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                  <text>Page B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, May u,

•

2004

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Aprf :JJ a per1ec1 g;rne agaut lh9 PI~""
As on~ 5. an;J so- fY1r9S !hiS arr,o.
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too pt:hld 12 ~ rrrgs n a ouel wilt\ Jado:
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111 OO.ble to knodl n 14 rms 1-.a. J5.1 1 IOI1l)

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career ~ 10 ~ Wi Argeles beal $31
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last .A.rne--carll.Biq..le rJdw to hl a gtn:~ Slam.
~'s ~ r:JI Diego SyJI ol1he Oekland
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go~ trw vdoly as hi lndilm w:::r~ 7·5.
•

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11l

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Associated Press

TAMPA. Fla.- The Flyers
had all the right answers in a
game they felt they had to
win.
John LeClair scored to end
his puzzling playoff drought
and goalie Robert Esche outplayed Nikolai Khabibulin
Monday night in the Flyers '
6-2 victory over the Tampa
Bay Lightning to even the
Eastern Conference finals at
one game apiece.
Sami
Mark
Recchi.
Kapanen
and
Vladimir
Malakbov also scored to build
a 4-0 lead. drive Khabibulin
from the game and ensure
Philadelphia would stop
Tampa Bay's eight-game winning streak in the playoffs.
·The Flyers also halted ·an
eight-game slide against the
Lightning that included four
losses during the regular season and a 3-1 setback in
Game I Saturday.
Game 3 of the best-of-seven
matchup is Thursday night in
Philadelphia, where the
Flyers are 6-0 in the postseason .
Esche, helped by the
Flyers' ability to clog the middle of the ice and limit scoring
opportunities for Tampa
Bay's potent offense, stopped
29 shots to improve to 9-4 in
the playoffs.
Ruslan Fedotenko. scored

Michal Handzus scored
midway through the thi~d
period with Tampa Bay down against the Tampa Bay back6-0. NHL scoring champion up late in the second and
Martin St. Louis added a Mattills Timander added an
power-play goal with 2:J2 to unassisted goal less than four
go.
minutes into the third period .
The loss was Tampa Bay's
Even thou gh the Flyers
weren't facing elimination. fir&gt;t since Game 2 of its tirstthey considered Monday round series against the New
night a must-win situation -- York Islanders. The Flyers ·
in 'part because while ihey're were confident they could
unbeaten at home in the play- even the series after dominatoffs. this is the first series ing the first half of Game I,
they began on the road.
when they outshot Tampa Bay
The sense of urgency was 20-17 but faltered because of
evident from the start.
defensive miscues and an
LeClair scored on the first inability score more than one
shot of the game. picking up goal against Khabibulin.
the puck after Marcus · NOTES: Ragnarsson had
Ragnarsson ki cked it along three assists .... Malakhov 's
which
ended
the boards and skating in to goal,
beat Khabibulin from the leti Khabibulin's night, was hi s
circle for his first playoff goal first in the playoffs since May
in 16 games, dating to last 6, 2000 against Toronto. a
season.
span of 26 games.
Recchi made it 2-0. recti- Philadelphia was 0-for-18 on
reeling Ragnarsson's shot on power play opportunities
the
power
play
past before Recchi 's goaL .. . The
Khabibulin with II : I0 left in Flyers have outscored oppothe opening period . Three nents 16-3 in the first period
minutes later. Kapanen 's during the playuffs. The secshort-handed goal pushed the ond period has been Tampa
Lightning into a deeper hole. Bay 's strongest, with the
Khabibulin began the night Lightning holding a 14-4
with .a 1.00 goals-against edge after giving up two
average and four shutouts in . Monday night. ... New York
the playoffs, one more than he Yankees · owner
George
had during the entire regular Steinbrenner purchased 350
season. The Flyers scored on tickets for military personnel
fouf of 12 shots against the stationed at nearby MacDill
Russian goaltender, who was Air Force Base, as well as
replaced by John Grahame some of the families of serwith 13:58 remaining in the vice men and women fighting
second period.
the war in Iraq.

• Reds top Padres.
See Page 81

Braves' Garcia hopes to
·finally stick in major leagues
BY PAUL NEWBERRY

Associated Press

•

ATLANTA -- Journeyman.
It's the most dreaded of labels
for a professional athlete.
Just ask Jesse Garcia, who
showed up at spring training
last year for the Atlanta Braves
coming off a .300 season at
Triple-A . .
What did that earn him ? For
the first two weeks, he didn 't
even get in a game, relegated to
the back fields with all the upand-comers and down-andouters.
"That was a low point,"
Garcia said. "Sometimes, you
just have to sit back and wonder, 'What kind of player am I?
Am I good enough or not?'"
He stuck with it, played in
the Triple-A All-Star game,
and finally convinced a few
people that he might be useful
as a utility infielder in the
majors.
At30, Garcia made Atlanta's
&lt;_&gt;pening-day roster. With shortstop Rafael Furcal and second
baseman
Marcus
Giles
plagued by injuries, Garcia has
become an integral part of the
team.
As of Monday, Garcia was
batting J 13 with one homer his first in the big leagues since
.1999 - and eight RBis. He's
been one of the few bri ~ht
spots for an ailing team, which
is two games under .500 as it
bids for a 13th straight di vision
title.
But Garcia kn ows hi&gt; position is still tenuous. He's a

journeyman, remember? Those better in the 1970s and '80s,
guys can never get too com- where a middle intlelder didn't
f01table.
have to worry about hitting for
Giles and Furcal could return power. These days, everyone is
to the lineup Tuesday' for the expected to knock the ball over
start of a series at St. Louis. If the fence.
that happens, Garcia will shufA superb athlete, Garcia
fle back to the bench, hopeful played four sportS in high
that 'his contributions so far school and won several titles as
strengthened his spot on the a Golden Gloves boxer. But his
baseball career got sidetracked
25-man roster.
"He's a grinder, man," said in 1994, when he missed the
teammate Mark DeRosa, who entire season because of pneuwent through a similar effon to monia.
prove himself "He's willing to
Garcia struggled to catch up.
do whatever it takes to stick ·finally making it to the big
here."
leagues
in
1999
with
Garcia has been Atl anta's Baltimore. But he lasted less
version of Forrest Gump. pop- than two weeks, getting farmed
ping up in the middle of all out when Deli no DeShields
·sorts of improbable moments came off the disabled list.
this season.
"He had the defensive
He homered last month skills," remembered Frank
against Florida - off World Wren, now the Brdves' assisSeries hero Josh Beckett, no tam general manager and GM
less. Last week , Garcia helped of the Orioles at the time. "He
tum a triple pl ay against San didn ' t have the offensive
Qiego.
skills."
Over the weekend. he rallied
DeShields isn 't around anythe Braves to a win over more, but Garcia kept plugging
Houston -- first, convincing away. After spending most of
the umps that he was grazed by 1999
and
2000
with
a pitch in the eighth, leading to Baltimore 's Triple-A team -two runs; then, driving in the with brief stints in the majors
tying run with a ninth-inning both years- he was traded to
triple.
' the Braves in one of those
"It's just a maner of getting obscure offseason deals.
Garcia wanted a fresh start.
an opportunity," Garcia said.
"''m doing fairl y well, but I've Instead, he found more of th e
go1 to keep it up."
same.
Beller th an anyo ne, he
He was usuall y called up by
kn ows past percepti ons are the Braves when rosters
ex panded in the fin al month .
never very far behind.
Garcia is only 5-foot- 10 and He played a career-hi gh 39
171 potmds -- hardl y the pro- games in 2002, but on ly
lotype player for thts homer- because Gil es and DeRosa
crazy era. He might have fit in were injured.

MASON, W.Va . -- The
Ravenswood Red Devils
broke open a close conte st
by exploding for six runs
in the sixth inning Monday
evening to hand host
Wahama an 11-3 diamond
setback in high school
baseball action.
Wahama entered the
sixth trailing by a slim 4-2
score before the Red
Devils erupted for six runs
on five hils, two walks and
an error o turn an otherwise close outing into a
runaway victory. The loss
kicked off the final week
of the regular season for
the White Falcons and
dropped the Bend Area
teams spring record to 9-11
on the year.
Ravenswood totaled 16
hits, all singles, on the day
with Wahama touching a
pair of Red Devil hurlers
for eighf hits.
Three of the Bend Area
teams safeties wenf for
extra bases with Kameron
Sayre delivering a lead-off

home run in the sixth in
addition to a double by
Dustin Vickers and a three
base knock by Caleb
Litchfield.
Six Ravenswood bailers
enjoyed multiple hit games
with Nat Adkins leading
the way with four singles
and four RBI's. Ty Hern
and Brad Ritz had three
hits apiece while Bret
Greene, Eric Panerson and
Larry Hol stien had two
each.
Sayre added a single in
addition to his round tripper for Wahama with
Litchfield owning a triple.
Vickers a double and a single each from Jeshua
Branch, Jimmy Rife. John
Barton. and Ian Smith.
Ravenswood jumped out
to a 2-0 advantage in the
first
when
Greene ,
Pallen;on and Adkins came
up with singles.
The Red Devils added
another tally in the second
on a single by Ritz and a
sacrifice fly to center by
Greene.
Wahama dosed the gap
to 3-1 in the .second after
Vickers smacked a double

to lead off the inning
before later scoring on a
sacrifice fly by Litchfield .
The White Falcon s closed
to within a run in the
fourth
following
Litc~fields' one-out triple
and a run scoring single by
Barton.
An unearned run by
Ravenswood in the fifth
made it a 4-2 affair before
the visitors exploded for
six run s in the sixlh to put
the contest away. Wahama
got one of those back in it s
half of the sixth on Sayre 's
blast before the Red Devil s
tacked on its final tally in
the seventh . for the 11,-3
win .
Adkins also picked up
the mound victory for
Ravenswood with Chad
Zerkle taking the lo ss.
Greene worked the final
frame for the Red Devil s
while Lucas Litchfield
came on in the sixth to finish up for Wahama.
The White Falcons will
entertain St. Joe today in
_its search to gain some
momentum heading into
next weeks post season
tournament action.

H

\\I l•i\1 · :--..1• \\

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Helen King, 87
• Michelle Stobart. 33
· • Milton R. Clarke, 59

INSIDE
• At Pleasant Valley
Hospital Coed Flag
Football Tournament
Eagles' receiver to be
featured celebrity guest .
See Page A2

J.

Meigs announces top
achievers in 2004
graduating class

*

, Thu~. l\}.ay 27th ~n Th,e ~Y. Sentinel•.
Harry, Daai'Dne for •tries is May 20, 2004!
dri:iP off or

Team Name - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - Phone Number ______~----------------------Message (up to 10 words): --------------- - - - -

--- - ---------·-- -·--··- ---.--

unh

the

make

~i t uattor J

\.-\Uf ... e:

·

lannarelli said ·MonJ av eve ning. "but the rr,,cess
of se ll i n ~ them mav take longer ihan we fir&lt;t
hoped ... '
·
•
·

Please see Problems, AS

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH @MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY Jaynee
Davi s and Mnegan Dodson
are co-valedictorians and
David Tyler Barnes is salutatori an of the 2004 graduating class of Meig s 1-Jigh
SchooL
Announcement of the top
achi evers was made by
Dennis Eichinger. principaL
as the school prepare s for
graduation &lt;It 8 p.m. on May

David Tyler Barnes

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

For a taste of what is to come . the Oh io De pa rtment of Transportat ion opened up a half mile
section of the new U.S. 33 near Dar win to detour traffic down a two-lane section of what will
become the new highway. The temporar y detour started May 5. As soon as the finish ing to uches are completed. the new hi ghw ay fro m Dar win to Athens wi ll open up - probably in early ·
September. (J . Miles Layton)

ca~ ier

MILES lAYTON

POMEROY -- Bu siness
and cn inmun il y lead er'\ c: tme
toge th er 10 li sten to Theresa
Lavend ar discuss uncmp lo ymcnl solution s m the monthly
Meig' Co un ty C'hamhe r of
Commen.:e meeting Tuesday
at the Wild 1-lorse Cafe .
·
The O ne Slop Program
m;nches polcnt ial cmpiDyees
with e mrl oye rs. Lave nclar.
who is a graduate or Southe rn
Hi gh Sc.hool a11cl is curre mly

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

Details on Page A6

INDEX
2 SEcnONS -

Calendars

12 PAGES

A3

Classifieds
Comics ·
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries

Sports
Weathe r

A6

© :1004 Ohio Valley Puhlishlng Co.

Child's Name-~------------­
Parent's Name - - - - - - - - -- -- - - - Town _______________________________________

breu l.. - in ~

C\C il

JLAYTON@MYDA ILYSENTINE L. COM

,r1

*Football
*Golf
* Basketball ,* Gymnastics
Child's Name
*Baseball ·· · *Tumbling
Child of: Parent's Name
*Softball
Team Name
*Soccer
Message
*Track
*Karate
&amp; More!!·
. Swimming. ·
This special secticm will run on

Ma,or SanJ) lannare ll i told !'vli ud lcpori Village
Co un ci l membe rs Monday even i n~ that work is
underway to prepare a h-id packcl for pote ntial ·
buyer' for ihe two bui ldings. and I hilt the fir&gt;l qep
i,n preparing f~1r 1he sale \\'ill he a sur,cy of b01 h
prn pertt es. ·
''The se hui ldi rH.!" arc L'O"ti nc the ,·j Jia t!c a lot pf
money. and' the · prob lems '~ ith ,· and~ l i 'm and

SMALL SECTION OF NEW
US 33 OPEN TO MOTORISTS

BY

(

,,-

REED

Meigs Local Board of Education One Stop Program helps local business
and
w orkliH! on a masters t.l eu ree wo uld make it
J.
takes action to reduce staff
less cosily to hire peoat Ohi o Unive"il)'. sa iJ~ 1he

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

AA

~,.,.\\'\ un;l,lih l' tlllhu ltotu

:..• uo.J

Please see Achievers, AS

WEATHER

"Star Athlete" -::. .' on\h ~..;-­
in your eyes, .! S\0. 0;:.include them in ;;;:::....-1A
this section!!
-yv, ' '

1:! ,

He " ' iJ en trv is be lie,·ed to haYe been made
th roll gh" brD~e n " induw. and some records lcrt in
th ~ !&gt;ttilding by th e Meigs Local School Di slricl
MIDDLEPORT -· Vandal is m. hi gh ut ilit v costs when ihe hu i ld i n ~ was \acaied are heli e,·ed tu
·and maintenance requirements ha ve made ~illage ha\T bee n st ol en. '
.
official s anxious to sell th e Middl eport Hig h
Vand ali sm and art empied . brea k-in s h&lt;n e
School and Central buildings. bu t the proce" may become an increasi ng pro hk m at tile two t&gt;ui ldtake longer than was first anticipa ted.
ing~. Sw ift sai d.
- Middl eport Pol ice Chief Bruce Sw ift said
"We ' re ~lw ay-.. finding .. pray painttng. ne wlyTuesday his department is investig aling a break-in broken wi ndows and otl1cr s i ~ n s of ,·and ali sm at
. at the Cent ral Building. located bchinJ the hig h I h e schook hu t unlc" we· rc at I he scene w hen I he
sehoul building on South Third Ave .
incidents happe n. there·s not much we . can do.
· According to Swifl , four female juve ni ks arc · especially with only one officer on the streets at
suspected in ihe break-in, and arrests ·are expecteJ . any g i n~ n titlle ."
BY BRIAN

Jaynee Davis

If your child is a

f\1 \\

BREED@MYOAI LYSENTINEL.COM

Prep Baseball
BY GARY CLARK
Sports correspondent .

I

Problems arise with Middleport schools

SPORTS

Flyers soar over Tampa Bay Devils wipe out Falcons
'
BY fRED GOODALL

Rudi Johnson signs
1-year contract, Bt

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TUHdr("s Games

NY MetS (l el1er 1-1 1at Anzona (Dessans 1-4). 9'35 p.m.
Cerocnnato(Harang 2- 1) a1 San Doego (OWti!ls 2·2). 10:05 p.m
Cubs (Wood 3-21a! Los A.ngales 1 Wea~ 1-4), 10·10 p.m.
Pt1iladelph 13 (M11wood 3-21 at San Franosco (J W~h:ams 3- 1). 10; 15 p.m.

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Monlrea l 1L Hernandez 2-21 at M.tw-&amp;uk&amp;e (Sheets 3-2). B:OS p.m
At~n1a JWngh12·2) at St Lowos (W.Wo ~ iams 0-31. 8 10 p.m
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POMEROY - Action to
implement a reduction in
staff to include both teachers anp other profe ssional
personnel as .well as nunce rti fied support workers
was taken by th e Mt! igs
Local Board of Education at
Tuesday ni ght 's meeting.
A decline in e nrollment
and the resulling re du ction
in financial income to ihe
di stri ct were given as the
re ason&gt; for the planned personnel reduction which will
go into effect in earl y
August.
"We' ve bee n talking
ab out staff reducti on for
several
month s,:· said
Supe rinl endenl
Will iam
Buckl ey. However, las t
ni ght wa s th e first time
ac ti on was taken by th e
Board in a move forward to
!let the distri ct on a better
·
linancial bas is.
Buckley ,said thai I he total
budget redu ction in personnel costs will be $694.000 .
He said about 20 employees

· William Buckley
of the distric t will be affecled, that many st:iff reducti ons will come th ro ugh
attri tion. retirement or rc~ i !.! ­
nat ion and ihcrc will be IJO
replaceme nts. He sai J .some
may have an opportu ni ty to
be re-em ployed lai er in the
summer and cm pha &gt;i1.ed
that the reduction will affect
teachers. ~ u pe r viso r~ ;. md
non-certi fie d empl oyees .
They will be made on a " Ia&gt; I
in. first out" basis. he said.
Board me mbers we re

Please see Board, AS

program i~ a useful too l
which helps b~ 1w ec n 100 10
120 joh , eei- c" each month.
Some of the fun .:titll~&gt; nf the
On~ Sto p Prog ram arc to
recrui t anJ snce n po te nl ial
emp loyees . post job ''"canc ie-" on th e Int ern et.

a sse~s

basic s ki lLs for pole otta l
hire s. ca reer l' nu n~c- li ng tt nJ
res ume wri ting.
Lavendar said these I) pes
of serv ices can be very helpful to busi ncs&gt;cs because it

pl e. The One Stop Prog ram i'
locaicd on the .sc,·un d floo r of
the M e i ~s Joh and Fami lv
Sen·ices 'in Mi JJi eport.
·
" We \\ 'cl com..:

bu~ mcs~

to

use

th e O ne Stop Program."

~o, b e

sai J . ··o ur

~ mtl i~ to

me et

the needs of both job seekers
anJ em ploye rs... ·
With one of 1hc hi d lc''t
une mp\\):- mcnt rat e ~ i11" the
~ t a le. M e i g~

Ct5lm ty neeJ~

:t

Please see One Stop, AS

Antique tractors prepare to invade Racine
BY

J.

MILES LAYTON

JLAYTO N@MYDAI LYS EN TIN ELC OM

RAC INE -- Eve r wo nde red wha t it wo uld be like
lo rl ow a fielJ '? Anyo ne
i ntc rc~ t eJ
in usin g an
anliquc trac tor or p&lt;;\Si bl y
eve n a plow wi lh a le am of
horses has an opport unit y to
learn fro m I he he1t and practice \V ith the re1 L
An tique lractors and such
will piU\v the fi eld al I he old
Oh io Ri\er · Campg rou nd
' tarting al 9 a. m. Salll rday.

Si nc e thi s is an antique tra c-

fi eld nwy :-.ee m '-~"'

~ in_1p l e a-.;
but it ·j, a lot

mowing a yard.
than ll/59 is e lieibl e mn re co mplica ted . The
Retired far mer Da n Smi th depth of the plt&gt;w. kH~ I of
will he using a 19)) ga~ the lr&lt;lc'lnr and ot her vari mode l 1hat bas prnhabl) ahk" ha\·C' tn be con-.idere' U
plowed thmt.sa nds of acres so 1hat the farmer i1 not
mere ly pulling a piece I nf .
in its heyday.
'harpencU
n1~ t a l ae ro':-. the
"We 're ju1t going 10 plow
a lill ie. ta lk a little and have ~ round . Nor dn vou \\ant to
!1ln\\ till' f UITO\-\ ~ too dee-p .
a fu n da v: · &gt;aid Sm ith.
·· we had a pre u:. htg
For o.11i yn ne who has ll lt \" 1! 1"
...
ho\\
in g. t he ~; ,..,, time \\ e did
plowed a Sl raig hl fLJrrn" . rh e
expen, w ill he on lwnd 10 t1m.'· he sa lll.
give poi nte r:-. . Tu th e undi ~­
~rimi n at in g L:)~ e . plow ing a
Please see Antique, As

tor ~\"l~ n L nothi ng . you nger

.

National Hospital Week
May9-15

Celebrating 32 Years on Jackson Pike
We would like to recognize those who make
Holzer Medical Center such a special
place - our staff. This week, and every week,
you help us make the difference to those we serve.

R
MEDICAL CENTER
Discm:cr· the 1-ln/zc t' Di[(crcnce

Www.holzer .org

�PageA2

REGION

'"(he.Daily Sentinel
Military doctor says most soldiers
served honorably at Iraqi prison
CHAMPION (APl - An
Army Reserve physician saw
a different side of soldiers '
treatment of Iraqis at Abu
Ghraib prison. where abuse
of detainees has been widely
documented.
"The overwhelming majority of the U.'S. personnel at
Abu Ghraib have and are
serving _their country honorably," said Lt. Col. Dave
Yeropoli.
Dr. Yeropoli, a doctor at
the
Youngstown
VA ·
Outpatient Clinic. served as Undated photo of Lt. Col. Dave
battalion surgeon at Abu Yeropoli taken at the Abu
Ghraib from mid-December G·hraib prison in Iraq: Yeropoli
through March 24 while - said the soldiers he worked
attached to the J20th with at Abu Ghraib prison were
Military li'olice Battalion.
dedicated . and
humane.
He said
the abus~s Yeropoli. a · doctor at the
occurred before he arri wd Youngstown VA Outpatient
and in a wing of the prison Clinic. served as battalion surwhere the detainees consid- geon at Abu Ghra1b from midered the most dangerous December through March 24
were held. He said he was while attached to the 320tti
in that wing once in his J Military Police Battalion. (AP
1/2 months in Iraq .
Photo/Courtesy of Family)
"I am not making excuses,
nor do I condone the acts or treated at the minor surgery.
abuse (of Iraqis) at the clinic. then guided him · to ·
hands of United States sol- relative safety when the clinqiers that occurred beginning ic came under mortar fire.
"I can honestly say I did
in June 2003." he said.
not
see one incident of prisYeropqli. of Champion.
oner
abuse at the hands of
who previously served in
combat zones in Kosovo and any U.S. soldier or anyone
Afghanistan , said the sol- else." he said.
Seven so ldiers from the
diers he worked with at Abu
372nd
Military
Police
Ghraib were dedicated and
Company face charges in the
humane.
··1 personally experienced mistreatment of prisoners at
many acts of human kind- Abu Ghraib in a scandal that
ness by U.S. soldiers toward has brought worldwide outthe Iraqi security detainees.'' rage. The abuses became
public when photographs
he · said.
showing
smiling American
For example. he said an
guards
with
Iraqi prisoners
American soldier removed
in
humiliating
positions were
his helmet and placed it on
aired
on
television.
t!ie head of a detainee being

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

•They're back: Trillions
. of cicadas emerge
from 17-year slumber
Bv HOPE YEN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON- After a
17-year nap, trillions of red' eyed insects are crawling
__ their way above ground in 14
states and the nation's capital.
Loudmouthed and ugly, the
cicadas will fly clumsily into
· pets, bushes and unwitting
pedestrians as they engage in
a frenetic mating ritual that
lasts well into June.
Then they'll disappear for
another 17 years.
Keith Clay, a biologist and
· cicada researcher at Indiana
University in Bloomington,
said the appearance of
cicadas is "an amazing biological phenomenon" that
· nonetheless produces a "yuck
factor" for some people.
"They're not scared but see
them as disgusting," he said.
. The I 1/2 inch-long black
bugs with iridescent wings
buzz around, but are basically harmless. They don't bite,
and they . don't sting. They
live above ground as adults
for about 2 1/2 weeks to
reproduce all. they can before
dying.
The adult males begin the
mating ritual with a long
buzzing sound that attracts
the females. The choru's from
one colony's male insects is
so loud that the insects can
drown out outdoor wedding
events. graduation ceremonies and golf tournaments,
researchers say.
Scientists say this year's
batch, the largest of the cicada groups that appear at various
intervals,
offers
researchers a rare opportunity
to study the inse·ct's impact
on the nation's forests.
Recent studies indicate
cicadas are growing in numbers due in part to deforestation.
·
:Cicadas tend to thrive in
spnlit forest edges, which
often provide the warmer
weather and younger trees
· most ideal for them to lay
t~eir young. That's because
y~unger tree roots can sustain

the 17-year feeding cycle of
nymphic cicadas until they
mature.
There are more than a
dozen broods of 17 -year
cicadas, along with several
13-year varieties. This year's
group, Brood X, is the largest
and is concentrated in the
Midwest and · the midAtlantic.
. Found qnly in the United
States east of the Great
Plains, the periodical cicadas
burrow into the ground after
hatching, some dtgging as far
as 8 feet under. Below the
earth, the nymphs slowly
suck the sap from tree roots
for nourishment.
After 17 years, they emerge ·
and climb trees and shrubs,
where they shed their
crunchy skins and harden
into maturity.
Sheer numbers is what
ensures locusts' survival. The
insects are a treat for robins
and other birds. and even
some pets, who are at risk for
diarrhea or constipation if
they eat too many. But many .
cicadas escape death because
there are simply too many in
the swarm for even the hungriest to devour.
.
"Their numbers simply
overwhelm," said John
Odland. a geographer at
Indiana University.
Once the l?u(;S mate, the
females cut shts into tree
branches. where they deposit
400 to 600 eggs. The adults
quickly die . . but the eggs
·hatch in a few weeks. The
young cicadas dig into the
~round and won't emerge
IIllO 2021.
The states which will see
cicadas this summer include:
Delaware, Georgia, Illinois.
Indiana.
Kentucky.
Maryland. Michigan, New
Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio,
Pennsylvania, Tennessee,
Virginia, West Virginia's
Eastern Panhandle. and
Washington, D.C.

On tire Net:
National Science frmndatiOII.'
http ://11 ww.- n.1:{: go\ v

Community Calendar

At Pleasa11t Valley Hospital Coed Flag Footbal!Iimrnamcnt

Eagles' receiver to be featured celebrity guest
-PO INT PLEASANT and banquet will go to the
Philadelphia Eagles· out- Bartrum &amp; Brown Football
standing wide receiver. Camp.
Freddie Mitchell. will be one
Mitchell
was
the
of the featured celebrity Philadelphia Eagles' first
!!Uests at the Pleasant Vallev round draft choice in 200 I
Hospital Annual Coed Flag out of UCLA. "He currently
serves as the team's slot
Football Tournament.
The dOllble elimination receiver and recorded career
tournament is planned for hi'ghs in receptions (35).
Saturday at the Point yards (498 ). and touchdowns
Pleasant High School and the . (2) in 2003 . Throughout his
Mason County Vocational career, Mitchell has convertCenter fields. The public is ed 70.1 percent of his recepcordially invited to watch the tions into first doWns (47 of
tournament and collect auto- 67). In addition, he made a
graphs from the arra; of miraculous catch that kept
celebrity guests.
the game-tying drive alive m
Additional cc lcbrity guests a divisional playoff game
include
Mike
Bartrum against the Green Bay
(Phi ladelphia Eagles). Erik Packers. The catch over the
Anderson (former player for middle led to a 37-yard field
the Kansas City Chiefs). · goal by David Akers.
Allen Degraffenreid (former
Mitchell is working toward
player for the Cincinnati a more prominent role in the ·
Bengals ). Coach Carl Lee Eagles offense, After show(,·urrent head football coac h ing glimpses of play-making
for West Virginia State abil ity during his rookie
College and former player campaign.
the
flashy
for the Minnesota Vikings). Mitchell was saddled in as
Alvoid Mays (former WVU ' the fourth receiver in 2002,
starters · James
wide receiver and player for behind
the Washington Redskins). Thrash, Todd Pinkston, and
Major Harris (former player renowned slot rccetvcr
for the Oakland Raiders and Antonio Freeman.
An avid traveler, Mitchell
West Virginia University
quarterback), Millie Smith has visited many places
and Chuck Shankles (team around the world. including ·
from the CBS reality show. Czech Republic, Mexico,
"The Amazing
Race"). Whistler Ski Resort in
Kristin Farley' (WOWK British Columbia, Canada,
anchor),
Keith
Jones England for Wimbledon, but
(WOWK anchor) and Steve his' all-time favorite destina- ·
McGehee (WOWK sports tion remains Rio de Janeiro,
director), Roxanne Whi.te Brazil.
The personable Mitchell
(Lady Herd assistant head
coach), Juliet Donahue credits his strong media
(Lady Herd assistant coach), savvy to hi s days working
Mike Guilliams (former with the TV production crew
tackle
for
Marshall in high school in Lakeland,
University) and Hillary Fl.
"I used to announce the
Anderson (former women's
field hockey player and wife morning news on the television throughout the entire
of Erik Anderson) .
Mitchell will be auctioned school," said Mitchell. "I was
as a coach at the VIP banquet a natural . back then (laughthat takes place at Riverside ing)."
Mitchell enjoys all genres
Golf Course in Mason the
night prior, Friday, All pro~· of music, but his overwhelmceeds from the tournament ing favorite is country.

Public meetings
Wednesday, May 12
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Board of Eleclions
~.Yill be closed Wednesday
due to the death of the diraclor's grandmother.
Monday, May 17
LETART
Letart
Township Trustees, 5 p.m. at
the office building.
•• ATHENS - The Southeast
Ohio Woodland Interest
Group, will meet at 7 p.m. at
the
Athens
County
Extension office . Dave
Schatz will speak on woodland herbs. Open to public.
For more information call
592-8555.

Clubs and
organizations
Wednesday, May 12
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Athletic Boosters,
6:30p.m., high school.
Thursday, May 13
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters to meet for ritual tea
at 6:30 p.m. , home of Clarice
Krautter. Social committee as
hostesses.

Freddie
"Country music is a different version of blues and they
truly speak from the heart."
said Mitchell. Toby Keith.
Journey. Frank Sinatra and
Br'azilian samba comprise
his eclectic music tastes.
Some of Mitchell's career
accomplishments include
starting against the New
York Giants in 2002; recovering an onsides lick in the
waning seconds to preserve a
27-20 victory at Seattle , also
in 2002; touching the ball 24
times in 200 I (21 receptions.
2 rushes and I pass attempt)
and I 7 of those were converted . into first downs
(71% ); catching his first pass

Mitchell
from Donovan McNabb
against Dallas in 200 I and
his first TD from McNabb
against the Washington .
Redskins and becoming the
third wide receiver ever :
drafted by the Eagles in the
I st round and the first since
1984. Mitchell has also been
drafted twice drafted in base- ball by the Tampa Bay Devil. ·
Rays and the Chicago White
Sox.
For more information
about the Pleasant Valley
Hospital Coed Flag Football
Tournament and Vl.P banquet
please call, (304) 675-4340, ·
Ext. 1326.

Church services

CHESTER Regular
meeting of Shade River
Lodge 452, F&amp;AM 7:30p.m ,
at the hall. Refreshments.
TUPPERS PLAINS
VFW Post 9053 will meet at
7:30 p.m. Thursday. Meal will
be served at 6:30p.m.

Wednesday, May 12
MIDDLEPORT - Revival ·
services will be held at 7 p.m.
through Saturday, May 15
and_10 a.m. Sunday, May 16,
at the Victory Baptist Church,
525 North Second Ave.,
Middleport. Dr. James Ellis of
Bessemer City, N. C. will be
the evangelist. Public welcome, nursery provided.

Saturday. May 15
SALEM
CENTER
Meigs
County Pomona
Grange will sponsor a Meigs
County Spring Rally on
Sunday at Star Grange ,
located on C. R. 1, three
miles norlh of Salem Center
There will be a potluck dinner at 1 p.m. followed by
entertainment by the .Red
Brush . Band of Jackson
County at 2 p.m. The day will
conclude with a •hay ride
around the area at 3 p.m .
There will be volleyball.
horseshoes and various
other games and activities
av~ilable throughout the day.
Information is available from
Opal Dyer at 742-2805.

Support Groups
Friday, May 14
MASON, W.Va.- Widows'
Fellowship, noon. at Bob
Evans Restaurant

Birthdays
Thursday, May 13
REEDSVILLE Annie
Calaway will observe her
80th birthday Thursday. ·
Cards may be sent to her at
48184 State Route 681,
Reedsville, Oho 45772.

Sunday, May 16
TUPPERS PLAINS
Olive-Orange Memorial VFW
Post 9053 at Tuppers Plains
will have a loyalty day dinner
for all members at 1 p.m. at
the hall .

Friday, May 14
POMEROY - Woodrow
Harmon . 38140 Mudfork Rd.,
Pomeroy, will celebrate his
90th birthday on Friday.

GRAND OPENING

2004

DEAR ABBY: My hu sband, "Cliff," is in prison and
we're not sure when he'll be
out. We have two wonderful
children, ages II and 13. We
are allowed to visit him six
Dear
times a month and can talk
Abby
with him on the phone up to
four times a week. Despite
his incarceration, he is as
involved as he can be in our
lives.
DEAR ABBY: I am 12 and
I have a problem when
have
lived in Te,.as all my
meeting new people who ask
life,
until
a few months ago
where my husband is. The
stigma of having a husband when we moved to Las
in jail is not something I want Cruces, N.M. My younger
to carry in the small town sister, "Janey," and I didn't
where we live. Plus, I don't want to move, but Mother
think it is something our chil- met "Patrick" online and fell
dren's friends should know in love. We moved to Las
because they · might taunt Cruces so they could be
together and get married
them .
•
As happens more times · someday.
I
like
Patrick
because
he's
than we'd like to think in this
us,
but
Janey
and
I
nice
to
country, my husband · was
wrongfully convicted, and don't get along with his
the explanation is a lengthy daughter. "Rita." She is 15.
one. So, short of telling each and says we have stolen her
person the whole story, what time with her dad. She is jealreply can I come up with ous because he pays attention
when asked the whereabouts to us, and she can't have him
of mv husband? ·_· NEEDS all to herself.
Please tell me how l .can let
AN ANSWER IN OHIO
DEAR
NEEDS
AN her know we ' re not stealing
ANSWER: You could tell her father and that he still
your neighbors that you and loves her. - STRESSED IN
your husband are hav ing a LAS CRUCES
DEAR STRESSED: As
"trial" separation but
please be aware that the cat much as you might wish to
will be out of the bag the put Rita's fears to rest, the .
minute one of your children person who must reassure her
confides their father's where- is her father. Tell Patrick priabouts to a close friend. In a vately what you have told
small town, there are very me . Or better yet. clip this
letter and tell him you wrote
few secrets.

it. If he's unable to allay his
daughter's . concerns. &lt;,ome
sessions with a family counselor would be a wise investment.
DEAR ABBY: My daughter is 12 and starting to want
to wear makeup. She is quite
a tomboy and would rather
play basketball than do •·girly" things.
She wore makeup to the
movie s last weekend. and her
father was very upset. He
ordered her not to do it again.
She tells me kids are making
comments about her because
she doesn't dress like a girl or
wear makeup. Abby. I don't
see anything wrong with her
wearin~ it once in a while.
What\ your take on this"
Is her dad right. or am I being
too easy" Is there a compromise ? - MO'vl IN NEW
YORK
DEAR MOM: Get a cold
compress for your husband.
becau'e I have news for him.
His linle girl is growing up.
and right on schedule. Now. I
don't know how much makeup your daughter wore to the
movies. but for someone her
age to wear lip gloss and a little mascara is not unusual.
Moderation is the key.
Dear Abb,- is 11-rillen lJ\
Abigail Vair Buren. also
known as Jeanne Phillips.
and was founded hr her
mother. Pauline Phillips.
Write
Dear Ahbr at
www.DearAbbr.com or PO.
Box 69440, Los Angeles. CA
90069.

National nursing home week to be observed
ROCKSPRINGS
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Center will observe National
Nursing Home Week, May 9with
a
theme,
14,
"Embracing Our Heritage."
Sponsored by the American
Health Care Association, the
week s~otlights the role nursing factlities play in delivering care · to the nation's
~-.

The local facility plans a
seniors
and
disabled
Americans - 1.5 million of week's events including a
whom live in nursing facili- Mother's Day tea, a handmake quilt exhibit, a visit
ties.
The week brings awareness from State Rep. Jimmy
to nursing facilities and is a Stewart, R-Athens, who will
vehicle for celebrating care give the Proclamation and
providers, volunteers, fami- have lunch with residents, a
lies and others in the commu- volunteer reception, and a
"Remembering
nity who foster the spirit of · pro~ram.
Elvts" by Dwight lcenhower.
"Embracing Our Heritage."

·broadcast scheduled
J?'R.o 1tYo To''lil! Skatopia
RUTLAND- Skatopia, a skateboard facility located near
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Cutting a.ribbon representing the grand opening of Powell's Foodfair on Sunday were, 1-r, Todd
Powell, assistant store manager; Scott Worster, grocery manager; Tony Salser, dairy and frozen
foods manager; Lee Powell, general manager; Apri l Burke , delicatessen manager; Dave Camp,
produce manager, Dave Warth. meat department manager; and Bob Haggy, assistant grocery
manager. The new store, located on East Main St., will be open from 7 a.m. until 10 p.m.,
seven days a week. (Brian J. Reed)

Southern Ohio
homeowners to benefit

• Diagnostic X-Rays

"Personal

_

Stewart Works to Pass Mi11ing Legislation

6\.l\'
•

CIMII;k Ill Mr
......lito

COLUMBUS
State
Representative
Jimmy
Stewart (R- Athens) stood
before hi s fellow members of
Ohio
House
of
the
Representatives today and
urged the passage of mining
legislation that would better
define laws regarding abandoned mines across Ohio.
The· measure, House Bill
425, specifically addresses
Ohio's mine · subsidence
insurance program ,·· which
was originally established in
19.87. The program provides
additional coverage to homeowners in· counties in which
abandoned mines exist.
"In the more than 150 years
that the underground mining
industry has been active in
Ohio more than 5,000 mines
have been abandoned,"
Stewart said. ''This measure
helps to further protect Ohio
home and property owners
from dangers.associated with
those abandoned mines."
Specifically, Stewart's legislation revises the current
limits on mine subsidence
coverage, increasing the cap
on the amount of reinsurance
coverage from $50.000 to
$300,000.
"Times have changed, and
we need to update our laws to
reflect
those changes."
Stewart said. "That is what
we did here today with House
Bill 425."
.
The legis lation additionally
specifies to the counties that

the insurance must be offered
in connection with property
and homeowners insurance
and also allows a representative of member companies to
be e lected to the Mine
Subsidence
Insurance
Governing Board (MSIGB)
without holding a meeting of
members.
''Thousands of abandoned
mines pepper the communities across Southern Ohio,"
Stewart said. " By updating
our laws it is my hope that we
can provide yet another safeguard for farililies and property owners."
House Bill 425 pm.sed the
House with an overwhelming
margin shortly after Stewart's
remarks. The measure now
goes to the Ohio Senate for
further review. ·

GALLIPOLIS The
Gallia
County
Health
Department will offer a
make-up day for free athletic phpicals.
·
..
The ¢hy sicals will be
held at the health department at S. a.m. , Saturday,
Students who are planning to attend must have
previou sly completed the
pre-physical screening at
the school. The school
nurses will bring prephysical screening papers
to the Health Department
for those students who
attend Gallipolis City
Schools and Gallia County
Schools.
Students who attend
Ohio Valley· Christian

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•

Wednesday, May 12,

Woman is at a loss for words
to explain husband's ·Sentence

;

MASON
Coming Thursday in the Sentinel...

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 12,2004

'

PageA3

School will be responsible
for bringing their prephysical screening papers
to the Health Department
with them . Students will
need to enter at the back
of the building. The Gallia
Ceunty Health Department
is located at 499 Jackson
Pike, Suite D. Gallipolis.
Ohio.
For more information,
please contact your school
nurse or the Gallia County
Health Department at 4412950.

Rutland. will be featured on Sunday's episode of the MTV
program "Viva La Bam~"
Bam Margera, 24, and Professional SkatebOarder Tony
Hawk, 31. visited Brewce Martin's facility in February to
shoot footage for the "Viva La Bam'" series, as part of. a
nationwide tour of skateboard facilities.
The show featuring Martin's skateboarding bowl will air at
9:30p.m. Sunday on Charter Communications channe l 76. as
part of MTV's Sunday Stew lineup.
·
,
Martin said Hawk n0w plans to use Skatopia as a setting on
his new skateboarding video game.
"Bam" stars with his parents and a mix of equally-odd
friends in the offbeat but popular MTV program.

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�OPINION

·The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
(I www.mydallysentinetcom

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

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

READER'S

PagcA4

VIEW

Legislation
Policy hurls tourism
Dear Editor:
The May 5 newspaper told of Rep. Jimmy Stewart trying to
return county health departments and the Ohio Health
Department as it was prior to July I, 2003.
· The Ohio Health Departmen t got a friendly legislator to slip
an item into the 2003 biennium budget bill to eliminate non-·
certified copies of health department birth death records using
the lie that it would prevent identity theft.
· The F.B.I. says no cases of identity theft are known through
these records. The real reasons for th is change was that the
Ohio Health Department wants to pick and choose who it sees
fit to serve and also wants to profit frorri history research
when it can not discourage it. That is not being a good public
.servant. Our tax monies already pay for the operations of the
.Ohio Health Department.
Non-certified copies that had ~:ost a dime were .~li~inated.
'Certified copies of these records were then raiseO"iil Meigs
County from $12 to $20. How's that for inflation?
·. Meigs County had massive migration into the county and
emigration from it to. other places west. One of the biggest
,lures of tourists to Meigs County is for people searching for
their ancestry. Genealogy is the second largest hobby in the
U.S. This action by the Ohio Health Department to make it
·e ~iremely expensive to. research history can only serve to
·i njure tourism in Ohio.
Tl]e Meigs County Health Department has been ~ordial to
researchers over the years. This good relationship has result.ed in much information being available on our county's history. Many other kinds of photocopies of old records in other
governmental offices still cost a dime. The Meigs County
'Genealogical Society urges letters in support of this law and
so that the Ohio Health Department will again be a good pub:lic servant to. historians as well as others.

Wednesday, May

Joseph
Perkins

who refuses to impose costly,
Draconian reductions in C02
upon the American people.
Yet, ·the film's producers have
allowed the Bush-hating liberal
advocacy
group
MoveOn.org to host a premiere of The Day After
Tomorrow.·
It will ptovide a backdrop
for a 'town hair meeting.
hosted by MoveOn, at which
former Vice President· AI
Gore and liberal comedianactivist AI Franken will take
turns blaming Bush for global
wanning.
.
But what Franken and Gore
and the MoveOn Bush-haters
will not let on is that the
doomsday scenario depicted
in 'The Day After Tomorrow'
is about' as improbable as the
alien invasion Emmerich conjured up in 'Independence
Day.'
Indeed, even scientists who
subscribe to the global warming orthodoxy acknowledge
that
'The
Day After
Tomorrow' is based on bad
science.
'My first reaction was, 'Oh
my God, this is a disaster
because it is such a distortion
of the science," Harvard
University paleoclimatologist
Schrag told The
. Dan
Associated Press. 'The science is bad,' echoed NASA
research
oceanographer

Obituaries

nounced as alannists 'uggest.
And that much of the \\anning that actuall y has been
detected is natural. rather than
anthropogcni'c (caused by
human activity).
Instead. it 'uggests that the
end of the world. a., we kt10\\
it. can be avoided if
Americans cut the ir use of
fos,il fuel&gt;. if the Bush
administration
and
the
Republican-controlled Senate
accede to the 'a-called Kyoto
Proto.:ol. the U.N. treaty that
would require the United
States tt' clll its carboJW;,!IliSsions a , 1ggering 30 perC~t
by 201 c
But it' not JUSt President
Bush " ho refuses to embrace
the Kyolo Prntocnl. Not just
Republicans on Capitol HiU
who refuse to ratify the treaty.
to subject Americans to costly
warming. _
compressing into a reductions in C02.
· matter of week' climate
In 1997. the U.S. Senate
chan
'1at could take as long
passeu a resolution that
as !lJ. dO years.
instntcted Presidem Clinton
Schrag. the Harvard palco- not to sign a treaty that ·would
climatolog(st. suggests that. result in serious harm to the
'the public is probably smart economy.· That resolution
enough
to
distinguish was approved by a 95-0 marbetween Hollywood and the gin. with nary a Democrat real world' But while that not even Massachusetts Sen.
may be 1he case when a John Kerry - di"enting.
movie plot concerns alien
The moviegoing public will
invasion of Earth. it does not not leam this from spending
when the plot is hased on an two hours in the Liark watchesoteric scienti tic issue like ing
Day
After
'The
global warming.
Tomorrow.' or attendin g
ln&lt;leed . filmguer' who Mm eOn.org\ 1011 n hall
attend 'The Day After meeting on global war;-ming.
Tomorrow' will be none the
Tlwt\ the wav that the
wiser that there is contitming film's producer; want it.
dispute about global wari11ing That's the "ay the Bushwithin the scientific .conunu- haters at Mo.1cOn .org want it.
nity.
(Joseph Pakrns is" columThe movie does not apprise nisT j i&gt;r Tire S"n Diego
them that many respected sci- Union·Trilnme und can be
entists beliew that planetary reacirt'd m Joseph. Perkins@
warming i; not JJearly as pro- Union Tri/J.cmn)
William Patzert.
Yet. both Schrag and
Patzert have given 'The Day
After Tomorrow' their blessing.
· Schrag told the AP he hopes
the disaster film will generate
public interest in global
'warming. much as the movie
'Jurassic Park' stoked interest
in· dinosaurs. Patzen views
Emmerich's $125 million
flick as ·an opportunity to
crank up the dialogue on our
role in climate change.'
But the public dialogue and
the political debate about
global warming ,ought not be
driven by Hollywood- and
ought not be influenced by
bad science in the form of
cinematic
entertainment.
Jnde~d .
'The Day After
Tomorrow· deliberately exaggerates the threat of global

.

•

The Daily Sentinel
.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Correction Polley
Published
every
afternoon,
Our main concern in' al! stories is to be Monday through Friday, 111 Court
accurate. If you know of an error in a Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
story, call the newsroom al (740) 992- postage 'Paid at Pomeroy.
2156.
Member: The Associated Press
and
th·e
Ohio
Newspaper .
Association .
Our main number Is

(740) 992·2156.
Department extensions are:

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
Reporter! Brian Reed. Ext. 14
Reporter:· J. Miles Layton . Ext. 13

Advertising
Outside S81es: Dave Harris, Ext . 15

ClaooJCin:.: Judy Clark, Ext. to
I

Circulation
.District Mgr.: TBA, Ext. t 7

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, E~et . 12
E·mall:
news@mydallysenllnel.com

Wob:
www.mydaltysenttnel.com

..

Plan outage

POMEROY - Michelle Stobart, 33, Pomeroy, died
Monday. May II. 2004 in Cheshire Township. Gallia County.
Funeral arrangements will be announced by the Cremeens
Funeral Home, Racine.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
District has ·schedulea a shut-down of water &gt;ervice for
Thursday in the Tuppers Plains Industrial Park. to affect customers in Athens and Meigs Counties . ·In Meigs County, customers on the west side of Tuppers Plains, Alfred, Bearwallow
and Flora will be without service, and in Athens, customers in .
Bern. Canaan. Lodi, Rome, Troy and Carthage ·townships.
Service will be disrupted from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. No cusRILEY. Kans.- Helen M. King. 87, of Riley. Kans .. died
Monday. May 10. 2004. at the Mercy Regional Health Center tomers will lose service at first , but slowly. as the day goes by,
in Manhattan. Kans.
·
- the higher elevations will lose service.
Customers are asked to refrain from using water so service
She was born on March 22. 1917, in Rutland, daughter of
the late Wesley Dale and Julia Mae Hill Musser. She was a can be mainained for as many people as possible. Only water
homemaker with Home Health Care for 20 years. She was a in surrounding water tanks will be available for use.
A boil advisory will be in effect after service is restored ,
member ot and very active in the Riley United Methodist
Church: She served on the board of the Riley County ATA and until further notice.
was active with the Riley Library.
She was also preceded in death by her husband of 27 years,
Clyde E. King. in 1983; a grapdson, Kevin Timothy King, in
1975; a great grandson. Christian King. in 1995: and a daughMcARTHUR ,- Beans and cornbread and $1 hot dog~ will
ter-m-law. Betty L. King, in 1997.
Tpree sons· survive: George M. King and hi s companion, be served at the VInton County Airport beginning at II a.m.
on Sunday, for 'the season's opening event. Plane rides will
Gla~ys .. of Ol sburg. Kans ., Clyde Alan King and his wife,
Patti, ot San Bernadino. Calif.. and Paul Stephen King and his also begin at II a.m. For those interested in learning to fly. a
wife. Catherine A.. of Springfield; two daughters, Julia A. flight instructor will be at the airport to answer questions or
Estts and her husband. Herbert. of Canal Winchester. and sign up students.
Airplane rides arc $15 per person.
Paula Sue Rizer and .her husband . Kenneth, of Portland ; 14
The Vinton County airport is located just of Ohio 93. five
grandchildren and 20 great grandchildren.
miles
north of McAnhur.
Services will be held at 1():30 a.m. on Thursday at the Riley
lnformationis
available from Nick Rupert at 596-2588.
United Methodi st Church in Rilev. Kans .. with Pastor Barbara
Laflin officiating. Graveside services will be held at I p.m . _on
Thursday in the Olsburg Cemetery in Ol sburg. Kans.
Respect calls may be made anytime Wednesday at the
Holmes-Pfeitley Funeral Home. where the family will receive
TUPPERS PLAINS - Students in grades six through II
friends from 7 to 8 p.m. on Wednesday.
interested in playing junior high and/or high school spans
Memorials· have been established for the Riley United next year are urged to get physicals at Eastern High School on
Methodist Church and Riley Library.
May 21.
Dr. Kelli Roush will be at the school at 9 a.m. Athletes
should pick up a physical form in the high school office and
bring the completed form, signed by a parent, to the physical.
Parents need not attend if the form is signed. .
The cost of the physical is $5. There will be no free physicals this summer. according to Athletic Director Pamela
Douthitt. and this will be the only time the physical exams are
LETART - Milton Russell Clarke, 59. of Letart. W. Va. offered. Athletes are urged to have their physicals completed
died Monday. May l 0, 2004 at Mount Carmel East Heart and out of the way ift::ftl(e summer sports camps begin.
Center in Columbus.
He was the son of Neva G. Clarke of Letart and the late
Robert R. Clarke. He is survived by his wife, Audrey Kinzel
Clarke of Letan.
MIDDLEPORT - In a report to Middleport Village
Funei·aJ services will be held at II a.m. Friday at the
CoutKil.
Poli~:e Chief Bruce Swift reported the following
Anderson Funeral Home with Pastor Greg Collins and Rev.
activity
for
the police department in May : 12 traffic arrests; 27
Joe Hammack officiating. Burial will be in the Hoffman
Cemetery where military honors will be observed by the criminal arrests: 29 mayor's case s: eight ~:ounty cases: two
American Legan Post 140 and the Veterans of Foreign Wars
Post 9926. Friends may call at the funeral home !'rom 6 to 9
society. and the French Club.
p.m . Thursday. An on-line registry is available at www.ander·
Dodson is the daughter of
sonlh.com
Russ and Kay Dodson and
serves as treasurer for the
from PageA1
National Honor Society.
•
21 . All three will address She has been a member of
their classmates. fami ly and the Meigs Marauder marchfriends at commencement.
ing band for four years and
The honorarians are David is the trumpet section
Boyd, Ryan Stobart, Auhrie leader. She has played lead
Kopec, Page Bradbury. Sarah trumpet with the ACMS
POMEROY -· Marriage licenses have been issued in Lee, Andrea Fetty, Erica Athen s City Music School
Meigs County Prnbate Court to Randall Robert Roush, 45, Poole. Aira Little. Randall Jazz
Band
at
Ohio
anu Karen Sue Dillard. 39. both of Elkview. W.Va.; Troy Hudson , Brittany Powers, University for three years.
Alexander Shu ler, 21, and Carrie Ann Mayle, 18, both of Miranda Stewart, Nico le and performed with the
. Pomeroy; and Jeffery Edward Fowler, 24, Cheshire, and Harper.
District Honor Band at
Brandee Michelle Gilmore, 24, Middleport.
Davis, daughter of Wayne Ohio University for three
and Debbie Davis, will be years .
attending
Ohio
Valley
She i.s a regional scholar, a
College on a basketball and Hugh
O'Brien
Youth
POMEROY -A personal injury lawsuit has been filed in academic scholarship. She Leadership Ambassador, a
Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Brandy N. Bentz, will be majoring in business. member of the Daughters of
For the past four years she the American Revolution,
Racine, against Brandon R. Bowling, Racine, and others.
A foreclosure action has been filed by Farmers Bank and has played varsity volleyball, Return Jonathan Meigs
Savings Co., Pomeroy, against Michael E. Warner, Racine, basketball, and softball, win- Chapter, and the recipient of
and others, alleging default on a mortgage agreement in the ning first team All-TVC in the Ohio University valedicher sophomore. junior and torian s~:holarship. She will
amount of $11 ,297.37.
.senior years in volleyball and attend Ohio University where
basketball, and AII-TVC in she plans to major in forensic
softball in her sophomore chemistrv.
· year.
Barnes, the siliutatorian ,
POMEROY - A divorce action has been filed in Meigs
She was All TVC All- is the son of David and
County Common Pleas Court by Susan Tobin Burns, Academic in her sophomore. LotTi Barnes of Rutland .
Middleport, against Levi Ray Burn s, Jacksonville, N.c.
junior and senior years in all He has been active in
three sports, achieved TVC speech and drama, on the
Oho
Division MVP in her quiz bowl team . a member
The hours of operation for
the one-stop is Monday senior year. first team all dis- of the National Honor
through Friday from 8:00 trict in her junior and senior Society, and served on the
a.m. to 4:30 p.m.. with years, and All Oho honorable ' yearbook staff. He also
from Page A1
ex tended hours. on Thursday mention in her senior year in attended Regional Scholars
basketball.
and Buckeye Boy s State.
one stop shop for job seekers until 5:30p.m.
She
is
a
member
of
the
He will be attending
After Lavendar spoke, ·
and employers. A year ago
Pomeroy
First
Baptist
University
in
this month . Meigs County Brenda Phalin discu ssed Church, the National Honor Capita l
Columbus
..
.
acttvtttes
the
had the hi ghest · unemploy- · some .
Appalachian
Heritage
ment rate in the state at 13.5
percent unemployment rate. Festival will feature between
the winter heating bill at the
according to the Ohio 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. May 21 in
two buildings.
Department of Job and Middleport. Some of the
lannarelli
said
The
Family Services. For the past activities include wagon
Legends
Realty
Co
.
remains
from Page A1
year, Meigs County has been rides, face painting and caninterested in building apart jockeying back and forth dlemaking.
lannarelli said last month ments at the high school and
Also , the Gold Wings and the sale could be completed central building properties.
with Morgan County Jor the
highe st unemployment rate Ribs Festival will be held in July. but said Monday it and said the village will
June 4 and 5 in Pomeroy.
in the state .
may be late r in the year reserve the ri ght to reject any
· before the bui !dings are sold. bid for purchase based on the
Meanwhile, the increased intended use of the building.
especially since the field is maintenance required at the
Village officials hope' to
25 to 30 acres. To truly step propenies, such' as grass cut- convert the communit y's
back in time , Smith said ting. and the cost of heating third abandoned school
there is a possibility a team the buildin g, are creating a building. the Pearl St 1~et elefrom Page A1
of horses will be available to financial hardship on the vil - mentary building. into a new
There will be several trac- pull a plow.
lage. On Monday, council vi llage hall and jail. using
For more information , approved a $1,156 transfer of federal or state gran ts for
tors at the event which
Smith said would last hou rs contact Smith at 949 -2033.
fund s to pay the remainder of construction .

Helen King

Season opens

Physicals scheduled

Death Notice

Milton Russell Clark

Arrests reported

Marriage licenses

SURE ,IT'S FUEL

E:FFICIENT.-.iUT
I Ml6HT &amp;E A
FEW MINUTES

Civil suits

LATE.

I

Divorce

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

(usPs 213-9601

Michelle Stobart

For the record

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Reader Services

Local Briefs

Achievers

·. · Keith D. Ashley, President
: Meigs County Genealogical Society
.Pomeroy

,

Postmaster: Send address correc-

tions lo The Daily Sentinel. 111
Court Street. Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
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One Stop

This little piggy went to market
There 's something going
on at the suNrmarket that I'm
not real happy about, and I
don't mean that cute cashier
who's fooling around with
the deli manager. It's not the
fake radio that pretends to be
a real radio station, but then
breaks into every song with a
deep-voiced
professional
annou11ce'r saying ' You're
listing to Food Chain's radio.
Remember Food Chain is the
place to save on frozen fake
crab meat ' and then you hear
the store managers' squeaky
voice cut in and say, ' Buy
one pound, get one free.'
Then the music starts up
again. It's like being in the
grocery store version of
'M*A*S*H' with Radar on
the microphone.
I don't like it tlmt the Food
Chain is trying to sell fruit I
never heard of in the produce
department. If they have to
hang a sign over the 'Spikey&lt;
Martian Doodle Fruit' to
explain to us how to tell if it's
fresh and how to eat it and
how peel it, I don't want it.
Be,ide,, this is the same place
that can't get L'leir tomatoes
right - how do you think
they're going to handle the
Spikey Martian Doodle
Fruits? Let's see. the tomatoes
are so hard you could play

takes about as much time as,
oh , say, opening the bag oi'
chopped lettLJCe. Sue has a fit
when I buy it. 'Sure it costs
more,' I say, 'But it spoil s in
the bag making it easier to
Jim
throw out when I forget about
Mullen
it in the bottom of the vegetable drawer, not like that
messy head lettuce.' ·
No, what really bothers me
at the Price Whopper is that a
croquet with them but their pound box of b~eakfast cereSpikey tvfartian Doodle fruit al is twice as expensive as a
is at its succulent peak and at pound of sirloin steak.
it's perfect stage of ripeness? I
that cereal i'
wonder how on earth ttiey Considerin~
what they leed cow; before
would know?
become sirloin steaks,
They can't get ··yellow they
you have to wonder. how is
bananas, the strawberries that possible?
taste like cardboard, they
Everybody I've put that
can't find peaches that aren't question to has a qui ck
&lt;L~ hard as river rocks butthey
answer: it's the processing.
have giant cactus leaves and Yes. they have to process the
fresh tamarind seeds and che- cereal. Excuse me, but they
rimoyas. 'Oh look, honey, have to process the sirloin
they've got jicama and chipo- steak, too. II doesn't just walk
tles! The Smithers are coming to the store. It take' butchers
to dinner and you know that's and meat packers and truck
their favorite. Remember, drivers and plenty of handon't grab the ones on the top, dling to get beef to the marthe freshest ones an: probabl y ket. And it \ much more peron the bottom!' ·
islmblc than cereal.
It doesn't bother me th &lt;lt
No. it':-. not proce~~ing , it', llllr
they're selling chopped let- kid,. It\ almo't impnssihlc to
tuce in a bag at three times find a cereal on a low. kid eyethe price of head lettuce. level she! f that is not nwned
Because it saves you all that after a children's TV show or a
time chopping lettuce. Which hit kid movie. ' Hungry'' It'll

,,

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydaiJysentineJ.com

12, 200~

Disaster movie destroys the trnth
Roland Emmerich is
known for his big·budget special effects movies, including
his · 1996 · blockbuster
'Independence Day.· and his
1998 clunker, 'Godzilla.' .
Now the German producerdirector has helmed a new
disaster flick, 'The Day After
Tomorrow:· '\llhich opens at
the end of the month. It is little more than election-year
political propaganda.
·Ten-thousand years ago,
one storm changed the face of
our planet.' proclaims the
film's slickly produced trailer.
'On May 28 it will happen
again.'
Indeed. the picture opens
with the collapse of an
Antarctic ice sheet. which
causes a rriassive change. in
ocean currents. which shuts
down the Gulf Stream, which
triggers the mother of all
stom1s.
'Tornadoes
rip
Los
Angeles.' the film's Web site·
promises. ·A massive snowstorm pounds New Delhi.
Hail the size of grapefruit batters Tokyo. And in New York
City the temperature swings
from sweltering to freezing in
one day.'
This climatic Armageddon
is the result. supposedly. of
man-made global warming .
And it all could have been
avoided if political leaders
had taken the necessary measures to curb carbon dioxide
emissions.
Of course. Emmerich and
others associated with The
Day After Tomorrow' deny
that the disaster film has an
underlying political motive.
They deny that it is intended
to sway public . opinion
against George W. Bu sh -

Wednesday, May 12, 2004

take 3 million bowls of
SpongeBob Squw·ePants cereal
to match the vitwnins in this
bowl ot'Total.' As if you would
ever find a child who would
voluntatily eat something thai
healthy.
.
It's a well-known fact that
young kids will eat dirt if you
let them. and I'm just gue ssing, but children's cereal is
probably several levels less
nutritious than di11 . Face it,
when the main ingredient in
one of your three meal s a day
is marshmallows and chocolate chips. something's seriously wrong . If a~ parent
served tl1cir kids candy bars
for breakfa, t we 'd be
appalled . Call it cereal and
it's suddenly OK. What';
next'' Ben and Jerrv Flake s
with dried chocolate syrup
balb'' Some people will
stoop m nothing tn get children to buy their products .
And .that 's what really hnthers me - that I didn't think
of it li"t.
(Jim Mullen's fmest book.
. 'My Firs/ Weddin~: A P1·imer
for A4odt rll ColfJ'Ie, , · u·as
ju.11 tmhlilill'd l&gt;.r Smron &amp;
Sclw.\lel: He u/so ,·o11trilmtes
1

regularly to 1.:. 1/fertainment
~Veekl\', wlu)re he cw1 be
reach~d al jim_mullen @

eu:com)

•

Problems

Antique

juvenile cases: seven accidents: 2 incident repons: and 2.608
miles traveled by cruisers.
Swift also reported 54.180 in revenue from jail housing.

Meeting set
COLUMBUS - The Board of Directors of Ohio State
Legal services Association and Southeastern Ohio Legal
Services will meet at I0 a.m. on June 5 at OSLSA, 555 Suttles
Ave .. Columbus. Ohio.' The board provides free representation
in civil m~tters for those people who cannot afford an attorney
in Athens. Meigs. Gallia. Vinton. Ross. Pickaway, Ross, Pike.
Jackson. Fayette. Fairfield. Hocking. Knox, Licking,
Washington. Monroe. Morgan . Noble, Tuscarawas, Holmes,
Carroll. Coshocton. Harrison . Scioto, Adams. Lawrence,
Jefferson. Belmont. Muskingum. Perry and Guernsey
Counties.

Association sets banquet

..

POMEROY - Final plans have beeg made for the Pomeroy
High School Alumni Banquet. to be held May 29 at the Meigs
High School cafeteria.
.
·
Dinner. catered. by Vaughan's Supermarket of Middleprt,
will be served at 6:30p.m. and will be followed by a dance at
9 p.m , Reunion classes are 1929. 1934. 1939. 1944, 1949,
1954. 1959. and 1964.
Reservations must be made by May 25 . Tickets are available. at Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy and Francis Florist, or by
mail. to the Pomeroy Alumni Association, P.O. Box 202,
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.

Tickets' for the dinner and dance
are $15.
Scholarships wi II be offered to students who are either a
child or grandchild of PHS. The deadline for applications is
May 2 1. There are no application forms . Those applying.
should send a resume. transcript. letter of application, current
photo and information on the relationship to a Pomeroy graduate. to the alumni association address .

Plan homecoming
GUYSVILLE -Homecoming at Carthage Community
Church near Guysville will be held May 23. beginning with a
·
potluck dinner at I :30 p.m.
Randy Parsons. manager of Joy-FM radio will be the speaker. with music by Parson s. The Jarvis Family. Sue Maison.
Sharon Cremeans, Randy Johns. Erica Cremeans and Josie
Cremeans.
The church is located on Route 50 west, six miles !Tom the Cool Spot.
Pastor Billy C. Murphy invites the public to attend.

Board
from Page A1
apprised of the seriousness
of the district's financial situation earlier this year when
Buckley supported by figures from Treasurer Mark
Rhonemus
predicted a
major deficit in operating
funds for fiscal vear 20042005. He 'said ai that time
that every program was
being looked at to see where
cuts could be made while
minimizing the impact on
the students.
The reduction in force
actions are being made pursuant to articles in the
negotiated agreements with
the Meigs Local. Teachers'
Association and the Ohio
Association of Public
Employees. Local 0 I 7 .
The Board also voted to
non-renew all purchased
service contracts of personal ass istant aides at
the end of the current
schoo l year due . to the
financial co nstraints.

Other business
The Board approved a
five -year contract extension
for Buckley as superintendent effective at the end of
his \current wntract next

year.· He has been superintendent of the district for I0
years.
A li st of graduating
seniors as submitted by
Dennis Eichinger. principal. was approved. It was
noted that about 15 students have not passed all
parts of the proficiency
tests and their graduation
is contingent on those
results which are expected
sometime later thi s week.
A change from a semester
to a tri-mester grading system at the Meigs Primary
School , grades kindergarten
through second grade, was
approved for next school
year.
It was noted that .the
sewer lin'e installation
between · the
Meigs
Elementary School and the
Rutland treatment facility
has been completed and is
operationa l saving the district thousands of dollars
each month. The district
has been paying more than
$8 ,000 a month to haul the
sewage, whi le the estimated sewage · charge now
with the direct line is
expected to be about $500
a month.
Attending the meeting
were Buckley, Rhonemus,
Roger
Abbott ,
Victor
Young. Norman Humphreys
Ron Logan. and Scott
~alton. president.

H·
Everything important!

A
R

• Thursday, May 13, 2004
ro~t:l: C71r=T TV
• Noon to 6 p.m.
~LL [)f)~f)~i!
• Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
• Sponsored by the Pleasant Valley Hospital AtLxiliary

AUDIOLOGY
AI OS

4?9 R..dllaftd

Awt~llt

• AlhcD5. Otno 4~701

Phone (7 40) S94-6H3 • &amp;oo-.51-9106

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�PageA6

·OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Local Stocks

A DAY ON WALL STREE-T
May 11. 2004

ACI- 28.42
AEP- 29.03
Akzo- 34.82
Ashland Inc. - 46.35
BBT- 33.73
BLI- 12.90
Bob Evans - 30.40
BorgWarner- 79.70
Ciiy Holding - 28.84
Champion - 4.086
Charming Shops - 6.87
Col- 30.19
DuPont - 41.87
DG -17.92
Federal Mogul - .265
Gannett - 86.33
General Electric - 30.25
GKNLY- 3.93
Harley Davidson - 54.27
Kmart - 43.17
Kroger- 17.15
Ltd - 20.00
NSC - 23.62
Oak Hill Financial- 31.90
Bank One - 46.35
OVB - 34.40

NewsChannel

Peoples - 24.06
Pepsico- 53.78
Premier - 9.14
Rocky Boots - 18.85
RD Shell - 49.00
Rockwell- 32.60

Weather forecast
'
Wednesday,
May 12
Morning (7 a.m.-Noo11)
Cloudy
morning.
Temperatures will rise to 77
with .today's low of 66 occurring around 6:00am. Wind s
will be 5 to 10 MPH from the
south turning from the southwest as the morning progresses.
Afternoon (1 p.m.-6 p.m.)
Expect a humid afternoon.
There could be d few raindrops around the area.
Temperatures will hold steady
around 78 with today's high
of 80 occurring around
4:00pm. Skies will be partly
cloudy to cloudy with 5 to I0

MPH winds from the &gt;outhwest turning from the south as
the afternoon progresses.
Eve11i11g (7 p.m.-Mid11ight)
It should be a cloudy
evening. Expect a few light
rain showers. The ra in is predicted to start near midnight.
Expect accumulations of 0.02
inches. Temperatures will
drop from 78 early thi s
ev~ning to 68. Winds will. be
10 MPH from the south .
Ovemight (1 a.m.-6 a.m.)
It will continue to be
cloudy. Moderate rain is
ex pected. Expect 0.25 inches
of rain by the end of this
overnight. Temperatures will

-~J~CiAL _ I)NIV_ER_§ AL _ MEDIA SYNDICATE

linger at 68. Winds will be 10
MPH from the south.
Thursday, May 13
Momiug (7 a.m.-Noo11)
Cl o udy morning. There
may be a brief sprinkle.
Temperatures will hover at
'68. Winds will be 5 MPH
from the south.
Aftemooll (J p.m. -6 p.m.)
It should continue to be
cloudy. Some light rain showers are predicted. The. rain
shoul d reach 0.04 inches by
this afternoon. Temperatures
will remain around 70. Winds
will be 5 to I0 MPH from the
south.

NBA Playoffs, Page 82
Baseball scores and standings, Page 86

VVednesday,~ay12,2004

~~v '
\

Dow Jones
Industrials
~

10.750

....

10 250
9,750
9,250

FEB

10.019.47
Pet~

fnlmprevious: +0.29

MAY
APR
Record high: 11,722 98
Jan 14. 2000

MAR
LOw

High

9,974 05

10.038 35

~
@ii'

""-·CI.

WV"'"''

'

'

• '"'

2,000

,.;'

1,600 .

FEB

MAR

High

Low

1,931 48

1,909.50

APR

MAY

Standard &amp; 7'~'tc\;,.7~
.
v
Poor's 500

1'150
1.100

~

""

1;095.45

FEB

Pel ClllngO
fnlm previouo: +0.77

1,095.69

, 050

'
MAR

High

LOW

1,087 12
.

APR

MAY

, ,C&lt;Xl

Record high: 1.527.46
Marcn 24, 2000

···----·------·------::
AP

.

Worthington - 17.48
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the previous day's transactions, provided by Sm ith Partners at
Advest Inc. of Gallipolis.

Sears - 38.00
sse- 24.49
AT&amp;.T- 16.82
USB- 25.39
Wendy's- 37.02
Wai-Mart - 54.53

Two charged with

immigr~tion

CINCINNATI (AP)- A man and a woman
fraudulently obtained immigration documents
and charged about 170 foreign worker§ up to
$800 each for the papers, promising them
jobs that were not available, federal authorities said Tuesday.
Teasha Flores, 32, formerly of Hillsboro,
and Romey D. Saunders, 50, of Westerville,
have been charged in a 19-count indictment .
with conspiracy, fraud and inducing the illegal
entry of immigrants into the United States.
Flores was arrested last week .in Delaware ·
and was released on a $5,000 bond after an
initial appearance in federal court in
Cincinnati. Saunders appeared before a federal magistrate Tuesday and was released on his
recognizance. Trial dates are to be set later in
U.S. District Court. The charges are punishable by five to 20 years in prison upon con·
viction.
According to the indictment, . Flores and
Saunders set up a partnership early in 2002
claiming to be an employment agency spe·

cializing in the temporary job placement of
·
immigrant workers .
Flores forged a signature on a letter faxed to
the U.S. Department of Labor falsely stating
that their partnership had a contract to employ
200 foreign workers as mail sorters at a
Wilmington company. federal authorities
said. Based on that letter, the Department of
Labor authorized 200 foreign workers for
·
employment on Nov. 19, 2002.
Saunders allegedly used this authorization
to falsely apply for 167 visas to the
Immigration and Naturalization Service, now
the Bureau of Immigrations and Customs
Enforcement.
Flores and Saunders charged some or all of
the 167. workers $400 to $800 each to assi st
them in coming to the United States, where
jobs promised them were not available, investigators said.

fraud

Pharmacists around the country
are bracing for the rush of people
expecting to get one of the newest
breakthroughs in medical science
called FLUIDjoi nt.
What calcium is to your bones
FLUIDjoint is to your joints.
It's being compared to ''human
joint oil" for adults bec.ause of it's
ability to deliver powerful micronutrients to the human joints.
Just imagine a formula that will
help your body to reduce joint
discomfort, stiffness and improve
flexibility to enhance daily living
activities.
·
Scientists have identified and
condensed the 'micronutrients that
your body can use and put to work
within days.
With the special micronutrients
in FLUIDjoint the only "ett'ects"
experienced are more mobility,
comfort and improved joint hea lth .
It's called FLUIDjoint. Thi s
brand-new supplement is a huge
breakthrough for those conce rn ed
about joint funct io n, because the
clinical resu lts show th ai the
remarkable hea lth benefits are
substantial.
Not all drugstores have rece ived
deliveries .of FLUIDjo int yet. But
for those who want it first . we are
providing the phone number and
information un who has it so you
can get it ri ght now.
"FLUIDjoint goes directly to
the carti lage and helps joints move
wi th ease, helping to preserve car·
tilage and improve joint function,"
explains John L. Zenk, M.D.
·:FLUIDjoint combines mi cronutrients that work with our own
bodies immune systems to slow
the cyc le of cart ilage destruction.
leading to joint dy~function ...
"The major problem is th at our
immune fun ction decline~ as we
age . FLUIDjoint provid es the
va luable micronutncnt 'upport
needed tu help prolect our

CINCINNATI tA P)
Left-handcr Mike Matthews
was called up Tue sday by the
Cincinnati Reds. who are trying· to balance their bullpen .
Matthew s takes the roster
spot of ri ght-hander Jimmy
Haynes. who was placed on
waivers Monday so th e duh
could release him.
Matthews. 30. went 1-0
with a 2. 13 ERA in II ga mes
for Triple-A Louisville .
Matthews, who has pitched
for St. Louis. Milwaukee and
San Diego. agreed to a minor
league deal with the Reds in
Januw-y.
Phil Norton was the only
left-hamler in the bullpen
until Tuesda y. limiting manager Dave Mil ey's options.
Haynes staneu the season
in the rot ation. but was
demoteu to the bullpen last
week after he went 0-3 wi th a
9.60 ERA. ConvinceLI that
Todd Van Poppe! can take his
spot as the fifth starter, the
club decided to get rid of
Haynes, who is owed $2.5
million on the final year ot
hi s contract.

011 the Net:
http://www. usdoj.govlumo!ohs

ADVERTISEMENT FEATURE

'

joints," Dr. Zenk said.
Each chewable dose of FLUIDjoint is so good it 1astes just like a
tablespoon of a vanilla milkshake.
That makes mosl people happy
because· they can get rid of all
those huge .supplement pills they
choke down everyday.

joint stiffness, activities ·of daily
living and total WOMAC scores
THE 10 JOINT TROUBLE SPOTS
which measures O'.&lt;erall joint functl Check all that apply:
tion) beginning at the second week
CJ Neck
U Wrist
CJ Toes 0 Elbow
and conti nuing to the completion
0 Shoulder 0 Fingers 0 Hip
0 Back
0 Knee 0 Ankle
of the trial. No serious adverse
reactions were noted in any of the
THE CLINICAL RESULTS
groups ." Dr. Beck said.
Placebo
Figure I depicts the effect
"FLUIDjoint's effect was far measurements for FLUIDjoint and
superior than Glucosamine in glucosamine' sulfate in one of the
every clinically measured joint studies. In that study FLUIDjoint
.parameter. A remarkable 90% of substantially beat glucosamine in
0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6
the people who use FLUIDjoint the combined study.
show
Although
both
compounds
FLUIDjoint Outperformed Glucosamine in Every
call expect to experience 011
the
ability
to
produce
a
large
effect
Clinically
Measured Joint Parameter of the Study
improvement in joint function.
FLUIDjoint is safe and effective size in every category, FLUIDjoint
FLUIDJOINT ORAL DOSAGE
for continuous, long term use, out-performed glucosamine in
Just 2 Chewables Per Dose
every area measured in the study.
according to study results."
FLUIOjoint vanilla milkshake. chewable
With many years of science
Jolm L. Zenk, MD
tablets
are well accepted and easier than
Prin cipalln"~~· tigator
behind
FLUIDjoint,
clinical
tests
swallowing
pills. They can deliver laster and
Certified American 8ourd of lnternvf Medkine
increased absorption to your joints than
show that daily consumption of the
pills. The twice daily dosage comes In a
amazing key ingredient in FLUIDcobalt blue prescription designed bottle.
For most. FLUIDjoint provides joint is of great benefit to those who
For Complete Refereoces see Curre nt Therape!dic Research,
rapid results. A noticeable im- worry about joint function.
Vol. 63, No. 7, J u ~ 2002. Dr. lee Randolph Beck a bloiQIJISI
and former professor.of the University of Alabama Medical
provement in joint pe rfo rmance
The active ingredient in
School Is currently theChief ScientHicOfficer for the produ c·
er of the milk biologics ingredients. John L Zenk, M.D. the
can be ~ee n in less than 14 days of FLUIDjoint was awarded a United
former Chief of Medicine at St, Franc1s Hospital, Minnesota.
iaking the daily dosage .
States Patent 5,650.175, for the
is currently retained as the Chlef Med1caVScientific Officer of
the licensee of the milk biologics ingredients.
Each place i1r your body where anti-inflammatory factor method
' THESE STATEMENTS HAVE NOT BEEN EVALUATED BY THE
bone meet.s bone is a polential spol of isolation and use.
FOOD AAO DRUG AoMINISTRATION. 7HIS PRODUCT IS· NOT
NT9IEl TO ~ TFEAT, QJE rn ~ lHA".iE.
. for the grinding agony of joint pam,
"This all results in the most
Frgure 1 Source· P81en1HEALTH . LLC
- Effect Is
u1rng Hedges lind Coh&amp;n formula
advanced joint health supplement
arthritis, stiff tingers or sore knees.
-.Unt il now. many people have on the market today. It lets you
fl ocked to remedies that contain move with ease. It works sooner .
Glucosamine, Chondroitin. MSM than imagined. Your joints can
bend and tlex easier so you can do
or Collage n.
Yet, Glucosamine and C hon - all the things you love to do,'' Dr. I. Rite Aid, .CVS/pharmacy, Kmart and Wai-Mart stores are
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offering a special introduction of FLUIDjoint while. supplies last.
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E

C200~

Bills to host
Browns in twoday training
camp session

Reds top Padres

Lawmakers rally around protecting Indy 500 struggling
NASCAR's favorable tax treatment to fill 33-car field
or mnn:. which would reduce th ei r tax
deductions by ha lf on an annual basi .s. They
st ill ~.· ould recou p 1hcir invesnnent. hut it
wuuiJ lake lw icc a:- Jon!.!.
WASHLNGTON - Stuffed in a package
NASC'A R katkrs "')~they aren't see kin g ·
of proposed corporate tax breah the Senate anyl,hing special: they JUSt wa nt the ta x treatpassed Tuesday is an order to lhe Internal ment they've eil.joyeu in the past put into
Reve nue Service: Don't start t rea tin ~ law.
NASCAR like it 's sometl1ing other than l:t
"We've had lhi s. II \ worked. and why
carni val ride.
For th ree decades. the own ers of mess i[ up·r· said Hum py Wheeler. president
qf Speedway Motorsports. which operates
NASC' AR tracks have huilt new ....grand stand.s ~IX
· tracr\.s.
r.
· tn ge t an eco·· EJve ry t10L1y ·~ trymg
and added rcstrooms or conc:es~ions using
a
- -nomi c advantage tnday. whether i1 \ taxation
sevcn-v. ear depreciation schedule. an or whatever it is. There _just simply wo n't be
arrangement also enjoyed by amu se ment as mucl1 construction if we don 't have the
Park owners.
favorable depreciation ."
But given the actual life of such grandWhile lrack owners arc tllC primary benestand s. I he IRS has begun challenging ficiaries. 1Joliti ci ans arc consc ious of the !atwhether racetracks and amusement park s. est political target demographic: "NASCA R
should be treated the same. Recently. the
agency has been telling track . owners they
· Please see NASCAR. 82
should use depreciation periods of 15 ye;u·.s
BY JEFFREY McMURRAY

BY MICHAEL MAROT

Associated Press

Associated Press
INDIAN APOLI S- There are ple nt y of cars ill the track
and several dri1·ers looking for jobs. Still. the lnLlianapo li s
500 mi~ht nut have a full field for the firs t time si nce IY-!7.
Just three days bdore qualifyin g beg in s. only 2X Llril ercar combinations are li sted on the cnt n sheet. A full field
for the race Mav 30 would be .\.1.
·
"I don't k n01~ where we're ;II now." s:tid John Barne s.
one. of partners in Panther Raci ng. ·T ,·e hcaru there's 27 to
30. but if you h;t\·e anolher cn"inc k:N' '"ailahlc it would
be sl upid· io keep it in your gao7;~ge."
The last time th e ra ce slitrleJ wit h a shon field \ViiS 57
years ago. \\-hen tlll..!rc \\r~r~ 30 cars.
.
It nearly happened lihl war.'' hen t11o dri1·ers were. h1red
-! 8 hou rs bt•forc the lust of lh ree qualifying Llays. The race
started with a full field al though no cars were left out.
The problem "as

ORCHARD PARK. N.Y.
(AP) - The Buffalo Bills
will scrimmage against the
Cleveland Browns at training
camp for the fourth consecutive year this August.
The
Bills
annoUiiced
Tuesday they will host the ·
Browns for a two-day session
Aug. 6-7 at Buffalo's training
camp
si te ,
suburban
Rochester's St. John Fisher
College.
The first day wi II feature
both tea ms working ·out ,
against . each other in two
practices, foll owed by a
scrimmage the next day.
This will be the Browns·
second visit to St. John
Fisher, after the Bills traveled
to Cleveland last year. The
teams had a simil ar two-day
session at Edinboro, Pa ., in

- _j

HOW TO CONTACT FLUIDJOINT'S
NATIONAL DIRECT ORDER LINE

2001.

'I
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munt~)

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Please see Indy, Bl

Pedro, Boston tops Indians
BY JIMMY GOLEN

cekul ~led

-

&lt;

SAN DIEGO (AP) - Adam Dunn tied for the
major league lead with hi s II th •home run and
Ken Griffey · Jr. also connect ed to lead the
Cincinnati Reds over' the San Diego Padres 6-J
Tuesday night.
San Diego nati ve Aaron Harang (3- 1) allowed .
three run s :md five hit s in six innings. beating
Da vid Well s (2-J)
John Ried lin g and Todd Jones followed with
one inn ing each. and Danny Graves finished for
hi s major league- leading 14th save in 17
chances .
'Sean Burroughs was 3-for- 3 fo r San Diego
and reached base four times .
Well s pitched seve n inn ings and allowed fo ur
runs and five hits. including four for extra ba ,es.
Griffey hit a solo shot leadin g off the second .
hi s e ighth career hom er off Wells. his most off
of any pitcher.
. .
Hara ng. I :for-34 in hi s career at the pl ate
co ming in , doubled leading off the rhiru . Aft er
right fielder Brian Giles dropp ed a fly ball by
D' Angelo Jimenez. Hw·ang scored on an infie lu
single by Ba rry Ltrkin that went off Wells' .
glove.
· Burroughs' RBI infield si ngle in til e bott om
half pulled thl' Padres to 2- 1, anu Mar k Loretta 's
two-run dmoble put San Dieg o ;1heau in th e fi fth .
Dunn then hit a two.-run homer in th e sixt h fo r
a 4-~ lead following a leadoff walk to Griffe y.
restored to the c leanup slot in the order for th e
second straight ga me.
Tim Hummel added a two- run single off
Antonio Osuna 'in the eighth. runs charged to
Eddie bropesa.
Not.es: San Diego' s Ryan Kleskn made his
first start in eight games since being side lined
with back spasom anu went 1-for-'3 . ... Padres
pitchers came into th e ga me having all owed j List
26 home runs, tied with Philadel plmt fur the
fewes t in the NL. ... Riedling has not allowed an
earned run in hi s last II appearance.' and 15 of · Cincinnati Reds second baseman D'Angelo Jimenez jumps over San Diego Pad res' Ryan Klesko while
relaying to first to com plete a double play in the second inning Tuesday in San Diego. (AP )
hi s 16 this season.

Reds call up
LHP Matthews

New FLUIDjoint '" has substantially greater effect over Glucosamine for improving overall joint function*
----------~

CINCINNATI lAP)
Running back Rudi Jnhnson
Tuesday with the Cincinnati
Bengal s. who already have a
backup in place.
Johnson was a res tricted
free agent after litst season,
but the Bengals made sure he
would stay by tendering a
.one-year: $ 1.8 million offe r.
No team was willing to
match the offe,r and give the
Bengal s first· and third-round
picks as compensation.
Johnson waited until after
the Bengal s' rookie minicamp to sign the one-year
offer.
•
Top draft pick Chris Perry.
a runnin g back fro m
Michi gan·. a~nded the mini-'
camp ov~l: weekend. The
Bengal s plan to use Perry to
back up John son this season.
Johnson emerged as a start ing running back after Corey
Dillon hurt his groin earl y
last season. John son ran for
957 yard s and nine touchdowns. and a di sgruntled
Dillon was traded tn New
England last month .

1,200

~~

Reds 6, Padres 3

signed '"'a one-year cont ract

Record high: 5,048 .62
Marcn 1o, 2000

May 11 , 2004

·,t.ua

RudiJohnson
signs 1-year
contract

1,800

+31Ji
1,931.35
Petc;n-.
fnlm previous: + 1.66 .

•

2.200

.

May 11 . 2004

Nasdaq
composite

Wednesday, May 12 2004

'

-

Pharmacists brace for rush to get 'Human Joint Oil'
BY LEE STEARNS
UNIVERSAL MEDIA SYNDICATE*

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

Associated Press
BOSTON -

Pedro Martineralluweu t11o lcotd i ll the ~ighth. hut -Bn . . tnn . . cored Lhrec
in the ho11om half against .lose .limenet 10opi n1! on his 1:ight h~111d . The bases 1\Cre
21
loaded in the 'econd and he kne" he IHJUid
Orti/ anu Bill Mueller doubled wi th til o
have to start conserv ing his pitch es if he outs in the eight h to nwkt: it .1-J. and Kqpil'r
was going LO stay in Tuc sduy· nighl's game. boun ced a single up the mid·dle that Wih
Martine/ -.truck out Viclor Martine/ to fic!Jed lw Ronnie Bcll&lt;ard be hi nd scnllld
enu 1hc second - hi s 52nd pitch or the ha~e , prL~' entin g th ~ go-ahe ad run ftnm
game - ai1d then retired th e next 15 batters \Lorin!! . Brian D ~tubadl \\'th annuutH.:cJ to
before leaving to a ro using ovat ion after pinch· hit lo r Po~ey Reese. am! Sn•tt
seve n innings. H ~ ~truck ouJ a season-high Ste\\art came nn fo rcli('\'C .
II. and pinch-hitt er David Mc·Carly hi t a
McCart\ ha11eJ for Dauha,·h and sent the
two-run trip le tlutt broke an eig ht-h-inning hall t.lml'li the rirst-hase line inlo the nnner.
ri~ anJ gave the Red Sox a 5-3 \'it: Lory uver
scuri nl!. hoth ru nn er ....
the Clel'eland Ind ians.
"ll ,\·a.; ~ond. cnou~h:· B(l:-,iOn m:.macer
"When you get the strikclHih. you nor- Terry Fra1~cnna 'aid~ "That \\;J:-, exaL;h:
m:.tlly arc going tu run hi gh in pitche-.. I fi g- whai we needed . You t;tl!, iibout a totaltc;oil
LireU I wa'\ rllnning in t\1 Je e p L·ount..;.'" 1he
effort : My ne\ t mme ""' pu111n~ (bacl.;up
Red Sox ace said. "They ' tartcd Slvinging at catcher D uu~l Mir;t belli in I he outfield ..
some of those pilclles and made things a lit·
Keith Foulke pi tched the ninth for his sei'·
tie easier for me ."
Vi~.·tor Martinet. doubled in two run s in
Piease see Indians, 82
run:-, in the fir..,t inn in !:!. A ca l lu ... wa:-, de\'el -

Boston Red. Sox's Manny Ramirez s lides but is out trying to
steal second base as Cleveland Ind ians second baseman
Ron Belliard takes the throw from catcher Victor Martinez
during fourth . inning action at Fenway Park in Boston
Tuesday. (AP)

the fir&lt;t. hut 13oston tied tile score on stll&lt;&gt;
homers_ h) Gahc K;tpkr 111 the third 'and
D;t viJ Ort it in the fou rth . Martinc 1.'s homer
oil Alan Embree 11 -01 gait Ck1eland a.\-2

�. '

•
Page B2 •

The Daily Sentinel

There~s

•

Wednesday, May 12, 2004

www .mydail~sentinel.com

no place like home in NBA playoffs

BY

MARK LONG
Assoc1ated Press
MIAMI ·- Home is where
tlie wins are m the NBA play-

offs.
Just ask the Heat: They're 50 in Miami and 0-5 everywhere
dse this postsea~on. They were
awful in two losses at Indiana
to start the second round. then
returned to the comforts of
home and a Game 3 'ictory.
.Similar scenarios played out
in the Lakers-Spurs and NetsPistons conference semifinals.
:"1 don't care how many fivestar hotels you've been to.
nothmg ts hke your own bed.''
Heat forward Lamar Odom
soiid. " I don't care what rcstaul'lints you've been to. nothing's
lit-e Marna ·s home cooking.
That's what we need."
·Odom and his teammates
have wm. 17 straight game s at
home, a streak that started in
early March.
It's part of a general trend in
the NBA. where the hosts won
37 of 5 I playoff games through

Monday night. That's a .725
winning percentage. the highest for home teams 111 the playoffs since 1990. according io
EIJas Sports Bureau.
~
lnd1ana. Lo, Angeles. New
Jersey and San Antomo also
are unbeaten at home this post-.
season.
'That' s why you play 82
games in the regular seasonto determine
home-court
advantage." Pacers coach Rtck
Carlisle said. "Now there\ a
lot of pressure to win at home ...
The New Orleans Hornets
know all about it
They went 3-0 at home
against the He.tt in the first
round of the playoffs but lost
all lour game&gt; at Miami.
When a team plays at home.
Ptstons (enter Elden Campbell
said. "You're withm your datly
routme where you're comfortable. You know what you· re
going to do. you know what
you 're going to eat, you know
your wife will have lunch fur
you, and all that.
" It' s all those little things that
make it a slight advantage to

'

being on the road.'' added each team already lost once at
Campbell. a 14-year veteran home.
who has played in 86 playoff
In the Pacers-Heat series.
games.
Miami lost Games I and 2 by
Hts team won the first two an average of II .5 points games at home against the Nets and the contests weren't even
by a combined 37 points. that close.
When the series sh1fted to New
But in Miami's raucous
Jersey. though, the two-time arena. wher~ the seat&gt; are red
defending Eastern Conference and the fan' wear black. the
champions turned ~verythin g Heat won 94-87 to snap
around and won Game 3 by 18 Indiana's 11-game wmning
points.
streak .
"It was established early that
The Pacers set an NBA
it wasn "t about Xs and Os. or record by wmning each thctr
coaches. or running plays.'' first six postseason games by
Pistons center Ben Wallace double digrts. But even the
sard. "It was just about heart team wtth the league's best regand detem1ination. Everybody ular-season record couldn't
knows when they get running win in Miami.
and get that crowd involved.
Several improbable things
they 're a toug h team to beat."
made it happen:
The Spurs beat the Lakers by
- Bnan Grant grabbed a
I 0 poims in each game in San career-hi ~h 16 rebound s and
Antonio: in Los Angeles. kept lnd~ma's powerful frontShaquille O'Neal and Co. dealt coun off the boards before
the re1gning NBA champs a leaving in the closing second s
with a bloodied hp that needed
24-point drubbing Sunday.
The only conference semifi- 12 stitches.
nal where the pattern didn't
-Reserve forward Maltk
hold
was
Timberwolves- Allen had I 3 points, including
Kings. Through three games, I0 in the second quarter. He

scored in double figures just
tive time• all season. and not
since January.
- Then there 'was Dwv ane
Wade. The rookie scored l4 of
his 25 points tn the fourth quarter. including a momentumswi nging dunk over Jermaine
O'Neal. one of the league's
best shot blocker'.
Miami magic~ Home-cowl
advantage•
Maybe both.
The Heat certai nlv have no
reasonable, rationaie an,wer
for u.
"Every day. I watch the game
and try to figure out why we're
a lot better at home." guard
Rafer Alston sa rd . "But I don ·t
understand rt. For some reason.
g uys just make spectacula r
plays and just do unbelievable
things out there . We're all over
the place. We're jumping
around. we· re going for loose
balls.
"We've JUSt got to find a way
to bring that energy and that
intensity and that fire on the
,.
road.''

Wednesday, May 12, 2004

www.mydailysentlnel.com

\!tribune - Sentinel -

Home teams rule

CLASSIFIED

The Heat. Lakers and Nels have
someth1ng 111 common- they've
played poorly on the road and
ternf1c at home 111 the second
round of the playoffs. To date,
home teams have dom1nated 1n
three of the four series. leading
to the best wmmng percentage
1n the postseason since t 990.

Winning percentage for
home teams in the playoHs
·Through games of May 10

1990
t991
1992

.750
.632
.712

1993
t994

.65s

1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2()(\0
2001
2002
2003
2004

.548
.676
.694
.662

.714

~
\

~~~·
~ 1

'

""""'

-

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
~rtbune
Sentinel

ca~f;~::v... (7!~2 ro44~:~~?2

.606

.720
.577
.592

.614
.725'

Word Ads

SOURCE
Ed DeGasero • AP

5

/}ead'tire.f'

Pedro

Playoffs

Kidd leads Nets past Pistons
EAST RUTHERFORD. N J. lAP) Jason Kidd's series- long slump ended. and
the New Jersey Nets evened thtng s up wtth
the Detroit Pistons 1n yet another lopstded
game.
Kidd had 22 points. II assrs ts and I 0
rebounds for hi s seventh career postseason
triple -double . scoring nine straight thirdqitarter points when the Nets broke the
game open for a 94-79 victory 111 Game 4 of
their Eastern Conference se mrfinal Tuesday
night.
Kidd was shoot ing an abysmal 23 percent
in the first three games of the series. all of
which w~re de(ided by double-digit margins. He shot 8-for-15 in Gc~me 4 and got
plenty of support from Kenyon Marttn .
Rtchard Jefferso n . Kerry Kiules and
Lucious Harris
Martin had 16 points and 15 rebounds.
Jefferson scored 19. Kittle s added 14 and
Harris II.
The home team has won every game in
this series. which is tied 2-2 and resumes
Friday night at Dctrmt.
Detroit was a one-man show .on offense.
getting 30 points from Richard Hamilton
and no more th a n eight from anyone else.
Ben Wallace was held to 15 rebounds following his 24-re bound performance in
Game 3.

Indy
from Page 81
more expensive lor cas_h-strapped dnvers to
race because used pa1ts were not available
Thts year could be an mstant replay.
IRL officials approved midseasun changes
to the engine and aerodynamics package, to
be used for the first time in the Indianapolis
500. The cost of leasing a new engine is about
$350,000- a price that has forced out Indy
regulars such as PDM Racing and He melgarn
Racing.
· After three days of pracllce, no teams ha'e
added drivers and most appear content to wait
until after Saturday's pole qualifymg - the
first of three qualifying days- before mak ing any decrsions .
"Our primary co nsid eration is Scolt Dixon
and Darren Manning," said Mike Hull . team
managing director for Chip Ganassi Racing.
"We want them to be m thi s race and to be in
this race with the full support from om team."
_T he most ominous sign is that there were
31 driver combination~ entered on Pule Day
last year- three more than there are now.
Some of the bigger teams, such as Team
Penske, Chip Ganassi R&lt;1cing. Team Rahal
and Andretti Green Racing a lre ady have multiple drivers entered and it's uncertain if
they'd be willing to add more.

NASCAR
from Page 81

•

dads." They're white, working-class men who like
President Bush but could be
persuaded
to
vote
Democratic, particularly in
state and local races.
"Poliucians react to what's
in the news, and NASCAR
dads have dominated a lot of
the political covera1le· rightly
or wrongly," satd Larry
Sabato, a Universtty of
Virginia political scienttst.
Herb Branham. communi·
cations
manuger
with
NASCAR's Ne~tel Cup
series, concedes that could be
one reason for the widespread congressional support
behind the measure.
"Obviously
whenever

Lakers 98, Spurs 90
LOS ANGELES (AP) - After spending
mo st of the last two days in a Colorado
courtroom, Kobe Bryant scored 15 of his 42
points in the fourth quarter.
Shaqu11le O'Neal added 28 points and 14
rebounds for the Lakers, who won by
outscoring the Spurs 55-37 after halftime.
Game 5 in the best-of-seven series. now
tied 2-2. will be Thursday night in San
Antonio. and Game 6 is Saturday night at
Staples Center.
The Spurs extended thetr winnmg streak
to 17 games by winning the first two of this
series at hom e before the Lakers did the
same thing - · exac tl y what happe ned when
the team s met in the conference semifinals
last year
The Spurs closed that series by winntng
the last two games.
Bryant pleaded not guilty to his sexual
assault charge in Eagle. Colo .. on Tuesday
afternoon. and arrived tn plenty of time tor
the game. It was the fourth ttme he played a
game following a day in court, including
once in the Lakers' ftrst-round series
against Houston.
Bryant starred and his team won every
time

M1chael Andretti has eight cars at the track ,
but he already has four drivers Dan
Wheldon , Tony Kanaan , Bryan He rta and
Dario Franchini - trymg to qualify.
Ganassi's team. which ran four cars in
2001. has four cars available but has nor yet
dectded whether to give IRLchampion Dixon
and rookie Manning another teammate.
One helpful owner might be A.J. Foyt. He 's
entered son Larry and grandson A.J. IV, and
has typically added drivers dunng the second
week or qualiftealions.
But the two biggest issues, as usual , will be
money and personnel.
''It costs you money and you've got to deal
wtth it and evcrythmg e lse that goes with it like people," Barnes said.
Barne s already has two drivers, Tomas
Scheckter and rooki e Mark Taylor.
So far, he said, nobody from the IRL has
asked him to add a car.
Just geuin g to 33. however. will not g uarantee a full l}cld. Acctdents or injunes could
create additional problems. but Hull believes
that if the IRL asks ow ners to he lp, they'll
respond.
" I think everybody will pull together in the
IRL." Hull said . "I think any team that 's here
in the paddocks that is asked with financial
sur port will think about it.' '
Barnes would be among those listening
" It' s important to me to have 33 cars start."
he said. ''I'm an Indianapoli s re sident, and I
know what it means to this community."

these types of demographic ty and safety of these facililabels do crop up, they do ti es - large and small - in
seem to take o n a ltfe of their reliance on thrs understandown," Branham said
ing of the tax law," Santorum
There are 60 co-sponsors in said. " It is only fair to prothe House - some from vir- ;ide certainty for the future
tually every Southern state. to al low for continued
The local political motrvation gro;&gt;&lt;th."
can be found in nearly ~very
Keith
Ashdown
of
statement lawmakers have Ta~payers
for Common
Sense says he isn't surprised
released to tout it.
" All the request says ts the NASCAR provision is
treat us like you've always encountering little resistance
treated us," Rep . Robin in Congress. though he conlends it should.
Hu,yes. R-N.C.
"It's definitely something
Sen. Elizabeth Dole. RN.C .. estimates NASCAR's at face value you really don't
annual impact on North want to oppose," Ashdown
Caroltna at $1.5 billion each said. '"They vqted against
year Sen. Rick Santurum. R- NASCAR' doe,n't sound
Pa., also cites the numerous good f(Jr anybody running in
motorsport&gt; facilities in hts middle America. It's kind of
state.
like opposing subsidies to the
"In the last decude alone. Indy spccdwuv and living in
more than a billion dollars lndmnapolis. You would be
has been invested around the seen as a vile outcast."'
country to improve the quuli-

'

•

from Page 81
enth save and 21st in a row.
Indtans starter C.C. Sabathia allowed
two runs. six hits and three walk s in seven
innings but he whs let down by the Indians
bullpen. Cleveland reliever s are 5-12 wtth
four saves in 13 chances and an ERA near
7.00.
''We're lookin g to see what the other
options are. In the meantrme we've got to
use the guys that we have." manager Eric
Wedge said
" We 're trying to pitch around Mueller.
We don't want to ~;ive hun anything to hit.
We don't want to throw the ball over the
plate and we throw the ball over the plate.
I mean , that can't happen . Thts is the big
leagues - (it) ca n't happen. "
What turned out to be another good outing for Martine z didn ' t start that way.
After striking out Matt Lawton to lead off
the game. he gave up three consecutive
hits. including Victor Martinez 's two-run
double: it was th~ second straight outing
that Martinez allowed the Indians to score
twic~ in the first inmng.
He was still laborin g in th e seco nd when
trainer Chris Correnti came out to the
mound to cut off a callus on hts nght
hand. That may have done the tnck.
Martine z retired his last 16 batters but
needed 115 pitches to get throu g h seven
inning s. After he made the last putout of
the seventh 011 a grounder to the right side.
he walked off the field to a standing ovation and threw the ball to a kid behind the

dugout. ·
Ortiz put his arm around the pitcher and·
slapped hts hand. and Marttnez received
more of the same from the dugout It was
hi s 94th game with at least 10 strikeout s.
thtrd-mo st among acme pitchers and fifth
overall: his ne xt w1ll be hts 68th with
Bo ston . which would tie him 1\ ith Roger
Clemens for most in team hi story.
Embree re!rcvcd hun to sta rt the eighth
and got the first two batters but g.n e up a
two-out homer to V1ctor Martinez. Since
moving 1nto th e cleanup spot last week.Martinez ha s 13 RBis 111 n1nc ~ames.
Notes : After the game. the Red Sox
optioned RHP Byung-Hyun Kim to Tripl e·
A Pawtu cke t. ... Martinez struc k out
Lawton tn ' the second inning for his
!,SOOth st1ike o ut with Boston He is second on the team's list behind · Clemens
(2.590) .... The lndrans have scored two runs in the first inning in each of th e six
games against Boston~ thi S s,eason .... OF
Jod y Gerut stngled in the first mnin~ to
exte nd hi s hming streak to a c·areer-high
14 games . RHP Bobby Howry was se nt
to the Indian &lt; Triple-A te.1111 in Buffalo
after a sttnt in ex tended spnng tratning. ·
He is rehabbing from right e lbow surgery .
in 20o:1 ... RHP Jeff D'Amico returned to
Cleveland to have his lower back exa mmed. He lasted just 2 2-3 inntng s Monday
and ha s been plagued by back problems
all seaso n . ... Boston OF Manny Ramirez
ce lebrat ed his return to the R ed Sox hy
carrying an American flag out wtth htm
when he took the f1eld 1n left to start the
game. Ramirez offkially became a U.S.
citizen during a ceremony Monday in
Mrami.

New Insertion
Date is

May 27,2004

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

If your child is a . , 1 '
"Star Athlete" . .'
\
/
.
2 onbo~
1n your eyes, ~ s1 Q.
include them in :;.......-~A ..
this section!!
· · vv'

..=

A

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

*
Ciolf
* Gymnastics

Fill out the forn below and dro·p off or mail
(along with your payment and photo) to:
The Daily Sentinel ..AII·Stars", 111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769
'

Make Cl1ecks out to: The Daily Sentinel
-------~--T- -- ---~----- - ~

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

'I.

Team Name
PhoneNumber _ _ _ _ _ _~---------

~

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

___ ___.....
,..__,.

----,-~--···--·-.,..--,.,.,

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

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" I It\ H I "
PERsoNALS

1~97.a414

Fill

ina-4~Love.com

M'NOUNC.T_\ffNTS

C-1 Beer Carry Out perm1t
for sale, Chester Townsh1p,
Me1gs County send leners
of mterest to The Daily
Sentmel PO Sox 729-20
Pomeroy. Oh10 45769

r

r.'~t~lO-----...,

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Flllpina-4-Love
Find your Philippine Lady
for love

HELP WA."''lD

•ANEW CLIN1CAL
PEELS!"
Wan! to look younger AND
earn Money? Lefs talk the
NEW AVON call
Manlyn (304)882·2645,
Joyce (3041675·6919.
ARnf {304)882·3630
_ _ _ _ _ _ __
6-montlls
part-t1me
Chauffeur valid dnvers
license Apply at 87 Spruce
Street w1th Mr Hubbard 810am

Addresses wanted 1mmed1·
atelyl No expenence neces4 tree t&gt;eaul1tul k1ttens. litter sary Work at home Call toll
tra1ned. Call (740)949-2019 (405)447·6397
CB Tower to giveaway Call AVON I AU Areasl To Buy or
Sell Sh1rley Spears. 304(740)256-6070 01515857
675-1429

t

BURGER KING
MANAGEMENT

r

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2
llu ..neaa Day• Prior To
P.ubllc.tlon
Sunday Dlaplay: 1:00
Thuraday for Sunday•

• Att ada must be prepaid•

• Sgrt Yo~o~r Ads With A Keyword • ln&lt;:lude Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

POLICES: Ohio Valley Publi1hlng ,...-v• the right to .c:lb., Nject, or cancel anr M 11t any time. Errors maa~t M ~ on ttw fl,_ day o1
1
Trtbu.....s.ndne+--Regl.wr will be retpOMHM tor no ~ thlln tM co.~ or the~ occupied by 1M tn'Of a.w~ ontr tn. flrtt 1nMrtion. We eMil not be 1'-bl•
any ktP or Pl*lM lhlt .-ulb from U.. ~on or omiHion elf ., ~""*"- ton.c:Uon will t. m. . In tM flm evale.tH. .ctltion. • Box numbw
art •"'• confidential . • eurr.nl,.... C8fd •ppl.... • All real •U.Ie ~ .,.. aubted to tM fedwal Fair Houan1g Act of 1168. • This ,..,.,_,_.
accept~~ only hlllp wanted ada mMtlng EOE atllndards. We will not lknowJngiy accept any actvtntaing In vloa.tion of tM law

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

110
1
HFJ.PWwn:o I

lwright@!lc.net

Make so~ * se ll mg Avon
L1m1ted
t1me
ONLY
(740}446·3358 F1rst 5 to call
rece1ves a g1ft
Med1 Home Health Agency.
Inc seeking a full-11me and
PAN AN s. and a PRN
Occupational Therap1s1 for
the Gallipolis. Oh10 area
Must be licensed both m
Oh10 al)d West V1rg1n1a We
offer a competitive salary
t&gt;eneflt package for fuU-hme
and 401 K E 0 E Please
send resume to 352 Second
Ave Gall1polis OH 45631
Attn· 01ana Harless Climcal
Manager
Need a JOb?
We are h1nng1
You could earn up
10 S8/hour plus bonuses
We also offer pa1d
traimng, holidays
and vacat1ons
Full or part t1me
ShiftS available
Call today
t-877-463-6247 ext 2455
WWW 1nfOCISIOO COm
NeEd someone to do weedeat1ng around a place of resIdence 1n GallipoliS Some
flat, some h1lly areas. Will
pay by the hour or by the ;oo
Must have your own equ1pment Call (740)446-2058

IIDD llwaN-Colorado
OPPORnJNmES.
1D lost last summer 1n
Gallipolis Call Aomana at
We seek caree1 onented
(740)645-0906
md1v1duals who w1il strive to
Lost Pekmgese dog black achieve ''The Best' m cusshave answers to name tomer satisfaction and team
Teddie had wh1te bandana worlc. If you have a des1re to
succeed with a goal dnven .
on neck (740)245-5945.
team onented and growmg
company. we offer Health. Now Hmng Quality people.
Y•Rn SAJ.F
Dental and Ltle Insurance
Apply at Burger K1ng
401 K Program. Prescnpt1on
65 Upper R1ver Road,
Card Bonus Program, Pa1d
Gallipolis
VacatJons and Advancement
YARilSALEfrom w1th1n Apply 1n person Overbrook AehabJflta!IOn
GALLII'OUS
at the Burger K1ng Center w111 soon be haVIng
STNA classes II you world
1st t1me th iS year 1206 Restaurant located at Ohio like td partiCipate m the
A1ver
Plaza
or
ma11
resume
Orchard H1ll Ad At 7 South
classes. please come mand
3 m1les Watch tor s1gns to Bu rger King 65 Upper fill out an applicatiOn at 333
A1ver
Ad
,
Gallipolis,
Oh10
Name brand clothes. L1!11e
Page Street. Middleport
T1ke toys . lots ot n1ce 1tems 45631
EOE
Friday 14-Saturday 15 9·? Company seekmg Semi
Tractor Trailer Dnvers for ParamedicS &amp; EMT's
Everyth ing
1magmable local delivery COL, good needed Apply at 1354
HUGE SALE Friday May 14 dnlllng record, and e)(pefl· Jackson P1ke. Galhpol1s
&amp; Satufday May 15 Ram or encQ
requ1red
Call Pos1hon Open at Darst Adult
Sh1ne
- - - - - - - '-17_40...:)_88_2_·7_7_74_ _ _ _ Group Home(740)992·5023
Moonlight Sate. 8 ooam· Dispatchers needed Pnnt Shop part time 20 +
' a·oopm
Fnday
and Experience preferred but not per week moving into full
Saturday, 99 Main Street, requ1red Call Monda~- time Musl be dependable
Crown City. Village Antique Fricla~ 8-4, 74()..446-7930 or and have gOOd PC abilities
Love. Seat and Stack apply at 1354 Jackson Pike and knowledge of graphics,
Bookcase and
more
(304)675-3952
(740)256-6588
Orlvers/0/0P's, Immediately
ng paop • oca
hiring! Home weekends Top ho want to eam mane
Washer/dryer, toys, clothes, pay. Must be 23+ w/clasa A hlle los 1ng weight. show
shoes, stools, red-wagon. COL, 2 yre OTA experlenc~ ng
others
now
leather jacket, act Thurs- wie mo llatbed, clean MVR , Informational,
OVO/C
Fn.-Sat 1914 St At . 141 Las 800·626·3560 extension vallable upon request 740
GallipoliS.
19
41 ·1 984.
!j
- - - - - - - - ==='------'
YARD SALE·
HEY DRIVERS Ill
Therapl•t· Respintory
1
- - PoMEROYn.1IDDLE • Here Is a great opportunity
Therapy
to come grow with us Full-time pos1t10n Must be
2 tam1ly yard sale Vary good Kuntzman Trucking, an eo Ohio licensed RATtCRT.
selection of new and used year old, RegionalTruckload Must be able to perform all
Items. May 13,1 4, 15
Carrier with terminals In aapects of Reapiratory Care
- - - - - - - : - : Alliance and Columbus Ohio Incl uding EKO's and ABO's .
May 14, 15, camper, school has opened a new terminal Aural healthcare facility,
bua. Home Interior, furniture, In Piketon. Ohio. Only hard competitive wagu, good
weld eaters, clothes, etc .. 2 working, experienced drlv· benefits. flexible schedul ing.
1/4 mile of1 At. 7 onto 143, ere With a clean MVA and a Contact. Doctors Hoepltal
corner 143 and Bailey Run minimum of two years &amp;!llpe· N e I s o n v I I l e ,
Ad
rtence need apply
Cardiopulmonary Direcior,
- - - - - - - - We ha11e opening• for :
11il50 Mount Sa~nt Mary
·RACO VA.RO SALE AT
15 Company Drivers
Drive, Nelsonville, OH
STAR MILL PARK, Racine
15 Owner Qperatora
45764, (740}753·1931, ext
May 11, 12, from 9 to 4pm
For Info call Ray
6262. EOE
ancl May 13 from 9 to 2pm
1-SBe-436-1013
-------All proceeds go to scholar·
ohlp lund. Clo1hlng, shoes. HVAC Technician must be Youth Fundralllng
Puraal!l, curtams, comtorter certified and at least 1 ~ear help daycares. summer
sets, linens, pans clothing, 8)(p. Call (740)446·, 637 or leagues,
schools, FJTA"s,
&amp;
nice toys, dishes. glassware, send resume to PI ants
.
II
coaches
ra1se
money for
II
A
G
S
baby Items, hlnh chair. car on 300 4th ve a 1po s,
•
local area Av/46,000 yr.
seat, books, sweepers, TV's, Oh. 45631 .
813-779-4542
holiday decorations, rugs.
Learn to Drive
pillows. cha1rs, mlcrowa11es.
Waste Management, Inc 1s
furniture &amp; lots of misc . On
Tractor-Trailers
the 1ead1ng provider In tne
May 13 all clothing $t 00 a 'Wetrlllln MenandWomen solid waste management
Time Classes
bag, and m1sc. 1tems one- 'Full Md-Part
Industry We are currently
'Job PJacemen!
half price Thanks for your
·coL Tralnillg
looking lor a responsible
support
"Financi('IQ Available
mot1vated indiVIduAl 10
WANTED
AS SEEN ON TV
assume the responsibilities
ro BUY
ALLIANCE
ol
Tractor-Tra1ter Tra1mng
Centers. Wytheville, VA
Scaiehouse Attendant
Gallia County Landfill
Absolute Top Dollar US.
1 _ 80 0- 334 ~ 1203
Silver.
Gold Co1nS. wwwalllllllCetractortrallercom
Bidwell. OH 45614
Prootsets, D1amonds, Gold
Rings . US. Currency,- LPTA wanter:l lor home Qualified candidates ffiU.il
M.T.S Com Shop, 151 health phys1cal therapy serv- possess competency w1th
Second Avenue. GallipoliS, ICes Motivated. self dlr9Cted computer operat1on mclud·
1nd1vidua1 will H~e flexible 1ng M1crosoft Office spec1fi·
740·446-2842
sc.heduling, good lndepend· cally M1crosoft Word and
ence. and compensatiOn E11cel Must also posses
Opportumties available m pleasant telephone skills
Athens, Meigs , J$\Ckson . and ab1flty to mult1task
Vinton &amp; Gallia count ies
Waste Ma nagemenl , Inc
Call 888-464-1126

r

, ,...'

Child's Name
*Tumbling
Child of: Parent's Name
Te&lt;;~m Name
*Soccer
Message
*Karate
&amp; More!!
~
This special section will run on
Thursday, May 27th in The Daily Sentinel.
Hurry, Deadline for entries is May 20, 2004!

--- ----

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

{ti

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
lf1'·
Borders $3.00/per ad
Grophlcs soc for small
SI .00 for large

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p . m .
Monday-Friday for In.ertlon
In Next: Day'• Paper
5~:::~:=~ In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
F
For Sundaya Paper

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

Eltas Sports Bu reau

l\.egttjter

(7!~2 ro992;!~ ~6 (304) 675-1333

' '

~BA

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

r M~~~

1978 Schultz 14x65 Mobile
Home 2Br, 2 decks AC
very good cond1bon. must
sell. ss ooo ceo (3041675·
1847
1982 Double w1de Excellent
starter home Very good
cond1110n Well taken care
of and clean 3 bedroom. all
walk-In closets, 2 baths with
garden tub 10 master sF(
bath Includes underp1nnmg
All electric w1th centraLAJC
Must be moved. $12,000
Call (740)245-0144

www

, _,._
~

t986 14x70 3 bedroom
Mobile Home 2 bath on a
rented lot S?.OOO·F1rm
phone (304}675-1451
1990 14X80 3br 2ba Heal
pump w/AC Cathedral cell·
mgs &amp; deck S14800
(3041882·3682
\

1!:&gt;2004 by NEA, Inc_

comics.com

2 Bedroom Trailer tor sale

"''"'o:------.....,ll':l'~~~=--~w~AN1--m--.., 1!lr"1o,........;.~Ho~-..-~-...., ;:for an1:!po
after
16 ;~~~;~~
HEt...P WANliD
To Do
FOR s~
pm
-

l

,
.
oilers a competlt1ve comoensa!IOn and benefits
package 1ncludmg 401K
Health and L1te Insurance,
Shor1 Term and Long Term
D1sab111ty among several
other benef1ts
Resumes w1l1 be accepted
until 5/19/2004 with a tenta·
t1VB start date of 6/14/2004
Interested par11es may send
a resume to (please do not
contact s1te directly)
Wasle Management, tne.
3415 Twp Ad #447
GLENFORD. OH 43739
Job Code· SA0244
EOE AA M/FIO

1

.

.
Georges Portable Sawmill,
don't haul your logs to the
m111 JUSt call304~675-t957

I am an e~tpenence Ch1ld
Care pro111der, pr0111d1ng
child care 1n my home I am
a non-smoker and have a
lenced-1n yard Very reasonable rates $10 per day, per
child, $15 on weekends.
Available any hours 10
f'J'IIIes south of Gallipolis. Call
740-256-1673 or 740-2569350 leave message
W1ll care for elderly person
1n my home Experienced
w1th most 1ltnesses, home
cooked meals 28-yrs expenence, good _references.
(740)667-()499.

2000 Oakwood Home 16x64
3br 2ba, all electric, central
air. Call anyt1me (304)675·
7-157

All

nt~~l

utate lldvertlalng

ttl/a newspaper Ia
aubj.c:tto the- Federal
Fair Houa1ng Act of 1968
which makes It illegal to
in

.ctvertlae "any
preference, llmltiiiJon or
diaerlminetlon based on

race, color, religion, Hi
lemiUel status or national
origin, or eny Intention to
make any suet!
P'•rence, tlmlt.tton or
dhJOrfmlnetlon."
This newap~~per will not
knowingly accept
advsrtl..,..nte for reel
•et.te which Ia In
violation of the lllw. Our

Will Pressure Wash house's,
mobile homes metal budd·
mgs. and gutters Call
reed«e .,. llereby
(740)446-0151 ask lor Ron
lnformtd ttlat 111
Waste M~nagement. Inc. is or leave message
dw.Uing• advertiHd In
the leading provider m the
this MWIIp.lper ,,.
solid waste management Wil l watch Elderly In my
IVIIlebfl On In equal
Industry We are currently home or yours (304)675·
opportunity b••••·
lookmg for a responsible 4660
mot1vated Individual to
11\ \\ 41\1
assume the respons1bll1tles ::ii~;;;~~;;;;;;~ - - - - - - - ol
~~
Nice 3 bedroom. 1 bath.
0PPoRl'UNI1Y
concrete drivewa~. carport,
Landfill Slto Mon1111or
s•s.ooo. East Bethel
Gall1a County Landllll
Church Ad (740)441-9108
Bidwell, OH 45614
ABSOLUTE OOLOMINEl
eo vending Michl nell
IXCtlltnt IOCIIIDnt
Ouahhed candidates m..u.JJ.
Spring Valley area 4-5 bedoil lor S10,fi5
possess prior experience In
rooms, 2-112 baths. 2-car
80Q.23'-tD82
employee supervision and
garage, Iota of updates 439
tamli1ar1ty with heavy equip· r"""'..,;;-'m!l't'll'~01
c;---, Jerry Slrool $125,000
ment operat1on and exparl- HIO VALLEY PUBLISH (740)448-2624.
ence In either solid wutt INO co recommends tha
landfill or earthmoving con- ou do buslnen with piO
structlon Add itional pre· 18 you know, and NOT 1
www.orvb.com
!erred qualifications would end money through th
Hom• Llttlngt ,
Include computer literacy, aUuntil you have lnvelfl
Lilt your home by c.lllng
OSHA program knowledge atect the otferln
(740)448·3820
and exposure to heavy p::~~;~;~l
eqt.Jipment maintenance.
VIew photoallnlo online
Waste Management, Inc.
Bedroom, 2 112 Bath,
offers a competitive com.22
acres, 3 Car Garage
pensatlon 8nd benefit pack~
TURNED DOWN OH
n
SR
554. Codo 32104
age Including 401 K, Health SOCIAL SECURITY /881?
r
coll(7401367·7619
and Life Insurance, Short No Fee Unlttl We Win I
Term and Long 'Term
1-1186·582·3345
Bedroom, 1 112 Bath,
Disability among several
I ~ I \I I .., I \ I I
acres, 3 Bay Shed
1.77
olher benefllo
lao tor eale: Camp•r.
6
HoMES
acant Lot in Porter.
Resumes will be accepted 1
FOR SALE
1 33004 or call
until 5/1912004 PoSition· Is Lw----iiiiiO._.I 740)446·6626
currently available.
3 bedroom, 2-bath, 2-car
Badroom, 2 Bath, River
Interested part1es may send garage, city schools &amp; water. lew/ Access, Pnvate
CIA,
electriC
furnace
Price
a resume to (please do not
oat Dock in Gallipolis 1
reduced.(3041926·6661 .
contact s1te d~rectly) :
ere lot. Code 80303 or
38r,
18ath,
N1ce
II (740)446·0531.
Waste Management, Inc.
Neighborhood, appliances
3415 Twp. Ad 41447
Included Corner lot, behmd eautlful 4 Bedroom, 3
GLENFORD, OH 43739
Armor~.
Pt Pleasant.
r anached, 2 car unatJob Code· SM0244
Asking $69,000 (3041593· ached garage w1th
3542
arage apartment m
EOE AA M/F/ 1110
alllpohs COde ,.2204 or
Brick Ranch in a nice well all t740)446·1082
established neighborhood,
3br. 1 5 B, 2car garage. Bedroom, 3 Bath, 10
extra garage 1n back. Must cres 1n B1dwell Codtl
see to appreciate (740)446· 2HM or call (740)368·
3081
39.
Gallipolis CarHr College Pt Pteasar)t/Sandhill ROad
(Careers Close To Home) 3Br 1Ba 1600/SQfl Ranch on
Bedroom, 2 Bath. 2 Car
Call Todayl 740-446-4367, .6 acre level lot. Oak floors, arage. 1 9 acres on SA
1·800·214·0452
1st house on Right past 141. Codl33104 or call
www gt~l ltpOii searun:ol lege com
Marshall
University 740)446-7633.
Accred•led Mt~ m oe r Accradlltng $103,000
t7•0)9•9·1131
COIJntll for lndependenl Col ~e1 aHer 5.00PM
and ScOOOie 127 48

rib

pi

r

r.~o-·FOR·"·OUSES·RENT--·1

1..

2000, 28,.48 Ooublew1de. 3
bedrooms, great cond1110n,
stove. lng a1r. clean
$17,500 (304)642-9 142 or
(304)335·0528
2001 Skyline Double Wide,
28x52, 3Br, 2 Baths,
Excellent Condition, Must
Move (304)523-4041

0% Down Payment Poss1ble
w/good cred1t approximately 5625 a month tor th1s
beautifully restored 19tn
century home 3 Dedroom 2
bath, central a1r 2 1/2 car
garage. studiO apartment
perenn1al garden to many
amenitieS to 11st. must see,
call (7401992-5863

APARI'\IE~'TS

FOR RE:\'T

Grac1ous l!v1ng 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Vtllage
Manor and R1vers1de
Apartments 1n M1doleport
From $295·S444 Call 740992-5064 Equal Housmg
Oppor1un1t1es

New 2 bedroom apartment
S400 00/mo plus deposn no
pets (740)992-4119 ask tor
, m1le from Holzer Hosp1tal, Marge
3 bedroom home. $475+
depos1t C.:all {740)446·3838 N1ce 1 bedroom- complete
kitchen AJC Reference and
after 6 OOpm
depoSit No pets (740)446·
3 bedroom house tn country 0139
no ins1de pets references
required, $400 00 a month N1ce 2 bedroom apar1ment
.$400 00 depos1t (740)742· tor rem Middleport Oh
S3251mo . S300 depOSit ,
2210
(740)596-2198 or 740-591·
3 bedroom hOuse m 0649
Pomeroy. $400 a mo . $400 - - - - - - - depoSit no pets (740)949- N1ce two oedroom apart7004
ments Large rooms Fully
eqUiped k1tchen Central
Small Farm-house 3 bed· heat1ng / cool 1ng
room. 17 acres perfect tor a Washerfdryer
hookup
couple of horses I s650• (304)882-2523
deposit (740)245-9020
MOBFOIUR ~~IDi
Tara
TownhOuse
JU!.I'oll
0
Apartments Very Spac1ous
2 Bedrooms 2 Ftoors CA 1
2
bedroom
tra1ler 1!2 Bath. Newly Carpeted
$300/month, $300 depos1t Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
no pets. (740)992-7546 call Pat10 Start $385/Mo No
after 5pm or leave message Pets. lease Plus Secunty
DepoSit ReqUired Days
2 bedroom tra11or 1n Rutland 740-446-3481 , Evenmgs
No Pets Call (740)742-2661 740-367-0502
3 bedroom mob1le home in Tw1n R1vers Tower IS acceptMiddleport 5375 00, plus lf'IQ e.ppllca!IQns for wa1tong
depos1t No 1ns1de pets list for Hud-subs1zed. 1· br.
(7401992-3194
apartment call 675 -6679

i

I

2003 Oakwood 16X80 3
bedroom . 2 bath all appli- 3 bedroom, 2 bath pnvate ~E:!:HO~-~:-----,
ances, garden tub, central
month
1No1,c. •ver2y
".'cned(740)446-7322
a3ddebded'roooomm. --Lr
___FOR
iliSO.PRE.'\T
,iC
iiiEiiit-,..J
air, like new {740)593·8828 $425
98, 14x60 2 bedroom new
carpet, great cond . stove,
a1r. $9,500 080 (304)6429142 OR (304)335·0528
Before you buy!
Does your dealer?
Move h1s homes · Do Site
preparation · build foundations · Roll and set houses·
Do heating and Bit · Have 1n·
house serv1ce people ·
Install septic system&amp; · Do
electrical/plumbing · Do
driveways. 11 the answer to
an~ of thesa questions IS no.
or If they ·sub-contract" You
better see the oldest most
experienced dealer In
Altlens County, Since 1967.
Coles Mobile Homea 15266
US 50 East Athena, Ohio
45701 "Where you get your
money's worth"
::---,-----,-----:-::For sale or rent nice mobile
names In Shade area.
(740)992·21 B7

mob1le homes tor rent
mcludes water, sewer &amp;
trash , no pets. start1ng at
$300 per month 1n Shade
area. depos1t reQu1red .
(740)992·2167
Nice 2 bedroom mobile
home No pets Call

Retail or Off 1ce Space,
Pnme Downtown Ga11 1po11s
locatiOn. call {740)379·951 1
or (740)379·2204 lor more
1nfo

Riveraite• ror rent, family·
type. 3 campsites, full
hookup, nor river. 3 dock·
Ct7::14~0)~4~46~·200;.;,;""3____,_., ollee, no hookup. Coli
APARTM!NrS
(740)992-5956
_ , FOR RFNr

r

1 and 2 bedroom apartHOLJSEHOW
ments. furn ished and unfurGoons
nished, security deposit
required, no pets. 740-992· Good Used Appliances.
2218
Recondltlonea
anct
Guaranteed
Washers,
1
bedroom
apt
Washer/dryer hookup, $290 Dryers. Flanges, and
rent depoalt required. No Refrigerators. Some start at
$95 Skaggs Appliancss. 78
pets 740-441-t184
Vine St , (740)446-7398
1 bedroom upsta1rs apartment, 5275 + utilities. MollOhan Carpet 202 Clark
deposit required, for appllca· Chapel Road, Porter Ohio
lion call (740)379·951 1 or (740)446·7444 1·677·130·
9162 Free Estimates, Easy
(7401379·2204
financing. 90 da~s same as
1 bedroom. stove and refrlg· cash. Visa! Master Card
erator. furnished, utilities
3 unit bullctlng, 2 businesses Included. S400 month plus Drive· a· little ssve alot.
&amp; 1 apartment for sale. depolll (7401245-5859
Oak dlmng room table with 6
Located 1n downtown
Windsor cha1rs French
Middleport
Excellent 1 Br apartment lor rent Proless 1onal oesk Call
Income potential. Please S350 month all utilities (740)367-0002
call 740 354-4084
included $150 security - - - - - - - deposit close to downtown Thompsons Appt1ance &amp;
LoTs&amp;
Pt P leasant ~304)67S-365"4 Repalr-675-7355 For sale.
ACREAGE
ra-condltloned automat1c
2 bedroom. just past Holzer washers &amp; dryers. relngara16x80 sites available $115 $425 month Call '740)44 1· tors . gss and electric
per month Includes water, 1184
ranges, a1r cond itiOners. and
sewer &amp; trash . In Shade 2 bedroom, near Holzer, wringer washers Will do
area, (740)992·2167
CI A, WID hOokup CIUI&amp;t repa1rs on major brands m
shop or at your nome
FOR SALE 3 Gra11e lots in location, .available 5/1104.
$429
plus
utilities
(740)446Meigs Memory Gardens on 2957.
Used furniture Store.
the
Veteran's
s1de.
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
l30 Bul.vllle Pike,
(740)992·2636
MENTS AT BUDGET Manresses,
dressers
Mercerville Lots for sale PRICES AT JACKSON couches. rechr'lers, much
shared enHance otf St At ESTATES, 52 Westwood more Grave Monuments.
218. 3-13 acres Phone Onve from $344 to $ 442 . (740)446-4782 Gall1pohs
t740)25&amp;-1625
Walk to shop &amp; mo111es Call OH, HRS 10·4 M-F
Equal
Private lot lor newer Mob1le 740·446·2568
' _
ANTIQlJF~"'
Home. C1ty limitS, $120 _H_ou_s_m,;;g_Oc.p_po_r_1u_n;-ly_
rhonth
plus
Secunty CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
t304)675·1996 or (740)388· ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Buy or sell R1venne
6,26
Townhouse apartments. Antiques. 1124 East Ma1n
and/or small houses FOR on SA 124 E Pomeroy. 74PIH" \I"
11AENT Call (740)441·t111 992-2526 F1uss Moore
~~=~=:::::::, for application &amp; 1nlormation owner
iO
Hous~
Furnished 1 bedroom u1,h·
MlscELLANEOliS
--,
FOR RENT
t1es pa1d. 2 m1ies to HoSPital.
~::ROIANDISE
call after 6pm (304)674·
17 1/2 HP Murray Lawn
4 rooms &amp; bath. 52 Olive St 0031
mower, excellent cond1hon.
No pels. $300 month, S300 --------::--:
Modern , Bedroom apt Call S500. (7401446 .3668
deposll. (7401446·3945.
(740)446·0390.

i

r

r

I

�\

Page B4 • ~The Daily Sentinel

Announcen.n~

r§l

Help Wanted

JET

Sportsman

.800-537-9628.

Club

~ Mini-Donul conceo~ businese for 151le.
1--!Jcally owned. Easily makll
$1000.00 or more at week·
'Ond own1a. E""l)'thing 1181's
in • spec;ally designed

ANNUAL
FISHING

w

~OX10

canopy. Excellent
'part-time or rui~time opporGaiOfe.

DERBY

Donuts

may 15th,
9am-12
flges 0-15

Middleport

'(1~)992-4294 .

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steal Beams, Flipe Rebar
For
Concrete.
Angle.

fun, foOd 6

Channel, Ftat Bar, Steel

Prizes

Grating
For
Drains.
Drivoways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;

I \R\1 '' 1'1'1 I I '
,\ll\l,ltHh

Friday. 8am_.:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
Sunday. (740)4-46-7300

&amp;

F'alio Furnl1ure. Lg. glass lop

r

:to

llu66aNi 's

Syracuse, OH
Now Open
• Easter Flowers
• Bedding Flowers
• Vegetable Plants
• Blooming
&amp; Foliage Baskets
• Paning Soil

.·

I'OR SALE

AKC Bl~ck lab puppies.
blocky heads. Excellenl
hunting stock. $250 each.
Gall {740)643-Q128.

AKC Black lab puppies,
males and leffiales. fi rst
shots. work 740-992·9784,
home(7401992-38il7.

r

I I&lt; \ "\ "' I'OI&lt; I \ I II I'\

Alif'Oi\

FOR SALE

I

Chevys,
POLIC E

~AKC registered Yorkie pups. IMPOUNDS Cars lrom
2 tema\e, 1 male. $Bbo.OO $500. For listings 1-800-719-

Ford Probe, S2,000: 94
Chevy Berelta. SSOO; 96 2000 Sea Ray, 180 BR, 3.0
Ford Ranger, $1,700.
&amp; Auto Sales

e o

r

HWY 160 N
( 7401446-6865

l'RIJCKS

L1ter. 'B-OB. Power steering,
A·l1- .1. CD. Bikini Top, lo ts

Il

~--.,.:;tu;;;;,K.S;;;M._E_.,J

:lt.

760

,u1p. brand new condi' 304)675-3354

AUIU Po\IUS &amp;
Ac~ES

4-P2.::oX60A 16. for a paseaCh OBO (740)992-oo53 or _300_1_e_•t_3_,90'--1--- 1970 Ford F350 . 10 Ft. senger car, 4-3 1x10/50R15,
Gratn bed. low miles, many
(740)4 16-0441
t976 Jeep CJ7 $1,500 new parts, new !ires/wheels. 4-BF
Goodrich
(304)675-48 14
LT265X/75A
16
$100
per set
For Sale: 8 monlh old. ::.:...:::.-".-'-~--- (740)245-0485.
$3,500
English Bulldog. BRINDLE . 1993
Bronco
$800. (740)441-9665 alter c;l304:::.:cl:_:6:_74:_·0:_1::3:::3_ _ __
1979 Chevrolet 1./2 ton.
5:00pm.
miles.
Body 111':~-~~--_.,
1994 Fotd Asp1re, 5 sp., air, 129,000
great gas saver. $1995; goodltair, runs great $400+
Leopard Gecko Aquarium .
1~9 Ford Taurus, V-6, auto, accessories. $ 1.000 firm.
heat lamp. cricket farm &amp;
air. tilt . cruise, $5495; and 17401441·3131 leave mes-

suppUes Paid $120 seU lor
many more grea1 deals to sage.
$40 (304)675:4500

I

choose from, trade in's weicome. Riverview Motors. 2
blocks above McDonald's
Pomeroy, Oh . (740 )9923490

Moving, must sacrifice a fine
Baktwin Spinet pi ano. Fine 1995 Chevy Corsica. Runs
wood craftsmanship. Hardly great. $2,500. (7401446toucl'1ed. Original price well 8731.
over $3.000.00. Will let it go
1997 Dodge Stratus, 4 cyl.
lor $800.00. Call (74019922.4, auto, all power. Very
5110.

t

FRurrs&amp;
VEG"-TABIB;

HOMEGROWN
STRA WHERRIES
at CharleS M cKean Farm

and William Ann Motel. Call
(740)446-9442 .

KisSEL'S PRODUCE
Amllh Chttll, Lunch Meat,
Frllh Fruit and Vegetable~
Open Thurt·Fri·Bit. 1354

Jackaon Pika,

Qallipolia,

.Ohio. (740)446-7787

JONES'

Top •

Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304-675-2457

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

K Q J 10
A J tO
9 8 5

•

9 8&lt;

•

K Q

t

A J 111
,. 108762

.. J 9 5

South
•

A 6 5

• 9 8
t K Q763
... A K 4

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Dealer: Soulh
Vulnerability: Both

South

West

I NT

Pass

Pass

2.

North
Pass

Easl

Pass
Pass

Opening lead: • K

• Stump Grinding

.
1986 Ford F-1&amp;1' bO)( !ruck
' 600 wllift gate, light damage
to top of box, 39,820 miles,
$14,500 OBO, (74016961227
--------1991
Chevy Silverado,
$4,500. Caii(740I245-5752

2001 GMC Jimmy SLE 4x4,
$2,000. CO Player, 811 power, ~C.
shape $12,500 or take over
1997 Olds. CuUass, 86,000 paymen1s (304)773 -5177 or
.
miles. Loaded, 9)(Cellan1 (304)593-3596

good condition.
(740 )44 6-7029

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Uncondilional liletime guarantee. Local references lur·
nish ed. Establi shed 1975.
Can 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870. Rogers Basement
Waterprooling.

Get A Jump
on

SAVINGS

Public Notice
Title
I
of
the
Workforce Investment
Act of 1998 (WIA)
requires each local
workforce Investment
area to establiah a
one·atop system to
provide aupport and
educational services
10 their community.
Each area Ia to submit a !Iva-year plan
detailing
how
II
Intends to accom·
pllsh this goal. The
plan
Is
affective
beginning July 1,
2004. Services are
targeted to youth, dla·
located workers who
have been laid off,
and aduHs. To provide
lhesa services local·
ly,' Ohio 's Area 14
consists of Meigs,
Athens, VInton, Perry,

and Hocking coun-

tlea. Some aarvlcas,
auch as job search
and usa of 'resource
rooms, are universal
services avallabla to _
the general public.
Other services, such
aa tuition aaalslanca
anc;l support servlc·
ea, are contingent on
eligibility criteria.
A DRAFT of the
Five-Year Local Plan
for the Workforce
Investment Area #14
will be available for
review and comments
In the Meigs County
Commissioners '
office at 1DO E.
.Second
Slreet,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
for a 30-dey parlod
beginning April 23,
2004 thru May 23,
2004.
For more Information
contact
Mlchaal
Swlaher, Director of
Melga
County
Department Of Job &amp;
Family Sarvlcaa (7 40)
992-2117.
(4) 23, (5) 12
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
In accordance with

~ AS"JC~l&gt;

FOil

''AilTICMO/C~s;·
NOT 'i41lTI~

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

Jor.~s:·

WELL, YA WON'T

_,.,{!;

FIND ENNYTHIN'

OUT HERE,

~~.&amp; ~

SHERIFF!!

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

1/®~~
High 8l Dry

Sefi·Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

.\ /altll/1111'\'

I ood

\Iaiii/ \illilahll'

for 2004 Meigs
iii:unty Fair. .

(304) 273-5321

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Rac ine. Ohio
45771

Serious
Inquiries Only

Call

Hours
7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

985-4159

Snapper

Gravely

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Street

74().949-2217

SIZes 5'x10'
," t(j iO'X30'

740-992-5232

1/14 I mo . pd

Pomeroy. Ohio

THE BORN LOSER

992-2975
/..aw11 mid Garde11 t:quipme/11 i.1· our

business. " ot our sidelim!
Manning K . Roush .
Owner
Open Mon-Fri 9-5 Sat. 9-12

1--ll·\[t-\ YOU IN\ER\/JE}l(i)'
FOR lf\l:) JOB, YOU :':&gt;/\1\:J
YOU Wt.\2'.£ P.. II Rt.LE.~

'it:t, 'iOU SEH\ TO BE""
T I&gt;KI 1--\G i\ C.Of f[E
BRt.NC.. E.\/E:.RY I--lOUR I

WORKER ...

"'

t

1--lOW DO YOU TI-\INK l
--.Not..\" FRO!'\ GEH IN' Tl RfS&gt;'Z

~

R.B.

River Way Cafe

Trucking
HAULING:

• Limestone
• Sand
• Dirt
• Ag Lime
740-985·3564

740-992·2507
Call for Daily Specials

CALL-IN ORDI=.R~
WI=.LCOMI=.

Re sidenlial &amp; ManufaciUred Housing
Air Condilioners, Heat Pumps &amp; Furnaces
• Super Hi Efficiency Equipmen_.,
• Free Estim-ates
.
• 5 &amp; 10 yr Warranties
.
;
'
.'· . ·~k'f&lt;;_
......
• Huge Inventory
·
• Vanguard Ventle:s Fireplaces ~~~~~!~~~t

. to·• ,
~"''""

G1bson ltmlfllRAf.
__,__

I

Gallipolis, OH WVOI021 2
446-9416 r 1-800-872-5967

Morning Star Road • C.Rd 30 • Racine,

BISSELL

Number 7411-992·291 t
for a $t0.00 non·
refundable IH.
Each bid must be
accompanied
by
either a bid bond In
the amount of tO% of
the bid amount with a
surety satlafectory to
the aloraaald Orange
Township Trustees or
by carlllled check,
cashiers check, or lei·
ter of credit upon a
solvent bank In the
amount of not less
than 10% of the bid
amount In the favor of
the aloreaeld Orange
Township Trustees.
Bid bonds shall be
accompanied
by
proof of Authority of
the official or agent
signing the bond.
shall
be
Bids
sealed and marked as
Bid lor: Mudsock
Road Slip Repair and
mailed or delivered

to :
Orange
Township
Trustees Oslo M.
Follrod, Clerk 41520
Kaeba ug h·Fo llrod
Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio
45769
(5) 12, 19, 26

tttOHP!

Are you in the market

,'

BUilDERS InC.

&lt;

E

New Home:-. • Viny l
Siding • New Garugcs
• Rephu.:cment
Windows • Roofing

See
Rocky"RJ"
Hupp

COMMERCIAL and .
RESIDENTIA L

'

MAYBE I
SMOULD WAIT
FOR IT TO
COME OUT IN

IMPORTS
Athens

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

PAPERBACK .

'

.

-

Dean Hill

Specializing In Poured Concrete
1Fcmndat1on~, Basements, Floors &amp; Walls

Kaabaugh·Follro'd
Rd., Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 until 7:40 p.m.
on June 1, 2004, and
than -at 7:40 p.m. on
June 1, 2004 at aeld
office open'ad · and
read aloud.
The prolacl provides for lnatalling
piling and deadman
far purpoaes of stabl·
llzlng a slip affecting
Mudsock·
Road
(Orange
Township
Road 304) In Meigs
County, Ohio.
DOMESTIC STEEL
USE
REQUIRE·
MENTS AS SPECI·
FlED IN SECTION
153.011
OF . THE
REVISED
CODE
APPLY TO THIS PRO·
JECT. COPIES OF
SECTION 153.011 OF
THE REVISED CAN
BE OBTAINED FROM
Public Notice
ANY
OF
THE
OFFICES OF THE
OF
NOTICE TO CON· DEPARTMENT
ADMINISTRATIVE
TRACTORS
Sealed proposals SERVICES.
Bid
documents
lor the Mud sock Roar!
Slip Repair will be may be secured at the
racelv,ed
by
the office ol The Meigs
Engineer,
Orange
Township . County
Trustees
at their 34110 Fairgrounds
office at Osle M. Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone
Follrod, Clerk, '41520 45769;

T HI S IS
LiKE BE ING
TEI\HI1ATE S
WITH THE
TA2MI\NIAN
DEVIL .

C.HOMfF!
HUtiC:H!
CRUNCH!

,

TFN

t:NI l'flurefl Wall1

Public Notice

Ct\ot\rr!

to dark!

HOWARD l.

Ne.w &amp;: Uaed
475 South Church St.

Ripley, WV 215271

WRITESEl
•ROIFINB
•HOME
MIINTENIIICE
•SUMlESS
amER

1-800-822-0417
"W .V's #I Chevy. Pontiac, Buick,
&amp; Cuslom Van Dealer"

Olds

!;JETTY
MY GLli:'SS'?
- il&lt;E MUSIC.

l'M"!RYING
10FIGU~c

MYNE:WCD
HAS"COPY
CON11WL"

IS/MOE ~oRR I91£
ON PURpOSE

OUTWAAT
11-\t\1
MEANS

*fniEIIMIIIIh

949·1405
Sunset Home
Construction
Bryan Reeves
. New Homes,
Room Additions ,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall
· &amp; More
FREE ESTIMATES!

740-742-341

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

NORTHUP DODGE

252 Upper River Road • Gallipolis

GARFIELD .
we CAN''T PO ANYTHING-

ABOU'T

1'HE PAS'T

!

BUT we CAN PO SOMETHIN&lt;':o
ASOIJT THE FUTURE

740-446'· 0842 • 949-1155 Evenings
50UND'3 LIKE
A L.O'T OF

EFFOR'T
'TO ME

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

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Add itions &amp;
R•model ing
• New Garagos
• Electrical &amp; Plumbi ng
o Rooting &amp; Gullets
o Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
o Pali o And Por ch Decks
We do it all except
furnact work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Years local E~perlence

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
·New Homes
• Garag es
• Complete
Remodeling

140-992-l&amp;n
Stop &amp; Compare

GRIZZWELLS
M~- ~~;i:ZIN~LL, \II~ \1./&gt;.\1~
~ l'l&lt;tJ6\..EM
\'1m\ 'loU~

c~'i:C\1..\\\~

/&gt;.C0'\1\\1'

To begin 1oday, look only al the North
hand 1n the d1agram. Your partner opens
one no-uump. and your right-hand opponent passes. What wotJid you do. if anything?
After deciding, look at the North -Soulh
hands. How would you (now SotJth) play
in two hearts after a spade lead?
For beginners. i1 looks impossible to .bid
with only two points. In addit1on. they are
used 10 needing 10 or 1! pomls fo r a two·
level bid Bul responcting to one no-trump
is completely different from hidd1ng opposite a one·of·a·sui1 opening
The key point is this : How many tricks will
that North hand be worth in one notrump? Maybe one: the club queen. How
rTiany will it be worth in hearts? Probably
th ree. Partner mus1 have at least two
hearts, so the .long stJit will ·generate ·
same trump tricks .
Noi'lh must get his side into a two-heart
contract If playing traditional methods,
North does it by respond 1ng two hearts
This IS called a drop-dead bid because if
partner does not pass. North may imme·
diately shoot his par1ner stone dead!
If using more modern technology. North
will respond with 1wo di·amonds, a Hans·
fer bid guaranteeing at least f1ve hearts
South will. as requested. convert to two
hearts, and North w111 pass. (Transfers
are highly rt=lCommended .)
In 1wo hearts. declarer should see six losers: two spades, three hearts and one
di amond. However. after winning the firsl
or second Irick with lhe spade ace. if
SotJih immediately l akes three club
tricks, he can discard a spade loser from
the North hand. Then , declarer draws
trumps as qu1ckly as possible.

G

BIG NATE

a week daylight

Come ~ee out new
gum mer menu!

~

~~ ·

Open 7 days

Monday 9am-lpm
Tiles - Fri 6am-8pm
Sat &amp; Sun 7am-4pm

~

_.,__--l ~

COMPARE THESE PRICES!!
4" pot of annuals 94e
4" pot of perennials 51.18 Buy 5 or more for 51.00

New Hours

HEATING f/ COOLING

lr--J

Meigs County's Largest selection of
annuals, perennials, vegeta bles,
shrubbery, fruit , ornamental trees,
roses, rhodod endrons. ana azaleas.

Syracuse, OH

BENNETT'S

m~.E.'Yl

the provlslona of the
Internal
Revenue
Code, tho annual
report of the Roger
Parker
Long
Memorial Trust for the
period
ending
December 31, 2003,
has been prepared by
Harold
Roger
&amp;
Delores Jean Long ,
Trustees.
The annual report
Is
available
lor
lnspecllon by any cit·
izen during normal
hours within 180 days
from the date of this
notice at the home of
Harold
Roger
&amp;
Delores · Jean Long,
581
4th
Avenue;
Middleport,
Ohio
45760. (740) 992·
7415)
(5) 12

--

ANI&gt; ...

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

1 LIKE THE
FU1URE
JU!lT 1'HE
WAY 11''6
OOINC. 'TO BE

1 Hologram
maker
6 Baseball's
Pee Wee 11 -happy
13 Church
custodian
14 Dogpalch
cartoonist
(2 wda.)
15 011 base
16 - Lanka
17 Tool
conlalner
18 Geol.
tormaUons
21 Moon track
23 Seat
on the aisle
26 Feedbag
tldbH
21 Goose
formation
28. Tree trunk
29 Florida race
track
31 Oinne&lt; signal
32 Crowning
polnl
33 On lhe stree1
36 Make keen
37 Record,
as mileage
38 Fury
39 Reunion
crowd

, hazard
42 Dancer
- Charlsse
43 Moving
truck
44 Old PC
syslem
48 Mackerel
49 Earthshaped
53 Up and

aboul

54 - Newton·
John
55 Sank ,
as a pun
56 Whodunit
award

40 Evaluated

shrub
13 Wine

41 Shortly
43 Carpenter'S
clamp
warm
Punk
. 45 Coasted
hairdo
46 Humbug Intra
- - chuan
Pollen
47 lncan
producer
treasure
48 Shutout
Saw
Lyrical
score,
FlcUonal
In Bi1taln
Queen
50 Std.
Used a
51 Pablo's
blowtorch
aunt
PBS
52 Com
supplier
serving
Lease
Kind ol doll
01 low
character
served

DOWN
18
1 Grassy field
2 The works
3 Kangaroo
pouch
4 Incoming·
plane data
5 Chide
6 Modernize
a laclory

7

19
20
22

23
24
25

Leave

8 lloQ days
In Dljon
9 Our sun
10 Draw
to a close
12 Flowery

28
30

34
35

run to a long suit

STilfH

(Btlore 6pm
~ 1-J. ~
....,. Mooooge) ~ AC-. "'

Public Notice
"Bid for School Bus"
and mailed to:
Eallam Local
School District
Treasurer'• Olllca
50008 State Rt. 681
Reedsville , Ohio
45772
(515,12 2TC

the PAIN

Affar 6pm '\ 'i

~~

cond . $2,700 (304)675-8165 - - - - - - - 96 F 150 XlT 4X4 Super
1999
Mercury
Cougar,
Cab. 302. auto old, AJC,
64,000 miles. good cond l·
cruise, tilt, pw, pdl, keyless
tion , $8,000 OBO. 740-379entry, JVC CD/MP3 player,
9088
or
740·645·5740
8~ lift , . 35's on American
evenings.
Racing wheel&amp;, Reese style
2001 Cavalier, 40 42K, drop hltctl, bed liner, dla·
$4,895: 1995 Cutlaee Clrea, mend plate tailgate prolec·
40,$1.995:1997 Cavallor Z· tor, nerf bare, cab vlaor, slid·
24, $2,995: Others In stOQk. lng rear window. 59,950
COOK MOTORS
OBO. 740·387 -72!51 ot cell
(740)446.0103
740-645-46&lt;17.

TM~

17401 985-4180.

• Bucket Truck

With a weak hand,

W~Li,, TI-llS Pfli~ST ANI&gt; TtiiS ~AJII
vJALr-IN(j l&gt;OvJN

UIA'S PllmiB

Removal · Trim

"Your One Stop Poured
Solid Concrete .'ih•&gt;n"

.BID FOR BUS
Eastern
Local
'School District, 50008
:state Route 881 ,
·Raadavllle,
Ohio,
:45772 lo accepting
·blda for e 71 pusenJJer
achool
bus.
Specifications for bua
can be obtained by
calling the auperln·
tendenra office at
740-667 · 6079.
Quote•
will
be
opened In the traa·
surer'&amp; office at noon
on Wednaaday, May
19, 2004. The board
reaarveo the right to
reject any or any part
or · the bid .
Bids
Should be labeled

•
•
•

,.

Let me :Jc 1\ fer youl

Tree Service

Toll Free: (866) 254-155!1

Public Notice

SFREE

cut of PAINTING!

Free Estimates

A hearing to claao
a portion of Pagevllla
Road
(Tawnahlp
Road 1421 will be held
an Thuraday, May
27th, 2004 at 1:OD
p.m.
at
tho
Cammlsolano' Olllca
which Ia located an
the third floor or lha
-court House. The
,public _Is Invited to
·aHend.
:51'12,19

Bonanza Get

East

West

MONTY

East State Street Phone miO)~i93-- 6671
Alhens, Ohio

:=====F=re=e=E~s~t~im~a~te~s:;;;;;~

·
7202.
$500!.j-tondas.
:____ _ _ _ _ _ _ Jeeps. etc !

MUSICAl.
JNsn!UMENTS

Buy SS.OO

T3~e

- - - - - - -2003 Cavalier 4door. 4 cyl., 2000
Yamaha Warrior
Aeg1stered ANGUS and auto. 9.000 miles. tilt. cruise. red/while plaslic. Nert bars.
Crossbred bulls. Top blood- air cond .. CD player. S6.500.
loud pipe, new t1andle bars
hnes. Slate Run Farm, (?40) 44 H &gt;337.
&amp; grab bar. runs great I"
Jackson. · (740)286-5395 ------~-- $3000 obo {740)843-5235
look
up
www.slalerunlarm .com.
98 Toyota Camry, $5.900: 01 2003 XA650l Honda OtJal
Chevy Impala, $6.995; 99 Sport, 783 Miles, exc. co nd.
HA\' &amp;
Ply.' breeze, $2,295; 98 S4,000 (304)675-5428
.___ _..;;G:,:RAIN~:;.,.-.,.1 Chevy Cavalier. $2,795; 99
"''
Ford Escort. $2,895; 98 Four wheeler 98 model. 4x4.
· Round bale hay, s 1o . Phone Dodge Caravan. $3.000; 97 like new. $2.800 (740)44617401446_7787_
Dodge PU, 53.995: 94 GMC 1750.
P.U. ve, auto, AJC, $3,395:
n .&amp; MaroRS
rx)ATS
Rou nd hay bales for sale 98 Oids Achieva. $2.195:95
Dodge Stratus. $2.000: 95 ~.,._ _ _
FOR
_
SALE
_ __
$10 each, (740)985·4291

(740)367-0038 Of 1740)367-

r.

Bring this coupon

740-843-5264

I

{740)245-0380 after Bpm.

AKC Lab puppies. chocolate ~tO
and yellow. 6 weeks old. 1st
shols and wormed . Call

871-24&amp;7

Box 189 • Middleport .

~

i

6:30
Last Thursday or
every month
All pack $5.00

"' Q 3

\and Financial Servict!s.t~

door
automatic
(304)675-4144

~C)

PEn;

Henderson, WV

We can insure you valuables!

Plymoutt1 Voyager
Van. one owner. V6 LE, 7
pass, aula 1rans. Excellent
C0M1t1on. All power with
A/C. $2,900.(740)446-3277.

L

Winrers , Rio Grande. OH
Call740-245-5121 .

•

Rocky Hupp Insurance

;-roy

~indows. lintels. e1c. Claude

MYERS PAVING

Early birds start

i

North
~ - 12 -04
1!1 732
. 765432
• 4 2

Wllat would you lose if there was afirel

car 1999 Mercury Villager.· 7
passenger. front/rear air,
94,000 miles, good condi-------tion.
Asking
$7,700.
2002 Mitsubishi Lancer ES, 17401441 -0658 .
passic Can; 13041675-()665 AOHA
Yearly
Ph illy 31.000 miles. aulo. CO plaY- 1!:·:;.;--;.;,;.;.._~.....,
er. rear spoiler. $5.®o 080.
l\t
·
Chestnut
Grt
Great 740-256-1618.
740-256(JfORCI'Q.fS
Bitt Rototllter 8 HP.. Daughter of Conclusive.
6200.
~
1-torse Model · very good Show 2003 done very gOOd
cond. asking $625(304)675- 13041675_6440
- - - -- - - - 1999 Harley Da'.lidson,
5440
::;:_:__:::.:___::_;___:______ 2002
Pontiac
Sunlire. Apad King Classic. Blue &amp; ,
~
For sale Boer Goals for Fa ir 29,200 miles. sunroof, auto, Silver. Excellent condition.
Projects (304)675-1126
cd player. yellow. (740)992· $13.900. (740)446-2924 or
(740)446-6142.
._
Goals for sale. all ages. 7228 after 6pm. $9,000.

pipes.

BINGO 2171

Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30

"!

Call:

Ja.s

brick.' sewer

Phillip
Alder

For a Free Quote or Appointment

Ranch King Lawn Mower.
AOHA 3 yr old, Philly, dark
HP. 46 inch cut. excel·
bay.
Granddaughter of
4e:nt conc4ition . $650. Call
Wortd Champ1on. Go Hank,
!740)25&amp;-6667.
Barrel
Harte
broke
~eg . Quarter Horses. {304)S7 s.6440

6iocJ&lt;.

Pomeroy Eagles

40 Ecoloalcol

ACROSS

IF YOU RENT

1990

~

• Porch Boxes
• Combination Pots
• Perennials
• Spruce Trees
• Shrubs
t. ·
• Peal Moss

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

table, 6 chair &amp; all the cusn- ..,
ions. Used one summer.
Like new, $200. 740-4464254 after 5pm .

' r:

q,.,,.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Business Car-d ... $25.00/column inch per- month

..-zEit

~~--oiEQuJPr:wvrililiiiiiliiii,;;,_.l

~

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5.

www.mydailysentinel.com

To place an ad Call 992-2156

Caring People...

FAR'!

I

Wednesday, May 12, 2004

ALLEY OOP

Business Services

Holzer Senior Care Center has an AN
position open on night shill.
We are a 70 bed long-term care nursing
facility located in Rural Gallia County
whose mission focuses on quality care for
our residenls.
Benefits include :
• Competitive Wages
• Shill Differential
• Experience Credit
• Health Insurance (FTI
• Life Insurance (FT)
• 401K (alter 1 year)
• $1000 Sign on Bonus
If working in a friendly, "team-oriented"
facility appeals to you, please come see
us at: 380 Colonial Dr., Bidwell, Ohio or
· call 740-446-5001. Ask for Christina
Hook, DON.
Come be a part of:

Forked Run

~ Cell Ron Evans, 1·

tunity. $9,950.00

Help Wanted

.N POSmON AVAII..UU

AERATlON MOTORS
f\el*nod, New &amp; Rabuih In

Wednesday, May 12, 2004

www.mydallysentlnel.com

AstroGraph

CELEBRITY CIPHER ·.
by Luis Campos
are aealed from QliOIB!ICtiS lly famous peo~ past and preserc
Each l~tter 'n !he crpl'ler stanr:ls l:"!r anomer

cryt~.ograms

Celebrrty Cipher

)-_day' s

" G Y AK I
TGC

Z YXKZ ,

TGC

o;q._.LS :..1

L VDYXS V

DFZI

VITL,

CFZTZLID
'LVt

:~ .1: · X

C XZ L

EDYB

CIEITL

I

ZLDYGSID ."
VIGDN

JTCZJYOLV

KYGSEIKKYJ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "His1ory IS wnnen by 1he winners." - G. Otwell
'Historians ought to stay out ol the future. - - Arthur M. Schles1nger Jr.
)c) 2004 by NEA.Inc. 5-12
WOlD
GAM I

-'lllrtllda,y:

Thursday, May 13, 2004
By Bernice Bede Osol
Take advantage of any opportunities you
gat in 1ha year ahead to mingle with new
groups or get involved in different kinds ol
aclivi!ies_Valuable contacts can be estab·
lished that could help you In other areas ol
your life.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ~You'll have
amp le opportuniti es today tor social
mvotvements wtth yotJr friends . but if you
get earned away they c~uld turn out to be
more expensive than you can alford . Be
prudent
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) ~ An objec tive
you've been lrying to reach can be
obtained today, but you mu st n't step on the
toes ot ot hers in order to accomplish your
goals. It you do. the price you'll pay will be
quite high.
CANCER (June 2 t -July 22) - Don't be
coy or bea,t around the bush it there. are
some facts you'd like to get across to your
associates today. Wi th the help of diplomacy, you can tell them what needs to be
said.
LEO (July 23·Aug_ 22)- One of the th1ngs
you do best is to lake the ideas of others
and Improve upon thern in ways that can
make them qtJile successful. If you do so
today. be sure to share th e credit with the
co-author
VIR GO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) - Should you
need to engage 1n a partnership situation
in order to achieve your go~ls today, select
cohorts who are in total agreement with
your plans- down to t he smallest del a1l.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 23) - Although
you're capab le ol domg a lot loday.
remember you ·still have your limita tions_In
order to not go overboard, establish reasonable objectives tor yourself and devise
a sensible game plan .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -One of the
biggest problems that Scorpios lace tn life
is the intensity w1\h wh 1ch they feel th1ngs
When sodaltzing with friends today, be
carelul not Ia ove rreact to unimportant
issues.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - We'd
all like to achieve maximum productivity.
but keeping your nose to the grindstone 1n
order to do so might be impassible today.
Take disruptions or other demands that
pop up in stride.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) - Having
a fertile imagination like you have can turnisll you w1th many good 1deas. but
remember that's not enougll 1n itself You
need to lind th e ways and means to Implement them .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb 19)- Today you
m1ghl see the first signs of your flnancral
prospects Deginning to bnghten . Do not
use this as a signa l that you can now
loosen your purse strings lor an extravagant expenditure.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) · Self-Interests can be successful ly promoted today it
you st1ck to your guns and do not allow
negative thinkers to dissuade you from
your purposes. Remember you're always
vulnerable 1o this.
ARIES (March 21·April 19)- Your potential for acquiring the lunda you need look
prom lelng loday. However, th•te are dan·
lil•rout warning signa tl'lat could let what
you gain al1p rlgl'l1 througl'l your fingers

SOUP TO NUTZ

I
I

I

FRARET

I' I

1I I
3

I

L ICLH

1· 1 I I
5

UG~.VE

Jf

I ] I' I I' .f
~-N-U-~-~-

0-

8

-

----,
1

College sludent answering
the prciessor's question : 'A
plal1tude 1s simply the ~rut h re- pealed so many limes tha:
people ge,!tlrec of------- - -·.

9

O

L__L_L...l..-'--'--

yc\J

(o,..~ ie'e ~he chud::le ~:~uoled
bJI fol!.n') on lh ~ moH•ng wordi

de ... elop from step No 3 below

Donkey- Koran • Wiper· Mighty· PAYING
Overheara in unemploymenl line "I'm not sure what
the min1mum wage 1s in my state,but I'm sure it depends
on 'whether you are getting it or PAYING it.'

ARLO &amp; JANIS .
iHE

Pf.~MAIJEtJI

J/&lt;).)15' MAK(OVCR OI'TIO!l5

T~t-

WAIF
Which 'do do you like?
We're going to gi ve Janis
a new look, and we want

your opinion. Go to
www.arloandjanis.c om
and vote for your
favorite 'do from those .
that will appear here
over the next 3 days.
Thank you\

�.

"'•

. '
•

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 12,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2004

....,.

w

"""""
NYVriH6

20
19

~--

!_6

Toronto
Tampa Bay

1.3

-

CleVeland
Kansas C1ty

5·5

~­
~
55:2
19- 424

14
9

__

~ron

PIO

J1

8·2

l

Pet

18

13

581

18
15
13

13
17
19

581
469
406

21 ·

323

10

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6

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GB

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l

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W3

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5·5

I 1·5
10·5

WI

w

Aflahetm

22

\1 .

667

Teras

20
16
12

1:2
16
20

625
500
375

OaklAnd

"'"'"

533

17
23

452
424
303

NY Me!s

Montreal

10

Atlanta

19

w

-

!H5

Wl

4·6
3·7
4-6

Wt
ll
ll

11-5
11-5

7-8
7-8

J.1

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Ho\;s\01'1

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7·3

13·6

5 '·

6·4
5·5

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W2

L3

7·9

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7·8

w

WEST
Los.Angell!!s
s~n o,ega
Ar.zona
San FranciSCO

l

21

0

Texas s Tampa B~ 4
Chicago Sox 15. Balt&lt;nl(Jre 0

t.11nr.esota 7. S!Htt1e 6. 1111
Kansas City 5 Toronlo 1

l2

8·7

4 '·

5·5
5·5

L2
L2

6-8
6-9

E~~6011

Cddyer3b2100

11)..4

Olen.od lb 4 0 1 0
'-':Cknpr 010 0
JoCbnl lb 2 0 2 0
Auriliass 4120
IJ'Nrlsn c 5130
Winn c1
5 1~ 1

THntet ct1
MRyanofl
.J.Ione5 rt
LFordt1

14
13

..,

GB

P10

5·5
5-5
5·5
4·6
4·6

5

GB
3
7

..........

Slril
W2
l1
W1
W2
WI
W1

PIO

Str11

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55

ws

1,-7
10·6

8-8

9·6

8·9

7·11
6·7
4·10

10·5
8·9
9·7

-

.....
11·4

1 0·6
!Hi
8·9
6·10

l2
W2
l1

55
5·5
4·6

••

•••
•••
6·9

•••

l.2

5-10

Mondar'• Resutts
A•12ona 12, NY Mitts 8

Tuel5dily'l Re.ult15
M,Mtaukee 8, MontrP.a 5. 11 4)
HOi.JSIOI'\ 6. Flor&lt;OO 1
St lou1s 5 Alianla 1
PITtsbU rgh 15 Coloradc 10. 112)
AnzMa 9. NY Mets 5
ClllC.rmatr 6. San Deger 3
Los A.ngeles 7. Ct11cago Cl.lbs 3
Philadelprre 10. San Francrsco 4

Toronto 9 Kansas City 3

3-7

4
4

Pcl
677
576
438
424
419

10
14
18
19
18

19
14

Colora!lo

'.3'/,

ISUzukl r1 s 2 , ,
Splwo3b 6023
BBocnt2b6020
lblwtel: I
60 10

7

13

I 1·5

7-7

433

16 .

Home

W4

l

Pllt$ou r~

LI

7·3

656

M11v.a u~ee

Strk

1

9-8
9-7
6·10
6-11
4-14

563
531
515
500

3-l.J.

9· 1

A~

9-6

11

7-7

P10

.Homt

ll

14
15
16
16
17

5&lt;~2

8-8

Stril

3-7

•

Pet.

Suttte

Red Sox 5,

Indians 3

Clwaland
abrhbl
LAwton! 4000
Vizquel ss 4 1 2 0
Gerutrl
3110
VMn'llc 4 1 2 3
Hainer on 4 0 0 0
~liard 2b
3 0 0 0
Brssrd tb 4 0 0 0

ab r hbl
Oamone1
Bllhom 2b
Mdar dh
MRmrz lf
varnekc
OOrttz t tl

5000
3 0 1 o
4 0 0 0

3000

20 0 0
4 1 3 1
Crespo ss 0 1 0 0
Muelh:n 3b 4 1 2 1
KaOierrl
4231
Reesess 3 0 o o

-'Aerlom 3b 4 0 0 0
Gnsoct
3&lt;1 1 0

1 0 1 2

McCty 1b

Tobia

33 510 5

33 3 8 3 Totals

Cleve ..nd
200 000
010 3
Boston
001
100 03x 5
LOB-Cleveland 5. Boston 8. 2B-VMar1rnez
(6]. Bellhorn (7), DOrtr.z (t3). Mue~er (5)
3a-.-..McCany (1). HR-VMart1ne2 (6J, OOM
(B), Kapler {l) SB-V1zauel 14 ) CSMAamrrez (2)
IPHRERBBSO

c.......

Sabatl'1.a
JJrmenez l .0·2
ScS1ewar1

762233
2·333300
1-3 1 0 0 0 0

Boston
PMenirlez
Ernbree WHl

7
1

5
I

2
1

2
1

2 11
0 0

Fou..e S.7

1

0

0

0

0

2

H8P--by Sabath1a (Varit;tlo ).
IJmpWes-Home. Ron Kulpa. Fir¥1. B•l M1ller;
Second. Brian Gorman. Trurd. Dale Scott.
T- 2 32. A-35.401 (35.095)

Rangers 5, Devil Rays 4
T1111

ab r hbi
MYalgss 50 1 o
Blalodl 3b 5 2 2 2

ASrano 2b 5
FllmBfdh
Txe•ra1b

2

10

oao

4 o a o
1 D1 0
4 1 1 1
4112
4 aa0

Dllucc1~

Menctr rt'
Nixe!
L.arrdc

Tollla

t

Te•a•
Tamp!!; Bay

002
000

r hbi
10 I
1 0 0

02 1

TMr1112 Ill

4 0 1 1

JoCruzrf
Lugoss
·Frckdh
THalfc
ASr-crrz 2b
Cmngsph

4 000
4 000

001
002

D'backs 9, Mels 5
New York
Valentff

SpncerW
Matsu1 55
P1azza c
KGarcari
Zerlo til
JPrlllps ttr
McEwg lb
Cmeronct

2,

ao

4120
2 a o o
I 000

30 4 5 3
020 200 -

5
4

E-~Young

(3). Lugo (5j. DP-Te.l(aS 1
LOB-Tilxas 7. Tampil Bay 6. 2B-ASorrano

(10) HA- Bialock 2 {8). N1~ (6). 58-Graw·

Arizcna
ab r hbi
J 1 1 0

;;.ooo

4 ? 2 1
-1000
4 0 0 0
3 0 2 2
2 G0 0
10 0 0
2 1 0 0

ab rhbi
5 I 10

Tracy 3ll
Hmckc

3100

LGnziZ~

1300

Hlnbrn lb

5 2 3 4

SFin~cl

4 I 1 4

DBustaM 4 0 3 1
Crnlron ss 4 0 0 0
Kata2b
4000
05sensp 1 0 0 0
Wggntn 3b 4 1 2 2 Bn.m~p 0000
Choatep 0000
OGr~ra 21l 3 0 0 0
IJwllsnc 1 a 0 D Clbrnn oh • · 1 0
Lerlerp
tODD Rndlpl; o • 0 1 0
Totals 3&lt;1 5 1 5 Totala 33 910 9
NewYork

f1mpa 81y
ab
Crwlrdll
3
Baldelli cf 2
Hutt3b
4

34 5 7 5 Totals

Ton
62·3 4 4 3 4 3
Drese
Ramrrez W.2·2
1· 3 1 0 0 0 1
Ahlanzar
100001
FCoroem 8.11
ld0001
Tampa&amp;.y
Wsachter L.1·3
1 6 5 4 3 6
LCaner
,·
1·3 0 0 0 1 0
DBaez
2·3·0 0 0 0 J
Harpeu
11 0 0 0 1
Waochter pr1ched to 3 batttl!'S m the 8th
HBP--by Drese IBa+Oellr'. by Waechter rDel. luccn. PB-THall
Umpr(t5-Home Ange. Hernandez Frrsl Mrl(e
Ewrrtt, Seccnd. Mark Wegner . Third lany
Young. T-2:32 A-10.389 (43.969)

Total&amp;

100
,302

020

020 -

5

Arizona
004
oox - 9
LOB-Naw York 8, Ar,zcna 11 28--MaiSUI 2
( 111. Ze1te (7), Hillenb rand (5), Rarldolph (1).
HR-,-Wiggrnton (3). Hrlle'11Jrand (4) , SFin~~
(11\ S-Hammock
1P H AERBBSO
New York
435552
Leiter L 1·~
Moreno
1 2 0 0 0 1
1 4 4
4
I 0
Stanton
Wheeler
1 l 0 0 0 0
1
0
0
0
3
2
weatners

.......

4 2·3 5
Bw~eyW.t·O
1 1
Choate
t-3 0
Randoflh
2 1
Valverde
1 a
HBP--by Lllller (lGonzalez\
Dessans

3
0
0
2
0

3
0
0
2
0

4
0
0
2
0

2
2
0
0
3

PB-VW~son

Cooper Second Mrkt! Ae1lly; Tturr::l. Chuck
MerAA'!llhar T-J.24 A-34.263 {49,033).

BergH

1000

Athlellcs 5, Tigers 4, (1 5)
Oakland

Detroit

ab r hbl
Kolsey cf 6 0 2 1

•b rhbl
AS1"1Cnze1 7 1 3 1
V1na2b
6000
lf!drgzc
&amp;0 2 1
~unson ph 1 0 0 0

K.e~ph

7231
7 0 2o
6 0 4 1
7 0 1 1
4 01 C
100 0

'wMeH

7021

CGrllen ss
MOIVOerl
CP\1-rra 1b
Hggnsn dh
Nonon11l
lnge3b

6b 1
4 01
2 0 1
5 1 1
51 1
612

Scutaro 2b 1 0 0 0
Cu;~sbyss 5221
Total• 56 5 1e 5 Total•

0
0

0
0
0
1

55 414 4

Oakland 011 011 000 000 001 5
Detroit
100 030 000 000 000 4
DP--Oaldand 2. Delrort 4 LOB--Oakland 11.
Detrorl9 2B-Kotlily {5), Harteberg (61 HROye (B). Crosby 141. SB-ASanchez 2 {7), Vrna
121. S----Hrggrnson.
IP H RERBBSO
Oakland
7 10 4 4 1 5
0 0 0 1
Bradtord
1 '
ARmcon
1 2
0 D 0
1
Dchchr W.1·1
5 I 0 0 1 4
Mecrr 5,2
1 0 0 0 0 1

'"'

De1...
5 10

JJol'lnson
Yan
Coiyilr
Ufbrna
Jwalker
L6\lfle

4 4 1 2
11000 1
200003
110013
2 1·3 1 o o o 2
1 2·3 1 o 0 1 0

DPattefSon L.Q-2

2

2

1

1

2

2

JJohrrson pnched to 3 bailers rn the 6th.
Umptres-Home. Jet! Kellogg; First. Doug
Eddings: Second. Dan lassogna: Thll'd. Chartre
Aelrlord_ T-4 38 A-15.859 ~40, 120)

Royals 5, Blue Jays 1
Toronto

ab r hbl
Jhnsonrt 4 0 1 0
Wdwrdss 3 0 1 0
GomelSS 1 0 0 0

VWellscl
CDigdo 1b
JPhlps dh
HrllSIIe 3b
OHudsn 2b

3
4
4
4
3

o
0
1
0
o

1
0
1
0
1

o
0
0
0
1

1

OOells L2·3

• 0 0 1

7

2
5

0

0

4

0

4

2

1
1

Oropes.a

2011

Osuna

s..tt'Minneaotl

100 100 040 00 6
100 001 040 01 7 White Sox 15, Orioles o .
One out When wrnnrng 1urr Kor9d.
S.ttlmore
E- Koskie (3) . DP- Seartle 1. Minnesota 1.
MJ r hbi
'
8b rhbl
LOB-Seattle 13. Mrnneso1a tO. 2B-Aivas BRilfts 2b 4 0 0 0 WHarrs 2b 5 4 4 I
VIMtin !IS 5 2 2 2
[5). 38-Sp16ZIO 121. RIVIIS (1 }. HR-THunter Mora3b
2000
MOrdtr1
5145
JBbsta 3b 1 0 0 0
[3). SB--JoCabrera (1). Cs-LFord 11).
Rwaodci 0 1 0 0
Aurilla. CGuzma11. SF-lFord.
Tejada ss 1 0 0 0
IP H RERBBSO ' LLopez ss 3 o o o Thnas dt1 4 2 1 3
RPimo 1b 3 0 1 0
Galee~
5000
7 6 2 2 1 3
M..opz c 3000 Gloid lb 3 1 1 2
P~&lt;O
10 0 0
Burt:etb 0 000
0 2 4 4 2 0 Osikc
5120
0 0 0 0 0 0 Gbbonsrl40 10 Uribi!Jb
p..,
11·3 1 o o 2 o Matosct 3010 TP9fez ci .s 1 3 1
522 ·1
Vllorre l .3·1
2
t
t
1 2 2
BlgtNeH
2000· SAirnrc
Hrs1Jrlfl 301 0
Totllls 30 0 4 0 Totah
42151915
CSilva
7 11 2
t
0 4
Rcmeto
1·3 4 4 4 0 o
Aoa
1 2 0 0 1 2 S.ltlrnore
000 000 000 o
310
102 8Qa: - IS
JAinoon
2·3 0 0 0 a ' I Ctrtlcagtt
Fi.JitzW,1·1
2 1 0 0 0 I OP-Baltimore 1, C~tea~ 1. LO~Itr­
atos (2) . WHarris
·Hasegawa pild'led to 4 batt&amp;rl it the 8th. MMy· more 6: Chk:a~ 8. 2
ars pitctwd 10 1 Daner in the 8th.
(7) . MOrdonez 2 (5). TPetez (3). HAHBP-oy MM_
yers (JJonesi. by Prn•iro Valen1rn (oil Thomas (6). SB--HairSion Jr.
{THunterl . T-3.39. A-16,794 (45,4231.
(1).
IP H AERBBSO

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s.--

__
.......
,.,......

Eckstin

200Q

Dyert
Dura:ro rtn
Httberg 10
DM•qer c
Mclmr2b

GnNMS.t4

........

HBmoc 3000
Otlr'!m ptr 1 o 0 o
~c
1 0 0 0

l&lt;antu City
ab ,l'lbi
BerrOil ss 3 1 0 0
8el1ran ct 3 1 1 1
MiSwy lb 3 0 1 2
JGnzlzrl 4 0 1 1
ABrwnr1
0000
StairsH
4 01 0
Randa3b 4 1 1 0
Harwydrl 4 1 1 0

AIBiora 2b 2 , 1 0
Slrnnetl c 3 0 1 1

0 10
30 5 8 5

Ctlnotto ..
2
Tot.lt 31 1 6 1 Tottrls

Toronto
000 001
DOQ 1
Klrnua City
000 011 30x 5
LOB-Tcronto 9, Kansas Crty 5. 28-JPhelps
(5) MiSweeney (6). Harvey (3). SB-OHud·
son (3) Catelanono (1). Beltran (1 0). SJotrnson. SF-OHudson , Beltran .

T....,.
Halladay l ,J-4
Frilsor
Kana11 City

ISS

5130

'v'GAvol1

Parris~:!

4 3 2 I

5 1 1 2
5120
'I 0 1 0

0 , 0 0
3113

Busltpr
Caro2b
Matsuilf

40 10

Mndy2b 4000

Adkins

Belk-Ponson.
lknpiree--Home, Rob Orakl. F'irs1, Mark. Car1son: Second. Gary Darling:Third. Brian AUflge,
T-2:20. A-20.400 (40,615).

0100

2210

4 0 0 o

43 IIJ 7

Toule.

6 2·3

8

5

5

2

2

11·3

0

0

0

0

1

Anaheim
300 101 002
0 1
New YOfk
002 020 021
1 S
Two out&amp; when wrnmng run SCOI'ed.
€-Halter (3). DP-New York 1 LOB- Ana·
heim 4. New York 13. 28-Figgins 2 (4),
VGuerrero (12 ). OaVanon (1]. Jeter (5),
Sheffield (9). 38-l.ofton (3). HR--VGueffero
(7), Glau&amp; {11), BUolina (4\. S~e1ar (3),
ARodriguez 2 (4). Bush (1). Cs-Giaus (2)
SF-BUolina
1P H RERBBSO

Anehelrn

Astros 6, Marlins 1
ab r hbi
4 0 10
4 0 1 0
4010
3000
3000
3000
3000
3 1 1 1

2000

3

KEsoobar

Houston

ab rhbl
Brggroct · 5111
A.EVrtt ss 4 0 0 0
Bgwell lb 4 1 2 0
JKent2b 3 2 1 0
BrkmnH
42 32
Hidalgo r1 3 0 0 0
Ensbrg3b 4 0 2 3
Asmusc 3000
Clrnensp 2 0 0 0
Lanep.'l
10 00

WCderoph 1 0 0 0
Totals 30 1 4 1 Tollll•

33 8 9 6

Florida
010 000 000 1
Houlton
000 000 24x II
E--Cab rera (3). LOB-Fionda 3. Houston 7.
28-Berlmlan 2 {6). HA- ACilstro (3] , Bigg1o
(7). SB-LCeslillo (5) . C5-Prerre (4)
IP H RERBBSO
Florida
62·3 5 2 2 1 5
Penny L,3·2
1-300000
Perlsho
Wa,rne
1·3 2 3 3 1 1
Gracesqu r
0
1
1 1 1 0
2·3 · 1 0 0 1 0
Bump
Houston
ClemensW.7·0
7 3 1 t 1 11

110002

Backe
100001
Or&amp;cesQur pilctliKI to 2 b&amp;nors in the 8th.
U m plre~ome , Dana DeMuth: First, J1m
JoyCe; Secof;ld. Kl!rwin DaniaY; Third. Marv10

G'ogg

ShieldS
FRodriguez

"""'
""
,_v.,.

Weber l.O..l

1 2·3
21·3
1
1
2·3

3l

'2

0
3
2

0
2
I

'

2
2
O
1

2

1

2
1
2
0
1

1

0

2

3.
2
2
1

'
675502

K&amp;own

740026
2 0 0 0 1 1

Buehrle W,2· 1

Sierra dh 5 1 2 t
BWimsph 1 0 0 0
EWilsn2b 1000

39 712 7 Totla.

6 11 7 1 2 7
1·3 5 7 7 2 0
12·331112

Ch!cogo

6032
ARdrgt 3tJ 5 1 3 2
JaGbilb 5 0 0 0
TCie.rX 1b 1 0 0 0
Shffltld 11 5 0 1 1
Poaadac "o t o

423'2

Glaus r:l1
OVnontl
Ktchm 1b
. , . ,.
BMolnac
Haller 3tJ

ab r hbl

Lofton cf
JeleriS

REFIBBSO

Florida

Ltdge

lb r hbl
50 0 0

Penson L,.il-3

H

52·3 5 1 1 2 4
CaJTfiW.2·0
31·3 1 0 0 1 3
HSP-by Halladay (Berroa). by OReyes
(\'Wells). WP-Halledey.
Umprr~cme, Tony· Randazzo; First Fteld1n
Culbret11: Second. Jim Wolf: TnWli. nm McClelland. T-224. A--15,n9 (40.765)

Pennyp

..........

.....,

IP

OReyos

Prerre ci
LCitltk12b
LoweiiJb
Cbrerarf
ConineH
Ch011b
AGn.zlzss
RCstroc

--

A.,....m

Castle

5000
M c Min~
2 0 0 0
EChavz Jb 5 1 1 0

653335
100001
1 1 0 0 0 I

T""""'

2 t t 2
1 I 0 0

H RERBBSO

Riedlng

HarqW.3-1

Mntkwlb 6131
KoliOa 3b 1 0 0 1

Yani&lt;Ms 8, Angela 7, (1 0)

Ur&gt;1~mes-Home . CB 8ocknor . Frrst. Ertc

Byfl'lesH

fl'

c........

CGzmns.s 4220

1·3 1 2 2 1 0
1·3 1 0 0 t 1
Llnebnnk
1 1·3 1 0 0 0 ..
Umpires~ome. Bruce Froammrng: F1rst.
Mike W~ntlfl : Second, Hunt:er Weode~tedl:
Aivas2b 5031
Third. rrm rlml0f'l5.
50 618 6 Totlla 37 710 7 · T-3:03. A-26.809 (42.445).

Flgolns c1
lord {15\ CS-Delluccr {2\ S-RSanchel.
SF-Craw!oro
IPHAERBBSO

llliw acubl
all rhbl
ShStwrt • 5 ' o a

8b rhbl

M-

Wedn11day 'a Gametr
Atla/'lla I "'ampton ().3) at St.lOUIS IMOfiiS 3·3). 7·1 0 p.m
Flonda ,wrlhs 3·1 \at Housloo 1M1Uer 4-2\. 8OS p.m.
Montreai tDay 2·3) at ty\M.·a!Jkae (ObermueHer 1-1) . 8:05 p.rn
Pmst&gt;urgh tBenson J.2\ at ColoraOo (E~tes 4-2), 9-05 p.m.
N Y Mets (Gievrne 4-21 e.l Anzooa (Johnson 3&lt;3). 9:35 p.m
C1nC1nnilll (lrdkl 2·2) e.l San Drego (Lawrence 4·2) , 10 05 p m
Chreago CloDs [Ctemem 5-t J atlas Angtoles {lshr1 5·1). 10 10 p.m.
Phlladelp"ue (Wolf 2·21el San FranciSCO [Sctlmid! 2·2). 10:15 p.m.

Wedne.ct.y 'a Gllme•
T01ooto IUIIy 2·2} a! Kansas Crty ,A'ieldt 0:-3, 2 '0 p m
CleYDIBnd (C.l&amp;e 3-0l 31 Bos1of'I ,( Wa~el~e1C 2·1 ): 1 05 p.m
Anaheim (Seie 1-01 at NY Yankees )Vazquez 3-31. 7 05 om
Oakland (Halden 1-21 at Oetrort {Sonderman 3·1 1 7 05 p.m
Texas 1Pa~ 1·3) ~~Tampa Bay tJ Gonza~z 0·4). ·7.1 S.pm
Baltimore !Bed11rd 0.01 111 cn.cago WMa Sol Gartano 2· 11. a·os p m.
Seallle {Gan::1a 1·1) ill Mrn!\8so1a Radlo.e 2·2 r 8 10 p m

Twins 7, Marinenl&amp;, (11)

P1D

18
17
17

a-~

H

Ga

21

Chrcago Cubs
C1nt:1nna1r
51 LOUI§

Mond.y't Rnults
Clevelar\d 10. Boston 6

Boston 5. c~a 3
(Uio.land 5. Oetrort 4. ( 151
NY Yat1kees 8. Arlahe1m? !10)

14

6·10

.J
5

Tueedey'a Anuth

16

3·14

Awaw

'

'"""'

563

6·8

Home

GB

Pel

6·9

•

WEST

L
14

L6

"

Strlt

8 .

W
18

Ll

P10

G8

EAST

14
14

11·8

San DWtgD
001
020 000 3
E-BGrles (3) OP---Qncrnnall 2 LOB~
Crnc~nnatl 7, Sa-l Dteogo 6 . 28-Cesey (14),
Har11119 (11, Lorena (Oi). HR-Grifiev Jr. (7).
Dunn (11), C5-loretta (1 ). $-DWells.

Hl..ld!lon T -2:40 A--37,958 (-40,950)

Cincinnati
ab rhbi
DJmnz2b 50 0 0
Larklnu 4 01 1

""'"" , o o·o o

Hmmel3b 4 0 1 2
JaCrul ph 1 0 0 0
Harangp 2110

CaS8'} lb 5 0 1 0

.g~~·Hc1 ~ ~ ~ ~
Freelrl

3000

Vlentin c

40 10

JCastro ss 2 0 0 0
Total&amp; 36 8 8 II
011

·San Diego
ab r 1'1 bl
Bffgh.53b 3 1 3 1
Lorette 2b 4 0 1 2
BGilesrl
4000
Nevin lb 4 0 0 0
KIBSkoM
3010
Payton cf 4 0 1 0
Ojedac
2100
ROnson ph 1 o 0 0
Greene ss 4 1 2 0
Wells p 1 0 0 0
LongjiD
t 000
AVazqz ph t o o 0
Ttttala
32 3 8 3
002

020 -

'B

s-

·-

IPHRER!JBSO

JSW"'1tf L2·3

""''""'
"""""""'

5 2·3
1·3

5
1

1
I

0
2

""St. Lauria
w.

'NfoJ~IIams

4

1

2

3

0
0

0
0

0
0

1
1

1

I

0

0

4 1 1 2 5
100000
Guo::I008: Fifst Jerr;
Meals: SBcond. Ed Montague. Third. Jerry
~res-Home . Cll~s

c.y,..

T- 2:31. A-35,QOCI {50.345)

Plrales 15, Rockies 10, (121
Color•do

Pltt.OUf\lh
TR&lt;tnnd 7221
JWiiSn ss 6 3 4 0
Kendall c 5 1 2 1
Mckwkll 5 '111
CW~!Wlr1
5447
Baylf
2000

Ciavton ss
Helton tb
Castrlla 3b
Burrntz ct
JJnngs ph
Hllldaylt

Castillo 2b 6 1 2 1

001 2311 040 005 -

005 021 020 ooo -

·-

1

0

0
1

Totlita

33 3 a 2 TOUIII

39 715 7

Chicago

010 001
001 3
Los Angal••
030 310 OOx 7
E- TWalker {2\. AAamire.z (2), JEI"ICernacion
(2). DP--Chicago 2. los Angeles 2. lOBCtuca!?'l 5. Los Angeles 9. 28-TWalk8f (B),
AR,smrnu. (10), AEM&amp;rt lnilz (2), Lo Duca (7).
HR--8etrre(10). Grabowski(1 )

IP

H AERBBSO

Ctdcego
WoodL.3..J
Rusch
Wetm.eyer

T-2:31 . A-35.439 (56.000).

......,.,

St.louis

trb rhbl

ab rhbl

DeRosa 3C 4 o 1 1
MGrles 2b 4 0 0 0
CJones~ oiOOO
JDrewrl
3000

Wrriactt 2b 5 0 1 I
Ln~rdlt

4 0 0 0
4 0 0 0
411 0

AJonesct 3 o 0 0

Rolen3b

422 0

Anlarla ss
MArd"rrl
Tguch ir1
Whenyc
WWimsp
Lllnaph

4 12 1
2 1 1 0
1 0 10

JEstdac

4 0 1 D

Edmndct
Pu;ols 1b

lroche tb 3 0 1 0
JGarcass 31 1 0
JSWrt11p 1000
Almnzap 0000
Furcal ph 1 0 0 0
Totalt !0 1 -4 1 Totab

' 1002

20 -00

1000
32 5 8 -4

4

•

5

I

2

2

2
'

""""'
Mo ..

STomts W.2·1

s

Q
2

0

2
1
2

2
1
0

0

0

0

3 "

2
0

0
2

0
2

0

,

0

0

0

0

'

2
3

2

0
0
0

~

Elarton
SAeed

Fitzgerald indicted for kidnapping, other felonies

SPORTS
• Giles homers Padres
past Reds. See Page B1

BY J. MILES lAYTON
JLAYTON@MYDAt LYSENTtNELCOM

POMEROY - A mat1 charged
with kidnapping and several other
related crimes has been indicled by a
grand jury in the Meigs Cottrt of
Common Pleas.
Shawn Fil7gerald. 26, of Coolvil le
was indicted for kidnapping. feloniou s assault. aggravated burglary.
and intimidation of a crime viclim all felonies. He is currently being
held in the Gallia County Jail with a
bond set at $200.000. I 0 percenl

- 586613
1 1 0000
12 1 10 0
123311

Hankkalr!

VNunez
FuertiBS
1 2·3 2
0 0 1 2
Chacon
11·3 0 0 0 4 0
Jrlopez L.o-1
t 4 5 5 1 1
Meadows pl!ched to 3 bailers 111 1t1e Bltl.
Hankkilir p!k:hed to 2 barters 10 lhe 8lh
HBP--by Jrlopez (Cota). by KWells (Ciaytoo).
WP-Eiar1on, Jrlq&gt;ez. PB--1o&lt;andall
Ump.res-Home. .Jerry Crawfofd , First, Danen
Spagnerdi; Second. Phil Guzzi: Thrrd. Jack
Sam~.~&amp;ls.

T- t36. A-21.1 23 (50.449\.

Phllliaa 1o, Giani&amp; 4
San Fr1n
ab r hbl
4013

Byrdc!
Aolrl55S
Thom81b
W001an 10
BurretiN
Lbrthalc
Da8ell3b
Utley2b

Cardinale 5, Braves 1

3
3

IP H AERIIBSO

1

1000
10 0 0

3
1
1
1

15
10
E-Boyd (2). BurnitZ (2), Holliday (4) . OPPi11$bulgh &gt;2 , Colorado 2; LOB-Pmsburgtt
11. Colorado 16. 28-Ward (1), Cla'flon 3 (9),
Helto~ (1 1). Caalilla (1 4). MaSweeney (4).
38-JWil500 (2). CW~son (2). LuGpnzalez
(1). MaSwe•ney (1). HR-TRedmen (2),
CWrlsoo 2 (8), Hill (1), BurniiZ (6), HOlliday
(4). SB---JWIIson (4), Mackowiak (3). SMac:kowilk, Bey. Vogelsong. Clayton . SFCastrlla. Bumitz.

'

1000

2
1
0
1

Pitt.tlurgh

1

oi 0 1 1

5
4
1
4

CoiOJIIdo

1

AEMtizss
WQO!:!p
Atlschp
Godwin IJh

5 2 4 o
42 1 1

3000
AN une.z pn 1 0 0 0 PelkJwrl
Ward 1b 41 20 MaSWyrf 4030
Hrllptl
1 1 1 2 Hawper1 2000
Stynes.3b 6 0 1 2 CJhsonc 6020.
KWell&amp;p 2000 Eiarton p t 1 1 0
1000
Vgtsngph 0 0 0 0 Milesph
3000
Cotaph
0100 Hckinglf
Totall !0151115 Totals 50 101910

Johnston

Delee lb .4 0 0 0
Berrenc 3 1 1 0

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

• r hbl
LuGnzl 2tl 7 1 2 1

lib f hbl

Boet1ringer

Lo• r\ngetaa
ab ,r hbl
lzturis ss 5 1 1 0
LOucac 4032
Brdeyc!
50 1 1
ShGren1tr 5000
Beltre 3b 4 1 1 1
JHmclz 3ll 0 0 0 0
JEcrcnrt
4 21 0
Grbwsl( H 4 1 3 2
Cora2b
41 31
Weaver p 412 0

at

8;

1·3

Kli"le

Chicago

~=

Padres

000 1
Oh 5
JSWr9'rt (1}.
LOB-Atlantl
5 'S1 lOUIS 8 28--JGarciB (2), Rolen (6)
HR-Renlilrl!l (3) 58--MAnderson {3)
JSWngnt. Matheny 2, WWtlilams

KW•"'
Boyd

233212
384400
2 1 0 0 0 2
MAivera
132201
1 1 0 0 0 1
GotdonWJ·l
1 1 0 0 1 2
~n
2 3 0 0 0 2
HB~~ Shield! (AAodnguez).
Umpires-Home, Geny Davis: First Lerry Pon·'
862217
1 2 1 1 0 2
c1no: Second ..Greg GibSon : Third, Bruce Sancnez
Dreckmall. T--3.57. A--36,706 !57,4781
HBP--by WetMtr (Barren).
Umpires-Home. Well~ Bell: Frrst. Laz Draz.:
Second, Kevin Kelley : Third, John H1rschbedi
Reds 6,
3
Ouan1ril

Alllntl
001 000
St. Louis
020 002
E-laroelle (1), JGI.f'CII (4].
Womack f3). DP-SI Lours 1

Dodge&lt;s 7, Cubs 3
lb r hbl
TWaN&lt;r 2b 4 1 2 0
CPttson c1 4 0 0 0
SSosan 4 0 . 1 0
Aloutr
4 120
ARmrz:Jb 301 1

52 20
3 1 2 1
2 o ·1 1

5231
S 1 1 1
4 1 1 o
4 1 2 1

Crmrerp 0000
Ledee p11 1 a o o
BAbre"'rl 4 2 1 1
Worrellp 0000
Mlholodp 3011
Tof'urz2b 2 0 0 0
Totals 42101510

TIJCker rt
Hmndsph
Motrrrl
Atlonzo p11
Snow tb
Dllmre 3tl
Gmaomd

.b,hbl
300 0
100 0
100' 0
1 0 1 1
2 I 1 0
2 0 0 0
4 0 2 0

BondsH

3 t1 0

FeliZ3b
Przyns c
DCruzss
NPerez 2b
JeWmsp
TyWikfp

4 12 1

Totela

.....,. .
t~,

4 _1 1 0

400 0
40 10

100 0
10 0 0

35 4 9 2

Ptl!lsdelpttla
200
·S•n Fr•ncl•co 010

330
020 - 10
100 101 4
E-Rollins {4). DP-Phtl&amp;delphl8 2. _LOBPh~eclelphlll 8. Siln Fre.ncrsco 7_ ( B--8Abreu
(61 . Utle~ ( 1). Gr issom (8), Bonds (6),
PierzynSki (2). NPerez (6). 39-Byrd (1 ),
Thome (I). HR-~Irz (5). SB-Aoll1ns (5).

OBITUARIES

2004 FORO F·l50

On Friday, May 28, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not
forgotten. They will be similar to the sample below:

$3500
2004 FORO EXPLORER

0

% FINANCING

..,

Er $2,000 REBATE

-

David C. Andrews
duly 10, 1961-May 5, 1980

·May God's angels

2004 FORO EXPEDITION

0

Page AS
• Michelle L. Stobart,
33
• Patricia Jeane
Michael, 70
~ • Juanita J. Lucas, 81

we remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.

~ fltft1fsCJN,~

guide you and
protect you
throughout time.

% FINANCING

Er $2,000 REBATE

2004 MERCURY MOUNTAINEER

i

O

~··-

l
tME8!:U.R.Yl

%FINANCING .
Er $1,000 REBATE

Always in our hearts,
John arul Mona Andrews and
family .

wish, select one of the following FREE verses below to
l"""miJanyyour tribute.
I. We hold·you in our thought• and memories forever,
2. May God cradle you in Hi ~ anns. now and forever.
3. Forever missed, never forgottcn. May Goo hold you in the polm of

His hand.

WEATHER

l!

will be with you until we meet again.
5. The days we shared were sweet. I long 10 see you again in'God's
heavenlyglory.
6. Your courage and bra&gt;ery still inspire us all, and the memory of your
smile fills us with joy and laughter.
7. Though out of sight, you II forever be in my hean lind mind.
8. The days may come and go. but the times we shared will alwaysremain.
9. May the light of peace shine on your face for eternity.
·
10. May Goo's angels guide you and protect you throughout time.

You were a light in our life that burns forever in 0ur hearts,
12. May Goo's graces shine over you for all time.
II.

ll You are in uur thoughts and prayers from morning to night and from

yearto year.
15. May the Lord bless you with His graces and warm, loving heart.

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND $8.00 PER LISTING • $12 IF PICTURE INCLUDED
Fill out the form below and drop off to:
The Daily Sentinel
With Fondest Memories
Ill Court Street, Pomeroy, OH

45769
DEADLINE: THURSDAY, MAY 20TH, NOON

cash down .
The dwrge' stem from an i nt:ident
th ai occurred in early April when
Fi1zgerald allegedly . broke into
Sleven Hulse's home in Chester and
lhreateneJ him wilh a baseball bat.
according to Meigs Coun ty Sheriff\
repons . Hu lse lried to defend himself
witll a .22 ca liher rille , bul Filzge rald
lOok the tiik from hit11 and fired 'everal round' into llle ce iling .
According 10 the 'hcri ff "s repm~t.
Hulse said Fitzgerald hit him in the
head with a baseball bm :md then he
allegedly kidnapped Hube\ girl-

friend Kimberke Mayle - 11le ex·
girlfriend of Fitzgerald .
When Meigs Counly Sherifh
Depu1ie s arrived. Hube had blood on
his · face and arms. An emer£encv
stJUad treated him for his infurie'.
Hulse to ld deputies he believed
Fitt.gcrald and bi s accomplice.
Thomas Shu ler. were beaded toward
a hou'e in Tuppers Plains. Deputies
called for a&gt;Sistance from the
Middleport and Pomeroy Police
Departments and immediately began
a search for the missing suspects and
tile woman.

Wil en Meigs sheriff\ deputies
reached the Tuppers Plain' area. they
discovered lhe car with Mayle and
both Fit7gerald and Shuler. who was
also arrested. on Dobbins Road.at the
intc rscc li.on of State Route 7.
The sheriffs rcpon said Mdyle had
some injuries fr om being hil wi\h a
baseball bat. She wa' 1ransponed to
a· BlcneS&gt; Hospital and later
released. Fitzgerald will be arraigned
m the Meigs Cou nty Court of
Common Plea' in lhe very near
futu t'e .

Downtown beautification under way in Pom.eroy

London

BY CHARLENE HoEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAtLYSENTINEL.COM

Pool set to

POMEROY
In
Pomeroy over the ne xt cou·
pie of weeks, it's going to
be all about beautitication
of the downtown area not only for the enjoyment
of local residents, but visitors expected to come in for
festivals and su ngfesls.
. Wednesday weeds were
being removed from planting
areas bet ween Main Street
and the parking lot and color- ·
ful nowers were being planted by two merchants.
Nexl week 20 hanging
baskels will be placed on
rods allached 10 the period
lights along Main Street.
Plans were discussed at
this
week's
Pomeroy
Merchants Association for
cleanin~ up the village and
enha~cmg the downtown
with flowers and plants.
Volunteers to assist with the
planting and maintenance of
the flower beds are needed
and work sessions will be
announced.
The need for additional
trash receptacles was discussed. Members were·
reminded that the Merchants
Association has a power
washer which can be used to
clean up awnings.
The first festival. Gold
Wing and Ribs. is sl&lt;tled for
June 4 and 5 and merchants
were reminded to decorate
their windows in an antique
theme. George Wright said
that he will have an antique
Victrola playing in front of

open with
a splash
BY J. MILES lAYTON
JLAY TO N@MYDAI LYS ENTtNEL. COM

S9bbi Karr of Heritage House and Annie Chapman of Chapman Shoes were busy
Wednesday working on the Pomeroy Merchants Association's downtown beautification pro·
ject Volunteers are needed to assist in weeding the plant1ng areas. preparing the soil and
getting the flowers in the ground. (Charlene Hoeflich)
Clark's Jewelry Store and
encouraged others to do fea ture dispjays on the sidewalk
as well as in lhe windows.
Thi s year lhere promises
to be plenty of ribs for
Goldwing visitors. Bill
Quickel reporting for lhc
committee. noted thai four
rib concessionaires will be
on hand. Several hundred
motorcyclists are expec1ed
lo come in for 1he feslival.

Entertainment
will
include the Third Shift
Band on Friday night &lt;ind
the
gospel
group.
··crossroads··· wiII be per·
forming daytime Saturday
wilh Elvis tribule anisl
Dwight kcnhouer doing un
evenin~
show in the
a mph iilieal~r
Light parades by lh e
m01orcycles bolh ttp and
down river will lake place

on both Friday and Saturday
nights at 9 p.m. and there
will be guided daytime
tours for lhe cyclist s around
the coumy.
Jutied crafter' will be dis·
playing and dcmonstraling nn
lhc upper parking lot. This
year molorcycles will be on
the lower parkin!! lot and tlll
Coun Street, instead of &lt;rlo ng
Main. Quickel reponed.
'

SYRACUSE - With tem·
perutures rising into the 80s·,
Syracuse Village Council set
a date for the opening of
London Pool and hired a lifeguard staff.
' Ltllldon Pool will open at
noon May 29 as free swi m
day for all. closing al 6 p.m.
The pool's regular seaso n
officially ope~s May 30 and
lhe hours of operation will be
from noon to 6 p.m. Monday
through Saturday; Sunday I
. p.m. to 6 p.m.
Council hired Brian Allen
as pool manager and Tommy
Sbepard as head lifeguard .
The lifeguards this year will
be Emily Hill. Derek Roush.
David Maxon. Brandi Dailev.
Brittany Hill. Josh Smith arid
Kaylu McCarthy. Allen will
be at the pool May 24
through May 28 from 4 p.m.
10 ~ p.m. In ;e ll pool pa&gt;Ses
or an~w e r any questions
regarding ihe pool.
.
"We· re reall) exciled for
the coming yea r:· said Allen.
a lcacher fur the Meigs Local
School Dimil'l . ··And we
hnpe to ..,ee everyone out
there again.··

Please see Pool. AS

Band members, director honored at Southern Band Banquet

4. Thank you.for the wonderful days we shured togelher. My prayers

14. We send this message with a loving kiss for eternal rest and happiness.

2004 LINCOLN TOWN CAR

Heat ties series with
Pacers, B2

.Tribe tops BoSox for
toooth time, B2

Major League Baseball
National League

\

BY JiM FREEMAN
SENTINEL CO RRESPONDENT

Dolalls

on Page A2

INDEX
2 SECfiONS - 12 PAGES

Calendars

A2

Classifieds

B3·4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3.

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Places to go

A6

Sports

B1

Weather

A2

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Cu.

RACINE - Members of
the 2003-2004 Southern
Band and band dire ctor
Jeanette Oldaker were honored Monday night at the
annual Soulhern Band bantJUet in Racine.
Gtlest speaker fur the
evening was Gerald Powell.
who was the band's first
field commander in 1947.
Powell said the origin of
the band was reminiscent of
The Music Man with a new
band director introducing
siUdenls 10 the joy of music;
excepl the director wasn '1 a
fasl-lalking Professor Harold
Hill. but Bernard Krinkie of
Middleport.
Powell recalled the exci lement of those firs! few years
of band, when students were
inlroduced to mu sical instru·
ments they had never played.

and the pride they felt when
wearing hand-me-down uni forms
donated
hv
Nel&gt;onville High Schoof
The tirst uniform• were re LI
and black. It would be a few
vears until uniform s were
purchased in Racine 's lradi ·
tiona! purple and gold . ·
Powell encouraged lhe stu·
dents to follow lheir musical
dreams. "Once you get start ed in music you never kn ow
where il will take you."
Powell concluded .
This
year'S
l]&lt;mtJuet
ca pped an cvemful year for
the band. a year hi ghl ig hted
by the purchase ui new band
uniforms.
Band members also saiu
farewe ll to band director
Jcanctle Oldaker. who is
resig ning the posi1i on a1 the
end of the school year. She
wa&gt; recogniLed wilh a computer sltdc. show. which
tncluded still photos and

P"''

three
video from lhe
yc&lt;trs. The presentation
clearly showed the progress
made by the small program
in ju't a few short years.
It wa.s noled thai Oldaker
was ~ey in relurning 1he
rnu~ic

program to Southern

Lot:a l afler a severa l-ye ar
hiatus in the 1990's . She
began workin g with sixth grade

stLtdellt~

at the now-

closed
Syracu se
and
Portland elementary &gt;choo l\.
and at Soulhcrn Junior High
School. and formed tho,e
se parate gro ups inlo a single
band.
Oldaker also inlrod ucetl
Ben Hagar. who as&gt;Lune' the Sen1or members of the Southern Marching Band recognized
band director'S rule.
Oldaker poitll ed nu l some duri ng Monday night's band banquet were, from left: Shawn
of the band's ac cn mj:Jii sh- Barnhart. Kenny McKnight. David Gloeckner and Field
menls for the schoo l year Commander Brandon Sturgeon.
The vcar i, not over for
includ ing perform i n ~ al I0 many nf the ~t ud ent"~ perfootball ga mes and I0 bas- fo rmed in 'nlo unci ensemble the 'ltidents: graduation,
at
Ohio
ketball ga mes, and marching c·ompclilion
Uni\
ersity.
in .11 parades . In addilion
Please see Band. AS

National Nursing
Name of d e c e a s e d - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Relationship lome _ _;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Number of !elected verse---Dale of birth _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;.__ _ _ __
Date of passin~&gt;-------

Print your name

here------------------------

Home Week
May 12-18 is Notional Nursing Home Week.
Holzer Medical Center recognizes our long-term core partner,
Holzer Senior Care Center, during their special week, and congratulates
them on their fourth consecutive Five-Siar Rating from H,,althgrodes, Inc .

A d d r e s s - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - Phone numbe~------C i t y - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Slate----- Zip---Make Check Payable to THE DAILY SENTINEL

L-------------------------------------~

For more information about Holzer Senior Core Center,

please cqll (740) 446-5001 ..

Discoue1· the Holzer D{flerence

www .holzer.org

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