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                  <text>Hundreds evacuated in
flooded Southeastern
Ohio towns, As

Shapiro feeling good .
about Indians, Bt

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Anderson to address Meigs Dems

SPORTS
• Jiminez hits game '
winner. See Page 81

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEO®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

strong advocate for the
working men und women of

Meigs County. our older
POMEROY Terry citi zens. and our children
Anderson of Athens. the · - those who mosl need a .
Democratic candidate for voice in the state legisla'
the Ohio Senate, will be the ture.'" Mais.on saicl.
"'The 2004 election may
keynote speaker Saturday
night at the Meigs County be the most imponant elecDeniocratic
Partv"s tion most of us have seen in
our lifetimes. The issues
Jefferson-Jackson Dinne1:.
A Lorain native and now facing this comnumit). the
an Athens business owner stJte and the nation affect
and rancher. Anderson is all of us. and as Democrats.
best known as the Associated we must do all we can to
Press foreign correspondeni elect our slate of cand idates
held capti ve in Lebanon to important o!Tices. where
I hey can make a difference.
from 1985 to 1991.
"'BvJ
electinob
Terrv• not only fo r us but for genAnderson to the Ohio erations to come.''
''The . most importanl
Senate, we will also elect a

issue for the senalor from
the 20th district is pruvidin2 a Ui:-,linctive. louJ ,-oicc·

for the people he or she represents. demanding I he 'liPport they deserve and
addre&gt;Sin~
the current
crises in cdunllion. health
care and job loss facing the
region:· Anderson

~aid.

Local
and
regional
Democratic candidate» for
olfice will also attend the
dinner. which will begin at 5
p.m .. with a social hour. followed by dinner at 6. It wi.ll
be held at the Meigs
Multipurpose Senior Center.
Ticket' arc S 15. and $25
for a couple. und are avai lable &lt;.II the door.

This photo from the Meigs County Sheriffs Department shows
some of the 3.000 mariJuana plants siezed from a Rutland
Town ship residence on Tuesday. 1Br1an J Reed)

Officers
sieze
Bradbury TAG students teach
preschoolers joy of gardening 3,000 pot plants
.

BY BRIAN

'

JepLllies Rick Smi th and
Adam Smith oblain~J a
:-.ean.:h warrant. anJ :-.C\'~ral

J. REEt

BRE ED@MY DAI LYSENTI NEL.COM

RLTLAND - A Rutland ()Lher plant:-. found grew, ing
Township man is in pi! after behind the property were also
sheriff\ dcptllies siezcr.l sie7eJ."'
nearly :1.000 mariju.ma plants
Deputic·s estimate the\ alue
from his property.
of eaL·h plant at S 1.500 .
Sheri ff Ralph Tru"ell "ud
ln siLk
the
residence.
an anonymou' lip made to his deputies fnund a small 4uanoffice resulted in the di,covtity of marijuana· and paruery of 2.632 mari_1uana plant'
at the home of Sah adnr phernalj,,. T1·u"ell 'aid.
Rui1 is in the Middleport
Aro la. also known a' Jose
Jail.
and charges are pending
Ruiz. 26. and his wife. Ann
Cleland Rui7. 24. of Swick against him. Tru"ell said . He
said -an inve,ti gation into the
Road .
'The plants were found in a case will continue.
The
Rutland
Police
fenceu area of one and a half
Department
ass
isted
at
· the
to two acres,"' Trussell said.
"After the sce ne was secured. scene.

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Carl R. Watson, 82
• Myrtle Sisson, 87

Page 24 •

Pomeroy • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Health Care 2004

LO'ITERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 5-0-1
Pick 4 day: 3-0-7-7
Pick 3 night: 1-8-7
Pick 4 night: 1-1-6-9
Buckeye 5: 6-19-26-35-36
Superl.citto: .1-8-13-24-25-30

Bonus Ball: 46

May 29 ceremony
to honor WWII vets

Kicker: 7-0-0-2-0- 1

West VIrginia
Daily 3: 6,5-4
Daily 4: 8-2-9-7
Powerball: 14-15-31-37-41 (31)
Power Play: 5
Kassandra Mullins, fourth grade TAG student, works with preschooler Jordan Roush on
planting flowers in one of the new growing areas created between the old Bradbury bui lding and its newer section. (Charlene Hoeflich)

WEATHER

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCH@MYDAI~YSENTINEL.COM

1{(/N d
Details on Page A7

INDEX
Sr.crwNs Calendars
2

I

t

Its Time. You Got A Good Nights Sleep

Classifieds

16 PAGF.S

A3
Bs-6

Comics

Dear Abby

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL is proud to announce the.opening of its Sleep Disorders Center:

The Sleep Disorders Center can effectively treat disorders-like apartner's snoring, gasping for air or kicking in the

Obituaries

middle of the night. Maybe you're having difficulty falling asleep or are excessively fatigued during the daytime.

Spo1ts

.

The Center can help you get back to your normal cycle. Now accepting appointments with a physician referral.

Editorials

Places

to go

MIDDLEPORT
at
the
Preschoolers
Bradbury Learning Center
are having . the joy of
watching their garden
grow. thanks to a special
project of.Meigs County's
fourth grude talented and
gifted students.
An area between the old
section of the former
Bradbury ·· school and a
newer section of the building was plowed up and
planted wilh flowers and
vegetab les by the TAG
students and preschoolers
who now daily tend . it
under the watchful eye of
the staff.
The project for the TAG
stud.ents and their teacher,
Cecilia Harris, began sev-.
era! weeks t\go. Weeds
covered the a·rea which has
never had a useful purpose. The students were
given the challenge of
changing an eyesore into Dozens of plants were put into the ground by children at the
Bradbury Learning Center under the supervis ion of fourth
an asset for the school.
grade
TAG students who developed the plan for changing an
"They began by develop-

Weather
© 2004 Ohio Volley Publishing Cu.

many will not. ;o 1\Ja,on
t\\(1
Amc-ri(';W
Lcgio1i p~)"h will b~ honoring
World War II 'eterans from
Mason Countv in a ccre'!HIIl\
on the &gt;CIIll~ d·ay as pan nt" ti'c
Le~in1fs l"at ional Dedication
Da\• aL·tiritie'i. ·
Tile local ceremnm will
he II a.m. at the · \Vest
Vir~inia
Slate
Farm
Mu~eum and i' open to an:
Wo rld War II \eleran re,id-

BY KEVIN KELLY

Cnuntv·~

KKELLY@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

Please see Joys, AS

area filled with weeds into a flower and vegetabre garden .
(Charlene Hoeflich)

POINT PLEASANT. W.Va.
- Satllrclay. May 29 will he''
meaningful clay for World
War II vetera ns. That\ " ·hen
the l ~1ng-awaited National
World War II Memorial \\'ill
be dedicated in wa,ilingtnn .
While numerous sun'il·ing
veteran&lt;.

the

··G real est

Generation" celebrated in inl.! in ~la:-.on Count\'. -.,aiJ
Tom l:lrokaw"s bestsellin g Mile' S. Epling. -''hL'. "
volume of the sa me name. arc
Please see Vets, AS
traveling to the dedinuinll .

Accident under investigation

The Oh10 State Highway Patro l 1S 1nvest1gating a two car acci- ·
dent at the 1ntersect1011 of Oh1o 7· and Oh10 143. which sent
both drivers to Holzer Med1cal Center on Wednesday morning.

Holzer Hospice Cruise· In
Saturday, May 22 • 4 PM ·- 8 PM
2881 State Route 160 (former Thaler Ford building)

J

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
304-675-2551

For more inFormation, call
1-800·500·4850

Free registration! Vehicles will be registered the day of the event.
Games • Live Music ·• Door Prizes • And Much More!

Special thanks to the OLE Car Club • All proceeds benefit Holzer Hospice

"

'

�'

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

SANTA . CRUZ, Calif. to decide whether to hear
(AP) - What do you do another case that could undo
when you sue U.S. Attorney · or affirm the Corrals' right
General John Ashcroft and to grow pot. A second case
win?
Fifty-one-year-old in federal court in San
Valerie Corral , a sinewy 5- Francisco could also affect
foot tall great-granddaugh- the couple .
The J.ustice Department
ter of Italian immigrants,
refused
comment.
throws back her head laughFor now, the Corrals are
ing. her hands reaching to
the clouds, hips wiggling. the only people in the
United States growing marifeet stomping.
"It's my happy dance,., juana in their backyard
she says, throwing her arms backed by state law, a local
ordinance and a federal
around her husband Mike .
She has also · planted an judge 's injunction And
Valerie Corral has become a
acre of marijuana.
The decision that lets the heroine to proponents of
crop remain is just one medical mariJuana. .
.
"This cou ld be the
round in a long legal battle.
Last month, a federal moment of the beginning of
judge in San Jose issued a the .end of thi s insane war
preliminary injunction ban- 'against the sick,'' said Bruce
ning the Justice Department. Mirken of the Washin~ton
. th~
Drug D.C.-based advocacy group
including
E n f o r c e m e n t Marijuana Policy Project.
Administration, from inter- "And while the DEA and the
fering with the Corrals' pot Justice Department charac garden. set above an ocean terize Valerie as a common
bluff near Davenport. about drug dealer. all you have to
an hour south of San ·cto is spend two minutes
Francisco. The injunction with her to know that's a
gives the judge time to li e."
During the past three
reconsider his earlier deciwhile sharing mardecades,
sion to allow the garden to
ijuana with sick people ,
be uprooted.
The Corrals call the Corral has watched 140
friends. ranging in age from
·
injunction a viCtory.
They share their harvest 7 to 96, as they died of can through the first legally rec- cer. AIDS and other illnessognized. nonprofit medical es.
" It is the greatest honor to
marijuana club in America.
which they founded in 1993 . be asked by a person who is
The club has about 250 seri- dying to sit with them," she
ously ill members who have said.
prescriptions from their docReflection on those deaths
tors to use marijuana to alle- has given her strength, she
viate
their
suffering, said - while battling the
increase their appetites and government. when federa l
control their seizures. The agents pointed a ritle at her
head. and when her motives
marijuana is free.
The San Jose ruling is one have been called into quesof a number challenging tion.
"John Ashcroft is not
federal restrictions on medical marijuana, · which has someone I would have choconsistently won support in se n to tangle with,butlthink
national opinion polls since of him. and George Bush, as
· 1995 but has had a mixed lost souls," she said. "When
record in state ballot mea- I look at them, I think about
how they are just people ....
sures.
This summer, the U.S. and that makes them less
Supreme Court is expected fearsome. Ultimately we all

Thursday, May 20,

2004

.Dream to be president
is not out of girl's reach

Valerie Corral. co-founder of the only legally recognized, nonprofit medical marijuana club in America. holds a bag of medical marijuana in her office in Santa Cruz, Calif., May 3, 2004.
(AP Photo/ Paul Sakuma)
·
make the S&lt;lme journey, and court system to get whal she
ultimately I hope they make wants.n
theirs in peace."
Valerie Corral's path to
In fact. Corral's compas- becoming a medical marision is grudgingly respected juana advoca te began 31
at the DEA\ San Francisco years ago. the day a small
airplane swooped low and
office.
''I'm personally impressed buzzed a Volkswagen she
with her desire to help was riding in through the
de&lt;ithly ill people.'' said Nevada desert. The car went
spokesman Richard Meyer. out of control and was sent
"It 's just that she makes it skidding, rolling and bounclook like the way to help ing 365 feel through the
sick and dying people is to dust, brush and rocks.
give them marijuana. And · Corral's slight body was
that's not the case .
flung against the . roof and
"There's hundreds of ways doors. causing brain damto help these .people. The age. epilepsy. and a lifetime
DEA has a lot of compas- of staggering migraines. She
sion for those people who took prescription drugs but
arc sick and dying. but I sti ll suffered convulsions,
think there are many. many shak in g ·and grand mal
ways to help them without seizures.
Then one day, Mike handgiving them marijuana.''
At DEA headquarters , ed her a medical journal
authorities said the issue has article that showed ma(ijua nothing to do with Valerie na controlled seizures in
mice. Since then, for 30
Corral or compassion.
"This may be personal to years, Valerie Corral says
her, bur it's not personal to she has maintained a steady
the DEA ," said the agen'cy's level of marijuana in her
Will Glaspy in Washington, system.
Her legal
cha llenges
D.C. "The DEA's job is to
enforce the Controlled began in 1992. when the
Substance Act. Congress local sheriff arrested her for
passed the laws and charged growing five marijuana
us with enforcing them. She plants. With Mike, she chalis attem'pting to use the lenged the law, using the

Valerie Corral and her ~usband. Mike . founders of the only
legally recognized . nonprofit medical marijuana club . in
America. pose for a photo in their office in Santa Cruz. Cal1f ..
May 3, 2004. The Corrals grow marijuana in their backya~d for
medical use. with permission from local, state and federal governments.(AP Photo/ Paul Sakuma)
a&gt;scrt that growing. using
defense of necessity.
· Prosecutors dismissed the and di stributing marijuana
case. saying they didn't was illegal. To provide legal
think they could win before protection. the city of Santa
a sympathetic jury in liberal Cruz deputized the Corrals
Santa Cruz. When the sher- in 2000 to function as mediff arrested the Corrals again ical marijuana providers.
In Scpiember 2002 , federin 1993 , the district attorney
said he had no intention of al agents raided the Corrals'
ever prosecuting them and far on taking the couple to
told police to leave them jail and pulling up more than
150 plants .
alone .
The Con'als were never
A few years later. the
charged.
but the raid .
Corrals
helped
draft
California's
landmark prompted them to begin a
Compassionate Use Act. legal challenge to the federapproved by voters in 1996. al ban. aided by a team of
including
that allows patients with a attornevs
Univer~ity
of
Santa
Clara
doctor 's n~commemlation to
profeS&gt;nr
Gerald
use marijuana. Similar laws law
in
Alaska,
Arizona. Ue lmen and advocates at the
Coloradq, Hawaii. Maine. Drug Policy Alliance. a nonOregon and Washington profit Washington D.C.allow the infirm to receive. bascd organization.
This i~ the case in which .
possess , grow or smoke
marijuana for medical pur- the San Jose judge recently
poses without fear of state ruled in th eir fa vor.
"Representing
Valerie
prosecution.
The law did not provide Corral. for me, is like reprecomplete protection from senting Mother Teresa." said
Ue lmcn. a constitutional law
arrest.
While local . authorities expert, calling . her ''one of
worked with the Corral s to the mmt co mpassionate
protect them against thef1 peop le I've ever met"
And one who has led a
and coordi nate distribution.
federal agents continued to niovement to a 11\W high.

Giuliani heckled by families
of Sept. 11 victims as he
testifies before commission
NEW YORK (AP) - New
York officials probably would
not have changed security priorities even if ihey had knowledge of an August 2001 White
House briefing paper that
warned of terronsts easmg.c1ty
buildings, former mayor
Rudolph Giuliani told the Sept.
11 commission Wednesday.
Giuliani's testimony was
interrupted with angry outbursts
by victims' families. including
chams of "One-sided!" and
"Put us on the panel!" One
man, a longtime GIUliani adversary, was tossed out of the hear- ing after shouting at the panel to
"ask some real questions'"
The heckling was a sharp
contrast to some of the questioning from commission
members. who gave Giuliani a
warm welcome and praised his
leadership following Sept. II.
The Aug. 6, 200 I, mtelligence briefing for . President.
Bush - titled "Bin Laden
Determined To Strike in
U.S." - referred to evidence
of buildings in New York
bein~ looked by terrorists as
poss1ble targets. It mentioned
New York or the World Trade
Center three times.
"If that information had been
given to us. or more warnings
had been given in the summer
of 2001 , I can' t honestly tell
you we'd do anything differently," Giuliani testified.
"We were doing at the time
everything we could think of
... to protect the city."
Giuliani said the briefings he
received from federal officials
indicated that New York's
bridges. tunnels and. subways
were more likely targets.
"I do \hink the interpretation would have been more in
the direction of suicide
bombin~s
than · aerial
attacks.' Giuliani said one
day after his top commissioners were grilled over their
Sept. II response.
It was about 90 minutes into
his testimony thar Giuliani was
shouted down by family members of the trade center victims.
"My son was murdered' "
yelled Sally Regenhard, who
lost her firefighter son in the
attack. Others in the audience
shouted about the failure of
Fire Department radios, shoutin~, "Talk about the radios'"
' Yo11 're simolv wastinc

• ·- - ·---·- - - ··- .....
----

time at this point," commission head Thomas Kean told
the family members.
"YOU'RE wasting time! "
came the angry reply.
Just as Giuliani finished testifying, Christopher Brodeur a New Yorker who became one
of Giuliani's most ardent critics
during his two terms in City
Hall - jumped out of his seat.
'Three thousand people are
dead!" Brodeur yelled .before
security guards escorted him out.
'They were not killed because
he's a great leader.... Let's ask
some real questions!" A second'
spectator wa~ also ejected. ·
The lorrner mayor and his
commissioners were widely
hailed for their efforts after two
hijacked planes slamined into the
twin towers, killing 2,749 people
and rattling the city's psyche.
On Tuesday, commission
member John Lehman said
the failure of city age ncies to
communicate effectively on
9111 · was· a scandal "not worthy of the Boy Scouts, let
alone this great city."
Giuliani said in his opening
statement that the commission's
priority should be preventing a
new attack, not assigning blame.
"Our enemy is not each other,
but the terrorists who attacked
us," Giuliani said. The mayor
acknow Iedged there were "terrible mistakes" made on Sept.
II , but attributed that to the
unprecedented circumstances.
After testifying, Giuliani
suggested that Lehman owed
his staff an apology.
"I was upset about that
comment and the Boy Scout
thing," Giuliani said outside
the hearing. "They did the
best job that anybody could."
Commission member James
Thompson, before questioning
Giuliani, said the pariel was
"not engaged in a search for
blame, n.ot ~!l!pged in a sear~h
lor vollams. tnstead, he sa1d,
the commission hoped to save
the lives of other Americans.
Giuliani pointed out that the
bmvery and quick thinking of city
rescuers undCr brutal conditions
had saved thousand&gt;of li ves.
."Maybe. ~.000 more, maybe
9,000 more than anyone could
rightfully expect" were brought
to safety before the towers collapsed, Giuliani said. About
25,000 people were evacuated
from the World Trade Center.

BY THE

The Daily Sentinel

Massey Ferguson • Fe!Wihand
• Bobcet • Shenntu
New Idee •Rhino
New Holland • Cub Cadet

16" 1 To~&gt;pirt~

615-1812

Point Pleasant, WV

113-5536
•

Mason, WV

~

'''
•••

'

Gallipolis
Chiropractic
L- .Center

Community Calendar
Ar~a

Clubs and
organizations

Hor ~c

Cnfc in

Pom~..·ru\. Ja n~.·

Ann Aanc slad ol- K:11 r
Audiolol') 111 A then' "iII
pre~enl

ern

a prug r:.m1 on !lind hcarint!
~.,arc.

Resef\·atiun s ar~ to he llli!dc·
·at 9'!2 -~2 1 -1 . Ciue,h i!rC "c·l
come.

Communit\

Or~anitataHl \.\ill meet tit

Thur,da~. \Ia,\ 2ll
PMU ER OY - The .\ki ~,
Count\ Retired Tc·ac·h'c'r,
As,oc:ttion "iII 1nc·e t .11
noon fur lunch :II the \\'lid

Other events

6: ·fo p.m. at 1he Rae one f-orst
llapll'l Church for J dinner
.111d rccugnotion of th~ &gt;chnl-

Frida1 . J\,Ja1 21
Po'MERO-i'
.Pomero)
Church of Chri&lt;t on West
&lt;~r . . hip \'inner ....
Main Street " iII h;" c " cummunit) pot luck dinner from
5:.10 to 7 p.no E\Cr)une i'
ill\ itcd .
Tuesda~. !\lay 25
\IIDDLEPORT - ,\ free
P0 ~1EIWY - Ye&gt;te r\'ear
dinna
will he 'ened from
e."a\ wntest " in ner \\'iii be,
.t!lll;lll need
:111d trophies -1 :~ 0 to 6: .10 p.m. al the
"" .1 rd ed ,It a (,;.1() pm . eere- \ liddleporl Church of Chri'l
Fam iil· Life- Cc·oHcT Fifth
IIHlll\ at the· St&gt;nior Cititen~
and
Main. ~1iddleport .
( 'e nter. Cal&lt;: and punch " ill
ht: 'IL'f\ ..:-d.

Social Events

SYRAC USE
Wildwood Garden Cluh \1 ill
meet at n:JO pn1. at the
home of Chro' Chapman· 111
Sunda)·, \Ia~· 23
Syra..:usc.
POM I:ROY
" Hi s
Tuesday. \ Ia~ 25
CHESTER
Ches tn 0\\'n" from .-\shla nd. Ky.
Shade Ri, cr Lod~e -1) \ '\\iII lw i 11 concert at I O:J()
F&amp;AM ll'ill h&lt;t\T ;t' 'peci.li a.m. at the Laurd Cli ff Free
meet ing for \\o r ~ in the
\kthodi,t Church. The pubentereJ appt\.'lltiL·L·. l k grt'L'. 7
lic' '' in,itcd h1 Glenn
p.m .
RACI ~E Tlw Racine· Rn\\ e. pa,tnr.

Church services

Birthdays
\londa.\ , \l it) 31
P0\1EROY - ."'. part)
hnnnr in ~ Beu lah Autho:r,on
on her XOth hirthda\ \\ill he
held I to .1 p.m. Sunua) at
the Se nior Cititt lh Center.
Card' ma\ he 'cnt to her at
Ple"""' t - Hill \Lonm. F\\ 'i ng. r. 0 . Bo \ .~ J 4 .
Pi~ e t nn. Ohio -l:'i6h I.

OReba
on 2004

Buick

@)Lesab re

·

~a&amp;lllll-:::~

Buick
'&gt;)' • o'

,.

\ · ,, .. ''•'" '!de'

y
~(' f\ F!Pc. '::["
Fuel For The Soul

· Hendrix honor~d for weight loss
COOLVILLE - Amy p.m. For more information 2633 or attend a fr ee meet Hendrix who has lost call Pat Snedden at 662- ing .
weight for six consecutive
weeks was honored at a
recent me eting of Tops
2013 , Coolville, held at
the Torch Baptist Church.
She was presented . a fruit
basket and certificate .
The monthly perfect
attendance winner was Pat
Snedden. A June 4 yard
sa le was discussed to be
held in Tuppers Plains as a
raiser. Tentative
fund
plan s were made for an
open house. Meetings are
held every Tue sday ni ght
at
the Torch Baptist
Church with weigh in
beginning at 5 : 15 p .m.
Meetin gs begin at 6 :30

mH

nreathof
Fresh Hir

Sunday Times-Sentinel
740-446-2342

All You Can Eat/

20, 2004 .

•

Our hcautifiil mtlrloorfumillfre offi'rs comfort. rflaxed .1'rvle ami
tiii COIII/'IY!IIIised 1ftlillitl'. V1sit our .1ho1t 'l'oom todar u11d choosefmm a11
autstrtluiillg Iele!'/iono(filmishingl· u11d ucce.l'.l'llries per(ect/(&gt;r nmr rani.

CbHIIIUIOUr

newWibltl
!lr!HVW!ICOHI.cam

PIZZA

sg.gg

Thursday, May

Celebrtlf:ing special
dtlfs with you!

.t
'

; DEAR READERS : I'm
United States. As a woman
:Still receiving fascinating letwho has fought hard to suc;ters in suppoo1 of the 13-yearceed in politics and govern'Oid girl who was ridiculed by
ment, ltnoly believe that ser,her teacher and classmates
vice to your nation is a most
.for revealing that she· d one
rew arding career.
Dear
;day like to be president of the
It is true a woman in poli Abby
:United States. Read on:
tics does have di spariries to
• DEAR ABBY: I read the
overcome. For years. women
:letter from "I Have a Dream"
fought for the right to vote,
:and would like to offer her
and today we continue to
:encouragement:
fight for equality .in many
DEAR "I HAVE A easy to ignore their criticism, careers.
DREAM": I was touched by and it is tough to look beyond
Women in government can
your letter to Dear Abby. and their doubts.. But remember, bring creativity, vision and
never
made commitment to the table. We
I want you to know that you · doubters
It is
America
a
better
place.
can become the president of
come with a different mindpeople
like
you
people
the United States because of
set than our male counterwho you are. not in spite of it. who dream big and are tilled parts, which makes for better
I have no doubt a woman will with hope - who make a debate and legislation. Both
be president one day, and difference in this world'.
Always remember that the parties need more recruitAmerica would be lucky to great
thing about America is ment of qualified female s.
have you leading us every that you can become presi- Schools need to encourage
step of the way.
dent , and you should never young women to become
When yo ung people like let anyone tell you different. interested in public service
)'OU express such a desire to
SEN . JOHN KERRY, through career days and menmake a diiTerence in people's WASHINGTON. D.C.
tor programs.
lives, you should be applaudI know that the tirst woman
DEAR SEN. KERRY: To
ed. Your teacher and your say that you are a busy man president
1s
alive.
classmates were wrong to these days is an understate- Somewhere out there. a
·laugh at your dream.
ment. That vou would still young girl is sitting in her
What you already know, reach out to help a child says classroom
interested jn
but they seem to have forgot- volumes about you as a per- becoming our nation 's first
'ten, is that we live in a coun- son.
female commander in ·chief,
try where e.very child, girl or
DEAR ABBY: As the first and I wouldn't be surpri sed if
boy, has an equal chance to woman elected Illinois state it's her. Best of luck to you,
grow up and become presi- treasurer, the first \voman re- · Mrs . President·' - JUDY
dent, or a teacher, or a doctor. elected to a statewide office BAAR TOPINKA , ILLI or a CEO, or the shopkeeper in Illinois and the first NOIS STATE TREASURER
Dear Abbl' is written bl'
down the street. That is what woman to lead a major party
makes our country unlike any in Illinois. I was appalled by Abigail Vai1 Buren, a/sn
place on Earth. Anything is the ne gative response the 13- know11 as Jean11e Phillips.
possible.
year-olcl girl (" I Have a and •m~' found ed by her
But to do the things we Dream") received from her moth e1; Pauline Phillips.
Dear Abhv at
believe in , we all have to teacher. her gu idance coun- Write
work hard, do our best, and se lors and fellow students 1\.'IVII'.DearAbhv.com or r0.
fight those who do not when she shared her dream of Box 69440. LOs Angeles. CA
always believe in us. It is not becoming president of the 90069.

PageA3·

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�OPINION

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20, 2004

Two decades ago. the
United States fell into a
panic over economic compe·
tition from Japan - unnecessarily. as it turned out.
Now, there's concern about
Morton
'outsourcing · to China and
Kondracke
India. But this time the fears
might be justified. · ·
'Japan In c ..' as it was
called in the 1980s. did not
come to dominate the world that America is in danger of
economy. partly because the becoming a ·Th ird World
nation's · banking system was country ' unless we adopt
ineffitieffi:' partly' ·tier'ause--· 'prl)te·ctionist"• potictes, ec9· .
the Japanese proved better at nomic guru Peter Drucker
copying technologies than has estimated that more jobs
inventing them. and partly are being created in the
because U.S. businesses got United States by foreign
scared enough to put investors- what one might
resources into boosting thei r call 'insourcing· -· than
productivity.
have been lost. ~
But now there's rea,on to
Such statistks make some
fear that the United States conservatives complacent.
could lose its technological But a new report by the
leadership to Indi a and National Science Foundation
China. two countries that are (NSF) is one of several that
exploiting their cheaper indicates American leaderwage rates. huge domestic ship may not last forever.
'The United States is in a
markets and (to a certain
extent) educated work forces long-di stance race to retain ·
to attract high-tech indu s- its essential global advantries and research business tage in science and engineer·
from the United States.
ing human resources and
A number of new studies sustain our world leadershtp
warn that, while the United in science and technology."
States still leads the world in wrote Warren Washington,
scientitlc innovation, we're chairman of the NSF's
in danger of losing our National Science Board.
advantage- and with it. the 'The outlook for the future
millions of highly skilled (is) uncertain. '
In January, the President's
jobs on which U.S. prosperity depends.
Council of Advisors on
The demagogic rhetoric of Science. and Technology
this presidential campaign warned that ' while not in
has hyped the immediate ·imminent jeopardy, a continthreat to the U.S. ~conomy uation of current trends
from . outsourcing of manu- could result in a breakdown
facturing jobs. However, the in the .. . U.S. innovation sys-.
outsourcing of high-tech ser- tern.·
vice jobs may become a real
And a just-publi shed
study by the Electronic
menace over the long term.
Despite the accusations Industries Alliance (EIA)
since toned down - by Sen. concludes that 'u nfortunate·
John Kerry, D-Mass., that ly, the United States' ability
the Bush administration was to adapt, compete and inno·
encouraging
'Benedict vate alongside emerging
Arnold corporations' to send workforces in countries
jobs abroad, the respected such as China and India is
Forrester Institute estimates threatened by a systematithat only 300,000 of ttw 2 cally weakened education
million jobs lost during the system . ·· a dearth of R&amp;D
Bush presidency have gone funding , visa policies that
offshore.
discourage the brightest farAnd while CNN's Lou eign minds and a business
Dobbs warns almost nightly climate heavy with regula-

tory ant! tax burden~.·
Ail the ;,tudies agree that
China is graduating three
times the number of engineering students each year as
the United State&gt;. Nearly
half of all Chinese under·
graduate degrees are in sci entitle fields. compared to 5
percent in the United States
Meanwhile. software engineers in India make $7.000 a
year. versus $64.000 in the
United States. In dia and
China -arc ·making •aggro,si&lt;ve
efforts to attract tech-ba;,ed
business from the United
States - and they are suc·
ceeding.
A paper presented last
by
Sen.
Joe
week
Lieberman. D-Conn .. at a
New America Foundation
symposium notes that ·in
2002. China 'urpa"ed the
U.S. as the most preferred
location for foreign di reel
investment. In 2003. a
record $53.5 billion flowed
into China ... (while) FDI (in
the U.S.) reached its lowe;,t
level in a decade. Investment
in the U.S. plummeted from
$300 billion in 2000 10 530
billion in 2002.'
According to Lieberman.
'job off-shoring is no longer
restricted to basic service
tasks such as data entry and
processing - it has expanded to sophisticated work
such as knowledge services,
decision analysis. design.
engineering. research and
development.·
Lieberman said that 'we
are. not just losing manufacturing jobs. We may be los·
ing critical parts of our innovation · infrastructure and
with it our competitive edge
in the global marketplace.
endangering our prosperity
and national security.'
He blamed Wa shington
politicians for responding to
the cri sis ·all too pre·
dictably.' with the Bush
administration . adopting a
'laissez-faire attitude that the
markets and tax cuts will
so lve the problem;· while
'others '
his fellow
Democrats - advocate pro·
tectionist trade policies.
Lieberman and the EIA's

president. former Rep. Dave
McCurdy. D-Okla.. recommended a set of 'oiution;
that include more federal
and private inve;,tment in ·
R&amp;D: a more expan'i'e
safety net including job
training for di,placed worker~;
bigger invc'\tments in
·
'ciencc education : stiffer
enforc·emenr of trade laws:
and fa"cr approval of visa'
for high-tech foreign worker' and stut!cnh .
Their liM spccildcally' (lid.
not include tax pcnaltie;,. as
recommended by Kerry and
other Democrat;,. to keep
·Benedict .Arnold companies' from investing off- ,
;hore. Kerry lately has said
that the phrase was im·cnted
by ·ovcrt.caloLi;, 'peechwriters. · but he ha;; used it
dozen' of time;, during the
primary campaign.
Bush atlmini,tration officials pmle't that tliey are not
'doi ng
nothing.'
a;.
Lieberman alleged. but
rather are stepping up fund·
ing for science. education
and j(,b retraining and
·engaging' Chinil on trade
violations. Bt&lt;t Democrat;,
-and some Republicans contend the steps are inade-quate because of O\ crem·
phasis on tax cuts.
Lieberman points out that.
20 years ago. President
Ronald Reaga n addresse&lt;i
· the Japan panic by appoint·
ing a commi"ion headed by
John Young. CEO of
Hewlett-Packard, which pro·
duced a report that did much
to spur U.S. corporate pro·
dul:tivity - gains that. in
turn . enabled the boom of
'the 1990&gt;.
Lieberman plans to introduce legislation soon to create a 2004 version of the
Young commission to lay
out steps for dealing with the
China-India
challenge .
America ha~ always shown
that it can handle global economic competition - but
sometimes it needs a scare to
do it. It's time to be scared.
I Mo.rton Konrlrade is
execuri&gt;·e &lt;
'diror of Roll Call.
rhe ne1rspaper of Capitol
Hill.)

America betrays itself

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

I

Thursday, May

Job outsourcing a threat to US.

The Daily Sentinel

I

PageA4

To anybody with more
than a child's understanding
of history, the most remarkable thing about wartime
atrocities is that anybody
pretends surprise. As George
Orwell pointed out in an
essay written around the end
of World War II, there had
been scarcely a year during
l)is adult life when terrible
crimes against humanity
weren't being reported somewhere in the world. Yet pco·
pie, particularly intellectuals, tended to believe or dis·
believe the ugly truth
depending upon their own
nationality and politi,al ideology.
'The nationalist,' Orwell
wrote, 'not only does not
disapprove of atrocities
committed by his own side,
but he has a remarkable
capacity for not even hearing
about them. For quite six
years the English admirers
of Hitler contrived not to
·learn of the existence of
Dachau and Buchenwald. ·
And those who are loudest in
denouncing the German concentration camps are often
quite unaware, or only very
dimly aware, that there are
also concentration camp&gt; in
Russia.'
For the record, Orwell hatl
nothing against patriotism.
defined as love of country.
By 'nationali sm,' he meant
blind chauvinism, specifically 'identifying oneself with a
single nation or other unit.
placing it beyond good or
evil,' and thinking ·solely, or
mainly. in terms of competi·
tive prestige.' In short, prim itive tribalism writ large.
Here in the United State~.
anyway, thing;, were different. Since few Americans
ever put faith in ri ght- or
1

date I could n ~ m e, he was
right and he was courageou&gt;.
To the extent that other
nations have forgiven the
United States its excesses
and still see it as a.beacon of
Gene
it has nothing to do
freedom,
Lyons
with being 'God's coLmtry.'
Rather. it's the ideals of free
speech , due process and
equality under the law
left-wing creeds of milita- embedded in our consiiturized utopianism to begi n tion . They help Americans
with, the crimes of the Nazis ri se above tribali sm: the
and Soviets were more easi- most moving account of
ly perceived. Committed to Japanese civilians' suffering
the proposition that 'all men was American John Hersey's
are created equal.' to a writ- 'Hiroshima.' an instant clasten · constitution and a gov- sic. Nor did it take an invadernment of laws. our own ing army to expose atrocities
kind of denial has consisted committed by U.S. soldiers
largely of forgetfulness.
at My Lai and to bring some
Whether it's the 19th cen· semblance of justice. It took
tury extermination of Native an American journalist,
Americans, the use of · Seymour
Hersh ,
and
nuclear weapons against American courts of Iaw.
Japan or the massacres at
Whi·ch brings · us to (he
My Lai, what historians call offenses against humanity
American 'exceptionali sm' committed by American sol- the senti mental belief thai diers and civilians at the Abu
the United Stales exists Ghraib prison in Baghdad.
above temptation and out· Once again. the indefatiga·
side history - helps us to ble Hersh, writing in The
reassert the national inno· New Yorker . . got the story.
cence again and again.
This time. moreover, there's
Even
mentioning undeniable evidence in the
Hiroshima all but guarantees form of digital photos and
furious rebuttals invoking videotapes shot by U.S. solPearl Harbor and 9/11 , diers and sent via e-mail to
which. no, I haven't forgot- computers back home. (Will
ten . Yet it's symptomatic that a technologically advanced
within a year of the Toledo nation ever again be able to
Blade's Pulitzer Prize-win· brutalize a captive populaning series documenting pre- tion with impunity~)
viously unreported mas·
It's one thing to read the
.,acres of Vietname'e civil· tlehumanizing detail; 1n
ians by the U.S. Army in the Maj. Gen. Antonio M.
late 1960s, Sen. John Kerry's Taguba's report : Iraqi citi·
testimony about Vietnam zen' (70 to 90 percent arrestWar atrocities to a Senate ed by mistake. the Red Cross
committee in 1971 can be e;timates) beaten . forced to
used against hiqi as an issue masturbate and simulate sex
in a 2004 presidential cam- acts. sodomized with broompaign. Unlike another candi -, '' ick,, raped , attacked by

guard dogs. even murdered.
· It 's another thing to see the
pictures. Even ihe most fervid chau1 ini;,ts can·t Jeny
the evidence of their senses.
What 's more. no less aw
authority · th an Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
says it's goi ng to get much
· worse.
The shame is bad enough.
but the bad political conse·
quence&gt; have scarcelv
begun. The worst atrocitie.s
took place during the U.S . .
government's futile search
for non-existent ·weapons of
mass destruction' used to
justify invading Iraq. No evi·
dence has been found link·
ing Iraq and a! Qaeda. Yet
there's no doubt that badlv
trained, undisciplined U.S.
troops encouraged to ·go
cowboy' on lrayi prisoner&gt;
imagined themselves aveng·
·ing 9/1 1. President Bush's
sly rhetoric assured it.
This tintc. moreover. the
world's faith in American
institutions has been badly
damaged. The Bush administmtion has systematically
insisted that neither the U.S.
Constitution nor the Geneva
Convention applies to anybody the president calb an
'enemy combatant.· which in
the aftermath of the Abu
Ghraib atrocities appears to
include the entire Muslim
world.
It's a betrayal of everything it means to be an
American.
(Arkwrsas
Democmi Ga ~ ett&lt;' columnist Gerre
Lyorrs is a national maga~ ine llH'ard u·inuer and coauJ/wr of 'Tire Hunting of
rlre Pres idem ' ISr. Martin's
Pre H. 2000 ). You ca11 email Lwns at gelle lrrms2 @cs.cnm. )

. Thursday, May 20,
'

Obituaries

Myrtle Sisson

Kennedy of Mason. Ohio.
Joshua Bolin of Rutland.
Heath Sisson of Pomeroy.
POMEROY
- Myrtle Adrian Bohn of ·Rutland and
Kathleen
Sisson.
87. Brianna Teaford of Che;ter: a
Pomeroy. passed away on great-great grandson. Hunter
Tuesday, May 18. 2004.
Sisson of Pomeroy; two sisShe was born on Oct. 12, ters-in-law. Mary 'Roush and
1916 in Pomeroy, daughter of Jackie Michael, both of
the late .Roy L and Neva Middleport ; and several
Seyfried. She was a graduate nieces and nephews
of Pomeroy High School.
A graveside service will be
She attended the Holzer held at 1 !'l.m. on Saturday.
School of Nur&gt;ing and May 22, 2004. at Beech
worked in the nursino field Grove Cemetery with Rev.
for . many years at ·"Me igs Jonathan Noble offidatin~.
General Hospital and for Dr.
There will be no calling
Raymond Boice. She was a hours.
member of 'lhe ·•Order &lt; of"~ Arrangemt'nts • are Ylll'd er ·
, Eastern Star, Chapter 186. the direction of Fisher
She was a member of Trinity Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
Church.
Memorial contributions
Besides her parents. she may be made to the Holzer
was preceded in death by her Hospice. Mei gs County
husband, Joseph H. Sisson. Branch. 100 Jackson Pike.
two sisters. Elizabe th and Gallipolis. Ohio 45631.
Ruth, and a granddaughter,
Friends may send condoKristal Sisson Bolin.
Iences online at www.tisherSurviving are a son, funeralhomes .com.
George (Shirley) Sisson of
Pomeroy;
a
daughter.
Carolyn (John) Teaford of
Pomeroy: four grandchildren:
TUPPERS PLAINS Rev. Philip (Patty) Gaul of
Plymouth,
Ind.,
Brian Carl R. Watson. 82, formerly
Teaford of Chester. Brent of Meigs County, passed
Sisson of Pomeroy and Beth away April 19. 2004 in
(Chuck) Kennedy of Mason, Corbin. Kv.
Contributing to a lifetime
Ohio; great grandchildren:
Joey (Michelle) Sisson of of service to hi s fellowman.
Mason. Ohio. Zachary Bolin community and country, ,he
of Pomeroy. David Kennedy participated in the Civi I
of Mason, Ohio. Jared Gaul Conservation Corp. He was a
of Plymouth, Ind. , Audra veteran of World War II . a
Gaul (Buddy)" Funk of New survivor ,the D-day invasion
Beach in
Haven.
Ind. ,
Stephen on · Omaha

Carl R. Watson

Normandy. France June 6.
1944. and retired from 25
year,
service
as
a
Montgomery County sheriff\ deputy.
He was the ;on of the late
Arthur and Effie Watson.
born ' on March 6. 1922 in
Parkersburg. W. Va.
Survivors include his wife.
Wanda. two daughters. Zdena
(Gerald) Bridgeman of Leban
and Linda (Rich ) Plattner of
Fairborn and one son, Gene
(Robyn)
Watson
of
Cincinnani. the mother of his
children. Liba Watson of
Beavercreek. four grand•datlghters, , ~aris·sa ·· and
Abigal Watson, Sarah Sanko,
Stephanie (Dennis) Sallee
and two great-grandsons.
Dylan Sanko and Mason
Sallee.
Also surviving are a sister.
Wilma (lester) Seaman of
Vincent; a brother. William
(Nancy) Watson. two stepdaughters. three sisters-inlaw. Faye Watson, Helen
Watson. and Donna Brooks.
several nieces and nephews,
special friend&gt;." Nigel and
Christ in e
Skerrff
of
Scottsdale. Ariz.
He was preceded in death
by three brothers. Everett.
Orville and Harold ; two sisters and brothers-in-law.
Doroth y (Bi ll!) Robinson,
and Gamet (Tom) B artheiy.
Funeral services were held
Apri I 21. 2004 in Corbin. Ky.
Burial was in the Highland
Park Cemetery.
Croley
Addiltion.

Local Briefs
Pancake
dinner set

bread, hotdogs, drinks and
other refre shments will be
available starting at 6 p.m . .

Free dinner
Friday

CHESTER - A public
pancake breakfast will be
held at the Chester Academy
with serving from 8 to II
MIDDLEPORT - A free
a.m. Saturday as a fund raiser
dinner
will be served from
for Academy improvements.
It is sponsored by Chester 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Friday at
Council 323 Daughters of the Middleport Church of
Christ Family Life Center.
America.
Fifth and Main, Middleport .

application s to Cottrill. secre·
tary of the Carleton College
Board of Trustees. or Robert
Wingett. board president. is
June 21. Legal residents of
. Syracuse village can qualify
for ihe scholarship awards for
a maximum of two years.
•

Office closing
POMEROY - The Meig s
County Heal th Department's
Otfice of Vital Statistics will
be closed from noon to 4 p.m.
Wednesday for staff trainjng.
Normal business hours will
r~sume on May 27. 8 a. m.

Auction planned Applications
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. available for ·
.- The Heritage . Christian
Academy will have a benefit Carleton College
aul:tion on Thursday, May 27
in the school gymnasium scholarships
Hours changing
located across from Raven
lanes in north Ravenswood.
Melissa Dailey. chairman,
advises that there are many
interesting items which will
be offered during the auction
which begins at 7 p.m. and
continu(;!s until all bidding is
complete. Beans and corn·

SYRACUSE
Applications are available for
2004-2005
Carleton
Memorial Scholarships for
higher education at the office
of Sharon Cottrill in the
Syracuse Municipal Building.
Deadline for returning

RACINE - The Racirie
Clothing parish ' will be
closed ·on Memorial Day.
Summer hours beginning on
June ·1 will be II a.m .. to 2
p.m.
Monday
through
Thursday.

Hundreds evacuated in
flooded Southeast Ohio towns
(AP) - Storms in southeast
Ohio caused a creek to overflow its banks and forced
hundreds of people to leave
their homes. including some
who had to be evacuated by
boats and fire truck, officials
sa id. There were no injuries .
The National Weather
Service reported I inch to
2.4 inches fell over 24 hours
in the counties. enough to
cause Sunday Creek to flood .
Many streets in Corning, a
town about 55 miles southea!it of Columbus iri Perry
County had 'about 3 feet of
water Tuesday night, chief
Douglas Gill said.
As about 700 evacuated
residents began returning
home when the water receded Wednesday. people had to
leave their homes downc
stream along Sunday Creek
in the Athens County towns
of Glouster and Trimble.
About 50 homes in the
Glouster area and 25 in the
Trimble area were evacuat·
ed. said Jill Harris. director
of the Athens County
Emergency
Management
Agency. Other towns also
were threatened and many
roads were impassable. said
Sandra Shirey. exec utive
director for the Athens
County Red Cross.
Gov.
Bob Taft
on
Wednesday declared a state
of emergency for Perry and
Athens counties. clearing the
way for the state to help. It
also is a necessary step if the
counties eventually seek federal disaster assistance.
State crews were sent to
help remove debris or repair

Vets
from Page A1
chairing the event.
Veterans will receive a
certificate entitled "Se rvice
to America," citing appreciation to proud survivors of
the world conflict. said
Epling, a Point Pleasant res·ident who is state adjutant of
the American Legion and a
former Legion national
commander.
The ceremony is sponsored
by Legion Post 23 of Point
Pleasant and Smith-Capehart
Post 140 of New Haven .
"We want to do something
for those men and women
who will not be attending the
national ceremony," Epling
said. "It 's a once in a lifetime
thing. We owe these people.
Who knows where we would
be at if it weren't for their

STEUBENVILLE (AP) The parents of a 2·year·old
boy who died . of pneumonia
were indicted Wednesday on
charges of failin g to seek
medical care for him, about
two years after the mother
was . arrested for letting her
children get too sunburned.
Timothy Hibbits died March
9 of pneumonia and physical
restriction of his air supply,
Jetferson County Coroner John

Metcalf ruled. Bruises on the
boy's face were consistent with
an · adult hand being placed
over his mouth, possibly to
muffle crying, Metcalf said.
A Jefterson County gmnd jwy
indictt:d Richard and Eve Hibbil~.
of Dillonvale, 011 one count each of
reckless homicide and one count
each of en~angering children,
Prosecutor Bryan FelnlCI said The
felony charges e&lt;ICh carry a JX'nalty of one to five yean; in prison.

Joys

written to each contributor by
the TAG students who are
now in the process of devel·
oping an inscription of appreciation · fot a plaque to be
placed in the garden.
.
"Our plan is to continue
making this area an edu~a-

ing a proposal for the site.
Their plan was then submitted
to the Governing Board of the
Athens-Meigs Educational
Service Center for approval,"
said Harris. "Once approved,
the students had the soil tested.
planned the layout for the garden and developed a computer
generated diagram."
She said the)" completed
calculati ons of size, perimeter and area, and wrote and
typed letters to ee sent to various area businesses asking
for donations.
Flower and vegetable plants,
seeds, and money came in. and
several volunteered to· help
with getting the ground ready
'tor use. Those contributing
were the ESC Goveming
Board, Dennis Hanis, Wilma
Hill, Mitch's Greenhouses,
Wal-Mart Supercenter, Bob's
Market, Rutland Department
Store, Ed's Greenhouses,
People 's Bank, Dettwiller
Lumber, Valley Lumber, and
King Hardware.
Thank you notes were

"They are called the greatest generation. and they certainly are:· he added.
Those planning to attend
the
local ceremony should
The couple also were
contact
Post 23 at 675-3437
charged with two misdemeanor
and Post 140 at 882·31 0 I.
counts of endangering children ,
In a letter to post com·
after authorities discovered that , . manders around the coun·
their two other children were
try, National Commander
also seriOLLsly ill and required
John A. Brieden Ill said that
hospitalization, Felmet said.
because many veterans
The couple were scheduled to
can't make the Washington
trip. "it is therefore approbe arraigned on Friday, he said.
priate for the American
The phone number listed
Legion
to reach out to our
under their names no longer
fellow
veterans and pay
works, mld they could not be
tribute to their accomplish·
reached for comment.
ments."
The Legion is planning
separate
activities in contiona! asset to the Bradbury
junction with the · National
Learning Center by planting
Dedication Day, including a
it each year," said Harris.
prayer
breakfast,
the
For the
preschoolers
Legion-Children's
Miracle
they're just faithfully waterNetwork walkatlmn and ' a
ing, watching and waiting for
World War II exposition .
bountiful blooms and lusBrieden
recommended
cious veggies to appear.

J

FINAL COUNTDOWN
lO ~DAYS LEFT
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Volunteers guide a boat to dry land in Trimble. on
Wednesday. Recent ra in caused the Hock1ng River and neigh·
boring creeks to flood . clos1ng the Athens County villages of
Tnmble. Glouster and ' Jacksonville to all but emergency pe r~
sonnel. (AP Photo/Athens Messenger. John Halley)
roads. place sandbags .and shelter 'et up at an old ;,chool
clean up, said Rob Glenn. by the Mu&gt;king.um Valle\
spokesman for the Ohio Red Cro". said Dan
Emergency
Management Hartman. the a2encv·.., exec ~
Agency. He said more coun - uti\ e direnur. -1\·lu.,"'t left "'
tie s could be added to the the water receded to retum
disaster declaration.
home or .qav with familie'
"We expect this weather and friends . lie sard .
pattern to park right over us
Earlier radar estimates of
for the ncx t five to sc1 en up to I0 inches of rainfall
days." Glenn said . ·'The were contaminated bY hail.
problem is the water doesn·t the weather sen ice said.
A few showers fell in Ohio
have anywhere to go.''
Red Cross centers set up in on Wednesday morning. but
Glouster and Trimble had most of the area wa; dry as
about 50 people Wedne&gt;day the storm front cvded. the
afternoon, Shirey sa id.
weather sen·ice '"id. More
In Corning Tue sday night. rain was possible Wednesda~
about 30 people came to a night and Thursday.
Legion familie s in every
community activate all
three.
National Dedication Dav.
Brieden said. "highlighis
what we were ·charged to do
by our founders in 19 19 to preserve the memorie s

and incidents of our associatio ns in the \!reat war&gt;: tu
care for veterans. their fami lie s and the legacy the~
leave behind - the ch ildren
of our nation."
The national dedication c~·
remony is 2 p.m. on May 29.

Celebrating special
days with you! ·
Sunday Times-Sentinel
992-2155

sacrifice~

Parents charged with reckless homicide

from PageA1

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2004

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Some are more
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Daily Sentinel
'

LAWYOU CAN USE
Sorting out housing options for seniors
Last week Mom was fine
(or so it seemed). but today
she is forgetting her medications and the boiling teakettle. It may be time to consider a move to a care facility.
but how do we choose? There.
are more options available to
day for senior care than there.
have ever been. but choosing
the best option for your situation requires some basic
research followed by facility
visits and meetings with the
staff.
Q.: What choices do I have
for senior living facilities'
·'A.: Choices range from
independent
houses
or
doplexes on a retirement
campus to highly skilled care
in a licen.sed nursing home
The best choice · for you
depends upon your individual
needs, the choices available
in the geographic area, financial status and personal preference. The County Office on
Aging in your county may
have a list of senior care
options in your area.
Q.: Retirement communities advertise assisted living,
congregate housing, licensed
, residential care ·and skilled
care. What is the difference
and how do I know what I
need?
A.: This can be very confusing. Generally speaking, inde·pendent living units are apartments or houses that are on a
gingle campus. but are not
licensed by the state to pro·.vide personal or nursing care.
Residents of these units.
can. however, contract to
receive such care from outside providers such as home
health agencies or, if appropriate,
hospice
care
providers.
"Assisted living" is a term

~Color

PageA6

that has led to much confusion. Many assi,tcd li1 ing
facilities are licen-,ed a&gt; re,i dential care facilities. but
some are not. If the tal'ilill
houses at least 17 people and
provides superYision and personal care

~ervice:-;

for more

than three or tho-,e pef'llll'. it
probably should be licep,eu .
There are limits .to hlm
much care such a faciliiv can
offer, especially \virh re'spct·t
to skilled nursing procedure&gt;.
Someone seeking re,idence
in such a facilitv' should &lt;t&gt;k
about the range of -,ervices
available and die criteria used
to determine when a resident
can no longer be safely c;~red
for in the facility. Man) new
assisted living communities
are actually one or two bedroom apartments . Each of
these apartments is licensed
as a residential care unit. This
arrangement permits resi- .
dents to stay where they are
and receive only those services they need a' 1ime pa." es (sometimes called "ag ing
in place").
Congregate housing typically is an apartment building
Of series of buildings that
offer limited serYices ;.uch as
one to two meah a dav with
other residents in a congre gate dining setting. A congregate housing facility does not
provide health or social services, although generally a
service coordinator assists
residents in getting such services (by providing fur tran'portation. for example).
.
A nursing home otfers a ·
high level of skilled nursing
care to meet the physical.
mental, emotional and social
needs of the residents. Skilled
nursing facilities are highly
regulated by state and federal
law and. the resident; typical-

ly are seriously ill and need
ongoing nursing attention.
Q .: What is a. continuing
c:are retirement community?
A.: A continuing care
retirement
community
1CCRC) is generally a single
c:ampus that includes independent living. assisted livin£ or residential care, and
'k~lled nursing care under

wmmon ownership and control. Residents typil:ally
mo1·e into a CCRC at either
th~ independent or assisted
liYin!! level. Those who
choose this option assure
then"elves of a place to live
and appropriate care in a· setting of their choice as their
needs increase.
CCRC contracts vary
greatly. but most give campus
re,idents preference, at least,
fur placement in the IJlOre
intensive levels of care as
needed. These communities
also generally include on-site
,ervices such as health clinics. beauty shops, bimks,
transportation for shopping,
pastoral counseling, psychosocial services and plenty
of organized social activities.
Law Ym1 Can Use is a
1reek/r consumer legal information column provided to
this new1paper as a public
H'ITice of the Ohio State Bar
A.uot·iarion and the Ohio
Stme Bar Foundarion. This
article was prepared by
Martha Sweterlirs"ch, . an
at1ome1' with the Columbus
firm of Benesch Friedlander
Coplan &amp; Aronoff Articles
lll&gt;f'earing in this column are
imended to provide broad,
general information about
the /cnr. Before applying rhis
information · to a specific
legal problem, readers are
11rgt•d 10 uek the advice of a
lic 't'llsed auorner.

of Friendship'

: POMEROY - "Colors of
friendship" was the theme
~elebrated when Gamma Mu
€hapter recently hosted the
~3rd anniversary of the
tounding of Beta Sigma Phi

Gardeners learn aQout pruning shrubs
President Evelyn Hollon
read devotions entitled
"Beatitudes." She announced
that Faye Collins would conduct a design study class for
hogarth curve and vibratile
on June 26 at the Senior
Citizens' Building beginning
at 9:30a.m. The class should
be helpful for designers planning to enter this year's fair
!lower sho\\· since these are
two nf the required designs
for that show. according to
Hollon. ~
The
74th "
Annual ConYcntion of the
State A, . 1ciation of Garden
Clubs will he held July 15 to
17 at the Marriott Northwest
in Dublin. Ohio.
Hostesses Betty Milhoan
and Peggy Moore served
refreshments. Other members attendi hg were Chris
Chapman', Tammy Ries.
Shirley Hamm, Debbie
Jones. Sara Roush , Linda
Russell, Janet Theiss. Ada
Titus, Evelyn Hollon, Nancy
Neutzling and Joy Bentley.
The next meeting wi ll take
place on May 20 at the home
of Chris Chapman.

First communion
Seven children of Sacred
Heart Church celebrated
their first communion
Sunday at the 9:30 a.m.
Mass with the Rev. Fr.
Walter E: Heinz presiding.
In the group were from the
left, front Samantha Cline, ·
daughter of Michael and
Joyce Cline; Austin
Hamilton, son of Todd and
Wendy HarJ1ilton; Rocco
Casci, son of Ronald and
Lowry Casci; and back,
Erin Korn, daughter of
Bracy ad Shannon Korn;
Meredith Gaul. daughter of .
David and Bethany Gaul;
Victoria Johnson, daughter
of Ramond Johnson and ·
Jennifer Coffman; and
Kimberly Casci, daughter
of David Casci and
Michelle Haning.

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High

Pol chonge

ln&gt;mPM~oua'

-0.31

Nasdaq
composite
..0.36

Low

10,093 21

9.933 t1

Record hi9h: 11 ,722 00
Jan 14. 2000

.....

Pot chonge
M&gt;m prevloul: +0.02
' .

.

Standard &amp;
Poor's 500

- - - - - - - - - --

Standard &amp;

·2.11

Poor's 500

1,088.68

Russell

·-1.78...

1.600

Hi9h

Low

1.936 04

1.89816

Record high : 5.048 62
Mard1 10, 200:l

Advanced:

1.1n Newhtgha

Declined:

1.511

' Unchanged:

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 200

..

...,.::-..~,.,.,_...,..""'\c--"11\
' -7--.-.r'S'\'\-:-=-~
=~

-

1,088.68

FEB

Pot cnange
f"'m pn!VloUs: ·0.26

High

Low

1.10593

1.088.49

MAR

APR

MAY

Volume:

25
New lOwe

139

41
1.936.151 ,280

Nasdaq diary

1150
1.100

1

540.86

NYSE diary

Advanced:

1.668 ' New highs
42
:::D.=:ec:.:.ll::.:n::::ed:.::_...c1c::.48=6 New Iowa
Unchanged: 34t
82

----------r------•050

·2.81

1,898.17

2000

- ' - · .,

May 19, 2004

com~He

2.200

-F=:E:::B--M
- A"'R--AP:-R-M-AY- 1·600

1,898.17

_ _c.:..:..:c:.:___:_c.:.:.:.

000

Record high, 1.527 .4.6
March 24. 2000

Volume:

1.803,739,369
AP

AP

Local Stocks

Thursday, May 211
Momi11g (7 a.m.-Noon)
Humid morning. There is a
slight chance we could see
some rain. Temperatures will
drop from 69 early this morning to the low for the day .of
69 at 8:00am as they rise back
to 77 late motning. Skies will
be partly cloudy to cloudy
with 5 to I0 MPH winds from
the southwest.
Afternoon (I p.m.-6 p.m.)
It should continue to be

.

humid. It will be dry, except
for a · sprinkle or two.
Temperatures will hold steady
arou nd 83 with today's high
of 85 occurring around
4:00pm. Skies will range
from mostly sunny to cloudy
with 5 to 10 MPH winds from
the southwe st.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
It will be a wet, humid and
Cloudy evening. You will see
moderate rain. Expect accumulations of 0.57 -inches .
Temperatures will drop from

.

81 early this evening 10 73 by
IO:OOpm then rise back up to
75 late evening. Winds will be
5 to t 0 MPH from the southwest turning from the west as
the evening progresses.
Overnight (I a.m. -6 a.m.)
It will be a humid and
cloudy overnight. There may
ne
a
brief
sprinkle.
Temperatures wi II linger at
73. Winds will be 5 to 10
MPH from the southwest
turning from the west as the
overnight progresses.

COLUMBUS (AP) - A sick." he said. "The people who · sure that took place before
bill limiting who may sue are truly sick get far less than 1972, the bill also would
over exposure to dust used in what they ought to get, and the require the worker to prove
sandblasting and glassmak- people who aren't sick get far that the fac ility's owner knew
of the presence of the silica
ing is meant to help the most more than they should get."
severely ill workers, the lawForrest said the claims are dust and did nothing to promaker who wrote it says.
backed by doctors who con- tect against it. It also defines
But an attorney who has firm the injury. In one case when shareholders of a busirepresented worker~ exposed settled out of court, the com- ness are liable.
There · are about 40,000
to silica dust said the oppo- pany's own physician diagpending claims for asbestos,
site is true for many aging, . nosed si licosis, he said.
low-income former factory
Representing the Ohio compared with a best guess
workers with lung damage.
Academy of Trial Lawyers, of about 1.000 over silica.
Forrest
was one of two peo- said visiting Judge Harry
'"It closes the door on people who would not meet the ple other than Widener to-tes- Hanna of Cuyahoga County
~trict
test," said David tify on the silica bill. He said Common Pleas Court, where
Forrest, a Cleveland attorney. there's no impending flood most claims are filed.
The court has assigned all
Like a similar measure cov- oC lawsuits because so few
asbestos and 'Silica lawsuits to
ering lawsuits over asbestos, exposed workers are left.
Most ill workers can't Hanna. The silica cases are still
the bill requires specific medical tests from certitied spe- afford the specialists the bill improperly classitied · as
demands. Forrest said. They . asbestos claim&gt;, so he doesn't
ciali sts to prove a diagnosis.
The Senate Civil Justice might be short of breath or have an accurate coLmt, he said.
Committee. after rejecting have pain and fatigue but st.ill . Hanna already has set schedmore than a dozen amend- pass the lung capacily test uling rules that give priority toplaintiffs who have lung damments offered by Democratic outlined in the bill , he sa id.
age
and are Ohio residents.
For
claims
tiled
on
expoSen.
Mark
Dann
of
Youngstown to try to slow
down the bill , recommended
the measure for passage. The
party-line vote was 6-2 with
Republicans prevailing. It
S£J~VKL
passed the House 62-32 last
week.
Pl~tC.£S.
The asbestos bi II is stalled over
House and Senate difterences.
Rep. Chris Widener, a
Springfield Republican, said
he introduced a separate bill
after an Ohio State University
physician pointed out in hearings on asbestos how lhe two
diseases differed.
Silica, a combination of silicon and oxygen, exists in
many forms such as quartz.
When ground into dust, the
tiny particles are round.
Asbestos is chemically relat'I ------~-----------COUPON
. 'I
ed but forms tiny fibers. Both
substances can travel deep
I
into the lung, causing
I
swelling and scarring of the
.
y
y
I
I
delicate tissues. which can
I
I
obstruct air flow.
Deaths attributed to silico1 Limit 1 per customer, per prescription. :
sis have dropped dramatical' !y to about 200 in 1998 from
&amp;
1
nearly 1,200 in 1968. accordI
·
·
I
ing to latest figures available
,
.·
expires 06-02-04
1
from the National Center for
------------------~
Health Statistics. In Ohio,
there were 223 deaths in the
1990s, second only to
Pennsylvania with 423.
The Ohio Alliance for Civil
Justice anticipates more silica
lawsuits, chairman David
Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
HOURS
Hansen said. The ColumbusCharles Riffle R. Ph.
Mon
Frl8am
- 9pm
based alliance of about 200
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Presidents of their respective chapters were recognized at the
annual Founder's Day dinner. They are fro'm the left, Gretchen
Anderson of Ohio Eta Phi, Kathy Johnson of Xi Gamma Mu,
Jenny Smith of Xi Gamma Epsilon. and June VanVranken of
Alpha Iota Masters
Werry.
year wi II be "Give the Gifts
of
Sisterhood",
' Theme for the 2004-2005

Thursday, May 20,

A DAY ON WALL STREET

Attorney: Sick workers could be
excluded under bill on silica lawsuits

~orority.

: The observance took place
at the Riverside Golf Club in
t.lason.
Other chapters
lttending were Ohio Eta Phi,
lei Gamma Epsilon and
Alpha Iota Master .
: Kathy Johnson, president
if Xi Gamma Mu, served as
llistress of ceremonies.
i After the dinner, current
6fficers and newly elected
6fficers for the 2004-2005
~~ar were introduced, as were
~wrrent
Girls-of-the- Year,
Sherry Bibbee of Ohio Eta
~~i, Gina Pines of Xi Gamma
Epsilon, Joan Corder o-f
~lpha Iota Masters and Kay
1.:dkins of Xi Gamma Mu. ·
~:A lso
introduced were
Valentine Girls,
Karin
lehnson of Ohio Eta Phi,
~tilie Campbell of Xi Gamma
· !:fsilon and Denise Grimm
j. Xi Ganuna Mu.
.
f._:~ew pledges for the year
P"'luded Ruth Ann Carsey
!ild Kristina Finlaw. Fifty
rear members were recog'zed and included Jane
own, Nellie Brown, Vera
ow, Norma, Custer, Clarice
l:rautter,
Mary
Morris,
loberta O'Brien, Velma Rue,
t.nn Rupe, Rose Sisson.
f:leanor Thomas and Jean

·OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, May 20,2004

SYRACUSE- Wildwood just after they bloom so they
Garden Club
members can set bloom buds for next
learned proJier techniques of year's flowering .
Whe11
shrub pruning during its pruned too late. they will not
recent '\ meeting at the bloom the following spring.
Syracuse
Community Kneen emphasized.
Building.
Forsythia.
flowering
Ohio State Extension agent quince. lilac. azalea. and rhoHal Kneen informed club , dendren should be pruned
members how and when to immediately after blooming.
prune their shrubs.
Summer blooming plants.
According to Kneen. such as crepe myrtle. bullerbefore pruning, consider lly bush. and barberry should
whether the .shrub is in a for- be pruned 111 early spnng
mativc. maintenance or reno- ' when they are still dormant.
Bypass pruners. rather
vative stage. Shrubs in a formative stage may need prun- than anvil prun,ers, should be
ing to encourage stem and used because they make a
branch development. said cleaner cut without damagKneen. Shrubs in a mainte- ing the plant. according to
nance stage need pruned to Kneen . Trim shrubs so the
keep them a certain size and base is wider than the top.
can be lightly pruned when allowing sunlight to reach
they are actively growing th~ lower branches. He also
during summer months. suggested that deadheading
Shrubs in a renovative stage, repeat bloomers. such as
however, need to be severely rose&gt; ;~nd buttertly bush
th~m • blooming .
pruned to stimulate develop- keep'
men! of scaffold branches throu : the summer. Lilac
and should be pruned . when ami (l:oclendren should be
they are dormant.
deadheaded so that more
Kneen explained that win- energy goes into next year's
ter pruning helps stimulate flower buds instead of seed
· growth o(shrubs, while sum- formation.
mer pruning helps control
Finally. Kneen suggested
growth since it slows down that less pruning is needed
the storage of carbohydrates when we choose appropriate
in the plant. Spring bloom- plants and place them where
ing shrubs should be pruned ther;vill not be crowded.

PageA7

·-----

-·-·------ --- -.

ACI- 30.5 1
AEP- 29.58
Akzo- 34.90
Ashland Inc . - 44.56
BBT- 34.47
BLI- 13.24
Bob Evans- 28.88
Borg Warner - 39.40
City Holding - 27.54
Champion- 4.14
Charming Shops- 7.82
Col- 29.81
DuPont - 41.94
DG - 17.66
Federal Mogul- .29

Gannett·- 87.05
RD Shell- 48.60
General Electric - 30.28
Rockwell - 32.66
GKNLY - . 3.94
Sears- 37.99
Harley Davidson-- 55.0 I
SBC- 24.38
Kmart- 47.99
"
AT&amp;T - · 17.06
Kroger- 16.34
USB- 26.61 ·
Ltd- 19.50
Wendy's36.05
NSC - 23.47
Wal-Mart - 54.R5
Oak Hill Financial- 31.62
Worthington - 17.39
Bank One- 47.09
Daily &gt;rock reports are the 4
OVB- 34.40
p.m. closing quotes of the
Peoples- 23.77
previous day·s transactionS:.
Pepsico - 53.01
provided by Smith Partners at
Premier- 8.80
Rocky Boots- 18.75
Adve~t Inc . of Gallipolis.

The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today • 992-2155

We remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.
On Friday, May 28, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not
forgotten. They will be similar lo the sample below:
you wish, select une of the following I'REE 1erses belo" to
' trihute.
Iac&lt;rnmpan) your

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

May God's angels
guide you and
protect you
throughout time.
Always in our hearts,
John and Mona. Andrews and
la.mily

I. We hold you in our !houghts·and memories fore\er.
2. May God cradle you in Hi.'! anm. 110\'- and forc\Cr.
J Forever missed.n.::vcr furglJIIen . Ma) God hold :ou m the palm of
His hand.
-+.Than~ )OU fur the wonderful da}~ \\C ~hared tngether. M~ pnl~er.­
.will he with you until we meet again.
5. The days we ~harcd were ~wcct ll ong 10 ~(\' ~ou again in God'~
heavenly glory.
5..Your ~:ourag:e and brJvcry still in~pi rc liS all. anJ the memory of ~our
, smile lills us wtthjoy and laughter.
1. Though oul of sig ht. you'll forcm lrr in 1111 hcan and mind.
8. The Jay~ mJy come and go. bu t the times ~~· e shared will always remain.
9. May the light of peace shine on your face lor etemit) .
10. May God's angels guide )OU and pr01ect ~ nu thrnughnm time.
II. You w~rc a light in our life thm burns forc,·er in our hearts.
1~ . Muy God's graces shine O\'CT ~ou for alltimr
11 You are in nur thnught~ an~ prJyep; from morning 111 night and from
yearln }Car.
1-l. We send tht~ mc~s&lt;~ge with a loving h ..~ fnr rtcrnal re~t and happiness.
15. Ma) the Lord bles~ you with Hi ~ grace~ and \\arm. toYing heart

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Fill out the form helow and drol' off to:
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With Fondest Memories
111 Court Streel, Pomeroy, OH .J.,j 769

DEADLINE: THURSDAY, ~AY 20TH, NOON
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www.mydail 'Se ntinel.com

Friday~ May 21st

'

• 10:00 a.m.-3:00p.m.

Live Radio Broadcast with
WYVK-92.1
and
WBYG 99.5
Hands-on children's craft
making at 10:30 ard 1:30 for
ages 7-:-/0

~~~o

(.., /

~';&gt;...

{

___,;--' '

( ·~~c;::s~J \

...,.

.

Appalachian Heritag~ Celebration!
We hope you wiiJ come join us.. .

Middleport, Ohio
10:00 - All festivities begin
· Invocation '
· Opening Ceremony
• Opening remarks
10:30 - Tracey O 'dell - Appalachian
cultu ral acceptance
10:50 - Cindy Parker -Traditional and
medicinal herbs
11:30 - 12:.30 - M ary and Roger
Gilmore - Music, Sing-a-long
and Appalachian musical
history
12:40 - Ivan Tribe- Appalachian
Folklore
1:00 - 2:00 - Bob and Ken dra Ward Dulcimer music and
entertainmen t
1:15 - 2:00 - Appalachian Folk Dancing
(All invited to participate)
2:30 - Debbie Gerlach - Appalachian
story tell ing

Baseball scores and standings Page B2
Flames defeat Sharks, Page 83,
'
Wolves knock out Kings, Page B4

eritage .elebration

ppalachian

Thursday, May 20, 2004

UniverSity of Rio Grande/Crossroads
Program

Demonstrations by local artisans:
0 Candle Making · 0 Quilt Making ·
O· Broom Making o Rug Looming a The University of Rio Grande Crossroads
0 Soap Making
0 Cross Stitching li program includes six programs ·currently ':
l; p rovi din g E mploy me nt and Training
o Basket Weaving
'· servtces.
Items will""be available for sale ""' ~ T~ese programs .include Meigs Work N~t.
L

'

:: Metgs Y.E.S. , Metgs Employ ment and Ltfe
,Wagon r ides ard face
Skills program, Gallia Y.E.S., Gallia Younger '
paintlflg will be available
.! Youth, and Job Prep program.
jl The Crossroads .program was established in
thr oughout the day.
11 1991, on the University of Rio Grande/Rio !;
Grande Community College campus. The .
Informational Tables
.! Crossroads program was out of 33 Job Prep :
0 Becky Baer
~ programs founded on an Ohio Community .
0 Tracey O 'dell
li College Campus, through a ~ollaborative
0 Ivan Tribe
'i agreement between the Ohto Boa rd of ,
0 Cindy Parker
Regents and Ohio Department of Human
'
0 Meigs Museum Meigs County
f Services. Our programs provide education ~·
1
'
Health Department
l• and employment as well as related support :
0 University of Rio Grande I
1! services. We assist with pre-employment job
II readiness activitie s, short-term job e ntry
Crossroads Program
II training, student retention, and placement of ·
!! individuals in public and private work
Food will be available for sale
II
·
•
,i expenence
sttes.
i Crossroad s offices &amp;re located at the
SIGN UP FOR THE RAFFLE
ji Hoffman House on the mai n University of ·
OF AN ORIGINAL
il Rio Grande campu s and upstairs in the
0 Ohio River "Appalachian" Bear
11 University
of Rio Grande/Rio Grande ,
a.pd an original
I! Community College/Meigs Center. We.''
·0 Hartwell Hou~e "Appalachian" Hare • t! provide a . wide arra y o f educati on, ,
with proceeds going to the Middleport
!f employment, and self-sufficiency resources 1:

I

'''" v

i

l

I

!

..

.. ~·

~·..-· . ·~- -~~~

"1

f"'ii1

.

'

'

;...JL..---~. ·'- r-·

.&lt;,__......,._;;;.;.-~,:..;..,~·,.;.... .

'

-

"'-

.

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'

.

'i~'.
U / 0~
___:r,~~-~~

Ri o Grande, OH 45674-0500

INGELS CARPET

WHITLEY'S

DAIRY QUEEN

Middleport Deportment Store

Brazier
992-3322

Tradi tional Clothin g j(lr mm and Women •

Sue's Selectobles
Couflln Treasures, Past &amp; f reselll

700 N. 2nd Avenue • .Middleport

107. Mill Street • Middleport
• 992-3148
.

Fisher
Funeral Home
'

Middleport.' Pomeroy ·

992-5144 992-5444

Hursemate Shoes and
T- Shirts for Nurses

740-992-7900
James Acree, Jr., Director

271 N. 2nd Street
~·, Middleport, OH
740-992-6070

Hrs:

M·F 10·5

Sat 10· 2
Sun Closed

INGElS

41

41
32
_ 23
22
20

19
12

DIVISION if
1, Sprtng . Kenton Ridge (3)
laGrange Keys tone (6)
3, Deftance
4. Poland Semtnary
5 , Celina ttl
6 Cuya Falls Walsh JesUit
7, Tallmadge
8. Rtchmond Edtson
9. Bellevue ·
10 New Concord John Glenn

82
82
61
51
48

43
40
38

11

99 Mill Street • Middleport, OH

740-992-0040

Hours:

M·F 6-7; Sat B-1

.Sun

Clo~ed

Swisher• Lohse
Pharmacy

992-5627

992-2955

Middleport, Ohio

Brogan Warner
Insurance

992- 2432

992-6687

Pomeroy, Ohio

Pomerdy, Ohio

Hom·e
National Bank

Valley Lumber

&amp;Supply
~rPvJS

Middleport, Ohio
•

Delivery Avoiloble!

·The Shoe Place
&amp;Locker219

Craw's Family
Restaurant

Racine

Syracuse · ~

949-2210 992-6333

DIVISION 111
1 Wooelsfteld Monroe Central (6)

2. Sycamore Mohawk ( 1)
3. N Aobtnson Cot Crawford (1)
4. Bloom -Carroll
5. Delta

Archbold
7. Jeromesville Htllsdale {2)
8. Waynesvtl le
9. Portsmouth West
,10 . W Lalayette Rtdgewood

82
76
63
48
47
47
34
29

76
62
62

50

37
31
27
26
24
19

201
173

3, Mentor (B) 23-1

164
150
125
97
78
73
67

65

DIVIS ION It

2. Washington CH 22-1
3. Louisvtlle (2 } 22-2
4 , Thor nv rlle Shertdan 21-2
5 . Deha nce 21-4
6, Cuya. Falls Walsh Jesutt .19-5
7, Bellefontaine 2 1-3
8, Del. Buckeye Vall ey 22-4
9, Vermthon 20-4
10. Cleve . Benedtctme 18-4

Pomeroy, Ohio

Downing-Childs-MullenMusser Insurance
992-3381
Pomeroy, Ohio

Farmers Bank
'Your Bank For Life"

1

Pomeroy
Gallipolis Tuppers Plains
992- 2136 446- 2265 667 - 3161

mason 773-6406

2. Bu cyrus (9) 20-2
3, Bloomdale Elmwood (4) 22-1
4, Chi ll. Za n~ Trace (2) 24-3
5 , Coldwater ( 1) 22-3
·
6, Middletown Mad ison 22 -5
7. Perry (1) 21-5
B. W. Lafayette Ridgewood 23-5
9, Hamler Patrick Henry 19-3
10, louisville Aq umas 17-2

262
192
175
129
98
90
79
77
64
54

20 4
174
151
103
, 100
90

76
74
60

DIVI SION IV
1, C tn. Country Day (1 1) 17-3
2," Del, AyerSVIIIe (4) 20-6
3, N. Lewrsburg Triad (5) 22·5
4 , Sycamore Mohawk ( 1) 18-5
5, Convoy Crestview ( 1} 17-4
6, Mowrystown Whtteoa k 20· 7
7, Edon 20-6
B. Colum brana (1) 19-6
9. Newark Cath (1)" 18-4
10. Van Buren 17-4

'

Big Te n. that '&gt; fine ... Ohio State
teammate Zac h Doran said. " If vou
wanl to say it's special beniuse
Kevi n's black and it's unu sual for a
minority 1o win the Big Ten. that\
fi ne, too. But the bottom line is he's a
great player. He lapped the field."
Never before had the medalist
received such a response from oppo·
ne nts at the tournament.
-·usuall y the competition is so
fierce. they're clapping but they' re
not rea ll y that happy (for you) ," Ohio
State 's Scott Anderson said. "But I' ve
never see n a tourpament where peo-

pi e hasc been "J genu inely h&lt;ipp) lor
1he winner. Eve ry body knew he had
the uame and he deserws it. ..
Ha11 wa ~. : aware oft he warm !!.~ ... tun:by the players he was battling ) u &gt;~ an
hom earlier.
··11 's always nice 10 be honored b)
yuur peers." said Hall. 11 ho t~ ped r•ut
responses on a laptop co1i1pu1er to a
reporter's 4ues1iuns. "I 11as louched
to a point 11 here I almo'l hroke
down ."
Ohio Stale coach Jim Brm\n h'"
come 10 look al Hall as ju,l :i nother
superlative golfer.
·

" It\ slill a nice ston. There's the
handicap lhing there . 'But when he
pia~ cd up there I thought I "as '
"C~lching a tour player pia~ ... Brov. n
said. " He \\ !Js unbelie\ able .-The Ci11cinnati nati\e had rounJs
of 6(]. 6'i and ()~ at the L' ni wrsit\ of
~ l ic hi~ a n. roll inc in 16 bi rdies and an
ea!!. le \, i"th ju-.,t 'two

225
190
177
129
124
92
91
81
49
48

Reds 4, Rockies 3, 10 innings

COLUM BUS (AP) - An
Ohio State punter has been
arrested for the second time in
less than a month on. a charge
of under~tgc drink ing .
Football coach Jim Tressel
sa id Tuesday he still was gath·
ering infi)I'ITiation abou t the
Monday incident in Perkins
Township near Sand usky
involving Alben J. Trapasso
(lnd has not dec1ded on any
potential action or discip line.
· Details of the incident were
not available from police .
- Trapasso,
18,
of
Pickerington. was arrested on
the same charge in Colu.mbus
on April 25.
• "The 1hing that bothers me
most is it is the same allega·
tion." Tresse l said. "That
jumps out at me. What concern; me is it in volves alco·
hoi, and we have to attack it
for (Trar:asso's) sake because
that ubviOLISiy is and can be a
1ierious i"ue and problem ."
Trapa "o \ allorney entered
a plea of innocenl to the April
25 charge and req ucsled a jury
, trial. A pretrial hearing is set
for June 7.
The lawyer. Steve Brown,
said Trapasso likely will pay a
line by mai I for the Sandusky
charge .

~Jnd onl.'

Please see Hall, Bl

1. White Sox
destroy
! Indians

Jimenez hits
•
game w1nner

1

BY ToM

WITHERS

Associated Press

BY JoE KAY
Associated Press

CLEVELA .\ID - Frank
Thomas had li'e RBis and
Paul Konerko added li1ur to
had. Sn•ll Schoenc\\~is.
l eadin~ 1he Chica~ o White
So\. lt~ d 15 -J ''in,__ O\l.~r the
Cle\ eland
lndi:Jns
on

CINC INNATI - Wi th the bases loaded in the
bottom of the lOth innin g. o·Ange lo Jimenez
made a g u es~ and won the game.

Jimenez ant icipated where the pitch wo uld he.
then singled lo righl field lhro ugh a drawn- in
in fie ld 10 give Cinci nnati a 4-3 vic tory
Wednesday over the Colorad(J Rockies.
D&lt;mny Graves blew a chance for a recnrd-selti ng save before the Reds pulled ou1 1heir fou rt h

W~tlnc~d .ty n1~h t.

Thoma&gt; buSied out of a 2·
for- 19 ... lum p hy gnin~ J-for.-+ \\' ith two wa lks a1 the
Wh ite So1 npcn~d " big lead
and then poured it ')n h\ scor·

Sean Casey started ·the ra ll y with a sing le otT
Bri an Fuentes t 1-1 ). and Austin Kearns drew a
. one-out wa lk. Fue ntes hit Adam Dun n with his
fi rsl pitch. loading the bases. and Jimenez wcmlo
bat expecting a pitch on lhe outside part of the
plate .
"Every time I' ve faced hi m. he's thrown me
outside," Jime nez said. " I was lo_oki ng to ge t

ing ...,j.\ time .... i n the eighth.
Chil·a!:!u·~
blu\\ OUI \\ in
ma\·
ha1:e
heen
C&lt;"th- .
·
.
Outfielder
\1aQelin
On.h1rte/ a11U ..,econtl bw. erllan
Wil lie Harri&gt;., hnth .su,tained
mjuncs \\hen ll1cy cull1ucd

good cu ntw:t. ''

\\·hi)e t rvin ~ lo run dm~ 1l a 11\

- He pumped hi s fist whe n his grounder made it
thro ugh for hi s fourth hit of the ga me. Team mates
mobbed him at fi rst base , and th ey hopped in uni son at the end of a long ni ght.
Jobn Ried ling (2-0) pitched a perfect IOlh,
he lping the Reds' bullpen overcome a late mel tdown.
Jose Acevedo struck out a career-high II in
seven shuto ul innin gs. but the Rockies tied it w1 th
their th ird set of back-to· back homers in lhe
series.
" I'm not mad.'' sai d Acevedo. who has n·, won
since April 20. ''I'll take it. What happened
to nig ht could h·~ppen to anybody.''
Vi nnv Castil la hit a two-out . two- ru n shol in the
eighth 'otT Todd Jones. his l ith of the season.
Graves relieved wil h a chance to set a Reds
record for caree r saves. but blew it on his firsl
pitc h.
Jeromy Burn itz hi s l.l th. homer into the st an ds
in righl-cen ter, the third lime he was invo lved
w·ith bac k-to- back homers duri ng the series.
• Burni tz and Matt Holliday pulled it off tw ice in
the Rockies' 8-3 victory ll n Tuesday nig ht.
Burn itz has take n a li king 10 Great Ameri can Ball
Park - five homers in fi ve games over its firsl
two seaso ns.

ho!!.('\' ""

dt•tthl..:
.
. Hall "ill le ad Ohio Slate into this .
\\ ecknJ·, \.;CAA re aional tournament. The gu,1.l i~ n1~king it to the

vktory in five game~.

1, Tal. Start {2) 21-2
2. Cm. Moeller (3) 20-3

1, Hebron Lakewood (25) 27-0

COLUMBUS - Kevin Hall used
to be known as Ohio State's deaf
golfer. Now he's known as Ohio
State's best golfer.
Hall wo n medalist honors at the
Big Ten tournament two weeks ago
by II strokes. prom pting hi s fellow
competitors 10 give him a standing
ovation at the awards ceremony after
·
the lhree-day lournament.
"If you want to say him winning is
special because a deaf player wo n the

?5

Prep Softball

4 . Centervtlle (3) 21-3
5, Cle St. lgnattus (5) 17-6
6, Sprtng. North 21·6
7, Ctn. St Xavter (4) 2 1-4
B,. Tor. St. John "s 17-3
9 , Celina 20-6
10 , Cin. Anderson 22-5

BY RusTY MtLLER
Associated Press

22

DIVISION IV
1, Convoy Crestvtew (5 1
2. Crestline
3. Strasburg-Franklin (1)
4 . Gtbsonburg (1)
5. Covtngton
6. Sugar Grove Berne Unton
7. Mana Stetn Marton Local
8. Gloi.JsterTrimtJie
9. Willow Wood Symmes· valley
10 . Cuyah oga Heights ( 1)

OSU's Hall ready for next challenge after winning Big Ten

22

Punter arrested
second time on
drinking charge

Joe's Deli

Jewelry &amp; Pictur~ Gallery
&amp; Radio Shack

106 N. 2nd Avenue • Middleport
992-2635

Hrs: 10·5 M, Tu. ,W, F
10-2 Sat; Closed Thurs. &amp; Sun.

Ohio River Tee's &amp; Things

244 North 2nd Avenue • Middleport, OH

Chester, Ohio

'

290 N. 2nd Avenue • Middleport
992-3684
NEW

ACREE FUNERAL HOME

985-3301

•

2. Tol St Ursula (1)
3, Greenvtlle
4, Sylvania Southvtew ( 1)
5. Elyria ( 1)
6, Htllia rd Darby
7 . Htlliarct Davidsa;n
8. Marys&lt;Jille ( 1)
· 9. Amhers! Steele
10. G~harina ltncoln

46
42

DIVISION Ill
1, Cin. Htllp ·christian Acad. (9) 23- 1227

-· ~~·-

Baum Lumber

992-661 1'

175 North 2nd Avenue
Middleport, OH
740-992-7028

992..;.3785 ,. Pomeroy, Ohio

'Two on the T"

190 N. 2nd Avenue
Middleport
992-6128

DIVISION I
i. Yo.ur,gs . Boardman {2)

DIVISION I

Decisions &gt;.1oe.. ;.,,,..----~---------------~--------:---------------~~~~&gt;"'---

'(our\oca\
source for
awards

COLUMBUS (AP ).- How a slate panel
of coaches rates Ohio htgh school girls
softball l earns tn the StKih poll tor The
Assoc,ated Press (by Oh to Htgh School
Athletic Assoc tahon dtvtstons. wtth ftrstplace votes tn parentheses):
·

COLUMBUS (AP) --:- How a state panel
ol coaches rates Ohto high school boys
baseball teams tn !tie ftnal regular-season
poll of 2004 for Th e Assoetated Press (by
Ohio High School Athlettc As sociation
divisions. with first-place votes in pa renlheses. records at ltme of voting):

F- 11 Uni versity of Rio Grande
P.O. Box 500

\ ~~~~~~s] )

Middleport Trophies &amp; Tees

Ohio high school girls softball pOU

Ohio high school b oyS baseball poll

The Crossroads Program

221 Mill Street
Middleport, Ohio
740-992-0008

Prep Baseball

'

and Pomeroy Community Associations )

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

bal l in the ~e\elllh.
They bolh left the t'kld
una" i&lt;!ed. hut Ordonel
bruised l1is left knee and
Harris hurt hi.s left ankle and
sh i11.
Thomas hit a IWO- rtlll dou·
hie in th e tiliru nft Jchon
Davi' (1·31. add~d an RB I
1i11!!le in the ic•urth and hit
illl&lt;Jther lwo-run doub le in the
1ixth as lhe Wl1ite So.\ wollwo of th ree in I he series.
The Rig Hurt m•wcd up
seve ral

.

It was the first time lh is season th at Graves
entered a game in tbe eighlh inning. Despi te his
fai lure to hold the · lead, ~e still tops the majors

Please see Reds, 83

Cincinnati Reds' Juan Castro (7) congratulates D'Angelo Jimenez (3)
after Jimenez hit a single witl1 the bases loaded to drive in th e winning run in the bottom of the tenth innmg against the Co lorado
Rockies. Wednesday in Cincinnati. Cinc1nnati won 4-3. lAP)

Kearns not sure.why return took so long
BY JOE KAY
Associated Press

CINC INNATI - AliSiin Kearns has
no idea why it took hi m so ~on g to
make it back.
The outfielder was finally activated
off the 15-day disabled list Wednesday.
rejo inin g lhe Cincinnati Reds for the
second game of their series again'!
Co16radu.
It was apparent last week lhat Kearns

had · rccoven:d

· from a hroken
bone ill .'\l above
his wrisl. hullhc
Reds let him
stay with TripleNOTE B 0 0 K A Louisvil le on
a rehabil ilaliun
ass i~nmcnt for
. an extra week to work o11 his hilling.
Keams batted .357 with a pair of
homers in eighi games for Li1uisv ille .
The better he ~ i d . lhe more puuled he.

i!O t.

- The Reds wanted to make sure he
wa.., rcadv bc l"nrt· activatith.! him .
K~a rns didn 't ~11011 what e!;.c h"c could
do to prove il.
" Yeah. 1 was upsel. I was mad."
Kearns 'aid Wednesday. · ,;uin~ on a
cmiL·h in the cluhhou sc. "If }OU \nould
have caugh t me a couple t•f da)s ago.
ynu mig hi h;l\·e got len· " di fferc1il
rc&gt;ponsc frnm me ...

Please see Kearns, Bl

Shapiro feeling good about Indians
BY ToM WITHERS
Associated Press

CLEVELAND - Now that he's
linally completed hi s bigge &gt;t trade of
the season, Indians general manager
Mark Shapiro hopes he can make
another one.
Cleveland acquired pitcher Andrew
Brown on Wedn esday from Los
Angeles as the "player to be named" in
lhe trade that sent troubled outfielder
Milton Bradley to the Dodgers.
With the Indians hanging around the
.500 mark. Shapiro has seen enough
good things to th ink hi &gt; team can
remain competitive in the. AL Central
for the rest of the season.
"I refu se to believe we can' t," he

sa id
before
We dn esday · 1
game.
If the Indians
are within striking distance of
first place IWO
NOTE B 0 0 K monlh;. from
now.
Shapiro
said it's possible he cou ld make a trade
before the Jul y 31 deadline.
"As long as no one run;. away with
this division. and we don't take our&gt;elve s out of it, I'm going to look 10
improvethisyear', clubas\\cll for the
long- term. " he said. "The longer \\C go
being in the mix. mayhe the bigger the
ahility we have of improving 1his
year's dub."
Shapiro i&gt; em·ouraged and excited

by 1he Indian&gt; overall impro,·emenl.
They entered Wednesd ay\ game at I X·.
20 after going 12-26 in their first 38
games a }ear ago.
They're &gt;till in the race despi1e 1he
. bul lpen\ many mehdm\ ns. and the
Indians have been compctiliw in ,dl
but a few games. That \ Cllllll~h to convince Shapiro lhings are on the right
track.
"I thin~ these ~uy;. h:l\c slHmn thai
ahove any1hing there ;, a lrcmcndous
amount of resilience ami tn 1101 &lt;'Ollllt
them nul." he smd. "B~c:tusc lh~y·,~
had aboul l :l solid reasons'" \\hi 1w1
to sli ll be in thi' thin~.
"A nd when \\C lnZ&gt;~ up .•md "''·re
nol out of iL"

Please see Shapiro, Bl

car~n

l i~ t~

\\·ith

another notable performan,·c
in a .:arecr full of them .
Thomas
!'"'sed
Ken
Griffey Jr. for 'i 7t h place •Ill
the all-lime I{B I list: tied
Ricke\ Henderson for ~.Cnd
with X73 ex tra hase·hir&gt; : and
jumped· II, ~6111 on 1hc cal-eer
th&gt;uhb list 11i1h -U 7.
Schoe ncwei'
i-1·1 1
impn\\ed hi s slalurc as " ·elL
The le ft-hamler gaw uplhrce
runs .1nd fi,·e hii'. t'lul w::&gt;n't
hurt h) fi\L' \\i!IJ..s i!nd slrud
Dlll ..,!\.
Hc has n' t l&lt;•sl ,; nee April ~
;md h&lt;h pi1ched into tile sixth
innin~ 111 all ei~ht st an s tll is
sea~on.

Ku nerk.n hi t ~~ three - run
double and R'"' Gl oad
llon1en.:J in the eighth.
Vi-L·tor .l\1~1 rtine 1 hmnered

fo r the lnJi;J ns in 1ilc fifth
l lllllllf! . .

Leadt n£. 9 -3 in tlw ..;~n~nth.
the \VhnC So:--; t!O t a ~&lt;.·are
\.\'hen Ord nne; ~md Harri:-.
were injured '".hik l· ha ~ in g

dtm n Omar Vi,que!'s lly to
shallow ri gh l.
llarri' rau~ilt it before gel·
1111!! h1 " ket l&lt;.UH.!Il.'d unJ er a
,JiJi n!..! Ordonl'/ . whn wa\
comin'g in &lt;llll he hal l.
Bnlh pia&gt; ers stu~ ed nn the
ilrounJ for ~~\"~ral nhml enh
before~ being rcp lac·cd.

Da1is didn't 'urvi,·e the
third inn ing when Chicago
tagged him for fi YC run, and
-.e\ 'Cil h i t ~ .

Thomas' tir't twn-run douhle u·i~~ered the outburst, ·
which~'~" filllo"ed bv RB I
hih from Carlos Lee: Jme
Yalcmin and Konerko a&gt; the
While Sn~ opened a 5- l kad.
D.l\ ;,_ "ho has just two
"111, 111 h1s l:ht ~·o 'tart,,
could prnhabl) U&gt;&lt;' ,nme
time inlhc minMs to 1\nr'l-. on
1hi ng-...
Hn\\ncr. il's dnuhlful the
Indians \\Ill &lt;lpli&lt;'ll him. since
111~' .rl rcad' h-a\ c two -..wrtcrs
- · Ja,on S1anford and Jeff
I)' .-\nliC(l nu the Dl. - and
tHHll' of tlwir nth~r ) ou ng
pitL'i1crs is read).

�·Page 82 •

•

The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, May

20, 2004

National League
EAST

W

L

Pd.

GB

PIO

Sbtl;

Home

....,

EAST

w

''''"'"
NV Vankee$

24
23

16
16

600
590

-

55
73

W2
WI

11 6

13 I C

Baltlfl'lOfe

,.,..,.. ..,

20
17

16
24

556
4.15

2
7

6-4
4-6

W3
L1

13 7
12 10

tO 9
86
S.l\
3-17

Ph•laO&amp;IFfl!ll
Floroda
NY Mets

"
"19

CENTRAL

W

Torooto

10

~

28

263

L

13

Pet.

GB

~i~~=-2~4
22~~1~
115~615
564 _

........
ChcaaoSo.l
DetrOit

~..~ooc~
~~........

_

19
1e

20

'57

21

462

13

24

351

..,

-

19

9-13
7 11

L5
Strk

P10

.,..,

Home

11 10

-2

_ _ 73
55

5

5-5

10

55

_ WI
W2 _

1i5
1 B.,_

99
99

10·11~

ll
s~- 6-&lt;~ __ l2

..=-

-

12 g

W2

8 tO

W

l

Pet

GB

P10

Slrk

Home

Awtty

26

14

6SO

-

6.4

Ll

12 6

14 B

Te~as

22

17

564

31

46

L3

Oakliilnd

21
13

18
26

SJ8
333

41
12

7-3
19

WI
L3

13·8
89
7 11

99
13 9
6 15

WEST

s.....
Wedl

m 1diY •

T~1

Rnutts

Reautta

Chcago b 4 CleYeland 2
Boston 7 Tampa Bay 3
Kansas Crty 7 Te.as 6
Balbmofe 7 Seante 2
Anahem 1 NY Yankees 0 1111
DetrOit 5 Oakland 1

0\cago Sox 15 Cleveland 3
Boston 4 Tampa Bay 1
Kansas C~ 5 T6l0.3S 3
NY Yankees 4 Anahe1m 2
Oakland 6 DetrOit 2
Baltmom 5 Seanle 2

M1n. .1ota

ab rhbi

CGzmnss 5000
.JJones rt 3 1 2 0
Otfrmn1b 4 0 2 2

THnterct 4 1 1 0
MFtyan It\ 3 o 1 o
Gm(&amp;r3b 2 1 1 0
HBinooc 4 1 1 0
Pneto2b 3000
LeCroy tb 1 1 1 4

33 6 9 6

Jhnson r!
OHudsn 2tl
V'Nellsd
CD1gdo1b
Zaunc
Hmske 3b
JPhlpsdl'l
PondH
Mnchno ph
Gome.zss

40 1 0
4 0 o 0

4 12 2
3 1 1 0
3 1 21

400 0

4 1 2 1
2101
0 0 0 0
2000
Cti!'\OitO ph 1 0 0 0
Totala
31 5 B 5

a

Mlnnnotll
000 002 004 Toronto
020
001
200 S
E.........Cudctyer {5) laun (2) DP- Mmnesota 4
Toronto 1 LOB--M•Mesota 5 Toronto 5
28-JJones t7) Offerman (9) VWells (15)
JPhelps 2 j7) HA-LeCroy (1) CS-Cuddy·
er (2) S-Gomez
IP H RERBBSO
M1onesol1
613
13

~

~ ~ ~

~

Romero
JRII'ICon
0 1 0 0 0 0
FultZW21
113 1 0 0 0 2
NathM S 13
1
0 0 0 1 0
Toronto
JM1iler
642244
Lopez
11300011
Kershner
23 1 0 0 0 1
AdamsL3-3
1 4 4 4 0 1
JArncon pitched to 1 batler rn the 7th
Umpues-Home Terry Craft F1rS1 Mike
01Muro Second Paul Emmel Tl'lrd Joe West

T-2,42 A-25 .675 (50.598)

Padres 6, Pirates 3
Gama1
Plttaburgh

ab r hbi
4 1 1 0
4 3 3 0
4 1 3 1
5 0 2 3
Klesko~
4000
Payton ct 1 0 1 1
Lwrncep 300 0
Abnson ph 0 0 0 1
Hffmanp 0 0 0 0
Loogct
5030
AaHrc!Z c 3 1 0 0
RVazqzss 4 0 0 0
Total1 37 613 6

hbi
302 0
311 o
4 0 0 0
4121

Kendallc
.M'Isnss
Ward 1b
CW~sn ri

t

lkltwk 3b 4 1 2 2
B;r;H
4010
TAdmnct 4010
Castillo 2b 2 0 0 0
ANunezph 1 0 0 0
Benoonp 2000
H1llph
1000
RMateoph 1 0 0 0
Totals
33 3 9 3

Sin Diego
001
020
111 6
Pittsburgh
100 002
000 3
E-i3GIIes (4) Kendall (4) CW lson 12)
Mackow1ak /3) DP-San Drego 1 Prttsburgh
2 LOB-San Otego 9 Pittsburgh 6 2Blorena (111 Long (4) CWison (11) Mack
OWIIIk (5) HR-MadcOWiak (8) SB-BG•Ies
(3) CS-Kendall (3) S-JW•Isoll SFRobinson
IP H RERBBSO
San Diogo

Lawrence W 6-2

6

8

3

3

,

0

0

0

0

100002
Otsuka
100000
HoHman 5 11
PittSburgh
Ben5on
5 9
3 3 1 3
Johnston L {).1 1 1 3 2 2 1 1 0
Meadows
12 3 2
1 0 1 2
HBP...../;I&lt;J Johnston (AaHamandezl
Umprres--Home Man HollOwel l First James
Hoye Second Sam Holbrook Th1ro Paul

,,. " "'
"' •
'
w
GB
"23 1516
3

21

Atlanta

Montreal

35(]

26

CENTRAL

PC1.

L

Houston
Chocago Cubs
C oconnat
Sl Lou s
M•""'aukee
Pittsburgh

21

590
536

18
19
19

..

46

l2
L1

55

P10

55
64

3
3

64
64

'6

64
55

GB

P10

,

20

525
513
459

w

L

Pct

22

16

579

,

575
436
410

6

46
55
46
46

400

7

37

21

20

Los AngeleS
San O~e90
C:oloraao

23

17

Anzona

16

San FranoSC()

16

,."
23

s.

Home

....,

Cubs 4, Giants 3, (10)
...,,...,

97
98
99

12 10
12 10
1{).12

Srow lb

89
71 0

~,

W2

64

1

615

WEST

2

Totala

34 1 8 1

L3

...
L1

716

Home

W2

12 11

W1
W1

'17
10 7

""'"'
,'",
124

1111

10 13

W1

'19

L2

.,2

...

...,
..
!&gt;10

138

H~

L6

11 10

W2

139

L1

1\ t 1

W2

814
914

L1

116
10.8

61'

710

Astros I 0, Marlins 2
~-=~=="'-;~;:----!
Houtton

AorlcUI

1b rhbl

5 2 11
5 2 2 1

Bigg1o cf

AE'frn ss
Bqwell1 b
Jt&lt;ent 2b
Brkmn H
Ensbrg 3b
Backe p
Hidalgo rf
Asmus c
Add•ng p
Lldge p
JVzcno 3b
Totals

5
3
5
4
o
5
3

0
2
2
0
o
o
1
20
0 0
1 l

1 1

2 2
3 2

23
o
1
2
0
0
1

o

o
0
0
0
0

3810151D

~mil cf

ab rhbl

4 0 2 0

LCsttllo 2b 4 0 0 0
Cbrara r1
4 10 0
Lowell 3b 4 0 I 0
Comne ~
4 0 0 0
Chor 1b
3 1 1 2
AGnziz ss 2
Easley ss t 0 1 0
RCstro c 3 0 0 0
LHarrs pi'! t 0 0 0
Pavano p 2 0 0 0
Sutton Pl"l 1 0 0 0
Bumpp
0 0 0 0
Trmla
l3 252

PavanoL32
7 9 5 5 1 5
Bump
26 5110
WP-Pavano Bump
Ump•res-Home Wally Bell F1rst Laz D1az
Secono 8 II Welke Third JOhn H ~rschboek
T-2:34 A-12, 12:2 (36.331)
I

Carthnals 1, Mets o
ab r hbl
Wmack 2b 4 0 3 0
Rnlerass 4 1 1 0
PuJOis tb 3 0 0 0
Roten3b 4 0 2 1
Edmnd ct 3 0 00
RSndrs rf 4000
MAnctl!r 3 o 1 o
0000
Eldredp
Cedeno ph 1 o 0 0
Tguch1~
0 0 0 0
Mfhen\C 4010
Suppanp 2000
LnkfrdH
2000
Kjjnep
0000

4

/ Hall

000

000

010 -

1

New 't'ork

000

000

000 -

0

E- MatSUI (!!) DP-St Lou S 3 New York 1
LOB-St lou s 8 New York 3 2B-Aolen
(B) Valent (5) WIQg•nton (3) S8--R8111&amp;rla
(3) MAnderson (5) CS-t..ankford (2)
IP H R ER BB SO

St. Louie

~'"' s 1

natiOnal tournament the fnst
week m June.
Hall has been deaf smce a
bout wtth men111g1!1 S when he
was 2 H1s parents took hun
golfing when he was 9 and
w1thin a year he was contending for JUmor tournament
t1tles. St Rlla School for the
Deaf m C111c1nnati didn't
have a golf team, so he
became one of the first pn-

Kearns
from Page 81
H1s response on Wednesday: He's JUS!
happy to be back and playing well
Kearns was in a 2-for-23 slump. battmg only 137 overall, when Ryan
Vogelsong's pttch h1t h1m on the lett arm
just above the wnst on Apnl 26, cracking one of the bones m the forearm .
The inJury healed fast , and Kearns
found h1s batting stroke at Louisville.
He hgured he ~ould be remstated when
the team returned from a West Coast trip
that ended Sunday.
Instead . he stayed 1n LoUisville for a
few more days.
Why?
" You're guess ts as good as mme," he

Shapiro
from Page 81
~

BROWN'S TOWN: After tracking
three players in the Dodgers' organization stnce trading Milton Bradley, the
Indians dectded to add Andrew Brown.
a right-hander with a 98 mph fastball.
Cleveland had until June 30 to fimsh
the deal. and Shapiro said they had seen
enough of Brown to close tt .
Brown, 23, went 1-3 wtth a 4.02 ERA
in etght starts for
Double-A
Jacksonvtlle. He led the Southern
League with 58 strikeouts, including I0
in four mmngs of his season debut and
13 on Apnl 19 agamst Greenville He

'

6

4

o o'

2

0

0

1

0

0

1

3

0

1

0

0

0

1

Gload cf
5 2 3 2
SAimrc
4220
Total1
4A 1518 14
Chlc.go
CIW~~elend

005
101

Totat.

102
010

New York
Valentr!
Matsuss
FloydH
P18ZZa tb
Cmeronpr
WJ1IS11 c
Zetle3b
DGrcJa 2tl
JPhllpsc
Wggntn2b
McEwgcl
Trchsel p
Stantonp
Bttlcop
Spncer ph
Looper p

ab rhbl
4 o 1 a
400a
300a
2 0 1 0
0000
0 0 0 0
3000
o o o 0
3010
30 1 0
3000
2000
0 0 0 0
0000
10 0 0

0 0 0 0

4 0 0 0
31

3 6 2

110 000 -

15

3

o

Philhes

-

sa1d ·'It was probably JUSt to get my
sv,mg bdck."
He already had, wh1ch is why be got
frustrated.
"I was, but I thmk I got past that," he
said " I wasn't g01ng to let It bother me
It d1d, but you JUSt shake you• head and
keep gomg."
Wlule Kearns discussed h1s stay m the
minors. calcher Jason LaRue walked
past the reporters and smd, ','1 told yo~
all he was ready - about I 0 days ago;
ROMANO GONE: The Red s
opened a spot for Kearns by scndmg
utility player Jason Rom,tno outright to
LOUISVIlle
The Reds clatmed Rom ,mo off
wa1vers from Tampa Bay on Apnl 22,
hopmg to g1ve the1r bench a l•ttle more
speed and flexibdny. Instead, Romano
struggled - one smgle tn 16 at-bats for
WJII report to the lndtans' Double-A
Akron affiliate
The 6-foot-6 right-hander pnched JUSt
one mmng last season before havmg
elbow surgery. He also missed the 2000
season with an elbow mjury
"There is definitely a risk here,"
Shapiro sai\1. "But thts 1s a guy we' ve
watched since his amateur days ."
Outfielder Franklm Gut•errez, the
other player acquired in the Bradley deal,
ts batt111g .328 wtth two homers and 16
RBis in 36 ~ames at Double· A Akron
Guiterrez s qu1ck development has
Shapiro convinced he can help the
lnd1ans, but it hasn't taken away the sllnj/
of having to trade Bradley
" It's hard to feel pleased about ma~mg
the deal," he said 'It was a mutual Iat lure on our orgamzallon 's pan and on
Milton's part We mtss hts abtl1ly and talI

4011

CPnson c1 3 2 1 1

REMtlz ss 4 0 1 0
Zmbrnop 2000
00 0 1
Hlndsw pn 1 0 1 0
Totals
34 • 7 4
{)ui)C)I$ ph

0 1 -

San D1e9a
400
010
002 7
P1ttaburgh
000
DID 020 3
E- Ward {1) CW•!son t 3) OP-Pntsburgh 1
LOB-San Diego 6 Plltsburyf1
2B-J~y~~­
son (12) Mactr:ow1ak (61 S~nes a) TRed
man (5) 36-Cota {1) HR-loretta (51
RaHernandez (4) Ward t3) SF-Pavton
D1eda
IP H A ER BB ' SO

3
4

5

3

3

2

2

23
1
113
0

0

0 tO

0

0

e

... Diego

Paa~t~YW42

o

Red's 4, Rock1es 3, (1 0)

Braves 4, (11)

Colorado

Atlanta

522~

Hlnbm lb 4 0 l 0

o o o

VIctories at the Marshall
Invitational anJ the Big Ten
tournament, where Oh10
State also won the team title,
even sweeter
"I am a little dJsappomted
that I dtdn 't wm my sophomO!e and jumor )ears but I
will take the scnpt as it is
now," Hall sa1d "Not many
players can say that they won
b1g m the1r semor year after
bemg written off by many
people "
A commumcations maJOI ,
Hall had flirted wuh the 1dea
of bemg a sports wnler 1-fis
strong play as a sen1or may

3 1 1 0
4 0 1 0

6 13

ab r hbi
50 0 0
41 20

Tracy3b
Kata2b
LGnztz lt

IP H AERBBSO

lnd1ans

41 11

SanF~1seO

Arizona

Chlcago
6 5 3 3 5 6
Schnws W 4 1
1
1
Takatsu
Adkms
1
1 0 D 0
1
Wunsch
1 0 0 0 01
Cleveland
JaOaVIS L 1 3
223 B 5 5 1 2
RiWhite
3 3 3 1 1 0
-;:::;-;;:~;-;:;:;;;r;;;::::::-;---1 JJimanez
12 3 4 4 3 1 2
SoK 4, Devd Rays 1
Bartosh
23 3 3 3
t
1
ScSwart
1 o o o o
1
Boston
Tampa Bay
HBP-by Takatsu (VMarllnez) WP-Scl'loe
ab r h b1
11b r h bl
neweis. PB-Laker
Damon cf 3 2 1 1 Crwlrd H 4 0 1 0
Ump 1ras-Home Jeff Kelk.lgg F1rs1 Doug
Blllorn 2b 5 0 0 0 Baldelli cl 4 1 1 0
Eddmgs Second Dan lassogna Thnd Cnarl•e
00rtiZ1b 4 12 1 Huff31:l
4 0 10
Reliford T-304 A-17205{43389)
McCty1b 0000 TM rtnz 1b 4 0 11
MRmrzdh 4 122 FOrf
2000
9, Dodgers 4
Vanlekc
3 0 0 0 JoCruzri 1 0 0 0
Los Angales
Phlla
Dubach I 3 0 0 0 lugo SS
&lt;! 0 0 0
ab rhbl
abrhbl
Muetle13b 4 0 0 0 Blum2b
4 0 10
lztuns ss 5 1 3 3
Byrdct
5023
Millar ri
4 0 0 0 G&lt;:rnes dl'l 4 0 0 0
LDo.«:aM 5010 Aolhns ss 5 1 2 0
Reese ss 4 0 1 0 THaU c
3 0 1 0
Brdley cf 4 0 0 0 BAbreu rl 3 2 1 0
Totals 34 4 6 4 Total&amp;
34 1 5 1
Burrell H
5 1 2 2
ShGren 1b 5 1 2 0
·
DoBell 3b 5 2 2 2
Beftre3b 3000
Boston
~03
000
000 4
JEcrcnrf
501
1
Ltx1halc
4 10 0
Tampa Bay
100 000
000 1
UII91J 2b
3 0 1 1
E- Bellhorn (41 Lugo 2 (7) LOB-Boston 8 JHrncl.z 2b 4 1 2 0
Rosse
4010 Wooten lb 4 2 1 1
Tampa Bay 7 2B-D0111Z (16) Reese !4)
Crawford [7) Baldalll [4) TMarlme.z (4)
Nomop
1 ooo
M1Honp
1 000
HR-Damon (3) MRamrrez (9) SB-Bium Flknbr~
0 100 Tlmacop oooo
nuston ph 1 0 1 0
(2) SF-DOr t z
ledeeph 0000
JP H RERBBSO
Saenz ph 1 010
Gearyp
0000
Boston
Totals
38 412 4 Totllls
35 911 9
7 5
1 1 1 5
SchllngW53
Embree
2·310000
Los Angeles
000 300
100 4
Foulke SB
1130 0 0 0 0
Philadelphia
015 210 oo~
9
E-SI'IGreen
121
DP-Los
Angeles
1
Tampa Bay
ABaiLQ-1
5 5 4 4 3 2 Ph ladelphl a 1 LOB-Los Angeles 11
3 1 3 1 0 0 1 1 Pl'llladelphJa 9 28--ShGreen 2 (10) JEncar
Standndge
TreM•IIer
23 0 0 0 0 2 nac1on (7) Da8ell 2 (11) Wooten (3) HAWP........f1Bell2
Iztuns 12) Burrell (9) SB-Roll ns {8)
Umptres--Home Andy Fletcher F1rst Trm BAbreu (6) S-MIHan
IP H RERBBSO
Welke Second J m R91Jn"lds Th11d Gary
Cederstrom T...:.2:5o. A-13.960 143.969)
Lo1 Angeles
Nomo L3 5
1 13 2 1 1 0 1
FaHcenbarg
32388831
Sox 15,
3
Sanchez
2 1 0 0 2 1
Chicago
Cleweland
..
Drenort
10000 2
ab rhbl
ab r h bi
Phtladelph•a
WHarrs 2b 4 0 2 0 BWard 2b 3 1 1 0
Ml~on W50
513 8 3 3 4 5
Rwandcf 1 0 1 0 Vzquelss 3010
Telernaco
123 2 1 1 o
1
Urbe3b
5110 JMcDid ss 1 0 0 0
Crowell
120000
MOrdzri
4210
Gerulrf
4001
Geary
100001
Crada3b 2100 VMrtnzdh 2 2 1 1
HBP-by Falkenborg (l1aberthal) WPThmasdh 4 2 3 5 AEscbrH 3 0 0 0
Falkenborg Sancttez PB-Aoss
CaLeeH
S2 2 2
Merion :Jb 3 0 2 0
Ump•res--Home Jade Samu.,els F rst Jerry
Vlenlin ss 4 2 1 1 Brssrd 1b 4 0 0 0
Crawford Second Darren Spagnarcll Tl'lird
Knerl«&gt; tb 5 1 2 4 laker c
4010
Ph1l Cuzz T-3 06 A-33 916 [43 5001

White

10 0 0

Alout
ARmrz3b
Delee 1b
Barrenc

Chrcago
010 010 100
011e o•n wl1en wuvung 1un scored
E-DJadl.son { 1J DP-ChJCago 1 LOBSan Franc•sco 8 Ctncago 7 2B-ARamuez
112) OeLee (9 ) MA- Tucker (2) Alou (10)
CPai!Sfson 15l CS-Oumam 121 .ti.Honzo (11
S-Snow Rueter SF-Dubo s
IP H RERBBSO

D'bscks 6,

CriSP cf

~flr!

San FranCISCO 002 100 000

c,.oaoo

E-Unbe (4) Geru1 (2) · Laker (2) DPCh•cago 2 LOB-Ch~eago B Cleveland 8
2B-Thomas 2 (9) Calw 19) Valentm (6)
Konerko {6) Merlonl (3) HR-Gioad (2\
VMarllnez [?) SB-Uribe (S) S--WHarns.
Ur•be

NewYorlc
Tl"liChsel
7 5 o o 1 4
Stantonl O t
13 1 1 1 0 0
Botlalrco
23 1 0 0 1 0
Looper
1 1 0 0 0 0
umperes-Home Bnan Alllgll Ftrsl BrUHohrl
Second Rob Drake Thrrd Mark Carlson T2 42. A-20.229 (57.405)

vale-school athletes to partiCipate for a public-school team
at the city's Wmton Woods
High School
Brown recruited h1m to
Oh10 State after confirming
that the umversuy could
meet Hall ' s needs m the
classroom An mterpreter
goes With h1m to h1s classes.
and he 1s completing four
years as an honors studentathlete at Oh1o State.
Hall was second on the
team in stroke-average as a
freshman, but a swmg
change hmdered him the
next two seasons That made

from Page 81

28 0 4 0

3 0 0 0

Grssomc1 4 D 1 1
AltonZo 3) 5 0 1 0
F.,IIZSS
5010
Przyns~
.:1020
1\fPore.z pr 0 D 0 o
Trrab11:::
0 0 0 0
HmndsW 4 000
Tuck&amp;rri
3 2 2 1
Rue1erp
2 0 0 0
DCruzptl 1 0 0 0
Totals 35 3 8 3

lib rhbi
MaciEISri 5000
DJclcsn 2b 3 0 o 0

6 5 1 1 , 9
,
1
113
Wttasd&lt;
000210tsuka
FRodr~guez
23 1 0' '0 1 1
1 0 0 0 0 0
Chnst anseo
10001Puffer
t
t
1
0
Pitlsburgh
Brower l 1 3
OIPeJezL3 2
3 2 4
0 4 5
Boehr.nger
2 3 1 1 0 2
Zambrano
7 6
3 3 1 4
Meadows
200001
Farnsworth
1 0 0 0 D 1
STorres
100 000
Hawkrns
120000
142201
BorowskiW21
1 0 0 0 2 0 Grabow
HBP....Qy PeilVY (MadiONrak)
Brower pitched to 1 baner •n the 10th
Umpues-Home Lany Vanovor F rst Sam
HBP--{Jy Hawk1ns (Tuck6f)
Holbrook
Second Paul Nauert Th rd James
Ump•r~ome Tony Randazzo F"rst Flllld•n
Hoye T-25 1 A-13.366(384961
Culbreth Second Jtm Wolf Th•rd T1m McCiel
land T-3:06 A-39.047 (39 345)

o o o Red

Houaton
013 001
014 - 10
Flor1d11
000 200
000 2
E-AEve1ett (4) Bump (1) DP-Fionda 2
LOB-Houston 6 Flonda 6 28-JKent 1111
Berkman (9) Ensbefg (8) Ausmus (3) P erre
(61 Lowell (1 0) Easley (4 ) HR- Berkma l).
(?) Ch01 (10) S--Aedd•ng SF-JKent Ensberg
IP H R ER BB SO
HoUlton
RaddlngW23 623 3 2 0 2 1
ldge
1131 0 0 0 3
Backe
110001

St Lout&amp;

Totals

Game2
San 0Mtgo
P1t1•bur9h
abrhbi
ab r hbi
Greene ss 5 1 2 0 JWIISn SS 5 0 1 0
Loretta 2tt 5 2 3 1 Hd12b
4000
BG•Iesrf
4 t 0 0
Cashllo 2b 1 0 0 0
Nwm1b 5000
Bayptl
1000
Payton ct 2 1 t 1 WsJd 1D
4 1 2 1
Bcttr;an " 2 o o 1 CW•Isnrl 3100
Rbnson~
t 000
Mckwl&lt;.~
3010
C.rUo3b
3, \ 1 RMateo c1 3000
Ofedac
3001
StyneS 3b 4 0 1 1
PsaltiYp 3010 Cotac
3110
Wlsidlp
0000
OIPrez p
1 0 0 0
Ra,HrdZ ph 1 1 1 2
TRdmnph 101 1
ANunez ph 1 0 0 0
Totals 34 7 9 7 Total•
34 3 1 3

Chicago

ab , hbi
Dmam2b411t

Rueter
Eyre

Tueld8y s Reauns
Mprttrwl 3 M !waukee 2
Houston 9 Florida 2
S&lt;Wl Dll!'!gOat Plt!sburgh (ppd ram)
Plltladelplua 8 Los Angeles 1
NY Mets 5 St Lou•s 4
Colorado 8 C normal• 3
.tl.n.z011a 2 llilama 0
San Frartc:ISCO 1 Ch!CJQO Cubs 0

St LOUII

-"'-:":=':--,
"" -2;;:350 A-JJ:;::;;:'38
::o:.•'96;;-l- - - - l =~ 1 -o

F!orldo

ab

&amp;rghs3b
Loretta 2b
BGtlesn
Nevm1b

1

l.inebrn~

Toronto

lb 'hbi
4 10 0

San Diego

18

73

...

Thursday • Games

Twins 6, Blue Jays 5

Loh..

553
538

P10

St Lours (Marqu s 2 31 at N Y Mets tSeo 2 3) 1 10 p m
San Francrsco (HermariSQl 1 21al Chocago Cubs (Maddu• 3 3) 2 2{) p m
M !waukee 10bermuotter 2 11vs MontrealtOhka 1 51at San Juan 2 35 p m
Houston (0swB.It 2 2 ) at Florula {Becken 3 3) 7 05 p m
San D1990 tVaIde&amp; 3 21 at Prnsbvrgh (Vogelsong 1 31 7 05 p m
LosAngeles (ls/'1~5-2 atPn tadepl\\3tMyers22) 705pm
Colorado Kennedy 4-1 ) a C•nclnnal•lPWIIsan 5 0] 7 10 p m
AriZona (Fossum 0.01 at Atlanta (Ram re.z 1 3) 7 35 p m

Oe!IOII {Knottst .O) atOakJand{HL.Idson 4 t ) 335pm
Boston (Lowe 3 31 at Tampa Bay 1Zambfano 3 4) 7 15 p m
Kansas Crty (May 1 51 at Texas (Rogers 5 21 B 05 p m
Oucago W'M e Sox (loa1za 4 31 at M~nnesota (Gre•snger 1 2f 8 tOp m
Bal!lmore Looel 3 I} at Seanle 1tkver 1 21 10 05 p m
N v Yankees {Mussm 4-41at Anah(llm (Colon 4 2) 10 05 p m

Totlla

GB

M twaukee 6 Montreal 3
Phltaoelph~&amp;. g Los Angeles .t
C~nannatr 4 Colorado 3 t 101
St Lows 1 NY Mats 0

-.-.o.n-

LFOftiH

....

L

Wednesday a Anuh•
~1 01Etg0 7 P1ttsburgn 3 {gm 2
San O~ega 6 Pmsburgn 3 rgm 11
AriZona 6 Atlanta 4 t1 1)
Ch.cago Cubs 4 Siln Frai1CISCO 3 (101
Houston 10 Florida 2

Tarooto 5 MJmasota 3

Mn1850ta 6 Toronto 5

20, 2004

ll1e Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com
•

Major League Baseball...
'

• Thursday, May

Sadler 3b
SFnl8')1 c1
DBtlsta ri
Crnt ron ss
M!iYne C
Hmckc

Webbp

1 0 0 0
3 2 2 1

5 1 10
4 0 0 1
3 0 0 0
1000
3011

Vtwrdep oboo
Baergaph 1 0 0 0
Tolala
39 B 9 6

Anzone
Atlanta

LuGnzl2b
Cast•tla 3b
HlkdayH
ClaytOn ss
Hefton1b
CJhsooc
Hawperl
JJnngsp

ab rhbi
JGarca S! 6 0 1 0
l roche 1b 6 0 1 0
J0rewr1
4010
CJones~
4 000
JEstdac
511 o

Thmsnp 2000
Gl)'bskp 0 0 0 0
Furcal ph 1 0 0 0
JuFrco ph 1 l 1 2
DWI&amp;e p11 1 0 0 0
Total1
41 410 4

a
4

Totals

31

5 4 5

0 -

3

abrhbi
MYongss 3 0 11
Blakrl 3IJ 4 1 2 1
A$rano2b 4 0 0 0
P9rry1b
4 000
BJordn dh 4 0 1 0
EYongW
3 110
Dlluco W 1 0 0 0
3100
Meoch rf
NIXCf
4 0 10
La1dc
20 11
Filmer pl1 1 0 0 0
Totals
33 3 7 3

00,
100 300 5
Kanaaa City
000 100 200 3
Texas
LOB-Kansas C•ty 6 Toi!KIS 6 HR-Berroa
(2) JGonzalez (5) Harvey (4) Blalock (11)
SF -MYoung
IP H RERBBSO
Kansas City
GoobleW22
613 6 3 3 1 2
Camp
1300000
Cerda
13 0 0 0 0 0
Hu•sma.nSt
2 1 0 0 0 0

Totals

34 611

Milwaukee

sb r hb•
Eet-vez cf 5 1 4 0
Vd-J2b
4 000
OGbera ss 4 1 2 1
CEvm~
3000
Cp.cl&lt;yl!
1 000
Wlkrsn lb 3 0 0 0
TBtsta 3b 3 0 1 1
Slodgerf 4 o o o
Schndr c 4 1 2 1
SKtmp
tOtO
Tuckerp
t 0 0 0
Fkacp
0000
Bentz p
0000
AFoxph
1 000
Ayala p
0000
JAIVra ph 1 0 0 0
Toll!llll
35 310 3

6

Seattle

ab r h b1
BADrts2D 4 0 0 0
Mora3b
3021
TeJada ss .:1 0 0 0
RPimo lb 4 0 I 0
J\lopzC 4 0 0 0
GbbOOS rf 4 1 t:..1

ab rhbt
IS~uk•rf 3 0 0 0
JoCbra tb 5 0 1 1
BBoone2b 3 o 1 o
EMrtnzdh S 0 1 0
IDanezH
4 0 0 0
SpiSZIO 3b 4 0 0 0
0\Nilsrl c 3 ' 2 0
Au11ltaSS 3111
W1nnrt
4010
Totals
3C 2 7 2

4 2 ~

Matosct

l

BrgoreH
4 I I 1
Hrs!Jretl 3 1? 1
Totals :W 510 5
Baltrmore

000

001

301

-

5

Sealll•

000

000

200 -

2

E- lbanez 21 DP-Seanle 2 LOB-Ball
more 3 Seatt'e 11 28-Mora 2 { 121 Matos
t5J B1gbe t61 Auulfa l!!l HR-Grbbons (51
Matos l ol l SB-BBoone t41 CS-HalrSIQn Jr

•21

IP H RERBBSO
Balt11110f"e
62 3 4 2 2 • 7
BedardW 1 1
13 1 0 0 1 '
De.,lean
1
1 0
BRyan
1
1
1
1 0 0
Jul•o S 7
Seal11e
AFrankl1 L2.: 613 9 4 4 0 4
Putz
12300010
Guardado
1 1 1 1 0 0
Umpres--Home Larry Your1g F1rst Angel
Hernandez Second M ke Event! Thrrd Mark
Wegner
T-241 A-295i5~7447 t

o a o

AthletiCS 6, Tigers 2
Oakland

Detrotl
ab r 11 b1
ASnctJz cf
CG•ien ss
IRdrgzc
WMeW

5 0 1 0
5 a 20
5 0 10

3100
3 0 1 1
Norton 1b 3 1 1 0
lnge3b
4 020
Shelton oh" 2 0 0 0
Munson dn 2 0 0 0
lnlante 2b 3 0 1 1
Total&amp; 35 2 9 2

Mo~eri

abrhbl
Bymesd 5230
K•ettylt
4234
Ec~a~z 3b 4 o o o

ove r1

.4

Hnoorg tb
Du•azo cf1
DMrller c
Crosby ss
Sr;u1arc 2b

000

202

000

4 1 2 0

37 613 6

Totals

011

1 2 ,

.: o 2 I
4 0 0 0
4 0 0 0
4 0 1 0

DOO 2
2Dx 8
DP-Q~ kt a nd 1 LOB-Detro11 11 Oakland
7 28-Monroe (6) Dye (9) HR-Krelty 2 {41
Dye (9) 58 -Infante (2) Byrnes (71
IP H REABBSO
0et:ro11
Maroth L 4 2
51 3 8 4 4 0 5
Levme
23 3 2 2 0 0
,
1 0 0 0 1
JWalker
DPanerson
1 1 0 0 0
1
Oakland
MAeli"nanWJ-2
5 7 2 2 3 4
Ouchscherer
2 2 0 0 2 1
Mecr
1 0 0 0 0
1
Bradlord
1 0 0 0 0 3
Levrne PIIC' ad to 3 DaHers 1n the 7th
WP DPanerson
Umprres-f-1ome Je~ Nelson F•~l Marry Fos
1er Second Joe Bnnkman Th rd Ttm Tsch da
T-2 43 A-20 477 (43 6621
Detroit
Oeklend

Angels 1, Yankees o. (11)
New York

Anaheim

ab r hb•
loftoncl
4 0 2 0
Jeterss
4 000
AAdrgz 3b 4 0 0 0
Sh~IElldri .:1000
Posadac 2 0 0 0
Matsu•ff
3 0 0 0
BWIImsdh 4 01 C
TCiark tb 3 0 0 0
Ca1ro2b
.:10 0 0

abrhbl
Eclo.slr• ss 5 0 2 0
Ftggl'lS 3b 5 0 0 0
DVnond 4 1 3 0
VGrfflot1 4020
JG•tlen ~
4 0 2 0
Amzga3b 0 0 0 0
Ktcnmlb 4000
AA gg sdh 50 1 1
JMolnac 4 0 1 0
AKncty 2b 4 0 0 0
Totals
39 111 1

32 0 3 0

Tolal1

Milwaukee

~*l24
623 4 5 5 4 3
BSI1oose
13 0 0 0 0 0
2 0 0 0 0
1
Almanzar
HBP-by Camp (Lard) by Parlr. (MISW&amp;ellll\').
by Park (BSantiago) by Park (Stairs)
Ump11es-Home AWonso Marquez F rs! RICk
Reed Second M ke F tehler Thud Ted Barrell
T-2:28. A-32,374 (49.115)

VSanlos W2 0
l&lt;reschnrck
JBennen
LV zcano
Kolb S 9
Montreal
SK1mL22
TLJcker
Ftkac

Padres 7. Pirates 3

""""

5

11-3

23
1

1

313
123
123
13

New York
000 000 000 00 0
An1h11m
000 000 000 01 1
One out wnen w nn1ng run scored
E-F•gg ns 14) DP-New Yor~ 1 Anahe m 1
LOB-New York 7 Anahe1m 11 28-JMolma
(5) CS-Lolton (1) Slletheld (41 Amezaga
(1) S-Jster Amezaga
lP H REABBSO
NewVork
JVazque;.
1 5 0 0 2 5
Gordon
220001
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Ouantn• L4 2 11 3 4 1 1 1 0
Anahe1m
0 0 0 0 0
00002S~Ie
6200 4 2
2000QFRodnguez
200012
Petcval
1 1 o 0 o o
4 4 4 3 3
SheldsW30
2 0 0 0 0 2
2 0 0 0 2
HBP-by Percival (Posada by ~ale ARo2 1 1 1 0
drguez)
0 a 0 0 1
T-311 A--43660(450301

400

Hall realizes how dtff1cult
tt IS to make a livmg as a pro
golfer, but he sees no reason
to have personal doubts now
"I have seen how good my
game can be - and my standards Just rose," he 1yped.
tlashmg a smile "I ' m gomg

to go where people have
neve1 gone. That's what I
wanl 10 do now
''If thmgs don t work oul
lhen 1"11 tall back to my !OUrnalism degree although w1th
my heart &lt;tnd desue, thai's
not g01 ng 10 happen "

Thomas Dn·it·h~st R~11tal t~nt~•·
MACHINE
IITihP.rP.'s only one way to
",,a,.~ popcorn for a b1g
Rent a popcorn
II rrtachtnle Looks great at a

STUMP GRINDER
And you thought that
unattractive stump had to
stay 1n your yard for
Gett1ng nd of 1t IS easy

a 063 average
BALANCED LINEUP: Manager
Dave M1ley Juggled h1s baumg order
Wednesday, droppmg struggling leadoff
h1tter D'Angelo J1menez to seventh
Mtley also tned to break up h1s combmauon of threl! straighl left-handed
h11ters - Ken Gnffey Jr, Sean Casey
:md Adam Dunn. Rock1es manager
Clint Hurdle has three left-handed
relievers m the bullpen , allowmg them
to match up agamst the heart of the
Reds' order m late mmngs.
Miley put Casey th1rd. Gntfcy fourlh,
Ke.trns f1fth and Dunn SIXth
"Clint has three lelt-handers he can
b1 mg m at any tune,'' M1ley smd '' I' m
1ust trying to break our left-banders
up ,,
Gnffey has batted th1m, fourth and
fifth in the lineup th1s season.
ent here, but we have moved on"
BASELINES: RHP Kyle Denney
spramed a hgament in his left knee while
covering second base for Tnple-A
Buffalo last weekend and will be side·
lined from 3-to-4 weeks The Indians
considered bringinj! up Denney as thetr
No. 5 starter earher this season when
Jason Stanford and Jeff D'Amico went
on the disabl~d list. .. The Indians pur·
chased the contract of RHP Kane Davis
from Camden of the Atlantic League to
replace Denney. Davts pitched for
Cleveland in 2000, one of an AL record
32 p1tchers used by the club that year....
3B Jhonny Peralta continues to tear up
International League p1tchmg. After
gomg 2-for-5 on Tuesday for Buffalo,
he's battmg 348 - second-highest 1n
the IL.

Flames defeat SharJ&lt;s, move Kelli White accepts twoon to Stanley Cup Finals
year ban for steroid use
BY GREG BEACHAM

Baltimore

110 6
Montreal
200 000 100 3
DP- M1Iwaukoo 2 Montreal 2 LOB -M ~
wauhee 7 Montreal 8 28--CouMelt (6)
EnChavez 2 (3) OCabrera (6) 38-BHall
jl) HA-Schne•der (61 CS-8Hall t11 SFKGmter
IP H RERBBSO

Te~aa

000

Orioles 5, Manners 2

Late Tuesday

Montreal

Milwaukee
1b rhbl
Pdsdn~ cf 4 1 0 0
Cunsell ss 5 1 4 0
KGtntr 3b 4 0 1 1
Jonk1ns H 4 1 0 o
ovmay 1b 2 1 0 o
8Hall 2b
41 2 3
Greve ri
3 1 1 1
LVzcnop 0 0 0 0
Kolbp
0000
GBnnhc 4 020
VSantsp 2000
Kschnkp 1000
JBeMn p o o o o
BCiario:rf 1 0 1 1

Te~ ..

have raised his s•ghts
"I've had guys who played
fourth man lor me ¥o out and
make the tour," saJd Brown,
whose Oh10 State players
mclude John Cook , Joey
S111delar and 14 other PGA
Tour members "I don't know
what separates them. You've
got to be playmg good those
weeks of the tour school,
that's for 'ure But I lhmk
Kevin wants to try it "
Brown smd some equipment
companies
have
expressed interest 111 sponsoring Hall, who Js scheduled to
graduate next spnng.

000 000 030

Brewers 6, Expos 3

Royals 5, Rangers 3

JGn.zzrf411 3
S1a1rsH
3 0 0 0
ABrwnll
0000
Randa3b 4 000
Harvey 1b 4 1 1 1
BSt1ago c 3 0 0 0
MLopez2b 3 o 0 o

4000

Colorllda

""~"""

MiS~d l'l21tO

4 12 0
50 2 0

Clndnnatl
021 000 000
1 One out w ~e n wmmng run scored
,
LOB-Colorado 6 C nc1nnat1 11 28-Heltoil
2 (1 4) Hawpe (11 Dunn {7) DJtmenez i8l
HR-Cash lla (1 1) Burnttz (13) CSDJ•menez (3) S-JoAcevado
IP H AERBBSO
Colcndo
JJennmgs
6 5 3 3 5 5
VNunez
1 0 0 0 0 0
Fassero
23 2 0 0 0 0
113 0 0 0 0 1
Harrkkala
FuemcsLtt
13 2 1 1 1 0
Cli\Clnnatl
JoAcevedo
1 5 0 0 0 11
TJones
2312210
Graves
1 1311103
Atedfil1gW20
1 0 0 0 0 1
HBP-by Fuentes (DiJnn) by JoAceveoo (Ho!
llday). WP-T.Jones
Umpues-Home Marv1n Hudson F1rs1 Dana
DeMI.l1h SEcond Jm Joyce Third Kerv.rn
Danley T-3 13. A-16.410 {42 27 1)

E-Webb {1) DP-Anzona 1 Atltlnta 2
LOB-Ar zona 3 Atlanta 10 28-JGarc•a
{3) AJones 2 (9) HA-LGoozalez 2 ( 12)
SFtnley (13} JuFranco (2) C5-AJones (1)
s-SF1nley SF- DaAosa
IPHRERBBSO
Anzona
1
7 6 0 0 3
W•bb
23
1
3 3 0
~
1 1 0 2
Vall.erde
113
Bruney W 2 0
2 Q 0 0 2 3
Atlanta
Thomson
6 6 4 4 2 4
Gryboskl
1 0 0 0 0
1
Redsma
1 00000
Smottz
210000
AlmanzaL01
1 2 2 2 0
1
Umpues-f-1ome Bruce Oreclcman F rst Ger
ry DaviS Second Larry Ponc1no Th1rd Greg
Gibson T-320 A-19.971 (50,0911

Kanaa1 Ctty
ab rhbt
Berroass 51 1 1
Baltrancf 3 1 0 0

hbl
0 0
12
0 0

4010
2000
MaS~p11t 000
Burnrtz d 4 1 1 1
HckngH
1000
Totala 37 3 7 3

.l.Jones cf 3 1 3 0
DeRosa 3b 3 0 0 1
NGroon 2tl 5 1 2 1

000 022 000 02 000 000 040 00 -

ab r
50
4 1
3 0

Clnctnnatt
ab r hb1
Free1 3b
4001
JaCruz ph 1 0 0 0
Larlcnss 3000
Case~ tb
5 1 ~ 1
GrfJrcl
4000
Keamsrf 3000
Dunnll
41 20
0Jmnz:2b 51~ 2
LeAua c
3110
JoA~dop
2000
JCastro 3b 1 0 0 0
Totals
35 4 9 4

Ayala
2 ' 1
1 '
WP-SKm
U'Tlpores-Home Paul Scnnebe1 F•rsl Chus
Gucoone Second Jerry Meats Third Ed
1\r\on!ague
T-307 A -8 '57 190001

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CALGARY, Alberta- The
Calgary
Flames
fmall y
showed some heaf[ al home and now Canada's team wdl
play for the Cup
lginla
Captam Jarome
scored h1s I Oih playoff goal
and the Flames advanced 10
thetr first Stanley Cup finals 111
15 yeaJ S With a 3- I VICtory
over the S,m Jose Sh,uks m
Game 6 of th~ We stern
Conference tinals Wednesddy
mght
Mukka K1prusotf made IR
saves for the Flames , whose
VICtory was the first by a home
team in the senes 1l1e raucous
"Red Sea" of fan s m the soldout Saddledome tinally had
something to cheer as the
Flames took an early le&lt;~d and
hung on through the thtrd penad.
Martin Gelmas also pul the
puck m the net tor the sixthseeded Flames, who Will open
thetr fourth straight playoff
series on the 10ad Tuesd.t~ .
e1ther at Tampa Bay or
·Philadelphia
Calgary hasn' t been tn the
NHL's final round smce winmng the Stanley Cup 111 1989
- and the Canadian anthem
wtll be sung 111 the finals for
the first ttme smce Vancouver
made 11 in 1994 A Canadmn
team hasn't won the Cup smce
Montreal's VICtory 111 I 993
Alyn McCauley scored tor
San Jose, but the best season 111
franch1se h1story ended with
back-to-back losses in the
Sharks' first appearance m the
conference fmals San Jose
also lost 1ts final four home
games of the playoffs, runmng
out of energy and focu s
despite thetr 104-pmnt regular
season and home-ice advantage 111 every round.
The teams tied ,m NHL
record w1th road v~etones 111
each of the first five games of
the senes, so the Flames
stayed 111 a hotel Tuesday mght
111 an attempt to replicate road
conditions It mu st have
worked: Calgary took an early
lead and never lost 11 desp11e a
strong th1rd-penod push by the
Sharks. who JUSt couldn't beat
K•prusoff
The Sharks pulled then
goal1e m the tinal mmute, but
the Flames' Robyn Regehr
was credJted With a goal with
one second left after San
·Jose:s Alex Korolyuk attempted to pass the puck from
behmd the Calgary net and 11
went the length of Ihe ice
Evgem Nabokov made 27
saves but lost aga111 to
Kipiusoff. h1s former backup
K1prusoff amved 111 Calgary 111
a trade last NovembeJ, and the
:Flames haven't been the same
·- they've been good enough
to roar past every Western
tean1 with a low-budget roster
and an unpeccable wo1 k ethic
: The Flames had more jump
:from the open111g faceoff. nar:rowly m1ssmg several sconng
·chances before lgmla walked
.m on Nabokov for a powhplay goal with 93 seconds left

j)IL'\

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coslmg her" t!lp-tu Ihe Atl1en' 01! mpil' d!lU br ~miL' .tl th~ 2l)(J I '' 1li 1J" 111 ELillHI!ll~l!l
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'ihc! ,l!ld Ch.l!ld!,! Siunup ol B.th.tmas lo
and l S 11,1111111.!1, "I he I S \111 1- l l11p111~ ~ ~ 011/L'
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Reds

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h~o.'l O\\ n .tlh:'t (('t,Ung po . . rtl\ r..· t ot ... tcwrd~
t:Lh~.t.ah lllo\e ... up to ... ti\L~I .tnd Ft;Jn L~-.
\hu tL·I Hu111 . . ~L"h th~ hroJJ/ 1..'

111:..·1

The l 'SAD \ b.t,cd 111 n•:d!('l (,l,udJo
Sptmg ... 'J.Jd . . omc 1..'\ tdL' tlll:' \\, , ..., uhl.unl'd
thmu':.!.ll d1 lLLiillL'Ilh !n till tilL' k~kJ.illl l\ L',\1~ t11011 1i1tu ll AI.( 0
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Lulldllb .11,(, 11.1' decl .u.:d lhe 21 XJ1 ou iJo&lt;H Lild111p1Lll1 111 the I()() .111u 200 hc1 l!rst

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myselr htn",d"' 1111 l,u111l1 l!!cnJ,
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ney ··1 .un -,o iJ ) liH th~..· p(loJ ~-.hpllt..?" I h.t'L'

(\\ ll ll.i[l (l tl.tl tltlc ~.o

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The 27-lc.u-old 'llr!IHL'! ,,1111 ,Ill' pl,n&gt;' to ld'&lt;s
"It r-. not ea-.,\ to LKlm 1t

COmpete dg_.Ltll \.\ h t.' ll till' hdll Cllr.J., Ill rvL.t~

\\rung dllll then· \ t.tnLI up

2006.

Calgary Flames nght wmger Jarome 1g1nla accepts the conference trophy after the Flames defeated the San Jose Sharks 31 to wm the NHL Western Conference f1nal 4 2 1n Calgary on
Wednesday (AP)
the tirst penod lgmla leads
the playoffs with 16 po111ts,
and h1s leadership has been
JUSt as Important for h1s young
club
lgmla 's goal was set up by
Curt1s Brown's h1gh-st•ckmg
penalty, and Gelinas' goal was
caused by yel another lapse m
dt sctplme f6r the Sharks
Rookie Mdl eel Goc won a
taceott bUI tailed to tJe up
Cr,tig Conroy. who sneaked
past h1m and passed to Gehnas
tor h1 s sixth goal of the playoils
Three
mmutes
later.
McCwley scored San Jose 's
first godl in approximately 118
mmutes - but that v,as Jt for
the Sharks. who scored Just
once in the fiNal seven penods
ot the scnes.
Though coach Darryl Sutter
reJects lhe 1dea of h1s team
represenung the nation, try
telling thai 10 mtlhons of
proud Canadwn hockey fans
who have t.ansfe11ed the1r
allegtances tram the Maple
Leafs 01 the Oilers to
Calgary's bdnd ol overachievers for the spnng
Ami never mmd that the
Flames have a Fmmsh goalie
and two Amencans m the1r
regular stamng hneup. or that
every NHL team has a roster
crowded wnh Canadmns.
They p1 efer to root for the
home team m the Great Wh1te
North
Anu Sutter never would
acknowledge any satisfaction
111 dtspatch111g the team that
tired h1m lUSt 17 months ago
- bul the flmty coach wore a
broad sm1le alter h•s team
clmched h1s first trip to the
Stanley Cup I mals
Notes: After taking a 3-0
lead
on the Colorado

k;Jgrng her llll~­
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'It I Lan make .1 J!llct enLc 111 Llc,mmg up
would dn dil k• cnll\
Wlnlc , ,11u the sport I "dl hdle done lll&lt;l!e 1111 the ' r on
.. UnloJIU!ldlcll \\c Ldnll(it ~o hdc' m tune I 1h.111 ,111, lhmg I could IMI e Jone on the u.1ek.'
can onh !.!O l;n\\dld .\lld nl.th.c -..Uie I do the
'he '"'J
light thlllg. . IH llll hr.:'tl' Oil ll lll
D.n tes .....uJ ,tthkh~..., u. . u.tll\ ..,e, \ r.: .tt k\hl u
·Ai th m!~h lhh "one ol Ihe h.!Jd~'llhm~' I )L'.tr's suspension bctorc lhe. l i\Ar L&lt;l!tsldeh
hd\ c e\ er ...h..td to dn 1 k 111 n\ I d1l1 Jouu! ...the tt lnst ..nement
IH!ht thiiH! .md \\ 11 1 Ull1\11llll' to do -.o 1ii the
Whne·, co.tc h. Rem• Kmche mm . \\,Is one
ltllure · "
ol fmu men mdiLicd ed! lie! 1h1·, \c,u on
Mnd~tlrntl Ldl llL'"' d puhlil \\,Uillll~ .ttrd Llr ...,c lMr~e..., nl Jlle~ ..Lil v Jr -..tJJbutt iH! ..,Ll'!&lt;lJJ..., dllt.l
qudl!l K\!110!1 I! om IIJL· n L'J ll 11 hc1c the P&lt;lS! - othcl pcllotm:lncC-cnh.mcmg "urug' to o~th­
IJvc te,llon' pi.!L c' hull he Lhc lll EPO .tllll lhc lelcs ,1, p,i!llll lhc B ALCO p1nbc

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nw. h l•l .upu . . In I ht• 111 .., 1 7~ • \\\.II th lu llll' lirsl su. Best Stret•t Kod • Be:o;;l Str l"tt
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1Jt~ur tD~t~ 'Price leadef on lhe Rifler...

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d1..,tJ 1hut111~ ..,,e, o 1ll "' &lt;Jtld pet tOJ -

Jtt ve

Avalanche m the second round
of the playoffs, the Sharks lost
s1x of the1r final mne postseason games
The Flames
were 0-4 at home games when
the team handed out the noisemaking ThunderSt1x, so the)
dec1ded not to g1ve them away
before Game 6. .. Aerosmith ,
m town for a show Thursday.
watched the game from a luxury sLute .. Calgary •mpro\ed
10 I0-1 in the playoffs when
sconng the ti1 st goal.

~.ddPd&lt;

,,nd

~.: JcJ .H! Oils aho commenucd V. hue to• lleppmg tom .trd .md Ihe l 'SArlA lot pw,uJng Ihe
Jll egd ll ~
1 1lc~tle1 Tt.tck.., '"odd !;!O\L'IIlllh! bud\ ihtd
manu:-cnll.ulung dtug:-. to p1ok..,~llll1dl .tth- hcen on.: Ihe h,11 shcst cntll'' 111 tl1~ hanui1 nQ of
lete'
Jopmg c.1-.es rn vo l\ mg U S .tthlete..,
...
The Scn.tle 1h1s monlh tl'lc.tsed ntlormdtJon
'Bl'L.Ilh~ thr ~ .tthlctc h.t ~ '-tg.n~d tu dl'CCpt
m tk BALCO c.tse I&lt;• Ollmptl ofltc!,d, \\ho he1 'uspc11110n. \\e h.11e a1o1dcJ lu11h~J leg&lt;~l
reque . . tcd th e m.ttcrr .d-.. ... u thL'Y could he ...,u tc dCllOil \'•lll l h I \ u ... u,dJ) CO\ tl: n! lt.?lll ll1ll' L0llto l!c ld ,, cledn lcd m 111 \ih~'"
'UI11!11)! dllU dlso keeP.' Olll spon 111 lhc llc\\1
F11 e-11mc 011 mp1c tncd.!l"l M.11 Jon Jnnc' lm lhc \Hong lcd"m · IAAF spnkc,!lldll NJL'k
smd l.tst 11cc' sit,• \\ OU!d ' "" l 'SADA 1! It pie- D.n 1e.., ..,;.wJ
VCIH..., hCl ft1llll ~t H JH.~ I U \th'.:lh \\ rthmll d po...,\\ l111e dg!eeu Ill help Ihe L S&gt;.DA ,md

The 8d)

111

~ldducn

,dlilUI II . he ':tid

Whuc " lhc li, ,l .nhleiL' 1u he '1"pcndeu
bused onmi &lt;1!JJMil'" !tom 1hc H \ 1.( 0 L,tsc

bly the best I've pnched all
yem ··
Hts manager emphasized
Jenmngs ha s to start
that
from Page 81
doing better.
"My grandfather used to
wtth 17 saves m 2 I chances
tell me, ' You either hsh or
Graves rema111ed !led v,tth cut ba•t.'" Hurdle smd .• ''It's
:John Franco for lhe club time for him to start tishmg."
:record with 148 saves.
Jenmngs d1dn ' t get off on
: Acevedo was 111 posJIJon to the nght foot with the mound
·snap out of the worst slump at Great Amencan Ball Park.
of hts career until the bullpen
The right-hander caught
let h1m down He gave up h1s left cleats dunng a fJrstfive hits and dtdn 't walk a mning p1tch to Ban y Larkm.
:batter 111 seven ulnmg s.
and dropped to h1 s knee With· H1s II stnkeouts were the out lettmg go of lhe ball He
:most by a Reds p1tcher smce h,td a bemu sed gnn as he got
· Ron Vi II one tanned 16 on Ltp and got ready to throw
·Sept. 29. 2000. at St Louis
aga m
"We were down 3-0, but 11.
It was Jenmngs ' first
seemed like a lot more than encouJileJ w1th the mound.
:that," sa1d Rockies manager cons1dered one of the fl.tttest
·Clint Hurdle, who wa&gt; eJect- in the ma1ors.
: ed 111 the seventh by plate
Notes Ram held lhe g.tme
: umpire Marvin Hudson lor up tor I hour, 12 mmutes 111
:argumg ball -and-strike call s the m1ddle of lhe second
"Acevedo absolutely lit us mnmg The game 11selt look
up . He was eleclnc "
3 hours. I 3 m1nu1es
Jason Jennings was erratiC Kearns was activated ott the
· He walked f1ve m the tirsl DL and went 0-tor-3 w1th a
:two innings, then settled pan of w,tl,ks Kearns c racke~
:down and ~ave up three runs a bone JUSt above h" lett
:and hve h1ts overall in SIX w1 !St when he was hit by a
· J1menez had an RBI double p•tch on Apnl 26
and scored a run.
Acevedo's prev1ous career
"I made tl a httle too stress- h1 gh was I 0 stnkeout s
:ful earlr." sa1d Jenmngs, who agamst the Mets last July.
·is 2-5 111 mne starts With an The · four hit s matched
:8.50 ERA "Those were J1mcneL·, cmee• hi gh
II
:probably three of the v,orst was Hurdle 's second eJection
:mRmgs I've p1tched smce ot the season. . The Rockies
I've been a Rockte. and the are 0-4 111 extra mmngs.
l~sl three mn111gs we1e proba4

••

JOHN MARSHAll

Assoc1a1ed Press

•

Per «&lt;ay

Bv

~·

"'"''

740-992-6614

Hours
9·8 Mon • Frt
9 -4 Saturday

• 1·B88·DON· TATE '

'

•••

-~"

l~"'tll U.tbn~

H IHI k.
'"" 1'

rmo

l&lt;&gt;o ....... '

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, May

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, May 20, 2004

20, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

;:Jimberwolves move on to face Lakers
BY DAVE CAMPBELL

Associated Press
MI NNEA POLIS- Kevin Garnett has
endu red his share of frustration with the
Mi nnesota Timberwolves.
The val idation for that. and for his
tviVP award, came in a big Game 7 performance against the Sacramento Kings.
Garnett had 32 poi nt s. 21 rebounds and
fi,e blnc ks on his 28th birthday. and the
Timberwoh cs ath anced to the Western
Confcn.:nce finah with an ~ 3- 80 victory
Wcdnesda1 ni~ h t.
.. I 11asl]·t th inking about anything,"
· • Ga rnett \ai d... , was just telling every• body to follow my lead."
The victory. ami the matchup with the
Los An~eb Lake rs. wasn't assured until
Chris \ve hhc r·s 3-point attempt spun
·: ar&lt;&gt;lllld the rim anu out as the tina) buzzer
- sounded. Th at stuck star-crossed
- Sacr;unentn with a Game 7 loss for the
thi rd ~t r aiLdll vcar.

.. , J clin-itd \· thou2ht the last shot was
gotld... Webber said... It did everything
hut go in I couldn ' t believe it came out."
Minnesota will face the Lakers. idle
since Sa turday. in Game I of the conference fina h Friday night in Minneapolis.
.. wc ·r~ up to the challenge," said Mark
1\-l adse n. who won NBA titles with Los
Angeles in 2001 and 2002. "It' s going to
be a tremendous series ...
In the only re rilainmg conference semi final serie,, N~w Jersey is at Detroit for
Game 7 on Thursday night. The winner
II il l fa,·e
Indiana in the Eastern
Cunkrence final!,.
\\' ith the Timbcrwolves clinging to a
three-po int teat.! . the Kings had a final
prhsess ion wt ie . Doug Christie 's off-bal ance .1-pot tttcr w;" an airball. and Brad
Mill er·s Ia! up alt~mpt off the rebound
11 ' " e1nphatlcally rejected by Garnett into
the scats.
T he Kin gs got another inbounds pass
with 2.2 second s remaining . Webber
pum p- faked Garneu in the air and got a
clea n look '" Garnett avoided contact.
'· I thought it was going down,"
SaLTamcnto cnach Rick Adelman said.
.. But it j us t didn ' t happen .''
Webber. who had 16. points, collapsed
to hi , kn ees in disa ppointment before gettin g a hug from Garnett - who eventually made his v. ay 10 the scorer's table and
jum ped ;1top it to salute a screaming sell-

out crowd.
Garnett left his mark all over this game.
too. His 3-pointer over Miller and Mike
Bibby with 3:39 remaining was a big
blow, putting Minnesota up 77-70:
"He showed why he is lhe MVP," teammate Fred Hoiberg said. "Early in the •
game. he got every rebound. He was
blocking every shot. ... He can dominate
a game in so many different ways."
The Kings added to their litany of postseason failures. They lost to the La~e rs in
the 2002 conference final s and last year
again st Dallas in the semifinals - both in
Game 7s .
·'We just kept lighting, man," Miller'
said. "I think that 's what it 's all about."
After trailing by as many as 13 points
in the fir,;t half, the Kings were within
four, 79-75 , when Bibby made a 3-pointer in the carrier with I :40 left. After
Garnett ihrew the ball out of bounds. the
Kings misse~·chance to cut it to two
when Webbe
issed a wide-open layup
with onet· ute to go .
Still do n by four. they blew another
opp,ortun cy when Garnett stole the ball
from Mille~nd nytde o ei f rwo foul
shots with 31 ~eCQ!ldS le!j..
Bibby hit a pair offr~hrow s , cutting
it to 80-77 , but Sprewell made one of two
to make it a four-point game. Christie's 3pointer with 16.8 seconds on the clock ·
sliced the lead to one, and Cassell sank
both of his foul shots 10 make it 83-80.
"Just a tough loss," Adelman said.·
''Heck of a series .... Give the Wolves
credit. Garnett was terrific, and we wish
them luck."
Christie. Sacramento's sixth-leading
scorer during the season, had 21 points as
his team's unlikely leader. Bibby added
15 points. and Miller had II.
Sam Cassell played through an ailing
back and returned to form with 23 points
and seven assists for Minnesota. Latrell
Sprewell added 14, and Wally Szczerbiak
had I0 off the bench.
A day after apologi zing for warweapon metaphors he used to describe
his mind-set, Garnett played his usual
high-energy game at both . ends of the
cottrt on the biggest night in the fran chise's 15 seasons.
"Seven games a lot of times define who
you are, and a lot of times the bigger the
game the bigger the guy who steps up,"
Wolves coach Flip Saunders said.

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REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS ·youR AD NOW ONLINE

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J'ERso
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'

make room .

Keams is eligib le to play Wednesday night against the
Co lorado Rockies.
Kearns. tile regula r ri ght fie lder, suffe red a broken .bone in
his kft forearm Apri l 26 when he was hit by a pitch during a
g~mc 111 Pill,hurg h. The Reds placed him on the di sabled li st
t \VO d:tV-" J t~!Cf.

Kcarl,, hit .357 with two home runs and eight run s batted
in during his eigh t-ga me rehabilitation assignment in
Luuisvil le.
Romano had gone .1-for-·16 in 15 appearances, including
one start, for Cincin nati. The Reds clai med him off waivers
from the Tampa Bay Dev il Ray' on April 22.
It i' the '&gt;CCond year in a row that Kearns has bee n hurt
early in the season. He played onl y 82 games last yea r
bcc:Jusc of a shou lder inj ury.

•

•

Very good salacMn

o1furno·

ture. household items, gar·
den1ng tools. TV, luggage,
ladders, hunting &amp; sPorts
eqwp. no childrens clothing,
Sat. May 22 9-3pm. 3 miles
East on Sant:1hill Rd . turn
nght at Stoneybrook Est last
hOuse on rig ht

Flllplna-4-Love
Find your Philippine Lady
tor Love
1·80{)-497·8414
Fill lna-4-Love.com

C-1 Bee r Carry Out perm1t
lor sale, Chester Township,
Meigs Cou nty, send letters

r

WANTED

Or Fax To (304) 675·5234

Oead'tiru-

Word Ads

HELP WAI\'I'FD

992-2157

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
~Jm
Oorders$3.00/perod
Graphics SOCI for small
$1.00 for large

olsplav Ads

Dally In- Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday•Frlday for Insertion

cJ

Atl Dl•play: 12 Noon 2

In Next Day' s Paper

Bu•lness Days Prior To
Publication

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

Thursday for Sundays Pape,r.

Sunday Dlaplay: 1:00 p.m.

• All ads must b' prepaid•

KIT &amp; .CARLYLE

Ill \I \Is

www.comics.com

lwright@ic.net

HolJl.TS

Apts. 1 &amp; 2 bedroom unfur- 10 Graveless sewer p1pe.
nished . Porter Oh10 No 15 dounle wa ll plaStiC culpets Call before 8pm 740- vert
a· 12". 18'. aM 24" also
0% Down Payment Poss1ble 367-7746- 740·367-7015
wl good credit, approx imateava i lable Wate r
APART· storage hauhng tanks call for
ly $625 a month for th1s BEAUTIFUL
AT
BUDGET pnc1ng delivery avatlable
beautif ull y restored 19th MENTS
century home, 3 bedroom 2 PRICES AT JACKSON Ya.Jger Farm Supcly Inc
bath. cen tral air. 2 i 12 car ESTATES, 52 Westwood Rt 35 Souths ide WV 304garage studio apa rtment . Drrve from $344 to $442 675 2078&lt;
peren nial garden ro many Walk to shop &amp; mov1es Call
Equa
amen111 es to l1st . must see. 740-446 ·2568
24 DIS SW1i11m1ng pool ~
Housmg C?pportunily
call (740)992-5883
accessor1e s $700 Go-ka~·
1 bedroom elfiCi ency house, CONVENIENTLY LOCAl· S250 Rot·Trller $100 Q, ~
Camp1ng Tra11er 5150: t9 !2
S250 pe r month plu s ui111t1es. ED &amp; AFFORDABLE !
depos11
negot1 able Townho use
apartments Dodge Pa rts Car. S150 Ca •
(7 40 )446·4654
and/or small houses FOR (740 )446·6630 alte• 6pm
AENT. Call (740)441 -1 1 11
Bedroom
House
for appl1 cal1Qn S. 1nformat1on
Clearout 41 ° o Glyphosate
w/attached , 1 car Garage,
'
Gallipohs Ferry. Bass Bend Grac1ous l1v1ng 1 and 2 bed· weed and grass ktll er w s~·
Area $250 month (304)576· room aparlments at Village factant S60 00 2 1 2 gal
Yauger Farm Supply
2201
Mana•
and
RNers1de
RT 35 SouthSide INV 304 ·
2 be droOm house m Apartmenls 1n Middleport 675- 2078
M1ddleport. $325 rent, $325 From S295-$444 Call 740 992 -5064 Equal Housm g
depos1t. no pets. (740)992JET ·
5039
. Opportunrties

Naed a job?
We are h1 rmg!
You could earn up
To $8/hour plus bon uses.
We al so offer paid
training, holidays
and"Vacations.
Full aod part time
Shit!s ava ilable.
Call today
1·877-46 3-6247 ext 2456

FORRL'IT

roBuv

Owner/ Operators Wanted

Amgs,
U S. C urrency,· Home Weekends. dom1cile
M.T. S. Co1n Shop, 15 1 1n Canton, Ohio, Sign-0 11
Second Avenu e, Galltpolls, Bo nus.
740·446·264 2.
95% No Touch Freight

040

GIVEAWAY
3 pupp1es, 2 male, 1 female

Boo k "The Silver Bridge" by
Gray Barker. published 1n
1970 by Tfie Saucer1an
Free killen s, house broken Press of Clarksbu rg with 1ts
Call (740)446-1934 .
original ·sil ver du st J8 Cket I
will pay by cash Contact Mr
liner trained moth er cat and Berm at
clonopsls@ yahoo 11 .
8 week old kinen C all

6 weeks old. (740}446-9535

Minnesota Timberwolves forward Kevin Garnett, right , bnngs the ball up after steatrng 1t from Sac rame nto
Kings forward Peja Stojakovic (16) of Serbia-Montenegroduring the final mtnutes of Game 7 of the NBA
Western Conference semifinal series, in Minneapolis on Wednesday. Garnett soc re d a game-high 32
points as the Timberwolves beat the Kings 83-80 to advance to the conference finals. (AP )

(7 4 0) 44~· 77 41

r

OAKLAND, Calif. - Eric
Musselman
was
fired
Wednesday after just two seasons as coach of the Golden
State Warriors. He will be
replaced by Stanford's Mike
Montgomery, a source told The
Associated Press.
Musselman told the AP in a
phone interview that he
received the news of the firing
from executive vice president
of basketball operations Chris
Mullin around 7:15 p.m.
Stanford spokesman Gary
Migdol told the AP that
Montgomery met with his players Wednesday to discuss the
Warriors' situation. A Pac-10
source, speaking on condition

· said
of
anonymity,
Montgomery told the players
he accepted the job.
Calls to Golden State ofticials were nor immediately
returned. Montgomery could
not be immediately reached for
comment.
The Warriors missed the
playoffs for the IOth straight
year in im injury-plagued sea·
son, finishing 37-45.
"It's been a great two years.
The players have played their
hearts out," Musselman said by
cell ·phone Wednesday ni~ht.
"The organization's headed m a
great direction."
Montgomery has been one of
the most successful college
coaches during his 18 years at
Stanford, but has no NBA
experience. He led the Cardinal
to their tliird No. I NCAA tour-

: nament seed in Ji ve years this
season, but Stanford was up&gt;et
in the second round by
Alabama.
Stanford has been to the second round of the NCAA tournament for I0 stmight years
and made the Final Four in
1998. The Cardinal won their
first 26 games this season and
finished the regular season
ranked No. I with a 29-1 mark.
The 39-year-old Musselman
is the franchise's most successful coach of the last decade, but
Musselman apparently clashed
with management who wanted
hirn to play the young players
more so they could develop
rather than relying so much on
veterans.
Musselman led the Warriors
to 38 victories last season, th~ir
best fini sh since 1994. Golden

Speci al advertlstng.fcatu re

·Statewide Inventory Reduction
Sell-Off Comes to Gallipolis
Repossessed, Off-Lease and other used vehicles to be let go at rock
bottom prices; Five days only at Norris Northup Chrysler Dodge Jeep
GALLIPOLIS, OH - A

unique opportunity takes place
this week for consumers in the
market for cream of the crop
used vehicles.
This Wednesday, May 19th
through Sunday, May 23rd,
Norris Northup Chry sler
Dodge Jeep - in cooperation
with Fleet Liquidators ·of
Am eric a - is hosting the
"Statewide Inventory Reduction Sell-Off.'' Over 214 repossessed, off-lease and other
used vehicles are being offered
direct to the public at rock-bottom prices.
Mike Northup of Norri s
Northup Chrysler Dodge Jeep
stated, "The Statewide' lnventory Reduction Sell-Off is a
unique opp ortuni ty for q u
buye rs to get a grea t preowned car at an incredible
price. For a $59 down payment,• customers can get into
the qual ity re possesse d or
other used ve hicle of their
choice• at absolute rock bottom prices. This is a once- ina-lifet ime event, so adjust your
schedules and make room for

thisfi ve-day event. "
sible. Mr. Northup said, "We'll
While repossessed vehicles have over $3 million in financare some of the most sought ing available for this event, so
after vehicles in the used-car chances are we can arrange fi market today, they are also the nancing for just about anyone
most difficult vehicles for the who is employed."
public to come by. But, as MT.
"The Southern Ohio bargainNorthup said, "Management hunters dream come true haphas brought in vehicles from pens this Wednesday through
·alhwer the state to allow fQr a Sunday only at Norris Northup
great seleciion forth is sale. We Chrysler Dodge Jeep. Every
have obtained these vehicles repossessed , off.Je ase and
with the intent of passing the other used vehicle is just $59
great savings on to the cus- then start making payments. •
tamer. We even have vehicles Customers may never see savfor as low as $79/mo• •."
ings like this again," said Mr.
. Almost every type of vehicle Northup.
and price range will b_e avail"Make plans to attend the
able, from luxury 4x4s to ba- Statewide Inventory Reduction
sic transportation. Many are Sell·Offthi sWednesday through
even still under warranty.
Sunday only at Norris Northup
"We've made it easy for you . Chrysler Dodge Jeep."
We'll mark the payments right
After the Statewide lnvenon tl1e windshield. Just pick your tory Reduction Sell -Off ends
ve hicleandpickyourpayment. , at 5:00 p.m. on Sunday. ~lay
You won't lind a faster, easier . 23 rd ma ny of these vehicles
way to purchase a great pre- will be sent to auction. Quesowned car," stated Mr. Northup. tions can be directed to (740)
Extra sales and finance stall 446-0S 42. No rri s No rthu p
wi ll be on hand to assure cus- Chrysler Dodge Jeep is located
tomers prompt, quality service at 252 Upper Rivcr Rd. n
and the best finance terms pos- Galli polis.
1

Found 2 farge dogs 1 shep.
mix. 1 Lab mix ca ll 304-675-

.

Call 800-652-2362
Param ed ics
&amp;
EMT's
needed Apply at i 354
Jackson Pike. GallipoHs.

AERATION MOTORS

3 bedroom Bnck Ranch 1•
Position Open at Darst Adult
Group Home (740)992-5023

1/2 acres, $600. Ava1 lable
July 1. (740)44 1-1124

© 2004 by NEA , Inc .

"":lo:""-~~---"1 l'l'l::'-~:":"'----, 3 bedroom brick lencea in

SATElliTE TECHNICIANS

II\\\( I II

NEEDED!

ffi10

HOME'i

'ANEW CLINICAl
PEELS I'

L-.

a ·oo

r

FOR :2004

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAl SECURITY ISS\?

Postal PoSitions

YARD SALE·

$14.60-$36.00./lu

GALLIPOLIS

Federal hire-full benefits
Call 7am-7pm CST

STYLIST NEEDED
No Fee Unless We Win !
Full and Par t Tirne. Pick your
1-888·582-3345
own schedule. Ca n rent or
IU \11~1\11
1-800-651-7024 E•t. 4044, work on commi ssion. Many
benafil s
included .
Call l'!f'~l10o:---H:-:-o-~-~~·-E--"I
Class A COL .Drlvers
(740)446-4247 or (740)446
FOR SALE
Wanted
368 7 ask for Ktm or leave a
mes sage. Re nt kept ve ry
NEW PAY SCALE!!
2/3 br. house, need s wor k, 3
di screte!
ca r attached garage, fenced
·Min. of 1 year exp
-------~- yard. base ment, hardwood
T imer Cutte r. w1th Ch a1n floors . $43.000 0 80. 304.Medical Ins. 401 K
.Domicile in Canton.· OH
Saw
expe rience .
Skid 675-8642
Op erator. little expenence
.Sign-On Bonu.s
3 bedroom Bnck, 1 1/2 bath,
•36 cent per mila to sta rt
call (3041576·41 95
1 acre lot. Close to town.
•95"/o No Touch
Reduced Phone (304)675·
oNO FORCED NYC
· Tu ppers Plams Regio nal 17 14
freight
,
Sewer Dtstrlct seektng partCall B00-852-2362
time maintena nce man up to 3 bedrOom 2 baths on 4 3
DellveryM'arehouse person 32 hours week ly w1th on call acres. In the Cou ntry, Scen 1c
$75,000.
Ca ll
needed, full ti me, Immediate em ergency duties required. view
opening , must hav e good Mec hanica l ex peri ence a (740)709·1 166.
driving record , apply at Life plu s but not required.
3 bedrooms, 2 bath fi replace
Style Furnitur e, 856 3rd. Mec hanic al ex perience a
1·1 /2 acres 8uc~eye Hills
Ave, Gallipolis, 9· 5 no phone plu s but not required. Paid
Rd. S65,000 . (740)709·
calls.
accordingly to el(perience
11 66.
Non-ben ef1t poSition Please
GUARDIN~ ANGELS
send res ume to P O. Box 3Br, 2 112Ba. Fa m11y Room.
CHILD
175, Tuppe rs Pl ains, Ohio Single attac hed Garage, 2
45783·0 175. ATIN : Lo retta car detached Garage, Full
CARE CENTER
Located at the Vmton Baptist Murphy. A Ssu mes will be Basement (304)773·956 t
Church , Now accepting accepted unttl June 1, 2004 .
4 bedroom. 1- t /2 bath, gas
applicat ions for Teacher,
heat, ctr. a~r, water softenef.
Reception1st, Janitor, Co o~.
1700 sq. ft., "132 Butternut,
(740)388·6671 .
$65 ,000,
Youth Fundralalng Pomeroy,

5 fam11y yard sale. Friday &amp;
Saturday, 11 55 2nd Ave
Baby items, table &amp; cha1rs ,
Narne brand clothing and
Long abarge r· crafts.
May 2 1 &amp; 22 11 303 St. AI.
160 7 m1les past Holzer
Somethmg for Everyone.
May
21-22 , Friday/ 8-5,
Saturday/8-1 , 1100 Second
Ave. Clothes. baby clothes,
electric Hospital bed, household, books.
Mov1ng Sale. Furniture, gar·
den too ls, power tools and
other Items. 2456 SA 141.
May 22-23

Norris Northup
Chrysler Dodge Jeep
252 Upper River Rd.

Spring Into Summer Sale
C ome 1nto you r local Tracto r
Supply Com pany Store fo r
all your Spring and Summer
neeas.
·
Free cart with purchase of

DAYS AND TIMES:
Wednesday, May 19
9am -7pm
Thursday, May 20
9am - 7pm
Friday, May 21
9am -7pm
Saturday, May 22
9am -7pm
Sunday, May 23
1 pm- 5pm

any
ll t&gt;tl
1 8 or 21
Horsepower Huskee Tractor.
ALL Tillers on Sale.
Open
ea rly
7am
on Heating &amp; Cool1ng Business
looking for 1 Technician and
Saturday· May 22.
1 ihstaller. Must ha\le 1 yea r
e11perlence . On ly expert·
YARD SALE·
~PoMEROY/MIDDLE enced need apply. Pay
basad on experience Send
3 family, Friday only, north of resume to: HVAC P.O Box
Chester, left off At. 7 on 572, Kerr Ohio 45643.

r

I

4

Sumner Ad ., second hOme

help dayca res, summer
leagues, schools, . PTA's,
coaches' ra1se money tor
local area. Av/46.000 yr.
8 13-779-4542

1!10

IN...-mucnoN

Ma ~ e

50% sell1 ng Avon
Limlled
time
O NLY Gallipolis Career College
{740)446-3358 . First 5 to call
(Careers Close To Home)
receives
a
gift
Call
Todayl 740-446-4367,
Friday &amp; Sat , May 2 1st1·600·214·0452
22rld , 8·5 3rd house on lef1 , Medl Home Healtt\ Agency.
www. gllllipclrac:e.reercoi~OII .COm
to p of Chester Hill ( SA 248) Inc. seeking a fu ll-tima and Accredii8Cl Member Accr~:~drtrny
c loth ing, girl/boy s 2TI1 4H
women's, shoes , rugs. bed- OcQ
PANupationa
AN 's, l and
a PAfor
N rcounc11 roroo
Colleges
Therapist
r 1uortj.
spreads, Charac ter ca~e the Gallipolis, Ohio area .
pan s and lots more.
Must be lic ensed both in

:.,:,_"""
_'.'f!!'~~.-"cOi"D:;
rlCienl'

--------Saturday. May. 22 al 727
B roa dway
Street
M id dlepor t. Good va ri et y.
Alleyway beh ind garage .

e

YARD SALE-

PT. Pl.F.A.SANT

5 Family Yard Sale 168 N.
Park Dr. Pt. Pleasant weather permilting May 2 1st &amp;
22nd.

G arag e Sate Longaberge r +
5 Ridgewood Dr. 3 1/2.
miles/ou t Sa ndhill Sat May

22, 2004 6· 1

&lt;Ohio and West Virgini a. We
offe r a competitive salary,
be nefit package for full-time.
and 40 1K. E O.E. Please
send resume to 352 Second
Ava., Gallipolis, OH 45631
Ann: Diana Harless, C h n~cal
Manager or call 1·800-48 1·

Lawn Care &amp; Maintenance
Will do mowing , weed·flallng and general yard
upkeep I have my own
equipment and transports·
tlon. For more information:
You may leave a message
6334
on my voicematl 740-645Seek1ng mdMdual for parts 5173 Call 740-379·9:2 15
.department poSition. Must (Home)
have computer skills and
good work he.btts. Some Htting required. Ag . experience W1ll Pressure Wash houses.
prefarred . Pleas"e
send mob1le homes , metal bUild·
resume to CLA Box 555. c/o mgs, and gutters. Call
Gallipolis Tribune. 825 Th1rd (740)446·015 1 ask tor Ron
Ave Gallipolis, Ohio 45631. or leave message.

9 169 .
Likt· 'i"ur l'rh1w~·~
'i'uu'll l.o\'t' Thi;; tl1w:
3 Bedroom. 2 bath, 3 ca r
detached garage o n 2+
acres. Separate Off1ce plus
2 nice Storage Shed s.

(740)286·6336
Nice 3 bed room, 1 bath.
conc rete dl"iveway, carport,
$49, 000
Easl
Bethel

Church Rd. (740)441 · 91 08
Pt. Pleasant/Sandhill Road
3Br 1Ba 1600/sqf1 Ranch on
.6 ac re level lot. Oak floors.
1st hous e on Righ t pa st
Marshall
U mversity

$103 ,000

(740)949 ·113 1

afte r 5 OOPM

www.orvb.com
Home listings .
Lt st your home by call1ng

(7401446-3620
V1ew pholo s.linfo online.
Bedroom , 2 1/2 Bath ,
.22 acres. 3 Car Gara ga
on SA 554 Code 32904
r call (740)367·7619.
Bedroom, 1 112 Bath ,
1.77 acres, 3 Bay Shed.
ISO for sale: Camper,
Vacant Lo11n Porter.
Code 33004 or call

(740)446·!ffi26.

!3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, A1ver

SCHOOLS

on left.

:
•
•

(740)992-3650

shop. $ 197.000. (740) 245·

.\11 real ••tste advartla lng
·In thl• newapsper Is
subje ct to the Federal
Fair Housing Act ot 1968
which mskee It Illegal to
1dvertlsa " any
preference, limitation or
discrimination based on
raee, eo lor, religion, aex
fam ilial atstus or nation•!
origin, or any lnt•ntlon to
maks any such
prefe rence, limitation or
· discrimination ."

:View! Access, Pnvate
Boat D ock in Gallipolis. 1
~e re lot. Code 90303 or
pa ll (740)446·0531 .
Beautiful 4 Bedroom , 3
F ar attachaa, 2 c ar .unat·
ached garage with
~arage apartment 1n
p atllpohs. Code 42204 or

F•tl (7401446·1062.
1'1 Bedroom. 3 Bath, 10
~cres in B1dwell. Coda

~2104 or call (740)368r839

Thla newspaper will not
knowingly accept
ad\lertla.emfmtl for rea l
est11te wtllch la in
vlolauon of the 18w. Our
readers are hereby
informed that all
dwellings advertised In
this newsp aper are
11vallable on en eq ual

~:•:P:P:•rt:":":":':b':':"':·~
VA approved, 2 bedroom .
d1n1ngroom. living room. w/all
appliances on 50lC300 riverfront lot Syracuse. $59.000

(740)949·2607

~ Bedroom , 2 Bath, 2 Car
~arage. 1.9 acres on SA
141 . Code 33104 or call

7 40)446· 7633.

i

Moon.E HOI\U:'\ ,
~.....fU·R--SAJ
. ..E
... .~

r10

HoMES
HJR SALE

ya rd . garage. 803 Brownell
Avenue
Middleport
$450tper month Secun ty
depoSit and
re lerences
1!=4 3 bedroom. 2 full bath, 14x70 mobile home. fur- 1equired. HUD approved
laundry roo m, d1n1ng room, ni shed with all new furniture. (740)446·4543.
otf iCe, large 2 car garage 2 be droo m. 28 ft . l1vm g
3 bed room house in
New roof. s1ding &amp; waterline roo m , 2 bath $8,500 neg Pomeroy $400 a mo . $400
740·256-9247 or 740-645·
$67.000. (740)256·6928 .
deposi t, no pets . (740)949-

row. SALE

10
BI ISIN~X~
MusJ have a good dnv1ng
OPI'OIUU.NJH
record . Comparty trucks
OR
vehicle
Want to look younger AND avaJiable
Lost keys on Gallipol is earn Money? Lei's talk th e allowance IS provided with
110 l'&lt;IVII\..C 0!1
1
Street 51 11 / 04 . Reward
own
t
ruck.
Expenence
in
~~~10
VALLEY PU BLI SH
NEW AVON call
cable or satellite a plus H lN G &lt;;":0 recommend s tha
Please call (740)446-8039.
Martlyn (304)882-2645,
you have
MOR E. fvou do bus1ness w1th peo
Joyce (304)675·691 9,
EARN MORE' Work ethiC, ~ le you Know. qnd NOT t
Apdl (304)662·3630
REWARD
~ R1o Grande. Spacious
you're a Qood candi date. 30- . ~end m_oney throu~h th
Lost small white/yell ow dog ,
35K per year. Full t 1me ben- lma1! unt1l you have •nvestl- Log home. 5 acres. 3-4 bed·
blacklwt11te pup. Alice Ad
room , 2 bath. huge kitchen
V1 nton , OhiO
(740 )388- AVQN I All Area s! To Buy or efits are avai lable Please kl ated the offering
w/oak cabinet s &amp; ISlan d
Sell.
Sh
irley
Spears.
304tall
Digital
Di
sh
M:.E
8 141 .
cooktop. ftn1 shed basement
675-1429
be tween 9all'l· 4pm to se t up 230
PROt-l·:S~ii«)NAL
"w/gas log firepla ce + centra l
an 1nterv1ew. 1-877 ·682SERVIO:S
heat/air, 30x54 heated wor ~­
AWF$OMii CAREER
8324 Opt1on 8.

I

I

1110 HElP
_ WANrnD
•

6767

LOCATION:

•With approved cr~dtl S59 JO\~n plu'l ta'&lt;. title &amp; fcCs Additional down payment may be r~quir~d for cro.:dit :tpprmHi ••hampk · ~llll l-ord Ltum•. S&lt;1k
rrrce SJJOO. S79,mo for 4~ mo~ 1a 10.5!}o APR. $59 down payment. Total amount linanccd $3.041 rlu" !tl'&lt; Sub1~·d to cr~·d!t .1pprm.1l ~~ pntH" 'ak
. Inc.

--·- -------------~-- -----~----- --~

'

STATEWIDE
INVENTORY
REDUCTION SELL-OFF
INFORMATION:

Number of Vehicles:
214+ Bank Repo, Off-lease
&amp;other used vehicles
Makes Available:
Dodge, Ford, Honda, Jeep,
Chevy, Chrysler &amp; More
Down PaymEmtAmt.:
$59 then make payments*
Monthly Payment
Amount:
Payments From $79/mo.**

~IIHit I· ~

LOSTAND

..._.,.,.;,F.Oo.OUNirill;;,_pl

State won 37 games this season
despite injuri~s ll&gt; several regulars. There were times the team
didn't even have enough bodies
to practice.
''The nex t step is doing what
Memphis did this year. We
were looking forward to coming in and do what Memphis
did this year," he said.
1l1c Gri zzlies made the pllty·
offs for the fi rst time in fran chise history thi s season after ·
years of losing.
"I got an oppo11unity of a
lifetime and will always be
grateful to the Warriors for
that," Musselman said.
Still , the Warriors were
among the most improved
defensive teams th is season and
establi shed a team single-season attendance record, averaging 16,235 people per game.

IMPORTANT EVENT
INFORMATION:

I \IPII))\11'\I

ML'l:f].LI..'IE()[IS
'VI.ERCH.'-''DL~F.

APARI':'IE:NlS
FORRTh'f

of interest to. The Daily Absolute Top Dollar U.S.
Gold
Co 1ns. 2 Sett lement Opt1ons pa1d
Sen t1nel. PO Sox 729-20. Silver,
Proofsets,
Diamonds.
Gold weekly
Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769.

Associated Press

C INC I:--Jt\ATI (A P) - The Cincinnati Reds ended outfielder Au.,ti n Kearns' m·edical rehabilitation assignment at
Triple-A Louiwil le Wedn esday and placed him on the major
league ro:-.ter.
·
The tcarn sen t ou tfielder Jason Romano to Louisville to

eii~~'

l\egtster

Sentinel
Or Fax To ·

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to. 5:00 p.m.
\V\tlt \.t I \II '\I"-

'.,

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Otfftee 11o~~

Bv JANIE McCAuLEY

Reds activate Austin
Kearns, send Jason
Romano to minors

m:rtbune

To Place

Weiskopf, Green,
Golden State fires Eric Musselman
Page, Smith are
2004 hall nominees
DUBLLN &lt;AP ) - Major-championship winners Tom
Wei.s kopf and Tammie Green are among four inductees into
the Ohio Gol f Hall of Fame. the sponsoring Ohio Golf
Assncr at1on announced Tuesday.
Joi ni ng Weiskopf anti Green are Kent State coach Herb
Page aml Cincinnati golf administrator George "Duke"
Smith .
Wei,kupf. a native of Cleveland, won 15 PGA Tour events
and fi ve international tournaments including the 1972
Briti sh Open. He alsp has four professional victories as a
sen1nr. including the 1994 U.S. Senior Open. As an amateur,
Wei&gt; kopf won the Ohio Public Links three years in a row
and abo captured the Western Amateur in 1963. He lives in
Sconsdalc . Ariz .. where he has been designing golf courses
for more th an 20 years.
.
Ori ginall y from Somerset, Green won rookie of the year
honor&gt; on the LPGA tour in 1987. Her breakthrough win
wa'i a major. the 1989 du Maurier. Green, whose professional career began with I0 Futures Tour victories, was a
member or the vic torious 1994 Solheim Cup team.
In 26 years as the head men's coach at Kent State, Page
ha' wo n II Mid-American Conference championships and
his Go lden Flashes have qualified for the NCAA tournament
in 13 of the last 16 years. Page is also a 2004 inductee into
the Golf Coaches Association of America HalJ. of Fame.
Page·, fo rmer players include reigning British Open champio n Ben Curti s.
Smi t! t has served on several state. regional and national
boards that support the sport. A member of the USGA Rules
Co mmittee for two U.S . Open championships, he has been
a me mber or the Royal and Ancient Club at St. Andrews
since 1974.
The induct ion ceremony will take place Aug. 9 at
Pl umhrook Country Club in Sandusky.

we cove
Meigs, Gallla,

0870

7004

2000 16x80 Mobile home 3
bedroom. 2 bath. v1nyl siding , shmgled root. 12x16
covered deck
Lots of
extra's
$25,000
OBO

Honey Suckle Hills Apts.

Repa1reo New &amp; Rebu 1l t t·
1 bedroom now available. Stock Ca lr Ron E~·ans 1rent starts 5255 month. low 800-537-9528
and moderate Income Equal
Housmg
Opportun1ty
(740)44 6-3344. TOO 1-800Mobtle Mtn1-Donut conces·
750·0750.
S10n bUSI 1"19SS fOr sale
New 2 bedroom apartment. Locally owned Easll~· mak a
StOOO 00 or more at wee&gt;lo.·
S400 001mo plus deposit. no
pets. (740)!392-4 119 ask for end events E~erythrng set&lt;;
up 1'1 a spec1a 11y des1gned
Marge
10X 10 cr~nopy Excellent
Taking applications for 1 part·t1me or tuil-t1rne opp01bedroom apt. bath. living tur1ty 58 000 00 Donuts
Mrddlep or l
room. ki tchen w1t11 app li- Galore
ances fu rnished Deposit, no (740)992-4294

3 bedroom. 1 bat h house.
for rent 1n Pomeroy, Hud pets. Ca ll {740)446- 1370
acce pted, $500 per month ,
Tara
Townhouse
(740)7 42·9964
Apartmen ts. Ve ry Spac1ous.
4 rooms &amp; bath . 52 Olive St. 2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors. CA. 1
(304)6 75·4246
No pets. $300 nionth. $300 t J2 Bath . Newl y Carpeted .
depOSII
(740)446- 3945.
Before you buy!
Adult Poo l 8: Baby Pool.
Does your dealer?
21 16 PallO. S l art $385/Mo No
H ouse
tor . re nt
Move his homes - Do Slle Madison Ave. PI Pleasant. Pets. Lease Plus SecJ.m ty
preparation · buJid tow"ldaC entral Air &amp; Heat (304)674- De poSit ReqUifed. Days.
t•ons - Roll and set hou ses ·
740· 446·348 1, 'E venmgs
0471
Do heatmg and air· Have In740·36 7·0502.
house se rvice peopl e · Newer· 2 bedroom, duplex .
Install septic systems · Do $400 mon th plus depos11 Tw1n R1vers Tower 1s acceptale ctricallplumblng - Do and refe rences Phone 740· Ing applicatiOns tor waltl{lg
I1SI lor Hud· subsrzed, 1· br.
driveways If the answer to 24 5-5 11 4.
apa rtment. call 675·6679
any ot these questions IS no,
Small Farm·house :3 be d- EHO
or 1f they ..sub-contract'" You
room, 17 acres. perlect lor a
better see the oldest most
\11-IU 'II \'&lt;JliSI.
coupl e of horses! $65 0+
exper ienced
deal er
In
depOSit. (740)245-9020 .
Athen s Counly, Since 1967
f510
HOUSEH(H.IJ
Coles Mobile Homes 15266 1"20 MORILE Hom:~ ·
Gooll'i
US 50 Ea st Athens , Oh•o
FOR RrNr
45701 ''Where you get your
Blue corduroy h1de .a. bed
money's worth~
t4x56 2rbed room on a pri- couch, 5300, dinene set
vat e lot , nea r Vm ton $ 100, (740)949-2607
For sale or re nt- 2 bedroom
$300/month, $300/depoSII
mobile hOmes starting at
$270 pa r month . Call 740- No pel s May rent to own Good Used Appliances .
C all
o nly
5pm-8pm Recondi tioned
and
992- 2167
1740)366·8260 .
Guarant eed
Was hers.
Dryers,
Ranges .
and
For Sale or Ren t: 2 bedBeautiful river v1ew, 1deallor
Relngerators , Some start at
room , 2 bath , fully furnished
one or two people. No pets,
$95. Skaggs App liances, 76
on Raccoo n Cree k. Great lor
refere nces (740)441 ·0 181.
V1ne St , (740)446·1398
flsh mg &amp; boa ting. 5400
month + depostt (740)367- Mob1le hOme for rent, $200
depos11, $350 a month Like new Whirlpool washer.
7025.
extra large capac ity $165:
(740) 441 -0829.
Like new Maytag dryer. Sl(tra
New 3 bedroom. 2 bal h
On ly $1. 059 down and only N1ce 2 and 3 bed room large capac1ty. S1f5. Tw1n
$209 B9 par month. Ca ll mobile homes· fo r rent bed 1ncludmg boxspr1ngs &amp;
Includes water. sewer &amp; mattress, S75, Fu ll SIZe bed
Harold, 740-385-767 1
trash , no pets. sta rting at wilh boxspnngs &amp; mattress.
N1ce 1992 Fairmont, 3 bed· $300 per month, 1n Shade $125. Queen s12e bed w1th
depoS!I
requ1rea. boxspring &amp; mattress, $ I is.
room with central a1r, Will area.
King size boxsprrng &amp; mat·
help with delivery, C all Nikk1 t740)992·2 167
tress. S150 ·table with 6
(740)385·99 48
N1ce 2 bedroom mobile
chairs, $95 floral couch .
home .
No
pets. Call
$95; cheSI·OI-drawers w11h 5
BUSINESS
(740)446·2003.
AND BUILDINGS
drawers, $60. chest-of-drawN1ce 2Br' Tr!ller Central A1r ers, solid woo9 , $60 dress·
3 unit bui lding. 2 bu Si nesses &amp; Heat, Garba ge, Water &amp; er, solid wood light color,
&amp; 1 apartme nt l or sale. Sewer pard. Jerrys Run Ad $60.
Skaggs Appl1anc6s
Loc ated
in
dow ntown $300 month, plus $100 dam76 V1ne Street
Midd leport
Exce ll ent age depoSit. (304)576·2999

r

NEW AND USED STEEl
Steel· Beans. P1pe Rebdr
For
Concrete
Ang le
Channe l Flat Bar. Steel
Gra tmg
For
Dra1rs
Onveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
Sc ra p Metals Open Monda\
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
Frrday. 8am-4 .30pm Closer.
TtiUrsday,
Saturday
6
Sunday (740)446- 7300
Po le Barn 30x50x10 on .
55 295. mc 'udes pa ,nted
meta.l plans ho11.• to bu ..~
book Filder tree de IV!"~
(937)789·0309
Pnde Hand1cap E1ecttrc
Scooter (30&lt;1)675-8175
You may quahly tor 50"o Oil
used computer systetT'
Call ReUse .Thurs-Sat
10AM-6PM (740)688·8200

a

Bl'ILDIN(.;
SliPI'LIF$
Block. brick. sewer p1pes
windows. lmtels , etc· Cla ude
Winters, R10 Grande. OH
Call 740-245-5121

i ·

Pn,;
fUR

S\1 ..:

AKC Black Lab puppres , brg
males and
tamales l1rst shots S 1"50
eacn. war~ 740-992-9784
hOme (740)992·3887 read;
to go

&amp; beautiful

I

income potenllel.

Please

iicaiiii~
74;;;0o;3;;;~;.4
·.;;4;;;08;;o~~--,
ACREAGE

APARTIIID&lt;lS

I

(?40) 446·7396

mil RTh'T

Full blooded Black Lab pup·
p1es No papers Phone
(740)446"2460 alter 4 OQpm

Mollohan Carpel. 202 Ciarlo.
Chapel Road. Porter, Oh10.
1 and 2 Oeclrool"l apart- (740 )44 6 "7444 1' 877 "830 "
-S-to_c_k_B_o_s-to-n-Te-rr-,e-r
ments, turn1shed and unlur· 9162. Free Est1mates. Easy
fmanclng 90 days same as puppies 6 .... eek.s old, mothn1shed
secur1ty depos1t
cash . Visa Master Card er fulr stock father AK C
requn ed no pets. 740-992·
Dnve- a- hltle save alot
$150. All males (74{))3882218.
8743.

bedroom
apt. ThOmpsons Applian ce &amp;
·Mercerville Lots for sale t
1
Repa~r-675 ·7 388 For sa 1e,
Washer
dryer
hookup.
$290
shared entrance off St. Rt.
automattc
218. 3-13 acres Phone rent depos1t reqUired No re-condit1oned
washers &amp; dryers refrigera pets 740-441-1184.
(7 40)256· 1625.
tors, gas and electric
1 bedroom, stove and fetng· ranQes . air conditiOners. and
Two homesites tor sale. Both
erato1. lurn•shed. ut1hl1eS wnnger washers W 1ll do
one acre mfl. 3-1 /2 mtles
Included . $400 month plu s repa1rs on maJOr brands 1n
from Holzer Hosp1tal
Shop or et your hOme
620 Evergreen Rd. , $19 500 depOSit. (740)245·5859.
560 Evergreen Ad , $18,500 1 Br apartment
lor rent

Call (740)446·6840
(740)645·4513.

l)t ~oiN' Ph1)11~

-F-ul-1

2 7110 acres, Welchtown
Road . wood ed. no t level.

$2.500 00 (600)563·3753

r

V.1ri~Ct)

( J{).IJ{) 7 ~ - 50-.n

FRl'n,; &amp;
\'H;tT-\Bt .h~

HOME GROWN
STRAWB ERRI ES
at Charles McKean Farm
and Wilham Ann Motel Call
(740)446 -9442

or $350

month all UtilitieS
mclucled
$150
secur1ty
depOSit close to downtown
Want to lease, Farm/ PI Pleasant (304)675·3654 Buy or se il. R1ver1ne
14Jt:65 good conditiOn , very
Acreage for hunting camp 1n
Ant1ques. 1 t 24 Easl Ma 1il
clean. new appHa nces, out·
Meigs County area. Call or 2 bedroom. Just past Holzer on SA 124 E Pomeroy. 740·
building. Ready to move.Lnto.
leave messagp (304)849· $425 month Call {740)441- 992-2526
Russ Mo ore,
(740)368.()460
1184.
9238 or (304)849·5701
owner

II: ESSEL'S PRODUCl
Am1sh Cheese Lunch Meat,
Fresh Frwt and Vegetables
Open T hurs-Fn ·Sal 1354
Jackson P1ke Galllpohs

Ohio (740)446-7767

�.

I

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

card of Thanks

Card of Thanks

'lfianR_ You ~

, 'fthtf Orr &amp;

) want to tfuml( a{{ my
&amp; famifJ for
a{{ tht umfs, j(Qu~rs,

jtlltli~ I BULLETIN BOARD

' 8 "'column inch weekdays
•15"' column inch Sat. or Sunday

pn my/lOth 'l!rrt!iday
Cefe6ratiorr.

tfwugfujuiniSS was
grr.at[y appreciated.

'Warufa M. 'l(iur

I \H\1..,1 \'PI II..,

I

q. 'Di{{

1·1le Miss :)iJU

Registered ANGUS and
Crossbred bulls. Top blood-

lines,

Slate

Run

ry

GRAIN

'IO

1Rou nd hay bales lor sate
each/740}985·429 1

!!'8':~9fl@iilifN

r

A•~

,i O

\JIV()

ll&gt;R SALE

:1"993 Cadllll.k

•

s

F

Box 169 • Middleport

dryer. ful l basement, detached

740-843-5264

2003 Honda CRF 230. 5
monlhs old . Looks and runs
QrE!at, $3,500. (740)446·

extras, ca ll for an appointment

(740)446·7029.

31.000 miles. auto. CO play- c6~pm~·-~--"'!"......,

er. re ar spoiler. $5,900 080. ~

c

740·256-

TRUCKS
FUR SALE

CAMPER&lt;; &amp;
MoroR HOME:;

1992 Vacation Aira, 40ft. 5th

wheel camper. Tri-axle, iiving
room slide, front and back
1963 Ford i/2 ton short bed door. Lots of room and stortruck 292 VB , 3 speed, dual age . Will deli ver' locally.
exhaust, $1,200. (740)339- $9,250.00. (740)742-000&lt;
3111 .
2000 Trail Harbor, 30 fl.
1994 Ford Ranger Extended camper. excellent condition.
Cab 4K4, 4.0, V6 Engi ne. fully equipped, used liMie,
(740)992·3301 .
call (304')882-2928 after $9.500.
·1.1 :00 am
Pomeroy
best to call morn1ngs
or evanings
82, Dodge, 318 auto, runs
good. looks good, $750. Call 35 ft . Camper, set-up as

=====---

r

(304)615-51 31 after 5pm .

Gooseneck, hitch, sleeps 6.
8 ft . slidEi·out. (740)645·
2729 aher 6pm.
•

r~

complefely remodeled, new
1993 Dodge Caravan High awning,
$3,200,
ph.
mneage, runs good, good
(740)992-4228
. tires, decent gas mileage,
..,, In HI"

$1, 800. 740·388·8293.
86; Ford Club Wagon Van
300-6 cyl. ·4 speed. Food
W6rk Van. 211 ,000 miles.

$600. (740)256-6707.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
equippedNice
Van . Uncondl1ional lifetime guar150,000 miles, $3,500. antee. Local references fur(740)256-6707.
nished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs (740) 4460870. Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

~~~
High 8t Dry

MmmcruFS

C•

River Way Cafe

$15.00 per month/
.

Syracuse, OH
740·992·2507
Call lor Daily Specials

CAll-ltJ ORD~R!;

COMPARE THESE PRICESII
4" pot of annuals 94e

W~lCOM~

Flat of plants $6.60
Hanging Baskats $6 .60

Monday 9am"2pm
1\Jes • Frl 6am-8pm
Sat &amp; Sun 7am-4pm

Come ~ee our MW
~ummet menu!

• Vanguard Ventless

.

·J.

-~-'

• '

BISSELL

·

! "· .

• Replacement
·Windows • Roofi ng

-{;.Y:

COMMERCIAL and

,•.

~-~ ~·;:~"

Fireplaces ~ ,.';1;' ..

Clearly Clean

Dean Hlll
New&amp; Used
PERAAP.S YOU
JUST NE':El?
1011iiNK
Of YOUR

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

WRITfSfl
You a- Right to" Know, Delivered Right to Your Door.

Athens

Cars~ Trucks~RV 's

rHOWARD l.
Public Notices in Newspapers.

TME FAT LAD'( SINGS "

Windshield Repair
Rock Chips
&amp; Cracks

Available

1-800-822-0417

dOOFING
dOME
MAINTENANCE
dEAMLESS
.I GOnER
*freelstlmatas. ·

UNDERPANT'S f

"W .V's #I Chevy. Pontiac , Burck . Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

ASA

FASHION
ACCESSORY

I

)N THE COMMON
f'LEAS COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
: HOME NATIONAL
BANK
PLAINTIFF
~ase. No. 04CV021
~vsp

THE
UNKNOWN
,HEIRS, NEXT OF KIN,
SPOUSES ,
DEVISEES,
LEGATEES,
ADMINISTRATORS ,
'EXECUTORS,
·SUCCESSORS AND
ASSIGNS OF TONY L.
WELCH AKA TONY
WELCH, DECEASED,
ETAL.
DEFENDANTS.
NOTICE BY 'PUBLI·
CATION
To:
T
h
e
Unknown Heirs, Next
of Kin , Spouses ,
Davlseea, Legatees ,

Administrators,

1\. x e c u

1

o ra ,

Successors

and

Assigns of Tony L.
Welch
aka
Tony
Welch, deceased ,

whose

names

addresses
up known.
~ • You ar:11

and

are
hera by

•9tlfled thet you nave
!Men
named
Oefendants In the
action entitled
Home National Bank,

Plaintiff,

vs.The

County

Official

and at 341

Unknown Heirs, Next

Records

of

Park
Street,
Middleport,
OH
45760, which Is more
fully descr ibed in

Kin,

Spouses ,.

Devisees,

Legatees,
Administrators,
Executors ,
Successors
and

17 day of June, 2004,
a nd the twenty-eight
(28)' days lor answer

!lament.
ESTATE NO. 21815
• 25th · Account of

will

Bernard

commence ' on

that date. tn the case
of your failure to

in

answer or otherwise

Volume 16, Page 811 ,
Meigs County Official
Records, and upon a
1974 Cameron mobile
home, ID#0735768H,
Ohio.
Certificate of Title
#5300048762 ;
and
costs of this action

deed

recorded

Common Pleas of
Meigs County, Ohio.
The oblect of the

and

respond as requested
by the Ohio Rules of
Civil Procedure, judg·
ment by default will
be rendered against
you and lor the relief
demanded In the
Complaint.
Dated this 27 day of
April, 2004

Complaint dem8nds

the liens andlo inter·
ests in or o
said

Clerk ol Courts
5113,20,27
613,10,17

Assigns of Tony L.
Welch
aka
Tony
Welch, deceased, et

al., Defendants. This
action

has·

been

asalgned Case No. 04
CV 021 , and Is pend·
lng in the Court of

judgment against the
decedent,

Walch
Welch,

Tony

aka
and

Defendant,

L.

Tony
the

Gwenne

D.
Welch

attorney fees ;
that,the mortg~e be
foreclosed an that

rea l estate title quiet·
ed and said real and

aka Gwenne

January 22, 2004, In

order to foreclose
upon a mortgage
upon
real estate
located at
29337
State Route 124,
Langsville, OH 45741,
which ia more fully
described In deed
recorded In Volume
25, Page 269, Melga

considered and con-

Harrison,

Public Notice

be paid from the proceeds of the sale.
You are required to
answer the Complaint

within twenly·ei§ht
(28) days after the
last
publication of this
Notice , which will be

published once oach
week for six (6) successiYe W€1!eks.
The last publication

will be made on the

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT, PROBATE
DIVISION
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT
OF
ACCOUNTS ,
PROBATE COU RT MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO

Tha Home National
Bank reserves the
right to reject any and
all bldo. For an
appointment to see,

call 949-2210, ask tor
Sheila .
(5) 19, 20, 21

Kibble
Bernard

not tess · than live
days prior to the date

Trustee Is available • - - - - - - lor public Inspection
at Bernard V. Fultz
Law Office, 111 112
West Second Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,

J.s. Powell
Judge
common
Courl,
Division

Pleas
Probate

Meigs County, Ohio
(5) 20

Public Notice

during regular busl·
ness hours for a perlp

od of 180 days subse·
quent to publication
of this notice.
(5) 17~ 18, 19, 20, 21,

24• 25 ' 26 • 27 • 28 • (6) 1•

2

The Home National
Bank will auction the
following Item on
Saturday, May 22,

the Probate Court,
Meigs county, Ohio
tor approval and setI

Fultz,

YOU NEVER A5K ME
ABOUT MY DA'-o'

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

cution of the trust,

Advertise in this
Space for
$50 per month

740-742-3411

Advertise
l'n thi'S
space
fOr
$50 per
month

chants

40 Tub In the
fridge
42 Outback
mineral

j

Implement
Holy image
Easy gait
States ftrmly
Not hungry
In this
place
Buy by mall
200 fins
-Arbor,
Mich .
" Unforgettable"
singer
Soldier's
addr.
Tortilla dlp

22 Cats do It
23 Computer
Image bit
24 Sha'J'
25 Cow s
mouthful
27 Southeast
Asian
29 Kill ,
as a bill
30 Party fabric
32 Andy
Capp's wile
34 Luxury

12
16 Wonder
18 Blaloglst'o
eggs
20 Cammon
phrase
21 Stable

41 Welles or

parents

Bean

44 Bumpkin

43 Mae's oohlol
45 Forearm
bone
47 Zoo barrier
48 Silliness
49 Poetic
twilights
50 Notes after
dOl
51 ·Ad committee
52 Miscellany
53 Type of lax
54 Garnet or

resort

ruby

37 Chenille
Items
38 Tarzan
companion

- Jessamyn West.

·

"Just the facts. ma'am." - Jack Webb
lei 2004 by NEA. Inc. 5·20
THAT DAILY

WOlD

•unuR

5.11111

Friday, May 21 , 2004
By Bernice Bede Osol
Additiona l s.ubsta.nt1al ga1ns are likely to be

0 fo ur

in the oiling tor you 1n the year ahead ·from
situalions where you already have an

I
I
I

le tters

2ecrrol'lg&amp;

of

th•

scrambled words be•

!ow to form four sirnpl• words.

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

R ·D Q H E L
1--~rrl:_:;l,--::..,~;~...::...,~2~

you 're blessed w1tl". the ability to see a liMie
clea rer and a bit further than your peers.
These assets should put you head and
shoulders above yow associates and ben eli! you greauy
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - Should circumstance appear to be tak1ng maners totally
Ol.ll of your hands today, don't worry Lady
Ll.l ck herself IS gwding events so that
everylhing turns out ll.ICky fo r you .
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22)- For a person
who usl.lally prides himself or herself on
being an individual ist. you are likely lo do
an about face today and seek out a learnwork Situation. You'll rind that's where
you·re the luckiest.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) ~T hinking "win"
Is a necessary ingredient for vjctory. and
.forlunately today that attitude comes easi·
ly tq you Positive lhinking gives you an .
edge over au the compe1ition th at others
can't match.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Important
connections who wouldn't lift a finger for
you previously could do an about lace
today and be supportive of somethmg
that's important to you. It's a w1nner ar)d
they know 1t.
SA~ ITIAAIU S (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - Don't
hesitate to take the lead in joinl involve·
ments today, because you wi ll be bailer
able than your associates lo g&lt;;~uge drifts
and sh1fts In situations. You'll lead them to
the promised land.
T~YON
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) - You
should be able to get along we lt with peo·
pie from all walks of Jife today but where
•POWe~
you'll 11nd yourself and really shine is dealing with lhose in high places wtm can otter
b1g benefits.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - AlthOugh
it comes about through your blending of
persp1ration ' with inspiral1on today, your
material stockpile could surprrs1ngly
increase more substantially than you
thoug ht possible .
11"'5 AN EX1"RA- PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Get Ol.lt
LONG 5PIN
where you can be seen and mingle with
CYCLE FOR
those wtto you'd like to get to know better .
&lt;,IOU, PAL
Chances are you could make an outstanding impression today, especially with the
opposlle seK
ARIES {March 21 -Apri l 19) - You 're t;~oing
to get the opportunity today to put the concerns of your loved ones above your own.
Much to your credit. you 'll do so and end
up dolnQ more good for ~ours91f In the
prOC&amp;I!.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - When you
rocua your effortl and energy on ventures
that truly arouse your enthutlum . you'll
give them your undivided attention and
accompllah far more today by being /Ired

1

1

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,.

KR1 F 5

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3

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5

.

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Y dad always told me that

3

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MU R0 T

I I I' I

1

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progress always mvolves

r---------,
7
.

L I f HT Y

I" I
.

.

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1
.

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I'
•

.

nsk

beca'JSe you can't steal secohd

base and keep your . ---on .. _ .

~- · ~

..

C)

.

tomcltflt! fhe ehutltl. auored
by filling in the ml!liflo wo rdt

you de-vela~ lr om tlep No. 3 below

E:. LETTERS
PQINT NUMBERED

I' I' I' I'

I III

r I' I

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS 5~ l9- o ~

Donng. Beefy- Quarl· Nature· FINE DAY
"I t IS w1se." the old man told h1s grandson. "lo hold off
unt1l n1ght before saying 1t was a FINE DAY ." ·

ARLO &amp;JANIS

"'E.RE,

AReD

'THONG"

!LL.-::::::::d...1_.~J§Io:9

Sunset Home
Construction

Form 990PF for the

V.

{I- - -

GARFIELD .

account or to matters

Foundation,

~

s

949-1405

pertaining to the axe·

set for hearing.

Accounts
and
vouchers of the following named fiduclp
ary has been filed in

I

miles.

tinued from day to
day until finally dis- - - - - - - - posed ot.
Public Notice
Any person Inter- - - - - - - - ested may tile written
PUBLIC NOTICE
exception to sold
The annual report

property

sold in the foreclosure aclion and all
amounts due Plainliff

Fultz,

Trustee of the Trust
Und'r the Will of
Anderson B. Kibble,
Item 10.
Unless exceptions
are filed ther.eto, said
account will be set for
hearing before sal&lt;\,
Court on the June 21 ,.
2004, et which lime
said account will be

property, if any, be
marshalled and the
personal

Welch ako Gwenne
Grady, In the sum of
$13,002.30, plus Inter·
est at a rate of
$4.10 per day from

Marlene

V.

2004, at 10:00 a,m. at
the Bank's parking
lot:
I 994 Jeep Grand
Chorokse
Lorado
I J4GZ58S3RC228524
Loaded ,
113,000

39 Mantra

el!ceptlonally lucky loday 1n two very ':.
important areas ; One could relate to your
status in li fe. and the oth er may have to do
with your income. They'll both bring you joy.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Today

REMEMBER WI-IAT Tj,jE'{ SAY ..
''THE GAME ISN'T OVER VNTIL

11

a mouse

Pass

established base that yields reason.able

PEANUTS

10

36 Hanoi
festival
36 Catch

returns. Good things coul d get even better.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)- You might be

SOUTHiASTIMPORTS

740-949-1910
Mobile Se,ices

9

-... 'lllrthda,y:

to dark!

Hupp

740·992-7599

8

31 Blazing
33 Ooze out
34 Went up
alone

North ''•Ea st
2•
Pass
Pass

7

cousin

AstroGraph

BIG NATE

,Rocky ~ftJ"
93 Columbus Rd.

1 jJI
Pass

2
3
4
5
6

c

Open 7 dayo
a week daylight

. ..sa.·· ·..

FREE ESTIMATES

SHOP CLASSIFIEDS
FOR BARGAINS

304-675·0022
304-675-4040

-,_..._ 'IOU 1-\0ULI:&gt; 0C
Fl~'( FOC.USW
00 Tf'E. f\Ol.E. 1

in the market

RESIDENTIAL

.

Gallipolis, OH WVOJ0212
446-9416 r 1-800-872-5967

I Nl\ CEKTf\1~

BUILDERS InC.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages

--~-

Carpet Cleaning
075-1278
•Dry in 1 hour
•No steam. shampoo or dry
1997 Suzuki QSXA 600.
chem1cals
f:'telmet, cover, plenty of
•Ab~olute deep cleaning
extras,
$4,SOO
OBO.
•Guarnateed results

T\\C~Rt'-\1\WLE:.,

TFN

'!!!!'.!IY.! Gibson . ,,m;,;;~:m

many extras $16,500 304·

~ T~U 1\RCLT WEKE. 1\ \)()\)G\\~

Morning Star Road - C.Rd 30 • Racine, OH

Residential &amp; Manuf~ctured Housing
Air Conditioners, Heat Pumps &amp; Furnaces

• Huge Inventory

RC::.T 1\::&gt;)\JRE:.I:&gt;, I f\fl\ '""
FIRtA.L'( t'OC.U:&gt;tt;&gt; Q\\1. OlJR.
i'WO\JC.T\01'\ T~TI

I"BUT

pot of perennials S1, 18 Buy 5 or more for

New Hours

• Super Hi Efficiency Equipmen.
.
• Free Est1mates
• 5 &amp; I 0 yr Warranties
.·,

1'10~

RE.FLC:.C.T IT, C.fl.II:OF ... .----1

Meigs County's Largest selection of
annuals, perennials, vegetables,
shrubbery, fruit, ornamental trees,
roses, rhoaoaenarons, ana azaleas.

HEATINC U COOUNG

~

P'\-fi,E. 11-ti\11\L f'IWKE.) 1111\'t'

ManningK Roush
Owner
Open Mon-Frl 9-5 Sat. 9-12

1/1411 mo . pd

BENNETT'S

1997 Harley Davidson fat· - - - - - - - boy must see, new rear tire,
Low Moisture

Yamaha 80 Badger 4
Wheeler. like new $1,800
(304)675·3824

R.B.

THE BORN LOSER

Pomeroy, Ohio

/.,awn tlltd Garden Equipme.nl is our
busi11ess, not our sideline

7:00AM • 8:00 PM

West

1 Farm

CELEBRITY CIPHER

~~~ ~~~~~~

992-2975

Hours

740-992-5232

74IJ-985-3564

.

204 Condor Street

· · · to 10'Jt3o·

985-4159

•Ag Lime

. ·. 1s page ror as law
.

i

THAT OL BEAR IS FAST,
FOLKS\\ TEN MORE FEET
AN' HE'LL CATCH UP TOPOtD'R(
JY"vr~-::=-;:SHERII=F TAIT \!

j

Snapper

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Sizes 5'x1 0'

Call

• Sand
• Dirt

l

.

1

1i

I

GRAVELY TRACTOR

29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio
45771
740·949·2217

Serious
Inquiries Ot1ly

H~ULING:

I

1740)446·2158.

for 2004 Meigs
County Fair.

Trucking

BU'rlllll!rs
.
f1

th.

.S·20

BARNEY

Kelly K. Jones .

Gravely

Hill's Self
Storage

\1a11d \mi/a/111'

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

93 Toyota Previa Van. Nicely

r

Dr.

\lalilltll/1'\' l1111d

SeH-Storage

.

'

HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

youl

,,

(304) 273-5321

• Limestone

(;.;J,

AK

DOWN

Eliza CooK, a 19th-century English poet.
wrote this couplet: "Oh. hoW cruelly sweet
are the echoes that start / When Memory
plays an old tune on the heart!"
II you have yesterday's di:tal echomg 1n
your mind, you will find today's easy. You
are South , the declarer in 1our hearts.
How would you plan the play after West
leads the club qtJeen to your ace?
ll South rebids three no-trump, North
should correct back to four hearts. (II 1s
almost never right to play in three notrump when you have a nine-card maJorsuit f1t.) Also. note lhat three no-trump
would fait, assuming West unimaginatively leads fourth-highest from his longest
and strongest.
·
At trick two, you should lead the hearl
queen. encouraging West to cover if he
holds the king . However, when Wesl
plays low, you should reject the finesse,
rising w1th dummy's ace. Then you play a
second round of trumps.
If West wihs with the king. you have cost
yourself only an overtr ick: you will lose at
by Luis Campos
worst two spades and one heart. But with
Celetlfllj ,OOOer ctyplog•ams !l!e created fr001 quota \lOlls by famous people. oasl arod presenl
this layout, if you take the trump f1nesse.
Eath lette• rn lhiJ' CIPI'oi!T stands I~ a~othe&lt;
::xh)·· o c:..e, ~,- ~as r;
you should fait. East, after winning with
the heart king , knows that you have the
MOGGLMMOOZ
" VNHHKYZL
CM
club king. pri d We st's h'aving ted a single·
ton club queen is very unlikely. So. East
RVLHL
CHL ,
CHRKMRM
N DR L S
should shift to the spade eight, high from
a doubleton. West will . take two spade
GHOLZLH
NH
P NHL
K M SNRVKSX
tricks, then give East a spade ruff .
Are you wondering about East's hav1ng ·
CHRKMR ."
RVCS
OC .KZLE
J CKS
king·lh1rd of hearts? Then you have .no
chance, because East always gets a
8 NSX
L H KG C
spade ruff (unless he has a doubleton
spade honor).
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ·: Fiction re veals truths that realify obscures·

~

A
· DVJE'RTJlSE
.

•

Th'e echoes that
ring in the mind

C:::-

··

~

AQ 2

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

• Bucket Truck

r,---------~-"'!!!'1\".,..,..ft
.'

•

Opening lead: • Q

316 Washington .Street
Ravenswood, WV 26164

Top • Removal · Trim
• Stump Grinding

Pomeroy Eagles 2171
Band "Rhythm Station"
8-12 Friday
7·11 Saturday

77- 19 ft . Trotwood camper,

--

Let me do 1t for

Tree Service

4B

-'=-------

ver tible limited, 48.000
miles. (?40)245 •9239 .
23 ft Searay Cud dy Cabin,
$2,500 OBO. Call 740-645·
2002 Mitsubishi Lancer ES, 2729 or 304·675-6444 after

740-256·1618,
6200.

JONES'

American Legion Middleport
Coverall Bingo in 46 numbers win
$1,000.00
t 50 peo·ple B1ngo in
numbers
pays $2,000.00
Crank 1t up Tipboard $3.000. 00
Starburst $1 ,350.00
Door Prize $550.00

Like New. $6.500. (740)446-

49

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

the PAIN
out cf PAINTING'

BINGO
May 22 6:30 pm

2000 Chrysler Sebring con - 4782.

8 3
K 6
• 10 9 6
. 1 076542

J 85
QJ 9

'SOUth
t•

Toll Free: (866) 254-1559
"Your One Stop Pn11red
Solid Co11crete Shop"
Ta~e

Rodgers EZ Ride Motors Inc.
Sales &amp; Rental
Richard B. Rodgers is no lon ger
affiliated with Rodgers Serv1ce
Center or Rodgers Exp ress Lube
Richard B. ,Rodgers

12 H. Fiberglass boa t w1lh
trailer, electric motor, bat~~sene player. $1 .100 tery, charger, 6 HP Sear gas
,.eo. (740)256·1233
motor (older). fish Iinder. 2
~94 Oldsmobile Bravada, seats. normal accessories.
· iell wheel drive. CD player. $800 firm. (740)446-979 1.
~ower seats, loaded. excel·
1987 Bayllner. 21 ft . Open
~ a nt
condition . $4,000
Bow, new 305, good condi·
'(740)446·8507.
l ion . Low hours. 53.800.
~97 Dodge Stratus. 4 cyl. (740)446-8507.
~4. auto. all power. Very
2002- 16 1/2 ft. Bass Tracker
'gdbd condition. $2,000.
Fish1ng Boat. Motor- Trailer-

•
•

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Neither

Free Estimates

740-992-7283

...e93 Dodge Spirit AJC, tilt,

8 3
Easl

stories

15 Cuatomer,
alter the sale
16 Nautical
posHion •
17 Puts In crops
19 Basketball
hoops
23 Fe~ boot
26 Tender meat
28 Morse-code
word
29 Alpaca

jJI K J 6

Foundations, Basements, Floors &amp; Walls

Call:

laundry roorn w /washer &amp;

:power, new · tireS, 4 door. t.,_..;FOiiliRiiSiiiAiii'i iiE-,..t
;t740)949·2253

•

blossom

58 Ancient

14 Passlonlllte

-.- Q10 9 8 3

Specializing In Poured Concrete

ror a Free Quote or Appointment

routine

55 Scallions
56 Wipes out
57 Large

13 Bushed

os-20-IH

South

StateWide
CNE Poured lfaBs

We can insure your vc;~luables!f

\and Financial Service~

M&lt;JIORS

•

•

304-675-2457

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

What would you lose if there was a fire?

garage plus many, many

Boxrs &amp;

BUJ $5.00
Bonanza Get

IF YOU RENT

dishwasher, refrigerator, range ,

3834.

&lt;:Oupon

1 Rice dish
6 NavaJo
lodge
11 Nook
12 Williams

~

·------·

Deville. all

Brin~ thi~

Fax

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

e\·en monlh
An pack $S.tHl

-- ' ·•

Rocky Hupp Insurance

Moroacn.1.t:s

Last Thursdn)· of

674·3311

A J 5 4
K 74 3

jJI AQ9.H
• 7 2

875-2457
Cell Phone

•
•

West

MONTY

· Henderson, WV

6:311

....

room, dining room, bath,
kitchen comp lete with

:Jami~

fuv&amp;

Porch Boxes
Combination Pots
Perennial s
Spruce Trees
Shrubs
Peat Moss

740-992-5776

. Immaculate 2 bedroom, living

:four Loving

•
•
•
•
•
•

46 Fossil reotn
51 Big bolher
54 Comfortable

of tennla

Nortb
• 10 7 2

MYERS PAVING

I

E•'ery Thursday
&amp; Sunda)·
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start

Monday- Saturday 9-5 Closed Sunday

A must see!

Farm,

Jackson
(740)286-5395
up
look
www.slatetunfarm.com.

r

Easter Flowers
Bedding Flowers
Vegetable Pl ants
Blooming
&amp; Foliage Baskets
• Potting Soil

House for Sale by
-Owner
'
294 S. 3rd Ave.,
Middleport, OH

:lul.lf :.:s, 1.91..·~-~,fi~y :•o, 1.'?9..

Horses- 2 very gentle.
e'lttremely ·safe for k:1ds .
$900; mirualure horse wilh
99.tfdle, $600: (74017423802

•
•
•
•

'

:

Syracuse, OH
Now Open

away and/or burn old B-room
house 1n exchange for
salvageable matenals; refu ndable
securi ty dep osit requ~red; call
(740 ) 985-4344.

br :&gt;femort{ ol

Cfiarfes

I

1/u&amp;&amp;aNL 's 4reenlu11Ue

In Memory

,\ 11\1 ... 1()( ...

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Business Card ... $25.00/column inch per month

Br

NEA Crossword Puzzle,

BRIDGE

To place an ad Call 992-2156

lier cde6rate lier ·
99tli 6irtfufay6y
seniing cards &amp;
rwtes. :fvur
1

pfwtu! m{[s, gifts &amp;
/ijrufness sfwwn to me

The Daily Sentinel • Page

www.mydailysentinel.com

Business Services

Get Your Message Across
With ADally Sentinel

wou&amp;f fl'k! to tfumf:..
everyone tliat lieljre4

Jrienas

Thursday, May 20, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, May 20, 2004
ALLEY OOP

HOW WA5
YOUR PAY?

I'M A 50CK
PUPPE:1", DUMMY!
WHA1" 170 YOU
. 1"HINK 11" WAS
L.IKE?!

up.

~=~~;:;;~~=j,jjjjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~

f

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling

:~~~~~~~~t•;lumbing

• Roofing &amp; Gutter&amp;
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
·Patioand PorchDet::ks
We do it all except

furnact work

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

SOUPTONUTZ

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

"bJ Gdf I.Ni'iL.

~[)ooJI"'' ""it)

1--\rf 1He ~IL OR I~L Hl!'o'e. ih
Stro.iP '1'8 ib s:xrf H1L.L

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1111
Stop &amp; Compare

22 Years local Experience

I

•'

\

..

�Page

88 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, May

www.mydailysentinel.com

...

:w, 2004

'

.

VIkings take
doWJJ. Eagles~ Bt

Davis says Browns
sticking with plan, Bt

G

nn

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

•
.)o(.l ~TS•\ol. .)4 , '\o. IH,;

11{11)\, . ~1\\

:!1,:!00 .1

\\\In ""d . 11 L

tllln••'•"u'

~

Gallia high·schools art exhibit
The Fr~n c h Art Col&lt;u1v "ill pre,enh the ,c,·enth annual high
school art exhibit. Th i' ·nhibit " ·ill feature a glimp,e into the
talented yo uth in t h~ c·outlly.
·
Works· on display ar~ from Gallia ,\ ca.Lklll) Hi gh School.
School's almost out, sumOhio Valle y Christian School and R11cr \alley Htgh Sch&lt;&gt;t'l.
mer
weather has settled into
The exhibit wil l run at tile FAC until May 30.
,.
the area. and ar~a residents
are making their summ er
vacat ion plans.
And if ymt' re looki ng for a
Lola E. Barc us Ri c hard'''' ~" born in Gallipol is and will be high-flying. fa,l-11101 ing thrill,
returning to her hometown to celebrate .lO years of painting. then Cedar Point. located in
The displ~y will open June 2 and run through June ~7. A recep- Sanduskv. ncar Cleve land.
tion will be held from 2 - -l p.m.. Sat urday. June 5.
might be· for you.
Lola was a "Rosie the ri 1ete r.. dunng WWII and la te r marOn \1ay 8. the park opened its
ried Army Air Corps o'ffi cer Fredric~ \\'. Richards . As" family of an artned force s otTiL·e r. Lt&gt;la and her three 'on' followed door' for the I :15th consecutive
Fredricks's career and "trave lb) extensive ly thrnughmtt the vear. And. the theme park hLts
world. After her hushanu \ rctircmcm. Lnla sett led 'in Won numerous awards fur its
rides and attractions. Cedar Point
Springtie ld. Va .
wa.s
recently awarded with top
Lola earned a bllche lnr·s de~ree in r ine Arts at Nort hern
honors
· in two popular mnuseUniversity Comtmm it} Cnlle_Q( and her first sholl' was at the
SAG gallery ,tore in northern \ 'ir~ini,t. More recent!). Lola ment indus~) 'urveys conducted
has exhibited at tl1e Fairfax Cmtnl\ Lthrats and m 200J wo n a b) Coa,terBunco m and the
blue ribbon at a sht&gt;\1 hl'id tiy the ·springfie ld Women\ Club. National Amusement Park
Lola will cele brate her 791h binhda1 on June :-&gt;.This coi n- Histmical Association. according
cides with her di splay in what 'he c·aJ J, tlJc "hometown of her to a media reica&gt;e from ,the park.
For the fourth consecutive
heart' - Gallipol is.
year.
Cedar Pninl was voted
The exhibit and reception are spotN ll"ed hy Ferr~llga,. Gene
Johnson Che vrole t. Nnrris-\/orthup Dndgc. Smith Bui ck- "Park of the Year" in the
Coasters Choke Awards . an
Pontiac. Rock we ll Automation and Turnpike Fmd.
annual
poll
by
co,bterBu a.com. a Web site
devoted tu roiler coaster and
wnusement park fan s around
Students of piano t e~lc he r Allen Strait have been pract icing the world. In aduition . Cedar
and perfecting thei r pieces. getting ready for their spring Poim received No. I rankin gs
recital. The reci tal will be held at 2 p.m .. May 16 at the Ariel in the Coasters· Choice
Theatre . Due to the large numbe r of students. the FAC gallery Award~ for "Best Steel
can'.t hold the audience . And it prnvide, the 'tudents with a CDLI'ter" fur the 3 10-funt -lall .
valuable opportunity to perform on stage.
· 93-mph Millen nium Force ; ..
Smdents· pertonmng will ~ Chebca Brown. Morgan Brumtield, . Best New Stcci .Coaster" and
McHale Robinson. Madison Daniels. Tori Duncan. Clmsti Dray. "Coaster uf the Year" for the
Kerria.ne Kay. Stephen Pticc. Marah Hager. Carley Jacbon. JcS&gt;ica -+20- fnot -tall . 120-mph Top
The rollercoaster Top Thrill Dragster won "Coaster of the Year"
Harold. Ranjit Maui. Eric KuTi Mm. Er·ica Spauli n. Michael Moore. Thrill
Dra gster:
"Best from CoasterBuzz.com. The rollercoaster is one of 16 rollerHanah Hager. Cole Spaulin. Je»ica Alexander. Dale Ellis. Zach
Capacity.'" which reflects th e
Rankin. T Jave McCalla. Caleb C tmpbell. Cast'YLawrence. MLuia
coasters at Cedar Point in Sandusky.
cllicicncy
in which guests
Robinson. Courtney .Campbel l. Kamal Dayal. Tabby Oiler. MorgLm
Daniels. Tara Clickenger. Robert Daniels. Shane Meadows. Stacey
Fellure, Alii TtTJe,ter, Katie Fcllure. Chdse~t Lemley. Adrienne
Eastma!i, Stacey Snyder. Raymond Cousins.

SPORTS

I

Looking for a thrill? Check out Cedar Point

A tribute to Lola Richards

Spring piano recital

move throughout the park :
and for "Best Food" at Lm
amusement park.
CoasterBua is one of the
·most visited coaster &gt;ites on the
lntemet. delivering daily ne ws
to thousands of enthusiasts
around the globe . The members are a divcr&gt;c group ran ging from teenagers to
retirees and college 'tudents to
professionals - with one common goal: a passion for roller
coaster' and amusement parks.
Cedar Poim was abo honored
by the National Amusement
Park Historical Association for ·
having three of the top five steel
roller coasters in the wurld and
for its astounding Top Thrill
Dra g~te r "strata-coaster·· getting the nod as the "Top New
Attraction of2004."" Tile incredible Millennium Force w~1s
voted the ." Favorite Steel Roller
Coaster in the World''. while the
pen~ nnial Magnum XL-200 tied
for the No.2 slot and the inverted Raptor came in at No. 5 on
the steel coaster list.
Cedar Poilll has 16 roller
coasters. more than any olher
park in the world. In 2002. the
park's 15 coasters deli vered nearly 19 million rides. Cedm· Point's
existing coasters have given
more than393 million rides.
For more infom1ation about
Cedm· Point. visit the pm·k\ Web
site at www.t:edarpoint.com. or
call (41 9 ) 627-2 .15(1.

ers in country music today.
She has won live Grammy
Awards, and two Best Female
Voc~1list Awards from the
Country Music Association .
Her first album of new material in tlve years. "Time* Sex*
Love * (200 I), showcases an
artist who transcends 'the
boundaries of format
Tickets are $34 for Area C, ·
$46 for Area B and $55 for
Area A.
For more information about
the Clay Center and upcomIng events. check out the Web
site at www.theclaycenter.org.

Big Sandy Superstore
Arena going to the dogs

•• • •

••

INSIDE

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

blTYiiURGARDENTI

\

'

Datalls on Page A8

Mary Chapin Carpenter

The CA.A proposal wa' accepted
based on a scoring sy,tem dev ised by
the DJFS . A second proposal was submitted by the University of Rio Grande
Crossroads progmm. but that proposal
received a score of 79.75 out of 100
possible poims. while the C. A.A. proposal received a score of 86.
Other busi11ess.
Commi ssioners passed a re.\olution authorizing the vacatiOn of a
quarter-mile portion of Crew Road
in Chester Town ship, following a
public hearing held yesterday.
The ponion of the road vacated is
unpaved and grown over. according

to Co mmi ss ioner Jim Sheet&gt;. and the
abandonmem was requested by an
adjoining propert y owner.
As part of the abandonment action. a
JXlrlion of Crew Road rem aining open
will be re-named KwT Farm Road.
Cindy Liberatore . Stacey Jenkins
and Heather Dunlap of th e H&lt;iller
Tobacco Prewntion progr&lt;tm met
with commissioner' 'to d!snt&gt;S the
observance of Mav .l l a' World No
Tobacco Day. designed to bring
awareness to the health ri sb a»oc iated with tobacco use.
TI1e world-wide observance is coordillllted hy the World Health OrganiL&lt;tliotL
Holzer' s Tobacco Pre ve ntion pro-

gram offer. . informa tion and prevention re,ources lD re&gt;idems. medical
and dental care provider,. teachers
and ' tudent s. and con duct&gt; public
c!J,es to help ' moker' qu it. The
'en ·ice' are &lt;liTereu ;t t no charge.
Liherat or~ said the program plans
10 'oon offer a smoking ce,sati on
cia" in \1eig' County.
Commi&gt;sioner' al so :
• Apprm ed payment of hills in the
amount of S.,-+6.2 13 .35:
• Approved .a transfer within the
budget of the Pro hate Court of $200.
Commi,sioner Mick' Da1 enpurt
and Clerk Gloria Kloe s also anended.

• Edna M. Payne

2 SECTIONS' - 16 PAGES

The Gin Blossoms

It will run from May 24 Lhrough Aug. 31 .

Page AS

INDEX

HUNTINGTON. W.Va. - The Big Sandy Supe rsture Arena
is going to the dogs- big red ones at th at as Clifford the Big
Red Dog is unleashed nn the Tri-State.
Its the first West Viruinia appearance for the big red canine.
Tickets went on sale "Monday at the Are na Box Office. all
Ticketmasler outlet&gt;. and on line &lt;tl www. li cketma&gt;ter.com.
Big Dog seat&gt; are priced at 532 ~hik premium reserved
seats are $23. and reserved seat&gt; are S 16. l:lut. JUSt for openmg
night. the Tri -State get' thrown a bone with all seat' priced at
just $16 (excluding Bi g Dog seats) for th e 7 p.m. June 15
Opening Night gala.
For more information. vi&gt;it www.big&gt;anuyarena.com.

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL .CO M

OBITUARIES

·WEATHER

•
•
•

County to offer youth employment program
POMEROY Meigs Coumy
authorized
a
Commissioners
$160.000 summer employment program for local teenagers Thursday.
Meeting in regular session , commi ssioners approved a contract with
the Gallia Metgs Community Action
Agency for an employment program
providtng summer jobs for incomeeligible youth aged 14 to 18.
Tile program is funded through
Temporary Assistance · tor Needy
Farrulies &lt;md administered through the
Department of Job and Family Services.

• Tri-county MU alumni to
host AngeL See Page A3
• A Hunger for More.
See Page A6
• 'His Own' in concert.
See Page A6
• Church Briefs. See
Page A6

Concerts coming to Charleston's Clay Center

CHARLESTON. W.Va . The Gin Blossoms and Mary
Chapin Carpenter will headline
performances at Charleston's
Clay Center in July,
The Gin Blossoms wi II appear
at 8 p.m .. July Hi hring the band's
power pop, altemative folk and
college rock sounds with hits like
"Hey Jealousy;· ""Found Out
About You," LUlU "Aiisun Road.''
Tickets cost $28 for Area B
and $3 5 for Area A.
Mary Chapin Carpenter will
take the stage at 8 p.m.. July
17. Carpemer is one of the top
female vocalists and .songwrit-

· • Reds dig Graves in win.
See Page 81

A3
Bs-6
B7

A3
A4
A6

BS
As
B1

'

Sanders sworn in as new
Pomeroy
Postmaster
Meigs Senior Awards Ceremony Bv
J.

BY CHARLENE HoEFLICH ·

POMEROY
Scholarships totaling nearly
a $100,000 were awarded to
Meigs High School gradu.ating seniors during the
annual awards assembly
program Thursday.
Jayne Davis was the top
recipient of scholarship
money receiving $7,500 a
year for four years for a
total of $30,000 from the
Ohio Valley College in
· Parkersburg, W Va.
Erica Poole was awarded
the McMicken Century
Scholarship
to
· the
University of Cincinnati in
the amount of $14,000, and
Tyler Barnes who will be
Capital
attendi ng
University in Columbu s
received the Ohio Board of
Regents'
Aeadem ic
Scholarship totaling $8.820
over four years.
Stefan Stamper received a
$2,000 University of Rio
Grande Music Scholarship.
Presented Ohio University
scholarships were Maegan
Dodson , the valedictorian
scholarship of $1,000; Ryan
Stobatt, the Florence and
Hunter
Hooe
S s q. u i c·e n t e
i I
Scholarship of $435; and
Sarah Lee, the Thomas M.
Wolfe
Se squicentennial

e

POMEROY - With an
official stamp of recognition.
Tom Sanders was sworn in as
the new postmaster in
Pomeroy Thursday.
Sanders. 54. will be in
charge of 14 postal employee s who process two niill ion
package s each year and provide carrier service to four
rural routes. three city routes
and one auxiliary route wh ich
is split between Pomeroy and
Jayne Davis, far left , and David Boyd. far right. were awarded the Army Reserve Scholar Athlete Award , and Jonathan
Larkins and Nikki Butcher. center, the Archie Griffin
Sportsmanship Award during Meigs High School's sen1or
awards ceremony on Thursday. (Brian J. Reedl

WE NOW HAVE ONIO'

Meig s High School Juniors Sam Pierce. Re nee Bailey, Katie Reed.
and back, Patrick Dowell , Randy Hart and Jeffrey Baughman were
awarded the Danforth "I Dare You" Award. (Brian J. Reed)

a neighborin g post offi ce.
The Pomeroy Post Office is
responsible t'or an average of
1.055 deli1·er ies on city
routes and 1.899 del iveries
on rural route s each day.
"I am confidem that the
businesses and re sident&gt; of
Pomeroy are getting one of
our finest leaders in Tom: ·
Vi ckie
Schnuerer.
said
Manager tor Post Office for
the Columbus District: who

Please see Sanders. As

High fuel costs drain school
transportation budgets
Bv J.

MtLES lAYTON

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTIN EL. COM

nn a

Please see Awards, AS

MILES lAYTON

JLAYTON@MYOA ILYSE NT INEL.COM

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.C M

AS

© 2004 Ohio Va lley Publishing Co.

'

These graduating Meigs High School seniors were awarded scholarships during the senior
awards assembly held Thursday. Front, 1-r, Jessica Blaettnar, Andrea Fetty, Steven Major, Nicole
. Burman, Jamitha Wilford, and Kara Buffington. Second row, Ryan Stobart, Aubrie Kopec, Tyler
Barnes, Jayne Davis, Chrissy Miller, Randy Hudson, and Michele Imboden. Third row, Stefan
Stamper, Nikki Butcher, Ty Au it, David Boyd , Jessie Sargent, Page Bradbury, and Holly Williams;
back, Erica Poole, Jenn ifer Dunn, Jon Larkins, Jordan Williams and Sarah Lee. (Brian J. Reed )

Tom Sanders was officially sworn in .as the new Pomeroy
Postmaster by Vickie Schnuerer, Post Office Manager for the
Columbus District, Thursday at the Pomeroy Post Office. Sander's
wife Anita holds the Bible at the ceremony. (J. Miles Layton )

POMEROY - The price
of gaso li 1_1~ i-. ca us.ing s~..:hool
transportatton budget&gt; to run
on empty.
Even though school di s, tricts get reduced rate s for
gasoline because they buy in
bulk: they are · still facing
to ug h times trying to make
ends meet on already light
budget&gt;. Paul McElroy. transportation supervisor for
Meigs Local. said a gallon of
gas cost $ 1.2-+ per gall on last
yea r. but now it is $1.52 a
~a ll o n . The distri.ct ha' 28
~c hool busc·s that each tral'el
at least 96 miles per day or
more than -+X-!.200 miles a

ye ar. acco rding to McElroy.
Meig s Local Treasurer
Mark Rhonemu s said the
average fue·l costs for the past
three years have been around
~I 00.000 each year, but fuel
costs have already exceeded
5 101.775 so far thi s year. and
th ere are tw o more monthly
bills comi ng due that are
expected to be well over
S 10.000 eac h.
"We had no idea ga&gt; prices
were going to· do wh at they
were uo ing to do.'" said
Rh oneri"1us.'
Ga' prices-have..shot up to
record breaking levels in the
past ft'w month' compared to
la'l year. Meigs Local paid

Please see Budgets, AS
.

Arthritis Foundation

Rock·a·Thon
. I

Crow's Family Restaurant

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzc 1' D{fjf:!rence

Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken
Pomeroy, Ohio

228 Main St.
Drive·Thru Window .

Public encouraged to atte~d. Donations appreciated .

992-5432

For more information,
I

•,

•

call (740) 441-3916.

W'ww.holzer.org

.

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