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                  <text>. Bothered by
blisters, Safin exits
French Open, Bt

Memorial Day
across -Ohio, A6

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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.)oll :\IS• \ol. :;4 . :\o.

H IFSDAY,.Jl iNE ~.

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Memorial Day service honors veterans

SPORTS
• Reds power past
Marlins. See Page 81

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - "Let us not
forget that thi~ is a day of
remembrance . a day our
nation pauses to pay tribute
to those who gave their lives
so we could live ours in freedom ." said Don Phillip' of
Lancaster. speaker at the
Memorial Day serv ice in
Pomeroy.
The Eighth Di strict commander of the American
·Legion noted that nearly 4H
·million have served the cause
of freedom and that more
than a million have died to
preserve liberty for this
nation.
"Wr come together here
today to pay' tribute to every
-;inglt; American service
member who has died in
defen~e of this great country."
"The cost of war and the
pri~.:e of peace are great,"
said Phillips. noting the Sept.
11 attack was a reminder that
there is no alternative but to
fight those who have already
declared war on our nation.
"That means we sometimes
must pay that price in lives.
Our armed forces are committed to making that sacrifice io be sure we live in
freedom." he said.
"The
weapons
have
changed. the threat ha s
changed. but the reason we
go to war has not changed .
.. Page A5 ___ ...
The torch ·ha' passed from
• Clay Nutter ·
one generation to another
down through the year' to
• Carl Vanover
• Venus Rappold Blake rest in the hands of the men
and women serving in today's
war on terror."
Phillips spoke following a
parade led by the honor guard
of Drew Webster Pos( 39.
The Southern High School
• Raccoon vandalizes
Band, · fire trucks from the
.church. See Page A3
Bend area. antique cars and
• URG to host Celtic
several political units were
Festival June 19 .
included

Mick Williams, Post 39
commander ·in his opening
remarks ca lled for those
allending "to remember fallen
war-time herm:' from the
Re volution War to the war in
Iraq and all those in
between." The band played
the Star Spangled Banner, the
pledge of allegiance was
given, and H&lt;irold Blackston.
chaplain. had a prayer.
In Pomeroy Mayor John
Musser's welcome. he asked
everyone to remember the
sacrifices made by tho'e
servin g in the military to protect the freedom which we
en1oy.
_
Representing the Auxiliary
of Post 39, Gladys Cumings
read "In Flanders Field" and
gave a history of the poem.
A wreath as placed on the
Ohio RiYer in remembrance
of those lost at 'ea bv John
Weeks, Harold Blacbton and
Lennie Jewell. and a tribute
was given by the post\Jiring
squad follow ed · by taps The honor guard of Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion. leads the Memorial Day parade
through downtown Pomeroy.
played by Karen Griffith.

OBITUARIES

INSIDE

See Page A2

Don Phillips, American Legion Eighth District commander, calls
for the nation to pay tribute to those who have given their lives
to secure freedom in a speech at the Memorial Day celebra;
tion in Pomeroy. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Navy veterans , Lennie Jewell. Harold Blackston. and John
Weeks, left to right. prepare to place a wreath on the Ohio
River in tribute to the war dead as part of the Memorial Day
service in. Pomeroy Monday. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Hundreds of alumn_i return Memorial Day tribute reminds
for PHS class reun1ons
nation of the sacrifice for freedom

WEATHER

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTI NEL.COM

Bv J.

MILES lAYToN

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Details on Page A6

INDEX
2 SECI10NS- 12 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Community
Obituaries
Sports
Weather
I

A3
B3-4

Bs
A3
A4
A2

As
B1
A6

POMEROY - More than 300 Pomeroy
High School alumni and guests from all
across the country returned to Meigs
County for the annual alumni reunion and
dance held at Meigs High School Saturday
night.
Joe Struble emceed the banquet where
special recognition was given to several
graduates. Gifts were presented to
Kathleen Bailey Scott, 97, of the class of
1925, the oldest alumni attending, and to
Kathryn Legar of Bradenton. Fla. of the .
class of '39 the oldest graduate traveling
the farthest.
Also recognized were Rachael Elberfeld
Downie of the class of 1934, the oldest
alumni wearing a class ring; Carla Will
Werry of the class of 1965, the oldest office
assistant: George Shiveler of the class of
194~. the oldet basketball captain, and to
Helen Magg, of the 75th anniversary class,
the oldest reunion class member in attendance.
During the evening three $400 scholarships were awarded. they went to Bethany
Diana Amberger of Southern High School,
Jayne Davi s of Meigs High School. and
Alyssa Holter of Eastern High School. All
three were valedictorians of their respec-

© 2004 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

•

~

Please see Alumni, AS

Please see Tribute. AS

\

A large crowd of fam1ly. friends and veterans came to Meigs
Memory Gardens to honor those who have served a grateful
nation. Under overcast skies to the bugle cry of "Taps." the sacrifice of Staff Sgt. Roger Clinton Turner. Jr .. t'ook center stage
during the Memorial Day serv1ce. His s1ster Den1se Bunce. mother Dottie Turner, and grandmother Elka. Marble Sit under a flag
that means something more on Memorial day. (J. Miles Layton )

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

• Desi(pled for hip school students • Technk:aUy challenplj
act yelll5 Gllll••' ; • • •

..

POMEROY - The sacrifice of a few for 'their country
echoes an eternity on
Memorial Day.
Meigs County veterans past
and present were honored by
several dignitaries reminding
a large crowd Monday at
Meigs Memory Gard~.:ns of
the importance of service,
freedom, honor and sacrifice.
State representative Jimmy
Stewart gave a stirring speech
about the importance of honoring what veterans ha ve
done for the nation. Stewart
said there have been nine
Medal of Honor recipient'
from Meig' Cou nty who have
served with distinction. But
more than that. Stewart
reminded the crowd of the
importance not taking any
moment of life 'bared
between friends and familv
for granted.
'
"In these uncertain times.
everyone 'hou ld cheri'h each

Gill•

Courses offered: Healthcare, Auto Service

._¥IIIey SG~G~Gallta YlntGnc.ty Welbkln u.otltlo~ and Information Technology

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Ohio Valley
Tech Prep
Conwct your high ~oehO&lt;Jl c.uun..clm todAy!

�•

PageA2

OMMUNITY

The Daily Sentinel
(

Tuesday, June 1,. 2004

A celtic folk fest ival will be held from 10 a.m.-10 p.m. , June 19 at the University of Rio Grande.
The festival will feature a Welsh sheep dog demonstration,, cloggers, and, of course, bagpipers
(Submitted photo).

URG to host Celtic Festival June 19

,

RIO GRANDE - A Celtic
Folk Festival will be held
June 19 at the University uf
Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College on the
Bell Tower Green.
The event. to be held from
10 a.m. to 10 p.m., is sponsored by the University of
Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College. Tri Valley Celtic Society. the
Madog Center for Welsh
Studies at the University of
Rio Grande . and the ·Ohio
Arts Council.
The Festival will ha ve a
Welsh sheepdog demonstration, Celtic clans and clog&lt;

gers. vendor;, storyteller an i mponant role for area
Bob Ford. and workshops on residents · because it preWebh anJ Irish . langua ge, serves and promotes the cusgenealogy. Welsh dance. and toms. traditions. and heritage
"Who were the Celts?"
of the Scottish. Irish, and
There will also be musical Welsh people who struggled
entertai nment includ ing. bag- to settle and build communipipers: the Celtic· . rock band . ties in the Appalachian areas
Silent Lion: Banks of Ohio of Ohio and West Virginia.
Admission is $5 for
Dulcimer Group: Bobby
Murray : Iris h gu itarist John adults, $3 for children 12
Shennan ; and Victoria Parks. and under, and children
At 6 p,m.. the Scottish under two get in free. The·
C'eilidh. a social gatherin g fes ti val will be held rain or
with traditional music, danc- shine and is handicapped
ing. and storyt elling, will accessible.
begin . Admiss ion to the
In formatio n is available by
cal
ling 245-7186 or . 245Ceilidh is free.
The Celtic Festival plays 7:1~ 1 .

Grade 4: Baylee Collins,
all A's: Christian Amsbary,
Christopher Bissell. Jan ae
Boyle s, Danielle Cline.
Tyler Cline. Emily Davis.
Cheyenne Doczi , Kristin
Fick, Shannon Goh , Brenna
Holter. Ari k Horne r. Kayle
Lawrence, Savannah Moore,
Paul
Morri son,
Kelsey
Myers, Jacob Parker, Marie
Powell , Ashley Putman .
Cassie Randolph, . Jenah
Sampson, Shelby Smith ,
Courtney Thomas.
Grade 5: Jonathan Barrett,
Devon Baum, Brady Bi ssell,
Megan Carnahan, Ashleigh
Duffy. Morgan Hall , Allie
Rawson , Robert Warner,
Lonnie Westfall . all A's.
Hayley Aanestad. Ryan
Chantel . Sauer.
Amos,
Jessica Cleland, Tia Collier,
Colin Connolly, Dakoda
Cowdery. Nathan Gheen,
Scott Gilbride. Rachel Kille,
Timothy
Markworth.
Danielle Maxey, Beverly
Maxson . Ashley Miller,
Pratt, Jennifer
Brayden
Reed , Hannah Rid gway,
Sheena
Riffle ,
Joyce
Romines,
Zari
Roush.
Randy Stewart, Matthew

Whitlock, Morgan Windon.
Grade 6: Wade Collins.
Matthew Friend, Hannah
Hysell. Whitney Putman. all
A's ; Darci Bissell , Jacob
Bosto n. Andrea r,uckley,
Breea Buckley, Uawfence
Samantha
Collins .
Cummins ,
Erin
Dunu ,
Samuel Evans, Kimberly
Minear, Phillip Morehead,
Audrionna Pullins. Devin
Rig gs, Amanda Roush, Jerry
Rucker, Hannah West.
Grade 7: Tina Drake,
Alexis Hirzel , all A's:
Dwight Beaumont, Heather
Brooks. Rhonda Durham,
Zachary Hendrix . Matthew
Ho sken . Kaylee Milam.
Michael
Moore.
Kyle
Sargent, Katlyn Sauvage,
Amber White.
Grade 8: Andrew Bissell,
Nathan Carroll , Ryan Davis,
Kyle
R·awson, · Morgan
Werry. • all A' s; Kathryn
Bland , Mogen Broderick,
Joshua
Collins,
Kyle
Edwards , Kelsey Holter,
Casandre Hook, Samantha
Parsons, Saralisha Powell.
Hannah
Praft,
Tri sta
Putman , Tiffany Rutter,
Cortney Scyoe.

..... --.. ~· '-- _
.
1•

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'

Clubs and
organizations
Thesday, June I
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
Lodge
363
F&amp;AM will meet at 7:30
, p.m. at the temple. All mas. ter mason s are invited.
(:HESTER
Chester
Council 323, Daughters of

Bv J.

work . Inside the nursery,
there ivere signs of vandalism. Toys were thrown
POMEROY - · A small everywhere. Crayons were
hairy terrorist has invaded on the tloor and there were
the serenity of the Trinity some ceiling . tiles strangely
·Congregationalist Church in askew.
Pomeroy.
Musser knew the raccoon
Wearing a black mask,. was back, but this time he
which covers deep dark sin- vowed it would be different.
ister eyes, thi s four legged In stead of waiting for the
striped creature, otherwise raccoon to strike again, the
known as a raccoon, has president gathered a coali been terrorizing the church tion of the willing, which
for nearly a week . Church included Police Chief Mark
Council - President John Proffitt and contact with the
Musser said he thou ght he Ohio Department of Natural
chased the creature away Resources Wildlife Officer
last Wednesday when he Keith Woods . Their mi ssion
caught it scurrying here and wa s clear: a . pre-emptive
there on church grounds.
first strike against the raeAfter that, all windows coon' to keep it from
and other entrance s were destroying anything else, or
carefully secured to keep the worse, biting someone while
creature from invading the possibly
infected
with
church again. For awhile, r. .es.
church and city leaders were £.'We're going to get him,"
content to let these sanctions Mu sser said.
Proffitt
and
Musser
against the raccoon take
their course. Typical to its worked together to track and
nature , the raccoon ignored corner the creature in ·the
th e sanctions and again ceiling of the nursery, but
sought to create havoc the raccoon avoided capture
by crawling .· over ceiling
inside the church.
Early Friday morning, tiles and light fixtures.
nature's thief fo und a small There was a shallow spider
h.ole , entered the church and hole of sorts which hid the
began making its way creature. Ductwork and
through a maze of duct- pipes were also handy if the
MILES LAYTON

JLAYTON@MYOAILYSENTIN EL.COM

"G})tac~f@~&amp;
TlrmgJ&gt; f@ JP.@"
Your guide to weekend

entertainment in the Tri-State

et Everyone Know Your Dad Is Someone
Very. Special With A Father's Day
.....___,
Thank You Tribute ...
To Be Published In The Daily Sentinel
On Friday, June 18th!

- . . ...._. . __ . . .:

Thesday, June I
ALFRED - The Orange
Township Tru stees will meet
at 7:30 at the home of Clerk
Osie Follrod.
Wednesday, June 2
TUPPERS PLAINS
. Eastern Local School District
will ho ld a special board
meeting at 5:30 p.m. at the
administration building for
interviewing superintendent
ca ndidates and · to transact
other impending busi ness as
. can be legally dealt with by
the board.
PAGEVILLE - - Scipio
Town ship Trustees will meet
at 6:30 p.m. at the Pageville
Town Hall.

America, 7:30 p.m. at the
hall . Charter to be draped for
Bulah Maxey. Members to
wear white .
MIDDLEPORT The
Middleport
Community
Association will meet at 8:30
a.m. at Peoples Bank.
RUTLAND
The
Rutland Gadrden Club will
meet at I p.m. at the home
·
of Debbie Blullington.
Wed•es~,June 2
TUPPERS
AINS Eastern Athletic Boosters.
6:30 p.m. at t
gh sc hool.
All parents anq coaches are
urged to attend. New ofticers
to be elected .
Thursday, June 3
TUPPERS PLAINS
The Tuppers Plains VFW
Auxiliary of Post 90B53 wil
meet at 7 p.m. at the hall.
.
Friday, June 4
POMEROY
- Meigs
County PERI Chapter 77
meets at Meigs County
Mu,ltipurpose Senior Center,
with luncheon at noon and
meeting to (ollow. Perry
Varnadoe , Meigs County
Economic
Deveopment
Director, will be guest speaker. All members are urged to
attend.

Wednesday, June 2
LONG
BOTTOM
Revival service s will be held
at 6:30 p.m. Sunday and 7
p.m. Monday through Friday,
June 4, at the Mount Olive
Church at Long Bottom . ·
Lawrence Bush , pastor,
invites the. public. There will
be special si nging each night.

Other events
Thesday, June l
POMEROY -· Childhood
immunization clinic will be
held from I to 7 p.m . at the
Meig s
County
Health
shot
Department.
Take
records and any medical
card s. Children must be
accompanied by a parent or
legal guardian.

Support Groups
Thursday, June 3
POMEROY
Holzer
Hospice Meigs · County will
have a "dinner with friends"
at 6 p.m. at Craw's
Restaurant.

creature sought escape later.
It 's bark warned anyone
who came too close.
Both Musser and Proffitt
agreed that thi s was going
be a long hard slog to get
the creature' to leave. Killin g
the raccoon with a Taser
could create even more
problem s because it would
be stuck in area that would
require perhaps expensive
repairs to remove it. Musse r
and Proffitt came up with
an exit strategy.
Proffitt set a live trap for
the animal in the alley
which the raccoon used to
get into the church . Inside
the trap were some appl es
coated with peanut butter.
"I believe we will get him
as soon as · he gets a little
hungry." said Proftitt,
The chief said they will
just wait it out and hope for
the best. After it is captured,
Proffitt said the animal
would transported to a far
away forest and set loose.
With the creature gone, volunteers from all over could
come to clean-up and sanitize the nursery making the
basement a model for safety
throughout Pomeroy.
As of press time 'Friday,
the raccoon was still at
large.

DEAR ABBY: I'm writing
re ga rding the letter · you
received from "Lost in
Alaba ma," a former foster
child who had lived in an
emergency shelter for seven
month s before being placed
in a foster home for the week
before she turned 18. The
girl was allowed to cal l the
shelter for a short · time
before finally being asked
not to call anymore and told
to "move qn with her life."
You wisely advised her to
contact the YWCA . YWCA
associations offer a variety of
services, and many of them
provide transitional housing
programs . The girl from
Alabama can learn about
resources provided by her
local YWCA by goi ng to the
Web site at www.y wca.org.
Since passage of the Foster
Care Independence Act in
1999, more assista nce is
available to this population .
This legislation al lowed
states to extend Medica id
coverage up to age 21: permits youth to save money
while in care to prepare for
· independence without their
assets counting again st their
. elig ibility for · foster care
funding; provides funding to
states for initial and ongoing
training of foster parents; and
created the Chafee Fost er
Care Independence Program .
Thi s program increased funding to states for independent
living activities and offers
increased assistance for room
and board .
Youth should contact their
state's fost er care syste m to

School Briefs
Recognized
on Honor Roll
REEDSVILLE Dana
. Eichinger of Reedsv ille has
been recognized for academic achievement as a United
States National Honor Roll
Award winner.
Eichinger, who attends
Meigs High School, will
·appear in · the United States
Achievement
Academy
Official Yearbook .
Eichinger is the son of
Dennis and Gail Eichinger
. and the grandson of Opal
Eichinger of Chester and
· Russ and Dorothy Kear of
Tiffin.

, 1 X3Gip•tii!'Q ~--" ~ "

Ohly'$10.00
University of Rio Grande President Barry M. Dorse)·, June Gillespie Evans. Professor Charles Withee
and Dean Brown are pictured at the dedication of a plaque honoring the late John Ell is Evans.
RIO GRANDE - . A plaque
honoring John Ellis Evans
and Jane Gilles pie Evans was
dedicated in the Rio Grande
Math and Science Building
during a recent ceremony.
John Elli s Evans. play,ed a
key ro le in helping the Allies
. win World War II and helped
to develop the defense system
that is protecting America
· today.
Evans died in Marc h. but
his wife spoke at the dedication ceremony and several
fami ly membe ~s attended.
Evans' voice was heard during the ceremony, in a sense.
as one of hi s speeches was
read during the dedin1tion .
Evans was born in 19 14 in
Oak Hill and graduated fr9m
Ri o Grande in 1934. and
taught at the uni versity for a
tit;ne. In furth ering hi s ed ucation, Evans went on to earn
three degrees in math and sci ence at The Ohio State
University. While a grau uate
assistant in physics. Evans
was named to the famed
Massachussets lnsitute of
Techn ology
Radiation
Laboratory, where he worked
from 1942 to 1945 .
At the laboratory, Eva n&lt;.
worked on the magnetrons
that were essentia l to the

..

radar equipmem key in wi nning the Battle of Britain in
World War II.
After earning hi.s Ph.D . in
physics from Ri ce lJniver.sity
in 1947, Evans worked at the
nal ion 's pioneering reacto r.
kn own as the "Water Boiler"
at the Los Alamos Scientific
Laboratory in New Mexico
fro m IY48-195 2.
Evans worked as the
Director of Nuclear Phy&gt;ics
Researc h at the National
Reac tor Testing Station in the
Idaho Falls dese11.
At the Lockheed Mi"ib
and
Space
Re search
Laboratory in Palo Alto.
Calif., Evans worked for 30
years. ret iring in 1992 after a
di .,ti nguisheu career leading
groups of &gt;eien tifi c investigators in both civilian-oriet)led
and
mil itary-oriented
re.search . Among the many
hi gh profile, important project&gt;, he worked on at
Lockheeu , Evans led the
research on the SDIO rStar
Wars) and Ballistic Mi"ile
Defetl&gt;e System programs.
Evam wa&gt; a Fel low of the
American Physi cal Society. a
mel)'lber of the Ameri can
Geophysic&lt;li Unio n, a member of the American Nuclear
Society, a member of the

Institute · of
American
Aeronautics and Astronautics
and a respected and honored
leader in hi s field .
Hi ., wife of 50 yeas, Jane
Evan,. also led a successful
career in science and industry.
She is one of HewlettPackard's first female engineers and she was recently
inducted into the Silicon
Valley Engineering Hall of
Fame.
John El lis ,Evans received
an honora'ry doctorate from
Rio Grande and spoke at and
1i'i ted the Rio Grande campus severa l times during his
life.
Dean Brown. vice president
of institutional advancement.
said that Rio
Grande is proud to be associated with Evan' and honl) red to ha ve his name on a
plaque on C&lt;llllJlU , .
"We are fortunate to have a
man of hi s stature be a part of
our campus." Brown said. " It
is important for Rio Grande
students to remember all that
Evans wa' able to accom plish
in hi&gt; life. after starting wi th
humble
heginnings
in
Jack,on County.''
"He can serve us an inspiration to our 'tudent,, " Brown
said .

Happy .
Father's Day

Happy
Father's Day

(Your Father's
(Your Father's
Name)
Name)

Love
(Your Name)

Love

. ATHENS

(Your Name)

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Phone_____________
Send Coupon and Payment to: The Daily Sentinel "Father's Day"
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
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·one subject per picture

------------------------------------Deadline For This Special Father's Day T-ribute Is
Friday, June 11 , 12:00 Noon.

..

Humphreys of Long Bottom
and Jessica Wright of
Pomeroy · graduated from
Ohio University with honors
following he winter quarter.
Other local winter quarter
graduates
are
Rebecca
Zuspan of Mason, · W.Va .,
Nicholas Avis, Amos Cottrill,
and Michele George, all of
Coolville,
and
Warren
Rayburn of Middleport.

On OU
dean's list

ATHENS - The following
students have been named to
the dean 's li st at Ohio
University for the winter
quarter, having earned grade
point averages of 3.3 or better:
Beau Bailey, Chester ;
Tara Jeremy Dotson, Michele

George, Kenneth Sisco, and
Esther Van Oort, all of .
Coolville; Orion Barrett and
Jeremiah . Smith, Langsvi ll e;
Stacey Brewer and Brooke
Vaughan, Middleport; Bobbi
Delong, Christophef Dodson,
Marjorie Halar, Maureen
Heines, Andrea Krawsczyn.
Sara Mansfield, Morga n
Mathews,
Scott
Needs,
Jeffrey
Shank,
Jennifer·
Shrimplin, Jame s Stanley,
and Joshua Will. all of
Pomeroy.
Mariam EI-Dabaja, Macy n
Ervin, Jessica Fisher, Tony
Hupp. Kimberly lhle, Rachel
Marshall , Brandon Smith,
Jennifer
Walker,
and
Brandon Wolfe; Matthew
Beldyk, Carri e Johnson,
Melissa Johnson. and Leah
Sanders. Reedsvi lle : Sara
Ihle and Amber Snowden,
Rutl and.

: Students co~respond · with soldiers
TUPPERS PLAINS
. Students in Jackie · Wolf's
; keyboarding classes have
: bee n writing letters to local
:· soldiers overseas, with the
. goal of inspiring them and
· letting them know much
: they are mi ssed and appre. ciated , and also keeping
. them informed of new s
. : from their hometown .
Wolf assigned the letters
as a regular assignment,
: and students had the option
· of whether they wanted to
: participate. Those who did
- not were given other
: assignments. Some students
:who knew soldiers from
- th is area wrote to them

personally. Others wrote to
anonymou s people .
Thi s
assignment
has
given the students a whole
new perspective on the war,
Wolf said.
"Writing these letters 'has
made me realize the reality
of the situation and how
serious it really is," said
student Sara Wiggins. " It
makes a lot of people, as
well as myself, think about
how much courage it takes
to do what they are doing. "
Since they first started
writing letters, everyone
seems to be getting more
involved, Wolf said.
" People continue writing

letter after Jetter and the
student counci l ts now
sponsoring a care-package
drive to send needed items
to our soldiers," Wolf said.
" Our school , ha s really
co me together to help our
soldiers while al so helping
tlwse in our school and
community who have loved
ones overseas ."
"Writing these letters has
had a big impact on all of
us," said Wolf. "Hopefully
these letters will just give
our soldiers the encouragement they need to help
them through these tryi ng
times away fr om their
home. family and friends ."

Tuesday,June1, 2004

Teens too old for foster care
find help from many sources.

Church services

·Raccoon vandalizes church

'Coming Thursday in the Sentinel ...

Plaque dedicated
J:r.:~,......,_

Public meetings

.PageA3

BY THE BEND

Community Calendar

Honor roll announced
TUPPERS PLAINS
These students were named
to the honor roll at Eastern
Elementary School for the
fourth nine-week grading
period :
Grade 2: Tyler Barber,
Latham Bissell. Zachary
Browning, Jenna Burdette,
Paige
Cline,
Samantha
Cline, Chase Cook. David
. Frank, Aliyah Gantt, Tanner
Katie
Keller,
Jenkin s.
Sarah
Jonathon
Kuhn.
Lawrence, Joshua Parker,
Erin Swatzel. all A's.
Sarah Anderson, Haileigh
Bush. Garrett Caldwell,
Cassidy Cleland, Thunder
Clonch.
Molly
Dunlap.
Kendra
Fick,
Meredith
Gaul, Austin Gheen, Jenna
Hysell.
Keri
Lawrence,
Whitley
Leach ,
Emily
Moore , Dakota O'Brien ,
Cody Rayburn, Madison
Rigsby. Joshua Robinson,
Sampson,
Benjammin
Jessica Sampson, Jasmine
Smith,
Kolton
Snell,
Jackie
Tanner, Alex Victory, David
Warner.
Phoeniz Watts.
Heather Wells, Christopher
Yeater.
Grade
3:
Marshall
Aanestad, Hannah Adams,
Randall Armes, Maxwell
Carnahan.
Rebecca
Chadwell, Breanna Hayman,
Jason' Kelley, Christopher
Morris, Larissa Riddle, Kyle
Y&lt;Jung. all A's.
Alex
Amos,
Lauren
Boggess, Samuel Collins,
Nicole Gilbride , Victoria
Goble, Bradley Goeglein,
Kayla
Hawthorne,
Alexandria
Hendrix ,
Rachael Markworth , Krista
Miller. Timothy Minear.
Mallory Nicodemus, Ethan
Nottingham.
Kendra
Oldaker, Derick Powell,
Thomas Pullins, · Garrett
Ritchie,
Maria
Sharp,
Florence Warth, Shanda
Welch ,
Nicolete
Wells,
Emily Wheeler.

The Daily Sentinel

Dear
Abby

get more information about
resources. If they have trouble naviga ting the syste·m.
the Child Wel fare Leagu e of
America may be able to
assist : www.cw la_org.
KELLY
BELLMcGLOTHAN. YWCA OF
FORT WORTH/TARRANT
COUNTY
DEAR KELLY: Since th at
letter ran, I have been told
that nearly 25,000 yo un g
people "age out" of the foster care system each year and few, if any of them. ha1·e
the necessarv skiII s to Iive on
their own. (congratulate you
for the work you are doing
with this underserved population. Read on :
DEAR ABBY: "Lost" and
all other teens in foster care
should re ach out and ask for
help. They don't ha ve to wait
until they are 18 to do it.
Teens in foster care need
adults to step forward and
help them reach their goals.
Agencies that can refer
young people to help in th.eir
local communities include
the local CASA (Court
Appointed Special Advocate)
programs and Foster Parent
Associations. A good online

resource ts Foster Club
(www.fosterclub.com). Casey
Family Program' also ha &gt; a
set of 'e lf-di rected plannin ;:
tools fur youth at it\ Web
s
i
t
c
www.casey.org/Re;ources/Tl'
ols/Casev Li feSki ll s. lllm. - .
JANIS -AVERY. EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR. TREE HOUSE. SEATTLE
DEAR. JANIS Than k you
for sharing the'e valuable
resources. Severa l ot h~r caring reader.; also pointed out
that Job Corps help; youth
hetween the ages of lA and
2-+_ Young people can li1 e
on-site for up to two years
while working on their education and· job-trainin g 'ki ll , .
They receive free room.
board. medi cal and dental
care in addition to coun,eling
and a small stipend. The Web
site i~ www.jobcOrp\ .org and
the toll-free number is (8001
733- 5627.
Additional resource s for
young peopl e in need of
a\sistance include Catho li c
Chari ties and the Orphan
Foundati on of Ameri ca .
which al so he lps youth in the
foster care system. The
Orphan Foundation can b~
reached at www.orphan .org
or by ca ll ing (57 11203-0270.
Dear Al&gt;hr is H'rillen hr
Abigail' V&lt;m Buren . also
knoll'll as Jeanne PililliiJ.I .
a11d &gt;ms f(wl!ded bNer
mothe•: Pouli11e Pliilllf'.\.
Wrile • DNuAbbr
a1
" '"'"'· DearAIJIJ\'. COl li or P U
Box 694~ 0. LOs Angeles. CA
90069.

Bend Area CARE gears for catfish tournament
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINE L.COM

MASON - Area anglers
have until Wednesday, June 2,
to pre-regis ter for the 14th
Bend Area CARE Redman
Catfish
Budwei ser
Tournament set for the Mason
levee on Saturday, June 5.
The buddy tournament, or
two-man team event, is one
of CARE's largest fund-raising events and has drawn
more than 200 fi shermen in
recent years for a day of casting and catching in the Ohio
River as teams compete for a
$ 1,000 first place prize .
A special guest for this year's
toumrunem will be U.S. Rep.
Shelley Moore Capito, who Will
be on hand to present the trophy
to the top team.
Check-in and regi stration
will be trom 5 to 6: 15 a.m. the
day of the tournament, to!lowed by a reading of the rules
at 6:30. Fishing begins at 7 ·
a.m. and concludes with

weigh-in at 4 p.m. at the levee.
Breakfast wiU be available the
morning of the tournament, provided by the auxiliary of
Stewru1-Johnson Post 9926 of
the VFW at Mason.
Pre-re~istration will be underway unw Wednesday. The entry
fee for pre-registering is $50 per
team and $45 for fatherson/daughter teams, also gmndparents. The late registration fee
ts $60 per teru11 and $55 for
father-son/daughter teams.
Checks are payable to Bend
Area CARE and can be mailed
to Catfish Tournament, anention:
Elvis Zerkle, Rt. 1·, Box 35C,
West Colwnbia, W.Va. 25287.
In addition to the ftrst place
prize, award' are given as foilows: $600 for second place.
$400 third, $300 fourth, $200
fifth, $150 sixth, $125 seventh.
$100 eighth. $75 ninth and S75
for IOth place.
Also during the day. kids·
games begin at I p.m. with free
prizes tor all, a frog jump will be
sponsored by WYYK-FM ru1d

WBYG-FM. ru1d a watermelon ·
eatin~ contest will be held. sponsoreo bv Sheriff Scon Simtm
and
Bob's
Market and
Greenhouses Inc.
There will also be a casting
co ntest sponsored by the
Mason Count y Republican
Party, and organizers said several other game s will be
announced thut day.
More informarion is an1il able from Zerkle at 77 35680 or Tim Roush at R823574. Information can also
be accessed at CA RE's Web
site, www.benda reacare.com.
In addition to Redman and
Budweiser, the event\ partners
include Akzo Nobel Functional
Chemicals, Ohio Valley Bank.
Gino's. Bob's Market. Hanging
Rock Sports Center at ~bson.
AT&amp;T. Auto Options at Mason.
McDonald's of Pomerov.
Pepsi,
Kayser-Laync-Ciark
LLC of Poi nt Pleasant. CocaCola and VFW Poq 'l926.
Tournament updates wiII l:lc
aired on WBYG-FM .

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�The Daily Sentinel

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Jim Freeland
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Charlene Hoeflich
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free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
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people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The. First Amel'ldment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today ts Tuesday. June I, the !53rd day of2004. There are
213 days left tn the year
Today's Htghhght m Htstory:
On June I. 1813. the commander of the U.S. fngate
Chesapeake, ·captam James Lawrence. said, 'Don't give up
the shtp' dunng a losing battle with a British frigate.
On thts date
In t 792. Kentucky became the 15th state of the union.
In 1796. Tennessee became the t 6th state.
In 1801 , Mormon leader Bngham Young was born in
Whitmgham. Vt
In 1868, James Buchanan, the t 5th prestdent of the United
States. died near Lancaster. Pa.
In 1926. actress Marilyn Monroe was born in Los Angeles.
In 1943, a civt!~an fltght from Ltsbon to London was shot
down by the Germans dunng World War II, killing all aboard,
including actor Leslie Howard.
In 1944, the Brttish Broadcasting Corporation atred a coded
message mtended to warn the French resistance that the DDay tmasion v.as nnmment
In 1958. Charles de Gaulle became premier of France.
In 1977. the Soviet Union formally charged Jewish human
nghts activist Anatol) Shcharansky with treason.
(Shcharansky was nnpn soned, then released in 1986.)
In 1989, former Sunday school teacher John E. Ltst, sought
for 18 years in the slaymgs of his mother, wtfe and three children in Westtield, N.J .. w.as arrested in Richmond, Va. (Ltst
was later sentenced to life in prison.)
Ten years ago President Clmton embarked on a European
trip that mctuded commemoratmg the 50th anmversary of DDay; his tirst stop was Italy.
Five years ago An American Airhnes MD-82 landed offcenter during a severe thunderstorm in Little Rock, Ark., and
barreled off the end of the runway, breaking apart and catchmg ftre; II people, mcluding the captam, dted. Prestdent
Clinton ordered a government investigation into whetherand how - the entertainment business markets violence to
chi ldren (In a 1eport released in September 2000, federal regulators satd the movie, video game and mustc industries
aggressively marketed to underage youths v1olent products
that carried adult ratings.)
One year ago: Leaders of the world's seven wealthiest
nations and Russia pledged billtons o( dollars to tight AIDS
and hunger on the opemng day of. thetr summit m Evtan,
France.
Thought for Today: 'If America forgets where she came
from, tf the people lose sight of what brought them along, if
she listens to the demers and mockers, then wtll begin the rot
and dtssolution ' - Cart Sandburg. Amen can writer (I 8781967).

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consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. s
editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

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OPINION

PageA4

Tuesday,June1,2004

Tuesday,Junet,2004

Obituaries

US. needs vocal Iraqi support
Polls indicate that the public mcreasingly thinks that
Democrat John Kerry could
handle Iraq as well as or better than Prestdent Bush.
Speeches by the two of them
last week won't change that
trend. In his speech Thursday
in Seattle, Kerry both went
on the offensive agmnst
Bush and offered hope (dubious though it may be) that he
can get other nations to share
the burden of bringing stability to Iraq .
President Bush's address at
the Army War College last
Monday was basically a reiteration of his past timetable
- this time fashioned into a
list of five objecwves.
Bush's Democratic critics
blasted Bush because his
speech
didn't
contain
answers to some cructal
questi.ons, mainly, 'Who
calls the mihtary shots alter
lraqts gain sovereignty on
July I?' That was a forgivable omtsston. The answer is
that decision-making authority IS still bemg worked out
in negotiations between
Amencans and Iraqis.
What I thought was missing from Bush's speech was
anything that could arrest the
rapid decline in public confidence that hts Iraq policy
will work to contTCI[ violence
and estabhsh a stable government.
It would have been - tl
still can be - dramatically
helpful if Bush had at his
side a high-ranking .Iraqi to
tell the American people:
'We're grateful that you liberated us from the horrors of
Saddam Hussein . We do
want your troops to leave our
country eventually, "but we
realize that the only hope for
our future depends upon
your staymg America, stick
with us~·
Obviously, there are Iraqis
who think this. Mem!Jers of

down from combat with implying that he would have
·assembled a whole team·
Sadr\ forces in Najaf
Ideally. the United States before going to war and 'preshould ,ehctt trom Sistam pared for the worst' afterh1mself a statement that a ward.
Kerry actually would not
U.S. presence is
contmuing
Morton
Kondarcke essential. Ststani undoubted- have gone to war without
ly IS reluctant to be seen as ' French approval, which no
too close to the United U.S. prestdent would have
States. but he should be acqutred. Nuw he wants
made to understand that his NATO to take over !nihllJry
the Iraqi Govermng Counctl endorsement would stgm ti- authority m lra4 , but Gerinan
Gerhard
risk their lives daily to parttc- ~antly bolster U S public- Chancellor
ipate m the American-led and worldwide-support for Schroeder has said he will
endeavor to transform their the only course that wtll pre- oppose that at this week's
vent Iraq from descending NATO stllnmn 111 Istanbul.
country.
In h1' speec h. Kerry
The American public mlo total chaos or ctvtl war.
rarely hears from Iraqi
Polls indicate decreasing promised U.S. forces: ·you
heroes. and the U S medta suppon tor the war among wtll neve1 he sent mto harm's
convey the impression that the U.S. pubhc - a fact that way wnhout enough troops
the enure Iraqi population is ha' to be demorahzmg to for the l.tsk .md you wtll
m rebellion against coalition h.1q1S standing with us They never be asked to fight a war
forces when the opposttton ha ~e to be made to under- without a plan to wm th~
mainly consists of Hussein st.Uld that they can help peace·
On the other hand. he told
loyalist s. foreign jihadists intlu~nce U.S. opinion.
the
worldwtde terronst netand followers of the radical
1 h •est Gallup poll, conShtite clenc Moqtada Al - duclL :VIay 21-23. shows work. 'tts commander in
that .1 majonty of voters, 52 chtef, I will b11ng the full
Sadr.
After the May 17 killing of percent. believes that going force of our nation's power to
the prestdcnt of the govem- to war in Iraq was 'not wonh bear on findmg and ctushmg
mg counctl, Ezzedme Salim, it,' and 57 percent believe it your network s. We'll use
every resource of our power
another member of the coun- is going ·badly.'
cil, Mowaffak Al-Rabai, told
The Fox News/Op1111on to destroy you.'
But suppose Pakis1dn. say.
NatiOnal Public Radio that Dynam1cs poll publi shed
'these gangsters and terror- May 21 for the ftrst ttme were taken over by lslamt c
ists will have to kill 25 mil- showed that. by a margin of fundament ali sts who suddenlion Iraqis who are longing 39 percent to 34 percent , vot- ly had posses sion of that
for freedom, democracy and ers think Kerry would handle country's nucle ar drsenat.
Would Kerry really watt until
prosperity.'
Iraq better than Bush.
In other polls, includmg he had fmmed an interna1 Rabat , nattonal security
advtser to the counctl, ts con- Gallup and the Pew Research tional 'team. anu 'a plan to
stdered close to Iraq's most Center. Bush retams a three- wm the peace · before acting''
influential figure, Grand point edge, but that's dramat- Or would he act at all"
Ayatollah Alt Al-Ststani, and ically down from 20-pomt
E~ent s have robbed Bush
of hts forei gn policy advanthe admi mstration should be Bush leads in 2003.
making the point publicly, as
As long as the news from tage over Kerry. So. Kerry
oftictals do m private, that lra4 1emmns dtsmal, Kerry tS now can nldke lesoluteSistani thinks a U.S. pres- in the enviable position of sounding speeches without
ence ts vttal to eventual being able to whack Bush havmg to dehvet Bush no t
peace in Iraq.
and propose plaustble- only has to make better
In tact. much of what looks soundmg
alternatives. speeches - and get some
l1ke confusion in coalition regmdle ss of whether they help from Iraq" . 1f he canbut he has to produce
activity m Iraq is the result of are likely to work.
attempts to placate StstaniIn
his
speech
la st progress Ami soon
includmg the speedup of the Thursday. Kerry obscured
(Morrall Koll chatk e i'
sovereignty handover, the the tact that. had he been erec111il ·e &lt;'diTor of Roll Call,
involvement of the United president. Saddam Hussein rhe lle\1 lflOJWI of Capitol
~
Nations and the latest stand- would still be in power. Ht/1 )

Congress acts against genocide. Will Bush?
On the night of May 17,
the House of Representative
voted 390-1 to adopt a resolutiOn 'condemnmg the
Government of the Republic
of the Sudan for its parttcipatton and complicity in the
attacks agamst innocent
ctvilians in the impoverished
Darfur regiOn of western
Sudan.' Frank Wolf (R-Va.),
who has traveled around the
globe to expose human
rights abuses, introduced
this call to the world 'to prevent further genocide by the
Khanoum government.
The .concurrent resolution,
introduced by Republican
Sen. Sam Brownback of
Kansas, and already passed
by the Senate, 'deplores the
inaction of some member
states of the United Nations
and the failure of the Umted
Nattons Human Rights
Commission to take strong
action with respect to the crisis in Darfur,' and urges our
president 'to ensure that the
individuals responsible for
crimes against humanity in
Darfur are accountable for
thetr actions.'
Moreover,
Congress
'strongly urges the president
to tmpose targeted sanctions,
including a' ban on travel to
the United States and free zmg of personal assets,
against ofticials and other
individual s
of
the
Government of Sudan, as
well as Janjaweed militia
commanders, who are
responstble for war crimes
and crimes against humanity
in the Darfur region.'
On May 18, Wolf wrote
dtrectly to U.N. SecretaryGeneral Kofi Annan, that
'the United Nations should
take a leadership role and
stand with the innocent men
and women who arc being
slaughtered in Darfur. [ urge
you to go to Darfur and

Nat
Hentoff

stand in solidarity 'with the
people.' I have seen little
medta coverage of this letter
to Annan or of the House
resolutiOn
condemnmg
Khanoum.
If Annan is truly repentant
for his appalling failure to
stop the 1994 genocide in
Rwanda, he will indeed personally shame the U.N.
Human Rights Commtssion
and U.N. General Assembly,
which also refused to act on
th1s genocide, by standmg
on the ground wtth black
African women whose husbands and children have
been murdered, and who
themselves have been gang
raped by the Janjaweed.
Those committing the
crimes against humanity are
Muslims, as are the African
farmers who continue to be
the victims of these horrors .
And where are the condemnations of these atrocities
from the Muslim nations?
On May 12, m the Dai Iy
Star in Beirut, Lebanon.
Julie Flint, who is assoctated
wtth Human Rights Watch,
reponed on 'The shameful
Muslim silence in Darfur.'
Her story begins: 'The
mosque m the vtll age of
U rum was packed with people mourning Yahya Abdul
Karim, 80, when armed men
on horseback rode tn, tinng
indiscriminately . Some of
the attackers rode into the
mosque, where they ktlled
16 mourners. Others chased
the imam into hts grass hut
and killed him there, along

with the J-ye,u-old hoy (his
orphaned grandson) he was
trymg to protect.'
Fhnt added that 'The
Western world, reluctant to
take the focu s away from
peace negot1attons between
the government and the
Sudan People's Liberation
Army (SPLA). has been
shamefully late in acknowledgmg the atrocities in
Darfur. But the Mushm
world, even more shalnefully, has yet to speak out.'
On May I0, the U.S .
Comm1ttee for Refugees which, since 1958, has been
defending the nghts of
refugees, displaced persons
and asylum seekers worldwide- released this powerful message to George W.
Bush lleadlined:
'Lead more boldly on
Darfur, Mr Pre stdent. Don't
repeat Btll Clinton's historic
mistake on Rwanda.'
The plea to the president
emphasized. 'One millton
internally displaced persons
and refugees are facing starvation as a result of Sudan's
atrocities and denial of unrestncted access tor humanitarian relief. In a few weeks,
the rainy season wtll make
the roads 1mpassable , and
hundreds of thousands may
starve to death
'Call mg 11 'genoctde'
would require action under
the Genocide Convention, so
offtctals avotd ust ng the
word ... as they avoided
using tt in 1994. But everyone knows what's happening
and who's to blame: the
Sudanese
govern ment,
which has been committing
massive crime s m an area
the size of France to dtsplace
the indige~ous populatton.
has not dtsarmed Its proxy
Janjaweed mlittla. and ts
blocking access by the mternational commumty to htdc

the extent of thetr atroctttes
and prevent food and medlcme !rom gettmg 111.' There
are stgns the Sudanese government may tssue visas for
humanitarian groups to go in
- while the klilmgs are
go mg on
And what of the American
Musltm orgamza[!ons? Are
they speakmg out"' The·
Beirut Daily Star's repon s
that 'in the vtllage of
Sandtkoro, (JanJaweed) soldiers and horsemen tore up
Koran s and defecated on
them before btu mng the
mosque, with 1ts nnam
inside ... (There have been
other)
murders
mstde
mosques , often dunng
prayer !I me.
Slow ly. parts of the
Amer1can medta we tllumtnating these horrors, but will
the president of the United
States act more resolu tely
against thi s truly ~v ii
Khartoum government of
Sudan° Many thousands of
lives can still be saved
be tore Kofi Annan puts himself 111 the lme of tire - tf he
ever does At last, Bush may
ask the U.N. Secunty
Council to tmpose sanctions
on Sudan. Even though the
UN Security Council finally has - albett belatedly strongly condemned the
attacks on ctviltans in Darfur
and told the Khmtoum government to disarm the
JanJaweed, will that be
enough to actu ally save
lives? Can we trust the
Umted Nattons to do more
than talk?
(Nm Hemoff 11· a narirma//, reno&gt;vned aurlwntv 011 thf
Fir.\/ Ammdme/11 and rhe
Btl! of Rtghts and author of

Alumni
from Page A1

Clay Nutter·
.,

REEDSVILLE - Clay Nuner, 85, of Reedsville , Ohio,
dted Sunday. May 30, 2004 at hts restdence.
He was born Oct. 2.19 t 9 m Creston. W.Va., son of the late
George and Ruth Nutter He was a retired mechanic for
Fi schbach Trucking, a member of Teamsters Local 24. an Air
Force veteran of World W.tr II. and an ordained mini ster for
30 years.
He is survived by a daughter and son-in-law Sharon and
Btll Campbell, a granddaughter. Meredith and Dan Rufener;
three great-grandchtldren, Teresa, D.J., and Holly Rufener; a
brother, Roben Nutter; a brother-in-law-, James Husk; several me&lt;:es. nephews and many good friends .
In ad~1t1on to his parents, he was preceded 111 death by his
first Wile, Leona Nutter, his second wife, Louella Nutter; two
sisters, Florence Sheets and Maxine Hu sk.
Services will be held II a.m., Wednesday, June 3, 2004 at
White Funeral Home, Coolvtlle, wtth Rev. Wilbert Lowe and
Rev. George Rifle offictating. Bunal will be m the Stewart
Cemetery. Hockingport.
.
Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m.
Tuesday.

carl VanOver
RACINE - Carl Vanover, 62, Racine, passed away on
Sunday, May 30. 2004 at Charleston Area Medical Center.
He was born on May 30. 1942 in Lindsey W. Va , son of the
late Frank and Mrytle Murphy Wolford. He was a truck
owner and operator for 40 years He was also a member of the
FOE #2171 , AMA Motorcycles Assoctatton, and OOIDA.
He ts survtved by hts wtfe, Ja&lt;:kte Vanover. of Racine: a son
and daughter-m-law. Ketth (Bobbie) Vanover. Gallipolts:
daughters Vtckl Vanover and Susan Landi&gt; of Florida. and
Jenmfcr Sloane. Gallipolis : stepsons.Ronald (Kathie) Gmther
ot Rutland and Jeff (Juamta) Ginther of Racine: and ' stepdaughters. Kelly (Kevm) Milam of Reedsvtlle and Angela
(Jon) Grueser ·of Reedsville; eight grandchildren, one greatgrandchild. and I 0 step-grandchildren.
Also survtving ate his mother-in-Law, Ruth Thoma s ol
Pomeroy; a sister-in-law, Sandy (John) Goolsby, Texas: a
cousin, Bnan (Wilma) Murphy, and se~eral aunts and uncles.
He was preceded m death by hts parents
Servtces wtll be held at 4 p m. Wednesday, June 2. 2004 at
F1sher Funeral Home. Pomeroy. Officiating will be Rev.
Wtlham K Marshall Visitation will be one hour prior to the
service at the funeral home .
'
Fnends may send online condolences to www fisherfuneralhomes.com.

Venus Rappold Blake
CULLODEN , W. VA - Venus Rappold
Blake. 94. of CuHoden, W. Va. dted Sunday.
May 30. 2004 at home after a long Illness.
Precedmg her 111 death were her parents,
Edward and Una Rappold. her husband,
John Blake, a granddaughter, Joan Btas, and
a grandson. Tetry Bias.~
She v.as a member of the Tempe Arizona
Church of Chnst
She IS survived by a son, John E. Blake of
M1ddleport , five daughtets, Jeanntne
Venus
Broyles ol Culloden, W Va .. Geneva Blake
of Denver, Colo.; Betty Bms of Rtchmond. Rappold Blake
Va.: Dons Blake ot Culloden. W. Va .. and
Donna Blake ot Culloden. W. Va .. nine grandchildren. and
two great-grandchi ldren.
Funer.tl service wtll be held at I p.m. Wednesday. June 2.
2004 at the Allen Funeral Home wi th Mini ster George Erwm
officiating Burial Will be 111 Valley View Memorial Park.
Hurricane, W. Va. Friends may call from 6 to 8 p m Tuesday.
June I, 2004 at the Allen Funeral Home, 2837 Main St.,
Hurncane, W Va.

ttve classes. The recipients
qualified for the scholarsh1ps
on the basis of academtc
ach1evement .md relat1onsh1p
by parents or gr.tndpments to
a Pomeroy H1gh School graduate.
Amberger, gra nddaughter
of PHS graduates, Madeline
Hy sell Patn!er and Wallace
Ambcr~er. wtll be attending
the Umversuy of Charleston
majoring in busine ss and
mass communications.
Davi s. granddaughter of
PHS graduates. Bill Ohlinger
and Paul Davi s, will be going
to the Ohio Valley College
where she will specialize in
recreational management.
Holter, granddaughter of
Roy Holter and Ron and
Shtrley Srnnh, all PHS graduates will , be attendmg Ohio
State UniverSity.
Ofttcers elected tor the
2005 reumon were Judy
Wehrung Sisson. prestdent.
Bill Young. ftrst vice president; Mary Jane Wtse. second
vice president; Carol· Strauss
Kennedy, secretary Marcta
Gruese r Arnold and Thelma
Datvs Jelfers, were named to
the alumm commtttee.
The pledue
of alleuiance
0
"
led by John Weeks and
singing of "Amenca the
Beautiful and the Purple and
White led by George Dallas
along with the invoication
given by Bob Buck, preceded
the catered dinner.
George Hall prov 1ded
mustc for danc1ng following
the banquet
Alumm auendmg
Alumm attendmg and the
class tn which they graduated as follows:
1925 Kathleen Bmley
Scott. Racine.
1929 Helen Grueser
Ma,Ig, Racme.

1931 MmyK . Baer
Roush, Rac111e .
1932 Vtrgmta Smnh
Hedman , Canton
1934 Rachael Elbed'elll
Dowme, Racme : and Sarah
Williamson Gtbbs.
Lexington, Ky.
1935. Dora Swank
Cnspin, Westerville.
1937 Margaret Thom.ts
Bailey and Charle' S.ty1c
Pome1 oy.
1938 Juamta Wmner
Gtbbs, Cudevtlle . .tnd Mmte
Dorahs Curd. Pometov
1939 Kathryn Lcgar
Spencer. Bradenton, Fla :
Mlldted Thoma Ziegler.
Pauline Hauck Mayer.
Dorothy Curti s Sheets, and

Mary Kimes Grue•er. all of
Pomerov: and Donald E
Will. Lewis Center
19~0 : Mary Karr Bowen.
Pomeroy
1941: Wanda Jacobs Eblin.
Edith Holter Sts&gt;on.
Pomeroy; and Dtck
Elberfeld, Hamtlton .
1942: George Shi\eler.
Grovetown. Ga.: Mary Sayre
Rogers. Danbury. Texas .
Pandora Strickland Colltns
and Burl Wmdon. Pomerm
1943 : Cecil Brickles, Vada
Paulson Bnckes. Mary
Grueser Russell and Be Iva
Young Glaze, Pomeroy: and
Jack Matson. Columbus
1944: Manha Myers
Sh1veler. Grovetown. Ga..
Wyatt G. Will, Gro~e City.
Sarah Genheimer Whtte.
Columbus: Erma Gibbs
Smith. Jack Lewts. Ray
Howell. Harold Blackston.
Phylli s Brown Spencer. and
Joanna Rauh Tattersun. ,lit of
Pomeroy , J'liora Ham ; R1ce.
Mtddleport: Btll Buck. Sun
Ctty, An zona.' and Robert
Hysell, Syracuse.
1945 : B1ll Radford. John
Weeks. Barbara Schott
Weeks. Eunice Hi II Jones.
and Harold Hyse ll. Pomeroy:
Evelyn Grueser Hollon.
RoCt ne, and Patnua Wat son
Buck. Sun Cny Anz.
1946: Roy Holter. Hov.ard
B Mullen. George Wright
and Edgar Abbon. Pomeroy:
M.try K Foster Yost.
Syracuse: and John I hie.
R.tctne .
1947 Frank Vau£han. Joe
Struble. Bill Ohhneer.
Pomeroy: Horton Thomas.
Howard. Ohto: Frank Ryther.
Syracuse: Kenny W1ggms.
Racme.
1948 · Ger.t ld Custer.
Charden, lola Fox Howell.
James Will. Phtl Ohlin~el.
C.trol Evans Ohlinger.
Kenneth 'H.tn ts. ,t! I of
Pomeroy. and Btll Kn1ght.
Pmnt Pleas,mt. W. Va. 1
1949· Leo K. S1\t1th.
Bernen Spnngs. Mich.: Jo.m
R1ggs Johnson. Atlanta. Ga ..
R.tymond William s. Pollock.
Mo: Albe1t Ru sche!. Jr..
Coco.t. Fla. J S Ru"ell.
Stuat t, Fl.t , Ann Fuste1
Cuitnll. Lmcaster: Vernal E
Blac kwood. Belpre.
Manmng Klocs . Mtddlcpon .
"1.1ry Lou Reed lhle. Racme;
Patnica Me1er Sw.:hoza.
McMurray. Pa .. Martha
Terrell Strubl e. Edv.ard Ball.
Peggy Dail ey Houd.tshelt.
l1ene McAngus B.tiley.
Pomeroy . Jack Seeltg,
Starke. FIa ; Ruth Fox
Douglas, Amesvtlle: Lms
Smnh Hawley. Pomeroy:
Rollin Daniels, Palm
Spnngs. Calif.; Canneleta
c

Grant is first step in
STAMP implemented
sewer system expansion
District Board Secretary
Loretta Murphy told Meigs
County Comnussioners early
TUPPERS PLAINS -A this year the system's original
$3, 120 grant from the plans called for a third lagoon,
Appalachian
RegiOnal m1d the two lagoons now operCommtsston wtll allow the ating are sometimes 111 danger
Tupper~ Plams Regional Sewer
of overtlowmg.
Distnct to begm the first step
According to Murphy and
toward expansiOn
Distnct Prestdent Gat! Parsons,
The gr.tnt. announced F11day the system may have to impose
bv bov Bob Taft., was awarded a buddmg ban snmlar to that
by the Governor's Office of the Ohio Environmental
Appalachia, and ts a result of a Protection Agency imposed in
program
matching the 1970's. which the system's
Appalacluan
Regional construction was designed to
Commission funds wtth state address.
funds These state planning
The grant award was made to
gr.111ts provide funding for eco- address future growth 111 the
nomic and community devel- Tuppers Plmns community,
opment
prOJects
in whtch is anticipated as the
Appalachtan
communitie s result of htghv.ay Improvewhtch do not typically have the ments to U.S. 33, US 50 and
tinancial or ctvic capacity to U.S. 32. An expansion of the
system would be benefit:tal to
undertake planmng proJects.
Eligibility is based on ht~h continued development or the
unemplO) men!. low per-capita East Meigs Industrial Park ,
mcome, l11g.h low-to-modemte whtch would be most senousl y
mcome percentages, and other affected by a new buddmg ban
The Metgs County Community
soc10-cconomtc factors.
The grant wtll bC used to lme Improvement Corporation 1s
a consultant who w1ll conduct nearmg completion on a spec
an expansion feasab1lity study building designed to attract
on the six year-old system, new mdustry.
The distnct hopes to secure
which is now nearing treatment
capaoty. The system, which grant or loan funding to conserves 216 customers, has out- struct a third lagoon and Iift stagrown the.two lagoon facilitie s tion "to protect the town and
built when it began operating. allow growth," Murphy said.
B.Y BRIAN

J.

The Dally Sentmel • Page A.5

www .mydailysentinel.com

I

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

The Stay Tobacco-Free Athlete Mentor Program, a youth tobacco
use mentor prevention program, has been Implemented in Me1gs
Local Schools. To be el1g1ble, mentors must be tobacco-free. 1n
good academic standing and be pos1\1ve role mocels for thelf
school and the Amencan Cancer Soc1ety. Members v1s1ted the
Me1gs Middle School seventh grade classes presenting 1nformat1on
to students about the dangers of tobacco use. Pictured front row.
from left to nght are Kayla Grover, Jamttha Wilford, Chnssy Mi ller.
second row, Brad Soulsby. Kathy Reed, AdVISOr. Melissa Richmond:
thlfd row, Dan Bookman. Jason Coleman, Kelly Barnette, Ass1stant
Pnnc1pal. The program is sponsored by Gaii1&amp;Me1gs Community
Act1on Agency 1n conjunction w1th the Amencan Cancer Soc1ety and
The Tobacco Use Prevent1on And Control Foundation.

fASY PAYMINT PUN*

$10 DOll· $10 Pll MONTI
'II STilE FIIETRS
-

--

~.

-

·~

__..

Galltpolt, , Lt!J Terrell
Mnch. and Dan E Mnms.
Pomeroy
1958 Maret a Grue,er
Arnold. Racine.
195'1 Shed.t Strau"
Eastman. Galltpohs: Sandra
lngtah.un Strau". Vmcent;
Gary Barntt L. Belpre. Judy
Gilmore Wolfe. Gary
Freeman, Marlene S~hull
Harmon. Sandra Smtth
Lauderm•lt. and Kat hi\ n
Slack Johnson. Pomeroy;
Gene Romtne. Pt ckenngton,
Janet Carpenter Young.
Lanca,ter. !='h.trlotte Murray
Rowley. Ironton, Paul
Reuter. Urbana. Su,.~n
Young Cleland. Chester:
Roger Arms, Logan: Cratg
Wehrung. Mtddleport.
Carolyn Meter Podbesek.
Mentor: Ruby Taylor
McMillion. Middleport:
Vernon Harnson. Racme.
1\160: Jim S~&gt;,on.
Pomeroy: Sharon Dou glas
Swmdell. Shade: ltm Smith.
Tuppers Plams: Btll Gibbs.
Lexmgtom. Ky
1961: Wtlliam young. Ben
H b• mg. Norman Pnce.
Paula sayre Welker.
Pomeroy. Ch,trlesana Hess
Sloan. Lakel and. Fla . and
M1ke Rnben s, Akron
1962: Lola Ztcgler
S1gmon. Dayton. Mike
Werry. Belpre
1963. Judy Wehtung
St"on. Allen Dowme.
Pomeroy: Rose Wingett
G,u dne1. Shamong. N J
1964 Dale Humphrey.
Ne11 Ha1en. W Va .lnhn
Srrau". G.tlltpoJi,: Nancy
Burns Ft,her. Glenville. W
Va . Louana Leonard.
Gr01epon. Alfred Stsson.
G.d1on . Jenml et Cre~&lt;
Solomon. Chester. S. C ..
Bob BuL h.. Don M.wer
Donna Hatfield. Po inerov.
Brend.1 W.1gne1 A1m,. Logan. Jane Baer Bourne.•
Stena V"t.t. An1. Karen
Miller Gilbert. Spnngl1eld.
DaliJ M. T.tylor. F(htona:
Allen S\&gt;arlL. V1enna \\'
Va .. Keith Whal ey.
CalllOIIl"l Louella
Thomp,on Rou sh. Houston.
Te xa,. Danny Smith. South
Potnt. C.uhy Wolle Erwm
.md Ht ld.t H.trt Stoth.
MtLILIIeptllt. .mJ Lance Hatt.
Kenton .
lli6 S John Curd Dnllllld
Haud Carr. L1nd ,t D.trnell
M.1yer. Pome1 O) . C.11 !.1 \Yd I
WelT). Belpre
1966: Robe1 1 W Smnh.
Pomeroy: Jell Gtbbs.
Cincinnatt.

Tribute

voice bare!\ ,tble to hold
back the tears ·'['m always
proud to be hts mother. He
made me proud all of hi&gt; life
and 111 death J' m honored
that e1 eryone came out today
to p.ty homage to my son and

from PageA1
moment with a loved one
because you never know
when It wtll be thetr las t. .. he
said.
The sound of a bugl e pL! ying ''Taps" served as u
remmder of the ulttm.lte s.tcllflce some gl\'e 111 servtce to

1everct! honk1 , rncludmg his

wrrent 1mrk.. ' 71~e War on
the Btl/ ()( R,ight.\ alu! the
Garhe1111g
Re11"mtce ·
(Seren Sro•·ies Pre" . 2003)

McBnde Wtlhams .
Loutsiana. Mo. Bill Tubhs.
Syracu'e. Joan Gtlmore
Parsons. Gran~ tile . George
Dalla,, Aguura Hill. Calt! ,
Lucretia Cornell Stoban.
M1ddleport.
1950 . Bob Bunon.
Margaret Theuner Lehew.
Pomero\: Emmo~ene
Edwards Hamilt o~n .
Svracuse: Gene Yeauger.
E'non: John Wat,on. C.mal
Winchester. and Betty
Genheuner Kmght , Pomt
Pleasant. W. Va.
1951 : Norman Smnh.
Gibbstown. N. J: Hazel
Schre1ber Ball . Pomerov ,
Janet Hill Thms. Racine:
Joanne Jones Withams ,
Syracuse, L1ly Girolami
Strickland. Woodvtlle
1952. Ron Smith. Phyll1s
Me1er May. and Sue Jean
Raub . Pomewy.
1953 Wtlltam Rou sh. El
Paso Texas: Shtrley Smith
Smith, Jack Raub. Marlene
Moore Wtlsoh. Ed Kennedv.
Frances Evans Hunnel.
Phylli s Goeglem Clark.
Clance Clifford Kitchen . and
Btll Kttchen, all of Pomerov
Ted Scott , We stland,
M1chtgan . Sally Bartel&gt;
Ayers , Mildred Sto&lt;:kton
Bernard. Athens: Kenneth
Cole. Betlvtlle.
1954· Rtchard Le1then .
Springfield: Howard
Kitchen. Manetta. Phil
Collins. Taylor. S C.. Le la
G1ueser E1vin. Athens. Ellen
Nesselroad Rought Joanne
Thornton Vmt£han . Rosali e
Story. Pomero-y; R.ty H1nes .
Belpre : Gloria Sv.mdcll
Mcmtosh. Athens. Slmlev
W1ppel Poling. Columbu;.
J,unes Nester. Ridgefi eld.
Conn.; Keith Stansbury.
Ballinger, Texas. Don .ild
Reuter. Mtddleport.
M.1dehne Hysell Pamler,
Middleport: Mary Holt
Selbe, Columbus: Joanne
Colmer Miller. Beverly:
Shelby Folme1 Davts and
Ri chard Vaughan.
Middleport. Martha Sayre
Server. 1\tlctnta. Ga ' Don
yea uger. Can.tl Wmche,tel'
1955 Roget Hme'. Log.m.
Madene Brown Rtneh,lft.
Albany: Fern Colmer
D,u11cls. M1ddlepon: Harley
Johnson. C.trol Strau ss
Kennedy. John Teaford.
Pomeroy: St.ICie Arnold.
Rac1ne, and Bill Hysell.
Columhus.
1956 John Young .
Lanc,,,te1. C.uolyn Brown
Charles. \1me"' die . Dale
Hal'llson. Pomeroy. and
Mary Scott Wtse.
Mtddlepott. and Robert
Larch.
1957 Robert Eastman.

-- -·.

ONE YEAR

their country. Even though
Staff Sgt. Turner v..ts killed
111 Iraq 1n Feb1ua1y. hiS memory took center stage as the
llrst person from Metg'
County to d1e 111 the war 111
Iraq
"Turner wa, a pall tot v.htl
gave hi.s hie that we tmght
enJOY
freedom."
s.t ld
Pomeroy
M.tyor
John
Musser " He chose to defend
his country. he was not
lorced to sene. To Dollie
Turner and .til hc1 l.tmt ly
members. I 'ay thank yo u for
tim life To illS \ltfe Tere,,l.
hts son Steven. .md hiS
dat1ghtet T.thttha. I say thank
yo u 101 lim lite ..
Turner's mothe1. Dottle.
had te.trs 111 her eyes as she
ta l~ ed about he1 son after the
sei'ICC. She satd he would
h.tve
turned
.IR
!.tst
Wednesday
"It's been a hard 11 eek.'·
she ,,ud 111 .tn emollnn.il

to oth e r \et erdns ··

Dut111g .1 wa1 l\1emonal
D.t) h,ts spcc1.il me:ming.
Accn1d111g to th e Endurin g
~reedtllll Supputl Group and
othe1 "'urccs. th" 1s a liSt ot
the knoll n men ,md 110men
\\ ho .ul' "er \ mg L)\ er"'e"" Ill
ei thet l1 a4 ur Algh.mt stan:
TIC\lll
C.udone.
Ma1k
Bostic. J.unes Gheett, Shan
Wllght. De1d. \\'arden. Rick
B.tkel. Br.tJle, Duddmg.
Ju&gt;~tn Gtlmo'e Z.me Beegle,
Anthon)
Deem. Jdl rey
Ru"cll Jcred Hill. 1\rthur
Nease·. F'11c Hill . Mtchael
Stc1 1ctt . Chuck Hotl n1&lt;1n .
John Wlilb.trger. DeeJay
R1ch,uds . Curt" Cook.
Robcn
Bem7 .
Joshua
Honten. Ch.trle, Wolfe.
Jeflle) C1LII1l .md Joseph
M.tC:IIlkn
Ca1dnnc satd
Thom.1s
So\\ d~r,.
C J.
l'vkKn1ght. .lc11 y McCabe
and Don E) 11(111 h.t\ c come
honK' ! rom ... .:n 111g 1n er~e ..,..,

�PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday,junet,2004

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
Smarty and his trainers' are ready, Page 82
Baseball'Scores and standings, Page 86

..

Memorial Day across Ohio

Tuesday, June 1, 2004

nneI

Prep Softball
~

Girls State Softball Pairings
Pairings for the g1rls state h1gh school
softball tournament
ALL GAMES AT BROOKSIDE PAR ~ . ASHLAND

'

-

DIVISION I
Semifinals
Tal. St. Ur sula {25-4) vs M11ford (22-5).
Fnclay. 3 p.m .. P1ckerrngton N (22-8) vs
Unio'ntown Lake P9-4), Frida~·. 5 30 p.m
Final
Saturday, 5:30 p.m

DIVISION II
Semirinals
Ashvrlle Teays Valley (18-iO) vs .
LaGrangs Keystone (30-2), Fnday, 10
a.m.: Lima Bath (21 -8) vs. Cuyahoga Falls

Walsh Jesuit _( 19·5). Friday. 12.30 p.m.
Final
Saturday, 3 p m.

DIVISION Ill
Semifinals
Archbold (23-7) vs. Wheelersburg (24·5).
Thursday, 3 p.m.: Warren Champion (225) vs. Woodsfield Monroe Cent (30-0).

Thursday, 5:30 p.m.
Saturday, 12 30 p.m

DIVISION IV
Semflnals
Crestline (25-4) vs. Maria Ste1n Marion
Local (16-10) . Thursday, 10 a.m.:
Gibsonburg (24-6) vs_ Strasburg-Fran kli n
(25-2), Thursday. 12:30 p.m

Final

Tuesdav, June I
Momi11g

(i a.m.-Noo11)

Temperatures will rise to
75 with today\ low of 6ll
occurring around 6:00am .
Skies will range from
sunny to mostly sunny with
5 to 15 MPH winds from
the southwest.

high for the day of 80 at
4:00pm as they drop back
down to tih later this afternoun . Skies will be sunny
to cloudy with I0 to 15
MPH winds from the
southwest turning from the
west as the afternoon pro~
g:res~es

..

Ajtemoo11 (I p.m.-6 p.m.)

· Eve11i11g (7 p.m.-Mid11ight)

Some shower&gt; are In the
forecast. Anticipate rain
accumulations of 0. 17 inches for this afternoon.
· Temperatures will rise from
77 early afternoon to the

A few sprinkles are pqssible. Temperatures will
stay near 69. Skies • will
range from most ly ·clear to
c\oudv with 5 . to 15 MPH
wind; fro m the southwest.

a.m.

Prep Baseball

Ovemight (I a.m.-6 a.m.)

Temperatures will hold
steady around 65 . Skies
will be clear to mostly
clear with 10 to 15 MPH
winds from the southwest.
Wednesday, June 2

State Baseball Pairings
Painngs tor I he boys state high school
baseba ll tournament

DIVISION II
Semifinals

Ar

Momi11g (7 a.m.-Noo11)

CooPER STADIUM , CoLUMBUS

Steubenvil le (18-11) liS. Canf1eld (28-4).
Thursday, 10 a.m., LaGrange Keystone
(22-5) 11s. Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesu1t

Temperatures will climb
from 64 to 75 by late this
morning. Skies will range
from sunny to mostly
cloudy with I0 MPH winds
from the southwest turning
from the west as the morni ng progresses.

(25·5). Thursday. 1 30 p.m.
Final
Saturday. 10 a.m .

DIVISION Ill
Semifinals

AT THURMAN

MUNSON StADIUM, CANTON

New Albany (16- 12) liS. Barnesville (2 14) . Fr1day. 10 a.m , Perry (25-5) liS.
Coldwater {29-3). Fr1day. 1·30 p.m

Final
SAturday. 1:30 p_m

Plastic bags-could help speed
up airport's ·checkpoint lines
CLEVELAND (AP)
at
Cleveland
Officials
Hopkins
Internation al
Airport are looking for ways
to speed up passenger
screening when travel surges
this summer.
·
The airport will experiment Tuesday with handing
travelers plastic bags so they
can empty their pockets
while in line before reaching
the airport's busiest checkpoint. Then when they reach
the metal detectors they can
simply drop the bags in
trays. said Hopkins commi ssioner Fred Szabo.
"If it saves 35 to 40 seconds of fumble time that
people normally have, that
multiplies dramatically when
you consider the number of
people
going through."
Szabo said.
Later next week, the first
of five electronic signs that

"The impact 011 operations
will tlash the wait times at
each of the airport 's three is going to be minimal ."
checkpoints shou ld go up.
Young said.
Szabo said the airport has
O!Ticials have been workordered the signs to provide ing on a number of ways to
travelers with continuously keep passengers moving
updated information about during a season notable for
wait times.
the number of novice atr
The moves also come at a travelers.
time
when
the
U.S.
"In the slimmer we get
Transportation
Security less-traveled people _ ramAdministration will have to ilies and other people going
get by with fewer workers. on vacations," Young said .
The
federal
agency
h
f
announced earlier this month
People w 0 travel rethat it would eliminate the quently on business have
equivalent of 26 full-time learned the best ways to
jobs at Hopkins as part of a avoid delays at the checknational shake-up of staffing point~. 'They know not to
wear clothing that contains
level s at airports.
Mike Young. the TSA's metal , they know how to
director at Hopkins. said pack and they know that all
creative scheduling and · boarding gates can be
overtime in peak travel peri- reached from any of the
ods should keep the airport' s' checkpoints, so they choose
three
security-checkpoint ' the one with the shortest
areas adequately staffed.
lines.

DIVISION IV

Semifinals
AT COOPER STADIUM , COLUMBUS

Fremont SL Joseph {20-6) liS . Newa r~
Cath. (27·5). Friday. 10 a.m.: Ashland
Mapleton (17-5) vs. N. Lew1sburg Triad
(26-4 ). Fnday. 1·30 p.m.

Final
SAturday. 1:30 p.m .

Dick Haddix. center right. puts his arm around his grandson . Lane Thomas. as they ride together
on a parade float with other veterans of World War II, Korea. Vietnam and the Gulf War, during a
Memorial Day Parade in the village of Terre Haute. (AP Photo/ Springfield News-Sun, Bill Lackey )

Former POW tells family of
kidnapped soldier not to give up
BATAVIA (AP) - A pri soner of war in Korea for
more than three years .lives
down the road from the
home of a soldier kid napped in Iraq.
Charles Leigh Whitaker,
74, has a message of hope
for the family of Pfc. Kei th
M. Maupin.
" You have to keep believing. They did it for almost
threq years for me," sai ~.
Whitaker, an Army medic
in the Korean War. " I was
27 months MIA and my
family never had a clue
where I was or eve n
whether I wa&gt; alive. I
believe he' ll make it home.
I really do."
Maupin, 20, was captured
when · hi s suppl y convoy
came under attack April 9
on the western outskirts of
Baghdad. one of many amid
an • insurgent
campaign
against supply routes around
the capital.
Whitaker has had some
sleepless nights lately. After
praying for Maupin for
more th an a month. the
televi!.ed images of Nick
Berg ,
the
26-year-old

Philadelphia man beheaded
by captors in Iraq , jogged
painful memories.
" All thi s, it's brought
thin gs back fo r me. for
sure ," Whitaker said rece nt,
ly.
On
July
12,
\950,
Whitaker had· been in Korea
for just two weeks when hi s
regiment was enveloped by
North Korean troops near
Chochiwon. south of Seoul.
For the next three years.
Whitaker marched at - the
behest of his captors. often
trave ling 10 miles a day.
Prisoners slept on the
ground, sometimes in su bzero temperatures. They- had
few clothe&gt;, and North
Korean soldiers stole their
boots, Whitaker said.
Pri,oners were given only
a handful of food each day,
essentially a glob of millet
and sorghum.
After two years. Whitaker
said he weighed about 80
pounds.
"Two thin gs keep you
alive," Whitaker , aid. "You
have to have faith . And you
have to have a sense of
humor. Which might sound

II
'

WHO: Anyone can join! This is a beginner's class,
focusing on form and technique. All exercises can be
modified to fit your personal needs and limitations.

· ·1 WHY: The benefits are enormous - loose inches,

8-10 a.m. 7-9th grade girts
10·12 a.m. 7-9th gi-ade girls
-~·3 p .m.
10-,2th grade girls
9·5 p.m. 10th-12th grade boys
Quest1ons can be directed to Ryan
Lemley, Athletic Director at Sou thern High
School949·2611, ext. 2103 or Dr. Hunter's
OHiCe at 949·2683.

WHEN: Class will include June 7th and last for 6
weeks, Mondays and Thursdays at 6 pm at
Rocksprings Rehab Center.

Women's fast
pitch tourney
planned

HOW: Class size is very limited. Please contact us
soon at Rocksprings Rehab Center, 992-6606. Class
rate is $75 to be.paid in full
on the
first night.
.
.

.

INSTRUCTOR: ALLISON G. BARNETT, CPI •
Certified Pilates instructor

740-992-6606
367l9 Rocl&lt;1prinl! Road
. Ohlo4l769

Rocksprings
REHABILITATION CENTER

Barnesville IO:Fedoral Hocki ng 6

The 1imes for physicals are as follows :

gain strength, improve flexibility and posture, and
decrease pain.

'

DIVISION Ill
Regional final

RACINE - Sports physicals for athletes in the Soul hem
Local School District wi ll be ·
l1cld at the ofllce of Dou~!as
Hunter. M.D. Wednesday. the
physicals are for all students
who will be partici/Jating in
any spot1s during t 1e 20042005 school year. The phystcals will be free of charge on
thi s day only.
Students mu' t bring a completed phys ical form signed by
a parent or legal guard ian .
Thev will also need to bring an
up-t"o-date
immunization
record . Ph ysical form s are
available at Dr. Hunter \ office
or the hi gh school office.
Students ' hould dress casually
in shorts and T-shirts for the
physicals. Students who are
under the Ci~·e ·of a physician
are encouraged to schedule an
appointment with their regular
physician to have their physical done. The sports physical
can also be done in conjunction with a well-child checkup, should a student have a
yearly check-up scheduled:

WHAT: Pilates is a dynamic exercise program,
allowing participants to improve their core body
J strength, while increasing their flexibility, muscle
tone, and coordination.

-

kind of strange. But truly,
the only w'ay I made it
through : You have to laugh
about it. You'd be surprised.
If you look hard enough
you can find funny things."
In' August 1953, after 37
months and 14 days as a
prisoner of war, Whitaker
was turned over to th e
Americans . He was among
the · first prisoners captured
in Korea and one of the last
returned to the Americans.
For decades Whitaker
wouldn't talk about hi s
experience's, and he was tormented by nightmares. He's
lived for 46 years in this
town about I 5 miles east of
Cincinnati, now awash in
ye llow ribbons for Maupin.
But he feels · Maupin 's
capture and Berg's killing
make il a fitting time to
reflect his experience as a
POW.
"Going through all this
re newed
my
faith ,"
Whitaker said. " You find
out who you really are. You
become a man's man: You
have no fear any more:·

Monday 's Result

Physicals for ,
athletes at
Southern set for
Wednesday

•••

EXTENDICARE'

,

"'~"r

www rxtlndlca~ cqm

BY RUSTY MILLER

Assoc iated Press

COLUMBUS - When it comes to
Ohio hi gh schools. some stale champions just don 't know when to qu it.
An A"ociated Press anal ys is of
Ohio
High
School
Athletic
Associatiot1 record s 'hows · that
dynasties - defined as at least three
conse~utive state -championships aren't nearl y so rare as one might
think .

There have heen at leas t 79 ' treaks
of at least three champio nshi ps.
illthough the numbers taper oil considerably beyo nd tha t. Only nine
times has a school won at least six
championships in a row.
The re isn't much debate about th e
two greatest dynasties in Ohio.
Cincinnati St. Xavier's boys swimming teams ha ve won 26 team titleso
includinc 12 in a row from 1970-81.
another 'six consecutive trophies from
1990-95 and the most recent five bigschool titles.

The
wrestling
prngram
at
Lakewood St. Edward has captured
20 team champio nships. including I0
in a ro" from 197~-87. The Ea~k&gt;
have wo n the la.&gt;t eight big-schoo l
wrcstlin~ titles.
St. Ed'Ward coach Greg Urbas ll'a'n' t sure al first how many titles he
had won as head coach. He sa id he

PARKERSBURG. W.Va. Jessica
Lynch Freedom
Women 's Fast Pitch Softball
Tournament will be held July
3rd ami 4th at the Dugout
Softball Park in Parkersburg,
WV. The event is open to
adult wome ri's slow pitch
teams and girls fast pitch
teams lOu. I fu , 14u. 16u, and
18u. 4 games ~uaranteed . For
more infonnauon contact Ron
at (304) 422-3761.

for ihe itffseason. It j ust never ends.
It's tlie next ~id' s turn to step up ...
Caldweli' stru ng together eight boys
cross cnuntrv titles from 1985-9".
and Ck1elai1d H ei~h t s Beaumont

won e ,-~ n· i.d r!s ~ wte trac k crown

from IYS6-•h Be,ides St . Xavier.
nthcr-.. t J k i n ~
in a row were:
Canton ~1cK~n!ey in boys ~w immin g
ne\l~ r t hi nk~ in term:-, of how man y he I !lJ:i(&gt;-611: Clcl·eland E&lt;ist Tech in
has. but. raihe r about what he ha; to bovs track and J'idd ( 1939--+4): and
do to ~e t the next one.
Cincinnati St. Ursu la in girls volley"They last maybe a wee k." Urbas
Please see Dynasty, Bl
said. "Then you'l'e got to get ready

Reds 9, Florida 7

,j,

NBA Playoffs

I_

'

'

F'lnal

Saturday. 10

What makes a·high s~hool program into a dynasty?

RedS power past
Griffey passes Gehrig
on home run list

Lakers
Marlins . finish off
Wolves
I

BY TIM REYNOLDS

Associated Press

1

I

MIAMI - Ken Griffey Jr. isn't
· fueled hy the drive for 500 home runs.
Hi ~ in-.piralion Monday was sou\enir
World Series championship rings the
!-'lorida Marlins handed out to fan s.
Griffey passed. Lou Gehrig on the
career home run li st with a go-ahead.
th ree- run drive in the seve nth inning
tha t helped the Cincinnati Reds beat
· the Marlins 9-7.
It was the 13th home run o f the se ason for Griffey and the 494th of his
caree r. mo~ ing him into so le po&gt;Session of 20th place.
.
"They've got something that I want.
and the y were showing it today -· that
big 'ol ring:· Griffey said. "That 's
what I pl~y thi s game for. Individual
accomplishments are going to take
care of themselve s. I want that championship.''
Sean Case y homered t"ice and
raised hi s major l_eague-lei.tding average to .394. scored fou r run s and had
three RB\ s. Barry Larkin and Wily Mo
Pena also homcreJ . for C incinnati,
which overcame a 5-0 deficit and
stopped Florida's five-game winning
streak .
•
· "We· had some runners on ba'e and
wu ldn 't get them in. and then Griff
came up with the big three-ru n blow at
tile end there." Casey sai\1. " It 's a bi g
win for us ...
Jeff Conine went 4-for-4. ·Juan
Pie rre and Luis Castillo had three hits
each and Mike Lowell had three RBis
for the Marlins. who lost for onl'y the
third time in their last 12 games.
"We had so many c·hances . ... I want
to forget this one:· Marlins manager
Jack McKeon said . " You ge t a five-run

I

Please see Power, Bl

A_s_so_c_ia_te_d__
P_re_s_s_____

_ _ _ _ _ _

LOS ANGELES - · The
!.akers 'nc1cr make it easy.
The\'• .,·ust keep winninoe and the y'1e made it back to
the NBA Finals.
Shaquille o ·r..:eal had 25
point &gt; and I I rebounds. and
Karc e m Rush came from
nowhe re to hit six 3-pclintcrs
in Lo, Angeb · 96-90 1·iernry
ovec
the
Minnesota
Timber11oil'es in Game h of
the We sle rn Conference
fin al&gt; Monda v niuht.
Kobe Brv:mt ·scored 20
points for ihe Lukers. who
overcame Kc1·in Garnett.
theit· constant bickerinu with
the referees and O'Nea l's
hurri fie 7- for- 20 free throw
~.ht.)Otin g tn win the best-nf~cvcn

ser ies .·

· Their fo urih tri p to the
NBA's clmnpi otbhir round
in fi1·e seasons will begin
Sundav. Det mit. leaJin2 the
Eastc ri1 Con ferem·e fin;;!, .12. II' ill 1 i; it Los Anueles if
the Pi ston; finish z,rr the
Indiana Pace rs on Tuesday
I

Please see lakers, Bl

Stanley Cup

lem.J in the ~econJ . inntng. you've got

to win. That's the kind you shou ld
win."
John Riedling (4-0l got the win.
despite walking four while retiring j ust

BY GREG BEACHAM

~

Florida Marlins ' Ju an Pierre is out at second as Cincinnati Reds second baseman D' Angelo Jimenez throws to first to double up Mike Lowell in tl1e bottom
of the e ighth inning Monday in Miami. The Reds beat the Marlins 9-7 . (AP)

Lightning
evens up
series with
Flames
BY ALAN RoBINSON

Associated Press

CALGA KY.

French Open Tennis

Bothered by blisters, Safin 8xits
'

BY HOWARD FENDRICH

Assoc1ated Press

PARI S - Marat Safin's left pi nkie '"" munHnified.
Parts of four 1&gt;t l1cr fingers were ll' rappcd with 11hite tape . .
. too. and ma tehhook-si;ed. patches protec'led e:~c h burning
piil111. Splotclte' ofru"-colorcd medil'inc 'taincd his h :~nds.
This was no way to try to reach the FretKh Open qu;lrtertinal.s. and Safin eventu all y succlllnbed to tl1e pain &lt;&gt;f II
bli stcr.s a'nd the steady play of David Nalbandi;tn .
Sa lin \ riveting run at Roland Garrn~ indud~d two fi\·cscttcr.s. three match points saved. a much-discus,ed parti;il
di&gt;robing. a rant about what's aili ng te nni &gt; - anJ it all
ended in the fourth round with Monday 's 7-5. 6--+. 6-7 (5).
6-3 loss to Nalhandian.
"The hands, I don' t care about actually an) more. because
I'm just a little bit frustrated.'' th e 2000 U.S. Open cham- .
pion said . " It was another b1g opportun it y for me to f~ght
for a title. Just to waste tim opportumty thts &gt;~ay. It' a

pi~~~

eighth-,eeded Nalbandian joi ns No. 3 Guillermo
Coria. No. 22 Juan Ignacio Chela and un,eeucd Gaston
Gaudio to give Argentina half of a major\ quarterfinal
; lots for the fir1t time . And none fac:es each other next. a
pro;pect that de lighted Nalbandian.
·
'Tm a little surprised,'' the 2002 Wimhledon runner-up
said. "It 's not like thi ; ever) day. I hope it 11 ill be all
Argentines in the semifinals."
On Wednesday. he'll play three-time French Open champion Gustal'o Kucrten. \\hn finished his 6-3. 7-.'i. 6-4 1 icMarat Safin of Russia checks his hands as he faces Polito ' tory O\cr No . 2.1 Fel1ciano Lnpet c·aked \1 ith cia: from a
Starace of Italy during their third round match of the French late tuml&gt;le on a set'l'e-anJ-I(&gt;IIc) btu that "ent a11r) .
Open tennis tournament at the Roland Garros stadium in
Paris Saturday. (AP)
Please see Blisters, 86

Alberta

Nikolai Khabibulin ha' never
had cl hi~~l'r ~an:' - he mav
ha1c sal·cd the Tampa Bay
Li~hlllin':2·.., ru n to the Stan lev

c ~,

.

-

Khab ibulin wa~ again at hi s
best ''hen the LichtlliJH.!. are
in trouh lc. stav inQ"undefcmed
following a Cn,- in carryjng
Tamra Ba1 tn a '~ r ies-tymg
1-0 l'ic!l &gt;rl OI'CI' the Calgary
Fl,tmes in Game -l oi· the
Stank) Cu p fina l Monday
nidH .
B;·ad Ric-hards sc'&lt;&gt;rcd duri n ~ :t

t\\l)-lllan ac.h'anwuc lin

the opening three mi1i'utes.
hi"' fourth game-\\'mning goal

fn ll nwing -~~ Lightning, loss,
and Khahibulin made the all important goa l stand up by
tying Calgary's Miikka
Kiprusoff ll'ith his fifth playoff .,hutout this ;pring . He
had 29 saves.
Ri chards' lOth goal of the
postseason ""' his seventh
game-ll'inner. breaking the
record he prel'iously shared
with Joe Sakic ( 1996) and
Jc&gt;e Nicuwendyk 11999). The
Li ghtning are 10-0-2 overall
;md 8-0 in the playoffs when
Rtchard scores .
The Lightning would have
been in desperate straits if
the\ had ~one down J- I
!..!oiin! intu Game 5 at home
Thutc,d,t:. '" &lt;&gt;nl) one team

Please see lightning. B6

�,
Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, June

www .mydailysentinel.com

l, 2004

Tuesday, June 1, 2004

'

\!tribune- Sentinel-1\e
CLASSIFIED

Quality Servis: Smarty Jones
trainer nears horse ractng's summit
BY DIIN GELSTON
Associated Press

Kentucky Derby and Preakness w1nner Smarty Jones, left, IS walks with excerc1se nder
Pete Van Trump and trainer John Servis rides Butterscotch after an early morning workout at the Ph 1ladelph1a Park race t rack in Bensalem, Pa. , Monday. If Smarty Jones
wins the Belmont Saturday, June 5, the colt woyld become the f1rst thoroughbred to
capture the Triple Crown since Affirmed in 1978. (AP)

BENSALEM. Pa. - He was a
grieving horse owner ready to quit
the business. The death or his longtime hieml and Lramer had persuaded Roy Chapman to clear the
barn and enJoy retirement.
There was one coiL, though , lhat
showed promise, one last chance at
a legacy.
So in 2002, Chapman called
Mark Reid, a friend and former
trainer. He told Reid he may have
a special horse and needed someone who could finally get him to
- not win. just get him to - the
Kentucky Derby.
Reid said he had the man. His
name was John Servis. The horse
was Smarty Jones. Together they
are one win from racing immortalit~
.
-Immortality? The thought never
crossed Servts' mind when he was
14 and slinging slop on a breeding
farm in Charles Town, W.Va.
Servis yanked 1weeds, cleaned
stalls and emptied manure wagons
for $40 a week. The money dtdn 't
matter. Horses were what men in
his family knew.
His father, Joe, was a jockey and
manager of the Jockey's Guild tor
more than a decade. His uncle,
Jack, was a longtime jockey agent
at Philadelphia Park.
Joe Sems thought his son would
get one whiff of those chores and
do something else. Instead, John
came back the next summer and
then on the weekends and after
school. John Servis had found his
call ing.
After high school , Servis spent a
semester at Shepherd College in
Shepherdstown, W.Va .. but bought
a horse. from a New Jersey owner.
Servis spent $1,000 and agreed to
oive the owner an additional
$t.500 atier its first win. The
horse. named Two Fisted, won its
first two races.
"That was the end of college,"
Servis said.
There were stints in Maryland
and Florida before Servis found his

a group hug near the bench behlre accepting
the mnference championship trophy.
Latrell Sprewe ll scored 27 points, and
Garnett. who fouled out. had 22 points and 17
from Page
rebOLmds for the Tnnberwolves, who nearly
extended the beq ' eason in rranchise htstOiy
night.
to a Game 7 111 M nlneapolis
The Laker' imt)roved to 9-0 at Staples
Instead, Minnc,otll"s first trip to the conferCenter in the posheason. but Garnett and th e Ctll'e finals ended when it couldn't score
Timberwolve' 'pent most of the g&lt;~me on the enough to overcome the abse nce of injured
verge of an improbable upset.
All-Star Sam Ca"dl.
Unbowed by the L&lt;t kers· nine champiBryant. o· Neal and Garnett all got in first- ·
onship banners and llllimtdating home crowd. half foul trouble in a tightly officiated game.
the Timberwolvcs played ti2ht defense and O'Neal sal on the hench for 4 1/2 minutes in
made enough free throws LO ' take a lead into the fourth quarter &lt;~fter picking up hi, fifth
the fourth quarter. But Bryant and Rush kd a roul. dtH.l Malone also gnt five fouls lrying to
15-6 run early in the L(Udt"Ler. an.d Slava
Medvedenko added two critical ba,kets in the slay with Garnetl.
But Rush. the sccon&lt;.l-year guard who had
final minutes.
II pomts 111 the entire senes. made shot after
Karl Malone ami Gary Payton. who signed &gt;hot from the perimeter. His 3-pomtcr with
with the Lakers la&gt;t summer for " chance at 3:22 to play gave Los Angeles a I 0-point lead
their first NBA title. joined Lhe1r teammates 111 and sent the crowd into pandemonium.

Lakers
81

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way in 1980 Lo Philadelphia Park
in Bensalem. Servis wa~ a jockey
agent when he hooked up with
Reid.
Reid hired him as an assistant
trainer. He knew Servis had not
only skills but charisma. It would
serve the assistant well nearly 25
years later as the daily face of this
Triple Crown stoty.
Servis, 45. has regaled the public
with Smarty Jones stories. How
did Smarty get hurt? Time and
again. Servis tells the story with
enthusiasm. The trainer . wore a
Flyers jersey at h public workout.
He signs autographs and connects
as a man of the people with
Philadelphia's notonously fickle
fans.
In 1981 at Atlantic City. N.J ..
Servis struck up a friendship with a
jockey named Stewart Elliott . The
two shared a love of horses. hunting and fishing. Elliott rode for
Servis for years. They were a couple of journeyman who hardly
seemed destined tor the big-time.
That changed when Smarty
Jones' original trainer, Bobby
Camac, was murdered in 200 I.
Roy m1d Patricia Chapman, who
made their fortune through car
dealerships, wanted out of the
business and turned to Reid to help
them with that one frisky, speedy
colt.
Reid soon called Servis, and the
trainer reached out to Elliott. The
chemistry has been perfect.
"He trusts my judgment because
you never know what's £Ding to
happen," Elliott said. "t-or two
friends in the same business to
come up with a horse that can even
win the Kentucky Derby, that's
pretty special in itself."
Servis sat down with the
Chapmans this year and told them
about Elliott's alcohol hi story.
Servis knew if the horse was this
good, stories of Elliott's past
would surface. Neither wanted the
Chapmans to be surprised.
"I credit John for that.'' Elliott
said.
The trainer drew up an unusual
Kentucky Derbv campaign that
went through Arkansas. Now, with

Dynasty

from Page B1

The Daily Sentinel
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Melt

······························-----------········
I

victories in· the Derby and
Preakness. the undefeated colt will
try to win the Belmont Stakes on
Saturday and become_ the lirst
Triple Crown champton smce
Afftm1ed in 1978.
''John is one of the best trainers.
if not the best trainer. to geL a horse
conditioned I've ever known."
Roy Chapman said. "He's ·very
patient with the horse. "
Even Reid questioned the tactics.
"It was kind of an all or nothmg
thing.'' Reid said. "He just had
supreme confidence in his horse ...
It's not a route I would have taken.
but I would have been wron~.'·
About five years ago, Servts was
beginmng to have &lt;.loubts. He had
senled in Berisalem wtth hts wtfe
and two kids, but his clients had
horses in New York, Delaware.
New Orleans and Florida. Some
days he commuted for hours and
came home about 8 p.m. He
thought his wonder horse might .
never come.
His wife told him to stick with it.
Sherry Servis is now her husband's
public relations liaison.
John Servis stopped the grueling
commutes, restricting his training
to Philadelphia Park. Better horses
soon came his way,
Now, as he's pulled in so many
directions, Servts cuts off medta
interviews by I p.m. He .wants to
be home when sons Blane. 16, and
Tyler, 13, get back from school.
For years, Servis coached youth
football and was the defensive
coordinator for the Bucks County
Bears.
"''ve loved working with the
kids. It' s a stress release." Servts
said. ""The only two times I ~el
away is that and if I go hunting.·
Servis has thought about other
opportunities and leaving the bush
leagues of Phi lly Park, but he just
can't uproot his family.
"This is home for me." he said:
"Everybody's happy here:·
Money is no issue . By wmmng
the Belmont, Smarty Jones woul&lt;.l
become North Amenc:fs nchest
horse with more than $13 tmllion
in earnings.

champion team in 1973, used to believe that
the Catholic schools had a decided advantage.
"A lot of times those of us at public
from Page 81
schools say those schools recruit and if we
caul &lt;.I recruit we· d be better and dah dah dah
ball ( 1993-98).
dah dah. I don't know that that's true ... he
Perhaps the most acclaimed dynasties in said. " Ir I'm a girl who's a good half-miler
Ohio prep sports - Cincinnati Moeller and in the Cleveland area. why would I not wam
Cleveland St. Ignatius in football -pale in to go to Beaumont as opposed to goi ng to a
comparison to other longer streaks. Moeller Cleveland city school'? I'm not going to say
won a meager three playoff titles ( 1975'-77), they don't recruit . but I will say they don't
while St. Ignatius Look fiv~ championships have to recruit as much as public schools
in a row (1991-95).
think they do."
Why have some schools dominated?
Most of the dynasttes revolve around one
One good class can fuel a program's run ot head coach - or a direct link from one
two. three or even four consecutive titles.
coach to another - for the dt)ration of their
One example is Akron St. Vincent-St. run.
Mary, whjch had won just one state champiThat's what makes S~. Xavier's domionship in boys basketball before a freshman nance all the more remarkable. The
named LeBron James led the Fighting Irish Bombers have been led to championships by
to the Litle in 2000. James - tabbed "The current coach Jim Brower ( II titles); Dennis
Chosen One" in a Sports Illustrated cover White (7). Jim Loomis (3), David Coffman
story before he had finished his jtmior year (2), Michael Arat (2) and Mark Sullivan ( I).
of hjgh school - led the lnsh to three state
Contrast that with St. Edward, which has
titles in his four seasons. The other year, had just two coaches over the last 26 years:
they lost in the title game.
· ' Howard Ferguson (II titles from 1978 to
But it takes a deep feeder system, a coach 1989), and Urbas (9 from 1992 through the
with a vision, cutting-edge facilities and a current season), who Look over after II
stream of star athletes to reach the rarified years as freshman coach when Ferguson
air of a dynasty.
died.
Sometimes, winning begets winning, with
Middletown won boys basketball champigreat players gravitating to the most suc- onships in 1944, '46, '47. '52, '53. '56 and
cessful programs because they have a better ' 57. Jerry Lucas, arguably the most domichance of earnmg college schol arships and nant Ohio schoolboy star ever, went 76-1
winning titles.
during 11 is career as a Middie. But the comUrbas credtts powerful CYO and YMCA mon denominator of those title runs was
wrestling programs for providing youngsters Paul Walker, who remains the state's allin Cleveland with athletes who are experi- time leader 111 basketball coaching victories.
enced even before they begin high school.
Caldwell won eight consecutive state titles ,
He doesn't shirk from another advantage in boys cross country from 1985 to 1992 St. Edward has.
the last six with Hill as the head coach.
"We don' t have boundaries so the athletes
When Hill thinks back on his school's
are ilot coming from one school district," string of successes, he is awed by the
Urbas said. "But tuition next year is around thought.
$8,000."
"Coaches dream of winning one," he said.
Caldwell is the lone public school with a "Do I feel honored, privileged , lucky'?
streak longer than six titles in a row. Coach Absolutely.''
Dugan Hill, who also ran on a Caldwell state

Power..

matlp m:rtbune

tlotnt ~lea~ant l\egt~ter

'

'
The Daily Sentin~l • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com .

three halters. Danny Graves pitched a perfect ninth for his 24th save in 28 chances .
Florida scored four runs in the first ahd
added another 111 the second. In the third, the
Reds got to Marlins starter Tommy Phelps
- who limited Cincinnati to one hit over
seven innings in his last outing .
That inning, Phelps issued consecutive
walks to Reds starter Todd Van Poppe! and
Ryan Freel and settin~ up Casey for a three·
run homer. pulling Ctncmnati to S-3.
Pena homered leading off the fourth and
the Reds went ahead in the fifth on back-tobuck homers by Larkin and Casey. Phelps
allowed six hits -.- four homers - in five
i nnin~s .
·
· "I JUSt couldn't command the zone the
wuy l should huve," Phelps suid. "And lhey
mude me pay."
Van Poppe! allowed I0 hils over live
innings yet left with a 6·5 lead. His bullpen

;

,

- and catcher Jason LaRue - couldn't
keep it.
In the sixth. Castillo drew a one-out walk.
and stole second, goin&amp; to third on the play
easily because LaRue s throw sailed into
center field - an error charged to him
though neither Larkin nor second baseman
D'Angelo Jimenez covered the base .
Pierre walked and stole second. This time,
LaRue 's throw bounced away from Jimenez
for another error, allowing Castillo Lo score
and letting Pierre advance to third. He
scored on Lowell's single for a 7-6lead.
Cincinnati came right back, getting three
in the seventh off Justin Wayne (3 -2), who
hadn't allowed a run in his previous four
outings. Larkin singled with one out, Casey
walked und Griffey followed with the go·
uheud homer ttl right-center.
"You make bud pitches und bad things
happen," Wayne suit.!.
Florida hud the buses loaded with no outs
in the seventh. but Todd Jones worked out of
the jam.
"A ~arne like this, it comes down to making pttches," Jones said. "Today l made
them. Some days you don't."

We C01ter''-7

Mel .., Gallla,
AndMe.an

eoUntlea Uke
NoOne
EIHC.nl
c . u;.. Count). OH

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

{

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To Place

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Call Today...

(740) 446-2342' (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
or Fax To (740) 446-3008

or Fax To (740) 992-2157

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
.8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.mJ
HOW IO. WRITE AN AQ
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

.r

r

~~~

PERSONAl£

r

ADOPTION: . A loving couple would like to adopt your
newborn
Will provide a
home tilled ,With JOy. napp1ness. fmanc1al secunty and
a great educat1on Feel confident 1n knowmg because of
your brave dec1ston your
Oaby could look forward to a
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Expenses paid. Call toll free
1-866-731 -7825
Barbara
and M1chael
C-t Beer Carry Out permit
lor sale. Chester Township,
, Me1gs County, send letters
of Interest to The Dally
Sentmel. PO Box 729 _20 .
Pomeroy, Oh10 45769

j,ir~;;;:,;.;;;;;;.;;.;.;;;;_.,
GIVEAWAY
6 adorable puppies. 4 male,
, 2 female , 5 weeks old
(740)367-7115 1f no answer
leave a message
Free 9 toot Aluminum
Satellite Dish with Receivers
. Removal to my satisfaction
5975
(30 4)675 .
Free
Cocker
Span1el
Female spayed Has all her
shots up to date , ms1de
tramed , loves every one
Needs a good lov1ng home
She \s • great pet tor Sr.
Citizens. she IS smart and
needs lots of love (304)7735899 This is not a mi~C.ed
breed canine
Needs A Home
. Fnendly larger m1xed-breed
dog , neutered, all shots.
house broken, crate-trained,
loves to run and to 'play ball.
(3o4}675 •10

ee

Puppy
to
giveaway,
Australian
Shepherd,
. German Shepherd call after
6pm (304)675·77~3

r

Lorr AND

\

FOUND

%~

Buslne•s Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m .
Thursday for Sundays

• All ads must be prepaid'

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publishing reserves the righl'to edit, reject, or cancel any 1d at any time. ErTora muat be reported on the flr•t dey of
Trlbune-Sentinei·Reglater will be rnponelblelor no more thin the coat of the apace occupied by the srror 1nd only the flrtt 1nsert1on. We
eny lou Of expena•thst r.. utts from ltHt publicAtion or omla1lon Of an adv&amp;rtl•ement. Correction will be mAde in the flr1tavai lable edition
are alway• confidantlal. • Currant r1t1 card appll11. • All r"l HlMe ldYertinmentl sr• 1ubject to thl Federal Fair Hou•1ng Act of 1968.
I
I w1ntod ad• meeting EOE atendtrda We will not knowingly accept any Advartia1ng In VIolation ol the l1w

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
lwright®lc.net

'ANEW CliNICAL
PEELS\'
Want to look younger AND
earn Money? Let's lalk the
NEW AVON call
Manlyn (304)882-2645 ,
Joyce 1304)675·6919,
Apn\1304)882-3630

Mult1-famlly Fr1/Sat., June 45; 9·4pm, 19 Debbie DnYe ,
1.9 miles out SA 14 1, Chest
freezer $25, household
1tems. loads of bargams on
clothmg, men 's 365. L&amp;XL ,
Mechanic/Small
s1zes 4-10 women 's suits Auto
hOme schooler stuff end Eng1ne Mechan1c, must be
experienced Shade Tree
table , vacuum. golf-bag
Mechanics need not apply
Yard Sale 1 mile out 218 , 1304)675·3600
Tue 6- 1. 8.30-? At Haner's .
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Ram cancels
by NEA, Inc.
Sell. Shtrley Spears. 304Yard Sale June 1,2,3, Sam· 675-1429 .
Spm. Ou114t 10 Centenary
Class A COL Drivers
past Jumbo. Lots of items
HEIJ' WANlEO
Yard Sa le· June 4 &amp; 5 Fn . Wanted
Sat 8am-6pm 123 P1ne St NEW PAY SCAlE!!
Med1 Home Health Agency
Galltpohs, OhiO
Inc. seek1ng a full-t1me and
PAN AN's, and a PAN
j014
Y~RD SAtE·
•Mtn . at 1 year exp
Occupational Theraptst for
eMed~eallns
401
K
PoMEROY/MIDDLE
the GallipoliS, Oh1o area .
•DOm1cile in Canton, OH
Must . be licensed both 1n
•S1gn-On Bonus
3rd-4th, Woodrow Moras •36 cent per mile to start
0~10 and West V1rg1nia We
State Rou te 7, by Meigs
o1fer a compet1t1ve salary.
•95% No Touch
Memory Garden 900"4 ·00 oNO FORCED NYC
benefit package for full -lime.·
Lots of s1ze 22 cloth1ng.
and 401K E O.E Please
freight
send resume to 352 Second
Call
800-652-2362
Benefit sale . Ang1e's Flea
Ave Gallipolis, OH 45631
market, Mechanic St. June DeiJVery/Warehouse person Attn · D1ana Harless. Chn1cal
4-11 , 10Am-SPM AuctiOn , needed , fuU t1me, 1mmed1ate Manager or call 1·800·481·
June
12th
5 30PM
Proceeds go toward funeral openmg, must haYe good 6334
dnv1ng record, apply at l1fe - - - - - - - - expenses John Hess all Style Furn ture. 856 3rd. Now h1r1ng iaborers/matenal
1
donations. except clothing
Ave, GallipoliS, 9-5 no phone handlers &amp; machme opera·
For 1nfo (740)992·2509 or calls
tors. Duties could 1nclude
{740)742-1408
grmdmg, weld ing, mak1ng
:___:__ _ _ _~-- Harris Steak house Now sand
molds,
handling
June 2nd &amp; 3rd, 9-3, baby
molteri metal. drill press and
,~,· o 2T I h
H~r~ng . (304)675·9726
furniture, vvr s .
cot - - - - - - - - - - lathe operators. Th1s posi1ng, ant.que dresser, com- Help Wanted- Mamtenance
tion IS physically demandmg
puler stand, tools , book· Supervisor. sk1lls m plumband requtres the llexibllity to
case, whole hOuse tan , ing. electrical. heating /a ir
work ovor t1me mcludmg
much
more
1315 conditiOning a must Starting
Bridgeman Street Syracuse salary range 18K to.. 25K. weeke nds Apply In person
at Pioneer C1ty Castmg. 904
M1n1 -Fiea Market , June 4-5 Apply m person at the Campus DnYe Belpre OH
Holiday Inn of Gall1po11s No , No phon!'! calls Please
Rainer
res1dence ,
phone calls
Tackerv11ie Rd Aac1ne. Kmg
Overbrook Center IS currentsize mattress/spnngs, toots, ------~-ly accepting apphcahons tor
bicycle.
lurmture,
col·
HEY DRIVERS I! I
a part-time RN for the Nigh!
lectibles, much more. Follow Here IS a great opportumty
Shift Superv1sor poslt1on.
garage sale signs.
to come grow w1th us
:.:::.::!::..:.::~:..:._.:_____ Kuntzman Truck1ng, an BO Please come in and fill out
The Lend-A-Hand of the yea r old, Regional Truckload an application at 333 Page
Harrisonville Presbyterian Carrier with termmals in Street, Middleport. EOE
Church are having a BAKE Alliance and Columbus Ohio Owner/ Operatora Wanted
and Yard Sate Saturday has opened a new terminal
June 5th, 2004 The pro- In Piketon, Ohio. Only hard 2 Senlement Opt1ons paid
ceeds of the sale will go working, experienced driv· weekly
toward the Church Building ers with a clean MVA and a Home Weekends, dom1clle
Fund. Everyone Welcome
mln1mum ol two years expe· In Canton Ohio, 1Sign-On

~

c··'::ot:;:ho::s::::a:.:\1::s:.:lz::.es_._o_r•_ft_s_&amp; _
' ~ousehOid Items
Animal Welfare League

r6

-oilyiiARDiiiSiiALE-iiii
'i iotr
Pr. Pl.EAsANT

1

•

great benefits tor qualified
managara. i1 you believe
you have what 11 takes tor

Yard Sale, June J,4,5, 9·4, Big Yard Sale lote of baby

success ... we 'd Uke to talk
with you. Cal1886-884-2478
clothing and baby ltoma, PC
1o
d d Info
r recor e
desk, book case much more
moxlmumnupcgaB rom
priced to sell, L.oc:atlon 688
.&amp;L1ao
3rd St. Mason WV Dale
June 1. 2. 3 Time In the Local financial lnstllutlon

www

3pm Longaberger dlshee. morning till ???? In behind aeeklng and experienced
mise
Imperial Tlres .up one Bleck . lender. Ability to ana lyze

IT'S
VA RDSA
.LE
I M.
TIME
•

Pri\ 1u·~ ~

Bonus .
• 95% No Touch Freighl

ww.comics.com

110

!'ROflN;JONAL

lfilJ' WAI'flFJJ

SEJ&lt;\1CES

Seekmg mdiv1dual for parts
department pos1t1on Must
have computer sk11is and
good work habits Some lift·
ing reqUifed Ag expenence
preterred
Please send
resume to CLA Box 555. c/o
Gallipolis Tribune, 825 Th11d
Ave Gallipolis. Oh1o 45631

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless We Wml
1-888·582-3345
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WANIID
To Do

I

Georges Portable Sawmill,
don't haul your logs to the
mill just ca11304-675·1957.

Rooting , Decks, Hardwood
floor inslallatlpn , remodel Paramed ics
&amp;
EMT's lng, additions. Top Notch
Contractors
needed . App ly at 1354 Building
WV036667, (304)675·5490
Jackson Plka.·GalllpoUs,
or (3041675·3042
Pleasant Valley Apartments
18 accepting Applications The Honey Doer, Call 'me
For 8 night Security Person wl1h your Honey Do List
For a fam ily Project FREE 1304)576·2835
RENT. For details and appllca11ons Call (3041875·5806 Wanted to do: Will babysit In
my home, Non smoking, Call
_9a_m_·,.;4p_m_._ _ _ __
~ 111 0
1 D 1 Ad 11 (740)367-0429 .
r-ul on pen a are
u
Clroup Home (740)992 502"
•
, Will babysit in my home, 25
PT/FT Master Social Worker years
experience , great
needed tor growing Dialysis family atmosphere, please
call 17401985·3840
Facility. Must have or be ell·
Qlble tor licensure In Ohio
Will Preseure Wash houat'e,
(74P)867-4471
mobile homes, metal build·
Aeglatered Nurse Position lngs and gutters . Call
BSN requlrod lor
10
1740)446-01~1 ask lor Ron
monthlyoar School NL.Irse
or leave message.
position for Mason County
II \ \ ' ' I \ I
Applications
can
be
obtained st The Mason
10
BI.SJNESS
Deadline June 2nd .
~=~0~PPO:~R1lJNI'IY=~~~
Cell800·852·2382

C::.ou::n~_;H,;e::a=ll;_h;_D~e:a-:r=tm_·~n-t

=TRAVEL U S A

r

81atemanla
financial
required . Pot8ntlal to de\lel,
• •
til)
Cll'
1
op a strong customer base Publication Sales Co. hiring pHtO VA~t£ -.("PuBLtSH
dealrable. Salary commen18 sharp enthusiastic
INO CO recommends the
turate with experience. EOE Individuals to trave l the U.S.
ou do business with pea
Pleali submit reaume and Trave l, training, lodging and
le you know, and NOT 1
salary lim itations to · The
transportation furnished
end money through th
Dally Sentinel, PO Box 729· Return Guaranteed . Start
!me.ll until you h&amp;ve lnvestl
34. Pomi!roy, Oh 45769
TOday 1-800-781-1344
ated the otter!no.

j+IO

APARTIIE.''TS

FOR R£sr

\nur

2 Houses for Rent · 3 bedroom , 1 bath $500 &amp; $650
month
plus
de pOSit
(740)245-902 0

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

3 bedrooms, 2 balh l1rep1ace
1-1/2 acres Buckeye Htlls
Ad
$85.000
1740)709·
For sale or tent - 2 bedroom
1166
mobile hOmes sta rling at
$270. per month. Call 740 992·2167

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today\ 740·446·4367 ,
1-800·214-0452

I'M

1 acre lot. Close to town
Reduced Phone (304)6751714
3 bedroom, 2 baths on 4.3
acres In the Country, Scen1c
v1ew
$75,000
Call
1740)709·1166

Call on behalf of the
Nat1on's leadmg Non-P10f1t
OrgantzaiiOns, or help
Protect your Gun A1ghts.
Earn up to $8/hour
Paid holidays. tra1nmgs.
And vacations
Full or part t1me. Day and
Evening shtfls available.
Call today to set up an
lnterv1ew1
1-877-463·6247 ext 2454

!50

HOME:-;
FORS~LE

HOIJSE.'
FOR R£11oT

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Tow!'lhouse
apart mer.ts
andror small ho uses FOR
RENT Call (740)441-11 11
3 bedroom house m lor application &amp; 1nformat10n
Pomeroy, $400 a mo . $400
deposit. no pets (740)949- GraCIOUS l1v1ng 1 and 2 bed ·
room apartments 'at V111age
Nice 3 bedroom. 1 bath 7004
Manor
and
R1vers1de
concrete dnveway. carport
3 bedroom stove &amp; refr~ger­ Apa rt ments 1n Middlepor t
$49 ooo
East
Bethel
ator furnished . 735 3rd Ave From 15295-$444 Call 7110·
Church Ad (740)44 1·9108
S300 month. $150 depos1t 992·5064. Equal Hous1ng
Pt Pleasant/Sandhill Road 17401446·3870
Opportun1l1es
3Br 1Ba 1600/sqtt Ranch on
4 rooms &amp; bath , 52 Ohve St N1ce 1 Br Stud10 Furn1shed
.6 acre level lot Oak floors
No pets, $300 month. $300 Waler Sewe r and Garbage
1st house on A1ght past
depOSit (740)446-3945
mcluded $325 00 mon th +
Marshall
Un1vers1ty
$103000 (740)949-1131 For rent 3 bod room house 1 depo511 (304)675-3042
alter 5 OOPM
1/2 ·bath
garage
m N1ce two bedroom apar!·
Centen ary on St At 141 ments Large rooms Fully
320 MoutLE Ho~m;
Green School dlstnct S600 eqUiped ~1tchen Cen tra l
I'OR SALE
month no pets Call 740- hea11ng / cool1ng
446-2 966 after Spm or 740. Washerrdryer
hookup
12X65 Stylemar Good con · 446-0073 dayt1me
13041882-2523
dition $3,000 00 (740)992·
Nice 3 BA 1 BA. beh1nd
1477
Armory P01n1 Pleasant All Pl easant Valley Apartment
14K65 good cond1t1on . very Appliances included $550 A•e now tak1ng Appl1ca110ns
clean new appliances out mol:ltl'1 (304)593 3542
for 2BR 3BR &amp; 48 R
Appl1ca110ns
are
taken
bu1ld1ng Ready to move 1nto 420 MOBILE HOl\U~
t740)388-0460
Monday thru Fnday from
1"01&lt; RENT
9 00 AM ·4 PM Off1Ce IS
141C.70 mobile home. fu rLocated at 1151 Evergreen
n1shed w1th all new lurniture. 14x70 Mobile home. all elec Dr1ve Pom t Pl easan t WV
2 bedroom 29 ft living tnc. C/A $350 month Near Phone No 1S (304)675-5806
room 2 balh $8.500 neg 160. Evergreen (740)446- E.HO
740-256-9247 or 740-645- 6865 or {740)446-6189
Taking applications tor 1
0870
bat h 11v1ng
3 bedroom, all electnc bedroom apl
1984 Schultz, 14x70 w/6x24
mobile home. M1 ~ dleport. room ki tC hen w1th appll·
pull out 3 bedroom. 2 bath. CIA no ms1de pets . $425 00 ances turmshed Depos11. no
ale
good
condttton + deposit (740)992-3194 .
pe ts Call (7 40) 446·1370
(7 40)992-765 t
Townhouse
3 bedroom . corner of Tar a
1995 Fairmont 14x80, 3 Creekv1ew &amp; Garners Ford Apartm ents Vei y Spac1ous
bedroom . 2 lull baths total Rd.
$375/m onth, 2 Bedr ooms, 2 Fl oors CA. 1
· electnc, heat-pump . under· $375/depOSit. $750 Move. 1n 1/2 Bath Newly Carpeted
pmmng , book for $16,000 F1rrn. No pets (740)245· Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Will
sell for $t3,500
Pat1 0 Sta rt S385 Mo Nc
567 t
(740 )441 _0668
Pet s Lease Plus Secunty
Beaut1lul nver v1ew. 1deal tor DepoSit Requued. Days
Coles Mobile Homes. 15266 one or two people No pets,
Even1ngs
740-446-3481
us 50 E Athens. Oh 1o
references (740)441-0181
740-367-0502
45701 New summer hours·
M·T·W 8 AM to 7 PM Th - Furnished 2 Br $400 a Tw1n R1vers Towe1 IS accept
F 8AM to 5 PM Sat 9AM to Month , Deposit 5 m1les out mg apphcal 1ons io1 wa111n g
4PM "Where you get your Redmond A1dge rea l n1ce. list lor Hud-subs1zed. 1· br
money's worth '
(304)675-4893
apartment call 675-6679
J.ik,.

·-------,.1

::.::_.c.________

~r.10-•rn•"•~.s.u.IES-._,..~I t'o
\uu ' li Lon I'!Ji ~ tluo·!
3 Bedroom . 2 bath , 3 car
detached garage on 2+
'acres Separate Off1ce plus
2 n1ce Storage Sheds
1740)286·6336.

1110

r

Garage Sale: 700 3rd Ave.
June 3.4 ,5. 9·5 . Clothing
teen glrla &amp; adult, old table,
· chairs. some anllques lots of
misc.
' June 3 ,4,5: 8-7, Turkey Run
Ad ., Chean lre. Follow pink
signs. Rain Cancels

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2

Monday .. flrlday for In•ertlon
In NeKt Day's Paper
Sunday ln•Column: 1:00 p.m.
FrlldO&gt;Y For Sundays Paper

...

~

• Estate Sale: 11918 Sl At 7.
Keeton residence, Friday
9am·4pm , Saturday 9am~

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p . m.

I \ 11 '1 t I) \II \ I
~11{\lll

{!;.

How you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
" $1.00 for large

Display Ads

.::olute Top Dollar · u s
Silver.
Gold
Coins ,
Proofsets. Diamonds, Gold
Rmgs,
US Currency,M.T S Co1n Shop, 151
Second Avenue , Gallipolis ,
740-446-2842

Large hose lound on
Georges Creek Ad . May
possibly belong to w~ter
company. Call (740)446· Thursday June 3rd at rlence need apply.
, 7940 or '7401645-1580.
Roderick Grimm's, 707 We have openings for:
Broadway,
Racine,. big
~S .Company Drivers
YARDSALE.
assortment Including tools.
15 Owner Operators
For Info call Ray
I
Om
hi
I
ran or s ne, Pease c e.
1-866·436·1013
Tuppers Plains. cammunlly - - - - - - - - yard saiiJs, Fri. June 4th , Immediate opening for an
accountant poSIIIon Full
Sat · Juna 5th ' 9 •5
t1me, medium site company
sale
&amp;
Home Exp. required , excellent ben1939 Chatham St June 1st, Yard
' 2nd, 3rd Furniture, dishes, Decorating Open Houae , efits· 401 K. Please send
what·nota, clothes
Sat. June 5th, 8am-5pm , resume to · Accountant, PO
- - - - - - - - - Gloria Oiler. 31645 SA 325, Box 606, Wellaton . Ohio
8309 51. R1 588. 8·4. June Langsville. Oh (740j742· 45892
Tuesday 1 &amp; Wednesday 2. 2076
--------'LEADERS WANTED!
Kids clothes, all sizes, wom·
Yard Sale: June Third thru
ens jeans, TV,'toya, etc .
Bscome a sales ma1ager
Filth . Mlnersvlllo Road
with th is Christian-based
US company. $75 ,516
85 Arnold Drive, Bidwell, Pla no, freezer, houaehold
: 614·615, 8-7 Brand name Items mise
average Income/year"'

91 Clarllold Avonue Huge
selection of Items.

Oeatllfire.s&gt;

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include ComPlete
Description e Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addres5 When Needed
• Ad&amp; Should Run i Days

1r
Jun~

I ; : e Rummage Sale·
1st lhru 5th Too many 1tems
DWM 65, 5 ' 11 ~. 170-lbs to mention AlsoonJune4th
Would l1ke to meet single &amp; 5th, 4-H Rummage &amp; Hot
lady clean, tnm. honest , for Dog Sale Rummage hrs
relat1onsh1p or more Reply 8am-6pm all week. Hot dog
to CLA Box 570 clo OVP, hrs. 10am-4pm Jet ol
PO Box 469, GallipOlis, Lincoln P1ke &amp; 141
Oh10 45631
June 1.2.3. 14728 St Rt.
Flllpina-4-Love
554
Bidwell.
furn iture.
Find your Philippine lady antiques toots , &amp; m1sc. Ra1n
for Love
1·80().497-8414
or Shine
"Moving Sale ' Furr11ture ,
Flliplna4-Love.com
clothes m1sc 2 miles East
of Porter on 554. June 2.3.4 .
ANNOUNCEMEmS
9·4

l\egister

Sentinel

All real estate adYertlalng
In this newspaper ia
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makea It lll•galto
advertl .. "any
preference, llmltaUon or
dl•crtmlnatlon baaed on
rac:e, c:olor, religion, 1ex
fami111l •latus or netton1l
origin, or any Intention to
make any euc;h
praterenct, limitation or
dllcrimlnltlon."
Thll newepaper will not
knowingly accept
advertieementa ror , ..,
eelllt whiCh It In
violation ot the law. Out
readert are htrtby
Informed lhtt 111
clweUinge advertl•ed In
thle newepep41r ere
available on en equal
opportunity bllll.

'1\j'1ce 2 a'nd 3 be d•oo •n EHO
\It Kl "II \"'lliSI·
mobile homes for rent
Includes wate r. sewe r &amp;
trash no pets. startmg at 1510
HOl'SEIKlLil
$300 per month 1n Shade
Goons
Mobile home and lot tor
area. depoSil reqwred. L..--~----,.J
sale 14x80 Mobile home on (740)992-2r67
B1rch doors. oak trim . :
n1ce level1 /2 acre lo~ . 3 bed room, 2 tull bath All electriC. N1ce 2 bedroom mob1le wash basons. 1 to1let Call
No
pets
Call (740)446·1712.
central a~r . good cond1t1on home
(7401446·2003
10x12 utll1ty shed on proper·
Good Used App liances
ty. Porter area. $45,000 Call
ReconditiO ned .
and
APARJ1\IEN1S
(740}446-4514 days and
Guaranteed
Washers
FORREI'IT
(740)446·3248 alter 5.
and
Dryers
Rang es

t

N1ce 1992 Fairmont. 3 bed·
room with cenlral a~r, Will
help w1th delivery, can N1kk1
(740)385-9948

r

BUSINES'i

AND 8UDDINGS

Marathon
Sale
For
Store
At2
Convience
Ferry,WV
Gallipolis
Stock!L.and &amp; Build ing .
Finance
Some
Owner
304 762·1 117

L&lt;m&amp;
A(.'REAGE

2 7/ 10 acres , Welchtown
For Sale 28r House In New Road, wooded, not level,
Havon $27.000 (304)882· $2,500.00 (600)563-3753
2890
Lot tor Sale· Nice level lot
3 bedroom, 2 !ull bath , Aprox. 112 acre In Porter
laundry room , dlnin'g room . area All utilities ava ilable
office, larga 2 ca r garage. $16,000 Call (740)446·
New roof, aiding &amp; waterlln,. 4514 Days or 1740)446·
J248 after 5.
$67,000. (740)258·6928

if4

~

Rio Grande, Spac1ous
Log home . 5 acres , 3·4 bed·
room, 2 bath, huge kitchen
w/oak cabineta &amp; ltlancl
cook1op, finished basement
w/gas log fireplace +central
heat/air, 30x54 heated work·
shop $197,000. (740)245·
9169.

1 and 2 bedroom apart ments. furn ished and unlu rnished. security deposit
reqwred. no pets. 740-992
2218

------1
bedroom
apt
Washer/dryer hOokup, $290
rent, depos11 requi red No
.P_•t_s_7_40_·_44_1_·1_1_B4_ __
1 bedroom , stove and refrigerator, furnished. utilities
Included. MOO month plus
deposit. (7401245-5859.

FOR RENT

Like new Wh1 rlpoot washe r
extra large capac1ty, $165 ,
l1ke new Maytag dryer, extra
large capacity, $ t 75, Twm
bed 1ncludmg boxsprmgs &amp;
mattress. $75. Full s1ze bed
With boxsprings &amp; mattress.
$125 Queen size bed w1th
l;loxspring &amp; mallress, $175 .
Kmg s1ze boxspring &amp; mat·
tress , $150 , table w1th 6
chairs , $95 , floral couch.
$95, chest-of-drawers with 5
drawers. $60, chest·ol-drawers, solid wood. $60· dress ·
er. solid wood light color
$60.
Skaggs Appltances
76 Vine Street
17 40)446· 7398

bedroo mcomplete
kitchencentral
air.
Refe rence; &amp; deposit. No
pets. 040)446 _0139
:.:.~:.....:.:__.:___ ___;_
2 bedroom upstairs apt
water trash Included $285
month, depOSit required
Weekends end evenings
t7401446-7620·
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road. Porter, Ohio.
2 bedroom upstairs garage (7401 446· 7444 1·877 ·830 ·
apt Stove relngerator &amp; 9162 Free Estimates, Easy
water
lurnt&amp;hed
$300 lmancinQ, 90 days same as
month, $150 deposit 106 casn V1s8J Master Card .
Locust St (740)446-3870
Drive - a· li ttle SaYe alot

Want to lease . Far m/
Acreage for hunting camp In
Meiga County area Call or
leave menage (304)849- 2 bedroom. JUSt past Holzer,
$425 monlt\. Ca ll (740)441 9238 or 1304)849·5701
1184
Ul \ I \I ..,
2 bed room , refe ren ces.
security, Rac ine, (740)949·
2517
HOUliEll

Letart Falls, OH; 3 bedroom
house. 1 bath , detached
ga rage, new rool, aiding . 2 bedroom house for rent.
$450/monlh
plus
windows. c,arpet, &amp; kitchen, CIA.
deposit. Renter pays utilities.
$65.00b .OO (740)247·2000
Call (7401446·4313
Must Salel!l l Nice 3BA,
In
i BA, behind , Armory, Pt 2 bedroom hOuse
Pleasant. All Ap plian ces Mlddlepon, S325 rent, $325
included $65,000 Firm depos11, no pets, (740)9925039
(304)593-3542

Ael r1gerators . Some start a1
$95 Skaggs Appliances . 76
V1ne St . {7 40)446·7398

Apptlance &amp;
For sale
re-cond11Jonad
auto matiC
washers &amp; dryers. relngera tors
gas and electnc
re.nQes . ci 1r conditioners. and
wr inger washers w m do
BEAUTIFUL
APART· repa irs on major brands 1n
MENTS
AT
BUDGET shOp or at your hOme
PRICES AT JACKSON
Used FurnJture Store 130
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Dnve from $344 to $442 Bulaville P1ke Mattresses.
dressers. couches . reclin Walk to shop &amp; movies Call
ers.
bunkbeds
G rave
740·446·2568.
Eq u•l
Monuments 2002 Ba ss
HousinQ Opporlunlly
Tracker
F1shmg
Boat
New 1 bedro om apt Pn one (740)446-47S2 Ga llipOliS
OH Hrs 11 -3M·F
(740}146· 3736
Th ompsons

Repa~r -675 -7388 .

�Page 84 • The- Daily Sentinel
Card of Thanks
Buv or sell. Riverine
Antiques, 1124 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy. 740992-2526. Russ Moore,

~ 984 V6 Evinrude boat
motor have title. $500. Small

horsepower boat motor.
$50.
Bandrsa.w,
$75 ,
Mlcrowa11e, $40 , 25" GE
conscHe TV, S~D . 13" TV,

. $20. (740)367-7272
2

plots

w/vaults,

Meigs

Memory Gardens. valuecl at

'. $2,100 asking $1 ,500, relo-

cated, call collect 1270)7859045

Tuesday, June 1, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

everyone's help,

support and
donations for the
benefit car wash
held for me- May
lsi, 2004 at the
Middleport Dairy

Man &amp; Woman needed to do light delivery work for

• Need to be familiar with on or more of the
local areas- Meigs, Gallia and Mason Counties.
Apply jo peoon·
Tuesday, June 1 • 3pm to 6 pm only
at Holiday Inn • Route 7 North, GaUipolis

enough "'ords to
express how much it
really meant to me.
God Bless you All,
Angie Swin

Ask for Mr. Aay at the front desk. No phone calls please

a::r~;::=;====~
B
Ir

What would you lose if there was a fire?

•••~.ro can insure your valuables!•
\

For a Free Quote or Appointment
Call:

BlOCk, brick ~ sewer pipes. 3 Yr. AOHA gelding. Aides .
Bunk beds with manresses w1ndows, lintels. etc. Claude $800 .00.
8VR . AOHA
$125.00. 7-ft pool table Winters, R1o Grande, OH Bucltskin mare, lilly on side.

Box 169 • Middleport

,c:;a;:-117.:,;40:::;:·2;::4_;,5·~5~t2,.t:;,._ _., bred back to Buckskin
with scope $100.00. New C
S2.000.bo . rides. 4 YR old

Licensed in Ohio and WV

SWO.OO. Marlin 22 mag rifle

10-inch.

buffer/polisher

r

PtTs

team penn ing, reining mare.
$20.00. 1740)992-2217 . ~
FOR SAU:
Money earner. $2 ,500.00.
Standing at stud Bucksk in
Easy Go Elec. Golf Cart with
AKC Australian sn·epherd. Great !=tine Stallion. 1990
charger. Excellent condition.
btack.lwhite/tan markings, Sundowner trailer 2 H slant
$1,800. Call 1740)645-4485.

740-843-5264

Salt/pepper $400.00 ea.ch.
AKC Pomeranian puppy. Angus Bulls for sale.
JET
cream. male $400.00. All Vet ( 740)256"1621 ·
AERATION MOTORS
checked and have 1st shots. APHA br&amp;d Mare, 4 yrs. old,
Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. Ca:t Ron Evans, 1·

800-537-9528.

c(7_40..;_)9_9_2-_t68
__3_______
-

brown. used only 5 months,
excellent condition , S500,

.1740)949-2481

·r

fRtm &amp;

VEGET~

....._

·~ NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle ,
Channel. Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For .
Drains.

94 GMC 4114 350. Auto,
Power-windows . high m iles.
runs good, looks goOd. 740446-0500. Asking $6,900.

j

due in Nov·Doc. (740)367"•~ &amp;.
AKC Lab puppies. B weeks 7 62 1
'""''U
old, Chocolate &amp; Yellow. t S1
·
4-WI);;
shots &amp; wormed . (740)367- Black Angus Bu~. 4 yrs. old. ~.,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,..

Lift chair, 2-way recline, ligh t 0038 (740)367·7202.

I

$ 1 ,200. (740)245-5788.

.

F1o

auto, . air,

(937)789-0309.

Ohio. (740)446-7787

Song of the South "Tales of

Uncle Re m us ~ full length
VCR tape $29.00. Available

i--n=D~v~D~-c~_.~_~"_o_ll_'r-ee__, __88_8_!:_28-6441
Washer/Dryer $100.00, King

Size Bed $250.00, Kitchen

Table
Entertainment

$75 00, Pian o
1304)675-2349

I \1{\1 ..,1 1'1 '1 II"'

,\11\I...,HH"

;:;::;;;:::=::::;;;;::;;===;;
~,r.'o
~ ...-~F•A•RM._._
EQuiPMENT ..~
Alii~ Chambers 720 tractor

5250 .00, with cab, real good condiCenter tion . $5,200 .00

$350.00 0053

Auros

size van , 7 passenger van.

JONES'

great deals, trade in's wei·

Tree Service

come, Ri11erview Motors
across from
Speedway
Pomeroy, Oh {740)992-3490

spe·

W.-st
•

674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

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

casse"e player. $900 OBO. 1997 Suzuki GSXR 600
extras,
$4,500plenty
OBO.
(740}256-1652.
Helmet, cover,
of
1995 Saturn Sl, 4 dr., stan· (740) 446 •21 sa.
dard. AC, cassene, needs .:__..;______________
rings, $800 OBO, {740)992· 2002 Yamaha Warrior 2WO
4/Wheeter Purchased new

~~ .

f/t(JQ.£ li\j

· Legacy April 03 • Sspd. Appro~! .
Outback, 78 .000 miles, very 75hrs. w/extended Warranty
good
condition,
many $J,800 (304)S93-41 n
Subaru

32.500 mites, $12,800.00 use .

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

Let me do 1t for youl

316 Washington Street
_R avenswood, WV 26164
Dr. Kelly K. Jones

~

Weekender.

100

Sea Ray

434

Hrs.

Dodge Caravan, 4dr, V·6, Excellent condition·$5000 or
auto, air, nice, $5795.00: best offer. (740)446·2347.
and many n'lore great deals.
trade
in's
welcome,
Ri11erview Motors across
from Speedway Pomeroy,

~

r;u

Oh (740)992-3490

1996 Pontiac Grand AM,

(740)367-0106.
92 Blue Ford Taurus 65,000

$2,500/0BO can be seen at
Sears

Gallipolis

or

call

R.B.

River Way Cafe

Trucking

740-992-2507

Syracuse, OH
Call for Oaily Specials

HAULING:

CALL-IN ORDI:R~

• Limestone
ous calls only (304)675·
• Sand
3343 304 675-7806
• Dirt
CAMPERS &amp;
Lw-iiM.iiOTOIIiiliR-HiiOMESiiii-,J •Ag Lime
-

Nomad
camper.
1740)446- 1546 (740)446- "1991
EMcellent
condition,
7570 after 7PM
$14,000. Slide out 51h
94 Mazda MX3, standard, wheel. (740)256-6392. •

c/d, air, pw, sunroof, leather
interior, (740)992·3478 after For sale: 9i Avalon 35'
5 pm. can be seen at 501 camper w/tipout. sleeps 4.
Mulberry Ave.
w/full accommodations. like
99 F- 150 Triton Lariat. Fully new. asking $5800. call 740·
loaded, low miles. (740)367·

7621.

'

Rome Auto Sales

1-88&amp;-m-1342

385-9948

Slide IN Camper. Great condition, steeps 4 comfortably.
Must see! Asking $600

OBO. 1740)379·9515.
2000 Focus, $4,995; 2000
..,, 1{\ H I..,
Taurus SES, $5,395: 1999 iimr;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Alero, $5,999: 2000 Grand

Am, $5,695; 2000 ,Grand
Am, $4,488; 20oo Impala,
$8,999; 2001 Focus. $5,999;
1997 Breeze. $3,988: 1996

r.10

H

IMPRo~

1.,--iiiiiliiiiiiiiiliiiitpl
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Sable, $3.999; 1997 Sunflre,

$3,795; 1999 Concord L S1·, Unconditional lifetime guar$4,999.;

2000

$6,999.

r

Ranger, antee. Local references furnished . Established 1975.
Call
24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers .B asement
Waterproofing.

l'RUCKS

FORSAU:

1992 Dodge 350. 5-spd.
Diesel, 8 fl. AI. flat, high
miles, Good truck. $5 ,500.

1740)643-2285.

:~

Slzea-5'X'IO'

te&gt; 10'~'

I

Hours
7:00AM · 8:00PM
H1411 mo . pd

YET, ~

·Law11 a11d Garde11 Equipme111 is our
busi11en·, not our sideli1te

Manning K. Roush

"TO GO"!!

I

I
j

1
G

_____.~~&amp;~~~~
THE BORN LOSER
P''&lt;W ::.CE~ WORKlC:.C&gt; 1\W\JT ~
f-\r-..1/lt'-IG ~f.. FILL If&lt; fOR '(0\J
IN. mt.. KLOPCR MMI
f.ICGOTir-..TIOi'l:'&gt;, Cl-\l(f...

p-1\'l.( '&lt;OU

Tl-\E.

r-..t:Rt&gt;..\\:&gt; 1.'11'1 f.\0\ Ot-1""l

~r-JI\(.1'1\G(

WIll-\ 't'OU '?

Open Mon-Fri 9-5 Sat. 9-12

Refinish, Repair,
Restore
Keith Baney
740 992-1956

WHCOMI:
New Hours

740-985·3564

BENNETT'S

Residential &amp; Manufaclured Housing
Air Conditioners, Heat Pumps &amp; Furnaces
• Super Hi Efficiency Equipmen
• Free. Estimates
• 5 &amp; I0 yr Warranties
• 'f;,• Huge Inventory
~ '
, · '"
• Vanguard Ven1less Fireplaces 'Oj

~~!?.'Yl . ~~!~ ltm~m~U.M.
Gallipolis, OH WVOI0212

Owner:

Jeff Stethem

Office: (740) 991-2804 Cell: (740) 517-6883

Open 7 days

u ·s

HALF THE AWARD~ ARE
YOURS AND .HALF ARE
~R'TUR'S!

DISPLAY

a week!

ToTALLY DOMINATED

. BY TWO PEOPLE !

WITH
THIS

Morning Star Road - C.Rd 30 • Racine,

CASE.

~RT\Jil ONL'( HAS

LADIES AND
GENTLEMEN.
'THE ' BLONDE
AMBITION"
. TOLJR

EIGHT AWI\1'-DS IN
THERE' 'I."VE GOT
TWELVE~ n1 WAY
AHEAD OF HIM 1.

.WHO/'.!
WHOA! IT'S
NOT HALF
AND HALF!

Gl N.A. ?

I'VE
GOT
T HE
BIGGEST

'

~

BUILDERS InC.

G

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New 'iara ge"i

· See
Rocky "AJ"
Hupp

• Repla~emenl
Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

EAST IMPORTS
Athens

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992·7599
Windshield Repair
RockChips
&amp; Cracks
Cars- Trucks-RV','i

POWER WASHING

Mobile Service.'i

LAWN CARE DIVISION
and Residential)
Mowin_g, Trimming, Tree Trimming, Aeration, Fertilizetion,
Spray1ng of fence line5, Leaf Removal, as well as small
landsca in jobs such as planting end mulching.
(Commerc~l

~~~~ ~ ~~~~
PEANUTS
YES

.. MARCIE SAVS
SI-IE, TI-IINK5 YOU LAU61-1 AT
MY ANSWERS ON TI-lE
TESTS YOU 61VE US ...

1

I DON TTI-IINK TIIAT'S
NICE. Mf:).AM ..

WELL, IF' NAPOLEON I-lAD
5WJTI-1E M1551551Pf'l , 11LL
BET ~E WOULD I-lAVE
CROSSED li!

S • GUA

Creati.ve
Cakes
by Lara
• Birthdays
• Wedding•
• Any apeclal
occaalon
Place your order
today
·.
(740) 886-3817
Lora Bing

NTEE

E T PRICE

fLEA M,.uKET
AT MAPLEWOOD

LAKE
State Route 124
Between Radne and
Syracuse
Friday, June 4 &amp;
Saturday, June !
Spaces available,
also Campsites
available with full
hookups

949-2734

SHOP CLASSIFIEDS

od of 1BO day a subsequent 10 publlcallon
of lhla notice.
(5) 17, 18, 19, 20, 21,
24, 25, 26, 27, 28, (6) 1,

2

BETTY
l USED TO READ

~TrMN ~D SPI~t-l.

1-800-822-0417
"W.V's

Ai..SO DR. STAAI-IGEiTHE
FANTASTIC FOUR M-ID
il-lE $€Eij LAN-rn&lt;N ...

Pontiac. Buick. Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

#I Chevy.

BUT LETS SEE
WOOS NEW

AND &amp;)(CITING ..

fiERI;'S ONE
ASOUT A SA~\?
GUY VJHO

WOIW INA

MAILROOM

-nilS ONe:S

A90UTA .
DEAD

GUY...

849-1405
GARFIELD

Sunset Home
Construction
Bryan Reeves
NewHom11,
Room Addltlona,
Garagea, Pole
Bulldlnge, Roofe,
Siding, Decka,
Kitchens, Drywall
lr More

HCS,INC.

ness houra for .a peri-

6/l/04

• ...,, .. South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

WRITESfl

740·742·341

Pomeroy, Ohlo 45189,
during regular buel·

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used

HOWARDl.

FREE ESTIMATES!

PUBLIC NOTICE
The annual roport
Form 990PF for the
Kibble Foundation,
Bernard
V.
Fullz,
Truetee Ia available
for publlc lnopecllon
at Bernard V. Fultz
Law Offlca, 111 112
Weal Second Street,

...

Available

*ROOFINI
*HOME
MAim NANCE
*SEAMLESS
llmR
•fl'll hllmltn•

NewHomea•New
Garage• • Pole
Barn• • Roofing
• Room Additions
• Remodeling
• VInyl Siding
Commercial and
Residential
Free Estimates

740·949-1606
1 mo DC

3 ~T

All pass

35

1¥

PER50NALLY, [ 170N'1' THINK
11'!1 ANY MORE THAN A
TWO-WOO 17AY

0
0
0

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

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addition• I
Aemodellng
• N•w G1rag••
• El•ctrlcal &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Outtert
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Por~; h D•ck•
We do It all except
furnact work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomttroy, Ohio
2:1 Years Local Experience

GRIZZWELLS

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes ·
• Garages

·Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

')bU KHoW, A~L
HAD~IJLE

E)(PLIIIN\HC:!
W\-111\l.

36

39

40

42
45
49
50
52

month

53 Swarthy
54 Sandpaper
1exture
55 "- been
had!"
56 Frothy brews
messages
57 Born as
(hyph.)
58 Koppel
19 "Et tu " time
Fashionable
of the news 21 Increase,
Fores! grazer
as prices
Ladle
DOWN
24 Opposite of
"paleo..
Less rude
Yearned for
Fully
25 Tingle
Incomingmature
26 Roman
statesman
plane stals 2 Cable car
Absent
3 This senora 27 Reluses 1o
Golfer
4 Sickly look 28 Blarney
Stone site
- Woosnam 5 Ouzo flavor
Harvesl
6 PC acronym 29 Slicky lruil
Moon mo.
7 Actor
31 Dirocting
Bean for
- Cotten
33 Rug 1exture
sprouting
8 Ballpark
35 Business
degs.
Monterrey
officials
Ms.
9 Rain slickers 36 Fawn's
Middle Earth 10 Make eames1
parent
denizen ·
petition 10
38 Flashes on
Expensive
13 Getting
and off
Youlh
sleepy
39 lithe

41 Dragon
of puppetry
42 Swit co-star
43 Make wa1er·
proof
44 Tender
46 Give lighl

47 Pew locale
48 Tinled
51 Fooled
vase

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celeb111y C•oher cr1ptograms are treat~ l•om quota~ons OJ&gt; lamous peop:e pasl aa:l nresent
Eadi Ieite• •o me cipher stands for a•l:'!her

Today"s clue K equars C

" GL

M'Y LIFE I'"'E

·II CA~'T BE fit! ~MMUI-IICI&gt;.i\014
51(\L\.~ .. MY CoMMUI'IICI&gt;.i\01-1

61'.1\.L~

t..'9\i WIY
Bi~i QUt..\.\'1'(,.
1'\ol)i,IT
CAI'I'T
, . . II '

BD

OAABKGBLZ .

AYSC.

to win th re·e club tricks. you will need to
find East with exactly ace·doubleton. So.

" GZTZLBDBNX

cross to dummy's spade ace. lead a club
to yourking . and return a club, playing low
from the dummy. You are lucky when the

HNY

BD

KMZVBXC

CSW

VYBCMG

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "II you re not l"l&lt;ng every now and aga&lt;n. liS a Sign
youre nol d01ng an~1hmg very 1nnovat1ve" - Woody Allen
(c) 2004 by NEA. Inc. 5·29

~~~;~t:~~ S©'R~~\.-Llt-~s· ~~~:
Ed it,d by CLAY R. POllA N --~-0 ilec·•c.,go
c!
iovr
wcrc'1 hi!·
· ~eo

~.: 1ombled

low to fo·,,. fo.Jr ·1ir.1p!e wc•ds

of opportun1t1es to get Involved in jo1nt ven·
lures that have lhe polenttal lor success.
Just remember th ere are many gold
nuggets in the sand. but 1hey must be Sift·
ed out 1n order to be found
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Relattonship
dealings could be your most sensi tive and
fragde area today, so you 'll have to be par·
ttcularly careful not to imPose your w1U on
those who are 1mportan1 to you Be dipiO·
malic .
CANCER !June 2 1·July 22)- Self·dl:..c lplme will be required today so tha1 ,my
lazy-bone charactensl1cs you keep Um1er
check don "t gam the upper hand and make
you irresponsible. Be especially diligent at
work .
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22)- Your customary
charm and decorum may desert you loday
and De replaced with indignant overtures
toward lriends and associates Use your
enen;;ly to make allies, not enemies.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl . 221- When deal Ing w1th co-workers or those who are
under your care today. you'll get Detter
reSults to your direct1ves if you are considerate and gracious rather than harsh and
demanding
LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct . 23) - Yours may De
the minority viewpomt today regarding
issues about which you feel strongly. so 11
would behoove you to stay mum when 1n.
the presence of lriends who think dlfloren tly.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov 22) - If poss1ble
today. don't put yoursel l 1n the pos1t10n of
tak1ng on cumbersome new f1nanc1al obh·
gatiors th at .might be difficult lor you to
handle Spend only what you have 1n the
bank.
SAGITTARI US (Nov 23-0ec 2 1) - It's
quite possibl e today th at your amtlitio_ns
co uld conflict w11h those whose support 1s
pertinent to your needs You'll fad unless
you wait unt1l another day when the1r Interests change.
CAPRICORN !Dec. 22·Jan. 19) - Be kind
and do what you can to help tho se who
need ass1slance today, but be careful not
to allow th em to overwhelm you w1th their
bu rdens and cause you to be negligent of
your own affairs .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Act ivi tie s
or 1nvoJvements w1th trlends today could
tum our to t;Je a bit more complica ted than
usual. Be particularly cognizant to avo1d
Si tu ations that p1t one pal against another
PISCES (Feb. 20-Ma rch 20) - Should
you have one of those days when Support
ol friends or family is more important to
you than usual, take care not to take
advantage of anyone Don't be over ly
dependent
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)- You're not
likely to have too much luck today attempt·
1ng to sell or promote someth1ng in whiCh
you actually don t bel1eve. Smcemy is a
must m order to have any hope of gaining
acceptance.
TAURUS (April_ 20·May 20) Jus t
b&amp;eause yow t1nenc1el prospects look
encouraging at this t1me Isn't any reason
to use 11as an eJ~cuse to make an extrava•
ganl purchase Wa1t until things becom e a
fe lt accompli

PCIISEG

........... ~ ..., ~·~ .,

WKTSMOX

'

TTNPA

By Bernice Bede Osol
In the year ahead, there may be a number

·ID-)&lt;~

D

·zpzo. ·•'

GMZ
HYOXI

Wednesday, June 2, 2004

SOUP TO NUTZ

BG ' D

WDVDMOTT

!t'!!'"l

PLUS ,

T ROP~Y'

BISSEll

(Comniercial and Residential)
Mobile Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Decks, Driveways,
Sidewalks, Gas Stat ion Awnings, Oegreasing of
Equipment, Boats, Campers, Tractor Trailers,
. Dump Trucks, painting or staining of your deck
or log home, Aluminum brightening.
Special rati!S to Trucking and Dump Trut.king Companies.

Pass

&lt;Your &lt;tllrthday:

Wt-1/'.TS
UP

ALL ON SALE NOW!! ·

740-949-2910

I NT

BIG NATE

Perennials, Annuals,
Flats, Hanging Baskets,

446-9416 r 1-800-872-5967
TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

34

AstraGraph

summ~t m~nu[ ·

HEATING fl COOLING

F.ast

Meigs County's largest selection of
annuals, perennials, vegetables,
-shrubllery, fruit, ornamental trees.
roses, rhododenllrons, and azaleas. ·

Monday 9am-2pm
Tues • Fri 6am-Bpm
Sat I Sun 7am-4pm

Com~ s~~ out n~w

~orth

ace does drop. but good players are olten
lucky.

and Furniture

Restoration

\\1 c~t

Note West's lead. He selected his lowesl
heart because he had not ra1sed h1s part"
ner's su1t. West would have led top-of·
nothing 1f he had supported hearts. when
partner would have known about hiS
length.
When in no-trump, always count your top
tr1cks (I mmediate wmners) first. Here,
there are Sllc three spades. two nearts
(g1ven tnck one) and one diamond: You
need to establish three more tricks. which
must come from the club SUit.
Ne11t , checK the points. There are 10 in the
dummy and you have 16 . That leaves 14
for the opponents. yet East had enough to
open . So. he surely has the club ace. But

~

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Owner

South

eggs
St. Francis '
town
Fable
Boxer
-Spinks
Canceled
Indy 500

II you we-re planning to open one notru mp. overcall one no-trump when you
have at least one stopper (and preferably
two or lhree) in the opener's suit.

OKAY,
GIMME
SUM PIN'

Big Bend Antique

2002 Cadillac Deville whh needs motor, body good
warranty, $26,500. 1992 shape ," Will take $350, seriGMC Sierra 1500, $2,500.

BUT YOU AIN'T · f
HAD
I

GRAVELY TRACTOR
992-2975

31
32

Zoologist's

41

Robert Doisneau, a French photographer.
claimed: "Chance is the one thing you
can·t buy... You have to pay for 11 and you
have to pay lor it with your lila ...~
A bndge player needs a vanation on that
theme. ';Chance is the one thing you can't
buy. You have to play tor it and you have to
play lor it to save your li fe .~
In Ieday's deal, you are South , the declarer in three no-trurrlp. West leads the heart
lour: five. king. ace. How would you con·
tinue?

MAW!!

Pomeroy, Ohio

20
22
23
24
27

37

Snapper

204 Condor Slreet

1 Rural addr.
4 - lor the
course
7 Flinch
11 Form 1099
gp.
12 In a while
14 Bradley or
Sharif
15 Greet Rover
16 Airport
vehicle
17 Humane org.
18 AOL

·3 0

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

BARNEY

(304) 273-5321

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

J 5 2
K 6 3 2

Opening lead ¥ 4

I'M OFF TO

Gravely

QJ

If you need
luck, chance it

. Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING'

Wilh 1999 trailer.

in.
Massey
a used computer system. cializing
2001 Saturn, 4 dr, auto, air,
Call ReUse. Thurs-Sat., Ferguson &amp; Ford. (740)696·
like new, 28.000 m11es , Older model 22
0358
.
1OAM·6PM 17 40)698-8200

•

Toll Free: (866) 254-1559
"Your One Stop Po11red
Solid Concrete Shop"

~=====~=~;=======~

+

... J\ 9

4o

Free Estimates

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

1f.......

J 10 8

10 8 3
KJJ 06 2
K Q 3

¥ AQ 3

LUKEY,

Advertise
H'1g.h al)f Dry
in this _
O&lt;tras. All Wheel/Drive i ~lNFOR&amp;S~~~RS I
$7,500 (304)675-3514
~
~
. SIf Sto
space
2001 lsuzu Rodeo, 4WD,
e • rage
for
len1 condi1ion, warranty. ZXI. Loss than tOO hours
33795 Hiland Rd.
1740)949-2115
Serious inquires only.
Pomeroy, Ohio
$50 per
(740)441·8285.
740-992-5232 .
month
ft.
$6995 .00; , 998
0829 leave message.

•

•
.

Dealer: F.ast
Vulnerable: East· West

. Specializing In Poured Concrete
Foundations, Basements, Floors &amp; Walls

Hill's Self
Storage

9 7 -t
10 9 K

A K

PLAY
POOL W!F

r----------~----,

. •
•

Soulh

Cllr ,ourad WaHs

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

East

9 i 6 2

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

1993 Dodge Spirit AJC, tilt,

1997

8 5
A i 6 -1
,.Q 754
•

875-2457
Cell Phone

!Hi·Ol·fH

A -1 3

•

Henderson, WV

Loaded. 1740)446-6304.

(740)949- sun roof, tully loaded, excel· 1998 Kawasaki jet ski

You may qualify for 50% off Tractor parts &amp; service~

5FREE

•

sharp ,

lw--~FOR-~~So;AU:~-.,J $3005.00; and many more.

Amish Cheese, Lunch Meat,
Fresh Fruit and Vegetables
Open T h~rs-Fri-Sal. t 354
Jackson Pike , Gallipolis,

Bonanza Get

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L Home Grown Strawberrlee For llstlnge 1-8G0-74t- j740 M
Scrap Metals Open Monday. available now at Charlea 8104 ext 3901
UIURC\'l.l..I-S
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; McKean
Farm. Phone
1991 Chevy Cevalier, body
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed ( 740 )446 •944 2.
good condition, $400, can 02 .Yamaha VSTAA 1100
Thursday.
Saturday
&amp;
(740)992-6079 after Spm.
Classic.
4800
mites,
Sunday. (740)446-7300
Pole Barn 3Qx50K10 only
$5.295, includes painted
metal, plans how to Ouild
book. Fl)der free delivery.

every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00

1\orth

Stale Wide

$5995.00; 1995 Dodge full

Fruits and Vegetables. State
Route 160 , Flea Market.
Thursday. Fnday, Saturday &amp; SSOOI.POUCE IMPOUNDS,
Sunday.
Chevye, JHpl, etc 1
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - Hondll Cll'l from $500.

KESSEL'S PRODUCE

6:30

Last Thursda)· or

1996 Dodge Dakota. s/c
4x4 .

Alder

MYERS PAVING

1999 S-10 trud&lt; 4-cyl. standard sh ift. AJC, topper. 35K
mil es
$4,500.00
firm .

Dodge, runs good , looks
male puppy, micro--c:hiped toad wllarge dressing room . 82
fair
$
OBO.
Call
Fof Sale- Amish built Oak $250.00. AKC Miniature $3,500.00 OBO 1740)992· (304) 700
_5131 .
675
Secrela,ry, $1 ,200. Call Schnauzers
puppies, 2800, (740)416-1960

(740)446-3963.

Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
Pomero~·

IF YOU RENT

Rocky Hlipp Insurance
\ and Financial Service~

It

UUDING

~~--..iiSuf'I&gt;LIIs
_____.l. ~

ACROSS

Phillip

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

• Training Provided

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

To place an ad Call 992-2156

hello Station Promotion
• Must have dependab(e transportation
• Full time &amp; part lime available
• Day &amp; Evening shifts available

Queen. There isn 'I

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

www.mydailysentinel.com

Business Services

NOW HIRING
$700 per week

I really appreciate

Tuesday, June 1, 2004
ALLEY OOP

I GONJl ~~
' 1 ~~
IL.--L.I -L-...!.--.L
I
. .-J! i

~. fc:r~.~ome :::umc•er S\iCker
.re~cs ''Ycu are .')nlv. whar you.

~

.--'---------------. are
·

I0

~RIPOM

w:-1 e'l

no :one s - · · - ~ ·

~

1---.--:1.,.-:.
I .;,_:1'~~rll

I

Comole•e N " " " '' cuo1ed
.
.
.
.
:JV fdlrnc;: 111 tr-.e .., .Uil"~&lt;; wer~s
L,...!,__,L__l__.L...l___l .~ cu ::e ... elc c ir~ 'l'! sre:: No J below.

tmm

1:11 PRINT NUMBERED
~ IN THESE SQUA•!I

0

uNsCR~MBLE
GET -ANSW ER

mrm

11

TO 1
.

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS s-: e-o~

Gem1ni- Wound- Vccal- Census· UNOCNE

Gr2nny always to!d me t~at the secret :f ge:1n~ rh1r.gs
cone iS to know what s~ou ld be left UNCONt:.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, June

www .mydailysimtinel.com

Lightning

Major League Baseball

from Page 81

Nellonlli I.Ngue .
EAST

W

NY~

l

Pet

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30

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18

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20

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29
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23

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~

23
27
26
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540
460
458
354

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5-5
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7, De1ron 3
Texas 4 Toronto 2
Tampa Bay 7. NYYriees 6
BosiOrl 9 Seattle 7. l121
~rnnesola B. Kansas C11y 3
ChiCago So~ 1 1 Anane~ 2
Ba~rmore

ngors 8, Royals 4

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HBP----4:¥ ABell (LFad). WP---fbnero.

Umpifft3o-4-lome. Mall HolkM!ell: F1rst Larry
Vancwer: Second. Sam Holbrook: Th1rd. Paul
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WP-NttkoWSkL
Uml)lres-Home. Adl Aood: First, Ed Rapuano.
Secood. Ted Barron Th·ro, Alfonso MarQUez.
T-2'37. A-24,945 (50.09 1)

Dodgers 3, Brewers 2, (10)
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26

San Otego
Los Angeles
San Francosco
ColOrado
4nzona
·

27

22
24

26
18

?-3

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520
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Sund.y's Results
Mootreal 6. Clnc.,nati 2
PIJ,Iadalohra 4. Atlanta 1
Chocago Cubs 12 Plt\sbuf9'11
Mouston 7. St LOUIS t
San Ooego 5. Milwaukee 2
Florida 8. NY Mets fi
San Francrsco 3. Colorado 1
Los Angeles 3. Anzona 0

Chicago Cubs {Rusch 2-0), 8;05 p.m

r.-

..ttmdz2tl 0 1 0 0
34212 Tatdl
34313

pn 1 0 0 0

Milwaukft

000 001 100

0 -

2

Los

000 000 002

1 -

3

A~

One ou1 when w!l"'mng run scored ·
OP-Mrhovaukee 2. los Angeles 1. LOB--Mil·
waukee 6. los Angeles 7. 28--Jenklfl!i (13).
BCtark p), Moeller (6) HR-Jenkrns (5). &amp;Podsednlk. Wose. DAoberts SF-Bf·la"
IP H RERBBSO
MilwiiUk•
53 0 0 0 2
w~
220001
Kmoy
1 C1 0 o o 2
LVrzC81r'Ci
Kolb
1 3 2 2 0 1
1-31111
o·
Bu~ l.3-1

Loo-

QF9rez

752206
1 1 0 0 0 1
TMartJn
2-3 I
0 0 D 1
Sanchez
1·3 0 o. 0 0 1
Gagne W.NJ
1 1
2
HBP-toy Ga111e (Poo:lsooruk ). by Kolb (lo
Ouca). by LVllCali'IO (Coral Ba11----0Per02 .
Ump!feS----Home. Paul Emmet Ftrnt. Terry Crall:
Second. Mike DIMuro Th·rd. Joe West.
T- 2:44 A-32.642 (56,1X.()J

Ore.1or1

o o o·

Reds 9, Martins 7

Los Anyeles
abrhbi
4 0 0 0
5o 2 1
3 1 , 0
4 0 2 0
4 1 1 0
4 0 2 •
Gl'llwsk~
4 01 1
Cora2b
JOOO
Gagnep
0000
OPerez p 2 0 0 0
Drnonp
oooo
Vnturapt"l 1 0 0 0

DRbrts c1
tzturiSss
LDL.Cac
SI!Gren lb
Beltre3b
JEcrcn rf

abrhbi
LCstllkl2b

4230
4330
5 I 2 3
50 0 0
4141
4 0 1 0

P181T11d
Lcwell 3b
Cbrerar1

Conrfli!H
Choo 1b

~lzss4011

3000

CirlCinr\eti

Aredhng W,4-Q
T.ioco&lt;
Graves S.2-4
Florida

f'heiM:

Phi~

N.wYork

ab r hbl

Ma1SUI

eb rhbl

5 2 20

$$

2&amp;11e3b
502 1
Fklyd~
401 1
Morenop 1000
Cmeron ct 4 0 1 2
DGrcraph 1000
Va~ 'rt
2000
Prazze lb 3 o 1 o
MG1n11p
1000
JPhllps c ·3111
KGarcart 3000
Sj)"'IC(If I
1 t 0 0
WW1tl 2b 4 1 2 0
Totals
37 5 '0 5

NewVork
Phlladelptlia

Byrdct

4000

ledae pll
Pratte
OaBell :IJ
BAttreu rl
Thome 1b

5 0 2 2

Burrell ~
I.:JIIey2b

lbrthal

~

Ma.dscrrp
ToPerzss

Glnville d
Wleisph 0000
Totals
32 3 5 3

100
000

020 010 -

110

020

5
3

E-P1azza 18), KGarc1a (3) . LOB--New 'for1l 7,
PhllaCielphia B. 28--Matsui (17), Zeile (BJ
Floyd (6J, Wiggnton 18), Cameron (8) . HRJPru:l,ps [5). Burrell (1a). SB-Matsui (6). Wiggmton 12) S-JPhillipS. BMyers
IPHRERBBSO

Moreno W,
"""""'

-

1-1

""""""
Slanlon

3

0

0

0

1

'
1 2·3
1·3

31
0

'

0

' '
1
1

1
0

Lacpur S.8
Pfllladetphill
SMyer!; L.3-3

0
0

0
0

1

1

I

\

1

0

1

1

0

0

0

0

1

3
4

1
2

1
2

0
1

2
1

Telemaco

3
2

Gca~

100 0

2

1

0

0

0

2

RHemanOOz

1

2

2

2

0

0

5111tCflph

1000

LH;.rspl1

1000
39 714 5

MadSOn
100002
Umpires-Home. And)' Fle1cl!el : F1rst. T1m
Wahl: Second. Jim Reynolds: Third. Gary Gederstrorn . T-3·02 . A-43.620 {43,500).

120

300 -

5

m

5

1

0

0

~

2 0 1 0
4 0 0 0
3 I 1 1
4100
3 0 0 0
0000
4 1 , 0
I 0 0 0

4000

Totals

003

I 0 0 0
1000

2000

9

;

~

5

~

~

0

0
0

2
1

6

566622

100010
1 3 3 3 1 1
Bu/Tl)
110000
Pensho
1 0000 1
Reding ptiChed to 2 0811ors tn the 7th, Bump
prtched to 1 barter'" the 91h.
WP- \Ian Popoel. PB---laRue. Balk-Van ~

pet
T-3:03. A-26.364 (36,331 ).

Cardinals 8, Pirates 3
St. Louis

Pittsburgh
eb rhbi
ab rhbi
Wmacl\205221
~aile
5010
Anlenass 5111
JWilsnss 4010
Pupls lb 4 I 2 2 Ward 1b
3 1 1 0
Tguch1H
0000
CW1Isnrt 4142
Ralen3b 4233 Mckm3b 411o
Edn:ondd 5010 BayH
4021
ASndrsrl 5000 TRdmnd 3000
Mill.xylf
4 0 1 1 ANunezph 1 0 0 0
hlltheny c 40 00 Srmonlb 1000
MrquiSp
423 0 Hill2b
4000
Kllllep
0000 Bensoop 2000
Tvarezp
0000 Coreyp
1000
Totals
40 813 8 ' Totals
3G 310 3

St. Loui•
014 012
000 B
PIHsburgh
200 001
000 3
E-Ward (2), Mackowrak (5) OP-St lours 1
Pittsburgh 1. LOB-St. Louis, 7, Pittsburgh 7

26-Renleria (9). Pu1ols (15), Marquis (1) ,
Kendall (9). Bay (5). 3B:-Bay (1). HA----"Womack (2). Rolen (13). CWilson [12).
1P H RERBBSO
St.Louis
Marq1.1s W,4-4
7 10 3 3 1 5
Tavarez

2-3 0 0 0 0 0
11·3 0 0 0 0 1

P........ h
Bensoo L.4-4

5 2-3 11

B 6
3 1-3 2 0 0
MarqUIS pnched to 2 batto~ ln the BIM.

Corey

Mats 5, Phlllles 3

ACstro c

8or18nd
WayneL3-2

K~ne

T-2 :~9. A-12 .582 138.496).

Phelpsp
Easley ji1

Florida
410 002 000 7
E-Hummel (1). laRue 2 (5] . DP-Crrw:mnatl
2. LOB--Concrnnat15. Flonda 11 . 2B-P161T9 2
(8) lOW8~ (171; Con1ne 2 (11 ). 3&amp;--DJimenez .
12) HA-Lark1n (3). Casey. 2 (9) . G'iffey Jr
(13). WPena (4). SB-lC&lt;~st~lo (8). Prerre (15)
SF-AGonzalez
IP H· A ER BB SO

CineVan Poppel

W~-

Florida

flowolp
1100
Totals
37 910 9

{7), NGreen (1 ). JDrsw (10). S-NGreen
'
1P H AERBBSO

P~o:tlk

l!

'21_

3

Monlreal
000 000 200 2
Atlanta
000 101
&amp;Olt 8
E-Vnlro (2). DP-M011traai 1. LOB--Mon!real
5. All;m1a 5. 28---CnChilveZ (fi). NJohnson (2),
AJones (13) DeAoSil (10). HA-Scnll8oder

Nltkowsk1

13·11

2-8

54C

2

HSSIM1b

J3 2 6 2

......

12-10

WI

540

1

ab rhbi
Furcal ss
4 2 1 0
t&gt;.Green2b 3 1 1 3
JDfewrl
32 11
C.lonesR 2 1 0 0
AuOrllzp 2 0 0 0

Wlkrsn n 4 o o. o

AL.OrtlZW.~

WI

5-5

23

LaAuec

Allanla

Montreal

TOO&lt;"

6·4

23

1

Braves 8, Expos 2

.,..

4'1,
5 .
13'1

27

0

T-2:15 A-39.380 (39.3451.

.........

500
480
320

27

Q

Poncilo.

Totals

14-11
13-11
1:)-15
11-15
7-17

St LOUIS

0

3

Ha&gt;MIU"lS
1 I
1
Borawslit S.9
1 2
1
Umptres--Home. Greg GIOSOn; Fnn .Bruce
Ored\man: Secctld: Mile FICfltef. Th1rd. laff'l

ECh11BZ d
Vidro2b
TBista 3&gt;
C&gt;Gbefa ss

16-10
14--11

Houston

4
0

(9). Hidalgo (14) Alou (12). HoHarldsworttr (3).
Bako (3) HR-Berio.man (14). Alou (13) &amp;AChavez . MaddUll
IPHAERBHSO

-

5-5- -Ll

Cn1cago Culls

0
0

001
020

LOB-HO\Isloo 10. Chrcago 6. 28--Ensberg

Dswah l.J-4
GaHo
Han.'!lie
Chic:a90
Maddux W,4-4
Far1"191N0f1tl

,- -

L
__?1
23

Cincin!VIti
ab rhbi
FrooiH
4100
LarKin ss 5 2 3 1
Casey 1b 4 3 2- 4
C)r! Jrcl
5123
dJmnz 2tJ 5 0 1 0
WPooarf 4. 121
JaCruz pll 1 0 0 0
Dl.flnH
1000
JCastro3b I 0 0 0
Hmme13b 3000

000 1
OOx 3
E--JKent (2\ . Of'-Houston 1. Chocago 1

LHmdz L.3-5
Booo

Orioles 13, Red Sox 4
8Rbns2b
Mora3b

4 1 2 1

•
Ensbrg 2b 4 0 1 0
Hda9:Jr1 3010

JVzcno pn

Rays 7, Twins 3

Bav

JKen!2tl
Brkrm n

4 o 1 o
4 a 10

Bgwell 1b

Oswahp
Lamb pt,

Devil

Tampa

5 0 1 0

abrtlbi
4 0 0 0
40 0 0
4 1 2 0
AIOIJ~
4 132
AAmr:z3b4010
Hlnds.'lrt 4 1 1 0
REMtr.z ss 3 0 1 1
Bakoc
3030
~Oduwp
2000
Fmswrp
0000
Hwk1nsp 0 0 0 0

TWallo.r 2t1
DeLee Ill
CP!tson cl

0
0

Umpires-4-iOOlll, Gilrp Darlrog Frrst. Maril Ca1!·
son: Seco-ld. &amp;~a~1 Al.fl98. Thkd. 9111 Hohn_T2.39 A-12,962 (40.120)

Huff3b
TMrtnz 1b

nbl

4 0 20

0

WP---"""&gt;

Crwfrdlf
Baldelli c1

ab r

2

000

0

Chicago

0
1

121102

4

Cubs 3, Astros 1

1

Urtma

7

7

Cublllan P«ched to 4 baners n thll 7'ttl. Dl~
I)IIChed 10 5 baners 1n the 6th
WP-Cr.blllan
Umpires-Home. Brli Welote. Forst John
H1rsctbeclo.. Second. W'i!ft.j Bell. Thord. Laz Draz
T-3 31 . A-35.465 (35.095)

0
2

1

JWalker

3

'

8

0 -~
3

Leskaruc
LEIWie

55

5

233310
253111

B
d
IQ9IO ss
AEVrtt

-.y

Milwaukee (Sneets 5·3) at los Angeles (Weaver 3·6), 10:10 p.m

DLoweL4-5

Houaton

"

Home~

ll

San FranciSCO (Hermanson 1-2 ) at Araooa (Sparits 2-4). 9:35 p.m
ColOrado ICOOk o-O) at San Diego (G&amp;rmWJo 1-01. 10:05 p.m.

Dinardo

·JBrcwn

25

Housl on (DuOOwrth 1-0) at

2 000
1 o 1 o

2-3

= W2-\

O

"""""""

""'

551-

Btrk

1·3

· N Y Mets (lll'ter 1-2) at PtutadelphiB (Mrl'wocd 4-3), 7 05 p.m
Monlr9i11 (Armas Jr Q-0) a1 Atlanta (Wnght 3-5 ). 7.35 p m

2· 3 3 2 1 ' 2 1
2 2 1 1 1 3
1 00000

"'-Booton

22

P10

Tue.day's Games
CII"ICinn&lt;tt• IHiloang 4-2) at F1onda ( F\tnn~ 6-21. 7·05 p m
:,'! l OUIS (S~pan 4-4 ) a1 Pittsburgh (~soog 1-4). 7·05 pm

l\letctay's Gwnes
Te~~:as (Drese 2-2) al CIIN&amp;Iand (Saootn~a 2·3) 7.05 p.m.
Bahnore (Ponson 3·5) at N.Y Yankees (Ml.ISS1na 5-4 1, 7 05 p.m.
Kan.B&amp;S City (Geofge [}-()) at DelfOII (Rooer1son 4·3) 7 05 p m.
Tampa Ba~ (Abbon 2-41 a1 M1rmesota {S!fva 5-3). e 10 p.m
Toronto (Halladay 5-4) at Seattle (Meche 1-5). 10:05 p.m
BoS!on (Arroyo 2·2)ilt Anal1e1m (Colon 4--3). 10:05 p n
Chicego While Sox (lo.iill! 6-3) at Oakland (Redman 3-3) 1o:as p m.

Cubillan

21

Monday's Res.ulta
~tla.nta B. Montreal 2
l os Angeles 3 Mdwaukee 2. ( 10\
Chocago Cl.tls 3 HouSlon I
C10eonnato 9. Floroda 7
II.·V Mets 5. Pt1 iladelpl'1ta 3
St LOU'S B. Pottsburgtl 3
San Francosco 8. Auzooa 4
Cok&gt;rildo ~~ San D1ego

Sunday's Rnutts
4. Qallland 3

C~eVelaOO

belrort 8, Kansas Cl!y 4
Tampa Bav 7. M~nnesota 3
Toron1o a1 Seame

30

27
25

GB

W
30
27

PJ!1shurgn

20
22

Pd.

16

12·19

L2

L

,, ,.

Atlanta

8·14
4-17

.,.,

W

Mon!My's R.ults
Bahrnore 13. Boston 4

Pn1ladelph1a

&gt;111

30
27

Seollle

17-12
13·1,
12-10

W

s..

WEST

Oakland

EAST

P10
7-3
3-7

...
·-·

6

lw.y

1~7

L1
L1

·-·

5

~

Home

Strt

7-3
7-3

24
2.L_.5tt
~~
-~-~=~===i'~'=-~~
28
.440
To~
~

P10

2
0

"
3

AL Leaders
BATilNG---Mora, Baltimore.. 380 : ASanchez.
Oel:ro~. 357: MAamrez. Boslon, .355: Hervey_
Kansas City•.354: VGuerrero, Anaheim. .348.
LFord, ~111oosota. .335; Uribe, Cm;ago.. 335.
RUNS-Mora, Baltimore, 45; \!Guerrero, Anahern,45.Matsut, New'fi:W1(.. 41 ;Belhom,Boston.
38; La-Mon, Cle.&lt;eland. 38: CGuilloo, Detro!!:, 36,
MVoung. Texas,35:JGullen , AncFielm.35:ARo-

driguez. New~- 35
RBI-DOrnz, Basion, 44: Xiuillan, As'\ahWn. 39;
IRodngLJeZ, Detroit 39: VMartilei:, CleYelarld,

38: Tejada.

Ba~.

38: VGucrrero. A~lahe~Jrl .

38: THa1ner. CIEMlland, 37: MRamirez, Boston,

37.
HIT'S-lSuzuk1. Seattle. 73: MVotrig Texas. 71:
Mora, BaRmore, 70: VGuerrero, Anaherm. 159.
MRarmrru. Bol;t011, 66: IRodnguez. DatiOII . 62;
ASandlez. DooOII 61 ,
OOUBLEs---DOftlz. Boston. 21: WJells. Tort'f'l·
to 17: THalner. Clelieland, 16: Bell1ard. 06\/elard, 16; Posada. New Yoric . 15: MRamirei.
Bost011, 15, Bla~ Texas, 14, Mo!a, Ballimor!l,
14; \/Guen-ero.Anah!lro, 14.
TRIPLES----f'igglns, Anahein, 7: Crawtorct, Tempa Bay. 4: MYoung. Texas. 4: CGuillan, DetrOit, 4;
Lol!CJ"I, New Yont 4: Uribe, Ch~go. 3; Wood-

ward. Torcrrto, 3.
HOME ~UN5--MA amire z , Boston, 14;
ECha.vez. Oa~l&lt;vld, 13; Blillod, Texas, 12:
VGuerrero, AnaheiTl , 12: AAcxltiguez. New~ .
12: Bettmn, Kansas Crty, 11 , Glau&amp;, An~m.
11 : OOrtr.z, Boston, 11.

NLLeaders
BATTING-Casey. Onc1mab. .392: Bonds. San
FmnciSCo, .364; Lo Duc.a. Los Aof}ele$, .357;
JWilson, Pittsbr.rg"r, .352: Berkman . Houston,
346, LCM'ell. Flonda. .344: CWilson. PittsOOrgtl,

341 .

.

RUNS--PujOIS, St LOtJis, 44: AEveren, Hooston,
39: BAbreu. PhJlalillptua. 38: Cabrera. Floods,
37: Casey, Ctncinnet1. 37: loretta. San Diego. 37'
Bagwell, Houston. 31 : lGonllllez, Arizona, 37.
FtBI-Rolen. St loUIS, SO: Castilla, ColoraOO. 43;
Burrell, Phi1a~la. 41 ; Beri&lt;man, Houston. 41;
AAam1rez. Chicago, 41: ~ Mtlwaul&lt;ee, 40;
Bumilz, Colorado, 40: JKont. Houston, 40 .
HITS--Casey. Cincinnati. 74: JWiiSon. PlttsOOrgh, 69, Pierre, FlQnda, 66; Burroughs, San
Dego. 65: loretta. San Diego. 64; lowell. Florida, 63 : CWils!ri, Pittsburgh, 61; Overbay, Miwaukee, 61; Aoi9n, St. LOUIS, 61 : Alou, Ch!CaQO,

61

- the 1942 Maple Leafs against the
Red Wings - has overcome that disadvantage in the final. lt didn't help
they were wi1hout two key regulars.
forward Ruslan Fedo~nko and
defensemen Pavel Kubina, who were
injured in Calgary's 3-0 vic10ry
Saturday.
But the Lightning have been a1 their
best .when cornered. going 6-0 after. a
loss while outscoring their opponents
18-5. They also kept ahernming wins
and losses. some1hing they've done in
every game since splining the first
two games of the Eastern Conference
final against Philadelphia.
· Even
without
the
injured
Fedotenko, who has I 0 playoff goals.
und Kubina. who plays an average of
24 minutes per game. Tampa Bay
pressured from the s1art, something it
couldn 'I do in Game 3. It paid off with
the opening goal - a big momentum
lift given that the team scoring first
has won every game in the series.
Calgary also tried to establish its
physical, hard-checking style immediately, just as it did in wearing dowp
the Lightning in Game 3, but Chris
Clark ~ cross checking) and Mike
Commodore (holding) bo1h drew
penalties just I :52 in.
Tampa Bay, 0-for-3 on lhe power
play during the first period Saturday,
1ook advantage of the 5-on-3 advantage with Richards powering a onetimer from just above the hash mark

1, 2004

past Kiprusoff as the goalie was
screened bv Vincen1 L.ecavalier. 11 was
only the second time in 12 games
Calgary has allowed a goal in the first
., period.
It was another good omen for the ·
Lighming. who are 12-2 when ~conng
fi rsl.
Still. Calgary did e,·erything but
score in the first perind before an electric, ali-in-red crowd of 19.221 1hat
began cheering an hour before the
game. The Flames had 12 shots in the
{leriod. 10 more than in Game 3. and
even had a good chance shrm-handed
la1c in the period when Vtlle
Niemi·nen gol loose on a breakaway
only to have the puck skip off his st ick
before he could get off a back-hander.
. Khabibulin also gave the Lightning
a scare in the tina! minute of the peri od. nearly mufting the puck as it skidded down lhe ice toward him. forcing
him 10 abruplly close his pads to stop
il. It was aboul his only mistake of the
night.
, Calgary was held lo live shots in the
second period. bu1 stepped up the
pressure in the 1hird period as it des- _
permcly tried to hold unto the homeICe advantage. Two of the tina! three
games. if necessary. will be in Tampa.
But the Flames were at a big disadvanlage in the final 4:13 as Nieminen
was called for a five-minute major
'penalty for ramming Lecavalier into
the boards _
Kiprusoff was nearl y as sharp as
Kh abibulin. bu1 had almost no chance
on the goal by Richards . He has
allowed only six goals in the four

•

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
, )U (

I :\ I S • \

U

i .) I . :'\ 0

• Reds fillet Martins, 7-6.
SeePage 81

t Fox'sPizza Den
t Fur Peace Ranch
tFUZZ
t Gino's Pizza
t Holiday Inn

t Holzer Clinic.
t Jividen's Power Equipment
t Kayser. Layne &amp; Clark
t Kentucky Fried Chicken
t King's Island
t Fredric E. LaCarbonara, MD
t Lamar Advertising
t Laredo's Steak &amp; Seafood
t Layton's Garage
t Mary's Tee Time Grill
t Mason Co.Area Chamber of Commerce
t McDonald's
t Meigs High School
t Miami Dolphins
t Breton L. Morgan, MD
+Motion Masters
+ MU Mid-Ohio Valley Cenler

+ N~w England Patriots -+NorrisNorthup Dodge
+Ohio River Bear Company
+OhioState University
+Ohio University
+Pepsi Bottling Group
t Philadelphia Eagles
+ Pigskin Chuckers
+Pizza Hut
.+Pizza Plus
+Pleasant Valley Hospital
+Pleasant Valley Hbspital Auxiliary
+Powell's Food Fair
• Pu1ney Pbotogiaphy
+Ray's &amp;Son Complete Car Cleaning

+Red Parrot Cafe
+ Riverbend Marina
+River City Smokelwuse
+ RiversideGolfCourse
+Sassafras Tire
+' M.C Shah, MD
t Sider's Jewelers lnc.

/

t Agnes A. E. Simon, MD
t MaNha Slater- State Fann (Barboursville)
t Splash Down
+Spring Valley Cinema
t Spring Valley Country Club
+Subway,
t Super 8Motel
t Tampa Bay Buccaneers
t The Amazon .
t The Lowe Hotel
+Thomas Do· it Center
+ToUiver's Pre·Owned Auto Center
+Tudor's
, Biscuit World
+University of Kentucky
+ Vajdya Urology Clinic
'
+Village Pizia Inn
+ Wal-Mart of Mason
t WBYG ·Big Country
+ West Virginia State College
t West Virginia University
t WOWK·TV Channel \3
t WYVK- The Frog

Dooley said small gift&gt; wil l '""'be

MIDDLEPORT - Th~iddlepon
Com.munity Association plans a free
breakfas1 to honor fathers on June 19.
and will again oversee lhe c·o mmuni1y's July 4 celebration_
Association members met Tuesday
morning to tinalizc plans for the June
and July events.
Vice Presidenl Tom Dooley said
lhe free .. Pops in lhe Park'. hreakfasl
will be served from 8 to II a.m. lhe
day before Father's Day in Dave
Diles Park. While the Father'&gt; Day
· weekend breakfast is not planned as
an association fundrai ser, donations

\\ \.'\ \\

111 \

d.rII \ ·· •

l

d

II H

I '

II tl •

given to tho~c v.-hn attenU .

Dooley updaled the member' on
plan ' for the association·, J4l y -l cel ebration. also to be held in Dave
Dile s Park _ Plan s for enlerlainme nl
during the evening program are no\v

nearing completion. and th e lineup
will he annou11ced ne.xt week.
Dooley said.
Fundraising cani..,ter.., will go into
area bu,inesscs thi.s week. in an
efforiiO help rai se Ihe S5.000 needed
for Julv 4 fireworks. Dooley said tile
associ,ition has already raised S 1.-100
toward the firework\ display. primar-

il) from local busi nesses _
•
Sue Baker di,l·ussed plans' for the
llpl'Oming Bear Baskel Bingo. which
abo rai-.cs monel for 1he firewo rk'
and other July -l expen .ses _The g;une
wiII he held al the Feenn -Rcnn etl
American Le 2itlll l1a ll on · Jun e 2-l _
Baker ha.; d~~ i g.neLI three -..pecia!
Ohio Riv er Bear . . to bL~ !.!1\t'll tma\'
alun~ wit!~ Lon !..:ahL·r~er-

h;.l .... ~t'h l()

\\im{er' of the ' hin~~'- and 1-lal-.er
rcm indeu membe rs rl1 at thi' vca(,
bill!..!O l!amc '"'ill ha,·.: two wmrlcr~ in
cal:h g:tme .
·
·
Baker

-.a id

Gll l'~nr i l~..,

hll\ t'

changed for Ihe July -l parade. Thts
yea r's paraUe

categn ri e~

ar~

IliU"ot

patriotic. beSI all-1errain vehicle_

hL·q-dres&gt;ed pet. he't 'intage car.
he' I float. bc' t \\ alk.tng/ marching

untt. best equestrian unit. and best
hic' \ck cnt n _ She said this veur"'
par-adL~ l'.t t~g.Or~ ,~,inner . .

\A

ill n!c~ivc

\-tiddlcport merchant gift cenificutes
in rJacl..' nf trophie ....
Duull'\ "ai d 'illa~c n1Lllll" il will
alhm tliL' a~ . . ncl:.ttHlil· aL:L·e~ ... to the
.~l iJdk pon Dcpnt for both --pops .in
the Park-- and Jul y -l e,·em,_
Doole\ ,a id 23 of the 30 trees
pbn1ed- in Jo\\nto\\n Middleport
hJ\ ,. hc·en purchased hy local Jonors.
and that ...,puri:-.ur . . ll i p uf the r;e mai ni ng

"'L' en rt•main..., a\ ailahlc . The as~n c ia ­

tio n j.,. 11ow con:-.iderin~ murker-. for
tree' \\'htch ha,·e been ::ponsored_

LoTIERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 1-8-3
Pick 4 day: 2-8-1-6
Pick ~ night: 9-3-0
Pick 4 night: 5-5-7-8
Buckeye 5: 6-9-23-32-34

More than 200 bikers from 11 states along wi th 2,500 festival goers attended the firs t -Gold Wings and Ribs Festtval
last year. This year promises to be a spectacular event that
will feature gu1ded bike tou rs. ltve entertainment. crafts and
anything and everything for anyone.

West Virginia
Dally 3: 8-5-3
D;~ily 4: 5·9-6-0
Cash 25: 1-2-6-8-17-22

Second Gold Wings and
Ribs Festival becomes a
.Meigs County tradition

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Dennis Kapple, 59
• Edna Kerwood, 55 ·
• Chalmer Blaine
Dailey, 69

BY

As a thank you for their use of the Syracuse Community Center, Meigs County Girl Scouts
took part in a beautification project at the center with the Syracuse Garden Club recently.
This·year's ,day camp for scouts will be held there June 24-26. This year's theme is "Mak1ng
Friends with Nature." Campers will learn to set uP a campsite, cooking outdoors, and how
to use natura l materials for mak ing crafts . As a special feature, students and staff of
Hocking College will present a program about snakes and birds of prey to campers.
Brownies may spend the night indoors on June 25. and Juniors and Senior Gtrl Scouts maytent camp Thursday and Friday nights. June 26 will be Parent Night. followed by a pool party
at London PooL

WEATHER

New legal eagle comes to Pomeroy
closing so lhat he could
devote more time 10 his new
JOb_ At lea't 6.300 cases a
POMEROY -· There is a year make th eir way throu gh
Meigs County Coml which
new f&lt;1ce proseculing th e
is p~esided over by Judge
guilly in the Meigs County
Steven Story who rcccnlly
courthouse.
celebraled a mi le,lone hirlh Richard Hedges is 1he new day. Hedges is the for me r
a&gt;Sistanl proseculor for law director and prosecutor
Meigs County. He will be in Nelsonville.
primarily responsible for
Hedges has defended &lt;I
representing the county in numher of high pro tile diem,
Meigs County Court which in Athens County. LtSI year
handles ntisdemeanors and he defended a Coolville marminor 1raffic offenses.
shal who was convicted of
"I look forward to serving stealinQ $50 in electronic
the people of Meigs equipn~ent from lhe Wai-M;1rt
County:' said Hedges, an in Athens_Earlier lhis year he
Alhens attorney who r~ pre­ defended a New Mi1r, hli eld
se ntcd clients from Meigs woman. who was previously
County for a number of convicted of kidnapping in
years_
2001. of a shop lifting charge
Hedge s graduated from which would send her back to
Capital Law School in 1995 . prison . One of lhe 'trange'l
He has a law office in ca~es Hellge s said he ha ~
Athens on Court Street defended involves a man who
which I1 e said he would be was chmged with DUI while
BY J. MILES lAYTON
JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Details on Page A6

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

Calendars

12 PAGES

A3

Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

J.

MILES lAYTON

J LAYTON@MYDAI LY SENTI NEL. COM

THANKS To ALL PVH COED FLAG FOOTBALL SPONSORS!
+ AEP- Sporn Plant
+ Banrum &amp; Brown Football Camp
+ Baseball Cards &amp; More
+ Basket Delights
+Bob's Market &amp; Greenhouses
+Bowman's Driving Range
+ Buttercream Wishes &amp; Chocolate Dreams
+Cincinnati Bengals
+ Clark's Jewelery
+Cleveland Browns
+ Michael W. Corbin, MD
+ Day Dreams &amp; Night Things
+ Deal Funeral Home
+Dollar General Store
+ Domino's Pizza
+ Duke Cleaners
+ DynamicDesign
+ DynamicGraphics
+ El Haijj Salon &amp; Spa
+Fanner's Bank &amp; Savings Company
+ Flair Furniture
+ Focus Promotions

w iII be accepted_

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

Blisters

We could not have done it without you! .

\\ ' I .I• N I'.S I),\\ , J CIN E :l 1 :! 00 .1

. It· :.."

Middleport Community Association plans events

SPORTS

games.

onship mmch. wbcrc he lost to No. I
Roger Federer. Two gutsy come back
victories last week I1ad No. 20 Safin
lhinking he cnuld make a similar
from Page 81
showing a1 the French Open - but
Ihey also drained him and beat up hi s
"Look at me:' a smiling Kuerten
large hands_ _
.
said moments after winning. --Thi s
Lrke a plillll ..,l or '-lurgenn. a teiJI11~
never happened to me in my life _ I'm
player relies on his hands for his
all dirty."
livelihood_ It\ all about feel. sen.sing
Nothing was messy about Gaudi _o 's lhe fuzzy ball on 1he racket"s tightly
6-4, 7-5, 6-3 viclory over Igor wound
strings.
And
against
Andreev, who knocked off defending Nalbandian. a player he'd bea1en in all
champion Juan Carlos Ferrero in the four previous encounters. Safin not
second round. Gaudio's quarterfinal only couldn·t mu-rer the proper delifoe will be No. 12 Lley10n Hew in . a 7- cacy - he was in pain 011 shot after
5, 6-2, 7-6 (6) winner against Xav ier shoL
Mali sse.
.. The last four ga mes_ I couldn ·r
Two men 's quarlerfinals are play. I cou ldn't hit a forehand:- said
Tuesday : Coria vs. 1998 champion Safin. who looked as if he had taken
Carlos Moya, and Chela vs. No_ 9 Tim part in a hi gh school biology class
Henman, lhe firsl Englishman to gel experiment. ·' I couldn't do many
this far a1 Roland Garros since Roger thing s:·
Taylor in 1973. All women·s roundBy the fifth game. he was looking at
of-eight matches also are Tuesday. · one hand or the other after nearly every
highlighted by Serena William s errant stroke. With Nalbandian serving
agains1 Jennifer Capriati in a show- at 40-30 in lhe nexl game. Satin interdown between pasl champions.
rupted play 10 have a trainer work on
With Safin ·s departure. three men his hands. lhc first of al lea.sl seven
are left who have won a Grand Slam limes he was lreated for the blislers title: Brazil's Kuerten, Spain :s Moya. six on his left hand. five on his right.
and Australia's Hewitt, the 200 I U.S.
Safin drew whistles and jeers from
Open and 2002 Wimbledon winner.
the crowd when he called for the lrainWhen Safin walloped Pete Sampras er at 30-all during the tifth game of the
3 1/2 years ago in the final at Flushing fourth set. He walked slowly to his
Meadows, his potential seemed limit- seat. chucked his racket down. and
less. The 6-foot-4 Russian was jus I 20, threw a hand in the air. as if to reply.
his serve was fearsome, and only his .. Hey. get off my case:·
temper and a taste for the nigh1 life
To his credit , Nalbandian wasn't
appeared to sland between Safin and a fazed much. hi s only real blip coming
slew of Slams.
·
in the tiebreaker. He tised drop shols
Well, he's still stuck on one such ·effectively throughoul , five times geltille and counting, although he did ling clean winners, and repeatedly lurreach the Australian Open final twice_
ing SaJin to the net before whipping a
It was at that event in 2003 thai he tore
passmg shot.
ligaments in his left wrisl, an injury
Asked aboltl that tactic. Satin paid
that sidelined him fur the season's lasl
Nalbandian an in sightful compliment.
three majors and sent his ranking
"He has a greal touch. He' s one of
down to 77th_
·
lhe most laletited people," a subdued
Unseeded at this year's Au stralian Safin said _.. He has really great hands_
Open, he upset Andy Roddick and Great hands _"
Andre Agassi to reach the champi-

REDS: Vander
Waal needs more
re~abilitation, B6

Indians struggle
• •
once aga1n
m extra
innings, Bi.

A6

© 2004 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

operating a Jawnmuwt~r.
In aduition to heing an
attorney. Hedge s is a pr~&gt;fes­
sor al Ohio L"ni,er.sily who
teache s health admini,lrcl lion_ He received both hi .s
undt:r!:!.raduate

i.IIH.I

UoL'toratc

from ' the Unive rsit y of
Kentttcky Hed ges ;, an
active · Detnocrat
wllo
attended the party caucus in
Jdfer"&gt;n Countv during the
prcsid,enlial priniary to l·oice
hi ' sup pori for Wesley
Clark _who ;, still a possihlc
vice-pres idcnt i;li candidale _
Hed ges take~ over from .

Dana Gilliland_ who left lhe
prosentlor's office a few
weeks ago .l o give birth to a
six pound haby boy. Alec
Benjamin. who many wurthnuse observers describe a.'
"an awful cul e baby:·
Mei g' County Prosecutor
Pat Story said Hedges \\Ould
be a welwme addilion ln Ihe
pmsccull&gt;r'' office .

POMEROY - The second Gold Win u' and Ribs
F~,tivul opcth ' 1he fcsti ,-a I
r..t:a'~on in Mei!..!\ Count\' on

lake place June-land June 5.
The schedule of ewnls is
;Is folln\\'s:
Fridav
• Vcn~lur-.; ;urin· and oren
"helle\ L'r they cu-e x·lup. 12 p 111.
• Open rcgi.,.tratiun ~ all
\ i ~ttu r ... that h~t\~ pre-rcgi-..-

Frida1· and s.~u rd ;i\ :1i lhe
Pnme'my amphith~&lt;ttu_
The f~,l iv&lt;tl "ill in,· lud ~ lL'n:d L:1 11 p1ck-up llll'lr reg _nn\L'd I ~ I\ j..., imp~r ... nnlllor i.., trat inn pack.ct~ at th t' rq;i-.lJ\1. i~lll lc L'IlhllW~L ri\ L' rih
_tratioll traikrl. 5 p.m.
\:emlor'... '~cveral 1 ~ uidl'd
• \Vckomc hv the Fcs~i,al
nwtorcvck· lou r:-. thrn~u:: hou t Commiltce oi1 the main
the colrn !\. li\L' t.:.·nte~·tain ~
... tag c.) :-+.:;; p.m.
ment. priiL' dr awi ng,_ ~111d
• -- ~1nsic ill the Park" with
\ ' ariou~ ·t!all1C\ and ~.·nniL'~t ....
Todd Bur~c 1110 L"ll\W) at
De,pi tc \ he ralll. tnllrc' th an c'"'~'~ Su-ect Grill_ 6 p.m.
2.500 peopl e &lt;lll cndcd 1he
• The Third Shill tcountry
festiv:d last vcar.
mn siL'I li1c &lt;II the riverfronl
"Th i' l~ai- we 1h inl-. \\C ""']lhilhcatcr. 6 p.m. to9 p.m.
\\·ill h aY~ a hl'tter IUI"IHHII_- • .l \1otorn de Li~ht Pa raUe
said Paul Dmncll. ,-h,tirm&lt;tn tllro u!.!h th~ ri\'L'1':" c itie~ of
or Ihe Gold Wine' &lt;tnd Rihs Pt lJ llc~nw_ S\' lac u...,e. R ~t~..: ine
1-'~st i \al (Dillllliltcc . " ]think and Mi"idlel1on _lJ
L'\~nhnd\' \\il"l ha\c .1 ~tli)Ll
p.m. 1o Ll:-15 p.m .
tinw-&lt;tnd i hope lh e lr&lt;tdltion
• Rdrc, hments following
L'illlti!llll"' IWL' ~! U'I (' tlli . . j...,
parade 1it-~ cream). 9:45
!.!Ulld lor not onh for \k1 ~...,
p.m. In 10 p.m.
('outlt\'_ but fo t.- c\ ~r' both
• Mnltlrncle li ght show
)\ItO attCilLh thi' lcsli\-Cii -- - bonfire tin the river bank.
Darnell added 11ta1 Meigs 10 p.m. until:
C(lllllty\ "(.:l'llil' t·o:lr..h\ ay . . .
hi.. , tnri c lnuh.inl! d~'\\ ntown
Sa1urda1·
and rhcr front \'1:-.t &lt;h arc a hi!!
• R~.·i!i.., iL_Itinn ()pens , 9
dra"· !( n- hil-.er,, He " 1id there :\. Ill .:
wcr~ at le;bl 2tX) bi l-.es \\ tth
• Clitf B&lt;tsel will give a
rider., fn11n II difkrem .stales ,afcl, tall-. "" motorcycle
all ~ ndin ~ lhc li:sli\'clllast vear.
traik r in~ on the main slage.
Local\ cnclor.s and &lt;lrt ;·san, l) a.m. 111 Ill &lt;LIII.
will a],o he on hand_ selling
• Fir:-.1 tour (rl'LJUirc~ regis1hei r \\arl' ... to th n~c in ·:men ~ trati,m l. 10 a.nl. to 12 p.m.:
dance . Sponsored h\ the
• Prn fes, ional Story Teller
''.
GoiJ Wi11 £s &lt;llld Rihs
Please see Fest. AS
Committec .t lw i"L-sli\al \\ill

The American' Cancer Society

Cancer Education Series
11

1 Can Cope"

6 Week Program beginning Tuesday, June

8, 2004

5:30 pm - 7:30 pm (Light dinner provided)
HMC Education &amp; Conference Center Rooms BC
"I Can Cope" is a series of educational classes developed by the
American Cancer Society and sponsored locally by Holzer Medical. Center
and Holzer Clinic for patients and families facing cancer.
To reserve o lace in fhis FREEs eciol series, or lor more inlormofion, lease coli (740} 446-5055 .

•

R
MEDICAL CENTER
niscovcr the If ol:a'1' Dif/i!r'C11CC

www .holzer .org

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