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Page

06 • &amp;unbap

ilrimr~t-&amp;rnlinrl

Pomeroy • Middlepqn • Gallipolis,

OH • Pt.

Pleasant,

WV

Sunday, May 23, 2004 .

Northmtt: signs ·
newdeai,Bt

DAR tows new Meip
FJementary School, A6

\..

I
''

SPORTS~'
• Lidle shuts out Astros
as Reds win again. See
Page 81

'll

Celebrating Appalach·ia ···

'

OBITUARIES
Page A5
• Rose Marie Hoffman, 65
• Webster Reed, 93

INSIDE
• Rain not over after three
rounds of damaging storms
soak northern Ohio. See
Page A6

Red, Ripe,
13-15 lb Avg

Whole
Seedless
Watermelon
WEATHER

.......

~··

,.,,.4.··w''

··'

The village among others has been using this hillside in
Monkey Run as a dumping ground for debris. (J. Miles Layton)
Demonstrations-of traditional
Applachian crafts, including
basket weaving, rug making,
,,
broom making and quilting, a
hayride, live music and other
actitivles
highlighting
Appalachian life drew a .
steady
crowd
to
the
University of Rio Grande
Crossroads
program's
Appalachian
Heritage
Celebration on Friday.
Middleport's North Second
Avenue and Mill Street were
closed to traffic and lined
with displays representing
the best of Appalachian life
- past and present. Gina
Pines. director of the
University of Rio Grande/Rip
Grande Community College
Meigs Center, is shown as
she face-paints a ·patriotic
design for Clayton ,Landaker,
4, while his sister, Tatum ,
waits her turn. They are the
son and daughter of Keith
and Stephanie landaker of
Middleport.
music,
entertained the Program, was designed to
Meanwhile, on stage, Roger lunchtime crowd with tradi· promote a positive awareand Mary Gilmore, who have iional Appalachian tunes. ness of the influence of the
entertained audiences from The street festival, said ·
Phalin
of the rich Appalachian history on
Pomeroy to Washington and Brenda
points in between with the Crossroads
Youth the present generation.
of Appalachian Employme.nt
Services (Brian J. Reed )
sounds

Monkey Run resident seeks
action to preseiVe field
BY J. MILES lAYTON
JLAYTON@MYDAI LYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - A once
valuable re source is being
washed away in a sea of tal~
grass.
swampland
and
debris dumped by the vil lage.
A large field. perhaps a
couple of acres long and
· wide, sits vacant and deceptivel y dangerous in the
Monkey Run area and
Sherman Mill s wants something done about it. The
field used to be a pristine
playground where children
routinely played. but now it
is a swampy mosquito-filled
place covered with weeds
and bordered by a hillside
that is a dumping ground.
After
talkin ~
with
Pomeroy Yillagec Council
and Mayor John Mu "e r
about the problem. \1 il"
promi ses further action if
the village does nothin~ to
clean up' the mess . Musser
said the village is on top uf

the problem and is working
to improve the ' ituc1tion
with the re sources it has
available.
Village counci l gets problems about cleaning debris
or clearin g streets in
Pome rov often. but nothing
on thi s scale. Property
owner J. Hal l leases the
property on very favorable
term s to the village in
exchange for maintenance
on it.
For awhile, the vi l lage
kept its end of the bargain. A
playground was installed
and
Pomeroy
Street
· Supervisor Jack Krautter
said the property was maintained until 2002 when nearby road work ha lted the
annual maintenance . Wi1h
the. dense under~rowth .
urainitge probktm and other
iss ues plaguing the proper!).
Krautter said hi s departmen t
doesn 't'hal'e the equipment
needed to clear the fic' lu

Please see Adion, A5

·'

Meigs foster parents honored by Dept. of Jobs and Family Service.s_·.
STAFF REPORT
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INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds

A3
H3-4

Comics .

Bs

Dear Abby
Editorials

A3
A4

Obituaries

As

Sports
•
Weather

H1
A6

© 2004 Ohio Vullc} Publishing Co.

Juvenile
Judge
Scott
Powell, Commi ssioner Jim
Sheets
and
Director
MIDDLEPORT The Michael Swisher. Swisher
Meigs County Department addressed the group. saying
of Job and Familv Services the agency greatly appreciheld a recognition dinner ates the Foster Families
Tuesday evening at the who have de.voted their
Middleport
American lives to providing a "safe
Legion Hall to honor the fos- and nurturing home for our
ter parents who serve the at- children at ri sk."
risk children of the county.
He spoke briefly on the
The group was welcomed many imprLvements in
to the second annual child welfare policie s now
Recognition Dinner by as compared to when he
Child Welfare Supervisor joined the agency in 1979.
Chri s Shank, by telling He included the available
them what an "asset- they pool of trained foster parwere to the agency," and ems; a protocol s between
-how appreciative he and his the agency and Juvenile
staff are of the assistance Court; state funding for cost
and
cooperation
they of care and state operational
receive from the Foster policies and guidelines.
Families when dealing with
Swisher said, "All chilchildren in cri sis.
Shank
introduced Please see Honored, A5

Foster parents attending a recogni tion dinner hosted by the Meigs County Department of Jobs
and Family Services were from the lett. Amy Hayes, Shawn and Garry Montgomery. Penny and·
Steve Lundy, John and Vicki e McCiasky. MaryAnn and Woody Cal l, Cled1th Ktng, Jeanna and
Rodney Wooten , Marlene and James Swingle, and Anthony Rowe. They were piresnted a clock,
a pen and certificate.

Arthritis Foundation

Rock·a·Thon

Sponsorecllocolly by HoiZM Medical Cen~ Holzer Senior Care Cen,... and Holzer Wyngate-Gollipo/is

Tuesday. May 2 5
.Prices. and Items bood at 919 E. Stele St., Athens and 530 E. Main St. Jackson
Kroger Stores May 23 thru May 29, 2004.

Some Items may require a deposit.

Visit our Website at www.Kroger.com or
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ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY1
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. Each of theae advertfHd Items Ia required
to be •valleble ror ule. n we do run out of an advertlaed ttam, w. will offer you your choice of a
compe~abkt Item, when available, reflect111g th• aame a8vlnga, or • ralnc-,eck which will entltJe
you to purch. . . the actvertlaed Item at the actvertleed price within 30 daya. Only one vendor
coupOn will be accepted per Item. Copyright 2004. The Kroger Company. No aalea to dealere.

1:00 pm · 4 :00 pm • _Holzer Medical Center French 500 Room
1:00 pm · 4 :00pm · Holzer Wyngate · Gallipol is

Frldav. May 28

'

2 :00 pm • Holzer Senior Care Center
Public enco~raged lo attend. Donations appreciated .
For more information,
call(740) 441 -3916.

- - - = - - - - - - - - - -- -- - -·-·-

MEDICAL CENTER
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•WORLD

.The Daily Sentinel ·

For same-sex couples, divorce is
sought-after benefit of gay marriage
SAN FRANCISCO CAP)
- It may not be on their
minds as they walk down the
aisle in Massachusetts, hut
along with gifts and toa&gt;ts
many gay couples are finally
getttng one of the biggest
benefits of matrimony: the
ability to obtain a ·dean
divorce.
Because their unions were
not legally himling. gay couples have had few protecticlm.
.when th &gt;'~ -split ~11p have had ,
to rely on the ihconsist~nt '
mercy of juuges to obtain
alimony. parental rights or a
stake in the couple's finances.
· "The sing le most important
thing you get with matTiage
is divor~e. a preui~table
process by which property is
diviueu. uebt is _apportioned
and arrangemems arc made
for custouy and visitation of
children." said JoAnn Citron.
a Boston lawyer researching
a hook on same-sex breakups
called "The Gay Divorcee ...
Especially when ~bildren
are involved. courts in liberal-leaning state s such as
Massachusetts. California
and Washington have been
increasingly willing to apply
the principles of uivorce laws
to same-sex breakups.
But in more conservative
states such as Texas and
Virginia. jud~es have been
loath 'to · do ~ anvthinQ that
would confer inarital-likc
standing on same-sex couples. even when partners have
drawn up detailed contracts.
'The situation right now
has cre.ated honor stories ,
where people put an awfuli&lt;)t
of sweat equity into property
and into a life together. never
held title to anythirw and got
nothing." Citron said.
The clearest benefits will
be for those who earn less
than their same-sex partners.
said Frederick Hertz. a real
estate lawyer in Oakland.
Calif., who has developed a
lucrative specialty resolving
: legal disputes among the San
·Francisco Bay area's relative: ly affluent gay population.
: Hertz recently represented
· a lesbian who had become ~
stay-at-home mother while
her girlfriend climbed the
corporate l~dder. When they
split up, the employed part: ner refused to include stock
·options among their joint
assets.
"We got a decent settlement, but decent compared to
. nothing, not decent compared
. to what she would have got. ten had · they been married."
Hertz said. ~' Acces s to marriage may level that playing
field." .
·
Gay marriage became legal
in Massachusetts on Monday
under a lanumark ruling by
the state's hi ghes t court.

is running strong."

Vermont has granted sptlusal
rights to gay coup les with
civi l unions since 2000. mak·
ing it the · only other state
where gay~ and lesbian~ are
treated the same as married
couples for the purposes or
divorce.'
In California. a lav- scheduled to take effect Jan. I
woulu g ive the state's 25,000
couples registered as domestic partners access to family
court proceedings when their
relationships end.
"At the present time it is a
very mixed sort of picfure,"
said An Leonard. a professor
at New' York Law S.choul
who monitors court rulings
involving gays.
Couples who drafted agreements with a lawyer's help
may be able ·to provide courts
with rules to interpret. But
problems arise when "they
are JUSt Jiving together,"
Leonard said. "There is basi·
cally nothing there as far as a
legal framework."
San Francisco attorneys
Julian Chang and Walle Estey
avoided acrimony when they
split up after more than 14
years together.
The men earned equa l

incomes and had drawn up
elaborate agreement~ governin ~ everything from home
owners htp and hospital-visitation rights to frequent-flier
miles and flll1eral arrange-·
men ts. They handled their
dissolution themse lves, splitting everyth ing down the
·
midule.
Both agree that had marriage heen an option, their
"divorce" would have been
easier ~ and they might not
have broken up at all.
·'There is something different about being married than
in an unmarried relationship
- it would make me more
committed to working things
out," Estey said.
With more than half of U.S.
marriages ending in divorce,
lawyers anticipate it won't be
long before they represent a
new class of divorcing couples.
B·o.ston attorney Joyce
Kauffman expects to see two
kmds of gay couples getting
married: partners ";vho have
already been together a long
time and the hopefully smaller category that n1akes the
same mistakes heterosexuafs
make ."

Emplpyment has been
Htgging in the economic
recovery. So when the president go t good news from the
Labor Department, he
~hared ·it Saturday with ,his
weekly radio audience. His
message was aimed at convincing voters that the U.S.
cconomv. which has been
consider~ed a drag on his reelection bid. now might
prove otherwise.
The department reported
that unemploymert(fell last
month in 1.1 of 17 hattieground states that could
decide the presidential election. Michigan, Minnesota
and Wisconsin showed the
biggest declines.
"This week brought further evidence that across
America. more citizens are.
finding jobs ... and these figures show that America's
jobs engine is running
strong," Bush said, rattling
off the report's findings.
.. Nationally. we gained
288,000 new j.obs in April.
and the nation has added
more than 1.1 million new
jobs since last August .... In
April. the biggest job-gain_mg states were Florida,

Bush suffers cuts, bruises while mountain biking
CRAWFORD, Texas(AP)
- Prestdenl Bush suffered
cuts and. bruises early
Sa~urday afternoon when he
fell ~htle mountam btkmg
on hts ranch, Whtte House
· spokesman Trent Dutfy satd.
Bush was on the 16th mile
of a 17-mtle_ nde when he
fell, Duffy s•ud. He was ndmg wrth a military aide.
members of the Secret
Service and h_is personal
phystctan, Dr. Rtchard Tubb.
"He had minor abrasions
and scratches on his chin
upper lip, nose. rillht hand and
both knees," Duffy said. "Dr.
Tubb, who was with him,
cleaned his scratches, said he
was fine. The Secret Service
offered to drive him back to
the house. He declined and
finished his ride."
Bush was wearing his bike
helmet and a mouth guard when
the mishap oo:urred. Duffy said
he didn't know exactly how the
accident happened. .
"It's been raining a lot and
the topsoil is loose." the

cial piece of evidence in a
trial where the defendant is .
charged with lying to the government. perhaps it's time to
start over again," Kuby said.
Martha Stewart. on her
Web site, offered a thank you
Saturday to her supporters a group that she said has sent
~0.000 e-mails with "upliftmg mes:-.ages" since her
March 5 conviction.
Larry Stewart, 46. · of
Bethesda. Md. , was released
on $50,000 bail. with a return
date iti U.S. District Court set
for June 10.
A week later, Martha
Stewart is due in court for her
sentencing. She was expected
to get between 10 and 16
months in prison.
,
U.S. District Court Judge
Miri•11n Ccuarbaum. · who
piesided over the trial: has
alreauy rejected one appeal
for a new trial after defense
lawyers claimed a juror had
lied ahout a past arrest to land
a spot on the panel.
While Mwtha Stew•ut\ attorney' wall! a reuial. Hayes wa'
doubtful a 'econu jury would
reach a uiHcrent conclusion .
"Even if the conviction was
thnmn out. 'he would be
&lt;.:Oill'ictcd at a retrial." Hayes
predicteu.

spokesman said. "You know his lip and on the end of his
this prestdent. He hkes to eo nose. When he waved to the
all out. Suffice it to say he crowd oreeting him a\ the airwasn't whistling show tunes." port. ao small 'bandage coulu
Bush left Crawford shortly he seen on his right palm.
after_ the btke mtshap tor
Earlier
this
month.
Austtn. where he was attend- · Democratic presidential candi·
mg a pnvate p•uty of hrs date John Ken-y took a s pill
?&lt;~ughter. Jenna, who wauu-_ from hts btcyde whrle numg
ated from the Untverstty of wtth Secret Service agents
Texas earlter 111 the day.
through Concord, Mass .. about
As he departed from the 18 nules north of Boston. Kerry
presidential helicopter . with fell when his bike_hi_t a patch of
hts wrfe, scrapes were vtsrble sand. He was not tnfured.
on the president's right temple
Told about Bush 's mishap,
and on hts chm. Close-up Kerry said. "I hope he's OK.
shots taken by photographers I didn't know the president
revealed other scrapes above rode a bike.''

Celebrating_ spedal
dqs with you!
"

Sunday Times-Sentinel

740-446-2342 .

ARE YOU 65 OR OLDER7

·Legal experts: Perjured witness. doesn't
assure new trial for Martha Stewart
NEW YORK , (AP) - If its price plunging.
nothing else, the perjury
Larry Stewart testified
indictment against a govern- about Bacanovic 's alleged
ment witness in the Martha doctoring of a worksheet list·
Stewart trial shou ld provide ing Martha Stewart's stock
the homemaking maven with portfolio. Secret Service offi.
· grounds for an appeal - but cials said he falsely testified
· it doesn't guarantee a retrial. that he l1ad examined the
legal experts sa id Saturday.
document on two occasions.
"lt's a substantial issue. and
Bacanovic was acquiued on
she had no other substantial the charge linked to the changissues for an appeal," said ing
of the
workshe~t.
noted
defense
attornev Prosecutors ·said Friday that was
: Edward Hayes. a Court TV one of the reasons they expect
· commentator.
the other verdich will stand
Fellow defense attorney despite the pe~ury charge.
Timothy M. Donohue agreed.
Lawyers for Bacanovic and
but suggested it was not a Stewart vehemently dis·
clear-cut winner.
agreed. saying the allegations
"The prosecution indicteu merit a new trial.
: their own witness." he said · "The arrest of one of the
' ''But the question. is. 'Ho1; government's key witnesses
does that apply to her''"'
for perjury clearly demon·
The accusation Friday by strates that the trial of Martha
federal prosecutors that Stewart was fatally flawed and
Secret Service ink expert unfair," .said a statement from
Larry Stewart lieu on the wit-· · the Stewart defense team.
. ness stand is prohahly more
Activist lawyer ·Ron Kuby
· beneficial for Stewart's co- saiu he felt Stewart ueserved
: defendant, Peter Bac;movic . · a retrial. althou gh he
· than for her, Hayes said.
acknowleugeu "it's a hioh
The pair were convicted har" for the defens~ to cle~r.
March 5 of lying to federal Stewart's lawye rs must show
_authorities about why Martha there was a "reasonable prob·
. Stewart peddled 3.928 shares ability" of a different verdict
· of lmCione in December to win a retnal.
: 2001 - just before a nega·'When a principal govern·
. live government report sc!ll mcnt witness lies about a cru-

North Carolina. Missouri criticism that his administra·
and Michigan. Forty-five tion is not Joing enough to
states out of 50 addeu new ease gasoline prices. whic·h
have surged to an average of
workers ...
more
than $2 a gallon, Bush
Not all the employment
three
steps
news, however. was positive noted
was
taking
to
Washington
for the Bush-Cheney camaddreS&gt;
the
high
prices.
paign. Jobless rates rose in
To protect co nsu mers
four critical election states:
against
high prices. he said.
Arizona,
Arkansas.
the
Energy
Department had
Washington and Ohio.
' Moreover. rates stayed th e set up a hotline to gather
same in two of th'e 17 states complaints of price goug"
New Mexico anu ing. Energy Secretary
Pennsylvania, which offer a Spencer Abraham is meethealthy 21 electoral votes to ing with world petroleum
either Bush or Democratic producers in Amsterdam
rival
John
Kerry
in this weekend to uiscuss
what they can do to help the
November.
U.S. and global economy.
Nationwide. the- unem- Third. Bu sh said, federal
ployment rate has dropped regulations
have
been
to 5.6 percent from 6.3 per- changeu to allow American
cent last June.
refineries to .improve and
Still, the economy has lost expand so that gasoline can
nearly I .5 million jobs since ge t to the market quickly.
Bush took otlice in January
Politicians have argued
200 I. Recent payroll gains over who should bear the
have helped shrink that blame for the high prices at
deficit, but Bush remains on the pump.
track to be the first president
Kerry and others favor
since Herbert Hoover to lose pressuring the Organization
jobs on his watch.
of Petroleum Exporting
The Kerry campaign on Countries. which ·cut proFriday hailed the good Qews . uuction in March and April.
on the job from, but spokes- to boost its outplll to meet
woman Allison Dobson cau- demand. Others want to use
tioned: "We're still in the the Strategic Petroleum
worst jobs recovery since Reserve. an idea Kerry has
the Great Depression , and so not endorsed. Kerry has said
we have a long way to go:·
new contributions to the
On _a nother economic reserve should be slowed to
issue, Bush responued to ease petroleum supplies.

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Support Groups

Thesday, May 25
POME;:ROY - Yesteryear
essay contest winner will be
announced and trophies
awarded at a 6:30 p.m. ceremony at the Senior .Citizens
Center. Cale and punch will
be served.

Other events
Thesday, May 25
POMEROY - A childhood immunization clinic
will be held from 9 to II a.m
anu I to 3 p.m. Tttesuay at the
Meigs
County
He alth
Parents
or
Department.
guard ians are to accomp.any

Thursday, May 27
POMEROY- Caring and
Sharing Support Group will
meet at I p.m. at the Meigs
Multipurpose Senior. Center.
Dr. Scott Smith will be

Birt~d~y~ disease.
Monday, May 31
POMEROY - A party
honoring Beulah Autherson
on her 80th birthday will be
held I to 3 p.m. Sunday at the
Senior Citizens Center. Cards
may be sent to her at Pleasant
Hill Manor, F-Wing, P. 0.
Box 334. Piketqn, Ohio
45661

Teachers, summer jobs and Social SecurityBY LISA CRUMP
SOCIAL

SECURI1'1 MANAGER IN ATHENS

The school year is nearly
over. and most teachers I
know ·are busy planning their
summer which for many will
include a second job. I am
often asked hy my teacher
lrtelllls about a so called
Social Security "teacher's offset" on the retirement benefit s they cam when workino
.
&lt;&gt;
outside the classroom.
I can usuall y clear up this
confusion by making one
Important point: There is no
offset if your teaching job is
covered by Social Security.
Most educators work for
school districts that are covered by Soci-al Security. In
other words. Social Security
ta_xes are deducted from their
salary. If that is your situation, then you will get all the
Social Security retirement
benefits you are entitled to,
with no offsets or reductions.
So. if you are a teacher
whose teaching job is covered by Social Security, you
do not need to read further.
. But most teachers in Ohio
;do riot pay Social Security
taxes. If you are in this situation, then you should iake
time to understand two provi_sions of the law that may
:re d~ce or eliminate any
:Soctal Security benefits you
would otherwise be entitled
to. (And these provisions are
not limited to teachers. but
· may apply to others. such as
:government employees.)
The Windfall Elimination
~ision
reduces Social

Security benefits paid to
someone who will get a pensron from a JOb not covered
by Sacral Securny. So tf you
are a teacher . who does not
,pay mto Soctal Secunty. but
you did earn at least 40
Social Security credits or
"quarters" '(the minimum
requrrement) at_ other jobs.
then your Soc tal Secunty
benefits will likely be
_
.
redu ced.
. Why' Your Soc,.ll Secunty
benetns are meant to replace
only a percentage of preretrrement earnmgs. The way
Secumy benefit
Socral
amounts are figured. lowerpatd workers get a hrgher
return than htghly pard work·
,rs. For example, lower-paid
workers could get a Social
Security benefit that equals
. about 55 percent '!f therr prerettrement earnmgs. The
a~erage replacement _rate for
htghly patd workers ts about
25 percent.
Before. 1983, people who
worked m JObs not covered
by Social Security received
· bene tits that were computed
as if they were long-term.
low-wage workers. They
received the advantage of a
higher percentage of Social
Security benefits. in addition
to their other · pension.
Congress passed the windfall
elimination provi sion to
eliminate this advantage.
The amount of the rcduc·
tion depends on your circumstances. but it currently can
be no more than $306 per
month. Also, if you have 21
or more years of "substantial"
earnings
under
Social

Security, the reduction is
smaller and can be totally
disregarded if you have 30 or
more years of Social
Security-covered earnings.
To learn more. read the fact
sheet. Windfall Elimination
Provision. at www.socialsecurity.gov/pubs/10045.html
or request a copy by calling
1-800-77212 r3.
There is another provision
affecting people who will get
a pension from a job not coverect by Social Security. So if
you are a teacher who does
not pay into Social Security,
the Government ·Pension
Offset law says we must take
two-thirds of your teacher's
pension and subtract ·that
from any wife's/husband's or
widow's/widower's benefits
you might be due _on your
spouse's SoCial Security
record. To learn more, read
the fact sheet, Government
Pension
Offset,
at
www.socialsecurily.gov/pubs
110007.html or request a
copy by calling 1-800-7721213.
·
Social Security also has a
special
Government
Employees website for teachers and any other federal.
state or local government
employee who may get a
·pension from a_job not covered by Social Security. The
Government
Employees
website, www.socialsecuri·
ly.pov/gvo-wep
-contains
more information, as well as
answers to many questions
about the two provisions and
illustrative examples of how
. they may affect your Social
Security benefits.

dean's list at · Hocking
College for the spring quar·
ter. She is the daughter of
Nan a.nd Jerry Swartz of
Middleport. ahd the grand·
daughter of Faye Wallace of
Middleport:
POMEROY .
Karen
Markins of Pomeroy was
m1metl to the dean's list at the
University of Cincinnati for
the winter quarter.

Settles ofPomeroy, and the
granddaughter of Everette
and Lucille Schwartz of Point
Pleasant. W.Va., and a 2000
graduate of ·River' Valley
High School.
She earned a 3.13 cumulative grade point average, and
was named to the dean's Jist
for the fourth consecutive
semester.
She plans to pursue a
career in her field of study.

On dean's list

~unba!' tn:hne~ ~~entinel

1

Social Events

Graduates
J-school

~allipolh~

Mail or drop oH this coupon along with a copy of your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gatllpolls, OH 45631 .

Thcsday, i\lav 25
CHESTER -- . Chester
Shade Ri ver Louge ~53
F&amp;AM will have ·~'special
meeting lor w.ork in the
entered apprentice degree, 7
p.m.
RACINE ~ The Racine
Area
Community
Organization will meet .nt
6:30 p.m. at the Racine First
Baptist Church for a dinner
and recognition of the scho larship winners.

children. Those with medical
cards are to present them.
Friday, May 28
MIDDLEPORT - A free
dinner will be served from
4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Friday at
the Middleport Church of
Christ Family Life Center,
Fifth and Main, Middleport .
The public is invited.
-

COOLVILLE - Students
from the Respiratory Therapy
Technology program at
State
WashingtoiJ ,
Community College recently
took. third-place honors at the
American Association for
Respinitory Care Region II
Knowledge Bowl, hed during
.. the recent AARC Region II
. meeting in Covington, Ky.
The annual event matched
' 16 teams from respiratory
POMEROY
Joy
programs in Ohio, Indiana
Pomeroy
Jannettc
Settles
of
and Kentucky against each
other in a double-elimination . recently grad uated from
tournament. Team members Youngstown State University
a
State with
from
Washington
Bachelor
of
included Michelle Ne~ell of
Coolville, Dave Hartshorn of Arts degree
Williamsto)Vn, W.Va., and in journalMatt Zyla of Washington , ism, with a
in
W.Va. , and al ternate Andy minor
photograFife of Williamstown.
phy .
She is the
daughter of
John and
_ MIDDLEPORT - Hannah D i a 11 n a
Joy Settles
Woolard was named to the

on your home delivered subscription!

:

Clubs and
organizations

On Knowledge
Bowl team

aor Discount*

:Address
: City/State/Zip
:Phone
I

Monday, May 24
POMEROY Meigs
County Veterans Service
Commission meets at 9 a.m.,
117 E. Memorial Dr.,
Pomeroy.
SALEM CENTER
Salem Township Trustees
will meet at 6 p.m. at the
Salem Fire Station on State
Roiute 1 2 ~ .

Sunday, May 30
POMEROY
-Meigs
County Bikers Association,
19th Annual Memorial Run ,
leaves Pomeroy ParkiQg Lot
at I p.m., ends with party at
Lakeview Tavern. Albany.
Food, prize drawings, music
by Double Shot.

Monday, May 24, 2004

Mother wants to right
daughter's wrong turn
DEAR ABBY: My daughter, "Skylar," just starteu
middle school, and she has
fallen in with the wrong
crowd. She walks around the
house with a chip on her
shoulder. wearing wha!
looks to us like boys·
.,clothes. She curses and lies.
and she and her new friend;
have vandalized the girls'
restroom four times. Her latest trick is to forge my sig.nattAoe on school papers.
I have discussed these
problems with . the .school.
They suggested counseling
and therapy. What I want is
advice on how to discipline
Skylar for all the wrongs she
has done.
How do I guide my daughter down the right path ? UNABLE TO DISCIPLINE
DEAR
UNABLE:
Guiding a child down the
·'right path" involves more
than discipline ; it involves
open communication and
the assurance that he or she
is loved. If Skylar were my
daughter, the first thing I'd
do· is have her tested for
drugs. If she tested positive.
I would start he r in a rehab
program and possibly place
her in another school.
If she tested "clean," I'd
do exactly as the school sug~
gested and get counseling
and therapy for her. In fact.
counseling for your entire
fami'ly would be a good
idea, because it appears that
Skylar is not the only one
who could usc some help.
Your parenting skills may
need to be upgraded .
DEAR ABBY: My husband and I are concerned
that his father may be in the
early stages of Alzheimer's
disease. He 's doing childish
things like biting my daugh-

Dear
Abby

ter (only with hi' upper dentures. not his lower on~s) .
hitting her. and getti ng mad
when she "tattles" on him.
He can no longer. remcm·
her simple thing~ anu e'en
forgot to take my daughter
to school one day. My moth·
er·in-law keeps putting off
talking to him. anu say'
she 'II do it "after the ·holidays." "after his birthday:·
then "~fter Father's Dav" you get the picture.
·
We are · worried that he
will become worse and there
will never be "a better time"
to tell him. I want to talk to
my father-in-law myself. but
my hu sba nd think s his
mother should do it.
· I don't want my 4-yearold to thi'nk it's OK to bite
;tnd hit. or that this is appropriate behavior for her to
copy in preschool. -TROLl·
BLED IN KENTUCKY
DEAR
TROUBLED:
There are other dementias in
addition to Alzheimer's.
Your father-in-law should be
scheuuled immediately for a
complete phy sical and neu rological evaluation . Tell the
doctor what yo u have told
me. His beha&gt;ior with your
little gi rl is inappropriate,
and if he is so impaired that
be forgot to take her to
school. he should not be
behind the wheel of a car.
Please do not allow this to
continue. Your first obliga---

--~

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tion mu;t be the ph) &gt;ical
and emotional "ell-being of
your daughter.
'
DEAR ABBY: I have a
huge problem This boy I
like. "Terr) ... told me over
the 'phone anu the Internet
that he thought I was "hot"
and he loved-me. but his best
friend's brother. "Rick:· told
me different. Rick &gt;aiu that
Terrv hates me. think' I'm
ugly: and I ~houlu ne1erceall
or e-mail him again.
Who should I .believe''
I'm reallv contuscu .
HEARTS ICK IN WAVER LY. OHIO
DEAR
HEARTSICK :
· Tell Tmy what Rick said.
l!' s possible that Rick al'o
likes you and want&gt; you for
him~elf. so don't be 'a quick
to believe what he said.
Hold those calls and e·
mails for a while. 'If Terrv
calls and e-mails 1ou. the
chance'\ are he likes vou.
Hov-e1·er. until vou ~a re
absolutely certain Ztbout hi ;
feelin~s. be cautious about
the wa} you respond to his
e-mails and about what 1 ou
;;ty on the phone . It niulu
prel'ent embarrassment later.
Drar Ahh\' is ,,-rilfen In
,.thi~uil · \lu,; Buren, u!s~/

Phil/if'.\·.
and 11'(1.1' fi11111ded /Jr her
11101/u·l: Po11li11&lt;' Pl;illiJ''Write
Deor Ahln
at
lrll'li'.Dmr.·\/J/i\'.COIII 1ir /~0.
klllllill {/.\' Jeai/Jie

Box 69-UO. Lr;_, Angeles, CA
90069.

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

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PageA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, May 24, 2004

Bush tells radio listeners
of gains in labor market
WACO. Texas (AP) President Bush is pointing at
"Help Warnell" signs in key
election states as ev idence
that "America's jobs engine

Jul ian Chang. left and Wade Estey, with thei r dog Remy.
pose Thu rsday, in the livingroom of Wade 's condo directly
upstairs from Julian's in the tluitding they bought in San·
Francisco. The couple separated after 14 years and split
thetr assests down the middle. As Massachusetts pre~ares
to sanction its First gay mamages on Monday. and with the
issue percolating Ill other states. many gays and lesbians
have realized that of al l the rights and responsibilities that
come with matrimony. divorce laws are among the most
pivotal. (AP Photo/ Susan Ragan)
'

PageA2

'

Earns honor at
Marietta
Bradley D. Brannon, a
sophomore accounting student at Marietta College, has
been named to the Dean's
High Honors list for the
spring semester.
He is the son of Joy and
Paul Brannon. and is an·
Eastern High School graduate.
Students on the list have
earned a grade point average
of 3.5 or higher and earned at
least 15 credit hours. ,

Sunday .Times-Sentinel
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J?ageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, May 24,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
James Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager1News Ed1tor

Congress shall make no law respecting 1111
establislunen'r of rel(~io n, or prohibiting tlrr "
free exercise thereo}i or abridging the freedom
of speech, or&lt;?_{ the press; or the right &lt;?.f the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Go1JeYtllll£'1lt for a redress of grier•a11ces.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
By T11e Assucwled l'ress
Today" Mond,l) \Lt~ 2-1. th~ I-15th d.l) ol 2004 Th~re "'"
121 days kit 111 the 1c.u
Tou.ty\ Htgltll ght "J H"" "" 011 M.l) 2-Ith IX-1-1 S,nmtcl
F B Morse lt.tt\SIIll\ted the 11\c'"·I~L'. Wh.ll h.tth Gnd
wrought'" from W.tshlll~ton DC. to B.thtmmc ,, he loiiJMI Iy opened Amc11c,l' I'"' tc'lc=''·'Ph ltne
On tlus d.ttc In IXI\J.l.)uc'Cil Vttton.t 11as botntn Lonuon
In ll\8 1 some 200 pcnpk dtcd \1 hen the C.llt.~dt.nl Iell\
Pnm.·css Vu.:lllJILI sdnk lll'.ll LonJnn Ont,uto
In 1 88~. the l:lrookhn B11duc ltn~tnu Btookhn .md
Manhdttan ""' ope11ed lo tl .llltc '
~
·
In 19-11 the Gc11n.tn h,lttleslttp Btsm,uLk s.tnk the Bllttsh
dre.tunougln Hoou '" tk :\otth -\tl.tnttc
In llJ58. United Ptcss lnt ctn,ltlon,tl ll.ts tnrmcJ thtouuh ,,
merget nl the Unttc·J Pte" ,111d the lntctn.HHlll.il N~e,ls
Setvtcc
In 1962. asllon,tut Slllll (" npentet bec.tme the second
Amencdll to otbtttltc· E,nth "'he lle1\ .tho.nd At1101.1 Sc\en
In llJ76 Bnt.un clllU FJ,lilLC upe neu tr.ms-AtLllltiC ConLorue
serv 1 c~ to \V~tsh mgron
In 1977. 111 ,,
move the Kteml111 ousted Smtct
Pres1dent Ntkol.u Pudgotny !tom the Commun tsl P.Jrty' rul mg Polttburo
In 1980. Iran re1ecteu ,, c.111 hy the Wmlu Colli t 111 I he
Hague to Ielea-.e the Am~nc.111 hostages
In 200:), Prestdent Bush .mJ RusSJ.tn Prestdelll Vl.tdllllll
Putm s1gned ,, landm.u k nude,u a11ns 1educuon 11 e.ll) 111
Moscow
Ten years ago Four men convtctccl ot bombtng Nev. Y01 k '
World Trade Centet wete ec~ch sentenced to 2-10 vedts 111
pnson The United St.ttes .tnd J.tp.m ,tgteed to Jevtvc ctt01ts to
pry open J .tpanes~ markets to US goods
F1ve yews ago 1\ sh,uply dt&gt;tdcd Supteme Co urt Ill led. 11\e
to four, that schools c.tn he sued when otftctals t,ul to stop student&gt; from scx u.tlly har.tsSJng each other The Supteme Com t
ruled that pollee vto l.ne peop le \ pnvacy nglns when they
br;ng TV camer.t crews 01 other JOUrnaltsts IntO homes durmg
arrests or searches M1ke Tyson w.tlked out ut a Rockvtlle.
Md . J&lt;lt l at1~1 servmg 3 1/2 months behmd bars tot assaultmg
two motonsts c~ller" tender-bender.
One year ago Funous c10wds hurled debns ,md tnsults .11
Alge11a\ prcSldetll (Ahdel.mz Boutetlika) when he vtsllcd a
town devastated b) a dc.tdly e.ut hquake The US -led codlttton ordered lr.lqts to g~&gt;e up then weapons by mid-June
Bn_t1sh actress R.1chel Kempson. mdtrtaJch ut the Rcdgr.tve
actmg dyna,ty. dted 111 Mtllbrook NY , folll days short of her
93rd bmhd.ty
thought tor Today 'Re;ponSlbtilty educates' - Wendell
Phtllips. Amen can abol ttt ontst ( 1811 - 1884)

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Advertising
Outside Sales Dave Hams Ext 15
ClassJCirc . Judy Clark Ext 10

Circulation
District Mgr: TBA

Ext 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoelhch Ext 12

E·mall
news@mydarlysentrnel com

Web

www mydallysentlnel com

\

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'liZ
'01!.

.&amp;

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THINK

Over. the years, Amenc,ms
have taken a lot of vtctmts
abuse tor being seltish und
trresponstblc We are otten
portrayed as a natton th,ll
wants to have Its cake ,md eat
11 too, whtch, as any Amencan
knows. ts patently untrue. We
also want our ice cream and
may~ some Cool Whtp
I b11 ng thts up because, once
agam, ~e are the targets of
mternattonal nd1cule, th1s ttme
tor our anger over nsmg gas
pnces Gas ts up now to about
$2 a gallon around the natton.
These pnces are outrageous.
as mdtcated by the newspaper
and TV-news stones quotmg
motunsts as saymg, 'These
pnces are outrageous."
The rest of the world, however, ts not sympathellc They
think th.n because gas IS $5 22
a gallon m England, $4 24 "
gallon 111 Tokyo a11d $4.92 a
gallon 111 France, we are ~mg
p1ggy fm complammg about
per;;gallon gas pnces that, even
wttlt the recent sptke, are sttll
cheaper than a Starhucks
Frappuccino
Apparently the rest of the
wotld doesn't understand the
underlymg sociologtcal tedsu ns we react as we do to
mcrc.tses 111 gas pnces Unlike
them. we dnve c.us the stze ol
P.u" apartments They obvtously don't realize how much
gas c,trs tike these consume' It
.lpp&lt;~rently has come as somethmg of ,, sutpnse to many ot
Us. I!Xl
When asked to rank the
tmpottance of 56 charactensllcs they constdered when
buymg a new car. Amencans
ranked fuel economy 44th
Tim cxplams wny sport utility
vchtcles, , numvans and light
trucks accounted for 54 percent of all new cars bought l.tst
year
' It's sttll more unportant to

to The

Mall Subscnption
Inside Metgs County

I

Rates Outside Meigs County
I 3 WeeKs
' 50 05
26 Weeks
' 1oo 1o
52 Weeks
' 200 20

'

Joan
Ryan

have the nght number of cup
holders than htgh fuel economy.' smd Art Spmella, directot
of CNW Mru ketmg Research,
whtch conducted the swvey
Petet Rennert sells cars ,11
John lnsh Jeep 111 San Raf.tel.
Cahl He showed ,, gt .ty
Grand Cherokee to a woman
one morning e,lfltet tillS week
She took the slow stroll ,tround
the vehtcle. opened the doo"·
checked out the cargo space.
took tl lor a test dnve
' What kmd of gas mtle.tge
dues II get?" she .1sked
Renne11 He showed her the
manufacturers sttcke1 on the
wmdow 17 to 21 mtles pet
·gallon htghway.
.
'Tit.ll was the last I evct
hea(d about 11." Renne11 s.nd
·People bnng 11 up mostl y
~cdusc they believe they'te
supposed to ' (The wom.u1
loved the Gil .md ,,ud she d be
b.tck soon wtth her husband to
hammer out .1 deal )
To understand Amencans. 11
ts essenttal for the rest ot the
world to remem~r that.
underneath 11 all , we ,ue
socially responstble bemgs
JUSt like they are, except we
hke btg thmgs and lots ol
them In the Umted States.
there are now 204 million c,us
and 191 milhon dnvers. more
cars than we h.tve people to
operate them
Bluehet ry
muffins here are the stze of our
heads Soda cups are btg
enough to harbor small children
We butld houses

REEDSVILLE - Webster Reed, 93, of Reedsvtlle, Ohto
dted Fnda) M.ty 21 200-+. ,ll hiS restdence
He was born October 1. 1910 111 Reeusvllle son ot the late
George and NarciSsus Reed
He " sun tved by two sons ,md daughters-Ill laws, Melvm
.md Joann Reed and Wtllc~rd and Martha Reed all ot
Reedsville, one daughter ,md son-m-law, Dons and Bob
Gtbbs ol Reeds~1lle . 13 grandchildren. 25 great-grandchtldren, seven great-great-grandchildren, four step-grandchtldren; and I I step-great-grandchildren.
Bestdes hiS parents he was preceded m death by h1s w1fe.
Flnsste Belle Reed. three mters. Sus1e Kerwm, Gladys Htll.
Ada Reed and Vtrgmm Hoselton, and one brother. Norman
Reed
Funeral set v1ces w1ll be held Tuesday, May 25 at I I a m., at
the Whne Funeral Home 111 Cuolvtlle, with the Pastor Teresa
Waldeck, Gtltcatmg. Bunal "'ill be in the Randolph Cemetery
111 Reedsvtlle
Fnends may call at the funeral home from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8
p m Monday.

_Deaths
Rose Marie Hoffman
Rose Mane Tennant Holtman. 65. Murrells Inlet, S.C .. dted
Fnddy, May 21. 200-1. at MVSC. Charleston, S C
..She IS survtved by her husband James Hoffman
Se t v~ees Will be I p m Tuesday m the Foglesong-Tucker
Funeral Home. Mason. W.Va. with the Rev Mtke Fmmcum
oftlcmung Bun.tl wtll be 111 the Graham Cemetery. New
Ha&gt;ell. W.Va Fnends may c.tll at the funeral home from 6 to
9 p m today

For the record
Dissolution
POMEROY - An .lctll)ll fot dtssolutton of marnage ha&gt;
been It led 111 Metgs County Common Pleas Court by Darren
w,,yne Robmcttc. Pomeroy. and Sandra Sue Robmette.
Athens

POMEROY - A foreclosure 'has been granted 111 Metgs
County Common Pleas Court to Home NatiOnal Bank agamst
Vtctor" Counts

Marriage license
POMEROY - A m.Jrnage license has been 1ssued Ill Metgs
County Ptob.tte Court to Justm Thomas Dtddle. 27, ,md
Dom11114Ue Shea Dtckerson 28 both ot Racme

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jl.·' ' - ',,

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Americans entitled to cheap gas

Webster Reed

KBOYCE@MYDAILYREGISTER COM

Foreclosure

THE WEAPONS
OF MASS
DESTRUCTION.

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2.004

'9 95

'3015
'60 oo
' 118 ao

diUIItll\l'\l(if 1 ' )' t:rm 11e1

1 uJ

C7fAHl£R.

rem1t 1n
Da 1!y
Sentinel No subscnptron by ma1l
permrtted rn areas where home
earner serv1ce rs available

13Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

"~I
dL..
''

u udwwrnl
lrme1

5/Je r ttn he umfif« 1ed

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Wcflfllll~loll

@n&lt;e CINCINNAi1 1\?ST.

should

d1rect

'

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'

Oneyear •• •
.'11940
Datly
. .. . . . so•
Senior Citizen rates
58 95
One month
One year
. . ' 96 70
Subscnbers

( Dwno \Vt ''

/OJ !he

(\1 . .

Subscnptlon Rates
By earner or motor route

advance

11t"\ e1 get to

.
\

45769

mon1h . . .

Wilen comml'stoner Bob
Keney asked WTC dnectm
Al,m ReiSs l'hether he w.ts
".mgry (IS thts Opr,lh' 1) the
FBI dtdn t 1e,e,il more .tbout
AI Q.1eua ~tore LJ/1 L Retss,
,JLcorduJ~ to the New York
Post ·shot b.tck' he 'I"' angry
,11 • 19 people 111 .tn .mplane, ·
not the FBI
Nme teen men 111 .m .111 plane
IS ll~ht 01 COUISC. II the 'chatlet· ~~ t(ne 9/11 l1au been listened to. these men would
h.t' c been tact.tll) p10filed
11~ht ott then lldth Thc~t's the
oilly logJL\ilt'OJl...dusJon ot any
seiiDUs tnqun] mto how 9/11
mtght h,l\e been pte\ ented Dne the LJ/11 Commtssum ~til

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(USPs 21J-9Go)
Ohio Valley Publtshtng Co.

One

Olllra!.!etnts

''

Published
every
afternoon,
all stare s 1S to be Monday through Fnday 111 Court
accurate II you know of an error 1n a Street P.omeroy Oh1o Penod1cal
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992
pos tage pa1d at Pomeroy
2156
Member The Assoc1ated Press
and
the
Ohto
Newspaper
Assoc1allon
Our main number is
Postmaster Send address correc
(740) 992-2156
hans to The Dally Sentmel 111
Department extensions are:
Court Street
Pomeroy Ohto

Reporter J M1les Loyton Ext 13

Whv should t hts m,m be
c,liielon to sweat over .md
delend h" undemably valiant
sen tee on 9/11 1 is Chtet
Pfetlcr - a dutttul. courageous liremdn \\ bo tollowing
hts ~st msttncts helped sa~ed
thous,md; ot Amcnc:ms on
9/11 - to bl,tme tor even one
death ' r11o deaths &gt; One hunched dec~ , hs ' The unphcdtlons
of the , lll11J"isJOI1..., findmgs
- that \ ,,·nc,t s hero&lt;::s share
bl..nne l( JI !he L\lllMge- arc

*' il. --

1n

New~

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, . ' .. -.n•

The Daily Sentinel

Editor Charlene Hoefl1ch Ext t 2
Reporter Bnan Re ed Ext 14

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Letters to the eduor G/e welcome. They should
be le~s than 300 words. All/ellen are subject to
editing and must be .\1!-(1/ed and include addre.1 .1
and telephon e numba No umigned letter5 will
be published. Letters should 'be in good Taste,
addressing issues, not penonal!tie1
The opinions expre.11ed 111 this column we the
consensus of the Ohw Valley Publishing Co \
editorial board. 1111le1 1 otheJWt!Je noted.
- - - -----·

Our ma1n concern

men

WEtVE FOUND

'

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Correction Poltcy

v,eaker radto st~nat he was
,tble to dtrec tthe (., ,K uauon of
the north tower tor a hellish
hour-plus unul 11. too. wiI.Jpsed. sa\lng the lives of
countless Cl\ tlidns and tire-

I

'"'I"''"

Physical therapy business offers 'hands on' care
BY KANDY BoYcE

ly correct blinders Were New
York\ Fmest ,,t l.tult 1 Were
New York's Bravest sloughmg
off' Could Mavot Glllltam
have done more 1
The most egregtous examDiana
ple of commtsSIOII scapeguatWest
mg concerns the stal~art ser\'tce on 9/11 at Deputy
As" st.mt Ch tel JOseph W
Pfe1tcr Chtel Pletter am1ed .11
the 11011h towet stx mmutes
as puttmg women's underwear after seemg the litst JCI ''"ke.
on the heads ot r.lcmlly pro- helpmg to bnng order to the
tiled Muslim men at atrport tealiul chaos 111 tlte lobby .md
check-ms. I suppose. In the du-ect rescue unns to the uppct
comnusston's findmgs, there tloor' He ,,!so 'lilt hts only
now emerges a we1rd sense brothet Ftre Lt Kevm PtcJtei
that what happened on 9/11 up the st.llrs 'We spent a couwhen out ot the most heavenly ple of seconds lookmg at caLh
olZllrC 'ky, AI Qaeda SllllUita- other. Cluet Ptetfer told Tite
ncously !,lUnched four "'r :slew Yotk Ttmcs 'Ht" d1dn t
o~ttac~s on Amencan c 111es Sd\ .Ill) lhmg It Wa'-• JUS( , )
was snmethmg Ute B1g Apple I' , ~. Lt Pktkt '"'s .mum ~
should have planned and tl.c &lt;~1 lllc'lllilers ot til~
J11lled lot to the pom! ot pre- NYFD 11 ho dteJ 111 the' mlet
' entlng all casu.lllles Indeed. liD
d&lt;.:lordlll!.!
(0
COI11111\S~I(lJ1
\:11 \
I\\ o ,md h.ill 'ye,lfs
thmktn~ ~~ ts almost as tf Ne\1 l c~tc"l
1d P1c1fc1 h bemg
York'~ response to the &lt;\I
1 9/11 ' w.1h lot ~
Qo~ed.J .macks cre,ned .til · ol
COill 1 ~ 1d Jecr . . um he lndlk to
the m.tyhem 111 the tirst place
'II licit r.KIHl Lh.mnds Itom "
Built IIllO this IWISted poull . . ttonger "'g11.1l the l'hlet says
ol vtew " the equally bl7.tne VvL~~n't \\en J..:mg thdt mommg.
nou . . go\ernment comm is- not ton that gt ven enough t,IX- to d \\C.tk.l:J. tunclinnlng .tlterSIOn 1
payet-lunded analyst,, the feu - n.llc. th~ tCb) lusntg the ability
There "a strange padtology et,\1commtsstOn Will diSCOVel tO COillllllllliC,IIC l"th ,IIi IIIII Is
111 the 9/1 1 Commtsston thc~t jUst wh,lt CdUSed 3.000 .md thcrd)) l.ulmg to le,,nn
goes beyond the Bush-ba,hmg Amettcans to lose thetr hves unnwdt.Hel) "hell the south
gr.mdst.mdmg ot th~ old days on 9/11 - ,md. 111 so domg. towet coll.lpsed The commts(tc membet Rtchard Cl.uke ' l presumably m.1ke New York ~ton finlilll !.! Is that tlll
b.1ck when the prestdenr ol the Ctty sale tot ten'Onsm Forget unn.nned Llttel Chtel
USAG (Untied States ol Abu .thout a surpnse attack Pletkr - 1\c~s mtst.tkcll The
Ghratbl WdS takmg 11 on the launched 111 bmad daylight b) bettCI sltOII~CI l.tdiO ch,lllnel
Lhll1 IOI llUl haVIII.£! ClldCtCd soldtets ol ,m extremtst \\(1:-.ltldL'txl \VoJ~lll!.! TheLhu:t
se11nus me,JStlles, ple-9/11. to Muslim ,umy h1dden I rom 10bu~ll) 1..h~~tgrec~ He Ltl"ln
stop lslamtc terronsts - such detection by our own polittcal- pomts out thdl "'en 111til tile

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

Reader Services

Obituaries

When an NYFD chtet
rcmmded
the
9/J I
CommtsSJOil thts week that It
was ne,er Ill 'anyone\ consctousne"' that the Twm
Towers would fall . he underscored the temble truth. often
fcllgotten. that we now ltve 111
the Age ot the Unrhinkable
Se,lf~d mto our consciOusness
" that the Twm Towers could
and dtd tall - a~ could the
Emptre State Butldmg. the
US
C.lpllnl
and
the
Superdome Our chtldrcn
know. c~s we never betore
1n1.1gmed that passenger
~ pl.me~ may become gmded
mtssdes .md skyscrapers nt.~y
IUIII IIIlO 'l'Orched ruhhle
lslanuc ph.td h.ts mdecd
exp.mded our consc tousness
But tl we look hack on the
hlmkered bliss that ended wtth
the c,n,tstrophtc tnumph ot ,,
uesptCo~bk lslamtc conspnacy.
we Lllso sec the 'hmmg wellsptmg ot courage ,md sacn lice
the d.1y teve,iled It " pamtu l
to behold. but 11 h.IS ste,Jdted
and sllengthened a reelmg
II.IIHlll Whc~t LOUid ~ WOISC.
''"' .md ,, hall years latet than
to ".ttclt 11 sul lied by a pot~o­

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

The Daily Senhnel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2004

2004

Don't blame the heroes

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, May 2.4,

right?

destgncd on tile well known Ill the SUV." Curner satd ' I
scJenttlic ptc~c tt ce ot mulnply- don t want to be lower (than
mg the number of lamtly everybody else on the toad),
membcts by pt to re&lt;~ch the lookmg up and gett mg
.tppropttdte numbc1 ot bath- crunched'
rooms
In other words, tf everybody
It the rest of the world w,mts else downsized. she would.
to undetstanu us better. I rec- too Unt tlthen she\ nut go mg
ommend they see the new to put herselt 111 harm's way by
mo"e, Supers1ze Me!" It's a ~mg the poodle on a freeway
documcnt.uy about a guy who ot watet buffalo
edts nothmg but McDonald's
How c.tn the rest ol the
toad lot a month The mov1e world blame het 1 They would
rcmtorces what we Amencans do the same under the same
a heady know and have known Circumstam:es. acc01dmg to
tor ye.us F.tst fOod makes us another CNW suney In
I.tl dnd unheo~lthy The mo&gt;tcs Western Eutope 1espondents
shu"' too, th.n thts knowl- s.ttd 11" g.ts ptiCcs were low
edge makes no dtlferencc enough, they would buy SUVs
wh.11soeve1 Ill our beh.tvtot ,md btg scd,llts. JUst like the
We sl tll pull up to the golden Amctlli.lrb
dH.:he!-., hiC.IIhC 111 thlll 1!fCdl
Its kind ol .tlllllsmg."
dccp-lty ,uoma and otcier ,, Spmdl.t s.ttd "When we do an
s.tck ul cholesterol to go
lllleiiJ,liiUildl WISh ItS[, It'S
W l1y 1 For the s,une reasons tem,trkahlc how snmlar peowe· buy btg cars desptJe out ple c~tc 111 the kmds of thmg'
heanlelt concerns dbotll s.tv- they would like to get thetr
tng th e environment Mid h,mds on "
wc.tntn~
ourselves from
See 1 There It ts We would
Mtddle 'E."t oil because It he as responstble as the rest of
mdkcs us feel good, •and the world 1t we had the benehcc.lltse everybody else ' ' lit they do of htgh ga&gt; pnces.
doLllg 11
1 he low p11ce ol g,JS 111 the
Acto"
the
b.1y
111 United St.ttes ett.lbles our
Rllhmond. C.tlt l . at an Atco SUV mdulgenc~s To put thts
st.ttiOil S.mdt~l Cumet filled complex soct.il dyn.tmtc 111 the
up her ILJLJX Che'y Bl.~te t lm p.trl,mce nl the l.ttest psyeho$42 the othet d.J) "TillS " the logrcdl re,e.trch It 1s not our
mosl I've evet p,lHl,' she s,ud 1,\U it
ol the ~2.29 regular unle.tdeu
Thetetorc, siiJCe tht&gt; sttua' It' got to come down"
uon IS not ot our own makmg,
She 11 a mohtle not.uy pub- we should not have to pay
he from Ctstro Valley who htgher gas pnces and g1ve up
sometimes h.~&gt; to lt.IVel dS the btg-car life to whteh we
much '" 2(X) m1les m .1 day have become .tccustomed.
She " constden11g ch,ugmg .,.Thm would not be nght
lllUII..' tor her :-.crvtce:-. to cove1
And tf there " one thtng
the n"'mg pnu: ol g~;., but gas Amencans believe 111, 1t ts
"not yet expcns"e enough to dOIIH! \\&gt;hdl \ I rght
UHNCicl tl.tdmg 111 het Blazer
(;,;a, Rwn ~" a wlwruu.lt
I or ~omethmg smallc1 dnU fen
tire San Fr wrusco
more luel-etlictent. Maybe Cluvmc/e. Smd wmmenTI to
when 11 htts $2 75 a gallon, 'he he1 m wr~ of rlrr1 ne111pape1
or send !ret &lt;' marl at JOWl·
·t feel my daughter IS safer ncm@,fclrmrucle wml

Hemlock Grange meets
HEMLOCK GROVE Wmners 111 the "'Ft esh Apple
Bars" bak111g contest were
announced by CWA challm,ut Murl Bradfmd at a
recent mectmg ol the
Hem lock Gr,mge
Brad lord took I 11 st place 111
the contest with K1m Romme
winn111~ second place and
Helen UJvey thtrd place.
J1m ry. actmg master. conducting the meetmg wtth Roy
Grueser. legJslall~e chatrrnan,
gave a report on several agnculture tssues Btll Radford reported
on upgmdinjl shrubs and cleanmg
at the ~ock :&gt;pnngs A commlltee
was tomted and several members
wtll meet there to asSJst
Romme a'ked members to contmue tumt~ m rectpes tor tlte
Hemlock unmge wokbook A
graduauon c.trd w,ts re:KI fium
Donna Dav1dson. who w1ll gmdudle tium Rio Grande Commumty
College Romme and Op,d
Grueser d1scussed flowers and
flower boxes at tlte Gllutge H,dl

Action
from Page A1
"We can't ltx 11" he s.11d
""It IS beyond the kmd ot
equtpment we have to ftx thts
sort of thmg "
Mills cla11ns the property
has not been mowed 111 at
Je,Jst lour ye.trs Standmg 111
the tall patch ot gtass " · a
sw111g set wttll seats so fat
gone~i hat 11 " doubtful any
chtld has dmed to usto them 111
many years
A caret uI step through the
tall grass reveals two large
portholes which lead to a hidden storm dram The pm tholes are lltree or tour feet
deep ,md at least a yard
across The1r ct acked concrete cove" he ofl to the stde

A report ~as gtven on
Pomona Grange hosted by
Hemlock Gmnge recently and
plans were made for Hemlock to
vtstt Racme Grange on July 15
It was noted fhat members
Rosahe Story and Sylvta
Mtdk1ff have been til
Patty Dyer, county deputy,
was 111 attendance for Grange
lnspecllon, and dtscussed
Inspection and the spnng rally
to be held at Star Grange
May JS Nauonal Strawberry
Month, and Romtne used
"Strawberries" as the theme
tor her program, not111g there
were strawbernes m Greek
and Roman tnnes Most of the
strawbemes now come tram
Caltforma and Flond.t
Romme conducted a qUiz
about strawbernes wtth all
members p.trtJClpatmg, and
setved stmwbemes wtth dtps
She also dtstnbuted strawberry
rectpes and strawberry plants
The June meeung wtlfbe preceded by a fned chtcken dmner

Paul smd that pauems do
not h,\Ve to be referred to
them though A doctor c.tn
recommend another theraptst. but the patient can make
theu o~n chotce
··Must people thtnk th,ll
JUst because a doctor recom
mends a particular therap"t
tl1.1t they have to see that one
hut actu,JIIy the p.Htcnl hc~s
an optton to choose ~hue1er
they Wt&gt;h." Paul s~d.
Paul and Matt ,ue well
quahtied as phystcal ther.tptsts and have ,m cxten"ve
resume 111 phy"c.tl ther.tp)
P,ml has a bachelor ot science degree Ill phystcal therapy from Ohto U111vet&gt;tty
and extenstve ·adlal!ccd educatton"from the Um1erstty ot
St Augustme &lt;Fia) He "
w'orkmg toward hts doctor-

MASON - A ne" phySIcal therapy bu'tne~s 111
Mason will teature a h.mds
on" .lpptoach to phystcal
therapy, ottenng peJsonal
one-on-one attentton to thetr
pattenls
,
Paul and Matt H.trm
brothers who grew ltp tn
!
Metgs County. Oh10 \1 ho
have more than 20 years
expenence between them.
\
opened the1r phystc.tllher,lpy
I
oftice wtth the customet tn
mmd
'Many of the l,trget offiCes
that ottet phystcal ther.tpy
have asststants that g1ve the
therapy and pat tents don t get
to see th e .tctu.ll ther~ptst lor
very long." Paul satd
"We Will spend the entue ate
Matt h.Js master ot physi HSII wtth our patient. workcal
therapy
trom the
mg o ne-on-one With them
ot
Cmcmnat1
Unl\erstty
gtvtng them out undiVIded
attentton. alluwmg patient School of Phy"c.tl Ther.tpy.
and has an athlete tr,unmg
feedb.tck ·- he ddded
P.tul s.ud that he and Matt b,lckgrOLmd and an exerc"e
g1ve mstructton to thetr physiOlogy degree from
clients that helps them heal Ohto Umverstty.
Harm Phystcal Therapy
themselves
LLC
oilers general orthope"People want to heal. but
they don't kno" wh,ll to do dic. ncurologtcal. work •and Matt Harns. left and h1s brother Paul stand by a ptece of the
to tiealthemsel~es We locus sports related lllJLIIY therapy. equtpment they use tn thetr new phystcal therapy bus1ness
on educa!ton and show them spectaiiZing m manual them- that opened at 2180 Second St . Mason Both men have
py They accept_ patients ot extenstve expenence tn phys tc al therapy (Kandy Boyce)
how."' P,wl satd
Paul sa1d they ,u e countmg ahll dges and otferdevenuhJg appomtment only FDt .m nunibet t\l&lt;l 11e \l ill \\ork
to accommo ate t e
I'·
1
on word-at-mouth to grow ours
u 0 1 11
t
.lppollltment 01 mtotm.ttton. une-011 one. h.mds am .no\\liCe s
tetr cus omers
call 771 -9'\'\S Medtcc~td .111d ~d~e lrtsus 111.1chmes- not
thetr busmcss
The
new
bu,me"
"
loc.ltMedtc.ttc arc .tccepted
th,it "" \louldn t u'e machmes
· PhySJcal therapy tsn t ltkc
ed
,\1
21
RO
Second
St
111
d
medlctne Word ~ets around
Paul '"' th,lt thetc .tre 11 tit•'~ I ·It
. "' ll"'"·'~
"u,u· ' _
•.111u-•
Doctors g"e referr.tls by the Ma~on Houts .tre -1 30 to thtee thtngs that the) \\dill numbctthtcc the pallelll has"
gh peop 1e to k now .1 t10u1 t11em
success rate and sausl.lctton 8F 30
·' p m Monda)
d S
1th10u h
,' hl&gt;l'".. 1,, ,_,,, ,11t•'r•'
, , til''\
, ,., u"Ill
11u.1y
an
,\l
urt
·'Y
Y
.__
1
1
t&lt;&gt;
"''
p
.,
,
~
,
,
s-ttcl
.
ol thetr p,tlt~nts, P.tul s.Jtd
·Numuc:J one we cliC OCcl
;;;;
~
~

Report: Trustees of police, fire pension fund accepted gifts
DAYTON tAP! - Fm11
nnestm~nt compames spent
more than $200 000 mer
f1ve years on me,tls entettamment. galt and tr.tvel tor
trustee; ut the Ohw Pol tee &amp;
Ftre Penston Fund the fund s
statt. tamtly members .md
tnends. accord111g to an Ohto
Ethtcs CommiSSion report
Investigators have tound
posSible felony auu mtsdemeanOI vtol,nmns mcluchng
bnbet), havtng .tn unla\\ tul
mtercst 111 a public conll .tct
and theft 111 otltce. s,ud a
nme-page summary ot the
report obtamed by the
Dayton Dmly News
The commtsSJOil Still IS
lookmg tnto whethet the
gtfts and tnps tnlluenced
trustees to conunue domg
busmess wnh underperformtng investment advisers. sa td

Honored
from Page A1
dren ha\ e hopes and dre,mts
But to rea lize thetr dreams
to truly tultill the11 potenttal.
chtldt en must lt'e 111" wotld
that protects them · "Our
.tgency, he s,ud · "has the
responstbthty to protect children ,md we 1ely on you to
provtde th.tt d.uly supe t vtSJOn whtch ens ure the chtld's

ofthts .ue,l, why .tre they (the
nearby
"The ltabthty the v1llage VIllage) dumptng .111 thts tn
faces could be ungodly tf out back )'lid." Mills s.nd
some ktd falls 111 and gets "It thts mes; " not cle,med
hurt and the parents file a law up, I ~111 conl.lct the Ohm
stut," sau:l. Mtll s
EPA."
John Andet 'on. vtlldge
Mtlls demanded that vtllage co uncil temedy the "tu - ,Jdtnumtt.tlor, satd the vtll.tgc
atton thts week or he ~auld has dumped m the are.J. but
seek a legal remedy. After a emph.lltc.tlly demes that &lt;~ny
long week of patchtng hazmdous malen.tl hds been
streets, Krautter satd he dnd clumped there He smd debt IS
his crew were busy covenng from Sugar Run School Wds
nothmg but bncks and sutlthe portholes Fnday.
The cmToded remnants ot able ftll matenal
Two years ago, Mills s.ud
the Pomeroy Machme Shop
,md the old Sug&lt;~r Run he had some soli s.tmples
Schoo l decorate " nearby analyzed by the Ohw EPA
hlilsJde. M,ills clatms the vtl- whtch revealed met cuty btolage among others is dump- mtde, cadmtum, lead .1nd
mg along the htllsJde .md other hazardous thtngs Ill the
there IS probably asbestos &gt;Otl 111 the area Anderson
and other hazdrdous maten- countered th.ll sot I testmg ",,
very SCientlf IC th111 g th.tt
als 1n that dump stte
"Speakmg for the restdents mvolvcs more than JU St

the repott whtch uners
I&lt;j')!; through 2001
lnvestH!.ltors !!~1ve the
tepott 1,,~, week to Fr.mkltn
Count
Proseullot
Ron
O'Bnen . who ' ' mvesllg.llmg pensiOn ISSUCS
You Cdn conclude that
the re wete substdnttal payments made bj vendot' as
2ratu1ttcs tor events ,tt wh1ch
boa1d membets ,tltended. ·
o· B11en satd
Gm Bob T.tlt on FttddV
satd on Fnday th.n the vto l.illons need to be ptosel'uted
·To me. the abuses are
shockmg ,md teally amount to
"" outrageous dereliction of
public duty and are cause tor
real alarm and a renewed
sense of urgency 1rt enacung
penston refonn legtslatJon by
the end of next week," he satd
Taft asked the commtsston
safety and well bemg. By
opening your hearts and
homes to these ch1ldren you
have pl.1yed an mtegrul part
111 helpmg th em reahze theu
hopes and dreams ·
Soct,tl Wot ket Candtce
Walker read ,, poem titled
'Lntle Thmgs · Wllllen by
co-worket R.mdy Smtih 111
honor ot the Foster P,u ents
Slle .tlso thankeu S"tsheJ
.md lm ,tumllliStl,lltve s!.ttl
tor thetr support ot the Chtld
Wcll.tre statt Ill thett hdndltng ol ,, dliltCultjob
scoopmg up .1 lillie btt ol tlirt
.mJ. m,1kmg ,, piHIIle c,lll
Andel son sc~td hi' oll1cc IS 111
constdnt cont,11.. t w 1t h the
OhHt EPA whtch wmild
nc\CI .1llow such VIolations
·II lot one mulllte they
thought somethtng ltke thts
\~ods gmng on 111 PomeiO).

they would be on us pretty
h,ud ," he s,ud
Mills \\,tnts the "ll.1ge to
cle.u out some ol the mote
dan~ctous Items 11om the
lnll;~ue ltkc ,, l.uge dtsc,uded
metal t.mk th.n held or holds
unknown cllcmtcals. and
then covet the .tre,, wtth a
few l.tyets ol top sot!
Anderson " spe.u head mg .m
eltmt to e,tse tratttc llow uno
the Monkey Run ar~.t and as
I ill d11t LOilles .tv.nl.tble ftom
thts and other proJeCts 111 the
vtlla~c. 11 wtll be spread on
'

to mve-.lti.!ale

~ttter

the

lte\\ ...,_

papet 1eported th.ll llustet•s
spent 561::!.-151 on tt.tvel
bet\\een llJ9S and mtd-2003
The Iund tssued ,, statement on F 11d d"V :-.d\ Ill~ 11

could not wmnient rin tindmgs tlt,lt tndtc.ttc posstble
utmnMl ch.trge" It J1U s.ty.
ho~e\et th.tt thete ,1ppe.ued
to be a mtsunclctst,llldlllg Ill ,1
couple ot InstdnLes

"The ptcscnt.t!lon
ot
tecetpts will cl.utly these
mst.mces .mel mdtL,Ite th.tt
took
nothtng
tmptopet
pl.tce."' the st,ttement s.ud
The fund ,tlso noted that 11
has re\ tsed etht cs .md govetnance pohctes and regui.Jttons covenng trustees .llld
staft

The commtsston's summ.try docs not tdenufy the people and compa111es that ,ue
SwiSher and Child Welt are
Soctal
Worker
Amy
Cremeans then tecogntzed
the folio\\ mg Foster P.uents
b) presenting them "nh a
cer111tcate ot .tpptect,mon
Woody .utd M.tty Ann C1ll
Tun .tnd Amy ll.1ve'
Cledllh Kmg. K,ire n Lc-tg 11.
Nell Ktellt ,md L\ nn
Lowery: Steve .tnd Pcitn)
Lunuv, Rhonu,1 M.tcc·. J\&gt;lm
and - VtLkte MLCI.tske)
G.my
.tnd
Sh.n1 11
Montgornet y. Anthonv .utd
Cmdy Ro"e Je11y '"'~
the htllstde
Dcpendmg on )OUt po1111 ol
VJCW, thCit.:

I~

C!lhCt ,t ~edo.,l)ll­
wetldnd on one

,tJ . . wLtmp 01
end of the lteld Mills s.nd
tillS ts a wetl,md necess,ny 101
de;msm!!. &lt;.:hl..'tntl,th irom
\V,tteJ cl!'. ... It f1•h'-t':S th!Oll g:h [0

the Ohto Rl\et. Also. \\~!­
land~ ~uc ~m tllleg1.tl p.ut ol
the wtldllk h.tbtt.ll Fn11nct
Pomeroy
M.tyot
Vtl'llll
Young Ill satd thts "" 1\\.tmp
lh.tt shoulu be ur.uned
belLlllsC 1\ lOUid b~ a b!Ct'dlllg
grounu tot mosquitoes wh tdt
sprc.tti West Ntlc Vtrus
Musser
s,ud
Jet lets
Ext,l\diHHI wilt dt.un the
"'"'mp .1nd pm 111 dt.nnagc
L

Bulthc 1cpo11 dct,llls some
e\ p~n ... ~ . .

-

r\

IllLiudtng.
recel\ed IIel'

t1u~tee

,_u1 Lm~

lndgtn~ mc.tl"- .tnd
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·------------ ·- - - - ----

�OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

1

Tuesday, May 25
Moming (7 a.m.-Noon)
It shou ld be a cloudy morn-

ing. Temperatures will climb
from 67 to 83 by late this
morning. Winds will be 5 to
. I 0 MI'H from the south turning from the southwest as the
morning progresses.
Ajternoo11 (I p.m.-6 p.m.)
It should be a breezy. humid
and cloudy afternoon. There
is a slight chance of rain.
Temperatures will hover at
85. Winds will be 10 to 15
MPH from the southwest.

•

Monday, May 24, 2004

Wolves even
up with Lakers

Peggy Moore. regent. Mary Rose, vice regent , Mary Powell and
Patncia Holter are pictured with Donna Jenkins, who took DAR
members on a tour of the Meigs Elementary School.
Ohio public school enrol l- Ashley. historian: Rae Moore,
ment totaled 1.8 million this registrar; Mary Rose, librariyear.
an; Betty Milhoan, correPauline Atkins. chair of the sponding secretary.
nomina ting committee. preTh.e new officers will be
sented a slate of officers for installed at the June 12. meetthe 200-l-2006. The new ofli- ing which to be held at the
cers elected · were · Pat Holler. Cleland Farm, 33616 Dexter
regent : Mary Powell , vice Road. Langsville.
regent' Karen \Verry, treasurBrunch was served at the
er; Carol Sisson. chaplain; Meigs Elementary School by
Anna Cleland. rec~ q sec- the
hostess
committee:
retary; Pauline Atkins. assis- Atkins, Jenkins. and Sharon
tant recording secretary: June Jewell.

Thousands of Ohioans
remained without power following two days of punishing thunderstorms, and the
National Weather Service
said more rain expected to
hit already soaked soil could
worsen tlooding in parts of
northeast Ohio.
Another round of thunderstorms hit Cuyahoga County
just before midnight, but
Cleveland
meteorologist
Frank Kieltyka said he wasn't expecting anything ·a1;
severe as Friday . and
Saturday's storms. Many
counties remained under a
·flood watch.
Waves of thunderstorms
packing heavy rain, hail ,
lightning and damaging
wind on
Friday and
Saturday toppled trees into
home s and cars, closed
roads and flooded basements.
''The soil over much of
no rthern Ohio just cannot
handle any more rainfall ,"
meteorologist Mike Dutter
of the agency's Cleveland
otlice said on Saturday. "If
any thunderstorm stays over
an area for even a short period today, there could be
some tlash flooding . It could
be a very dangerous situation.''

,.

•
I
I

·

In the Columbiana County
village of Leetonia, crews
packed sandbags around
downtown businesses on
Saturday as streets flooded
with water from nearby
Little Beaver Creek. The
barrier helped limit the dama~e mainly to !nuddy floors.
F1re
Ch1et
Kenneth
Garlough said.
"It could get worse if we
. got real hea vy rains again,''
he said . "You can only sandbag so much ."
Basements filled with
water and firefighters had to
rescue at least two motorists
from fast-rising wa_ter.
Garlough said .
Columbiana County residents were advised to boil
water as two wastewater
treatment plants were overwhelmed.
ln Medina County, about
five or six homes were evacuated in the village of Gloria
Glens Park as Chippewa
Lake flooded, sheriff's dispatcher Pat Kennedy said.
The lake lloods several
times a year, he said.
About 7 3,000 northeast
Ohio homes and businesses
were still without power
Saturday night, down from a
peak of 400,000 customers.
FirstEnergy Corp. spokeswoman Ellen Raines said.
More than half are in the
Akron , Kent ,' Salem and
Alliance area, and might not
have power restored until
late Monday night or
Tuesday, she said. About
25,000 Cleveland-area customers could have power
back by late Sunday.
Crews had to clear
downed power lines before
they could start restoration
work, Fi'rstEnergy spokeswoman Darlene Johnson
sail!.
The utility was working
with the American Red
Cross to distribute drinking
water and ice in Cleveland,
Parma.
Solon
·and
Strongsville in Cuyahoga
County, and in Trumbull
and Mercer counties, said
Rob Glenn, spokesman for
Ohio
Emergency
the
, Management Agency.
American Electric Power
spokeswoman Terri Flora
said most central Ohio customers would have electricity restored by Saturday
even mg.

Ben Krampitz, 4, from 'Rocky River. jumps off a picnic table into
a flooded area at . Rocky River Park Saturday, while Quinn
Dennis, 7. also from Rocky River. gets ready to take a turn. The
fiooded area, wh iCh came after heaVy rainfall yesterday, made
a watering hole playground for about a dozen kids who were visiting the park. (AP Photo/ The Plain Dealer. Brynne Shaw)
. Lorain County commis- age estimate.
sioners mel in an emergency
In Ashtabula County,
session Saturday to declare · observers recorded 4 inches
the severely llooded county or rain over two days, Dutter
a disaster area.
said. Another heavy thun··we hope to get state dol- derstorm hit the rural southJars for the people affected east corner of the county on
by th e storms," Lorain Saturday, while downtown
County
Commissioner Ashtabula was sunny.
David Moore said.
In southern Cuyahoga
The current on the Rocky County. about 30 businesses
· River ripped loose dozens of along
the
flooding
docks and tethered boats and Cuyahoga River had to close
pitched them crazily down- because of the rising water,
stream, some all the wav out Glenn said.
to Lake Erie , where ·they
Cuyahoga Valley National
were chased down by U S. Park, which last vear had to
Coast Guard boats.
repair massive siorm damAbout 25 boats were age, canceled a river cleanup
mashed into q mangled Saturday because the work
tlotilla resting against train areas were . flooded, spokestrestle supports just south of woman Mary Pat Durley
the Cleveland Yachting said. Crews were assessing
Club.
the damage and park offiCoast Guard officials said cials closed the Ohio and ·
as many as I00 boats came Erie Canal Towpath Trail.
loose and dozens were
The flooding also candestroyed or damaged by the celed an appearance by Gov.
churning waters. The Coast Bob Taft to promote Ohio
Guard did not have a dam- tourism.

CHICAGO
Jeff
Cunningham. Kyle Martino
and Michael Ritch each
scored and the Columbus
Crew upset the Chicago Fire
3-1 on Sunday.
Columbus won its second
straight after starting the season 0-3-2. The Fire is winless
in its last three games (0-1 -2),
but remains tied with the
MetroStars for first place in
the Eastern Conference. ·
Cunningham opened . the
scoring in the 32nd minute
with a penalty kick past the
late,-diving Fire goalie Henry
.R1ng.
Damani Ralph tied it in the
·49th minute. beating goalkeeper Jon Busch from J0
yards out. Andy Williams and
Chris Armas set up the goal.
Martino gave Columbus a
2-1 lead in the 55th minute ·
on a solid individual efto11.
Martino carried the ball
through traffic befnre passing
,to Ritch . who bouncing
return pass left Martino ili one
against Ring.
Ritch scored his first-career
goal in the 59th minute. Erik
Denton passed to Ritch inside
the 18-yard box before colliding with Chicago defender
Jim Curtin and Ring. leaving
the net open for Ritch .

.,~;~~~

TEMPERATURES
f~t~~-. ARE RISING SO
·~r"' --~- ARE OUR RATES
'

Flesch wins
at the Colonial

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•

-I,.II:"DE"

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Even without injured Sam
the
Minnesota
Cassell.
Timberwolves h&lt;~d the eneroy
and attitude to even the
Western Conference finab. ·
.
Kevin Garnett scored 24
· points and· Darrick Martin
had 15 points and six assists
in place of Cassell, leading
the Tiinberwolves to a 89-71
victory over the Los Angeles
Lakers in Game 2 Sunday
night.
Latrell Sprewell scored 17
points and Wally Szczerbiak
had 16. but the Wolves relied
on their MVP to put away a
game dominated by good
defense and bad feelings.
There were seven tec hnical
fou ls and severa l trash-talking staredowns in the fourth
quarter. Karl Malone was
ejected with 2:31 left for a
tlagrant foul on Martin.
Garnett cl'osed the third
. quarter with a 3-pointer that
helped Minnesota hold off a
one-man rally by Kobe
Bryani. who scored 27 points
and brietly roused the Lakers
from their game-long slumber.
But Minnesota \:Oach Flip
Saunders had called it a
must-win game. and hi s players responded with all the
passion Los Angeles lacked
- and Cassell. who played
just 43 seconds hecause of
his aching back. sure ly loved
his teammates' tou~hness in
the chippy finalmillUtes.

College Softball- NAI~ Tournament

Rio holds off St. Xavier to advance
STAFF REPORT

sports@ mydailytribune.com
e

~

DECATUR, Ala. ·_ The 'Universiiy
of Rio Grande Redwomen softball
team held off a late rally by the St.
Xavier (Ill.) Lady Cougars to win 4-3
to advance in the loser's bracket of the
NAIA National Tournament held at
Wilson Morgan Park on Saturday afternoon.
Rio Grande (39~ 13) advances to play

at 2 p.m. on · Monday against No. II
seed St. Scholastica (Minn.).
Sophomore pitcher
Stephanie
-Broccolo lasted six and a third innings
to get the win. Bmccolo (14-9) struggled at times, walkipg live. She yielded
only four hits and one earned run in
earning the victory. The Rio defense
had two costly errors to make the game
close.
Fellow · sophomore Andrea Lotycz
came on to get the final two outs and
collect her fourth save ~f the season.

Senior center fielder Krista .Tucker
and 1ophomore right !Ieider Jenny
'Oiding swung the big bats fur the
Redwomen . Tucker 'lammed tv. o
home runs and drove in three and
Olding pounded her II th long ball of
the season.
,
Tucker's two-run blast in the tilth
inning made the score 4-0 and · pro1·ed
to be the difference .
St. Xavier (36-24) mounted a comeback with a run in the sixth and two in
the seventh before Lotycz carne on \o

•

FORT WORTH. Texas
(AP) - Another lefty won
the Colonial on Sunday, and it
wasn ' t the Masters champion.
Steve Flesch. the only
golfer with four straight
round s in the 60s, wasn't hurt
by a late bogey and won the
Colonial by a stroke over
Chad Campbell.
A closing 3"under 67 came
on Flesch's 37th birthday, and
his winning total was 11 under 269.
It was just the second PGA
Tour win for Flesch, and the
victory came a w~ek after he
withdrew frorrt the Byron
Nelson
Championship
becau se of a sore back and
mental fatigue.
'Campbell, who charged
into a tie for the lead with a .
course
record-tying
61
Saturday, made a 5-foot
birdie putt at the 433-yard
18th, and finished alone in
second after a closing 68.
Stephen Ames had the best
round of the day. a 64 that put
him in third place at 271.
Craig Perks (68) was
tounh , hi s best finish ; ince
his only win at the 2002
Players Championship .
J

ptll out the rally. Maura ~yan led the St.
X attack "-'ith two hits · and an RBI.
Meli ssa Romano and Rhea Mina.s also
had RBI hits fo1 the Lady C&lt;;&gt;ugars
Stacie'Eschm:lnn 1!8- 71 took' the low ·
f(&gt;r St. Xa,·ier.
Rio Grande had six hitl for .the game.
St. Xmier was eliminated from the
tournament. after bea.ting Athens State,
3-0 and losing to No . .! seed Mobile 52 prior to losing to Rio.
Rio tood Sunday off before the
match-up today. St. Scholastica is -ll-6.

Lidle shuts
out Astros

as Reds
•
•
w1n aga1n
BY JoE KAY
Associated Press
CI:-JCINNATI - The best thm~ tu do with the
Cincinnati Reds right nov. is just get out of their
w:w.

Cory Lidle pitched his third care~r 'hutout and
Ken Grirtt~y Jr. hit a two-run homer Sunday. leading the Reus to their fifth straight win. 7-0 over
the Houston Astros.
The Reds have won eig ht of nin e. pulling into
first place in the NL Central with their heSI surge
of the season. They opened the day tied with the
Astr&lt;h and the Cubs.
Eve rything is going their way t&lt;'r now. Their
broken-bat llares find a hole and their opponent,·
line drives find someone\ ~lol'e.
"I think we're right on tr~1ck ... said Lidlc . who
. gave up only six singles. "I don't think there are
very many teams that want to face LIS right now."
The fiye-game winning streak matches their
best stretch of last season. when they lost · 93 .
games and traded away many of . their stars at

Crew put out
Fire in 3-1 win

Tyh:ir Fryar, 12,
his first turkey,

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Kenseth wins Challenge, Page 82 ·
MLB boxscores and standings, Page 86

2004

ASSOCIATED PRESS

DAR tours new Meigs Elementary School
RUTLAND - A tour oft he
new
Meigs Elementary
School highlighted a recent
meeting of Return Jona.than
Meigs Chapter. Daughters of
the American Revolution.
Donna Jenkins, a teacher.
served as the tour guide.
Approximately 900 students attend the elementary
school , according to Jenkins .
The DAR commended all
three districts on efforts at
upgrading and improving the
county's school systems and
congratulated them on providing the facilitie.s and
instruction for all students to
meet their educational goals.
· Anna Cleland, DAR memher, said that a recent
announcement by the State
Budg'1t Director projected a
$108 million shortfall in the
budget due to an unusually
high student enrollment.
However. the Director has
said he will be able to work
with the General Assembly
and State Controlling Board
to close the budget gap by
JUJ1e 30 so that no ;chool in
Ohio will get shortchanged.

Monday, May 24,

INSIDE -

BY CARRIE SPENCER

,
winJ, from the west.
Moming (7 a.m.-No011)
E•·e11i11K (7 p.m.-MidlliKht)
Temperatures will rise from
Thc•rt• is a slight d1ance we
74 to 8 1 bv late this rnomin~. could ~cc
some
ram.
Skies will-be sunny to clouJy Temperatur~ .s wi.ll drop from
with 10 to 15 MPH winds 8-1 early this evening w 70.
from the west turnin~ frllm Skies will be dear to partly
the southwe.st a~ the nlurn111g· cloudy with 5 to 10 MPH
progresses.
winds from the west.
Aftemoon ( 1 p.m.-6 p.m.)
Ovemighl (I a.m.-6 a.111.)
Expect a couple of rain Temperatures will linger at
drops around the area. 66 with today's low of 65
Temperatures will hold steadv occurring around 6:00am.
around 85 with today's high Skies wit! range from mostly
·Of 86 occurring around dear to mostly cloudy with 5
· 4:0Gpm. Skies ~ill range MPH winds from tht· west·
from mostly sunny to mostly turning from the south as the
cloudy with I0 to 15 MPH oYcrnig ht progresses.

'

Rain not over after three
rounds of damaging
storms soak northern Ohio

annel

Monrlay. May 24

P~geA6

miUsea.-.,nn .

The Astros have lost a season-high four in a
row. knocking them out of first place for the first
time since April 2'1.
"Trust me. there's not a guy in this clubhouse
that\ worried." catcher Brad Aum1us said. "This
is a good team. Good teams have slumps during
the season."
·
Lidle (3-.J).stnlck out four. walked two and hit
Craig Biggio a:-. he got hi .~-, fir\l victory ~ince April
n. The Reds turned three double plays behind
the right-hander. who has three cnmpl~t~ games
this season.
Lidlc 's other t 11 u ~hutouts callle for OakidnJ in
2002.
A talk with Hall of Fame catcher Johnll\ Bench
a few days ago helped Lidle figllfe oL~t 1i·h1· he's
been so inl'onsi-.,tcnt this -.,eas(ln on~ :.:ouJ out ing inevitably follo1wd by a b~1d on~ Bench
shows up at the Rc·Js' park Llc'L'&lt;"i&lt;Hlallv. and
Liclle had never 111~1 him .
·
".1 told him I thought I ll'as thr"11·ing the ball
pretty goult.' but thi11g~ ~\cren't going my \~ray:·
Lidlc said. "It '"" frustratin~ . He told me that I
Cincinnati Reds pitcher Cory Lidle delivers against the Houston Astros in the first inning in Cincinnati
Sunday. (AP)

Northcutt signs new deal
then be on the field
when the Browns
resume their fourweek voluntary quarterback school. He
missed la;t week's
practices and was
excused from the
team's recent mini -

BY ToM WITHERS
Associated 'Press
CLEVELAND - Wide receiver Dennis
Northcutt, who was denied free agency
"'(hen his agent missed a deadline this winter, agreed to terms on a new, three-year
contract with the Cleveland Browns on
Saturday.
.
Financial terms were not immediately
known, but Northcutt had been seeking a
deal worth more than $3 million per season.
He had been scheduled to make about
$700,000 per season · over the next three
years.
Cleveland's top playmaker the past two
seasons, Northcutt expected to be a free
agent in March. But his agent, Jerome
Stanley, failed to file the proper paperwork
in February that would have voided the
final three years of Northcutt's original
seven-year contract with the Browns.
After weeks of negotiations, the sides
finally reached a deal on Saturday.
"[am very pleased that we have been able
to resolve Dennis Northcutt 's contract situation and have him return to the team,"
Browns coach Butch Davis said in a statement. "Dennis .is a versatile player who is a
threat to make great things happen every
time he touches the ball on offense and as a
punt returner. "
Northcutt will sign hi s deal Monday and

camp.
After months of sometimes nastv dialogue between him and the Brown ,,
Northcutt was relieved things worked out
so well.
,
"Words cannot express how happy I am
to get this matter behind me,'' said
Northcutt, who has been working out at
home in Los Angeles . "The last three
months have been very difficult, but all is
well that ends well.
.
"The fans in Cleveland are so loyal and
special, and 1 want everyone to know that I
am proud to be a member of this franchi se.
I have a lot of respect for my coaches and
teammates. and I can' t wait to step on the
field again this Monday." ·
Northcutt had a team- and career-high 62
receptions for 729 yards and two touchdowns last season. The four-year veteran
also averaged 8.2 yards on punt return,, hut
didn't take one all the way back after having two punt returns for TDs il1 2002 .

--- ·- ----

Please see Northcutt. B2

Please see Reds. B2

Prep Track

County athletes
advance to
,regional meet
STAFF REPORT

sports@ myda&lt;lytribune.com
PROCTERVILLE - Gmng inlll the final day of the
Division Ill district track meet. Eastern\ Ross Holter and
Darren Scarbrough a! read) earned thei r 'PotS . at the·
regional meet in Lancaster beginning Tuesday.
Holter and Scarbrough were not through.
The duo, who already qual ified in the discus willdirst
and second place finished respccti l'ely. done so again in
the shot put. Holter was third with a throw of 46-foot01.5, while Scarbrough wa' fourth t-l'i-11.25 ).
Also ad1 ancing for Eastern. Kel'in Marcinko finished
third in the long jump (I g- 11 ). while Chris Da,is was
fourth in the 3.200-meter run 1II :35) The Eagles -lx 100
relay team of Anthon) Crites. Bryce Honaker. Alex
McGrath and EJ Beattv fini,hcd four.
On the girls' sicle. Ea&gt;tnn's Jcn Ha yman advanced by
finishing sCC\lilU in the 8011-mclcr run i2:JH.2 i.
t\1cig:~htlllone runner tn advanL~ tn the n:gion.:tl meet at
the Di1 ision II clistric·t finals .
Ashley Samar came in th ird in the J (l() hurdles (51 .6).

�Monday, May 24, 2004
Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, May 24, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

NASCAR

Sentinel CLASSIFIED

,Lightning, Flames await
improbable Stanley Cup final
ALAN ROBINSON

Assor1ated Press

Kurt Busch (97) . Kasey Kahne (16). Jeff Gordon (24) Stertmg Marl1n (40), Joe Nemechek (01)
and Kevtn Ha rv1c k (29) s ltde and crash at Lowe's Motor Speedway on Saturday dunng the
NASCAR Nextel All-Star Challenge 1~ Concord. N C. (AP)

Kenseth passes Newman
:to win All-Star Challenge
BY

KEITH PARSONS

Associated Press

CONCORD, N C. - Wtth
$1 1111lhon on the !me. M.llt
Kenseth showed just ho\\1
aggressive he can be
He moved n ght to the rear
bumper of R} Jll Newm.1n but never touched htm - and
then drove past wtth lour laps
· leti to wm the Nextel All-Star
· ChallenQe on Saturdav m~ht.
When' ll was over.· Kc7lseth
stepped out ot ch&lt;tractcr a btl
anti cdcbt .tied by domg
doughnuts by the limsh lme
wtth hts Ford
"'A mlllton bucks. boys! .. he
screametl to hi' crew ovet the
two-way radto ... You gu}s we
t he best.I""
Kenseth be,tt t\ewnw1 by
about live c,u-length,, wtth the
Chevrolets of Tony Stewart.
Mtchael Waltnp .md D.tle
Earnhardt Jr roundm~ out the
top live
'
_ Newm ~m
~lll p1 ismgly
eschewed a pil stop before the
final 20-lap segment, .md the
rest of the leaders changed four
tires. Even v.!lh Ihal adv.mtage,
Kenseth had a hard ume making the dectstve pass.
He med a couple of umes 10
get below Newman. but couldn't complete the move. Fmally.

commg oft Turn-+ wllh lour to "' were forceu to the gatage
go. Ne\\ mdn ~ Dodge begdn to for 1he 1est of the mght That
sit de SJde11 ays. \1 htch \1 ;b the IJSt tncludeu Biftle. Busch.
onl y opcnmg Kenseth needed. Ke' in Hal\ ick and Sterling
· I fU SI saw hun sltppmg off Mat lm. who ~ot into the AII -+. ~o I lll'-l got 11 ght on hun:· Stm Challenge by v.inning the
Kcnseth s,ud .. , Wds .tble to get p1ehtn1tMI)' fdCt'
.. , don't underst,md what
by then ··
•
happened
."
Bifne
said
The Jefending Nextel Cup
champ had only one vtctory "You·,e got lo fini sh the race
Juring hJS con set vatt ve run to first , and he wrecked us on the
that title. but he came 11110 2004 strmghtaw~1y.
.. He took out the whole tield
seemtngly detet mined to alter
Ius inM!le. He won two of the If I 1\,Js (team owner) J.tck
tiJSt three races 111 dommaung Roush. I don ·t know what f"d
fas hton. then struggled a b~t do ..
Busch took the hl,nne
qver the ne xt sever.il races
.. II was JUst .m all -star type
' He broke out olth,ll sl ump 111
hump: · he sat d .. , apologtze
a btg WdY
.. It feels good to come here tor all the wrecked cars on pll
to have such a roc ke t c.tr:· road. r ve got to get myself in
Kenseth satd ·Tm cxctted tor check. I guess."
Stewart won tlw lirst segthts millton bucks. and excned
tor all these guys on the crew ·· mem .•md the top etght were
Thts r.tce•os spill IIllO tl1ree mvened lor the second. 30-lap
segments. st.trting wnh 40 laps. ponton . whtch was won by
Ne,trlv hall the field was dam- Newm.m
.. ,, was just good racmg.
.tged ·e.trly. when Kurt Busch
tned to pw;h Roush Racmg Matt \ a good lncnd of mme:·
tedmmdte Greg Btftlc past Newman saH.l. .. We JUSt came
up a httlc short. JUst three laps
Ken seth on the IOth lap.
Instead. the contact sent shot1 ··
Jeff Gordon. who was
Btltle mto the outsu.le v.all at
the end of the tromstt etch. w1th involved m that early wteck.
a large port ton of \he tie ld brought hi s batteted car home
SIXth. followed by rookte
beanng Jown on htm
In all. II cdrs were mvolveu Kasey Kuhne. Elliott Sadler,
- mcludtng defendmg tace pole-sttter Rust} Wallace and
champ Jimmie JohtNJ11 - and Mark Mat1in

ThlS Stanle} Cup litul armed
like a Ltghtmng bolt from the
blue. a you-got-to-be-kiddmg
me Calgary '-'· Tampa Bay
matchup that mtght see the wmner ret.tin the cup tor far longer
than the nom1al one year ,
If 1hts mdeed ts the last time
·hockey\ most 'ptectous pnze ts
hol'tcd 111 celebral!on tor a few
years- and the NHL"s pendmg
labor talk&lt;vwtll dectde that - at
least the league picked a good
way to go out.
Compared td last year's
Anaheim-New Jersey sevengame snoozefest. where tmps
re tgned supreme and the rtrst
goal sometimes was the only
one needed to v.u1. thts final
should have speed. sconng,
end-to-end rushes. exciting
transttJonal play and a 1111ntmum of dumpmg and chasmg.
There are b1g stan;, too, even
1fthey aren't yet big names outstde of hockey's hard-core fan
base Jarome lginla, Calgary's
captam courageous. might be
his genemtton ·s Mark Messter,
a scorer and unparalleled leader,
and the Ltghtnmg 's small but
Indy car-last Martm St. Louts is
the likely league MYP.
The subp lots aren ' t bad,
either. There's Lightnmg captain Dave Andreychuk·s quest
for his first Cup in 22 NHL seasons at age 40, St Louis goi ng
agamstthe team that let htm go
and the league's No 3 oftense
(Tampa Bay) agamst tiS No. 3
tlctensc (Calgary).
Now, the quesl!on ts whether
anyone wtll be watching a final
that seems certain to be - Dare
the NHL say It? - entertaining
The first Canadian finalist in I 0
years ts pumpmg up interest in
the land where the span was

bom. but Calgary won' t help
ABC or ESPN land casual fan s
to whom lggy is an aging pop
star lrom the ·60s. not the
Ratnes· dynamtc lgmla
Sull. perhaps more so than
ever before, the Stanley Cup
tinaltsts and their home c!ltcs
are a story 111 themselves.
The Lightmng v.ere so bad
for so long that hockey fan s
once were as rare tn Tampa-St
Petersburg as snowflakes:
nobody ever dared call this
place Hockeytown. Now. tickets that once couldn ., be given
away can't be had. with the
Lightning tielding so many
phone calls dunng Saturday's 21 victory over Phtladelphia m
Game 7 of the Eastern
Conference final that thm
phone bank went out.
"I am not gomg to he to )OU.
there ·s no chance we thought
this would happen so quick."
satd Lightmng coach John
Tortorella, who has spent several seasons convincmg his players the Stanley Cup really could
come to the Sunbelt.
In the Great Whtte North of
Calgary, they never thought th1s
would happen so slowly.
'The Flames have been mostly
invistble since last winning the
Cup in 1989. missmg the playoffs tor seven stmight season&gt;
until this one Attendance
declined so dmmatically that the
Saddledome's uppermost seats
were covered with tarps, m1d
boosters held bake sales, raffles
and bmgo games to help sell
13,000 season tickets and prevent the team from moving.
.. Now. you can feel the buzz
m Calgary no matter where you
go," satd the Flames' Martm
Gel mas, known as "The Closer"
after sconng the dec:stve goalm
three consecutive series
The wmner of the most

1mprobable final smce longtime
loser P11"burgh matle "'
Stanley Cup debut agatn'i
below-.500 Mmn~ sota m 1991
mt ~ ht be the team that e,m soh e
the' other"' goah~ - ,md can
wm at home.
That "s been no problem fat
the Ltghtmng. who ,u-e 7-2 m
the arena tonnerly kno"n as the
Ice Palace. But Calgary i' a
remarkable 8-2 on the road
whtle eliminating •three 1·00poi nt teams Vancouver. Detro !I
and San Jose. and Tampa Ba)
awwts as a fourth consecutive
I00-pomt opponent
'They are relentless:· the
Lightnmg·s BrJd Rtchards satd
''They never quu. Thctr feel are
always movmg. m1d they arc
playmg wtth so much emotton
- and (with ) a great goalte."'
Both teams are relativeh
wtde-open in an era where
coaches talk endlessly about
puck management atld traps are
a way of hfe, partly because
thell' goaltes allow them to be
Tampa
Bay' s
Ntkolat
Khabibulin really has lived up
to his mckname as the '·Buhn
Wall," with a 1.90 goals·agamst
average that 1s exceptional but
not lower than Calgary goalie
Mukka Ktprusoft"s 1.65.
Spectal teams are a key. too.
and tmght be Calgary's most
vtStble weakness The Flame'
ha~e scored on only two of theu
last 32 power-play chances.
whtle Tampa Bay ts wmening
at an excepltonal 21.2 petcent
rate sim;e the playoffs started.
For the next 24 hours 01 so
though. both tean1s we 0\ erJOyed merel y tr be here. espectally with marquee teams such
as the Devil s. Red Wings
Flyers and Avalanche all gone.
·To say we were going to get
to the Stanley Cup. you know, ts
h,ll'd to belt eve, .. Gelinas sat d.

Winning Team

.

N~xtc l

Open at Lowe·s Motor
Speedway anll atlvancc to the
Assoctated Press
All-Stat challenge.
Ken Scht.tdct , who finished
CONCORD, N C - Kun nmth, won ,, fan vote to join
Busch admittedly n1.1tlc a mts- rvhu·ltn tn the tinale
take. and one of ht&gt; Roush
.. ,, got pretty wtld." Marlin
Racmg teammates and a bunch sa1U.
of other drivers paid forti
McMutray ea,ily won the
Busch tried to push Greg first 20-l.tp segment, which got
Biffle past Matt Ken seth on the ott tn an ugly st--tn v.hcn I I c(trs
IOth lap ot the Nextcl All-Stat ptlcd up as the gtccn !lag fell.
Challenge on Satun.lay night Mayfteld was one of tlto'e
Instead, the cont.tct sent Biffle mvolveJ. and he 1.tllied fwm
mto the outside wall at the end the re,u· ot the 25-car field wnh
of the frontstretch. wnh d large the front nf Dodge p&lt;llched
portion of the lteld beat tng together wtth tape anJ spdrC
down on him.
p.u ts .
In all. II cw s were in volved
Dui Jng a CdUlion beto1c the
- mcluding detending race fi nal I0-lap run, Marltn was the
champ Jimmte Johnson - &lt;tnd only one of the leaders v.ho
six were torced to the ~a ra~e dtdn"t change four ttres He
for the rest of the 111ght. That hst took a htg lead un the restat1.
mcluded Biffle. Busch, Kevin but a cautton tor a crash by
Harvick and Stetlmg Marlin. Kirk Shelmerdme ttghrcned up
who got in to the~ All-Still the field agatn.
Challenge by wmnmg the pre1hts tunc. McMutray beat
liminary race.
Marlm when the green fel l. and
"I don't understand whm Maytieltl took second They
happened,"
Btflle
satd ran nose-to-tail for two l&lt;tps
"You've got to fi111sh the race before Mayfield moved tn the
ftrst, and he wrecked us on the instde 111 Tum 4. m1d the two
straightaway.
Dodges banged· toget h~r
"He took out the whole field
They stayed side-by-stde for
If I was (team owner) Jack a full ' lap before McMurray
Roush, I don't know what I'd moved back ahead commg to
' do."
the white flu~ But he nearly
Busch took the blttme.
lost contml ot hts car- us dtd
"II wus just an ull·stur type Mayl"tcld - und Marltn drove
bump," he said. "I upologilc by both ·on the inside ll•r the
for ull the wrecked curs on pit feud ,
rottd . I've gut to get nty;clf 111
Murfin's
Dodge
hem
check, laue~~ ."
Muyti ~ ld by uhuut nvc cur·
• MARLIN WINS: Two length,,
new tires were onough ltl get
"Once we \turtcd gtlilllll!! on
Murl in to the big show - hltt'C· thcrna little. they ~ut to mcing
side-by-side," Murl in said. " I
ly,
He zoomed past teammate was like. 'Thi&gt; is what we wan t
Jamie McMurray and Jeremy here '"
The race was r~d-Jl,tggcd
Mayfield on the final lap
Saturday night to win the shnrtly .titer tile htg wreck on

.

J

'

KEITH PARSONS

•

Lap I Ctsey Mears. who started on the outs1de ot the Iron!
row. broke " tr.tnsmtsstun jUSt
past the gteen llag and was
pushed mto the outstde wall by
Mayfield
In the ensuing mayhem,
Kerry Earnh.tnJt. Brendan
G.tugll.HI. Rt cky Rudd, Jtmmy
Spencer. Je ll Burton. Scott
Rtggs. SchrdtlCt and Morgan
Shephc1d ,til wrcckcu. It was
pat1icul,uly
costly
for
E.trnhmtlt, the h.tlf brother of
Dale Earnhardt It , who had "
nde wllh Ri chard Chtldress
Racmg
'That was the ' hot1est r&lt;tce I
can eve1 Ieme111be1 being in;'
Spencer s&lt;tid .., don't thmk we
went even a thousand feet··
None of the dnvcrs mvolved
wetc lllfUred.
• CEI.EBRITY SJGHTINGS: Lenny Kra vnz. Edwm
McCam. Jultus Peppers and
Baron Davis - an eclecu c
group ot suu; - attended the
prerace dn vers' meet mg.
Kravnz was the grand marsimi and McCam was on hand
to st ng the nauonal anthem.
Peppers, a delenstve end for the
Carolma Panthers. and Davis, a
guard for the New Orleuns
Hornets, were guests of
Lowe's.
Nextcl COO Tom Kelly ulso
attended. and thunkcd the dri ·
vcN lor their help du ring the
compuny's tir\1 \Cll,OJI 11~ title
SJll!llMH' of NASCA I&lt;\ top
scncs.
"We 're us c~dtcd us we were
in the bc11inning. if Ill&gt;! more
so," Kcll~ saki. "We've come
to upprccmte the athleticism of
the unvers. and the passion
with whid1 you do whut you
tlo ··

Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Uke
NoOne
Else cant

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Sho~ld

(740) 446-7741

Run 7 Days

t

1

Northcutt
from Page B1
The Browns tncd to trade the 5-foot- 11 ,
175-pounder during the off-season and nearly had a deal done wtth Balt11nore. but Davts
decided agmnst making a deal to an AFC
North rival.

Reds
from Page B1
had to just wipe that out. It 's JUSt getting into
the right frame of mind."
Griffey hit hiS ninth homer - and 490th of
his career - in the fifth inning off Wade
Miller (5-4). who matched his season high by
giving up five runs in on ly tive innings,
Sean Casey hud three more hits, including u
solo homer thut ruised the NL's top uveruge to
.380. Austin Keurns singled twice und urtwe
in u puir of run~. extending his teur since he
returned from u hmke11 fureurrn .
Miller cumc in with guut.Jy career numbers
ugttirtst the Red~ _ 7· 1 in I) gumes. History
Wit&gt; no help ugu\nst uteum C11111 rull.
In the first two gume .~ of the series, the Ret.Js
knocked CJUt Andy Pettitte untl Roger
Clemens after five innings apiece. Miller wus
already kic king the gru" 111 tli,gu st as he
headed for the dugout after a tone-settmg fi rst
I.

inn mg.
He, too, was gone after the ftfth .
In the ftrst three games ot the series, which
concludes Monday night, Hou ston starters
have given up 12 runs 111 15 tnnings.
"Our pitching hasn 't crumbled, but our
starting pitching this senes hasn't done
great," satd Miller, who struggled with all of
~i s pitches. "Once we get hot, the whole team
ts gomg to get hot."
The Reds load~d the bases wtth one out in
the first on un infield ~ingle und u puir o~·
wulks. und Kearns singled softly l\l right field
for u 2·0 leud, Keurns cruckcd u bone just
ub&lt;&gt;ve his left wrist when he wus hit by Ryun
Voyclsung's pitch April 26. und hus gone (').
fur-17 In five sumcs since rcturnintz.
Juvicr Vulcntin hit u S\tlo homer in the
fourth, und Griffey hit u two-run slmt deep
into the seuts ir1 right l'i~ld in the l'ifth fm u 5·
0 leud . The homer left Griffey one behind
Fred McGriff li1r 21st plucc on th~ cureer list.
Cu,ey added his fifth homer off Bnmdon
Du~kworth in the seven th , leaving him 3-for·

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l.1k•• lour l'n\ 11j''!
ljm'lll•n•· ltu~ llru'
3 Bedroom 2 bath 3 car
de tac hed garage on 2+
acres Separate Ofi•ce plus
2 ntce Storage Sheds
(740)286·6336

FOR SALE
3 bedroom Brtck, 1 1/2 bath ,
1 acre lot Close to town
Reduced Phone (304)675
1714
3 bedroom 2 bath s on 4 3
acres In the Country. Scemc
vmw
$ 75 .000
Call
( 740 ) 709 _1166
:.:...:.::.:.:.:..:..:.::::.:_ _ _ _
3 bedroo ms, 2 bath ftreptace
1-1 12 acres Buckeye H11ts
Ad
$85,000
(740)709·
1166
- - -- - - - - 4 bedroom , 1·1/2 batil gas

hee1 Cl ' "''· wale' soheoo'
1700 sq It 132 Butternut
Pomeroy
$65 ooo
(740)992·3650
930 sq fl , 2 beOroo~ : 1
bath dry basement natural
gas. ctty water&amp; sewage
Corner tot, stze (52'X 124 )
on
General
Hartinger
Parkway N1ce area tor walk·
mg Interest rates now lowl

Call (742)992-3057

All real eeUtte advertising
In tl'll• newepaper le
eub)eet to the Federal
F•lr Housing Act of 1HS
which maktl It Illegal to
adnrtlte "any
preference, llmhatlon or
dlacrlmlnatlon btteed on
race, color, ~llglon, eex
htmlllal Sllllll or n111ional
origin, or eny lnttntlon to
m•ke •ny IUCh
preferenc:t, flmltltton or
dllcrtmln•tlon.'
Thll new1p1per will not '
knowingly ICclpt
a!lvlrtlttment• tar r11l
which 11 In
\llol•tlon of lhtllw. Our
re•dert ere 1'\ereby
Inform~ thlt •II
dwelling• •dvertlsed In
thil newspaper are
1\lllllble on an eqUII
opportunity bates.

••t•t•

BUSINESS

f-oomliT!lT&lt;O--:

/iff-~

© 2004 by NEA , Inc

Newly remodeled 3 bed·
room 2 lull bath 1 car
garage . on State Aoote 1n
Rac1ne (740 }949-2 136

Ntce 3 bedroom 1 bath
concrete dnveway carport
$49 .000
East
Bethel
Church Ad (740)441-9108
--------PI Pteasant1Sandh1tl Road
3B r 1Ba 1600/sqft Ranch on
6 acre level lot Oak lloors
1st house on R1ght past
Marshall
Un1vers1ty
$103000
(740)949· 113t
after 5 .00PM

www.orvb.com
Home Listings
Ltst your home by calltng

t740)446·3620
V1ew photosfrnlo anima.
Bedroom 2 112 Bath,
22 acres 3 Car Garage
n SR 554 Code 32&amp;04
r call (740)367·761 9
Bedroom 1 112 Bath .
1 77 acres 3 Bay Shed
~lso tor sale Camper,
scant Lot m Porter
Foda 33004 or call
740 )446·8626
Bedroom 2 Batn. R1ver
View/ Access Pnvate
Boat Dock 1n Galltpolls 1
ere lot Code 90303 or.

all (740)448·0531

23

bedroom neuse 1n
Syracuse
Oh1o
$450 00 montn
Includes
water and sewer $250 DO
depoSit (740 )949 2025

Tara
Tow,house
AparTments Ver} Spac•ous
2 Bedrooms 2 Floors CA. 1
1 2 Bath Newly Carpeter:l
Aault Pco1 &amp; Bab~· Poe
Pat•Q Start S385 Mo N c
3 bedroom br1ck fenced ,, Pets Lease Plus Secur ·•
yare garage 803 Broo•.re • Depos•t Requ•red
Days
Avenue
M•ddlepcn -40 446 3481
E .. enmgs
S4501pe r month Sec ... ' •IV 740-367-0502
depOSit and references
requ1red HUO approved Tw•n A1\lers Towe r •S accept
(740)446 4543
1ng applications lor wa1tmg
- - - - - ' - - - - hst lor Hud subs•zed 1 b r
3 oedroom
house
1n apartment
call 675·6679
Pomeroy S400 a mo $400 EHO
depos1t no pets 1740! 943·
\IFRI "II\
7004

"'N

Bedroom, 3 Bath, 10
~re s tn Bidwell Code
2104 or call \740)388·
j9839

IJ B~room, 2 Bath, 2 Car
~a raga, 1 9 acres on SR

~ 3 bedroom, 2 lull bath ,
laundry room , dtnmg room,
offJce, large 2 car garage
New roof sidtng &amp; waterltne
567 000 (740)256·6928

1,!.:.1

R1o Grande Spac1ous

Log home, 5 acres, 3·4 bedroom. 2 bath, huge kitchen
wloak cabmets &amp; iSland
coo~top flnl6hed basement
w/ga s log It replace +central
heatlatr, 30x54 heated work·

141 Code 33104 or call
740)446-7633

Beaut•lul nver v1ew •deal lor Mollol1an Carpet 202 Cia' •
Chapel Roao Porter Oh 1~.
one or •wo people N o pets
(7 40 )446-7444 , 877 930
3 Ulllt buddmg 2 busmesses reference~ (740) 441 -0181
9 162 Free Estimates Ea ~1
&amp; 1 apartment lor sa le
N1ce 2 and 3 bedroom hnanc•ng 90 jays sa"le a:,
L ~ateel
m
downtown
mob 1le homes lor rent cash V1sa Master Cil "1
Middleport
Excellent
Dnve· a I t' l&lt;? "-avf ,, c!
1ncome po ten!1al
Please Includes water sewer &amp;
trash
no
oets
sta
rtmg
at
call 740 354 _4 084
Thomps ons Ar. ~ .- ne e &amp;
5300 Per month •n snaae Repa•r-675·iJ 88 FJr ; a f
reqw red
L:YJ~ &amp;
area
depos•t
re·CO/"lOI!I Cned
o1 UIOrT'il tiC
(740)992 2167
washers &amp; ctrre s relnger a
~
- -- -- - - -tors
gas anj ele.:: tr c
2 7/10 acres Welchlown N1ce 2 bedroom mooile ranges a•r c on CI•t• o ner~ anc
No
pets
Ca ll
Road wooded not level home
wrmge r wa sh ers Wll! de
(7 40)446·2003. .·
$2 500 00 [600)563·3753
repaas on ma1o bla fl dS w
sllop or at you r home
Lot tor Sale N1ce level lot
AP.\R'I~Il:Xrs

t..--.:A,:;;L;;Ri;M;;;,;('ii'--"

/4«1

t..--·ffi·R·Jb·C•N'•r-_.1

4514 Days or (740)446- menls furnished and unfur ·
32 48 after 5
n1shed
secunty depos1t
requ~red no pets 740-992
Mercerville Lots to r sale 22 18
shared entrance olf Sl AI
218 3·13 acres PhOne 1
bedroom
apt
(740)256- 1825
Washer/ dryer hookup 5290
Two homes•tes lor sale Both
one acre m/1 3-1 /2 m•res
from Holzer H ospttal
620 Evergreen Ad , $19 500
560 Evergreen Ad $18 500
Call
{740)4 46-8840
or
(740)645-4513
Want to lease, Farm/
Acreage for hunting camp tn
MeJgs County area Call or
leave message (304)8 499238 or (304)849·5701

r

lO

HOUSES
FOR ib:r.T

Bedroom
House
w/attached 1 C!3r Ga·age
" - - - - - - - - - " GalliPOliS Ferry Bass Bel'ld
14x70 mobtle home fur· Area 5250 month (304)576
ntshed w1th all new turn•ture 2201
2 bedroom 29 ft ltvmg 2 bedroom house m
room, 2 bath 58 500 neg
M1ddleport S325 rent $325
740·256·9247 or 740-645· deposit no pets (740)992

shop S197 000, (740)245·
0670
9169

rent, depos•t requtred

No

~0_01_5 _7_4_0_.4_4 _1 _1 _16_4_ __

SALE

5039

Buy
or
sell
R.&gt;enne
Ant1ques 1124 East Ma•n
on SR 124 E Pomeroy 740
992-2526
Russ Moore

ML&lt;;CEt.t.18EOLIS
MF-RCHA~ll~E

1 bedroom stove and refr ig- 20 H P 46 · cu t auto low
erator lurntshad u!JfltlaS hours $850 1740)441 0756
a"!Ciuded $400 m&lt;lnlh plus
24 D•a sw1mm1ng pool &amp;
depOSit (740)245-5859
accessotJes. $700 Go-kart
2 bedroom JUSt past Holzer $250 Rot·Ttller $100 Old
$425 month Call (740 )441 Camp•ng Tra11er $150 1950
Dodge Pa rts Car, $150 Cal
11a4
- - - - - - - - - (740)446·6630 alter 6pm
Apts 1 &amp; 2 bedroom un turntshed Porter Ohio No CRAFTSMAN 18HP 44' cu t
pe ts Call belore apm 740· r1dtng mowar 5500 GE
367·7746· 740-367·70 15
reversible 16" w1ndow tan
new
$50
26"
mens
BEAUTIFUL
APA~T- Mounta1 n B1ke, $40 4 5
MENTS
AT
BUDGET cub1c foot chest treeze1

PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
·- , m 5344 10 $ 442
P
0% Down Payment osstble D'l y... 1 0
Walk to shop &amp; movieS Call
w/goOd cred1t approK1mately $625 a monlh for til lS 740 446 2568
Equal
beaul tlully restored 19!11 Housmg Opportun•ty
century home, 3 bedroom 2 - - - -- - - -bath, central a11 2 112 car CONVENIENTLY LOCATgarage stud1o apartment EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
apartments
perenntal garden, to many Townhouse
amen1ttes to liSt must see and/or small houses FOR
RENT Call (740)441·1111
call (74o) 992-5 8a3
lor apphcatton &amp; •nlormaiiOn

Moon£ Ho~Jio-s
FOR

r

Apr ox 112 acre 1n Porter
area All utthttes available
.\ 'lllVl E~
$15 000
Call (740)446- 1 and 2 bedroom apart· , _ _ _ _ _ _ __.!

1 bedrooF11 furniShed , a1r
condtl1oned
$300
per
month (740)446 1759

filii

,;(,;;'';.;:&gt;;:.;';;"';;..-.-

-s

Rl ' I \I..,

e11(740)446-1062

Rt~\T

- - - -- - - - - JSIO
HoL,, .Jlllll&gt;
3 bedroom 1 bath ho use
:...•~lor rent m Pomeroy Hue L_ _ _
accepted 5500 pel month
Gooa Used Appliance s
US 50 East Athens Oh10 1740)742 9964
ar c
45701 "Wh ere you gel your - -,-oo_m_s_&amp;_b-al_h_5_2_0_1_"_e_SI 8econd•l •on ed
4
Guarantee o
Washe rs
moneys worth
No pets $300 month 5300
Dryers
Ranges
ar .,
For sale or rent· 2 bedroom deposit {740)446-3945
Refngerators Some Slart a
mobtle homes start ng at
Newer 2 bedroom , duple)( 595 Skaggs Aopliances 7c
$270 per month Call 740
$400 month pl u~ depos•t V•ne St 1740 )J45-739E
992 216 7
and references Phone 740·
l1ke new W"'"t TIOOOI Nashe
Mob1le h01me and lot tor 245 5114
extra 1 a · ~w cap c•tv S165
l1ke nevv Ma~1 ag 1rver ext· a
large caoac•ty S175 Tv.1 "
bed 1ndud.ng ::.o,sor •ngs &amp;
central atr good cond1t1on
mattress 575 F .~ 11 s1ze oeo
101112 ut111ty shed on pror;:erw1th boxspnngs &amp; rnanress
ty Porter area $45 000 Call
$125 Queen s•ze bea w tr
(740 )446 4514 days and
boxbprl'lg &amp; manress 51
(740)44 6·32 48 atter 6
Ktng s•ze boxspr1nq &amp; rrat
tress
Sl50 ta r:le w1m 6
New 3 bed room 2 bath 2 bedroom mobile hom e
14X
70
m
M•ddlepor
t
cha1rs
$95 f1oral COllCfl
Only $1 059 down and only
$375
00
plus
depoSit
No
S95
chest·ol-drawers
w1 t!t:;
$209 89 pe r month Call
•ns•de pets (740)992 3194 J d[awers S60 c"esH'.:!·dra..,
Harold 740-385· 7671
ers solid wood 560 rtres&lt;:.
er
solid wood hgl1t cole•
N1ce 1992 Fa1r mont 3 bed 3 ~edroom mob•le nome for
room w1th central a•r w111 rent Hud approved ready S60
Skaggs A.J:' -I ,ances
help w•th deltvery Call N•kk1 June
In
V1nt on
t st
76 V•ne ::- trePt
(740)385 9946
[740)245·5&lt;140 (740)388·
(7401446 7398
9192

~eautltul 4 Bedroom, 3
Par attached 2 car unat·
ached garage with
ara ge apartment tn
alltpohs Code 42204 or

o\.J•\RT\Il-::..""1~

FUR

better see the oldest most
expenenced
dealer
1n
Athens County Since 1967
Coles Mobile Homes 15 26 6

Owner! Operators Wanted

PART TIME SECRITARY
SOCIAL WORK PROGRAM

"";;:'::.;::1

FUR SALE

1.,.--------"

1

•wl'" •

NOW HIRING A lead.ng
prov•der to md•vtOuals w1th
mental retardation and d•s
abtltttes ts look•ng lor d1rect
care stall •n the Gallipolis
area No expenence neces·
sary If mterested
call
Rhonda Ball at (740)4469676 An Equal Opportu mly
Employer

Bon
95 %us
No Touch Fre•ght

eel at any time EtrOf"l must be reported on the t1r1t dl'f of

will be rupona1ble for no more then the co1t of the ·~ce occupied by th• error 1nd onl y the fir•t•nHrtiGn W• sh•ll not be
1ny loss or upense th1t re1utts ffom the publication Of Dml1110n ot 10 ldlfertlt.emeflt COfrect•on ••II be m1 de In the first •n•l•ble edrt•on • Bo•
are •h••J'S c011fldentl•l • Current r.te card
All r.a! n~t• sdvertiMmenll 1re subtect to the F.deral Fan HO\.ISing A.t:t ol 1968 • Th•• r
at:c:eple 011ly help wanted sds mMUflg EOE stancl1rds We will not ~wtngly accept any advert1s1ng 1n vlol•tion ol thel1w

6334

2 Sel11ement Opttons patd
weekly
Home Weekends dom1Ctle
m Ca nton Oh10 S1gn -On

an~

Tribun•Sentlnei-R~Ister

Med1 Home Health Agency
Inc seeking a full·t•me ana
PAN AN s and a PAN
OccupatiOnal Therap1st for
the Galhpolts Ohto area
Must be licensed both 1n
Ohto and West V1rgm1a We
offer a compet•t1ve sala ry,
beneftt package tor full·t1me
and 401K E 0 E Please
send resume to 352 Second
Ave GallipoliS OH 45631
Ann 0 1ana Harless Clinical
Manager o r call 1 800 481

Post•ng Date May 19 2004

mBuv

POLICIES OhJO Valley PubliShing resertH the ngtrt to edit, rated, or cancel

Hn.P WAN'IID

NEW PAY SCALE!!

•Min of 1 year exp
·Med•call ns 401K
• Dom1c1le 1n Canton OH
Found Black Lab 6 months •S•gn·On BQnus
old weanng a collar Purple •36 cent per mde to start
spot s
an
hts
tongue ·95% No Touch
740 389·0158
•NO FORCED NYC
freight
WMflm

Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays Paper

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

.~10

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
{1~.
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Start 'lour Ads With A keyword • lndude Complete
• Ads

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Word Ads

The 0 0 Mclnty{e Park
D!stnct ts now acceptmg
ParameDICS
&amp;
EMT s applteattons lor Day Camp
Boarder Colhe mtx puppies,
needed
App ly at 1354 worker s Must be available
~740)9 92 6079
June 14·25 an d be wtlllng to
Jackson P1k.e. Gallip&lt;Jits
work w•th Child ren ag es 4-10
Free K1ttens•1 Please call
years
of age Also seek1ng
(7401388-0867
AVON • All Areast To Buy or
summer help for park mainSell
Shirley Spears 304
ten ance Must apply m per·
Free k1ttens hOuse broken
675· 1429
son For more 1nformat1on
Call (740)446 1934
contact Mark Dsnner at 740·
Class A CDL Driver&amp;
446-4612 ext 255
Lmer tratned mother cat and Wanted
POSITION
8 week old kttten Call
ANNOUNCEMENT

At one pmnt, a frustrated Stanley insisted
Northcutt would never play for the Browns
agam
Stanley also ftled a gnevance agamst the
club wtth the National Football League
Players Assomtt1on, saymg the ~rowns dtd
not bargam wtth Northcutt 111 good ta uh and
had breached his contract.
However. the NFLPA never supported
Northcutt's clatms .

1\egister

Sentinel

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
..,
ax "'_..:.l7~o;..:.
.o
92-2157,
..,....c_a_I_I_T_o_d_a_v_._··__!!!..~a.:.."'o,. 17401 44.,.,..3: : ,_ _ __5!_Fr ___
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234
1 !:=-=...:.:.:.;_..._

5 a-week oJ(j kittens 4 male
and 1 female , black &amp;wh•le
1 female cal to a
good
home (740)992· 151 0

The Metgs Juntor Varstty Softball Team ftntshed thetr season wtth 11-3 record and 7-1
agatnst TVC opponents on the team are left to nght, front, Kasey Wmter, Jenna Wtlt.
Amanda Kmg, Jenm Cade. and Cectlta Core: second row, Meghan Leslte, Natasha Wtse ,
Ashley Baylor, Jenny Bowles, and Jenmfer Smith, and back, Coach Dartn Logan , Whttney
Smtth, Heather Etam Cha!s1e Manley and Amber Burton Asststant coach, not ptctured , ts
Kevm Logan

1.1.-op Counh OH

WeCov•.-..4~

Meigs~

C·1 'seer Carry Out perm tl
lor sale Chester Townsh•p
Me tgs County send letters
al tn te rest to The Daily
Senltnel PO Box 729·20
Pome r&lt;1y, Ohto 45769

Busch bumps Biffle, starts 11car wreck in All-Star Challenge
Bv

ister

~ribune-

NHL

BY

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentrn~l.com

$60 [740!379-2426
c__:__c__ _ _ __
Easy Go Elec Golf Cart w1th
h
E
11 t
d1
c arger ~~:ce en con • •on
$1 eoo Call (740)645-4485
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repatred , New &amp; RebUilt In
Stock Call Ron Evans 1·
800·537-9528
------~~-

Kenny Chesney wtth Rasca l
Flails &amp; Uncle Kracker Ju ly
Grec•ous livmg 1 and 2 bed· 24th Charleston 6 t1clo.ets
room apartments at V•llage Sect1on 236 Row A All for
Manor
and
n•vers•ae S305cr$ 110pa1 r (740)645
Ap artments 1n Middlepor t 4485
From $295 S444 Call 740992·5064 Equal Ho usmg Wood Worktng Tools. JET
t5 °o Plane r w mob1te base
Opportuflll•es
$75000 14 °o Drtll Press
Taktng appllcattons to r 1 Floor Mode l $350 00 sc,
bedroom apt
bath hw'g Jo•nter
w mobile
bas e
room k•tchen wtth appl1 $450 00 and a dust collecto r
ances turn1shed DepoS!I no $200 00 All tools a1e 1n nev.
co nd1hon (304)675·8990
pets Call (740 )446 1370

\

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, May 24, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

It

Monday, May 24, 2004
ALLEY OOP

h ...s&amp;

-1-WDs

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentinel.com

s•on business for sale.
Locatty owned. EaSily make
S HOJ.OO or more at weekend events Everythtng set s
up rn a speaaUy OOs1gned
10X10 canopy. Ek cetlen l
pan-time or fuH·bme opportunity_ S8 .000 00 Donuts
Galore.
Mu:k.lleport

desperately n~ names
Call me Metgs Co Dog
Pound--:- d no answer leave a
message (740)992-3779 2
P1t Bull rrull:eS blac~&amp;whne
abPrm:. 3 vrs old 1 male

casse tt e player
St 1.00
0 80 (740)256-1652
----·---1998 BUICK PARK AVE
Sharp, e.~~:cellenl condrtton.
62,000
m1les.
loaoed

Phillip
Alder

1998 Olds lntngue. 88K
5
m1x-oreed
oupp•es
$3.695 1997 red Sunhre
male&amp;temal€ Several very
2D, 95K, $2 ,695; 1996 Okls
n1ce gentle m••ed-breed

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171

llu66aHL's vreenhtNUe

Ach1eva SC. 2D, 5 speed
NEW AND USED STEEL dogs All Clogs adopted WJ!I 94K S2. 195 1995 Grand
come
·
w
th a 1 2 otf spaySteel Beams, P1pe Reba r
Am , 20. 99K . S2.195 We
For
Concrete.
Ang le. neuter coupon 'rorn the take trades
Chanflel . Fla1 Bar. S1ee1 Humane Soc•et"t
Cook Motors
Grating
For
Drams
(740)446.() 103
Driveways &amp; Walkways l&amp;L
FU.I n~ &amp;

• Porch

Easler FlO\\ er'
'Bedding

Flower~

MYERS PAVING

Thursda)'
&amp; Sunda)·
Doors Open ~:.JO
Earl~- hird~ starl
6:.JO
tasl Thursda) or
t' ' en· month
E\'fr)~

Syracuse. OH
Now Open
Bdxe~

• Combina1ion Pots

• Perenniab
Vcgc1at&gt;k PIJnl'
• Spruce Trees
Bloom ine:
&amp; Foliag&lt; B a'k~IS • Shrubs
Pollin g Soil
• Peal Mo"
~londa) ·SalunJay 9-5 Closed Sunda);·

L__,i..iH
iii;io
nio··\iillliii£iii"ii._.1

Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesd~y. Wedne sday
&amp;
friclay, Bam-4:30pm Closed
Thursday,
Satu r.day
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300

875-2457
Driveways t Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads t Streets
WV Contractors Lie. #003506

!Iring lhis coupon
llu)· $5.00
Bonanza Get
5 FREE

35 tt. Campe r. set-up as

aren·t only for
buying or selling
items. you can use
· this widely read
sedion to wish
someone •
Happy Birthday.
provide a Thank
You. and place an
ad ••tn Memory••
of a loved one.
For more information. contact your
local Ohio Valley
Publishing otfic:e.

HoMt:
IMPROVF~\m\'fli

WATERPROOFING

Uncond&lt;l&lt;onal l&lt;lel&lt;me guar·

antee. Local referen ces fur-

DAY!

~

LOW MOISTURE
CARPET CLEANING
• Dry in 1 hOur

(740) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel

• No steam. shampoo or dry
chemicals
• Absolute deep clean1ng

(740) 992-2155

:fi)lrasmlt :IRrgistFr

• Guaranteed results
C learly Clean

(304) 675-1333

304·675·0022

Hours
7:00' AM - 8:00PM

R.B.

River Way Cafe

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•

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~

.J

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•

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'

Of! .this page for as low (IS

,$25.00 per month!

-The
Daily
Sentinel
992~2155

'' L

OH, TH'
US'AL
WA'Y.

~

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Trucking

Mannmg K. Roush
· Owner
0

!
!

Pomeroy. Ohio

Call for Daily Specials

CALL-1'-1 ORD@!::

}

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Monday 9am·lpm

6
5-2~~~~~~~~ ~ ~~~~~~~~
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WELL, Wf\1\T 00 '&lt;OU KNO\-.L

,..

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BE t\,.._1/11'\G 1\

~1\LL'i 501"-11'\G \lt-\[ 1

n Mon·Frl9-5 Sal. 9-12

BENNETT'S

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BUILDERS InC.

New

Ai~ Co~l ition~~-'-- t!~~ t_l'umps &amp; Furnaces

Ho111 c~

Siding .. NL'W

Equipmen~l&lt;

•

• Viny l

RL·pla~.:~ml.!'tll

Window s • Rooling

• Vanguard Vemlcss Fireplaces '',

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

!,&lt;.

'!!!~£.'!.'! Gibson 1~.

~
Rocky"RJ"
Hupp

Ga r:1gL·~

'!.

• Huge Inventory

PEANUTS

u: IT MEANT MORE T&gt;IAN
ONE PERSON, IT WOULD
SA'&lt;, ''EVERVBOD'I' WALK"

IMPORTS
Athens

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599 .

1

1LL 60 FIRST..
SEE YOU LATER

I THINK I'VE
BEEN 1-lAD!

Windshield Repair
Ro&lt;·kChips

&amp; Cracks
C11rs~ 1'rucb~HV ·~-

740-949-29/0

PUBLIC
NOTICES ·
PUBLIC NOTICE
The annual report

Form 990PF lor lhe
Kibble Foundation,
Barnard V.
Fultz,
Truatee Cs available
lor public Inspection
at Bernard V. Fultz

Law Office, 111 1/2
West Second Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,

Available

1996 Ford Bua/Diesel
Engine
2 Meat Slicers
I
Batlery Charger
The llama w!ll be sold I
as Is. Appolnlmenta
can be arrangact for
Inspection by calling

office

ol

the

Superintendent

or

Treasurer. The board

during regular bust·
ness hours for a period of 180 days subse·

or any or all parts of a

quant 10 publication
olthls notice.
(5) 17, 18, 19, 20, 21,
24, 25, 26, 27, 28, (6) 1'
2

bid. Successful bid·
dar must submll pay·
mont en lull by caeh or
cashie r check only.
Sealed bids will be

reserves the right to

rejecl any or all bids

opened at 12:00 noon

Public Notice
NOTICE
The Eastern Local
Board ol Education Is
accepting bids for the
sale the following sur-

plus vehlclea and
equipment:
1987 Ford Box Truck
1986
Ford
Mini
Sua/Converted
maintenance Van

to

1992 Ford Bus/Dieaal
Engine
1994 Ford Bus/Diesel
Engine

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used

JW(}bi/e Servic:e.'i

the

East

Pass

3 •

P&lt;~.s!S

-i ...

Pass

4 •
6•

Pa!)S

4•

Pass

Pass

Paso
Pass

on Wednesday, June
9, 20041n the olllce of
the Treasurer. Bid
should be clea rly
marked
"B!d
lor
Surpluo Items" and
mailed lo: Eastern
Local School Dlstrlcl
Allentlon: Lisa M.
Ritchie, Treasurer
·
50008 State Reule 681
Reedsville ,
Oh lo
45772
Phone: 740-667-3319
740·667-6079
(5) 24

SHOP CLASSIFIEDS
FOR BARGAINS.

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

HOWARDL.
WRITESEl

BETTY

,,,OR PEOPlE
WHO WOJl.K

1-800-822-0417

*ROOfiNG
dOME
MAINTENANCE

Fl.~l6l£

"W.Y's # 1 Chevy. Pon(lac , Buick, Olds
om Van Dealer"

•.. Mti.YBE RET!RW
Pt!ru 01&lt; SERIOUS
AnH£TES

HOURS

MiHUWIIN
FACt IT- -mE~
ONE
Is /MKING
COUL.D 8£ I.OTS OF
MEfEa
REASONS YOUR
GUIL.iY I'OR
~tAL.TH CLU@ IS

NOW oPCN 2.4/7

NOT GOING!

T

, .SEAMLESS

GUTTER
'*Free Estlmatah

949-1405

Sunset Home
Con.struction

GARFIELD
ANt;&gt; JUST HOW MUC.H

OOOKAAAY....

Bryan R~evas

ENER&amp;Y DO t Nt:£D .TO
AC.COMPL.I5H THIS~

New Homes,.

0

Room Addi\lons ,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Sldl
D k
ng, ec 8 '
Kitchens , Drywall
&amp; More
. FREE ESTIMATES!

740•742 •341
;=;;:::;~;:;::

HCS INC
I

'===;:;~~~==Jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
r
YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

•

New Homes • New
Garages • Pole
Barns • Roofing

·Room Add ition• &amp;
Remodellni

• Room Additions
• Remodeling
• Vinyl Siding

·New Ge~raget
•

~lect rlcal

&amp; Plumbing

• Roofing &amp; Gutters

• Vlnyt Siding &amp; P~unting
• Patio 111nd Porch Declt:t

Commercia l and

We do It all except

Residenlial
Free Eslimates

V.C. YOUNG Ill

7 40·949-1606

Pomeroy, Ohio

1 mo

0

0
0

Advertise in this
Space for
$50 per month

rurnact work

992-6215
o

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complele
Remodeling

140-992-1871
Stop &amp; Compare

22 Year• Local Experience

I

Give your opponent
an opportunity

ingredient
22 Aulhor

31
33

34
35

38
39

· 40 Curves
41 Where

· Columbus if
42 Hull and
- Grey
pull
12J45.6789, 23 Hearty laUgh
Bread riser
43 Lick an
Indy drivers
24 Novelist
e.g.
envelope
Actress
- Bagnold
2 Meadows ·
44 Ayla's
Moon25 Staller
3. leav., out
creator
26 Nol
lappa
4 Slyesl
JeanSahara
5 Extracts
courteous
45 Enjoy
information 27 Hawser
feature
46 PC maker
!hal's ~r· 6 Limo
28 Queens
47 Hwy.
Clown
Passengers
baJipark
49 Lipstick
30 Pipe
around
7 Wreslllng
choice
Pabon of losl
Win
32 Pay lor
34 A Peron
8 Appelizer
causes
Gush forth
9 Microwave 35 Is thnfly
Galher
· 10 Vegan's
37 Coal wilh
Coral reel
no-no
II our
locale
11 Goof
38 lee hockey
lab animal , 9 Narrow bed
great

·-so

Here 1s one of the good reasons lor over-

bidding : 11 you are due to fail in your conlract. often a fnendly opponent wtll make
a m1stake and contnbute a. free tr1ck or
two to your cause However. although
somet1mes

you can

JUSt

sit back and

awalt the charitable dona11on. on other
occas1ons you w1U have to g1ve a detender a nudge in your direct1on

CELEBRITY CIPHER

control1n the b1d su1t.
The Yugoslav declarer played a heart to
h1s ace at trick three and coUld not recov·
er: he had .to lose . a trump trick . Paul

by Luis Campos
Ce'eobtily (,p~ter crwt;Jgr ~rr~ a1e creiiii!(J hon- "~01al10ns r,·, t;n;oi.o6
Eacn ;e~e· 1r !he oone• s:a1os •:· ~~n·~·
Tooay s Clue S eque'~ Q

Soloway gave his op ponent a chance to
err : He called for the heart mne .
If East llad play ed low. SolOway would
have risen wilh h1s ace and fa 1led. But

" NUBLVMI

East covered w1th the hear t 10. Declarer
won w1th h1s ace and noted Wesl's discard _Then declarer crossed to dummy
1w1ce. each t1me finessing m heart s

AUOKE

G.A.t'G ,

BISSEll

Rcsidcnlial &amp; Manufactured Housing

• Free Est im ates
.' 5 &amp; I 0 yr Warr;tnlics

~ICi-HT .

AM I

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

11

26

30

North
t!'IT

-.r'llirt~:

THERE MUsr BE SOMEiHINC:, WE CAN DO
WITH THE DESKS '

to dark!

740-985-3564 Com~ s~e OUt new
':::::::::::::::~==su:m::m:~:t:m::e:n:u:!~

23
29

Astrc...
Graph

8 WHk daylight

Sat &amp; Sun 7am-4pm

• Super Hi Efficiency

6 5 3

lhrough Easl. This a11owed Soloway to
play the tr ump SUI I Without loss and make
h1s slam .

Open 7 days

Tues ~ Fri 6am4pm

Ag Lime

•

20 Sushi

DOWN

22 Energy

hearts to set the trump su1t. Four clubs,
tour diamonds and lou r spades were control-bids (cue -b 1ds) show1ng slam 1nterest
in hearts· with a l1rst- or second- round

t

~

vehicle

21 Goddess

would normally be played as natural and
game-1nv1tatlonal. prom1smg 10-12 highcard po1nts. But this partnersll1p treated 11
as game-forc1ng Sou th rebid tllree

COMPARE THESE PRICES!!
4" pot ol annuals 9411
' pot of perennials $1.18 Buy 5 or mOte lor $1 ,00

W~LCOIA~

• Limes! one
• Sand
0 Dirt

18 Boonies
20 Carry on

Th is layout arose dunng a world-championship match between !he United States
and Yugoslavia. North's lwo-no-trump
response . followmg West's overcall.

STRAIGHT 'DOWN WIF M'Y ARMS
A-SWINGIN', 'YELLIN' "JEEPERS1!"

1!

.

of dust
54 ~oop trains
55 Winter

11 AI hand

ot dawn

AKJ&lt;42
A Q 3

I.

53 Speck

staffer

thts deal. you are Sou1h 1n Sl)( hearts.
West starts w1th the club ace and ahother club to dummy's queen. How would
· you co ntinue?

Meigs County's Largest se lection of
annuals. perennials, vegetables,
shrubbery, fruit, ornamental trees, .
roses. rhododendrons . and azaleas.

740-992-2507

HAULING: ,

i ~

51 Youngster
52 Lap dog

On

1
:

business, not our sid,•liue

Syracuse, OH

Gallipolis. OH WV01021 2
446-94 16 r 1-R00-872-596 7

ADVERTISE .YOUR.
BUSINESS

~~

I

I.Awlland Gm·den J::quipmem is our

1141mopcl

B

&lt;~

- ../11

992-2975

Call

--"- -

304 -6 75-4040

204 Condor Sl!"et't

Serious
Inquiries Ouly

~~

. ~··

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Sizes 5'x1 0'
to 10'x30'

Ttl~ R~AL

vJQfl.l,D.
·~.

GRAVELY TRACTOR

45771
740-949·2217

HEATING U COOLING

!!Dall1polis illailv {l[:l"ibunF

~o111t

Basemen!

OF

':======~

nished. Established 1975
Call
24 Hrs (740) 446- r

0870 , Rogers
Waterprootmg.

,AI.L 0(.(p_$JON.f

Snapper

Gravely

29670 Ba shan Road
Ra c1ne Ohio

-~ County Fair.

740-992-5232

BASEMENT

MAKE
SOMEONE'S

High&amp; Dry
SeH-Storage

for 2004 Meigs

\mi/al1/e

985-4159

77-19 11 Trolwood camper.
completely remodeled , new
awnmg.
$3 .200.
ph .
j740)992-4228

10

rood

~~~

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

ON~ "Gfl.Al&gt;UATION" ANt&gt;
•
ONf: ''CONl&gt;OLENCts:·... ~~
/ tWS AFfl.AID
~~

CP.Rt&gt;f fof?

HOW'D 'YA FALL OFF
TH' ROOF, LUKE'Y 7

Hill's Self
Storage

13 Jr.' s son .

36

(304) 273-5321

.\ttillllllilr\'

~

J lUG 5

•

Opening lead : • A

BARNEY

F

i;!!;:&lt;.:;,:,;:;;;:o:;:_____,

9 8 :l
Q l(t 8 5

t

Wl'SI

I.

Dr. Kelly K. Jones

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

\ta111/

1:1 -l
A .Jl082

idea!

47 Slimpy 's
buddy
48 Naturalis1
Jotm50 Sweelcherry

maybe

Vulnerable : Both

316 Washington Street
Ravenswood, WV 26164

liNDA'S PAINTING .
17401 985-4180

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

Anns

-

5 Baseball
award
8 Arrive
12 Interstate
hauler

14 Say 1irmly
15 Hardware
item
16 Hasp.

•
t

9

South

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

Let me do it for youl

Tree Service

r

Gooseneck. h1 lcll . sleeps 6.
B !t shde-out (740)6452729 after 6pm

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

JONES'

r.lO

r

wv·,.
Ta~e

I ___

•

comment

41 Candid
43 Soap opera
46--no

1 Gradual

Dealer: South

Toll Free: (866) 254·1559
"Your One Stop Poured .
Solid Co11crete Shop"

189 • Middleport

740-843-5264

r

Ea~t

Q-;f, 52

¥

Free Estimates

\and Financial Servicesl

82 DOdce 318 auto. runs 1994 Stratos Bass Boa1150
~.JVF.Sll)( 'K
good. looks I)OOd. S750 Call Evenrude Intruder. 1999
: 1OAM-6FM (7 40)698·8200
Power Head w1th less than
1,~-------,..J (304)675-5 131 atler Spm
5Hr (740)992,7758
lll'IIJJI'Ol; .
Reg1stered · ANGUS and
\ ',.\"\._"t &amp;
SI'J'I'Ut:J;
Crossbreo bUlls Top blood- ...
+;,;,W;,;'Ds;o;;:- - ' 2002· 16 112ft Bass Tracker
lines.- State Run Farm -.
F1sh1ng Boat Mc'or· Tra11er·
Block. b rick. sewe r p1pes JaCI\s~m
(7401286-5395 1990 Plym outh Voyager L1ke New S6 500 (740)446. wmdows. lintels. etc . Claude lao-:
up Van_ one ow 11m . V6 LE. 7 4782
Wmters . A1o Grande OH Mvw slaterun1arm com
pass auto trans. E)(cellent
23 t1 Sea ray Cuddy Cabm .
~ Call 74D-245-5l2l.
Cond1llon. All power w1tn
$2.500 OBO Call 740-645AIC 52.495 (7 40)&lt;:46-3277
2729 or 304-675 -6444 atler
~~~~
~
1
6pm
~llK S.-\LE
1993 Dooge Carayan H1gh
m1leage. runs good. good
60 AI "Ill PAirl~ &amp;
AKC Black Lab pupp1es b1g
t1res decent ;:~as mtleage
· A cn:•&lt;'llllm;
&amp; beauld ul
males and .
$1 .BOO 7 40-388-8293
females 1•rst shols $150
1996 S-10 (4,500) &amp; 2000 Used t1res tor light trucks &amp;
each , work 740·992·9784
Ford Explorer ( 11 .500) both suv ·s 15-16-17 InCh sag.,
home (740'1992-3887 ready
HIKS\Lt.
4x4 V-6 auto A C PW or more tread ware lett
IO go
(304)675-1670
pnced
upon
mspeciiOn
t991 Plymouth Accla1m - - - - - - - - l 304 )675-3354
1994 Ford Explore Call 2000 Cad1llac Escalade. 1
(740)367-7374
between owner. ~1 . 100 m1les, good
C\, II'ERS &amp;
8 30 am to 4 ·30 pm Monday condttton . Sl8.500 must setP L-•1\;,;;;l&lt;ilrlilllllR;,H-00.\tiiit;ii.s.,J
Vanct;. 1•! ~,.:uJm, PIH'Il~· through Fnday, ask lor T1m Day (740 )446-4672 Evemng
1992 Vacat1on A 1re. 40ft. 5th
Stout
(740)441-1034 ·
1JO..IJh7:i-50-n
wheel campe1 Tn-axle. I!VIng
roorn slide . front and back
door Lots ol room and storage Will i:lelive-r locally
. 59 .250 00 (740)742 -0002

9 6 J
K I 2
K Q"

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Rocky Hupp Insurance

a used 1..0mputer syster•1
Call ReUse . ThurS-Sat

•
•
A

South ·
• J

Sl"'cializing In Poured Concrete
foundations. Basements. floors &amp; Walls

For a Free Quote or Appointment
Call:

A K IU ~

.

.

-SlaleJfille
CNI l'o111ell WaDi

~ We can insure your valuables! ~

03 H 1H.

A

\\' 1"1'&gt;1

•

t

What would you lose if there was a fire?

4t, Licensed in Ohio and

.

MONTY

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675·2457

IF \'Otl RENT

Box

Nol'lh

Henderson, WV

· All i&gt;ack ss.oo

740-992-5776

You may qua11ty tor socc. ot1

40 Subzero

ACROSS

German ShepPard 4 years S9.BOO (7 40)256-6278
old 3 Beagles 2-3 years old

(740)9924294

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Mobile Mini-Donut cooces- Ptaase Helol These dOgs 1993 Dodge Sp.rrt AlC. M

TuesdaY,. May 25, 2004
By Bernice Bed e O so l
In the year ahead you should be able to
use tile exper1ence and exper ti se you ve
acquired over 111 e years 10 furth er your
goals. As you pu t them to prol1t able uses,
you w1ll see proof that knowledge IS
power
GEMINI {May 21-June 20)- Be carelul
nollo get ca reless as to how you phrase
something that m1ght be ot1en s1ve to lhe
person you're talkmg to Try1ng IO e)(p1a1n
your 1ntent may prove to be qwte difficult
CANCER (June 21 -Juty 22)- A .bus1ness
pOSi liOn can always be improved upon 11
you're w1llmg to nego11ate a b1t loday by
Q1v1n g up something in ord9r to get wh at
you want. but take your time and make
sure 1t's nght.LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Str1v e to be par ·
ticularly considera te of the feelings of
those W1lh whom you 're assoc1at1 ng alth1s
time . because people in general co uld be
a li ttle more sens111ve and louchy !han
usual today
VIRGO (Aug 23 -Se pt 22)- Keep a care l ui eye on thOSf! in your charge today.
because just when your mind ·is on olher
th ings they could do something careless
that would place th emselves or you 1n
jeop ardy
LIBRA (Sepl 23-0ct 23) - Allhough you
may thmk il is kinde r to disguise tl1e tru th.
from a tru:~nd or asSOCiate today, weigh the
loss o lth1s data aga1nst the odds ol lead·
ing to unnece·ssary complica ti Ons for lh1 s
person
SCORPIO (Oc t. 24- Nov 22) - A lack o f
faith 111 yourse l1 and underest1mcit1ng the
wor th Dl your abilities would be the two '
btgge st enem1es you'll have to lace 1oday
Se ll -doubt s- cou ld hamp er you 1n ways no
corrlpet1 tor co uld
Make
SAGITTARIU S (Nov 23-Dec 21)
11 a pom t·to seek o ut the adv1ce of A truSt ·
ed counselor today regardmg a personal
Situation you· re tac1ng. bu t g1ve pr1or1ty to
your own lhml&lt;~ng as well 1/ you know
sorno H111'lgs they don't
CAPRrCO RN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - It IS
always 1mpor tant to be prudent and cau
11ous concernmg money matters. t&gt;ut plac·
mg more emprtasts on d01ng so tOday may
be necessary_Your sales resistance collld
be .at a low eDb.
AQUA RIUS (Jan. 20-Feb 19) - II vo u do
not rhmk tor your sel f today m work or
career Slrtla!lons. assoc1a1es Will be more
!han happv to do vour thmk1 hQ lor you. The
tr ouble 15 1t may furthe r then Interests, not
yours
PISCES (Feb . 20-Marc ll 20) - Th ose 1n
your cha1ge ri1ay need some words of
encouragement 10 get them up and runntng at thEm bes t today W1th just tl lew
pil,ls on the back , you 'll eas1ly slimulate
lhe1r productiVIty.
ARI ES (March 21 -April 19) - Mucl'l can
be accomplished today. prov1ded you keep
your emphasis on your ObiEIClives and not
get sidetracked by the petty issues ol others Don 't lei unproducttlle purs uHs waste
your t1m E1 .
·
TAURUS (April 20 -May 20) - If you lee Ia
ne ed to talk th ing• out and di scuss a sen sitive family lltue with 1omeone todl.y,
only do 10 with one you ~now you C• n
tn.Jst T• lllng lhe wrcng p•rson could be
cOunt•rproductlv• .

SOUP TO NUTZ

VA

UX

LZG

UD

BVCTGLULUVD .

oe~p•e ~as:

a1d p•esen1

SJKEULI

DVL

L ZG

XBYMG ."

C UR G

.C K MXZ K E E

· PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "I can·! say any!hmg bad about Meryl S1•eep- aoo
I love 10 say' bad th1ngs about people ,. ~ James Wood s
(c) 2004 by NEA , Inc 5·22

0

i:'!:l."lcn;o leHen of ~~~
lo.:r ! :r:Jrnbl ed words be·
lo,.o. 1:'l f or.- fn·Jr ~1rn ple .,.. o·d 1

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,
,
SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS s-' l-:
&gt;\ f,~,vE ~

4

C.'1s.on ~ Ra1a11 - Curiv- ·.rendor - CHIL.'JPf: 'V
Tt1ere 2re three wavs ::1 qet scrnetrMg ~rne do 1t
vcu rse lf •m e someone' to j o Jt ana ma~e tt c:t 11m1!S ~0
1

;our CHIL DREN

ARLO &amp; JANIS

�••
Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

-...

NY ~

,.,.,

Toronto
Tampa

L

Pet.

GB

P IO

27
25

17

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18

581

,

7-3

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14

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18
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5·5
6-4
5-5

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513 1
SB l
349

Suodly's Results

National League
14-6
13-7
12- 10
9-13
' 11·1 1

,,
B-2
H

EAST

W

L

Pet.

G8

PIO

r3- 1r
12-1I
6-10
6- 14

Ptu~ra

24
24

18
19

-

?2

22

7-3
5-5
7- 3

20
14

&lt;:'9

571
.558
500
476
326

3·17
12-10
11 10

10-11
12·9

Stri&lt;

H~

W3
WS

15 7
12·9
1 5·9
9-13

L1
WI

3-7

.l.way

.I.way

L4

Pto

3
3
13

...

WI
L1
L1
L5

3·7

"

317

29
25
25
15

...

6·4
J-7

11-11

6-15
5-18

.....
14-B
13-9
3·9
6-.15

Sawrday·s Res ults
Oal. !and 5 Kanroas C•t) -t 11
Texas 4 l'o 't' Yankees 3
Tampa Sa)• 6. Clevei"'M 3
!!':';'teo 5, Toronto 2 ,
~rnroesura 9 Cnoeago So:. '
AA&lt;~~'s""' 3. BaH1rnOJ1! 2
DtltH)I!8 Seallle -1

Tampa Bay 5 , Ciewland J. ! 10).
Boston 7, Toronro 2
NY Yanltees 6. Texas 3
~ , ..-: · ._
Chteago So-. 17. Mlllnet&gt;Oia 7
Mahern 6. Banimote 3
Oakland 3. Kall!iaro City 2. 1101
Sealde 3. Deuott 1

Flonda
NY Mels
Atlanla
Monlreal
CE NTRAL
Cmcago CuDs
Crncrnnarr
Houston
Mrlwa ukee
S: l Cl&gt;IS
P ttsbu•gh

W

25
25
2.J
22
23
19

WEST
Loro jj,,-,ge~~
Sd , o.ego
Sa'1 Fra'lC I!iCO
Anzona
COIO! ado

22

L
18

13
19

20
21
21

Pet.
58 1
581
558
524
523
475

W

L

Pet.

23
2J

19
20
'24
2tl
26

548
545
442

'9
17
17

I.

J

~4

PIO

G8
-

7-3

82

Home

Aw.,

L4

12·8
12·9
12·1 0
11-1 0
7, JJ

12· 10
12-10
10.. 12
9-12
7 16

W2
W5

Home
13-9
14·7

Wt

L1
W3
WI

...

1

3·7

L4

1~- 11

2
2
4

64

WI
L2
L1

11-9
10-13
6-13

5·5
6-4

·~

395

'6

395

6

Sunday·• R•aultiJ
AllamJ 5. Los Angeles 1
N~' Metr. ~ Colorado 0
L lli;Jil '18tl ; HO\JS100 0
s·.ln ~ra'ncrs-.:0 a1 Mo'ntraar (ppd 18.rl
t..'fllwauke-e 2 Prt1robur gh ·
Ptu•adtllphla 6 San D1ego 4
.O. i•zon~ 4 FlortOa 3
C.,~t ago Cubs 4 St LJUIS 3

...

~

'0

...

PIO

,_,

46
5·5
3-7
3-7

...

Home
11· 10
13·9
9-14
8-1 4
11- 11

L1 ,
L1
W3

IY 1

L;

Aw.,
12-9
11-11
12·8
11 11
13-8
13-8

"-'l!wt
12·9

-

I t- 11

10- 10
9-12
6- 15

Saturday'• RM~Jill
Los An9Qies 7. Attanra 4
Cl1cago Cubs 7. St. LOUIS 1
"'londa 11 , AriZona 2
('rttsl&gt;u~!1' 3. Mrlw$UII&amp;e 1

San FranciSCO 7, Monlleal 2. { 1.1)
San Drego 9. Ptuladelphia 6
Cwoc111nat18. Houston 7
NY ~ts 5. Comdo 4

'
Mond-v's Gam..
Ar.ahelm (Ladley 3-51ar Toronto tJ Mliler 1-0l. 7.05 p m

Moodty's Gamet
'
Anzona (Wellb 2-3\ at Florida (Pa..ano 3· 21. 3:05p.m
Ai lanta (Thomson 2-:21a1 h.k&gt;r1trea1(Day 3-4). 7 {] 5 om.
Houston I A edd il"~g 2·3) at C rnc1 nna~ !Acevedo 2-31. 7. 10 p.m.

Coloftclo

000

000

000 -

0

New YOfll

201

001

0011

4

58-Spencer 2 (4 ). Woggrnloo ( 1) 5---0Gar·

'"Co1&lt;x&gt;do

--

,.,..,

ES1esL6 ·3

NewVorko

Tex111

ltb r l'lbl
l olton ct
4 2 2 0

.O
MYong ss 5
Blalock 3b 4
jj,Srano 2b 4

C10sby c1

1
.kiter ss
5
,oi. Rdrgz 3b 4
ShH1eld r1 4

0 0 0
0 11
0 2 0
0 0 0

r h bi
0 1 1
0 0 0
D 1

FUme rdh J 0
Txerra l b 4 0
Poseda c 4 00 0
DIIUCC1JI
3 1
Marsullt
5 2 3 0
\1enchr1 0 0
SWims dh 4 1 1 .1
BJoronr1 3::
TCiaril liJ 4 1 1 1
Nr\ cf
~ ·2
EWilsr1 2b 5 2 33
BraJ3ro c
~ ~
Tot1tl1- 40 au &amp; Totals
35 3

J

1C
0 C
0 C
0 ~
J '

'

1

7 J

NowY&lt;t&lt;11

,....

Ddley

6

6

_:;

~

2,

0

:;

1

t

:

~

.:

.:

L,4-A

5

•

·

'.
:

Ooo

~g

"'!&gt;

While Sox 17. Twins 7
Chicago
eb r hbi
Uribe 2b
6331
Rwand cf 7J4 3
MOroz rl
733 2
Thmas dtl 4 2 2 0
WHansoh JOOO
CaLeen
51 46
~ralH
10 00
Kner'ko 1b 1 1 1 1
GJoaa 1b 1 0 0 0
V~1rn s::
6 12 1
Crede 3t1 4 0 1 1
O!ivoc
6 ·23 2
Totals 481123 17

Mirmuota
ao r ti bi
LForl'!H
5110
CGzmn ss 4 2 3 2
JJonesr1 3010
MRyan K 2 000
M.-neau dh A 1 0 0
THnter c1 2 2 2 1
Rslliw:: h rt 2000
Motkw 1b 4 0 2 2
Cddyer 3D 3 0 0 2
HBincoc · 4 0 0 0
Pr1eto 2b 4 1 2 0
:J7 71 I

Totall

;:;:
~
~_,
""
,;,~,_T-;-;-2-:5:-:0c:A;:-::::--;
&lt;Q . 8,.-t9_!_36_.3_3_11_ _
1
Phillies 6, Padres 4
~~~ ~ :

TGiavne W.&amp;-2
Umptres-H~.

1

Chic~D

300
815 000 - 17
Mlnnnota
411
000 001 1
E-urrbe (5). Crede (3). LOB-Ch•cag o 13.
Minnesola 7. 2B-Urrte (7) . Rowand 19)
Calee (1t ), Valentm {6), Pueto (1). 39MOrdooez (2). HP- U11be (5 ). Rowand r4).
Oli~o (4), CGuzman (2) CS-Cuddye r 13)
S-CGuzman SF-ctede .
·
IP H RERBBSO
01iC.go
7 10 6 6 2 3
Garland W.4·2
Takatsu
1 0 0 0 1 1
1 1 1 1 0
,
Mlnne•ota
Santa na L.2-2
3 10 7 1 2 2
Balfour
0 .2 3 3 1 0
Fultz
2 4 22 1 0
Mulholland
1-3 4 5 5 1 0
Romero
1 2·3 2 0 0 1 2
JAincon
1 10 0'-'1
Nalhan
100 00 1
Santena prtchect lo 4 batrers rn .ttre 4th BaHour
pMched to 3 batters 10 the 41h .
U mp~ res-Homs . MaiVHl HOOson: F1rst. Dana
D&amp;Mlllh : Second. J m Joyce: Third. Kerv.•n
Dankly
T- 3:06 A-22.859 (45.423).

"""

Red Sox 7, Blue Jays 2
Toronto

Boa ton

ab r hbl
Jhnsonr1 31 0 0
Mnchno ss 3 1 0 0
VWels cf 40 10
CDIQdo 1b 4 0 2 2
JPI'lfps dh o1 o 1 o
Hlnroke 30 4 o o o

ab rhbj
Damon cl 32 22
Bllhorn 2b 4 2 1 1
DQrtiZ lb 5 0 3 3
McCty 1b 0 0 0 0
MAmrzdh 3 o Co
DubachW 4 000

Hou1ton
ab t h bl
Btgg•Ocl
30 10
AEvrN ss 4 0 1 0
Bnr.mn~
3000
JKent 2b 4 0 1 0

g6g

Cincinnati
ab r hbl
5 0 10
31 0 0
4 33 1
3 1 1 2
Kea ~n s rf
4 022
DunnW
4 0 00
VlenMc
4 22 1
..ICastro ss .4 0 3 '1
lldlep
2 0 00
Freel3b
DJmnz 2b
Caseytb
GrfJr_cf

"""""

""'"'

2

"I·

RERBBSO

5 2-3

7

11 ·3

1

1

1

4
0
0

4

4
0
0

0

0

4
0
0

9 1 0 0 I 8
Loury Va1"!01161 . Firsl. Sam

"""""

T-2:25 A-37.4&amp;6 (57.405)

Mariners 3, Tigers 1
Suttle

Detroh

ab r l'lbl

•b r hbl

.bSnch: c1 5 0 0 0

!Suzuki r1

CGi ten 55
IRdrgzcl'l
Hggnsn rf
Monroe !!
CPena 1b

2 0 10
4 0 10

5pJeZIO

31 10
3021
30o o

Wh~ eph

000 0

Ibanez~
312
JoCbra ss 4 0 1
Hansendh 30 1
DW.tron c 3 01
Olerud l b 2 t 1
W1nnct
30 0

4 1 1 0
1 Q

Jb. J 0

Moone 2D 4 o 1 o
t
0

t

0

I
Shenon 1b o 0 o o
0
lngec
3000
Munsoo 3b 3 0 0 0
No11onph t 0 0 0
lnla.rrte 2b 4 0·0 0
Totals ' 11 1 5" 1 Tut.ls • 29 3 9 3 '

tt..

Detroit
000 100 000 ~ I
001
001
1Ox 3
E- ll'ltante (2). DP-Derroir 3. Seanle 1.
LOB-Detroit 9. Seattle 6 28-HIQQIMOn
(7). Ibanez (10). HR-O ierud \2). SBJoCabtera (2) . SF-Hansen.
IP H RERBBSO

s..

"""'"
eo,.,

Reds 7, Aslros o

H

Holbrook Second Paul Nauert: Thrrd . Matt

Brdrm L.4-3

San Diego
Phlla
JVzcno lb 3 0 2 0
abr h bi
abrhbi
Asmus c 3000
Brrghs 3b 4 1 2 1 Bv•ocl
4 0 0 0
WM1IIr p
2 0 0 0
Odiwrt p 0 0 0 0
lo1elia 2b 5 0 2 0 ROII~ns sro 3 2 1 1
' 3 ~ 6 5 6 3 8G1Iesrf 50 2 0 BAbreurf 2 01 0 OPirmoph 0 0 0 0
Kli:'!sko 1b 3 o 1 o Burrell ~
4 12 1
Torale 30 0 6 0 · Torals
33 712 7
J 0 0 ~ 2 I
Longll
2000 RHrndzp 0 00 0
\;l!&lt;.&lt;t'"&gt;,.-a
1 0 '
' 2 I
Bchnanrt
1
0
0
0
Worrell
p
0
0
0
0
Houston
000
000
000
0
1 J
0 ·J 0
J
' '3"--'"
Cinclnn11tl
200 120 11• 7
TrkrsiH
0 0 0 0
lJtley 2b
4 1 I 0
E-DJ•menez (4). OP- Houstoo I , C111C1nne l1
Wtroido.p 0 0 0 0 Oa8ell3b 3 t 0 0
Wa-;t&gt;' "' •.:JW~ i
7 6 2 2 1 4
3. LOB-Hous ton 6, Cmc1nnat1 6 . 2BE at011~
0 0 01
TcPerz 1b 2 1 1 2
T·r"lh"
I 1·3 0 0 ·J 0 2
Va1en11n {3), JCastro (4). HA---C a se~ 15).
E ~&gt;tYet&gt;
2-3 0 0 0 t
1 Paytoncf 31 1 0 Grmi(!rp 0 0 0 0
Gr1ttey Jr. (9). Valentin (3) S---t.ldle 2
1000 MchelsW 0000
HBP-.." ) Wa~&lt;.et~t~ la iJohl'lson ). WP- Wake- Of!lda c
IP H RERBBSO
RaHrazc .,4 2 2 1 PraNc
3 0 r 2
telll PS--Castl
Houa1on
\Jm.J.-ero--Home. Jack Samuels. F11st Gerry Rrnson ct 0 a 0 0 Padilla p 2 0 0 0
WMIIIer
l.5·4
5 a s s 2 s
0.11.'15 Secono. Darren Soagnarell Th110. Ph1l G•e€nE'ros J 010 Wooten1 b 2 010 Du~kwo rth
2 2 I 1 0 1
Lwrnce p 2 0 0 1
,,zz,
1 2 1 1 0 1
Cmlloph I 0 0 0
T-2 39 A.--35.239 35.095 1
PJf erp
0000
Cinci"nlllti
Lidle W,3-4
9 6 0 0 2 A
Nevrfl10 1 000
Devil Rays 5, 1ndians 4, (10)
Totals 36 4 11 4 Totlll&amp; 29 6 8 6
HBP--by Lrdle (B1ggro) WP---t.k:lle 2.
Ump1res--Home. Jell Kellogg: F11sl, Doug
C1eweland
Tampa Bav - ·
Eddulg$ : Si#COOd. Dan lassogna : Timd, Char1te
San Olegc
010 200 001 4
ab r l'lbi
ab r h bi
Aclrford. T- 2:26. A- 29.593 (42.271 ).
Bllii!H:l2b 50 0 0 Crwt;dH
5 C0 0
Phrladetphra
001
21 0 02x 6
V!ZQ.Jel 55 5 0. Cl
Ro~s2b
2 1 0 0 E- ToPere2 t1). DP - San Otego 2. Phrladel·
lJ.,.,lOI'\ !1 1 1 . 0 BlurT'2D
2 0 Q 0 phra 2 LOB-San Otego '11 , Phrlade!ph1a 7. Braves 5, Dodgers 1
28- Pavton (9' Utley (4). HR- t=taHcrnanGerut rl
J 0 · 0
Bardell• ct 5 2 2 0
Alf•nta
dez \5). Rolhns \1:•. ToPerez (3 1 CS-Rob•n- Los Ang&amp;les
J 12 1
VM!In2c ~ 1 00 Huf!3b
ab r hbi
tb r hbi
Mer1on1 lb 4 1 1 1 JoCruz rt 2 0 0 0
son I ll
121UfiS 55 4 0 1 0 Furcalss 5000
IP H RERBBSO
Hafnerdh ~ 0 2 2 TMrtnz lD 4 0 2 2
Grbwsk
ph
1
0
0
0
JuFrco
1b
4 t 2 0
Btalle3b 4 J 0 0 THeile
4 1 22
Slln Diego
5 5 4 4 • 2 Snc he.z p D 0 0 0 CJooe5H 3 1 1 2
AEscorrt 4 1 1 1 Gomesdn 3 0 0 0 Lawrence L.6 3
DW ise~
0000
L Dtx:alt 5030
Puffer
2 1 0 0 2 1
Cnsp d
J Q 20
FICk oh
1 080
Tankersloy
RSrcnz 55 J 0 0 0
0 ~ 2 2 2 0 Brdl&amp;y ct 4 1 3 0 AJones cl 3 0 0 0
Totals 39 4 9 4 Totals
36 5 8 5 Wrtas•ck
1 0 0 0 0 1 Bekre3b 5010 J0rewr1 3110
ShGren 1b 5 .0 2 1 EddPrz c 3 1 1 o
Philadelphia
JEcrcn r1 4 0 2 0 DeRosa 3b 4 0 1 0
Cleveland
300 100 000
0 4
P&lt;tdllla W,4·4
6 B 3 1 0 5
Tampa Bay
300 100 000
1 5
Ccrm pr
1 1 0 0 I 1 JHmdz2b 4 0 0 0 NGreen 2b 4 0 2 2
Rosse
2000 Hmptn p 2 1 1 1
One out when w.nn1ng run scored .
-RHernandez
1 1 U 0 o 0
E -Bald~U1 \4 ). JQ(:ruz \31 l OB-GIENeland
I 1 1 1 3 1 WAivrzp 2 0 0 0 Btemit ph I 0 0 0
Worrell S. 5
Saenzph 1000 Grybsll p 0 0 0 0
7. Tampa Bay 9 2B- THalnor 113). Ba ldollr 2 TsnksrsiEiy oftched to 4 batters 1n the 8th.
Ritsme p · 000 0
0000
:6' JB-Hutf 11) HA- AEsCobar { 1I. THall HBP-b~ Pa&lt;Hia \Payton). by Padrlla (long) : Lmop
VnturB 3b 1 0 1 0 Lroche ph 1 0 1 0
12' - SB-C11sp (41 CS-B ia~e (3:1
WP- Tanlwrslgy.
Smoltz p 05)00
IP H AEFIBBSO
Ump 1res- Homo Bruce Dreekman : Frrsr.
33 510 5
Clevel&amp;nd
James Hoye. Secood. Larry Poi'\Crno: Thrrd. Tota1a 38 113 1 Tot•la
CILee
72-36 4 4 3 6
Grsg G1bscrr T- 3:02 . A-44 ,216 143.500).
l.oa Angeles
000 000 100 1
R •s~eL 0- 2
t23 2 1 1 2 1
AUenl•
010 220 OOx . 5
. 1 1
Tampa Bay
P
;B;rew~::_ers~2~'~'-'""a"es"===---l E- Furcal (3), NGreel'l (1f. OP- Atianta 2
Hsndrockscn
7 8 4 3 1 2
MilWaukee
Plttalrurgtl
LOB- l os Angelas 13. Atlanla 8. 28Hsrper W 1-0
3 1 0 0 1 1
&amp;b r hbl
ab r hbi
Bradley (9), EddPerez (11 . NGreen (4). HRH ~ P-by C lee (TMarttnez)
CJones (6), Hamptoo( 1) CS-JEnearnacton
U'T"Ip•les-Home . Allonso Marquez, Frrst. A1ck Pd5dnkcl 3 0 I 0 Kendall c 5. 0 1 0
(2). NGreen (1).
Cunscll ss 4 0 0 0 JWrlSn ss 4 0 1 0
Fleed· Second. M•ke Fictlter . Thrd. Ted Barten
Sp
·ve~2
b
3
0
0
0
Bay
H
4
0
1
0
IP H A EA BB SO
T-2.56. A- 10 555 (43.969)
Jenkrns If 4 0 0 0 Jhnroton p 0 0 0 0
Los Angeles
5 7 5 5 3 6
Ovrbay 1b 4 1 2 1 Mdows p 0 a 0 0 WAivarez l.2-1
D'backs 4, Martins 3
L1ma
220012
BC1arkr1 ~ 4 0 0 0 CWilsn r1 41 31
Ft Orida
~
1 0 0 0 1
Arizon•
KG1ntr 3b 4 1 1 1 AMateo cl 2 0 0 0
Sa nchet
ab rh bl
ab r hbi
Atllllnta
Moeller c 4 0 1 0 TRdmn cf ! 0 0 0
4 1 t c
l(ata 2b
LCsl•lto'2b 4 0 I 1 ODavisp 1 0 0 0 Ward lb
690023
4 01 0
HamptonW, 1·5
C•ntron ss 4 1 2 1 P•ene d
4000
1 2 1 1 0 0
Gne\19 ph 1 0 0 0 Stynes 3b 4 0 1 0
Grybosk1
LGn.zll ~ 5 I 1 1 Lowell JD 4 o o o
JBenntt p o 0 o o Cas1rt1o 2tl 3 0 ·o 0
Reilsma
1 1 0 0 1 0
Hlnbrn 10 5 1 3 t
Cbrerart 4 1 2 1 LVzcnop 0 0 0 0 H11l ph
1 0 0 0 - Smoltz
1 1 0 0 0 2
Con•ne lb 2 1 t 1
SF rn le~ cl 5 0 2 1
Kotb p
0 0 0 0 KWells p 2 0 1 0
WP- WAJvarez.
DBtrsta r1 4 0 2 0
Rdmnd c 3 00 0
Mckwk If 2 0 1 0
Ump!res- Hom e. Tim Welke: First. Jim
'Tracy 3b
411 0
2 0 0 0 Nunezll
Totals ~ 2 5 2 Totala
36 110 1
Reynolds: Third. Gery Ced&amp;rstram.
4 o a o AGnzlz ss 3 0 0 0
T-2:40. A- 29.738 (50,09 1).
Hmd&lt; '
RJhson p 3 o a o LHarrsph 100 0
Mllwaukae
000 001
001 2 :-:"-:"""':'"-:::"--:.,;.-:,...------1
H•rston ~h 1 0 0 0 Wrlhsp
1 000
Pltttburgh
000 000 010 1
..M:;e':"ls=4 ,,_,R_,oc=k,ie,s'i0~=:---l
Kpl o~ e p
0 0 0 0 Easley ph 0 0 0 0 LOB- Mtlwaukee 6. Pnrsburgh 9. 26-Bay Colorado
Naw York
Vlverde p 0 0 0 0 Waynap 000 0
CW1Isort (12) , KWells (1)_ HA--Overbay
1b r hbl
· ab r hbl
(6 . KGintsr (7). CWilson (10). SB-Podsed·
Mrdca• pH 1 o 0 0
Hcking 2b 3 0 0 0 Malsuiss 3 2 2 1
nrk (21).
Penshop 00 00
Cla}'lon ss 4 0 0 0 DGrcia2b 3 0 0 o
Totals Jt ·411 4 Totala
31 3 S 3
1P H RER8BSO
Gastrlla 3b 3 o o o Fla'fd H
41 2 2
Milwaukee
CJ h~c 3 0 o o
Piazza 1b 4 0 1 0
Ar izona
000 040 000 4
6 1 0 0 1 6
DO&lt;lVlS
Burnitz
rt
3
o
o
o
Cineron
c1
0
0 0 0
Florrda
001
00 1 001 3
t
2 0 Q 0 1
JBennen
Hllrday H 3 o o o Spncer r1 3 1 0 0
DP- F1onda 1. LOB- AIIZOOB 11, Flonda 5 LVizcamoW,1-2
1 1
1 1 0
I
Pellcw 1b 3 o 1 o JPhl ps c 4 0 1 0
1 00000
2B- Kata (9). LGcnzalez (101. Hrllenbrand Kolb S. 11
AR&amp;)'cs cf 3 0 0 0 Wg~ntn Jb 4 0 2 0
(71 DBau11sta 19]. Cabrera (8). Nunez 11).
Pitlaburgh
2 0 0 0 McEwg cf 2 0 0 0
HR-Cabnna (12). COf'lne t3). 58- Kala (3). KWells
7 4 1 1 2 8 .Estesp
3 o1 1
SAeed p o o o o TGivin p
LCastlll o (7). 5- Aedmond.
Johns1on
11·3 0 0 0 0 2
IP H REA88SO
Meadows L2- 1
2-3 I
1 1 0 1 Chacon p 0 0 0 0
Greene ph 1 0 0 0
Arizooe
HBP-by KWells !Spevev).
RJahnson W 5-d
7 4 2 2 1 5
Uml)lres----fiams. John Hirsch bed\; First Wally Tot.al1 28 0 1 0 Totals . 30 4 9 4
Koprove
r oo o o o
Bell. Second . Laz 01At: Third. Br• Welce

c

Mahay
1-3
._
Francrsco
2-3 , l
._
BSOOuse
• 1.3
• :
JPa.Yell
' 1-3 :
,
Ram1rez
• -~ • :: J
~
HBP-bv Dtdl.ey , S/lPHoe~ w.::-..1\'az-~'-"?Z 2
Dickey.
Ump~res---Home . TOI'\ Ran.u:=o "'~: F•eld1 ·
.CultJ-eth . Secood J •IT' \\'01' "l)r.-., Terr. t..1cCie'T-3:09 A.- 5{) .24'

Toronto
000 200 000 2
Bost or1
204 000' 1Ox 7
E-JCI'I!'son tl 0 &gt;--! u.S or •6 · "oukrhs t1·
Creropo 3l DP-8 Jroton 3 LOB- Toronto 5.
So5lo&lt;1 • J 2B-00n ::. 2 tl 81 CS-Damon
t 3 ~ SF-Oam un
lP 1-1 R ER 88 SO

00

N- Vork
100 303 001 8
Tex••
020 010 000 3
E- MYoung (7). ASonano 14 ~ ,.)8-,,.,..
York 10. Tuaro 7 2 B- I\R oong.Je~ \? VI&amp;:
sur 2 (10). EWrlson 131 Te .xe~ B \ ' -?
36-Lottcn (4 ). HA- EW rlsor c2·
.
IP H R ERBB SO
Jllazquez W.4-4
Quantrill
MArvera

1 1 1
t
1 1
Va['.·erve S.3
Florida
w .n.sLJ-3
5 g " 4 2 s
Wayr'le
:21003 1
Perlsho
21000 2
HBP---by RJohnson (Easley).
Ump1res-Home. Paul Schnebec F11st. ChriS
GuccHJne: Second. ·Jerf} Meals. n urd. Ea

IP

Ch-

1

T-2:55 A- 19.32£ [38 .496).

OOJC
Gomez ss 2 0 1 0 ~ lllar r1
? 0 0 1
~~
3 0 \ c- Kapl t~r r1 0 0 0 C
Bergph
lOC C YUk1I1S 3tl 2 2 0 0
Ca:.' &lt;:
30 0:
Mrbel~c
3 · 1 0
Cr@spo ss .: 0 0 J
Totllls 32 2 6 2 Totals
30 7, 7 7

Aeesess

-

DP--Colorado 2 LOB--Colorado 2 New
York 7 28- Pellow (5). Matsut { 16), P~U za
(91 Wf9911"1100 (5) HR-Matsul 5). Floyd {41

.......

Yan
OHudsn 2t 1 0 C C

Yankees 8, Rangers 3

2004

..

Major League Baseball
Amortcan IAegue
EAST
w

Monday, May 24,

www .mydailysentinel.com

793335
1-3 0 0 0 0 1
2·300001

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7

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Anaheim
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32 812 8
Baltimore

Baltimore
100 110 000 3
Anlllhelm
300 300 1 h B
E-AKennedy (5). DP- Ballrmore 2. LO BBaltimore 11. A.natu:um 5. 29------Mora (14).
0 1bbons (4). Matoro (6), Eckrotein (4), JGurllen
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Kan•a• City
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Oakland
020 000 000
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One out when winn1ng fun scor&amp;d .
E- WGuerrero (1), DReye s (3) . DP-Kansas
City 1. LOB-Kansas City B. Oakland 6. 28Berroa 2 (6), Harvey (5] , Karras (3.\. HRMiSweensy (7). SB-Crosb¥ (2). CS- BSanlrago (1 ).
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DRayes pk~ad ro 1 banar rn the 7th
Umpirero--HOme, Larry Young: 'First, Angel
Hernandez: Seccnd, Mike E\'1lritl: Third. Mark
WBgner T-2:56. A-33,476 (43,662).

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BasebaiiCefendar
Ju~

"

,..,

7·t

.&amp;.rna1eur draft.
Jui'NI 14 - Hall o1 Fame gama. Atlanta ys. Minneroota. CooperstONn , N.Y
JUly 13 - All-Star game . Hous1on
Juty 25 - Hall of Fame tnducbons. Coopo!!t·
stown. N.Y.
Oct. 5 - Playolls ~ll'l
Ckt. 12 - League ~hamp'ionsh rp seues begm.
Oct. 23 - World Ser!M Degtns
Nov. 9-12 - Gensral milllaQeiSmee1 rngs Key
BiScayne. Fie
O.C. 10.13 - Wint Br meet 1ngs. A.nahetm.
Cald

This Dale In Baseball

TIITI TIITlmorrs: Frrst. Bru:::e

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May24
.
.
191 B- Cleveland's Sran Coveleskr pllehe&lt;l 19
rnnmgs ttl the lnd1ans· 3·2 viClory over the New
Yof1( Yankoos. Former pncher Joe Wood h~ a
home run tor the w1n
1935 - In lhe lirsr major league nrght game 1n
Cincrnnall, the Reds beat ttle Philadelphia
Ph•llles 2· 1 before 25.000.
1936 - Tony lazzen, batt ing etghtt1 lor rna
New York Yankees . drow 1r1 ' 1 runs wrth a trrple
and three home runs - lwo ot them grand
slams- Ill a 25·2 rout ol the Phr l ade~h ra A's
1964 - Harmon K1IIAhrew of the Minnesma
Tw105 hrt the longes1 home run m BaH•more·ro
Memorial Srad•um. a 471 -toot sl'lal to lett-center oH M1k Pappas
1984 - Jacl&lt; Moms led the Trg.ers to merr 17th
s1ra1ght road w1n, se.tt1ng an Al record Morns
allowed only lour h ~ s and Oetrort beat the Calrtom•a A.ngetro 5·1
•
1990 - Chicago's Mite Dawson -was walked
mtentronally 1!11!! ttmes by !lie Crncmnarr Aects
10 break the rQCOrd shared I.Jo,• Roger Marrs and
Garry Templelon
.
1994 -The Sr. LoUis Cardmafs ser a ma1or
teague record by slrandi ng 16 runners wrthout
sconng, losrng to Oav1d West and 1hree
Philadelphia Pnrtlres rel•avers 4·0.
1995 - Oaklafld'ro Derrn1s Eclo.e•sley became
(he Sixth pitcher with 300 53\IEIS rn a 5·2 wrn
over the 8ah1more Onoles
1998 - Heshman Man Diaz hrt lour homers .
tyin'g a sctrool and reg1ona r record. and drove 1n
SBY&amp;n runs as Flonda State routed Oklahoma
23·2 ro advance to 11'1e NC AA A11anllc II
Regronal final
2000 - For the third 11me rn mapr teague hrstory a team blew a \ even-run lead lw!Ce m a
week The Houston Astros lost a 7-0 leAd at
home agamst Philadlllphra after blow rng a 9-2
lead fl the nmth rm1ng at ~11twaukee two days
earher.
2001 ..... Johl'l L1cber of rhc CntCago CuDs
threw a 79-p!tch. one-hit shulout 1n a 3·0 blank·
ing of the Rads. 11 was the 111s1 shutout of the
Redro 1n an Nl·recCJrd 208 games
Today's brnh days: Joe Kennedy, 25 ; Brad Penny. 26 Jason GrabowSki, 28: Brandon Larson.
28: Ba nokl Colon , 31; Danny Ballllsta. 32

AL Leaders
BAmNG-Mora. Ballimore.. 38Q: MRamirez.
Boston . .351: MYoung. Te-as . .349. Cetalanolto . Toronto. .346; ASanchsz. Detr011. 345 ;
\!Goertero. Anahetm. _J-45: Bell•ard Cte-.oeland,
.342.
RUNs-VGuarrero. Anaherm . 40: Mora. Baltr·
m~. 39: Lawton. Clevelalld. 34; MYoung,
TeKas. 33 : CGurllen, Detroit. 32 Beltran .
Kanroaro C1ty, 31 ; Blalock, Te~ as . 30, AAoddguez. New YorK 30
RBI-OOrtrz. Boston, 36, JGu•'len , Anahe.m.
35: MOrdonez. CnJCago. 3-t \/Guerrero. Al1ah!llm. 34. Whrte. Detrort. 34: MYoung Te~as .
33; IRodnguez. Derroit. 33.
HITs--MYoung. Texas 66 : ISuzuk1 . Seattle.
62: Mora. Baltimore, 61; VGuerr ero. Anahelm ,
60: MAamrrez. Boston. 59 ; Bell1ard. Cleveland.
55; IRodngueL. Detroit. ·55,
DOU8LES-D0rlit . Boston . 18: VWells .
Toro nto. 15, Bell1ard, ClEveland, 15. Mora, Sal·
timcre. 14: THafner, Cleveland. 13: lugo. Tam·
pa Bay, t3; Caralanotto, Toronto, 13, VGuerrero, A.naneim. 13; Posada, New York , 13
MRamrrez , Boston, 13.
TAIP1.E5-Figg rns. Anaherm 6: Crawtord.
Tampa Bay. 4; MYoung, Texas. 4; CG u1l lsn.
Detroit 4; Lofton . New 'fork. 4: Woodward.
Torooto. 3: 12 t re t•ed wrth 2
HOME RUN$--Bialock. TeKaS, 12: Beltran.
Kansas C ~. 1t : EChavaz, Oakland. 11 : Glaus.
Anaham, 11: MA amrez, Boston , 11: DOrtiz.
Bcroton. 10; VGuerrercl. Anaheim. 10: Af3odrigue.z. New Yorio: , 10.
STOLEN BASES--Crawlord. Tampa Bay. 21:
BRoberts. Bak1more, 16: ASanchez , De1ro~ .
10: Beltran. Kansas Crty, 10: La wton. Cleveland , 10; Figgins. A.naheim . 9: JJones. M1n·

· Rolls was running full speed into right
tield while chasing a short tly hit by
Ronnie Belliard that Cruz _caught. Rolls'
sternum and right jaw were bruised
when he ran into Cruz and went down to
the ground.
"Felt like I was hi1 by a train," Rolls
fine. I'm going home to go to
said.
-sleep."
Rolls stayed down for several minutes
while being examined. He got up and
tried to persuade Piniella to let him stay
in the game before walking off the tield
under his power.
"He wanted to slay in there ... how
about that," Piniella said. "He said, Tm
not getting enough at-bats.' I said. 'Well.
we'll ~et you some more at-bat s next
week.' '
Team trainers will monitor Roll s. who
was replaced by Geoff' Blum. No res1s
are planned.
Cruz rem ained in the game. but afterward said his right side and leg were sore.
· "It was a borderline, jn-between ball,"
·cruz said. "I staned calling it as soon as
I knew I had it and then- bam 1 I'm glad
nobody really got hurt."
Cleveland starter Cliff Lee did not get
a decision and remains 5-0 this season.
He gave up four runs and six hits in 7 2. 3 innings.

"''m

Restored WWI p~e
has hando~afted feel, A6

NL Leaders
BAmNG-Casey. CIOCI11lali, 381l OYerbay,
Mr1Wau0(81!. 363; JW lsol'l. p,nSbiJrgh , .352 , Lc
Duca . losAngelt!s. 351 ;CW•Ison. Plft!bJr£'1 .
350. Rolen . St LOUIS. 340: MGik.JS, Allanta ,
339
RUN$-PujOis St LOUIS. 37. LGonzalez. Allzona. 36. A.Everen. Hou ston. 35. 8Abreu.
Phillldelptua 35 Hallon Colofado. 33, Bagwell. Houstoo . 33. Boggn. Ho!Jston 33 •
RBt- ROIBr'l. 51. LOUIS. 41 O.,..rbay. ~~u ­
kee, 39, Bunell, Phlladelphi!l, 39: GastJIIa . Col·
of'BCkl. 39. Burnrtz. Calonulo, 36, JKeot. '-louslon, 35 BAbreu. Pl"idade l~ra . 34
tiTS-Casey. Cronnat1, 62. P~erre. Flonda
~: .NJlif,on. Prtlsburgh. 58: Owrbay. t.41twau~1-: lorena SanOiego. 57:CWhon . P.nsburgh . 55: Burroughs.' San ·rfrego. 55: Btlltre
Los Angeles, 55
OOU8LE5---0verbay. M•twaukae. 21 . Castil le.
Colofado. 17. Matsu ~ New Yor\. t6: Gasey
Cu,c•nnatl, 16: Clayton. Colorado, 16.
Edmonds, St Lo~&gt;~s . 15; Helton. CoiOtftdo 14
TRlP LE s-F~eel C.ncrnmnr. 5. JWilsoo, PittSburgh . 4. P~e~"re , Fklnda. 4; CM'1se , Atlanta. 4.
Cmlron. Ar~ona . '3. DRobens, Los Angeles. 3,
JOrew. A11anta. 3. Cora. los Angeles. 3 Jenk Ins. M11waukee. 3
HOME RUNs-Lowell. FIOflda . 13. BurnltZ.
Colorado. 13: SFrnley. Arizona. 13; Cabrera.
F!onda. t2, Castrlla, COiotliiOO. 12: LGanzafe.Z.
Anzona. 12: Alou. Chir;agc, 12
STOLEN BASEs--Podsednrk. M 1~ aukee. 21 .
DRoberts. Los Angeles. 15, Poerre, F~onda . 12,
Roll1ns, Ph 1ladelph1e. 11; womack. St Lours.
10. RSanders. St Lou-s. 9. EnChavez, Montr&amp;al . B: Cameron. NI!YI 'fork , B.
PITCHING (6 DeciSIOO&amp;I-Ciemens. Houston.
7·0. t 000 . 251 : PWilson. Crnc1nna11. 6-0
1000, 3.59: Carpvnter. St l ouis. 5-1 , 833
3 93; TGiav-ne. New York.. 6-2. 750. 2.13. Penny. Flonda, 5·2 , 714. 2.10:6 are t1ed with 667
STRIKEOUTS- RJonnson
An zona. 86.
Clemens. Houston. 70; BSheets. Miwaukee
69. Becken . Florrda. 50: LHemandel. Montre·
al. 57. Peavy. San Ooego. 53. Clement Ctllca go, 53
SAVEs--Gravoes. Clr'IC1n11al1. 20: Benllez . Flori·
da . 16. Mesa. Prnsbur11h. 13, H8fges. San
Francisco. • 2: Kolb. MrlwAukee. 11: Hoffman
Sa n Orego. 11. Chacon. Colorado. iO. Gagne.
Los A11geles, 10

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
-• ••'- '1'\IS•\•'I . :,J . '\,, l~t•

SCOREBOARD
Monday, May 24
Houston a1 Crn~ rnna11 Jose Acevvdo a'1d the
Reds face T1m Aedd1ng and the Astros 1n "the
i1nal(l of a tow-game ser~es between NL Cen·
Ira! rrvafs
LATE SURGE
Bar ry Bonos dro\16 rn !he go-ahead run With the
bases loilded 1n tl'le ! lth tnn•ng and A.J
P1erzyn s~ r to11owec1 wrtl'l a gran~ slam Saturday
nrghl to help San Franc;I$CO to a 7-2 ~icl ory
over Montrea l P1erzynskr. Who has struggled
mosr ot the season finrshed w1th Sk)( RBiro. It
was h1 s seeood home run ot ttle seaSOfl and
hrs th1 rd career grand slam ·
MILESTONE
Lu1s Gonzalez's srngllltn !he hrsl tnn1og o1 A.rr
zona's 11 ·2 loss to rne Marlins on Salurday
was hrs 2.000th career M
OPPORTUNISTIC
Rod Bariijas homered w~h one out rn the n1nth
rnn1ng. caporng a late comeoad&lt; that gave
Te~ as a 4-3 ~ dory ove1 1he New 'York Yankees
on Saturday Barajas. wno beCame Tho !ul1-t1mo
stan!!! -Fnday when roclo.oe Gerald Larrd tme a
igament rn hiS left tnumb. smacked an Q-1
breakrng ball from Torn Gordon hrgh 1'1to the
lef1-l1eld seats lor hrs fourrh homer ol the seil
son.
•
DOING IT AlL
Jerma1ne Dye mad&amp; a dutch calch In thlj top o
the 1\th rnmng then scored on Bobby Crosby's
1nt1eld S111gte w1th tv.·o outs rn the bottom ~an Ia
gr-.re Oakland a 5·4 viClory OYel Kansas C1ty on
Saltirday Enc Cha..ez 1\Sd rt wrth a rwo-aur
IWo-run horner 1n the n1 nth off new closer Jere
my Affeldt. mak1ng hr~ lirst relief appearance o
the yea r alter erght sl&lt;lrtro.
TAMPA HEAT
Jose Cruz Jr. homered and drove \n four runs
leadii'IQTampa Bay 10 ils first three-game wrn
ntng streak of the seasol'l w.th a 6-3 vrctory
over Cleveland on Sa1urday nig ht Cruz IS 7-lor
1t w1th two homt~ rs ard eighl R81s 1n the pas
throe gam as. He hn a three-run shot rn the frrs
ard made 11 4-3 witt' an RB! grounder in fhe
SIKth
REVERSAL OF FORTUNE
Bra&lt;) Radke allowed on(! run il'l stlven rnnings
and Matthew LeCroy M a two-run homer lo
lead the Minnesota Twm over ttre Cnicagc
Whi1&amp; Sox ~ 1 Saturday n•ght Minnesota had
lost the prevrous !hree games agat-rsl Chrcago
by a comb•n&amp;d 29-5 margrn M•CtliMI Cuddy&amp;
went J-tor-4 w.1h two doubles and en RBI. The
White Sox had lhef w1nn1ng streak enepped a
lour and I~!U one game behind the fir st-place
Twrns 1n ltle Al Central ·
SLOWING STAR
Roger Clemens tasred on.,- tive Innings In his
worst NL outil'lg, but avotd8d 1he kiss as the
Astros tell to the Aects B-7 on Salu r:Ja~ nig ht
The SIK-time Cv Young wnner haS won his last
11 deCisions in tne regular season, a streak
that started Sept. 1t . Clemens gave up a sea
son·hlllh srx runs n h1s shorte st outrnll srnce
SWilchli'lQ leagues
·

Lee is just the third Indians pilcher in
the last 30 years to start a season 5-0.
Dennis Mm1inez won his lirsl nine decisions in 1995, and Greg Swindell started
6-0 in 1988.
Toby Hall hom~red and drove in two
runs tor the Devil Ray s. He has three
RBis in his lasl 14 games.
Tampa Bay's Mark Hendrickson
allowed four nms and eight hits in seven
innings. Travis Harper ( 1-0) went three
scoreless innings for the win.
Cleveland gm a homer from Alex
Escobar. It was his tirst since Sept 17.
"We missed opportunities, again,"
Indians manager Enc Wedge said. "That
was the difference for us."
Lou Merloni had a run-scoring single
and Travis Hafner hit a two-run doubl e
that put the Indians up 3-0 in the first.
The Devil Rays lied it in the bottom
half. Huff had an RBI single, Martinez
was hi\ by a pitch with the bases loaded
and Hall drove in a run with grounder.
The teams traded solo homers in the
fourth. Escobar went deep in the top half
before Hall got the Devil Ray s even at 4
in the bottom of the inning.
·
"It's frustrating when the team scores
runs and you should put up a zero in the
next inriing," Lee said. "TWice I didn 't do
that.''
·

111'-.ll\\

\1\\

· .,

•••(•1

,1,,,, 1111• lr rl ,

,1, , 1,1•1·····

B&amp;E sUSpects believed to be in Kentucky

SPORTS
• Reds sweep Astros.
See Page Bl

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDA ILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - A warrant has been
issued tonhe arrest of a Dexter man in
conneclion wilh a breaking and entering spree in western Meigs Counly.
and charges are expected · against a
juvenile. as well. Howe ver, Sheriff
Ralph Trussell said he believes the
suspect s have gone to Kentucky.
Todd M. Gayhean, 18, Dexter, has
been charged with the sale of an Apple
iMac computer stolen from the
Elementary School.
Wilkesville

According to Sheriff Ralph Trussell. the
computer. valu~d at over $ 1.300. W&lt;L'
sold to a Pomeroy woman. recovered
by the sheriff's depm1ment. and turned
over to Vinton County authorities.
According to Tru s:' e II. Gayhea rt
and I he juvenile are also believed to
have been involved in a hur~larv a1
the Harold and Regina Erlcivine on
Slrong 's Run Road on May 5. in
which firearm s. jewelry and ca' h
were stol en, as well as the break-in at
the Star Grange Hall on Sal e m
School Lot Road. wh ere a radial arm
saw belonging lo Wait.! Nichol son

was stolen . Tile saw was later reCO\ r
creel from an abandoned bui ldi ng.
Trusse ll 'aid .
""G ayheart and hi ' acco mplice are
al so suspected in a break-in of a
build i n ~ owned by t harle-s Emmotb
of Lant!:-.vi lle." T!~u ~~e \1 ~aid. "where
firearnb and cash were &gt;~ ol en ...
Accordi ng In Trusse ll . ammuniti on
an d lens cove r' compatibl e wilh
Emmons· 303 Brn ish rille we re
foun d a't Gay hea n ·s re sidenc e.
Tru&gt;&lt;ell " "d witnesses observed
Gayheart ai1d lhe alleged ju ven ik
accom plice in possession of a lawn

mower reponed stolen from De borah
Cm of Star Hi ll Road. \\ ho also reported pl&amp;.~ :-.t ic ga~ cu1itain er". a Lree trimmer
and a 'p ra~'" stolen from her re,idetll'e
"G &lt;~ ~he a rt and th e ju1enile. are
repnrte dlv in Kentucky. and we ha1·e
COill actcJ au th nr il ies ihere. and prol'ickd c·opi e' of the warrant. so he
coul d be a rrn i&lt;'U on the M e i~ s
Count~ L'ha rge-. there... Tru~~e ll -.aid.
AcconJing 1o Dep uty Scott
Tr u. . -.el l. \\·ho im e-..ti~ ak:"d the ~.: om­
pla int. the im e-; tigcltion cont inu e~
into the Salem Townsh ip burglarie'
and other B&amp;Es .

Bush seeks to reassure America, says U.S. will Citizens'
persevere in Iraq, prison will be demolished
group takes

Baseball Today

·oevil Rays sting Indians in 1Oth
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. - The
Tampa Bay Devil Rays are tinally playinu with confidence.
Tina Mm1inez's bases-loaded single in
the IOth inning Sunday gave the Devil
Rays a 5-4 victory over the Cleveland
Indians and their tirsl four-game winning streak of the season.
Rocco Baldelli hit a one-out double
off David ~iske (0-2). After Aubrey
Hulf was intentionally walked and Jose
Cruz Jr. walked to load the bases,
Martinez lined a single to right on a 1-2
pitch.
"When you win a few games in a row,
your team bui Ids contidencc and things
take off," Maninez said. "You take the
tield with a lot more confidence. We've
taken the field the last two days expecting to win .''
The Indians have lost five straight for
' the second lime this season .
The Devil Rays' previous four-game
winning streak came last July 29-Aug. I.
-"Success breeds confidence," manager Lou Piniella said. " I know tni s, I'm
going to enjoy my off day (Monday) a
whole lot better."
'
Tampa Bay second baseman Damian
Cleveland Indians· Alex Escobar. right. runs toward first base after Rolls had tl)e wind knocked out of him
Tampa Bay Devil Rays catcher Toby Hall dropped a cal led th ird strike in a scary collision with Cruz in the seventh.
during the second inn ing Sund ay. (AP)

Countdown to Junior's
sooth begins, Bt

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PfTCHING
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833. 2 90, Ki3folm NBIII ¥00. 5-1 . 833. 3 00 :
JAncon, Mlnne5'o4a. 6-2. 750. 2 82 . Roger&amp;.
T~as . 6-2 750. 3 l 7 CSiva. P.M vwsota. 5-2.
71 4. 4 39. Mulder . ()aldalld 5·2. 7 14 . 2 98
STRIKEOUT 5-PMa•tlnez, Boston , 63.
Scnlllflg. Bos100. 61 Robertson. De1T()I1., 53 ,
ZambrMO, Ta!&gt;lpa Bay. 52, Buehrle. Chcago.
s2.L1IIy Toronto. 51 Halar:lay. Toronto. 49.
SAVEs--MRr..ara N!111' Vorit, 15. FCortiero.
Te-as, 14, Nalhan. ~llnnesota . 13. P&amp;rctval.
Anaheim . 12. FouHw. Bostoo 9 AhoOeS Dak ·
land. 8. Jol•o. Ba~1mor e 7. Koch ChiCaQCJ. 7

I

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Jared Clark Leach
• Clara Roney
• Joseph Cremeans
• Mary Ruth Porter

LoiTERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 6-4-8
Pick 4 day: 4-1-6· 1
Pick 3 night: 4-8-5
Ptck 4 night: 4-0-9-7
Buckeye 5: 7-9-27-33-35

West Virginia
Dally 3:4-7-1
Dally 4: 9-7-0-5
Cash 25: 12-13-14-16-17-21

WEATHER

Dolallo on Page A6

WASHINGTON (AP) President Bush sought to
reassure American s Monday
night lhat he has a plan to
pull lray out of the violence
and chaos lhat have marked
the year since he declared an
. end to major com bat.
" History is moving , and it
will tend 10ward hope or
tend toward tragedy," he
said.
Bush promi sed to demolish Abu . Ghraib pri son.
where Iraqi de1ainees were
abu sed by U.S. troops , The
White House said the prison
had become "a symbol of
disgraceful conduct by a
few American troops who
dishonored our country and
diregarded our values."
In a prime-time address at
the U.S. Army War College
in Carlisle , Pa., Bush was
outlining a hopeful path
amid rising body counts on
both sides. His goal was to
demonstrate
momentum
toward the shift of political
power to Iraqis in five
weeks and the U.S . effort to
draw more countries in 10
combat insurgents and
rebuild the country.
"We will persevere and
defeal lhis enemv and hold
this hard-won ground for the
realm of liberty. " he said,
according
to
excerpts
released by the White House
as Bttsh prepared to leave
for Pennsylvania.
The White House said the
Uniled States would keep it s
troop level at . the current
138.000 as long as nece ssary, promising more if necessary and offering no
timetabl e for bringing sol diers home .
Bush outlined five steps
he said would he lp Iraq
achieve democracy and

Please see Bush. A5

INDEX
SncrtoNsCalendars
2

12 PAGFS

A3

NEWS@MYDAILYS ENTINEL .COM

Comics
Dear Abby
Edito rials
Obituaries
Sports

81

Weather

A6

© a.oo4 Ohio Valle)' Publishing Co.

STAFF REPORT
NEWS @ MYOA !LYS E ~ TINEL.COM

(Editor\ n o l ~: A lawsuit
o utl ines Ihe grie 1 ance.s of
one part y against anot her. It
doe' nut t.!ctcrm ine guilt or
innocence. )

CH ESHIRE - A lawsui t
fikd in federa l court bv a
local citi ze n ~· or~an iL alion
requests full rep&lt;Jrting ant.! .
notificati on of sulfuric acid
emt ss tons from th e Ge n.
Jame s M. Ga vin Po wer Plant
by its own er. American
Electric Power.
Th at and seve ral oth er
reque &gt;ts for relie f are squght
in th e U.S. Di str ict Court of
the Sou1hern Di stri ct of Ohio
in Columbus by Cheshirebased Citi zen s Again st
Polluti on tCAPJ in an o ngoing dispute betw ee n th e
group and th e utility giant
since AEP install ed air poilulion conlrol techn o lo ev a1
Gavin in 200 1_.
'"
CAP a ll eges til e coal burning planl has fai k d In
report or has only int ermil te ntl y not ified !he puhlic an d
\!11\ iron menta l agencies or
,-a rying leY e l ~ of ~ ul fur ic
ac id ~ milt ed from Ga1·in. ,·reari ng a . hea lth ha; arcl for
C h e,lm~-are a reside nt s.
Su lfuric ac id is cl as,i fie d
as a haza rdo u' subs lance
under fede ral statu tes proYided by the Co mprehen si1e
R t""~pll n -,e .

En,·ironm ental

Co mpensa1ion and Liab;l it!
Ac·t iCE RCLA I an d the
Emen.!e nc\ Pla nning anU
C o mtn un liy Ri g h i- t o~ Kn ow
ACT !E PCR A)
Under those requireme nt s.
CAP all ages AEP l1&lt;1&gt; fa iled
to not-ify lhe publi c· o f
increased ' ul fu ric acid emisPresident Bush greets members of the faculty, staff an d other dign itaries as he arrives for
his speech at the U.S. Army War College in Carlis le, Pa ., Monday. (AP Photo/ Ge rald Herbert)

Plea_se see AEP, AS

Anderson announces regional development plan
STAFF REPORT

Classifieds

AEP to court

MARIETTA
Terry
Anderson , Democ rati c can didate for the 20th Di slrict
Ohio Senate, announ ced hi s
plan for economic develop ment in Southea st Ohio
Monday in Marietta.
From the banks of the Ohio
River, Anderson called for the
creation of lhe "Southeast
Ohio Initiative," a public-pri-

vale piutnership to enhance South ea' t Ohi o - commun irecreational and touri sm- "ty leade rs and busi ness peobased busi nesses in the reg ion. pl e who have a ge nuin e
The Initiative, Ande rson intere st in th e region's ~co­
announced , will eslabli sh a nomic health. Eac h cou nty
comprehe nsive, practi cal a nd exisli ng eco no mic · proregional development pl an. motio n organi zati ons will
-assemblin g support and .ha ve a. vo ice in th e effort .
tool s all owin g entrep re''The Init iative thJ I I am
neurs and de ve lopers to get proposin g wi ll build conp lhe ir ideas off the ground. It eralio n a nJ coordi nation
will be finan ced in part by amo ng . ex i ~ ti ng orguniJa state and federa l funds, but tions. " Ande"o n ' aid . " It
will be run by th e people of wil l promote reg tonal t h in ~ -

ing a nd effurts to work
together for a common goal.
Th e ln ili ati l'e will foc u' on
project' that be nefit lhe
reg ion a' a whole. whi le
Cll'iUrim.! that ew.:h of the
co u ntie~ in th e distri ct ha' a
t:ha nce tu deve lop um yue
ad \ anta&gt;tes. suc h " ' the
Becky • Thti1c her dinner
showboat 111 Wa shington
County or the sceni c hyway
in Mo rgan Cotltlly."
Tu su cceet.!. the Initiative

mu~t

in ' oh e De m ocra t ~.
Re ptth licath
. a nd
Independents. Anderso n sa id .
" It i' time th e peop le of
Sotnhea' t Oh io lake control
of our own future ... he ,aid .
An der :-.nn

~~

run n m l!

nu a in~t 'tat!.! scna10r Jo\·
P'Udge tt. fDrmcrly th e director of the Gmernur\ Office
of 'Appa lachia . hefure ' he
\\ ' a' appu i nt ed by Gni'Crnor
Taft ILl fini'h former state
!'!e nator Ji m Ca rne .'~ :-. eat.

• Thursday, June 3, 2004- Pleasant ValleyWellness Center

The SICirs Shine Bright at Holzer Senior Care Center!

• 4:30p.m.- Grades 9to 12 (Boys)
• 5:30p.m. -Grades 6to 8(Boys)
• 6:30p.m.- All Girls

HYS ALS
J

• Cost is $12/student
, For more information call: (304)

675-7222

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

'--------------------------~------~--------~--------------------~-----

Holzer Senior Care Center recently earned their fourth consecutive ~
*Five-Slur" Roling from Healthgrades, Inc. This is an outstanding achievement, .
and Holzer Senior Care Center is the only area facility to receive such recognition .
I

()it.d tt y ( " '

"'" ( ""IIIIIIIIH 'III r" I", ll&lt;·lt! !' ,., til• ·. I.IIHI.tl d rh .ll 111.1kn !lw

HolzPr SPnior· C .tr&lt;' Difkr&lt;'rH.c!
For more Information, or to Jehedule a tour of thl! facility, call Amber johnson, Director of Adm•ssions,
at (740) 446-5001 . Chl!ek out www.healthgrodes.com for more information about their Five Star rotingl

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