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•

'.

Pqe 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Marlins double up Reds, 12~6

Meigs ·

who have the majors '
youngest and least-expensive
lineup. Florida opened the
season with II rookies and a
$15 million payroll , by far
the smallest in the big
league s.
The Marlins came into the
game with only I 0 homers,
third-fewest in the NL. For
one night, they held their own
iQ a ballpark that y{elded the
most in the majors last season. A total of . 29 homers
have been hit in eight games
at Great American Ball Park.
Milton has contributed
more than his share.· The lefthandrr gave up 40 1 homers
last season. the most in the
majors, and hoped that an offseason conditioning program
to strengthen his legs would
help him keep the ball down .
He gave up two homers
while winning his ftrst two
starts. Then . he went back to
his old ways Tuesday.
Ramirez , a 22-year-old
shortstop obtained from
Boston last · November, hit
Milton's third pitch of the
game for his first career
homer,· a drive that barely

cleared the wall in center. He
added a two-run shot in the
second, 'and Uggla followed
with his second homer.
Miltun kept his head down
as he walked off the field following the inning, enduring
loud boos and catcalls from
the crowd of 19,724. Jason
LaRue was on deck to pinchhit and Milton had grabbed
his jacket and headed for the
clubhouse when David Ross
homered in the bottom of the
second, giving Milton a second chance.
. He didn 't make much of it.
Milton 'allowed eight hits,
three walks and nine ·runs in 4
1-3 innings, leaving with the
bases loaded in the fifth.
Miguel Olivo doubled off
reliever Matt Belisle to start a
· four-run rally.
.
Notes: Juan Pierre was the
last Marlin to lead off a game
with a homer - last July 7
against · Milwaukee. Mark
Kotsay was the last to do it on
the road, May 2, 200Q at San
Diego .... Ramirez is 19-for50 (.380) as a leadoff hitter.
... Vargas threw 110 pitches in
his four-plus innings ...,. CF
Reggie Abercrombie snapped
an 0-for-22 slump with an
RBI single in the fifth ....
LaRue was activated off the
15-day DL before the game.
He had surgery du;·ing spring
training for torn knee carti· lage.

sixth. Hanning had a two-run
single in the offensive explosio n, and Amy Barr had a
two-run double as Meigs
blitzed to the 1.8-0 win.
Meigs hitters were Haning
with two singles and a double, Melia" Whan two singles,
Amy Barr a double, Cassi
Whan a double, Lian ·
Hoffman a single, Amber
Burton a sing le, Whitney

Smith l! single, and Samantha
Cole a double.
Southern hitters were
Linda
Eddy,
Lindsey
Buzzard,
and
Virginia
Brickles all with singles. ·

The Lady Eagles tied it
again in the top of the fourth
on the strength of a Cozart
RBI double and a Baker runfrom Page81
scoring si ngle . .
South Gallia went up 6-5
Osborne. The Green imd thanks to one final run in the
White went up 3-1 in the fifth. Halley singled to get
third as Bissell came through herself aboard · and scored
with an RBI si ngle.
later in the inning on a
The see-saw battle contin- groundout by Kelsey Wells .
ued as the Lady Rebels plated
But Eastern kept its all· four runs in the fourth frame time unblemished record
to take a 5-3 edge. South against the Gallians intact by
Gallia amassed four hits dur- scoring an ·incredible II
ing that span, one each by times in the sixth. Eastern
Taylor, Clary, Fulks and pitcher Danielle Carroll
worked out of a two-on jam
Stapleton.

in the bottom of that same
inning to end it via the 10-run
mercy rule.
Carroll went the distance in
earning 'the victory. Fulks
also worked the whole game
and, took the loss.
· Eastern plays host to
Southern today. South Gallia
,goes to Southern next
. Tues day.

from Page 81
on ·a Tornado misc ue ~ That
led to one run, then Cole
slammed an RBI double for a
· 6-0 Meigs lead.
Meigs added .a, run in the
fifth, then blew the game
open with eleven runs in the

Eastern

MEIGS'18, SOUTHERN 0
6: Innings
Meigs
402 01(11) 18 11 o
Southern 000 000 0 3 8

Whitney Wolfe-Riffle, Linda Eddy 6th and
Sarah Eddy. Joey Haning and Whitney
Smith. W - Haning. L- Wolfe-Riffle.

home the Raiders second run
of the inning befQre River
Valley knotted the score
when Eggleton reached on an
from Page81
error and was picked off ftrst
.
. .
with Mulholland crossing the ·
staged liS wmm~g live run plate on the throw to first.
rally on three hils and two
w h· . . II ' d. ·
re
River Valley errors in the
a. ama. ra te to sco
frame. Flint gave up eight • five limes m the bottom half
runs, five earned, on eight. · of the s1xth. Cody Herdm~~
hits with 11 strikeouts, five reached on an error and ow:as
walks and a hit batter.
followed by successtve smWaham&lt;~jumped out to a 2- gles by Garrett Cullen and
0 advanta¥e in the second Garret Underwood .. Derek
before addmg a third tally in . Veazy walked pnor to
1the third to make it a 3-0 con- Nathan Stafford dnvmg ,.a
test . Clark was breezing single back through the box
along until Dee! reached base to g1 ve Wahama a 7-3 edge,
on an error leading off the Courtesy runner Jacob Roach
River Valley sixth. Curnutte would later score the final
then broke up the no-hit bid run of the contest on a balk
with a bunt . single before by Flint to conclude the
Mulholland also laid down a evenings scoring activity.
bunt for a base hit to score
Curnutte had two of the
Deel. Flint walked to chase three River Valley safeties on

·Wahama

..

Southern .
·from Page 81
the second who was forced
out when Jacob Hunter
reached on fielder's choice.
Hunter . then scored on an
RBI double to' deep right
field from Riffle. Pape followed with an RBI single and
SHS led 9-3.
Meigs came back with on
run in the .third. Dave Poole
scored after reaching on a
fielder's choice. Story singled, then Steven Hudson hit
an RBI single, the score 9-4.
Southern added two runs in
the fifth. Meigs added ·two
runs in the sixth.
Wes Riffle had a double
and single and three RBI's,
Josh Pape two singles,
Marnhout a single and two
RBI's, Brad Crouch a double
and single, Ryan Chapman
two sjngles, Darin Teaford a
single, and Jake Hunter a sin'
gle.
.
Meigs hitters were led by
Clayton Blackston with a

.'

•
•

.

CINCINNATI (AP) Leadoff
hitter
Hanley
Ramirez hOmered in his first
two at-bats off Eric Milton
and . drove · in four run s
Tuesday night, sparking the
Florida Marlins to a 12-6 victory over the Cincinnati
Reds.
Florida stopped a threegame losing streak with its
bi'ggest offensive splurge of
the season. The Marlins hit
three homers off Milton (2-1)
-Dan Uggla ·also had a solo
shot - ·and had seven doubles among their season-high
18 hits.
Ramirez had a solo homer,
a two-run shot and an RBI
single as part o( a 3-for-6
game. Six Marlins had multihit games, including lefthanded starter Jason Vargas.
For a while, it looked like it
might not be enough.
Vargas matched his career
high with five walksin four'
plus innings . and gave up
three homers, allowing the
Reds to turn a potential drubbing into a matchup of
Edwin
bullpens. ,
Encarnacion 's
three-run
homer with none out in the
fourth cut it to . I 0-6 and
ended Vargas' outing.
Josh Johnson (1-1) stopped
the Reds' comeback by pitching three hitless innings.
It was only the fourth win
this season for the Marlins,

.Wednesday, Apfil19. 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

'
two singles,
and a
walk, Bryan Delong a single,
Jenkins a single, Tyler
Wayland a .single, Aaron
Story two singles, Steven
Hudson two singles. and
Cody Davidson a single .
Southern's Ryan Chapman
got the win with four strikeouts and four walks, while ·
giving up II hits. Meigs
pitching combined for four
doubl~.

the day with a pair of singles
with Mulholland adding the
remaining base knock for the
Raiders.
Wahama got two hits each
.off the bats of Garrett Cullen ·
and Kameron Sayre in addition to a double by Herdman
and singles by Stafford,
Clark and Underwood.
The White Falcons return
to action on Thursday when
they travel to City Park in
Parkersburg to meet the
Crusaders of Parkersburg
catholic in a 4 p.m. outing.
River Valley will host
Chesapeake in a 5 p.m. affair
this afternoon.·
WAHAMA 8, RIVER VALLEY 3
000 · 0030 - 3 3 2
Wahama
021 005x - 8 8 3
Brenton Clark, Kameron Sayre (7} and
Nathan Stafford. T. A. Flint and Eric
Caldwell. W - Ylark. L - Flint. S $ayre.

River Valley

walks and six strikeouts,
while giving up. II hits. Eric
VanMater was the Meigs
starter and suffered the loss
with Dunfee coming on in
relief. .
SOUTHERN 11, MEIGS 6
Meigs
211 002 0 6 11 1
Southern 252 020 l': 1·1 11 5
Ryan Chapman (WP} and Butch
MarnhOut. Eric VanMeter, Dunfee and
Greg Musser. W - Chapman . L VanMeter.

12 DEALERS FEATURING

.

.

MTS 'C.OINS of Galllpolls .·
-"J

FlEE ~u.ftcl,aym, !-P4
. ·pmnl
Admission -· · .J •

2J . FlEE .
Adnalsslor
.at nol14n Inn
. GallipOlis ·

In the individual events for
the boys, Bryce Honaker
took first in the I00-meter
dash ( 11 :92), fi'rst in the long
jump ( 18-7) and first in the
200-meter
(25.3).Aaron
Martindale won first in the
1600-meter (5:26) and second in the 3200-meter
(II :49), Anthony Crites won
first in the disctlss ( 106-3 5),
Alex McGrath \von first in
the hi gh jump (5 -8 ) and
Owen took first in the 400meter (57 . I ) and first in the
800-meter (2:20).
Other i'inishers for the
Easterl!' boy s
included
Newell with a third in the disLarry Crumlphotsl
cuss (I 03-7); Batey with a
foruth in tbe discuss ( 103-6) Eastern's Michael Owen, left, jumps out to a big lead in th~
and second in the shot jut 800-meter run during Tuesday's quad meet in Tuppers Plains~
•
(38-5), Pierce placed thir in
included
Barker
(second
in
the 400-meter (I :00.1), the 100-meter (15.58) and
Castor took fifth in the 400- sixth in.. the 200-meter discuss, 105-4, second in
Iong Jump, 15-9, fourth i()
meter ( 1:0 I. 73) and fourth in (33.26).
•
·the 800-meter (2:39) and
OVC boy s won first in the shot put, 36-0), Skidmor~
Davis placed sixth in the 400- shot put (Luke Stinson, 39- (third in shot put, 37-4, fifth
meter (I :02.02) and second 2) and 300-meter hurdles in discuss, I 02-11 ), Lewi~
in the,800-meter (2:24) while (Kelley, I :06.29). Otber fi n- (second in 200-meter, 26.4;
_Aeiker placed fourth in th,e ishers for the Defender boys second in 100-meter, 12.74
in
400-mete~&lt;,
3200-meter ( 13 : 12).
included Stinson (second in fourth
Individual Eastern girl fin- 300-meter, 1:18.66, sixth in I :00.46), Sommer (third in
ishers
included
Katie discuss, 79-10, fourth in 100-meter, 12:89, third iii
Hayman who took ftrst it) the I 00-meter, 13 :0 I), Kelley 200~rneter, 27.9), Call (sec;
I 00-meter hu1dles (20.4) and (fourth in· 200-meter, 28.3, ond in 400-meter, 58.1, fiftlj
first in the 300-meter hurdles fifth in 100-meter, . 13 .02, in BOO-meter, 2:45.5) an&lt;i
(59.4), Megan Broderick third in long jump, 13-'9), Coury (third in 800-meteJit .
•
won the 1600-meter (7: 10), , Simms (secon.d in. 1600- 2:34).
The individual Soutli
Becca Owen finished tied for meter, 6:29, ftfth tn 200first in the high jump (4-2) meter, 30.66) . and Patrick Gallia girls included Adkin
(ssecond in 400-mete ~
and won first in the 200- (fourth In long JUmp, 11-6).
1: 16.6, fourth in 200-metet;
meter (29.06) a11d finished
~VC girls won first in the
third in the long jump (II' Dtscuss (Edmonds, 65- 31.8, second in 100-meter::
10.'5), Morgan Burt was tied 4.25), I 00-~eter (Frantom, 14.92), Hall (fifth in 100:;
for first in the high jump (4- 14.3), long JUmp (Frantom, meter, 16.69, third in 40()and
shot put meter, 1:21.5, second iii
2) and took second in the 13-2),
long jump ( 12-6), Milam (Edmonds, 23-5.5). Other 3200-meter, 17:01) ana
won the 400-meter (I: 1.0.4) finishers included VanMeter Gasanova (third iri shot put;
and 800-meter (3:02) and (second -in shot put, 21-4, 19-5 , third in discuss, 44-8) ~
The final school in compe;
Martindale took first in the .sixth in 100-rrteter, 17.61,
3200-meter (14:34).
fourth in long jump, 9-5.5) titian was Southern . witlt
Other Eastern girl finishers and Frantom (thirq in 200- individu~l boy finisher~
included Broderick who fin- meter, 30.77).
· Counts (fifth in shot put, 35~
ished second in the 800For the Soutli Gallia boys, 7), McNight (sixth in shot
meter (3:24), Georgana their lone win came in the put, 35-3, third in 3200· Koblentz took third in the 4x200 (I :51). In their other meter, 12:59), Goode (first
100-meter (15.45) and fifth team finishes, the 4x400 in 3200-meter, II :35) and
in the 200-meter (33.21), team
finished- second Hoover (sixth in 800-meter,
Morgan Weber placed second (4: 13.7) and 4x 100 Jearn fin- 2:45.9).. For · the Southern
girls, Vanmeter finished sec;
in the 200-meter (29.43) and ished second (53.5).
Brittany Roush took fourth in
Individual
fjilishers ond in the disc.uss (56-4).

;;o l't·:N T S • \ 'ol. :; :; . No .

• Southern rallies
past·Lady Eagles.
See Page 81

BY BRIAN

INSIDE
• ODOT seeks stream
conservation easements.
. See Page tA2
• Chester-Shade
plans fund raiser.
~Page A3
• Uons Club donates
to London Pool.
See Page AS
• Transfers post~d.
. See Page AS
• Lawsuits filed
against Bausch &amp;
Lomb in eye fungus
cases. See Page A6
• School districts turn to
traditional campaign ·
tactics. See Page AS

WEATHER

.'

sions about · abstinence and lifestyle·
choices, such as good decision making,
self esteem, peer pressure.management,
· and positive self image, DJFS Director
Michael Swisher said.
The ABC program . is administered
through a contract with the AthensMeigs Educational Servite Center,
using Temporary Assistan ce to Needy
· Families funds.
·A recreational coordinator, activity
leaders and security staff wi ll be in
place at the two parks to work with case
managers to provide scheduled activities, such as athletic. events. The program will distribute up to $44,000 to .
each pool this summer for the passes,
. V,ihich will be accepted at both pools.
T.he DJFS will also provide lifeguard
staff and other personnel for both 'pools
through ' the · Summer ' Youth
B~an I. -/photo
Employment Training Program, which
.'
Meeting
Wednesday
to
discuss
the
Abstinence
Bu
ilds
Character
summer
is administered through a contract with
the Gaflia/Meigs Community Action youth program were Syracuse Village Council member Joy Bentley,
Agency. At least 20 of the 90 qualifying Syracuse Mayor Eric Cunnirgham, Middfeport Mayor Sandy lannarell i, .and
youth participating in the SYETP will ABC Cas~ Manager Cara Bullington. Back, 1-r, Middleport Pool Manager
Dale Riffle: George Arnott of Gallia-Meigs CAA, Commissioner Jim Sheets,
work as lifeguards at the pools.
Activities Coordinator Dan Thomas. ABC Director Fenton Taylor, DJFS
Please see Program, AS
Director Michael Swisher, and Commissioner Mick Davenport.

Carey, Bickerstaff
to sp:ak at Rio
commencement
ceremonies

the schobl on their day off. keeping
their promise to help unload the
truck if books. · Other helper s
included Connie and Gene Halley;
Carolyn Nicholson, Andy Garnes ,
Crocket Cruw, Rill Riggs. Amy and
Marge BtltT.
Barr said the books are' in "very
good condition~· and the school was
happy to have receiv~d them.
So were the students; including the
kindergartners who were husily flipping through the books, including one
about pengt,tins which was a big hit.
Barr added that she has several
thank you notes to keep her busy
regarding the Iiterary donation,
including a big tllank you to Mrs .
Beegle.

.•

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RUTLAND . -When kindergartners. at Meigs Primary Sc~ool
entered the librmy this week they
immediately noticed boxes and
boxes of new books. · .
Actually, the books weren't new tiut
used from the Worthington · Public .
School District.
Submitted photo
Meigs Primary School Librarian
Linda
(Crow)
Beegle
(left)
rece
ntly
saved over
Marge Barr informed the kindergart-.
100 boxes of used books from the. incinerator
ners that the books were going to be
and
with the help of husband Ted transported
burned, . to which the children
them from the Worthingtoh Public School
responded with gasps.
.
District to Meigs Primary School. The Beegles
Barr went on to say the books did
.are
both natives of Meigs County and gradubelong to a K-6 elementary school
ates of Pom~roy High 'School.
in Worthin gton that was being
.remodeled into n school for handicapped children. Because of this
transformation the books would
have mel their . maker if not for
Worthington Public Sc]Jool District
. employee and Pomeroy High School
graduate Linda (Crow) Beegle stepping in to save them.
Beegle, who now lives in Columbus
and is a native of Meigs County,
worked the phones for over a week
calling different administrators in her
district . until receiving permission- to
bring the books home to Meig s
Primary School.
With the help of student s at the
Worthington school , Beegle packed
more than I 00 boxes of rescued
books and with money from her own
pocket she rented a U-Haul trail er to
transport the goods from Columbus.
Beegle arrived at Meigs Primary
School on Good Friday along with
husband Ted, also a native of Meig s
County and grad uate of .Pomeroy
Beth Sergenl/photo
High School. The couple was met
by school janitors John Davidson Meigs Primary School Librarian Marge Barr explains to kindergartners how the school
and Dave Jacks that arrived back at received boxes and boxes of new (used) books.

RIO
GRANDE
University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community College
will Welcome a state leader
and '.an NB~ coach to its
upcoming commencement
. and Founder's Day ceremonies on Saturday, May 6.
State Sen. John Carey of
Wellston will serve as the
keynote speaker for the commencement ceremony, while
NBA Charlotte Bobcats Head
Coach and General Manager
Bernie Bickerstaff will be the
key note speaker for the
. Founder'&gt; Day Ceremony.
Dr. Herman Koby, interim
president of Rio Grande ·
Community College, said he
has followed Carey's career
in the Ohio House of
Representatives and the Ohio
Senate, and is proud to have
him speaking at the commencement ceremony.
·
· "He's advanced rapidly,'~
Koby said: "He's been a real:
·
credit to our district."
Dr. Greg Sojka, interim
president of the University of
Rio Grande, said that Carey .
·has been a good friend to Rio .
Grande over the years and has
served the communi ty well.
He added that Carey would
have one additional duty as
the -commencement speaker,'
as he will play a key role on
·the stage when one very spe-:
cia! student receives her
diploma. That student is
•

Ple.ase see Rio, AS

..

Soutluwn
Puom
this
weekend
....-----

·New generator

Hurrv.tlme Is
runnina.outl
2 SllC'riONS- t6 PAGES

Ad
is
Mav11. 2006

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

Bs-6

Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials

B7

Obituaries

A3
A4
As

Places to go

B8

Sports
-Weather

B Sectipn
A2

'

- '·

'""' ·m) &lt;hoit) "'"li o" ·l.c·o 111

Detallo on Page A2

.Buylnr likl s.illn; ..,U (,1
COins
ancl Cumncy
.....;
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REED

M[DDLEPORT - The Department
of Job and Family &gt;Services, Meigs
County Commissioners and officials in.
Middleport and Syracuse have kicked
off a new approach to pregnancy prevention through a summer program at
pools in the two communities.
Through the Abstinence Builds
Character program, the DJFS will pay
$88,000 for pool passes for 2,200 students in grades 6-12, at all income levels. The extension of the school-bltsed
abstinen~e program into the summer
months is ·considered a "creative" way
to reduce teen pregenancies in the county, which has the highest .teen pregnancy rate in the state.
.
The program will offer continuing
abstinence education programs and
summer activities at General Hartinger
Park and in the Syracuse Park and
London Pool, beginning when the pools
open on Memorial Day weekend.
ABC Case Managers will work at the
two sites during the summer to continue
· the curriculum with ongoing discus-

•Heanh Care.Edition
to be published
Mav18;200&amp;

.

.

J.

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

BY BETH SERGENT

I

19atlp ~rtbune
~oint ~leaS)ant l\.egtS)ter
•
and Daily Sentinel

,

Tlll ' I{Sf),\\', AI'RII. 20, 2006

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

·I

~aUtpoliS)

•--t

.0

·county e~pands abstinence program·into summer

Page AS ·. ·~
• Keith Chaffee, 70
• Norma Hawthorne, 68

Don't miss this
opportunitv to reach
over 16,000 homes ·

Ariel ready to
re-dedicate, BS

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

OBITUARIES

Free ColDs ford l'dlen t6-a unci.,
0. ~ • sliver colas ,
'

Protesters want
Shenvin-Williams to .
clean up lead paint, AS

. from Page 81

EASTERN 16, SOUTH GALLIA 6
&amp;Innings
Eastern
012
20(11)- 16 12 2
S.Gatlia ~ too
410 ~ 6 9 s .
Darilelte Carroll and Hannah Pran. Niki
Fulks and Laura Gwinn, W- Carroll. L Fulks.

COIN SHOW
iJ;

Quad ·

© 2006 Ohio VaiiJ=Y Publhthing Co.

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Beth Sercent/ photo

They'll be rol ling out the red (or purple) carpet in Racine th is weekend when the_So'4thern Prom
gets underway at 7:30p.m. Saturday at Southern High School. Th'e gymnasium will be open at
(3:30 p.m. for pictures and the prom is scheduled to end around 11:30 p.m. , culm inating with
the crowing of this year's prom king and queen. Pictured are candidates ior _prom royalty, first
row (from left) Nicole 'McDaniel , Amber Holsinger, Kristiina Williams, Jenny Warner, Andrea·
Parsons, Chelsea Smith; second row (from left) Andrew Parsons . Kevin Hill, Ben Lee, John Bentz,
Brad Crouch, Dustin Brinager. The prom 's theme is "When The· Lights Go Down In The City.",

'

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a.tan I. RMCI/photo

Tony Maxey of Maxey Electric, Tuppers Plains. installs a new
generator at the Meigs County Sheriff's Department on
Wednesday. The new emergency generator was purchased by
County Commissione rs, Sheriff Robert Beegle said.

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LOCAL • STATE

The Daily Sentinel
•

•

··ODOT seeks stream

•
'•

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MARIETTA - The Ohio District I0 Deputy Director.
Department of Transportation "The NMRC is a very imporDistrict I 0 today announces tant study for Marietta and
I 00 feet in width . In the launching of a new web the surrounding region, and
exchange for this easement, sitc, www.nmrcstudy.com, for we want people to have the
the landowner will sign a citizens to learn more about means to interact with the
legal agreement stating that the North. Muskingum River project team."
the stream and adjoining cor- Corridor (NMRC) study, fol The initial site contains
ridor 'will remain in a forested low its progress and provide background , information
natural state, free from live- input and comments tq this about the study including the
stock acce ss. timbering, and imp011ant regional project.
proce·ss by which ODOT
development.
HMore and more people are studies transportation corri"The purpose for this effort accessing the web to get dors throughout the state of
is to offset water quality informat ion about topics that Ohioc Visitors to the site can
impacts associated with are of interest to them," said also view a map of the project
ODOT construction pro- George M. Collins, ODOT study area and find answers to
jects," said Filson.
Landowners interested in
participating arc : asked to
call Mike Austin, ODOT
Di strict 10 ecologi st, . at
CINCINNATI (AP) ing 48-year-old Michael
(740) 373-0212 extens ion
Authorities
upgraded
the
Bailey, a Cincinnati Metro
704
or
emai l
at
michael.austin @dot. state .oh charge against a man accused bus driver also known as
of shooting a community Gen. Kabaka Oba, in the leg,
.us.
activi st outside City Hall to arm and chest last week,
aggravated murder following shortly after Bailey addressed
the activist's death.
Gty Council. Bailey died
Municipal Court Judge Saturday
at
University
Nadine Allen sel"bond at $1 Hospital.
million for Howard Beatty,
Beatty surrendered to
52,"on Wednesday and di s- police a few hours after the
mi ssed two lesser.. charges shooting . Beatty's lawyer.
against him.
Ken Lawson , has said
Beatty is accused of shoot- Bailey threatened Beatty

POMEROY - The Ohio
Department of Transportation
is seeking landowners interested in collaborating with
. the agency in its stream conservation efforts.
The area includes conservation-minded landowners
within the Muskingum River,
Hocking River, Raccoon
Creek, Shade River. Leading
Creek, and Little Hocking
River ·watersheds, according
to' ODOT Public information
Office Stephanie Filson.
She said that landowners
. with at least 500 linear feet of
permanent flowing stream
that meets specific water
quality standards may be paid
a o.ne-time fee for a conservation easement corridor 50 to

'.' .

RIO GRANDE - Jay and
Kate Holsinger cif Rio Grande
are announcing the birth of a
daughter, Haley Allison Grace
Holsinger, on Dec. 18, 2005.
She weighed 6 pounds and
5 inches, and was 19-1/2 ·
-inches long.
Maternal grandparents are
Pat and Betsy Canaday of
Rio Grande. Paternal grandpatents are Alva and the late
Grace Holsinger of Tuppers
Plains, Ohio.
Maternal great-grandparents
are Alice and the late Howard
Baker Saunders of Gallipolis,
and the late Marshall and
Helen Canaday. Her aunts are
Holly-and Ginger Canaday.

frequently asked questions.
As more planning and engineering work is completed
and available, it will be posted. Individuals. who want to
be added to the project mailing list may sign up on the
site. The site was developed
and is being maintained by
consulting firm
Jacobs
Engineering Group, Inc. ·
"ODOT views this web site
as an important' tool to help
sec ure and maintain public
interest and involvement in
the NMRC study," said

Today's Forecast
Forecast for Thuradav, April 20

Clty/IJeglon
High I Low temps

. ; . '· " ..
'M1C~t

n· 145"

~

Jtench City

VALLEY

J.tntUJue &amp;: Craft .MaU

BANK.

·

L___2l

75• I 48"

OHIO

OV '

Youngllown •
Mtlntlleld •

during or after a local TV
appearance on ·April 9.
Lawson said his client was
acting in self-defense when
he met Bailey . by chance
outside City Hall.
Police have said the two
· men had a long-standing dispute and Bailey had a
restraining order to keep
Beatty at least 500 feet away.
The case was scheduled to
be presented t9 the grand jury
on April. 28. ·

t

~
-~

76°148°

~·

,);"'

Cincinnati

''

f • 75• I 51•

f
'
'

10:30 am-2:00pm
5 great sandwiches

to choosl! from ...
only $2.99

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Point Pleasant, WV ·
113-5536

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7....446-ttOpen Mon-S.t Jl)..6i Sun 1-!

M A • (:(;(.". ,\

-~ Portamoulh• ~
',\/VA

K"Y

/'!?.....

~
Partly

:Cloudy

c
~

Cloudy

e:s
.

"C-..:.)
,,;, ,
Showero

Thunder-~ Flurries ~
Ice
storms '
o~~

~
i

'"' .

Ram

• ••••

•

•

Snow"

'

.

in the moming ...Then becomirlg partly cloudy. Highs in
the lower 80s. " Northeast
w:inds around 5 mph ...
Becoming southeast in the
afternoon.
'
·Thursday night. •• Partly
cloudy. A slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms
in the evening ... The'n a
chance of showers and thu ndimtorms after midnight.
Not as cool with lows in the
upper 50s. Southeast winds
around 5 mph. Chance of
rain 40 percent'
Friday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Highs in the
mid 70s. South winds around

&amp; M,keup

~

.. ...

• MicrOderm Abrasions

5 mph. Chance of rain 50
percent.
Friday night ..• Showers
with a chance .of thunderstorms. Lows in the lower
50s. Southwest winds 5 to
· 10 mph. Chance of rain 80
percent. .
Saturday•.• Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers arid
thunderstorms. Highs in the
lower 70s. Chance of rain 50
percent.
'
.
Saturday
night
and
Sunday.•• Mostly
cloudy.
Lows in the upper 40s. Highs
in the upper 60s.
Sunday
night
and
c.loudy.
Monday... Partly
Lows in the mif rOs. Highs in
the lower 70s.

C~)!

· Nail Cor~ • Helix Cuts
·facials"&amp; Waxing

· M,ssage ·Body Wr,,ps
• 5pll rackages • Chernic.,r f'eets

Weathef U11derground • AP ·

~Thursday ... Mostly sunny

M!W.d.alt " FREE Drinks
• H,tir Que

'

326 Second Avenue
Callipolis, OH 45631

(740) 446.:.2933

HHt what orheN ar• wylflg

obout etlcon Sync/'0.
~

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'
-IIIIICUIY

195 Upper River Rd.

· llalllpolls

740-448-8800

1·1E \I{ I~(;
Cl-: :'l Tl J{

DII.ES

GALL.IP-O.U!i

4~~S'h Se&lt;:ond Au•nue
( --\ CI'''~ {(, •U• Jl'. "I ( •rl'i .'~ i
Opr;n ~1•Jf\ Thur- ::i.· l(). ~pm

W~dn~.$.d"~. v - Hall Rack Dinner
$7 90 · 10 W1ngs $:1.00

Chester-Shade
plans.fund raiser

lhYrVP.l!Y " Hoi! Ch1cken Oinnr;r
SS . ~i9

Frlelm': · Pitllters $5.99
Sat~td.BY • Cillc"on &amp; Rtb D1nner
$9.50
liun.lll!Y"
Chop Dinner

.

p,,,

1 PC. $5.99 2 j iC . S"i.99 ,
~rill. f&gt;lll!l:iiL11 •rn· ~ Gl:t'I .~I&lt;0.11 tm , IJ1t&lt;'fl
!308 fA5TfRN AVf.fiAWI'OiiS. 01&lt;45631

CHESTER Che sterShade Historical Association
is having a two day yard sale
May 4 and 5 from 8 a.m. to 4
p.m. and is currently accepting good, . usable items fqr
the sale.
,
Craft items, perennial flowers, · house plants, baked
goods, furniture , antiques,
toys, dishes, tools , small
appliances, books, unwanted
gifts are among the items
needed for the sale. Only
clean and ready-to-sell good
clothing items, along with
vintage clothing, are being
accepted for the sale .
Appliances
contributed
should be in working condition. Items can be priced by
the contributor or left to the
committee to price.
More information on the
sal'e can be obtained from
Kaye Fick (985-4115), Mary
Powell (992-2622), Qr Linda
(985-4281 ).
Blosser
Volunteers to work the sale
are ,needed.
· Items can be brought to the

Powell's
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from CSX)

lOCal Stocks

6_7 5-3877

ACl- 85.30
AEP-33.22

,.

Kroger - 19.87
Ltd.- 24.91
NSC- 55.87
Akzo-54
Oak Hill Financial - 28.14
Alahland Inc. - 74.55
Bl.l-14.10
OVB -25.20
BBT- 40.10
BOb Evans - 29.18
Peoples - 31.45
BOr&amp;Warner- 60.66
Pepsico - 58.08 ,
~NX- 51.20
Premier - 15.84
Champion - 6
.
Rockwell77.17
Ch&amp;rmlnc ShopS - 14.23
clty Holding - 36.50
Rocky Boots - 25.40
Sears
- 140.45
c'ol- 57.69
Wal-Mart - 46.47
DD-11.50
Wendy's62.47
DuPont - 43.69
Worthington - 21.19
Fjt.de"'l MOCul - .30
Dally stock reports are the
USB-30.50
4 p.m. closing quotes of
oennett - 55.31
the previous day's transacGeneral Electric - 33;89
GMNLY - 5.37 .
tions, provided by Smith
Fllianclal Advisors of
Kerley Davidson - .51.02
JPM - 42.62 "
. Hilliard Lyons In Gallipolis. ,

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Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·5252
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446-0007

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740-441-9896
180 State Rt. 7 N. •Gallipolis. OH

Clubs and
organizations

.

·Educator workshop on increasing wildlife habitat

Owner&amp;: &gt;\udi&lt;1!oghlt

8()0 1:.\8"

..

Birthdays .

.Easter egg hunt winners

j ust fJ more

.

. - · ~. I

"

Church events

Diane McVey

·&gt;'

2006:

Church. Special music by Joe .tion, call 949-2021.
McCloud. Everyone welSunday, April 23
DEAR ABBY: "Crushed in
come.
GALLIPOLIS OH- California" whined about her
KAN Coin Show, 9 a.m. to 4 new ste pdaughter' s '"rude,
p.m. at the Holiday Inn, tacky, inapprop1iate and
Gallipoli s. No admission cruel"
reaction
after
charge. Door prizes awarded. Stepmom and Dad dumped
Friday, April 28
Dear
Monday, April 24
POMEROY Shirley
notice on his 24-year-old
POMEROY - OH-KAN daughter - in a public place,
Abby
Appleby who is confined to
the Kimes Rehabilitation Coin Club, 7 p.m. , Pomeroy no less - that they ~ad
Center at 75 Kimes Lane, Library.
eloped.
Thesday, April 25
Athens, Ohio 45701 will . be
Abby, the ADULTS were
.· .
95 on April 28. Cards may be
SYRACUSE - Syracuse the rude , insensitive, inapprosent to her at the Center.
Pool Committee, 6:30p.m. at priate, self-centered and also believe that it is unwise the home of Bob Wingett.
to count other people's money ·
RACINE - Racine Area inconsiderate parties in this as your own . If the fat he~ .
Community Organization, matter -. not the daughter. wants his daughter to ha~e ·
6:30 p.m. at Star Mill Park. They are the ones who should any of his assets, . then he
be seeking to mend fences .
New members welcome .
•
When . I decided to remar- should have a will that says ·
Saturday, April 22
Wednesday, April 26
so. (It 's called estate plan-POMEROY
Meigs . ry, we invited my daughters ning .) lf'he already has a wi.ll .
RACINE - Alumni class
of 1966 of Southern High County Cancer Initiative , (all in their 20s) over for a le)lving his property to his .
School breakfast meeting at 8 Think Pink kick off event, private dinner at home daughter. now that he is mar· ·
a.m. at the Kountry Kitchen, 6:30 p.m., Meigs Senior where we · made the
announcement, invited the ried' he will need a new one,·
Racine. For more informa- Center.
girls to participate in the because here in California,
planning and answered ques- his wife would have a claim
tions. And yes, the question on half his estate in the event
about a pre-nup was raised. of his death.
Read on for other readers'
r::----:""",......__
So what' My daughters
wanted assurance that I had comments:
thought things through. They
DEAR ABBY: I, too, have "
wanted to know · how the a
stepdaughter"
who ·
"freaked out" when hermarriage would change our father and I married. Her
family's dynamics, home father and l were shocked at
arrangements, college plans, her reaction. We offered her
Stewartetc. They were surprised. the option of family coun:
Johnson
They got emotional. But seling, . but she refused io
V.F.W. Post
they clearly cared about me go. My husband and 1"
9926 Auxiliary and · my happiness. Their decided to go by ourselves. ·
of Mason held question s' weren't out of It worked miracles!
an Easter egg line; they were the same
Once his daughter came to .
hunt on Good
questions I got from close grips with the fact that we
. Friday.
friends .
were going to stay together•
Winners, left
It seems to me that these and she would alway s stil,_
to right, were
self-centered "adults" cared have her father, tliings grad- .
Erin Korn,
, diddly-squat about what ually got better. Now, a few,
Tanner
Dad's daughter felt or wor- years later, we're a clo se:
· Decker,
ried about: Keep the young and loving family. It seems _
Christopher
woman in the dark Don' t let she was afraid she would no
·Clark, and ·
her contribute toward plan- longer ·be No. 1 to Daddy, '.
Natalie
ning the event: Don't let her but she is - she'sjust No. l ·
Rickard.
attend this milestone. Then Daughter. 1 am No. 1 Wife.
Submitted photo
dump the news on her in a There is plenty of love to go
public place to keep her emo- around for the both of us. tiona! response contained. NO. 1 WIFE IN MIN That ought to show her how NESOTA
important she is in her dad's
DEAR ABBY: If you look
new life'
beyond the daughter 's initial
Get over it, Stepmom. You reaction, l think you'll see
married a man with a daugh- someone who was scared to ·
ter. She needs to be part df death of losing her father. :
your life right now. You and Eloping was probably inter- :
Dad blew it by shutting her preted as the first step to "
out.
Maybe in time the abandonment. Bottom line:
ATHENS Educators District Four office in Athens. sion of Project WILD, a sup- and activities ·students use on
daughter
will forgive you. -·
She was scared . In stead of
wishing to learn how to There is no fee for the work- plementary, multi-discipli- their WILD School Site can
increase wild! ife habitat at shop but pre-registration is nary environmental educa- help them achieve better · A DAD IN NEW HAMP- p~lling away from her and
SHJ~
resenting her, they should
their school or agency site required. Similar . workshops lion program that is used to understanding in any subject:
DEAR DAD IN NEW embrace her and reass ure her
WILD School Sites are . HAMPSHIRE: You appear to that she' II always be part of :
while still teaching required will be held throughout Ohio teach science, math, language
classroom concepts "are this spring and more in forma- arts, and many other school · also called land•labs, habitats be at the helm of a close and their lives. - ANOTHE~ :
encouraged to attend the tion can be found at subjects with wildlife man- for learning. outdoor class- functional family. It's sad tl)at DADDY' S GIRL IN PORTWILD School Sites educator http://www.dnr.state.oh.us/wi agement concepts as its basis. . room s, and school nature more families aren 't like your " LAND
WILD School Sites allows areas. But whatever the · own.
workshop hosted by the Ohio ldlife/workshops/projectWIL
· ·
Dear Abby is written by
Department of Natural D _workshops.htm. For more the student to take what they name. the concept is the
What bothered me about Abigail Van Buren, also
Resources (ODNR) Division information, or to sign up. have learned from their class- same: to provide students an the letter from "Crushed in known as Jeanne Phillips, .
contact Jen Dennison at 1- · rooms and apply it to the ere- opportunity to learn in a more California" was that the first and was Jou11ded by her :
of Wildli(e.
at ion of wildlife habitat on creative environmeni at the words out of the daughter 's mother, · Pauline Phillips.
The workshop will be held 800-WILDLIFE (945-3543)
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Friday,
The WILD School Sites their school grounds. And like same time they ru:e providing mouth had to do with money. Write Dear Ab,by at
May 19 at the Wildlife program is a~ ~ction exten- Proj~ct WILD, the projects quality habitat for wildlife.
I believe that people who,eam www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
and save money should be Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA able to spend it as they wish . I 90069.
nightly, April 21-30, at the
~ose of Sharon Holiness
Church
at
Rutland.
Thursday, April 20
ROCKSPRINGS - Smart Evangelist will be the Rev.
and Sober Town Hall Mark Hamaker. The Rev.
Meeting. 7 p.m. , Meigs Dewey King is pastor.
Saturday, April· 22
Middle ' School, discuss teen
POMEROY
- The Hyse ll
drinking, drug, internet
Run
Community
Ch11rch of
abuse .
.
Hysell Run Road , Pomeroy,
CHESTER
-Chester • will be hosting a free dinner
Townshtp Boa!d ·of Tru_stees at 5 and the movie , "Passion
monthly meeting , 7 p.m., of the Christ" at 6:30 p.m . at
Chester Town HalL . ·
the church. A nursery will be
Monday,
Aprtl24
. ~·s we I·POMEROY
_ M .
prov1·ded. The pu bl 1c
e!gs come to attend. For more
Count~ Veteran s Serv~ce fnformation call 992-5275 or
Commiss iOn ~ 9 a.m., 117
742 _3171 _
Memonal Dnve.
Wednesday, April 26
POMEROY - Community
prayer and praise service, .7
p.m. at the Pomeroy Church
Friday, April 21
of Christ on West Main Street
RUTLAND - .· Revival in conjunction · with the
services will be held at 7 p.m. . Enterprise United Methodist

' '

..

Thursday, April 20,

Dad owes daughter an apology
for springing new mom on her .

Public meetings

Coil ins. "We hope the result
of this and other public feedback efforts will be a successful. efficient project that
serves the southeast Ohio
region well."
·Any comments or suggestions regarding the web site
can be forwarded to ODOT
Pub I ic Information Officer
Stephanie M. Filson at
Stephanie. Fi Ison @dot. state.
oh .us.

.

'

Community Calendar

Haley Holsinger

Local Weather

&lt;•

..

. Charge upgr~ded in shooting death of activist

Holsinger birth

·. ·

Thursday, April2o, 2006

Page .A:J.

BYTHE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

ODOT launches .river corridor study web site

conservation easements

••
' .

Page.A2

.PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
304-675-4340

home of Linda and Greer
Blosser, which is the gray log
home about 2 miles north of
Chester, on Rt. 7. Donations
will be accepted the week of
April 26-May I to allow tim~
to price and arrange salt;
items before the sale·. Those
·wanting to deliver items
· should call in advance.

TUPPERS PlAINS Amanda Scyoc was named
weekly best weight-loss winner at Tuesday 's meeting of
TOPS (Take Off Pounds
Sensibly) Chapter#OH 2013,
"Coolville.
There were 19 members
present. Cindy Hyde was· tecognized for being half-way to ·
her weight-loss goal. March
monthly winners ·were:
LaChresia Bogardus, Doris
Buchanan and Connie Rankin,
.

exercise chart; Bogardus,
Buchanan, Joan Cole, Hyde,
Theresa
Marc-inko · and
Rankin, food charts.
Leader Pat Snedden shared
restaurant strategies for making the right ch~es when
eating out. The group meets
every Tuesday at Torch
Baptist Church. Weigh-in is
from 5:15 to 6:15p.m. with a
meeting at 6:30. For information , ~all Pat Snedden at 6622633 or attend a free meeting .

We honor most third party
prescription plans:
Your Swisher &amp; Lohse
Pharmacists_, Chuck and Ken
are here to fill your
prescription needs.
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1

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,County'
informed
if•
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. ' ' 992-2155
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TOPS loser honored ·

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UALITY

Kenneth McCullouoh. R. Ph.
1
Charles Riffle R. Ph.
Prescrlpllon ~h. 992-2955
11.2 Eosl Main Slreet
Pomeroy, Ohio

HOURS
Mon - Frl Bam - Bpm
Sal. Bam - 5 pm
• Sun. CLOSED

Open Weeknights 'TillS • Friendly Service

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111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

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www.mydaltysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher ·.
.. Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor.

Congress shtdl make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exerdse thereof; or abridging the freedom
·of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redr~ss of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday. April 20, the II Oth day of 2006. There
are 255 days left in the year.
,
Today's Highlight in History: On April 20, 1999, the
Columbine High School massacre took place in Littleton,
Colo., as two students shot and killed 12 ~lassmates and one
teacher before taking their own lives.
On this date: In 1812, the fourth vice president of the United
States, George Clinton, died in Washington at age 73, becoming the first vice president to die while in office.
In 1836, the Territory of Wisconsin was established .by
Congress.
In 1889, Adolf Hitler was born in Braunau, Austria.
In 1945, during World War II, allied forces took control of
the German cities of Nuremberg and Stuttgart.
. In 1971 , the Supreme Court upheld the use of busing to
achieve racial desegregation in schools.
In 1972, the manned lunar module from Apollo 16 landed
on the moon.
In 1978; a Korean Air Lines Boeing 707 crash-lande&lt;;l in
northwestern Russia after entering Soviet airspace and being
fired on by a Soviet interceptor. Two passengers were killed.
" In 1980, the first Cubans sailing to the United States as part
of the massive Marie! boatlift reached Florida. ·
In 1986, following an absence of six decades, Russian-born
pianist Vlltdimir Horowitz performed in the Soviet Union to a
packed audience at the Grand Hall of the Tchaikovsky
Conservatory in Moscow.
Ten years ago: Russia and the leaders of the world's seven
richest democracies agreed in Moscow to end nuclear tests by
·the fall and pledged new steps to keep nuclear materials out of
:the wrong hands.
Five years ago: A Peruvian air force jet shot down a small
plane carrying American missionaries in Peru's Amazon jungle region, killing Veronica Bowers and her infant daughter,
Charity. President Bush attended his first international summit
as leaders of the Western Hemisphere's 34 democracies metit:l
Quebec to advance plans to create the world's largest free.trade zone; police in riot gear clashed with protesters. Two
therapists were convicted in Golden, Colo., of rec~ess child
~buse in a young girl's suffocation death during a "rebirthing"
therapy session. (Connell Watkins and Julie Ponder were later
.sentenced to 16 years in prison.)
One year ago: President Bush signed a bill making it harder for debt-ridden pel)ple to wipe clean their financial slates·
by declaring bankruptcy. In his first Mass as pontiff, Pope
Benedict XVI pledged to work for unity among Christians
·and to seek "an open and sincere dialogue" with other faiths .
Ecuador's Congress voted to remove embattled President
Lucio Gutierrez from office and swear in Vice President
Alfredo Palacio to replac~ him.
·
.
: 'Today's Birthdays: Actress Nina Foch is 82. Actress Jessica
Lange 1s 57. Actor Crispin Glover is 42. Country singer Wade
Hayes is 37. Actor She mar Moore is 36. Actress Carmen
Electra is 34. Actor Joseph Lawrence is 30.
• :
''thought for Today: "Taste. You cannllt buy such a rare and
wonderful thing. You can't send away for it in a catalogue.
And I'm afraid it's becoming obsolete." - Rosalind .Russell-,
American actress (1911- I 976).

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PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, April2o, 2006

But perhaps the most Meredith Viera takes a look at allowing a multitude of priauthoritative poll of them all the confusion it has caused."
vale discount companies to
WASHINGTON - Ju st is the one conducted by the
Her story told of airline sign up customers, offering a
when it seemed everything AARP, the politically pow- passengers suddenly being variety of plans that may
was turning sour for erful senior-issues lobby that faced with a lot of different seem a little confusing at first
President Bush, according to backed the prescription-drug fares from competing airlines, but allow seniors to shop
reforms during its passage in often on the same routes. To around for the best deal.
th~ polls, a large and influential voting bloc is giving one 2003 . The AARP poll, her, i.t was "all so confusing,"
The Democrats overof his chief domestic reforms released last week, reported as the story told of one man whelmingly opposed Bush's
surprisingly high marks.
that 78 percent of seniors who .Paid more for a flight, prescription drug plan,
For months, stories about who have signed up for the before he foun&lt;) another pas- largely because they hate the
Bush's ·Medicare prescrip- benefits were happy with its senger who got a cheaper fare idea of turning anything over
tion drug program were uni- · results. Only 20 percent from a competitor.
to the private sector. ·
formly negative: Seniors voi,:ed their disapproval.
Of course, this was nothThe drug-discount proThat's prelty impressive ing but old-fashiQned price- gram was "fundamentally
found the -sign-up process ·
too confusing , few were by any standard, strongly cutting competition, as the flawed" because private
applying for the program, suggesting that the early government-run, single-set businesses were delivering
and the cost savings, if any, gloom-and-doom
stories pricing system was being the benefit, Kennedy said
were minimal at best.
about the program's prob- junked in favor of market last week. But this is, mfact,
But now the story is that lems were premature.
reforms that freed airlines the ·program's strongest
scores have signed up, 29
Those stories reminded me (within parameters) to set attribute, giving competitors
million at last count, and a · of the early news reports their prices without seeking every incentive to offer
large percentage of seniors ·about the airline deregula- the approval of the Civil deeper discounts to sign up
say they are saving a great tion program that began Aeronautics Boarcl. which new members.
deal on the drugs they pur- · under President Jimmy was abolished.
I wasn't a supporter of this
chase through the discount Carter and was pushed
This healthy but some- program because I thought it
program. .
through Congress by an times messy competition led was too big and too costly,
Contrary to those network - unholy alliance of liberals, to a revolution in super- adding heavier. financial
news reports about the diffi- who included Sen. · Ted saver fares that opened up obligations onto a Medicare
culty in applying for the pro- Kennedy of Massachusetts, air travel to millions of ordi- program that was already
gram (apparently they could and free-market conserva- nary,
lower-income facing huge liabilities withnot find anyone who liked tives who wanted to open up Americans.
out the drug benefit add-on.
it), the latest Washington the industry to more compeThe enactment of taxBut there are recent signs
tition.
·
Post/ABC News poll found
deferred
or
tax-free that the cost projections may
that 74 percent of all seniors
But as., the deregulatory Individual
Retirement not be as high as initially
said they had "an easy time" reforms were getting under Accounts seemed confusing, . feared . New estimates sugsigning up, compared to way, the big three news net- too, at first, as banks offered gest the subsidy bills will be
only 24 percent who said . works began running a .litany a multiplicity of plans and billions of dollars less than
. that it was too confusing.
of stories similarly reporting .inducement s and interest forecast. ·
.
As for all those reports . how confusing it all 'was and rates. But the industry
If that's the case, it will be
suggesting that the discount how airline passengers were adjusted, and, tens of mil- due in part to the program's
hons of savers who opened market-oriented structure.
savings were small to nonex- getting ripped off.
istent, this poll found just the · . The classic wrong-headed accounts have benefited That's something that needs
opposite. A sizeable 63 per- story at the time was aired on from them.
to be broadened and
cent said they were saving "a CBS News, which was introIn the same way, Bush's improved in the legislative
lot" or "some,". compared to · duced by anchorman Dan prescription-benefits bill is fine-tuning that will no
26 percent who said their Rather this way: "What price opening up the drug industry doubt be done in the .years to
deregulation? to more competition by come.
drugs were just as expensive. airline

..

Obituaries

Lions Club donates to .London Pool
The Pomeroy-Middleport
Lions Club has contributed' to funds being
raised oy the Syracuse
Pool Steering Committee
for necessary repairs and
operational expenses of
London Pool. Here, left to
right, Lions Bill Klein , and
Bruce Teaford present a
check to Joy Bentley and
Judy Williams of the
Committee. Seated is
Bob Wingett. Syracuse
Grants Administrator. The
Lions Club is an international community
improvement organization
with its major benefit and
funaraising efforts directed towards eyesight. The
local club has several
fund ra isers such as flag
service and food fair
booth, and promotes profes.sional entertainment
productions to provide
funds towards eyeglasses for low income individuals and local community
improvement projects.

Keith D. Cllaffee

DONALD UMBRO

~.

REEDSVILLE - Keith D. Chaffee, 70, of Reedsville, died
Monday, April 17, 2006, at St. Joseph's Hospital in
Parkersburg , W.Va.
He was · born Sept. 6, 1935, son of the late Charles and
Gladys Smith Chaffee. He was a retired paver and attended St.
Paul United Methodist Church .
~
.. · Surviving are his sons: Kenneth D. (Cathy) Chaffee, New
Mextco, Dame! L. (Paula) Chaff~, Aorida, and Timothy W.
_E~affee, Reedsvtlle; ststers: Naomt (Paul) Torrenc'&lt;.• Jane (Don)
cnliler and ,Judy (Dwight) Luther; a brother, James (Susan)
Chaff~e; five grandchildren and three great grandchildren.
B~s1des ht~ parents, he was preceded in death by hi s wife,
Loutse Chaffee; hts brother, Charles Chaffee; and a daughter,
Nancy Chaffee.
::. Services will .be held at 11 a.m. on Friday, April21, 2006,
at ~~to~ f uneral Home in Pomeroy with Rev. Jane Beattie
OffiCiatmg, and bunal fol lowin g in Tuppers Plains
:Chnsttan Cemetery. ·
.
Friends may call from 6-9 p.m. on Thursday at the funeral
home.
•

Norma Hawthome
• CHESTER - Norma Belle Hawthorne, 68, Chester, went
home to meet the Lord, ,at her residence, on Aprill8, 2006.
She was. born on March 20, 1938, in Chester, daughter of
the late M1lford H. and Addie Haselton Hawk. She graduated
from Chester High School as the Class Salutatorian in 1956.
Spe was employed by the Meigs County Library and at Smith
Photography Studio in Pomeroy.
• She was an exceptional homemaker and a member of the
Faith Full Gospel Church.
· ,
· In addition to her parents, she was preceded by a brother,
Robert Hawk.
·
•: She is survived by· her husband, Darrell Hawthorne,
Ches\er; sons: James Bryan Hawthorne, Timothy Dwane
'f(awthorne, and Darrrell David (Joy) I:lawthorne, all of
Chester; a daughter, Laura Marie Guthrie, Chester; a brother
(lnd sisters, Paul Hawk of Chester, Dorothy Hawk of Chester.
1;3etty (Bub) Stivers of Pomeroy, Maxine (Carl) Hunnell of
Columbus; grandchildren, Timothy .Ryan Hawthorne, Dyana
Marie Hawthorne, Bethany Vencill, Mallory Hope Guthrie,
. . Seth Donald Guthrie, Kimberly Louise Hawthorne, and Kayla
Marie Hawthorne; several nieces and nephew s; and a special
family friend, Karen Ridenour, Pomeroy.
Services will be held at I p.m. on Friday, April 21, 2006, at
Fisher Funeral Home, Pomeroy Chapel with Pastor Steve
)leeq and Pastor Rob Barber officiating. ·
Burial will be in Mound Cemetery.
. Friends may call from 4-9 p.m. on Thursday at the funeral
home.
. Donations in' memory of Norma inay be made to Holzer
H
. ospice, 90 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 ,
.

Submitted photo

SFERS POS'I'ED
,

POMEROY
- Meigs
Courity Recorder · Kay Hill
reported the following transfers in real estate:
Gail Byrd to Ercle w.
Akers, Patricia A. Akers,
deed, Columbia.
John c. Harmon, Kellie R.
Harmon, to Adam Mc,Daniel,
deed, Village of Pomeroy.
Patrick L. Lawson, Julie
Lawson, to Christopher T.
·· Matters, Jillian Mayberry,
deed, Columbia.

· Ettie Mae Miller Living
Trust, Ettie Mae Miller, to
Christopher s. Ransom,
deed,. Bedford.
Michael L. Proffitt to
Homer L. Proffilt, deed,
Sutton.
Lori D. Mugrage, Lori D.
Hayes, Charles Mugrage, to
Wayne 0 . Leib, Jr., Chasidy
Leib, deed, Rutland.
WATERFORD - Hervida 4-H Camp will have ·a barbecue
Harry Lee Leffle, Harry· L.
chicken dinner at the site on Saturday, May 6. Proceeds will Leffle, to Gheen 's Painting,
benefit Camp· Hervida. Cost for the dinner is $7 for half chick- Inc., agreement, Village of
en and $5 'for quarter chicken.
· ·
- .·
Pomeroy/Salisbury.
•
' '
.

YOU CAN HAVE

THIS GAS NOZZlE
WHEN YOU PRY IT

Local Briefs

FROM MY COLD
OEAD HANDS.

·Chicken barbecue dinner planned

Chester~Shade

••

Gene
Lyons

Nazi Germany."
Hence, every warmonger
pictures himself, if not
President Bush; as Winston
Churchill, and everybody
who opposes war as the vacillatirtg leaders of England
and France who appeased
Hitler at Munich iw 1938.
"You have chosen dishonor
over war," Churchill thundered. "You shall' have both."
Jt's a dangerously seductive
emotion. Many of the same
d' ts who dro e the
~~ft!~a~t~tes to warv over
Iraq's mythical WMDs, who
wrongly ·predicted that Iraqis
would welcome American
troops as liberators, and who
foohshly denied that sectarian
strife would impede democracy's march, now clamor for
an attack on neighboring Iran.
(Persia.)
So what if the main strategic effect of the Iraq war has
been to weaken Persia's traditional Sunni Arab enemies? The same word
processor warriors at the
Weekly Standard are once
again dragging the Nazis
into it. "It is not 'moral
progress,"' William Kristol
w;tms, ~ · to put oll serio~s
planning for militw;y action
to a later date, probab~y in
less favorab le circumstances, when the Iranian
regime has been further
emboldened ..."
. Have they no shame?
None, whatsoever. "Political

tea party set

CHESTER - The third annual children 's tea party of the
Chester-Shade Hi storical Association for ·boys and girls 12
and under will be . held from I to 3 pi.m. at the Chester
Courthouse on May 6.
·
Each child will. complete a craft and then help wrap the
Maypole preceding the tea party The maximum number of children that c3,1,1lbe seated is 32 so reservations need to be made
early with J{1/ye Fick, 985-4115, or Linda Blosser, 9853828,
peadline is May, 2. There is a charge of $2 for each child.

Not every crisis equals World War II
In the age of mass medja,
political' propaganpa imitates
TV melodrama. Particularly
in the United States, the discussion of foreign affair-S crucial questions involving
the lives of millions - follows the conventions of the
action/adventure film: an
idealistic American hero, a
villain with his wicked
henchmen, a dramatic "crisis," redemptive violence,
and, after an imagined resolution, order and tranquility
· restored.
. Americans have been sold
th.e identical scenario many
.. times, most recently in Iraq.
A :•madman" materializes
somewhere in the third
world. Even when, like
Saddam Hussein, the villain
may have been a U.S. client,
he's depicted as motiveless
and malign, an "evildoer"
who "hates freedom." His
deluded followers are always
panted as robot-like drones.
There's no time for critical
thinking. We must destroy
the brute before he' attacks.
That's not to say that the
evildoer may not, in reality,
be a. thorm~hly nasty piece
of work, like Saddam. Nor
that, everything else being
equal, the world wouldn't be
better off without him. The
propagandists who concoct
these melodramatic scenar. ios are invariably sincere.
Indeed, it's their dreadful
solemnity that's the problem. To the typical ·pro-war
pundit, Glenn Greenwald
points out on his Weblog
"Unclaimed Territl)ry," "the
world is forever stuck in the ·
. 1930s. Every 'leader we
don't like is Aqolph Hitler, a
crazed and irrational lunatic
who wants to dominate' the
world.
Every
country
9pposed to our interests is

'·

•
'r, ,

or military commentators, ments. But he's no dictator.
like astrologers," George . lran'.s elected president serves
Orwell noted acidly, "can at the pleasure of the ayatolsurvive almost any mistake, lahs, who also command the
because their more devoted nation's armed forces .
followers do not look to
Otherwise, the comparison
them for an appraisal of the is ludicrous. Iran has
facts, but for the stimulation expressed no territorial
of nationalistic loyalties."
ambitions; history records
· Thus stimulated, .. some that the Persians haven 't
readers urge a skeptic like ' launched an aggressive war
me to ponder apocalyptic since the 16th century. While
Bible verses. It's all foretold both sides hype Iran's modin scripture, you see. est nuclear experiments, the
Another ·warns that "the day best intelligence suggests
will . soon come, when, for that the capacity to make a
the safety of America, we nuclear wear,on is five '.to I0
will have to cleanse this years off. Mtlitary strategists .
· co!Jntry of traitors like your- doubt a bombing campaign ·
self and allow you to see a ·could do anything but delay
bullet coming straight for them a bit.
Meanwhile, we've got
your face." (It's my po)icy to
warn such persons that "ter- them surrounded. There are
roristic threatening" is a . U.S. bases in every country
bordering Iran: Thrkey, Iraq,
felony.)
,Afghanistan,
Once again, Pres·ident Pakistan, '
Bush has denied hostile Turkmenistan and Saudi
intent, just as he did for Arabia. More than twice the
many months after secretly size of Texas (and five times
ordering the Pentagon . to larger than Iraq), Persia
draft detailed war plans would be difficult to invade
against. Iraq. Writing in The and impossible to occupy.
Meanwhile, here's what a
New Yorker, Seymour Hersh
tactical
sugg.ests that all systems are "pre-emptive"
go at · the White House , nuclear . attack against: a
including possible use of purely hypothetical threat .
tactical . nuclear weapons would do: According to the
Academy
of
against targets on Iranian National
soil. He hints that the neo- Sciences, it would incjnerate'
conservative . ideologues more than a million Iranian
around Dick Cheney have men , women and ch iidren,
deluded themselves that and spread cancer-causing
bombing Iran would lead to fallout across the region .
And on the day it happened,
internal rebellion and the
overthrow of the nation'$. America, as we have known
it, would cease to exist.
Islamic regime.
(Arkansas
Democrat·
Yeah, sure· it would. Ever
notice how much the neo- Gazette columnist Ge1ze
cons' ignorance of basic Lyons is a national magahum an psychology rivals zine award wi1mer a11d coauthor of "The Hunting of
bnly Osama bin Laden's?
· So how is Iran. like Nazi the President" (St. Martin's
Germany? Well, President Press, 2000 ). You can e-mail
Ahmadinejad makes screwy Lyons at genelyons2@sbcanti-Semitic
pronounce- ,globa/.net.)

•'

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

r

Soaring drug plan popularity not just ojd news
·By

'

., Thursday, Apri12o, 2006

Youth Council meeting set ·

'

· ATHENS - A Region 14 Youth Council meeting will be
beld at 9 a.m. on May 8 at the Athens County Department of
lob and Family Services on State Route 13 in Chauncey.

~: Chicken

barbecue set for Sunday

•

:. RACINE - Racine Volunh;er Fire Department will have a
i:hicken barbecue dinner at the fire station Sunday. Serving
~ill begin at II a.m.

'
,.

.For the Record
Marriage licenses. ·
POMEROY - Marriage licenses were issued in .Meigs
Probate Court to: Restry Trav.is Kilkenny, 26, and Rose
Marie Ackison, 20, Racine; Andrew Vance, 26~ Albany, and
Tina Leea.nn Lenigar, 25, Pomeroy ; Douglas Keith Robie, 46,
and Kelli Shawn Davis, 39, Pomeroy; Jason David Shain, 32,
and Roberta Sue Young, 34, Racine ; Gabriel Stephen- Weber
Jenkins, 22, ant;! Brook Elaine Bolin, 21, Rutland; Strauder
Wesley Little, 2 I. Pomeroy, and Brandy Ann Grover, 28,
Mason, W.Va.; Timothy Allen Erwin, 25, Albany, and Amanda
Sue Barringer, 19. Albany; and Walter Aaron· Woolard ~ 26,
Pomeroy, and Heidi Mae Gilmore, 20, Middleport.

~ounty

'·

-Program
from Page A1 ·
Swisher said the new summer abstinence program will
serve a secondary purpose by
assisting the two participating villages-with the increasing financial burden or pool
operations.
"Hopefully, we can help
the villages develop longterm strategies for their
future ·pool · ops;rations,"
Swisher said Wednesday.
"We believe that by provid-

~Subscribe today • 992-2155 • ·

J. Sifford, to Columbus
Southern Power, easement,
Columbia.
Ronald ). Hanning to
Columbus Southern Power,
easement, Columbia.
Michael T. Hendrickson,
Luanne S. Hendrickson, to
Columbus Southern Power,
easement, Sutton.
Raymond J. Fowler, Patsy
R. Fowler; to Thomas
Fowler, Mary Fowler, deed,
Rutland.
Raympnd
J.
Fowler,
deceased, to Patsy R. Fowler,
affidavit. Rutland.
Terry
Dale Ashburn ,
deceased, to Terry Ashburn,
affidavit, Salem.
Mary L. Birchfield to
Kenda K. Hill, deed, Village
of Pomeroy.
Irene W. Hendricks to
Terry L. George, Rebecca M.
George, deed, Chester.
·
Richard H. Boring, Inez
C. Boring, to Brenda Kay
Segal. Randall Lee Boring,

'

than 30 years. His coaching poslllon of House Finance
career includes serving as the Committee chairman.
In 2003, Carey be.gan '
head coach for four NBA
serving
in the Ohio Senate,'
he
currently
teams,
and
from PageA1
where
he
has also worked
serves as the head coach and .
on several key issues, such
Carey's wife, Lynley, wh 0 general manager of the as tax reform. Among his
Charlotte
Bobcats.
will be receiving her master's
Originally from Benham, other duties. he currently '
degree during the ceremony.
serves as the chairman of
Sojka added that he is als 0 Ky., Bickerstaff and hi s wife the Finance and · Financial
Eugenia
have
five
children
very
proud
to
have and six grandchildren.
Committee.
Bickerstaff delivering the
Carey: who has won numerThe acadell'!ic procession
keynote address at the
ous
awards .for his work as a
for
the
commencement
cereFounders' Day ceremony'.
'
public servant in Ohio, is the
mony
wi.
l
l
begin
at
2·p.m,
on
"It' s going to be a real ·
ftrst person in 75 years to
homecoming for Bernie the green in front of Allen serve as the chairman of both
Bickerstaff and hi s family," Hall and Anniversary Hall. House and .Senate finance
If there is rain during the
Sojka said:
day,
the ceremony will be committees. Carey and his
· Koby .agreed, adding that
moved into the Newt Oliver wife Lynley life in Wellston
he is happy to have someone Arena
in Lyne Center. In that ·and have two sons,
..
as successful as Bickerstaff·.
While the main activities
case,
tickets
will
be
required
has been in the NBA, returnwill be occurring on
entry.
.
ing to campus for the forCarey
is a· fifth-generation Saturday, May 6, other
Founders' Day ceremony.
resident
Wellston who important events will also be
The Founders' Day cere- served as of
mayor of the city held in the week leading up
mony will be the first activi- from 1988 through 1994. to that day.
ty of the day on Saturday,
On Thesday, May 2, the
began serving in the
May 6, as it will begin at I 0 · Carey
Radiologic Technician recogOhio
House
of
a.m . in the Alphus R.
Representatives in 1995 and nition ceremony will be held
Christensen Theatre in the worked
on numerous key at 6:30 p.m.; on · Th urs day,
Berry Fine and Performing
4,
the
Clinical
issues such as reforming the May
Arts Center on the Rio state's
Technology
welfare system, Laboratory
Grande campus.
changing the law "on fire- . (CLT) recognition ceremony
During the ceremony, all works after the Scotiown will begin at 7 p.m.; and on
of the students who have tragedy, and pushing for th.e Friday. May 5, the graduates'
had signifi cant' accomplish- Rural Industrial Park loan breakfast will begin at 8 a.m., ·
ment s, both academically program to help rural coun- the graduation practice will
and athletically, throughout ties compete for jobs. Carey begin at 9:30 a.m., and the
the school year will be rec- also served in the important nurse s' pinning yere mony
ognized. The· ceremony also
honors the history of the
institution, and salutes the
· you know that Senior Homestead Exemptions
students who will be graduand 10% tax rollback are admlnlsterad by the
1
ating . .
.
.
County Auditor?
Bickerstaff, who will serve
ELEO ·
as tlie keynote speaker for the·
ceremony, attended· Rio
Grande from 1961 to 1963
EIGS
UNTY
ITOR
and played on the men',s basketball team.
Will make sure that all taxpayers are aware of
Bicke'rstaff went on. to
tax reductions which they are entitled to.
. become a very successful
Your Vote Needed and AfJ•P.nrf..~rl!.e'!E
basketl)all coach , and has
coached in the NBA for more

ing a 'variety of supei-vised
summer activities at the two
parks, we will aid in the prevention of risky .behavior by
the youth," Swisher said.
"We hope to establi sh the
groundwork through the
summer program to build an
ongoing, year-round program
which .will result in fewer
teen pregnancies."
The program will be promoted thorugh 'a newsletter to
parents of chi ldren participatmg. It is open to children
entering grades 6-12 regardless of 'income. Information
is also available through the •
ABC P.rogram at 992-9121 :

Proud to be apart of your life.

Michael T. Wolfe, Lora
Hart, Lora Wolfe, to Billy D.
Clendenin, Kimberly . J.
Clendenin, deed, Bedford.
Diana L. Zirkle to Susan
Zirkle, d!!ed , Village of
Middleport.
. David E. Gilkey, deceased,
to Karen J on'es, certificate,
Village
of
Middleport/Salisbury.
Esther Helen Martin,
deceased, to Stephen Daniel
Martin, affidavit, Scipio.
Rickie
Causey,
Rick
Causey, to Rose M. Causey,
dee&lt;f. Olive.
Rocky R. Hupp, Carol J.
Hupp, to Jeffery Lundy,
Andrea Lundy, deed, Sutton. ·
Ronnie E. Burkhammer,
Candy K. Burkhamer, to
Howard E. Frank, deed,
Sutton.
·John P. Goodin, Tammy
Goodin,
to
Columbus
Southern Power, easement,
Col!lmbia.
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ACROSS
THE
NATION
Thu"""y,!!~~!S
~----~--------------~--~~~----------------------------~~~~~~--- Chinese president extolls trade tie benefits at Boeing plai1f
TheDailySentinel

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BY ELIZABETH
M. GILLESPIE
AP BUSINESS WRITER

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EVER'ETT, Wash.
Chinese President Hu Jintao
called Wednesday for fewer
trade barriers and closer ties
between his country and the
United States, while defendinJrChina's heavily criticized
policies on trade, currency
and energy.
·
The meaty speech followed
a wa:rm welcome at Boei ng
Co. , where . Hu sought to
soothe ten sions over the
U.S.-Chi na trade deficit,
telling workers his country
would need thou sands or new
airplanes in the coming years .
·Speaking to an audience of
Washington state business
and political leaders including
Microsoft
Corp,
Chairman Bill Gate ~ . Hu
said hi s country .does not
st;ek a big trade surplus with
. the U.S. He also reaffirmed
hi s government's commitment to crac k down on software piracy, which should
increase Microsoft's sales in
China.
"Strong business ties meet
the fundamental interests of
our two countries and · peo- .
pies and wiH continue to play
an important role in sta~iliz ­
ing our relations," Hu said
through a translator. He !lew
to Washington D.C shortly
after the speech.
China's rapid growth and
development will increase
demand for American products and expertise . in areas
such ·as technology, Hu said,
and "!. hope the American .
businesses will seize the
opportunities."
The comments came just
ahead of a summit with
President Bu,sn. where the
two sides plan to tackle
thorny issues including trade.
Visiting Boeing's widebody jet assembly plant earlier, he called his country's
long-running relationship

AP Photo

Chinese President Hu Jintao, center, joins in a three-way toast with Starbucks coffee mugs with Washington Gov. Chris Gregoire,
right, and former Washington Gov. Gary Locke, left, Wednesday following a .luncheon held in Hu 's honor at the Boeing Co. Future
of Flight Museum in Everett, Wash . Hu gave a major policy speech at the event before departing for Washington, D.C., and a
Thursday summit with President Bush.
·
with Boeing an example of
the potential of China-U.S.
trade.
"Boeing's cooperation with
China .is a .living· example of
the mutually beneficial cooperation and win-win outcome
that China and the United
Srates have achieved from
trade with each other," Hu
said.
• He estimated that demand
for new aircraft in China will
reach 2,000 planes in the next
IS years.
Hu 's speech at the company's massive Everett plant

came just days after Chinese
officials confirmed a com.
mitment to order 80 .Boeing
737 jets, in a deal valued at
$5.2 billion at list prices. The
order has yet to be finalized,
and airlines typically negoti- ·
· ate discounts.
The Boeing deal is one of
several
purchases
the
Chinese have · announced
recently as officials try to
ease tensions over. the massive trade gap · between .the
U.S. and China.
Hu's meeting Thursday
with Bush will cover a broad

agenda, from China's much- avoidable that some probcriticized currency and other lem s have occurred," Hu
trade policies, to its aggres- said. "However, mutually
sive search for oil and its beneficial cooperation and
positions on the developing common
development
nuclear programs in Iran and remain the defining feature of
North Korea.
our business relations."
Hu said China takes its
At his lunchtime speech,
Hu touched on several of trade imbalance with the U.S.
those issues, defending . seriously, and noted that his
Chinese currency and energy country has trade deficits
policy but acknowledging wit~ Japan, Korea and some
that there havebeen bumps in southeast Asian countries.
the road.
Hu promised that China
"Given the rapid growth, will take a firm stance prosheer size and· wide scope of tecting intellectual property.
our l')usiness ties, it is hardly He also said his country has

already taken some steps to
loosen currency regulation
and
promote
financi~l
reforms, m apparent response. ,
to U.S. criticism.
' :
The Chinese president sald".
the two countries shouli:J"
address trade issues througli''
formal dialogue.
~"
"Trade issues should not lie .
politicized," he said.
·~·r
But Hu said strengthening-;
China-U.S. ties will require' ·
both sides to continue pr\)~' ;'
mating global free . trade amt
economic development.
He said opportunititis"
included nuclear energy, nat,~ .
ural gas, energy conservatior(
and new forms of environ" ··
·mentally friericfiy energy. ::;::
. Despite the political. te~.: ..
s1ons
expected
m·
Washington, H~ has receivet
a warm and cunnus welcome ·
during his visits to Boeing ·"
and, on Tuesday, Microsoft. ~
The thousands of Boeinf'.
workers, some of whom wait!"
ed hours for a I 0-minute
speec;h Wednesday, appeared •;
eager for a glimpse of Hu. '' ·"China is one of the largest'"
markets for Boeing," said"' .
· CraigThompson, an engine~t''
at the Everett plant. "Th~ .
guy's coming here. I'm going '
to listen to what he has ttl' ·
say."
Hu
began
his
day;'
Wednesday visiting at hi,s ./
hotel with China scholars and ·.
academics, including formei ;
Secretary of Sta!e Henry ·
Kissinger, former National·
Security Adviser Brerit' ':
Scowcroft
and
formet' .
Defense Secretary William l :"
Perry.

.

t /1 '~·

On Tuesday, Hu toured ·
Microsoft's
suburb!l!\''
Redmond campus and dined··
at company chairman Bill
Gates' home. Hu said he"
admired what Gates had
achieved.
Associated Press Writers
Allison Linn, Peggy Andersen
and Melanthia Mitchell contributed to this report. ,

•

The Daily Sentinel .

,, BY PAUL GARWOOD
'I'&lt;ABUL, Afghanistan Fay ruza's doll-sized body
l~l,lns limply across the forearm of her aunt, who became
the infant's mother minutes
after her birth.
.The death of the withered
baby's natural mother during
Ghi!dbirth epitomizes the
leading health crisis in warravaged Afghanistan, where
U,N. offic.ials say 600 infants
aiid 50 mothers die on averag~ each day. ·
_President Hamid Karzai ,
a~~ressing .a health confereiJ.Ce ·Wednesday, called the
appalling rates of infant and
m11ternal
mortality
his
n11tion 's "great tragedy."
;1-=radling Fayruza in the
crJI.mped contines of a ward
at Kabul 's Indira Gandhi
qildren 's Hospital, the
bijby 's aunt recalled her birth
three months ago.
;;The morning she was born
I • became an aunt," said
Snirinja, . who goes by one
nacme. "But by the afternoon,
afJer my sister died, I had
become her mother."
.:The baby has spent the last
AP Photo
18 days in the hospital, .suf- ·An Afghan woman walks with her son inside Indira Ghandi children's hospital in Kabul Wednesday. Infant and maternal mortalficing chronic malnutrition.
ity, along with chronic child mall'1utrltion, are among Afghanistan 's most dire health challenges, claiming the lives of tens of
Afghanistan has the world's thousands of women and children annually.
·
sc.cond-worst rate of mothers
dying during childbirth destroyed Afghanistan's mea· Abdul Salam, director of among women.
nancy complications."
I,600 per I 00,000, according ger health services. Deep Indira Gandhi Hospital.
"Illiteracy is one of the.
Health Minister Mohammed
tQ . UNICEF. The worst is poverty, . restrictive social
Almost 90 percent of the biggest problems becau se · Amin Fatemi said most births
Sierra Leone . .Child mortality customs and illiteracy have hospital's patients come from
people don't know how to are not . attended by trained
i~ , also among the world's ·
compounded
the
cri
sis.
remote
provinces
where
the
take
care of their children," medical staff and occur in
highest: Some 135 children
"Our country is rebuilding health problems are worst. said pediatrician Dr. Hamid homes in remote villages far
dje within the first year of life
with the help of the Acce~s to health care is limit- Mazin, 37, as· he helped feed from health ce.nters equipped
itself
oq~ of every 1,000 born. For
community ed by widespread insecurity formula . to malnouri shed to deal with childbirth emerchildren younger than 5, that international
n!!mber rises to 257 out of after almost three decades of because of militant attacks babie s. "Women have no gencies.
Training 12,000 communie~ery 1,000, compared to conflict, war and infighting, and banditry, and by the iso- right. to leave their .homes due
and in every sector we have lation of communities.
to village traditions, so they ty health workers - half of
eight in the United States.
Another obstacle . is poor remain inside to the very end, them women - and 6,000
· ·A quarter-century of war problems and challenges,
and Taliban rule all· but ' partiCularly health," said Dr. . education,
particularly even if they are having preg- midwives by 2010 is a Health

BY KELLI KENNEDY

vision and can lead to blind- pmduct.
ness, according to the Miami
"As the manufacturer, they
lawsuit, filed Monday. It says are responsible for it and they
MIAMI -A Miami attor- Wartmann 's corneal scarring are the ones who are going to
ney is· seeking class-action has resulted in petmanent be held responsible for it,"
status for a lawsuit blaming blurry vision.
Magolnick said.
·
Bausch &amp; Lomb for a painful
A Bausch &amp; Lomb spokesThe company's manufactureye fungus he says perma- woman said Wednesday that ing plant in Greenville, S.C.,
nently scarred the cornea of a the Roche ster, N.Y.-based which is at the center of the
woman who used its contact company does not comment fungus · investigation, was
lens. solution.
on pending litigation.
cited by the Food and Drug
The lawsuit, following on . "Obviously we're working Administration four years ago .
the heels of a similar suit filed to complete tlie investigation
The FDA said the company
in New York, alleges the com- into these fungal infections as failed to adequately investipany either failed to remove quickly as possible," spokes- gate the cause of paint chips
the fungus from the Renu woman Meg Graham said.
discovered during inspecwith MoistureLoc eye soluWartmann and the six other tions in 2002 in rooms where
tion or fostered its' growth in plaintiffs all used the Renu containers of eye care prodthe manufacturing process.
solution to clean their con- ucts were filled.
Bausch &amp; Lomb stopped . tacts, and all developed the
Graham said the problem
shipping the product last fungus, said attorney Joel was resolved. "The quality
week after health officials Magolnick.
and sterility of the products ·
linked it to I09 cases ef the · The lawsuit seeks $75,000 made there was never in
eye fungus. More than 50. of in damages. for, each client ·question," she said.
those cases were diagnosed and class-action status.
The warning did not cite
in Florida, according to the
Magolnick said he had problems · with Renu with
federal Centers for Disease · received dozens of calls from MoistureLoc, which wasn' t
Control and Prevention .
people in Utah, Georgia, manufactured until 2004.
Jacqueline ·Wart mann, 57. Virginia and Las Vegas - all
Bausch &amp; Lomb shares
was among those diagnosed · contact lens wearers who rose $1.06, closing at $47.54
with Fusarium keratitis, a developed pr.oblems after Wednesday on the New York
fungus that causes blurred using the Bausch &amp; Lomb Stock Exchange.

Americans are fleeing farther out from big cities
BY STEPHEN
OHLEMACHER
·ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON
Americans are leaving· the
nation's big cities in search of
cheaper homes and open
spaces farther out.
Nearly every large metropolitan area had more people
move out than move in from
2000 . to 2004, with a few
exceptions in the South and
Soutliwest, according to a
report
being
released
Thursday · by the Cens'us
Bureau.
Northeasterners are moving South and West. West
Coast residents are moving
inland. Midwesterners are
chasing better job markets.
And just about everywhere,
people are . escaping to the
outer suburbs, also . known
as exurbs.
"It's a case of m.iddle class
!light, a flight for housing
affordability," .said Wi IIi am
Prey, a demographer at the

,.

Brookings Institution, a
Washington think tank. "But
it's not just white middle.
class fli ght , it 's Hi spanics
and blacks , too."
The Census Bureau measured domestic migration people moving within the
United States - from 1990
to 2000, ·and from 2000 to
2004. The report provides
the number of people moving into and out of each state
and the 25 largest metropolitan areas.
The states that attracted the
most new residents: Florida,
Arizona and Nevada. The
· states that lost the most: New
York, California and Illinois.
Among the 25 largest metropolitan areas, 18 had more
people move out than move
m from 2000 to 2004. New
. York, Los Angeles and
Chicago - the three biggest
metropolitan areas- lost the
most residents to domestic
moves. The New ·York metropolitan area had a ~~ loss of
more than 210,000 residents

a year from 2000 to 2004.
Richard Florida, a professor of public policy at
George Masdn Universiiy,
said • smaller, · wealthier
households are replacing
larger families in many big
metropolitan areas.
That drives up housing
prices .even as the population shrinks, chasing away
even more members or the
middle class .
"Because they are bidding
up prices, they are forcing
some people out to the exurbs
and the fringe," Florida said.
"Other people are forced to
make moves in response to
that. I don't have any sense of
this abating."
The metropolitan area that
attracted the most new resi·
dents, was Rivers'ide, Calif.,
which has been siphoning
residents from J:.,os Angeles
for years. The Riverside area,
which · includes
San
Bernardino and Ontarip, had
a net gain of 81,000 people a
year from 2000 to 2004.

'·

Don't miss this
opportunitv to reach
·
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over 16,000 homes
.

·®allipoltsilBaHp ~ribune
·lloint ,Jlleasant l\.egister
and Daily Sentinel

Health Care
·to be published
Mav18,2006
'

Hurrv, time is
running outl
AdD
Is .
'
Mav 11, 2006·

••

is attributed to him in this der Sloat, and the brothers,
case," the family said in a Deepak and Satish Kalpoe,
• .
.
stateme.nt that released in were jailed and later
•ORANJESTAD, Aruba __; Dutch by his l11wyer, Eline released after a judge ruled
· l!ie' family of a 19-year-old Lotter Homan.
· there was noi enough eviaPrested in the case of a
Aruban prosecutors, identi- dence to hold them.'
yitung Alabama woman who fying Cromvoirt only by his
The public . prosecutor's
went missing last year while . initials, said he WljS suspect- office .said Wednesday that
vfsiting
Aruba
said ed of "criminal offenses that the coast guard was using
Wednesday that he had may be related to the disap- sonar and other equipment to
nbthing to do with her disap- pearance" of Holloway but check an unspecified area off
pearance. ·
.._ .have not provided details the Caribbean island. ThliJ,
:The family of Geoffrey van about why he was arrested.
search, the latest of many fofl;
Qromvoirt also said in a
"Her friends have not given Holloway, of of Mountain
Stf!tement released by his me any indication that Brook, Ala., was in its fourth
lq;.vyers that he is not friends Natalee had a meeting with day but had not previously
wtth any of the people previ- this young man or ... (had) a been disclosed.
oosly detained in thl! Natalee relationship with him,"
Officials on the Dutch
investigation, Holloway's mother, Beth island also said they were
it&gt;lloway
~ich has gathered force in Twitty, told CNN's "Larry interviewing witnesses and
r&amp;;:ent days with new search- King Live" on We.dnesday.
were in contact with authorieland witness interviews. · · Holloway, who was 18 ties in the Netherlands about
:"The family van Cromvoirt when she disappeared, was tips received after the airing
dl&lt;;tances itself completely last seen leaving a bar with a of a televi sion program
fClm all expressions or state- Dutch
teen
and
two devoted to unsolved crimes.
nl:nts which bring Geoffrey Surinamese brothers on May
vtn Cromvoirt in connection 30 - the ·final night of her
YD.th the disappearance of high school graduation trip to
/tltalee Holloway and any the Caribbean island.
sQ!iements in which UjiY role
The Dutch teen, Joran Van

•

A judge on 1\Jesday had
approved a prosecution
request to hold the man pending further investigation. He
was also detained· on suspi- ·
cion of drug offenses.
Under the law, another
hearing for the 19-year-old
must be held by·at least April
25 if the prosecution wants to
continue his detenion, said
Mariaine Croes, a spokeswoman for the prosecutor's
office.
Searches involving Dutch
marines the FBI and hundreds volunteers have been .
conducted throughout the ·
island and off the coast. More
recent ~earches have focused
on dunes along the island's
north shore.
A.uociated Press writer
Margaret We ver contributed
to this repon.

of

·And·Win·
COtJGRATU(ATIOtJ~!
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r;gg wa~ found at th~ ~af~rn
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•

South Korea warns of possible clash with
-!apan as talks continue on disputed islets
: BY KWANG·TAE KIM

Seoul dropped efforts to
or change place names
m the area .
:•SEOUL, South Korea · - , , Abe, however, said Japan
J!Panese and South Korean planned to go ahead with the
nagotiators raced · to avert a project.
cl6sh Thursday over a set of
"The Japanese coast guard
disputed islets in the Sea of is carrying out preparations
Jlpan, as Seoul . accuse.d to conduct a maritime survey
~k):'O of neocolomal a111b1- thal'is based on international
t~ns and warned of a po~s1 law," he said. "A calm
b~ high seas confrontation. ·
re spon se is necessary, and
:Some 20 South Korean unofficial contacts between
gpnboats had be.en di ~- Japan and South Korea are
~tched to the area 1~ ant1c1taking plate with the aim of a
~tion of the. arnval of peaceful resolution."
JIPanese ships planning to
South Korea's Foreign
stuvey the resource-rich . Ministry spokesman Choo
waters near the islands, Kyu-ho, meanwhile, warned
Which are occupied by South of a clear "possibility of
&amp;,rea but claimed by Japan. phy sical clash" and said
'l);o survey ships left port on Japan held the key to whether
Jlpan's
we st
coast tonflict erupts.
\lednesday but have been
The South Korean prote sts
lUJgering offshore s1nce, were
under~cored
by
. ~st
Guard ' official President Roh Moo-hyun ,
asayuki Fujita s~id . ,
. . ~ho accused Tokyo of har• ews reports satd the s11r· . boring imperialistic ambi ~y could begin later in the lions. While the ·territorial
d!Y
·
·
tiff highlights rival econom;J~ Tokyo , Chief Cabin~t ic interests in th e area's
&amp;'icretary Sh(nzo Abe sa1d .undersea resources, it strikes
tAre were "unoffici al" con- ari especially raw nerve ·in
t:!lts between the two sides South Korea, where many
t ~ try to difu se the situa- consider Japan's claim a lefttl'On,
fpllowing
media over of Tokyo's 1910-45
·reports that Tokyo ha.d colonial rule of the Korean
offered to halt the survey 1f . peninsula.
: ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

"

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a

Man arrested in Aruba in·HoUoway ·case
has no link to missing teen, lawyer says

: · ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Ministry goal for trying to ·
deal with the child and maternity death rates, Fatemi said
on the sideli nes of ,the regional
health
conference
Wednesday. '
Afghanistan :s »'·idespread
poverty must . also be
addressed if health indicators.
are to improve, he said . "We
have to break this vicious .
cycle, where poverty causes
these mortality rates and
mortality rates contribute to
poverty," Fatemi saip.
Chronic malnutrition lack . of energy .
primarily
and protei n - runs at 54 percent for children Ufider 5 in
Afghanistan, behind only .
Burundi at 57 percent.
Poverty's bitter relationship to child and maternal·.
health in Afghani stan are
evident inside the bombedout ruins of west Kabul's
Aliabad Hospital, once the.
capit al' s leading medical
facility. Now, .it is home to 50·
refugee fa milies too poor to ·
afford to rent or buy a home..
Sixty-year-old Alam Gut
lives with his wife Ghutai,
who is roughly half his age,
and their nine · children,
including infant twins, in a
tiny room without electricity, ,
running water or gas. Cold
drafts blow down the corridor
toward bathrooms in which
cracked pipes leak human
waste onto the tloor from
families living above.
"My children are very sick
because of the dirty water, ·
di seases and unclean state of.
everything," Ghutai said,
showing The Associated
Press the family',&gt; bereft
home. "My baby twins are ill .
and hungry because they .
don't have enough ·mother's
milk. I don't know how we .
will all keep living ."

,, ASSOCIATED PRE SS WRITER

:8Y JONATHAN M. KATZ

' '

Thursday, April2o, 2006

High infant, maternal mortality rates cause anguish·in Afghanistan

,;.

Lawsuits filed against Bausch &amp;
·Lomb in eye·fungus cases

AROUND THE WORLD

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Page AS .

OHIO
Protes~ers want Sherwin-Willi~ to clean up lead paint

1be Daily Sentinel

-.

Thursday, April 20,

Inside

2006

.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel·

.

Reds rally to beat Marlins, B2

'

Orioles double up Tribe, B2
Cavs sneak past Atlanta, B4
No plea deal for Duke lacrosse player, B4

BY THOMAS J. SHEERAN

Sherwin-Williams said lead
paint. which can cause brain
damage in children, was
CLEVELAND - About legal until it was banned in
125 protesters chanteq dur- 1978 as unsafe.
•
ing a peaceful march outside
Wells said the paint maker
the
annual
Sherwin- had exchanged letters with
~
Williams Co. shareholder ACORN and was will'ing to
'
meeting
.Wednesday, meet with the group's repredemanding
that
the paint sentatives under the ausptces
•
.
maker . pay to remove lead of the National Paint and
. ")
paint from·hbmes.
Coatings Association trade
. The sidewalk protest, orga- group.
nized by the Association of
Sherwin-Williams hasn't
Community Organizations made residential paint with
for Reform Now, or ACORN, lead sinc.e 1937, according to
included placards that read Wells. "That product 'ha&amp;
."Shame on Sherwin, William~ been out of our control for
for poisoning our children" close to 70 years," he said.
and the chant, "Pay up, clean
The company has backed
·up, get the lead out."
programs to educate conOne of the protest speakers, sumers on how to limit e~po­
· 42-year-old Julie Smith of sure to lead-paint hazards,
Cleveland. said her she Wells said.
blames lead-based paint in
The company, disagrees
her former ·rental home ·for with the Providence verdict
the fact that her 5-year-old but was waiting on additional
son has the developmental rulings from a judge. before
skills of a 3-year-old.
deciding whether to appeal,
"He ' was poisoned by lead Wells said:
paint. That's not fair," said
Sherwin-Williams also is a
Smith, who noted later that defendant in a class action in
she didn't know which brand California alleging that sevof paint had been used.
eral paint manufacturers
Police barred ,protesters knowingly sold lead-based
froin the office tower where paint pro~ucts for decades:
the annual meeting was held.
The lawsuit was filed by a
The meeting was limited to coalition of cities, counties
shareholders,
spokesman and school districts that claim
they face millions of doliars
Bob Wells said.
·
In February, a Providence, in costs to remove lead-taint•
R:l., jury held Sherwin' ed paint a~d treat people
. AP Photo/The Plain Dealer, C.H.Peto Copeland Williams and two other paint harmed by exposure. The
Protesters chant during a ml!rch outside the annual Sherwin-Williams Co. stockholders meeting Wednesday in Cleveland. The makers liable for problems plaintiffs seek monetary
caused by lead paint. compensation.
protesters were demanding that the paint maker pay to remove lead paint from homes.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

'.

..

ThUI"Sday, April2o, 20o6

past Lady Eagles
.Southern rallies
and Kelsi Holter and Hannah
The ,Lady Eagles were in

,. I

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.

BY Scon WoLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

,, -4...

LocAL S~HEDt,JLE

~

Lawyer controlling papyrus fragments
drums up interest with possible,gospellink
BY M.R. KROPKO
· ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

.. '

. COLUMBUS (AP) them to vote for·a $75 million
School districts are tU.rni'ng tn school bond issue for the
. old-school political strategy to Hilliard · school system in
ask voters to spend more suburban Columbus. She's
money on their kids' education. hitting up parents of childien
Voters will decide 187 in her daughter's Brownie
troop and co-workers. .
school issues May 2.
"Its a great idea," Dillion
To increase the likelihood
of passage, districts are tum- . said. "Hopefully, it will work."
Campaign committees are
ing to professionals like BJ.
Fischer, senior aecount man- '. increasing their budgets,
ager ·at Funk Luetke Skunda using Internet sites, raising
Marketing in Toledo. The money through auctiOns and
company has managed levy calling on local celebrities.
..You can't just go to the
campaigns in Toledo for
about 15 years.
voters and ask them to just do
Many of· its tactics are what's right for the kids any- ·
common to candidate cam- more," said Larry Jenki'ns,
paigns, but the key is reach- chairman of the Our Schools,
ing out to parents in the cOm- Our Community campaign in
suburban Westerville. "You
munity, Fischer said.
"We do a lot of phone have · to run a true political
banking. That can be done a issue campaign. You've got
lot of different ways. It works to convince the voters.
best when you have volun- You've got to be talking to
teers making the calls," them. You can't just assume
Fischer said.
that community spirit i~
Supporters of tlie ballot · going to pass the issue."
~
measures hope the efforts
Some school campaigns · .
will improve ·on the mixed have hired consultants to help
results from recent elections. design literature, advise on:
In May 2005, 55 percent campaign strategies and offe(
,
passed, while just 37 percent tips for public SJll;aking.
passed in August elections
"The stakes keep going up
and 57 percent passed in in terms of the need to pass
November.
·
levy issues," said Jonathan
Alice Dillion is one of hun- Benedict, asso~iate vice presE
dreds of volunteers using, ident for . Burges &amp; Burge~
voter lists to contact friends Strategists in · Euclid, a'
and neighbors and encourage Cleveland' suburb.

••
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•

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or w

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II

'

BaHb•ll
Point P&amp;easant at Fairtand, 5:30p.m.
Wahama at Parkersburg Catholic, 5 p.m .
Ravenswood at .Southern, 5 p.m:
Federal Hocking at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Softball
Meigs at River Valley, 5 p.m.
Southern at Hannan, 5 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Eastern, s p.m.
Tennis
Gallla Ac&amp;demy at Marietta, 4:30 p.m.
cono~SOftbllf

Ohio Dominican at Rio Gran!;le. 3·p.m.

Frldav'f garnet
Bal&amp;ball
Gallia Academy at Warren,· 5 p.m.
Eastern al Meigs, 5 p.m.
Coal Grove at Ri~~er Valley, 5 p.m.
Soulh Gallia at Point Pleasant, 6:30 p.m.
Nelsonville·York at Sou thern, 5 p.m.
Softball
Warren at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
·. Point Pleasant at Wendy's Tour. TBA
Eastern at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Nelsonville-York at Southern, 5 p m.
Track and Field
Point Pleasant, South Gallia, Eastern at
.Fairland, 4:30p.m.
Tennis
,Gallia Academy at Minford, 4:3Q p.m.
Soturdey'a garnet
.
Baeebatl
.
Gallla· AcademY at Portsmouth (DH),

..

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~' ~

.

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Southern Lady Tornadoes
scored a dramatic 7-4 comefrom-behind victory over the
Eastern Easles Wednesday
night
dunng
Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division
softball action at Eastern High
School. Southern is now 3-8, 24 on the season while Eastern
falls to 4-7.
Eastern took the early lead
!llld Danielle Carroll breezed
through the Southern line-up for
the first live innings with nothing more than a ·minor threat.
But the proverbial ceiling caved
in during a seven-run seventh
inning that Jed coach Alan
Crisp's squad to the 74 win.
Southern mercied Eastern in
Racine 14-3, claimif\g two of its
three wins against the Eagles.
Eastern went up 2-0 in the
first inning when Snyder ·was
hit by a pitch and advanced on a
ground out. Alyssa Baker
walked and was c~ught stealing,
then Brittany Bissell walked

noon
Wahama at Wlrt County (DH), noon
Fort Frye at River Valley (OH), 10 a.m.
Meigs at Athens (OH), 11 a.m.
Softball
Point Pleasant at Wendy's Tour, T.,BA
Meigs at Athens (DH), 1i a.m.
Track and Field
Gallia
Academy
at Parkersburg
Invitational, 9 a.m.

Lady
Raiders
double
up Peake

Tennis.
Point Pleasant at Parkersburg Catholic,
10 a.m.
College Baseball
A!O Grande at Ohio Dominican {DH), 1
p.m .
,
College Softball
Mayers at Rio Grande, ~p . m .

Panthers roar past
River Valley, 15-2
I .

BY BRYAN W,.LTERS
BWALTER S@MYOA.ILYTRIBUNE.COM

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

CHESHIRE
River
Valley managed only five
hits and committed five
errors during a 15-2, five
inning Joss to visiting
Chesapeake Wednesday in
Ohio Valley .Conference .
action.
The Raiders (0-11, 0-6
OVC) surrendered four
unearned runs, seven hits
and nine walks during their
latest setback, while the
Larry Crum/photo
Panthers (7-2, 5-1) made the
inost of those extra opportu- Southern's Wes Riffle dives back to first base during a pick-off attempt while Eastern's Kyle Gordon prepares to catch the ball
)lities by sending at least I0 11durlng the Eagles' 10·0 victory Wednesday ih Tuppers Plains:
batters to the plate in three
of the five innings . .
Chesapeake sent a total of
31 hitters to the plate during
the second, fourth and fifth
when Mark Guess and Cory walked the first two batters.
Derek Young with two sinframes , collectively,. which
BY ScoTT WoLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT 1
Shaffer each walked and the
Senior Brad Crouch was gles and two walks, while
resulted iri 13 of the guests'
next batter was called· out for called upon to put out the Cory
Shaffer,
Justin
15 runs.
TUPPERS
PLAINSJoel
CHS starting pitcher
stepping on the plate. on a · fire, but Eastern capitalized Browning, Joel Lynch, and
Travis Zimmerman took .Ly nch pitched a gem of a bunt. Terry Durst made up on the oppo~tunity an~ saw Terry Durst came . in with a
care· of the rest in his four game to lead the Eastern for the miscue by hammering Lynch help h1s cause with an single ami walk each .
innings of work, allowing Eagles to a I 0-0 shut-out a run-scoring single, then RBI smgle. Justm Br?wmng · Marnhout suffered the loss
.:
·
no runs, two hits and a walk over the Southern Tornadoes Justin Browning had an RBI walked to load the bases. and ·. .
single
for
-a
2-Q.
EHS
lead.
Derek
Young
liad
an
RBI
si
ng•.vmg
.up
seven.
Juts,
seven
while picking up the . win. Wednesday night during boys
Southern went down 1-2-3 gle . Two strai ght errors and a walks, and four hitS.
.
Conference
Zimmerman also struck out Tri- Valley
in
the
third,
fourth.
and
fifth
sacrifice
tly
brought
home
Southern
play
s
at
Mrller
Hocking
Division
baseball
at
five in the decision.
inning and likewise Eastern the last three Eastern runs Thursday 1t1 a make-up game.
The Raiders managed two Eastern.
Lynch walked four, struck went down in order .in the and the Eagles of Coach The Ra~e n swood game was
runs and three hits off of
· ·cancelled to accommodate
out
four, and scattered three fourth . Lynch and · hi s Brian Bowen Jed 9-0.
reliever Clinton Baise iri the
Southern
counterpart
Butch
Eastern
reached
the
mercy
the Miller league game.
bottom of the fifth, but their hits to · pick up .the win .
engaged in a great plateaU. in the sixth when
rally efforts came up short. Seiuthern hitters were Wes Mamhout
pitching duel. The duel, how- Lynch walked and rode home Southern 000 000 - 0 3 4
Riffle,
Brad
Crouch,
and
Silver and Black starter
002 071 10 7 1
ever, ended abruptly for on a Derek Young sing le, 10- Eas1ern
Butch Marnhout, Brad Crouch (5) and Devan Gibbs lasted only Nick Buck, all with singles.
·
Eastern broke a scoreless Southem in the fifth. A tiring 0 Eastern .
J.R. Hupp. Joel Lynch and Te rry Durst. W
one inning allowing deadlock
and perhaps ailing . Marnhout
Eastern hitters were Jed by - Lynch. L- MarnhOut.
·
in
the
third
inning
seven runs, five earned
I
runs, three hits and two
walks - · in the losing decision. Ryan Eggleton took
O'ver in the second frame
;md surrendered eight runs ,
six earned runs, four hits
and six walks. Eggleton also
· fanned two in his relief
Ohio Athletic League, and it
BY BRAD S~ERMAN
:Work.
BSHERMAN@MYDAI LYTR IBUNE .COM
kept the Red and White's slim
title hopes alive. Jackson (12Please see Roar, Bl
. GA.LL1POLIS ~ Tyros 4) improved to 5' 3 against
Coy an's grand slam capped a league foes .
pivotal, seven-run tifth inning
Despite . its first SEOAL
for Jackson, then pitcher Ben loss, Gallia Academy (8-4, 6CoNTACT US
Jordan worked out of jams 1 SEOAL) remains alone in
over
the final three frames to first place thanks to Logan's
OVP ScoreLine (5 p.m.-1 a.m.I
help the lronmen hold on and upset of Marietta, al so on
1-740.446-2342 ext. 33
beat league-leader Gallm Wednesday. The Blue Devils
Academy
13-10
on are a game up in the Joss col. or 992-5287 (Meigs Co.) · Wednesday.
umn over both Marietta and
Fn- 1-740-446·3008
· The Blue Devils left the Warren. '
E-mail- sportsOmydeilysanllnel.co m
bases loaded in the fifth and
Frid~ will be a pivotal day
Soorts Staff
•
sixth innings, and al so had the in the SEOAL as the red hot
Brad Sherman, Spbrts.Edltor
tying run at the plate in the lronmen. winners of six
(740) 446·2342, ext 33
bottom of the seventh. but straight , play host to Marietta .
bsherman@ mydailylribune.com
· Jordan · struck out batters to .Meanwhile Gallia Academy
'
Bryan
Walters, Sports Writer
end each threat and give goes to Warren. The title
(740) 446·2342 , ext. 23
Jackson its biggest win of the could be all but clinched, or it
bwahersOmydailytribune.coi"n
Bred Sherman/photo
high school ba,eball season . could become a logjam at the
Gallia
Academy's
Austin
King
(9)
catches
a fly ball duri~g
lt was the· lronmen's first top.
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
Wedne sday's SEOAL contest with Jackson at Memorial
(740) 446·2342, ext. 33
'
win over a team in the upper
Please. see Devils, B:t
Ierum 0 mydallyregister.com
Field in Gallipqlis .
·~chelan of the Southeastern

Eagles blank Southern, 10-0
"

Jackson harids Devils
first SEOAL loss

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Todu's ggmaa

School districts tum to ·
traditional campaign tactics

: CLEVELAND -A lawyer
charged with raising money
to pay off the .bankruptcy
debts of an art and antiquities
dealer offered a glimpse
Wednesday of several small,
.... .;;•'oW-"'' •.
brown bits of papyrus that
may be fart of the ancient
Gospel•o Ju&lt;las.
Potential historiCal and
religious significance aside,
R. Scott Haley's courtappointed task is to pay Ohio
cvllector Bruce Ferrini's
creditors. Whether the fragments that ended up in a bank
vault in downtown Akron are
genuine remains in question.
Haley said he has no immediate plans to · go through a
iime-consuming, expensive
authentication process. He
lllso said he. wants to draw
attention to Ferrini's assets,
but hopes the fragments will
not have to be sold and can be
returned to him.
"I think there is obviously
enormous historical interest
AP Photo
in these items," Haley said, Akron attorney R. Scott Haley uncovers a fragment of a purported copy of the Gospel of Jud&lt;Js
·
,
f h 1.
for members of the media to view in an office at the taw firm of Vorys, Sater, Seymour and
dl. sp Iaymg
a
.ew
o
t
e
rag·
pease We dnes day .m Ak ron. p·1eces of t he forgotten manuscnp
. t base d on t he l'f
1e of Jesus , d'IS·
111ents some. with text visible i~ a law office confer- . ciple were reportedly purchased by .bankrupt Ohio Art -Dealer Bruce Ferrini of Bath Township,
en~e room. · ·
.
·Ohio, some time after their discovery in Egypt in 1970 and stored the sizable chunk of the man. A roughly 1,700-year-old uscript in·a bank vault in downtown Akron. T~~. law firm is drumming up interest in the docu·
IA!xt about Ju~as, one of sev- ments to help ra1se money to pay Bruce Fernm s creditors.
era] such documents found in
' .
. '
tlie Egyptian desert in · 1970, ..-satd he was mformed about
:.vas preserved and translated the bank vault dJSC?very
py a team of scholars, then Tuesday. It was unclear tf any
made public by the National of the fragments correspondGeographic Society about ed spec1f1cally, but ~ number
two weeks ago.
of the fragments clearly came
: The announcement drew from a volume of papyrus
, worldwide attention, telling a document s sold and l~ter
· far different version than that recovered . from Fernm ,
jn the four Gospels in the Roberty sa1d. .
New Testament It portrays
Roberty promised to fight .
Judas not as 3 sinister betray- any attempts by H~ley to sell
er but as Jesus' confidant, the fragments, saymg Femm
chosen to be told spiritual had agreed. to a complete
Secrets that the other apostles return of ~ts purchase to a
were not.
Zunch, Swttzerlandrba~ed art
: -Haley said a National dealer who Worked wJth tho!&gt;
Geographic photographer M.~ecenas Foundation ..
who saw the Gospel of Judas
We have tmf!!edtate~y
pjeces also saw the ones in .~nnounced a c_la1m, . he satd
Akron and made. the link. m a telephone mterv1ew. . .
National Geographic spokesAt 1ssue 1s whether ~ernm
waman M.J. Jacobsen, how- retut:ned all the matenals he
eyer, was noi willing to draw had m hts posseSSIOn. Fern~u
any such conclusion.
contends the fragments m
: :"The fragments (in Akron) r---=---::--..-----:----------,
woum ltave to 'be autpemicat•
ed, and I don't know if that's
happened, so I don' t really
have a comment," she said
•
Wednesday.
: Hale~ took control of
-Ferrini s properties in order
to pay credttors, including
FirstMerit Bank, w.here the
fragments are .stored. He said
he can't try to sell them until
·Sponsored by the Pte(# nt Val q i/~pttal Eoundatiori.
a. tug-of-war over ownership
For more in[ormlliion
ake rtservatio/IJ(;ptease contact the .
Is: resolved . . The Geneva,
Switzerland-based Maecenas
: PVH Community Reltztionr Dtpartmeh~, ($01) 675-4340, Ext. 1326.
Smite! NOW you 01n tHin thl piOtUI'e or tnlt unforgettablt
F.oundation for Ancient Art
rnom.lt c.ptured in ttMt ~. Pta» beoorne tlme!Mt
•
Cash, checks &amp; ~li ~gfadly accepted.
also claims ownership.
·
wheQ framed 01' pmt.ct on a mug or I'!10LIMI ~d .
Mario Robetty, who leads
•'
.
'
and olltl&lt; the blua button.
~
the Maecenas foundation,

.. .

GAlLIPOLIS- A sch9dule of upcoming collf19B
and high achool v~mty sporting evems Involving
team&amp; from Gallla. M&amp;ig!l and Masqn oountiA11 .

Pratt had back to back RBI sin- shock. Eastern put one base
gles, the score 2-0. ·
runner on in the sbcth, then went
Eastern scored another run in down 1-2-3 in the seventh as
the second inning when Snyder Southern brought home the big
singled and scored on an error win. ·
in the outfield for a 3-0 EHS
Southern' s . Sarah Eddy
lead. In the fourth . inning,, pitched a great game, scattering
Snyder, who scored three of five hits, striking out four, walkfour Eastern runs, ~:~:ached oil an ing seven, hitting one, and
error and scored on an error and allowing only four runs. Carroll
a Holter single, 4-0. That suffereil the loss despite a good
scored stood until the sixth effort and only one bad inning .
inning, when Southern started with four strikeouts, six walks,
to r?ll.
·
.
. · just four hits, anP seven runs.
Lmda Eddy led off w1th a Sll!Southern hitters were Linda
gle, Lmdsey Buzzard reached... Eddy with two singles, Sarah
on· an error and advanced on a Eddy a , single, and Whitney
two base error, the Sanlh Eddy Riffle with a double and two
smgled home a run. "";htUley walks. Eastern hitters were Jed
Wolfe-R1ffle walked. 'vrrgm1a by Kelsi Holter with three sin. Bnckles was ·htt w1th a pttch gles, while Snyder and White
and brou~ht home a run. each had two singles.
Chelsea Pa~ walked home a
Southern goes to Miller on
ru~,. Stephanie Cund1ff had a Thursday for ·a TVC make-up,
sacnfice fly RBI. and Amber meanwhile. Ea~tern plays host
Hill walked home a run. Adelle to Federal Hocking.
R1ce walked home another run
and Linda Eddy singled ho.me . southern 000 007 0 _ 7 4 3
·
Larry Crum/photD
the seventh run (or Southern Eaatem 210 100 o - 455
Eastern 's Shana $nyder leads off first base ,while SOuthern·~
with- her second hit of the . s~rah Eddy and Whitney Wolfe-Riflle. Amber Hill prepares for the play during the Lady Tornadoes' 7Danlelle Carroll ard Hannah Pratt W- Eddy.
.
.
inning, the score 74.
L-Carroli. . · .. .
4 come-from-behind victory Wednesday m Tuppers Plains.

•~

CHESHIRE
River
Valley softball picked up its
first Ohio Valley Conference
triumph of the 2006 season
· Wednesday
with a 4-2
home victory .

o

v

e

r

Chesapeake.
The Lady
Raiders (2-8,
1-6
OVC)
received a pitching gem from
Kari McFann, who recorded
10 strikeouts and gave up'onc;
hit, no earned runs and no
walks in her complete game
victory.
The Silver and Black mflllaged just four hits off of CHS
starter Brittany Daniels, who
allowed three walks and
fanned seven in the losing
decision, but that limited
offense was enough to get the
hosts their second win of the
year.
RVHS trailed 2-0 after the
top of second inning after
back-to-back errors allowed
Kati McCallister and Kirk to
reach safely. The second miscue allowed McCallister to
score for a 1-0 advanta!le.
Brea Ratcliff singled in Ktrk
to giYe the Lady Panthers (55. 1-5) a two-run edge. ~
River Valley quickly
responded with three runs in
its half of the second inning,
as Terra Porter started the ·
rally with a leadoff double.
Kaylee Rose doubled in
Porter to trim the deficit to 2-

T

1'

'

Stephanie Grif!ith singleq
one batter later to plate Rose,
tying the game at two.
Griifith later scored when she
sto le home following 11
strikeout, giving RVHS a 3-Z
lead. ·
:
The hosts tacked on an
in suratlCe run in the fourth
when Rose 'led .off. with
another double . Rose later
scored when Kayla Payne
reached safely on an error,
bringing the score to 4-2.
McFann dido 't allow a hit
after the second inning anti
struck out five after th~
point. Only two Lady
Panthers reach base over that
span.
.
Rose was the only player
with two hits in the contest
and she also scored a pair of
runs.
River Valley returns to
action today when - it hosts
· Meigs in a makeup contest.
Game time is slated for 5
p.m.
. RIVER VALLEY 4, CHESAPEAKE 2 ·
Chesapeake 020 000 0 - 2 1 1
River Valley 030 100 11. 444 •
Binany Daniels and Katl McCallister. Karl
· McFann and Te rra f)or:ter. WP - McFa~;m.

LP - Daniels.

\

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I

Page B:z • The Daily Sentinel

Cin~innati
·CINCINNATI (AP)- Four
Florida homers. Unbeaten-inApril Dontrelle Willis on the
lljQund. A late four-run lead.
If the Marlins can't win a
game like this, they're not
going to win many at all.
Edwin Encarnacion's runscoring double in the ninth
inning
completed
the
Cincinnati Reds'. comeback
fqr a 9-8 victory Wednesday
over the NL's least-successful
· team.
Cincinnati, which leads the
NL in homers, overcame an 84 · deficit despite only one
extta-base hit m the game · Eneamacion's decisive oneout double off Todd
Wellemeyer (0.. 1). the Reds
got a lot of help.
Florida (4-1 0) tied its club
reCord with four homers, but
made t9ree errors, walked six
batters, hit another and let in a
iun with a wild pitch.
"It's emb'!JTassing," said
manager Joe Girardi, so upset
\' that he called his second
postgame meeting in three
days. "We can't keep making
mistakes. Seventeen days in,
we ·can't keep making mistakes."
The Reds took full advantage, right up to the final pitch.

~.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, A1n·ll :ro, 2006

"

BY

WtWAMS

AP photo

Florida Marlins' Dan Uggla, left, slides safely into home plate
past Cincinnati Reds catcher Jason LaRue, right, in the sixth
inning of their baseball game Wednesday 1n Cincinnati. Uggla
scored on a t1it by Josh Willingham.

~dmen
R...

%

the pitches, including picking up an RBI as he was hit
Base.ba/1 . · -...
with the . bases toaded .
PIKEVILLE
The
Martin was 1-for-2 officially
University of Rio Grande
at the plate . Chau went 3baseball team traveled to · Junior Nate Chau was 1· for-4 and knocked in a run.
Pikeville College for a for-3 with an · RBI double
Junior Matt Smith was 1make-up doubleheader on and senior Jorge Morales. for-I with two RBI's and
Wednesday . afternoon and was 1-for-3 and plated two Warren was l-for- 2 with an
was rewarded for their ttav• .teammates. ·
el by taking both games
Freshman
lefthander RBd}. Fhreshman fJh. .P. Keefe
from the Bears, winning the ¥ickey Robinson made his ·. ma : e t e most 0 IS ~~par­
first game, 9-3, and taking fir·st collegiate decision a tumty to play, going · or-4
game two by an 11-3 count. winning one. Robinson (1- ·with a double.
This proved a good tune 0) pitched five innings, scatSa to (2·1) started and
up for Rio Grande (29-16) ~s tering seven· hits and allow- pitched five innings and was
the Redmen prepare for the ing all three runs with two credited with the win.Senior.
showdown this weekend strikeouts and three walks. Dustin Gibbs pitched the
with Ohio Dominican. Both Senior Brent Watterson final innings and was un-hitteams will enter the week- blanked Pikeville over the table. Gibbs fanned three
end even in the loss column final two innings to record a and did not allow a base runfor the top spot in the save. He allowed a hit while ner.
American ·
Mideast striking out one and walking . Rio won the season series
. • AP photo
Conference
South
Division.
one.
over Pikeville College, four
Cleveland Indians runner Jason Michaels slides safely across home plate as he scores a run durJunior Michael Warren
Game two was wild, as in games to none, winning 'a'
ing the fifth inning of their baseball game against the Baltimore Qrioles Wednesday in Baltimore.
paced the Rio offense, going wild pitching. Pikeville doubleheader from the
3-for-4 at .the plate and College .walked 10 Rio hit- Bears, March 30 at Bob
_
knocking in two runs. ters and hit four more. The Evans Field.
, · Sophomore Kcnta Sato, Bears also made some noise
The' Red men will travel to
BALTIMORE' (AP) -If a ' which had beaten Baltimore gle in the fifth and Ramon ·.freshman Kevin Hoover and on the offensive e.nd, swip- Columbus for a doubleheadlopsided
loss
to the · five straight times. Martinez Hernandez's two-out, run- . senior Matt Martin all added ing six bases, despite losing er against Ohio Dominican
on Saturday. The first game
Cleveland Indians didn't extended his hitting streak to scoring single cut the lead to two hits each. Sato had an . 11-3 to the Redmen.
Martin was hit by three of begins at 1 p.m. ·
raise the Baltimore Orioles' 14 games, the longest in the 7-5, Javy Lopez hit an RBI RBL
ire, it certainly awakened major leagues this year.
double and Millar followed ·
their bats.
A night after a 15-1 loss to with a two-run double that _ _ _..;__..;__ _ _. , - - - - - - - - - - - . , - - - - - - - - - - - - Kevin Millar hit the go- the Indians, the Oriole s had a · bounced over the centerahead, two-run double in a season-high 21 hits and bat- field fence.
seven-ruh
fifth
inmng ted around in the fifth and
Matt Miller relieved, and
from Page 81·
capped by Corey Patterson's eighth : innings. · It was Patterson, who .eptered the
two-run homer, and the Baltimore's highest-scoring game hitting .067, hit his
Orioles overcame a four-run game since a club-record 23 Sf=Ond pitch into the right·
Aaron Mulholland paced
deficit to beat Cleveland 18- runs against Toronto on Sept. center seats for his first AL the Silver and Black offense
9- Wednesday night.
28, 2000. at Camden Yards. homer and a I0-7 lead.
with two hits, while Gibbs,
. "They. really showed me
Conine ha·d three hits, ·"This is one of the nights T.R. Flint · and Clayton
some character tonight," matching his season total in that we picked up our pitch- Curnune added the other ·
Baltimore manager Sam one . game. Every Orioles er," Gibbons said. "There is safeties. Mulholland and
Perlozzo said. "I know when starter had at least 1one RBI going to be other nights Gibbs each scored a run.
P.J . Rase Jed the Panthers
they ·came into the dugout except for Brian Robert s - where we ' r~ going t~ win 2and it was· 7-3, they were who reached base fo"ur time s I (and) they'.re going to have with three hits and three
still chirping about coming. and scored twice.
to pick us up. It was a good runs scored. Cody M.ethax
"We came back and got a night to explode after what had two hits and scored
back. Miguel Tejada was
'once. while Harris and Kyle
saying, 'Let's go, we can get couple of rallies going in a happened last night."
them.' "
few innings," Patterson said.
Boone homered off John Rose provided the other
Ramon Hernandez had a "We played well. What can I Halama (1-0) in the sixth, hits.
Rose, 'Baise, Zimmerman
but Gibbons answered with a
home run and four RBls, Jay say? We all contributed! '
Gibbons hit a three-run
Jake Westbrook (2-2) 'three, run drive off Rafael and Cor,Y Methax each
homer, and Tejad&lt;) and Jeff failed to protect a 7-3 lead, Betancourt in the bottom scored twice in the triumph.
ijarris ~nd Bryon . Huff
Conine each had two RBl s allowing nine run• - eight half.
were
also walked three
for the Orioles, who . have earned- and 12 hits in 4 2Grady Sizemore hit an RBI
apiece.
won fi ve of seven.
3 innings.
sacrifice fly in the eighth. times
River Valley returns to
"You' can get waxed like
"I just think he was over · Hernandez's
three-run OVC action Friday when it ,
we did last night and come the middle of the plate and· homer highlighted a five-run ' hosts Coal Grove . Game
back and put a performance ·they were swinging the bats· eighth.
time i« slated for 5 p.m .
together
like
we did well tonight," said Indian s
Baltimore starter Rodrigo
tonight,'' Conine said. "It's a . manager Eric Wedge , who Lopez gave up seven runs 1CHESAPEAKE 15, RIVER VALLEY 2
good thing, and it does a lot closed his 'clubhouse to and nine hits .· in 4 1-3 • Chesapeake 51nnlnga
250 44 - 15 7 1
I •
for your conl',idence," .
reporters :' "It was a bad innings. He has allowed River Valley
,
Bryan WaHera/photo
000 02 255
Jhonny Peralta , Victor night, all the way around. seven homers this year, Travis Zimmerman . Clinton Baise (5.) and River Valley reliever Ryan Eggleton delivers a pitch during the
Bryon Hull. Devan . Gibbs, Ryan Eggleton
including five in his last two (2 ) and T. R. Flint. WP- Zimmerman . LP fourth inning of Wednesday's OVC baseball contest with
Martinez and Aaron Boone It's one ga!De."
-Gibbs.
·
homered for Cleveland,
Tejada's one-out RBI sin· outings .
Chesapeake in Cheshire.
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEl

TtM

Sox or Yankees, there's a fair
roster of guys that people Still
like." .
Surprisingly· enough, the
Yankees have two home
grown prospects who have
made careers in the Bronx.
Bernie Williams is in his 161 h
year as a Yankee, and Derek

DAHLBERCI

ASSOCJATEO PRESS

Redmen sweep Pikeville College
BY MARK

www .mydailysentinel:com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Fan loyalty stretches·only so far when players bounce around Angels win third straigh~~

rallies to beat Marlins, 9-8

Cincinnati tied it with three ourselves up." Willis said. "It Cabrera, Miguel Olivo and
runs in the eighth. and was a tough Joss. I should Reggie Abercrombie added
Wellemeyer walked Adam' have done better. I should solo shots - Abercrombie's
Dunn to open the ninth. Scott have. put them on their heels first career homer landed 493
Hatteberg singled with one and I didn't."
. feet away in the upper deck in
out, and Encarnacion followed
This one slipped away in the left, the third- longest in Great
with a grounder down the ei~hth . Matt Herges relieved American Ball Park's fourthird-base line to score· Dunn With the bases loaded and season history.
without a play at the plate. . couldn't field Felipe Lopez's
Willis came in 4.-0 in five
~' My flrst base hit to win a c.omeback grounder, which career
starts · against
game in the big leagues," could have resulted in a home- Cincinnati, allowing a total of
Encarnacion said, still smiling to-tirst double play. Instead, four earned runs. He gave up
at!er he was pummeled by the ball kicked away to second four in a ragged fourth inning,
teammates. ·
baseman Dan Uggla, who then when he walked two batter-&gt;
In the Marlins' opinion, it threw it away while trying to and let in a run with a wild
never should have come to get Lopez at first. Brandon pitch.
.
that.
Phillips' run.scoring groundStill, the Marlins were in
· Willis was· on the verge of out tied it at 8.
· good shape when he left. Or,
improving to 10-0 career in
Then, the Reds completed a so they thought.
April when he turned an 8-4 most out-of-character perforTwo errors,.a walk and a hit
lead over to the bullpen after mance - no homers in a batter helped the Reds tie it
the sixth . Once again, Florida high-scoring game. Cincinnati with a run in the seventh and
turned it into a close one and had II singles before three in the eighth.
lost it.
Encarnacion's game-ending
The Marlins entered the
Florida is 0-5 in one-run · double.
series with ,only 10 homers;
gaines, the only NL team that
"It just shows we don't have third-fewest in the . NL. They
has yet to win one. It's a big to hit home runs to win games, morphed · into sluggers in
rea~on why the major leagues' either," leadoff hitter Ryan Cincinnati,
hitting seven
youngest and least-expensive Freel said. "We've shown we homers in the last two games
lineup has only four wins and can score five or six runs an at a ballpark that gives them
has yet to win a series this sea- inning. With thi s lineup, up pell-mell..
son.
there's no reason to drop your . Their first three came off
Todd Coffey (1-0) pitched a head and give up."
right-hander Aaron •Harang,
perfect ninth to get the victory
By contrast, the Marlins tied who lasted only four innings.
and let Cincinnati take two of their club record with four In his last outing, Harang
three in the series.
homer, including a three-run pitched into the eighth inning
"We're definitely beating shot by Uggla. Miguel of a 1-0 win in St. Louis.

Thursday, April2o, 2006

Pedro Martinez was on the
mound the other night in New
Yor~. which was enough to
attract some 13,000 walk-ups
to Shea Stadium. They came
to celebrate win No. 200 for
one of the best pitchers in the
game.
Two seasons ago, the same
fans wouldn't have paid $2 to
take the No. ·7 train to Queens
to see Martinez pitch. Before
he sig'ned a $53· million contract with the Mets, they prob-'.
ably dido ' t- even know he was
nearing a career milestone ,
Across 1own, Johnny
Damon ·1s cheered every time
he comes to the plate at
Yankee Stadium. He cut his
hair and shaved off his beard,
but he's still playing suspiciously like the guy who
broke Yankee hearts when he
hit two key home runs including a grand slam - to
help t~e Reo- Sox bea.t New
York in Game ? 'of the 2004
American League championship series. .
.
All is forgiven . And the
wounds seem to be healing
quickly in Boston, too, over
the $52 million signing of
their center fielder.
"I know I' II always be
remembered for Game 7 to
help, get us to the World Series
and I know I'm also ~oing to
be remembered for JUmping
sides," Damon said after his
sighing.
.
Game 7, maybe. But these
aren't your father's Red Sox
anymore, either.
.
Heck, they're not even your
older brother's. Eighteen
months after wining the
World Series, only 13 of the
51 players who tools: the field
in Red Sox uniforms in 2004
were still in the organization
when spring training began. ·
'Babe Ruth's trade to the
Yankees invoked a curse that
lasted for more than 80 years.
Damon's departure, after a
brief sputter of protest from
Red Sox fans, now draws little more than a yawn.
Even Red Sox fans don't
really seem to care who is

APphoto

Jeter his lith .
Still, there are so many
p1ayers bouncing, among so
many teams that players end
up celebrating career milestones far from places where
they made their mark.
· Man inez became the second pitcher to get his 200th
win as a Met, but who remembers the first? That would be
Ore! Hershiser, who spent a
year making some late career
money with the Mets but
probably now wishe s he
would have been able to cele])rate that mark while still a
Los Angeles Dodger.
Wade Boggs had a great
career with the Red Sox and
Yankees, but got his 3,000 hit
· ·
pIaymg m a crummy dome in
Tampa Bay.
· And then there:s. Tom
Giavine, who didn't win his
200th as a Met, didn't even
win a· game for New York
until he had already won 242
of them in Atlanta. But he'll
likely win his 300th for the
Mets, unless he's gone off for
greener pastures by then.
They . will cheer in Shea
Stadium that day, just as they
did Monday night when
Martinez won his 200th.
Maybe. it will make up for the
time Mets fans dido' t get to
cheer when the best pitcher
their team ever had, Tom
·seaver, won his 300th while
toiling for the Chicago White
Sox.
The players, of course, go
where the money is. Fans, on
the other hand, have little
choice but to stay where their
·
team is.
Loyalty can only stretch so
far.

New York Mets PJ)dro Martinez delivers a pitch against an
Atlanta Braves' batter during the . second inning of their MLB
baseball game Monday at Shea Stadium in New York.
wearing their uniform these Williams spent their entire
days.
years in Boston uniforms.
"Most fans today don't real - Lose a Clemens or Mmtinez
ly remember the 'time that or ' gain a Ramirez or David
when Y0\1 were a Dodger you Wells , it doesn't matter as
were a Dodger forever," said long as the Green Monster
Robert Passikoff, who runs remains in left tield and openBrand Keys, a New York ing day is still. in April.
company that surveys fan loyIn Boston it's simply an
alty. "You 're dealing with the opponunity to sell new jerbionic consumer of the 21st seys . Fans there are ranked
century. These guys . realize No. I on the Brand Keys
that it is a business. They may Sports Loyalty Index, an
not like it, but they ·under- annual survey of 14,000 fans
stand that this is how the that charts the intensity of a
game is now played."
fan's relationship with his or
Red Sox fans cenainly her team.
understand it. The revolving
The Yankees aren't far
door both in and out of behind at No. 3, ·whi1e the
Fenway Park in recent years Mets make the top I0.
includes
players . like
All have something in comMartinez, Damon, Roger mon - they have enough
Clemens,
Wade
Boggs, money to reload at any time.
Nomar Garciaparra and And that makes fans quicker
Manny Ramirez.
to both forgive and forget.
But ask Boston fans how
"If you lose a popular playmuch theJ love the Red Sox er it all depends on how inan.Y Tim Dahlberg is a national
today, and the answer is the other popular players a team sports collimnist for The
same
as
when
Carl has that fans can bond to," Associated Press. Write to
Yastrzemski
and
Ted Fassikoff said. "If it's the Red him at tdahlbergap.org
·

and Haley Riegel also chipped ·
in hits.
Kimber Davis scattereq
JACKSON Brittyn seven hits and walked three in
Saund~rs hit a two-run home earning the complete ga me
run in the fouf!h inning to lift pitching victory. Callahan toolC
Gallia Academy to a 5-2 high · the loss.
school · softball victory over
The Blue Angels jumped oul ~
host Jackson on Wednesday.
to a 2-0 lead in the third inning ,.
Saunders'
in-the-parker thanks to a pair of Jackson
broke a 2-2 tie and helped the errors. The lronladies commitBlue Angels to their third ted five miscues on the.
straight
victory.
Gallia evening.
. .
Academy improved to 5-8 and . Childers evened the score
3-5 in the Southeastern Ohio with a two-run single in' the
Athletic League.
bottom half of that frame - ,
Jackson (7-7), on the other but those were the only runs
hand, lost its second straight in for Jackson on the day. The ·:
league play and has dropped .lronladies stranded seven on :
three of Jts last four. the base for the ~ame .
.
Ironladies once led the lea~ue
After takmg the lead on
at 4-0, but is now 5-3 agamst Saunders' homer in the fourth, ;
the SEOAL.
Galli a Academy tacked on one,
Warren leads the league at6- more insurance tally in the ..
I.
.
fifth.
Saunders also doubled in the" Gallia Academy plays host .
victory while Lindsey Niday to Warren on Friday. Jacksq\),.
had the only other hit for the meanwhile, goes to Marietta. ;
winners.
c.
Gallipolis 002 210 o - 53 a
Rebeeca ChI'ld ers wet 2·•OrJackson 002 ooo o - 2 7 5 •
2 to pace ' Jackson·. Haley Kimoar Davis and Sarah cochran. Haley ,
Callahan Kr' t
J
h Calahan and Elizabeth Legg. w -oavis. L .
'
IS en · osep • -Callahan . HR - Game Academy ·1,•
Audrey Tomblin, Katy Davis Brittyn Saunders 1.
STAFF REPDRT

SPORTS@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

-~------------------,­

·Winebrenner leads Riverside .
Seniors after three weeks of play
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAil.YSENTINEL.COM

. MASON, .w. Va. -· Mick
Winebrenner of Racine, Ohio
is the leader of the Riverside
Senior League after three
weeks of play. Winebrenner
has amassed a total of 41
points to lead Jack Maloney
of Gallipolis, Ohio and
Claude Proffitt of Patriot,
Ohio who have 36.5 points
for their season's effort.
A new record total of 72
players were on hand for the
day .with 18 teams of four
players making it possible to
score 18 points with a first
place finish. There was a tie
between five teams for first
place with a score of 64.
The teams were Wes
Peterson, Kenny 6reene,
Kenny Dodson and Paul
Some(vil!e, the team of Gary
Minton, Ron Phalin, Harvey

Vanvranken
and
Clark ·
Greene, the team of 'Gafy Bates, Jack Sturgeon, El) .
Coon and Haske I Jones, the :
team of Mick Winebrenn~ · '
George
Miller.
Claud&lt;!:
Proffitt and Harley Rice a~ :
the team of Fred Bryant, Jim :
Bowman, Harold Heugel and :
Pat Williamson.
;.
The closest to the pin win; :
ners wer~ Claude Proffitt on
No. 17 and Gene Gray on No.
14. The total number of different players to have attend" ·.
ed the league at least on~ ·
week has risen to 86.
Senior Standings
: .
1. Mick Win~renner, 41 .0; 2. (lie) Jac~ ·
Maloney ami Claude Proffitt, 36 .5:.-4. (lie) .
Pal Williamson and George Miller, 36.0: 6.
Chat Thomas: 7. (tie) Clark Greene . Gary ·

Minton and Harley Rice, 33.5: 10. (Ue) :

Gary Bates and Wes Pelerspn 33.0: 1'2\ ~
D~k Dugan 30.5; 13. (tie) Russ Hollaoti ~

and Jim Lawrence 29 .0: 1.5. Don Fields; ·
28.5; 16. Jack Sturgeon. 28.0; 17. Dana
Winebrenner, 27.0; 18. (tie) Sill Yoho and
Dan Waldie , 26.5; 20. (tie) C9cil Minton,
Chuck Yeager, Tom Fisher, Kenny Gr&amp;ene
and Paul Somerville, 26.0.

..

Tribe doubled. .up by on•otes, 18·9

Roar

Devils
from.Page 81
Jordan, who also homered
in tbe game, relieved starting
and winning pitcher . Andy
Wasch . He came on to record
the final out of the fifth ex~inguishing a bases-loaded
jam.
Jordan .did surrender three
runs in the sixth, but stuck
out back-to-hack Blue Devils
to keep the damage at a minimum, before working out of
a two-on predicament in· the
final frame .
Oallia Academy didn't start
ace Shaphen Robinson,
although the ace did work the
final two innings .•. Shawn
I

.
fir,t of

'

Thompson was the
.Caudill had one hit apiece in
four Gallia Academy pitchers the setback. Greg Russell had
on the daY, and took the loss. two RB!s.
Blue De.vtl pitching gave up a · The Blue Devils scored in
dozen hits.
every inning except the sevCoyan finished 4-for-5 enth, but it. was Jackson's
with five runs batted in, while seven-run fifth frame that
Jordan also went deep and made the difference.
drove in three runs. Wasch
Trailing 6-5, the Ironmen
doubled and singled while sent II batters to the plate
Bruce Smith, Wes Skaggs, and scored all the runs it
Marcus Boggs and Dylan needed for the eventual win.
Cryder also hit safely. Cryder . They only ·had two hits in the
and Boggs had three and two frame, but took advanta~e of
RBls respectively.
four walks and a patr of
Gallia Academy's Luke Gullipolis errors.
.
Skag~s walked to lead. off
Haislop hit his fourth home
run of the year, a solo shot in · the innmg, then an error and
the .third inning. Austin King unsuccessful fielder's choice
had an RBT double in the first loaded up the bases . Boggs
aloqg with a single, Justin drew an RBI ,walk, tqen
Saunders,added a double .
Cryder slapped a two-run sinMatt Mooney singled twice gle up the middle to put
. while Chris Miller and Brad Jackson in front fo~ good.
'

f

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JACKSON 13, QALLIA ACADEMY 10
Jackson
'04 071 o ..... 13 12 1
Gallipolis 111 313 0 ~ 10 8 3
Andy WSiech, Ben Jordan (5) and Wei
Skaggs. Shawn Thompson, Matt Mooney
(3). Greg Ru88all (5), S~aphon Roblnaon
(6) .and Luke Halslop.

YARD BOSS ~

Great for wood-cutting t111ka arourid In• home.

Jackson, which saw Boggs
and Coyan single in runs
before Jordan 's two-run blast
made it 5-3 Jackson.
Gallia Academy's last lead
of the game was 6-5 after
scoring three times in the
fourth. An obstruction call at
third base allowed John Paul
Finnicum to score, then two
err-ors led to two more scores.
Miller reached on a miscue,
then scored on a Caudill single. Caudi II later scored on a
two-base error by the Jackson
left fielder. ·

Thompson. HR - Jackson 2, Ekm Jordan
1, Tyrus Coyan 1: Gallla Academy 1, Luke
Haislop 1 (-4).

95

MM55STIHL

~~~~CJ4·· . . .

,,

Another walk loaded the bases, but was unable to get
bases again for Coyan, who any more runs in.
homered over the tight field
The hosts stt.anded I 0 base
fence to increase the lronmen runners on the day, most of
lead to 12-6.
those coming in the latter
The Devils got one run innings . Early-on, the Devils
back in the fifth on a bases did a good job of manufactur·
loaded walk to Russell, then ing runs.
Jackson tacked on its final
After Jackson went up 1·0
run in the sixth on a Boggs in the top of the first, Mooney
groundout.
walked and stole second for
Galli a Academy · s~ored Gallia Academy to set up its
three times in the sixth to pull first run; King singled him in
to within striking distance to know the score. '
thanks to a pair of hits along
Likewise, Miller walked
with three Jackson · errors . and stole second base to set
The lronmen committed · up another run in the second.
'seven miscues on the Miller went to third on an
error and came home on a
evening.
Mooney and Miller had Russell groundout. Haislop
hits in the frame, but a drop hit a solo home run in the
in center field allowed two · third. ·
more runs to score. Gallipolis
Sandwiched in-between
managed to re-lpadetl the was a four-run inning by

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�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinetcom

Thursday, April 20,

2006

Thursday, April 20, 2006

www.mydailysentlnel.com

tll:ribune - Sentinel - l\egtster

.Cavaliers sneak past Atlanta, 100-99
, CLEVELAND (AP)
On Fan Appreciation Night,
the Cleveland Cavaliers
handed out free T-shirts,
Jerseys, plane tickets, cash.
·sneakers and pizzas.
: They nearly gave away a
:victory, too.
LeBron James and Larry
Hughes got some needed
test before the first round of
the
playoffs and
the
Cavaliers tuned up for the
.postseason with a I 00-99
·win over the Atlanta Hawks
(ln Wednesday night.
: Flip Murray scored 19
points, Donyell Marshall. 16
and Anderson Varejao had a
.Career-high 18 rebounds for
-{!leveland,. the No. 4 seed in
:tlie Eastern Conference .
: :The Hawks rrever stopped
i~rapping, despite being
Zlown by 14 after three
· ~uarter s . and go t within
100-99 on Josh Smith's 3'pointer With 7 seconds left .
·Marshall missed two free
throws to give Atlanta a
final chance, but Smith's 3
just before the buzzer hit
'

the back of the rim.
Smith had 21 points
including a ferocious slam
in the foprth and AI
Harrington 16 points and II
rebounds for Atlanta.
. With the victory, the Cavs
imptoved to 50-32 - only
the fourth time in franchise
history they ' ve won 50
games in a season and the
first time since 1992-93 .
Also, Cleveland's Mike
Brown became the first
rookie coach to win 50
games since Rick Carlisle
did it for Detroit in 200102.
But those milestones didn ' t overshadow something
much more important: The
Cavaliers are back in the
tplayoffs for the first time
since 1998-99 and will face
the Washington Wizards in
Game I on Saturday.
As a precaution, James
didn ' t dress for the third
time in four games because
of a tender left ankle he
rolled last week. Brown
didn't wa~t to ta~e any

chances with his young
superstar.
James finished the regular
averaging
31.4
season
points, 7.0 rebounds and 6.6
assists to join Oscar
Robertson, Jerry West and
Michael Jordan as the on ly
players in league history to
get 31-7-6 in a season.
Not wanting to risk re injurin·g his ankle on the eve
of his first trip to the postseason, James watched
intently imd
nervously
chewed on his nails as the
Hawks rallied in the fourth
quarter. He had good com-.
pany on the sideline as
Hughes, too, ·got the night
off.
·
The Ca va!iers played the
first quarter and the early
part of the second as if they
were in an exhibition game
in October. But trailing 3725, Cleveland reeled off 14
straight points and took its
first lead on a dunk by
Ilgauskas.
The Cavs closed the half
on a 24-6 te ar to take a 49-

43 lead at the break.
With James and Hughes
in street clothes, Brown
started Ira Newble for just
the third time this season.
Notes: Cavaliers owner
Dan Gilbert remains confident he'll be able to sign
James · to a contract extension this summer. "If we do
the ri,ght things con tinually,
I don't see any reason why
that won't happen," Gilbert
said. In August, the Cavs
can offer James a five-year,
$75 million "maximum"
contract. . .. The Cavaliers
finis hed 42-40 last season,
just missing the playoffs
when they collapsed down
the stretch. ... Hawks G
Royal lvey sat out wit!)
bronchitis .... R&amp;B superstar Usher, who has maintained a low profile as a
minority owner with the
Cavs this seaspn, ' attended
his third home game and sat
courtside .... James was serenaded with chants of "MV-P!" by Cleveland fans m
the fourth quarter.
·

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Offe~ llo«r'~

AP photo

Cleveland Cavaliers' Ira Newble (14) gets crunched between
teammate Anderson Varejao, right, from Brazil and Atlanta
Hawks' Josh Smith (5) in the fourth quarter of the Cavaliers'
100.99 NBA basketball win Wednesday in Cleveland.

.

.

declined to say whether it
plans to discipline either of
the players, although they
have noted the university has
historically suspended students charged with a felony.
Cotter said Wednesday that
Finnerty, of Garden City,
N.Y., has left Durham,
although he wouldn't say
where he went. Attorney Kirk
Obsborn, ·
representing
Seligmann, of Essex Fells,
N.J., declined to say whether
his client has been suspended.
Seligmann and his father
spent much of Wednesday
working from the law office
of attorney Robert Ekstrand,
who represents dozens of
uncharged lacrosse players.
District Attorney Mike
Nifong, who has not granted .
interviews in weeks and said
Tuesday he planned to make
no comments about the case
outside the courtroom, has
said he still hopes to link a
third man to the alleged

attack.
He did not return calls
Wednesday seeking comment
about that effort, or about
searches by Durham police
Tuesday night of Seligmann's
and Finnerty's dorm rooms.
Warrants a,uthorizing the
searches had not been
returned to the court clerk's
or magistrate 's office by
Wednesday evening.
"I can imagine they never
quit investigating, but I think
it's unusual to be executing
search warrants after they've
indicted," Cotter said.
Defense attorneys have said
they have time-stamped pho-

tos from the party,. bank
records, cell phbne calls and a
taxi driver's statement to.support Seligmann 's claim of
mnocence.
A person close to the case
told The Associated Press on
Wednesday that the cell
show
phone
records
Seligmann called for a taxi at
12:14 a.m., and that according to sworn testimony he left
in the taxi at 12: 19 a.m.
The bank records show he
stopped at an ATM five minutes later, the person added,
while information provided
by Duke shows he swiped an
ID card to enter his dorm at
12:46 a.m.
A member of the defense
team, who also spoke on condition of anonymity because
the defense is working ·with
players who could still be
mdicted; showed photos to
the AP on Wednesday that
show the accuser on !tie back
porch of t~e off-campus

house, With her clothing
intact. She is smiling and
looking through her purse.
The defense team member
said the digital photos were
taken at 12:30 a.m., citing an
electronic time-stamp known
as metadata. Such timestamps are not visible on the
photos. They are created,
though, when digital photos
are taken.
The accuser, a 27-year-old
student at a nearby college,
told . police she was attacked
by three white men at a house
where she and another
woman were hired to dance at
a lacrosse team party.
According to defense attorneys, DNA tests conducted
on all the players failed to
·c onnect any of the team
members to the alleged rape.
"I would have to say she is
defimtely making it up,"
Cotter said.
Nifong has ordered additional DNA testing, which

was originally performed at
the state crime lab. Cotter
said he believes those results
should be "back any minute."
Ekstrand said the defense
has also not yet received a.
report from authorities about
any photo identifications of
suspects made by the accuser.
"I think we're entitled to the
report of the identification
procedure, and the results of
the photo identifications she
did," he said. ·
The allegations of rape led
Duke . to cancel . the highly
ranked lacrosse team's season, accept the resignation of
the team's coach and begin a
series of internal investigations, including one into the
behavior of the lacrosse team.

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oported on the firs
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eglotar
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re than lhe coot o
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the error and. onl
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holl not be llablo fo
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Box number ada ar

AP National Writer Allen
G. Breed and Associated
Press Writer Tim Whitmire
contributed to this report.

lwaya contklentlal.
I'

Current rate

CLEVELAND (AP) Cavaliers star LeBron James
sat out Cleveland's regularseason finale Thursday night
against the Atlanta Hawks to
rest his left ankle for the NaA
playoffs.
James sprained his ankle
April 12 in a blowout loss at
Detroit. He has missed three
of Cleveland's four game's
since, and he sat out the final
15 minutes in the Cavaliers'
other game.
"It's a precaution, this late
in the year with one game
left," coach Mike Brown said.
"If he were to play, he would
not have played in the fourth
quarter anyway."
Guard Larry Hughes, who
missed 45 games following
tinger surgery, also sat out as
the Cavaliers attempted to win
50 games in a season for the
first time since 1992-93 .
Hughes banged his right hand
in Monday's win 'at. Boston
and didn't want to take any
chances making it worse.
Brown has had to adjust his
lineups because of injuries· all

season, so it was almost fitting
that he would do it at least one
more time before the Cavs
embark on their ftrst playoff
appearance since 1998.
Brown had hoped to keep
his starters sharp down the
stretch, but that tdea became
an impossible one.
''It ts a concern, but you've
got to weigh the alternatives
either way. lf a guy misses
this ~arne, it's not a big deal.
But tf one of those guys gets
hurt, they might not be able to
play at all. And especially in a
game that doesn't mean anything at all, I just decided not
to play them."
James was getting treatment
on his ankle and was not
available before tile game.
James, who has made a late· season push for MVP in his
third season as a pro, averaged
31.4 points, 7.0 rebounds and
6.6 assists. He is just the
fourth player to average 31-76 in a season, joining Oscar
Robertson (1963-64 ), Jerry
West (19(\5-66) and Michael
Jordan (1988.-89).

COLUMBUS (AP)- The
Columbus Blue Jackets had a
banner season in terms of
rewnt1ng
the franchise
record book.
· The upshot, however, is ·
pretty much the same old
story: another year without
playoffs.
·
·
The club set new marks for
winning and scoring, yet just
like the foUI;, previous Blue
Jackets teams, this one will
be sitting at home when the
postseason gets under way
this weekend.
"'When you're a young
team it's probably better to
start from the bottom," said
ilefenseman Adam Foote, a
free agent signing last summer who o;.vns two Stanley
G:.up rings from his time with
the Colorado Avalanche. "It
hurts. It hurts a lot. You
don't like it. No one likes it.
But you learn. Sometimes
it's a hard way to learn.
That' s behind us now and we
AP photo
have to look ahead. I think Columbus Blue Jackets goalie Marc Denis, right, blocks a shot by San Jose Sharks' Marcel Goc
guys feel pretty good about (11) during an NHL hockey game Jan. 5, in San Jose, Calif. San Jose won 6-3. The club set new
what's been going on here
marks for winning and scoring, yet JUSt like the four previous Blue Jackets teams this one will
the past. few months."
be sitting at home and watching when the pos~season gets under way this weekend.
The Blue Jackets finished
35-43-4, setti ng franchise
After that the club went assists) but was a valued get a chance to play on one
marks for wins, points (74), 26-18-3.. the offense provid- commodity
around
the of the top two lines at the · MOOSIC ; Pa. (AP) fifth save.
road wins (12), home wins ed some spark, the defense younger players - particu- outset of next season. The Eude Brito allowed one run
The Red Barons jum.ped out
(23) and goals (223) . From got stingy and goaltenders larly Zherdev in the front office believes he .has on one hit and struck out three 1-0 in the second after left
Jan. I through the end of the Marc Denis and Pascal dressing room and on the ice. star quality.
in six innings to lead the fielder Shawn Garrett's pop
season, they had the eighth- Leclaire played well.
There were several other
Others lik~ly will not Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Red fly · fell between Kevin
best record · in the Western
"If you look at our second bright spots. Defenseman return. Forwards Vyborny Barons to a 2-1 victory over Thompson, Russ Johnson and
Conference and were just 'half of the season, we came a Ron Hainsey, picked . off and Trevor Letowski, centers the Columbus Clippers on Escalona in shallow left field.
Garrett hustled to second on
three
points
behind long way," said Nash, who waivers· from Montreal, was Jan Hrdina and Manny Wednesday night.
Colorado,
four
behmd finished with 31 goals and a a rock on the blue line and Malhotra and defenseman ' Brito (1-1) pitched five hit- the hit and scored on Brennan
Calga~y ~nd stx back of .cafeer-best 23 assists to give set a club record with his Radoslav Suchy are unre- less innings l:lefore giving up King's RBI single . Chris
Nas~ville.
'
him 54 points in 54 games. plus-13
free
agents. a leadoff walk followed by Roberson stole third and
rating.
Jaso u stricted
Snll, than~s to an a~ful "If we had 30 more games Chimera, part of a five.play- MacLean says he ' d like to Wil . Nieves' single. Felix scored on a throwing error by
start they fimshed 21 pmnts
,
,
.
Escalona hit a sacrifice fly Nieves to make it 2-0 in the
behind Edmonton for the ·left, I m sure we d be nght er trade with Phoenix in have them back, but· won't that scored Danny Garcia. .
third.
eighth playoff spot in the ther~. to make a playoff e'arly October, ··collected 17 overpay to keep them.
The Clippers got just two
Matt DeSalvo (1-2) gave up
·goals
and
12
assists
.
Also,
Denis
might
be
Western Conference.
spot. .
hits the rest of the way and · one earned run on six hits
"The last 50 games, we've , David Vyborny had .a huge Untested Mark Hartigan, shopped around in a trade for Yoel Hernandez earned up his through seven innings.
proven that we're a team , year (22 goals, 43 asststs) to Aaron Johnson, Alexandre · a draft pick. Mactean says
that's getting better," said move mto the ~lu_e Jackets Picard and Dan Fritsche all he has seen few teams sueDoug MacLean, president career leadershtp 10 . ga'!les proved they could handle the ceed with two guys sharing
the gQaltending job.
imd general manager.
(395), goals (90) and asst~ts rigors of the NHL.
"We proved to everybody
Coach Gerard Gallant
. On Dec. 23, the ;Blue (137).
.
.
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. four blocked shots this past
in
the
·
second
half
that
.
we
prefers
to look at the way the (AP) - Tyler Wilkerson, a season for Lafeyette High
Jackets were an NHL-worst
Fo~ard Ntkolat Z~erdev
9-25-1. Then 2003-2004 had hts best seas?n with 27 can win," Chimera said. team played late in ihe year hi gh school recruit from School in Lexington, Ky.
"He won't turn 18 until
goal-scoring co-champion g~al~ and 27 asststs before "We've got a good young and forget the lopsided loss- Kentucky, has signed to
Rick Nash and defenseman mtssmg the final two weeks team. I'm one of the old guys es and bitter disappointments play for Marshall, men's July 25, or somewhere
basketball coach Ron Jirsa around there," Jirsa said.
Rostislav Klesla returned with a sprained knee. He,' at 26 - I don't feel that old, of October and November.
bitt
I
guess
I
am
compared
to
"The
start
of
the
season
·
said.
"He has a lot of tremendous
from injuries and Sergei like Nash, is just 21. ,
.
hurt our chances," he said.
The 6-foot-8, 240-pound upside. He has v.ery big
.f edorov, acquired in an
At 36, Fedorov .had hts a lot of these guys."
Last
year's
first-round
"It's
a
long
way
back.
But
I
Wilkerson
averaged 18. hands and can catch it. He's
October trade with Anaheim, worst NHL season m terms
points,
12.3
rebounds and a very good foul shooter."
draft
pick,
Gilbert
Brule,
will
like
our
chances
now."
found his footing .
of numbers (12 goal~, 32

Red Barons clip·Columbus

Ky. player signs with Herd

'

y

I

r

r
~= I
I
bl acklt~n.

Classmates, Colleagues of
US A , etc
I, Zelda
Wilson, need financial help
obta1n1ng house from
owner ror commumty serviceS for all that need help,
before, a publlo sale the
m1ddle of May 2006
Contact. Mordeca1 D
Wilson. Owner, All mail.
PO Box 73 , Lula, GA
30554, telephone 1-770669·3937
Concealed Pistol Cl,ass
OhlO, WV, May 13, 2006,
$75.00.
9.QOam . VFW
Mason WI/. Ph . (740)843·
5555

r·
;;d.

GIVEAWAY

Rul

dvertlaemente
ubjeclto tha Fodera
air Houolng Act o

968.

bust &amp; pllad con:

crete Excellent fill Must
haul &amp; take all . Call day
time on~ {j04)675·7694
Black&amp; White female dog
about 6 months old to go
Home. (304)875·4431
Free to goOd home. Male
Shepard mix about t yr old
t 740)709-6218 .
G1veaway
Two Male
Australlan Cattle Dogs. 16M and 1·3M. 740·742·

2380

lhalaw.

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2
Bu•lne•• Days Prior To
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'rl&lt;lay For Sunday• Paper

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Thuraday for ,Sundays

• All ads ~ust be prepaid'

M1x male breed dog. 1
1/2yrs old, ltxed, loves
ch1ldren, needs room to
run. (740)949·2122

110

.
1

HoME'i

HELP WANI'Eil

FOR SALE
All Types Masonry, Bnck.
Block,
Stone ,
Free
Esttmete, {304)773-9550,
304-593·6421

l.ost· large yellow dog on
fU
33
near
fa1r
grounds!Wlllow Creek Rd ,
Reward, 1740)992·5029

Computer Troubleshoot &amp;
Repair Call (740)992·
2395

.

()
0

Lost- white English Setter
plus dark brown Bnttany,
Flark1nson
Ad . area,
Reward , (740)742-4204

'

'

Q,

r ,..
Child Care provided by
education major/ Mommy
of 3 year old, lov1ng!
Chnst1an env1roment, educational actiVltlas and
wholesome meals provid·
ed
Call April 740·992·
7920 to find out mOfe!
I I \ \ \ ( I\ I

LOST. 2 calves, Red 300
to 350 lbs. In letart/Board
Church
Rd
are'a
(304 )895·3442
Lost· Gold Marine Corps
Ring
Onyx settmg
Reward ca ll (740)992·
7200

r

r
chest,

c lothes ,

canopy

Yard sale April 21 -22.
Green
Terrace
m
Centenary Clothes. toys,
Home Interior, glassware,
m1sc.
Yard Sale· 1~ 7 Woodland
Dr .
Wed-Thurs.
9-5.
~come and See"

I \1 1'1 I 1\ \I I \ I

'-I In II I"

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble cratts,
wood 1tems
To $480/wk
Materials provided
Free InformatiOn pkg
24Hr
801·428·4649
An E~.:cellent way to earn
money The New Avon
Call Marllyn 304·882·2645
Are You Tired of Not
Hav1ng Enough Money to
Make Ends Meet. A maJOr
Distributor 1n the Air &amp;
Water Industry 1s oflering a
Business
Opportunrty, 1n Sales for
those who are concerned
with Indoor "air quality.
safety of dMk1ng water &amp;
the environment. A meet·
1ng at the Pomt Pleasant
library, April 21st 6 30
pm Everyone Welcome.
No pressure no obligatiOn
call (304)576·2056 for
more Jnlormat1on

-~~-~-...., , Home
YARD SALE-

POMEROY/l\ttn&gt;r&gt;U

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Apr11 22

Moving Sale.
Treasures.
Some
Furmtute,
No Clothes
End ol MechanJCs Street.

Aplll Thurs 20 &amp; Fri 21 ,
11me 1Oam-4pm, ofd cookie jars, stone J&amp;rs, ant1que
furniture, 5 guns, 15 quil ts,
6 tin pie safe, 10 pictures &amp;
tram es, old dishes &amp;
lamps, much, much more,
N8Yf Haven He1Qhts, New
Haven. WV
Inside -Ya rd -S ale

Frl 1 Sat&amp;Sunday
Furniture,
Lots-of-

Houst1hold-ltems. End of
JerichO Ad , turn right big
gray garage on left
Yard sale 2 Fam1ly Apnl
21,22.23 9am to 4pm 2504
~ ulCqtn Ave Pt. Pleasant

r~~~ Auction: Modular House
and Tools &amp; EqUipment
Buckeye
Hills
Career
Center. A1o Grande, Ohio.

At1en110n Drivers
R&amp;J
Trucking is lookmg for
Dnvers w/1 yr OTR.
Experience for Regional
Hauls Average pay 40's to
mid 50's Home every
Weekend
call
Kent
(800)462·9365
AVON I All Areas! To Buy or
Sell Sh1rley Spears, 304·
675-1429
Be Appreciated!
Stable company, Steady

Hours
Up to S81hour fulltlme
WMkty Pay, Pald tramlng
Great Bonu...
Medicai!OentaWision
Benefits
Paid VacatJons and
Holidays
CALL NOW· START

SODNI
(7•0)446-7442 ext 2311
or Ht77.,.63-6247 ext.

2311

• T&amp;E . farm tractors at
11 ooam, House at t2 oo
Noon on May 6, 2006
{740)245-5334.
Carolina Flea Market Frl
Sal Sun Ou1slde (304)6755516 or (304) 8751160

t

' NO EIIPERlENCE NEC£SS,i,RV

'FULL·TIME ClASSES
• COL TRAINING
• FINANCINO AV... lLABLE

'JOB PlACEMENT

Absolute Top Dollar· U S
Silver and Gold Coins,
Proofsets, Gold A1ngs,
Pre .. 1935 U.S. Currency,
Solitai re Diamonds· M.T S.
Coin Shop, 151 Second
AventJe, Gallipolis, 740446·2842

• ENROlLING

NC1N

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR-TRAILER
TRAINING CE'NTEAS

WYTHEVILLE. VA

1-800-334-1203

I buy Junk Cars (304)773·

5004

I will buy JWI1s
(740)3aa·9303.

.

Ida. Call

wanted to buv 1865
Charles Dickens Books
(304)675·6499

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

www comlct.com

C 2008 b NEA, Inc

YARD SALE

Sat. April 22, B 00·3:00,
116 Mabeline Dr. Wine
rack . TV stand. • X-mas
tree . household decorations, kitchen apphances,
water sk1s, Stanley tool

p74

4x4's For Sale .............................................. i2s
Announcemant ............................................ 030
Anttques ....................................................... 530
Apartments for Rent ..... :............................. 440
Auction end Flea Market............. ,..: ............oao
Auto Parts &amp; Acceasorle8 .................. :....... 760
Auto Repair.: ................................................ 770
Auloafor Sale ..............................................no
Boals &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles ........................................550
Business and Bulldlngs ............................. 340
Buslnesa Oj&gt;portunlly.................................210
Business Training ....................................... 140
Campara &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Carda of Thanka .................................. ,....... oto
Child/Elderly Cere ...................... :................ 190
E-lcai/RIIfrlgeratlon............................... 840
qulpment for Rent. ....................................480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment ..........................................6t0
Farms for Rent.. ..................................,........430
arms for Sale ............................................. 330
For Laaaa ..................................................... 490
For Sala ........................................................ 585
For Sale or Trade .................................. ,...... 590
Fruita &amp; Vegetablas ..................................... 580
Fumlohed Roomo . .'......................................450
General Haullng........................................... 850
Glveaway...................................................... 040
HIPPY Ads .....................................; ............. ,050
Hay &amp;Graln ..................:............................... 640
Hlllp w.r&gt;tect ...................................., ............ 110
Home Improvemento ................................... 81 0
Homes for Sale ............................................ 310
Household Goodo ..............: ........................ 510
Houaea lor Ronl .......................................... 410
In Memorlam ................................................ 020
Insurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Gardfn Equlpmenl ........................ 660
Llvaatock......l ......... ...................................... 630
L..-1 and Found ........................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
Mlacallaneouo.............................................. 170
Mlacellaneouo Merchandlae....................... 540
Moblla ·Home Rapalr .................................... 860
Mobile Home• lor Ranl ............................... 420
Mobile Homes lor Salo ................................ 320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
.Motorcyclea &amp; 4 Wheelers ..........................740
ll!ualcallnatrumonto ................................... 570
Peraonalo ..................................................... oos
Pets for Sale ................................................ 580
Plumbing &amp; Hutlng .................................... 820
Proteoalonal S.rvlcea ................................. 230
Rodto, Tv &amp; CB Ropalr ............................... 1110
IIIII Eatate Wonted ..................,.................. 3110
hoololnatructlon ..................................... t50
'Seed , Plont &amp; Fanlllzer .............................. 650
SHuollono want~ ....................................... 120
. space lor Rent ............................................. 480
Sporting Goodo ........................................... 520
8UY'a for Sala .............................................. 720
Trucks lor Sale ............. ., ............................. 715
UphOlstery ................................................... 870
Vena For Solo ...............................................730
Wonted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wonted to Buy- Farm Suppllaa .................. 620
Wonted To Do .............................................. 180
:wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
Yard Sal• Galllpolla....................................072
Yord Soi•Pomaroy1Middle ......................... 074
Yard Sai•PI. Pleasant.. .............................. 076

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In Next Day•• Paper
'

LoS!· Akl1a mox
male (Buster), Mornmgstar
area, Reward, (740)949·
3700

1 1'1'111"""_ _ _ _..,

pplloo.
All

Columbus hoping strong finish carries over· LeBron sits ou( finale

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No plea deal for one of two players charged in Duke lacrosse case
· DURHAM, N.C. (AP) An attorney for one of two
Duke University lacrosse
players charged with raping a
stripper at a team party on
Wednesday strongly rejected
any sort of deal with prosecutors, p'roclaiming again his
client's innocence.
· "I don't think there is any
chance in hell that there will
be a guilty plea," attorney
Bill Cotter said. "I can't tell
you about (everybody), but
my client' s case is either
going to be dismissed by the
D.A. or go to trial."
Cotter represents Collin
Finnerty, who ;tlong with fellow
sophomore
Reade
Seligmann was · indicted
t1onday on charges of firstdegree rape, sexual offense
and kidnapping. Each posted
$400,000 bond after their predawn arrests early Tuesda;Y,
and both were released withm
hours.
School
officials
have

.·

Deii-Jery ~rsbn needed
Local
Furniture
and
Appliance Dealer
Full
time
work,
Health
Insurance offered. Send
Resume to .
Box TSC12
c/o Polnl Pleasant
Register
200 Ma1n Street
Point Pleasant. WV
25550

Desk Clerk position open
Immediately Professional
attitude &amp; friendly personality a must Please ·apply
in person at Holiday Inn,
Galhpolis NO PHONE
CALLS PLEASE
Direct Sales Fantast1c
Opportunity,
50K
no
Problem
Must
be
Mot1va1ed and Self Starter.
Call Ken (740)992·7440
Experience Truck D~ver &amp;
Tr.uck Mechan1c h1r1ng now
Class A COL requ1red
Dump Trailer axPenence
requ1red .
Potential for
$ 1OOO+per week • call
(304)722·2184 Bam to
4pm M·F
E11per1enced Farm Hand
wanted. Phone (304)675-

1743.;.·~

iPs

enc
ec an1c
for small equipment &amp;
trucks. gas &amp; diesel.
Full time with bene·
f1ts Apply m person
Thomas Do lt Center,
Gal\1 oils, OH.
For a hmiled time make
50% selhng Avon Call
(740)446-3358
Fuii·T1me
Apartment
Manager for Pleasant
Valley Apartments In Po1nt
Pleasant,
WV
Government
Subsides
Fam11y Pro;ect, Wages
negotiable, and Benefits ·
Medical Ins. and 401K .
ExpenencB prelerred. Fax.
Resume to · Attn· John
.Hunter
(614)-224-4736
EOE
.•
Housekeeping Supervisor
Healthcare ,
Services
Group, Inc IS looking for a
career onented,. aggres·
sive hands-on manager in
the Marietta area As the
leading provider of house·
keepmg and laundry services to the long term care
industry, we are seeking
Individuals who w1ll effectively represent our com·
pany and manage our onSite operations. We pro·
v1de a competitive salary,
paid training and benefits
package
Please
fax
reSume to· 1·6 t 4-577 •
0125
Insurance Agency looking
tor a motivated, licensed.
or wlllmg to become
licensed,
Customer
Service Aep. Salary and
benefits, dependant on
experience . ' Interested
apphcants please • submit
resume to . The Dally
..Sentinel. PO Box 729-6,
Pomerov. Ohio 45769

Overbrook. Center is currently accepting applications lor AN's 8 and 12
hOur
sh1fls
available
Competitive wages and
benefits package available. All interested appli·
cants should p1ck yp an
appllcant at 333 Page
Street, Middleport , OH
For additiOnal InformatiOn
please contact Hollie at
(740)992·6472. EOE

•NOTI'Ch
HIO VALLEY PUB
ISHING CO. recom
ends that you do busi
ass with people yo
now, and NOT to sen
oney through the ma1
nt1l you have 1nvest1gat
the offenn .

r

Overbrook Rehabilitati on
Center Is currently acceptmg .applicatiOns for a
d1etary coo~. Part ttme
positions available. All
mteresled '
app licants
should piCk up an applica·
tJOn at 333 ' Page Street,
M1ddleport, OH

MONt.-v

roLoAN

rrow Smart Contac
he Oh1o DlvJsJon o
manc1al Institution'
Hice , of Consume
Ha1rs BEFORE yo
efinance your home o
bta1n
a
loan .
EWARE of request
or any large advanc
ayments ot fees o
nsurance
Call th
ffice or Consume
, Hairs toll free at 1
66-278-0003 to lear
f the mortgage broKe
r lender is properl
icensed. {ThiS lS a pub
lc service announce
ant from the Ohl

Part t1me Dental Assistant

&amp; Part t1ma Receptionist
Plea&amp;e send resume to
CLA
Box
ill. c/o
Galhpohs Tr1bune , PO Box
469, Galllpolis, OH 45631

r~~ll

Part 11me Mall Carner JOb.
Must have own veh1cle,
good driving record, insur·
ance (740)256 -1664

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY

ISS I?

Part 11me pos1t1on to
Manage Country Homes
rental commumty lf1 Shade
Area· inCludes a house to
live 1n Send resume to
Country Homes, PO Box
t033L.ogan, Ohio 43138

No Fee Unfess We W1n1
1-888·582·3345

I&lt;I \I I "" I \II
HOMFS
FUKSALE

Part-lime
yard
work.
Mostly weed eahng Must
be dependable Approx 4
hours week. Call (740)367·

112 Pltasant Street. Po1nt
Pleasant, WV (304(675·
4034or (304)~75 ·0418 . 3
bedroom , 1 1/2bath, family
0889.
room . d!ning room, new
POSTAL JOBS
wmdows, now AC , new
$t 5 .67_$ 21 _981hr,
now , . wattr !ank, fenced yard ~ •.
hiring For application and .
free governement job Info,
call American Assoc. of
Labor
t -913-599-8042.
24/tlrs. emp serv

6082

~

4 year ol4 Colon1al on 3
acres, approx 1,900 sq. ft
3 bdr, 2 baths, 2 car
garage, master bdr lS
28x24 with a JaCUZZI tub
$125,000. (740)446·7029
Attention I
Local companv offenng
"NO DOWN PAYMENT"
programs for you to buy
your home instead ol ren t·

Ing
• 100% fmanc1ng
• Less than perfect credit
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
locators
(740)367·0000
Bnck home 4BA, ,3BA,

0-Jerbrook Ae hab ilit~tion
Center Is currently acceptIng applications lor LPN's
Available shifts are 7A· 7P
and 7P-7A All interested
applicants should pick up
an applicalion at 333 Page
Street, Middleport , OH
For further mlormat1on,
please contact Hollie at
(740)992 -6472. EOE

Aespon&amp;lble Reliable Chid
Cttre .needed in my Home.
Must nave References &amp;
Transpo.rtallon (304)675-

3BR. 2ba, LR . FR wlwood
burner; gas furnace, new
CA; attact1ed 2-car garage
w/poss!ble upsta1rs apartment,
pltJs
another
attached
1-ca r garage/workshop .
large outbuilding aboveground pool ; 3 acres mil
Ask1ng $110 ,000. Near A10
Grande (740)245·0372

t900 sq fl 3bd 2ba hOme
with basement , SIIS on 3
acres. just off of Rt 7,
Chesttr Township, Eastern
SchOOl DISITICI Also"regis tered quart~r horses lor
sale. Call (740)985·432; ·
attar 6pm
- --a-cr-.-,-a-rm--w-,1h
20
_ftOOsq ft custom 1999. 2

garage, basement, f1re·
place, mce lot w1t h storage
bldg. carport, pat10, pool
and fenced backyard
EKcellent locatiOn on
Jackson P1ke. (740)446·
7903, cell(740)441·7098.

I

Newly remodeled, 3 ·or ~
b8drooms, central a1r, lull
basement
ha rd wood
floors detached ' garage.
large
covered
pat1o.
fenced back yard, dose 10
schOols, Po1nt Pleasant.
$69,500 740 709· 1382

u
rab
Creek
Road
icturesque Old Ca
od home Oak construe
Jon 3-4 bedroom t bath
ig countf)' k1tchan. tots o
abmets, plu's d1mn
oom, spac1ous IP&gt;~in
oom &amp; study on 3
eras
Beaut1ful rollm
awn w/mature shad
rees &amp; new pond &amp; doCk,
Jctl workshop plus 4-out
wldmgs
&amp; carport.
62,500 11rm (304)675
680
Sorry No Lan
ontracts

MOBU.E HOMFS
mRSALE
All reel est•te advartlslng
ln this newspaper Ia
subject to the Federal
Fair Houalng Act of 1968
which make• 11 mega! to
advertise "any
preference, llmltstlon or
dlac:rlmln•tlon based on
race, color, religion, ...
famlll•l atatus or national
origin, or any intention to
make any such
preference, limitation or

dlacrlmlnallon."
TN1 newspeper will not
' kno-Mngly accept
sdvertisemenls for real
satate which it in
violation of the law. Our
readers ere hereby

Informed !hal all
dwellings advertised in
this newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity Nses.

Crab Creek area 22 acres
w1th 3 br, 2 bath , 2,100
SQ ft home, stone f1re·
· place. bam. some pasture,
creek front ' and mora
$167 ,000
Trl County
Realty Call Paul Hemann
t304)736·0710
or
t304)733·9000
Five bedroom , 3 5 bath
house in .quiet neighbor·
hood
near
Pomeroy.
Hardwood floors. oak
doors and tnm, fireplace . 2
deck., 2
car g8rAge
kitchens! . 2 hving rooms,
storage room 3.000 sq.
feet $1 59.900 Call 740416·4765 after 4 00 PM

~lo Grande McOonald' V story nome located
hlrtng ell shifts. Apply 1n
Detween Rio Grandt and
peraon
Jacklon. J.4BR. den, 3lull
bath with muter 1acuzzr.
Gallipolis Ferry 2br 1 bath,
huge wrap-arou nd porch,
Tri-Statt area dealership
large level lot, fenced yard.
large kitchen with llland; 3
1n need of qualified ATV &amp;
garage and more A must
car garage foundation
MotorCycle .Mechanic&amp; To
see at S45 .500 call Paul
ready to frame , prlvatt set·
be conslder.ed: Please
Tri-County
Rea lty
tlng with great hunting,
send resume &amp; references
(304)736-0710 (304)733·
1o •367 Slalo Routo 160, $234 ,900 (740)384·5182
Medi
Home ' Health
9000
Gallipolis. Ohio •5631 .
Agency. Inc •eeklng PAN
3BD, 2Ba, fireplace, 40x60
Maple Street, Mason
Speech Therap ist and •
barn, 8 llat acres Pleasant
Plrtf1CI iOCAIIOn
4 bed·
Occupational Therapist tor
· Valley Acl., Rio Grande
room w81ik In closet 2 full
Galllpolif, Ohio and surS120.ooo'.' (740)709·1166.
bath, 2 lots w/pr1vacy
rounding area. LM::ensed In
Oelllpollt C1reer
fence
Great
Ohio or West Virginia pre·
3BA. 2 Car attached
Collo&amp;o
NeJQhborhood
$69,000
lerred. We offer a competl·
Garage on 1 06 acres
(Careers Close To Home)
(304)773·5268
tlv9 salary E O.E. Please
$60.000 (304)675-6331
Call Today! 74()-446-4367,
send resume to 352
1·600·214-()452
ours txt Three Bedroom
78R. SBA, Foreclosure,
SBCOnd AVenue, Gallipolis,
house In Pomeroy
O)t
WWW.D&amp;II!Witcar"rwli9 t.VIT1
only St8.000. For listings
OH 45631. Atln . Judie
Accredited ~embflr Accrediting
c811 800·391·5228 elrt. • main Road . River View.
Reese
or • ema il
COtJnclllor lnoependalll con• •
$27,000. 1·740·992·2593.
F254
jraeseC msa-oorp.com
and SchOOlt 121,8

1'!0 ~

New Home. 2 Story on 2
1/2 acres MIL
Paved
dr1veway and streets New
StJbdiVISIOn 3 bedroom 2
1/2 bath.
Unf1msh.ed
bonus room over garaga,
full poured basement ,
wraparound porch 2 heat
pumps, n1ce rear deck, private yet close to town
Beautiful
v1ews
Immed iate
possess1oR . ,
Appraised a1 $185,000
QUick sale at $169,900
Call 740·992·2478

'
,

12X60 2 Bedroom Mobil"
Home Needs some floor
repa 1rs Water line needs
replaced . As IS, you move,
May t .2006 mov1ng dead·
hne. $1,200 or Besl Offer
reasonable
ofier
No
refused 740-992·3t80
14x55·'97 Fleetwood MH·
2BR.
t
bath
eleC.
heat!AC· good cond111on
$10,500 Call (740)446·
3644 for appl.
14x70
mobile
hOme,
needs work. Aprox 11i3
acre. Pnced to sell fast.
$8.500 060. (740)645·
1742
t971 12li65 Redma1 1 3
bedroom Askmg S2 500
Call {7401368·05 70
1996 ~nd Up, 14 and 1~
Wide Mob1le Homes for
Sale
in
excellent
Condition Day 740·388·
0000 OT 740-388-851 3
Evenings 740·388·8017,
2002
14x50
Clayton
Mobile Home. 2 bedrooni .
1 bath Custom ordered
with 811 upgrades AC IS
1nstalled Great ConditiOn
$17,500 call (740)446·
4096 or (740)645-0535
'86 Crestnge 14li70 2BA/
2 bath, $6 ,995 . Call
(740)385·9948
'86 Skyline front kitchen
Cash pnce 58,995 Wlll
deliver Call (7 40 )38~
9948.
9/ toth ot an acre tor "-le
on 143 . 2 mob1le homes.
740·992·5858
Brand new 16 wide
vinyVshlngle $181 tmo. Call
(740)385-7671 .
Nice 14x70 3 bedro6m
only $10,995 'Will help
with
delivery
Call
(740)385-9621 .

r

Lms&amp;
ACREAGE

22 acres, wonderful view.
ridgetop property, close tp
' ma1n highway perfect for 4wheeler trails, (740)701·
2109

..

�..
.,

Thursday, April 20, 2006~

'

'

Need to Rent a Trall&amp;r Lot
soon. 16x80 Trailer. single
no ctlildren (304)n3-572B
Of (304)n3-5930
RNervktw vacant lot 98x75
Front. Street, Middleport,
~ng $25.000, (740)992-

2849
Thirteen 5 to 12 acre lots

Retridg
&amp;
Stove .Washer &amp; Oi'yer
included (304)576-2934
3Br.

Mobile Home for rent 3br,
2ba 3-miles out of Poin t
Pleas ant on
At 2 N
(304)675-381 B
Mobile home-sites for up to
16x80 1n Country Homes.

In Morga n Twp. Gallta
County.
96 acres in
Cheshire Twp. Gallia

(740)385 -401 9.

County. Six 5 acre lots in
Salem Twp. Mei gs County.

(740)385-o698.

Very clean 14x64 2 bed·
room . Only $7,995 . Call

Poisible t8nd contact on
an &amp;Xf&amp;pt 96 acre piece:

Female Senior Citizen
seeking Gall ipoli s apart·
ment or small house; must
be
easily
accessible

Trained pheasant and
duck Lab, 2 years old,
SBOG-·3 pointing Lab pup·
pies. huntin g !Stock. 6mths.

2000
VW
Beetle,
78 ,000/miles. Turbo . Auto,
Sun
Root,
CD
Air,
Changer. Good Condition .

1hroughout
9209.

old, $50 each.

$7.800 (740)446- 4096 or
(740)645-0535
'

ro

·

(740)446·

H~

I

wire cages with legs,
4X8ft., lor birds, rabbits
and beagles. Call: 74-Q.

.9.921"
-1-07-2..
. ..---....,

·r

.r:.~ 1
36• Sony Trinton with DVD L_,.;iiiiiiiiiliiiliii.O.,J.

&amp; surround sound, stand

Gibson Epiphone acoustic
guitars. solid mahogany
bodies and necks, new In
box . Your choice $1"50

included $500.
32~ Pan llat screen , stand
included $400. (740)4461802.

sh
I \ I&lt;\ I -..1 1'1' 1 1l -..

PhOne (7 40}669-Q143, No

cans attar

i

~

9 ~00pm .

1 and 2 bedroom apart ·
ments1 furnished and
u n fur n ish~ d .
secuflty
deposit required, no pet s,
74().992- 221 8.

~:AI. FsfATE
Wvm:v

Need to sell your home ?

Late on payments, di'IOrce.
job transfer or a death? I
can buy your home. All
cash and quick closing.
740-418-3130.
1: I ' I \I ..,

Hou;ES
FORRE:Jvr

1 Bedroom Apt. for rent 1n
Pomeroy.
Deposi t
required .. newly remodeled
$350 call 740-992·2874 or

74Q-41 6-2507
Altentlon Construction
Workers.
2 spacious
apts.. ··furnished w/ca018
an d uti lities-weekly and
monthly. ra tes. 740·992·

Aelrigerator,Jalmond, large
freezer at lop, nice, $150.
Washer, heavy duty, $95, dr yer,
$~5 .
Gene
App liances , 76 Vine St.
( 7 4 0 ) 4 4 6 · 7 1 oo -8 m ,

(740)441-8258-pm.

(740)441 -0194 .

or

(7~0 ) 441 - 1184

2

or 3 bedroom house 101

rent in ,. RaCine area, no

peG;, (740)992-5858
2br House on 2111 Lincoln
AviJ. No Pets, Deposit &amp;

rerSrence s

$400/month
(~)675-~749

3b(/2 bath, chla, aU appliaf'l(:es, 1 car garage. fu ll
basement, $575/month,

S4eo

dep.,

Syracu se,

(74V)992-Q167
4 ):&gt;edroo m house. 2nd
Ave, Gallipolis, Ohio. C~ll
tor· details (740)44 H }194
or (740)441 · 1164.
4br
in
Syracu se,
$600/m onlh &amp; Depo sil.
Water/Sewer iticluded, No
Pets (304)675 -5332 or

(740)591-0265
Attention!
LOcal company offering

"NO DOWN PAYMENT"
programs tor yo"u lo buy
your hOrf!B instead of rent·
ing.
• 100% financing
• Less lhan perfect credit
accepted
• Paymenl could be the
same as rent.
Mortgage
Localors.

(740)367-&lt;1000
Country Sening, New con·
dition Brick, 3 bclr. 2 bath
anachod Garage. Many
extras: Prefer older co u·
pie. Ref, Deposit, No Pets

- (304)675-5162
House for rent. 4 bedroom,
washer &amp; dryer hook·up.
(740)256-6803, anytime.

(740)645-3261 . 1,oopm9:00pm _
House for sale or rent at
6 1 Mill Creek Rd. 3BR,
1BA , ot1 street parking .
$500/mo. Wil l rent with
oplion
to
buy. Call

(740)867-4290.
· Large cedar home in coun·
try near Holzer Medical
Center, 4 bdrm, 2 1/2 bath,
gas fncluded. References/

deposit (330)920-9171
·Point Plea sant. ni c~ two. story hou se, 7·rooms, 2·
baths. Larg e backyard .
Sto\le,
refr igera_tor.
$52 5 / mon t hi Y .
Reference s,
deposit

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS AT BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Dri'lle hom $344 to $442.
Wa lk to shop &amp; movies,
Call 740·446-2568. Equal
Housin g Opportunity.
Brand new 2 bedroom
Apts on State Route 160.
Call for details (740)44 1-

0194 or (740)44 1-1184.

Townhouse apartments.
and/o r small houses FOR

RENT. Call (740)44 1-11 11
for application &amp; infori'na·
tio.n.
Furn ished upstairs, 3
rooms &amp; bath, newly decorated,
new
carpet.
&amp; deposif
Referen ce
required. (740)446-151 9.
Gracious 11\li ng. 1 and 2
bedroom apartments at
Village
Manor
and
Riversi de Apartments in
Middleport. From $295·

$444. Call 740-992-5064.
Equal
Housing
Opportunities. ,
HoneysuckiO Hills Apts.
GallipOlis. now accepting
applications for 2BA apt&amp;.
Al~o . 2BR han dicapped.
Rent starts at $315. Equal
Housin g
Opportunity.

1-

Slop renting Buy 4 bed·
room foreclosure $15,000.
For listings 800· 39 t ·5228
ext 1709.

lM~~IES~
2 tieoroom , total electric,
1n Syracuse, new carpet ,
$4QO monthly plus deposit
&amp;. Utilities, (740)992·7680

Vinyl $5.95/yrd. Drive a Iii·
tie- Sa'lle alot. Mollohan
Carpet r 76 Vine St ..
Gallipolis, (740)446·7444.

16ft. Food Concession
Trailer. 4 sinks, new elec~
tric system, like new condi·
tion, new tires, $7,900.

(740)773-1712.
Abo'lle ground ~col 18'x4'
with Hayward pump and

Deere 7200 No Til vacu·
um· John Deere 7200 No
Toil plateless· white 5100
No
Till
air
planter.

( 7 40)44 6- 241 2
Carmichael Equipment.
Hay wagon $500; Pickup
disc $500; set of plows

' $75. Call (740)379-2351.
John Deer 650 tractor
w/60" ·belly mower, 1.040

hrs, $5,500, call (740)9492169
Load
TraiVload
Max
Trailers · ·
Goo Se necks / 0 u mps /
U-tilities.
Carmichael
Equipment
(740)446·
2412.
Pine treated fence post.

74Q-992-Q1 65..
N..ew 2BA apts. Wat son
Ad.
Rodney Pike/850
area. Reference/ Deposit
requ ired.
no
pets.
1740)446-127 1, (740)7091657.

NEW ELLM VIEW
TOWNHOUSEIAPTS
2 &amp; 38EDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp;
TOWNHOUSES
'ALL ELECTRIC
' CENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
'STOVE, REF
•DISHWASHER
'(3ARBAGE DISPOSAL
"WIND BLINDS

'WATER, SEWAGE &amp;
TRASH INCLUDED
PETS CONDITIONAL
(304)882-3017

Twm Ri\lers Tower is
accepting applications for
wa iting list for Hud-sub·
sized, 1· br, apartment.
call 675-6679 EHO

Boer Goata for aale
6 fuU bk&gt;od, 1 year old reg-istered males. Ready to
breed.
Championship

bloodlines. Call (740)245-

Butchered

$120

080. Call (740)256-1652.

• or

Kevin. Ike, or Ben Dough1y
011 -(740)696-6231' .
Reg. Angus bulls and
heifers 11 to 17 mo. Above

average EPD's. (740)4469856 or (740)446-7421

Showpigs
for
· sale.
Approx . 50 head of Feb.
Repa1red , New &amp; Rebuilt · .Showplgs. Deel's Club
Pigs
(740) -388-7447
In Stock. Call Ron Evans,
(740)-441-5460
, -600·537·9528.

JET
AERATICJr,I.MOTORS

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For Coricrete: Angle,
Channel. Flat Bar, Steel
Grati ng
For
Drains,
Dnveways &amp; Walkways.
L&amp;L Scrap Metals Open
Tuesday,
Monday,
Wednesday &amp; Friday, Sam4:30pm. Closed Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday.

(740)446-7300
Used
Beauty
Shop
Equipment. · 2 Stations
with Bowls and 2 hydraulic
'Chairs. Phone (304)882·

r
(740)367-7086.

(740)211Ei-5395.

Club
Pigs
Meigs
County Born Pigs. Call

3253

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments,
Very
SpacioUs, 2 Bedrooms.
CIA, 1 1/2 Bath, Adult
,.ool &amp; Baby Pool. Patio,
Start S425/Mo. No Pets,
Le ase
Plus
Security
Deposit
Requ1red.

Angus Butts, two X-Dreds,
4 heifers. Excellent, breed-ing. Slate Run Farm. See
www.slateruntarm .com ,

0485.

Middleport, N. 3rd A\le., 2
(304)675·6132
Br. furn ished Apt. , Dep. · (304)675-6963
and References . No Pets.

BUILDING
SIJI'I'LIES

Tobacco Plants for Sale.

Call

(740)446-7843 or

$500! Potice Impounds!
Cars from $500. For list~
ings 800·391 ~5227 ext .

r

1992
Chevy lumina,
90,000 actual miles. Very
good condition. {304)675·
5644
1997 Buick Park Avenue.
Leather, loaded, ell main·
tenance records, well
maintained. 116k, asking

(304)675-8089
1998 Plymouth Voyager

Gold_Retriever AKC pups.
ready to go, val checked.
Males $275, Females

$325, (740)256-1064
Lab puppies AKC, papers,
shots . wormed . Only 4

6463 or (740)645-6527.

$3,495 080 191!9 COrsica
$995 080 (304)576·2934
2000 Volkswagen Jetta, 5
speed, air condition , power
windows, mag wheels, low
profile tires 97,000 miles.

$8,600. 080. 740·9922478.
2003
Jeep.
Liberty,
limited , 22,000 miles,

$10,200 080. (740)2566200 or (740)256 - 1~18 .

~g==·;;~COIN SHOW

Mondays &amp; Wednesdays
· 5 p.m.
12 sessions
• $5 per session
Pleasant Valley Wellness
Center

(304) 675-7222
Fr~e sport water boHie

with sign· up

OPEN HOUSE
' to Celebrale Henry Milam's
Birthday Fri. April 21.
Cheshire Baptist Church
5·8 pm Stop by anytime!
It's a surprise!

Many

96 Olds Clara, \lery clean,
0 t Metro, less than 1OOk

call (304)674-0098 after
Spm
Save With fuel economy
cars, priced \O sell~
Clivaliers, Sunlir9s, GEO
Metros. Saturns. Hyundei,
Neon,
S-10
trucks,
Ranger. Others In stOCk. 3
months, 3,000 miles war·
ranty. Our low prices dis·
played on windshields .
Cook
Motora,
328
Jackson Pike, (740)446·

0103.

Gallipolis ,
Holiday Inn
Sunday,
. April23rd
9 am- 4 pm
Free Admission

Community Band Concert
Sunday, April 23, 2006 · 2:30 pm
MBSOnic Temple Building
Middleport
Refreshments Served
Sponsored by: Riverbend Arts Council

Racine Fire Department

Chicken BSQ
Sunday, April 23rd
· Serving at11 am

J

TkUCKS

FOR SALE

98 Dodge 1500 Quad cab.
4WD. loaded , $6,850
negotiable . (740)446· 1905
or 304 412 ~4645 .

SINs
FOR SALE
66 GMC Jimmy, 2.8 TB I. 4

s~ '7.. Seflr« s.~re..~
At 'RM~att41k ~lltu

New Construction
and Remocletlng
Flat Roofs A Specialty

HOME CREEK ENTERPRISES
740-992-7953
591-4641
416-1436

992-5682

Parking Lots • Ball Courts •. Private
Roads • Driveways • Stre.ets •
- Free Estimales Playgrounds

•

F r ( •• • F.: I

•
•

'

•I

\( )

1 •.J I•

(,

(740) 992· 2804

j !

)

• \

•

1996 Bombardia Seadoo.
2 stroke, 720cc, with trail·
er. Asking · $1 ,800. Call

(740)441-6959.

r

Vi\NS
FOR SALE

MaroacvnES' ·

4 WllliELERS
01

TIR 225 Yamaha .

Elect. start. runs good .

$1 .2so. 1740)367-n46.
1999 +iarley Da'llidson
Ultra Classic. load6d ,
Excellent
condition,
29,000 total miles. Price

$13,500.

Call 740-949-

2217 until 7 pm.
2001

Harley

Davidson

Superglide. $11 .500. Gall
(740)446-1414
or
_(740)709-1460.·
2001 Harley Davidson .
Dinawide Glide. Blue and
Sliver. Very nice, many
extr~s .
14,000/miles

$14,500 (304)675-1310
2001 HD Dyna Glide 88
twin tam , like new $9,200
OBO. _ Wind
sheild,

chrome. (740)245-5747.
2002
yellow ·
HarleyDa'llidson Classic.
Chromed up! 13,000mi
Detachab l e
windshielclfrear seat back·
reSt .
Garage Kept.

$15,900. 304·773·5379.
2003 Chevy Sil'llerado
2500 HD, ·~tended cab
long bed. Tow ing package
with lots ot ex.tras, 26,500
miles, excellent_conditlon.

' (740)256-5676, (740)441 554 t to reave message.
2004 Yamaha Zuma scoot·
er. 200 miles-Like new.

Call (740)448·1382.
2006 SofHail Standard.
V&amp;H
Pipe s,
T~Bars ,
Chromt Controls, Stage 1
Kit. 4100 Miles. Low profile
seat. Original Equipmerft
lncludeQ. Exc. COndition.

•

Homes- Dec.ks ,

1•

• 1t• 1 , !

I

,._,

1

(

H.l. Wrltasel ·
IRdSons

AI

All typss of roofing:
New or Repair
Seamless Gutler
Downspout

•

26 Opera by
Verdi
28 Rollover

amt.

4

+

A K 4 2
• 3

Wei t

1.,.

NorCh
1 NT

Pass

. 5 Whiskey
"
grain
aubj.
6 Wild plum
29 Throat
7 Warty
31 Theme
er)tters
33 Heroic talaa 8 Jr. naval
34 Sell off
officer
35 Bask In the ~ Rent out
sun
10 Newsroom
VIPa
:tB Uaa a
musclal
11 Hardly any
instrument 12 Thfong
39 Pete blond 16 ~chi
40 ' Seeka info
ch'uan
42 Ahal C2
18 Pillbox or
wds.)
bowler

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

Hardwood Cabinetry And Fui'IIHUre
MERCY ME, THAT SHOREL'{
WU~ ONE
!!

_,..,dui1Nrc...ekcabbt""""'.&lt;IO•
APRIL,
MAY AN'
JUNE !!

,.
,.
(

~~~:"Carpet Guy" '

'

•'

Ray Martin
Installer
Carpet

Ceramic Tile

Free

..

•

,..

_

tHE BORN LOSER
•I

:w\TI-l \1-\E. &lt;.L0:£1&gt;

Laminates .

740.517-3704
740.992.0650

' I

·. ';"w~'&lt; 1&gt;-li:..E. '&lt;OU W~T0\11-1(, T\J""l

Hardwood • Vinyl:.
Carpet Restretch ;

~""o"' t&gt;..CC.OU!'\T Of' f/IDM Tf\I~KS"'' P"S~E. TOLD 1'\E: l: fi-r&gt;.\/ C. TO
I W"'TC.f\ TOO 1'\UC.f\ TV ...

: cN&gt;not&lt;l~(, CJt.&lt;?

'

CELEBRITY CIPliER
by Luts·campos

I&lt;:E~t:&gt; t'&gt;ORE- 1

ir--~

Celebrity CIPher cryptog1ams ere created ((om QuotB!lons by tamous.people. past and present.
Ead! letter in !he cipOef stanos_lor anomer

Today's clue: I equals R

bener to establish dummy's club suit. But
that requires three entries: two for ruffs

"F

and one to cash the new club winner.
The secrel is to duck lhe lirsl round of

FGJY.GNFSG
EFCN

discard your diamc;md loser on the establishad club jack.

.

G

BIIG NATE
'

YOU'RE

W:lRRYIIIG TOO
MUCH A8oLlT CO!(TENT!
JUST STICK 1r,l SOME
K.A.NDOM WOii:I&gt;S ~ MRS.

02 Wildcal 28tt 5th wheel.
slide out, fiberglass sides,
$18,000. Excellenl condi1ion. clean . (740)245·9109,

C:.OOFREY HAS Tll READ
SO MANY OF THESE
POP.TS, ~HE WON'T EVEN

u:-

!II OTIC E;r:-'_ _

Coleman Tacoma 2000
Fold Out Camper, Two
King size slide out Bed , full
Kilchen (wlhot water &amp; 3
burner Stove ne\19r used),
Outside Shower {hot &amp;
cold
water),·
Air
Conditioner t3000 BTU.
;rv Antenna (wf power
booster), Double LP bot~
ties, Sattery &amp; Battery box,
Refrigerator 3-way, 12 foot
Awning, Spare Tire . used
\lery little, asking $4,995

Phpne (304 ) ~75- 1731
For rent camping trailer
sites, full hook • up 740·

992-5956 ..

And

••

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -

Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Guttera
Vlnyt Siding &amp; Painting
Patio and Porch O.Ck.._
WVD36725

V.C_ YOUNG Ill
gg2.fi/ 1s
Pomeroy 0•1 ,

i'

YC'il

~local

Hill's Self .
Storage
29670 Bashan Road

6RAMPA 5AV5
1=11/E MILES~
flE ALWAV'S WAILI\t:l,ll IN ZERO
"To 'SCI.IOOI. ..
l W'EA1rHE·~'

IN DEEP
SNOW~

UP~ILL I

CANCER (JUne 21 -July 22) - Your well intentioned resolve could go by the boards
if you lack th e-necessary discipline to carry
it ou t. Be prepared to figh t against
&lt;lve rindulgence or being far too extrava ·

u::o

ADVERTISE IN THIS
SPACE FOR $54 PER
MONTH

Racine, Ohio
45771

SUNSHINE CLUB

..

Kniden1ial • Commen:ial • General Contracting

Eslablished 1975. Call 24
Hrs. (740) ·446·0870,

740·949·2217

Rogers
Ba sement
Waterproofing.

Get A Jump
on
SAVINGS
·,

ROBERT
BISSEll
CQISTIIcnll
• New Homes

• Garages
• «;omplete

Shop
Classifieds!

PISCES (Fab. 20· March 20) -

FOR RENT- MEIGS COUNTY

VIews that you express could be
more offensive to your audience than you
first realize. If you sense what you say
anle.gonlzes others, tone down your mes·
sage Immediately.

ARIES (Moren 21 -Aprll1 9)'- 11 mlghl no1

Scorpion Tractors.
"Taki11g The Sting. Out Of
Hard Work!"

Mid -Si ze 4Wheel Drive Tractor
.w1th
'
30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

740-992-1671

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985·3301

Some

stront;~

1-4 BR Houses &amp; Apts.
1 Luxury- Also HUD
Also Commercial Space
740-416-5547

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

be cyn ica l regarding a finanda't proposal
brough t to you by another. This is parl icu·
larly true it it should deal with sometliing
about wh ich you're tot~ ly unlamiliar_
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Fel:l. 19) - Be cau ·
tious 1n your competitive irnoNements.
especially thos e that pertain to your work
o r career. Yo u may wi n. Out if it's by poo r
tactics. yo'u'll lose all support In th e futu re.

PRE'fl'&amp;,&gt; 1MPRE$51VE
51GN, EH?

Now Available At

LZG

NWY

1:11 wise to r~C~uest a favor of a friend . even
If th is person owes you for a paat la\lor.
S/he may comply with your request, Out
Jnedvertently do mort hlrm than good .

G.RIZZWELLS

SOUP TO NUTZ
lEI~ ~EE

TilE~

·mLA t:roE'5
.)

LZIIHG

ARNWYI

I

,.

I

I:

1 1

'p ul N N f

13

.

.

I; I
•

I
.

.

t.Cl

j·)

o
I

Z0 TA P

~
~

'-..l--.i.......l-..1-....1

·•He 's a hard person to convince,"
a colleague remarked

about

a neW

1

N y WR [T
'i

8

I

employee. ."He 's the type that will
go around touching -- - --.•·

e

~OmO ieft the· C ~ udd e Cu01ed
ov li lhn; 1r. the mtSSln; word1

you cieY•Ioa irDm step Ng. 3 ~•tow.

i'R;I-.J T NUM!E RED
~~PE P. ;- IN SOUt- ~f S

I'

12

I

i"

I' i' i'

UNS: &lt;• MB
. L:· fORI
~t"~~'N(P

·SCRAML.e'I'S AHSWI!RS ~110
Loudly - Obese - Brown- Nimble - WISDOM
The ;tudcnrs w~ disappointed in their gMeS. The ·
proiessorrespondcd, "Disillusionmo:m is the ftiSt uue
Step toward real WISDOM."

ARLO &amp; JANIS
ft-10' If£&gt; 5Af( TO~'(.
rr.~E.Y'RHl\fl~crr

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - ll's OK 10

•
BARFIELD

Advertise
in this
space
for
'54 per
month

-

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No\1. 22) - There may
be ce rtain things you want to do that don't
Interest your loved ones - do not impose
your activities· on them . Make you r pitch,
but, if outvoted, go along with the clan
SAGITIAAIUS (Nov. 23-09c. 21) - Yo u're
usually a self· starrer, but Ieday you might
require a push lrom others. However, If it
takes tnem a .while to get you going. too
rriuch valuable time will De lost.

1

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFII'IG

ZGM

SRID: · F· N FD

sap.

r~o~~· '
Unconditional
lifetime
guarantea.. Local refer ences
fu i niched .

.

(July 23-Aug. 22) - Trying to wrap up
an tmportant deal in a toO eager fashion
will turn out to be a grave mistake. Be.,
patient. and take adequate time to get all
your ducks In order lirst.
VIRGO (Au g. 23·Sept. 22) - If you 're try·
ing to impre ss some associates, don't
monopolize the conwrsation with,. topics
that are on ly of interest to yo u. You'll fall
flat,' unless you give others a -ctlance to
talk.
LIBRA {Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Wheeler--dealer tact ics may temporari ly impress others,
t&gt;ut it you're too eX1ra\laganl or loose with
your resou rces. you will end up Qei ng the

· CornerStone
Construction
· Paiming • Doors • Windows • Decks
• Siding • Roo fing • Room Addilion s • RemodcUng
WV 038H2
• Plumbing • Eleclrical 740-317..0
OH 38244
• Accou slic Ceiling
740·33~12'

I·

unwiSe. impulSive promise 10 do somelhlng
for anolher lhal you're really no1 properly
equipped to handle. You'll be ridiculed.

g'nt.

-.

II

B• careful

siva mood could impel you to make an

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

fxi-'er&lt;"" ,.

EST."

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Your expen-

Free

New Garage~

SC

S0 PEP0

lively, which will enable you to benefit from
what they offer.

PJ:ANUTS

YOUNG'S

SC

-...&lt;JIIrlhdlrfy:

In the year ahead, several unrelal~ Inter·
ests may stan blending together in ways
that will pro\le to be quite advantageous. It
wi!l be your ability to deal with them collec·

counUess boxes of tea for rwo
and two Cor tea, me for you
and you for me, tea for two
and me for you alone Into the
depths of Bpston H~ rbor .

Tree Service
• Bucket Truck

FG

AstroGraph

that you do not Qel yourself in the middle of
a misunderstanding between two lriends.
No matter which person's side yo u take,
the other will see you as a villain in !he
Issue.

Top • RemoVGI • Trim
• St1111p Grlndlng

DAYZDRIY

PREVIOUS SOLUTiON - "He was a giant among serts in the publishrng
world .. ." - LA. Times columnist AI Martinez, ol Olis Chandler

Frido~April21,2006
By Bernice B - 010.1

thE!n, under cpver of

darlr.nen, the colonists lhrew

\..&lt;-

JONES'

GS

play a club to dummy's ace, ruff a dub,

••

1543.

WZJY

8 W S T Y D 0 F D Y 0 'L R D F H . F N F D G S

clubs.You ruff the second heart, draw twO
rou nds of trumps with honors in hand,
cross to the spade queen , ruff a club,

Pontoon Boat. (740)446·

Remodeling

54 Furry friend •

fruits

How would you play to bring home six
spedes? Wesi leads lhe hearl queen.
South's two-diamond rebid is New Minor
Forcing, an artificial Inquiry promising at
leasi game-invitational values . When
North shows three-oard spade support,
Soulh launche.s Roman Key Card
Blackwood , learning thai his partner has
the trump queen and two key car9s (two

3. or the defender ~with lour diamonds has
the long trump(s) . Here: !hat linelails. It is

••"
••

Room Additions &amp;

37 Tropical

rau,:~.·

·

You couig draw lwo rounds ol !rumps,
!hen play on diamqnds, gening home
when spades are 2-2. or diamonds are :J.

Call

69 Air StreafTI Camper, 31
Feet, Sleeps 4. Priced on
inspection
40779
Hollow
Rd.,
Grueser
Pomeroy, OH

henna

aces or the trump king and one ac;e)

Free Measurements "' )

David Lewis

CARPENTER
SERVICE

!heater
53

weak.

Jet Ski with trailer, 2
seater, 90hp, yellow . &amp;
white. NAOA $3,270 ask·

9112 .

plexus
48 Big ditch
49 lamb's
allaa
50 H)bemate
51 Mlochlo- · : '
VOUI Child - '
52 Japaneoe

establish winners !rom a long suit estab-

26 Years Experience

2000 Coa chman PrOspera
36'. 5th wheel, three slide·
Outs,
tully
loaded,
garaged, excellenl condition . Mason ., 30.4· 773-

43 Astronout'a
. base
45 "Vogue"
rlvaf
47 Solar

lishes beyond doubl thai his iechnique is

(740) 949·1405
""

(740)992-Q167

cousin
41 Brake pada :

A playwright who needs the aclors to
shout and use bad language lor dramalic
effect usually Is no1 doing a good job. A
bridge player who does not know how to

FREE
ESTIMATES

sleeps 4 wilh ale &amp; heat,
sink &amp; sto\le, $1500,

ment

4 Gnomes

38 Cobra

Michel de Montalgne, who died in t 592,
wrole, "He who eslablishes his argument
by noise and command: shows that his

1997 Yamaha Wave 'runner

r:~~~l
trait ~

•

lead a diamond to 1he board's k1ng, and

$7,150. (740)441·5540.

Doo Spi with

23 lntereat

reason is weak .~

740-992-6971

89
Honda
Goldwing
whrailer. 6cyl ., 45 ,000
miJes, \lery good shape,
well maintained, cover,
extra lights and chrome,

er, $1 500, (740)992-01 67

South
. A K J 9 ll 5

20 Wind
catchers
21 From
Kilkenny
22 Senseless
23 lmmalure
• butter1iles
24 Jingle
25 Beat medicine
27 FHI's
boylrlend ·
29 Japanese
clog
30 Telepathy
32 Eggs, to
Ovid
34 Apply

'

.. I

(740)256-1002

control

To establish,
lose early

(740 ) 5 17-6883

6673 after 5:00PM.

'93 Sea

F;AANK &amp; EARNEST

..

nies
1 f

19 Veer out of

K7

•

1 Volcanic
emission
2 Hoople ol
the comics
3 Flneaadl·

Bernard~

Opening lead ' • Q

Driveways~ Equipment..Degreasing ~ Boats~ ·

ki

17 George

. ,. J 1097

Pass

1740)992-0496

$15,000 firm. 740·709·

18'3" Stralos 150 hp. Ju~t
rebuiH
$1 2,500.
can

•

Pa~ s ·

(740 )992.!4100

16' Flagstaff by Cobra,

740 245-5934.

8 3
Q 10 9 4

Pass

1740)441 -7632.

1996 Mercury Villager mini
· van , leather, loaded, ~en
maintained, new ti res,
1 10k, asking S4,000.

•

South

(740)388-0570.·

ing 52,500 080
(304)895-3840

. K 8 6 5 32

Pass

Call (740)256-1517.
Bright blue 1998 Dodge
ext. caD 360 va , 4x4, •
95,000 miles. Looks &amp;
runs great! $9,500 firm .

·•

Chud( Wolfe/Mgr.

I:U.:lJrua!iL!::'l!:'l!il!:ll!ii::'U:lEUil!i t.:

9944.

Q J 10 9

Dealer : North
Vulnerable: East-West

OvuJOyears
experience
Ed Dill/owner

10x10x10x20
992·3194
or 992·6635

2268

•

1'

J e ff St ct h e m · Ow ner

591-4348

863 6.000 miles, $7,800.
(740)441 -5282, (740)388-

East
• 2

304-675·2457

Cl
lllll
IIIIIIITIIl

T

Middleport, OH

"Middleport's only
Self-Storage"

West
• 10 7.

•

Trimming · Aeration~ Campers- Trucks - DeckFeniliz~tion · planting. staining or painting
~
Mulching
Special rates for
~·

97 Beech Street

r

_ 98 Ford Explorer V6 sporl
4WO, 114,000 ml, 4.000.

'
MONTY

Mowing. Tree

MANlEY'S
SElf STORAGE

1995 t 6 112 ft. Hydro sport
4x4
Bass boat with 90 horse·
FOR SALE
·. power Johnson motor,
' stainless
steel
prop,
'
·1995 F150 4x4 new mud
trolling motOr, 2 batteries,
tires &amp; exhaust $5,300
2 depth finders, in eXeatabout
110,000, 2005
tent condition and garage
Harley DavidSon Sportster. kepi tor $6,000, (740)992-

$29.500 (304)576-2668

• SEAL COATING
• PATCHING

24hr Emergency
Sen ice
l.icensed &amp; Insured

Appt. to submit sealed bid
to Estate.

2005 Dodge 3500 Quad
Cab long Bed, 4JC4 diesel.
aft lift. loaded, DVD

• Q.'

LAWN CARE

3 miles west of
Pomeroy, OH
on State Rt. 124

04·20.06

Q 43
A 7

.AJ8 ;2

POWER WASHING :

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair

992·7770, M-F, 9-5 lor

miles, 4•4 . $11,900 080.
(740)256-6200
or
(740)256·1618.

•
•

TRI-STHH mOBILE POWER WASH
AnD LAWn CARE

ROGER HYSELL
GfiRfiGE

speed, P/S, AM Radio, Tilt,
63559 miles . Call 740·

2003
Jeep
Grand
Cherokee Larado, 59,000

North

and Excavation

Opti ons.

miles. $14 ,300 080 740992-2476.

44 Tough fiber
48 Ready to
1 Bright beam
fight
6 Slone
51 Arch
monument
support
11 Kin
54 Bayou
12 Like Dolly
dweller
tho sheep
55 Gourme1
13 Develop
mushrooms • P.m't'Eiiiiiimi
slowly
56 Achieve
14 Cooke In
57 Cycle part
embers
58 Frat letter
15 Squander
16 Hoving
DOWN
digits

"/ I

Ganaral ConatncUon

080.
or

2004 Ford Mustang . V6
automatic air condition ,
cruise, power windoWs.
and seat.
6 disc CD
Player. New tires 45,000

NEA Cronword Puzzle

Phillip
Alder

2004 Buick Cenlury Low
Miles

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87 .

ACROSS

interior, 26,000

miles, $1 0, 900
(740)256·6200
(740)256-1618.

3901

Block. brick, sewer pipes,
wtn'dows, lintels, etc.
Claude
Winters,
Rio
$4,600. (740)245-5934.
Grande, OH Ca11740·245· .
1997 Chrysler Sebring JX,
·5121.
Convertible. 4 Cyl. $2,400

WEEKLY AVAILABLE
left. $1 oo (304)675-7652
Inc l u des
Refr igerato r/Microwave
Labrador Retrievers AKC
From $17 5 To $250 · registered.· Different color,
College Hill Motel Call ' ages &amp; price. {740)256·

(740)245-5326

row Corn ' Pianters: John

filler. (740)256-1141 .
hog,

18ather

www.mydailysentinel.com

BRIDGE

2003 Mazda Tribute 4x4 ,

2158

Working red GE cook·
4734.
·$75:
working
s tove ,
Kenmore dryer $75;• 2
whirlpopl washer (to use
,for _parhts) $50 each. (740)441 -8959.
34th Annual BentleY Pig
Sale. Friday, April 21st ..
7:30pm Fayette County
Fairgrounds, Washington
Court House, OH. Selling
Buy or Sell. Riverine
175 head of barrows and
Antiques, 1124 EaSt Main
gilts. Consigners: Roger
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy,
Bentley &amp; !emily, leroy
740·992·2526.
Russ
Larrick &amp; family. (937)584Moore, owner.
2396.

Electrk: Hospital Bed $800
price neg .
ln'llocare
Scoo.ter $1 ,000 like new.

requir ed . (304 )675~23 19

SA 7S· 4BR, 1 bath homegarage. basement . river
access. Propane heat,
window AJC. $650/mo"nth
rent- $650 sec. dep .. you
pay utilities. A\lai!able 1st
April. Call
week in
(740)446·36 44 for an
application.

Used Furniture Store . 130
Sulavilte Pike. Electric/ gas
range, bunkbeds, chests,
dinettes , couches, used
manresses. Gra\le monuments.
(740)4,46-4782,,
Gallipolis, OH. Hrs. 11·3
(M· F) Sat. Call first.

(749)245·9245, (740)367·
0624.

loss Your Gain. 74D--742·

4
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repair-675-7388. For sale.
re ·co nditioned automatic
washers &amp; dryers, refrlger·
ators. gas and electric
ranges. air cond itioners,
and wringer washers. Will
do repairs on major brands
in shop or at your home.

2001 Blazer LT 4K4 ,
91 ,OOOml, loaded, New
Goodyears,
Onstar,
Leather, All Power, $7 ,500.

Asking Pay-OH OBO. Our

$4.00 each. Call (740)446-

CONVENIENTLY LOCATED &amp; AFFORDABLE!

(740)446·3344 TDD
800·750·0750.

,\ l l \l"ol 41! h.

'

0031 or 304-882-3449.
1BR house- 11 Garfiela
Ave .
Ga'llipoli s. S350
mdnth. Call tor t1"ela ils

Welded

Thursday, April 20, 2006
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· · Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

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.Pride 2006: Progress
Along the River inside
todays Sentinel

Thursday, April

·-

Suburban Columbus
restaurant wins best
bathroom awaro, AS

20, 2006

·'

••

In rehearsal
•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o &lt; I ~TS • \ ol. :;:;. :\o. •-:;
.

..

Band of Flight Concert .Band.
tn concert1at Rio April29.

•
Kevin Kellr/i&gt;hoto

~n in rehearsal for the upcoming production of "Arsenic and Old Lace- With a Twist" l&gt;y the River Valley High School Drama

1:5epartment are, from left, Dyanna Eggleton (who plays Aunt Al&gt;by), Kari ,McFann (Aunt Martha) and Matt Sm1th (Mr. Gibbs). The
classic 1940s farce, which has been contemporized under the direction of Cynthia Graham and her assistant, Josie Bapst, will
~performed at 8 p.m. Friday, April 28 at the Ariel-Dater Performing Arts Centre. Tickets are $6 per person and can be obtained
by-contacting Mrs. Bapst at 367-7377.

Garden Festival set Saturday at state center
native to West Virginia. In
addition; lunches provided by
K-Mac Mills of Mount Nebo
will be available for purchase
from II a.m. until 2 p.m ..
Concurrent workshop topics include "Why We Garden:
One
with
Becoming
Everything," Keeping Your
Trees and Shrubs Alive,"
"Healing Thyme: Civil War
Plants,
Potions,
and
Poultices," "Environmental
Friendly
Gardening ,"
Growing Shitake Mushrooms
and Medicinal Mushrooms
and
Wild
Crafting
Mushrooms," and "Attracting
Birds and Butterflies to West
Virginia Gardens."
In addition, a special session
with Tara Dillard, garden
lifestyle designer from Stone
Mountain, Ga., will take place
from 12:30 to I :30 p.m. She
wi~l be speaking about two of

: :CHARLESTON, W.Va.
Green thumbs will be plentiful on Saturday, April 22,
When the West Virginia
'Division of Culture and
History presents a Garden
Festival from 9:30 a.m. to
3:30 p.m. at the ·Cultural
. Center,
State
Capitol
Complex in Charleston.
' This year inarks the divi·sion's lOth day-long celebration of the growing season
with workshops, exhibitors
and demonstrations. All activ~ties .. located on the plaza
deck and in the Great Hall of
the Cultural Center, are free
aild open .to the public.
·· Gardeners,
agricultural
e1lperts, herbalists, organic
gardeners, landscape designers, lawn and garden suppliers
ahd others will be on hand to
answer questions and sell
!heir wares, including plants

her books: "The Garden View:
· for
Beautiful
Designs
Landscapes" and "Beautiful by.
Design: Stunning Blueprints
for Harmonious Gardens."
Dillard holds degrees in
industrial engineering and
horticulture ·and is a speaker,
designer and national award.winning author. She has hosted her own shoW on CBS-TV,
,"Better .Gardening Show,"
served as NBC-TV's garden
expert on "Peachtree Morning
Live," was co-host of PBSTV's "Georgia Gardener" and
has also been heard on radio.
Dillard teaches horticulture
at the Atlanta Botanical
Garden
and · Gwinnett
Technical College and lectures across the southeast. Her
lecture will close with a book
signing.
Dillard's books feature
beautiful photographs with

(304) 558-0162.

.

•

Sunday at noon. Williams is a · 2 p.m. - Cherry Ridge
foqner BHCC student.
Band.
The entertainment schedule
3 p.m. - Joey Wilcoxon.
4 p.m. - Tom Neal and
at Expo is as follows:
Saturday
Randy Simmering.
Noon - Cee Cee Tench.
The Expo will be held each
l p.m. - Jenny Dyer.
day from noon until 5 p.m. on
2 p.m. - Pam Hager &amp; . the BHCC campus.
Many · activities
are
Friends.
including
Big Bend planned,
3 p.m. business/industry exhibits,
Cloggers.
4 p.m. - Buckeye Hills vendor display of services, a
Idol Final.
craft show, NASCAR flag
· Sunday
room, antique tractor show,
Noon Paul . "Bub" classic car show on Sunday,
greenhouse sales, lawn and
Williams.
I p.ni. - Miller Family.
garden equipment demon-

Silent classics
.will have music

strations, health care checks,
games for children, child care
NELSONVILLE - Silent Movie Night at the historic
services, local · music each Stuart's Opera House in Nelsonville 8 p.m. Friday will feaday and food sales. ·
ture live piano accompaniment by Joel Forrester.
In addition, secondary and
The evening will feature piano-great Forrester playing to the
postsecondary career-techni- classic silent films "Greed" (1924) by Erich von Stroheim and
cal programs can be visiited. 1j ''The Mascot" (1934) by Wladyslaw Starewicz.
Career· center staff will be
Tickets afe $8 and $6 for students with an 10 and seniors .
available to answer questions For more information call (740) 753-1924 or on the web at
·
and provide program demon- www.stuartsoperilhouse.org.
strattons.
The student-built modular
home will be on display.
Numerous prizes will be
given away daily. More infor~
mation on Expo is available
by calling 245-5334.
Meadows, Ken Turley, Jim
Brown, Bill Oshe, Fre4
Millboro, Bob Harrison, Don
Shaw and a guest.
Admission is $5. For inforGALLIPOLIS
This
year, the French Art Colony's mation, call Dave McCoy at
annual international exhibit (866) 295-7942 or Don
Meml&gt;ers of the Ariel Board ilre seen
the
Caribbean McCoy at (7,40) 682-6903.
inspecting the restoration work going on in features
the ballroom of the Ariel-Ann Carsofl Dater Islands from April 5-30.
Stop
-and
learn
about
the
Performing Arts Centre. The work is part
of the current construction in preparation islands' shared ancestry, colonial past, tourism, culture and
for the grand re-dedication of the facility
on Saturday, April 22, which is 110 years music. Call (740) 446-3834
to schedule a school tour
BARBOURSVILLE ;
from the original dedication. The re-dedica- (scheduled groups will make
W.Va.
- Need to make a few
tion events include a street s ide re-dedica- an island craft and get a taste
changes to your home or gar;
tion ceremony on Second Avenue before a of island food).
. . den? The Huntington Mall
concert l&gt;y the Ohio Valley Symphony feaThe exhibit is sponsored by can help by letting its custuring internationally known pianist Cecile · the Ohio Arts Council tomers find what they may be
Licad .. The work includes new energy effi- ·1nfoCision Management and looking for.
.
cient windows , plaster repair and painting, the Gallipolis Kiwanis Club.
The mall will host a
a new entrance that is handicapped accCreative Promotions Home
cessible and a new marquee. Sunday will
and Garden School April 21!&gt;ring a Beach Party to Gallipolis when Phil
23 during mall hours .
Dirt &amp; the Dozers appear at 3 p.m . Tickets
The show ill feature various ·
for both days are still available l&gt;y calling
vendors from th·e Tri-State
the Ariel-Dater box office at 740-446-ARTS
KANAUGA - A bluegrass area.
(2787). Ariel-Dater Hall representatives
jamboree will be held
Mall hours are lO a.m.-9
are, from left, Executive Director Joe
Saturday at 7 p.m. . at the p.m. Monpay through Saturday
Wright, l&gt;oard member India Cullen, volun- AM VETS Lodge featuring and noon-6 p.m. Sunday.
teer Joe Snyder, and board memt&gt;ers Jeff the Sounds of Bluegrass.
For more information, call
· Fowler and Joyce Anderson.
Callers are Don McCoy, the mall office at (304) 733Submitted plloto
Dale Delaney,
Howard .. 0492 .

Y TO RE-DEDICATE .

at

•

department around 9:25 a.m.
Proffitt said witnesses at
McDonalds had noticed the
POMEROY
Moses boy lingering in and around the
may've been 'found in the restaurant two 'hours earlier
bulrushes hut yesterday before customers reported him
morning a nine-year old sleeping under the shrubbery.
Belpre boy was found unatThe boy was then taken to
tended and sleeping on mulch Meigs Co11nty Juvenile
under the shrubbery in Probate Court until Meigs
McDonalds parking lot. ,
County Children's Services
According to Pomeroy workers arrived to .access
Chief of Police Mark E. the situation.
Proffitt McDonalds' cus- . In the meantime the boy's
tomers reported the .sleeping father, Doug Copeland, 45,
child to \)1anagement. who Belpre, arrived at McDonalds
then brought the boy inside to pick up his son around
the restaurant and called his I 0:05 a.m. according to
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

•

Pomeroy dispatcher Heather
Wi se. Wi se said Copeland
then arrived at the police
department to claim hi s son
shortly afterward .
Prottitt said Copeland was
openly belligerent to Wi se
and
made
threatening
remarks while Proffitt was en
route to the police department along with Middleport
Chief of Police Bruce Swift
who assisted in the case.
Proffitt described Copeland
as b&amp;ing irate and di sorderly
and he was placed under
arrest and charged with chi ld
endangerment, a tirst degree

misdemeanor, and persistent tion out of proportion.
disorderly conduct. He later
I;'roffitt said he obviously
posted bond.
did not feel the same and he
Proffitt said Copeland ver- takes every call he gets seribally admitted he dropped off ously but admitted, "In my
his son at McDonalds yester- years as a police officer I'd
day morning, gave the child never gotten a call like that."
some money fo·r food, and
Proffitt
also , praised
left to deliver a tractor trailer Mcnonalds' staff and cusload of stone to Belpre. After tomers for being observant
the load was' delivered he and contacting his department.
returned for his son on! y to
As for the boy. he was
find him gone.
released into the custody of
Proffitt was not sure how his mother and the case has •
long the boy had been on his now been handed over to the
own at the restaurant and he Washington
County
said Copeland felt the depart- Department
of Human
ment was blowing the situa- Services for review.

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MVDAI LYSENTI NEL. COM

INSIDE
• Search is on for
"'"' a ·" . ....
prime minister for Iraq
after ai-Jaafari agrees to
new vote. See Page A2
• DAR honors members
·
·
.
Cha..,.. -lch/pllotO
Sue
Hager
is
enrolled
in
her
first
painting
class
under
Rhojean
McClure.
in!?tructor. Here she
for 50 years of service.
works on a landscape.
See Page A3
• Hayman promoted
With ITT l.ndustries.
.
.
See Page A3
• 5 Kan. students
arrested in alleged
shooting plot on
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
Cost is $40 a month for 10 hours of instruc· HOEFUCH®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Columbine anniversary.
tion and the classes are structured for older
teens.and adult beginner and intermediate levSee Page AS
MIDDLEPORT - . Art classes for beginner els. Beginners with no painting experience
• Grief support group ·
to advanced students are being offered by will need to attend a 30-minute orientation
at O'Bieness meeting.
'Artist Rhojean McCI~re at the Riverbend session prior to their first class, McClure said .
Arts Council on an ongoing basis to encourSee Page A5
Registrations will be held every fcur weeks
age residents to "get out of the house and into for a different session. Studenls are to supply
Gospel accor'ding
some art."
their own paint and brushes. Canvas or other
to Judas. See Page A&amp;
A new feature this year which started in surfaces on which to paint are to be purchased
February is ongoing painting_ classes in from the instructor. As wfth all art cl asses
• A Hunger For More.
acrylic
. They are held every Monday through held by McClure, 20 percent of the proceeds
See Page A&amp;
November with different projects every four .
of the Riverbend Arts Counci!.
• Concert planned.
weeks. The projects .feature landscapes, flo- go in support
.
.
See Page A&amp;
rats and still life ·pieces.
Pkt•se "- Arts, AS
~

POMEROY -·
Frances
Strickland, wife of U.S. Rep.
Ted Strickland, D-Lisbon ,
will be the keynote speaker at
the
Meigs
County
Democratic Party's annual
Jefferson/Jackson Dinner on
Saturday.
Her husband · is the
Democratic frontrunner in the
race for Ohio Governor, and
has served Meigs Co~nty in
Congress for six terms.
The dinner will begin with a
social hour at 5 p.m. at the
Riverbend Arts Council in
downtown Middleport. Dinner
. will oo:seJ1i!d at 6 p.m.
Stricl&lt;:li!n.d was born in
Sihipsbrtville, Ky., where she
gre}V up on a dairy farm in a
. strong Democratic, Methodist
family. She attended Murray '

State
University,
and
the
University of
Colorado, and
earned a doc.
tora,te in educational psyFrances
chology at the
Strickland University of
Kentucky.
The Stricklands ftrst met
in 1974 at the University of
Kentucky,
where
they
shared . a small office while
working toward psychology
doctoral degrees. After graduation, she devoted herself
to a career as an educational
psychologist.
She . .. has
authored a widely-used
screening rest fo~, ~indergarten-age children. · ·
Tickets for the dinner are
$15 and are available at the
door.

Arts Council offers
something for everyone

• The

B~an

Day of ~ayer May 4

l

I

i•

.. .,,. .

Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

I

-~ ,

-onPaceAB

INDEX
2 SllCTJONS -

16 PAGES

'Calendars

A:3

Classifieds

Bs-6

Comics

B7

Dear Abby

A:3

Editorials

A4
A6-7

Faith • Values
Movies
NASCAR
,Sports
Weather

As
I
B3
t
.
B Sectwn

•

AB

@ 'a oo6 Ohio Valley PubUshinx Cq ..

·,

____.._

~-

...

J. Roed/plloto

Meigs County Commissioners Jim Sheets and Mick Davenport
signed a proclamation declaring May 4 National Day of Prayer
in Meigs County. Also pictured are Coordinator Brenda
Barnhart, Eugene &lt;!nd Linda Hoalcraft, Mars Kitchen, Debi
Brockert and Gladys Cumings, all members of the local
National Day of Prayer committee.

Commissioners proclaint

EHSProm

WEATHER

Caribbean on
display at FAC

AMVETS host
jamboree .

.

Frances Strickland named
DeltlS' keynote speaker

Entertainment Briefs

Home, Garden
Show slated

•

• Lady Eagles fall to
Fed Hock. See Page 81

ensemble within the 'Band of
Flight. The concert band,
under the direction of Lt.
David A. Alpar, J?erforms a
diverse repertoire which
includes original band compositions and orchestral tJ:anscriptions, popular Broadway ··
and show tunes, marches and
_patriotic selections.
The group supports the
morale, welfare and recreational aspects &lt;1f military
life, performs for military and
civilian dignitaries, and
appears in civic events in support of the Air Force Materiel
Command's
commnunity
relations program.
In December 1997, the concert band was selected by the
John Philip Sousa Foundation
to receive the Col. George .S.
Howard Citation of Musical
Excellence
for Military
Concert Bands. This is the
second time the Band of Flight
Concert Band has received
this prestigious award.

text describing how to recreate the image. "Garden View"
explains · how to make -the
most use of limited space, and
how to plan the garden for
viewing not just from the garden but froni inside the home.
"Beautiful by Design" discusses focal points that capture the eye, how to turn every
area into a habitat for beauty
while making a strong
impressioJJ, and how to maintain beautiful plants and flowers all year long.
There also will be a
Children's
Gardening
Workshop with Melissa
Dem'lison, master gardener
from Clem, on the Cultural
Ce.nter plaza from 11 a.m.
Submitted phot'!
until I p.m.
·
A tense moment is seen in the epic 1924 film "Greed," which
For more information about will be shown with piano accompaniment by Joel Forrester at
the Garden Festival or other Stuart's Opera House in ~elsonville this Friday at 8 p.m . ·
programs of the division, call

Local entertainers- to headline
Buckeye Hills Expo
.
. RIO GRANDE - Joey
Wilcoxon will be the featured entertainment at the
Buckeye Hills Career Center
Expo set for this Saturday
:and Sunday.
·· Wilcoxon has performed at
various events around the tristate area. He is a regular 9n
the Southern Ohio Opry and
-was recently voted as
~·Entertainer of the Year" for
the state of Ohio . by the
Buckeye Country Music
Association.
: Paul "Bub" Williams will
also be performing on

RIO GRANDE - The
United States Air Force ·sand ·.
of Flight Concert Band will
present a free public concert
at 8 p.ni . Saturday, April29 in
the Fine and Performing Arts
Cehter ~f the University of
Rio Grande/Rio Gninde
Community College.
The band's performance is
one of the events scheduled
for the Ohio Lions District
13-J Convention to be held in
Gallipolis and Rio Grande
Friday, April 28 through ·
Sunday, April 30.
Free tickets for the concert
are available at the Gallipolis
Daiy Tribune, Tawney's
Studio, the Ariel-Dater
Performing Arts Centre, Ohio
Valley . Bank, lnfoCision
Management Corp. and the
University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community College.
The 45-member Band of
Flight Concert Band, based 'at
Wright Patterson Air Force
Base, js the largest single

.

Unattended child found sleeping in the shrubs at McDonalds

·. SPORTS
U.S.
Air Force Band of Flight Concert Band
.

""" · "'~clail~"· ntind .w m

I'RI DA'. \I'RII. :!I, 2006

...

POMEROY Meigs
County Commissioners pro·claimed May 4 National
Day of Prayer in Mei gs
Cari Stegar,
County,
and have authorized
Brittni Hensley .
the ·use. of the courthouse
and Brittany
step
s for a co mmunit y
Roush a·re candiprayer
service that day .
dates for prom
Brenda B;trnhart. National
queen at
Day
of Prayer Coordinator.
Eastern High
and
members
of the cou nty 's
School on
National Day of Prayer
Saturday, and
Committee,
met with com Shawn Reed,
missioners at Thursday's regBryce Hon aker,
ular meeting to outline plan&gt;
and Eric Roush
f0r _a weeklong prayer c:clc are king candibration to end with the comdates . The prom munity-wide service.
will be held at
Barnhart noted that Meigs
the Lazy T Royal County's observance of the
Chaparral
National Day of Prayer is
Resort.
see'n as one of the largest in
B~an J. Reed/ photo
the state because of the vari e,ty of events held each year
and the number of Christian;
who participate.
The observance will begin
with a prayer circle around
· the court-house at 3 p.m. on
April 30. dedicated to prayer
for county officials and their

employees. Volunteers will
read from the Bible and offer
prayer&lt; 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.,
from the gazebo on the
Pomeroy parking Jot, beginning at 4 p.m. on Apiil 30 and
cominuing through .May 4.
A catered Day of Prayer
breakfast at 7:30a.m. on May
4 will be hosted by Rejoicing
Life Church. and the observance will end wit){ a concert
of prayer at 7 p.m. at Ash
Street Church, sponsored by
Middleport · Minis~erial
Association.
The community prayer service ut the courthouse steps
. will begin al II :30 a.m. on
May -+. and will include
prayers fo~ elected officials at
the local , slate and national
levels. and prayers for th"
country.
For the first time , loFal
churches are asked to spen&lt;l
15 minutes reading the Bible
on April 30. The committee i~
looJ-mg for 365 people to
read di fferem portions of the
Bible. allowing for the com-.
munity to read the entire
Bible in 15 n1inutes. .

Pie•'•

s~

Pr8yer, AS

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