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                  <text>Page B6 ·• The Daily Sentinel
National League

w

Pet

L.

GB

PIO

Strk

Home

Awry

8-2

W1

18-8

17·12

4~

W2

18-Q
13-14

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20
23

··"'~--;;2·~
.se1

Baltlmor1

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27

.481 _

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32

.43Q

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1'ampl Bay

33

.389

13 1,

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l1

14·14

7-19

ClNTFIAL

W

L

Pet

GB

P10

'itrk

Home

AWIY

CENTRAL.

Chieaoo Sox

JCl ·-!.:"c---'556
2ti .536
25 - ~
463

5·5

l2
W1

17·10
17- 12
16-13
12-16
13-14

13-14
13-14
9-16
13·15
7-20

Clnclnl"a!J

Minnttota
C.....lll1d

JO

--~25

Dtlrort -

Kansas c~

-

20

446

6

.370

10

w

" "
" "

,......

22

11

554

34

11

393

l1

l2

...
l3

46
6·4
5·5
5·5

Philadelphia
Atlpnta

15·1"4
12-13 .

,,f"14 -,1_:_18

W3

P10

589
571

24

32

Te•as

GB

P&lt;1.

l

·~
7·3
3·7
5·5

5

31

Anaheim
Oakland

WI
- !~-- --=11

1

34

WEST

5;-5

_ 8'1,

V/3
W1
V/3

~j_M_!l!_

~bffireal

3 0 00

Estesp

2000
0 0 0 0
MaSwy pl1 1 0 0 0
Hcki-lyph 1000
Totals
30 5 7 5
Hr~lap

000

113 -

10

Colorado

000 . 000 -

5

104

E-NPerez (4), Milas (4), Castolla (3). DPSan FranciSCO 2, Colorado 2. LOB-Sa n
Franc1sco 13, Colorado 5. 2B-NPeraz !BL
Alfonzo 2 (10), Ransom (3). Miles 2 (5),
Casttlla (20), Bumitz (1 41 HA-F'e 12 2 (1'I,
Torrealba !21 Burnnz 11 6 1. CS-NPeraz (" 1
S-NPeral. LuGonlalaz. CJohnson
San FranciKo
IP H A EA 88 SO
Tomko
575522
Brower W,3-3
1 0 0 0
1 1
Eyre
2-300010
FRod11guez
11 ·3 0 o 0 o o
Herges
1 00001
Colorado
52·375 5 6 4
Estes
Harikkala
1·3 0 0 0 0 0
2-J 2 1 1 1 1
SAeed l.0-1
Jrlapez
2·3 2 1 1 0 2
Kroon
1 1·3 3 3 3 3 1
Simpson
t -3 1 0 0 0 0
HBP----by Brower (Pellow). by Eslas (Tuda rl.
WP-FRodriguez Balk--Estes
Umpore5-HOI'T)e. Mike Focnter . F~rst. Dave
Aschwege . Second . Larry PonCHlo: Third.
Bruce Drackman T-3·20 A-20.697

Cardinals 4, Cubs 3
St. Louia

Chicago
lbrhbi
4 01 0
B.:irrenc
4 0 1 0
Aloulf
4 120
ARmrt 3b a 01 0
\f'h'alkr 2b 4 0 0 0
DeLee'lb 4 0 I 1
CPnsonct 4 1 1 I
AOfdnz ss 3 0 0 0
Dubois ph t 0 0 0
Ruschp
2 111
Hlr(lsw ph 1 0 1 0
32 4 6 4 Totals 35 3 9 3

MAndn :2b
Rntena ss
Edmndcf
Roten 3b
ASndrsrl
Mabry tb
Tguctult
lsmghsp
YMiinac
Crpnter p
Klogp

Tollll;
St. Louis

ab r hbi
3 0 0 0
4 t 1 0
3 1 0 0
41 2 3
4 t 1 t
4 0 1 0
4 01 0
0 0 0 0
13000
3 0 0 0
0000

,

000

Ma ~oas l1

400

29
27
24

000 -

4

Chlcaga
001
110
000 3
E-Edmonds (2). RO,dorl8z (2). DP-SI
Louis 1. ChiCago 2. LOB-St. Louos 3. Choca·
go 5. 28-Renlena ( 13). Mac•as (3). Del ee
( 14). HR- Rolsn ( 14). ASanders (10), CPat·
terson (7), Rusch (1)
St. Louis
IP H R EA BB SO
CarpentarW,7-1 8 1·3 9 3 3 0 6
King
1·3 0 0 0 0 1
!srngns S,13
1·3 0 0 0 0 0
Chicago
Ruschl,2· 1
7 6 4 4 2 2
Rem~nger
2·3 0 0 0 0 2
1 1-3 o o o o 2
Farnswonh
Umpirea-Homa, Alton&amp;a Marquez; First Rido.
Reed; Second, Ed Rapuano: Tiurd , Kwtn Kel~- T-2:22. A-39,226 (39,345 )

""

327

l

Pee

23

596
579
536
518
500

24
26

27
27

30

3-7

GB

P10

s"'

1

8·2

31,

4-6
46

,., •••
"

5·5

?·3

41.

,,
5 1,

'"

AW"f

WEST

w

18·10
16·10
17-9
13· 16

15·13
14·14

Los Angeles

30 .

l
24

San Dego

31

25

554

14 -1~

S&lt;ill Fl&lt;iiiCI$1;0

29

28

509

,,

'9·18

A.nzona

386

9•

"

35

21

35

GB

Pet.

556

.375

4·8
2·8

P10
6·4
6·4
~4

5·5
3·7

10

l1
W1
l1
l1
l2

18-12
14-1 3

15-13

13·1~

9·10
Homt
18·10
13-15
15·13
16-1 3

Awrt

13-15

~18

15-12

s"'

Homt
15:12
16-l2

1'5- 12
15-13

15-14

12-17
13-16

Mariners 5, Astros 0

Alleaders

Texas

Houston

Se1n1e

ebrhbi
MVongss 50 2 0
Blalock 3b 4 1 2 1
ASrano 2b 4 2 3 0
Filmer dh 4 1 1 ,
T~eora 'b
5 1 1 2
Dllu~co~
3 0 0 0
CAllAn I!
2 0 1 0
Mat1wsrt 4 0 1 2
No~ t;f
4 1 1 0
BrajMC
5010
Totals
40 613 6

•b f hbi
B1ggooc:!
5020
AEvrttss 4 0 2 0
Bgwel! dn 3 0 0 0
JKen12b 4 0 1
Brkmnlf
4000
JVzcno'b 3 0 0 o
H1dalgo rt 4 0 1 0
Ensbrg 3b 4 0 2 0
RChavz c 3 0 0 0
Totell
34 0 8 0

ab r hbi
!Suzuki rt 5 0 2 0
Wtnncl
31 1 0
EMrmz dn 3 1 1 0
Olerud lb 4 1 2 1
BBOOflti! 2b 3 0 1 1
SnleliO 3b 3 1 3 2
JoCbraH
41 0 0
Aunllass 4 01 1
BrOOrsc
4 0 0 0
33 511 5
Totals

BATTING -Harvo~. Kansas CllV. 375 Mora.
Balhmore, .370; ASanchltz. DetrOit. 350 IRoOrrgllez. Detroit. 349 . MAam1rez Basion . .346:
VGuerrero. Anaha,m. 345: l$uzuk1 . Strat~le.

a

HOUlton
000 000 000 0
Seattle
301
010
DO• 5
OP -Seattle t LOB-Houston 10, Saattls 8
28-B•gg•o (17)'. 1Suzuk1 t9l. Olerud (1 01
Auroha (11] HR- Spoez1o (6'1. SB-BBoona
(7). Sp!BZIO (2). cs----wmn (4)
IP H REABBSO
Houston
.
DuCJ(Wcrth L.t-1
1-3 4 3 3 1 I
PMunro
4 2-3 6 2 2 1 4
Slone
2 1 o o 2 1
Harv•l•e
100000
Seattle

co..,
G
,_

660 03 B
Nageolte W. t - 1
320002
JMaleo 5.1
WP- Duckworth.
Umpores-Home. Buan Gorman: First. Dale
Scott: Second. Ron Kulpa. Th1rd. 8111 Miller.
T-2.46 A-28.556 (47.447)

Kellog-~.

T-3 38 A- 25.286 (49. \ 15!

This

Athletics 13, Reds 2

~C1::'n&lt;~lo':,'::.,C'
; C..:.::!.C~OC;akCC18::,:;-,- - -

32 2 6 2

14-14
10-18
8·19

.

030 002 000
a 5
003 020 000 1 6
Two outs wh6f1 Wmn 1ng run scored
E-Teue•·a (4) OP-Ponsburgh 1 LOBPittsburgh 4. Texas t 2. 28-ASor oAno (13)
HR--CWilson (13). Te&gt;~ftl ra IS) SB- Mi!.ck·
owra~ (7). Fullmer (1 ). CS--cAIIen (11 s-ANunez SF-Fullmar
IP H R~ABBSO
Pittsburgh
42·3 1
5 5 5 8
KWells
2·3 1 . jJ 0 1 t
1 2·3 1 0 0 0 2
STorres
210003
Johns1on. L.0-3
2·3 3
1 1 0
1
Teua
Dock:ey
52·355504
AaJT1ore2
2-3 0 D 0 1 o
FranciscO
1 2-J 0 o 0 0
1
FCoraero W.2·0
2 1 0 0 1 2
HBP--oo, Ockey (HII) WP-STorres. D1ckey
Umpires----Home . CharfiEI Rehlord: F1rSf Doug
Eddings: Socond. Dan lassogna: Th1r0. Jeff

Totals

Awrt

Tuuday'• Gemea
Sl Louos (W WoHoams ~-5) al Chocago Cubs (C1emell1 6-4). 8 OS p_m

Pirates 5, (10)

ab r h bi
3 0 0 0
3 0 0 0
1 0 0 0
4 1 1 1
3110
1 o 0 0
4 o 2 0
3 0 1. 1
4 0 0 0
3 0 I 0
3 0 0 0

20-9
15-13
13-14

Anzona 6. los Angeles 5
San DJagO 8. 11.1rlwauilee 3

Plnaburgh

Freel H
Lar1ml ss
FLopez ss
-Case·f dh
Grt,l·.cl
Hmmellb
DJmnz 2b
Dunn lb
Larson 3b
WF'I;na rt
Vlentln c

16·13

14-12

Allanla 6. Ptllladelotua 4
NY Mets 5. Florida 2
ClllCinna!i 6. Montreal 5
Hous1on 3. St lOUIS 2
Ch!Uigo Cubs,4. PITtsburgh 1
San Franc•sco 16. Colora00.4

Sl . Lou,s 4. Ch•cag6 Cubs 3

16-13
15·13
13-15

LJ

l1
W2
W2
W1
l2

ab r h bl
5 2 2 0
McLmr 30 4 3 2 0
Kelsay cl · 3 1 1 2
10 0
Kielty rl
Dyort
3000
McMln H 2 (J 0 0
Httberg 1b 3 2 2 .5
Kanos 1b 1 0 1 0
Durcu:o ~h 4 1 1 2
Crosby ss 3 2 3 0
Germn 20 1 0 0 0
DMIIIer c
4 12 3
Scutaro 2tJ 3 1 1 o
loleta
37131512
By rne~ H

°-

Cincinnati
010 001
000 2
Oakland
240
502
OOx - 13
DP-Conconn ati 2. Oakland 1 LOB-Gtncin·
na11 5 Oakland 6 28-0unn {9). Hatteberg
( 12). Crosby 2 (1 1). DM11Ier i 9). Scularo (13)
HR--Casey ( 11f l&lt;oiSCI)' (2), Hanebarg {7).
Durazo (9). OMoller (3) SB-Byrnes (B)
·
IP H R ER BB SO
Cincinnati
Lldls L.4-5
32-3 9 9 9 3 4
3
3 t-3 5 4 4 2
Valemtne
PNorton
1 1 0 0 0 1

Oakland
7 6 2 2 2 4
Mulder W,7·2
1 0 0 0 0 2
CHarm1ond
Mac11
100001
HBP-by lldle (Durazo). WP-lidla 3
Umpires-Home. Jim Wall; First. Tim McCiel ·
land , Socond. Tolly Randazzo: Third, Foeld1n
Culbmlh. T-2:30. A-14,686 (43,662)

Date in Baseball

June a
1940 - Harry Cratt ot Ctnconnat1 had a hamer
111ple, double and two singk3s tn sev9'1 a1-ba1S
to lead a 27-hn altack 1n lhe Reds 23-2 rout ot
the Dodgers al Brook~n .
1950 - The Boston Red Sox beal the St Lou15
Browns '29·4 at Fcnway Pari&lt; and se1 majOr
league records for runs scored: mosllong hols.
17 (n1ne doubles. one luple and seven
homars): most lolal oases, 60; mosl e•tra
bases on long hils. 32: mosl runs over two
t
51 nclud
games. 49. mosl Hls 1n two games. , 1
·
ing 28 thiS game.
1968 - How1e Bedell's sacrihce fly 1n lha f11th
mning ended Don Drysdale's record streak at
58 consecuti\19 scoreiE!ss Innings. The Las
Angeles Dodgers beat ltle Ph1ladalphoa Ph j lies
5·3.
1969 . - Tne New Vork Yankees· No_ 7 was
re11red on MiCke)' Mamie Day. Before a Yankee
Sladoum crowd ol 60.096, New Yarlo: swept the
Ctucago While So) 3-1 and 11-2
, 996 ~ Wa rren Moms hrt a two-run homer
W!lh 1WO ou1s m 1110 bonom of the n.mh to give
LSU a 9--8 'llctory over Moamo in the chem,::ionsh1p game of the Colege World Senes.
2001 - Damion Easley became the ntnth
De1r011 pla,.er to hrt tor the cycle. and thO T1gers
beal Milwaukee 9-4. Easley hoi an RBI OOuble
1n the third Jr\1111'\Q, a three- run homer 1n
Oelroit's siNun fifth, a SflQ~ in lha s1nh and a
tnple 1n the etghth.
Today "• birthday: Man Pltnsho, 29

341
RUNS-Mora. Baltimore. 50, VGuerrero. Anahelm. 47; Ma1su1. New Yor'll. 43: Beltlorn.
Bos10n . 43: Lawton. Cleveland. 42 ; CGulll8fl ,
Datrort. 4 1 ARodrogUez. New York . 40
RSI--DOrtiz, Boston, SO ; VGuerrero. Ana,he1m, 5o: VMart•nez, Cleveland . 44: Tef!da.
BaMimore. 43: JGuillen. Anaheim, 43: lAo·
dnguez. Detroit 42; THafn er. Cleveland. 41 :
Mora. Baft•more. 41. Beltran . Kansas C11)'. 41 .
HrTS--lSuzukr. Seattle. 86; MVoung. Texas,
BO. Mora. Baltimore. 78: VGuerrero, Anaheim.
77 !Rodriguez, De!rool 73: MRam1rez. Boslon,
72 ASanchez. Detro1i. 71
HOME RUN5-MRamuaz, Basion, 15 VGuer"
rero. Anaherm . 14 Blalock. Texas. 13:
EChavaz, Oakland. 13, ARodro guez. New York,
13 D0r112. Boston. 12: Dye, Oakland. 12:
Thomas, Ch•cago. 12
PITCHING (7 Deos•ons)--K8rown. New York.
7-1, .875 . 3.89: Rogers, Texas, 8·2 , .800, 3.64;
Mulder. Oakland. 7-2.. 778. 2.93; Washbl)(n.
Anaheim. 7·2 .. 778. 5.24. THudson. Oakland,
6·2, .750. 2.92.
SAVEs--MRIIIf'lra , New van... 23: FCordero.
Texas, 18; Nalhan. M1nnesota, 15: Percival,
Anahetm. 13: OBeez. Tampa. Bay. 11: FoLill&lt;e.
Boston. 11 : Guardado. Seanle, 10.

NL Leaders
BAnlNG-Casey. Cinconnati. .374, Bonds,
Sail FranCISCO . 374. LO Ouca, Los Ang-eles.
.363, JEslrada, Allanta , .355, Rolen , St. Louis.
353 : CW11son . Pittsburgh . .349: Lowel l. Flo nda .. 336.
RUNS-PUIOI9. 51. LOUIS. 53 JDrew. Atlanta .
44. Casey, Cinc1nnaii, 44; Clayton, Colorado.
43 : Bonds. San Franc1sco. 43 : BAbreu .
Ph1ladeipllia. 42 : LGon1a1ez. Anzona, 42
RBI-Rolen . St Lows. 60: Castilla , Colorado.
48 Berkman. Hous1on, H . Griffey Jr., Cincinnati. 47 : Burnolz_ Colorado. 46; Burrell ,
Philadelphia, 43: CasE!)'. Cr1c1nna11. 43: JKem.
Houston. 43.
HITs--Gasey. CIOCm[iali. 82: JWilson, PittS·
burgh. 76 ; P1ane. Fio11cia, 74. CWilson. Pittsburgh, 73: Rolen. SL LOUIS. 72: Burroughs. San
D1ago, 71 : Lowell Florida, 71.
HOME RUN&amp;-Ounn. CinCiflnatl. 17: PUJOIS.
StlOUIS. 17: Grollay Jr., ClllCIIlllall . 11: Bur111tr:,
Colorado. 16. SFml€1')'. Anzona. 16: Bonds. San
Fran ~1sco, 1B: Cast1~a. Colorado. t 5.
PITCHING (7 Oecls!onsJ--Ciemene, Hou9ton.
8-(1, 1.000. 2 27: PWilsoo, Cinclnllati, 7-0.
1.000. 3.18 Molton. PholaOOiph1a. 7-1. 875,
3.78 ; Carpen1er. 51. LOUIS, 7-1. .875, 342:
Schmid!. San Francosco, 7·2. 778~2. 61; Zambrano. Chicago. 6·2, .750, 2.27.
SAVEs-Gravas, Cn)Cillnatl. 26. Beni1ez.
Flonda 22: Herges. San FranCISCO. 16. KotJ.
Milwaukee, 15; Hollman, San D•ego, 14, Mesa,
Pittsburgh. 1•: Gagne. los Angeles. 13: lsronghau!HI Il, SL LOYJS, 13.

nine homers is his l3st
15 games, including
Associated Press
two Sunday agamst
Montreal.
OAKLAND. Calif. As Ken
'They started mi~s­
Griffey Jr. closes in on another major
in a the label and hltmilestone, it's clear 500 home run s
titfg the barrel ;' he
mean&gt; a lot more to his family than it
said . "For a while the
does to the slugger.
halls were hitting the
While his wife. kids tind father made
label. A few minor
the · long j!Jurney to Oakland to see if
adjustments had to be
Griffey can hit -the two homers he
Griffey
mi1de. and that ·s it."
needs to become the 20th player in that
While
Griffey·s
exclusive club. Griffey tned to deflect father, who hit 172 homers in his big ·
any questions about the meaning of the league career. came to watch his son
milestone.
thi's week, the two haven·t talked about
"I haven ' t hit it yet, so I can't tell . what the milestone would mean.
you how it will feel,. Griffey said
"We don't talk about things like
before Monday's 13-2 loss to the that." Griffey said. "As a father and
Athletics. ''We_'ll see when \he .time son · we don 't talk about accomplishcomes. Right now. I can't worry about ments. He comes in and asks where the
. how I'll feel three weeks from now. a kids are. Even when I played Little
month from now or whenever. I' m just League or basketball. he always asked
worried about today."
how the team did first, and then at the
·Griffey's entourage will have to wait el)d he · d ask how I did ...
at lea·st onnnore night. He went 1-forGri ffcy 's heralded return home to
3 with a single before leaving the game Cincinnati has not been the fairy tale
in the sixth inning trailing 11-2.
people thought it would be. Acquired
"I just threw him a lot of sinkers," in a trade with Se3ttle before the 2000
A's starter Mark Mulder said. ··If he season, Griffey signed a below-market
was going to hit a home ·run. I wanted $116.5 million. nine-year conttact JUSt
it to be off my best pitch."
· to be able to stay at home. ·
Even though the 34-year-old Griffey
But the assortment of injuries and
is poised to reach 500 faster than all losses turned the once happy-go-lucky.
but. five players, getting there has backwards-cap wearing kid into a frustaken longer than people thought.
trated veteran. The Reds even tried to
Gritfey finished the 2000 season trade him only to have. Phil Nevin
his first with Cincinnati - with 438 block a deal to San Diego after the
homers, trailing Barry Bonds by only 2002 season and an injury halt talk of
56, and seemed ready to reach 500 in a trade to the New York Yankees last
early 2002.
summer.
But three injury-plagued seasons
Now the Reds are in first place and
have delayed the milestone by two Griffey is happy to be coming to the
years. Now. instead of Griffey being ballpark. Most importantly. he is
the player mentioned as most likely to healthy.
break Hank Aaron's career record of
"There are good days and bad days.
755 home runs. it 's Bonds who has I just deal with it like every other playthat label with 674 homers.
er in the league," he said. ·'If I run into
"If he had stayed healthy. he would a wall. I run into a wall. If I have to
have done some awesome things." said dive I'll dive . If I get hurt doing that
Expos manager. Frank Robinson , one then I'll go home. It 's as simple as
of the memberS of the 500 C(Lib. •• It JUS I that.·•
wasn ' t to be. But he's still a young
Griffey's res urge nce has caught the
man as' far as this game is concerned." attention of his opponents.While the
After a slow start thi s season it A\ would prefer to watch Griffey
seemed as if Griffey would never reach the milestone on TV instead of
regain the form that made him an All- in person, they respect what he·s gone
Century player ahead of Bonds. through recently.
Pitchers challengei.I him with impunity
"You don·t ever want to see anyhody
and even intentionally walked Sean of that caliber get hurt so many times,"
Casey to face him- quite an insult for A's first baseman Scott Hatteberg said.
a player of Griffey"s caliber.
"I've always considered him to .be one
But over the past couple weeks. of the greatest players I've seen. To see
Griffey once again is hitting the way him get back where he was is great:·
he did when he was younger. He ha'

Associated Press
COLUMBUS- While 184
players were competing for 33
spots in the U.S. Open, the
United
States
Golf
Association was left to face a
lot of caustic comments.
With a cumbersome field
that included dozens of tour
players fighting for limited
spots in the Columbus sectiOnal, the pace of play was
glacial as officials tried to
complete the 36-hole qualifier.
"The USGA needs to apolo~ize to the people of the section here 111 Col umbU', for
putting 184 people at one
site," said Tom Pernice Jr..
who qualified for the Open
with a score of I0 under in
rounds at The Lakes and
Brookside Country Cluh' on
·Monday. "You ' ve got some
sites with 20 or 16 people.
You 'd think the USGA would
know better. but obviously
they don't."
·
The field teed off in threesomes at 7:30a.m .. going off
both the first and I Oth tees at
both ·courses. The last few
groups scrambled to finish as
darkness fell. Everyone completed play. but I 0 players
must return Tuesday morning
to particifate in a playotf for
the . fina seven qualifying .
,
spots .
Jesper Parnevik. who failed
to qualify with a pair of 2under 70s, said three groups
were backed up on his second
hole of the day - with 34
more holes to play.
The USGA acknowledged
that it put too many players in
the Columbu&gt; sectional , one
of eight played around the
country on Mond ay. There

'I

were f1ve sectionals scheduled
for Tuesday.
" I agree it's too many." said
USGA site official Jeff Hall .
"We've already had a discussion - it won ' t help us thi s
year - assuring that t.t doesn't
present this type of problem in
the. future."
Hall said the problem
stemmed from the large con.tingent of pros. competing one
day after the tina! round of the
Memorial Tournament, and
locally exempt players competing for spots. The USGA
permits those applying to
qualify for the Open' to speci1y where they wish to play.
"They know where most of
the spots are:· Hall sa id .
'They 're chasing the spots."
Still, most of those who
pl&lt;iyed in Columbus were
bunched around the leaderboard as day turned to twilight
and groups were still coming
off the course.
South African Tim Clark
was the medalist at the
Columbus, sectional with a 67
at Broobide and a 62 at The
Lakes. Also qualifying. were

Duffy Waldorf, Chris Smith,
Jeff
Maggert,
Aaron
Baddeley, Mark Calcavecchia,
Rory ·sabbitini and Wake
Forest senior BiH Haas, who
will join his father, Jay Haas,
at Shinnecock Hills in New
York next week .
Among those failing to
qualify were Mark O' Meara,
who won the Masters and
British Open in 1998, Paul
Azinger, Robert · qamez,
Frank Lickliter 11. Scott
McCarron and Tom Lehman .
''The last time I had to qualify' was in 1992," said
Lehman, who won the British
Open in 1996, "One of the
other guys qualifying that year
was Greg Norman. I remember asking ' How could . the
best player in the world have
to go through qualifying?' I'm
far from the best player in the
world right now ... ·
At qualifying in Summit,
N.J. , David Moreland IV and
J.P. Hayes shtired medal honors at S-under-par 134 at
Canoe Brook Country Club. A
tield of 1.3~ golfers competed
for 22 spots.

TROll
playing selections from his new CD

"White line Fever"
Saturday, Jun.e 12th
9:30 -1 :30
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-7986

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
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SPORTS
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coach. See Page B1

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d .. 1\ ··• ul•• .. I , •' .. ,

small communties that make up the
Ethtern Local di .strict.·· Edwards said.
"I really look forward to continu TUPPERS PLAINS . - Eastern
ing to wor~ with district personnel
High School Principal Ri cky D.
and th e communi!) to build upon the
Edwards of Pomeroy has heen
for nine yew·~ wu~ a achie.vcments of the past. Eastern
special
- education Local has developed ll reputation of
named the new su reri ntendent of
Eastern Local Schoo District.
teacher
and· being one of the fin es t school dis Occupational Work tricts in Ohio and I llttt1t to work hard
Meeting in special session on June
Adjustmellt teacher at continuing to build upon and .solid 4. the Eastern Local Board of
Education awarded Edwards a fourin Meig' Lo~al ify our place in the state and region:·
School Dtsuict.
year contract, beginning August I. and
"My primal) focus earlv on wil l
Edwa~ds
He is a Meig~ High be to f!et lU know the di~trlct from a
ending July 31. 2008. Ht~ will replace
Dervl Well , who has announced his School gmduate.
different perspecti1·c. As superinten''Growing up in Rutland , I wa~ dent. I expect I will hci\'C to see
retirement effective next month.
Edwards just completed his sixth year reared with the 'ame value,· and bv thins-s ~ume t irnes are differL·ntly·than
as principal of Eastem High School. . the same kind of people that fill the I dill as a building principal.··

"One of the district fo~use; over the
past few years has been to ti.l!.ter community involvement in the schools:·
Ed\\ _ards said. "I "ant to continue
\\ml ing on gettino huth the communi!) inmlwd in the schools and the
schnols1nloked in the commun ity."
..Fmm da; one. the dis~rict as a whole
has been verv kind and· supportive of
me and I ha,:e ~.great appreciation for
the wmmumty. Edwards sa1d. "The
studc1its who h;tve ~one through the
I1igh school during tne past six years
llal·e had a tremendous Impact on mx
lite both personally and profes"onally. ·
.. , w1ll mtss the suqamed dally
interaL· tion with the st udent, :·

Library opens Rutland book station
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RUTLAND - A different kind of library
fac.ility has opened at the Meigs Elementary
School in Rutland - a "book station'· to be
operated during the 'ummer months by the
Meigs County District Public Library. and
open to the general public.
The operation is designed to serve both
adult' and children in the Rutland area with
summer reading material, book' on tape.
videos. reference material and public internet access. said Kristi Eblin, director of the
Meigs County District Public Library. It
will serve.the public from the intermediate
library in the new elementary school , one
of two libraries in the building.
In addition to materials already in ph1ce in

the 'choollihrary. the facility will offer adult
llction and non-fiction books and other mate~
rials of inkre't to the gene ral puhli c. Readers
may also join the children\ and adult summer reading programs at the hoo~ 'tat ion.
Eblin said the book station will be open
from I to 5 p.m. Monday through Frid;~y.
through Augu't 20.
The library board ha s" long con,idcrcd a
Rutland-area branch. but Eblin _,;~ida frcoe
in state fundin g set aside for local library
operations ma~es a firth permanent library
impossible at thi' time.
"We hope that Iihrllry patron ' i11 the
Rutland community will make good useof
the book station this .su mmer... Eb lin solid.

Please see Book, AS

Padgett speaks at Meigs
Chamber luncheon
Bv

where the jobs will come from
and why they may be attracted
to southeast Ohio.
POMEROY - State ,enaDespite .some popular mistor Joy Padgett talked with conceptinn.s. Padgett ' said
busine ss and community Ohio is "a strong indu,trial
le;~ders at the Mci~s Count\· ' tate" that will contim1e "to
Chamber of Cll11llllerce ltni- make stuff that lasts fore1·er:·
cheon Tue...,dav about ..,ollle of While some manufacturing
her plan .' for tlie future when joh.s are leav ing. others are
and if she i.s re-elected.
attracted to Ohio hecause of
'"E&gt;erything that hitppen., is it..., lucation . infni\tructure
locally Jri1·c•f' sa id Padgett and &gt;e1l id "orkrorce.
who ,aid her mlc in ' late go vPadgett said agriculture
ernme nt i~ to help provi de th~ will continue to a big part of
tnoh local n unnwnilie-.; need Ohio's economy and ethanol
to accompli~h th eir goa l~ .
fuels will play a central role
Padi!etL wllo llas served as in the future. Meigs County
both ~tate representative and ha~ a huge farming commu Jircctor of the I.!Ovcrnor \
nit y and is .well known for its
oHicc of Appalachia. said jobs Ohio Ri\'er to rnatoe.., a~ well
arc a big priority for the region.

J. MILES lAYTON
JLAYTON@MYDAI LYS ENTI NEL .COM

P;tdg~ t-t

laid out ...,pecitics

a~

to

Plea.se see Padgett, AS

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
Beth
Shaver. current activities
director at the Senior
Citizens Center, has been
named interim director of
the Meigs Cmmty Council
on Aging, Inc .
Announcement of her
appo intrr\ent was made
today by Paul Reed, president of the Board of
Trustee,. Shaver assumed
operation of the agency
today. The resignation of
Mark Sutton of Athens,

dire~tor

since last
fall , was
effective
Tuesday.
Sh.av·er
b c g a n
employ ment
at
the Center
in 1987 as
Shaver
a respite
aide and
coordinator for Alzheimer''
disease and related disor"
ders. In 1988, she was
appointed mentiJI health
case m;Jnager, working in

that postt1on until 199 I
when she be~ame the communitv ~en• ice' Jirector.
She - was named '""lCiate
director of the Council on
Aging in llJ'!:l and served until
2&lt;XXJ. leaving the agency to JOin
Access to Human RcS1JUrce
Development in G;~lia County.
For the two years p1ior to
retuming to the Council on
Aging. she w~L.., a con . . ult;m! ;u1d

hilling sptx:iali't.
Shaver i.s a nati vt: of
Racine. graduated ln•m
Southern II igh Sd10ol and

Please see Shaver, AS

beautification
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOCFLICH@MYDAILYS[NTINEL.COM

POMEROY - The completic&gt;tl of downtown plami ngs. the up ~radin g of electrical c4uipmcnt on the 'tage.
i.llld the plann~d in..,tallatinn of

a -txX ··wekumc to Pomerov"
...,ir!n were i.HllOIH! t h~ topr4..'s
disl' u"ed at Tuc~day\ meet ing
of
the
PL&gt;mcroy
Merchants As.sociation .
lnh n Mu sser. president.
L':\ l l~ll dcJ arpreciatinn Ill tho:"!e

inHllved in plant ing the flowers and those who contributed
financi;\lly. He reported that
Bob "s Mur~et had given 20 .
llttts of tlower.s to the project.
;md a Sl.(XlO donation had
heen received toward the cost
nf the beautitication.
Heal") noted that the stage
has been rewired at a cost of
severa l hundred dollars to the
A"oci;ttion tmd that for the

Please see Merchants, AS

$9.00 - 15 words or less
+ $6.00 Kit

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®allipohs Jlailp m:rtbune
~oint ~leasant 3Register

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A:3

Dear Abby

3 Day Ad:

$6.00 - 15 words or less
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Gets You Great
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12 PAGES

Classifieds

S Al E

11 n

Shaver named interim director Merchants Association
of Meigs Council on Aging
discusses downtown

'

)!

Prior to tha·t. he
· worked for a year a'
an assistant prin~ipal
in the Warren Local
School Disuict. and

Lisa Stethem of the Meigs County District Public Library shelves books provided by the
library for the new "book station" at the Meigs Elementary School in Rutland. The new
summer 11brary will serve adults and children. (Brian J. Reed)

• Rutland alumni award
sCholarships. See Page A2
. • Parent group wants all
·schools to have heartshocking devices. See
Page A6

2 St:CTIONS· -

"

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Daily 3: 6..()·2
Dally 4: 7-7-6-5
Cash 25: 1-8-9-1 0-21-23

INDEX
.,

\1

Edwards named new Eastern superintendent

West Virginia

Details on Page A&amp;

..

1,

State senator Joy Padgett s hakes himds with Horace Karr, a
prominent business leader and owner of the Wild Horse Cafe.
Tuesday at the Me1gs Chamber luncheon at the Wild Horse
Cafe in Pomeroy. (J. Miles Layton)

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Takers even
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Sunday'• Retultl

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S1n Francl1co 500

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500

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W1
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San FranciSCO 10. Colorado 5

Rangers 6,

Pellowrf

26

...•••

Strlt

Monday's Ae1utts

PIHaburgh
ab r hb•
Kendall c 4 1 1 0
JWtlsr ss 5 0 0 0
Ward lb
5 0 0 0
CW1Isn 11 4 1 1 2
MckwiiH
412 0
S1mondh 2 0 0 0
RMatso rtr 0 0 0 0
Caslollo 2b 4 0 t 2
Ho!l 3b
3.1 0 0
TRdmllcl 4 t I 1
Totals 35 5 6 5

Mohr rl
4~10
Lmdenll
21 0 0
Trra.lba c
5 12 3
RI1SOm ss 2 0 t 0
Minor1b 20 t 1
Tomkop
2 0 0 0
DCruzph 1 0 0 0
Prz yns ph t 1 1 0
Tohlls 38101510

.§61
.527

P10

Sunda~ 's. Rl!tuJtt.s

San Fran
.
ab '
Tucker- c1 :2 1
N~rei: 2t1 5:2
Fel12 tb
6 2

abrhbi
M1les2b
4 2 3 a
LuGnzl ss 3 0 0 0
Helton 1b 2 1 1 1
Csst1lla 3b 4 1 1 2
Bumuct 3 1 2 2
CJhson "c 3 0 0 a
Hl.clayH
4 000.

25
26

Gl

Home

Boston 5. l(ans.as CJty 3
M1nnesota 6. De1r011 5
Clewland 7 Anahe1m 0
Oakland 8, 1'oronto J
Seat1le 5, Ch1cago s~~ 4

Co1or1do

.....

NY Yankees 2. Texas 1

Glan1s 10, Rockies 5

2 3

·34
33
30

Cr11cago Cues
Milwaukee
Pmshurgl'l

Los Angeles (Noma 3·5) a1 Toronto !Lolly 4·2). 1 05 p_m
Atlanta (Hampton 1-6) at Dclrool rJonnson 4-6). 105 pm
San Diego (£J.Walls 2·4) at Boston iPMar1 1nel 5·3). 7:05pm
Flonda (Woth s·5·3) at CIB\Ieland (C Lee 5· 1). 7"05 p m
An:zona (Johnson 7-4) at Balbmore (Penson 3-15)_ 7:05p.m
Colorado (Fassaro Q-5) at NV Yankees (Vazquez 6-41. 7 05 p m
San FranciSCO p WoH.ams 4-4] at Tampa Bay /Weechler :J-5) 7 15 p m
Potlsbi.Jfgh (QI.F\!rez 3·3) at Te•as t8enoo12·21. 8·05 ~ m
Philadelphia (MadSDrl 3· I) at Choeago Wh~e Sa;. (Buehrle 5·1 ). 8-05 p m
N.Y. Mels (Giavone 6-J) at M•nnesota (Aa!J&lt;e 4-3). B. 10 p m
Montreal (Armas- Jr. 0·01 a1 Kanills C1ty (Gra nq~ 0· 1). 8 10 p m
HQIJliton (Clemens 8·01 at Seattle lP1ne ro 1-7). 10:05 p.m.
MilWaukee r ~heets 5·Ji a1 Anane•m (Es&lt;;obar 4·2). 10:05 o 'n
CIOCif'tnal• IBt 'osle 0·01 at Oakland tli10 3-3). 10:05 pm

Alfonzo 3b 6 1 3 1

w

Houston

1\.tesctey·• Gwne1

32

18

81 LOUIIO

Batt1more 5, Tampa Bay 4

Seanle 5 Houston 0

Oakland 13, C111C111neh 2

h bi
t 0

28
28

ColoraDo

MondfrW''I R"ultl
Te•as 6. Pittsburgh 5, {iO)

l

. !AST

33

35

Tuesday, June 8, 2004

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�COMMUNITY

' The Daily Sentinel

Rutland -a lumni
:award scholarships

•

.'
I

RUTLAND- Recognition Marie Little Birchfield. 1951. Wilcox. Joan Rife Wolfe:
of alumni and reunion classes and the late Bill Willford. 1952. 1958. Emma Hysell Cro-s.
and awarding of three schol- who will attend the UniversitY Charlotte Birchfield Grant.
arships highlighted the 75th of Rio Gmnde, majoring ii1 ' Thomas Jeffers, John R.
Priddy. ELra Jim Sheets.
annual Rutland High School mcdicaltechno!Cigy.
Preceding the .:atered din- Shjirley Sue Turner.
Alumni banquet held at the
1959.
R u t Ia n d
ner. Danny
Tillis. class ,.---~-.- L i n d a
C i v i c
Turley Ball,
C e n t e r.
. of
1964,
D a v i d
More than
gave
the
Carson.
300 alumni
invocation
D a n n· y
and guests
and a vote
Cremeans.
attended.
of thanks
Elaine
Richard
w
a
s
Steele Gyer.
N e I s on ,
extended to
Loui se
vice presiC h r i s
Par s ons
dent. preHunon for 1111•111
Eads. Dee
sented sper e c e n t
Willford
a"•ard
Barnes
Stewart
n
improveThoma s
Cl.al
certificates to Eugene Fink. ments to the civic center.
Easter. Lanna Tumer Goode.
Other alumni attending and Jim gr..tham. Shirley Ballenger
class of 1933, the oldest
alumnus in attendance with a their respective classes were: Head. Keith Kennedy. Janet
perfect allendance record of
i 9~0: Dorothy Colwell Caton Ladd. Eddie Long.
71 years.
Emmons. Frances Hendrix. Belly Jeffers Longstreth. Larry
Seventy-year certificates Marjork Stanley Rice: 1941. May. Judy Gallion McGuire.
went to four members of the Belle Dunfee Biggs, Maxine Jack Morris. Roger Musser.
class of 1934. Vera Clark Ogdin Griffith. and Kathleen Richard Nelson. Allen Page.
Crem~ans,
Albert Queen Haley Tillis: 1942. James C. Andrea Cross Parr. Phyllis
Smith. Marjorie Hysell Wilt, Lanning. Robert Snowden, Williams · Rife, Ronald Rife,
and Doris Nelson Thomas. . Kathleen Smith Rogers. and Barbara Jones Steele. and
Also presented certificates James B. Thomas: 1943. Jean Larry Turley.
were
·Bernice
Snyder Amos Redden: 1944. Leafy
1960, Linda Cremeans
. Spaulding and Harold · C. Orraham Chasteen, Faye Boyles. Alberta Hawkins
Rice. class of 1935, and Reeves Hammond, Edwin . Brewer, John Brogan. Eloise
Robert Smith and John Nelson. Richard Ruipe , Musser Carson, Patty Young
Stanley. class of 1939.
Eleanor Taylor Thomas. Clark. Linda Haley. Clara
Recipients of the Rutland Galen Will: 1945. Delma Mae Hysell , Irene Searles
High School 2004 Alumni Riggs Nelson. Goldie Knotts Kennedy, Judy
Slawter
Scholarships were announced Nelson, and Harry Snowden. Marinacci. Margie Priddy
1947, Meryl Houdashelt. Rife, Wayne Roush, Dottie
by Suzy Parker, assisted by
Maxine Ogdin Griffith and Merle Reeves Johnson, John Lucas Turner; 1961, Charles
Phillips, Catherine Colwell Barrett. Jr.; Marvin Cremeans,
Joan Rife Wolfe. .
Parker noted that over the Shenefield; 1948, Charles
past 17 years; 81 scholarships "Bill" Buck ; . 1949. Phyllis James William Hobstettcr.
have been awarded, funded Burson Amos, Charles Amos, David Martin, Richard Rife.
solely by alumni donations, Helen Taylor Atkison. John Louise Milnm Soulsby, Elena
·.with a colle~e completion . Dyke, Carol Dawson Pack. Martin Thompson.
1963.
Sue
Rathburn
rate by recipients of 99 per- Eugene Richards, Carroll
Graham.
Charles
Hoffman,
cent. She said donations to Snowden. Raymond Thomas.
the fund may be sent anytime Barbara Starbuck. Weygandt. Di"ck Lambert, Bobby Pope:
1964 ..Charldene King Alkire,
to Rutland High School Lanada Thomas Wilcox.
Alumni ·
Association,
1950, Bill Brown, Maxine Calvin Biddle, Jerry Black,
Scholarship Committee, Box Rumfield Dyer, Avanell Ancil Cross, Karen Oi Ikey
125. Rutland, Ohio 45775 .
Jordan George. Samuel Bruce Harrington.
Paul
King,
She reminded the alumni May. Paul Patterson. Roben Danny McDonald. Roberta
that a child or grandchild of Wilcox. Mickey Williams: Smith Meyer. Ellis Myers.
an alumnus who is a gradual- 1951. Jack Barton , Marie Carolyn Brickles l'erry,
ing senior in high school may Little Birchfield. Virgil Rosemary Harless Pope.
apply for a scholarship by · Likens, Joan Snowden May, Linda Hicks Rife, Gerald
submitting an ofticial tran- Henry McKnight. Virginia Saxton, Pamela Wilson
script including at least the Moore Michael, Rose Slawter Shephard, Benny Slawter,
first semester grades from the Patterson, Shirley Cremeans Danny Tillis, Dixie Roush
senior year on a 4.0 scale, a Simmons, and Lowell Vance . Waters,
George White,
1952,
Ainslee
Wilson
letter of career intent, name
and graduation year of quali- · · McKnight. Vivian Hysell Sharon Quillen Wise.
1965, Suzy Parker ·Hysell.
fying alumnus, college to be Robinson:
1953.
Joan
Johnston.
William
attended, and publicity photo Montgomery Corder. Nell Rice Cecil
.
Lambert,
Judy
Cremeans
by May I of each year.
Dicken. Bill Graham, Judy
While past scholarship Lamben Snowden ; 1954, McDoinald. Ronnie Taylor:
Barbara
Cottri II
recipients have been gradu- Monis Goff, Robena Hysell 196o,
Cremeans,
Sam
Hicks.
Jr
.. Mary
ates from high schools Jeffers. Donald King. Donna
around Ohio and other states , Hysell Morgan. Donna Bolen Crpuser Hobstetter, Jean Tillis
all of this year's recipients Nelson, Marian Reed Smith, Weaver: 1967, Roger Alkire,
were Meigs High School Donald
Swisher,
Bill Lori Godby Joe Hawkins. Lilly
graduates.
Williamson; 1955, Jack Bolen, Imboden Kennedy. San1 Larkin,
They were Tyler Barnes, Russell
Carson,
John Sue Clonch Larkin. Kathry
grandson of Robert Snowden. Montgomery. Alberta Snowden Thoma~ Schultz. Jim Vanaman.
1942, and Judy Lambert Montgomery. Jim Nelson, Jack and Darlene Smith Vanaman:
Snow9en, 1953. _who plans to Perry, and Paul Shoemaker.
1968. Gerald Drenner and Larry
attend Capitol University,
1956, Weldon Bartrum. Montgomery.
Lynn
Bartrum
majoring in political science Sharon
The ·evening was concludimd sociology;
Miranda Benschoter, Janet Turner ed with the group singing the
Stewart, granddaughter of Joan Bolin, Joe Bolin. Bill Brewer. school song led by Janet
Utsinger Stewan. 1950, who Harold Carson, Jim Dyer. Bolin and accompanied by
plans to allend Buckeye Hills Donna Will Higgins. and Catherine
Shenefield.
Community College and Larry Pickens; 1957 John
Hocking College, to pursue a Jeffers, Kenneth Longstreth, Entenainment was by Dee
nursing degree; and Jamitha Henry Milam , Robert Rife, and Dallas.
Willford, granddaughter of Jerry Schoonover, Raymond

Chester Class of 1954 reunites
CHESTER - The Chester
High School Class of 1954
celebrated their 50th anniversary recently with a picn ic
luncheon at Chester. A decorated cake using the school
theme was served.

Attending were Allen
Brown and his wife, Regina,
of New Philadelphia; Shirley
Summerfield Roush and her
husband. Larry. of Altamonte
Springs, Fla.: Paul and
Shirley . Hayes Scott of

Kodak , Ind .: Donna Dorst
Story of Marysville: Kathleen
Hayman Secktnan of Long
Bottom: Nora Wolfe Hartman
of Chester; Esther Hayes
Smith, and her husband ,
Scottie, of Chester.

Aanestad addresses retired teachers

•

POMEROY -. Jane Ann
Aanestad of Karr Audiology
and Hearing Aids in Athens
spoke recently to the Meigs
County Retired Teachers
Association when they met
recently for a noon Iuncheon
at the Wild Horse Cafe in
Pomeroy.
Aanestad sa id some signs
of hearing loss include difficulty understanding speech
in crowds, difficulty hearing
the television or telephone
'conversations, and often
asking people to repeat
themselves.
Communication is essential to the quality of life.
Aanestad said, ;o if these
symptoms occur, a certified
audiologist should be con"
tacted .
She noted that advance(J
technology in hearing aids
has broqght about the devel-

• _:;....;. •• ~ -- ·-....,.··•

~ -~ ...

'
opment of programmable
digital hearing aids, but programmab le aids can be the
conven ti onal analog type, as
we ll .
A hearing instrument plan
is avai lable to retired Ohio
teachers. ORTA members
can save ·money by using
this plan , but a provider is
not located in southeastern
Ohio.
During the business meeting, Jake Frowine, District
VII Director, reported to the
group that ORTA representatives at all J I· district conferences
overwhe lmingly
approved OCHER. the Ohio
Council of Hi gher Educati on
Retirees. as an affiliate of
the ORTA . This will help the
association grow in both
number' and in influence
with legislators and State
Teachers Retirement System

•

PageA2

'r -•,.-•• - · - - · -· - -·- .. ·~--

board members.
He &lt;llso informed the association that STRS recently
adopted a health care assistance' program (HCAP) that
looks at household incomes
and provides increased premium. medical and prescription cost assistance for lowincome retired educators.
Under the HCAP plan.
members wit~ hou s~hold
incomes less than . $20.000
annu ally and liquid assets
under $20,000 can qualify
for assistance.
Dahlias from
Debbie
Roush were presented to
Aanestad and Jake and June
Frowine.
President Gay Perrin welcomed a new member.
Michael Winebrenner. and
Maxine Whitehead gave
devotions before the meal.

Wednesday, June 9, 2004

Bailey celebrates 85th birthday
POMEROY
Alpha
Bailey of Rocksprings Road.
Pomeroy. celehrated her !55th
birthdav May 19. 200~.
Refresh'ments were served to
family members at the home
of .her son and daughter-inlaw. Roger and 'Yvonne
Young.
Those attending were her

sister,. Bessie William' and
Ola St. Clair. Other familv
members attending · were
Shelia Turner. Wesley. Jodi.
Victoria
and
Madi son
Young: Yveue and Bobby
Epling: Joe and Ida Mae
Stanley:
Nancy
Burns:
Karen, Donnie and Hunter
Randolph: Gail and Myrtle

St. Clair; Jeff and Erin
Cogar:
Ti sha. Autumn
Willi ams: David Davis:
Gage and Breanna Barrett:
Carolyn and Craig Wi bon:
Janet. Kathy and Kimberl y
Peavley. Maarten and Lucille
Swart. Eddie and Louise
Foreman. her sister-in-law
and her husband called.

Local grant money available
from March of Dimes
POMEROY - The Ohio
Chapter of the March of
Dimes is currently accepting
letters of intent for its 2005
Community Grants.
As part of the 27 -county
area served by the Central
Ohio Division of the March
of Dimes, the Meigs County
Health Department has been
the beneficiary of funding
for many years.
The Community Grants
Program is designed to
in vesl in projects that
address the March of Dimes
funding priorities using a
··direct service to clients" or
··health professional education" approach . Orimts are
intended to be start-up or
"seed money" to provide for
· and stimul ate the development or expansion of ser-

vices and programs.
The Community Grants m-e
funded through a variety or
special evenL&gt; held ¢roughout
the year.in the 27-county area
served by the Centr.U Ohio
Division. Those counties are
Ashlm1d. Athens. Coshoc~on.
Cmwford, Delaware, Fairfield.
Fayette. Franklin. Gallia.
Hocking. Jackson, Knox.
Licking. Madison. Marion.
Meigs, Morgan. Morrow,
Muskingum. Perry. Pickaway,
Pike. Richland. Ross. Union.
Vinton and Washington .
Letters of intent and progr.un
abstracls are due hy 4 p.m ..
July 15. Grant applications m-e
due by 4.p.m., Sept. 10.
Anyone interested J.n
obtaining a Request for
Proposal. with a complete
li st of funding priorities. for

the 2005 Community Grants
should
contac t
Nancy
Cum1ingham at the Central
Ohio Di vision of the March
of Dimes at (614)-486-5243
or 1-800-686-2569.
The March of Dimes is a
national voluntary health
organization whose mission
is to improve the health of
babies by preventing birth
defects and infant mortality.
Founded in 1938, the March
of Dimes funds programs of
research. community services, education and advocacy to save babies. More·
information is available on
the March bf Dimes Web
S
•
t
e
s
www. marchofd imes.com
and www.nacersano.org.

Quilters plan summer activities
POMEROY - The Bits N'
Piecers Quilters Guild met
recently at the Pomeroy
Library for a working session on quilting and to finalize plans for summer meeting and trips .
At the next meeting, June
22, the group will meet at the ·
library at 6:30p.m. They will
have .a
"fat quart er"
exchange {pieces measured
18x22 inches) and decorated
program guides will be
Judged.
Members
are

reminded that reservations
need to be placed at the
meeting for the Amish
Country trip on June 26.
Members are to meet at 7
a.m. at the Park and Ride at
the end of State Route 124 to
carpool.
On July 17 the group will
take a trip to Creations Sew
Clever in Chillicothe. Plans
will be finalized at the June
meeting.
New members and beginning sewers are always wel-

come . . Further information
can be obtained from
Saundra Tillis. president at
742-2572, or from Debbie
Bullington, secretary at 7420212.
----------

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

---

Community Calendar
Public meetingsWednesday, June 9 .
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Board of Health will
meet at 5 p.m. in the conference room of the Meigs
County Health Department.
Thursday, June 10
MIDDLEPORT - The governing board of the AthensMeigs Educational Service.
Center will meet at 7 p.m. at
the Bradbury Learning Center
located at 39105 Bradbury
Road, Middleport.
CHESTER - The Shade
River Lodge #453 F&amp;AM
regular meeting will be at
7:30 p.m. at the lodge.
Refreshments will be served.
SYRACUSE
The
Syracuse Volunteer Fire
Department basket bingo wi II
b_e held at 6 p.m. at the
American Legion Hall in .
· Middleport.
Friday, June 11

NELSONVILLE
Region
14
Workforce
Investment CEO consortium
will be held at 8 a.m. at the
Ramada Inn, Nelsonville.
NELSONVILLE
A
Region
14
Workforce
Investment board meeting
will be held at 9:30 a. m. at
the Ramada lnr.. Nelsonville.

meal. Fathers will be recog·
ni zed. The camp will furni sh
meat. rolls. drinks and table
service.
Monday, June 14
LONG BOTTOM A
meeting of the Meigs County
Republican Party will be held at
7:30 p.m. Monday at the Long
Bottom Community Center.

Clubs and
organizations

Church
services

Thursday, June 10
Sunday, .June 13
TUPPERS PLAINS MASON.
W.Va -A
VFW Po~t 9053. meal at 6:30 gos pel concert for mi ssions
p.m .. meeting at 7:30.
will be held at the Christian
Friday, June II
Brothers Church in Mason,
POMEROY
The W. Va. beginning at 6 p.m
Widow 's Fellowship will Saturday.
Singers
will
meet at noon at the Wild include Ray and Deloris
Horse Cafe.
Cundiff.
Sandra
Wi se.
Saturday, June 12
Claudette Harbin . Together
BURLINGHAM
for Chrisdt. The Kin 2 Kids,
Burlingham Camp, Modem . Matt Scott, and DMarty
Woodmen, will meet at the Short. For more lnformaton
hall at 6 p.m. for a potluck call 304-773-5892.

'

Notify Social Security of name changes·
This time of year keeps
wedding planners especially
busy.
If you are among the hundreds of thousands of women
who will be exchanging marriage vows in the next couple
of months, you also may be
exchanging your maiden
name for a married name.
(And that would include
those women who plan to use
hyphenated surnames. such
as Smith-Jones.)
So here is one more thing
for brides to add to their todo list: .if you are working
and . wi II be making a name
change- let Social Security
know. Telling us about your
- name change shortly after
you have tied the knot will
help us accurately keep track
of your earnings. and will
ensure that you and your
family get the Social Security
retirement, disability or survivors benefits you are entitled to. Also. if the Internal

Revenue Service and Social to change your name at a
Security records do not show later time. yqu should let us
the same name and Social know so that we can update
Security number. your feder- your Social Security record.
al income tax refund could be
T~e name change process
delayed.
is simple and free. You will
You should also know that
need .to complete
an
your employer cannot update
your Social Security record Application for a Social
to show your name change. Security Card. and show us
originals or certified copies
Only you can do that.
If you do not plan to work of either your marriage ceroutside the ' home, you still tificate showing your old and
should report any naine new names or two documents
change to Social Security so - one • with your former
that vour Social Security name and one with your marrecord will show your mar- ried name. If you were born
ried name and make it easier outside the U.S ., you also
if you apply for benefit s on need proof of_ your U.S. citiyour husband's earnings zenship or that you are lawrecord.
fully living in the U.S.
Of course. today many
To get a copy of an
women continue to use their
Application
for a Social
maiden name after marriage .
If you continue to use your Security Card. visit our
website ·
at
maiden name consistently Internet
throughout your working www.socialsecurity.gov: call
years, you do not need .to our toll-free number, 1-800contact us. But if you decide 772-1213.
'

1

Insomnia maybe due to depression, disease
. 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!

Surprise

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Question : I ·have trouble insomnia usually goes away
sleeping at night. I get to by itself when the stressful
sleep easily, but I wake up in situation is resolved. If it lasts
the middle of the night and longer than that or comes and
can't get back to sleep. This goes over a long period of
has been going on for a cou- time, you may have chronic
ple of months now. It doesn't insomnia. This can be a
happen every night, but it symptom of depression or can
happens more nights than be related to another health
not. What is causing this and condition like menopause .
what can I do about it?
You need to see you' doctor,
but
in the meantime here are
Answer: It sounds like you
have insomnia. From a med- a few se lf- h~lp measures you
ical standpoint, insomnia is a can try:
• Avoid caffeine and nicorather broad term that covers
both difficulty in initiating tine. They are stimulants and
sleep and in mainktining sleep. can keep you awake.
• Avoid alcohol. It might
Specifically, a person with
insomnia frequently suffers help you fall asleep, but it can
from at least one of the follow- wake you up in the middle of
ing: trouble falling asleep, dif- the night.
• Give yourself at lea st
ficulty getting back to sleep
after waking . up during the three hours between exercise
night or too early in the morn- and bedtime.
ing. and un-refreshing sleep.
• Try to go to sleep and
Insomnia can be either pri- wake up at the same time
mary or secondary. Primary every day, even on the weekinsomnia is not caused by any end.
• If you aren't able to sleep
other health problem or condition. Secondary insomnia is after a reasonable length of
caused some other factor. time , get out of bed until you
This might include health ·begin to feel drowsy.
It's also important to create
conditions such as emphysema, a bout with poison ivy or a good sleep environment.
clinical depression. It co uld This means not only a comalso be as a result of the treat- fortable mattress and pillow
ment for another health con- but also a cool temperature, a
dition; a common example of relatively dark room and a
this is a medication that has lack of distracting noi se.
insomnia as a side effect. Or; Some noi se, like the sound of
secondary insomnia can be raindrops. ocean surf. or so- '
simply the result of some bad called "white noise," can help
habit like drinking too many induce sleep. Machines that
caffeine beverages, consum- simulate · these sounds are
ing too much alcohol, or exer- available.
You need to see your doccising too close to bed time .
tor
to find out if an underlyAcute insomnia, which
lasts less than three weeks, is ing medical condition is
often the result of current "life causing your insomnia. One
situations." In these cases the of the first things that he or

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Send Coupon and Payment to: The Dally Sentinel "Father's Day" ·
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Deadline For This Special Father's Day Tribute Is
Friday, June 11, 12:00 Noon ..

Teens' budding relationship
gives parent cause for concern
DEAR ABBY: My daughter, "Chris," i&gt; 14. She 'II be
graduating from eighth grade
in a couple of weeks. Over
the last few months. I have
been driving her and a group
of boy' and girls to the
movies on Friday nights. Thi.s
has evolved into a romantic
relationship with a IS-yearold boy, ';Bob." who lives
close by and is in her class. In
her junior high school, this is
described as "going out."
I know they kiss. They
also dance together at a local
hangout on Saturday ni ghts.
I could refuse to drive them
to the movies together. but
they would probably meet
there anyw~y,
Chris has a level head on
her shoulders. She\ a good
girl and active in our church.
We talk openly together.
Abby, can you guide.me in
this'' I trust my daughter. but I
am also aware that 14- and
15-year-olds have a lot of raging honnones. Please advise .
- WISHES KIDS CAME
WITH HANDBOOKS
DEAR WISHES: I agree
that teenagers have raging
hormones, and the most
intelligent way to deal with
it is to kee p the teens occupied . You are already on the
right track, keeping the lines
of commumcatton open. lor
which I applaud you.
I sec no harm in your
daughter being at the movies
with this boy and a group of
friends on weekends in light
of the fact that you are providing the tmnsportation and
they arc in a group. But mu.:h
of her free time should be
· occupied with constructive
pursuits such as spo~s. vol-

afternoon rcmini'&gt;cing abnut
his days as a teacher and
mine a·; a student. Although
I don't remembe r much
abou t the ,uhject.s he taugiH.
I will ne1er for~et the tim r
he spent '"th us-_ laughing
while we played footb;dl on
the playground. crying "h~n
a da&gt;'mate pa,ed a,,·ay. He

Dear
Abby

wa~ a l way~

unteer work. muO,ic and acri 1jties that will give her ..,crvice credit s· toward .:ollege.
Develop her inlcre&gt;t&gt;. Keep
her goal-oriemed. Encourage
her ' to devc!Dp platon"i.:
friendships. You can't preven t your daughter from
growing up. but

~ou

can give

her guide line ~ anU ma"-e \ure
her time is '-'ell spent.
DEAR ABBY: From
fo urth to ninth ~rade. I
atte nded a smal l Chri&gt;tian
school in Delaware. II wa&gt; a
great experience hecau se the
teachers and the studcnh
were able to rea II 1 ~et to
know one another. - . _

.

One of the teachers. Mr.
C .. was one of Ihe hest ;t slliJ~nt could ever h&lt;lre to
ha\.·e. Learning v.a ... fun ill
the subjects he taugh t, especially U.S. hi story. Can you
imag ine taking a da~s nf ~()
on an overn ight campin~
trip to Getlysburg"
"
While tal ki ng to my mom.
who was a co-teacher with
Mr. C.. about an upcoming
business trip lo Ashe1·i lle.
N.C.. Mom mentioned that
Mr. C. Ii ves there and
encouraged me to try to ftnd
him. Wl'll, it turned out 1ha1
Mr. C. was the only Mr. C.
in the Asheville phone book.
We spe nt a wnnderfu l

there for u ....

One of his fa,·orite line '
\\as: ··Don't hurt him~ He is
the onlv one we ha1e like
him' .. :\;,,.,. that I v-.orl 11 it h
L'htld ren. I find myself usin g
hi s fa1·oritc phrase.
· Ahb) .. pk:a..,t! encouragt:"
)our reader.., w take the tlllll'
if• kx•k: back and thank th&lt;"e

teachers 11 ho made a diffc.renc·e in !heir li1·es. The1
helped to make LIS who we arC
toda\ . and it \\ uuld be re\\ ani in~ i'ur them tu "ee the fru ih
o( thet r lahors. - GRATEFl'L If\ 1-&lt;0RTHER N OHIO
DEAR GRATEFUL: I
ha\ e -.aid il before amJ rIll
plea..,ed to ~ay it again :

EITrHlll~ \\'ants to know
that he tlr she h~s made a
difference. Teachers don ·l

earn · mud1 in the wa\' pf

'alarie" li'llers and calis of
appreciation from formn
students can he cxtrcmclv
gratifying to former teachers
who have helped to shape
our lives. So if vou·\·e hee n
pulling it oil why no1 do i1
llll\\''~

Deur Ah/J\ i., IITitt~' n IJ\
\(m Buren. ui.\;J
knoii'N {f.\ lc'wnre Plrillips.
am/ 11 '0.\ {ounded /n htr
1110Tite1: Pauline Pliillil'' ·
Writ&lt;' Dear Al&gt;ln
at
· 11 ,-,·.DearA!Jhr.tD/11 ,;,. PO.
Box 6'N.JU Lo.s Angtles. C4
9006'1.
Ahi,~·ail

Raci_ne High School celebrates 50th reunion
'

RACINE - Racine High
School's Class of 1954 celebrated its 50th reunion May
29, at the Racine Public
Library and at the RacineSouthern Alumni Banquet
that evening.
The class entered Racine
Hi gh School in September
1950 with 60 students and
graduated May · 1954 with
35. Out of 31 living members. 18 attended the ·day 's
events.
After opening comments
by Alice Wam sley. Ron
McDade read the class
prophecy and Norman Roush
and Oscar Badgley spoke.
The group enjoyed lunch,
looking at photogntphs and
remmtscmg.
Each allendee was given a
yellow carnation from the
centerpiece, a decorated candie and holder inscribed with

'

Cu ndiff. Jr .. "B udd y" of
Sebring. Fla .. Patty Oiler
Brown and d&lt;tughter. Lee
Ann Williams of Mineral
Wel ls,
W.Va..
Loretl&lt;t
(Davis) &lt;tnd Ron McDade of
Athens. Oscctr B ad~ lev of
Centerville. Dot'&gt;cl ·and
Doro1I1y
Wilso n
of
Sissonville. W.Va .. Shirk v
(Powel l I
Shivley
of
Columbus, Marlene (Clark )
and Cecil Hil l of Westervil le.
Bonnie {Badgley) and Brian
Simpson ,o f Baltimore. Dale
Johnson ofWad,wonh. Alice
(Fisher)
Wamsley
of
Pomeroy, Mary {Martin) and
Jim Cline of Beverly. EJ,ie
(S inger ) and Gene Wells.
Owosso, Mich.. JoAnn
(Wilford! Proffitt. Long
Bottom. Shirlev iStobartl
and Tom
R·aberts nf
Le xin gton .
Ky..
Jane
(G ilmore) and Bob 13eegle. ·

Joyce (Hartl Manual · &lt;tnd
2ra nddau ~lncr.
Brcanna
Manual. ' Lillian 1Pov-. ell I
Weese: Maralvn iC leland l
C'&lt;Jpretl&lt;l and I :trry Wolfe all
of Racine:

The grolqJ

wa ~

joined at the nening ban~Lte t
by clasSina le Sh;irl ene
(Dee m) and Den1er Orav of
Roc kbrid 2c.
·
The group expressed
appreciation 10 cl a"mate.s.
Jane Beeg le and Alice
\Vam . . ley foJ' organitin ~ !he
!..!t'l-logelher.
lund1 and ·
nlemory book let. and decorations in keeping ll'ith the
class colors of .silver and
~ reen.

Thank" '' cr~ a l~n

gi\e n to Boh Rel.'~le and lu

Linda Co;.art a11d the Rac ine

Publ ic Libran .
Th e class 1i·ill be pla n1iing
a pic ni&lt;: fnr the summe r nf
2005.

class
andcomposed
date. as well
as a n&lt;tme
booklet
of · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - many high school pictures
and memories. The memory
booklet was dedicated to the
four deceased class members, Donna H.olter, Franklin
71te Dail1• Sentinel
Lew is. ' Gary Parsons and
Subscribe
todar • 675 ;1333
Marl ene Shields. Fisher.
\\'\1 ~ fliyda i /.''rCg iSf e COt/ I
The group talked with
classmate, Janet Wolfe Oiler
I
in Englewood, Fla .. who is
reco veri ng from surgery. .~~~~~~llllllllllllllllll-~111111,....,1111111111111111111111111..- ...
Everyone signed a ge t-well
--~
------- card fo r class mate, Earl
(Woody) Cleek.
Those in attendance were
YOUR HAIR ' SbMEWI;lERE ..
Norman and Janet Roush of
Charleston, Glenn 1"-:ltn

PROUD TO BE APART OE YOUR LIFE.
1

\\

f

SAVE $10

on Perms

pric~d from. 5.49

.

RED KEN
Buy anytwo,
get one FR.EE
.. Sale ends july 11· .ir\14

I

City/State/Zip._______________ Phoneo__________

conditions. Past columns are

al'aihible online at \\'Ww.jamilymedicine news. org.

Wednesday, June 9 , 2004

'

{of equal or/( .~H'I 1·arue)

Father 's Name._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Address ___________________________________________

she will want to consi der is
the poss ibility that your are
depressed. If so, successful
treatment of the depression,
often with medication , will
resolve the insomnia . .
If you aren't depressed,
there are other drugs that can ,
be used to help you sleep, but
most aren't good for long-term
use. If your doctor recommends behavioral therapy such things as relaxation techniques or reconditioning- be
patient. It may take up to a
month before you see results.
Fami/r Medicine® is a
u·eeklr ·colwnn . To submit
questions. IV rite w Martha A.
Simpson. D.O .. M.B.A .. Ohio
Unil:ersitr
College
of
Osteopathic Medicine, PO.
Box 110, Athens, Ohio 45701 ,
or l'ia e-mail to readerques·
1i 011 s ®fer Itt ilymedi c,inene H·s. o
'K Medical it!fonnatiott in
this colwitn is prm·ided as w1
~duca tional serl'ice nnlr. It
does not replace rite )itdgment u(wlllr personalphvsician. who should be reliNI on
to diagno.ve and recommend
treatment }i1r any m~dical

PageA3

. COUPON

·---------------~--------------------~CirCle One: A. 1X3 Greeting ... $10.00 B. 1X5 Greeting with Picture ... $13.00 ,

Will be given in MEIGS COUNTY by

1

1
Dr. A. Jackson Bailes Office
1
New Location:507 Muliberry Hghts, Pomeroy, OH I
I
Friday, JUNE 11 , 2004
• FREE DELIVERY
·1
(740) 446-1744 • 9 to noon
I • FREE REMOVAL OF OLD APPLIANCES
Call Toll Free 1·80Q-634-5265 for an Immediate appointment. I
I The tests wlll be given by a Licensed Hearing Aid Specialist.
I
1 Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding 1
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.

Anf'l

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,wlroim9Mul•

--------------WALK·INS wELCOME

..

,.
•

BYTHE .BEND

The Daily Sentinel

·-----

------

...

Pom~!:.~~~..:!!~~!,671 f3C •

fi[Sl
HAIR

SAL ON\

fiestasalons com

sun: 10-5

�•

OPINION

·The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

..,,

11.1 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

...

. www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

.' .
•.

.....
.
' .

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

·----------~~-------------------

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting1he0
.· free exercise thereof; or abridging the
freedom of speech, or of the press; or thf!
right of the people peaceably to assetnble,
and to petition the Government for. a
•
redress of grievances. ·
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER~S

Cemetery .
Identify flowers
Dear Editor:
Due to the strong winds of June I. many cemetery tlowers
were blown off the graves at Sand Hill Cemetery. The tlowers

·.

PageA4

• Wednesday, June 9, 2004

che~:k

2004

Animal rights activists or thugs?
A federal grand jury in
Newark, N.J., recently
indicted seven animal rights
activists on charges of 'animal enterprise terrorisn1.'
All are linked to an
extremist
group.
Stop
Huntingdon Animal Cruelty,
or SHAC, which has targeted
Huntingdon
Life
Sciences, a British-founded ,
New Jersey-based pharmaceuti&lt;:al te"ing company
that uses animals in its test-

Joseph
Perkins

ee and slash the tires on hi s

Christie describes them promise they will not stop at
merely destroying buildings.
·A II customers and their
families are considered legitimate targets.' they warn.
That 's why it is so imperative
that -the
J)Istice
Department crack down on
groups like SHAC. Those
animal ri ghts extremi sts
ha,·c ,rnssed the line in (JUfsuit or-their political endsfrom peaceful advocacy to

car.
SHAC also waged an
domc~tit.: terrorism.
IIHL
.
inlimidation
camp~ugn
Indeed. in recent testimoSHACs hlnatics have also against New York-based
ny
before the Senate
. targeted companies that do Marsh Inc .. which provided
business with Huntingdo11. insurance .for Huntingdon.
..Judiciary Committee, John
,The animal rights militants E. Lewis, the FBI's deput y
including
Ligand
Pharmaceuticals. which 'has allegedly acquired personal assistant director for counresearch facilities in San · information on a number of terterrorism. told law makers
Diego.
_. ,
Mm·sh employees- includ- . that groups like SHAC. like
so-called
Animal
Federal :prosecutors say ing. in so me cases. the t'
that SHAG · actually posted name s. ages and schools l. .. •cration Front (ALF).
an onli,ne list of its 'Top 20 attended by their children ha' ~ l'\.llllllli tted more than
Terror Tactics.' including and posted the information l.ltlll :l tninal acts in this
vandalism, threatening let- on its Web site. The site later n•u: • '"·er tile past three
resulting in dam ters and pho!1e calls, e-mail ~:tiiTie&lt;..l reports that the d e ~
·bombS' to crash computers, homes of several of those age'
II\' than $ 100 milhmi1e invasions and physical Marsh employees were van- . linn
.
assaults.
· dalized.
Lewis testified that ALF,
·their bu siness, quite
Then there was Chiron closely aligned with SHAC.
frarykly, is - thuggery and Corp., an Emeryville..,Calif.. has in recent years become
intjmidation,' Christopher biotechnology
company, one of ' the most auive crimChristie. U.S. attorney for which SHAC listed as a tar- inal ex tremist clements in
the Qistrict of New Jersey, . get on its Web site. Last the Uniteu States.· In fact.
said during a recent news · August, it was rocked by twq much of the animal rights
·movement ' is extremist. ll
conference.
pipe bombs .
In an e-mai l posted on the gathering
dlmger
to
Indeed, the grand jury
indictment of the SHAC Web s,i-!e of Bite Back maga- American society, including
sevcn lists several acts or zine. animal rights terrorists the radical ly chic People for
border! ine terrorism by the threatened to double the size the Ethical Treatment of
extremist animal rights of their bombs. 'Today it is Animab. or PETA .
group that includes the insti- 10 pounds (of explosives).
Hm ing failed to persuade
gat ion of protesters to smash tomorrow 20. ·they decl;tred. much of the American poputhe
windows
of
a 'until your buildings are btinn-that 'a nimals have the
same rights as retarded chi lHuntingdon employee and nothing but rubble.'
And the animal rights dren.' to quote PETA covandalize his cars, and to
spray-pai!]t the home of extremists-. 'violent fanat- founu er Alex Pacheco, ani~nother Huntingdon employics.' as U.S. Attorney mal rights militants are

resorting to more drastic
measures to make their
point.
'Those who make peaceful
change possible make v_iolent revolution inevitable.'
declared PETA, bastardizing
a· quote from John F.
Kennedy, in a statement to
the Judiciary Committee.
And PETA has put its
money where its heart is. It.
has donated · more than
$150.000
to
criminal
acttvtst s, to individuals
jailed f&lt;1r an;on, burglary and
attempted murder. according
to the C nter for ·consumer ·
Freedom . .t nonprofit group
thm , " 'poi·ts
animal •.
research.
-.
·· '
In his te&gt;timony before the
Senate Judiciary Committee.
McGregor W. Scott. U.S. ·
attorney for · the Eastern
District of California . noted
that ·millions of Americans
belong to legitimate animal
welfare and animal protection groups.
'They speak for a longstandi ng tradition in this
country th&lt;tt abhors cruelty
to animals. They advance
their cause and seek reforms
by lawful means. in leg islative votes. court decisions
and ballot initiatives.'
Thm's the right way to
campaign for 'humane treatment of animals. The ta~:tics
emp loyed by extremist
groups like SHAC, like ALF,
like PETA. are the wrong

way.
(Jo.\'t'ph Perki11s is a
columnist for 711e San Diego
Union- Tribune and cm1 be
rec1ched al Jost'ph.Perkins@
Union Trib.com. )

FIOWE!rs were planted at Star _,Mill Park recently -by the
The mourners file past the casket of former President Ronald Reagan during the changing of the guard , at the Ronald Reagan · . Southern Junior Girl Scout Troop 1204 whose leader' is
Presidential Library Tuesday, in Simi Valley, Calif. Because of the demand by the publ ic to pay their respects the hours have .. .. Sh irley Cogar. Here S&lt;1ratt Pullins and Kimberly Deaver as
been extended. (AP Photo / Rick Bowmer)
assisted in their project by master gardeners; Linda Russe[l.
and Janet 'Theiss , left to right.

Thousands endure hours to·pay respects to Ronald Reagan
BY JEREMIAH MARQUEZ
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

SIMI VALLEY, Calif.
Waiting good-naturedly for as
much as half a day in traffic
jams and a parking lot. tens of
thousands of people tiled past
Ronald Reagan's !lag-draped
casket in an outpouring that
forced organizers to extend the
viewing period Tuesday by four
hours.
An cstimaied 52.000 mourners had passed by the collin in
the 24 hours after the viewing
began at noon Mond&lt;ty at
Reagan's presidential library.
The nmion's 40th president died
Saturday at age 93.
"He gave us eight ye•u·s of service." said Keith Godlimm1. 50.
of Santa Clarita. "It doesn't hurt
for us to wait eight hours for him.
He deserves us to wait eight
hours t(,r him."
The !low of moumers was
inteiTupted
briefly
when
Democratic presidential cruJdidate John Kerry arrived.

Standing before the casket, he
made the sign of the cross,
placed his hand over his heart,
then left.
Tmffic jams and the wait for
shuttle buses encoumged camamderie among the throngs. who
passed the time sharing memories of Reagan ru1d making new
ti'iends.
"It was really something.
There was a kindred spirit out
there as we waited," said Linda
Peterson, 49. of Temecula, who
left home with her son, Lee, 2~ .
on Monday night .
TI1eir 110-mile trip went swillly until the last tour miles to a
local ~:ollege parking lot, which
took four hours to cover. and
then there was a 4 112-hour wait
to board a shuttle bus to the hilltop library.
"I · w;mted my son to know
exactly what an honorable life is
all about a life of service with
such passion," Mrs. Peterson
said.
The view ing at the library in
the hills west of los Angeles was

the ftrSt event in a week of
national mourning. The· body
will be llown to Washington on
Wednesday to lie in state at the
Capitol, followed by a national
funeml on Friday and a retum to
the librdl)' tor burial at sunset.
Nancy Reagan. who accompanied the body to the library,
received a message Tuesday
from Pope john Paul II expressing "deep gratitude" for her husband's commitment to the cause
of freedom.
Among the celebrities who
came to the library Tuesday was
actress Bo Derek, who said she
became a RepLtblican when
Reagan became president, citing
his belief in smaller government
and optimism.
"It's something when you lirst
sec the llag on the casket." she
said. ''I'm stunned. He was such
a great man."
The period in which Reagan's
body was to lie in repose at the
Iibrary was originally .supposed
to end at 6 p.m. Tuesday, but the
· overwhelming tumout torced an

extension to 10 p.m. More buses
were added to the shuttle fleet to
h•mdle the crowds.
The Red Cross handed out
cups of water that were gulped
down by moumers before they
boarded buses for the return to
Moorpark College.
Jesse and Joni Garcia of
Woodland left their Northern
California home at 6 p.m.
Monday and finally walked past
the casket at 9:45a.m. Tuesday.
"It took live hours for the l&lt;t51
five miles of the freeway." said
Jesse Garcia, 52. They spent two
.more hours in the parking lot
before boarding a bus.
"I knew they'd think I was
nuts," her husband added. "But
he's a homeboy _ our govemor,
our president."
Humbert Cabrera. 38. of Sru1
Diego, said while waiting in line:
"He should be on Mount
Rushmore. He wa&gt; one of us. He
lifted us all."
Associated Press Writer Jeff
Wilson contributed to this report.

U.S. raid frees four hostages, new
captives appear in kidnappers' video

if any

'

of them belong on a love one's grave.
One flower that we picked up had the tirst initial and the last
name of the person 's grave it belonged to written on the back

Bv JIM KRANE

of groups such as al-Qaida."
· Meanwhile. Iraq saw a llarcup of bloodshed three weeks
BAGHDAD. Iraq - U.S. aheadofthehandoverofsoverspecial forc es freed four eignty on June 30. Car bombers
hostages i'n a raid Tuesday blasted targets in two Iraqi
after staking out their captors' cities Tuesday. killing 15 peo- '
hideout for a day _ the tirst rle _ including a U.S. soldier_
military resnte of foreigners and
woundftlg 50. Six
caught up in Iraq's wave of European soldiers died when
kidnapping.s.
munitions they were transponBut the re was no word on ing exploded south of Baghdad.
West ot Baghdad. U.S. troops
the fate of a U.S. soldier held
hosta~c
and · two other exchanged tire with insurgents
Americans- missing since an in the town of Karma. An Iraqi
attack on a fuel convoy nearly doctor said at least two w01pen
two months &lt;tgo.
died ; the U.S. military said
· The raid ended the ordeal of seven insurgents were killed.
a Pole kidnapped last week and
In Tuesday's raid south of
three Italian ·security guards Baghdad that freeo the
abd(~~:ted in April whose co- hostages. U.S. troops detained
worker was brutally slain . But a number of suspects.
Iraq's strin~ of abductions
Coalition troops uncovered
showed no Sign of abating.
the
kidn&lt;tppers'
hideout
Gunmen disclosed they had Monday and observed it until
kidnappeg· seve n Turkish citi- the deciSion was made to move
zens.who 'they said were work- in . Italian Prime Minister
ing with the Americans. They Silvio Berlusconi said.
There were only two guards in
showed some of their captives
to reporters and re leased tl1e hideout. and there wa' no
videotape or the others .
bloodshed during the mid, he said.
More \IJ&lt;m40 people from sevSuspects "involved in the
eral count1ies have been abduct- kidnapping" were detained,
ed it1 Iraq since April. Many have U.S. Lt. Gen . Ric ardo
been released. At lea't two have Sanchez told report ers in
been killed hy their captors.
Baghdad. He said there were
About 20 are still being held, no reports of shots fired.
said Andrew White. an Anglican
The four freed men were in
cleric acting as a negotiator. . good health , Sanchez said.
.
But freem g the hostag_es IS
U.S. special force s ca1Tied
becoming a more dtlli cult out the raid. the commander
since some may have been of Polish forces in Iraq said .,
sold by their captors to antiThe three Italians Roberto
U.S. militants, said White, the Cupertino, Salvatore Stefio and
Mideas! envoy of the Maurizio Agliani _ were among
Archbishop of Canterbury.
the 'longest held hostages in
" Thin~ s are looking very bad Iraq . The three secu.rity guards
fo r the hostages." he said. "My were kidnapped April 12. along
wmTy is that eventually these with their colleague Fabrizio
people w1ll end up· 111 the hands . Quattrocchi. who was killed by
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

with a Sharpie. We knew where to put that flower. We suggest
that families do this to !lowers in the future.

Freeda Larkins, Secretary
Sand Hill Cemetery
Long Bottom ·

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
,b e less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to

RONALD REAGAN
1911-2004

editing and must be signed and include address

'

'

, and telephone numbet:_ No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
-addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed.in this column are the
consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. 's
editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

· The Daily Sentinel
Re~der

Services
·

Correction Polley
Our main Concern in··all stories

(usPs 213-9&amp;0)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
· Published
every
afternoon ,

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Association.
Our main number Is
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They came highly ·reco-mmended
'Lester is the one with the
Say Monaco or Majorca.'
long record of duping the
pony tail. ·Pinky is the bald
'But they're young, they're unwary that matches th eir
one.' Pinky and Lester are
party people . I hear all kinds description have been seen at
repairing our barn, and I can
or wonde rful things about an excl usive Mexican resort
never keep their names
being y&lt;iu ng and single in buying round s of double.
Iceland. It's. (he
new anjeos at a bar where topless
straight, so, for the umpteenth
Jim .
time, Sue is explaining to me
Sweden.'
·women between 18 and 25
Mullen
how to tell them apart. I am not
·capetown- or Sidney.' I drink for free ,' Sue spews.
good with names. Actually,'
CDU tilcr. "When it's summer
'I prefer my Australian
that's not true. I remember
here. it's winter there. They're theory,' I said without much
nmnes very well, I know hunprohahly having a blast fix - co ti viction.
dreds of !:hem. It's remember- Wflrk like beavers -· when ing -.;ome guy's barn in the
Just then Pinky and Lester's
ing which name goes with they're here. It's what they do Australian outback while it's pickup pulled into the drivewhich face that tricks me up.
when they're not here that wet and muddy here.'
.
way. I went to the door.
But this is partly Pinky · puzzles us. Where do they go . .- That wou ld ex plain so
·Lester,' I said, ' It's good to
and Lester's fault. If they when they're not here whkh much .'
see you. We thought there
would show up more than is roughly, oh, 95 percent of
'W hat possible explana- might have been an accident. '
once a month, it would make the time ?
tion could there be?'
'I'm Pinky. Lester's the
it easier for me. We haven't
It's a game Sue and I play
'The other explanation one with the pony tail. Don't
seen them since the begin- when we're bored . In our could be that they over- worry, we get a lot of that.
nin g of the mud season, version, they are secretly charged u.; and made so For some reason no one can
which was mercifully short very wealthy and they just much money on the deal that keep us straight.' Sue starts
'this year - only six weeks fix things as a hobby, some- a couple hundred dollars in to cough.
long.
thing to do when they feel tool' i;. chicken feed to them
·We just stopped by to tell
Lester told me a year ago like it. Pinky and Lester's hut it keep&gt; our fantasy alive you we're running a little
when they started that once tools, table saws and chi,el s they're coming back so we behind schedule but we'll be
they began. the job would and augers and jack&gt; arc all don 't call the law. One day back over here soon to fini sh
probably take about 10 days. still in the barn. Who but the we'll read a story in the paper up. And Lester W&lt;!nted to
To his credit, he didn't say .. very wealthy -could be so that a gullible, half-witted check on his tools. I trust
I0 'consecutive' days, but casual about their posses- middle-aged couple with you guys but you can never
one naturally assumes .. . sions?
apparently no common sense be too careful , you know
well , next time I'll ask .
'Belize?' I suggest. Sue whatsoever gave a ton of what I mean ?'
money to two con men posThe good news is that shakes her head.
(lim Mullen's lares/ book,
' It's too warm this time of ing a' contractors with the 'My First Weddi11g: A Primer
they've finished up to Day
Eight. I don't ·think they're year. They're kind of arty. obviously fictitiou' names of .for Modem Couples,' was
Pink •v atld Le ster. Local just published by Simon &amp; ·
laLy or on drugs. The work- Maybe Prague.'
man;,hip is first rate, replacing
' No ,' I say, 'When autlwriti ,;, confi rmed that Sclwstet: H~ also contribwes
rotted posts and beams using you've got that kind of there ~n.:~ no .""~Ll('h contractors regtdarlr l o Enterwinment
all old-fashioned mortise and money, contracting mone y. by that name in thi&gt; county Weekly, where he ca11 be (
tenon joints, cleaning up after I think you'd go some and never have been, but two reached at jim_mullen@
themselves as they go. They place a little more ritzy. well-known grifters with a ew.com)

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Planting flowers

. ·are being held in the little building by the cemetery gate. They
will be held for 30 days if anyone would like to

Wednesday, June 9,

Merchants
from PageA1
first time there is now plenty of power
for whatever takes place there.
A 4x8 foot sign to be used on the parking lot has been donated. Mu sser satd tl
re ads "Welcome to Pomeroy" on both
sides. Since it is li ght weight and vinyl.

Book
from Page A1
"If it goes we ll. it might
return next summer."
In additi nn to checking Oltl
books and other materials onsite,
visitors to the Rutland book station ClUJ also reque't materials
tium other library locations in
. ,.

~

-

--·-

~·-~--

·Roach·first birthday
Tri stan Roach, son o(
Charles and April (Rayburn)
Roach of Gallipolis, celebrated his first birthday April 2.
Those helping Tri stan celebrate his birthday, in addi tion to his parents , were his
sister, Courtney; Karen
(grandmama)
Rayburn ;
Sandy (grandma) Roa~:h:
great-grandparents.- Maurice
and Ruby Pendleton; Renie
(Nan-Nan) and
Myria
Blain: Shyanne and Sierrah
Harper: great aunts. Barbie
Edwards
and
Sandy
Pierson; Uncle Greg, Aunt
Cathy, Caitlin and Hannah
Tristan Roach
Roach ; Uncle Justin Roach:
Sammy.
and
Betty
and Chad Edwards.
Those sending gifts and Hemphill: LW and Angie
birthday wishes were cousin (Gi-Gi) Harper.
The theme for the party
Christa Martin. uncle Greg
Engle . special friend&gt;. Kim. was Barnyard Buddies. The
Mark and Josh Trout: and cake was made by family
Katie and Kaleb: Cristi, friend Maia Endicott.
"I feel like I have had the
two best te;v:hers anyone
could ask for in what a
from Page A1
Senior Center direct.or
sl10uld be." said Shaver. " I
attend Ohio University where · bring co mmitment to the
she m;uored in social work. agency and .its mi ss io!]. I
At the Council on Aging. she have a passion for thi s busiworked under fanner directors. Eleanor Thomas and ness and those we serve and
Susan Oliver. and described I will work to continue to
them as "terrific mentors and offer the highest quality of
service possible ...
role models."

Shaver

Padgett
from Page A1
From left, Roberto Copertino , Salvatore Stefio and Maurizio
Agliana. three Italian hostages that were being held in Iraq are seen
in this image aired by AI Jazeera·on Wednesday June 2, 2004. U.S.
special forces freed the three Italians and a Polish hostage
Tuesday, south of Baghdad, the top U.S. general said, in the first
successful commando raid to rescue foreigners caught up in Iraq's
wave of kidnappings.The three were kidnapped on Apnl 12 along
with a fourth man who was executed by his captors. (AP Photo)
moments later appeared on a
his captors soon atlerwm·d.
Hi s slaying was recorded on videotape posted on an aia video that was not shown to Qaida-ltnked Web site . U.S.
the public. though Italian officials say al-Qaida-linked
diplomats saw it. (Juattrocd1i militant Abu Musab al -Zarqawi
became a heru in Italy when it may have heen Ber~;;'s killer.
U.S. military officials have
emerged that in hi s last
moments he defiantly told his described the kidnappings as
captors, "Now I'll show you a tactic aimed at halting U.S.Ied rebuilding work that was
how an Italian dies."
The three were rescued supposed to return j&lt;~h·' · elecalong with Polish hostage tnctty and a sense ot normaf c
Jerzy Kos, 64 , who was cy to this battered country.
The
CIA.
Defense
abducted last week when
seven men stormed his com- Intelli ge nce Agc11cy. FBI and
military units are also
pany's Baghdad office. .
Over the past two months, involved in trackinn;, kidnapki&lt;lnappin g victims /mve run )ers and their hostages 1n
the gamut of the hlue-collar \ raq. a defense intelltgence
workers toiling on behalf of official in Washington said.
White; the Anglican negotiathe U.S.-led occupation of
Iraq. They driv e trucks , tor, said tracking down who has
rebuild electrical plants. the "'\)lives is co mplicated.
especia ly as victims are handed
guard building sites.
·
American Nicholas Bern. a over from kidnappers who arc
businessman, was beheaded by in it only tor the money to more
his captors. and his last ideologtcalanti.- U.S. militants.

he said care will have to be taken as to
where it is erected.
The weekend Gold Wings and Ribs
Festival was repot1ed as successful and
announcement was made of the upcoming
Blues and Jazz Society's presentations in
the amphitheater which start on Jul y 2.
. Plans were discussed for the ducky
derby sponsored by the Merchants
Association at the Sternwheel Festival in
September. Peggy Barton was appointed

tl1e county or through the interlibrdl)' loan service.
While the main libmry in
Pomeroy will operate during
regular hours this summer, the
bmnches at Middleport, Racine
and Eastern Elementary School
will have restricted summer
hours, Eblin said. TI10se libraries
will be open from I0 a.m. to 6
p.m,, Monday through Friday.
and closed on weekends. '
~·

'

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

chairman. It was decided to purchase an
additional :lOO ducks for the event.
The gro up voted to purchase a $200
ad in The Back Fence which will have a
feature story on Morgan's Raid in its
winter edition.
The new banners in maroon vinyl featurin g a sketch of the Pomeroy-Mason
bridge purchased at a cost of $758 have
arrivedandhavealready been hung on
the penod llghts 111 the downtown area .

as its multi-million dollar
greenhouse industry which
continues to grow each year.
With numerous power
plants in the region and
more energy provide rs
planned for the future.
Padgett said.the energy sector of I he economy is poised
to take off as Ohio exports
more an&lt;..l more power to
energy sta'rved states.
Partnerships between uni versities and busine ss will
create opportunity in the
future . Padgett cited the
partnership
betwee,n
Diagnostic Hybrids. which
employs dozens of workers.
anJ
Ohio
University.
Finally. Padgett said the

tourism industry is growing
in southeast Ohio .
Padgett is a firm supporter of Senate Bill 223 which
rrovides low intere st government loans to attr~u.:t
potential . entrepreneurs to
distressed counties in th e
state.
Perry Varmdoe. uirector
of the Mc1g-. Economic
Developmelll
Office .
praised Padgett's advocacy
o'f business and said she is
doing a goou job representing the people and interests
of Meip County.
" I think &gt;enator P a d~ett is
doing a very good job.'· said
Varnadoe . --1 think Senate
B'ill 22~ will be a very ·
i'mportant tool for development which could be the
mo'l important piece of legisl ation coming ou1 of this
let!is
la tive sess ion."
&lt;

Coming Thursday in the·Sentinel ...

..Pface: f~ ~ 0'
T/timg~ f~ ;f)~"
H
E verything
· important!
· · ·

I: A
Wt;komes Bact

... R

"Swamp luece '~ ...
Sat:LR-day-Jwle '19tJJ
9:30-1:30

.

Pomeroy. O' l i

49'.1 Ro~hl•ftd A\off~ lit • Athl!m , Oh.o 4'70 I
fthont' (740}
• 800-4") 1-9806

�/

PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, June 9,

OSU must fine replacement, Page 82
Tri.County gold beginning Monday, Page 86

Parent group wants all schools
to,have heart-shocking devices

NewsChannel

A DAY ON WALL STREET
June 8 , 2004

10.750

Dow
Jones

10,250

+41.44
10,432.52

June 8, 2004

---

N8Sd8Q

"'

'Pet. change

from prevtous:

n

--,..,-:,.---------~.,------~----

+0 .40

composit

MAn
High

10.432.81

·-·-----..................- ........-....- - - · - - - -

""""-?

9.250

APH
. MAY
JUN .
Low
Record high : 11 , 722 98
"10 ,353.05
Jan 14 ,2000

c-...._ r..

-

_

2 ,200
2 ,000

~~

1 ,BOD

+2.91
.

2,023 ,53
Pet. change
fTOm previous:

MAR

+0 . 1 4

1.600

APP

High

Low

2,023 54

2.008.30

MAY
JUN
Record htgh : 5,048 .62
March 10, 2000

June 8 , 2004

'1 ,200

Standard&amp;
Poor's500
+1.76
1 ' 142 . 18
Pet. change
from previous: +0. 1 5

1 . 150
l , 100

1.050

- -MAR
- - · - -APR
High

1 ,142.1 8

- - - - - - - - - 1 .000

MAY

Low

1,135.45

JUN

Record high: 1.527.46
March 24, 2000

AP

Local Stocks
ACI - 32 .62
AEP- 31.40
Akzo- 37.672.
Ashland Inc. - 50.59
BBT - 37.53

BLI - 15.44
Bob Evans- 27.85
Borg Warner - 43.50
City Holding - 30.08
Champion- 4 18
Charming Shops- 8.58
Col- 31.91

DuPont - 43.85
DG- 20.35

Federal Mogul - .28
GanneH - 87 .43
General Electric- 3147
GKNLY - 4.46

Harley Dav1dson - 58.60
Kmart - 66 .33
'
Kroger- 17.07
Ltd- 19.49
NSC- 25.44
Oak Hill Financ1al- 31 .75
Bank One- 50.21
OVB- 33.39
Peoples- 26.06
Pepsico- 54.95

Wendy's - 36.50
Wai-Marl - 57.68
Worlh1ngton - 19.85
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
closing quotes of the prev1ous day's
transactions , provi_ded ' by Smith
Partners at Advest Inc. of Gallipolis.

· Premier -

9 70
Rocky Boots - 2 1.04

COLUMB US (AP) Fifteen-year-old
softball
player Cadie Clark slid into
third base, barely beating the
throw. She looked up and
saw the umpire cal l her safe.
Then she slumped over and
everything went black.
Instead of pumping blood. her
heart was tlunering uselessly.
She lay on the infield at the
city park in Mantua for four
minutes before an ambulance
arrived. The crew shocked
her five times with a defibrillator, which helps restore a
normal heart rhythm.
Now 19. Clark. her mother
and other fa milies struck by
sudden cardiac arrest came
to the state capital Tuesday
to thank lawma kers and
Gov. Bob Taft for a law that
includes $2.5 million for
school s to buy automatic
external delibrillators.
'Thank you for placing
value on the young lives that
were lost." said Linette
Denniner of Geneva~ whose
18-year-old son, Ken, died four
years ago after collapsing during l(x&gt;tball team calisthenics.
After her daughter's co llapse, Cind y Clark worked
18 months to raise money
for seven machines fo r
Mantua's Crestwood Local
· School District.
Cindy Clark said she's thrilled
the state money will help lowincome school districts.
"It's a very hard light," she
said. "1l1ere are a lot of people
who are still not believers."
Several other districts
have used community dona·
tions and corporate grants to
buv the $2,000 to $3,000
machines . The new state
money can ' t pay for
machines in all schools in
the state's 613 districts..
The Ohio Department of
· Health will use guidelines
from the Ame ri can Heart
Association,
American
Academy of Pediatrics ·and
other sources to determine
how to award the grants, and
will develop a bidding
process for. a ve ndor.
spokesman Jay Carey said .
Sudden cardiac death can
be brou ght on by an abnormal heart rhythm from an
undetected defect or by a
sudden blow to the chest of a .
An
healthy
person.
American Heart Association
report estimates there are 25
to 50 such episodes among
U.S. hi gh school athletes
each year, but says it is a
leading cause of death for
adults 35 and older.
One-fifth of the American
population is in public
schools on any give n day,
the report said. They're used.

'

Rio's Cooper,
Conn earn NAJA
scholar awards
OLATHE,
Kan .
University of Rio Grande
playe r;
Emily
softball
Cooper and Amy Conn were ·
selected to the 2004 NAIA
All-American
Scholar
Athlete team releaseu recent·
ly.
Cooper. a sen ior second
baseman
from Okeana. ,
majored in Mathematics.
She had previously won .this
award as a haskethall player
two years ago. On the field.
she batted .356 with II RBI
and 42 stolen bases.
Conn. ·a jtlntor from
Wheelersburg. majored in
Sports and Exercise Studies.
Conn is a first time winne r of
the award. On the tleld. Conn
batted .394 with 16 doubles
and 34 RBI.
Both were integral parts of
Rio's -10·14 season in which
the club won the NAIA
Region IX Tournament and
appeareu for the lirst time
ever in the NA IA National
Softhall Tournament in
Decatur, Ala.
Cooper and Conn are the
fourth and fifth ath letes from
Rio Grande 10 win an All ·
Ameri&lt;:an Scholar Athlete
award from the spring sea....,ons.

Dr. Terry Gordon. a cardiologist at ,Akron General Medical
Center in Akron, demon strates how an automated external
defibril lator works as Cadie Clark; i9. of Mantua , Ohio. a cat·
diac arrest survivor who was saved by a defibri llator, looks on
Tuesday. June 8, 2004, at the Riffe. Government ~uitding in .
Columbus . Gordon, who is an advocate of distributing AED's
to schools throughout· Ohio, met With families of both sur·
vivors .of cardiac arrest and families of victims to demon··
strate the device . (AP)
as polling places. communi ·
ty group meeting centers and
emergency she hers.
The association recom·
mends putting the devices in
schools with a '·documented
need ," such as hav ing a
teac her or student with a
diagnosed heart condition or
where emerge ncy medical
crews can't arrive in five
minutes or less.
The machines alone won't
save a life. s;tid Mary Fran
Haz inski. the report's lead
writer and a clinical nurse
speciali st at · Vanderbilt
Children\
Hospital
1n
Nashville. Tenn. Staff need to
be trained how to use it ami in
other lifesaving techniques.
" If people don't know an
AED (defibrillator) is pre·
sent, they won't respond in
an etfective manner to save a
life,'' she said·.
The v ict im~ also need
CPR immediately. Once the
device gets the heart's eke·
trical si'gna ls operating correct ly, it doesn't always get
the muscle pumping aga in,
Hazinski said.
Sen.
Ray
Miller, a
Columbus Democrat. questions the large expenditure
without enough data on how

many deaths coukl be prevellt·
eel. He said there should be better health screening in sc.hool
spo11s and efforts by .coaches
not to work athletes too hard.
·-rm in sc hool s all the
time." he said. "I have yet to
hayc anybody in a school say
to me we need these electronic defibri ll ators that are
being pushed so aggressive·
ly. What they do say is we
· need hooks. we need computers we need basic suppi ies for our classrooms."
The Heart Association
donated I0 of the devices to
Columbus school s. Parents
donated most of the money
needed to eq uip most of the
schools in the rap idly grow·
ing Lakota Local district in
Liberty Township nort h of
Cincinnati . Boosters. 11 0 11 ·
profit foundations and ~.1 11
insurance company pooled
the money for seve n defibrillators at the high school
and middle sc hools in
Newa rk.
" I can' t foresee that pan ning oul for everyone. particularl y in smaller com mu nities where gra nt money
might not be available." said
Mark Doughty. head athletic
trainer at Newark.

Marshall to play
Xavier in men's
basketball
CHARLESTON.
W.Va.
1AP) . - Marshall's basketball team wi ll visit Xavier in
the 2004-2005 season.
Marshall athlCtic director
Bob Marcum said the two
schools signet.l a . . . ing le-game
deal. Detai ls were not avai lable.
Xa vier posted a 26- 1I
record ta . . . t scuson. marking
the third consecutive year the
team has won 26 games. The
Musketeers closet! the season
by winning 16 of their last 18'
games. including four games
in four days to claim the
sc hool's thi rd Atlantic 10
Championship and three
NCAA Tournament ga mes.
Marshall fini,hcd the season 12- 17.

Marshall softball
program to hold
July camps

£ocal tJalllpolls Dealet WID Dispose lllllvet la,IIIIIJ,IJIJII Wotlh
Ill Pt.tlwrred Vehicles lane IRth
'

District to build virtual
high school as alternative
to charter schools
COLUMBUS (AP) - The city
Student~ who enter ch•u1cr
school district will develop an schools t;,tke about $5,00) in state
online high school to oy to retain aid with tlJem. The disuicl expect&lt;
hundreds of student~ it exJU:t~ to the loss of state li.ltldi1;g to chwter
lose to chaner schools next year. schools to rise to $34.o million by
school officials said.
2(()8, up from $18 million th1s
Columbus Public Schools otti- year.
cials say the clislli&lt;.t's new sch(X)I
In 2CXXl. a conU-aL1or predicting
waul~ mirror the services of
enrollment tO.. the Oh1o School
Internet chmter sch(X)Is. which Facilities Commission assumoo
have attr3Cted more than I.(XXJ stu- · there wou ld i"C no chwwe in the
dent&gt; away fi'om its public St:h(X)Is. ntunrer of student\ choosmg charThe online schools· provide 'to- terover public 1ehools in 10 yem&gt;.
dent&gt; with a mcxlcm and mmputNow, the numher of tl10Se stu·
er. and teacher.; ct\siJ.,'Iled to them dents ha' lrKire than uipled to
keep in mntacl by c-m;u I •mel 3,995 and tl1e Columbus cli,Dict
expects to lose sevet&lt;u hundred
!*K&gt;nellle district's plan for the more next school ye&lt;Lr.
Internet school is still"on the dr..1w·
A multi-hillion.OOilar effort to
ing table," said spoke\lmm upgmde '.Chml buildings n=..'isi·
Micha:l Stmughtcr. But leaving t;Jtes &lt;JL'CUrJIC enrollment proje&lt;:SIUdent&gt; "obviou,ly want '-Ome- tions. ~~tid Rick Savor~, a
thing from the cli'tnc1 tl1at we need spoke"'"mtor tl1e schoullacilities
to provide," he added.
t.'Ommission.
He said the clisuict estintate.' the
"We w•mt to know how manr,
school will serve aoout 125 ;,to- student' we· re having to build for. '
dents staning in Septemher. he said. "h cmn·t do us w1y f,oo..l
Straughter added that four mm- to build tm much or tm little. '
munity centers around the city will
The a"l of bui Icling upgrdde;
provide in-person tutoring •mel 10.. just Columbus ;ulll .the five
computers f(.,. student' who cht 't other lw1!est districts in Ohio have online acces.' ;rt ho~re . ·
Akron. 'Cincinnati. Clevelw1d.
The clisui&lt;.1 has begun 'urvcying D.1yton WKI Tolruo - is $5.74 bil·
exiting students to sec what it could lion.1l1C state would pay $2.95 bildo to keep them.
lion of that.
The nwnberoftln,e ;,ti.K£nt' h:.t'
Ch:.utt.'f sclxx•b have their own
thrown oft· the di'llid's enrolln-cnt linw1Ciul pmblems. Sina: 20:&gt;2.
projections, which n-eu1s pralic'led one in f{)UJ· of tJn,e audited h'"
furrling.isn't materi•dizing.
ended a liscal year in the red.

GALLIPOLIS, OH. Local Dealership has announced plans to liquidate their used vehicle inventory to the public by means of a
SUPER PRICE SLAS HER SALE this comi ng Saturday June 12th. During this 2 Hour event. every used vehicle will be sold for
thousands below its original price, including used cars for as low as $79'* "Why price them so low·• For two very important reasons." explai ns Neal Peifer, Sales Manager of Norris Northup Dodge. "Fir~t of all, strong new car sales have created an-over abun·
dance of 4uality pre-owned vehicles to sell. The recent economy has dri ven intere&gt;t rates down, allowi ng more and more people to
trade up 10 new vehicles; and with auto leasing at an all time high. we are seeing more lease return vehicles than ever. The ciretimstances indicate that we have no other choice but to liquidate this in ventory as fast as possible." Norris Nort hup Dodge has decided
to niTer these vehicles to the public for thousands below market value before they go to auction. "The local communit ies have shown
us grea t support and we' re very grateful. We would rather give these great buys to the public than unl oad them at an auction. A huge
selection of over 200 pre-owned cars, trucks, vans and sport utilities wi ll be avai lable for this event. ·We mu st reduce our used invcn·
tory at all costs. so cu&gt;tomers can expect these vehicles to be sold for near or below wholesale;· stated owner Mike Northup. Cars
that would normally sell for $3,000 to $12,000 could be thousands lower. There is truly a vehicle for every budget." All vehicles will
be on display in a special area. Customers are req uested to fi nd a vehicle that interests them and the rest is up to the PRICE
SLASHER. 'This will truly be a great opportun ity. as our inventory, must be reduced by at least half. and for that reason used cars
will be priced as low as $79." CUSTOMERS ARE ENCOURAGED TO ARRIVE BETWEEN THE HOURS OF 9AM AND
I0:45AM SATURDAY JUNE 12TH IN ORDER TO PRE-REGISTER AND CHECK ON FINANCING AND QUALIFICATION
PACKAGES. THE SPECIAL AREA WILL BE OPENED PROMPTLY AT !0:45AM Here is how the PRICE SLASHER SALE
works: AT 10:45 all vehicles wi ll be opened so customers may inspect them. The retail price will be posted on the windshield of each
vehicle. When the $79 Sale begins at II :OOam the Price Slasher will cross out the retail price on each vehicle and replace it with the
new SUPER SLASHER SALE PRICE. Prices will be cut one time to the rock bottom price. including vehicles for only $79. This
Super Sale is for the public only-auto dealers and wholesalers are not eligible to participate. "It' s just that simple,"said Neal Peifer,
Choose the vehicle you're interested in, be the first one behind the wheel, and you get the first opportunity to· purchase that vehicle at
the Super Slasher Sale Price." There will be special finance and credit analysts on hand to get you prequalitied before the sale. "We
wil l have some of the most liberallenders in the urea at this event, so even if you have had trouble obtaining auto financing in the
past. don't count yourself out. If you bring acurrent payroll stub and your driver's license, chances are we can arrange financing for
you ... This $79 Super Price Slasher Sale this Saturday, June 12th, will be the Biggest Used Car Sales Event thai we have ever had
and I expect over I00 satislied customers to leave with great cars at great prices," said Mr. Northup. The $79 Super Price Slasher
Sale will be held at Norris Northup Dodge, Gallipolis, Oh. Remember be here no later than I0:45am this Saturday June 12th Come
early or call to prcqualify and find out all the details of this once in a lifetime event!! 80().446-0842 or 740-446-0842
Own the car, truck, or SUV you have dreamed about at a price considered impossible unt il now ..-- Ju &gt;t in time for Summer Vacation

NORRIS
NORTHUP
DODGE,
INC.
Jeep
T II E R [

S 0 N L Y 0 N F.

GRAB LIFE

BYTHE HORNS '

l@J

CHRYSLER
--a.e~CJ~P--

.

Wednesday, June 9, 2004

USED t:JJBS '10 BB SO£D '10 'tHE I'UB£11: PDB
liS £OW liS $19

RD Shell- 50.56
Rockwell- 34.25
Sears- 40.41
SBC- 24.34
AT&amp;T - 16.95
USB - 28.39

252 Upper River Road

1/2 Mile South of the Silver Bridge, Gallipolis, Ohio
www.norrisnorthupdodge.com

740-446-0841 or 800-446·0841
111rSIIIs18C118n Guarameet'

•J

HUNTI NGTON, W.Va.
The Marshall University softball program wj ll be hosting
its fourth annual all skills and
pitching camps from July 1216 at Dot Hick s Field for
players of all ages.
The all skills camp i&gt; a
three-day event from July 1214. All aspects of the fastpitch game will be covered,
with morning sessions concentrating on hilling and the
aftemoon sessions focused
on defense. The cost for the
all skills camp is $ 140.
The pitchi ng camp runs
from July 15-16 and costs
$50. Proper techniques and
mechanics of the position are
a major compo nent of the
pitching camp.
Playe rs can attend both
camps for on ly $ 165.
Contact the MU softball
office at 696-4370 or h 'g on
to HerdZone.com/info/camps
to at;4uire a camp brochure.

Three penalized
for postrace
fight at Lowe's
DAYTONA BEACH , Fla.
(AP) - NASCAR penalized
driver Brad Te~tgue and two
other men Tuesday for fighting on pit road after the
Busch &gt;Cries race May 29 at
Lowe's Motor Speedway.
. Teague and Jeffrey Smith.
motor coach driver for Kevin
Harvick, were fined $2,500
apiece and placed on probation until Dec. 31.
James Caldwell, a public
relations representative for
Harvick. was suspended until
July 2 1, fined $2.500 and
placed on probation until the
end nf the year.

Legion
Baseball

Meigs
romps
Logan,
14-0

No home
runs for
Griffey in
Reds' loss

By BuTCH COOPER

bcooper@mydailytribune.com

OAKLAND. Ca lif. IA PI Ken Griffe1· Jr. faiku 10 homer'
for the se~ond straight g&amp;me.
and Damien Miller . tied a
career high with five RBis to .
lead the Oak land Athletics to
their fourth straigh t victory.
10-6 0\er the Cinc innati Reds

LOGAN - The Meigs
Post 128 .American Legion
baseball team had little trou ble against a Logan squad
that was unable to field a
team in 2003.
Led with three hi ts a piece
by Doug Dill and Ken
Amsbary. Meigs handled
Logan. 14-0, Tuesday.
Former River Valley
hurler Chris Brown threw
the complete game shut out
lor Meigs. allowing only
two hits. while striking out

on Tu e~dav niuhl.

SIX.

Amsbary had a triple in
the first inning and later
scored with the help of b&lt;L'iC
hits by Dill and Colin
Crabtree.
·
Meigs led 6-0 at the end
of two innings.
Crabtree was 2. for- 3 at
the plate for Meigs, while
Andy Parsons, · Michael
Warren. Josh Eddy. Dave
McClure. Terry Durst and .
Ross Well also had hi ts.
Meigs travels to Athens II
Thursday before playing
host to Athens Saturday in a
doubleheader
at
Rio
Grande.
With · the win. Meigs
improves to 4-1. coming off
a 16-4 di strict win at
Glouster and a doublehead·
er split at Beverly.
Against Glouster, Meigs
scored I0 runs in the top of
the seventh for the Eighth
District win.
Amsbary had four base
hits. while Angelo Hardy
collected three hits, a pair of
triples and a double.
Par'sons and Wanen also
had two hits each.
Brown pitched the win
with Brad Palm also seeing
work on the mound.
At Beverly, Meigs won
the tlrst game. 7-2, with the
help of three runs in the seventh and a Dill home run .
Dill tlni shed with two
hits, while Amsbary had
three hits and Hardy and
Parsons each doubled.
Parsons also recorded the
win, pitching the complete

game.
Meigs, though, lost its
on Iy game of the season to
Be veri y in the second game,
9-6.
Parsons led Meigs al the
plate with a pair of hits.
mcluding a homer, wh ile
Di II and Well each had two
hits and Raysean doubled.

Ohio State coach Jim o :Brien, shown reacti ng to an official's call Dec. 13. 2003, in
Columbus, was fired Tuesday for alleged NCAA violations that involved him trying to
assist a young man who wanted to attend the university. (AP)

'Brien Fire
Ohio·State dismisses basketball coach
BY RUSTY MILLER

Associated Press
COLUMBUS -Ohio State fired basketball coach Jim O'Brien on Tuesday after he
admitted giving a recmit $6.000 five years
ago.
Athletic director Andy Geiger said he
offered O'Brien- who led the Buckeyes to
the Final Four in 1999 the opportunity to resign
or be fired and that the
seven-year
coach
refused to step down.
"I am troubled that ~~
mle was admittedly
violated and it took us
· five years to find out
about it,': said Geiger. who
frequently championed the honesty of his
basketball coach as the Buckey~s struggled
through a 14-16 season last year.
Geiger said he was stunned when he found
·out about what he called serious violations in
the basketball. program.
In a statement released through his attor·
ney, 0' Brien, who was 133-88 as Oh1o

-

...

"I am advised that my
firing is because I was
askc~d to and tried to give
assistance to a young
man's family who was in
dire financial straits:'
- Former Ohio State men's
basketball coach Jim O'Brien
State's head coach, did not dispute that he
helped potential recruit Aleksandar
Radojevic.
"I am advised that my tiring is because I
was asked to and tried to give assistance to a
young man's family who was in dire linitncial
straits," said O'Brien, who did not retum
phone messages left at his home and Ohio
State oftlce. 'The assistance in no way inOuenced the young m&lt;m in his decision to·auend
OSU &lt;mel. indeed, the young man did not
enroll at OSU ."
Geiger would nol say whether the money

Gri ffc v · rc tllaincd. at ~98
career homers. two away from
becoming the 20th player with
)00. He has nine ho1ner&gt; is hi s
last 17 ~ames.
~1iller hit a bases-loaded
double in the A's five -run first
innin ~ off Jun !! Keun Bong WI I. a' nd doubled home ' two ·
more runs in Oak land 's fourrun fourth .
That was more than e nough
cushion for Barry Zi to (-!-3).
who won for on ly the second
t1me in 10 .starts Llat ing to April
I K.
Zito ga1e up five ru ns in five
. innings on eight hit s. including
homers by Barry Larkin and
Jason LaRue. but got plenty of
support from th e A's offense
whi ch has scoreLI 23 runs
against Reds pitchers in two
ni !!hts.
.
Arthu r Rhode s got four outs
for his nin th save in 13
clwnccs.
Larkin left in the bottom .o f
the fourth whe n he fell pain in
l1is lo we r left abdo men whi le
fielding an infield single . The
Reds said the 3-l-year-old
shortstop would fl y back to
Cincinnat i to be examined bv
team phys ician Dr. Tim othy
K remchek.
Desptte losing. the Red s
maintained their one-game
lead in the NL Central over St.
Louis. which al so lost.
Larkin. Sean Casev and
Griffey ga1·e the Reds· a I ~0
lead in the first with cotbecuti\e

~ing l e~.

The A\ took ad1·antage of &lt;1
two-out en·or 111' third baseman
Tim Hummel (.nd scnred five
unearned runs in the bottom of
. the fir st. The b1~ blow was a
th ree-run Jouble by Miller.
Marco Scularo follow ed w:th a
s in~k. anu Mille r ran !hrough
coac·h
Brad
thiru-hasc
Fiscller's " lop si&amp; n hut scored . .
ma~in~ it 5-1.
The 'Reds strud back 4uickly on Larkin's three-run homer
in the tnp of the second.
Bobby Crosby led n il the A's
third wi th hb nin th homer. but
LaRue narmwcJ it 10 6-.'\ with

Please see O'Brien, Bl

Please see Reds, Bl

Marlins swim
Lakers even series in OT past Tribe· in ninth·

NBA Finals

.

BY

CHRIS SHERIDAN

CLEVELAND 1API pitl'h," .limenet said. "They
The Fluriua Marlin' alwav' were rasthalb that didn't

Associated Press

..,t:cm

LOS ANGELES - Kobe Bryant came
through in the clutch, saving the Lakers at the
end or regulation and canying them in overtime.
In the type or pert'om1ance that cemented
the star's status .as one of the great performers
in NBA history, Bryant tied the game with a
3-pointer late in regulation and helped them
pull away for good at the start of overtime to
lead the Los Angeles Lukers past the Detro11
Pistons 99-91 Tuesday night in Game 2 of the
NBA Finals.
Seconds away from facing a 2-0 ddicit
with the series headed to Detroit, the Lakers
·evened it at a game apiece behind Bryant's 33
points and seven assists.
.
"It 's all about rising to the challenge,"
Bryant said. "High stakes. I know I can rise to
that.''
The teams will go at it again Thursday
night, each having earned a greater level of
respect for their opponent. 1l1e Lakers now The Los· Angeles Lakers' Shaquille O'Neal
slam dunks against the Detroit P1stons 1n
li.Piease see Laken. Bl
the third quarter of Game 2. (AP)

j

--- ---~

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

2004

--·-·-

to

find a \\'~\'to k·a~~: 'in"-.··

the Ck1·cland lndi'ans heart·
broken .
and
Miguel
Cabrera
Damion Easlc} each home red ,,tl the ldt-ficld foul
pnle with twn outs in the
ninth tn n1;1g. kadin~ the
~larlins to a 7-5 1 ictnry
Tue,lfa)· night.
"Have you e1cr seen anv ·
body hit. two· foul pole' In
nne' inninll·_J" Marlins man ·
accr Jack ' McKeon said. "I
bet that ·.s a rcl'oru ...
Cabrera tied it nil Jose
Jimcnct tl-41 with his 1-lth
lwmcr - a shol thai ricochcted otT the top nf the
pole . kiT Conine walkccf.
anu .Ea,lc\ fnllowcd h1 lin·
ing a sl1l;l thai · hi.t . nt'r the
pole ncar tile top of the 11all.
"Bnth were oil the 'amc

Both batters were surpri;;cd at the results.
" I didn't w;~n l lo maJ..e the
l:t&gt;l out anu JU&gt;t tried to get
tll\' bat on tile ball." Cabrera
sa.id . " I didn't know if it was
fair or fnul. hul it hit in the
· ri~ht spnt."
Easley. whu hit the first
pitch fr'nm Jimenct. said he
figureu the 1;elicver would
tn to ~cl alJcau in the count
at'tcr w~a l~in~ Conine.
" I wanleu'to laJ..e one shot
- and that was it." he ,aid.
"Hnw it staved fair - I
uon ' t know.",
Nate Bump I 1-3 ) got the
final two out&gt; t&gt;f the eighth.
I],UI allowed Omar Vitqucl';
RBI singk that
gave

Please see Tribe, Bl

�Page B2 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, June 9, 2004

~ Ohio

State must find
O'Brien
:replacement for fired O'Brien
BY RusTY MtueR
Assoctated Press
COLUMBUS
Ohio
State athletic director Andy
. Geiger JOked he will rely on
: reporters to tell htm the top
z candidates to replace basket; ball coach Jim O'Brien. fired
· Tuesday for paying a recrUit
$6,000
''The (news) papers haven·,
been printed yet. so I haven't
: gotten my list," he smd wtth a
: gnn
The names were already
ctrculating o,n call-in radiO
shows and on Oh10 State tan
Web sites Xavter's Thad
Matta, Cmcmnau·s Bob
Huggins, Texas Tech's Bob
Kmght, Skip Prosser of Wake
' Forest , Pete Gillen of
Ytrg'i nia, Kent State's Jtm
. Christian. Dan Daktch ot
Bowhng Green, Marquette's
Tom
Crean,
former
Northwestern coach Kev111
O' Netll, ex-New Orleans
Hornets coach Tim Floyd and
former UC LA coach Steve
Lavin, among many others
Rtck Boyages ts servmg as
mtenm coach with o· Brien ·s

departure Ohm State ts m the
process of co ntact111g Its
stgnees, assunng them that
they made the nght decision
and should sttck wtth the
school.
Getger must do a prenner
selhng JOb to get a replacement for O'Brien The new
coach will inherit a team that
went 14- 16 last year, played
before dw111dlt ng crowds at
its 19.000-seat arena and may
well end up on NCAA probatton
" I thmk Ohw State ts a ternfic place. and ~e will be
candtd wtth all the candidates
as to what ctrcumstances we
t111d ourselves m.'' Geiger
sa td. ·we hope that we can
weather the storm and head
forward wtth a good basketball program ..
Also workmg agamst Ohto
State and Geiger ts the timmg
of O'Brien's fmng. Most
coachmg JObs were tilled dur111 ~ the weeks surroundmg the
NcAA tournament 111 March.
Matta led Xavter to the
Eltte Etght thts season but has
repeatedly satd he has no
111tenuon ot leaving hts
school Ht s contract runs
Mtller doubled home two
more runs m Oakland's half
ot the mmng. puttmg the A's
on top I 0-6 and chastng
Bong
Bong was makmg hts second maJor league start, and
ftrst since 2002 wtth Atlanta

agamst Anzona
He was recalled earlier m
the day from Loutsville
where he was 4-4 in l 0
starts, and was the ftrst leftbander
to
start
tor
Cmcmnatt smce last Sept.
18.

off Flonda starter Dontrelle
Wilhs wnh outs 111 the hrst
tnning.
Matt
Lawton
and
Martmez each singled and
Casey Blake followed with
a base hll to right that was
ftelded by Cabrera, whose
perfect throw home beat
Lawton by 15 feet but
catcher Mike Redmond
missed the ball for an error
Marltnez then scored
when Wtllts, back111g up the
play, got the ball and threw
wildly to second trymg to
, ge t Blake
Abraham Nunez htt hts
ftrst career homer 111 the
third off Cleveland starter
Cliff Lee to make it 2-1, and
Flonda tted tt with an
unearned run 111 the fourth
Cleveland went back
ahead 3-2 111 the fourth on
an RBI single by Vtzquel , a
hard shot that glanced ofl
the glove of thlfd baseman
Mtke Lowell.
It was the first earned run
allowed by Wtllts tn 15 1-3
111nmgs of mterleague play.
As a rookte last year, he
went 2-0 and pitched II

scoreless mnmgs 111 I wo
starts agamst Oakland and
Tampa Bay.
Alex Gonzalez tied it 3-3
tn the stxth wtth his fourth
homer.
Wtllts allowed one earned
run and eight hits tn five
tnmngs, walk111g one and
strikmg out five.
Lee gave up two earned
runs and seven hils over six
tnmngs in hts ftrst Interleague start The lefty
walked Juan Pterre and
gave up an infield hit to
LUis Castillo to open the
seve nth
" I dtd all nght, but could
have been better," Lee satd.
"Other than a couple walks
and the home runs, It went
pretty good agamst a tough
hneup"
Matt Mtller came on, got
Lowell to bounce tnto a
double
play,
walked
Cabrera, then struck out
Comne to keep 11 tied.
It was the sixth consecutive game at Jacobs Fteld
dectded m a team's I mal atbat. Cleveland ts 3-3, losmg
the last three

Reds
from Page 81
a solo homer
the fourth.

111

the top of

Tribe
from Page 81
Cleveland a 5-4 lead
Armando Benitez worked
the ninth for hts 23rd save.
The Marhns contmued to
fru strate
the
lndtans
Cleveland lost Game 7 of
the 1997 World Series 3-2
in II innings after leadmg,
and was swept 111 a threegame senes at Mtamt two
years ago.
The blown save by
Jimenez was hi s third tn stx
chances, and the 14th by
Cleveland 's bullpen 111 21
opportumues tht s season
"This ts very hard for us,
especially for me ." Jimenez
satd " I left a couple pitches
up. and patd tor It btg tllne."
Cleveland took a 4-3 lead
in the seventh on an RBI
single by Vtctor Mart111ez
The Marlin s tted It 111 the
eighth on an RBI smgle by
Mtke Redmond.
The lndtans went ahead 20 wtth two unearned runs

Lakers
from Page 81

I

•

•

realtze more than ever that the
Pistons are anything but a
pushover, whJle Detroit now
knows that no vtctory IS ever
secure when the ball can end
up m Bryant's hands tor the
btggest shot of the game.
"It's a challenge," Bryant
smd "A dogfight No one satd
It was gomg to be easy. We
look forward to go mg up
there.''
Shaqutlle O'Neal added 29
pomts for the Lakers, stx of
them commg m the extra penoct as Los Angeles improved to
7-0 in overtime games during
the regular season and postseason.
One of those vtctones came
on the final night of the regular season at Portland when
Bryant htt a buzzer-beating 3pointer to force ovcrttme, then
won it at the end of the ex tra
period with another 3 to give
the Lakers the Pacitic Dtvtston
title
This ume. thmgs looked
fairly hopeless for the Lakers
as they trailed by six pomts
wtth less than 40 seconds lett
in regulauon. But o· Neal converted a three-point play and
Chauncey Billups missed a
runner for Detroit. gtvmg the
Lakers a laq ; hot
Naturally, the ball went to
No 8. And naturally, Bryant
dnlled 11 over Rtchard
Hanulton wnh 2.1 seconds left
before running back to the
bench to chest-bump teammate Devean George as
Detroit called umeout to set up
a last shot
"Shaq gave me a great down
ptck," Bryant satd. "I had

through 20 l 0.
Huggms ts a former
Buckeyes assistant coach ~ ho
has feuded with Oh10 State
offtcials, mcludmg Geiger.
for years because the
Buckeyes won ' t sched ule
Ctncmnau 111 men's basketball
Knt ght showed his soft side
after he brought the Red
Ratders to Oh10 State lor a
game m January.
·-r ve never really forgotten
about all Ohio State has done
lor me - when I was here as
a student and what 11 enabled
me to do after that... Kmght
said then. hts ~01 ce choked
wtth emotton " I have felt
deep down more tor Ohm
State than any of the sc~ools
r ve coached •·
Now Oh10 State will have
to come up wtth a search
commmee to find a replacement for O'Bnen even as 11
continues an investtgatton
mto the sulhed program
'Thts ts a wondertul umversny, and a great place to
coach basketball , I think,"
Getger satd "We' II rei y on
that as our recrmtmg basts tor
a new coach"

Rtchard on me. and I just tned
to gather rhy balance and
knock 11 down "
Rasheed
Wallace
let
Tayshaun Pnnce 's mbounds
pass shp through his hands,
and the clock exptred without
the Ptstons attemptmg a tina!
shot
The momentum was squarely on the Lakers' side by then ,
and Los Angeles outscored
DetrOit l0-2 m the extra penoct to even the senes.
Bryant began the extra period by feedmg o· Neal for a
dunk, but he then ptcked up
hts fifth lou! wtlh 4: 18 lett
Dtd 11 matter? Not a bit
Bryant scored on a dnve,
fed O'Neal for a 4-footer and
scored on a dnving bank shot
for a 97-91 lead
The capper came when
Luke Walton, a surprise contnbutor 111 the first half and at
the end, sent an alley-oop pass
to O'Neal tor a dunk
Detroit shot just 1-for-9 in
overtnne, ruming a performance that seemed so promtsmg as regulauon wound down.
Chauncey Btllups scored 27
and Richard Hamtlton 26 for
the Pistons
The dtfference-maker m the
tirst half was Walton. a rookte
who dtdn 't even get oft the
bench in Game l
Bestdes makmg all thtee of
hts shots and grabbmg three
rebounds. Walton had ftve
asststs Two of them came on
passes to Bryant to begm d 156 run to close the half that
gave the Lakers .1 44-36 lead.
Los Angeles was ab le to sustam a comfortable margm
through the early part ot the
thtrd quarter, in large part
because the Lakers' own slopptness was matched by
DetrOit's After Jacbon berated Pa} ton as he walked ofl the

,

court dunng a timeout, Bryant
came out and htt a 22-foot
JUmper for a 54-43 lead
Detroit began chtppmg
away by going at the Lakers •
two agmg superstars, Rasheed
Wallace taking on Karl
Malone and Btllups gomg at
Payton Both Los Angeles
players began making mental
mistakes on offense, too.
Getttng 16 pomts 111 the
quarter from Btllups and etght
from Rasheed Wallace, Detroit
pulled wuhin one point late 111
the quarter and trailed 68-66
entenng the fourth
Walton dtdn't get ofl the
bench m the second half until
after Detroit scored the first
basket of the fourth quarter to
tte tl, and the Ptstons pulled
ahead on a 3-pomter by
Lmdsey Hunter as Jackson
went with a lmeup of Walton,
K,ueem Rush, Bnan Cook,
Derek Ftsher and 0' Neal.
0' Neal took a pass from
Walton and plowed mto Ben
Wallace With 6 171eft, ptckmg
up hts fifth foul and headmg to
the bench. A gtve-and-go
layup by Hamilton off a pass
from Rasheed Wallace was
followed by an mrball by
Bryant, and Rasheed Wallace
then fe,d Ben Wallace for a
reverse layup and an 8 1-77
lead
Detroit traded baskets wtlh
the Lakers on the next two
possessions. and a mtssed 3 by
Bryant was followed by two
tree throws by Hamtlton lor an
87-82 lead wtth 1:19 left.
Notes: Jackson's girlfriend,
Jeannte Buss (daughter ot
Lakers owner Jerry Bu&gt;S)
went on a local radto program
Monday and said she was 95
percent certmn Jackson would
return to coach the team next
'eason ''She freelanced on tt."
Ltckson satd

www.mydailysenti nel.com

Former Oh10 State basketball coach Jtm ()'Bnen's year·by-year
record
Year ............Team ....................................................Record
20·10
1982·83 . .St. Bonaventure
t8·13
1983-84
St Bonaventure
.. 14·15
1984·85 . St Bonaventure
15·13
1985·86 . ..St. Bonaventure ..
4-year St Bonaventure record 67-51
11·18
t 986·87
Boston College
18-15
1987·88 ... Boston College
12·17
1988·89
Boston College.
1989-90
Boston College
8·20
. 11 · 19
1990·91 . Boston College
17·14
199 t ·92 ... Boston College .
18· 13
1992·93
Boston College
t 993·94
Boston College
23·11
.. . 9·19
1994·95.. Boston College
19-11
1995·96 .. .Boston College ..
22·9
1996-97
Boston College
11-year Boston College record 168· t 66
1997·98 .... Ohto State ...... .
8·22
1998-99 . Ohto State
27·9
1999-00 .. Ohto State
23·7
2000-01 .. Ohto State
20·11
2001-02 ... Oh10 State
24·8
2002·03
Oh1o State
t 7-15
2003·04 . Oh10 State
14· 16

mtenm bas ts dunng the search
for a new head coach.
O'Bnen, 368-305 m22 years
as a head coach. came to Ohto
State in 1997 trom his alma
matet , Boston College He had
also been a head coc~ch &lt;It St
Bonaventure.
o· Bncn took over the
Buckeyes from Randy Ayers.
who was tired after, tour consecutive losm~ sec~sons and
NCAA probatton for paymg
$60 to a potenttal recrUit
After going 8-22 111 hts fttsl
sec~son wtth Ayer," players.
O'Bnen led the Buckeyes to a
27-9 record as they m&lt;Ide II to
the national scmtfmals betore
losmg 64-58 to eventual nation·
al champion Connecttcut.
The Buckeyes went 23-7.
20-11 and 24-8 the next three
sea son~. wmnmg two B1g Ten
regular-season titles and a conterence tournament tttle. Each
team went to the NCAA tour·
namcnt.
Last season. Ohio State
mtssed the postseason for the
ftrst time 111 SIX years as
O'Bnen struggled to tegam h"
votce aftet hts vocal cords were
damaged dunng back surgety

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For sale or rent· 2 bedroom nt::.nec

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garage new roof s1dmg
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large Apa rtments Very Spacrou~
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•t&lt; f~•N•C eS (740)441..()181
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lllcluefes .,.. c\tet sewer &amp;
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1304)593 0719
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4514 Days or (740)446·
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740 446·4234 or 7&lt;10 208
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bedtoom
apt New sota and char S350
Washer dryer hookJp S290 New reclmers S 150
rent depost t reqwed No Mollohan s (740)367 70 t 5
pels ""404411184
ThOmpsons Applrance &amp;
Reoa•r-675·7388 For sale
re-cond1110ned
&lt;~utomatt C

_'n;;;lo:;;:(7;;;40:);;;44;;;6;;;
· 7;;;3;;;7;;;7:;;::;;:;;;
1

1

WANirll

To Do

Call B D Construction for all
of your home tmprovemant
needs roofs decks stdtng
etc reasonable prtees tree
esttmates, call (740)992·
2979

Bedroom , 2 1/2 Bath
22 acres, 3 Car Garage
n SA 554 Code 32904
r call (740)367 7619
Bedroom 2 Bath 2 Car
arage $2500 Carpet
llowance Jay Dnve,
alllpofls Code 52804 or
aii(740I446 7231

All real eatate ad.,.rtielng
In this newepaper II
subleC1 to the FtK1er11
Fair Hou1ing AC1 of 1M8
which make• It Illegal to
edvertlae "any
preference, llmltltlon or
dlecrlmlnaUon b. .ed on
race, color, religion, 111
flmlll•l ewtu1 or n1tlon•l
origin, or •ny Intention to
meke •ny euch
preterenc•, llmltltlon or
dllcrimlnatlon

Ch1ldcare m my home new·
barns welcome as~ for Pam
(7401985·3437

Georges Portable Sawmill
don't haul your logs to the
Immediate opening tor an mtll jus! cell304·675-1957
accountant position Full
time, medium size compar.ty Interior palntmg Don Van
Exp requ~red El;t~;Cellent ben· Meter (740)985 3951

Thil niWipaper will not
knowingly accept
advertl1emente tor rNI
etlllt which II In
vlollllon of the law Our
reader• Ire hereby
Informed that •II
dw•Uinge 1dvertl1ed In
this newepiJ*' ,,.
1v1H1ble on an equet

ef1ts· 401 K Please send
resume to Accoun1ant PO Jim's Carpentry &amp;. small
Box 608 Wellston. Ohio Landscaping Call (740)446·
2506
45692

aoo

IOK R b'1

--~

Call 8()()..652·2362

Heavy Equipment
Mechanic or Welder
Knowledge tn electncal and
Atr condlttorllng referred
Serv1ce trucK/tools also
Competitive
preferable
wages Good benefits Apply
at Sands Htll Coal Company,
3870 1 State Route 160
Hamden , Ohio or call 740·
384·421, to request an
appllcatton form be mailed
Resumes can be mailed
dtrectly to P:O Bo;t~; 850,
Hamden, Ohio 45634

&lt;\ 1'\I!T\ILN fS

.t·;

HELl' WANTEII

bursement 401 K and health
and dental tnsurance If
tnterested please conla cr
Clmtcal Manager at 740·
441·9300 An equal oppor·
luntty employer

BR

Hot,.&gt;,
lUI! RfXI

Home Graetous ltvmg 1 and 2 bed
room apartments at Vtflage
Pleasant area N1ce fenced r&gt;.AClnor
and
Arverstde
yard m O&gt;Cellent netgnbor Apartment s rn Mtddleporl
2000 14x70 Clayton 3 bed hOod
567~ monHJiy pus From 5295 $444 Call 740
room 2 bath appliances deposrt
References 992 5064 Equal Hous tng
deck Great condrhon needs requtred
Call 1 304 638 Opportunlttes
moved $19 000 (7401379 7411 or 1 304-2731112
New 1 bedroom apt Ph one
2928
(7401446-3736
211 ~I onu l-Im II·~'
96 Skyl1ne Mobile H0me
~&gt;Jew Furntshed 1 Bedroom
3Br 1 112BA call (304\576
FOR R~-"
Apart .... ent SSOO month all
2268 after 5 00
utiltlleS
pa•d 3 miles to
2 bath mobile home m
Coles Mobtle Homes 15266
Middleport $250 rer 1 S250 Hosp•tal (304)674·0031
US 50 E Ath e'1S Ohro
acpoSit 1 yr lease no pets \le""€r 2 bedroom wrt"'
45701 New summer hours
no
calls
alter
CJpm garage
No
pet
MTW RAMto7PMTh
(74fJ)992 50::J9
~400
month
plus
deposrt
.)
F BAM to 5 PM Sat 9AM to
eferences
(7401446
280
1
4PM 'Where you get your 2 bed oofl&lt; mob•le homes
2 bedroom tra•ler Call tor
appo•ntment alter 5 OOPm
(304)675 5217

DRIVERS NEW PAY

CLASS A COL NEEDED

10

MoRn • Ho~ us

PM Shift

SCALE

VISA

POLICIES Ohio Vall•y Publl•hlng reserves the right to ed it reject, or cancel env ad at any time Er ror~ rnust l:le reported on ttl&amp; tlrst day of
Tribuna-sentinel Regletar will be reeponelble tor no more than the coat of the spoce occup1ed by the en or and only the !Ira! Insertion We shell not be II
any lose or e•penee lhal reaulla from the publication or om leeton of an ad\lettlsamenl Correction will be made 1n the f1rs t alia liable ed1t1on • Box
are alwa~s confidential • Current rate card applies • A.ll re11l estate &amp;dverti!Uimenta are subject to the Federal F11u Hous•ng Act or 196!1 • Thn'
accepts onl~ help wanted ada meeting EOE standards We will not knowingly accept any adllertltmg n "lola! ion of I he law

Dtesel Mechanic II
Rumpke tS the leader In lhe
waste Industry.
Pos1t1o n assists senior &amp;
experienced mechanics
with repairs &amp; maintenance auch aa lubrication,
electrical and brake work
Reqwes mechanical aptt·
tude with basic knowledge
of vehicle maintenance
and repair· exp wtth dtesel
power vehtcle preferred
Must also have own tools
famthanty wtth repa•r manu·
als and a mtmmum of 1 year
performtng stmllar duttes
Must be able to ltft 751bs
Excellent compensation &amp;
benefits with medical ,
dental, 401k, vacatton &amp;
pension. Please come m
and apply anytime Mon·
Frl 8am-Spm
Take the whee' of your
Rumpke Waste
28 AW Long Road
Wellston. OH 45692
Fax 74D-~5472
No phone calls please/EOE

•

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
fJ~Jr'1',
Borders $3 .00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Keeper
Lunch Cook needed Apply Nurse/House
Within,
Second Ave , Expenenced Geriatric Care
Gallipolis
Giver wtll care for your love
one In their home Mon·Frt
Make 50% sellmg Avon $7 hr (304)576·2787
Limited
time
ONLY
(740)446·3358 Flrsl5 to call Roofing Decks Hardwood
floor Jnstallatton, remodel·
receives a gift
lng additions
Top Notch
Peroonal
care
· Garage Sale 3277 Tyn AhOa
Contractors
&amp;
EMT s Building
• Ad
(off Center Potnt) Someone needed lo aft with Paramedlcs
• clothes dishes, mise ttems eldeoly Call (7401886·8527 needed Apply at 1354 WV036687 (3041675·5490
or (304)675·3042
or (740)256·1968 attar 6pm Jackson Pike GaUtpolls
8·4, Sat-Sun

4lde

ads

JUST SAY
CHARGE IT!

(304) 675-1333

Publication
1 : 00 p.m

'rlclay For Sundays Paper

r.,;,.--------,f·

lost Aed Bulldog m1x
Female 6-monlhs old White
on chest Lost Mulberry Ave
Area Rewards Childs pet ATTENTION OWNER
very
much
missed OPERATORS
(7401992·1080 (740)992·
5853
Canton Ohio reeler
company looking for
Owner Operators td
YARD SALE
earn between 125· 150K

r
r

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

Famtfy Addtc!ton Community The Metgs l ocal School
Treatment Servtces- An out D1stnct IS seekmg quafllted
pattent AlcohOl and Drug applicants for the position of
Hartford June 11 12 CCCU Counseltng
agency
IS Tutor for a Severe Behavtor
Fellowship Hall Nb·plus accepting Resumes for the Handicapped Student The
pos 1t.on
posttton pays $20 per hour
Iols oI items, ch otr span- follow '""
:oo
sored Ratn or Shine
Prevention
Educator- for no more than ftve hours
Seeking an energettc 1nd• per week The tutonng wtll
Rutland Freew 1U Bapt 1st vtdual to work youth and be lor the summer With the
Church aU week June 7 adults tn Gallta and Jackson posstbrltty of gmng tnto next
thru 12 many ttems, very cou nt tes
Responsrblflttes school year Applicants must
cheap 1st Rd to lett past tnclude but not flmtted to have a current teachtng car
Fo;t~;'S Ptzza
alcohol tobacco and other l thcate or ltcensure Please
drug educatiOn classroom contact the Superintendents
6
YARD SALEOll,ce at 740 992 2 153
n.. PL
presentattons,
tra1n1ngs ,
..- •·
EASANf
1atrs communt 1y even 1s, Deadlrne for appllcatron ts
June 16, 2004
I
I
I an d tmpemen·
deveopmen
i:i::i-.;,;.~-----,
Garage Sale • After sale one latton of grant prOjects elc 150
ScHooL~
nght
pnce
buys
all A m1mmum of a Bachelors
INSl'RLJCnON
(304)675- 3823 leave mes Degree requrred wtth know! t.,.-ooiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiedge of alcohol tobacco
Gallipolis Career College
WANIID
and other drugs Send
(Careers Clo se To Home)
resume by June 15 2004 to
Call Today' 740-44 6·4367
10 BUY
FACTS 45 Olive Street
1·900-214-0452
GallipOliS, OhtO 45631 Or
www gt~llipol lscamercclloge com
Absolute Top Dollar U S FAX to (740)446·8014
Accrvd•led Membr;n Accred•tmg
Silver
Gold
Cams EOE, M/F/H
CounCi l lor lndBpendent Colleges
Proofsets Dtamonds Gold
and Schools 12746
Amgs
U S Currency,· Fresentus Medtcal Care 170
I
MTS Com Shop, 151 global leader 1n dtalys•s care
~ISCELI.ANE:OUS
Second Avenue Galhpolts currently has open positiOns 1
740 446 2842
tor AN s and Dtalysts Tachs
I \ll'lt&gt;\\11 \I
tn our Gallipolis OH factltty Baby Srtter lor 5 yr old &amp; 9
must
be
link
"\11~\ltl"\
We
oller
compet11 1ve month
;r:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,....;...;., salanes, educatiOn re1m · approved tn the Mason New

110

LOST $1 100 m a C1ty

Dally In-column : 1100 p.m.
Monday - Friday for :Insertion

In Next Day's Paper

.ssoo

Black Cocker Spamel w1th
blue collar Name Prec1ous
Lost tn KanaUga area
Reward call (740)446·8 125

(Your Name)

Yard Sale 6/1 1·6/12 10·4
Down Rt 7, 2 miles, 1903
Raccoon Rd Boys 0-3T
name brands, excellent con
d1t10n Carters cr~bs beddmg
and accessones toys dtshes, candles, home tntertor,
baskets tread mill , qu tll
frame ladles 14·20

Display Ads

Sunday :tn-Colurnn

.Earn between 45 50K
.Min 1 year exp
.Home Weekends
Cltfton WV June8·11, Samstgn-on bonus
1yr old female full blooded
?
lawn mowers btcycle .S\art at 36 cpm
Brussels Gntfon puppy no
chtlderns &amp; adult clothmg &amp; .95% No touch fre1Qht
papers
good
w/ktds
miSC
.NO FORCED NYC
(3041675·6615

r

Love

lnstde &amp; ou l 4 rooms lull
large
vartety
1699
McCormtck Rd June 10 11
9 ?
--------White Road Yard Sales
8+ Homes Saturday 12 7?
Household 1tems foozeball
table Longaberger Prom
dress toys , baby, toddler
adult clo thtng and ttems col·
lectable dolls etc 160 ftrst
nght past Hatfelts

home whtla you enJOY the [J74
YARD SALEfeeli ng of a modern spa
PoMEROY/MUllll F:
Hold your ver'y own Spa t...,.;,tiiiiiiiiiiiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiioi-1
Escape party For detatls call
( 304)675 3008 leave mas Boat trailer tires outdoor
rug old cot ns currency
sage
glassware
mtsc
37 t 20
Rockspu ngs Road June
GrvEAWAY
I I&amp; 12

To good home 7 months old
whtte female house cal
Declawed/shots (740)3792696 9 30-noon

Love

GALUI'OLIS

Interest m helptng couple s
complete
thetr
family
through surrogacy? Your
eggs wtll not be usAd For
tnformat1on call 1 888-342 Yard Sale Fnday Saturday
3678
9 ? 16 t 1 Shoestring Rtdge
Somethmg lor everyone ,
Refa,~e and earn free gtfts m
th8 comfort of your own crafts mtcrowave, TV

Pomeraman dog
male
house broken very good
wlthchtldren (740)9921833

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

YARD SALE·

ADOPTION A Jov1ng COU·
pie would like to adopt your
newborn
Will prov•de a
home ltlled w•th JOV happ•·
ness, hnanctal secunty and
a great educatton Feel con
fldent m knowmg because of
your brave dectSIOn your
baby could look lotward to a
bnghl and wonderful future
E;t~;penses pa1d Call toll free
1·866 731 7825
Barbara
Yard Sale 1595 Adamsvtlle
and Michael
Road Saturday, Sunday,
C·1 Beer Carry Oul permit June 12 13 9·3

-

Happy
Father's Day

n

Word Ads

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Descriptlon • Include A Prtce • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed

Get Response ...

KIHens lo good home Born
May 1st 1 female, 3 males
1
.7_4_01_37_9_·2_9_8_1_ _ _ _

Happy
Father's Day

l\.egister

Sentinel

urribune

To Place

l1t1er tratned {740)742·1019
after Spm

1 X 5 GreeUnv &amp; Picture

i~ter

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

7 years at Ohto State 133·8tl
22-year collegtate. record 368-305
Getger smd he had asked
o· Bnen whether the coach was
aware he had vtolated NCAA
rules
"He admttted he knew that
he dtd."' Getger smd
NCAA spokeswom.tn Kay
Hawes satd the NCAA ts mvestlgating o· Bncn and the Ohto
State basketball program.
Ohto State Prestdent Karen
Holbrook satd a coach is
expected to look out for ht s ath·
letes but is bound by NCAA
bylaws
"Everybod~ understands the
compassiOn,' she satd "We ;.ue
all compasstonate and tee!
strongly about helpmg stu·
dents. but we also have the
NCAA gUidelines that this umversity and every universtty has
to hve wtthm When they're
violated, there are sanctions
placed on the inslltutton ··
0' Bnen 's contract - whtch
pmd hun more than $ll50.()()()
per year - specttics that the
umverstty can tire htm for any
NCAA violations.
His finng was effective
nnmedmtely Geiger satd that
associate head coach Rtck
Boyages would take over on an

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

urribune - Sentinel - l\.e
CLASSIFIED

Jim O'Brien's ca•r coaching
record

from Page 81

was O'Bnen·, or came lmm
another source ·
"My understandmg ts It was
not the school's (money).'"
Getger satd.
Geiger s,tid O'Brien mdtcated he g,we the money to
Radojevtc becau'e the player's
father had died, his mother was
unable to wot k and he h.td
three stblmgs
RadoJevtc, a 7-foot-3 center.
played m hts nattve Yugoslavia
and was recrmted and stgned
by O'Bnen Before he attended
a class or wore an Ohto State
umform. however, the NCAA
ruled that he was ineligtble for
accepting $ 13.000 from a professtOtM.l team in his homeland.
Pre~ented from pl.tymg college ball, Radojevtc entered the
NBA draft and was taken wtth
the No 12 ptck m the first
round by the Toronto Raptors.
lnJunes cut short hts NBA
career He was traded to
Denver and to Milwaukee m
2001 before bemg cut hy the
Bucks
Oh10 State learned ot
0 ' Buen 's
payment
to
Radojevtc through a lawsuu
agamst 0' Brien by a woman
who satd she provtded ho4s111g.
meals and dothes for another
Ohto St&lt;tte recruit from the
same war-tom area, Slobodan
Savovtc He played four ye;u s
wtth the Buckeyes, mcludmg
on 0' Bnen ·s Fmal Four teliQl
The lawsUit says that thenOhto Stale asststant coach Paul
Btancardt - now the head
coach at Wnght State - also
was acttve 111 handling money
for Savov1c ,md Rado1evtc.
Btancardi was out of town
atld could not be reached for
comment Wnght State athlettc
dtrector Mt' .e Cusack satd he
had not seen any documents.
but also was trying to reach
Btancardi.
Geiger satd he had asked
O'Bnen about the lawsuit and
was told by the coach that tl
was a mmor problem and
would go awav On Apnl 24,
Getger satd OrBnen told hun
that deposlltons 111 the lawsuu
would teveal the payment
made to Radojevic.

Wednesday, June 9, 2004

Bedroom 2 Bath Atver
lew/ Access Prrvate
at Dock m Galltpohs ,
ere lot Code 90303 or
all (740)446·0531
Bedroom 8nck Home 2
ath 3 Car Brick
nanached Garage 2
tory outbulldlng Code
2704 or call (7401446·
586
Bedroom, 2 Bath 2 Car
a rage 1 9 acres on SR
141 Code 33104 or call
740)446-7633

·~:::•:pp~o~rt:un:l::ty•:••:"~~
_

House
for sale 2014
Jefferson Ave
$40 000
OBO (304)675·5865 leave
message
Ntce House for sale In
Rutland , musl be moved
$12,000 (7401367-7886

i

~

MOBILE HOMES
FORSALE

1984 Schultz t4x70 w/6x24
pull out 3 bedroom 2 beth
a/c
good
conditiOn
(7401992· 7651

lli~I\IS

10

Hot lSI~
FUR Jb.:Nl

1506 Oh10 St PI Pleasant
2 bedroom, full basement
depos•t
$37 5/month
(7 40)441 0720

dressers couches reclrn
ers
bunkbeds
Grave
Attr acttve one bedroom apt Monuments 2002 Bass
2nd floor corner Second Tracke r
Frshmg
Boat
Ptne
No
pets (740)4 46·478 2 Ga ll•polrs
and
Reterences
reqwed OH Hrs 11 3 M F
secur1ty depoS!t S3oo per

"r'"JO.-.;;.....;...;____.,

month water 1ncluded Call
(740)446 4425 or 1740)446
3935
;_;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ ·
APART·
2 Houses tor Rent 3 bed BEAUTIFUL
4T
BUDGET
room 1 bath $500 &amp; $650 MENTS
month
plus
depostt PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
(740)245·9020
Ortve from $344 10 $442
2 Small 2 bedroom homes Wal~ to shop &amp; movres Call
tn Mrddleport. lo;.ttchen fur· 740-446·2568
Equal
n1shed
$400 00
plus~ Housmg Qpportuntty
deposit Ptck up rental appli·
cations at Datry Queon or Beaullful untu rmshed one
VauQhn s
grocery
In bedroom apt overloo~tng
Ctty
Park
references
Middleport
required no pets secuPty
3
bedroom
house
1n depoSII $400 per month
Pomeroy $400 a mo S4DO Call
(7 40) 446 2325
or
depos•t no pets (740 )949 (740)446-4425
7004
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
3 bedroom house No •nstde ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
apanmen1s
pets Ge.I!Jpolls Ferry wv TownhOlJSe
Must
have
references and/or small houses FOR
$500/month S250 'dep ~s 1 RENT Call 1740)44 1 1 t 11
'o r i:I P r 1::&gt;n &amp; 1nlo• mnt on
(304 )895 87 95

Buy
or sell
RIVa rme
AntrQues 1124 East Matn
or SA 124 E Pomeroy 740
992 2526
Russ Moore
owner

lf~~M~Lo;t:-.,-1-1-~N-f.-:0-liS_,
MERCHANDL~E
1 5 Ft Kenmore Freezer
(Chest) 11ke new (304)773
5835
DIVIng boa rd &amp; spnng stand
2 stamtess ladders 1-1 h p
&amp;
sand
lttler
pump
(740)446·0014
JET
AERAT ION MOTORS
Reparred New &amp; Rebutlt In
Stock Call Ron Evans 1
BOO 537·9528

Ktng Stze Bed S250 00
1ng applrcattons for war11ng Kttchen Tab le S250 00
Center
hst for Hu'd·subsrzed 1 'br Enter1atnment
P1ano
S350 00
apartment call 675 6679 $75 00
13041675 2349
EHO

3 bedroom 1n country no T\\tn Atvers Tower ts accept
tnsrde pels
references
reqwred $450 per month
5400
depostt
(Hud
Aoproved) (740)742 2210

AN"II(Jl ~~...."'i

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

r

Wednesday, June 9, 2004

www.mydailysentlnel.com

~ It'~.,.0-·FOR·A·u·SALE
ros_ _..,

lift ehalr, 2-way recline, light
brolNI"', used only 5 months,
excellent condition. $500,
~140)949-2481

.NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
-.For
Concrete,
Angle.
.Channel , Flat Bar, Steel
-Grating
For
Drains,
.Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
~Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday. Sam-4:30pm . Closed
Thursday,
SatUrday
&amp;
Sunday. (740)446-7300

~ Pole Barn 30x50x10 only
$5,295, includes painted
metal, plans how to build
book. Fllder free delivery.
(9371789-0309.

---~---,

Bs~!!'~~
i'---iiiiliitiiiiii-.,.J
unL.U:.o:J

Block. brick, sewer p1pes.
windows. lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande. OH

~~~~~~~-..,

98 F-250 real good shape 4·
wheel drive $8,000 00. 89
Crown Victoria $2 .750.00
OBO. 87 Jeep Pioneer
Wagon . real nice shape
$2,500.00(7 40)992-5532

PRICE REDUGEDI 23ft. V8 PRICE REDUCED! 35 ft.,
Sea Ray Cuddy, 52.250 5th Wheel. E~&lt;cellent shape,
OBO. 304-675-6444 or 740- 8 ft. slide out. $5.500 090.
(740)645-2729.
645-2729.
IW

CA.~II'ERS &amp;
MOTOR Ho~u.:s

Blue 2000 Ford Explorer
XLT. 56,389 m iles. Power
1974 Winnebago Brave
wii1dows. sears &amp; mirrors.
$2,300. (7401388·8473
Keyless/entry.
leather.
Loaded
$12,000
call
(304)576-2541
1990 Coleman Pop Up
Nice 1993, while four door Camper. Good CondJtiOn
Ford Escort Gets 36 mpg . Canvas lfke new $1 ,500
automatiC
transmiSSion (304)675-4096
loaded , $1.493 (740)4469430.
-------1991
Nomad
camper.
TRUCKS
Excellent
condit1on,
IUR S.w:
$14.000. Slide out 5th
wheel . (740)256-6392
1 980 Chevy 3/4-ton, 4x4
350, 4-speed 6-1nch l1ft.
good cond1110n . $4,000
1992 Chevy S-10, 4x4, 4.3
auto aJr, S2.30&lt;J Goat for
sale, 3 year old Wether. $40

i

Phillip
Alder

"I ~~ \ II I "

North

HOME
IMI'RO\'EI.IENTii

IF YOU RENT
What would you lose if there was a fire?

BASEMENT

We can insure your valuables! ~

WATERPROOFING
Uncondition al 11fetime guar·
antee Local references fur·
n1shed Eslablisl:!ed 1975.
Call
24 Hrs . (1'40) 4460870. Rogefs Basement
Waterproofing.

For a Free Quote or Appointment
Col/:

Rocky Hupp Insurance
, and Financial Services,

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
EnrJ Thursday
&amp; Sunday
l&gt;oors Open ~:30
Earl) birds start

MYERS
PAVING
•

h:.lU
LastThursda) of

Cell Phone 67 4-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

eYe r~·

month

All pack $5.00
Bring Ihis coupon
Ruy $5.00

Box 189 • Middleport

740-841-5264

M1niature
puppies. 95. 4x4. Chevy ext caiJ .

shots .. 7 40·696·1 065

male, 4 female. Ready to go
July 5. $300, call (740)441 0931.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _:__
AKC Dachshund puppies for
s·ale 2·male, 2·female, 1st
shots, lst worming, $350.

j

2000 Chrysier Town &amp;
Country Van limited loaded.
Call day 74 4 46-21 07. ·
night 740 _245 _9164 .

AKC Labs, Black &amp; Yellow atm, PDL. PS, 3rd row seat,
lemale, 4 months. all shots rear air. cd and cassette
Parents on premises. hunt- player. running boards.
~ ing stock. (740)388-9515
100.000 m11e transferable
· warranty.
great
shape.
AKC Pekingese puppies for Asking $19.500. (740)388·
sale. 3 male, 2 female . Call 9673.
(740)992-0287.
-------79 GMC 12pass 3/4 ton Van
Full blooded Rat Terrier 350 motor, excellent shape,
pups. 6 weeks old, wormed motor needs rebuilt. Asking
and tails dockeCI. $100 each . $ 500 OBO. John (740)379(740)367-7468.
9122

Top • Removal • "f:rim
• Stump Grinding

liNDA'S PAINTING

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

Bucket Truck

0401985-4180

'il(a,'f tJ~d

'Ctea-a-

~M~

Taylor &amp; Hall Family
Kayla Jacks l&gt;aughler

~~~

Good 85 Ford F-~50. 4ll:4, V8, 4 speed. Call for- details
(740)256-6735.

1 \tnt-..t t't'ttt...,
,\ I I\ I 'IC H 5o.

12' John Deer disc, model
1.1O: round baler. New ~~o.:;;;;;.o~~:.:;.:,;=;
Holland model 640 net wrap:
'hay bind New Holland model
: 472 ; rake New Holland
.model256; 80S International 1998 ·Kawasaki jet ski 1100
1ractor, 125hp, 740-742- ZXI. less than 100 hours
use.
W1th 1999 trailer.
NOS
Serious
inquires
only.
· ~ 950
Ferguson
tractor, (740)441 -8285.
:$1.000 060, can be seen at
Michael Farm·on County Ad .
25, (740)742-2101

Advertise
in this
space
for
$50 per
month

High 8l Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

98 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Limited . loaded . 84.000
m1les, $8 ,300. (740)256·
6346.

740-992-5232

R.B.
Trucking

Open MIC Night at the
IRON GATE GRILL
Every Thursday
7pm

Bands, Musicians, Singers,
&amp; Comedians
Limited PA Equipment &amp; Drums
provided

Free Estimates

·'

o

5 &amp; I0 yr Warramics

, ·11::· ·'·

Fireplaces ~· !' ,, ..· ,

YIIIJII All PUIS TIIR WEI
11.1¥116 AGARAGE SAl.! EASY!

Cherokee
·Laredo,
Loaded, Exc.
Condition,
one Owner
(:1041882-2825

!2002

1Day Ad:
.
$6.00 · 15 words or less
+$6.00 Kit
Gets You Great

Suzuki 650 Savage.

• loW mlloo, (740)992-8084
94 Toyota •X4 pickup 4-cyl 5

-tpHd. Professionally lifted
128K miles good condition
$.2,800.00 (740)742·13 16

•1 wooden slates
•108 pricing ~Is
•Felt tip marker

•lrnlruetion and rip sheet

t

Stethem

fLEA MARKET
AT MAPLEWOOD

LAKE
State Route 124
Between·Raci~~ and
· Syracuse
Friday, .lune 4 &amp;
Saturday, ,June 5
Spaces available,
also Campsites
available with full
hookups

949-2734

3Day Ad:
$9.00 · IS words or less
t $6.00 Kit
Gets You Great

; e,

: (3041576·2383

IT'S NEARLY TIME FER
LUNCH AT ELVINEY'S !!

I

(j)OI)I [ ~fi..\IE

TIZ\1-\ME.R~ 7

I1..\ Tf\E. 1&gt;\E.l)IC\f\(
n

Mon-Frl9·5

Sal. 9-12

.

.., ....
fl.. TOEW\IL

.

BRUIUS

Tt\f\1 KE.EPS POK\t-16

Tf.IDRI-'fi..WLC

TI\ROuGf.\ M'&lt;
)OCKS-l Tl-\li'lK

1'\E.'iR.O)(')(.l)t&lt;.L 1.

I )f'.OULt&gt; TRifl\ _..).~ll

CN;.\1..\ET I

Meig.&lt; County•• LargeJt .election of
annuals. perennials. vegetables.
shrubbery, fruit, ornamental trees,
roses, rhododendrons. and azaleas.

46 Disturbs
49
53
54
55

r AM 50 REAbY FOR. •
TODAY'S SOCIAL STUDIES
FINAL' r'VE BEEN
CI?ArtMING FOR t&gt;AYS \

ASK

ME

AN'i THING'

RI\N

FOI'&lt;.

· PRES I DENT,
WHI\T · wAS HIS

CAt1P,.._IGN

SLOG,.._N ~

\l"

'

IMPIRTS
Athens

NIJ-9&gt;1~·19111

Dean Hill

A I'Qi/(1/)/e

New .&amp; Used

·

WRITESEl
. HOOFING
. dOME
MAINTENANCE
•SEAMlESS
GOnER
* Fraa Estimates*

NO, I'LL TAKE TI-lE
6LANKET ...'&lt;OU KEEP
TI.IE TI.IUMB!

BETTY

475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

HOWARD l.

HOW ABOUf
'' SUIM1E.R HOLIDAY
AUGUST 2ooq,
VOUJME fiVE :&gt;

WHAT DO YOU WANT

TO WATCf1 NEXT ?

1-800-822-0417

JUST

"W.V"s # I Chc,y, Pontine. llttirk. Olds
&amp; Custom Van DeaiPr''

''VOlUME.

flVE "?
flO,\/ IW\Ilf
VOL.Ufr\5

AS ! 1\E.CALL , THAT WAS
1HE SUMMEI&lt; YOU WERE
0Ei€RMINI:O TO ~i IJI'

ON ONE; WAIE!l- 5KI

ARE
11iERE'?

~~-

11-l\NG
y

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

740-7 42-341

HCS,INC.
New Homes • New
Garages • Pole
Barns • Roofing
• Room Additions
o Remodeling
• Vinyl Siding
Commercial and
Residential
Free Estimates

r

~

NORRIS NORTHUP.DODGE
252 Upper River Road • Gallipolis

740-446"-G842 • 949·1155 Evenings

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

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addition• &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages

• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Pa11o and Porch Oeeks
We do it all except
furnact work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
22 v,ars Local Experience

ROBERT
BISSELL

CDIISTRUCTIOII
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

140-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

· GRIZZWELLS
~UWJ\ .1 I toUWil 50ME- C\.\1. C.~l&lt;tl&lt;!-5.'
1\\t.'('~£

, Th5'1tl.£~S
Al-It;) ?TALE:
A't:l.P Rl\..L
OF

~IJ\1.51

••

..•

23 Chopping

~~
24 Bun!au
25 IIQrse.drawn
"""""Yonce
28 Kiwi cousin
30 So&lt;:lety
· miss
34 - the line
(obeyin~)

Usually, one pair easily wins the auction .
Bu1 some deals become down-and-d1rty
scraps, with neither side sure who can
make what. Th1s deal. from a social
Ch1cago game, 1s like that
The first three Calls were clear-cut. Then
South had a problem. which he sens1bly
solved IJy , overcalling thJee diamonds.
There are btds, like the Unusual NoTrump, that immediately describe twosuitors . Do not use one when you have a
two-ca rd disparity between your long
suits Also. with hands such as this. do
not worry much about point-count. II you
find a Iii, you will do extremely well. ·
Now Wesl introdUced his second suit.
whiCh would allow partner to judge what
. to do at the five-level. North decided that
raising to lour d1amonds would be going
too tar. But when South was slill there
with five clubs and West continued with
five spades. North had no c:ompunct1on m
bidding SIX d1amonds. He had two key
1
honors in his partner's 5ults.
West. who knew both s1des had a double
lit. should have fa~en out insurance by
bidding six- spades. But he doubled,
thinking that his opponents were too
high.
West · led the heart ace and continued
with the heart king . South ruffed, drew
trumps ending in hand. and led the club
queen, claimmg when the king appeared
from West.
Six diamonds doubled had made tor plus
1 ,090. True . six spades doubled would
have cost 200. but that would have been
a cheap price to pay.
The key rule is th1s: When bOth pairs have
a double lit. become tile declaring side

color
u~~
cargo
48 Footed
, vase
50 Depot Info
51 Best
medicine
52 Still

35 Wire-haired
dog
40 Extremely
41 Famed
loch
43 "The heat
-45 Teen woe
46 Primary
:,--""T,;-""1;---r."""""Tl'/\'""1

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
CeleOIII',' C•pner cryp!OC)fM~J; ar~ Oetiled !:om qiJ{liallOros o, 'amous people pB3I and Dresen\

Eact letler m !he a~· stand! tor anot.ef

Today's ci!Je T eauiliSK

" TMVJXZKYZ
ASZ
"P

PW

TMVJ

MVA

CVVK

VC

L XH AV

WVOX ."
HG

ASZ

FVOMY .

ZMVOYS

AV

ZUZEFASPMY ·."

0 H GZ W

G ·,

AHEE PZ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Ideas ~re great arrOYis, but !here has Ia be a bow
And politics is the bow of 1deahsm. - B1U Moyers

AstroGraph
-&lt;111~:

By Bernice Bede Osol

H,.._!&lt;.Ri SON

PEANUTS

Mobile Service.\·

4¥

6•
Pass
All pass

11 Boom
boxes
13 Shaggy
56 Strike back
flower
14 Wry
DOWN
15 A Peron
16 Pale gray
17 Stocky hor9o 1 Part of TNT
18 HICk
2 Com serving
21 Subway lan! 3 Ancient
23 Villain's
Tokyo
.
laugh
4 Ike turner's
~~-~
u
27 Yaar.I on end 5 Raised
28 Part of MHz 6 Stone wor1&lt;er
29 Frying pan 7 Moby Dk:k
31 Noveilsl
foe
-Wister
8 AHorney 's
32 Twig i&lt;"f1n
cleg.
·
33 Reaches
9 Perjure
36 Halk wearer 10 "My gal"'
37 Mother
of song ·
rabbH
12 Group
38 Two-striper
offish
39 Oreg.
13 Mince
18 Good brandy
neighbor
40 Bobby - ol 19 - borea.lis
Indy fame 20 Kind
42 Fitness
ol wreath
center
22 Massages

Thursday. June 1 0, 2004

OK .. wHEN

IIILLtAM HENI&lt;:'i

'

FREE ESTIMATES

Ease
2•

Fine point
Blunders
Not rough
RHchle
ValensM

Careful bidding,
simple play

G

BIG NATE

Perennials, Annuals,
Flats, Hanging Baskets,
ALL ON SALE NOW!!

RESIDENTIAL

lm

•

~U,t&gt;YS, DO WE. 1-\fi..I/E TOCW\IL'""

...Of\,

~O MMERCIAL and

740-949-1606

' Ton, 84.000 miles, $7,900

Manning K. Roush
Owner
0

THE BORN LOSER

6/9/Doil

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

TrY the
Classifieds!!

Advertising!

' 97 Muetano. Corwertible, vAuto. '-lr, GO, Green with

WISH I COULD,
BUT I'M 'FRAID
I'VE STAYED
TOO LONG!!

Window!\ • Roofing

Windshield Repair
RockChips
&amp; Cracks
Car.,·- Trm:k.\··H V 's

ANew Home?

Grand

'151111'dy Glll!eiYard Sale signs, 16119 incl1es

..

~

• Vinyl

740-992-7599

For

$12 Advertising!

l-Imn~~

Gallipolis, OH WVOI0212
446-9416 r 1-800-872-5967

• Birthdays
• Weddings
• Any special
occasion
Place your order
today
(740) 985-3917
Lora Bing

l..awu aud G!Jrdw Equipmeut is .our
busi11en', not oitr .\·ide/ine

Siding • New Garage~
• Rcpla(cmcnt

--·--

~ CaLkes
..,__., by ora

. dard, AC, cassette, needs
rlngo, $800 OBO. (740)992·
0829 leave message.

2001

f" ;'·~

·'

G1bson 1~.

Creative

1987 Chevy S-10 Blazer.
96,000 original miles, new
paint job, windows just tint- ·
ed, new head liner, 53,200 ,
Exc.
condition,
call
(304)675-1833 if no answer
leave phone number and
message and I will return
your call

; 1995 Saturn SL, 4 dr., stan-

New

FREE EST1MATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

1·800-749-

: (740)256·1~52.

~~.~?

BUilDERS IUC.

·
(Commerc1al1md Rl!5idMtitll)
Mowing, Trimming, Tree Trimming, Aeration, Fertilizatlofl,
Spraying of fence lines, leaf Removal. as well as small
landscaping jobs such as planting an d mulchi,ng.

$5001.POLICE IMPOUNDS,

' 1993 Dodge Spirit AIC, tilt,

IT.

BISSEll

LAWN CARE DIVISION

Chevyl, JHpl, etc f
Hondal Care from $SOil.

; cassette player. $700 080.

~~5~

TO

SovPwlcH

TFN

(Commercia l and Re$identicll)
Mobil e Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Decks, Drivew'ays,
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Degreasing of
Equipment, Boats,.Campers, Tractor Trail ers, .
Dump Trucks, painting or staining of your deck
or log home. Aluminum brightening.
Special rates to Trucking and Dump Trucking Companies.

@alli~olis iail~ mriuunr

· 1988 Nlssan pickup, $1,695;
1995 Cutiass ~lrea, $1,995:
1998 Grand Am, $2,895.
Others in stock. Cook
Motore (740)446-0103.

l.'M NOT GOING

&gt;"AN&amp;&gt; ANI&gt;

Open 7 days a weekf

Office: (740) 992-2804 Cell: (740) 517·6883
POWER WASHING

_..1 ~oint ~I~asant ~e~istrr
The Dail~ ~entinel

llatings
8104 ext 3901

5recJAl-

SALES &amp; SERVICE

992-2975

Dbl

North

Pass
Pass

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

GRAVELY TRACTOR
Pomeroy, Ohio

West

Opening lead : • A

Morning Star Road- C.Rd 30 • Racine,

Come ~ee our new
~umtner menu!

o

re~£!1...!!

....;FO..,.ARvr'-.,ALE

For

(740) 992-1956

Monday 9am-2pm
Tues - Fri 6am-8pm
Sat &amp; Sun 7am-4pm

• Hu ge Inventory
• Vanguard Yen lie;"

BlaCk Angus Bull. 4 yrs. old.

t.

Pass

1\ I,

Big Bend Antique
and Furniture
Restoration
Refinish, Repair,
·Restore
Kellh Bailey

New Hours

Owner: Jeff

6

1114/ 1 mo pd

Air Conditioners, H£_at Pumps &amp; Furnacss
• Super Hi Efficiency Equipmenb_

Appaloosa Mare 12 yr old,
gentle (304)937·2281

call.

Hours
7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

Residential &amp; Manufactured Hou si ng

Tractor parts &amp; service, specializing
In
Massey
Ferguson &amp; Ford, (740)6960358

~\~~. ~;2~)~9~~7~

s'xt·b't:··••
,.,,·.....Sl:tea•
. ·to1o;i3o;,tt.
· / ·. ; / )Fit

HEATING f/ COOLING

New Holland 849 round bailer, call (7401985·3374

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

35..

South

Snapper

740-949-2217

BENNETT'S

accessories, $125. Cu1fing
torches , tanks , cart, tool
box. accessories. S350.
(740)446-9430.

Gravely

2114 Cnndnr Str••l

45771

CALL-IIJ ORD[R5;:
WUCOM!;

no-985·3564

Arc Welder includes Rods ,

Bashan Road

Racin e. Ohio

Syracuse, OH
740-992-2507
Call for Daily Specials

• Lime,tone
• Sand
• Dirt
• Ag Lime

Everyone 's Welcome

29670

River Way Cafe

HAULING:

on the patio
(weather permitting) .

Hill's Self
Storage

·,.••.
3

Dealer: West
Vulnerable: East -West

(304) 273-5321

AU.

• Q
olo 9642

. Al098432
oloQJ 1085

ANOFFER STACK OF
FI.APJACI&lt;S, PARSON ?

prayers, tlml-·ers, cards. e-mail's and food .
A special thank you to Pastor Carl \\'ard
and While Oak llaplisl Church.

, J 10752

• Q

BARNEY

\Ve wish to thank t''·cryone for their

Why not adopt one of these
dogs from the Meigs Co Dog 98 F- ISO .. 4x4, V6 , 5 speed,
Pound. and Save its life? AJC, 95,000 mile.s. $6.300
Please coli (740)992-3779 ( 7401256 "63W
for more information.
Male German Shepherd.
male
Golden
Retriever/Chow mix. female
Rabbit
Beagle, female
Aussie I Shepherd mix, male
Eskimo
Spitz.
white
groomed and house broken.

Let me do it for youl

May 24,2004

o.

2002'Ford Explorer. XLT. 4 0

(740)446-4446.

Tree Service

JONES'

The family of
Cathy A. Taylor Hall

4-\"""·
Y ~

Ravenswood Chiropractic
Center

Card of Thanks

"~~~~~~;,,;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;;;;;

VANS &amp;

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

76

Soulh

Toll Free: (866) 254-1559
"Your One Stl!p Poured
Solid Co11crete Shop"

Auto. 5.7 liter. runs great.
All Vet checked and have 1st $4 ,900. Call (740)643-2167.

9' 3

A K 8 6

• J 5
olo K

Free Estimates

satVpepper $400.00 each

C d f Th k
ar o . an s

•

• Driveways • Tenn,is Courts
t Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets

Specializing In Poured Concrete
Foundations, Basemenls, Floors &amp; Walls

•

A i 3
Eas&amp;
West
• K J 5
. AQI0812

MONTY

878-2417

9 6 .• 3

4

StateWide
Cll Poured Walls

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
•
per month.

1993 Chevy ·S- 10 Blazer, 4
WD, Fully Loaded. Tow Pkg.
AKC Australian Shepherd.
Good Condition. Asking
black/white/tan markings,
$2,600. can after spm
male puppy, .m1cro-chiped
(740)446-2398.

Henderson, WV

06-09-04

•

+K

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Licensed in Ohio ond WV

tered,. $200. (740)388-8526.

"A-KG
-'-G.,-ho-col-at- eLa- b-s.- 5

cousin

1Some
canines
6T_,
hangouts

(7401367-0!66

,

43 Seine sight
" 401(k)

ACROSS

......iiiiiiiii._..

AKC Boston Terrier female For Sale 2003 Chevrolet
Tru~ . 2500 HO LS. Lots of
PuppieS. Shots, wormed &amp; options,
priced below. book.
tells
docked,
$300.
(7 40)367. 7564
(304 1675-7930

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

2 full blooded male Boxer
pupp1es. Parents AKC regis-

$250.00. AKC
Schnauzers

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

www.mydailysel"'tinel.com

Wednesday, June 9, 2004
ALLEYOOP

A FEATHERL-E!i!i
CANARY

IT WOUL-t&gt;N"i TICKL-E
GOING- t&gt;OWN

A least-eMpected person could turn out to
be very valuable to you in the year ahead
by serving as an adv1ser. His or her input
could help fallen your ban~ account in
ways you neve r ~auld flaiiC thought
about. Listen well to all.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20)- II you expect
coope ration from others tociay, you are
f1rst going to have to show a willingness to
be helpful to th em. They. 1n turn, will gladly imitate your behavior and lend a hetpmg
hand.
CANCER
(June
21-July
22)
Procrasti nating over 1mportant tasks that
need to be tenciad to tociay just because
you find them distasteful witt put you so far
behind that you'll make thmgs harder on
yourself than they need to be.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - When selecting
tnends with whom you'd li~e to share your
time today. base your standcirds on the
worth at the people rather than on the
w orth of the1r wallets. You 'll get more value
outoti!
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- Even though
you might secretly teal someone could do
more tor you than what she or he has
been doing. be appreciative tor thi s person's generosity. It could serve to be
encouraging
LIBRA tSept. 23-0ct. 23) - Your optimistic spirit today could have you ma~ing
some b1 g plans for the future, wh1ch is all
well and good. But first . f1n1sh what you
have underway before shooting oil into a
di fferent direction
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Guard
against tendencies today to think that
money is easier to co me by than 1t actually is or you could be In for a big disappoi ntmen t for not getting what you anticipated from your ettorts.
SAGITIAAIUS (Nov 23-0ec. 21) - Take
your m1nd ott yourself today and give credIt where credit is due to an assoc1ate
whose cooperat1on played a key role in
your achievement. Show the proper
acknowledgment
CAPRICORN (Oec. 22·Jan. 19) - There
Is a possibility today that you could be a
bit too ind1t1erent to something important
lor your own good. Do not take serious
matters for granted or treat them w1th apathy.
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 19) - Be carelui today th at you don't reJect the sound
advice of a pal who has your best inter·
ests at heart In order to wmply with the
wishes of a know-nOthing It'll work
ag&lt;unst you .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - It's best
not to broadcast your in tenhons or
thoughts in ad~ance toc;tay especJaity in
f career slluations. because your compet1 ·
hen could get wind of them and beat you
to the punch
ARIE S (March 21-Aprit 19)- Even 11 you
see someone domg something incorrectly
or you know a Detter way of doing •t. subdue temptat1ons to otter unsohc1ted advice
today tt won 't be appreciated or accepted
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20) - Funds or
resources that are earmarired lor something essemlal should not. be d1verted
today in order tc;&gt; fu lfill a soc1at or frivolous
desire. Think about the consequences
before you spend

SOUP TO NUTZ

I I'
K U 0 R ~;;
I_L_ ts _L :,
I

My ne1ghbor mustered up
enough nerve to lake skvdiving less.ons. Her instruc:oi lola
.L. .
_ her that courage is not the ab.-~--------. s.ence ol :ear but the abdity to
-.,-M--,O_T-;-;-N-TE-'F""17-11 ~-ar~ on. wi.lh d1gn1ty in ..... ot,

TI

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':'-v t :l.rc m ·ne ro- ~~~ll'l:l wmC$
'---'--'--'--'--'-..J vov aeve·oo ~·o:n ~lt'P N:: 3- b.-lew

@ ::F.JNi

NUM5ERE9 ~CiE~S J1
' ~J iHfSF ~ ·)UARES
j

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U~S(V,M5lc .ETHiS
;Cf.l ANSWE R

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'

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS 6 '8 'c "
Hangar· Malch · Doily · Revolt · CARTR/~GE
Times sure have changed. My husoand asKed cur
teenage son it he wanted to play baseball and he replied. "Sure, dad. l'il go get the CARTRIDGE.''

ARLO &amp; JANIS

.,
Go£. ~ f

THOUUI'ii~

OU J.&amp;,llle,'

MAKE.OV ~~ CW~ P '!OM1~ 1 l -'OJ 1.-0fe.
.¥~0'?£. A.I'J i iO.'NIA. .,Y . , .

'WWW . A.I.?\..OA.UOVAUI~ . C0/1\

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.

"

'

•

Page B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

0

Wednesday, June 9,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Indians' Notebook

Stanford plays waiting game ·
CLEVELAND (AP)- Ja,on Stanford
has no idea when he might be able to
pick up a baseball. let alone pitch again
for th e Cleveland Indian,.
··t don ' t know and I don't a,k." '"id
the rooki e left-handcr. who · ha&gt; been
&gt;idelined 'ince April 16 "ith a 'trained
forearm.
The wait is more painfu l than the
injury for the ~7-year-old who final!~
claimed a ~ pol in the ... tarting rot ~l tion
this season.
"'There's ·not a thing I can dn ;th&lt;&gt;Ul it .".
Stanford said. "Sure. that i' fru,tratin g. I
want to pi tch. But until the dnctms gi1e
me the go ahead. all I c·an dn t' wmc to
the ballpar~ . ·lift wei ghts and w;rtch
games.'"

Stanford pitched well in hi, 1\ltil tin)
all owing ~mly one run in II
(0.82 ERA) before ev..pcrictlL·ing
discomfort whik wanning Ltp fl&gt;r the
~ i xth inning of a !:!ame- again~! Kan-..a :-.
CityonApri115. "
'
"It"s :n an area of the foreann whc·rc
there isn 't &lt;Ill) thing yuu can do to help 11
except resr:· St;mfnrd said. ·· But I c·an
tell how mucl1 11 ha' imprmed ...
He can tell hc•causc 'hortlv after the
injury. he felt pain just lifting a glass llf
star t ~.
inning~

water.
'T m lifting \Veighls now and ha\ e no
pain. so that\ good." he said. "When I

· can pitch again. who k11ows·• I'll j t"t
have to wail and let the do,·tors te ll me ."

Over his last four outings at Buffalo,
• PITCHER PERFECT: The Indian,
completed the second day of the annual Tadano went 1-0 with a 1.06 ERA. The
amateur draft by taking more pitchers . 2~-ycar-old pitched in three games for
Cleveland made 50 pi&lt;.:k' overall and .&gt; I Cleveland after being called up to the
of them were pitchers. including first- maj9rs for the tlrst time April 24. He had
round ~ekction Jen:mv Sower" of no record with a 9.64 ERA over .t 2-3
innin~s and was sent back to Buffalo on
VanJerbi it.
.
"The draft was lopsided with pitchers. M;ty li.
Wedge said Dawley's . injury was not
hut we expected that." said John
Mirabelli, th~ lm.Jian~ · a~~oi!-.tant ~t·ncr;.ll serious. but woufd keep him frQm makmanaQ~r in char~e of ~coutin!..!. .. :--1 think ing his scheduled start Saturday against
e,·cry. . . tc~un i~ afway~ lookini for more Cincin nati . He did not name a starter, but
said veteran RHP Scott Elarton and
pit&lt;.: hing."
Among Ck1danJ·, later pi&lt;.:ks were rookie RHP Kyle Denney were candithe younger hmthers of twn players who dates to be called up then fmm Buffalo.
Elart011, who was released by
" ·,·re llrst-round picks by the Ind ian' a
Colonu.lu last month. pitched a four-hit
r~w year~ i.lf!,l.
Outllclder J'"on Denham wa, take~ in shutout Monday night for Buffalo.
• VETERANS ON THE MEND:
the 13th rnund . He is the I X- year-old
brother of ridH-hander Dan Denham. We.dge was pleased with the work of
11·h,1 "a' sck:·rcd with the 17th owm\1 RHP Je\f o·Amico in a three-innin~
simulated ga me and RHP 'soh Wi&lt;.:kman
pick in elK) I .
Ri~ht-hanJci Carlt on Smith. also 18. in a bttllpell workout.
"D'Amico said he felt good. but we'll
is th~· brother of third ba,eman Corey
Smith. who 11 as taken with the 26th pick wait until tomorrow and see how he feels
then," Wedge said of the right-hander,
of the first round in ~IK)().
• WELCOME BACK: Right-hander who has been on the disabled list since
Katuhito Tadano was recalled from May II with a strained lower back .
Wickman. the team "s closer who has
Tripk-A Buffalo when RHP Jne Dawley
been
sidelined since mid-March with a
was put on the 15-day disabled list
strained right elbow. also threw well,
Tuc,dav with a strained right elbow.
"We 'can '"" him in 1tli1g or middle Wedge said.
'"It was a good day for him." Wedge
n:licf. \VI1ich gives us sume versatilitV."
mana~er Eric \Ved~e said. "We want.to said. '"He threw pain-free. That is very
g,·t a·rlother look at 'Kaz ."
good."

Turns out that was just what
once so errat k he was :-o.een as
more ,,fa problem than a solu - th e Li ghtning needed to take
tion. thinks h.: knows what did on the never-take-a-shirt-off
Flames. who eliminated three
it: Dnin~ nothi·ng .
TAMPA . Fla. - For the last
Rather than ctfsmantlin~ the division champiuns and were
I0 -vears. there wa' no room team whe n they tlx&gt;k •ove(. within one goal in Game 6 of
for the little guys ill the Feaster and Tnn(&gt;rella made a taking out another.
Stanley Cup finals.
Now, the Flames must live
few ll1ll\'e~. such a.-. ac4uiri ng
The list of c:hampinns was a Rmlan Fedotenko in a much- with the unpleasant memory
trade
with of not winning the Cup even
familiar mix of big-budget and crlticiLed
top-talent teams : Detroit (tl1ree Philadelphia.
when it was a few feet from
times). New Jcrsev (three
them
in their ow11 building.
times). Colorado "( twice) . · Mostly. th ey waited for
"We
were literally one shot
lav_
ers
suc
h
as
Martin
St.
Dallas and the New York P
Louis. Vinc'ent· Lecavalier, away, one second away from
Rangers.
Fedotenko. Pavel Kubina. winning the Stanley Cup,"
There were plenty of stars Khabibulin and Brad Richards said Jarome lginla, the best
and . familiar sti&gt;ry lines. but 10 gain confidence and grow player in the series for Jive
not much unpredictahility. Can comfortable with unc another. games but a non-factor in the
the Devils win &lt;i~ain with the ir
trap·&gt; Is this Scotty Bowman·,
When they all arrived about llnal two.
What \ different now is the
Just Cup' Is Patrick Roy the tile same lime. the Lightning
Lightning's
reign may last
best goalie ever'' Brett Hull. Jtd, 100 ·
. ,
St. Louis was the re gular- more than one season if the
are you here agam'.
season scoring champion- aild anti cipated labor impasse
The newly minted champion wo n the pivotal
'
'Gan)e ·6 in shuts down the NHL for the
Tampa Bay Lightning changed
all that. and in an interesting Calgary with an overtime entire ' 2004-05 season. The
. ._ goal. Lecavalier made a dal- current contract expires Sept.
bit of liming. did so just '" the ~
.
other small- and miJmarket zling pass th at led to the sec- 15 .
the
llnals,
commisBefore
teams head into the NHL\ ond of Fedotenko's two goals
labor talks looking for a much jn Game 7. Richards. sioner Gary Bettman warned
better deal.
'Lecavalier's teammate since that medium- or small-market
Under general manager Jay they were 1~. won the Conn teams could compete only
· St til ree year' Smythe Award as the play'offs infrequently for the Cup
Feast
, .. er. JU
because they could not ecoremoved from running a MVP.
minor league team in Hershey.
" I think the most important nomically sustain themselves
Pa..
and
coach
John thing was that the core of the once they did.
Unless the new labor deal
Tortorella. who was passed players stayed the same," said
change
s that, the Lightning
over by bigger franchises. the Khabibulin. who finally lived
up to his nickname of the t\tay be ready to test
Lightning developed a plan to Bulin Wall with five playoff £lettman ·s theory.
compete and stayed with it.
The only surpri se was how shutouts. "A lot of the guys · The.ir $34 million payroll
fast it all came together. just a matured and became very nmked close to the league's
good players."'
·
bottom third until they picked
year after the Lig I1tt1ing won a playoff series for the first
The Lightning overeame a up Darryl Sydor's $3.5 miltime.
midseason slump In wi n the lion salary late in the season.
Eastern Conference rcnular- · Nnw. Lecavalier's salary is
"I' still can ' t figure it out.
e
h
· kl · h
·
season d~&lt;~m pion s hip , then due to go up $ 1.7 million and
11
appenctl lor quick ly
elim inated
the the team must decide whether
ow qutc Y
uS:' Tortorella said after a Islanders and Canad icn s Ill pick up Khabibulin 's $6.5
Cup-clinching 2- 1 victnry
over Calgary in Game 7 ·before the Flyers tnok them to million option. St. Louis ($1.5
....
~e\en gitllle~ in a testy and million). Kub ina ($2 .5 milMonday nig ht.
Goalie Nikolai Khabibu lin. pllysically demand ing confer- lion). forward Fredrik Modin
ence fjmds.
($ 1.S5 million) and Fedotenko

Tri-County Junior Golf Tour
begins Monday in Point Pleasant
,

STAFF ' REPORT

sports@ mydai lytribune .com'
·
Tile ·rrr·-Coutlt y J Lilli()!'
II'
To
d
.
Go
ur ge 1s un erway
Mo nday at Hidden Valle v in
J
Point Pleasant , W.Va.
Youth competion will be
held in age groups for boy'
and girls separately. The
elite elders are J5 - l 7 so
long as the player docs' not
·
th
become 18 pnor 1o
c
fourth regular Ollting. Then.
a es 13-14 form the next
~oup youth 11 - 12 ate in
g
h'
· · ·
·
anot er dt vtsto n•. wtth
.
• the
.
I 0 -an d-un dcr c I&lt;hS I orm111g
the final bracket.
Each week. the first place
scorer of each division

recc ives I0 points. second
ga rners eight. third place
brings six. fourth place ge ts
four and all other partit:ipan t' receive two. After all
four regular rounds. points
are totaled to determine
· nt
· winners and/or
pl aceme
..
pl ayoll ' ituation ' for the
final round of [llay.
Schedule for the 2004 sea'"n bcg llts Mtmday at
. H1dden V;i\lcv: the scw nd
1. . f 1. . -. J
1~ .
" 11 " 0 p ~·~ 1' llltC
dl
Rt.verstclc Ill Mason. W:Va.;
and on June ~H. competltton
be &lt;~I CI1IIS1de 111
c·wrll
1a 11 .IJ'O 1.IS .
AI'
I . I •J I
ter t1e. 1ourt 1 o 1 u y
week, the ftn al re.g ular ,easn n match '· ' met tor July 12
at Ptne Hill s 111 Pomeroy.

Then th e grand finale
roundup is set for July I 9 at
Hidden Valley.
Pla yers sho uld check-i n
each day at the schedu led
site of play by 8:30a.m., pay
fee s, he placed in groups.
and he ready for tee-off at 9
a.m. Then nine holes of
competi.tion
normally
around noon . Play will
begin. rain or shine. each
Jay. Only delay or cance llation would he lightnin g or if

'($950,000) also need new
contracts.
The runner-up Flames must
·decide how much they can
add to their $35 million payroll , especially with lginla
($7.5 million) and goalie
Miikka Kiprusotf ($800,000)
needing new contracts.
Until the cqrrent labor contract expires, the Lightning
will have a few months to celebrate.
"We're going to enjoy this
for as long as we can," Dan
Boyle said.
The rest or th e NHL can
only hope the Lightning still
aren't celebrating this championship a year from now.

l).S. not taki"ng
·Grenada lightly in
World Cup qualifying
COLUMBUS - When the United States hegins
World Cup qualifying Sunday. the eig hth-ranked
Americans will play the Caribbean island nation of
Grenada: a lowly !45th.
U.S. coach Bru~e Arena isn't thinking about th e game
as mismatch.
"We're really focused on having our team prepared in
the right way to play Grenada."' he said Tuesday. "We
don't take any ot our opponents lightly. We think this
&lt;.:ertainly h;rs the potential to have a very difficult game
on Sunday."
.
In March. a well -below-full -strength U.S. tcani needed a second-half injury time goal from Danny Califf to
gain a 1- 1 tie with lowly H&lt;!iti . ranked 86th.
"It was a le sson well learned and hope fully that will
not occur on Sunday," Arena said. "G renada will come
in here with the dream uf knocking oil what they per.
ceive as a powerhouse."
The United States. which advanced to the quarterfi- .
nals of the 2002 World Cup. had a bye in the first-round ·
of the Not'th and Central American reg ion , while
Grenada beat Guyana on X-I aggregate. The winner uf
the home-and-home. total -goal serie,. which concludes
June 20 in Grenada. advances to a semifinal group likely to mclude Jamaica, El Salvador and Panama.
"We ' ve become a team to beat no\v, doing so well in
the lasr World Cup." defender Frankie Hejdul; said. " But
we' ve got to go out and prove it wasn't a flt.l\e."
Arena said Grenada boasts otTensive threats in Jason
Roberts, who scored ·eight league goals la st season for
Wigan Athletic in the English first division. and Ricky
Charles. who had ·l8 goals and 16 assists la st year for the
University of South Carolina-Spartanburg.
"We'll give our opponent the proper respect and proper preparation. and we're hopeful that we'll be off to a
good start and be successful on Sunday. knowing that
the second leg in Grenada will be difficult," Arena said .
Kasey Keller, the American starter at the 1998 World
Cup and a backup at the 1990 and ~002 tottrnaments.
will be in goal on Sund;ty. Jonny Walker of the
MetroStars is Keller' s backup.
Forward Clint Mathis and goalkeeper Brad Friedel.
who started at the World Cup two years ago. will miss
the game because of injuries. and goalkeeper Tim
Howard is being given time off following his first season with Manchester United.

Reds put Kearns on DL
CINCINNATI (AP)
Outfielder Austin Kearns
went on the 15-day disabled
li st Tuesday with a sore
thumb, the second time thi s
season that ·the Cincinnati
Red ' outfielder has been
sidelined by injury.
The Reds called up lefthander Jung Keun Bong

from Triple-A Louisville to
start against Oakland on
Tuesday.
Kearns was out of the lineup for nine consecutive
games after developing a
sore on his ri~ht thumb . He
was placed Otl the 15 -day
di sabled list retroactive to
June~ .
•

EXTRA! EXTRA!
I

Coming Friday, July 16,2004
'

•

Middleport .• Pomeroy, Ohio

.SPORTS
• Lawsuit contends
O'Brien, assistant knew of
aid to player. See Page 81

Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel Baby
Edition is a Special Edition filled
with photographs of local
children - ages newborn to four
years old. The Baby Edition will
appear in the July 16th issue.
Be sure your child; grandchild,
or relative is involved!

Tristan Roach
Son of
Charles &amp;. April Roach
Gallipolis
Thursday

must

July

be

8th,

In

by

2004.

Pictures can be picked up alter

. July 19th, 2004.

·

Complete the form below and enclose a snapshot or wallet sized pi cture plus
a $7.00 (;harge for each photograph. If more than one child is in the picture, ·
please enclose an additional $2.00 per child . Enclose payment with picture.
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The Daily Sentinel

Meeting next week to address ca contamination
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY Ohio's large&gt;!
environmental · organization. Ohio
Citizen Action, will host a public
int"ormation meeting about the water
contaminant CS next week at Meigs
Hign School.
Jane Houlihan. a natiunally-know n
e~pert on pertluorooctanoic acid. 01
CS. and its effects will be the speaker at the meeting , to be held at 6 p.m.
on June 17. Houlihan is vice president
for
research
at
the

Environmental Working Group. a
organization
in
·'watc hdo g"
Washington. D.C.
The meeting is open In the public
at no wst.
The chemical C8 is used at the
DuPont
chemi&lt;.:al
plant
at
Washington.
W.Va.,
near
Parkersbtrrg, in the manufacture or
fluoropolymer products, including
Tellon. It has been detected in the
Tuppers Plains-C hester. Po meroy
and Syracuse drinking water supplies , although water system oflicials
for all three communities have main-

tamed th e ex level s in the ln,·al 'Li Jl· mer plastiL·s ... sa1ll Debra Cuchran of
pile.; are \\ell below levels JecnteJ Pagl'\ilk' . nn~ · of th~ meeting\ orgaby. DuPunt to he , .. rc.
· niter' "Tiwrc are lwndreds of thou The En1·ironmc ntal Protection
Agency ha' not ,et f1lrth a safe CX S&lt;IIH.h or produels commonly manuleve l in . pub lic wate r suppli es. A factUI\:~d U"'irlg llunropt)Jymer pJa ?-

l..' l a:-.s action .l awsuit ·nov. · p e ndin~ in
Wood Cuunty. W. V;1. a l k~cs tlwt-the
chemical. is J:.1ngerou ... to"' hurnan~ at

any level.
"The purpose of next wee k·, meeting is to provide accurate and substantiated facts on the chemicaL "
by -product or the m anufa&lt;.:turin~
process used in making flunr(&gt;pul)~

tiL' " ·..

Th(: r~ginn~t! ,CX L·onLtmination i"- .
bclie1·e d In affect appw.&gt;.inw tel\
I(JO.OOO wa ter custnmers in eight
puh!ic drink ing \\·a1er sy\tem.., in
West Vi rgmia along the Ohio Ri1·er
and in fil e cmllttie' of Southeastern
Ohio.

Construction around Meigs County

Mayor April Burke spearheaded a campa1gn to bring th1s new p1cnic
shelter to the village. Located on Main Street. thts 24 foot by 40 foot
shelter was paid for by a $9,300 grant from the Ohio Department
of Resources ana was bu1lt by volunteers fromMelgs County.

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Linda Morris

LoTI ERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 1-5-7
Pick 4 day: 4-6·8-7
Pick 3 night: 7-8-6
Pick 4 night: 7·8-8-9
Buckeye 5: 5·7-12-16-33
Superlotto: 1-19-21-40-43-47(39)
Kicker: 5-Q-8-7 -5-0

West Vuginia
Dally 3: 5·1-7
Dally 4: 6-8·1-4
Powerball: 1-31-33-37-50 (40)
Power Play: 2

The

Pictures

Pistons try bl shake off
Bryant's shot as series
shifts for Game 3, B8

Associated Press

'

Associated Press

A's bats hot
•
•
agamagamst
cooling Reds, Bt

BY ANITA CHANG

Staying the course led to
Lightning's surprise Stanley Cup
BY ALAN ROBINSON

\

2004

WEATHER

Detail• on Page A 7

SEcrtoNs -

Two construction projects
at opposite ends of Meigs
County are signs of the
county's changing landscape. In Pomeroy, walls
began to go up Tuesday at
the West Main Street site
of a new KFC / Long John
Silver's
combination
restaurant under constructio n by the Crow family. The
new restaurant will replace
landma'rk Crew's
the
Family Restaurant. which
will be demolished later
this summer in favor of a
parking area for the new
fast foo d restaurant. In
Meigs County 's eas.t ern
end, Wesam Construction
Co. continues work on a
new branch office for
Farmers Bank and Savings
Co. in Tuppers Plains. The
new office, to be Identical
In design to the bank 's
office 111 Mason, W.Va., will
be completed later this
summer, and will replace a
building constructed by
Pomeroy National Bank in
1973.
(Bria n
J. ·
Reed /Brenda Davis)

BY J. MILES lAYTON
JI.AYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL .CO M

RUTLAND -· When the
sun comes out, picnic -.;eason
begins especially now in
Rutland which ha s a new picnic shelter.
The shelter was made possible by a $9.300 grant from
Ohi o Department of Natural
Resources (Natureworks) and
Rutland Village. Located on
Main Street m Rutland . the
24 foot by 40 foot shelter
house is open to the public on
a first come first save basis.
The shelter will he dedicated later this yea r to James
Vennari . a form er principal at
both Rutland Elementary and
High
School.
Rutland

16 PAGES

Calendars

A3

classifieds

B4-6

Comics

B7

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials
Obituaries

A4
As

Places to go

A8

Sports

B1

Weather

A7

© 2004 Ohio ValJey Publishing Co.

BY J. MILES LAYTON
JLAYTON@MYDAtLYSENTINEL.COM

said VemJiJri

"a~ d

Please see Shelter, AS

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

vide a suitable · exercise
space, lloor mats and taken
· out a loan for the e~ercise
RACINE
The equipment estimated to cost
Southern Local School- approximately $270,000.
Board was flirting with the The foundation would have
idea of pursuing a $270,000 provided the grant but only
grant for e~ercise equip- if the district pledged to
ment from the National make physical exercise a
School Fiiness Foundation bigger part of the educalate last year, bu.t caution tional experience .
prevented them from mak Except for a few rubbering what could have been a ized mats, this proposal
huge inistake.
would not have cost the disIn order to have qualifed trict anything. The founda. for the grant , the·school dis- tion would have reimbursed
trict would have had to pro- the district for the $270,000

it borrowed. but onl y it the
district sent in the result'
month after month for the
e~ercise regimen . At idst
100 schools in Ohio went
for something that so unded
just a little too good to be
true.
The Southern Local
School Board did not pursue the grant because ofthe
potetitial risk of what would
happen if the foundation
defaulted on the money it
promised to the district .

Please see Wise.

AS

RUTLAND
Before
se houl opens in August . four
new well -equipped playgrounds will he in place at
the new Meigs Local
El"mentary Schon!.
A repor1 on the prog n.~..,\ of

th e $160.000 playground
developmen t proJec t was
given by William Buckky.
s11perintendcnt ' at Tue sday
night's meeting of the Me igs
Local Board of Education.
SSOE i' the ard1i1 ect and
Quandel is the ,·onstruction
manager on the project.
Buckln said that a&lt;ile rt ising for ·biLb on the playground equiptilcnt will begin
'0011. Mnne~ to pa) for the
equipment will c&lt;\ine from a
$90.000 allowatll'C fr,&gt;m the

William Buckley
Ohio
Schn11l
Facilities
Cnmmi,ion. and 570.000
frqm Ml'igs Lt&gt;c'&lt;tl. "money
,el as ide front the 'ale of con-

Please see Meigs, AS

Ill Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
-----------------------------------------------~

Child's Name (s) &amp; Age (s): _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

E-mail us your local sports news:

sports@mydailytribune.com

Parent's Name: _____- '1- ; ; - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - City &amp; State:-----------------~---'--••• The above information will be used in the ad. •••
Phone Number: - - - - - - - - - Submitted by: - - - - - - - - - -

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

·HURRY!! PICTURE DEADLINE IS
fRIDAY JulY 9. 2004!

• Hipr Acact.mica • Hands on trafnfnaand experience • Stamlftt path to an A11oclatts Dear11 or hlahor

Ohio Valle

• Otsfanld for hiah IChoolstudentl • Ttchnfcally challentfnt

Tech Prt'p

Courses offered: Healthcare, Auto Service '

lkldttt'fHftli GIIIIUcldtmy .ltcMAon OOHiU IIWII'VIIIfy luuii!OIIIfl VfnWnCOtllty Wllllton U.oUtoOr8MI and Information Technology

"

ren:red

cuad1. teac:her and aJmini'trator for decade&gt; 11 ho was an
inspiration to many. She said
she is proud to be dedicating
the she lter to him on behalf
of the village.
·'He truly is a wonderful
man," said Burke who was a
student while Vennari was
pnncipal
at ·
Rutland
Elementary.
Burke th an ked Damcon
Shipley. ODNR and also
Ralph Bales who negotiated
with the contractor and drew
up the plans and 11 n&gt;te · the
&gt;pees. along with keep ing a
writt en log complete with

..;;ever~ co nDitions exist.

No ·advance registration is
required.
For additional infu, call
675-9739 (Hidden Valley).
or the pro shop at any participating courses .

Bur~~

Rut la nd Mayor April

Meigs Elementary getting
four new playgrounds

Board's rejeCtion of grant money, a wise decision

INDEX
2

Rutland dedicates new picnic
shelter to leading educator

•

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