark
Kimmitt said.
The court-martial will be
held
May 19 in Baghdad, and
RUTLAND- Goldie Evelyn Graham, 84, Rutland, passed
Kimrnitt said it will be open
away on May 9, 2004, at the home of her daughter.
to
the media. If convicted,
She was born Jan. I0, 1920 in Leon, W.Va., daughter of the
Sivits
faces· one year in
late Alfred and Lona Burdette Boles. She was a homemaker ·
.and a member of the Rutland Church of the Nazarene, and a prison, demotion or a dis- Armed members of radical Shiite cleric Muqtada ai-Sadr's insurgents take up . a position on
mernbe of the Retired Senior Volunteer Program at the Meigs charge for bad conduct, mili- the outskirts of the holy city of Najaf, Iraq . (AP Photo / Hadi Mizban )
tary officials said.
County Senior Center.
The rest of the seven sol- Hotel in central Baghdad, rip- where al-Sadr sought refuge said.
Surviving are her daughter, Wanda (Bud) Vining, and a son.
Jim (Sue) Graham of Columbus; stepdaughters: Naomi diers charged in the abuse ping through the bar and last month. Plumes of black
No British casualties were
Schoonover of Columbus and Bessie Bennett of Parkersburg, likely will face trials where wounding si~ people, incl ud- smoke could be seen ri sing reported in that attack. but
W.Va.; a stepson, Billy (Betty) Graham of Chillicothe; four they could get more severe ing two Iraqis, two British from the area. !raqi police and British spokesman Maj . Jan
sisters: Beulah Little of Leon. Osa Smith and Betty Robbins, punishmeiUs - suggesting and two Nepalese , a hotel U.S . tanks blocked the main Clooney said "a number of
both of Point Pleasant, W.Va.; and Ruth Kidd of Huntington, the military was starting the employee and police said.
road from Najaf io nearby pos sible mortar positions"
W.Va.: a sister-in-law, Leafy Chasteen ; 13 gra ndchildren and courts-martial with one of the
The U.S. foray into Kufa Kufa. residents said.
were destroyed.
several great and great-great grandchildren; and several nieces lesser figures in the scandal.
was the deepest move yet into
The U.S. military has
Several · houses
were
and nephews.
The heaviest fighting in the city, an al -Mahdi Army vowed to kill or capture al- destroyed in Amarah's Sadeq
Besides her parents. she was preceded in death by her hus- Baghdad came when militia- stronghold. Several tanks Sadr and put down his militia. district. killing four civilians.
band, Gerald Graham. a granddaughter, a sister and a brother. men from al-Sadr's Al-Mahdi pushed as close as 500 yards which has taken control of Residents .accused British
Services will be held at II a.m. on Wednesday. May 12, Army attacked police stations from Kufa 's main mosque,
much of the holy cities of helicopters of ;triking the
2004. at Rutland Church of the Nazarene, with burial follow- . and set up checkpoints in the
trading
tire
with
militiamen
Kufa. Najaf and Karbala. neighborhood, but Clooney
ing at Miles Cemetery in Rutland.
Shiite
neighborhood
of
Sadr
on
both
sides
of
the
main
south
of the capital. But said no helicopters opened
Friends may call at the Birchtleld Funeral Home in Rutland
City, a heavily populated dis- road, witnesses said. Tanks troops have been hampered fire in the operation.
from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m.
trici in the eastern part of the also moved into the ne.ighbor- by the nearby sites revered by
"There were helicopters circapital, Kimmitt said.
hood on the other side of lraq's Shiite majority.
cling the area. then they startU.S. troops moved in and. Kufa, trading fire with fightStill , U.S . forces have been ed . firing ." said · Subeih
secured two police stations in ers.
moving more aggressively Hassan. standing in front of
Two civilians were killed against al-Sadr fighters in hi s demolished house.
lighting that killed 18 militiamen, Kimmitt said.
and I0 others -. including their strongholds. U.S. troops
His brother was killed in the
Earlier, an e~plosion tore · two children - were wound- raided the cleric's main oftice attack. The victims in nearby
apart shops in a market in the ed in the battles. hospital offi- in Sadr City on Saturday hou ses included an ~-month­
old child. re sidents said.
Shannon W. Stobart,' 33, Racine, died on Sunday, May 9, western Biyaa district. The cials said. Three houses were night. detaining six people blast occurred when police destroy,ed. The tanks pu lied including a suspected ai-Sadr · In Basra. 100 miles so uth of
2004, at his residence.
Arrangements are under the direction of Cremeens Funeral tried to dismantle two bombs out of the city in the after- li'eutenant and financier. Amamh. three ·coalition solHome in Racine and will be announced upon completion . .
found in· vendors' stall s, wit- noon.
Kimmitt said.
di ers were wounded when a
He vowed that al-Sadr's large explmion OCCLJrred near
nesses said. Four people were · " It was the .first time the
killed and 17 were wounded. American s came thi s far," movement WOL!ld be put a coalition convoy Sunday
·the
Health Ministry said. said Odai Abdulkarim, 24. a down in Sadr Citv. named . morning.
Clooney said.
"It never entered my mind
mechanic
who
has
a shop off after the young cleric's mar· Witnc"es said the wounded
that I would not have straight Kimmitt said three people
the highway leading to the tyred father. a sen i·or ayatol · soldiers were British.
were killed.
A•s, " she sa1'd .
"Is this the freedom that Kufa mosque, where al-Sadr lah.
Elsewhere. a U.S. soldier
Yeauger played several
from Page A1
leads
Friday
"These are still )ome inside was killed and another
varsity sports and was a . they want - people cut into regularly
prayers. "We are afraid for that district that are of the wounded Saturday in a mortar
the fall. "I like math and it member of the Spanish club pieces?," one man at the market, Fadhil Farid, cried. our families, afraid the rock~ belief that Muqtada's militia attack on a coaliti on base in
as well as prom king .
always came easy to me."
"I/.
ust
paid
attention
in
class
ets would hit our house. "
"What
did we do wrong?"
can operate freely ... that the northern city of Mosul.
Another obstacle was Carla
and
kept
up
on
all
my
home"Americans
don't
hit
you
if
At about the same time,
somehow Muqtada has some the U .S. command said in a
Shuler, a revered and somework,"
said
Yeauger
who
wH.I
you
don
'
t
hit
them,"
interjectsort
of legitimate control over statement. Another soldier
gunmen
opened
tire
on
a
U.S.
times feared math .teacher
be
attending
the
University
of
ed
Haidar
Abu
Zaid,
35,
that
district. They'll find out died in an "electrical accipatrol
in
western
Baghdad,
who demands a lot from her
Rio
Grande
in
the
fall
and
sparking a firefight that killed another mechanic. "The al- they'n: wrong," Kimmitt said. dent," the command said.
students . Each member of the
majoring
in
pre-medicine.
AI-Sadr's militia fired marThe latest deaths bring to
three
Iraqi police, two civil- Mahdi Army fires from our
fab five said they worked
Davis,
who
was
a
member
areas,
so
they
have
no
choice
tar
shells
before
dawn
Sun(lay
765
the number of U.S. serians and one of the attackers,
hard in her class to make the
of
student
government,
a
varKirnrnitt
said.
Fighters but to tire at them - and we at the governor 's office and vice members who have died
grades they did.
other British position s in since the U.S.-led invusion in
"Even though some of our sity athlete and worked as a attacked another patrol in the end up getting hurt."
part
time
waitress,
said
the
Also Sunday, scattered . Amarah. I 80 miles southeast March 2003. Of those, 557
classes were harder than othcenter of the capital, woundclashes ·occurred between of Baghdad , the scene of died as a result of hostile
ers, I think we will be really secret to her academic suc- ing two Iraqi policemen.
prepared for college," said cess has been to set goals.
On Sunday night, a bomb U.S. and militia forces in the fighting the day before. a action and 20R died of non"A lot of it is persistence and
Davis. "! think Shuler was
went
off at the Four Seasons industrial area of Najaf, Briti sh official and resident s hostile cause s.
one of my best teachers and I dedication," Davis said who
will be attending Ohio
learned a lot in her class."
Another hurdle these stu- urliversity this fall and majordents cleared was time man- ing in pre-medicine and psyagement: Each student has chology. "I knew when I started
MACON, Miss. (AP) a desire "to get back to some escaped May 2 from a farm- for an arm injury.
been involved in a variety of school that I wanted to maintain Former hostage Thomas normalcy" following the house about 50 miles north
Hamill's fir st duty after
extracurricular
activities perfect grades no matter what." Hamill was greeted with excitemeni of his return from of Baghdad and ran a half- landing wa&gt; to hug ftis I 2Even though iabitha Jones
including sports, student govwill
graduate as salutatorian, hugs from fellow churchgo- Iraq early Saturday, did not mile to a patrol of U.S. mili - year-old daughter. Tori. and
ernment, prom, senior play
ers Sunday as he attended speak to reporters Sunday.
tary vehic les.
hi s &gt;o n. Thomas. I4.
and a few even had jobs: or second 'in the class. she services with his family.
Hami II
Plans to honor Hamill with
return eLl
to
He was among seven
Sayre was a varsity athlete also had. a nearly perfect
postMi
ssissippi
about
I
a.m.
The
Rev.
Greg
Duncan
a
parade
have
been
&gt;ontractors who
American
for three sports. Amberger grade point average .
"I studied hard and kept my told a congregation of more paned for now because he Saturday to a churus of disappeared after the April
was very active in many
·organizations including . the , mind on what I was doing," than I00 people at Calvary has said that he is particular- cheering family and fri~nd&gt;. attack. The bodies of four
On
the
day
before have been found . and two
Spanish club, student gover~­ said Jones who will be Baptist Church that he ly looking · forward to qui et
ment and the prom commit- attending the University of thanked God for the family's time with his children , ages Mother's Day, " It was !he workers remain mtssmg .
best gift I could get.'' said Two military men also vanstrength and called Hamill 's 14 and 12.
tee. Amberger was also Rio Grande in the fall.
Hamill, 44, a truck driver. Kellie Hamill . The couple ished : one was later found
. While they will be going to wife, Kellie. "a special mothcrowned Fall Festival queen.
er"
was
wounded and · captured had . tlown home togetiler dead and the other. Pfc.
for
her
fortitude
through
different
schools
next
year,
" I guess you learn to priorher
husband's
ordeal.
when
hi ~
coi1voy was fro m
Germany.
where Kei th M. Maupin of Batavia.
each
said
they
would
miss
itize things," said Amberger
Hamill , who had e~pressed ambushed April 9. He Thomas Hamill was treated Ohio. remain&gt; mi ssing.
who will be attending the Southern High School.
' '!'II miss not having class
University · of Charle ston,
with my friends," said
W.Va., in the fall.
Hawley was a cheerleader, a Amberger.
Sayre, who was a key
memberoftheQuiz Bowl team
of the volleyball,
member
. and like the others, a member
basketball
a'nd softball teams,
of the National Honor Society.
Hawley said she would panic a had a different opinion.
"No, I don't think I am
lot before tests or when
research papers were due, but going to miss this place very
quickly overcame these jitters much, but I am going to miss·
playing sports," she said. ·
urne and time again.
Betty M. Eynon , 79. Racine, passed away at 8:10 p.m. on
Saturday. May 8, 2004, at the Holzer Medical Center in
Gallipolis.
She was born March I, 1925, in Harrisville, W.Va., daughter of the late Charles and Orpha Jones O'Conner. She was a
self-employed )lookkeeper and secretary.
She was a 1943 graduate of Point Pleasant, W.Va. High
School. past pres1dent of the American Legion Auxiliary of
Pomt Pleasant, Post #23, and past matron of Chapter #75,
Order of Eastern Star in Point Pleasant.
.
_Surviving are her h~sband, John D. Eynon; two daughters,
Lmda (Edward) M1dk1ff of Pomt Pleasant and Barbara Griffin
of Teays Valley, W.Va.; a son, James Thomas of Hattiesburg
M!ss.; a sister-in-law, Shirley Bane of Gallipolis; four grand~
ch1ldren and two great-great grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by her first husband, Paul F.
Thomas. on Dec. 19, 1970, and her son, Paul Charles "Chuck"
T-homas.
A memorial service will be held at II a.m. on Friday, May
14. 2004. m the chapel at Letart Falls Cemetery with Rev. Jim
Satterfield officiating.
There will be no calling hours.
· Arrangements are under the direction of Cremeens Funeral
Horne in Racine.
Memorial contributions may be made to Holzer Center for
Cancer Care. I 00 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

Goldie Graham

Deaths

Shannon Stobart

il ill-·

Valedictorians

0TAH~fR.
© 2004 by NEA , Inc.

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Innocence requires luck and good lawyers

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When San Francisco Public
Defender Jeff Adachi walks
through the reception area of
his office, he sees redemption
in the form of a soft-spoken
clerk named John Tennison.
Adachi was a young deputy
public defender in 1990 when,
in his first murder trial, a jury
returned a guilty verdict on a
client he was convinced was
innocent. Tennison was lhat
client. Just 18 years old and
still in high school, he was
locked up for 25 years to life.
' It's a defense · attorney's
worst nightmare to have an
innocent client convicted,"
Adachi said. ·And there was
no question he was innocent."
It took 14 years and several
breathtaking twi st~ of fate to
free him . .
' I sometimes still can't
·believe it," Adachi said of seeing Tennison. now 32,
m1swering phones and greeting clients at the public
defender's office.
It has been seven months
since a guard summoned
Tennison from his I8-centsan-hour job in the prison print
shop one day last September.
He was abruptly released and
waited on a curb oms ide in the
late afternoon sun tor his farniIy to drive from the Bay Area
and pick him up.
He stayed close to his family's San Ramon home during
his tirst months of freedom ,
eating everything he dreamed
about in prison, sleeping,
learning how to play video
games with his older brother.
Bruce, getting his driver's
Iicense, discovering cell
phones and spending trme
with his mother.
'That's the most important

Joan

Ryan
thing to me. From the day I
was released, there hasn't been
a day she hasn't smiled,"
Tennison said last week.
Tennison declined to be
interviewed e~tensively on his
lawyer's advice because he is
in the midst of a suit against
the city of San Francisco, seveml forrner police officers anti
an assistant district attomey
for manufacturing and withholding evidence.
Tennison's story point~ up the
frighteningly .frd~tile prospect'
of an innocent man in prison.
Were it not for a few timely
strokes of luck, he would still
he prisoner H-07723.
The tirst piece of luck came
a month or two after the conviction. Tennison was placing
a collect call from cou nty jail,
where he was housed while
awaiting sentenci ng. The
operator said to him, ' I know
you didn't do that murder."
She gave him her tirst name. It
was pure coincidence that she
connected Tennison's calL
Several years later, Adachi's
investigator was able to trdCk
her down through the phone
company. She turned out to be
a key eyewitness who corroborate&lt;) the fuzzy account of
the man who confessed to
pol ice that he comrni tted the
murder.
The second stroke of luck

came in the midst of
Tennison's darkest hour, when
he had exhausted all his State
appeals am,! the fedeml court
~ the court of last resort ~
told him he had missed the
dea(lline for his case to be
heard. But shortly thereafter, a
ruling came down in a separate case that issued a new
way of calculating deadlines.
It turned out, according to the
new
calculations,
that
Tennison had filed on the last
day.
The third bit of luck was
geographical.
Tennison's
brother, Bruce. works in the
parking lot ne~t to the law
firm Keker &amp; Van Nest. When
the San Francisco Bay
Guardian pLlblished a long,
detailed
article
about
Tennison's case in 200 I,
Bruce handed out copies to
the attorneys he knew.
Elliott Peters and Ethan
Balogh we1e intrigued. The
article said another man had
confessed to the murder; an
eyewitness corroborated the
cpntession: no physical evidence linkeu Tennison to the
crime; and the prosecutors'
two main witnesses at the trial
were young girls whose te~ti ­
monies were at best inconsistent, at worst fabrications. ·
' But being innocent doesn't
get yotl out ," said Peters,
whose linn ended up working
on the case pro bono for three
years. Jogging more than
$500.(XJO in legal fees. 'Being
innocent doe,n't even get you
into court. You need a constitutional violation ."
They . found it in the suppression of evidence. The
police and the pro&gt;ecutor didn't tum over key pieces to

'

Adachi. including the other
man's confession. the eyewitness' initial &lt;.:orroboration and
a trial witness' admission that
she was lying about having
seen
the
murder.
In
September, federal Judge
Claudia Wilkin vucated the
conviction without a hearing.
Soon afterward, Tennison's
&lt;.:odcfendant. Anton Goff. was
also
released.
Adachi
acknowledges that if it were
not for Peters anti Balogh ,
Tennison and Goff would
· likely have spent the rest ol
their lives in prison. despite all
the evidence.
Meanwhile, tl1e man who
confe&gt;sed is sti ll free. So lhe .
homicide for which Tennison
;md Goll' spent I4 years ol
their lives is stillLJnsolved.
For Adachi , the prickly pit
in hi s stomach whenever he
thought about T~nnison i&gt;
finally gone. 'I can't describe
to you how I felt when he was
released," Adac hi said. His
eyes sudden ly fi II and he
swipes a linger lmdcr them.
'When you live with something like lhm. it's alway&gt; in
the back of your mind."
One noor down, in the
reception area, Tennison
sipped his tall cup of takeout
coffee and !lipped through a
binder to find an attorney's
exten,ion number for a caller.
' I always knew nne day I'd get
out," he 'aid. 'I'm just 'o
happy to be wi th my family
that I ju&gt;t don't have time to be

Former hostage's life returning to normal in rural Mississippi

m1gry.11
(lVlm Rwm is a columnisl
for the · Soil
Fnmrisco
Clmmide. Seud comlltellt.\· ro

EIIY

$11 . .·$11PB•m

her i11 care of this 11eH·spa11er
or send her e-mail a/ joatlryan@ sfch rrm ide.c o111.)

•

PlU*

··-·11111

....

~-

................ - -··- . .. .... . .. _ ..

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..

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....

~......---- - ~· - ~ ----------

�J

PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, May to, 2004

Bl

The Dail~Sentinel

INSIDE
. ML8 Stan_dings and boxscores, Page 82
Flames wm Western final opener, Page 86

Monday, May 10, 2004

Prep Schedule
Sectional Tournament
Today's Games
Baseball
Division II
Gallia Academy at Warren
Meigs at Athens
Rock Hill at Jackson
Waverly at Vinton County
Division IV
Southern at Miller
Waterford at Eastern
Ironton St. Joe at South Gallia
· Softball
Division Ill
Wellston at River Valley
Nelsonville-Yqrk at Belpre
Federal Hocking at Alexander
Chesapeake at South Point
Oak Hill at WesHall
Coal Grove at Fairland
Ironton at Wheelersburg
Tuesday's Games
Baseball
Division Ill
Oak Hi ll at Belpre
Nelsonville-York at Fed. Hocking
Coal Grove at Portsmouth
Chesapeake at Irant on
South Point at Fairland
Wellston at Alexander

Three photo sequence shows the implosion of the Grant Medical Center's 16-story Baldwin
Tower making room for a new four-story bu ilding that will include 18 operating rooms. Baldwin
. Tower, one of the more visible parts of Columbus' dow.ntown skyline with tht1 word "Grant" at
its top, was reduced to a pile of rubble in about 12 seconds. (AP Photo/ Greg Sailor)

Part of hospital comes tumbling down
COLUMBUS (AP)
Changes at a hospital are
altering the city's skyline.
Gram Medical Ccoter's.
16-story Baldwin Tower
was
imploded
Sunday
morning, making room for
a new four-story building
that will include 18 operating rooms.
Baldwin Tower. one of
the more . Visible parts of

Columbus' downtown skyline with the wotd "Grant"
at its top, was reduced to a
pile of rubble in about 12
seconds.
People gathered downtown to watch from outside
a 500-foot perimeter. while
the few remaining patients
in a nearby hos pital build.ing wer~ moved to the side
away from the implosion.

Baldwin Tower was completed in 1968. It was
named for Dr.
James
Baldwin, who founded the
hospital in 1900.
Demolition Dynamics of
Franklin, Tenn., which also
handled the implosions of
Cincinnati's Cinergy Field
.and Veterans Stadium in
· Philadelphia,
coordinated
the job.

Monday, May lO

Legislature may give
amendment another try this week
\

COLUMBUS (A P) - The
Legislature must respond
soon to a new push to get
racetrack-operated video slot
machine s on the November
ballot if the state is to retain
any control over the issue.
Racetrack interests could
take the issue directly to the
voters, but they would need
322,899 valid signatures of
registered voters - 10 percent of the total vote. in the
2002 election for governor
- by Aug . 4.
A group of lawmakers.
racetrack lobbyists and others has been working privately on legislation to be
passed by the end of May.
They are trying to get the
t1nal · proposal put together
this week.
The industry needs to
know this week if legislation
is ready to move, said Paul
Tipps, a lobbyi st who represents Beulah Park in . suburban Columbus. Whether it' s
through the Legislature or
directly to the ballot, "we' II
know which way to go," he
said.
The plan would split the
state's share of the profits
about $500 million a
year - three ways: half for
scholarships for Ohio's top
high school students, 30 percent for primary-secondary
education, and 20 percent
for childhood development
programs such as Head
Start.
"It's an issue that will
bring oe·mocrats to the ballot. It will be hard to find
anyone against it ,". said
House
Minority Leader
Chris Redfern , a Port
Clinton Democrat.
It isn' t hard to t1nd votes
against it in the Legislature.
Since the issue would be a
constitutional amendment, it
would require a three-fifths
majority - 60 of 99 House
members and 20 of 33 senators - for passage. Most
·lawmakers who oppose the
resolution are against any
expansion of sta te-s pon~ored

gambling beyond the lottery .
and racing.
Redfern said 14 to 17
members out of 37 in his
Democratic caucus could
support the legislation. That
means Republican Rep. Bill
Seitz of Cincinnati. who is
carrying the Senate-passed
legislation in · the House,
would need 43 to 46 votes
from his 62-member caucus
to move the resolution. Seitz
sa id he thinks he has
enough votes if Redfern 's
numbers come through.
''We'll know when we
take the vote. My job is
tougher than his job because
there are so many of them.
Everybody 1s guarded,"
Seitz said.
Gov. Bob Taft opposes the
idea, but since it would take
the form of a resolution, it
would not require his signature to go before voters. Taft
has said he would campaign
against it if it qualifies for
the ballot.
The Senate in October
passed a resolution authorizing the slots . It would provide about $475 million of
the state 's share for college
scholarships and about $25
million for school construction.
The version currently
being discussed ' would provide about $250 million a
year for scholarships for the
top . 5 percent of each Ohio
school 's senior class and for
those not in that bracket but
who · do well on proficiency
tests, have 95 percent attendance records and meet
other standards.
The 30 perce nt that would
go to schools would provide
$89 for each public school
pupil in Ohio. plus a small
percentage increase for aid
to nonpubli c schoo1 3, mostly
parochial schools. The state
helps those schools pay for
textbooks, tutoring and other
learning aid s.
"It's imponant to point. out
that it's not money that the
Department of Education

will handle . These are direct
payments to school districts
to spend as they see lit -.
$89 a head ," Redfern said.
Democrats, though, have
concerns that the money will
be seen as a way to scale
back the state's per-pupil
funding.
Senate Minority Leader
Greg DiDonato. a Dennison
Democrat. said as many as
six of the II Democrats in
the Senate could support the
proposal if they .can be
assured that per-pupi I funding is not going to get cir~
cum vented.
Sen . Louis Blessing, a
Cincinnati Republican who
sponsored the original legislation, did nor return a telephone call seeking comment.
House
Speaker
Larry
Householder has not referred
the resolution to a Ho11se
committee for hearings. He
hasn't received a final .proposal from the group negotiating its terms, said Dwight
Crum,
Householder's
spokesman.

Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
It's going to be a cloudy

morning . Temperatures will
rise to 79 with today's low of
63 occurring around 6:00am.
Winds will be 5 to 10 MPH
from the south turning from
the southwest as the morning
progresses.
Aftemoon (I p.m.-6 p.m.)
It should continue to be
cloudy. There might be a bit
of rain around the area.
Temperatures will stay near
82 with today's high of 84
occurring around· 2:00pm.

Winds will be 5 to 10 MPH
from the southwest.
Evening (7 p.ITi.-Midnighl)
II will continue to be cloudy.
You will see light rain . The
rain should stan by 9:00pm.
The rainfall should end around
IO:OOpm with total ac.:umulations for this event near 0.10
-inches. Temperatures wil.l fall
from RI early this evening to
68. Winds will be 5 MPH from
the we st turning from the
south as the evening progresses.
·
Overnight (I a.m.-6 a.m.)
It will remain cloudy. There

is a slim chanc·e that it could
rain . Temperatures will hold
steady around 66. ~inds will
be 5 MPH from the south .
Thesday, May II
Moming (7 a.m.-Nom1)
It will be a cloudy morning.
There is a slight chance we
could see
some rain.
Temperatures will climb from
65 to 72 by late this morning.
Winds will be 5 MPH from
the south turnin g from the
southwest as the morning pro-

gre s·ses.

Cancer survivor gives
millions to help hospital
CLEVELAND (AP) His recovery from leukemia
motivated retired dentist
Donald Goodman and his
wife to give ·more than $50
million to the .Cleveland
Foundation.
The Donald J. and Ruth
Weber
Goodman
Philanthropic Fund will help
University
Hospitals of
Cleveland, home of Ireland
Cancer Center, with income
from half of the gift.

"Thi s will give us the
oppm;tunity to extend clinical
trials and help other people
get the kind of outcome that
Don Goodman got." said
Fred Rothstein. president and
chief executive of University
Hospitals of Cleveland.
,The Goodman estate also
will create two professorships
at Case Western Reserve
University\ medical school.
Part of the gift will support
its school of dental medicine.

In addition, 20 percent of
the fund will support medical information broadcasts
on public television .
"I realized we were in a
position where we could do
a lot of good," sa id
Goodman. who for decades
invested in the stock market.
By the time Goodman met
and married his second wife,
Ruth. in 1974, he 'd been
.
. ?O
mvestmg
_ years.

k 1\t''lut'l»i.r "N.tiiJ~rJ. /1/J,

Coming Thursctay in the Sentinel ...

.PLM&amp;flff VALLE¥ llf)IP/Tt4L

'

'

'

"G_P~ceJ f" ~· &amp;
.
TM"9: t" fJ~
'

COLUMBU S lAP)
Mall Harter dro'e home three
runs 10 help Penn State to an
earl y lead and a 6-~ win over
Ohio State in th e second
game or a doub leheader. and
th e Nittany Lions swept the
series Sunday.
A pinch-hit. run-scoring
sing le hy Lance Thompson
provi d~d the only run as Penn
State beat Ohio State 1-0 in
the first game.
The Nittany Lions broke
th e Bu ckeyes' seven"game
winning streak.
. In the second game. Harter
hit an RBI single at the top of
the first. and Mike Milliron
added a run when .Harter
· stole second and the throw
from Ohio State C&lt;~Lc h er
Kellv Hou ser went into center field .
·
Derrick Barr's RBI sin gle
in tht: second. and Hartc'rs
two run homer in the third
help~d Pen n State (26-19. 158 Bi~ Ten) to a 5-0 lead in the
third'. Cl int Eury added an
RBI single in the fourth.
Ohio State (26JJ9, 14-9)
got on the board in the fifth
with Drew Anderson\ sacrifice tly. Brent Garrard added
an RBI single and Paul
Farinacci hit an RBI double
to cap the scoring in the sixth.
Aaron Tressler (4- 1) took
the win. striking out fo ur and
giving up nine hits and three
run s in 5 2-3 innings. Josh
Palm got hi s third save, striking out two in I 1-3 innings.
Trent Luyster (4-4 J gave up
II hits. six runs and four
walks in six in nings.
In the first game. Mike
Milliron slid home ahead of
the throw in the sixth to score
the only run of the .ga me.

Meigs Middle
golfers win again

. K, 9-ts, 2fKH,
1"

Penn State
sweeps
Buckeyes

POMEROY
Steven
Stewart and Kirk Lager shot
an almost perfect round finishing with a pair of two over
.37's. as they led the Meigs
Middle golf team to a win
with a 166.
Point Pleasant was second
with I 87. Point was led by ·
Will Garrison wi th a 42.
Wahama was third with
Darrin Reese shooting a very
respectable 40.
Eastern was led by the ever
improving Kyle Edwards
with a 43.
'The nellt match is Thursday
at Hidden Valley Country
Club.

Bonds still hurts Reds
8v JoE KAY
Associated Press

C INCINNATI - Reds
manager Dave · Miley
walked
Barry Bonds
again , and paid for it
again.
A sick and struggling
Bonds gut an intentional
walk leading off the lOth
inning.
advanced
on
Edgardo Alfonzo's double
and came home on Dei vi
Cruz's sacrit1ce fly, giving
the San Francisco Giants a
7-6 victory Sunday ov.er
Cincinnati.
For the second time in
the series. the Reds lost a
game because t.hey were
afraid of Bonds. Little did ·
thev know· that thev had
liui~ to fear.
•
Bonds was 0-for-4 when
he came to the plate in the
IOth. mired in an 0-for- 15
s:ump. He had missed
three ga mes because of a
severe sinus infection that
is still bothering him .
Playing on an 80-degree
afternoon, Bonds was 'o
Uraint!U

that

STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune.com

~

Please see Reds, 86

Red men
advance
tcrregibnal
tourney
Gibbs tosses shut
out against Point Park

manage r

Felipe Alou considered
taking him out in the middle innings.
"If th~ y only knew how
sick and how weak Barry
Bonds was the whole day."
Alou said. "We were talking to him about leaving
the game, but he wanted to
stay in . He was not swingin" the bat with much
energy. They dun·t know
what we know."
The Reds had seen
enou gh- a strik eot1t , two
weak grounders and a rou tine fl y on a belt-high fast. ball - to know that Bonds
wasn't himself. Milev
urd~red closer Danny
Graves ( 1-3) to walk him
anyway.
"Everybody is going to
second-guess him. but I"m
not," Graves said. "He's
still Barry Bonds. He did-

College Baseball

San Francisco ·Giants ' Ma rquis Grissom, left, is congratclated at home plate
by Barry Bonds. middle. and JT Snow after hitting a two-r un home run off
Cincinnati Reds pitcher Todd Van Poppet in the first inning Sunday. (AP)

Larson back on DL with sore thigh
draft pick.
Larson aggravated hi s lett thig h
Associated Press
while sl iding hard into home plate
on Friday night in a 6- 1 ID.'S to
C INCINNATI - Third base- San Frandsen. He sat out the next
man Brandon Larson went back ga me .
· on the di sabled list Sunday with a
Doctors decided it cou ld devel strai ned thigh. the latest in an op Into
·
a season-, long problem if
backs for the
amazi
ng
series
of
set
. ·
· Red s • r·ormer No. 1 it's not allowed to heal now, -gcnC lnClnnall
. erul manager Dan O' Brien said.
BY JOE KAY

PITTSBURGH - The Univer&gt;ity of Rio
Grande Redmen hasehall team behind the
outstanding pitching of sophomore Dustin
Gibbs haYe earned a spot
in the 2004 Ameri.:an
Mideast
Conkrence/NAIA Region
IX
Tournament
after,
defeatin~ Point Park 8-0
on Sunday aftanoon to
wi n the hest-nf-th ree qualifying ~c ri es.
Gibbs. a nati1·e of
Vinton. hdd the Pioneers
Gibbs
t&lt;&gt; tlnec hib ov~r . 7 1/3
in nin~ s. Gibbs 13- 1J struck
out seven i n thrnwi~~ Lhe gem. Senior
Ch&lt;~d Wolfe pitched tlie final'! 213 frames.
holdin~ Point Park at bav.
Frc,fiman outfielder 1\:ne Chau paced the
17-hit attack wi th a 3-for-3 day. including a
triple and three RBI. Sen ior second baseman Gabe Devonn was 3-fo r-.J with an RBI
and junior ccnterficldc r Scott Peterman
went 3-for-.J with an RBI.
Junior Kris Schuler was 2-for-5 wi th an
RBI and sophomore Matt Martin &lt;1dded
. two hits in fi ve at-bats.
s·enior shorhtop Brent Ewing 11ent 1-for.J at the plate wit h an RBI. Sophomore
cal.: her D&lt;~n Crabtree also colle.:ted a hit in
two plate appearan&lt;:es.
Rio improves to. a school reco rd . 36-22
with the victory and Point Park ends the
sc;ISnn at 21- 15.
The Rcdmen elller t()e NA JA Region IX
Tournament as the No. -l seed and will face
AMC SDuth Divi~ion ChamplDII and t&lt;'P·
seeded Moulll Vernon N~11arene . Game one
is .,et for I 0 a.m. on M~l\ I~ at Thurman
Munson Stadi um in Cant,i n. OH.
:'v!VNU tool.. thre,· of four from Rio
Grande in the final series of the season.
April JO throu ~h May I :

"We just decided it was be., t to
do it thi s way." o· Brien sai d. ··He
was willing to gut it out anJ ke ep
playing:·
Larson ~aid the thi!!.h has been
sore for some time. Alncdieal test
over the weeke nd found a sma ll
tear in the muscle. and the team

The Llnivcrsitv of Ri o Grande Rcdmen
o~~~l.!hall tc4nl1 !--Piit a pair or game-. wi th
Ptlint Park on Saturday in the best of th ree

Please see Larson. 86

Please see Redmen. 86

Redmen split with Point
Park in AMC Playoffs

Bengals Football

What draftee was meant to be:
artist and offensive lineman
BY TERRY KINNEY

Associated Press
C INC INNATI
Stacy
Andrew' fe ll in love wi th drawing long before football .
He played in only five games
in .:o ll egc. but the Cin cinnati
Bengal' saw him as a sleeper in
the drafl , picked him in the
fou rth rou nd and hope to make
an NFL tackle vut nf the .142 Cincinnati Bengals rookie offensive lineman Stacy Andrews
stretches during minicamp
Friday in Cincinnati. (APJ

pound
art
majm~
from
Missi" ippi.
"W hen I was real yo ung. I
loved to draw. I drew cvcrv
dav." Andrews said Saturdav ;it
the 13engal s minicamp for r&lt;)okie~ . "It w"~ ju~t something I
wanted to do."
In high school. Andrews '""
a track and basketball star hut
slwnncd fnntball . He thou gill he
cou ld get a basketball ,cJwlarship. lout got offers only from
.small schools. MissisSippi
offered him a track scholarship.
Before leaving Ole Miss. he
had set three school record,.
including a discus throw of 188

feel. ) inches . All the wh ile.
offensiw line coach John Latina
tried to get Andrews tn u· ~ foot balL
"When I firq got here fi1·e
vcars a~o - his fiN year - I
~\'alk('d ~ intn the \Veif!ht ronm

and naturally thought ' he was a
fn,lthall pL¥yer." Latin'1 said
Saturda~
by phone from
o,rord. Mi" . "I walked up to
him. intrnduc·cd mvsclf and tnld
him I thought I might be his line
coach . He said he w;ts there
because of track."
Nul di~couraged. Latina cunPlease see Draftee, 86

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

lltALTil i ~AftTr fAIV@ VVIl

!•
••

'~

·:
:
:

• Thursday, May 13, 2004
•10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
• Back parking lot of main facility
• Public is cordially invited

!

• Safety information available for ail ages

•

•'

Your guide to weekend .
entertalnmeqt in the Tri-State

,/ lfea!t.t!Ve.t
,/ S'e.a...e.t &amp; Ru-eae- Oop
,/ ;t-9 ?ftr/t
· ,/ E;e!t

hi-e fo/e~
• Sponsored.J:&gt;y the PVH Education Department ,/ ;t!u.c.t, !'(ad llftJI'e/

:

,/

:•
••

PLEASANT
VALLEY
H OS PI TAL

:•
:
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:

!

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
'·

J

"

.I

�Page B2 •

'

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, May

www.myd
a ilysentinel.com
.
-

.Major League Baseball
W

-NY Yankee&amp;
--

19
1
a
16

- .- Torooto

t3
9

Tampa Bay C~Al

W
17

ciaqo Sox
M~nnesota

17
15
12
9

Detrotl
Cltweland
KGnsas Crty

12

613

13

581

I

1~

571
419

1/,

64

18

6

6~

21

300

l
13
13
16
18

PCI5E7
567
494
400

GO

20

310

71

W

L

Pet.

Anahe1m
TeXas
Oakland

22
19
t5
12

10

688

12

613

16

484

19

387

"·

TorMIO 5 ChiCagO

Aw.,

H

l1

104

"

W2
W3
WS

95
118

98
98
54

69

7-9

l5

6-7

3·14

2-8
P10
55
46

...

Homo

.,.,

3·7

WI

5

·~

l5

a-7

"

WI

66

P10

S1rk

Homo

AW"I

91

W9
l1

115

115

13 6

6-6

"
61
91

7-B

411
314

WI

5-5

l2

"

7-9

·-·

5-10

S.turct.y • Reauft1
Toronto 4 ChiCagO Sox 2
Boston 9 Kansas C~ 1
M~nnusota 3, Oakland 2 t!Ol

Sax 2

Bah:rnore 12 CleYeland 11
Kansa&amp; Cny 8 8(lston 4

Te~M

16 De!ronl5 (10)

Anahetm 7 Tampa Bay 2

Oakland 8 M•nneso1a 4
NY Yan!U3es 7 Seattle 6

NY Yank~s 6 S.anle 0

4-13

Homo

Awoy

Pct

GB

P10

....

Homo

"'""'

18
15

581
517
467
452
313

46

WI

96

2
3
4

64
37
64

W3
ll

77

8I

5·5

l1

Pot

GB

PtQ
82

Ptidadelpn1a
Atlanta
NY Mels
Montreal

10

"

t3
14
16
17
22

CENTRAL

w

L

14

ChiCago Cubs
C1nc1nnatr
St lOUIS
MrlwauNee

8·7

WI

....

11

645

10-4

"
,

581
5t6
500

2

55

WI
WI

10·7

13
15
16
16
17

106

67

4

•6

l1

96

4

55

WI

611

' 9
10 5

484

5
7

46
37

L1

77
4·10

8-7

16
l6
15

w

WEST
los Angeles
Sen 018go
San FranciSCO
Colorado
Anrooo

9-7
8 -7
6-9
6·9

20

20

"
14

,,
13

414

L
10
t3
t8
t7

Pd
667
594
438
433

t8

4(1&lt;)

GB

2

"

P10

,_,

54
55

7

78

Sl~

Homo

W4

9~

l1

1 1·5

WI

89
87
6-9

,,
l1

"3-7
SIIU""W'a

Sundlry's n..ulta
Houston 2 Atlanta 1
Sl louiS 5 Montrea12
NV Mats 6 Mrtwaukee 5 1111
San FrartCISCO 7 Cronnab 6 t 10)
Los Angeles 9 Pittsburgh 7 ( 14)
ChiCagO Cubs 5 Colorado 4 (131
Florida 7 San Diego 4
Ptuladelohaa 7 Artz011a 1

Ba!!&gt;more 10. CMiand 7

~s le~tas3

AnaM•m 8 TaiJlla Sa~ 4

6·9

L

Plti:Sburgtl

7-l
55

"

Pltt1burwh
Lo• An!jletl'l
ab r hbl
ab r hb!
Cora2b
5120 Kendarl c 7 0 1 1
Saenz 1b 1 1 1 2 .M'1Isn " 7 0 2 0
LDucac 7t21
6110
Baylt
Brdley ct 7 1 4 1 CWIISn tb 7 1 t 0
SnGrenrt 6 2 2 t
Mckwkrt4210
8€'1tre3b 6 1 3 1 Styn&amp;s 3b 4 2 1 1
JEclcnlf 6 0 0 0 Casullo 2b 3 0 1 0
Vntura tb 6 0 t 1 H1ll2b
2111
Flknbrp
0 0 0 0 TRdmncl 4 0 I 3
JHrndz ss 5 2 t ~ Foggp
100 0
OPerezp 3 0 0 0 JOaVIS ph t 0 a 0
TMartnp 0 0 0 0 Cotaph
1000
Grbwsk pM t 0 0 0 ANIJilezphO 0 0 1
Thrston pt1 t 0 0 0 Vglsng ph 1 0 0 0
Totals 54 916 T Tollla 48 110 1

w

,_, -·00

21

L3

ll

·-

EAST

7-e

10 5
10·5
7·8

GO

SUndly'a Aotultl

s..

P10

PCI-

WEST

Seattle

GO

l

Grybosti1
1-3 0 0 0 t 0
JuCruz
210002
WP-RuOr'tll
Umprres-41orr'llil Brll Hohn Frrst Rob Drake
Seccfld Mark Carlson Th1rd , Gary Darl1ng
T- 2 53 A-26 825 (50 091]

sa

Awry
11-4

·-·
6-9

5-to
6-9

~nl

Mrlwauk.ee 6 NV Mets 4
CHUIIlilll 5, San FranciSCO 3
ColoraOo 4 Chago Cobs 3
Safl0t&amp;g06 Fklnde3 (t01
Los A.ngeles 4 Plttsb.Jrgh 3
Allanta5 Housron4 (101
Monlreal 2 St LOUIS a
Ph1ledelphta 8 Artlona 7

~ 'a Gamu

NV Mets (Seo 1-31 at Anzona (Da1gla t-1 ), 9 35 p m

s........

Toronto {Hantgen 1 2) at Kan5as C1~ (8 And8!-son 1-3), 8 10 p m

Yankees 7, Mariners 6
Suttle

NewYoJk
ab r hbl
52 2 2

Jeter ss

BWIIms cf 5 0 0 0
A~d r';lZ 3b 3 3 2 1
JeGbi lb 4 1 2 3
Posada c 1 0 0 o
Shlheld rl 4 0 0 0
Mst11u11f 3011
S~&amp;nadh
4 010
Calro2b 41 I 0
Flher~c
2000
Tot111 35 1 g 1

lb r h bi
ISuzU~I

rl

4 0 1 Q

Wmncl
4010
BBoone 2b 4 0 0 0
EMnnzdn 310 0
Ibanez II 4 1 1 0
JoCbra 3b 4 1 1 2
Olerud lb 4 1 1 0
Au nltass 3 1 1 1
SplfiZIO ph 1 0 0 0
DWIIsnc 3123
Tot1l1 34 I I I

NIWYork
000 103 210 7
S•ttle
0&amp;0 000 000 - I
OP-New York. I LOB-New Yor!( 4 S1attla
4 29-Citro (4l ISuzukl/3). JoCaDrera (4l
HA-Jeter (2) AAodrlguez (7) JaG1amt11
(B), 0WI1aon (2) SF-t.fa1sut
IP H RERBBSO

New York

1 1·3 6 6 6 2
22-::11000
2 0 0 0 0
Ouantr~ll W4· 1
1 1 D 0 0
Gordon
1 0 0 0 0
MAIVflrlll S 12
1 0 0 0
01borne
Prinz
()White

....,.

0
4

2
I
0
I

~oyer

664405
JMateo
122202
ASorlanol03 13 1 l 1
0
Hasegawa
1 2·3 0 0 0
0
Umpmn-Home, Allonso MarQuez F1rst
~tek Reed Second, Ed Rapuano Th1rd Ted
Barrett T-2 55 A--46.589 (47 447)

Cuba 5, Rockies 4, (13)
Colorado

Cklcago

lb 'kbl
4130
LuGntl 2b 3 0 2 0
t.1aSwyph 10 t 0
CJhsonc 50 2 0
Hewpert 6000
Pellow ph 1 a 0 0
JKnndyp 2 010
Clayton ss 5 0 0 0
Helton \b 4 t 2 1
CAstilla 3b 5 0 1 0
Burnltz d 6 1 2 1
HR1day II 5 1 2 1
Hclungll 1000
Tot.l1 48 416 3

ab r hbl
DJcksn 2b 4 1 1 t

M~es2b

ct 6 1 2 1
4000
Aloull
6020
ARmrz3b 5, 1 2
Delee tb 4 2 2 o
Barrette 4 0 0 0
AEM11z ss 5 0 2 0
Mrtrep
2000
Godwin ph 1 0 1 1
TWa lkr ph 1 0 0 0
Hwk1nsp 0 0 0 0
Moctas pn 1 o o 0
Tohll• 43 51 t 5
CPtt!On

SSo~rl

Colorado 100 200 000 100 0 4
ChiCII' 200 001 000 100 1 5
Two outs when wmmng run scored
OP~Iorado 2 Chcago 4 LOB-Colorado
10, ChiCago 13 28-Cast1lla ( t3) HoM1day
(6), Goodwin (2l HA-Helton (6l OJackson
(H AAamlrez (8) SB---HawE:Je (1) CPatter
son (5) CS-Holl1day (3) LuGonzatez (3)
S-Ciayton Barre" 2 Rusch SFARamlfiZ
IP H REABBSO
ColorHo
532244
JKennedy
SReod
2·32t100
1-3 1 0 0 t
JrLQPt~z
Hartk ~ala
200001
Fuentes
t00003
Chacon
1 1 1 1 0 1
Fessero l 0·2 22·3 4 1 1 2 3
Chic.go
6 10 3 3 t 3
Mitre
1 I 0 0 t 2
Farnswor1h
2 3 0 0 0
Haw~ms

Borowsll1
2 1 1 0 0
Bel\f&amp;(l
o 0 0
2
Rusch W I..Q
2 0 0 0 1 0
HBP--by Ha n~kala (Delael by JKennecly
1Dele&amp;) WP-Mrtre Hawk1n5
Umprres-Home Brian Gorman First Date
Scon Second Ron Kulpa Th1rd 8111 Miller
T-3 38 A--39155i'9345l

Umpnes-Home Jany Layne , Frrst Ch ns
Gucc1one S9Cf.lnd Paul Schrieber Th1rd Ed
Montague
T-233 A--249t6 (43662)

Ump1res-Home M1ke D1Muro F1rs1 PauJ
Emmet Second JO\I West Th1rd, Terry Crall
T-3 20 A-34 589 (35,095)

Meto 6, Brewers 5

Marlins 7, Padres 4

San Diego
ab r 1\ bl
1b r hbt
I 8 D IIR
4
Rbn5oncf 4020 P~rrect 4 130
;::n:!lg:'a::ia::=-•&lt;..::.e::li:.::.;_;::•!,:Y::C
Sc::----- 1 Brrghs 3b 4 o o o LCst111o 2b 3 1 0 1
5 t 1 1
Tampa Bay
An1t11lm
Lorene 2b 4 0 0 0 ChOI 1b
ab r h bl
•b r hbl
BGikU rf 4 0 0 0 Cbrerarf 3 1 2~
l..ugo as
5 0 2 0 Ec.. slin ss 4 0 0 0 Nev1n 1b 4 1 2 0 Conmfllf 4011
1000
4 2 3 0 Nunezlf
RSncnz2b4 0 0 0 F1gg1n63b 4 1 t 0 Looglf
Crwtrdph 1 0 0 0 VGrerorf 4 1 1 1 AaHrdzc 41 2 3 Banrtezp 0000
B1ldell1 e1 s o 1 o Glaus dh 3 1 1 0 Greene ss 2 0 0 1 Mrdca1 3b 5 0 0 0
Huff dh
3 1 1 0 JG1IIen ~ 3 3 3 I
Eaton p 1 0 0 0 AGnzlz st 4 1 2 1
EouPrzlf 2 0 t 0 Halter3b 0 1 0 0 Szmnekp 1 0 0 0 FICttroc 41 2 0
Ftckll
2000 0\lnonct 4 1 24
Klelkoph tOOO Btckettp 2110
JoCruz rf 4 1 1 t
Ktchm 1b 3 0 0 1 TDtala 33 4 i A Tollta 35 712 7
TMrtnz1b 4 2 3 2 JMolnac 4 0 21
THallc
4010 AKndy2b 4010
San Dt.go
010 000
tG2 - •
Blum3b 40t1
Flortda
150 010 00• 7
Totala 38 411 4 Totala 33 811 8 E-lorena (21 DP-F!ortda 2 LOB-San
01ego 6 Florida 11 28-Nevtn [6) Long
Tampal1y
001 021 000 4 (2) RaHernandez (2) RCsstro (I) HAAnaheim
014 010 20• -- 8 ~IHerntndez (2), Cabrera (11). A.Gonlalet
E--VGuerl'flrO (3) LOB-Tampa Bay 6 (3) SB--Fiob1nson (3). P1erre (10) csAnaheim 6 29-LuJ;ro ('l Baldelli (1) Greene (1) S-Wayne SF-Greene
IP H R ER' BB SO
EduParez (2), Blum (4) JGu1llen (6) 38S.n Diego
Ftgglnl (!), JMohna (2) HA-TMartrnez (6)
JGu1llen (6l DaVanon (2) SB-F1ggms (9) Eaton L t-3
1 2·3 6 6 6 2 4
Szum1ns1&lt;r
l 5 I I , I
AKennedy (SJ SF-Kotchman
Oropess
1 1·;3 0
I
IP H RE ~ BBSO
0 0
2 I 0 0
2
Wrtasidl:
T1mp11 Bay
Zambrano L 3-3
Florida
5 7 6 6 2 I
8 5 I
I 2 3
Halama
I
I 0 0 0 0 Becke" W,3 2
223 4 3 3 I 2
LCarler
I
2 2 2 0 0 Wayne
I
1 0 0 0 I
Benitez S t3
13 0 a 0 0 0
DBaez
WP---Bec~en
Al'lllhelm
washburnW6-162-3 10 4 3 0 5 Umprres-Home, Charlie Reliford, Frrst, Jeff
FRodr~guezSl 2t-3
1 0 0 t 5 Kellogg Second Doug Eodrngs, Third Dan
HBP-by Zambrano (JGUillen) by Zambrano lassogna T-3 tO A- 16497 (36 331)
(Glaus)
Ump~res-Home Mike Redly, F1rst. Chuck
Royals 8, Rod Sox 4
Menwether Second C B 9ucknor Third
Kan1111 City
Enc Cooper T-2 39 A--4t 410 (45 030)
ab r h bl
ab r hbl
Berroa ss 5 1 1 1 011moncl 502 1
Athletics 8, Twins 4
Beltran cf 5 0 3 4 Bllhorn 2b 5 0 0 0
Mlnnuola
Oakland
MISwy 1b 2 0 2 2 DOrt1Z dh 4 0 t 0
ab r hbl
ab r hbi
S!Birs dh S 0 0 0 MRmrzl! 3t ~ 1
Aanda3b 51 1 o llar1 lfl~ c 4 0 0 G
ShStwnlt 41 2 2 McMinlt 51 I! t
0000 Gutellt
3 0 0 0 M1llarrl
4120
CGzmnss 4 0 1 0 Oyerl
Mntkw tb 4 0 0 0 Byrnes cl 3 1 0 a 8St1agoc 4 0 0 0 Mueller 3b 4 1 t 2
THntar dh 4 0 0 0 EChavz 3b 3 2 l 0 St1nne" c 1 t 1 1 McCiy 1b 4 0 I a
lFordcl 4 0 0 0 Durazo dh 5 0 I I!
Rlalord 2b 3 3 1 0 Reesess 21 to
Cddyer 3b 4 1 1 1 Httberg1b 3 2 t 1 DJe~&gt;us rf 2 2 0 0
MRvanrf4010 OMIIIerc 4 0 2 1 Totals 35 e 9 8 Totals 35 4 9 4
HBincoc 3 1 1 0 K1e1tyr1
3123
R1vas2b 2 1 0 0 Scutam ss 5 1 2 0 Kanaaa Ctty
002 004 011 B
Mnchno 2b 4 0 0 0 Bolton
020 000 011 4
33 4 6 3 Tota l•
35 811 8 E-Reese 151 LOB--Kansas C1ty 9, Boston
Tollll
7 28-Benran 2 (9) MiSweene~ (51 DOrttz
Mlnne1ot1
011 020 000 4 p 2) McC11rty (3) HR-Stmnell (2)
Oakland
210 031 Ob 8 MR11m1rezl!.l) Mueller (5) SB-Bellran (9\
E-ShStewart (2). LFord (2), Cuddyer (4). MISweeney (2) CS-Fieese (t) S-Gu1el
EChavez (4) Scutaro (2} DP-Qakland 1 DeJesus
IP H R ERBBSO
LOB-M innesota 5 Oakland t2 2BKan ..a City
MR~an (1), HBianco (7] McMillon (2), Stu·
taro (B) HA-ShStewart (3) Cuddyer (3) ~W.1-4
5 2·3 7 2 2
5
K1elty (2) SB-Rr~a~ (3) Byrnes (61 C8rda
2 I I 1
EChavez (3) S-A11/as
I
I I
Suiii&gt;Jan
I I
IP H RERBBSO
OAfi'Jes
13 0 0 0 0
Mlnn..ota
ao.ton
4136546
Lohsa L t-3
523 5 6 4 5 3
DLowa L3 3
JAtncon
1233222
13 I 0 0 1 1
Maleske
2 2 1 ,
1
Fultz
Arroyo
I 0
0 0 0 2
Oakland
Otna1do
I 2 1 1 1 0
Mulder W3·2
9 6 4 3 2 3 Ttml1n
I I
1 1 0 2
WP---tohse
WP--Cerda

~--,-..,-.,-,-.,---,---- I

A

Los Angelel 212 000 020 000 02 9
P1tt1butgh 020 000 GSO 000 00 7
E-K&amp;ndeK (3) DP---tos Angeles 1 P1ns
OIJI"Qh 1 LOB-Los Angeles 7 P1nsburgl'l 9
28--Cora (3) Lo Ouca (61 ShGreen 2 (6)
Beltre (8) Styne~&gt;{6) 38--CastiiiO (1) HRSaenz tt) Bradle~ (6) 88-JHernandez (1 )
Cs--Lo Duca (2), Bradley (3) TRedman (1)
S-lztuns Stynes KWells.
IP H R ER BBSO
Loa AngM1
o.....
7 5 2 2 0 2
23 2 4 4
L•ma
0
0 0 1 ,
1 0
Ore1fort
Tl.tart1n
0 0 0 0 2 0
1·3 1 0 0 0 0
2 1 0 0 2 I
Gagne
2 0 0 0 0 2
Flknbr W t 0
2
0 0 0 I
Pitta burgh
Fogg
575412
Johnston
0 0 0 0 2
Meadows
0 0 0 0 t
Boyd
122210
Mesa
230001
STorres
310000
GrabowLQ.1
2·3 3 2 2 1 1
Boehnnger
1-3 0 0 0 0 0
Dretlort pllehad to 1 batter 1n the 8Th TMarlln
pttched to 2 batters 1n the 8th
HBP-b~ OParez (Bay)
T--410 A-16554 (38.496)

,

MonO.w •• O.met

Cle'loelahd (D'AmiCo 1-21 at Boston (Krn 1-{l) 705 pm

l?odgers 9 , Pirates 7 , (14)

M1IW1Ukee
•b , hbl
Pdsdnk ct 5 0 2 2
Cunsell ss 6 t t 0
KG1n•r 2b 6 0 t 0
Jenkm If 5 0 t 1
o-.rnav 1b 4 o 2 o
Hemll3b 51t0
Gne..erf 2 t 00
BCiarkrf 2 0 1 2
LVzcMp oaoa
BHallph
1000
K1chnkp 1010
Motllerc -4210
VS1n11p 2000
Tot111 43 15 11 5

NewVor ~

1b r h bi
Vaf&amp;ntd
4 1 1 1
McEwgss 4 01 o
Zelle3b 51 1 0
KGarcarf 6 01 0
JPhllps 1b 3 1 2 o
Matsui SB 2 1 , 1
Cmeron cl S 0 0 0
I/W1I1n C 5 1 2 0
DGrcle 2b 2 0 1 2
Trc:l'llll p 3 0. 0 0
0100
Seopr
Wggntn 3b 2 0 1 2
Gttrrll pl1 1 0 1 0
Totala 42 112 II

MllwaukM
001 000 130 00 5
NlwVork
t10 100 020 01 f
T'M outs when W1nn1ng run scort~d
E-Zelle (2l LDB-Mtlwaukee 10 New
York t2 28-Jenkln s {9), 011erbay (1 6)
K18lChlllck ( 1), le1le (B), JPh1lhps (5), Mal·
BUI (8) VW1Ison 2 (2) HR-Valenl {3] SBPodsa dnlk (18) S--McEW1ng 2 SF-

"""

Tigers 5, Rangers 3
D1trolt

T1xaa

ab r hbl
ab r hbl
ASnchz cl 3 2 1 1 M'fong sa 3 0 0 0
CG ~Ien 15 4 2 2 1
Blsloclt3b 4000
IAd~dh 2000
ASrano2b 4 0 0 0
Wtttlllf
4022 Perry dh 3 1 0 0.
Hggnanrt 0 0 0 0 Filmer ph 1 0 0 0
Mcnroert 4 0 0 0 T11.e1ra 1b 4 0 0 0
CPena 1b 4 0 0 0 BJordnrf 3211
lngec
4000 EYcngl! 30 t 0
Norton 3b 4 1 1 1 Mench ct 1001
Infanta 2b 3 0 0 0 Bre)asc 3 0 1 t
Tot111 32 5 1 5 Tollla 29 3 3 3

Podseom~

Mllwauk. .
VSantos
K1esctln1ck
JBeMBit
Burba
LVIZC&lt;IIflO
BFordLt - 1
New York
T1achS8I
JoFranco
Wealhers
Stanlon

IP

H

REABB SO

5

6

I

I

3
0

I
I

0

0

0

I

I

1

2
0

,
0

2
0

1 2-3

3

I

1

3
0

I
I

I

'0
I

0
2
2

6 7 2 t 2
1 2-3 1 2 2 1 2
0 1 1 1 1 0
1·3 1 0 o 0 0
L~r
210001
Wh~:~elerW10
t 0 0 0 0 0
TracMel prtched to 2 baners 1n the 7th
Weathilrs p1tched to 2 betle~ In the 8th
WP-Weathers PB-V\'Vrlson Ba!k--Burbe
Umpues-Home, tJarv1n Hudson, Ftrst, Dana
OaMLIIh Second J1m Joyce, Thtrd Kerw!n
Oen~y T----4 04 A-29, 686 (57 405)

'

Detroit
000 111 020 5
Texas
020 100 ODO 3
E- CGUIIIen (4) Te1we1ra (3\ LOB- De1ro~
3 Texes 3 2B-CGu1llen 2 [8) BJordan (2)
HR-ASanGhez (2l Norlo~ (2) SB.A!Sanchez \5) CS-EVo1.1ng (4) SFMench
IP H REABBSO
Detroit
Robertson W 2-27 2·3 3 3 1 2 7
Knotts
1·3 0 0 0 0 0
UrblnaS4
t o 0 o o
Texaa
~OQ!i!fS L,4-2
7 2·3 5 5 4 2 7
Nelson
1 1-3 t 0 0 t
1
HBP-by Robertson (Mench ) WP-Robert son T-2 34 A-25 034 (49 115J

Giants 7, Reds 6 , (10)

Cinc innati
San Fran
ab r h bi
-:-:::::c:--;:--;:::,.,--,,.-::,.---'---1
lb t h bl
Astros 2, Braves 1
Tucl;;!!r r1 4 o 1 o 0Jmnz2b 4 0 0 0
Snow1b4112 larkin ss 4 1 1 1
Houston
Grssom cl 5 2 2 2 Casey1b "2 2 1
ab r h bl
ab r hb1
Bondslf 4200 GrlJrcf 3000
OPimroct 3 0 0 I DeRosa 3b 4 0 0 0 Altonzo 3b 5 0 3 1 Freel ll
4000
AEwttss 4000 JuFrco 1b 4 0 0 0 OCruzss 3001
JaCruzr1 3 1 1 2
BrtimnH
3 0 0 0 CJones If 2 0 0 0 NPerez 2b 4 0 0 1 DunnH
10 10
JKent2b 4110 AJonescl 4 0 0 0 Tnalbac 31 0 0 WPenaph 1 0 0 0
Hldalgorl 4000 JDrewrf 3 1 1 0 Tomkop 1000 Vlenttnc 51 1 0
Lambl b 4 0 00 JEstdac 40 t 1 Mohr~ 1110 JCastro 3b 5 1 3 2
Ensbrg 3b 3 1 1 0 Btemrtss 4 0 0 0 Browerp 1000 Poppelp 1 0 0 0
Asmusc
201t
JGarce 2ll 3 o 1 o Fellzph
10t0 Rmanoph l 0 0 0
Pettlltlp 2000 AuOrtlzp 1 0 0 0 Chrstns p 0 0 0 0 Hmmelph 1 n 0 o
B'i!QIJph 1 oao lroche ph 1 0 0 0
36 7 8 7 Tol81a 37 6 9 6
Tohlll
To1111 30 2 3 2 TOII II 30 1 3 1
S1n Franclaco 200 002 t01
1 7
Houlton
000 OtO 100 2 Cincinnati
100 003 t01
0 -- 6
Atlanta
000 100 000 1 E-OJ1menez (3) JCestro 2 (3) DP-E- H1dai!;!O (2) LOB-Houston 7 Atlanta 6 Cmcmnatl t LOB--SM Fri!OCISCO a
2B-JKent (8] JOrew {6), JEstrada (10) Cmcmnat1 8 2B-AIIonzo (6) JCastrd (3)
SB-Ensberg (2) SF-Ausmus
HR---Gr~ssom (51 Casey 14) S-Tucker
IP H RERBB SO
OJ1menez SF- Snow OCruz NPeroz
Ho~lon

PemneW31
OMteel1
Oolel$6
Atltnta
Ru0rtlzL34

E-mail us: sports@mydailytribune.com

Lar~m

6
2
1
623

2
1

1
0

0

0

2

2

t

5

0

4
0

0

0

'

2

4

I

9

IP
San Franclaco
Tomko
Eyre
FRodnguez

H AERBB SO

664&lt;135
1

I

1

0

0

0

0

0

2

2·3

"''"'

2

0

t

I
I

0

0

0

o a o

113

0

0

0
0

van Poppet
RWagner
Rredlrlg

4

3
0
2

2
0
2

2
0
0

2
0
0

3"
C
0

PNorton

1

0

0

I

cnnsnansen
BrowerW 1 2
Cin&lt;::lnn~ll

TJones
tt3 1
1 1 0
GravesL13
123 2 1
2
Chr shansen p1tchad lo l batter In the g,:h
WP-Tomko 2
T-3 29 A-30 204 {42 271)

Blu• Jays 5, While Sox 2
Taron to

Cklc • go

ab r hb1
•b r hb1
Wrla,si?b 3 1 3 0 HCiarl&lt;l1 4 1 1 a
Unbe2b 1000 Jhnsonrt 0000
Vlenun 55 3 1 1 0 Ctlnotto II 4 1 2 2
MOrdzrf 3000 W/ellscl 4 0 1 0
Thm11sdh 4 0 1 2 COigoo1b3000
JPntps dM 4 1 1 0
CaLeeH 2020
Knerko 1b 4 0 0 0 H1nske 3b 3 1 t 0
31t1
Crede3b 4010 Zaunc
Rwandct 3 0 0 0 OHudsn 2b 3 0 2 t
Olrvoc
3000 Gomezss 2 0 0 1
Totals .]{) 2 8 2 Tot•l• 30 5 9 5
002 000 000 • 2
002 201 OOx 5
(1) Olivo (2) OP---Chtcago 3
Tomnto 2 L08-Ch1cago 5 Toronto 4 26CaLee (6) Catal11nono (B) HA-Catalanot
to 11) S B-H1ns~e (11 CS-Calee (2)
Crede (t ) S--Valenlln SF-Gomez •
IP H RERBB SO
Ch1cago
l0111Za l4·2
6 9 5 5 2
Toronto
JM1IIerWlO
7 7 2 2 2
Kershner
23 0 0 0 0
L1gtenberg S 1 1 1-3 1 0 0 0
HBP-b~ JM1Uer (Calee) PB-OIIvo
Ump1res-Home Larry Vanover, F1rs1 Lance
Barksdale, Second S11m Holbrook Third
Paul Nauert T-2 11 A-17 546 {50 598)
Chicago
Toronto

E~WHams

Orioles 12, Indians 11
Cleveland
ab r hbl
Blkard 2b 4 0 1 t
Merlon1 1b 3 t 1 t
Brssrd 1b 3 0 2 3
Lawlonlf 4 0 0 0
VMrtnzc 6 0 1 0
Halnar dh 4 2 1 0
Blake3b 4 0 2 0
Cr~apph
1000
Gerutrl
4330
AEacbr cl 3 2 1 3
JMcOid n 2 2 2 1
V1zquel U 2 1 1 1
Totlla 40 11 15 10

B1ttlmore
ab r 1'1 bl
B~brts 2b 5 0 0 0
Mora3b 5331
Tejada ss 5 3 3 4
RPimo 1b 2 2 0 0
JvLopzc 5231
Gobonsrl 4022
SurfloNdh 312 2
Matosct 5011
Bl(lbtall
4121

31121 112

Clav.land
002 312 102 - 11
Baltimo re
121 024 02x - 12
E-.-JMcDonald (1), 81gb1a 11) OP-Cielll!
land t, Balttmore 2 LOB-Cleveland t1
Ba!llmore 8 28-VMarunez (4\ AEscober
(6), Gibbons (3) Sumoll 2 (5) B1gb1e (51
HR-Merlon1 (1) Mora 14) Tejildil 2 (4)
SB-THalner (1), Blake (21 Gerut (5) More

141

1P H A ER BB SO
Clevatand
Ja0aVIS
I
5 9 6 5
R1sk11 l Q-1
I 5 4 4
I
I
JJ1menez
2 2 2 2 2 a
Baltimore
DuBose
5 6 6 5 3 8
R11ey
2-3 1 2 2
'
I
DeJean
t-3 t 0 0 0Groom
031t 0 0
FILopel W,3·1
1 0 0 0 I a
BRyan
11 00
JuliCS5
1 3 2 2 0I 0'
Groom prtched to 3 batters 1n ths 71h
HBP-by Julro (lawton) by DeJean (Lawton) WP----JaOaVIS PB--Jvt.opez
Ump1res-Home Andy Fletcher F1rs t Bill
W&amp;!ke Second J1m Re~nolds Ttwd Gar~
Ced11rstrorn
T~3 26 A-35 778 !46 286)

'

Cardinals 5, Expos 2
St Lou ll

Montreal

ab r hbl
Wmock 2t&gt; 4 t 1 0
Edrnnd ct 3 2 2 3
Pu1ols 1b 4 1 2 2
Lnkfrdtt
30 10
Rn!Bfl!l SS 4 0 1 0
Porterrl 4000
Luna3b 3000
lsrnghs p 0 0 0 0
McKayc 3000
Crpntllf,O 2 1 1 0
Totals 30 5 8 5

ab r h bl
EChval ct 4 0 0 0
Vrdro2b
4 03 t
OCbara ss 4 0 0 0
Wlkrsn lb 4 t 1 1
TBtsta 3b 4 0 o 0
Sladgelf 3 0 0 0
JAIVril rf 3 0 0 0
Schndrc 3 t 1 0
Vargas p 1 0 0 0
Cp1cky ph 1 0 0 0
Totala 31 2 5 2

St l ou il
000 203 000 5
Montre11
001
tOO 000 2
DP- Monlreal 2 l08- St LOUIS 2 Monrre
at 3 HA-Edmonds (7) Pu1o1s [9l Wilker
son {4) CS-Lanklord !2) luna (11 SVargas
IP H REA BBSO
St LoUII
Ci!rpenterW3-1
8 4 2 2 0 4
lsr1nghausen 5.5
0 0 0
Montreal
Vargi1SL2·2
5 5 5 5 3 6
F1kac
2 1 0 0 0 t

CCord&amp;fO

I

1

Tud.er
0 0 0
Vargas prtctled to 3 bane1s rn IM 61h
Umo11es Home Bruce Dreckman
GPrry Da~1s Sacono La rry Ponc1no
G1eg Gbson
T-224 A-1230t!46338 1

0

0

0

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

ct
Aolltns ss
BAbreu rf
Thome 1b
Burrel If
loflhat c
DaBell 3b
ToPerz 2b
BMyer s p
Tlmi!CO P
B~rd

•b, h bl
Kata.?b
4000
Cintron ss "4 0 0 0
, LGnzlz If 4 .Q 0 0
Hlnbrn 1b 4 1 2 0
t
1 SFrnley cl 4 0 1 0
0 08\lstarl 4 0 D 1
0 Tracy3b 4 0 2 0
0 Maynec 11020
0 Sparl!sp 2010
0 Choatep 0 0 0 0
Bruneyp 0 0 0 0
Devo1eph 1 01 0 ••
Vllrreat p 0 0 0 0
Baerga ph 1 0 0 0
5 Tota ls 36 1 9 1

Total•

2 3 2 t
5 1 4 1

3 0 0
4 0 0

2 0 0
5 0 t
5 0 0
4 2 2

3 1 1
0 0 0

33 710

Name

Child of: Parent's Name
Team Name
Message

This special section will run on
Thursday, May 27th in The Daily Sentinel.
Hurry, Deadline for entries is May 20, 2004!

353

10

TRIPLEs-F1gg1ns Anehe1m 5 Crawford
Tampa Bay 4 MYoung, Te~as 3 Woodward
Toronto 3
HOME FIUNS-G iaus Anaherm
10
EChavez , Oakland 9 Baltran Kansas Crty
8 MOrdonez ChiCiiQO 8 Posadil New York
8 JaG1ambr New York 8 MRam1rez Boston
8

NL Leaders
BATTING--BeHre Los Angeles 385 Bonds
San Fran ctsco 379 Casey Cmc1nnat• 376
Lc Duca Los Angele s 364 Prerre FlorJDa
362 Overbay t..f,lwaukee 356 DBIIUtlsta
Anzona 348
AUNS-PuJOIS 51 LOUIS 29 Bagwell HOUS ,
ton 29 POdssdn1k Mtlw11ukee 26 Helton
Colorado 26 LGonzalez Amona , 26,
Bonds San Fmnc1scc 215 Cabrera F1or1da
25

RBI-Aolen. St LOUIS 35 Overbay M1lwau
kee 31 CeshiiB Colorado 28 Cabrera Flon
da 26 Beltre Los A.ngeles 26 .A!Ramrraz
Ch1caga 26 Lowell Flonda 25 Hidalgo
Houston 25 JKent Houston 25
HITS-8eltre Los Angeles 47 Casey
Cmc1nnat1 47 P1erre Florida , 46 Overba~
M1tw11ukee 42 Lorena San O~ago 42 JW1!
soo Pillsburgh 41 B19910 Houston 41
DOUBLES--Qvertlay, Mrlwaukeo If Case~
Cmcmnat1 13 Ci!SIIIla Colorado 13
Edmonds St Lou1s 12 Hidalgo, Houston.
tt BIQQIO 1'1ouston 11 JEstrada, Atlanta
10 Pu]OIS 51 LOUIS 10 Helton Colorado
10 SSosa ChiCago 10
TRIPLES-OWISe Atlanta 4 Freel Ctncm
nat1 3 P1erra F~11d11 3 DRoberts los
Angeles, 3 Jenkms Mrlwaukea 3
HOME FIUNS--Cabrera Flor1da tt Dunn
CmcrnMh 10 Tho'Tie Ph!ladetphlil tO
Bonds San Fraf!CISCO, tO Cho1 Flor1da , 9
PUJOIS $t LOUIS 9 LoY.ell Flonda 9 Beltre "
Los Angeles 9 Sexson Anzona 9 SF1ntey
Antona, 9

Message (up to 10 words): - - - - - - - - - - -

I

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

r

.
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Word Ads

Dally In-Column : 1:00 p.m.
Monday - Friday for Insertion
In Next Day~s Paper
Sunday In- Column : 1 !00 p . m .
Fr·ldav For Sundays Paper

r

.
1

IIELPWANIED

•ANEW CLINICAL
PEELS!"
Want to look yo unger AND
earn Money? Let a talk the

NEW AVON call
Marllyo (304)882·2845,
Joyce(304)675-6919.
Aptll (304)882-3630

Dlopolchoro llftded
Experience preferred bUt not
required
Call
Monday·
Friday 8-4, 740-446-7930 or
apply at 135-1 Jeckaon !=like

Ava., Galllpolla, OH 45631 3415 Twp Rd0447
Attn· D! ana Harleaa, CUnlca!
GLENFORD. OH 43739
Manager
Job Code· SA0244
Need a job?
Wa are hlr!ng l
You could earn up
to $8/hour plua bonuaas
We a!ac offer paid
training, holidays
and vacations
Fun or part time
Shifts available .

Call today
1-677-483-624 7 ext 2455
www.lnfoolalon.com
Now Hiring quality people
App!y at Sl,jrger K!ng
65 Upper River Road.

Gallipolis.

EOE AA M/F/0

Youth Fundralslng
help daycarea, summer
leagues, schoo ls, PTA's
coaches raise money for
local araa Av/46,000 yr
813·779·4542

roR;,;H;O;;,;RENTiii
l~iiiio_,.ll

0
_ ..

2001 Skyline Doubhl Wide,

!"21'

MOBUJ: HOM~:'&gt;

28x52, 3Br, 2 Baths ,
Excellent Condition, Must

mRRENT

D

tJJAA

it&gt; 2004 by NEA, Inc.

www.comics com

..,r.~o-•o•!•u•-m,•
sIN•IJNITY•
'liS•' .,.I r~o
..

Include compute r l tteracy,
OSHA prog ram knowledge
and el&lt;posure to heavy
eqUipment ma1nlenance

Mobtl e M int-Donut concesSIOn bus1ness for sale .
Locally owned Eas11y make
$1000 DO or more at weekend events E ver ythm g se t's
up in a specta lly destgn ed
10X TO canopy. Excell en t
part-hme or lul!·ttme opportunity $9 950 00 Donu ts
Ga lore
M idd lep ort

Waste Management Inc
offers a compet1t1ve compensatton and benefit package mciudtng 401 K H ealth
and L1fe Insurance, Short
Long Term (740)992-4294
Term and
Otsablltty among several
other benef1ts

..,

"'

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH

Resumes wtll be accepted
unt tl 511912004 P.oSI!IOn IS
currenl!y available
Interested parttes may send
a resume to (please do not
contact s•te d•rectly)

lNG CO recofnmends tha
u do bus1ness wtlh peo
le you know and NOT t
end money through th
ma tl uni1l you have tnvestt
ated lhe offenn

PROFESSIONAL

SERVICEN

Waste Managemenl. (nc.
34t5 Twp Rd #447

GLENFORD, OH 43739
Job Code- SM0244

EOE AA MIF/ VID

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unl ess We W1n!

1·888-562·3345

Hllll \ 1\i l

1~50

SCHOOI.S
I
....--JNsmiiiiiiiiUiiiiCiliiOiiiN-pl
OaiHpolia Caratr College
(Careers C lose To Home)

Call Todayl740-446-4387,
1-800-214-0452

r10

:~~

~~--------pi
3 bedroom, 2·bath, 2-ca r
garage city sc hools &amp; water,
CIA , electric furnace Price
reduced (304)926·6661

www galllpolllcar .. rcolle~e com
Accredited Membtr .l.ccredillng
Counc11 for lnd1penden1 Collegtl
and Schooll 1H48
33 Acres
Ranch etyle
House on Eckard Ch ap el
W.oom
Fld , F't. Pleasant A re e

l.:jJ

Ho~rns

FUR SALE

All real estate adverfls lng
In this newspaper Ia
subjec:t 1o the Federal
Fa•r Hou1lng Act of 1966
which mlkel It Illegal to
advertiH "any
preference, limitation or
discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex
familial 1tatua or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such
prelrerence, limitation or
dlacr1mlnation ."
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertlaementa for real
estate which Ia In
violation of the law. Our
raadttra are harttby
Informed that all
dwelling• lldvertl1ttd In
thl l newlpaper are
available on an equal
opportuntty baa11.

3 bedroom Ranch, 2
ar garage, In ground poo l.
75,000. 3460 State Ao tJt

18

r

8USINOO

AND BUilDINGS

Church Ad.(740)44 1-9108

740-258- 1673 or 740-258·

Jlrry

9350 leave message

(740)446·2824

Street

(740)992 3 194

2204 or call
1062
Br!ck Ranch In a nlca wall
astablllhed neighborhood,
lf:br, 1 5 8, 2car garage,
extra garage In back Must
see ro appreciate {740)446-

N 1ce 2 bedroom mobile
home
No
pets
Call

1740)446-2003

r

APARTMIJ&lt;ITS
FOR REI\1'

1 and 2 bedroom apart·
ments furn•shed and unfur·
mshed, secur1ty depos1t
reqw ed, no pets. 740-992'·

r

FJ10

H OUSrHO\ II

GtXlllS
Good used Appl tar;ces .
Recondtlloned
and
Guaranteed
Washers
Dryers
R~nges
and
Retngerators Some start at
$95 Skaggs Appl1ances 76
Vme St ( 740 ) 446 ~7398

re condt!IOned
auromallc
2 bedroom, 1usi past Holzer washers &amp; dryers rel r geraACREAGE
$425 month CaU (740)441- tors
gas and electnc
1184
ranges atr cond11ianers and
16x80 Sites ava•lable S115 2 bedroom , near Holzer wnnger washers W1ll do
per month tncludes water, CIA WI D hookup, qwet repa1rs on maJo c brands rn
sewer &amp; trash (740)992locahon. ava tlable 5/ 1104 shop or at your home '

2167

$42g plus utthhes (740)446-

FOR SALE 3 Grave lots m
Me•gs Memory Gardens on
the
Veterans
side

(740)992·2636
Mercerv!lle Lots lor sale
shared entrance off St AI
218 3· 13 acres P hone

(740)256·1 825.

Call
(740)446-8840
(740)845·4513

or

You could fish your badlands
and increaee property value
tool M aka land Into lakee

(740)388-8228
Ul '\ 1\1 "

2957

...

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACK SON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Dnve from $344 to $442
Wa lk 10 shop &amp; movies CaU
740· 446·2568
Equal
Housing Opportunity

3 bedroom w ith garage 8
mUss from Rio- 10 miles
from Gallipolis No pels,

(740)379-2540

:z,oqo

deposit (740)446-3945

Used

Furnhure S[Ore

130 Bulavtlle rike.
Mattresses
dresse rs
couches , rechners much
more Grave Monumen ts
(740)446-4782 Ga111pohs
OH, HAS 10·4 M-F

r

ANTIQL'ES

or
sell
A1ver~ne
TownhOuse
apartments, Anttques tt24 East Maln
and.lor sma ll hou5es FOR on SA 124 E Pomeroy, 740-·
RENT. Call (740)441-1111 992·2526 Russ Moore

for appllcat!on &amp; Information
FUrnished 1 bedroom utili·

tl~s paid, 2 miles to Hospi1QI,
call

after 6pm (304)674-

DP Air Strider Climber arm
e)(erctser like new. Rowe
Gracious llvtng 1 and 2 bed · pottery. crock. plate &amp; roastroom apartments at VIllage er (304)675-5549
Msnor
and
Atverslde
Apartments In Middleport
JET

0031

From $295-$444 Call 740·

AERATION MOTORS

992-5064 Equal Housing
Opportunities

Repaired New &amp; Aetlwll l n
Stock CaU Ron Evans. , •

0% Down Paym ent Posalble
w/good cred!t, approximate· Modern 1 Bedroom apt Call
1y $625 a monih for this ( 740)446· 03 90:"

amenlt!aa to list must see
call (740)992·5883

I

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT•
Buy
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE !

New 2 bedroom apartment.
$400.00/mo plus depoalt, no
~ pals (740)992-4119 ask for
Marge
_.:__ _ _ _ __

800-537-9528
NEW AND USED STEEL

Steel Beams. Pipe Ae~a r
For
Concrete.
A ngte .
Channsl , Flat Ba r, Steel
Grating
For
Drams,
&amp;
Walkways
L&amp;L
Drtveways
Nlce 1 bearoom· complete
kitchen . A/0 Aelerence and Scrap Metals Open Monday,
deposit No pe1o (740)446- Tuesaay WeCinesday &amp;
Fnday, 8am·4.30pm Clo&amp;ed
0139
Thursday
Saturday
&amp;
Nice 2 bedroom apartment Sunday (740)448--7300
for rent Middleport , Oh,
$325/ mo.. 1300 depo111. Troy B11t Roto ttller B HP
(740)596-21 96 or 740-591- Horse Model, very good
cond a5k lng 5625 (304 )675·
0649
6440
Nice one BA unfurnished
apartment Range &amp; relr1g . Truck tool box three TV 5
provided Water &amp; garbage otd bottles, electnc cords
paid Deposit required Call marbles car radtOS s o ld

3br Ranch wl garage, lg
lenced yard . e,;c family (740)446·4345 atter 6pm
location
tn/ PI Pleasant
Nice 1wo bedroom apa rt·
$675.00 a month dep &amp; ref
3081 ments large rooms Fu!l y
Coli (740)245·0144.
required Call(304)273·1112
ectulped ~lichen Central
(304)638-7411
heatjng l cooltng
By owner- moving, large 1990 1.. )(80 3br, 2ba Heat
hookup
garage, deck, extras, rtver pump wtAC Cathedl'll cel l· 4 r'QOms &amp; bath , 52 Olive St. Washer/dryer
&amp; deck $14 ,800 No pets, $300 montn, $300 (304)882-2523
frontage, outside city limit, lnga

(304)882-3662

\IIIH II\ '\IHSI

Lms &amp;

2210
1982 Double wide Excellent
starter hOme. Very good
condition Wen tak.en care
ol and clean 3 bedroom, all
waik·ln cloeeta , 2 bathe with
garden ttJb In ma~ter SA
bath Includes underpinning
All electric with centra! AJC
Mutt be moved , $,

~ 7 40) 992· 5956

2167

(740)379-2204

1978 Schultz 14K65 Mobl!e
Home, 2Br, 2 deck&amp;, A.C, 3 bedroom houu in country,
very good condition, mull no Inside pete , relerencas
ssll, $5,000 0 80 (304) 675- required. 5400 00 a month
,$400 00 deposll (740)742tB•7
orb\l.com

Reta il or Ol1tce Space
Pnme Downtown Gal lipolis
3 bedroom 2 bath pnvate
locatron
call (740)379 -9511
101 very mce added room
or (740)379 2204 for more
$425 month (740)446-7322
tnfo
Nrce 2 and 3 bedroom
mobile homes lor rent R lversltes fo r ren t. tamtl y
mcludes water sewer &amp; 1ype 3 c ampsites, f u ll
trash no pets, depostt &amp; hookup, near n ver. 3 dock $300 per montll (740)992· sites, no h ook up. Ce ll

2218

beautifully restored 19th
$12!5,000. century llome, 3 beclroom 2
bath, central air. 2 112 car
garage, atudlo apartment ,
perennla! garden, to many

rM~s~ l

(740j992 -3t94

3 un1t butldmg, 2 businesses
&amp; 1 apartment lor sale t
bedroom
apt
Located
m
downtown Washer/dryet !lookup, $290
M tdd lepor t
E)(ce llen l rent. depos1t requ~red No
mcome potential
Please pets 740-441-1184
call (740)354-4084
t bedroom upstatrs apart
30x40 com merc1al butlding men!.
$275 + uttllltes
2- 12x12 deposrt reqwred lor applrcam
Mtddleport,
doors
$275
month, tton call {740)379-951t or

Two homesltes lor sale Both
one acre m/1 3-1/2 mrles
Nice 3 b edroom,
bath, from Holzer Hospital
concrete driveway, c arport, 6 20 Evergreen Ad., $, 9,500
$49 ,000
East
Bet hel 560 Evergreen Ad., $18.500

PI Pleasant/Sandhill Road
(304)895-3129
3Br 1 Ba 1600/aqft Rancll on
Georges Portable Sawmt ll,
.6 acre 18\/el lot Oak floors ,
1Ba th,
N ice 1st ho use on Right past
don't hau l your lOgs to the 3B r,
Neighborhood , appliance s Marsha!!
mill jus1 call304-875-1 957
Unlvtrllty
In cluded Corner lot, behind $103 ,000
(740)949-1131
Armory,
Pt
l'leasant after 5 OOPM
I am an eJ&lt;pe rlence Child ASKing $69,000 (304)593·
Cart provider, providing
3542
Ranch style , 4 bedroom , 2
chi!d care !n my home. I am
bath , family room wfflrea non-smoker and have a
place, large 2 car garage.
fenced·ln yard Very reason- 4 bedroom. 1 112 bath. 2
story brick, 2 car unattached (740)992!6084
able ratee. $10 per day, per
girago, $37,500 Fourth St
ctllld, $ 15 on weekends.
Spring Valley area 4-5 bed·
Available any hours. 10 New Haven WV (740)448· rooma. 2·112 bath&amp;, 2·car
4274
'
miles south ol Gallipolis Call
garage, lots of updates . 439

Will care for elderly parson
Wasta Management, Inc. Is In my home . Experienced
the leading provider In the with most Illnesses, home
aol!d wasta management cooked meals. 28-yra expeIndustry. We are currently rience , good references
looking for a responsible (740)667-0499
motivated
Individual
to
assume the responsibiUtles Will Preasura Wash house's,

Before you buyl
Does your dealer?
Move hts homes Do Stte
preparatton - bUild foundations • Roll and se t houses •
Do healing and a1 r Have tnhouse serv1ce people Install sept1c syslems - Do
e lectncal!plumbmg - Do
dnveways If l he answer to
any ot these quesiiOns IS no,
or 1! they 'sub·contracr You
bette r see th e oldest most
e)C p ertenced
dealer
m
Athens County, Smce 1967
Coles Mobtle Homes 15266
US 50 East A ihens Ohto
4570 t "Where you gel your
money's worlh"

740 256- 1962

ToDo

(740)949-8049

Twtn Atvers Tower 1S accept
mg apphcat1ons tor w81tmg
list for Hud-subs1ze d 1- br
apartmen1 call 675 6679

r

•

110

r

·.
2 bedroom tratlor 1n Rut land
No Pets Call (740)742-266 1 EHO
98, 14 K60 2 bedroom new
carpet, great cond . stove
3 bedroom mobtle home tn
. ... $9.500 080 (3041642- M iddlepor t $375 DO plus
9142 OR (304)335-0526
deposri No 1ns1de pets

Move (304)523-4041

eo ~

Home (740)992·5023

r M~U:s~ l ...e.

TownhOuse
2000 Oakwood Home t 6x84 N•ce 2 bedroom attached Tara
3br. 2ba. all electnc. central garage. Near Rodney Lease Apartmenls Very Spactous
an·: Ca ll anyttme (304)675- and Re1erence $4001mon1h 2 Bedrooms 2 l= loors CA 1
plus depastt Call (740)446· 112 Baih, Newl'f Carpeted
7157
AdtJii Pool &amp; Baby Pool.
2801
2000 28x48 Doublew1de, 3
Patro Start S3851Mo No
bedrooms, great conditi on Small Farm-house 3 bed- Pets, Lease Plus Secunty
s tove , fng , a tr
clean room 17 acres perfect lor a Oeposl! AeQutred Days
$17,500 (304)642·9 t 42 or couple of horses• $650+ 740-446 348t
Evenmgs
(304)335-0528
depostt _(740)245·902~ .
740-367-0502

If ONL'I JH"Re
~A'&gt; AN ''oN" ~w1141,

of•
mobile Mmee, metal bulldOverbrook
Rehabilitation
Cell
lnga, and gunera
Center wilt soon ba hav1ng
Lo ndllll Slto Monogor
(740)448-0151 ask Jor Ron
STNA ClaSStl II you wqrld
Galha County Landf!l!
or leave me1eage
l!ke to participate !n tne
Bidwell , OH 45614
11 '\\'\t 1 \ 1
classes, plane coma In and
1111 out an application at 333 Oualll•ed candidates till..ll1
Page Street, Middleport, possess prior experience In
EOE
employee supervision and
famlllarlty w!th heavy equ1p·
Paramedics
&amp;
EMT's ment operation and exparl·
ABSOLUTE QOLDMINEI
needeD. Apply at 1354 enea In either solid waste
80 vending mac h l ne al
Jeck.Bon Ftlka, Galllpoha.
landf!ll or earthmoving con ·
IXCIIIInt IOCitlonl
structlon Addl1tonal preell tor 110,815
Posl11on Open at Darst Adult ferred quallflcat!ona would
800-234-ttll2

LPTA wanted for homa
health physical therapy serv·
lett. Motivated, nlf directed
individual will like l laxlble
scheduling, good Independence, and compensation .
Opportun ltiet available In
Athena , Mtlg l , JackSon,
Vmton $. Ga!lia counties
Group
Call 888·464--1126

t

lwrighl@ic.net

HEY DRIVERS ! ! !

1'172

116

POLICIES. Ohio Valley Publlahtng J"Her\1• the rtght to edit, NfKt, or cancel any ad at any thna. Errore mu81 be r~rtld on tM firat
Trlbune-S.nllnel-Aeglater wilt tM re1pon1lbte for no more thitn the coet at the SPfiOI!I occupied by the error •nd only the flrlltlnMrtlon.
any loa. or upenM thai te*Uita from tha publleaHon Of' amlulon of an advertisemant eorr.ctlon will be made In tha flr•l aw•llab1e edition
are .,waya confld.ntlat. • Current fill Cllrd appll• • All r..r eatate advart laemants are au.bject to lha Federal fllr Hou•lng Act of 1968.
acceptl only help wanted ada mtetlng EOE atandlrds . We will not knowlng1r acc.pt any advertlalng in 11lolstlon ol the taw,

H ELP W .wrnJ

YARIJS~.E

{p

• All ads must be prepaid'

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Pnnt Shop part ttme 20 +
per week movmg mto fu ll
Here IS a great opportuntty
Fillpina-4-Love
ltme Must be dependable
to come grow wtth us
Find yo ur Philippine lady
and have good PC abtltt~es
Kuntzman Trucktng, an 80
f o r love
and knowledge of graphiCs
year old, A eg10nal Truckload
1-8()0-497-8414
(304)675-3952
Gamer w11h termtna ls m
Flllplna-4-Love,com
Alhance and Columbus Ohto
ee ng
peop e oca
has opened a r:1ew termtnal
ho want lo earn mane
m P1keton, Ohto Only hard
h1le lostng werght, show
worktng expenencecl dnv- ng
others
how
OV DIC
C-1 Beer Carry Out perm1t ers with a clean MVA and a lnlormattona l
vatlable upon request 740
for sale Chester Townshtp mtntmum ol two years expe4 1-1984
Me1gs County send letters nence need apply
Of tnlerest to The Da1ly We have opentngs for
The M ason County Pubhc
15 Company Dnvers
Sentinel PO Box 729·20
l tbrary IS seek1ng a ParlOwner
Operai
drs
15
Pomero , Ohto 45769
ttme Ltbrary Clerk The sucFor 1nlo ca ll Ray
LOSf.\Nil
cesslul apphcant must be
1-866·436-t 013
frtendly fam1har wrth comFoUND
HVAC Techmctan must be puters and anle to 11ft up to
Saturday and
Founcl Black/white cat very cert ifted and at least 1 year 25 pounds
tame On Roush Lane exp Call (740)446-t637 or evemng hours are reqUired
Sandy Scott 740-367 7328 send resume lo Plants &amp; Interested applicants may
or Glona Westfa ll 740-367- Son 300 4th Ave Galltpol1s ptck up and appl1catton at
508 V1and Street. Potnt
0185
Oh 45631
Pleasant EOE
Lost Female Husky mr)( lnstruct tonal Atde postttoll
T lw n11'i"1- H•'"l'irutu r '
dog Any tnfo please call for the Meigs County Adult
"llw nq • ~
(740)446-461 0
Baste EducaiiOnal prog ram
Full-trme pos1t1on Must be
Lost· Pekingese dog, black Apphcant must llave or be Ohto licensed AATICRT
able to obta.n an educatton·
shave. answe rs to name
Must be able to perform all
al a1de permtt Pos1t1on IS
Tedd te had wht te bandana
aspecis ol Respiratory Care
grant funded for 20 hours
on neck (740)245·5945
tnclud1ng EKG's and ABG's
per week/50 weeks per year
Rural healthcare fac1llty,
lnierested persons should
compet•ttve wages. good
subm1t a letter of Interest
benefitS, llex1 ble scheduling
and res umo3 to Carol Brewer
Coniaci Doctors Hospital
at
the
Athens-Mergs
Nelsonvtlle
Educational Serv1ce Cenier.
YARIJ SALF.Cardiopulmonary Director
320
1/2
East
Ma1
n
St
reet
,
G AI.IJI'OLIS
1950 Mount Sa1nt Mary
PO 80)( 684, Pomeroy, Oh
Dnve
Nelsonv1!1e.
OH
45769 More mformat1on 1s
Survtvors and Friends
45764, (740)753- 193 1 ext
Relay For Ltle Cancer Team 8\/arlable by calling 740-992- 6262 EOE
5592 The Athens-Me tg s
5/14-5/15
ESC IS and equal oppor tuni- Waste Management Inc Is
St Peter's Ep1scopal
ty Sflllloyer
the leadrng prov1der 1n the
Church, 9-5.
solid waste management
4
YARD SALE·
Learn to Drive
tndustry We are currently
POMEROY/MIIJIJLE
looktng for a responstble
Tractor-Trailers
mottvated
tndtvldual
to
·we tra1n Men and Women
RACO YARD SALE AT
'Full and Part Time Classes
~~sume the responstblltiles
•Job Placement
STAR MILL PARK Ractne
"COL Tra1n1ng
May 11 12, !rom 9 lo 4pm
"F1nancmg Avilll&amp;ble
Scalehouse Atte ndant
and May 13 from 9 to 2pm
AS SEEN ONTV
Gal l1a Counly Landf1ll
All proceeds go to schola r·
ALLIANCE
Btdwell OH 45614
Ship lund Clo thtng, shoes
Tractor-Trarler Tramtng
purses, cu rta 1ns com forter
Centers, Wythevtlle, VA
Quahl!ed canchdates Irn.!..5J
sets, linens. pans. clothtng
1-8Q0-334·1203
possess co mpetency wtth
n1ce toys d1shes, glassware
www elhancetractortraller com
computer operation lncludbaby 1tems, htgh chair, car
tnQ Mtcrosof1 OlfiCe speclllseat books. sweepers. TV's,
Local Home Health Agency
cally M tcrosoH Word and
holiday decorations, ru gs
seekmg A N, PCA'S and
Excel Must also posses
ptllows, cha1rs, m1crowaves
Hom e H ealth A1des w111 pleasant telephone sktiiS
furniture &amp; lots of mtsc On
tra1n the rtght person, comand eb!l lty to multi task
May 13, all clothtng $ 1 00 a
pany offers benellls, f!extble
ba". and mtsc 1tems oneschedu ling ,
competlt 1ve Waste M anagement. Inc
half price Thanks lor your
wage s and a great work
elfers a competitive ..:omatmosphere Please send pensatlon and
benefits
resume lo ClA box 568 , c/o package 1nclud1ng 40 1K ,
Gallipolis Trtbune, 825 Thtrd
Health and Life Insurance .
Avo. Gallipolis OH 45631.
Short Term and Long Te rm
Absolute Top Doll ar U S
Otsabihty among several
S liver,
Gold
Coins, Med! Home Health Agency, other beneftts.
P rootsets, Diamonds, Gold Inc. seeking a full·tlme and
Rings,
US Currency,· PAN AN'a. and a PAN Resumes will , be a,ccepted
M T.S Coin Shop, 151 Occupational Therapist lor until 5/19/2004 w!th a tenia·
Second Avenue, Gall!polla, the Gal liPol!s, Ohio area tlva start date or 6/1412004 .
Must be Ucena ed both In
740-446-2842
Ohio and West Vlrglnla.'W e
Interested pa rties may send
I \ 11 ' 1 It\ ' II \ I
offer a competitive salary,
a raa ume to (please do not
'-. I In U I "
benel!t package for tuU ·tlme,
contact slle directly)
and 401 K E .O E P!ease
send reeume to 352 Second
Waste Management. Inc

Now you can have borders and graphics
AL-'
added to your classified ads
~\
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 504 for small
$1.00 for Iorge

All Dl•play : 12 Noon 2
Bu•lneaa Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dlaplay : 1 : 00 P · "' ·
Thursday for Sundays

PERSONALS

675-1429.

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

/}eadiJirU'
DisPlay Ads

• Slltrt Vour Ads With A Keyword e Include Complete
Descr iption e Indude A Prl c;e • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Mumber And Addre•• When Needed
e Ads Should Run 7 Dayt

110

\\\tll \( I \ II \I..,

AVON ! AU Areasl To Bu)l or
StU
Shirley Spears, 304·

- ·--·------------.. - ... - -.. -.-.... .-.. -.-__.---·.-.,..,r,,..,,....,._,-r,
I

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

6·montha
part-time
Ch,utleur
vai!Q
drivers
license. Apply at 87 Spruce
Street with Mr Hubbard 8·
10am.

Advertising Deadlines:
Thursday, May 11, 2004

Reaching over 29,800 readers

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

11"

Thursday, May 20

.~

Ofpee lloar~

•

RUN $-MYoung, Texas, 30 Mor1, Bal11mont •
28 Glaus Anahe1m 28 CGu111en Detroit, 27 ,
BRobarts BilltlmOffl 26 VGuerrero Anahelm, 26, CPena DetrOit 25 , Beltran Kansas
Crty 25 White Detro1t 25
RB ~MYoung Texas 26 Glaus An1h11m
26 Wh1te Detrort 2e .IRodr1guez . Oetro1t , 26
Beltran Ksnaas Crty 25 Tejaoa Salt!mOI'e
25 JGUIIIen Anah&amp;1m 25
HITS-MVoung, Texas 50 MAam1raz Bo~tcn 45 Br;ll1ard Cleveland 44 Blalock ·
Texas 42 Mora Baltlfllore 42, VGuerrero.
Anahe 1m 42 , ISuzu~&lt; . Seattle 41 ASonano. ~
Texas to! tAodr1 guez Detron . 41
DOUBL ES-OOrtiZ Boston 12 Blalock
Texa5 11 8Roberts Baltimore 11 VWalls
Toronto 11 Belllard Cleveland tl VGuer
rero Anaherm 11 Mench Texas tO Mlen·
tklewiCZ Mmnesota, 10 Posada New Vor~

992·2157

Or Fax To

BATTlNG-Belllard Clevelano 379 Mora
Batt1more 372 MRamlr&amp;Z Bo!lton 369
Urtbe ChiCago, 358 MYoung Te11.as 368 •
Jvlcpez BaiMIOfe 355 IAoc'nguez Detroit :

A SPECIAL FEATURE
OF
'lrbe ®allipohg 1\atlp 'lrribune,
~oint ~lea£iant l\egi£iter and
The Daily Sentinel

.Child's Name - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Parent's Name
Town
Team Name - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Phone Number ________________

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
l\egtster
\!Crtbune
Sentinel
Your Ad, (7 40) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today•••

AL Loaders

Getting fit and
staying fit is in!
~hild's

G•llu County OH

Phrla dalphll
100 020 310 7
Am:on•
OtO 000 000 -- 1
E- OaBell (7] Trac~ 161 DP-Phdadelph1a
1 Arl lOM 1 LOB- Ph1ladelphra 9 Ar1zona •
8 28- ToPerez 2 (4) BMyers l1 ). Hillen ..
brand [41 HR-Byrd !2) SB-Rollms (4) +
CS-Byrd 111 S-BMyars SF-8Abre1.1
1P H RERBB SO.
Ptu!adelplu a
7 7 I I
0 5
SMyers W t·2
2 , 0 0 0 I
Telemaco
Anlona
Sparksl22
6t3 6 5 5 3 3
2 0
Choate
0 1 1 I
0
Brune~
23 0 0 0
0
V1llaneal
2 3 1
Choate Pitched to 3 baners m the 7th
HBP---by Sparks IByrd) WP--BMyers 2 V1l :
larreill
•
Ump~res-Home Joe Br•nkman F1rst Trm _
Tscn1de Second J&amp;f! Nelson Th1rd, Marty
Fosler
T-2 40 A-29 637 (49 033)

Of

*Golf
* Gymnastics
*Tumbling
*Soccer
*Karate
&amp;,More!!

CLASSIFIED

Araona

FITNESS

'

- Sentinel - ltegister

ab r hb1

HEALTH

If your child is a \ I I I
/
"Star Athlete" ~, on\b :..in your eyes, ~ Sl Q.
include them in --..-1A AA ......:
this section!!
· · v v' ' '
*Football
* Basketball
*Baseball
*Softball
*Track
*Swimming

~ribune

Phlllies 7, D'backs 1

and

I

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

+

National League
EAST

Monday, May 10, 2004

10 , 2004

toola (740)258-6468

r

8lJIU)ING
Sl'I'I'LlES

Blocl&lt;\ brrck sewer p1pes
wmdows , hntels, elc Claude
W tn ters . Ato Grande . OH
Call 740-245-5t2,

�Monday, May 10, 2004

www.mydallysentinel.com
1\~\'\, 1 '()1\\

Monday, May 10, 2004
ALLEY OOP

\ I HI\

~ OCINT~NUM "10

AKC registered Yoric.ie pups.

2•tema1e. 1 male. $600.00
eOch 080 (740)992-0053 or
:;.17c.40:.:.)4c.1.:6.:-Q44__:_:1_ _ _ _
leopard Gecko Aquarium,
htat lamp, cricket tarm &amp;

r
I

:~lllpptn:-"(~les-~P6~·7id5:-!.S~120_•..e_ll_fo,r
~

•

r
;

M

...
.._~&lt;;!!-~
.11'0IK'-' -.u:.~~•.,

1
"'--iiiiiiiiiiiii-_.1

·
t
·1·
fl
Mov1ng,
mu.s sacn •ce a ne
Baldwin Spinet piano. Fine
WOOd craftsmanship. Hardly
touched. Original price well
r:Ner $3,000.00. Will let it go
for $800.00. Call (740)992·
51ii1~o....,~----::--,

i

FR.urrs &amp;

i1.,--ioiiiiiiiiiliiiliiil;,.,.t
VEGETABLES

KEsSEl'S PRODUCE
Amish Cheese. Lunch Meat.
Fresh Fruit and Vegetables
Open Thurs·Fri-Sat. 1354
Jackson Pike. Gallipolis,
I \l!\ 1 " ' 1'1'1 II ...,
,\ 1 1\ l " I (Hh.

.lO--iil(ii\RMiiiiiiiii..-11

.

Massey Ferguson 255
Dies&amp;! with front loader,
2800 hrs, $10,500 movin11
must salt (304)674-0133
-------Massey Ferguson so, 4 cyl.
gas. Price $2,850 . Phone
(740)446·4999.
-------Moving Locust Fen&lt;;e Post.
Must Sell (304)674 _0133

LlvEmx:K

FOil SALE

-o38°

··~
·rm&amp;.co, m.

extras.

llu66ard 't ~reenh~We

(740)645-

Syracuse, OH

94 S-lO Truck for 5·818 $

Now Open

wheel dnve $2,500

Easter Flowers
Bedding Flowers
Vegetable Plants
Blooming
&amp; Foliage Baskets
Potting Soil

93 Toyota for sale $1 ,500
(304)675-2245

96 FtSO XLT 4x4 Super
Cab. 302, auto ol d, AJC ,
cruise, tilt. pw, pdt. keyless
entry, JVC CDIMP3 player.
6" lift, 35's on American
Racing wheels, Reese style
drop hitch . bed liner. dismond plate tailgate protec·
tor. nerf bars, cab visor, slid·
ing rear window. $9.950
080. 740-367-7251 or cell
2000
Kia
Sportage 74o-645-4647.
Automatic. 2 wheel dnve,
VANS&amp;
eKcellent condition, little
4-\VDs
011er 39,000 miles. while L.~-------,1
with brown interior. $6 ,500 '
080 or will trade for small 2 1990 PlymoUth Voyager
do'or
automatic
car Van, one owner, V6 .LE. 7
(304)675·4144
pass. auto trans. Excellent

r

1.1Bnilp W:ribune

(740) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel
(7~0)

992-2155

...,.u.nt l'Jll"ll!linnt

3aegi~ter

(304) 675-1333

· 1979 CheYrolet 1/2 ton .
129,000
mites.
Body
good/lair, runs great $400+
accessories. $1 .000 firm
(740)441-3131 leave mes-

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

..

·~

,.

APPEAL WITHIN 30
DAYS OF ISSUANCE
OF
THE
FINAL
ACTION.
ERAC
APPEALS MUST BE
FILED WITH: ENVI·
RONMENTAL
REVIEW
APPEALS
COMMISSION,
309
SOUTH
FOURTH
STREET, ROOM 222,
COLUMBUS,
OHIO
43215. A COPY OF
THE APPEAL MUST
BE SERVED ON THE
DIRECTOR WITHIN 3
DAYS AFTER FILING
THE APPEAL WITH
THE ERAC.
FINAL ISSUANCE
OF
PERMIT
TO
INSTALL
MARK
SMITH DBA MARK'S
PLUMBING II HEAT·
lNG; OLIVE TWP. OH
ISSUE
DATE

Yrs. Exp.

Slaliotwrr I ood

~~~ .\lulllf \railublt'
H'gh &amp;D · for 2004 Meigs
1
ry ,, County Fair.

~ Serious ~ ·

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

l11quiries 011ly
Call

740·992·5232

985·4159

FOKSALE

r':======~ rL:;======~

R8

AtJTO PARTS &amp;

•

At'CE'&gt;SOKIEli

0

Trucking

4-P225X60A16, for a pas-

senger car. 4··3lx10/50A15,
4-BF
Goodrich
LT265X/75Ai6 $100 per sel . 0

Advertl'se
in this ·

HAULING:
L'

• Dirt
o Ag Lime
740-985·]564

HOME

WATERPROOFING
Unconclitional lifetime guarantee. Local references furnished. Established 1975.
Ca ll 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing

ADVERTISE
YOUR BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

I.
.J: ALWAY$ TU{(N ON

Tt!E New5 I&gt;OWN ~t~e.
IT MAI'ES Ttfe WINe
/
AGe FMTt~-

750 East State Street

Phone (7;10)59Jc667
Athens, Ohio

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

Let me do 1\ for youl

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

UNDAIS PAimNB

BENNETT'S

HEATING fl COOLING
Residential &amp; Manufactured Housing
Air Conditioners, Heat Pumps &amp; Furnaces
• Super Hi Efficiency Equipmen~
• Free Eslimates

·

• 5 &amp; I0 yr Warranties
· , ~·''
• Huge Inventory ,
·
,;·::··· ·
• Vanguard Ventle&gt;s Fireplaces V~,)/c .
rRPPRn
1~
llfCIIIIII:IIItl.

__,__ --c--

Gibson

Gallipolis, OH WVO I0212
446-9416 r 1-800-872-5967

BARNEY

(304) 273-5321

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio
45771
740·949·2217

Sizes 5'x10'
to 1o'x30'
Hours
j
7:00AM • 8 :00PM

~~:;:~11~14:11 :m':·P&lt;l~

•

Gravely

Pomcro~· - Ohio

i ..~------~"----~··~·~·~,~~··~"·~M~&lt;::,~-----------~~~~N~~~~€0~~

THE BORN LOSER

992-2975

P'

"1

.
i\CCU~E

HOW CA~ '(()U
Mf. OF
::.lACK.Ii'IG OFF 1 I 1&lt;-M !&lt;- DE:DICi\\ED (MPLO'/(£ 1

LilH'I~

tmd Ganh~u Equipment is uur
b11siness, 1101 o11r sideline ·

"--""=----

Manning K. Roush
Owner
Open Mon-Fri 9·5 Sat. 9-12

~

Wll''I ITl,low
"I

v.a·"""s
I I I VI

uo-992-ssu
7-t0-992-6162

;cr;:======1 f

Meigs County's Largest selection of
annuals, perennials, vegeta!Jies,
shrubbery, fruit ornamental trees,
roses, rhododendrons. ana azaleas.

4"

BIG NATE

pot of annuals 94~
Open 7 days
a week daylight
to dark!

Flat of plants $6.60
Hanging Baskets $6.60

Morning Star Road • C.Rd

BISSEll

SEASON. GoEN\5 1

30 •

Racine,

INHAT

LET'S LOOk ALIVE 1

WO~KED

WE
ON IN

PI\A&lt;.TICE' LET 'S

GET THIS
YEAR OFF

OH

'-......_TOA ...

in the market
---···

BUILDERS InC.

New Homes • Vinyl

" see

Siding • New Garages

Rocky ''AJ"

• Replacement
Windows • Rooting

. Hupp

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

IMPORTS

FREE ESTIMATES

PEANUTS

'f'ES, SIR .•. NO, 'r'OUR
HONOR, 11VE NEVER MET
A JUDGE 6EFORE ..

Athens

7 40-992-759~..

SO YOU'RE NOf GOING TO

DOVJN~D IT FOR

FREE
OP. 1\A\1€. AFRIEND ~
YOll ACOPY'?

1-800-822-0417
Pontiac,

Tf.\15 15 A NICE ROOM •. IT
REMINDS ME OF TJ.lE TIME
I WAS CALLED IN TO
ADVISE GENERAL PERSI-IIN6 ...

BETIY

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271
"W.V's !ill Chevy.

WELL, M'{ 006 60T Tl:liS
CARD IN TI-lE MAIL SA'&lt;IN6
HE HAD 6EEN SELECTED
FOR JUR'&lt; DUT( AND...

Buick. Olds

&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

848-1405
GARFIELD

Sunset Home
Construction

~~~~~~~aAT 3:e~~

MAYSE !'l-L

DODGE

Bryan Reevea
New Homes,
Room Addlllona,

2ND STREET.
COUNTY: MEIGS
FINAL APPROVAL OF
PLANS AND SPECIFICATIONS
RACINE, VILLAGE
OF
P.O. BOX 375 3RD II .
VINE ST
RACINE,OH
ISSUE
DATE

• Gallipolis
55 Evenings

Garages, Pole

Daily
el

0412.8102004

•

,.

A J 10
10 4

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: Neither

West
Pass

1.

North

3•

Opening l ead: •

East
Pass
All pass

K

992·2155

Buildings, Roofa, ·
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall
&amp; More
FREE ESTIMATES!

740-742-341

Advertise
in this
.space
for
$50 per
month

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

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• ~oom Addition• &amp;
Remodeling

• New G•rag••

• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting I Guttera;
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
~Patio and Porch Dec kt

We do It all except
furnact work

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

22 Yeart Local EKptrltnce

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCnON
• New

Homes
• Garages
· Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1671
Stop &amp; Compare

CLAW JON

Sometimes you bid

MAY&amp;E I'LL GO GET U!&gt;
OOME ICE CREAM

yeN, 1'1-!Eif.LL
HAVE ME 1'0 AN5WE:R 1'0!

IF ANYS0\71,1 CLAWS

53 Menu phrase 1-'R~'!'
12 wds.)

54 Standings
55 Ungerie Item
56 Crumple up
57 Unseld
of the NBA
58 Establish

of gasoline .
19 Arranges
21 Picnic pest
22 --tree
falls ...
. 23 Say
lmpulalvely
26 Thin
30 Reindeer
herder
31 Public
transport
32 Run up a tab
33 Like some
sock~

34 Memorable

time

35 Begged
36 Grendel's
39 ' Swerves
40 Sumac

DOWN
Argonauts '
arg.
2 Eurasian

range
3 Tempo .
4 Pismire
5 Null and - ·
6 MIT grad
7 Black gem
8 Prefix
for house
9 Minus
11 Common
contraction
1~ Faux pas
18 Senior cit.
group
20 007 creator
-Fleming

22 Ingrid
In "Casablanca"
23 Splotch
24 Fill a hold
25 Elegant
coiffure
26 Hang five
27 Mete out
28 Stlll·llle
. subject

29 Crimsons
31 Mr. Lugosl
35 Clap
of thunder
37 Mont.

neighbor

dr42 Dog nail

43 "The
Mammoth
Huntars"
heroine
44 Skimmed
through
45 Berlin
single
46 Wanes
47 King 's
address

unvarn--

50

Ished
52 Edge a
dolly

38 Earth tone
39 Gambling
town
41 Roomy

with a weak hand
Th ose who play bridge for money complain thai they always pick up bad cards.
They all lie except one- who?
However, there are times when you have
to bid with a weak hind. This wQek, we'll
look at some or them. First, your partner
opens one club. How many points do you
need to make a one·IB\Iel response?
The standard answer Is six. Why'?
Because this means that your side coUld
have 25 or 26 combined points, which will
usually be enough lor game. And it game
is still possible, you must keep bidding.
Now look at the South hand in today 's
diagram. Partner opens one club. Attar
your right-hand opponent passes, what
would you do?
With only lour points, all in ~quacks." It
looks as it you should pass. but you
should not. Although bidding one spade
is not without risk. your chances of
improving the contract are good. Also. a
5-5 shape is worth some extra value. A
reliable partner will have a fit somewhere!
Here. it you pass over one club, so will
West: North can win six tricks by tapping
Wes1 with spade plays, but four spades is
makable. True, after North raises one
spade to three, South will probably pass,
but being plus instead of minus Is an
improvel)lent .
Playing in spades, declarer wins trick one
with dummy's club ace and draws two
rounds of trumps using dummy's honors.
Then (and he might do it· sooner) he
plays on hearts to establish that suit He
will lose two hearts and one diamond.
Who is the only person who doesn't lie
about always holding bad cards? You, of
cou rse!

'~

~EI'\EMI!oEK .

FtR.5T G"'ME OF T+1E.

4" pot of perennials $1.18 Buy 5 or more for $1.

•ROOfiNB
•HOME
MIIIIITEIIUCE
•SUMLESS
amER
*Free Eltlmlleb

FACILITY
DESCRIPTION : COMMUNITY WATER SYS·
TEM
THIS
FINAL
ACTION NOT PRE·
CEDED
BY
PRO·
POSED ACTION AND
IS APPEALABLE TO
ERAC.
DETAIL
PLANS FOR PWS
ID:5300312 PLAN NO:
223732 REGARDING
WATER
IMPROVE·
MENTS.
(5) 10 lTC

10 9 8

•

. K t 0863

~
~~~

JF=== =='I·

COMPARE THESE PRICES!!

HOWARDL.
WRITESEl

FACILITY
DESCRIPTION:
WASTEWATER
APPLICATION NO 08·
07025 .
THIS
FINAL
ACTION NOT PRE·
CEDED
BY
PRO·
POSED ACTION AND
IS APPEALABLE TO
ERAC.
ON-LOT
SEWAGE DISPOSAL
SYSTEM
FOR
MARK'S

I

Il

SALES &amp; SERVICE
Condor Street

i

I

Snapper

GRAVELY TRACTOR
204

I
1

NOT A'TALL,
MAW!!

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used

04/2212004

-

IT'S KINDA 'DRAFTY DOWN
THAR, PAW·-MIND IF I PUT
U'l TATER IN BED WIF US 1

space
for
$50 .per
month

lffieS!One
~·Sand
IMPRoVEMENTS

•

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

o Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Self-Stor:l"'611e

BASEMENT

PUBLIC NOTICE
REGARDING A PRoTHE FOLLOWING
POSED ACTION MAY
APPLICATIONS AND/
BE
SUBMITTED
OR VERIFIED COMWITHIN 30 DAYS OF
PLAINTS
WERE
NOTICE OF THE PRoRECEIVED, AND THE
POSED ACTION. AN
FOLLOWING DRAFT,
ADJUDICATION
PROPOSED,
OR
HEARING MAY BE
FINAL
ACTIONS
HELD ON A PROWERE
ISSUED, BY
POSED ACTION IF A
:THE OHIO ENVIRON· . HEARING REQUEST
PROTEC·
OR OBJECTION IS
·MENTAL
TION
AGENCY
RECEIVED BY. THE
.(OEPA) LAST
OEPA
WITHIN
30
' WEEK.
DAYS OF ISSUANCE
"ACTIONS" INCLUDE . OF THE PROPOSED
ACTION.
WRITTEN
THE
ADOPTION,
MODIFICATION, OR
COMMENTS,
REQUESTS
FOR
REPEAL
OF
ORDERS
(OTHER
I&gt;UBLIC MEETINGS,
THAN EMERGENCY
AND ADJUDICATION
HEARING REQUESTS
ORDERS);
THE
ISSUANCE, DENIAL,
MUST BE SENT TO:
MODIFICATION
OR
HEARING
CLERK,
REVOCATION
OF
OHIO !NVIRONM!N·
liCENSES, PERMITS,
TAL
PROTECTION
VARI·
AGENCY, P.O. BOX
LE;ASES,
ANC!S, OR CERTIFI1048,
COLUMBUS,
CATES; AND THE
OHIO
4321 8·1 048
APPROVAL OR DIS·
(TELEPHONE:
114·
APPROVAL OF
644--2128).
I!LANS AND SPECIFI·
"FINAL ACTIONS:
.
CATIONS.
ARI! ACTIONS OF
"DRAFT ACTIONS"
THE
DIRECTOR
ARE
WRITTEN
WHICH ARE EFFEC·
STAT!MI!NTS
TIVE
UPON
OF THE DIRECTOR
ISSUANCE
OR
A
OF ENVIRONMENTAL
STATED EFFECTIVE
PROTECTION'S
DATE. PURSUANT TO
(DIRECTOR'S)
OHIO REVISED CODE
INTENT
SECTION 3745.04, A
WITH RESPECT TO
FINAL ACTION MAY
THE
ISSUANCE,
BE APPEALED TO
DENIAL, ETC. OF A
THE ENVIRONMENPERMIT, LICENSE,
TAL
REVIEW
ORDER, ETC. INTER·
APPEALS COMMIS·
ESTED
PERSONS
SION (ERAC) (FORMAY SUBMIT WRIT·
MERLY KNOWN AS
TEN COMMENTS OR
THE ENVIRONMENREQUEST A PUBLIC
TAL
BOARD
OF
MEETING REGARD·
REVIEW) BY A PERlNG DRAFT ACTIONS.
SON WI;IO WAS A
COMMENTS OR PUBPARTY TO A PRO·
I.IC
MEETING
CEEDINQ
BEFORE
REQUESTS MUST BE
THE DIRECTOR BY
SUBMITTED WITHIN
FILING AN APPEAL
30 DAYS OF NOTICE
WITHIN 30 DAYS OF
OF
THE
DRAFT
NOTICE
OF
THE
ACTION. "PROPOSED
ANAL ACTION. PUR·
ACTioNS" ARE WRIT·
SUANT TO
OHIO
TEN
STATEMENT&amp;
REVISED CODE SEC·
OF THE DIRECTOR'S
TION
3745.07,
A
INTENT
WITH
ANAL ACTION ISSU·
RESPECT TO THE
lNG, DENYING, MODIISSUANCE, DENIAL,
FYING, REVOKING,
MODIFICATION,
OR RENEWING A
REVOCATION,
OR
PERMIT,
LICENSE,
RENEWAL OF A PEROR VARIANCE WHICH
MIT, LICENSE, OR
IS NOT PRECEDED
VARIANCE. WRmEN
BY A PROPOSED
ACTION, MAY
BE
COMMENTS
AND
REQUESTS FOR A
APPEALED TO THE
PUBLIC
MEETING
ERAC BY FILING AN

30

BoATS &amp; MOTORS

1D

.KQJ 97

•

Soulh
AQ643 2
• Q8943
• 75
• 2

servicl!s.t:

JONES'

1750

·~

A4
A8653

East

South

740-843-5264

Four Wheeler 98 model. 4x4,
like new. $2.800. (740)446-

r

• Driveway? • Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
t Roads • Streets

Box 1B9 • Middleport

$4.000 (304)675-5428

60

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457 •

•
•

West
• J
• K 75
• Q J 92

people
13 Glasgow
turndown
14 Insect resin
15 Pablo's
=end
16
• and jr.
17 Type

toe

\and Financial

Sport. 783 Miles, e)(C . cond

new pa~s. new !ires/wheels .
(740)245-0485.

Last Thursday of
every month ·
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
SFREE

·&amp;71-2457

Rocky Hupp Insurance

2003 XR650L Hollda Dual

brand new condi1970 Ford F350. 10 Ft. of equip.
30 4 6 75 3354
Gra1r:1 bed, low miles, many ~ti!o;in~(;;;
::;:~::,;;;·~~-~.,

1
4
7

OS-1041

Call:

(740)367·0632.

Liler IB-OB. Power sreering.
Ani-Fm, CD. Bikini Top, lots

6:30

Henderson, WV

t We can insure you valuables!"
For a Free Quote or Appointment

2003 Suzuki AM 125, like
new condition. $3,500 OBO.

2000 Sea Ray. 180 BR . 3.0

&amp;

,

..,
2000
Yamaha
Warrior
red/white plastic. Nerl bars,
loud pipe. new handle bars
&amp; grab bar. runs great.
$3000 obo (740)843·5235

TRUCKS

MYERS·PAVING

What w6uld you lose if there was a firel

1

FOKSALE

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds starl

North
A A K 75
• 9 2

IF YOU RENT

nA

4

• Porch Boxes
• Combination Pols
• Perennials
! Spruce Trees
• Shrubs
(.
• Peat Moss-

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

rwww.sateru...
Gn

2003 Cavalier 4door. 4 cyl.,
auto, 9,000 miles, .tilt, cruise.
air cond., CD player, $6,500
(7_40_14_4_1_·0_33_7_
. ___
98 Toyota Camry, $5•900 ; 01
Chevy Impala. $6,995; 99
Ply. breeze. $2.295: 98
Chevy Cavalier, $2,795: 99
Ford Escort. $2.895; 98
Dodge Caravan. $3,000; 97
DOdge PU, $3,995: 94 GMC
P.U. VB. au1o, A!C, $3.395.
98 Olds Achieva , $2, 195; 95
Dodge Stratus. $2,000; 95
Ford Probe. $2.000; 94
Che11y Beretta. $500; 96
Ford Ranger. $1 ,700.
B &amp; 0 Auto Sales
HWY 160 N.
(740)446·6865

41 Ocean
42 Ersalz
Hold gently
chocolate
Abel's mom 45 Rsptors
Nocturnal
48 Caulllc
predator
49 Feminist
Friar's IItie
- Jong
SE Aalan
51 Morsel

t0
11

1993
Bronco
1
(304)674-0133
;___;_:_ _ _ _ _ _ miles XLT. $28,500, Fifth
1994 Ford Aspire, 5 sp., air, wheel towing package,
2m1a0n3y.

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

1!:4tJ-------.,

~nlhpoh~

ENOUGH!!
S'TOP.~~

T'HEMSE.L'¥£$

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

BRIDGE

2001 GMC Jimmy SLE 4x4 ,
CD Player. all power. exc.
shape $12,500 or take over
payments (304)773·5H7 or
(304)593·3596
$3 .500 200? F- 350 SAW 51 .400

Condition . All power wilh
2001 Cavalier, 40 42K , A/C. $2,900. (740)446-3277.
$4,895: 1995 Cutlass Cirea.
f,.,
40, $1,995;·1997 Cavalier Z· 1999 Mercury Villager. 7
'BN Ford Tractor. Disc &amp;
24, $2.995; Others in stock. passenger, trent/rear air,
.b h ~
ed ·1
Round bale hay. $12. 50 or
rus ·~· ne s 01 pump,
COOK MOTORS
94,000 miles. good condi-$1,300. (740)367-0632 .
more $10. Phone {740)446(740)446-0103
tion.
Asking
.$7,700.
7787.
~(740)441·0658.
2002 Mitsubishi Lancer 6 .
31.000 miles, auto. co playChevy Pick1.1p 4x4. Has
er, rear spoiler. $5.900 080. noise in transmission. body
740·256·1616,
740·256- 11ery good conclition. $2..900.
6200.
91 Ford F250, 7.3 D1esel,
needs clutch &amp; pressure
2002
Pontiac
Sunrire, plate, $1 ,500 (740)36729,200 miles, sunroof, auto, 0632.
cd player. yellow. (740)992-r
7228 after 6pm, $9.000
.MtiTORCYL'LE&gt;

.!:Jt:Wf

NO!!

$500! .Hondas.
Chevys .
Jeeps, etc 1 POLICE
IMPOUNDS Cars from
$500. For listings 1·8Q0-7193001 ext 3901

I

Goats for sale. all ages.
·( 740 &gt;245
after 8Pm .
Registered ANGUS and
Crossbred bulls. Top blood· li·nes, Slate Run Farm,
~ackson .
(740 }286·5395
look
up
1
1

~'VE TJM&amp; TO FIOISITION
~~ 1!01100&gt;.. ..

..-r

1991 Chevy Silverado.
$4,500. Call (740)245-5752.

great gas saver, $1995 ;
. 1999 Ford Taurus, V-6, auto.
air, tilt, cruise, $5495; and
AOHA 3 yr old, Philly. dark many more great deals to
bay. Granddaughter of choose from. trade in's weiWorld Champion. Go Hank. coma. Riverview. Motors, 2
Barrel
Horse
. broke blocks above McDonald's
(304)675-6440
Pomeroy. Oh . (740)992·
- - - - , - - - - - - 3490
AQHA
Yearly
Philly - - - - - - - Chestnut, - Grt
Great 1997 Dodge Stratus. 4 cyl.
Daughter ol Conclusive. 2 ·4 · auto. all power. Very
ShOw 2003 done very good good condition . S2 ·000
(304)675-6440
(74 01«6· 7029 ·
- - - - - - - - 1997 Olds. Cutlass. 86.000
For sale Boer Goats tor Fair miles. Loaded, excellent
Projects {304)675·1 126
cond . 52 .700 (304)675 _8165
___

USE. HI$ CtNM

1.("1.......... llCl.F ~ OOP AND """""""'

AIIIOS
AKC Blade Lab puppies,
mates and remates. first
shots. wo~ 74().-992-9784,
home 1740)992-3887.

\

www.mydailysentinel.com

AstroGraph
-.r'lllrthdi\Y:'

Tuesday, May 11, 2004
Bv Bernice Bede Osol
In the year ahead . you will have a marllelolJS opportunity to develop a channel
that would provide you with ways to further
your work or career. Large' strides can be
made wllich will prove to be qUite rewarding.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)- Your intuitive
percept1ons will be your greatest asset
today, especially thos~ insights relating to
your ·relationships witll co-workers.
Reading their thoughts helps you gain
lheir support.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- If last week
was a bil hectic. you're entitled to include a
bit of fun In your involvements now. Forego
getting hung up on the mundane and plan
sometlllng that would be pleasurable for
you
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Take
advantage of your popularity being on the
rise at this time and go catch the anention
of someone you'11e been eyemg . Chances
are the impre ssion you'll make will be a
good one.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)- Issues or causes
1n which you truly believe can be success fully promoted at this time. Make It e point
to use your charm and graciousness today
to win over those who have something to
offer.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22)- The secret to
establishing a promising JOint venture
today Is to team up with someone who is
striving for the same th 1ngs as vou . The
more vou ha11e in common, the better.
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) - You are at
your best when yolJ are in ·a situation
where vou can serve as the middle person
between two opposing lactions. Today you
WiJI bring together two pals for a prolitable
purpose.
SCORPIO (Oct . 24 ·Noll. 22)- Today you
could gel a chance to reverse a situation
that has been going againsl you and turn
it into something successful. Once you get
going you won't hesitate to make up lor
lost time.
SAGITIAAIUS (Nov. 23-0ec . 21) - All
should go well for you today in affairs ol
the heart. Dan Cupid has singled you oul
tor special attention. You ca n either
strengthen existing bonds or. if yo u're looking . find a new love
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - In si tuations where you are motivated to provide
something Important lor those you love .
chances are you'll come out the big winner
in the end. Lite has a way of rewarding th e
givers
AQUARIUS (Jan _ 20-Feb. 19 ) - Try to
keep yourself absent from re strictions
today so that you can mo11e around at will
Some ol the most tun happenings that
occur for you will be thOse that are sponta"
neous.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Follow the
dictates of your Instincts today, especially
those that have to do with finan cial sltua!IOns. Your material prospects look particularly encouraging If you probe around a bit
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) -The role
you ·~ mttnt to tutflll today Ia tnat of a
ltadtr. You'r• 1 n1tural btctuat you 'll rtc·
ognlzt that tne beet way to gtt other• to
follow ~ou Ia to flrtl ae1 a good e~e•mplt .

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by

Luis Campos

Celebrlly C1pher cryptograms ilfa created lrOM q uota~ons bV 1arriQus people. past aro p!'er;ent
E8ch lette11n tile e1phe! stands to1aJII.(twl
:air,I'S C~ll': : 'iq_a,s C

" S

NWFNAJ

FBMUYZ

MYNWSVYZ
PYNCKA .
GYMA

NPSWSKA
SK

ONX

SJ

PY

EWYYKSXD ."

ENIY

TNMZ.

S

WSUY

GYMA,
TNWW

JTBMKJKBL

BVVSY

BE

JISKT

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Life is like a 8-picture script. .. Ill had my life .
story offered to me lo film. I'd turn it down: - Kirk Douglas
(C) 2004 by NEA. Inc . 5·8

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�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, May 10,2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

NBA Playoffs
'

Lakers finally take spur out of Spurs
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Facing a
must-win situation, ShaquiHe O'Neal
dominated the inside and the Los
Angeles Lakers tightened their
defense to rout the San Antonio Spurs
105-81 on Sunday.
The Lakers cut San Antonio's lead to
2-1 in the Western Conference semifinals with Game 4 set ·for Tuesday
night at Staples Center. Game 5 is
Thursday night in· San Antonio.·
O'Neal had 28 points, 15 rebounds,
five assists and eight blocked shots.
and Kobe Bryant added 22 points. six
rebounds and six assists for the
Lakers.
Tim Duncan shot 4-of-14 for I0
points and committed six turnovers.

and Tony Parker was 4-of-12 for eight
points with three turnovers for the
Spurs.
The loss snapped San Antonio's 17game winning streak.
Gary Payton had 15 ·points and
seve n ass ists, and Karl Malone added
13 points. - six rebounds a nd five
assists . for the Lakers. who shot 56.9
percent.

Force defeats Destroyers
COLUMBUS (A P) Leon Murray threw for 334
yards and eight touchdowns. and the Georgia
Force snapped a sevengame losing streak with a
72-51 victory over the
Columbus Destroyers on
Sunday in the Arena
Football League.
Murray went 24-for-34,
scored on a rushing touchdown and threw three scor-

Hill pounds Cats, Bt

ing passes to both Markeith
Cooper and D1alleo Burks.
Cooper had I 0 catches
for 148 yards. while Burks
fini shed with eight receptions and 104 ~yards for
Georgia
(5-8). which
scored a team-record -t4
first-half points.
For Columbus (4-9).
Ryan Vena completed 14 of
23 passes for 184 yards and
three touchdowns.

Eastern Conference se mifinals.
The Pistons still lead the series 2-1.
with the Nets looking to tie it in Game
4 Tuesday night.
Ben Wallace grabbed 24 rebounds
for Detroit. but he was the only member of the Pistons to display the same
type of energy that fueled Detroit's
lopsided victories in Games 1 and 2.
Kerry Kittles scored 17 . but his· L--------------------'----'
biggest contribution was his defense
with a sacrifice lly off Matt
on Chauncey Billups. who averaged
Herges. Jim Brower ( 1-2)
Nets 82, Pistons 64
17 points in the first two games of the
came in with the bases loaded
and got Ryan Freel to ground
EAST RUTHERFORD. N.J. (AP)- series but was limited to two on 1-forfrom Page 81
out, keeping it tied.
Ri c(lard Jefferson had a career play- 10 shooting.
• ... The Reds' defense. among
Wallace and Richard Hamilton had
off-high 30 points 'as New Jersey
n't
have
a
good
series.
We
the majors· worst for the sec15
points
each
fo.r
the
Pistons,
who
finally put together 48 minutes of
pitched
him
well.
But
he
's
ond
straight season, commitdece nt basketball in Game 3 of the shot only 22- for-76 (29 percent) .
still Barry Bonds. The odds ted three errors that Jed to
were in his favor. I guess."
three unearned runs . Juan
Miley took the same Castro, usually a sure-handed
approach in the series opener, infielder, had two errors at
walking Bonds in the seventh third base.·
inning of a scoreless game.
Neither Bonds nor Ken
Pedro Feliz followed with a Griffey Jr. contributed much,
other than the one intentional
homer, setting up a 6-l win.
"The same people who walk that turned the game.
.question you when you walk
Bonds • average dropped
scored for the Flames, who conference finals . Game 2 is od. Harvey tied it in the final him would question you if from .403 to .379. He hasn't
minute of the period, deflect- you pitch to him and he hits it gotten a hit since hitting
won for the fourth time in Tuesday night in S,an Jose.
five overtime playoff games.
Both teams stuck to the ing Wayne Primeau's slap out of the ballpark,'~ Miley career homer No. 668 on
Calgary followed its second- strategies that propelled them shot and capturing the · said. "That's part of the April 29 off Florida's Brad
.
round upset of Detroit. which into thi s unlikely matchup of momentum.
game. We went to the well a
0 f
Penny. going - or-IS since
But
Calgary
.
kept
to its few times with hiril."
two
teams
that
missed
the
included two OT wins, by
Bonds declined to be inter- then with 15 walks, nine of
stealing home-ice advantage playoffs last season. San Jose hard-hat mentality. grinding
from the Sharks in the opener rallied from 14th place in the out scoring chances and play- viewed after the game. He them intentional.
· h h'
f
A day alter e It a pair o
of the Flam~;s' first trip to the conference last spring to the ing keep-away in the Sharks ' dressed and sat on a couch in
homers. Griffey was just
conference finals since 1989. best season in franchi se his- zone ·until Conroy found the clubhouse, reading a car solo
quiet.
going 0-for-3 with
a
s
.
The Sharks held Flames tory, while the sixth-seeded himself alone near the blue magazine .
two walks and two strikeouts.
captain Jarome lginla with- Flames ended an eight-sea- line. His tloating shot barely
Marquis Grissom said
Grissom'; two-run homer
out a shot in regulatiOrl and son playoff drought before got past Nabokov, who was teammates could tell Bonds
wasn't feeling well for the in the first inning got the
dominated overtime, out- upsetting Vancouver and screened.
entire
&gt;eries.
Giants going against Todd
shooting Calgary 12-5 - but Detroit.
The Flames seemed headed
Van Poppe!. but Castro's
The Sharks specialized in for victory until San Jose got
l~inla made the game-win" He's real sick," said two-out. two-run double off
nmg pass to Mantador. The outstanding
first-period an extraordinary bit of luck. Grissom, who hit a two-run Brett Tomko tied it at 4 in the
low-scoring. seldom-used efforts this season, and they From the boards, Korolyuk homer in the first inning. "He sixth inning.
defen seman
skated got 18 shots in the opening absently flung the puck to the showed me a lot by playing.
J.T. Snow's sacrifice tly
untouched into the slot and 20 min\ltes of Game I - but net - but Nils Ekman com- These three days, we could put the Giants up 5-4 in the .
beat Nabokov, who made 33 KiprusotT turned them away, pletely screened Kiprusoff, see he's not himself."
saves.
and the Flames got goa ls who didn't see the knuckling · The Giants headed home seventh. but Sean Casey tied
.
.
it again with a two-out homer
Mike Ricci and Todd from Oliwa and Conrov. who puck until it was floating trom
a 2-4 tnp that dropped
them seven games out 'of first off Scott Eyre in the bottom
Harvey scored in the second capitalized on an odd-man over his shoulder.
petiod for the Sharks, who rush.
Kiprusoff stopped 90 con- in the NL West. their biggest of the inning.
The Giants went up by a
have lost two straight home
Kiprusoff lost hi s sco reless secutive shots during a score- deficit since eptember 2002.
in the ninth, when the
playoff games after winning streak of nearly 170 minutes less streak that included two Bonds will have an off-day run
Reds fail ed .to turn a double
their first five to earn the on Ricci's rebound goal mid- 1-0 shutouts that finished off Monday to try to shake his
illness.
play on Snow·s grounder
franchise's first trip to the way through the second peri- the Red Wings.
The Giants hlew three with the bases loaded. Herges
couldn't hold on. blowing a
Iea d s, an d were on the verge save
for the second time in 12
of losing in the ninth after chances as a fill-in for the
Barry Larkin tied the game injured Robb Nen.
'

Reds

Stanley Cup Playoffs ·

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,o ( 1 "\ 1 l..,.

\

ol -,.1 '~'·

PGA

• Durbin helps D'Amico.
See Page 81

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)
- Fourteen years and 370
tournaments removed from his
fast victory, Joey Sindelar
tnade it worth the wait Sunday
in the Wachovia Championship
with an improbable rally and a
playoff victory over fast-fading
Arron Oberholser.
Sindelar, 46, birdied two of
the last three holes, waited for
Oberholser to wilt, then polished him off with a par on the
second extra hole for his fiiSt
victory since the 1990
Hardee's Golf Classic.
"I never, ever gave up hope,"
Sindelar said. "This feels way
too good. It's a thrill. It will
take me a while to understand
!his is real."
- Oberholser might need some

Red men
from Page 81
first
round
American
Mideast Conference Playoff
series, losing the first game
7-0 and taking game two 5-2.
Rio Grande (35-22) managed only three hits against
Point Park (2 1-14) ace Joe
Martinson (8-l ). Martinson
fanned six in going the distance.
Rio ace Kevin Hale lost
his second consecutive outing. Four the seven runs that

time to recover from a stunning
collapse at Quail Hollow.
Two shots ahead with three
to play, his first PGA Tour vktory firmly in his grasp, the
pressure overcame him . . He
bogeyed the next two holes and
needed a brilliant recovery
from the trees on No. 18 just to
force the playoff.
Sindelar closed with a 69,
while Oberholser had a 72.
They finished at 11-under 277.
Tiger Woods, errant as ever,
gave himself a chance with a
30-foot birdie putt on the 17th
and nearly chipped in for birdie
on the 18th. He closed with a
68 and joined Carlos Franco
one shot behind. Franco had a
35-foot .birdie putt on the tina!
hole that ca.ught the right lip.

Hale (9-5) surrendered were field assists and he made a
earned.
·sensational diving catch at a
The first game was a com- key point of the game. He
pletion of game one that also drew three walks in the
began on Friday. After just a first game.
half inning of play on
Junior center fielder Scott
Friday, the game was Peterman was 2- for-5 with a
washed out.
double and an RBI. Charlie
In game two, Rio broke Kabealo broke out of hi s
open a 1-0 game in the sev- slump with a 3-for-4 day at
enth with four runs. Senior the plate and Ewing was 2shortstop Brent Ewing and for-4 with an RBI.
freshman right fielder Nate
According to Rio Grande
Chau had key RBI hits. Head Baseball Coach Brad
Ewing singled and Chau Warnimont, · senior Jaso n
ripped a two-base hit.
Williams pitched his best
Chau had a splendid at the game ·of the
season.
park, going 2-for-4 with Williams (3- 1) scattered
three RBI, a double, two out- three hits over six innings to

Draftee
from Page 81
tinued to work on Andrews.
"Every time I saw him, I'd tease him about
coming out. He'd laugh," Latina said.
"Finally he stopped laughing and decided to
come out."
A,ndrews' younger brother, a two-time AllAmerica tackle at Arkansas, helped influence
his decision.
"I was talking to my brother Shawn about it
and I finally j ust made up my mind to go
ahead and do tt," Andrews said.
He played as a backup in just five gam~s.
but that was enough to get scouts interested.
"He picked up the game very quickly,"
Latina said. " He's a really fine athlete who
has natural ability. If we had him another
year, l think he'd be the first lineman picked
in the draft."
Andrews, 22, is a year older than Shawn,
who was Philadelphia's first-round pick this

-'

He shot 70.
Phil Mickelson had a bogeyfree 67, the best .round of the
day, to finish in a tie for fifth.
Vijay Singh held out hope
for a third consecutive victory
and got within one shot of the
lead with an eagle on the 15th
hole, but a bogey-double
bogey finished dropped him
into a tie for lOth, four shots
behind.
Oberholser appeared to have
this locked up. He never lost
his lead all day, and when his
5-wood into the 15th hole
stopped 8 feet away for eagle,
he pumped his fist with pass1on.
But those finishing holes can
expose the slightest nerves, and
Oberholser was loaded with

·-

Larson

them .
from Page 81
He hooked his tee shot on the
16th next to a bush, had to
punch out to the fairway and decided to be cautious.
"There's a small tear."
then overshot the green. Only a
· great chip allowed him to Larson said. "I didn' t want to
· go on the DL. but they felt it
escape with bogey.
Then, he badly pulled his tee was best for me and best for
shot on the 17th and got a huge the club."
The Reds called up infieldbreak - the ball was one turn
er
Tim Hummel to take his
awaY' from going in the water'
spot.
Hummel ,hit .289 in 27
From the hazard line, he
for
Triple-A
chipped to 10 feet and missed games
Louisville.
. the putt.
Juan Castro filled in for
Suddenly, he was tied at II
under with Sindelar, who two Larson at third base Sunday
groups ahead made a terrific and had two errors as the
charge. He holed a 15-foot Reds lost to San Francisco 7birdie on No, 16, then hit his 6 in 10 innnings.
It's the second time this
approach to 3 feet on the par-3
17th, the hardest hole at Quail season that Larson has gone
on the IS-day disabled list.
Hollow.
He developed turf toe in
spring training and was sideget the win. Point Park lined until April 26. Hi s
touched Williams up for two ·comeback was slowed when
runs (one earned) in the sev- ·he was hit by a pitch during a
enth. Senior left-hander Tim minor league rehahilitation
Sutton pitched the final three stint.
Larson struggled after he
innings to collect hi s second
was activated, committing a
save of the season.
With the second game tri- team-high five errors in only
umph, the 2004 Redmen set II games. His errant throw
the standard for single sea- on a two-out grounder in
. Milwaukee allowed · the
son victories with 35.

year.
"Hi s physical ability is . first-round type
physical ability, He has legitimate size, legitimate speed and is very, very strong and powerful," Latina said. "The upside i&amp; he is very
inexperienced- you know he's going to get
so much better. l wouldn't be surprised if he
became an All-Pro ."
At this point, the Bengals simply don't
know if Andrews will be able to play in the ·
NFL. Latina thinks he can because he learned
the college game so quickly.
"We had a very com~lex system with Eli
Manning at quarterback,' Latina said. "We·do
a little bit of everything. That's not easy for
anybody, but he (Andrews) picked it up fairly
quick."
Latina thinks Andrews' late start may actually be a ~Ius.
'
"Somet1mes when a kid has played 14-15
years, he's kind of burned out JUSt when it's
the most important time of his life," Latina
said. "Coming out so late was not easy to do.
It took a lot of guts on his part. But it's pay. o f'...•
mg

Brewers to rally for a 9-8 win
on April 27, the day after he .
rejoined the club .
· Since 1997, when he was
the College World Series
MVP and the Reds· firstround draft pick, Larson 's
career has turned into an
odyssey of odd injuries.
He tore up his knee while
sliding into home plate early
in his second pro season,
resulting in reconstructive
surgery. He hurt the same
knee a year later and went on
the disabled list.
The Texan had one of his
proudest moments on Aug.
15. 2002, hitting a homer off
Randy Johnson the first time
he faced him. Two at-bats
later. Johnson hit him with a
pitch . on the right big toe.
breaking it.
Three weeks later, Larson
was in the dugout in St. Louis
when Todd Walker lined a
foul hi s way. The ball
smacked him behind the right
-ear, and he broke his left
hand as he fell to the ground.
Last year, he strained his
rib cage during spring training, then lost the starting
third base job. He had
surgery on his left shoulder in
September.

NOW YOU CAN

JUST SAY NO
TO CABLEI

&amp;
PICTURE
GALlERY
740·992·2635

Thur 9 to 12
Sat 9 to 12

Local
Channels
Included

-

\\\\\\.111\d.trh-.,·rrtrrwl

tiltH

1

to improve water quality at the treatment site .
Council\ plans to include the system will increase the total cost of the
plant to $2.4 million. and will increase
engineering fees hy $.10.000.
,
·'To build this plant without a water
softenin g system wouldn't make
sense:· s7.id Council President Stephen
Houchins," especiall y with water as.
hard as Middleport's ."
The village 's engineering , firm.

Floyd Bniwne A"ociates. is no11
\Ceking. grant and loan funds for construction of the new plant. to be built
on Page Street on propeny to he pmchased from Harold Brown.
Other business
\1ayor Sandy lannw-elli said she is
working with,a local .; urveyor to pre-

pare a bid packet t r sale of the
Middleport High School and Central
Please see System, AS

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM .
POMEROY - A former
sheriff\ depanmcnt emplo)ee ha&gt; pleaded gu1lty to one
count o theft in office. and is
expected to be placed on probation and ·ordered to pay
restitution for money determined miss in~ in a state audit.
Lisa Roush. Pomeroy. entered
a guilty plea to one count of
theti in oftice on Monday afternoon. before Common- Pleas
Coun Jud~e P. Randall Knece
of Pickaway County.
The indictment tiled against
Rou.sh in December conlained
_
12 counts o.f theft in oftice. allegmg that she stole Sl7.605.50
from funds paid into the sheriff's
. department in 2000. while ·she
was employed by former Sherif!.
James M. Soulsbv as a SC\.TetarY.
The chames in "the indictmein
are founh':deeree telonies.
Roush had- 01iginally pleaded
innocent to all counl\. and the

• Bush examines new
photos, video with
'disgust and disbelief,'
stands firmly with
Rumsfeld. See Page A2
• Prom dress charity
becomes legacy of South
Florida teen.
See Page A2

WEATHER

Holter, Boyles take top EHS graduatio~ honors

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Shannon Stobart
• Genevieve McFarland

INSIDE

maner

Details on Page

AS

INDEX
S•:cnoNsCalendars
Classifieds

12 PAGES

A3
B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

Sports

A3
A4
As
B1

Weather

-

Editorials
Obituaries

A6

TUPPERS PLAINS - Alyssa
Holter, daughter of Ed and · Jan
Holter of Pomeroy, will address
her fellow graduates as valedictorian of the Eastern Hi gh School
Clas s of 2004.
Jess ica Boyles. daughter of Joe
and Laurie Boyles of Tuppers
Plains. is th e class salutatori an.
and will also speak to her classmates at the school's commencement ceremon y at 2 p.m . Sunday.
An active 4-H member and athlete, Holter serves as vice president of the Eastern National Honor
Society and vice president of the
Class of 2004.
She is a three-year varsity letterman in volleyball. basketball and
softball , and has received a number of athletic awards.
She is also a member of the
Eastern High School concert band .
She is president and an 1.1 -year
member of 4-H, and belong s to the
Better Livestock Dairy Club. She
is a member of the Trinity Church
of Pomeroy, and is the director of
the nursery there .. She plans to
study Agri-busines s and applied

w't'

set for a jury trial.

Her attorney. Charle' Knieht.
and · Special
Pro,ecuung
Anomev Sumnne Schmidt said
·in couri Monday a negotiated
plea agreeement ha' been
reached. calling for the dismissal
of the remaming II counts
against Roush and payment of
full restitution by Roush.
That restitution is expected
to be paid to the county auditor
no later than the end of thi s
week. Kni gh t said. but the
Ohio Auditor of State must
detem1ine how it is distributed.
Knecc ordered the completion of a pre-sentence investigat ion by the Adult Parole
AuthoritY. and continued
Rou&gt;h's bond. No sentencing
date ha&gt; been set.

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

M·F 9 to 5

!!004

Middleport Polrce Chief
Bruce Swift, right and
Lt. Jeffrey Miller look
over evidence seized in
a drug investigation in
Middleport over the
weekend. Crack
cocaine, prescription
medications believed to
have oeen used for
sale , marijuana, a handgun and nearly $10,000
in cash were seized
. from a North Third Ave.
residence. Arrested was
Elisha "lacy" Dickens,
24, on two counts of
trafficking in crack
cocaine. He remains in
the Middleport Jail.
Swift said the Meigs
County Sheriff's
Department and
Pomeroy Police assisted
in the investigation, and
said it is an ongoing
search into
Middleport's "i ncreasing and serious" drug
problem . (Brian J. Reed)

2

INGELS
JEWELRY

li ,

system approved for plant Roush
pleads to
theft
charge

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
Village Council approved including a
water softening system into plans for
the new water treatment plant now in
planning stage.
Meeting Monday evening, council
approved changes to the engineers'
plan for the plant to include a half-milli on dollar softening system, designed

s.

Sindelar wins for the first time in 14 years

11 1 Sit .\ \' 1 ,\ :1;\V

1 .

··~ softening

Flames take opener of Western finals
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) Overtime suits the Calgary
Flame~ particularly when
their goalie seems determined
to show his former teammates exactly what they gave
up.
Steve· Montador scored
18:43 into overtime, and
Miikka Kiprusoff stopped 49
shots in the Calgary Flames'
4-3 victory over the San Jose
Sharks in Game l of the
Western Conference finals on
Sunday.
Alex Korolyuk scored with
3:21 left in regulation to force
overtime for the Sharks. who
set a franchise playoff record
with 52 shets. But Kiprusoff,
who became a star after the
Sharks traded him to Calgary
last November, turned aside
nearly everything while winning a duel with Evgeni
Nabokov, his longtime teammate.
Craig Conroy got two goals
and Krzysztof Oliwa also

Eastern mercies
Waterford in
sectional, Bt

Alyssa Holter

Jessica Boyles

economics at Th e Ohio State
University.
Boyle&gt; is a Regional Scholar and
member of the National Honor
SocietY and French Club. She is a
USAA
International
Foreign
Language Award winner and
received the 2004 Holzer Clinic
Science Award.
S'1e has also hccn awarded the
Ohio First Scholar,hip and the
Ohio
Board
of
Regents

Scholarship.
She plans to study pre -phan11acy
at the University of Rio Grande,
Th e Top I0 Scholars or the Cia"
or 2004 will be annou nced FriJay
by Principal Rick Edward&gt;-'
Members of the graduat ing da"
are: Jessica Renee Baker. Micah
Ryan Barber. Jason Barringer. Eric
Shane Batev. Brandv Mac Bi.s.sell.
Jes sica Liane B,)yk&gt;. Logan
Samuel Bun ger. J(,,hua D;tvid

C'legg_ Herman James Dalton.
Ste\~.;n Allen Dillon. Rachel Lynn
Elliott.
Ant"nda Chri&gt;tinc Gregory.
Nathan Lee Grubb. Jennifer Lee
Ha rris. Brittany Lea rin Hauber.
.Paul Daniel H~ns l ey II. Alyssa
Elaine Holter. Ryan Edward
Kidder. . Brandon
Kleeberger.
Brend an David Lind. Kassa1idra
Jean Lodwick. Michael Leon
Long. George Curti' Macdonald . .
Roger Ke\'in Marcinko. Vinson
Michael Martin. Santana Marie
·Murphy. Jonathan Ri chard Owen .
Jes &gt;ica Ann Pooler. Sandra
Virgene Powell. Tia Ashlev Pr:.~tt.
Rohcn W. Putman. Joseph Michael
Ri chard. Larrv Joseph Ritchk.
K:.~therine Elicabetli Robcmon.
Holl y
Jean
Ruse.
Philip
Ale,anJer Simpson. Brandon
Smith. Stacy Lei~h Smith. Derek
· Arthur Ta.;l"r. CTirnntlw Tvl er
Th&lt;&gt;rnpsotl.- Caleh Ryan -Toi!Cver.
Andrew Fran,lin Upwn. Andrea
Sue Warn n. Nidwlas Paul Weeks .
Den ise Ela ine We st.
Harry Earne't Wh) bell. J o,h u:.~
Pete Wilfon~. Michael Adam
EJwanJ Wil l. Adam Mar&gt;h all
Wolfe. and William Bradley
Woods.

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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      <name>o'conner</name>
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      <name>stobart</name>
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