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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March 30, 2005·

www .mydailysentinel.com
'

NBA

Cincinnati Reds Baseball

Freel valuable in,role Cavs sink Clippers, 94-84he'd rather relinquish
"-It's hard as a .
utility player. I
. • J
Fr~~~~r~Y:hi~,:~,-e, Ryan cou ld. def rmte y
Moved to the outfield for
contribute if I
the
timeinfielder
in Class made
A ba ll.a played everydav,.
the first
speedy
1
sensational di ving catch that
but
at
thiS
time
turned heads. The next day:
he made another.
in the season I'm
He had no idea it was a
t , t be
preview of how he'd make it nO g01ng . 0
to the major leagues.
. playing as much.
Freel, 29, e merged last
W. e'II see,,
season as one of the maJ·Of
BY JOE KAY

Associated Press

The setbacks left him
resigned to the ro le he fiiJ.s
so well but wishes on someone else . Teams need reliable
res·erve . players. but ·Freel
would rat her not gertrapped
in that niche.
1
"It' s hard as a utt·1·lly Pay-

er.'' he said. "I could definitely contribute if I played
·everyday. bu t at this time in
the season I' m not go ing to
be playi ng as much. We' ll
see. It 's kino of hard to set
·those ~xpectut ion s and goa ls
h
'
· ·
h
W , .en you re Slttmg on t e
bench. "
leagues' most versatile players, handling five positions
- Cin,cin~ati's Ryan Freel
Free l got so much playing
for the Cincinnati Reds. He
time last season because of
led the t~am in steals, triples, in nine gan\es for Toron to at injurie s and the lack of a
infield hits and a number of the stan of that season. then depe nuable third baseman .
other categories, becof[li ng a got sent back to Triple-A. The Reds signed Joe Randa
fan favorite in the process.
The Reds signed him as a in the offseason, shoring up
He also became the first free age nt after the 2002 sea- the position that Freel played
major leag uer to start at least son.
mos.t often - he started 5 1
10 games at five positions
Free l got fo ur stints with games there last season. ·
since Tony Phillips did it for the Reds in 2003, hitting
Outfieluers Ken· Griffey Jr.
the Tigers in 1992, unC\er- .285 in 43 games. When · and Austin Kearns hav e
scoring how difficult it is to · injuries gutted the lineup last recovered from · injuries that
move around and still be ' season. Freel emerged, hi t- limited them to lialf of a seasound.
ting .277 in 143 games while · son, and Wily Mo Pena is the
He inadvertentl y started moving fro m posi tion to primary bac kup in the outcarving hi s role during his position - third' base. sec- field.
third se!lson in the minors,· ond , left field , center and
As lon g as everyone is ·
when hi s manager at right.
healthy. Freel will ha ve lim"That was another freak ited chances.
Dunedin ran into a problem .
"Something happened with thi ng," he. said. ''It was one
" I can still come off the
our center fielder that da y. of those situations where I benc h. pinch-run and play
and we had nobody to play got to play a lot. There were defense here and there,"
there," sai d Freel. who had a lot of positions th at needed Freel said. "We' ll see ."
played second base and a to be fi ll ed."
Reds fans look a liking to
few games at shortstop .
He was hoping to compete Freel, who runs hard on
'They were like, ' Let's see for a start ing job this spring, every hit and di.ves for ball s
what he can do out there."' ' but wasn' t fully recovered without hes itation, even if it
It turned into hi s first taste from surgery last November means taking oir the outfield
of what it 's like to become a to fix torn knee cartil age. He waiL
utility player.
was getting close to normal
'The fans have been just
"I made a diving catch on last week when he pulled tremendous," Freel said .
the· warning track, then made thi gh muscles while running -'They say, ' You remind me
a diving catch the next day the bases. forcin g him to of .Pete Rose' and this and
and started go ing back and take a few days off.
that. They know how the
forth ," he said.
Freel pinch-hit Tuesday game is supposed to be
He finally made it to the night against the. Twins and played. It doesn't take talent
majors in 2001 ; his seventh drew a walk. le av in g hi s to run everything out or to
year in pro ball. Freel played ave rage at .379.
play your heart out"
I

.

Twins beat Reds in 10
SARASOTA,· Fla. (AP) Joe Mauer went 3-for-3 with a
two-run double and Matthew
LeCroy homered in the I Oth
inning, leading the Minnesota
Twins to a 12-11 victory over
the Cincinnati Reds · on
Tuesday night ·
Mauer. ·making back-toback stans behind the plate
for the ftrst time this spring,
also singled twice .before he
was replaced by LeCroy in
the fifth inning. Knee su rgery
limited Mauer -to 35 games
last year, and the Twins have
been cautious with him this
spring.
Tor:ii Hunter and minor leaguer Josh Rabe hit two-run
homers for the Twins, who
piled up a spring-high 20 hits
off a cast of pitchers trying to
secure
bullpen
roles.
Outfielder
Michae l
Restovich. hoping to secure
the last roster spot, also had a
pair of run-scoring si ngles.
The Reds rallied for fi ve
runs off two minor league

pitchers in the ninth to tie it at I'm there now. I feel comfort! I, but LeCroy led off the able."
lOth with a homer off Jeriome
Besides playing . 'solid
Robenson.
defense, Randa has,gone on a
Ken Gri!Tey.Jr. went 1-for-5 hitting tear - 9-for- 17 with a
with a fir st-inning double. pair of homers in the last six
Griffey, who is coming &lt;iff games.·
hamstring
surgery
last
"I' ve felt good the whole
Augost, is hitting .282 with- spring," Randa said. "I wasn't
out' a homer this spring. He striking out early in camp,
smoothly ran down a couple just hitting balls at guys. I
of long tly ball s in center, didn't get frustrated . I just
showing no problem with the . stayed with the plan. I think
leg.
it's going to work out ."
The Reds were paced by
Reds left-hander Brandon
third baseman Joe Randa, Claussen gave up four hits
who hit a three-run homer in and three runs in the first
the tlrst inning off Joe Mays, inning , struggling at the outsingled and walked.·
set fo r the second straight
Randa signed a one-year, appearance. Claussen_ is
$2. 15 million deal last expected start the season in
December. The Reds haven't the bullpen, and could be used
had a rCiiable . third baseman as a fifth starter.
since they traded Aaron
David Weathers, one of the
Boone to the Yankees midway rei ievers signed by Cincinnati
through the 2003 season.
as part of a bullpen overhaul
'il just wanted to get adapt· in · the offseason, gave up
ed and fit in," said Randa. Rabe' s homer during a fivewho sPent the last six years run seventh inning that put
with Kansas City. "I feel like Minnesota ahead 11 -5.

"We want the playoffs and
CLEVELAND (AP)
LeBron James was not about we want to be at home, too,"
to let a sore left ankle, lack of said point guard Eric Snow.
sleep or blown layup affect "Every team is fighting for it
now and we're right there. We
him .
James hit two key 3-pointers have to keep winning."
Corey Maggette scored 26
down the stretch and scored 22
points to lead the Cleveland points to lead Los Angeles, but
Cavaliers past the Los Angeles the Clippers have lost four
Clippers 94-R4 Tuesday night. straight on · the road, where
" I thought we would be a lot . they are 7-26 with eight of
more tired," said James, who their final II games away
got treatment on hi s ankle from home.
The Clippers were without
before the game and shot just
starter Bobby Simmons for the
7-for-20 from. "I fe lt OK.
"We ran earl y and just first time all season. The forjumped on them. We · worked ward, averaging 16.6 points,
together defensively and were bruised hi s left leg Sunday
just playi ng complete basket- against Minnesota.
ball."
·
·
"Bobby's the 'X' factor for
Cleveland had lost five of us," Magette said. "He brings
six before rallying for a one- another edge to our team. We
point overtime win Monday ih had to try to weather the storm
New Orleans. The win and (Quinton) Ross was hurt,
~uesday gave the Cavaliers but that's no excuse."
Ross went. scoreless in nine
victories on consecutive nights
for the first time since Nov. minutes and did not play in the
26-27 and revitalized their ·second half because of back
quest for home-court· advan- spasms.
"LeBron wasn't even hitting
tage in the playoffs.
"We got to bed at three or shots," Magette said. "But
four thi s morning, but I other guys did. They played .
thought we had an awful lot of
eilerg(' said Brendan Malone.
3-2 stnce replaCing ·the fired
Paul Silas as Cavaliers coach.
"We pushed the ball and ran
off our defense. Our defense
was very good.''
Zydrunas Ilgauskas had 19
points, 15 rebounds and three
blocked shots as the Cavaliers
moved within I 1/2 games of
Washington for fourth place
overall in the Eastern
Conference. The top four
teams get the home-court edge
in the first round and
Cleveland is 26-9 at Gund
Arena.

KISSIMMEE, Fla. (AP) Brad Ausmus hit a sacrifice fly
in the bottom of the ninth
inning to cap a three-run rally
and give the Housto[l Astros a
7-6 victory over the Cleveland
Indians on Tuesday.
Cliff Bartosh squandered a
two-run lead, allowing three
hits.- then was traded to the
Chicago Cubs for minor league
right-hander Ronald Bay. ·
Willy Taveras had an RBI
double and Chris Burke a runscoring single to tie it 6-all .
before ·Ausmus drove in
Taveras.
Chad Harville gave up runscoring singles to Ronnie
BeUiard and Travis Hafner in
the top of · the ninth to put
Cleveland up 6-4.
Brandon DuckWorth, who is
competing · with Ezequiel
Astacio to be Houston's No. 5
starter, allowed eight hits and
four runs with tour strikeouts
in six innings.
,
Whether Duckworth will be
a starter or ·a long reliever ·
remains unclear. He is 1-1 with
a 3. 12 ERA in 20 2-3 innings.
Astacio is 1-0 with a 0. 79
ERA. ·

Spartans strive for elite status

,.

seven seasons - stack up
with any program in college
basketbalL
The Spartan s have been to
more Final Fours since 1999
than Duke or Con necticut. In
2000. Michigan State won the
schools second national title,
and first since 1979.
North Carolina was the last
team to maj(e such frequent
trips to the national semilinals, making it . there four
times from 1995-2000 . ·
When Michigan State (266) t.ips ' off Saturday night
agai nst the Tar Heels (3 1-4),
lzzo wi ll joi n former Ohio
State coach Fred Tay lor as the
only coaches in NCAA history to advance to four Final
Fours in their first I 0 seasons.
Michigan State is in the
NCAA tournament for an
eighth straight year and it has
advanced to at least the round
of 16 six times during the
stretch, trailing only Duke in

abi lity to survive the first
weekend since 1998.
"I look at '(the accomplishments) and say, 'Wow,"' lzzo
said. "But they' re never as
impressive when they're
about your own program as
they would be if they showed
those same slats about somebody else.
·
. "A ll of those things are just
stat;, but they do help you get
the goal I want to achieve and
that's to put this program on a
level that people won't say
we're impostors if we have
one down season."
Gus Ganakas, Michigan
State 's head coach from
1969-76, said the Spartans
have already reached elite
status.
"With this grm1p going to
the Final Four, every player
that has come to play for Tom
and stayed four years will be
able to say he went to a Final
Four. That's impressive," said
1

Ganakas, an analyst on
. Michigan State's radio broadcasts. "Tom is way to humble
to admit it, but he's reached
the goal for this program that
he's always talked about
striving for."
As Ganakas predicted, lzzo
insisted Michigan State has
not yet reached the lofty sta-.
tus enjoyed by the likes of
North . Carolina and Duke.
But lzzo acknowledged an
unexpected trip to the Final
Four brings him closer to hi s
goaL
"Thi s is definitely another
giant step in the right direction," he said. "Now. if we
win another national champi·
on ship, that's another step .in
the right direction."
.
If the Spanans win a third
national title, they would join
UCLA ( II ). Kentucky (7), .
lnd1ana (5), North Carolina
(3) and Duke (3) as the. only
schools to reach that total. .

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
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•.Eastern tames Tomcats
in opener. See Page 81

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAtLYSENTtNEL.COM

POMEROY - The Meigs
County
Community
Improvement . Corporation
has purchased the former
· Pamida building on Ohio 7
near Pomeroy, and plans to
lease it for use as a "upscale"
Ilea market.
CIC President Paul M.
Reed said the non-profit CIC
closed the purchase on
Tuesday from MRG , Ltd: of
Palm Beach, Fla.
The CIC is governed by a
volunteer board which acts

as an economic development. arm for county gov.
ernmen!. It paid $500,000
for th e 20-year-old build ing, Reed said. The former
owner offered a redu ced
price to the CIC as .a nonprofi t group .
"The CIC purchased the
building because of its potenti al value to Meigs County,"
Reed
said
yesterday.
"Because of its location at the
intersection . of two busy
highways, the CIC board
feels the building has much
potential in terms of develop-

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POMEROY -. T~o new tech-prep
programs geared to educating
"today's students for tomorrow's
careers" are being introduced into the
.
curriculum
of the Meigs Career and
Page AS
.
Technical Center at Meigs High
• Betty Jane Lowe, 74.
School.
• Clara Tipton, 90
The new programs are Medical
Office Management taught by Eleanor
McKelve~ and Carol Crow, and
Health Technology taught by Jackie
Newsome.
Both programs have a four-year
• Accident hans traffic on career pathVo~ay which equips students
to enter the employment field right
l,J.S. 35. See Page A3
out of high school or ha ve adequate
• Dinner and auction set. credits for acceptance into a university or technical college.
.
See Page AS
Beginning
in
the
freshman
year and
• Girl Scout cookies
through the four years of high school
available. See Page AS . both programs include technology
• Absentee applications
studies in the chosen field but also
all of the college preparatory
include
available. See Page AS
courses.
• Agency proposes fees
This means the students enrolled in
for developers, coal mines. the two new tech prep programs now being integrated· into the former
See .Page A&amp; .
. office management and nursing pro'
• Pay-for-performance
grams - have more choices when
plan for doctors draws
they complete the programs as to
whether they go onto a job or decide
national attention.
to expand their horizons by enrolling
See Page A&amp;
in college.
.·
"Thi s gives the students more
choice," said McKelvey. "Our purpose 1s to get students to a place where
they are capable of working on the
business ·side of the medical field
when they graduate ... she added.
"Medical office managers perform
highly specialized work requiring
·knowledge of technical terminology
and procedures. Students will be. able
to enroll in classes that include medical terminology•. business management, medical transcription, pa'tient
scheduling, medical billing, and CPR
and first aid."
Details on Pa&amp;e A&amp;
Please see Pro1rams, AS

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WEATHER

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Ohio .crash
BY

A3

www~peoplesbancorp.com ·
"Ar111u1l P!rcentlp Yltld fJ#'('J, 1\ttoUnl tlfnslnltrlflt. Curtt!nl r1tes 1nd AP'f arl IWirltt u of ,

02/17/o5, but subjlct to thanp. A dlllly balance of$1,000 IS ltQUIIed to a1101d • monthly ftt of S15.
A'-• of$100 11 charpd If thl "count 11 cloMd within tht "rst 12 months.

Hoeftlchf photos

the new health technology program to be offered at the Meigs Career and Tec~nology
Center at Meigs High School in the 2005-06 school year. Here Jenny Bowles. left. and
Clare Sisson look over the study guide and practice equipment on ph lebotomy .t6 be
used in the program taught by Jackie Newsome. ·
·
.
Right: Gerald il1intz
prepares a patient
chart with Valerie
Diddle, standing.
and Amber Handley
as part of his training in the medical
office management
program ·which will
be fu lly integrated
into the curriculum
of the program's
four-yea r · pathway
beginning· this fall.
Carol Crow and
Eleanor McKelvey
are the instructors .

B4-6

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A6

© 1005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

RUTLAND - A you[!g
man fro m Mason was -killed
Wednesday in a single-vehicle accident on Strongs Run
Road in Meigs County.
Warren "Zack" Faulk , 18,
was thrown from a vehicle
driven by his brother, Clinton
"Ty ler Faulk,
20, of
Langsville in Meigs County.
He was pronounced dead at
the scene by Meigs County
Coroner Dr. Douglas Hunter.
Tyler Faulk was transported from the sce ne by the
Mei gs Co unt y EMS .and
transferred to Med Flight
he Iicopter, which took him to
St. Mary's Hospital in

Please see Crash, AS

Crow rules
LeMasters
is not se:Xual ·.
predator
BY BRIAN

Financial Planning
BSERGENT@MYDAtLYSENTINEl.COM
McARTHUR - A psychiand Supervision Commissio.n
atric report on the Meigs
member Bill Wolfe said .
RACINE
During . Superintendent
Bob County woman accused of
Wednesday :s fiscal manage- Grueser told the commission ki lling . Marvin Hunt ()f
'ment meeting of . the that he supported the board's Ewington in January is due to
Financia.l Planning and decision not to implement arrive in Vinton County Coun
Supervis ion
Commission
within the. next few days.
whi'c h oversees Southern's dual bus routing as · a cost
Ruth Ann Wood, 38, of ·
deficit-reducing plans, the saving measure at this time.
31\029
Carpenter Hill Road.
Instead, Grueser proposed
commi ssion decided against
Dexter,
pleaded QOt guilty by
overriding the school board's a Permanent Improvement reason of insanity on Feb. 14 to
decision not to implement a Levy and reductions in "other a charge of aggravated murder.
areas" as possibilities to gen- · Currently being housed in
policy of dual bus routing.
erate
revenue for the district. the Ross County Jail in.
"We don't anticipate overriding that decision anytime
Chilli cothe on a $1 million
Please see Southem, As

evalu ati on by psychiatrists
from the · Shawnee Forensic
Center in Portsmouth .
With a period of 45 days
allowed by_the coun for completion of. the report, it i~ now
due. Johnna Shepherd, legal
assi stant to Vinton County
Prosecutor Tim GIeeson. said a
representative of the Shawnee
Center called the prosecutor's
office to say that the repon was
nearly complete.
"They just had a few more
question s
they
wanted

POMEROY - Judge Fred
W. Crow 111 has ruled that a
man convicted in 1993 of the
murder of a
Gallipolis man
and his son is
not · a sexual
predator, but
did not rule on
whether
he
should be classified as a
c hild'- victim
William
LeMasters predator.
At
· the
request of the . Ohio
Department of Rehabilitation
and Corrections, and following a January hearing, Crow
ruled Monday (hat William
LeMasters II should not be
considered an &lt;1ffender who
has committed a criminal
offense with a sexual motivation.
LeMasters is in the London
Correctional Institution. He
was convicted of three counts
of aggravated mu rder, two

'Please see Rulings, AS

Please see LeMallhn, AS

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J. REED

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Peoples 1·800•374•6123

Cha~ene

Above: General laboratory procedures . such as phlebotomy, will be an emphasis of

TMALONEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

BY BETH SERGENT

TtM MALONEY

TMALONEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.CDM

TIM

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Chanene Hoefttchj photo

Commission agrees with Southern Rulings pending in ·murder cases
BY
MIILONEY
School Board on dual bus routing
bond, Wood has undergone

INDEX
.C alendars
Classifieds

1

The Meigs County Community Improvement Corporation closed on its purchase of the 20-yearold Pam1da butldmg on Tuesday. It will be leased by 'the CIC to an undisclosed lessee for use
as a flea market.

INSIDE

Ultimate Checking Balance Interest Paid

o

CIC buys Pamida building; plans lease for flea market

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Astros
edge
Indians

NCAA Tournament

EAST LANSING, Mi ch.
(AP) Michigan State
wants to be considered an
elite program, worth y of
being mentioned wi th the two
teams the Spartans beat to get
to the Final Four and the one
they'll face in St. Louis.
Michigan State became the
first team to knock off Duke
and Kentucky in the same
NCAA tournament. winning
the Austin Regional· and earning a Final Four matchup
with North Carolina.
''I' m really excited about
the opportunity to play the
third giant," Michigan State
coach Tom lzzo said Tuesday.
The Spartans would have to
sustain the excellence they : ve
achieved · under lzzo fo r
decades to approach the status of the Tar Heels. Blue
Devils and Wi ldcats. But
Michigan State's recent
accomplishments four
Final Four appearances · in

harder than we did."
James scored 44 points and
played all 53 minutes Monday
night in a 108-107 overtime
victory. He missed nine of his.
first 13 shots Tuesday, including an uncontested fast-break
layup midway through the
th1rd quarter - a play he normally , finishes with a power
dunk. .
That miss gave the Clippers
a glimmer of hope and came. ·
shortly after the Cavaliers
opened a 19-point lead. Elton
Brand scored eight points as'
the Clippers closed the quaner
with a I5-8·spurt.
Los Angeles continued to
chip away and got wi.thin 8075. Then James swished a 3pointer with 3:48 to p•lay.
James hit another 3 with 2: 13
left for an 88-77 advanta~e .
"Some teams underestimate
our shooting," James said. "!
have no shame in pulling up
for a three-pointer."
Chris Kaman had 18 points
and Brand finished with 15
points and 12 rebounds for the
Clippers.

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NATION

The paily Sentinel

Thursday, March 31,

2005

SUPREME COURT, APPEALS COURT REJECT LATEST APPEAL BY TERRI SCHIAVO'S PARENTS
Bv MITCH STACY

case from its beginning , Medicine in New York, said
including whether there was · it is hard to predict what
enough "clear and convinc- would happen if the tube
PINELLAS PARK, Fla. ing" evidence thai she would were to be reinserted because
The U.S . Supreme Court have chosen to die in her cur- it is highly unusual to do that
after life-prolonging treatrefused to intervene in the · rent condition .
Terri Schiavo case for the · The parents asked that the ments have been stopped.
sixth time late Wednesday. feeding lube be reinserted
He said that if her kidneys
taking less than two hours to immediately "in light of. the have already shui down, reinreject her parents' request magnitude of what is at stake serting the tube · at this point
that the fecdmg tube for their and the urge ncy of the action might prolong her life by just
brain-damaged daughter be required."
hours or day s. However, it
reinserted.
·
The Schindlers ' motion could also hasten her death,
The one-sentence ruling included ,arguments that the he said, because it wohld
came hours after the II th lith CircUit 111 1ts .earlier rul- supply fluids to · a bbdy tljat
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals mgs d1d not cons1de( whether can no longer get rid of them.
resoundingly. declined to there was_ enou~h ev1dence · Three. protesters were
intervene in the case. Justices lhat Tern Sch1avo would arrested Wednesday, includdid not explain their decision have chosen to d1e. .
_, ing one who was arrested
and there was no indication . To be granted, the parents when ·he tried to take a plas- .
how they voted: .
.
1eques,t · "ould have needed tic cup of water inlo the ·hosThe Supreme Court's dcci- the suRport o~ seven, of the pice. Otlicers stopped him at
sion, on Schiavo's 13th day appeals co_urt s 12 Judges. the gate as he shouted: "You
without food or water, was · The court d1d not d1sclose the don't know God from
the latest in a string of losses vote breakdown. ,
Godzilla!" .
in state and federal courts (or
Judges Ger~Jd TJoflat and
Fifty protesters have been
her parents, Bob and Mary Charles R. WilSon, the same ,
·
.
.h
b
,.
Schindler, and the second two judges who also issued a ,mest~d smc~ t e tu e was
time in a week the high court dissenting opinion last week remO\ed.
AP Photo
rejected the parents' claims.
when the full court cbnsid- -A-,-s-nt-.,--11-te_d_P-,--e-s.-,.-,..-,.,--1e-,--s Mary K. Porta, a St. Petersburg, Fla. resident. holds a clock for the ·symbolism of time running
"We're watching a black ered the case for the first
mark in American history," time, said the harried pace of Hope Yen in Washing/on and out, and water for Terri Schiavo, as she sits on a smallladder .outside the,Wo.ods1de Hosp1ce
said David Gibbs Ill, who appeals made it impossible to Johnny Clark and Jonathon during a v1gil for Schiavo on Wednesday morning in Pinellas Park, Fla. A federal appeals court
n!pn::sents ·the Schindlers. determine if state courts · Landrum .h -"' Atlanta ron- raised a flickel of hope for thE: parents of Schiavo , but snuffed it out Wednesday by firmly and
resoundingly declining to intervene in the grueling legal battle .
"Let's just hope and pray properly considered the e.vi- tribwed to rhrs retlort.
something happens that will_ deuce.
The two dissenters said
keep her alive."
Schiavo's
husband , Wednesday that "it is fully
. Michael; insists he is carry- within Congress's power to
ing out his wife's wishes by dictate standards of review"
having the tube pulled. It was for federal courts. " Indeed, if
removed March 18 after a Congress cannoi do so, the
yearslong legal · battle, and fate of hundreds of federal
Terri Schiavo, 41, ·was statutes would be called into
expected to survive one to question." _
two weeks without it.
Federal courts were given.
The woman's parents main- jurisdiction
to
review
case
after
tained that while Schiavo · Schiavo's
was weak, her organs were 'Repubiicans in Congress
functioning Wednesday and pushed through unprecedentshe . was responsive. They ed emergency legi slation
~~~::_~~~~~C~o~nt~ractors, Venaors ,
their immediate tan1ilv. not eligible.
urged supporters to keep up aimed at prolonging her life.
efforts to reconnect her feed- But federal courts at three
tiEED fl CA~ LOAn?
ing tube before It is too late. levels have rebutfed her par"Under the circumstances, ems, and Birch said the court
she looks darn good, surpris- had no jurisdiction in the
ingly good," Bob Schindler case because the Jaw was at
said after visitihg, his daugh- odds with the Constitutional
iiliP.'I'...
ter Wednesday aftern'oon. principles of separation of
"I'm asking that nobody powers. ·
16" 1 Tnnninn
throw in the towel as long as
The Schindlers' Supreme .
she's fighting, to keep ·fi-ght- Court appeal · went first to
ing with her," he said.
Justice Anthony Kennedy, a
Geor,[le Felos, the .attorney Reagan appointee who has .
for' · Schiavo's
husband, staked a moderate position
Specializing in:
declined to comment
on social issues. He · referred
Bankruptcy
, The appeals court had the Schiavo case to the full
I
675•1812
Divorce
raised the Schindlers' hopes . nine-member court.
~·
MERCURY
Point Pleasant, WV
late Tuesday· when it agreed · The order from the court
Charge
Oft's
173-5536
to consider their emergency was swift. Schiavo' &gt; parents
446-9800
V'
And
MORE!!
bid for a new hearing in the filed their reque't shortly
Mason, WV
HOURS: Mon - Frl 9.-7; ~or. · Y·::Jt
Delivery restrictions ma.y apply. Not valid
case. But !.5 hours later, the after 9 p.m. EST, and lhe
APPIV Todav... Drive Todav!
with other offers. Limited time only.
court ruled against granting a court released its order at
hearing - the. fourth time 10:40 p.m. For the parents'
since last · week that it ruled previous request, last week, it
against the Schindlers.
took the justices about ·12·
Diane McVey
"Any further action by our hours to reject.
.
M.A., CCC-A
' ' .
court or the district court
The . court 's decision was
Owner &amp; Audiologist
Prescnpuon
. Oxygen
would be improper," wrote expected. Not only had jusJudge Stanley F. Birch Jr., tices repeatedly declined to
Tilt
COIIIPQII}
tlrt' BfG St'"'iu
Business!
one of the members of the . intervene in the Schiavo case
PRESCRIPTION
Atlanta-based II th Circuit. on previous occasions, ·but ·
Always oil High Speed
"While the members of her they routinely defer to state
OXYGEN
Connection ·
family and the members of courts on family Jaw issues.
THE AREA'S ONLY ·
Judges in various Florida
Congress have acted in a way
that is both fervent and sin- courts have · sided with
AUTHORIZED
cere. the time has come for Schiavo's husband since she
HEUOS PROVIDER.
Mo. .
. dis'passionaie di scharge of suffered brain damage in
2605 Jackson Ave.
duty."
.
·
1_990, when her heart stopped
The judge went on to deliv- for several minutes because
~ up ttJtlafjl
Pt. Pleasant. WU
er a scathing attack on politi- of . a chemical imbalance
www.kasplat.com~
··
GALLIPOLIS
(740) 441-1)202
cians who got involved in the apparently brought on by an
435•11
Second
Avenue
.
·
3064
State"
Route
160
740.446·8500
.
case, saying the White House eating disorder.
,
fAc·ro,, from Po\1 Office 1
Woodland Center CompleJC
328
2nd
Ave.
.
and lawmakers "have acted
Her parents doubt she had
Open M on. - Thurs. 8:30-'Spm
(Acro81 from Holzer Medical Center)
Gallipolis, OH
' GaHipoUe, Ohio
in a manner demonstrably at any end-of-life wishes and
odds with our Founding dispute that she is .in a persisFathers ' blueprint for the tent vegetative state as courtgovernance of a free pe'ople ordered doctors have deter-.
- our Constitution."
mined. They say she laughs,
The Schindlers had asked tries to speak imd responds to
·the lith Circuit and the them when -they visit the hasSupreme Court to order the pice.
,,
reinsertion of their daughter's
Dr. Sean Morrison, a profeeding tube .so a federal dis- · fessor of palliative me.dicine
trict court can. review the at the Mount Sinai School of
. ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Call the Loan
at:

PLEASANT
VALLEY ·
·HOSPITAL
304-675-4340

Lilli~

PIZZA

s9.99

v
v
v

wil~

HOLZER
CLINIC

01l"sz9''

675-4498

Attorney sentenced in Rochester, N.Y.,
for role innightclub owner's execution
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP)
- A defense attorney drew
a sentence of up to 18 years
in prison Wednesday after
failing to overturn a plea
deal in which he admitted
conspiring to kill . a nightclub
owner,
distribute
cocaine and launder more
than $200,000.
Anthony Leonardo, 57,
who once represented mobsters and crooked cops, was
sentenced in federal court .to
.16 years and, hours later,
got a concurrent sentence of
six to 18 year~ for a role in
the gangland-style execution
of Anthony Vaccaro, his
·
business partner.
" You've given a black eye
to the profession ," ·said U.S .
DistrictJudge
Dav'id
Larimer,
adding
that
Vaccaro's slaying in 2001
"would have never ~appened
if you had an ounce of

courage to step away and
say, 'No ... this is wrong."' ·
· Disbarred after 28 years as
a lawyer, Leonardo unsuccessfully argued he was ille·gaily entrapped into committing cri!)les at a time in his ·
life when he was hurting for
money and fearful of getting
killed by Albert Ranieri, a
coconspirator.
Leonardo also claimed he
never got full access to FBI
surveillance tapes that linked
him to drug trafficking and
money laundering.·
Ranieri, the driver of an
armored truck robbed of
$10.8 million in 1990 in one
. of the nation 's largest hei sts,
pleaded guilty in 2003 to
carrying out the robbery and
killing Vaccaro.
Leonardo, who has been
imprisoned since 200 I ,
could be freed iri about I0
years..

Community Calendar

DEAR ABBY: I am 19.
inspection of Racine Chapter each month from now on.
Last year I made the biggest
134, Order of Eastern Star,
Thursday, April7
mistake of my life. My then7:30p.m. Members to bring
POMEROY
- Public boyfriend persuaded me to
sandwiches or salads.
meeting on ODOT Statewide · marry him. We got the mar1\tesday, April 5
Friday, April 1
Transportation Improvement riage license one day and
MIDDLEPORT
POMEROY
- Meigs
Program allowing public were ' married the next.
County PERI Chapter 7 4, Middleport Lodge 363 , review ~nd comment{)n four- . Nobody in my family knew
noon luncheon at Meigs F&amp;AM , business meeting year listing of federal and about it. I really didn't want .
County Senior Center with will b~ held at 7:30 p.m. at state-funded transportation to do it, but I was having
program following : Charles the temple.
projects; 2 to 6 p.m., Meigs some problems at the time,
W.Va.
. MASON,
Riffle discussing medications
County Courthouse.
and he hinted that he would
VFW
and their interactions.
· Stewart-Johnson
never talk to me again if I
Ladies Auxiliary .of Mason
Saturday, April 2
didn't We broke up in May.
SYRACUSE
- Meigs will meet ut 6 p.m. for food · ·
He is not a U.S. citizen and
. County
Girl
Scouts followed by a meeting; New
Saturday, April 2
has never lived here. He has
Daisy/Brownie Tea, J' . to 3 officers will be elected.
MIDDLEPORT _ A spe- since gone back to his counp.m., Syracuse Community
cial service will be held at 7 try and hasn't returned to the
Center. Puppet show and will
p.rr•. Saturday at the Hobson states.
be earning the Manners TryChristian Fellowship Church
For the last three months, .I
it Attire is dress up and girls
Saturday, April '2 :
at Hobson. The service will have been seeing the most
attending should bring a purse
PORTLAND
The be a part of World Mission wonderful guy of my life. I'd
with items in it. Girls from Lebanon Township Trustees Outreach Ministries and a like to get a divorce and move
Kindergarden through ' third will rneet at 7:30 p.m. at the donation will be taken to go on , but I' m a full -lime college
grade are invited to attend. township building. ,
toward building a church in student wi.th no money, and
Cost is $2.50 for registered
Monday, April4
Malawi, Africa. Singing lvill · my family dbesn 't hi1ve any
girl scoutsand $12.50 for non
LETART - The_ Letart be Earthen Vessels, Together money either. I found a site
registered · girls. Financial "'"ownsh1p
1
Trustees wtll
meet
that was featured in the media
,
•
· , for Christ and Proclaim.
.
assistance for registration is at' 5 p.m. at the office bu1ldmg.
'
that can help me with the
available. Additional inforThesday, AprilS
divorce for little monev, but
mation is available from
RUTLAND Rutland
' my ex refuses to sign- anyJerrena Ebersbach at 992~ Village Council will meet at 6
thing. I just want to get rid of
7747, after 4 p.m. or Shirley p.m. in Council chambers in .
Friday, Aprill
him after the stuff he put me
Cogar at 992~2668.
the Civic Center.. Regularly
REEDSVll..LE- Customer through. but I don' t know
. Monday, April 4
scheduled meetings will be Appreciation Day at Reedsville where to go.- "MARRIED"
RACINE
- Annual held on the 'first Tuesday of Pos1 Office. Refreshmenls.
· IN NEWBURGH, N.Y.
DEAR
" MARRIED":
Because of the circumstance
of your marriage, it may not
be possible to end it without
ihe
help of an attorney.
RACINE Numerous .
Because
you can't alford one,
awards in recognition of
I
recommend
that you get a
accomplishments were prepart-time job and save money
sented at the 39th annual FFA
for
a consultation. With help,
banquet held at Southern
you
may be able to get. the
High School:
marri9ge annulled.
The awards ceremony fol lowed a dinner with Tim
Thome giving the blessing and
the recognition of officers,
Jake Nease, president; Bryan
Smith, vice president; Mallory
Hill, secretary ; Kasie ·Sellers,
BY DIANE POTTORFF
DPOTIORFf@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM
treasurer; Brittany Morarity,
reporter; Andrew Parsons,
HENDERSON - A single
adviser;· Wes Harn10n, histori an, and Tim Sands, SentineL
¥ehicle accident led to the
Guest speaker for the meet closure of U.S. 35 for about
ing was Hilary Bailey,
six hours early Wednesday
· District I0 FFA presi'c;lent.
morn mg.
. Awards presented included
Around 1 a.m., A. Keith
the Star Green Hand award
Morrison, ·39, of Columbus,
. which went to Miranda
Ohio, was driving north on
McKelvey. · The Chapter
Kanawha Valley Road toward
Degree for grades, work on the
· Henderson when the accident
SAE project; and being an
occurred near Jim Hill Road,
active member went to on
according to the Mason County
SAE projects went Wes
Sheriff's Department report.
Harmon, Ben Lee. Kasie
Morrison told Cpl. S.L.
Sellers, Brittany Morarity,
Submitted photos
Mallory
Hill and ·Dale
· Receiving
the Teaford.
Star Jake Nease, left, president, and Bryan Smith, vice president,
Chapter Farmer Award was were presented plaques in recognition of their work during the
Bryan · Smith; the Star · 2004-05 year in FFA. ·
Chapter
Agribusiness
Hemsley
and
Award, Jake Nease; and the Bryan Smith, Kasie Sellers Charles
Emanuel
Casto.
Star Chapter Agriscience and Tim Sands; the award for
Second-year members recAward, Mallory Hill.
agriculture engineering to
Medallions Went to the stu- Derek Teaford and the leader- ognized were Dennis Adkins,
Patrick
Mallory
Hill,
dents who received either ship award to Nikki Riffle.
Johnson,
Mike
Lavender,
RJ.
first or grand champion in the
The Natural Resources
Leech,
"Brittany
Morarily
and
science fair last month. The award was presented to W9s
students that received medal- Harmon and agriculture sales. J.D. Sellers.
Third-year members prelions were Mallory Hill, There were specia) awards for
sented
were Ben Lee, Andrea
Whitney Wolfe-Riffle, Derek Honorary Chapter Degrees
·. Teaford , Nicqle Writsel, and which · went to · Ronnie Parsons, Kasie Sellers, Dale
Teaford,
Josh
Harris,
Andrea Parsons. The Star Wagner and Ed Gibbs.
Placement Award went . lo
All first-year members Addison Allen, Wes Harmon,
John Bentz.
received the Green Hand pin Bethany Riffle, Eric Wilson,
Writsel,
Jamie
Production plaques were for their FFA jackets. They Nicole
presented to the following: were Bryce Bowling, Josh Johnson, Nikki Riffle, Derek
for swine production, Jake Caruthers, Nathan Cook, Joe Teaford and Bryan Smith,
Nease, Terry Bell, .Derek Daily, . Joey Eakins, James and special recognition went
Teaford, Eric Wilson, Cory Grady, J.R. Hupp, John to John B.entz and J~ke
Marcinkewicz, Wes Harmon Allbaugh, Mikayla Krider, Nease, four-year members.
The 20()5-06 officers recogand Ben Lee; for dairy feed- Miranda McKelvey, Amber
nized
were Wes Harmon,
ers, Bryan Smith; for poultry Norville, Amy Norville, Josh
production, Kasie Sellers; for . Pape, Grant Phillips, Latosha president; Kasie Sellers, vice
· sheep production, Brittany Richards, Billy Jo Rizer, president; Mallory Hill, secre. Morarity; and for equine Steven · Sellers. Andrew .tary; Miranda McKelvey, treamanagement, Mallory Hill; Smeck, Josh Smith, Billy Van surer; Whitney Wolfe-Riffle,'
for · market garden, Chris Cooney,
Jerry
Baker, reporter; Brittany Morarity,
Moss; and vegetable produc- Cameron Brinager, Weston Sentinel; Tim Sands. adviser;
tion, Dale Teaford.
Counts, Leigh Ann Flynn, and J.R. Hupp, historian,
Auctioneer Dan Smith
Rural soil awards were Todd Klein, Corbin Sellers,
given to Miranda McKelvey, Darin Teaford, Eric Zeiner, conducted an auction of
Mallory Hill, Wes Harmon Shyla Jarrel. Whitney Wolfe- trays of meat homegrown by
and J.R. Hupp. The urban soil · Riffle, James Davidson, Wes the Southern FFA on. the
awards went to Jake Nease, Burrows, R.J.
Harmon, Nease Farms.

Clubs and
organizations

Sjlt 911m-1 pm

DEAR ABBY: My husband, "Jon," and I are newlyweds. We bought and
restored a house. Jon did
most of the work himself. My
mother-in-law, "Marjorie,"
whq is understandably proud
of her son, has taken to showing off our twuse - · but
here 's the hitch. She gives no
warning beforehand; she just
shows up on the front steps
with people I've never met.
(The first time Marjorie did it
was the day Jori and I were
leaving for our honeymoon.)
Abby, Marjorie parades these
people into our kitchen, bedroom, bathroom·, even our close
ets! If I ask her to please skip
our office because It's a iness,
she says, "Oh, just give them a
look," and barges right in.
I have telephoned and
asked her politely to please
give me a little warning
before bringing people to tour
the house. Still. she shows up
expecting to be let in with yet
another stranger in tow.
The last time it happened,
after a cue from me, Marjorie
acknowledged that she knows
I don' t like when she does it,
yet . she continues . . Jon is so

Public meetings

Qh

t .er eventS

FFA recognizes outstanding members

nonconfrontali onal , he's no
hel p contro lling her. What can
l do'1 - VIOLATED AND
ANGRY
DEAR VIOL ATED AN D
ANGRY: Your mot her- in -law
continues to do this because
your feelings are nol lmp_ortant lo her. The next time it
happens, re fu se tci open the
door to admit her.
DEAR ABBY: Our da ughter is murrying a man who
lives in another state. The
groom' s parents have in vited
30 members of thei r fami ly to
attend the wedding. They 'll
be paying for t ~ c ir own lodgings at a local hotel. as well
as their airl ine transporta tiqn.
Are we obli gated to pay for
transportation from the hote l
to the church and reception..
and-the return trip to the hote l
for the groom 's family'' We .
think renting a hus to lransport the group would be more
economical than multipl e
rental cars for the evenin g.
My question is, who s h o~ l d
be responsible for thi s cust''
._ FATHER OF THE BRIDE
DEAR FATHER: Provid ing
transportation would be a gracious gesture. However, if it
will create a tlnancial hardship, con sider askin g the
groom's parents to split the
cost of renting the bus.

Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as .lt!anne Phillips, and
was· founded by her mother,
Pauline Phillips. m-ite Dear
Abby at www.DearAbby.com
or P.O. Box · 69440, Lo~. Angeles, CA 90069.

Accident halts traffic on U.S. 35

'

Greene that he fell asleep then
awoke when he ran off the
right side of the road and
struck a highway sign.
As he tried to get back on
the roadway, Morrison lost
control of his 1988 BMW,
then headed toward the other
side of the road, went into a
ditch and struck a utility pole;
and then struck 3 tree, according to the report. The utility
pole broke in half.
Morrison was no.t injured in
the accident, the report said..
U.S. 35 was closed.from the
time of the accident until

';'\~~

.

A

_,.

about 7 a.m .. according to ·
Terri Patterson, offi ce administrator for the West .Virginia
Division of Highway s Mason
County office .
Patterson said the road was
closed for so long because
telephone lines were laying
across the roadway. The DOH
and law enforcement were
waiting for a ·work crew from
Verizon to fix the li.nes.
Members of the Point
Pleasant
Volunteer
Fire
Department
and
Mason
County Emergency Medical
Services were also at the scene.

•'

'Comini'' '~

n

. day, April .lst
,to

Home National Bank

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· Open M·F 9am-6pm

Dear
Abby

Church events .

*

700 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
740·991-5252

PHARMACY

2005

Student wants to erase her failed paper marriage

Powell's
FOODFAIR

Powell's FOODFAIR ,

Thursday, March 31,

EE TQ THE

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PageA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel ·

Our knowledge ol wine is
a passion: The "Frenct'!
Paradox" aired on CBS '60
minutes; shows why the
French and Italians hQve

much lower cholesterol
than the Americans.
Seoret!! RED WINE?? .

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Pt. Pleasant. WV 25550

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Hours:
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aw11ed · lht' Hn-..mon Family
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·the fun Beains at 8:00 a.m.
in the in the lobbY of Home
National Bank in Racine!

LiiiNPI!R

Officers for 2005-06 recognized at the FFA banquet were from the left, front, Whitney WolfeRiffle, Mallory Hill, Miranda McKelvey, J.R Hupp and Wet Harmon, and back, Brittany Morarity,
Kasie Sellers, and Tim Sands.

•

·F---Dii
•

RaCine
740-949-2210

~~©illl@@

Syracuse
740-992-6333

�The Daily Sentinel

The. Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street ~ Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydailysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
· Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

.Congress sltall make no law respecting an
establishment ofreligion, or prohibiting tlte
free exercise thereof; or abridging tlte freedom
of :speech, or of tlte press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday; March 3 1, the 90th day of 2005. There
are 275 days left in the year.
Today"s Highlight in History: One hundred and twenty-five
years ago, on March 31, I 880, Wabash, Ind., became the first
town in lhe world to be illuminated by electrical lighting.
Pn this date: In I 889, French engineer Alexandre Gustave
Eitferunfurled the french tricolor from atop the Eiffel Tower,
officially marking its completion.
In 1917, lhe United States took possession of the Virgin
Islands from Denmark.
.
in 1933, Congress authorized the Civilian Conserva1ion
Corps.
.. in 1943, the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical
"Oklahoma'" opened on Broadway.
In 1945. the tennessee Williams play "The Glass·
Menagerie'' opened on Broadway.
In 1949, Newfoundland entered confederation as Canada's
I Oth province.
In I968. Pre sident Johnson stunned the country by
announcing he would not seek another term in office.
In 1986, 167 people died when a Mexican a Airlines Boeing
727 crashed in a remote mountainous region of Mexico.
In 199 I, the Warsaw Pact spent the last day of its existence
as a military alliance.
In 1993, actor Brandon Lee; 28, was accidentally killed by
a prop gun during the filming·of a movie in Wilmington, N.C.
Ten years ago: Mexican-American singer Selena
Quintanilla-Perez, 23, was shot to death in Corpus Christi,
Texas, by the founder of her fan club. (Yolanda Saldivar was
convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison.) Baseball
players agreed to end their 232-day strike after a judge granted a preliminary injunction against club .owners. President
Clinton briefly visited Haiti, where he declared the U.S. mission to restore democracy there a "remarkable success. "
Five years ago: The U.N. Security Council decided to let
Iraq spend more money to repair its oil industry- an investment intended to boost the amount of food and medicine
Baghdad could buy through the U.N. humanitarian program.
One year ago: Four American civilian contractors were
killed in Fallujah, Iraq; frenzied crowds dragged the burned,
mutilated bodies and strung two of them from a bridge. Air
America, intended as a liberal voice in network talk radio,
made its debut on five stations.
Today's Birthdays: Actor William Daniels is 78. Hockey
Hall-of-Farner Gordie Howe is 77. Actor Richard
Chamberlain is 71. Actress Shirley Jones is 71. Country
singer-songwriter John D. Loudermilk is 71. Musician Herb
Alpert is 70. Sen. Patrick · Leahy, D-Vt., is 65. Actor
Christopher Walken is 62. Comedilin Gabe Kaplan is 60.
Fqrmer Vice President AI Gore is 57. David Ei~enhower is 57.
Actress Rhea Perlman is 57. Rock musician Angus Young
(AC/DC} 1s 50. Actor Marc McClure is 48. Actor William
McNamara is 40. Actor Ewan McGregor is 34.
Thought tor Today: "So often we rob tomorrow's memories
by today's economies." - John Mason Brown, American
critic and lecturer ( 1900- 1969).

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.OPINION

Thursday: March 31, 2005

PageA4
Thursday, March 31, 2005

Obituaries

Medical fact should decide Terri 5fate
Having p\!rsonally experiis beyond hope of recovery.
That 's important for the
enced the agooies that propel
future of medicine and the
both sides in the · Terri
economy in this country. A
Schiavo case, I come to this
significant proportion of
conclusion: The best solu•overall U.S. medical costs
tion would be io keep her
Morton
are paid to care for people in
alive long enough to deterKondracke
the· last weeks of life.
mine, for once and for all, if
Where lives can be saved, ·
she is indeed in a persistent
obviously the cost is "worth
vegetative state (PVS) with
it." And, iil unclear circumno hope of improvement.
If the diagnosis of PVS is parents, Wolfson concluded stances, it is ri ght to ."err on
correct, then she should be that Schiavo's "neurol\)gical the side of life."
At the same time, the hosallowed to die, as her hus- tests and CT scans indicate
band argues. If it isn 't, then objective measures of the pice movement and the
she shou ld receive rehabilita- persistent vegetative state . growth of "palliative meditive therapy, which her par- These data indicate thai cine" offer humane alternaents arc willing to oversee.
Theresa's cerebral corte)&lt; is . tives to heroic medical interThe amazing fact is that, principally liquid, having vention when a person's case
through. the 15 years of her shrunken due to the severe . is hopeless. Polling on the
illness and I I years of bitter anoxic (oxygen deprivation) Schiavo case indicates
strong public support for
legal wrangling · now trauma 13 years ago.
highly · politicized
"It is noteworthy to recall these developments.
It 's also encouraging that,
Schiavo has never had a that from the time of her colmagnetic resonance imaging lapse, and for more than U1ree amid the mad rush by most
(MRI) or a pos(tron emission years, Theresa did, receive Republicans to the "right to
tomography (PET) scan, active physical, occupational, life" side of the Schiavo
which would quickly deter- speech and even recreational argument and most liberal
mine whether she is really therapy .... In the observed cir- Democrats to the opposite
beyond hope of recovery.
cumst~nces, ihe behavior that side, so me politicians manShe once received a com- Theresa manifests is attribut- aged to think independently.
Democrats such as Sen.
puted tomogrdphy (CT) scan able to brain siem and forethat supported one of several brain functions that are reflex- Tom Harkin of Iowa, a longstanding defender of the dis- ·
past diagnoses of PVS. but ive, rather than cognitive."
Last week, this medical abled, sided with Republicans
MRis and PETs are more
modem technology that would consensus was challenged, on the Schiavo case, only to
principally
by
Senate be pilloried by liberal columgive defmitive infommtion.
Chances are, she is beyond Majority Leader (and heart nists for lacking the guts to
recovery, based on informa- surgeon) Bill Frist. R-Tenn., stand up to the forces of righttion collected in 2003 by Jay. · and a neurologist from the wing "theocracy."
Wolfson, a lawyer and pub- esteemed Mayo Clinic.
.
I can sympathize with the
lie health expert appointed to
The thalamic implant passions felt by the particiadvise the Florida courts and makes an MRI impossible, pants in the Schiavo dispute,
Gov. Jeb Bush, R-Fia., on but a PET scan would tell husband Michael Schiavo
the case.
whether there is any activity and Terri 's family, the
After reading 30,000 in Schiavo's cerebral cortex. Schindlers. What's harder to
pages of court records, interIf there's anything encour- stomach is the certitude of
viewing health . professionals aging to be taken from the the political combatants.
who had treated Schiavo and Schiavo controversy, . it's
My wife, Milly, descended
dozens of other experts, and this: The public is over- in late 2003 into something
after ~is itin g her and inter- whelmingly on the side of like PVS because of a
viewing her husband and · allowing someone to die who . "Parkinson's·-pi us" syndrome

known as Multi-Aystem
Atrophy. A PET scan confirmed this was happening.
Yet like Schiavo's parents,
I hoped beyond hope that
Milly was "there." I was sure
1saw signs of responsiveness
that others - including my
daughter, a doctor - said
were not there.
Last summer, like Schiavo's
husband, I finally concluded
that Milly was "gone." In conformity with her "living will,"
I resolved to stop her feeding
tube in August. She died naturally on July 22, sparing me
the firtal agony.
But I understand why
Michael Schiavo would resist
an outside intervention in
what was inherently - artd
legally - his business, and
declared to be so in past cases
by the U.S. Supreme Court. ·
The Wolfson report shows
that, contrary to allegations of
neglect, he provided consis- ·
tent, loving care to Terri. "It is
notable that through more
than 13 years after Theresa's
collapse, she has never had a
bedsore," Wolfson wrote.
On the other hand, I can
understand . the Schindlers'
desperate desire to keep their
daughter alive and their rage
at Michael Schiavo's decision to "kill" her.
What's dismaying is the
knee-jerk tendency among
liberals and conservatives to
rush so passionately to one
side or the other in this case.
It has more to do with winning the · c'ulture war than
helping Terri Schiavo, whose
fate should rest on medical
fact, not political posturing.
IMorton Kondracke is executive editor of Roll Call, the ·
newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

.

The Daily Sen tint' I • Page A5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Local Briefs ·

Taft supports pooling of
districts to buy health insurance

Dinner and auction set

Clara Tipton

COLUMBUS iAPJ - Gov.
Bob
Taft 'aid Wednesday he
POMEROY - A spaghetti dinner will be held from 5 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT - Clara E. ·Butcher Tipton. · 90,
supporh
a Hnu'c plan to
Middleport. passed away on Wednesday, March 30, 2005, at to 6:30p.m. on Friday at the Meigs Senior Center with a teddy require school di,trict&gt; tn band
bear auction to follow at 7 p.m. Over 200 teddy bears donatOverbrook Center in Middleport.
together to buy heal th in,urShe was born on July 25 , 1914, in Greene County, daughter eu by Nancy Shaw will be auctioned off to benefit the home- ance to he!p lower their co'!'·
of the late Paul Dewain and lvah Shockley Butcher. She delivered meal.&gt; program. The bears include Steiff Danbury
Taft . a Republican . . says
100 year anniversary bear, two autographed Dean's Rag
played basketball in high school and was a member of the Mint
he's
been working with the
Book Co. Bears, Oh10 R1ver Bears and Boyd's Bears.
Grange 4-H Club. She was a member of the Christian Church
Department ·of Education on
of South Solon and attended the Victory Baptist Church in
a ' imilar proposal that he
Middleport.
·
·
wants to impl ement as ,oon
as
pos.ible.
Besides her parents. she was preceded In .death by her husSYRACUSE
Me.igs
County
Girl
Scouts
will
otfer
a
"It's
something that we can
band, Harry . Tipton, in 1997; two sisters, Pauline Pence ·and
Daisy/Brownie
Tea
from
I
to
3
p.m.·
on
Saturday
at
the
do that will help , conserve
lola Small; and a brother. Conrad Butcher. .
Syracuse
Community
Center.
Girls
attending
will
enjoy
a
pupresources in a very tight budTwo sisters, Annabel Call and lvah Wiladcan Mantle both
pet
show
and
will
be
earning
the
Manners
Try-it.
The
attire
is
·
getary
situation. " Taft said .
of London, and several nieces and nephews, survive. '
dress-up and girl s attending should bring a purse with 1tems in " It's a very .important initia-.
Friends' may call from . 9 to II a.m. on Saturday, April 2, it. Girls from Kindergarten through third grade are invited to
2005, at F1sher Funeral Home in Middleport, with graveside attend.
serv1ces to follow at Neal Cemetery in Gallia County. Rev.
The cost is $2.50 for reg istered girl scouts and $12.50 for
James Keesee will ofticiate.
non registered girls. Financial assistance for registration is
Memorial contributions may be made to the Meigs County available . Additional information is available from Jerrena
Semor Center, I 12 E. Memorial Dr., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, or Ebersbach at 992-7747, after 4 p.m . or Shirley Cogar at 992from PageA1
to a charity of choice.
. .
'
2668.
Huntington.
Accordin g. to the Oh1o
State Hi ghw ay Patrol. Faulk
was traveling eastbound on
POMEROY
.
TkMeigs
Cadette
Troop
1208
will
have
a
MIDDLEPORT ~ Betty Jane Ward Lowe, 74, of
Strongs
Run Road (County
Cookie
Booth-Bake
Sale
at
Powell's
Foodfair
from
9
a.m.
to
Middleport, passed away Wednesday, March 30, 2005 at
Road
52)
east of Silo Run
5 p.m. on Saturday.
Overbrook Center, Middleport .
Road (Township Road 363 J
Born on Feb.· II, 1931 at Coal Fork, W.Va. she was the
at 6:05 p.m . when . the acci· daughter of the late Jesse J. and Mildred Hayman Ward. She .
~bsentee.
dent occurred.
was of Baptist faith, a.barmaid and janitor, and belonged to
Faulk lost control in a
POMEROY- Absentee ballot applications are now avail- series of potholes. He drove .
the Stewart Johnson Post 9926 VFW Ladies Auxiliary;
Mason •. W. Va. and the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center, able at the Mei gs County Board of Elections to residents of off the ri ght side of the road
Middleport who will have a Republican Primary on May 3.
Pomeroy.
into a small ditch, came back
Applications can be p1cked ·up at the office in the Meigs onto the road and slid off the
She is survived by·children, Jack Lowe of Concord, Frances
Burns and Lola Faye Whittington, both of Pomeroy, Margie County Annex on Mulberry Heights, or can be requested by left side of the road, came
Haggertty of Sabina. and Ada Marie Poddlski, Danielson, mail or telephone.
back onto the road. and the
Among the reasons residents qualify to vote absentee arc vehicle overturned onto its
Conn.; brothers. Tom Ward of Leewood, W. Va .. and David C.
absent from the county on Election Day, 62 years of age or
Ward of Ft. McCoy, Fla.; a sister, .June Estep of Poca, W. Va., disabled,
according to Rita Smith, director.
several grandchi ldren and great-grandchildren. nieces and
nephews,and a special friend, Eddie Hlad of Dexter.
Besides her parents she. was preceded in death by daughter Barbara Lowe and several brothers and sisters.
POMEROY -Applications for the Brandi Thomas
from Page A1
Graveside services will be 'at noon Saturdav at Gravel Hill
Memorial
Scholarship
may
be
picked
up
at
Meigs
High
Cemetery at Cheshire. Friends may call 5 to "7 p.m Friday at
School or received in the mail by calling 992-6 763.
the Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutlanu.
·
Eligible app licants must he Meigs High School seniors or counts of . kidnapping and
Meigs Hi gh School graduates attending college, having par- aggravated robbery in the
ticipated in track or cross country a minimum of two years in February. 200 I death s of
Jeffrey L. Halley, 36, and
high school.
.
Applications must be returned to the selection c_ommittee by Jeffrey S. Halley, I 2. The
Halleys' bodies were di scovM~l
.
ered in separate locations in
Lebanon Township.
A co-defendant. Fred
PAGEVILLE - Lester G. Jeffers, 47, Athens. was cited for
Drennan of Ra venswood.
RACINE - To clear out remaining winter items, God's W.Va.. entered into a plea
improper backing by the Gallia-Meigs Post of the· State.
. Highway Patrol following a two-vehicle accident Monday on Clothing Parish on Third Street in Racine is having a 25-cent baragain agreement, admitted
sale on all items for the next two weeks. The store is open to three count s of aggravated
Ohio 692 at the intersection with Ohio 681 .
.
Troopers said Jeffers was stopped northbound at the inter- Monday through Friday from II a.tp. to 2 p.m.
murder. and testified in
section stop sign at 3: I 5 p.m. when he bacKed the truck he
LeMa sters· 1993 jury trial.
drove and struck a northbound car driven by Vanessa L.
. "In order to classify
Kaukomin, 42, 37000 Kingsbury Road, Pomeroy. .
(LeMasters) as a sexual
Kaukonen was also stopved at the time of the crash, the
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse Youth League will hold a predator. the Court must find
report said. The accident caused non ~ functional damage to · meeting at 6 p.m. tonight at the Syracuse ballfield for coach- that he committed a sexuallyKaukonen 's,car, and no damage to the truck.
es and parents to discuss activities a11d concessions.
oriented offense or committed another offense with a

·scouts plan tea

Crash

Girl Scout cookies available

Betty Jane Ward Lowe

•

applications available

a

Seek scholarship applicants

LeMasters

For the Record

Highway Patrol

Clothing sale set

ti1e that we rea lly need ...
Hou'e
Speaker
Jon
Hu" cd 'aY' the plan i' a
way to u'e the stat e'&gt; l:;&gt;uying power .i:l the "IIllC fa, hion

Programs·
from Page A1

Bush aPied Piper for democracy? Thats a howl
Some years ago, I owl)ed a
the world as childish.
beagle qamed Leon. A handSyria 'entered Lebanon in
some, lemon-colored dog,.
1976 at U.S. invitation to
Leon had a terrific nose. Tum .
quell a nasty civil war
him and his brother Otis loose
among very roughly the
in a thicket, and if those boys
same factions now demonGene
didn't chase a rabbit out, then
strating. The fighting neverLyons
no rabbits lived there.
·theless continued for another
Alas, Leon also did a.lot of
decade, all but . destroying
"cold-trailing," baying down
Beirut, one of the world's
scent lines so old that the
great cities. After Hezbollah
rabbits that left them proba(the Shiite militia partly
bly existed only in the form that will be taught in sponsored by Syria and Iran)
of coyote scat. Other dogs America's schools for gener- · inflicted punishing losses on
knew when Leon was bluff. ations to come? It's an idea Israel, there was a subseing, but he could drive you gaining more currency."
quent Israeli invasion and
nuts babbling about nothing .
Next came Artdrea (Mrs. withdrawal. With the Israelis
My hunting buddies nick- Alan Greenspan) Mitchell, gone, many · Lebanese,
named him "The Journalist." who spoke of "a historic turn- notably Christians, Sunni
I've started calling my ing point, like the fall of the and Druze, want the Syrians
current pack "The Pundits." · Berlin Wall." The analogy out, too. The Shia, about 40
See, they've developed this first appeared in David · percent of the population,
habit of accompanying dis- Ignatius' Washington Post want them to stay.
·
tant police sirens with group column. It was attributed to
But what set off the current
howl-ins. Except when they . Walid Jumblatt, a Lebanese wave of demonstration and
get tuned up around 5 a.m., Druze leader who'd had his counter-demonstration wasit 's pretty funny to watch. U.S. visa revoked in 2003 n't the U.S.-sponsored elecRather li ke the . savants on after regretting that Deputy tio·n in Iraq. (The Lebanese
"Meet the · Press" or Defense Secretary Pau I have been having parliamen''Reliable Sources," they Wolfowitz, whom he called a tary elections since the
stand in a circle hooting and "microbe ," had survived a 1940s.) It was the .assassinaeyeballing each other with Baghdad rocket attack. Vice tion of former Prime
their noses pointed at the President Dick Cheney . Minister
Rafik
Hariri,'
.sky. Even my' wife's basset echoed him on right-wing blamed without evidence on
hound joins the chorus. The radio. It' s an officially Syria. although some suspect
only remedy is spraying approved White House .theme. Israel , it's anybody's guess.
them with the garden hose.
How sincere was Jumblatt?
The idea of a U.S. president
J. wish Washington hounds Let me put it this way: I have denouncing foreign invaders
were so easily discouraged. Lebanese-born relatives by no doubt strikes most
Recently, .the D.C. pundits marriage. .
(They· re Lebanese as faintly hilarious.
started baying about George Christians, if it matters, Will Bush now leave Iraq?
W. Bush's brilliant success which in Lebanon it sure DemJnd that Israel quit
bringing "democracy" to the · does.) Their default mode for · putting fences around Arab
Middle East. .
analyzinJ! Middle Eastern land in the West Bank? Give
"Lately even the harshest politics IS to assume that the Golan Heights back to
critics of President Bush nothing is what it seems and Syria ? For now, though,
have been forced to admit: nobody's motives are what praising Bush might help
Maybe he ·s right about free- they sar What really ·matters drive the Syrians out. Period.
dom's march around the is wh1ch tribes/clans/reliThen there 's Palestine.
globe ," anchorman Brian gious sects/families are mak- Let's pray that Mahmoud
Williams · announced on ing alliances with which oth- Abbas, the recently elected
NBC Nightly News. "What ers for the purpose of screw- prime mirrister, can help
\f we are watching an ex·am- ing mutual enemies. They moderates prevail. But
ple o( presidential leadership . view other ways of looking at . remember that the election

happened simply because
Yasser Arafat died. Arafat
. was elected, too. Should
Israel use this historic opening to tighten its grip on East·
Jerusalem and expand West
Bank settlements, the current mood cannot last.
Egypt? Please. Egyptian
military dictat.or Hosni
Muharak says he'll let government-approved candidates run against him. That's
exactly how the ayatollahs
run Iran. Until joining the
recent pro-Bush howl-in
pundits like The Washing!()~
Post's Charles Krauthammer
justified · supporting Middle
Eastern dictators because
"(d)emocracy is not a suicide pact."
Unlike Washington pundits, few in Beirut or Cairo
failed to notice that the Iraqi
elections were held under
martial law enforced by a
foreign invader, with anonymous candidates and 42 per- ·
cent of the electorate boycotting. Nor that the winners
were Shiite religious parties
to
Grand
answerable
Ayatollah Ali Sistani, the
Iranian-born cleric who
basically forced Bush to
hold the elections.
So fat, the anti-U.S. insurrection shows no signs of
abating. Iraqis have been
unable to folm a government.
Maybe after they do, pundits
can quit baying at White
House sirens and begin to
assess what the Bush doctrine
actual! y means.
(Arkansas
Democratwzette columnist Gene Lyons
is a national magazine award
winner and co-author of "The
Hunting of the President" (St.
Marrin s Press, 2(}()()). You
can e-mail Lyons ar genelyons2@cs.com.)

Crow noted that there are
many job opportunities locally for people with ski lls in
medic.al office management
ipcluding hospitals, cliniCs,
doctors· office, nursing
homes and medical billing
companies: "What "'e'll be
doing is preparing today's
students for tomorrow's
.care~rs,'' she said.

Pam ida
from Page A1
ment and job creation."
Reed said the CIC expects
to fina li ze details of the
lease as early as this week ,
but confirmed that the
potential lessee is local , and
plans to operate a flea market in the building.
The building, located on
Laurel Cliff Road, first
housed· a Fisher's Big
'
.

Whee l discount store, an'd
later a. Pamida discount
-store. which closed shortly
after · Wai-Mart opened a
Super Center in · Mason.
W.Va. Meigs County tax
records show the true value
of the reai estate and building at $769,650.
The tiC already owns
several buildings in the
county. including the former Holzer Clinic buildin g
on
Mill
Street
in
Middleport, which hou ses
the. University of Rio

Both Cremeens and Wood
allegedly have confessed to
the crime, which took place
in a rural . cemetery near
from PageA1
Wilke sv ille .in
Vinton
County. They are accused
answers to,': Shepherd said.
luring Hunt to the cemeOnce the ·report is submit- · of
tery, allegedly under the
ted, a hearing will be set to premise of buying Xanax
determine Wood's competen- from him.
cy to stand trial , Shepherd
While sitting in Hunt's van,
said.
the ·victim allegedly made a
Meanwhile, a hearing has sexual comment, at which
been set for 9:30 a.m. Friday, time Wood is accused of
April 22 on a motion to sup- shooting him twice in the
press the videotaped confes- back with a .38-caliber
sion of Donovan K. Cremeens. revolver.
18, of 8194 Bull Run Road in
On the . videotaped confesVinton, who is accused of act- · sion which will be contested
ing in partnership with Wood in April, Cremeens said Hunt
in the shooting.
then tried lo get out of the
He also faces a charge of van door, and Wood allegedaggravated murder.
ly shot him a third time. in
Cremeens'
attorney. the chest.
William
Henderson
of
Cremeens then is alleged 10
Logan, has filed a motion to have driven Wood's car over
suppress the videotape, say- Hunt' s body. Hi s remains
ing it was recorded at the were found between a set of
Gailia County Sheriff's . (ire tracks. and human hair
Department before Cremeens was
found
underneath
was read his Miranda rights. Wood's car. The alleged mur-

Rulings

negotiating th-:

co~ t

top ofl Ihc right side of the
road. ·
Zack Faulk. who was not
wearine a ~eat belt. \\.a -.
thrown cfrom the vehicle alld
di ed
Th1 s' i' the · 'econd fatal
nash in Vlci gs Coumy this
year. and the third in the covera ge area of the Ga·llia'
Meigs Highw ay Patrol Post
thi ' year. There we re fiv·e
people kil led in t i1c separate
crashes in the Inca! patrol
area last vear.
The cra'h remaim under
inve,tigation by the pat rol.
A . . ..,istin g at 1he . . cc ne were

the Meig s · Cou nt y Sherifr s
Office. Meigs County EMS
and Salem. Sutton and
Rutland fire department s.
mined a brutal. rcprcben'i 1·e
acl - the murder of t"o ol
hi s fell ow hun1an beim!, .
These crimes ... do not !'all
within the cla"e' of offense'
Ji,ted in the Oh io Revised
Code.
·
"Nor Joes the record or circumstances of these offen&gt;e'
permit the Court ·to reasonahly conclude th e} were
committed with a sexual ·
motivation :·
In his entry, Crow re,en ed
a deci,ion on the issue of
LeMa ~ ter~ · clas ~i fi c ation a~

a

chi ld-victim predat&lt;;r
Crow sentenced LeMa, ters
consecutive li fe "entem:e"
on the three aggravated mur -

lO

der chitrges. with addiiional
six -year
sente11ces · on· •
firearms specifications. with
parole eli.gibility alter 30
years.
He . senten ced
LeMasters to two sentences
of 10 to 25 years on two kidnapping counts and a sentence of 10 to 25 years on an
aggravated robbery charge.

Syracuse Youth League meeting

The program also includes
McKelvey and Crow said dents the opportunity to
they are _currently recruiting · explore the health care field an internship project where
students to enter the program · while they gain experienc·e students work in the health
in the falL "We are looking in basic nursing skills and care field at a facility of their
for highly-motivated stu- receive certification in sev- choosing and externships in
dents who want to obtain . era! entry level health-relat- phlebotomy to those interested · in that field . she added.
. employable skills for success ed careers.
in the workforce," they said.
"Students can become state Both programs emphasize
"This program gives students testyd nursing assistants, can computer skills.
The Meigs Career and
the option of goi ng into ·nurs- be certified in CPR and First
ing or some other medical . Aid, can complete training in Technical Center, open to all
field or staying in office general laboratory proce- Meigs County .high school
. management."
dures including phlebotomy, students. work s in partner- .
As
for
the
Health and by the end of their senior ship with the Washington
Te'-"nology
program year can set for their certifi- State Community College in
Newsome said it allows stu- cation test," said Newsome. ·Marietta .

a~

of pre~ cn ption Jrug,,
He '"Y' the concept could
' ave distri ct' ) I XO million
over two )ear' beginning in
Jul y and 5656 million o1·e1
fou r years "" -.a\'i ng . . he gin to
kick in . Hu sted. a Da1 t'm
area Republican. expect's ltJ
inc lude the prop&lt;"al in the
Hou'e 1er,io n. of the upcom ing qa tc hudgc,l.

sexual motivation,'' Crow

wrote in hi ~ entry dated
Monday. "(LeMasters) com-

by a note of the board of education dated on or about Feb.
I I . The board \ note bears
interest at the nile of 4 .75
from Page A1
percent per annum. payable
Robe11 Burlenski from the on or before June 30.
In other busines': '
Auditor of State's office
The Monitor 's Re.pon
•·
made a presentation and
was
released.
reviewed the district's deficit
• The commiSsion approved
certification for fiscal year
the
following tlnancial docu 2005-05 at $29 1,000. down
ment
s as pre sented by
from the previous year's
Southern Di strict Treasure r
detlcit of $67 1,000.
Carter:
Revised·
The comm1ss1on also . Pam
Grande Meigs Center, ttie Plains, and dedicated a spec
Amended
.Certificate
of
a
resolution
Millenium
Teleservices building there last year, approved
Resources.
requesting the release of Estimated
building on East Main with hopes that the building Solvencv
Permanent
Fiscal
Yea r 2005
Advancement
Street and other parce ls sur- soon will be occupieu by an Funds . '
Approp'riatinns Reso lution .
rounding it. the former industrial concern. ·
. During an emergency com_. Tax Budget as approved by
"The C:IC's mission is to mission meeting on Feb . 9. the Southern Board of
Midwest Steel b~ilding now
housing Gheen ' Industrial be involved in projects in Resolution 25-20, Approve Education.
Painting. and the former the community that provide Cash Flow Borrowing. was
The commi"ion decided to
Ohio
Department
of value to the people who implemented . The action was· an11ounce th eir nex.t meetin £
Transportation garage on Jive here . either through taken for the continued oper- at a later date . af\er Gruese"r
Ohio 7 ·near Che ster, which job creation or by provid - ation of the district. The conduct&gt; negotiations ·1\ith
is now leased by American ing opportunities for busi - Southern Board of Education unions represc·ntin g the di'nesses which offer a prod- adopted a resolution 10 bor- trict\ staff and facull! beginElectric Ppwer.
The CIC also owns the uct or other value for the row $350.766 as evidenced ning in April.
60-acre
East
Meigs cit izens of Meigs County ...
Indu strial Park at Tuppers Reed said.
der weapon. a .38-caliber
handgun, and bloody clothes
were found in Wood's home
in Dexter when she was
arre·sted.
~'There is a lo.t of foren sic.
physical evidence to back up
the 'confessions if she (Wood).
ever changes her mind."
Gleeson said.
Both Wood and Cremeens
face possible life sentences.
but not the death penalty.
Cremeens is being lodged in
the
Southeastern
Ohio
Regional Jail in Nelsonville,
while Wood remains in
Chillicothe. She is being represented by John K. Clark of
Wellston.

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA 7;11

446-4524 ' ll

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2004-2005 Valley Artist Series

Pirates
of
Penzance·
Saturday, April 2, 2005 • 8 pm
Sunday, April 3rd • 3 pm
Fine and Performing Arts Center
University of Rio Grande
10.00 at the

Call 740· 245-7364

Kenneth McCullouQh, R. Ph.
Charles Rime, R. Ph.
Prescription Ph. 992-2955
1 12 East Mal n Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

HOURS
Mon - Fri Sam - 8pm
Sol. Sam - 5 pm
Sun. Closed

�PageA6

OHIO'

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March 31,

Thursday, March 31, 2005

NEWS ABOUT

PEr STORE CALLS SOUI'HFAST Omo O'IY'S SPAY/NEUTER L\W UNFAIR Agency
ATHENS. (A P) - A pet . d0gs and cats when they leave
store chain is protesting a city the campus in Athens, about
law that holds sellers re spon- 65 miles southeast of
sible .if customers don't spay Columbus.
or neuter their pets.
Pet-welfare organizations
City council adopted the pushed for the law. Stephanie
unorthodox approach tQ try to Shain, spokeswoman for the .
reduce the· 3,000 unwanted Humane Society of the
cats and dogs the animal she!- United States. praised the city
ter kills each year. Similar for an approach she called
·
laws across the country typi- progressive .
cally hold buyers · responsible
Pet land, which opened its
if they do not spay or neuter Athens store last spring, has
their animals.
.
tried to comply with the ordiChiHicothe-b;~sed Petland nance, spokeswoman Debbie
operates the only pet shop in May said. Pet purchasers
Athens and argues the law receive a voucher for free
unfairly singles it out. The sterilization
from ·
a
company c!Jallenged the ordi- Chillicothe veterinarian.
The city is holding off .
nance in a lawsuit filed ~arlier
this month, arguing it is a dis- enforcement of the law until
.criminatory and unconstitu- the Petlan4 case is resolved in
tiona! restraint of commerce. Athens· County Municipal
In Athe'ns, breeders · who Court, said Lisa Eliason, city
live outside the city and pet prosecutor and assistant .law
stores face a $100 fine if they director.
.
cannot prove that the buyers
When the ordinance· passed
later had the animals steril- . last June, Petland was open
ized. Local residents whose about a month, but the timing
animals have litters do not was just a coincidence,
face the same requirements.
Councilman Jim Sands said. ·
City officials have argued
"Pelland might have been
Ohio University students con- the catalyst," he said. "But we
tribute to 'the unwanted pel very carefully did not consid- .
population by abandoning er Pe\land by itself."

proposes .
fees for
developers,
coal mines

AP Photo

Teri Combs from Albany plays with a mutt at the Athens County Dog Shelter in Chauncey.
Chillicothe-based Petland is protesting a city law that holds sellers responsible if customers
don't spay or neuter their pets. The Athens City council adopted the unorthodox approach to
try to .reduce the 3,000 unwanted cats and dogs· the animal shelter kills each year. Similar laws
across the country typically hold buyers responsible if they do not spay or neuter their animals.

Pay-for-perfonnance plan for doctors draws national attention
Bv LISA CORNWELL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CINCINNATI - A program. started in Ohio and
Kentucky to give doctors
financial
incentives
for
improving patient care has
become a model for similar
pay-for-performance health
care.plans elsewhere.

'Guzman says
justice system
restored in Chile
DAYTON (AP) - Juan
Guzman, the Chilean judge
who ·indicted former dictator
Gen. Augusto Pinochel for
alleged human rights abuses,
said the . days when the
country's judges "collaborat- .
ed" with the military regime
are long ~one.
"In Chtle, our judges are
fulfilling their jobs. · Many
prosecutions are taking place
there; and many agents who
took part in crimes against
. humanity during Pinochet's
era have been severely punGuzman
said
ished,"
Wednesday night, whe~ he
received a human rights
award from the University
of Dayton.
.
According to an official
report by the civilian government that succeeded
Pinochet, 3,190 people ·were
killed for •political reasons
during his .1973- 1990 dictatorship.
·
' .
In his remarks before a .
gathering of about 100 people, Guzman said that during
the. Pinochet era, some
judges "collaborated with a
system of torture and extinction of the enemy within" by
ignoring what was going on.
"For about 20 years, the
crimes that were committed
during the long night of the
dictatorship · were neither
investigated .nor punished,"
he said. ·
'
In December, Guzman
charged Pinochet w'ith nine
kidnappings and one homicide
in the
so-called
Operation Condor, a joint
plan by the dictatorships that
ruled
several
South
American nations in the
1970s and 1980s to suppress
dissent.
Seven of the kidnapping
v'ictims were seized in
Argentina, one in Paraguay
and one in Bolivia, while
one man was ·killed in Chile,
according to the charges
·
filed by Guzman.
Guzman said a new page
has been turned and the
country's judicial system has
proven it can carry out its
role effectively, with judges
becoming the .protectors of
human rights:
·
"Judges are really braver,
· more courageous · because
they don't have this oppressive system over them," he
said.
During an afternoon panel
discussion
on
campus,
Guzman said he was surprised that Chilean soldiers
who were tried for crimes
: seemed to be braver in
accepting guilt than did
civihans.
.
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Companies parttctpating in
the program, which began two
years a&amp;o as a test in
Cincinnati and Louisville, Ky. ,
pay doctors extra money· lor
meeting certain standards for
care they provide for chronic
illnesses. Doctors receive
inc.entives ranging from $50 to
$160 per patient annually
through the Bridges to
Excellence. initiative, organizers say.
As of J,anuary, about 500
doctors in the pilot program
that
has
expanded
to
Massachusetts and upstate
New York had earned around
$1 million in bonus payments
across all segments of the program. The nonprofit coalttion
of doctors, employers · and
health plans that created the

Bridges to Excellence initiative
announced this week that the
concept is in the process of
moving into 10 states and
involving more than 2 million
people as employers and insurers take it into the wider mar-ketplace.
.
"Bridges to Excellence is
clearly a program that is !letling attention and showmg
results," said Qr. Mark
McClellan, administrator for
the federal Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid
Services, which oversees
Medicare and works with
states to administer Medicaid
health insurance.
The Bridges initiative helps
companies by providing better preventive care for
employees, reducing the risk

'rhe Daily Sentinel • Page A7

www.mydailysentinel.com

2005

of disease complications and
helping lower overall costs of
care for employers and insurers, organizers say.
McClellan wants Meditare
to adopt a similar pay-for:performance plan, and constders
the pro~ram started in
Cincinnati one of the best
models for how the government's version of the incenlives should work.
The program is focusing ini· ~ally on care for diabetes and
heart problems and on the adop·lion of im~roved information
technology m doctors' offices.
Some of the nation's largest
employers farticipate, including Genera Electric Co., Ferd
Motor Co, UPS, Verizon
Communications Inc . and
Procter &amp; Gamble Co.

United Healthcarc, Cigna
Healthcare and CareFirst
BlueCross BlueShield are
three health insurers that also
are involved in the initiative.
"We are looking to re-engineer delivery of care and to set
some national standards on
how we measure quality," said
Jeff Hanson. president of the
coalition and regional healthcare manager for Verizon .
The diabetes portion of the
program costs · employers
about $'175 per patient per
month, including the bonuses
and ad ministrative costs. but
the companies say the'y save
about $350 per employee
each month through reduced
hospital visits, less unnecessary testing and other factors.

SENIOR CITIZENS IN MEIGS COUNTY
Actlvltv Schedule

2681, ext. 233 for more
MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR NUTRmON PROGRAM
Apr.05
information or to schedule an
The Senior Nutrition Meal Is sarved Dally at 11 :45
The Meigs Multipurpose appointment.
Center is open Monday
Menus Jn.,.-.d by Uncia Myers R.D. L.O . .
through Friday from 8:00a.m.
1
Massa@ therapy
' .
until .4:30 p.m. Regularly
~ber• tf you will not tM'
Meat Loaf
scheduled activities held
Another new addition to the
hOfM to .-.ceiv. your rMa1, -.n
Baked Potato
throughout the week include Wellness Program is Massage
1M driver or call tt2-2111 . 1fyou
Brussel Spruots
'
sewing, quilting, bingo, Therapy. Janice Haynes, a
Pineapple Upside
hn. • toueh tone phone,
you
checkers, and games.
registered massage therapist,
Down Cake
miiY ~~ H2·2A1 •rt 235
Dance team practice is will be providing this.new
B'\lad
held each Monday at I :00 service for its. April I is the
5
6
7
8
p.m. Cost is $1 per session projected day to begin. The
Tuna Salad On Bun
Sausage &amp; Egg Bake
Ground Baef Stroganoff
Baked 'r url&lt;ey
Swiss Steak
attended. The
Knitting cost for this service is $30 for
Hash Brown Potatoes
Harvard Beets
Candied Sweet Potatoes
Baked Potato
' • Potato Soup
Circle meets on Wednesday half-hour and $50 for one
Biscu~
1\pfJie Juice
Tropical Frurt
Green Bean Casserole
Creamed Cauliflower
hour. If you have a current
from 10 a.m. until noon.
BuHe.red Cabbage
Tomato Juice
Angel Food Cake
Applesauce
Orange
All ages are invited to MCCoA bronze membership
Prunes
Pudding
Roll
Wheat Bread
attend the activities sched- card, you will receive a 10%
uled. Lunch is served daily at discount for the service.
11
12
3
14
15
II :45. The suggested dona- · Appointments can be schedBreaded Veal Wl(;ravy
Pori&lt; Chop
Tuna Noodle Casserole
Roast Chicken
Chili
tion for the noon meal is $2 uled . Monday
through
Seasoned Spinach
Tossad Salad
Mashed Potatoes
Coleslaw
Malhad Potatoes
for those 60 or older.
Thursday beginning at 4 p.m.
a.-!Dnloalng
Orange
Juice
canota
~ima. Beans
Spiced
Peaches
To schedule an appointment,
Fruit Coctdllll
Scellopad Potatoes
Pears W/Jell-0
Pudding
Cake
.
call 992-2 161 or 992-2681
Social 5ecurlty
Biscuit ·
White Bleed
Plums
Wheat Bread
Crackers
ext. 233.
Representatives from the
Massage therapy helps
11
19
20
21
22
Social
Security relieve pain of arthritis, musAthens
·
Turkey
Tetraz.zini
Beef
Stew
Beans
&amp;
Franks
Swedish
Meal.
b
alls
Macatoni
&amp;
Cheese
Office will be at the Meigs cle strain, tendonitis and other
Pee$
Pineapple Juice
Mashad Potatoes
cautlftower W/Cheese
Senior Center to assist people injuries, eases chronic back
Stewed Tomatoes
with Social Security prob- pain, reduces post-.traumatic
Cranberry Mold W/
Biscuit
Cam
Sauerkraut
Green Beans
lems and to provide informa- headaches, lessens pain and
Mandarin Orange
Pudding
Under The Sea Salad
Banana
Grape Juice
tion. The dates are April 13 muse le spasms in patients
ROll
Bread
WhHtBraad
Chocolate Cookies
and 27 from 10-11 a.m. No who have ·undergone heart
appointment
is
n'e eded ; bypass surgery, promotes
29
please register at the recep- relaxation and alleviates the
Chid&lt;en Nuggets
Navy Bean Soup W/Ham
Johnny Merzeni
BBORibl,
Fish On Bun
tionist desk.
·
perception of pain and anxiety
AuGratin Potatoes
Tomato Juice
Palllley Potatoes
lt.Bllan Green Beane
Oven Browned Potatoes
in cancer patients.
California
Vegetables
Cottage
Cheese
Salad
Peacl\
Cobbler
Hot Spioed Pears
Succotash '
'
Apple
Crisp
Apricots
Supoort Groups
Honey Ambrosia Salad
Perfection Salad
GMicBread
' Rtness
Peanut Butler Cookie
Com Bread
Graham Crackera
Expanded
ROll
The Caring and Sharing
RoomHoyrs
Support Group meets each
at . the
Meigs. The Sisters of Saint Joseph
month
Multipurpose Center at I p.m. Charitable Fund have awardThe meeting date is April 28. ed a grant to help finance our ·
2005 Calendar of Events
Lenora Leifheit is the coordi- fitness room. This grant has
. nator for the group.
allowed us to expand our
· April I", 5:00p.m. Spaghetti Dinner and 7:00 Bear Auction
The
Stroke
Support hours of operation and hire
Group Will meet from 1-2:30 an . Assistant
Wellness
M on~ay
d
T uesday
Wednesdav "
Tbunda~·
Fridav .
p.m. on April 12. Lia Tipton, Director, Bryan Hoffman.
i1
Occupational
Therapist, Our new hours are as foli 9:00 Paint Class (F)
Holzer Rehabilitation Center, lows : Monday
through
.
5:00 Spaghetti Dinner(FJ
'
is the· coordinator. ·
Thursday 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.
7:00 Bear Auction
The Diabetes Support and Friday from 7 a.m. to
Group will meet on April 21. 4:30p.m.
'
Meetings begin at 10:30 a.m.
Wellness Director; Joy
5
'6
7
8
and .are · held in the Bentley
10:00 Karr Audiology
works
Monday . 1:00 Dine&amp; Group (F)
9:00 Nails by Pam
9:00 Paint Clas~(F )
Conference Room at the through Thursday from 7 a.m.
10:30 Paint wateling cans 10:00 Kni!llng Circle
8:00 Y11g11 ~tau (F)
10:30 Paint pots with
Meigs Multipurpose Center. to noon . Bryan Hoffman
with Doris Carder
1:00 Dance Group .
Doris Carder
A program on "Shoes for the staffs the fitness · room
10:00 Euchre
•
•
11 :00 Linda King
Diabetic" will be presented by Monday through Thursday
-·····
Pleasant
Valley
Home from 2 p.m. to 8 p.m. _and on
11
12
13
15
~
1:00 Dine&amp; Group (F)
10: ~ Rock~prings Bingo
10:00 Kni!llng Circle
11:00 Spring Plant
9:00 Paint Class(F)
:Medical Equipment.
Friday from 7 a.m. to .1 p.m.

COLUMBUS (AP) -The
Ohio
Environmental
Protection Agency has proposed that developers and coal
mining companies - not taxpayers - pay the cost of
reviewing proJects that alter
wetland,; and oth~r waterways.
The surface water protection
fee applies to any project to
dredge, till or move wetlands,
lakes, stream·s and other bodies of wnter. They are paid by
residential, .commercial and
industrial developers, mining .
companies, state, federal and ·
local agencies, marina owners
and others.
· ·
Currently, the fees range
from $25 to $200. but· .the
reviews can cost the EPA
thousands of dollars. The cost
of the reviews is borne mostly
by taxpayers in money that
comes from the state's general
revenue fuhd.
·
However, Gov. Bob Taft's.
$51 billion budget proposal
eliminates state funding for
the EPA - about $19.8 million for the current year beginning July I. Instead, the
budget proposes that the
agency replace the money
mostly through fee increases.
The state's share . has been
about 13 percent of the EPA's
budget. The rest comes from
fees and federal grants.
The new water protection
fees would range from $25 for
a review of a small'Wetland fill
for a road to $5,500 for a 10acre wetland fill for a coal
mine. The cost increases with
the number of visits the EPA
must make to a site, the
amount of technical docu- ·
ments that must be produced
and public hearings on proposed projects. The EPA proposed a cap of $25.000 per
project.

"

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April

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BINGO
Thursday; March 31

Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)

turning from the northwest as
the evening progresses.

· Join us for bingo on April
12 at II a.m.
· Rocksprings Rehab will
sponsor the April bingo. Bring
.a friend and stay for lunch.

Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
Expect a cloudy morning.
Heavy downp~mrs are fore- · Temperatures will drop
casted. The ra,tn should stop . from ·48 to today 's low of 40
by 9:00am wtt~ total accu- by 6:00am . . Skies will be
mulallons for thts event near mostly clear to mostly cloudy
0.48 . tru;hes. Temperatures with 5 MPH winds from the
wtll nse from 60 to 66 by late .
this morning. Winds will be 5 northwest
to 10 MPH from the south
turning from the southwest as
Friday, April 1
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
the morning progresses.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
Temperatures will climb
Temperatures will rise from from 42 to 53 by late this
69 early afternoon to the high morning. Skies will range
for the day of 71 at 3:00pm from partly cloudy to cloudy
as they drop back down to 66 ~;~~ith 10 MPH winds from the ·
later this afternoon. Skies north turning from the northWill be sunny to partly east as the morning progresscloudy with· 10 MPH winds · es.
from the southwest turnmg
Afternoon 0 _6 p.m.)
from the west as the afterIt 'II b · 1 d · ft
noon progresses.
.
WI
e a c ou y a erEvening (7 p.m.-Midnight) n~on. There could be a few
Temperatures will diminish ramdrops around the area.
ho~d
from 61 early this evening to Temperatures wtll
49. Skies will range from· steady around 52. Wtnds wtll
clear to mostly cloudy with be 5 to J 5 MPH from the
10 MPH winds from the west north.

,.

*

Tax assistance is available at
the Meigs Senior Center each
'Tuesday and Thursday from
9-11 a.m. Through April 15.
Herman
Carson · and
Shirley
Hamm
provide
Volunteer
Income
Tax
Assistance (VITA) and Tax
Counseling for the Elderly
. (TCE) by appointment only.
Please call 992-2161 for an
appointment.
For complicated tax returns,
please consult a paid tax preparer,

Real

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Local Stocks
ACI- 42.14
AEP- 33.55
_Akzo - 44.76
Ashland Inc. ,;_ 65.82
AT&amp;T -18.82
BU -11.86
Bob Evans- 23.94
BorgWamer - 48.70
Champion - 4.17
Channing Shops ,.... 8.16
City Holding - 29.85
Col-'- 47.59

DG -21.81
DuPont - 51.12
Federal Mogul- .34

USB -28.63
Gannett - 79.60
General Electric- 36.20
GKNLY- 4.77
Harley Davldaon- 57.68
)PM-34.95
Kroeer - 15.94

Oak Hill Financial 33.55
OVB- 33.19
BBT- 39.18
Peoples - 26.96
Pepsico - 53.36
Premier - 11.20
Rockwell ....: 56.20
Rocky Boots - 27.02
RD Shell - 60.09 .
SBC- 23.70
Wai-Mart - 50.84
Wendy's - 39.20
Worthln&amp;ton - 19.16
Dally stock reports are
'the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the prevloua day' a
tranaactlona, provided by
Smith Partnera at Advest
Inc. of Gallipolis.

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Diet Analysis and
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NSC -37.08

Subscribe today

• 992~2155
'I •'

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PER! Meetlne
.
'
The regular ·m~:eting of
PERI will be held on April I
at the Meigs Multipurpose
Senior c;:::enter. Lunch will be
served at II :45 a.m.
Tax Preparation

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1

Diet ilnalysis and nutrition
education have been added
to the Wellness Program.
Tiffany Hoffman, D.T.R .,
who has an associate 's
degree in dietetics and eight
years of experience working
tn a pursing home setting
and in children's nutrition
programs, will be lending
her expertise to our p~o­
gram.
· If you have high cholesterol, high blood pressure,
are overweight, diabetic,
have been instructed to modify your diet in any way, or
you are the parents or
guardians of hyperactive
children, you may benefit
from dietetic counseling. The
cost is $25 for those who
have a current MCCoA membership card and $30 for nonmembers. This price includes
individual diet analysis ana
· recommendations for three
one-hour
sessions.
Appointments will be sched. uled at your convenience.
Please call 992-2161 or 992-

6:00 Yoga Class (F)

1

18

:0? Stroke;Support

10:00 Social Security
1:00 Dance Group

Exchange

19

20

21

22

11:00 Arbors at Gallipolis
Rehabilitation Center
Therapy Dept. to talk on
knel and hip replacement
11:00 Paint Terra Cotta
pots with Dori• Can:ter

10:00 Knitting Circle
1:00 Bloodmobile

10:00 Euchre
10:30 Paint pots with
Doris Carder
10:30 Diabetes Support
1 1:00 Linda King on
D.a.s.h. Diet in center
room

9:00 Paint ·Class (F)

Plant Exchange
The annual spring plant
exchange will be held on
April 14 at II am. Hal Kneen
and the Master Gardeners
Will present a program on
spring ·pianting a!ld have lots ·
of plants and bulbs for
exchange.
· Don' t worry if you don't
have any plants to exchange,
there is always plenty. If you
do have plants to give away,
please mark what they are
and bring them to the Center
by II a.m.

I

1:00 o.noe Group (F)
6.:00 Yoga Clau {F)

.

i

'

'

'
2S

21

27

1:00 Dane. Group(F)
11:00 Yoga Clala (F)

11 :00 Swinging S.nkw

to dlinoe

10:00 Knitting Circle
10:00 Social Security
1:00 Dance Grpup

28 Birthday Party
10:00 Euchre
10:30 Crafts with Library
Girts.
1:00 Caring and Sharing

1

-·---

29

19:00 Paint Class (F)
:

I
I (F) •

r.. for the activity/e¥1:111

DONATIONS ARE ACCEPTED AND AfPRECIATED

Rummage Sale
Winery, and Maid of the Mist.
We are once. again particiPrices:
pating in the Yellow Flag Yard
Single $347
Sale on Friday, May 6 and
Dou.ble $.289
Saturday, May 7.
Triple $278
. If you have clean, used or
Quad $270
new items you would like to
A deposit of $80 per person
donate to the Center for the
is
dtie by July 12, 2005.
Rummage Sale, you can drop
them off at the Center beginAmish Country in Ohio
ning the week of May 2. We
are unable to take items
The cost is $45 for this trip
before this date due to the
which
includes shopping, an
shortage of storage space.
Amish meal and a visit to the
Trips for 2005

cheese factory. The trip is Christmas show, the Comedy
·scheduled for October II, · Barn, shopping at the outlet
2005.
stores, two dinners and two
breakfasts .
The cost is $340 per person
Pigeon Forge
for a double room . If interested
in this trip, plt;ase make a
An overnight trip 10 Pigeon
reservation
a soon as possible
Forge for Winterfesl is scheduled for November 29, 30 and so final plans can be made.
•••
December I, 2005.
Dates are vet to be deterThe trip wi II include transportation,
lodging , mined for the:5e trips:
Dollywood, Louise Mandrell
Oglebay Park Festival
Theater, ' Blackbear Jamboree
.
of Lights
·
Wheeling, West Vi~ginia

•••
Theater trip to
. Columbus, Ohio
t!' see the Nutcracker

...

.F or further information
or to make reservations,
contact
Debbie
Jones,
Activities DirMtor at 9922161 or Alice Wamsley,
Volunteer Trip Coordinator'
at 992-3938.

The . following trips for
2005 are being planned. If
you are interested in any of
the trips, please make your
reservations as soon as possible so final plans can be
made.
·

"We Care About Patielll Care"

New York City Your Way
Four nights lodging m
downtown Manhattan.
Prices:
Single $803
Double $493
Triple $410
Quad $369 ·
A deposit of $.100 per person is due by April 20, 2005.
Gel a group of your friends
together and see New York
City.
.
Niagara Falls Trip
Thi s trip includes · two
nights lodging, two full break·
fast buffets, two dinners, a
guided tour of the Niagara
area, Paredevil Theatre,
Chateau
Des
Charmes

'
l

April!, 2005 ~5'ojt&gt;:~ncr

Spaghetti Dinner 5:00p.m.- 6:30p.m.
Auction 7:00p.m.
Meigs County Council on Aging, Inc.
112 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
We bave approximately 200 bears 10 choose from which ·
includes: Steiff Danbury Mint I 00 year anniversary hear, 2
autographed

• Home Oxygen
• Hospital Beds
• CPAP Machines • Wheelchairs
• Nebulizers
• Oximetry
JCAHO Accredited

24 Hour Emergency Se111ice • Free Delivery

l-800-458-6844

Dean's Rag Book C'o. Bears, Ohio River
Bears and Boyd's Bears.

·

For more infonnation or a list of bears,
contact us al (740) 992-2161

Bears w""' donated by Nancy Shaw. All procC1XIs t'roin Ill&lt; bear
auctKm will benefil the Meals ~m Wheels program.

446-7283 286-7484 59.4-21
70 Pine Street

765 E. Main St.

540 W. Union

�Southern baseball falls to Fed Hock, Page B4
OSU warns about Improper benefits, Page 84
Browns trade for RB Droughns, Page B8
Reds best Yankees, Page B8

Page A8 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

--

Greer Museum
to display works
of Randall Enos

Thursday, March 31, 2005

'Pirates coM

Thursday, March 31, 2005

Davis tosses four-hitter as Meigs wins opener

. PREP SCHEDULE

RIO GRANDE - The and music theatre, and Dr.
delightful
Gilbert
and David Lawrence, director of
Sullivan
musical , 'The choral music and assistant
Pirates of Penzance," will be professor ·of music at the
performed on Saturday at 8 University of Rio Grande.
p.m. and Sunday at 3 p.m. · Gary Stewart, president of
in the Fine and Performing the Valley Artist Series, said,
Arts Center at the University "We are so fortunate to have
of Rio Grande, as the fifth Drs. Tadlock and Lawrence
in the series of presentations combine their talents to proby the Valley Arti st Serie~. duce and direct this popular
This is great family enter- musical, which has an
tninment, with tickets avail- appeal
for
everyone .
able at the door for both Presenting two performances
performances, priced at $10· provides an opportunity for
each. This exciting local · people to fit this .unique
production of a very popular event into their schedule, for
musical , featuring pirates, a either an evening or an
bevy of' young maidens. and afternoon of · great entertainthe famou s Maj. Gen. ment."
Stanley, . dates back to 1879,
Subscribers to the Valley
when it was first performed Artist Series have their tickin New York City, conduct- ets. In addition, tickets may
ed · by Arthur Sullivan him- also be purchased at the
self.
door for $10 each, both
Directors . for Saturday 's Saturday for the 8 p.m. perand Sunday 's upcmJ:}ing per- formance, ·and · Sunday for
Submitted photo
formances are Dr. David M. the 3 p.m. show.
Tadlock. adjunct instructor
For any additional infor- A number of the "Pirates" are busy in rehearsal for their participation in the Saturday evening
of music
at , Marietta mation, or to reser\le tickets, and Sunday afternoon performances of-"Pirates of Penzance" in the Fine ana Performing Arts
&lt;::enter at the University of Rio Grande.
College, a specialist in opera call 245-7364.

Today'a gam!'• .
BIMbiP ·
'
Ironton at Gliltia Academy. 4:30 p.m,
Rlver Valley at Atho'ns, 4:30p.m.
Southern at Meigs, 4:30p.m .
EaS1ern at Welteto&lt;)..4:30'p.m.
Hannan at'Sdutlf-Clalllli, 4:30 p.m.
·,~
-·
,., 1 801tban
·· .
Gatlla ~ at Cheaapeoke, 4:30

)l.m.

.;

Southern at Meigs, 4:30p.m.
Elstem a~W~IISton , 4;3() p.m.
,River Valley at Athens, 4:30p.m.
Wahama ot·South Gallla , 4:30p.m.

Frldo!Y'• v•in••
liUollolt
· Meigs at Miller

any entrant and all proceeds
will benefit tile March of
Dimes.
Trophies will be given for
farthest distance, best import,
best truck, best low rider, best
paint, best GM, best Fqrd, best
Mopar and people's choice. In
case of rain, the cruise-in will
be held Sunday.
·

GALLIPOLIS - WBYGFM Big Country 99's fourth
annual CfJJise-in is Saturday
from noon to 4 p.m.
·
Staged with the assistance of
the Ole Car Club of Gallipolis,
there is a $5 regi stration fee for

Civil War
weekend set
HURRICANE, W.Va.
A Civil War weekend will
be held Friday through
Sunday, This is the seventh
anpual event held atValiey

MARIETTA
The
Association of Ohio Long
Rifle Collectors will hold
their 30th annual exhibit on
Saturday, April 2 arid Sunday,
April 3 at the Hotel Lafayette
in historic Marietta.
"This e~hibit will presen1
to the public approxm1ately
400 of the finest Ohio n\uz;
zleloading rifles in exis,
tence," states James Claggett;
AOLRC president. "The
rifles, exhibited by private
collectors, include plain rifles
as well as extremely fancy
rifles with brass, silver, and
ivory inlays that are excellent
examples of American folk
art."
The annual "Featur~
Gunsmith" will be the Teaff
family. James Teaff Sr.
worked in Jefferson County
in the early 1800s, and taught
the trade to at least two of hi~
sons, James Jr. and Nimrod.
"The P.urpose of the annual
exhibit, ' . according · to
Claggett, ''is to attract visitors who may not otherwise
ik able to view or obtain
information on original Ohio
longrilles."
.
Claggett notes that the
members and experts at the
show can often identify ion- .
grifles that visitors bnng to
the show, thus establishing
the age, value, and historical
significance of what otherwtse would just be a "wall·
·hanger." The exhibit is primarily for the presentation of
Park in Hurricane:
Events are to include battle historic firearms, but a "traqing table" is provided for
maneuvers
and
tactical members to offer antique
demonstrations, "true to life" muzzleloading arms and
campsites and sutler mer- accessories for sale or trade.
chants.
The · Associaiion of Ohio
The Honorable Abe and . Long Rille Collectors was
Mary Lincoln will be present formed in 1975 for the study
and dancing to the tunes of the and preservation of Ohio
t;nade muzzleloading rifles .
Civil War with the Sons of The ·association has recently
Dixie Civil War Band. The completed the publication of
weekend will feature company a five-volume set of books
drills, ladies tea, military ball, listing the gunsmiths of Ohio,
night firi'ng, church service by county, with biographical
information and photographs
and living history tours.
of
their work. The books will
The event is being sponbe
available at the exhibit.
sored by the PUtnam County
The viewing hours for the
Parks and Visitors Bureau, the public are Saturday from 9
city of Hurricane and the a.m. to 5 p.m., and· Sunday
Hurricane Woman's Club.
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.tn.

Two Con'IIO!tnt I ooeflonJi
2400 Eaaterh Ave.
1/4 Mile Nor1h :
(Across from KMart) Pomeroy/Mason Bridge :
Muon, WV 25280:
Gallipolis, Ohio 45831
(740) 446-1711
Phone (304) 773-5323

~

..

.---.....,..:::::--"'" fell to 0-2 forc ed the game. which had
o verall and to
be
moved
from
0-1 · in the Rock sprin gs beca use of
Tri- Vall e y soggy fie ld condition s, to be
MCARTHUR Mike
Conferen ce, called after six frames.
Davis threw a four-hit ·
and issued
Eric VanMeter, Eddie Fife
shutout, helping Meigs to a
6-0 season-opening baseball
just one base and Jeremy Blackston all
victory at Vinton County
on balls in had a pair of hit s to pace the
·
Wednesday.
six innings . .Marauders, who had seven
of work.
hits.
The
left-hander al so
Davis
Darkne ss
Afier
two
scoreless
struck out I I Vikings, who
BY BRAD SHERMAN

BSHERMA.N@MYDAILYREGISTER .COM

Eastern 5 I Trimble 2

Alexander at Eastim
Nelsonville-York at Southern
Softball .

Southern
explodes
late, tops
Fed Hock
ScoTT WoLFE

RACINE - An I I -run .
fifth inning gave the
Southern Lady Tornadoes a
12-2
come-from-behind
mercy win over the Federal
Lancers Wednesday night al ·
Star Mill Park . Southern
Senior Brooke Xiser was the
winning pitcher with two
strike outs and five walks,
while the Southern qefense
made just two errors in
securing the win .
Southern (1-0) pounded
out eight hits , singles by
Joanne Picken s and Linda
Eddy, and doubles by Ashley
Robie , Kasie Sellers. and
Nicki Tucker, while freshman Whitney Riffle had a
two ruri triple, and senior
Ashley Roush Jed the team
with a double and a single.
Eddy was perfect with two
walks to go with her single,
while Ki ser walked three
tin\es and scored twice.
Federal Hocking (0- 1) had
three hits, singles by Teri
Wolfe, Gibson, and Rosson .
. Southern loaded the bases·
with no outs in the first
inning, but poor base running,Jed to a scoreless inning
for the Tornadoes.
Federal Hocking took a 20 lead in. the third .inning
when with one out Wolfe
walked, Ali Deddens walked
and Stover walked. Rosson
hit a bases-loaded lly to left
field that was dropped
allowing two runs to come
home, but on the relay home
Stover was caught at . the
plate before a 1-3 ground out
got Southern out of the
inning.
Southern came back with ·
one run in the third when
Linda Eddy walked and stole
second and third, then came
home on a Joanne Pickens
single, the score 2- I. All
was quiet offensively until
the fifth.
· Federal Hocking pitcher
Terri Wolfe had struck out
seven So'uthern batters and
appeared to be much in control of the game. Southern
had been very impatient at
the plate over the first four
. innings, but still had managed four walks.
In the fifth irining, however, Southern's patience paid
off. Six walks and singles by
Eddy and Roush sparked a
drive that was finished off
with doubles by Robie,
Tucker, and Sellers before .
Whitney Riffle cleared the
bases with a booming triple.
That pushed the score to 12-2
and the .10-run mercy.
Wolfe suffered the loss for
Federal Hocking despite ten
strike outs to go with her ten
walks.
Southern goes to Meigs
Thursday for a Tri-Valle y
inter-divi sion make-up game.
Southern plays host to
Nelsonville Friday.
Southern 12, Federal Hoeklng 2
Federal HOG'tlng 0 0 2 0 0

""T"'

233

Southern
00 1 01 1- 1282
Brooke Kiser 'and Bonnie Allen. Terri
WoHe, Summer Hatfield and Adrian
Slolfer. WP - BrOOI«t Kiser. LP - Terri
Wolfe.

•

.

also th e losi ng pitcher, ·
allow ing ·seven hits over six
lll nlll g~ .

Meigs p lay ~ host to
So uthern today. Vinton
Cou nty is at Trimhl e.Friday.
Meigs 6, Vinton County 0
Meigs
00 1 140 67 0
·Vinton COu!liY 0 0 0 0 0 0 - . 0 4 :3
Mike Dav1s and Eddie F1fe Jos h Ousley
arid J, D. Rose. WP - Mike Dav is (1 -0).
LP - Josh Ou sley (0- 1)

Eastern tames
'Cats in opener

Nolionvlil.e-Volt&lt; at soUthern

BY

innings, Meigs broke the ice
with a run in the thi rd. then
added another iil the fourth
for a 2-0 lead.
The vi sitors pull ed away
wi!h a four-run ou tbu rst in
the fifth . a run fueled by
double; from Fi fe and Van
Meter.
.
Josh Ou sley had two hi ts
for Vinton Co unt y. He was

.

Melga at Miller
•
~nderatEasbwn

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Entertainment briefs

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

Smith strikes out nine, allows only
four hits in complete-game victory
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDA ILYTR IBUNE .COM

TUPPERS PLAI NS
Eastern baseball started it s
yeai with a bang Wednesday
with a 5-2 victory over ri val
Trimble
in
Tri-Valley
Conference play.
·
The bang was supplied in the
fifth inning by sen ior Ken
Amsbary, who blasted a threerun homer that allowed the
Eagles (l-0, 1-0) to break a
two-all tie and gave the hosts
the opening day win.
Afterward. EHS coach Brian
Bowen was· pleased ·with the
start of the 2005 season.
"I thought the kids did a real
good job tonight of playing
fundamental basebalL" said
Bowen. "We were a little slow
with the bat at the plate. but we
were able to produce when We
needed ir."
A large reason for the closely-contested game early on
was the pitching performance
·of. senior Ryan Smith. who
recorded nine strikeouts and
allowed just four hits and two
walks over the distance.
·
"Ryan has been working
hard since last falL He . has
been . throwing every week
since last season and it really
paid off tonight.'' commented
Bowen. "He did an excellent
job on the mound."
Early on however. it was the
Tomcats (Q-1, 0-1) that struck
tirst.
Lead-off hitter Ch a~ Mohler
tripled and later scored on a
Teny Holber1 sacrifice for a 10 lead.
Bryan Walters/photo
Chri s Myers and Smith both
Eastern right-hander Ryan Smith delivers a pitch during his Eagles ' 5-2 victory over riva l walked in the bottom half of
Trimble Wednesaay.
the first, then Myers sco(ed on

.Late heroics lift
Meigs over Vikings
BSHERMAN@MVDAILVREGISTER .COM

ROCKSPRINGS
Amber Burton 's RBI single
in the bottom of the sixth
broke the tie, then Joey
Hanin g sat down Vinton
County in the seventh to
complete Meigs ' thrilling
2-1 victory in the softball
season-opener Thursday.
. Burton 's hit fell safely in
shallow center, allowing
pinch runner Arnanda King
to score what proved to be
the game winner. Whitney
Smith and Haning had
back-to-back singles earlier
in the inning to set up
Burton 's hit.
The game, although the
first of the season , was an
important one in shaping
the Tri-Valley Conference
landscape . The two Clubs
have fini shed either first or
second. in the league the
past three seasons, and are
expected to challenge for
the top spot again thi s year.
The road team had. won
the last four meetings in th e
series prior to Wednesday . .
The southpaw Haning
allowed just five hits in
picking up the complet e
game pitching victory. Her
counterpart. Kinsey Clark ,
I

Haning

those game s."

The- Eagles travel to
Wellston today· for a 4:30p.m.
conference matchup.

'

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTER S@MYDAILYT RIBUNE.CO M .

Garnes.
Vinton
Count y
Burton
nianaged to
knot
the
score in the top of the sixth.
when one of three Lady
Marauder errors on the day
allowed Kara Reed. who
had drawn a base on ball s,
to score all the way from
second base.
Meig s plays host to
Southern today.
· Meigs 2, Vinton County. 1

...

an Amsbary single to tie the
game at one.
Myers walked again to lead
off the third inning and later
scored on a two-out single by
Terry Durst for a 2- 1 advantage.
Trimble's Nick Giffin sinjlled in the top of the fifth and
tate r scored on an Eastern
error. which set up the
Am sbary's heroics later in the
inning.
On the night, Amsbary had
two hits and four RBL's, while
Myers walked three times and
scored three runs.
Smith had the other hit for
the Eagles ..
Losing
·pitcher
Matt
Christ{nan allow~d four hits
and six walks while striking
out five . . Chri stman and
Anthony Dixon had the other
hits for the Tomcats.
Even with the good start,
Bowen knows his team will
have to · be ready for the
remainder of the week against
a couple of traditionally powerful squads.
. "This is going to be a very
tough first week for us.
We Iiston and Alexil!lder are
!!oing to be a challenge," said
Bowen. "We are not going to .
be overconfident in any of

Eastern·.,
drops
opener

M e g a n

VInton Co
000 00 1 0 - 152
Meigs
0 1 0001X - 2 103
Kinsey Clark and Kristen Collins. Joey
Han1n g and Megan Garnes. WP - Joey
Haning (1-Q}, LP - Kinsey Clark (0-1)

Next Game -Today Ill Welloton;·
4:30p.m.

High School Softball - - - ' - - - - - - - - -- - -

suffered the
loss .for the
.L a d y
Viking s.
Me ig s
held
the
lead · for
much of the
game, as it
broke th e
scoring ic e
in the second thanks
to a double
from Cassi
Whan , fol lowed · by a
run -scorin g
single by

BY BtJAD SHERMAN

Eastern 5, Trimble 2
Trimble
100 100 0 - 2 4 1
Eastern
101 030 )( - 54 2
Matt Christman and Anthony Dixon.
Ryan Smith and Terry Durst. WP Smith. LP- Christman. HR - E: Ken
Amsba.ry, fifth inning, two on.

Bryan Waltero/photo

Cassie Nutter connects on a double cluring the fifth inning
of Eastern 's 6-3 loss to Trimble.

'

TUPP ERS PLAINS Eastern opened defense of its..
Tri- Valley Conference soft-.
ball title with anything btU
Wednesday:
·
The Eagles committed five
errors that turned into three
unearned- run ~ and allowed
rival Trimble (1-0, 1-0) to
escape with a 6-3 season
opening victory.
The Tomcats ( 1-0, 1-0)
held the Green and White to
j ust one hit over four innings,
then extended its 2- 1 edge in
the top of the seventh with
four runs· thaf proved to be
the difference in the outcome.
Afterward; Eastern coach
.Pam Dout)litt spoke of the
opening contest.
" It·s not the way we wanted to start, but I think we' ll
be all ri ght once we get the
ba L~ moving." said Douthitt.
"We had a few defen sive mistakes and some fi rst game jitters. but we'll put this one
behind us and move on."

PleaseseeDrops.M
\J

�:rhursday, March 31, 2005
.Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ill.BE

Games thrOugh Big to'tournament

Big 10 All Top 25 . PF

Illinois

.

15-1
13-3
11 -5
Minnesota
10-6
Indiana
10-6
Ohio State
8-8
Iowa
7-9
Northwestern 6-10
Michigan
4-12
Purdue
3-ll
Penn State
l- 15

Michigan St.
Wisconsin

32-1
22-6
22-8
21-10
15-13
20-12
21-11
15-16
13-18
7-21
7-23

8-0
1-3
3-4
1-6
1-6
2-4
3-6

PA

78.2
78.1
68.0
66.5
63.9

n.o

73.2
59.0
61.6
62.9
63.4 '

1-i
1-6
0-8
0-6

60.7
63.4
59.8
62.8
63.5
64.1
67.0
62.0
64.0
68.1
70.7

-ozoos Long1vlng Publications Inc·.

FINAL FOUR

Pl"eview

18.3
18.2
17.9
15.9
15.7
14.7
14."7
14.3

14.2
. 14.0
14.0

REBOUNDING

1 •

. .. 9.9
. 8.3
7.9
• •
7.6
7.6
7.4
7.1
. 6.4
. . 6.3

. . 5.6

FIELD·GOAL PERCENTAGE
James Augustine, IUinois
Carl Landry, Purdue ...
Courtney Sims, Michigan.
Terence Dials, Ohio State.
Brent Petway, Michigan .
D,J, White, Indiana .. ,
Alan Anderson, Michigan State
Paul Davis. Michigan State.
Roger· PoWell Jr., Illinois.
J.J. Sullinger, Ohio State ..
Jeff Hag~n, Minnesota .
Xelvin Torbert, Michigan State ..

.. 633

- .618
.590
. .574
. .572
.572
.569
.563
Illustration by Bruce Plante '" 2005

Final four free .throws

.530
.530

.517'

3-POINT PERCENTAGE
Dee Brown, ntinois. . .
.446
Clayton Hanson, Wisconsin
.440
JeKel Foster, Ohio State.
.428
Ivan Harris. Ohio State.
Maurice Ager, Michigan State
Luther Head, lllinois . . .
. Jeff Horner, Iowa . .
Aaron Robinson, Minnesota . :
Adam Haluska, Iowa . . . . . .
S~arif Chambliss, Wisconsin . .

earn trip to Final Four

.427

.412
·.410
.408
.397
.389

W

hen Alan Anderson stepped to the line in the fina l
seL:omJs of Michigan State's NCAA Regional Fi nal
against Kentucky. he had a chance w wipe the slate
.38?
dean. He hit.hi s final four free th rows and the Spartans secured a
FREE,THROW PERCENTAGE - 94-88 double-overtime victory and a trip to the Final Four. ·
Alan Anderson, Mic~igan State
.869
Gone were the memories of missed free thtows that led to
Shannon Brown, Michigan State .
.845
losses against Duke and Wis~on s in during the reg ular sea~01 1 .
Kelvin Tot bert, Michigan State.
.827
Gone too was the memory of the Sparta ns' openi ng-fo und
Adam Haluska, Iowa .. · ..
.808
conference tounlament loss, when Anderson missed two free
Maurice Ager, Michigan State- ~
- .807
throws in the game's waning seconds.
Luther Head, ntlnois ..
. .798
Afier four years of hearing abou t their unfulfilled potent ial: the
Jeff Homer, Iowa . . . . . . , .
.787 . Spartans' se niors led their team back to th.e Final Four to silem:e
Bracey Wright. Indiana. . .. : .
- .783
the critics. After makin£ it to three consecutive Final Fours from
Vedran Vukusic, Northwestern .
- .765
1999-200 I. including the 2!X!O champion&gt;hip, the Spartans and
Xammron Taylor. Wisconsin ..
. .76?
cnach Tom l zzo were 31 h"ome again.
Dion Harris, Michi9an . . . .
- - . .755
h wasn't just the Spartans who were underestimated thjs
ASSISTS
season:' it was also the Big Ten conference as a whole. After
hearing about the v,.:eak conference and Illinois ' easy road to the
Deren Williams, illinois .
·. 6.57
Jeff Homer, Iowa .
top
ranki ng. the conference defe nded itse lf by placi ng two teams
' 5.45
Dee Br'o)Vn. illinois ... ' .
i11
the
Final Four,
' 4.49
Chris Hill, Michigan State
. 4.37
The Sig Ten repre.scntativcs' will face teams from Conference

Luther"Head, illinois ...

- 3.83

Brando n McKnight, Purdue
, Ben Luber, Penn State . . .
Dion Harris, Michigan . . .
Marshall Strickland, Indiana ..
Brando n Fuss-Cheatham, Ohio State .
Drew Neitzel, Michigan State . . .· .. . -

BLOCKED SHOTS
Erek Hansen, Iowa ...
Jeff Hagen, Minnesota· ..
D.J . Whitti , Indiana . .. ·
Courtney Sims, Michigan.
Brent Petway, Michigan .
James Augustine, illinois
Gary Ware, Purdue . . . .
Greg Brunner, Iowa . ·..
Mike Wilkinson, Wisconsin.
Geary Claiton, Penn State .
Vedran Vukusic, Northwestern :

3.75
3.56
3.55
3.36
3.12
2.9~

. 2.59

. 2.50
- 2.21

1.68
1.62
1.29
1.19

. - 0.97
- . 0.97

. 0.77

- - . 0.74

STEALS
Vincent Grier, Minnesota.
Brent Lawson, Minnesota ,
Dee Brown, Tilinoi..s . . : . .
Aaron Robinson, Minnesota
Luther Head, fllinois . . . .
Robert Vaden, Indiana ...
Michael Jenkins, Northwestern
T.J. Parker, Northwestern . : .
Tony Stockman, Ohio State . · ,
Rico Tucker, Minnesota
Jeff Homer, iowa ..

'.

..

•

1.97
1.94 .
1.74
1.74
1.63

!.55
1.54

1.50
1.47
1.44
1.42

.

USA (Louisvi lle vs. lllinois) and the ACC (North Carolina vs.
MSU) this weekend, rai sing the possibility of an all-Big Ten final
if Michigan State and Illinoi s win.
Illinois and Michigan State reached the Fi nal Four with stell ar
guard play , and each will ride that strength in the quest for a
championship. Ill inoi s has flexed its musc:le~ al l season lon g in the
backcourt , wi.th Luther Head. Dee Brown and Deron Williams
shari ng the scoring and defensive roles perfectly _Il l inoi!'! tn.tiled
by 15 poi nts with les!i than fnur mi nutes to play last Saturday
against Arizona , but the gu a~d tri9 lcd the ll lini back On a 20-5
run . Williams hit a· late 3-pointer that sent the 'game into overtime.
where the lllini won 90-89 in one of the mqst exciting regional
final week.ends,ever. lt was the first tirne that three regional finals .
were sent to overtime.
In the victory over Arizona , Williams led the way with 22
points and 10 assists on 8-for-15 shooting. Head scored 20 points
on 7-for- 18 shooting. w~i le Brown had 15 points with seven
assists .
For Michigan St3te, the excellent guard play was more of a
surprise. The Spartans' guards improved as the season wore on.
v.. ith fre~hlnan poin t guard Drew Neitzel joining Shannon Brown,
Maurice Ager and Anderson in starring roles.
The Spartans' signature game of the tournament was their

78-68 victory over Duke.-which sent MSU into its fifth Elite Eight
in seven seasons. The Spartans fOrced Duke to commit 22
turnovers, and the Spartans converted them into 29 points. Under
the hoop. Paul Davis was expected to be outplayed by Duke' s.
Shelden Williams. but Davis got the best of Williams, scoring 20
points with 12 rebounds and forcing Williams to foJ.II oUt on a ·

3-point play laie in the fourth ·quarter. Williams finished with l9 ·
points and eight rebounds . The Spartans got balanced scor ing

from thei r guards. with 17 points for Anderson ~ 14 for Ager and
II for Brown.
Fnr lllil{oi s. the highl iglu of the tournament ha s been playing so
close to hom e. The lll ini ha ve played every postsea~on game
with iT] a bu,s trip ofChampaign.en route to thei r first Final Four
appearance ~i nce 1989. They opened the second sea"on by
winning the conference tourname nt title in Chicago. Then they
drove cast to Indianapolis to win their opening round NCAA
Tournament games before r-eturning to Chicago to ·win the
regiomil fin al. Now , with the Final Four waiting ..they will he;1d to
St. Louis to compete for a nat ional champion ship .

Illinois IUini
• seed:No.I.Chicago Region . • Record: J6-I (lS- I Big Ten).
• Coach: Bruce Weber ( 165-62). • Final Four opponent: No.4
Loui sville (33-4. 14-2 C-USA): St.- Louis, 5:07p.m. CT Saturday
(CBS). • Winner faces: No. I North Carolina or No.5 Michigan
State .

·
Outlook: The Ill ini will have their hands fu ll attempting to
shut down Louisvi lle's Francisco Garcia and Taquan Dean.
'Saturday. wit h Dean nu rsi ng an inju1y and Garcia in f(llll troubl e.
Loui svll le sti ll managed to make the Final Four by beming hot·
shooting We st V~rgin ia in ovenime . ,
The lllini faced their biggest chall enge of the season against
AriZona. and they came buck to win in overt ime. The)' proved
th eir toughnes!'! down the stretch and know they can come back to
beat any team with their stell ar guun.J play un offense and defense .
The Cardino.ls rernuin bitter about their No . 4 seed after just
four losses during the regular ~cason, und many sec this a~ coach
Rick Pitino 's chance to prove th at he has put Louisville bas ketball
on the map . It is certainly a chance for the Cardina ls tll make a'
statement. and they hope to prove thei r stren gth with the nat ion
watchi ng so th ey won ' t he sli ghted agai n in the fuwrc.

Michigan State Spartans
• Seed: No.5. Austin Region. • Record: 26-6 ( 13-3 Big Ten).
• Coach: Toh1 lzzo (2 33 -96) . • Final Four opponent: No. I
North Carolin a (31-4. 14-2 ACC): St. Loui s. 7:47p.m. CT
Saturday (C BS). • Winner faces: No. I Illinois or No.4
Louisville .

·

Outlook: Throughout the ~eason. the Spartam. were lnbeled as
chokers ;lflcr failing to win any games against highl y ranked
opponent s. But .afle r last weekend's victories over Duke and
Kemucky. in which' they sho wed composure to survive tight
games. they "s hed the label. The Spartans· strengths 'remain their
guard depth and defensive press ure. whic h they turn into ea!'!y fu~t­
break baskets. At this point. any team can wi n the tournament. and
· the Spa1ta n ~ know thal defense will be the ir key to .vi~tory . Nonh
Caroli1~a is a team that is talente&lt;l but susceptible to silly mi stakes .
The Tar Heels' talent and athleticism are as good as any team in
the country, but as· Wisconsi n proved in the regional final. good
dcfcn5e cun slow t~em down.

First Round•

18-Mef" 30 mln. lo!

lltinoia

24-Mar

5

Alabema
17-llllar 1Z:ZI p.m .

I

11-Mar

Boston C!JII

4

15 :30 p .m.

17-Mar 30 m in. fol.

20-flllr ·

15

"Oekland

2:30p.m.

8

~.Mnesota

Bo&amp;lon Co

UAB

•

17-Mar 1:20 p.m .
Utah St
Sou1hern Ill.

UAB S2..SB

UI ·Mer

L'~''--="-;.,:"::'!:"':0!"--

,.....,

1: tB p .m .

4

8~82

13

Syracuse

26-Mar

27-Mar

6:05p.m.

2:40p.m.

Wi6t:On1in !57-52)
• WiJCOnlin 71-62

St. Louis
Aprll4

Kan~as

21-Mar

14

Bue~an

7

Charlolle

North Cilrol~na St (76·63
North CaroHna St 65·62

11

St. loui$
April 2
40 min. fol.

April2 ·

5:07p.m.

ton
Washi
ttl

10

12:10 p .m.

2

Connllditut (77·71

••

Wnh1

!on 97·19

Dytce (6J-5SJ.

ao-Mar
30 mlrl . fel l.

,......

Minl!ll
lDUIIYiHe 93-79

t.AithiQa n Si (78-68

I 51. 193-70)

2s.J••r
1:10 p .m .
Michigeo St

louiswille

(7~~

Mich~n

Albuquerque
26-Mar

....,

LOUIIYIIII(9J.55 OT

chi an St. (94-8!1 .tOT}

I

· hton

Wlke Forest

West Vi

Z

· 30 min . fol.

17-Mar 7 :10p.m.

Chatte

•

Wake Fore11

112

on I

'
I

North CilrOIIna St
Connecticut

Cerrtrill Flonoa

utah 67-SIIJ

Kflnl~.~t.k

!12·52.

~"Qakland defeated Alabama A&amp;M 79-69 in the openirig-round game
on March 15.

Wesl Vlrgirua (111-105 20T)

Oetawa~

St

Stanlord

16-Mar 30 min. lol.
M ossis~'PP'

St

M1Ch1gan Sl
18-M., 30 min. lol.

Oid Dom1mon

s """'

111-M., 7:1 0p.m

Vermont

Utaf1
H..U•r lO min. ro1

t t-Mar

11

UTEP

30 min. fel l.

3

Ok.lilhom~

17-Molr 10:•5 a.m.

215-Mar

14

30 min. foL

7

lnoa 63-!11

1!11·Mir

'

a-lahoma (M-67

30 min . fol.

10

I '

'"

,.....
1T...•r 30 min. f~.

"•
I

30 min . fol.

Austin
27-Mar
4:05p.m.

•uALI,. TIMES ARE LOCAL-· ,

m the Btg Ten was
Minnesota, and the surprise player.was
Vincent Grier (17 .9 ppg, 5.6 rpg). The
transfer from Dixie State Junior College
ignited the Gophers' offense and defense
(1.97 steals per game) while leading
Minnesota to its first NCAA berth since
1999.

St_{12·61j

Vermon1 (50-57

2:40p.m.

1

S

'

20-Mir

lnll

-'•~

u

18--Mar 7:25pm

· !1:10 p .m .

I

~

Duke {57..61

j ·;;:~"!"~"~':;.;;-~'1-~"~20~•;· m~.:!i...J
Pacific ?9-7 1

•·

. 18-Mar lO min . fol.

1 !!I

ton 611-71.
19-Mar

i

18-Mtr 12:15 p.m.

20-Mar

NATIONAL CHAMPION

11-Mar 30 min. fol.

Weill VI

18-Mar lO min. fol

7:2 7p.m .

2Cl--Mar

St. louis

~

u

OhiO

~"'--'""'""';!'"!''"'"'~'~:.•'--

"'--!
L-~""~'o:&lt;""~":.&gt;':::":;,~:;;
AriZona 79-78

Florida

18-Mar 6:20p .m.

Nizona 66-5J

OklahOIM 51 (63·50)

11.U.r 10:.&amp;0 a.m .

Nortn CarClUna

Hlinois 90·89 0

SOIJlherniH . 65-S6)
2

7~5

1HI1er JO m 1n. 1o1.

55-47

20-Mar
· 30 mlp . l ol .

18-Mir1t:30t.m .

Monlana

Vill~nova

30 min. fol.

1:20 p .m.

Wa1hi

Iowa St

5

•

L-~F~ooo~
- ~·~&lt;6~7~~24-_,~-~
10=~~,1~1;
:25~•:-m:.__ z

Arizona 85-63

u~ : :·~··~-M~·~··;c~"~j"~
SouthNitt~rn Ls

t

e 8f)..85)

"1

18-lhr 30 min.. lol.
· Oldahoma St.

215.-af

VIllanova

Chicago

11

! ..,=-"":'':'"o-'---'':.,
~

Wis.-Milwauket! B3.75

111-Mar 12;30 p.m.

30 min. fol.
V~la11011a

13

LSU

e7-M)

Wls ·Milwaukee 83·73

t2

e

North Co~rohnil

11~3

1:27 p.m.

Wi•.·MitweukH

17-Mar 30 m in. fol.

The Spartans
had plenty of
guard depttr this season, but during the
second half, senior swing man Alan
Anderson (13.6 ppg. 5.4 rpg) emerged as
the team's MVP. Along with his scoring,
Anderson was the best free-throw shooter
in the conference (86.9 percent), bui
many fans will remember the t)VO he
missed to lose to Iowa in the ,onference
tournament. His best game of the season
came when he made 10 of 10 shots in a
77-64 victory over Wisconsin.

NESOTA The surprise team

S.Cond Round"

Iowa St 64·53

llillla£'HIGAN ST·
Jlll'ft'li

.551

Region I ll

Nol1h Carl)[ina (92~5)

Like .Iowa. Michigan
Jlll'ft'li
had its off-court
problems this season, but the Wolverines
never could turn things around.
Nevertheless, sophomore guard Dlon
Harris (14.3 ppg) had a breakout season.
With point guard Daniel Horton
susperded, Harris took charge at the
guard position and guided the offense.

6.1

NeUonal Semifinals

r~~~~~~~~N~~~C~M~olm~o~~~·~·l

llw.a:coHJGAN

. . 5.6

Second Round'

17-Mar So tn!n. fol.

A

14.3

Aaron Johnson, Penn State .
Greg Brunner, Iowa . . .
Terence Dials, Ohio State
James Augustine , Illinois .
Paul Davis, Michigan State
Mike Wilkinson, Wisconsin
Carl Landry, Pur4ue. . . .
Alando Tu~ker , Wisconsin.
Geary Claxton, Penn State.
Jeff Hag~n , Minnesota . .
Alan Anderson, Michigan State .
Vincent Grier. Minnesota . ~ . .

fWst Round•

heavily on fresh men this season. junior
Bracey Wright (18.3 ppg) was the team's
guiding light. Wright averaged the most
points of any player in the·c6nfetence
while leading the Hoosiers to a short-lived
run in the National lnvitational
Tournament.
Despite falling apart at ·
midseason, the Hawkeyes put
their season back toge ther at the end,
upsetting Michigan State irt the Blg Ten
Tournament and earning an NCAA
·
Tournament berth. Forward Greg Brunner
(14. 7 ppg, 8.3 rpg) was forced to assume
the top scoring role, a responsibility he
took in stride. after the Hawkeyes' leading
scOJer, Pierre Pierce, was kicked off the
team midyear.

)6.8

Adam Haluska, Iowa .
Jeff Horner, Iowa .
David Teague, Purdue

2005 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship

Wr~JANA While the Hoosiers were
PUJ
, forced to depend

SCORING

Mike Wilkinson, Wisconsin . . .

In this, om last week of the season,· we
pick the most valuable player for each
team in the conference:
Three guards shared the
' 111:11
load and led the lllini
into the Final Four, but due to his strong
defensive presence (1.7 4 steals per game)
and offensive&lt;juickness, Dee Brown (13.2
ppg , 4.49 assists) was the spark plug for
the Illini, running the offense and
shooting the lights out from beyond the
3-point arc (44.6 percent).

tloLINQIS

iNDIVIDUl\L LEJUlERS
Bracey Wright, Indiana. .
Carl Landry, Purdue
Vincent Grier , Minnesota.
Vedran Vukusic. . . . . .
Terence Dials, Ohio State.
Luther Head, Itlinois. . .
Greg Brunner, Iowa
Alando Tucker, Wisconsin
Diori Harris, 'Michigan

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

'

Thursday, March 31, 2005

By The
NUMBERS
BIG TEN STANDINGS

'

Kentudl.~

(7Cf.~

(69-80)

ra

r-'C~'"~•:"'~';"~'~~L-i1~-'~':·•:"~~~m:lo.~m=l.__ ~
1ioMar

10

IOWI

a_

30 min. lol .

2

Kentuck~

~

17-Mar 12' 20 p.m.

~•.

Kentu

11

Naa

Cmeinnato

2.--M)

11

E15tem K

0 2005 NeCiorlal COIIIg1lll ATII!et _....toeill!On NO CCII"IIrMr"CiiiiiM willloin the NCAA"• WI'IIWII*Jtlii&amp;O)n
Tfla NCAA~ .t1 ~ ~ . T~• ~IJI ~~~~1101 N 111M tor IWI«&lt;'lMM c;onlelll, offici pOOII or o!l&gt;af (lllllblwiG ac!MtiM .

f)HJRTHWESTERN ~~~dcats .
struggled throughout the season, but
Vedran Vukusic (16.8 ppg) was a
constant threat. Despite his size, Vukusic
ventured beyond the arc plenty, shooting
36 percent and making 67 3-pointers
during the season. Vukusic also l_ed the
team with 0. 74 blocks per game.

-n· ILES HEARING
CENTER

STATE

Despite a one-year
self-tmposed
sanction that removed them from
postseason consideration, the Buckeyes
made waves this season. Most of their
success came.through center Terence
Dials (15.9 ppg, 7.9 rpg), who was a force
under the hoop and helped the Buckeyes
to the biggest upset of t he college .
basketball season, when they lianded
filinois its only loss.

435 Second Avenue • Gallipolis, OH

Diane McVey
M.A., CCC-A
Owner &amp; Audiologist

(740) 446-7619
(800)237-7716

NSTATE

The Nittany Lions
,
struggled
throughout the year, with only one
conference victory. But center Aaron
Johnson ( 11.8 ppg, 9.9 rpg) was the
team's most consistent producer. After
· closing the season on a solid run.
freshman Geary Claxton (12. 7 ppg , 6.3
rpg) seems to be the heir of Penn State's ·
hopes.

HOURS: Mon. • Thur. 1;1:30·5:00

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In coach Gene Keady's
final season, forward
Carl Landry (18.2 ppg, 7,1 rpg) was the
go-to guy, an old-school grinder of the
type Keady produced often during his
25-year coaching career. Landry was one
brig ht spot in an otherwise forgettable
season for Pprque.

OHIO VALLEY

CHECK CASHING &amp; LOAN
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The Badgers love io
slow down a game'
and run the half-court offense, something
that worked into the hands of Mike
Wilkinson (14.3 ppg , 7.4 rpg), the latest
in a long.line of big men who have kept
the Badgers competitive with solid post
moves and fundamenta ls.

216 Upper River Rd. Gallipolis, Ohio
'lz Mile south of the Silver Bridge

446·2404
License CC700077.000 and 001
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�Page 84 •. The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March 31,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, March 31, 2005

2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

Southern boys fall to Federal Hocking
Bv ScoTT WOLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

RACINE
Federal
Tyler
Hocking
hurler
Chadwell fired a twci-hit 100 shutout over the Sou thern
Tornadoes Thursday night in
the season opener for both
clubs ·at Racine's Star Mill
Park.
Southern (0- 1) coll ected
two hits, both si ngles, by
Ch ris Tucker and Derek
Teaford . Federa l Hocking
had eleven hits led by
Brandon Bamhart with three
singles, Nick Spri nger with

two singles, and singles each
by A.J. Smith, Tyler
Chadwel l, Aaron Rupe , Cory
McCune, Ryan McCune, and
Tyler Jarvi s.
Federal Hocking took a 2-0
lead in the first when Smith
reached on an error, Barnhart
singled, Spring had an RBI
single, and Barnhart scored
when Rupe reached on an
error in left field.
The Lancers, defending
league champions, scored
two more runs in the second
inning. Tyler Jarvis si ngled
up the middle, Smith reached
on an error that scored Jarvis,

t

h e n

Springer
sing led
h o m e

\!I:ribune - Sentinel - l\egister
c· LASSIFIED

Cole Brown and Brad
Crouch combined in suffering the loss. Each pitcher
fanned two, while Brown in
three and a third innings of
work, walked four and
Crouch walked none in two
and two-thirds innings.
Southern goes to Meigs
Thursday for a league makeup and hosts Nelsonville
Friday.

Smith, the
score 4-0.
Federal
Hocking
added
a
.
single run
in the fourth, and added five
more for the 10-run mercy·in
the sixth inning, the score 100. Six Southern errors helped Federal Hocking 10, Southern 0
Fed HocK 2 2 0 1 0 5 10 11 2
lead to their demise.
Southern
000 000 0 2 6
Chadwell struck out six in Tyler Chadwell and A J Smith Cole
, Brad Crouch (3) and Derek
picking up the win, while Browh
Teaford. WP- Tyler Chadwell. LP- Cole
walking none.
Brown

(,~!Iii

Bryan Walters/photo

Jenn ifer Armes scores Eastern's first run of the game during
the bottom 'of the first inning. Armes scor.ed twice overall in the
Eagles' 6-3 setback to Trimble Wednesday at Eastern H1gh
School.
Carrie Woodgerd picked up
the victory for Trimble.
Woodgerd allowed six hits
and five walks over seven
from Page 81
innings while striking out
in the decision.
'
three
Things went well early on
was
credited
with
White
for the hosts, as Krista White the loss, allowing seven hits
singled in Jen Armes in the and
three walks while fanbottom of the first for a 1-0 ning nine in the setback.
advantage. It was the only
White and Smith each had
lead of the night for Eastern. two
hits for Eastern, while
Trimble responded with Armes
twice in the
two runs in the third when contest. ·scored
Cassie
Nutter douAlicia Andrew singled in bled in the fifth for
Eastern's
Tabby Jenkins and Janelle final hit.
Nichols for a one-run edge.
"We have some games
Three full innings of score- ahead
us this week, so we
less ball followed, then came have toofforget
about our misthe four-run Trimble explo- takes," said Douthitt.
"We
sion in the seventh.
to build on this."
With two outs i'n the bot- have
The Eagles look for
tom of the seventh, Eastern redemption in the TVC when
made one last gallant effort to . they travel to Wellston today
get back in the game.
.
Casey Smith doubled and for a 4:30 p.m. start .
later scored on an Armes'
double . White singled in
Trimble 6, Eastern 3
Armes to make it 6-3, but Tnmble
002 000 4
6 70
100 000 2
365
Hannah Pratt popped up to Eastern
Came Woodgerd and Alic1a Andrews
second base to end any come- Krlsla
White and Casey Smltl'1 WP .back hopes.
Woodgerd LP - Wh1te.

Drops

for alumni, fans and friends
with thi s year 's mailing to
football season-ticket holders and intends to pass out
COLUM BUS .
.
cautionary brochures at athEmbarrassed by accusatlons -letic events starting in
that boosters ha ve g1ven August.
mone~ to . athletes, Ohio
Coachj:s and compliance
State 1s trymg new ways t~ officers have spoken to
educate fans that g1tts arcn t players for years about not
allowed -and to make sure accepting money and gifts
from boosters. Now more
players get the messa-ge.
"Ther~'s
always
an time and effort has been
assumptton that everyone devoted to that process. ·
has the best Interest at
Still, it comes down to the
·heart ," associate · athletic message sinking into the
director Richelle Simonson athletes.
• a
said. "May be now we're
Most sports programs
have one or two people who
little more jaded."
After .quarterback Troy ignore the warnings, reflectSmith was su-spended for ing poorly on the majority of
two games for taking about players, football linebacker
$500 from a football boost- Bobby Carpenter said.
er, the athletic department is
"People look at it and say,
·sendi ng compliance office ' Well , their school is rotten .
workers to speak to booster they recruit the wrong type
·groups around the state and of kid. They have no quality
·people there. Their character.
outside Ohio.
An · announcement was level is low,"' Carpenter
read before ho,me basketball said. ''But in reality, we ' ve
games thi s season caution- got a lot of guys on this
ing fans about the limit s the te)lm. Guys make mi stakes.
NCAA puts on boo s te r ~.
Now we've got a chance to
"OhiO State .reminds you, put all of that behind us. "
'If you don 't know, ask,' and
Football coach Jim Tressel
help the Ohio State depart- said he put e~ tra emphasis
ment of athletics to stay in on the ·dangers of boosters
compliance with NCAA · and age nts when speaking to
rules," the announcement his players.
said.
" I've probably talked
The ;;chool sent two pam- about it more with the kids
phlets detailing NCAA rules this year than I hav~ in the

received money from boosters ·and frequently · were
~iven high-pay, no-show
JObs.
·
One of 'the pamphlets
mailed ·to football seasonticket holders is 20 pages
long and details the many
things that boosters and fans
are not permitted to do for a
student-athlete or a recruit.
past," said Tressel, in hi s
Ohio State President
fifth year at Ohio State.
Karen Holbrook writes in an
Ohio State athletic direc- introduction to the pamphlet
tor Andy Geiger, who is that compliance "is essential
.retiring, has referred to an to ensure the proper integri"underworld element" sitr- ty and ethics in our PfO·
rounding college athletics grams .... Failure to uphold
that includes agents, boost- the rules of ,the NCAA and
er.' and memorabilia collec- the Big Ten _jeoP.~rdizes not
tors who sell autographs.
only th"e ehg1b1hty of our
Smith was suspended by prospects and student-athOhio State in December letes but also impacts negaafter accepting money from lively on the image of our
booster Robert Q . Baker. university."
The NCAA notified Ohio
Tressel said the pamphlets
State on Monday that Smith are a step toward combating
will be reinstated if he abuses by boosters.
repays the amount of money
"We've had those pamhe received to a charity and phlets as to the do's and
sits out the Buckeyes opener don 'ts for boosters for years
on Sept. 3 against Miami and years," he said. "I think
(Ohio). Smith also missed the impetus to distribute
the Buckeyes bowl game in them more broadly has been
December · because
he on the heels of some situalions and issues we had."
accepted the money..
NCAA investigators are
Carpenter said he has
looking into Ohio State's · grown tired of the jokes and
basketball and football pro- innuendo about Ohio State's
grams. Former football play- athletic department. He weler Maurice Claret! charged comes the new methods the
last .summer that players university is trying.

To Place
\!I:ribune
Sentinel
l\egister
ca~our Ad, {740) 446-2342 {740) 992-2156 {304) 675-1333
I TOday... or Fax To (740) 446-3008 ·
Or Fax To (740) 992-2157

. Monday thru Friday
_8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AU
Successful Ads

\Y\01" I \I I \ I"

i

~

r~-===:·
YARDSAIE

ANNouNCEIIIEmS

. =-r

I will not be responsible for
any other debts but my own.
Sidney V. Watson
Needed: lovmg and carmg
foster parents. Please contact Transitions for Youth at

I

:I

r

(740)985· 4349

GIVEAWAY

Amencan Esk1mo Sp11z.
whne, not good with kids,
housebroke n, female, 6 yrs!

old. (740)742· 1080
Free puppies. Adorable and
healthy, 6 wks old. MotherFatherCollie/Boxer,
Siberian
Husky
Call

(740)256·6817

l

LOST· Ladtes Bulova Watch
Reward Call {304)675-2052

1

4

YARDSA!L·
l'oMERoYIMIDDI.E

Garage sa1e 3/31 &amp; ~1o1
K1ds, adult -clotl1mg, toys,
GAWPOUS
Longaberger, Tupperwara,
appliances, bikes
Durst,
4 lamily yard sate, April 1st Noble-Sum'mll 8am-3pm
&amp; 2nd at 6847 State Route
588. Gallipolis .. Hours are 9· Indoor sale- River Valley
5. Items for sale Home &amp; Worship Center, 803 S
Garden Items. A m~r i can Th1 rd , Middleport. March 31.
Cancer Society Relay for Aprii1S1 , 2nd. 10'00-4,00
Life
items,
g'lassware,
Netghborhood garage sale.
Tupperware, and many more
Fnday &amp; Saturday. April 1st
1tems
&amp; 2nd. Sam-? ra1n or shine.
clothmg , ant1ques, glass·
Estate Sp.le. Lots 01 new ware, Fenton. old crocks &amp;
Items added. 25-35% off all jugs. guns &amp; Knives. Silver
6 m1~9 below GallipOlis St doll ars. Red Ryder BB gun,
Rt 7. 3131· 4/ 1· 412, 9·5. €all old VIctrola. old walnut roll(740)446-12 11 'nlo.
top desk old oak dresser.
old plclures &amp; comicbooks ,
r1d1ng mower, four 16" Jeep
Yard Sale· Apn l 1 &amp; 2 , 9-5 ,
t1res.
&lt;Hd hallseat. lots more,
Centena ry.
TV, 10gg1ng
approximately 5 m11es north
treadmill . bedd1ng. mise
of PQmeroy on St At 7 , turn
at Metgs Memory Garden ,
Yard Sale, Apnl 2nd, 8am- 1/4 mile. (740)992 7599
3pm Co rner of SA 160 and
YAJIDSAIEBuck R1dge Rd. Aa1n or
Shine.
~ Pr. I'LEAsANr

r

4

YARD&amp;LE-

5 Fam'ity Yard Hartford
Comm Building Aprtl 2nd 8? Plus stze clothes. Tovs.
Glassware,
Microwaves.
Furmture.
lots
morel
Tu erware, Fl Bulbs

Male tan Pug
Lost m ~ PoMF.ROYIMJooul .
Bashan-Mormng Star area
Aac1ne
Answers to Toby. April 1st&amp; 2nd, Keith Fitch's
Rewara
Call (740)949- residence , 55599 At 124,
3088
Ohio,
Sam-?
Portland .
Benefit s Relay lor Uletl
Missmg black &amp; while
AUCilONAND
femal e Boarder .Collie,
F'LEA MARKIT
answers to Molly, &amp; brown &amp; Fnday &amp; Saturday 1st &amp; 2nd,
white Colhe mix male. newborn-5X adult, 341 Page Flea Market
Southside
answers lo Billy Last seen St . Middleport just past Commu nity Center ms1.de
on Mornmg S1ar Road Overbrook on lett , ram or and outsi de set up lor $5
sh1ne, 9-?
(740)949·2188

Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the
right to bid at this
sale, and to withdraw
the above collateral
prior to sale. Furttier,
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company reserve•
the right to reject any
or all bids submmact.
The
obove
desCribed collateral
will be sold "as Iswhere Is", with no
exprasoad or Implied
warranty given. The
collateral muat be
moved from property.
For further Information, or for an
appointment
to

.Inspect

collateral,

prior to sale date. contact Diane Ractor or
Randy Hays at 9922136.
(3) 30, 31' (4) 1

Public Notice
PU!ILIC NOTIC.E
NOTICE: Is hereby

given

that

on

Saturday, Aprll2, 2005
at 10:00 a.m., a public
sale will be held at
211 W. Second St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio. The
Farmers Bank and
Savings Company Ia
aelllng tor caeh In
hand or certified
check tha following
collateral:
t994 Redman - l e
Home
BH
SPE1246394
The Farmers Bank
and
Savlnga
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the
right to bid at this
sale, and to withdraw
the above collateral
prior to sale. Further,

p.m. at the commissioners' Office In the
court House. The pur- ·
pose of the viewing
and hearing Is lor the
addition of 440 feet to
the road with 30 feet
of
right-ot-way.
,Anyone Interested in
this
Salisbury
Township Road add~

CLASSIFIED INDEX

tlon, Is welcome to
attend both the vlaw·
lng and the hearing.
(3) 3t' (4) 14

Pomeroy Eagles
Thursday &amp; Sundays
Doors Open 4:30 p.m.
Bingo Starts at 6:30 p.m.

Public •Notice
Notice Is hereby
given that on April
2nd at 10 a.m. a public
auction will be held at
A&amp;J Mini Stortge on
Union Ave. to sell
contento ot Boy 16,
coneletlng
of

Halp Wanted

Help Wanted

Crafteman tool box,
air . hockay table,
mlec. furniture &amp;
small tooll, etc.
Owner Hebberl Noel.
(3) 2t.• 28, 31

20 games for $20.00

Public Notice

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

PUBLIC NOTICE
In compllanca wllh
Amended
Section
319.11 of the Ohio
Revload Code, 1 lull
and complate copy of
the annuli lln1nclal
report ot the Melg1
County Boord of
Health 11 avall1ble tor
public lnlp8ctlon at
the office of the Melg1
Auditor,
County
Malgl
County
Courthouse.
The
Auditor'• olllce hours
are Monday lfl"rough
Friday, 8:30 a..1.. to
4:30 p.m. end the'- ·
phone number 11 740-

RADIOLOGIC TECHNOLOGIST

992-26118.

-

(3) 31

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
A
viewing
of
Rocklprlngs
Cemetery Road II set
lor Aprll 21, 2005, at
10:00 a.m. II the Road
Site, with the hearing
to be April 21 , at 1:15

EASTERN ATHLETIC
BOOSTER$
Basket Bingo

Pleasant Valley Hospital, a non-profit
healthcare facility, has a position
available for a part time Radiologic
TechnologistApplicant must meet the registry
requirements by the ARRT. Applicant
must have a WV license.
Excellent salary, holidays, health
insurance single/family plan, dental.
life insurance, vacation, long-term
disability and retirement Join our
family of professionals to be the
resource for community health
service needs.
For more "information :
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550
304-675-4340
AA/EOE
www.pvalley.org

March 31 , 20P5 6:30pm
American Legion Po~! 128 ,
Middleport, Ohio
Come out and
support the boosters.
For info
·
Marcia Guess 740-667-6513

SPAGHETTI DINNER
for Evan Jarrett
Sponsored by Local Churches
&amp; Thrivent Financ1al
. $5.00

Eat-in, Carry-out or Datively
St. Paul Lutheran Church
Fellowship Hall
5th St., New Haven, WV
Fri , April1, 12 pm - 2:00pm
Church 882-2194
Eagles 2171
STONE STREET
Friday &amp; Sat. 8:00 till 12:00
Members &amp; Guest
Wefcome

Pays $100.00 Game
(Guaranteed)
Progressive Coverall for
1,000.00
Bonanza Game 4S# or less
1,000.00
Starburst 1,000.00
Smily ball 500.00
$22.QO all pack you can play

ELLIOTT'S
APPLIANCE
Spring 3 Day Sale
Fri, Sat &amp; Sun
Washers ............. as low as $297
Dryers .................as low as $297
Refrigerators .: ..... as low as $347
'""'"'··• Dishwashers ....,. .. as low as $247
Electric Ranges ... as low as $277

All other Appliance•
10% off plue free Delivery

(740) 446-8051
Kanauga, OH
•

'x4's For S~e ...., ......................................... 725
1nnouncement ............................................ 030
Absolute Top Dollar· US
Antlques .......................................................530
Sliver and Gold Co1ns,
Apartments lor Rent ................................... 440
Proolsets. Gold Amgs. US.
Auction and Flea Market. ............................ oeo
Currency,-M T S Com Shop,
. Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
151
Second
Avenue,
Auto Repair. ,.......... ,.. ,, ....... ,,., ........... ,..... ,.. ,, no
Galhpolis. 740..446·2842
Autos for Sale .............................................. 710
Older used sthool band
Boall &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
instruments.
Tru mpets.
Building Supplles........................................ 550
Saxophones. Trombones
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
etc. Older N1ntendo games
Business Opportunity................................. 2t0
Large lots only. (740}388Business Training .......... ,........................1''' 140
8692
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camt~lng Equipment ................................... 780
I \I PI !l\ \ II \ I
Cards of Thanks ....................... :.................. 010
'I In It I "
Chlld/Eide~ly Care ....................................... 190
Electrical/Refrigeration ....... ,........ ,...... ,, .,.... 840
110
H~l.P WANlT.D
Equipment lor Rent ..................................... 480
1
Excavating ..............................................,.... 830
Farm Equlpmenl ...................................... ,...61 0
$$$ BELIEVE IT $$$
Farms lor Rent.......................................... .,.430
Call for somethmg you
Farms lor Sale ............................................. 330
believe 1n and make
For Leaoe ..................................................... 490
great
money do1ng itl
For Sele ........................................................ S85
We pay up ttJ $a/hour.
For Sele or Trade .........................................S90
Weekly pay, Paid trainmg,
Fruits &amp; Vegetablea :....................................580
Excellent benef1ts,
Fumlehed Rooms ........................................ 450
Stable work , Professional
Gen~rel Haullng........................................... 850
emmonment
Glveaway......................................................040
Celt
TODAY
lo set up tn
Happy Ads ............. :......................................
Interview!
Hay &amp; Graln ..................................................640
1-an-463-6247
Help Wanted ................................................. ltD
ext. 2457
Homalmprovemenll......, ............................et 0
WWW infOCISIOn Com
Homes lor Sale ............................................31D
Housohold Goods ....................................... StD
ACTIVITIES
Housoslor Rent .......................................... 4t0
In Memoriam ................................................ 020
DIRECTOR
Insurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ 66D
Scemc Hills Nursmg Center,
Llvestock ......................................................630
a Tandem Health Care
Lo1tand Found ........................................... 060 , Faclhty, is seeking a select
Lola &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
few ttJ JOm our outstanding
Mlacellaneoua .............................................. t 70
.team. We currentty seek a
Mlecellaneoue Merchandlso.......................540
lull time Activitie5 Director
Mobile Home Repalr ................, ...., ..............860
Must have expenence In
Mobile Homeolor Rent ............................... 420
activities planning, w1th
Mobile Homealor Sele................................320
stronQ emphasis on creativ1·
. Money to Loan ............................................. 220
ty and t1me management.
Motorcycle• &amp; 4 Wheelero ..........................740
Certification a must We
Mullcallnetruments ................................... 570
offer excellent benefitS and a
Pereon ala .. ,......... ,.......... ,,, ...... ,, ................... 005
wonderful work enVIronPete lor Sale ................................................ 560
ment . Please apply to
Plumbing &amp; Heetlng .................................... 820
ProteHional Sarvlcee ........................... ,..... 230
Attn: Dianne ThOmpeon,
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... t60
HR
Real Eetate Wented ..................................... 360
Scenic Hilla Nur~lng
SchOolalnllructlon..............................:.. ,... tSO
Center
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertilizer ........................ :..... 650 .
311 Buckridge Roed
Sltuattons Wanlld ....................................... 120
Bidwell, OH 45614
Space for Rent,............................................ 460
Ph. 7401446-7150
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
Fax: 740/.u&amp;-2438
SUV'alor Sele ..............................................720
Email: admln.shnO
Trucks lor Sale ............................................ 715
tandemhealthce ....com
Upholetery ................................................... 870
Vena For Sale..............: .......... :..................... 730
SF/Df'/EOE
HROtanct.mhMithcala.com
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Suppllel .................. 620
An Exc;:ellen1 way to eam
Wanted To Do ..................,........................... 180
money The New Avon
Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
Call Manlyn 304·882· 2645
Yllrd ...... Cialllpoiii ....................................072
Vllrd ...._Pomeroy/Middle ......................... D74
Need 1o people to sell Avon
V1rd ....Pt. Pleuant ................................ 076
Call (740)446-3358

•

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Buslnees Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00
Thursday for Sundays

• All

•

4

ads must be prepaid'

POUCIES. Ohio Valley Publlehlng reaervn the right to &amp;dit, reject, or cancel any ad at any time Errors must be repor1ed on the first day of publ icat1on and
Trlbun.-Sentlnei·Reglater will be responsible for no more than the coat of the tlpace occupied by the error and only the first Insertion . W&amp; shall not be liable
any loaa or expense that retulta from the publication or omlaalon of •n adver11aement. Correction will be made in the first Bvaileble edition • Bo K nu mber
are alw-.ye confidential. • Current rate card appllea. • All reel estate edvertlaemente are subject to the F&amp;deral Fair Housing Act of 1968 • This nowopo1oec l
accepts only help wented eda meeting EOE standards. We will not knowingly accept any advertising 1n viotalion or the law.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

I

170

lwrigh~ic.net

1

MlscELI.ANEOU:

PRorES.WlNAI .
.__ _
SE.:RiiViliiOII;&lt;;Ia
" -,J

4 cemetsry plots A1verv iew
Cemetery, tot #5 Row 10
Sec.-0 , $625 for all four

(740)384·4187
WAATEI.l

If PMfA
IS
.

To Do

,,

WHV AM I ~

-

&lt;t

llt·U:oM fo!2.1ABt..E' ·

l-}1

~c:m-

10

Ho\IE'

1.,---~fillRiiiitS'iii\liii.fia:_,.,
Aacme Oh , 1 112 story cape
cod farmhouse w dormers &amp;
wrap around porch 4 bed·
room 3 oath. unfm1shed
basement
s1tuated
on
approl( 3 acres. 24:ot36 pole· ·
barn garage small barn
wilcft fenced area for IJVe·
stock. dog lt.ennel stockeo
pond, pe renmal flower beds
S175 000 for
evening
appomtment.
( 74 0!985·

3327

,..,..._ _ _ _ _ _ _.,

Moun .£ Ho~IE..,
_.I

OHK

Gemolog1st.

Clean1ng &amp; Restoration, Let·
Us-Help·You Clean·er·upl ll
No Matter What The Job Is
We Will Get-er·Donelll For
AI! You're lns1 deiOuts1de
Needs We're th e Ones for
You Call Karen or Oa\le at
740·985·3633, Bus1nesses.
A e side n t 1 a 1/ home 5 ,
Contracts.
Anyttme.
Clean
All .
Anyplace.
Powerwash1ng, Re.modellng
etc
No Job ts
D1rty!!•

(740)645-6365 or (740)446- L - - HiiliiRtiiSIIAii.1.•E_
3080

To

@2005 by NEA, Inc.

OIRECTV
Free EqUIIment
Free Profess1onal
1nstallat1on
Free OVD player
Call 1-800·523·7556
call for Free HBO/Cinamax
&amp; Show t1me

Babys1ttingVery
--~----Reasonat&gt;le Rates Ages 4
and under Ca ll CrYstal Jewelry Buy Sell Go!d
(740)44 1-9654 or (740)590· 01amonds.
Gemstones
Aepa1r· Appra1sa Is. Gem
2590.
Testmg
Graduale

"toMf"oftT fooD,

www.comlcs.com

Jeweler

1979 Fa1rmont Claudena
14x70 2 br 1 ba 304-675·
1!':'110!"'"-~H~o·m~- -~ ,5954 or 304-779-2353

L---FOiiiRiioiiSiiAiii.r..ii"'",.I
2-story . 7 room house 4
bedroom . 2 bath 2 porches
l1 closed 1n), deck, 213 acre
flat lot Heal pump . R1~er
Valley
School
D1st nct
Bulaville P1ke
$69,500
(740)367-7272

--------2 Payments down 4 years
let1 on note (304)736·3409
2001 Oakwood tGxSO 3
bedroom 2 bath vmyl •shln·
gle, appl1ances central heat
&amp; a1r. $16900 1304)633·

6536

Jim '~ Carpentrv

HELP WMITEil
Appalachian Ttre ts lookmg
for a Sale Assoc1ate Send
Resume 10 PO Box 327 Pl .
Pleasant. WV
25550 or
Stop by our location @ 426
Viand St Pt Pleas lor a
~pphcatton

AVONt All Areas ! To Buy or
Sell
Sl11rley Spears, 304·

GAMESTOP NOW HIRING
New S tore opening in
Galhpohsl Now hmng Jpr all
pOSIIIOnsl
•
Send your resume to
petemonell@gamestop com
or fax to 304·842·90.19.
Help Wanted '

675·1429.

oso

Must be 18 to play
Kitchen Open

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for In•ertlon
In Next Day ' s Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 P.m.
For Sunday5 Paper

YARD SALE-

'
r
I

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
{,:
rn
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for Iorge

Display Ads ,

• Start Your Ads With A Kevword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbre\lllations
• Include Phone Number And Acic:lress When Needed
• Ach Shoutd Run 7 Days

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

Public Notice
The Farmers Bank
Savings
and
Company reserves
the right to retect any
or all bids submiHed.
The
above
described collateral
will be sold "as Iswhere Is'\ with no
expresoad or Implied
warranty given. The
collateral must be
moved from property.
For further Information,
or for
an
appointment
to
Inspect
collateral,
prior to sale date conteci. Diane Rei:tor or
Randy Hays at 9922136.
(3) 30, 31 (4) 1

OecullfirM

Word Ads

L,.-oioiiiOitiiiiiiiiiii;..,.t

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: is hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, April 2,
2005, at 1D:OO am, a
public sale will be
·held at 211 W. Second
St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company is selling
for cash in hand or
certified check the
following collateral:
2003 Jayco Travel
Trailer 305 BHS Eagle
IUJCJ02R331L90192
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings

Count), OH

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

'

Ohio State increasing warnings
on improper benefits.for athletes
BY Rusrv MtUER
Associated Press

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Chns ti an heavy metal Duo
needs drummer and bass
player. If you are a young
Chnstian muste 1an and look·ing to join a band, call
ask
tor
1740 )441 . 12 36
Joseph.

____

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

Domino's now H1nng.
Safe Drivers
, All LocatiOns
Apply m person

(304)675-5858
Driver Wanted · t year' exp
Tractor Tra1ter. Home most
nights. $5()()-$700 a week

Call (740)378-6400
Ortvers Needed:
COl OriVi:irS Willing to drive
for local ready-m1x compa·
ny Expenence IS preferred
but nQt necessary. Dnver
must be wilting to do premaintenance on trucks &amp;
equipment, yard work &amp;
other miscellaneous chores
Experience operat1ng equip·
mont &amp; extra sk1lls such as
weldtng a plus

Call (:304)937·34 10
Earn a salary while gainmg
s1&lt;1lls. 1n patient care, fittmg
eyewear and medical testIng! We are a well estab·.
lished Athens Op1ometnc
Pract1ce and will prov1de on
the JOb traln1ng for a career
m op11c1anry. We offer a
ctynam1c work environment
with a great team of professionals. No experience necessary, applicant must be
detail orienled, self motiva1ed and possess good communication skills. Give us
the opportunity to discuss
how you can be a vital part
our team while gaining a
career as .a licensed optiCian.
,
Fax resumes to 740-594·
2270 by April 6, 2005.
EKperienced medical office
worker. b111ing, clerical and
raceptton1st duties. Lsave
message for John (740)388·

8086 ..
Fostercare Givers Needed.
Become a Therapeulic care
giver. you w111 be rei!Tlbursed
$30-$45 a day tor the care of
a ch1ld in your home.
Tra ining begins in April, for
more
call
Oasis
1nfo
Therapeuhc
Fostercare,
Albany. Qh Toll Free 1-877·

The Galll8 County Board of
MAIDD IS currently ac;cepttng appltcabons lor the lol·
towing full time positiOn in
the
Gallco
Workshop:
Habthtation Spec1ahst 11

McClure's Restaurant now
M1n1mum
quahftcatlons· h~r~ng all locations, full or
Bachelor Degree (Spec1al pari -time, pick up application at location &amp; bring back
Education preferred)
between
10.00am
&amp;
Monday thru
Dulles Include Enrollee 11 ·0oam.
intake , evaluations/assess- Saturday
ments. developing and sup·
Paramedics
&amp;
EMT's
porting 1nd1V1dual proQrams
needed Apply at t354
1n. behavior management. Jackson P1ke. Gallipolis
VOCBIJOnal~ SOil -help, SOCIAl·
izat1on, etc while mon1tonng Sales
person
needed
and document1ng progress. Furniture sto~e . Full t1me,
Coordinate services wt1h , sales experience preferred
otfier agenc•es
Immediate open1ng Apply 1n
person Lrfestyle Furniture.
Applications
can
be 856 Tllird Ave . Galhpohs.
obta1ned at lhe Gall!a OH. 1Oam-5pm. No phone
County Board of M R/OD calls please.
located at 8323 North State
Secretary needed mus1
Route 7, Cl1eshire. Ohto
have computer ski lls &amp;
45620
excellent communtcatJons
sk1tls Send Resu me by
Deadline for applying. Apr il
April-8th to TSC28 c/o Point
15,2005
Pleasant Reg1s1er 200 Main
St. Pomt Pleasant , WV
The Gallia County Board of
25550
MA/00 is an Equal
Opportunity Employer
Secunty OffiCers needed for
a great organizat1on,lll
Home Health Care ot SE SeC urltas is now h1nng lor
Ohio 1s currently hiring the Jackson. OH area
Home Healll1 Aides, com· Competitive wages, unipetitive
wages,
call . forms and trainmg prov1ded.
(740)662- t222
Please apply between the

We do remodeling and most 3 Bedroom 1 &amp; 112 bath

2002 Clayton 16K80 moolle
new-windows &amp; root .located
any unhn1shed work , also
hOme
Sh1ngled
rootsma ll
tree
remova l 12 Sm1th St K1ngtown area 525 .999 . Call i 740)446(740)446-2506, (740)367· A1ver-v1ew available No 7817
Down Paymen1
$425 a
0437 I
month
(304)675·2749
--.L.--,---For Sale - 1979 Homette. 2
Mike 'poDI
wl centrat a1r
Roof1ng , S1drng Porches, 4 bedroom, 1 112 balh, gas bedroom
$3.495
00
Call
{740) 385heat.
ale,
soft
water
sys1em.
Oecks Phone (740 )388·
8329
-------Weekend Tree Serv1ce Tnm
&amp; Removal. Call (740)256·
, 1883 or (740)645+4458
Wtll do Engine Change.
Engme Repairs and other
Automo tive
work
ASE
Cert1fied. Call · (740)441·
1306 or {740)645- 1794-cell

1'90 CHU-~!:RLY

I

Care tor the eldelly 1n my

iiliiiiil
1
10

BUSINESS

'

0PI'OR11JNITY

Bwld1ng tor Lease Gall1p011s
Ferry Area
Ideal . tor
RestauranV Etc (304)675-

7538

""

"'

PHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO re&lt;:ommends tha
do business with peo
le you know. and NOT t
~end money through the
mail until you have lnvestl
ated the offerma.

L

Moon·
TO

loAN

I

loh10

1
L--il!oosnrucnoNiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_.J

r

""'-------'
DIRECT TV Free 4 room
hookup. Free HD B~g Screen

TV, 800-263-2640

PRonNStONAL

TURNED OOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We W1n l

1-888·582·3345

fully lurn1shed. tmancing 4367
available
565,000, call
Gwdo (740)99:2-2529 or For Sale 14X 70. 3 oed·
740·992·3650
room . set up 1n Cou ntry
Homes. $6 ,995 00 Move 1n
5 Acres With a 1 bedroom todayl Call (740)385-4367
I1Ker-up house, . c1ty water.
cable trash ptck-up access
For Sale
Clayton · S1era
Located 10 coun1ry, back of
28 '1(56'
Double
W1de
West Colombia $24 .000
MOdular Home Buyer must
Has been appraised &amp; sur·
move Home to the1r Site 3
veyed (304)773·5103
bedrooms MBA w1th fu ll
bath and 6' Soaker Tub. 2
50 acre farm w11tt house and Ad'l Bed Rooms w1th lui!
barn ,
$62 500
Call oath Includes all up grade
(740)256-6005
Appliances .
also
Aefr1geratcr. Wasner!Dryer
1n· Mud Room L1v1ng Room
Anentlon!
Local company offenng .UNO has 45 Surround Sound TV
DOWN PAYMENT" pro· System •Wllh 6 Changer
grams for you to buy you r CDIDVD Player 3 ton 3600
home mstead ot rentn1g
BTU Heat Pump Pnced at
• 100°1o hnanc1ng
$54 800 'for mformatmn ana
• Less than perfect credrt v1ew1ng call (304)675·7137
accepted
1! no answer !eave message
• Payment could be the w1th name and phone numsame as renl
ber
Locators
Mortgage

1740)992-7321

ftou

"Lea&lt;Mg t-manc1a1
Institution approv1ng Small
Busmess Mor1gage
Personal ci.nd VehiCle ·
Loans lmmed1ate
response.
give us a call at
1·868-228·7063' Or apply
Kelty Home Cue S.rvtcee hours of 9am·3pm, Monday- .
onlme at
A Fortune 500 Company, Friday 5354 At . 60 East
www. IIWEIStmenrtmane~at org
Suite 4, Barboursville, WV
Ms Immediate openings for 25504 For more information
experienced Home Health call
, _
_
_
.
Hl'lli0TI£E**
1 866 740 6082
Aides and CNA's. Must ba
reliable , high-quality care- _
E_O_EIW_F_I_DN_
. ---~~row Smart Contact th
givers , preterably with an X·Aay Tech for doctor's
Division of F~nanc1a
available au1omob1le and office, 4 or 5 days per week,
n:;tltutton·s
OffiCe
o
proal of tnsurance. II you 8:30·5. ·no weekends, !loti~onsumer
Alfa1r
enjoy work1ng with the elder· days or evamngs. New grad~EFORE you relmancE
ly or physteally challenged uate's may apply Please
tfour home or ob1a1n a loan.
you have what 1t takes to apply at. Med1cal Plaza. 936
jBEWARE ,of requests to
work for Kelly. We offer fi&amp;IC· St Rt 160 , Gallipohs or tany large advance p~y
lble schedules. very oompet- phone (740)446-9620
~ents of fees or Insurance
1t1ve pay and asstgnments j,l:tt§)II"".;..~Sc;.~-~-.•
. - - , Eall the Olflce o
th ro ug~ut
Mason
&amp;
-~
~onsumer Affa1rs tOl l freE
Putnam Counties. Weekday
~~ 1-868-278·0003 to learr
&amp; Weekend shifts currently
.. the morlgage broker o
ava1lable Come see what Golllpollo co- College
ender IS property licensed
Kelly Home Care has to
(Careers Close To Home)
ThiS IS a publiC serviCE
offer. Call1·866·755-5 182
Call Todayl 740-446·4367.
tannouncement from thE
Kelly Services is an Equal
1·800·214-0452
lohio Valley Pubhsh m~
Opportunity Employer
._, gallpolieclloWI CO.~ com
!company)
Accrldile&lt;l
Mttmber
.l.cnechtlng
- . . - -- ' - - - - ' - 1 ~
Overbrook Center IS current· Council tor
ty accepting applications for
lull-11me STNA's, all posillOns and all shtf't are avail·

able. II rou are interealed
please come in and fill out
Help wanted· Darst Adult an &amp;ppiiCl!IIIOn 81 333 Page
Middleport,
Oh
Group Home, {740)992· Street,
45760 EOE
5023
325·1558

Lakm Hospital IS currently
taK1ng B1ds for the following
Positions
Chaplam.
Telephone Mamtenance' for
Panason1c Dtgltal Bus1ness
Systems, Cop1er Machine
Mamtenance for Sharp
S02060, Renta l ol OICygen
Conce ntrators, Laboratory
Services, X-Ray Serv1ces.
Dental
Serv1ces,
Psychological Consullation
Services, Refuse Services.
Contracl Per1od to run July
1 2005 to June 30, 2006.
For Information and Bid
Forms. Please contact Carol
Staats at 304-675-0860 ext.
103 Monday-Friday a·ooam4·00pm

G:t

AU re•l es1a1e aCivenlslng
In this newspaper Is
subjec1 to 1he Federal
Fair Housing Act or 1918
which m11kes ltlllepl to
adveniae "any
proifer.ence, limitation or
discrimination b..ft on

race, color, religion, •••
f.mlllal slalua or natlon~~l
origin, or any lnlenlion to
meke any such
preferencf, limllalion or
discrimination."'
TP'IIs nw.spaper will not
lcnow!ngly accept
adventum.nta for real ·
eamr. whlen is in
violation of the law. Our
readers ere tlertiby
lnlormed that 111
dwellings sdvertlsed In

ln'ven1ory Clearance. New 3
bedroom .
home
$239.00/monlh
Includes
AJC. Dehvery a na Set·up
Call Mike (740)385-7671
Inventory Clearance ~ew 4
bedroom
Home
$319 00/month
Includes
NC. Del1very and Set-up
Call Harold , (7 4 0~385·9948
"Movmg Must Sell'
14x70 Norrrs set up on lot
$10,900 (740)446-9480 or

(7401446·3266
Nat1onwtde ava il ability. All
Repos 1999 and older- half
pnce Will bnng 'in from ou1
of state tc 1111 cu stome r
demant;~ 1st come 1 serw

1304)736·3409

SAVE·SAVE ,SAVE
Stock models at old pr1ces.
2005 rnooets arri\..mg Now
this newspaper lfe
Coles
Mobile
Homes
availabl• on en equal
15266 us 50 East. Athens .
ol)p9rtunlty
Oh•o 45701 1740 )592-1 972
"Whe re You
Get You r
Moneys
Worth"
No down payment poss1blet
3 bedroom 2 bath d1n1ng
l..m~&amp;
room . llv1ng room wtf1rer\CHF'-1\G~
place. newly remodeled
kitchen anached 2 car
For Rent Tra11er Lot No Pets
QA[age 281!32 pole barn . all
$100 Plus DepoSitS Roush
appliances tncluded. approx
Ferrel Dr of Camp Conley
6 acres. $89 000. a 40}742Ad 1304)615·2614

b.•••·

7200

No Down P..aymenl Posstble
1900 square 11 house. 3
bedroom, 2 bath. fun basemen! new heat pump sets
en 3 acres SA 7 Eas1ern
Sctlool 01Slr1Ct (7 40)985·

Lol lor sale 41 X107' Beale
Land Clendenm Ols1nCI Lot
•SS accorchng to ta)( deed
Larrv Edwards (7 401742·
2535

43.21

•

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

·~wr_awiiiiANITDiili~iiil.:_.ll
n;: r
1 BUY HOMES
Need to sell your home
quickly becaUse of a
divorce, bankrupt cy, job
transter, or death. Don't let
the bank loreclose and ruin
your credit. Local person
buys houses. Fast closings.
AU cash. Jim

3 or 4 bedroom house in

Pomeroy, $500 per mo.•
$500 deposit, no animals, 1
years lease, (740}949·7004
4 rooms and bath. 52 Olive
St. No pets. $:WO month.

Auros

FOR SALE

AKC Registered . German
Shepherd. pups. e~~:cellent
bloodlines, large boned
$225 (304)675-5724

Beautiful full-blooded Pi t
Bull puppies. Needs a good
SPACE
home. (no papers) $150RJR RENT
fema le,
$200-male.
(7 40)245-5102: (740)645Business or Retail Space 5990.
available Downtown Point
Pleasant Corner Fourth and Border-Collie Pu'ps tor sale,
Black &amp; Whtte, 3 male~ . 7
Main St (304)6 75-3788
weeks-o ld , Parents on
premises (304)895-3328
For Lease: Office or retail
spaces in very good condi- CKC Jack Russell pups .
llon . Downtown Gall ipolis. Ready fof the ir new homes!
Ap prox. 1600 sq. ft. each. 1 Vet checked. $250. Call
or 2 bath s. Lease price (740)256c6341 .
negotiable to encourage
new
business.
Call Golden Retrie-ver puppies
(740)446-4425 or (740)446- has had 2nd shots and
wormed, $250. Eight weeks.
3936 .
old. (740)388·8965.

r...-------,..1

rL~--ooiFiii:ORiiRENr:0::--_.11 .
3 bedroom Condo with river
view,
full
basement,
Gallipoli s Ferry. $700 month .
Call (740)446-3481 .

PErs
FOR SALE

i

(740)992-

HOUSES

It

Twin Rivers tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for Hud-subsized, 1· br,
apartment. call 675· 6679
EHO

iiiiiiiiiill
iO

www.mydailysentinel.com

r

WANI1'.0

mRENr

(740)446-3945 .

(740)388-6901

2003 Dodge Duly, 4K4 ,
, 994 white Thunderbird,
black, 4 door, 6 speed,
loaded. excellent condition,
engine, nerf bars,
va. $3,200 or tiest 'Offer. Cummins
stai nless body moldings ,
(740)388-9875.
diamond plate tool box &amp;
bed
sides .
relracta,ble
1997 Chrysler Concord LX.
gooseneck · ball , 59,000
Air, good tires, 100,000
miles. S29,000. (7401256miles, V6, good condition .
Must sell. Call {740}446- 9247 or (740)645.0870.

(740}388·8596.

i

•

2 bedroom mobile home in
Middleport, all etectri'c,
$375/month + deposit. No
inside pets (740)992·3194
2 bedroom mobile home.
Close to
town . Call
(740)256-6574.
3BR. 4 miles from Holzer.
$350/month plus security
deposit and r.eferences. No
,pets. ' (740)379-2923 . or
(740)446-6865
Rent to Own. 2BR Mobile
Home (304)675-2359

AP.OOME:Nrs
FOR RENT

1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments
on
Beech
Street
in
Middleport furnished, utilities paid, deposit &amp; refer·
ences required , no pets.
(740)992.0165

2 bedroom apartment for
rent, Raci ne, OH. Deposit
required, rio pets . (740)9925174, leave message.
Beautiful 2-story townhouse,
overlooking Gallipolis City
park. Kitchen -family, D. A.•
LA. 3 B.A., study, 2 baths,
laundry area. References
required . security deposit,
no pets. $900 per mo.
(740)446-2325 or (74{))4464425.

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES · AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $344 to $442.
Walk to shop &amp; mo&gt;Jies. Call
740-446-2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED I AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments,
and/or small houses FOR
R~NT. Call (740)441-1111
for application &amp; informalion.
Efficiency apt $300 month
plus utilities. No pets Ideal
for 1 or ~ people. can
(740)446-4313
Furnished 2 &amp; 3 room apts.
Cle'an, no pets. Reference &amp;
deposit
requ ired .
Call
(740)446·1519.
Furnished ·apartment, suit·
able for 1 person, all utilities
paid.
Downstairs,
'$285/month. 919 Second
Ave. (740)446-3945.
Gracious Hving. 1 and 2 bedroom apartment&amp; at Village
Manor
and
RivenPde
Apartments in Middleport.
From $29~$444 . Call 74Q992-5064 . 'Equal Housing
Oppilr1Unitios.
New 1 bedroom apt. Can
(740}446-3736.
One BR apartment in Spring
Valley. $290 per month plus
deposit. W/0
hookups.
(740)339-0362, (740)388·
oo_
:.:1.:.7:..
. ----~--.
Pleasant Valley Apartment
Are now taking Applications
for 2BR, 3BR . &amp; 4BA .,
Applications
are taken
Monday thru Friday, from
9:00 A.M.-4 P.M. Office is
Located at 1151 Evergteen
Drive Point Pleasant, WV
Phone No. Is (304)675·

5806. E.H .O
THE MAPLES
100 MEMORIAL DRIVE
E!.ST
PCMEROY. 740-992-7022
Subsidized
Residential
Houstng for 50 YAars of aoe
and Older. Pria111y Glvon ta
Appllcanto with lncamo 11
or betow $10,100.00
Maximum Income effective
0211112005 for 1 pe rson
$18,150.Dq.
M....t meet HUD/120218 crl·
teria tor houMhOid' compotltlon. · Managed by
Silwrheels, Incorporated, A
Realty Company Equal
Housrng Opportuntty

_21!1
5211'4--~~---..,

VANS
FOR SAU:

9 1,000 miles, 2 sliding
2000 Kia Sephia 4-door, doors, power wlndo.ws &amp;
automatic, very e.asy on gas, cruise $6,300 {304)675·
70,000 miles, runs like new, 4014
purple in color. $4,500 or ,
b~t offer. (740)441 ·9378.
-2000--F-o_r_d_W_i-ns-ta_r_L_X-.-8-1K-.

ALLEYOOP

6200

.Phillip
Alder
1"'""'::':"'"":'""':::'"-"::"-,

Jim '• Bifid .

.__.._ 8
·- · · ·

•••••

ne_..

Complete small
engine repair

i
LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION

25 Years Experience
David Lewis
740-992-6971

E-mail

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair

• Room A.ddlllon&amp;&amp;
· Remodeling ·
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Pallo and Porch Decks
We do It au except
furnace work

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

BoATS &amp; McrroRS
fUR SALE

992·6215

1

Westerns Will Trade or
Exchange (304)675-5884

L..r_llunDING_StiPPLmllioiiiillo....JI

r~a ,

2003 Chevrotet Tra,lblazer
finieh mower. EXT LT 4x4. 3rd row sealing,
$600. Call loaded,
garage
kept
Excellent · ·
condition.
$24,500. (740)446-7484 ·or
(740)441-7411 . .

99 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Laredo. Loaded, 6 cylinder,
Block. brick, sewer pipes,
winOows, lintels, etc. Claude Must sa)e, 1984 CofWtte, 8)(Cellent condition, 97,000
$7.900
080.
w ;ntera, Rio Grande, OH 350 er19ine. (740)992-t797 miles,

Call74ll-245-5121 .

(740)592-2948.

(7 40) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155
int -'Itasant ~egtster
(304) 675-1333

JONES'

South

I

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me do 1t for youl

LINDA'S PIINTII
11401985-4180

Bucket Truck

"rttE fOt.LOINING
PlfOGifAM

I

wAS . . . . _

••

IY A GlfANT

FlfOM .fOM~ONf /

WttO OIVIOV5J.,Y
ttAS WAY TOO /

Sunset Home
Construction

MVC:tt 1'/IONH:'

Brian Reeves
New Home Construction. Remodeling,
Reno vations. Decks. 'Garages, Pole
Buildings. Roofs. Siding. Windows &amp; All
Other Residential Needs
Phone: 740-742-3411
for a free estimate.

2005
9:00A.M.

MasonVFW
$75.00 ($25.00 NonR~rundable Deposit)

Cal740,992-9444
· or Email pers0n6@,nrizon. Net

·BARNEY
ARGUMENT WIF
Et..VINEY !!

Ll!t us help you
choose a lasti11g
tribme to your loved

one 's memory.
\( IH I
\10\l \II-\ I
('( n ll' \ \ '

THE BORN LOSER

J972R SRI43

Pomeroy. OH

P:(ou Kft:P LOOK\t-1(:, AAOUN.'v'";!

740·992-9922

· P"W.E. CNI\f.AA"rf&gt;.Rt..

Wt.. ON'";!
C.OURI T\J?

Tf.\E. c.o01':rTIZ.OO/'&lt;\-I-JAAT ~
1'---r-~ YOU LOOKIN6 H~,
.'\R, ~\JE.":&gt;I Tt..?

M on-Sat l0AM -5PM

llgh aad Dry

Storage

DOING

IMPORTS
Athens

33795 Hiland Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

Middleport. OH

10x10x10x20
991·3194
or 991-6635
"Middleport's only
Self-Storage"

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCDII
• New Homes
• Garages
-• Complete
Remodeling

140-192-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

r

WIND .SPRINTS

NEVER.

THOUGHT I'D

AND PU S H·UPS IS NO
FIJI&gt;.!, RI GHT' YOU DoN'T
WI\NT To EliER.CISIE ,
Yo&lt;.J W"NT To PL/1.'('

GEN TS ,

HE.._R 11Y·
SELF SA'&lt;
Ttl IS, SUT :
HO W t'\VCH
LON6EFt..

-

THIS.

$0Ll&gt;IEitS,

· IS A.

MEDICI tiE
&amp;ALL!

' rtL SOCIA,L
STUDI E S. "

Whaley's Auto
Parts

!

i
•
I

St. Rt.68 1 Darwin, OH
7407 992-70 13 or 740-992-5553

~=w·~~~~--~

PEANUTS

Restockin9 h• te Model Sa "'••n••l
and ;trter /lila rket Parts
See Bren1 or Brian Whaley

'(OU SURE GOT YOURSELF
WET SITTING OUT T~ERE
IN T~E RAIN , SNOOP'I' .. .

M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat. 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

BUT AFTER I TOWEL YOU
OFF. 'I'OU'LL BE NICE AND
WARM AND FUZZY .. .

I

MYERS PiliNG

r

Henderson, WV
Cell Phone

~7~~~3!4,675-2457

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

SE-NIOR

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

FISH
FRY

/

'
ll\ll

lllllll(lll

3/:zr

GARFIELD
t CAN,8U'f
YOU CAN'T

1,)00 CAN'1' AI..WAY5
GE'f WHA1' I,IOU WAN1'

NORTHUP DODGE

252 Upper River' Road • Gallip()lis
740·44"6".0842 • 949-1155 Evenings.

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road ·
45771
740;-949-2217

.

.

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH .
GRIZZWELLS

Now Available At

tb't41WfA~Imt

BAlll\1 Ll i:\1BER
Scorpion Tractors
"T11king Tile Sting Out OJ,
Hard Work!"

~t&gt;WIC~

A Pl:ttA.,.

t:IR

...-.-. r---:------,:;;r;:;;;g;;;;!.:f 17''1\.1[11&lt;.'1;"~ u~~a. l-lc5\l\l~ 1\I.II.M
-...--"""'~---- btl~&gt;.'(

43

46
48
50
54
55
56
.

woes
57 Bamboo

9 Give
a ticket
10 Concarde
fleet
14 Gloating
15 Flghllacale·
17 Said over
and over
19 More
attractive
20 Excessive
22 Blow It
24 Cod~ers'

muncher

'DOWN
1 - degree
2 Cry
.of discovery
3 Racathe
engine
4 Sewing

machine

quenes

part
5 Didn't give
way
6 Willing
Ia try
7 She loved

25 Terrace
26 Uiie phons
27 Fork

Friday, April '1, 2005
Shifts in cond itions or unus ual
changes could be in the offing tor you
in the yaar ahead where your major
affairs are concerned. Be prepared to
handle whatever it is.that cpmes your
way and you can go far.
ARIES (March 2 1· Aprit 19)- Be on
your best behavior today, partiC ularly
if YO'-! a re around people who could
either help or hurt your w ork or
career. Your actions will be closely
scrutinized &amp;nd consequences dOled
out .
TAURUS (April 20 ~ M ay 20) - Do not
leave important matters up to chance
today, beca use Lady Luck will be
nowhere to be found and yoU could
lull yoursetr into a false sen se ot
security that would trip you up badly.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20 ) Separate yourself immedia tely from
situations where you could be penalized by the m istakes or actions of other,. Make sure the boundaries are
clearly de fined . If they go down, you
go down .
C ANCER (June 2 1-July 22) - Treat
everyon e equally ·today beca use
things are not what they seem to be .
Contac ts you believe can help you
won't be able to. whil8 those you think
have n o clout will come through fOr
you .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - R a t~er than
ask others to do things for you today,
you would be far better off fending for
yo u.r self. It isn't likely they'll do things
properly and you'll have to do over
wha t they attempt. ,
VIA GO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- Be very
careful to day about becoming
Involved In ve ntures that are risky,
because outward appearances ~;o uld
be extremely deceptive.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct . 23) - It wlil be
vita l It&gt; keep family prbblems within
the con fines of your ho usehold today.
·Taking them to in -laws or outsiders
will muddy the waters further and ere·
ate additional disturbances.
··
SCORPIO (Od . 24 -Nov. 22) - Keep
pace w ith your work and responsibili·
ues today. What you taU to do at this
time w ill cause you to fatl so far
behind that you'll have great difficulty
catching up again. Stay on sch&amp;dule.
SAG ITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 2 1) lndltterencoe or care lessness with
you r Property or resources might cost
.you tar more· today th an you may bargain for. Be guarded w ith anything
you consider to be of great value to
you .
CAPRICORN {Dec. 22 -Jan. 19) Limi t the number of Irons you put in
that tire today. If you attempt too
much all at once, everything could
collapse on you Uke a ton of br ick s
and you won 't get anything done .
AQUARIUS' (Jan. 20 -Feb. 1 9) - It's
good to be optimistic at all times. but
be sure to base your high hopes on
realistic premises today. Counting on
blue skies when st orms are In the
fOrecast Isn't very smart .
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mar~h 20 ) A
commitme nt tor ·either a business or
social dealing should nol . be made
Impulsively today. If you Clive In betor•
testing the waters, you co uld get Into
something way o11er your head.

Lennon

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipller cry~rsms ere cn:tated from quotallOnS by llr11CJJ$ people. !)SSt and
Each letter in the cipMr $farm 101 anottw

AE

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get the money tha· s spent
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SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS l , ; t• - o;
Clumsv - Ounce - Vouch - Vertex - OUTCOME
Tne loGal un1on head toid reporters that, .. The arbitralor IS the on ly. person who :s totally satisfied with the
OUTCOME .

ARLO &amp; JANIS

.
~4
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FASRTMS

VR YNY

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PYXZE ."

-

St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

~esent.

Today's due: 1equals M

SOUP TO NUTZ

BAUM LUMBER

bargains
Maund
Badger
Noi se
California
fort
53 Call - cab

47
49
51
52

-----..:....~ Edlltd by C\AY ll 'CLLAN ....::.,..._ _ __

By Bernice Bede Oaol

' . ~. -.A: '

45 Festive
46 Great

feature

"I&gt;\-

.- .

36 Forego
crop
39 Mortar
troughs
43 Chewable
sticks
44 011 01parter

29 Place
of cloth
34 Counterten

8 Exlol

THAT PAILT
'UllLII

'lllrtbdi\Y:

TH&lt; '"""'""' L~D'I SaiP
T&gt;I!IT
N81&lt;eil ~
aRlO CUISSIC OF AAT,
So !Qn BE E~o.

;,

Mid -Size 4Wheel Drivc•Tr.actpr
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Ehgtne s

42

Cement
component
Earth,
In combos
Watch
chain
Rock-band
booking
Lama 'arole
model
An outer
planet
·
Hardly ever
Indonesian
Really
excited
Pantyhooe

PREVI OUS SOLUTION - "It is a wre1ched 1aS1e1o be gratilied with mediocrity
when the excellent hes before us." - Isaac O'lsraeli
(c) 2005 by NEA. Inc. 3-31

AstroGraph

·BIG NATE

Janet Jeffers

97 Beech Street

6

honorclble.

(740) 992·5232
SxiO, IOxiO,
1Ox IS, 1Ox20,
10x30

41

to a bard
33 Sheik's
roba
35 Lustrous
fabric
37 Monk's lllle
· 38 Roman
Empire
Invade&lt;

East
All pass

.
This comment by George Bernard Shaw
is correct, but still a degree depressing:
~A lite spent in making mistakes iS not
only more honorable but more useful ·
than a life spent doing no thing."
Today, one delender has to fmd an han~
arable play to help defeat South's con·
tract of three no-trump. What is It? West ·
leads .the heart she, his lourth-highest In
the suit.
Althot:Jgh five diamonds makes here ,
North is rig ht to plunge into three no- ·
tru mp. AI leas!' his singleton is a .high
honor.
,
Whe n partner's fourth-highest lead Is rei·
atively high , third hand should apply the
Rule of Eteyen. Subtracting six from 1 t
gives five. So, there are five hearts high·
er than the six in the North , East and
South hands combined. Since East can
see four of the m - dummy's king and his
own O·J·B - he knows that declarer has
on!y one higher heart. Further tho ught
will reveal that this higher heart will be
the nine or tO .' (II West's suit were head·
ed by the 10·9-7-6, he would have led the
1o, not the six .) This should. push Easr in
lhe right direction. ·
At trick one, . under dummy's heart king,
East must play his queen. This both tells
partner about the. queen and jack, and
unblockS' the Suit.
Then, after dectarer ·takes the losing diamond finesse, West continues with the
heart lour to East's jack. That honorable
defender returns the heart eight through
declarer's 10, and the defenders ta ke live
tricks: one diamond and tour hearts.
A life spent learning from mistaKes and
avoiding them in the future is even more

Phone

1 Compaoo
point
6 Does
9 holl!tl
11 limerick
starter
12 Olarlot
- Nin .
13 Shacks
15 Check enlry
16 Think
highly of
18 - Moines
19 HeUer's
mautltlul
21 Sporty
truck
22 Hoodwink
23 Kind
· of pool
25 Interest

greatest
32 Above,

Use the rule
for an unblock
.

'

MAl&gt;~ P05SISL~

Salurday April.l3,

•

40

28 M ink cousin
30 Fan noise
31 Boxing's

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

WV, OH and a Illegal
states must be 21.

MANlEY'S
SElf STORAGE

a

ACROSS

amt.

North
3 NT

Opening lea~ :

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

MU t:o•t:UW
lllurm•t:Ya

West
Pass

I NT

Tree Service

BUILDERS IDC.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replm.:ement
Windows • Roofing

Racine , Ohio

®allipolis 1!Bailp 'Ql:rtbune

6 ,4

.. 4 3
4&gt; Q J 10 9

+

W\1 036125

r

(740J~nn.

•

s

9 6

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: North-South

I BISSELL

__4

r

K6

740·667-0700 1-888-HUPP2;J4

Pomeroy, Ohio
25 Years Local Ex rlence ·

r: ~=CUS'

..

+

•

.• Q J 8 ·

South
• I( Q J
• 10. 3 2
A 9 7 2
4&gt;AK

V.C. YOUNG Ill

992-5682

i

10001f bales, $7.00-$10.00
&amp; $15.00, piCk up loac! or 2001 Lincoln Navigator.
semi-lOad,
good
hay, AWD, 5.4 V8, 3rd row seat·
(740)696-2765
lng, · caasettef.CO-changer,
healed/cooled-seats, ·low
Tabacca Plan10 for sale. c.ll
miles, excellem condition ,
(740)446-7&amp;03.
$23,500.(740)'1!13-5535.

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Roll overs • Major Med •
Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

East

Wesl
• 10 8 3 2
• A9764

· andWV

ROGER HYSELL
GftRftGE

OJ -31-05

A7 4
K
Q J 10 8 5

4&gt; 753 ·2

45783

jw ill45769@ya hoo.com

r ~~ ~ I

Grand Opening
New Location
11 am-7pm Monday-Friday
, 2pm-5pm Sa1Urday·
Sunday
U.S. 60
Canoonoburg-Aahland
1~";1 Mr. Ganl's)
. 606 922-7185

and Financial Services
,.

32119 WelshtownRd._
· Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone: 740-992-2432

r

·---iiiiiiiilroloo,.l

Rocky Hupp Insurance

•
•
•

1 ~~~Tu~ppers Plains, OH

JamesAWill Jr.
Owner

r

North

41800 SR #7

1. ---:cc-:-:-,-----,--,----:
2002 Stingray 20 ft. open
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
02 Honda 400 EX. Exq:~llent bow, Red/ White, 5.0 liter V·
Chapel Road. Porter. Ohio.
condition , rode little. $3,000 8 , Hustler trailer, excellent
(740)446· 7444 1-877-830·
neg. Call {740)256· 1526 or cond., garage kept, price
9162, Free Estimates. Easy
(740)645-0446.
new $24.000 sell $15,700.
financing, 90 days same as
call Troy Krebs 304-675·
I
\In
I
"
I
1'
1'1
II
"
cash . VIsa/ Master Card.
93 Lincoln Town Car. 81,000 04 Yam8ha Rhino after mar- 8828
Drive- a- little save a!Ot.
.\ I t \ I "" I t l~ h
miles. Ve ry nice, $4,500. ket wheels , speed-o-meter,
CAMPERS &amp; •'
(740)446-1759.
$6,800 Call (740)339· 1620.
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
MOTOR HOI\IES
Repair-675·7388. For sale,
95 ' Buick Century Wagon. 1982 Honda 500 Trike
re-conditioned · automatic
Under 48,000 miles,. new Faring w/stereo system. Dk "03. 34 ' Jayco 5th wheel. 1washers &amp; dryers, refrigera· 1100 gal liquid manure tires , brakes, baltery, mufblue. Evenings (740) 256· 12' slide out. Like new. many
tors . gas and electric spreader: 4 rw Notlll corn fler, alternator. $3,600, 6B70. $3,000.
eK1ras.' (740) 339.021 e.
ranges, air conditioners, and planter: 40' Little Giant Exc911en t. {740)446·2739.
wringer washers . Will do Elevator: JD Semi mount 3
1982 Yamaha Exciter 185,
repairs on major brands in 14" plows : 1 rrM carousel 99 Chevy Malibu LS. V6, 4942 actual miles, last tune- 1997 Coachman Ca tali na
door,
automatic,
tully
shop or ·at your home.
Holland Transplanter; Hyd
loaded, CO, aluminum up Spring 2004, $750 060. Ute 24' foot, Front Bedroor:n.
tobacco press with 3 boxes
(740)696-1227
ma ny
e)(tras '
phone
Used ' Furniture Store. 130 · in line: APP 3000 tobacco wheel s, 65,000k. $4,795.
(740)379-2748.
(304)675-2039
$6,995
080
Bulaville Pike. Applian~es, sticks; New Holland grinder
1993 Suzuki 600 Kantana .
mattresses,
dressers, mixer 2 1/2 ton : 10 Ford
BMW Z3, '99, Special New paint la st fa ll. Great
couches, dinettes, recliners. Trasport disc; 3000 lb cattle
Edition, 22,000 miles, darie: shape .. Asking $1 ,800 080.
grave monuments , much scales new; 4 young Angus
1998 30' fifth wheel travel
green, $19,999. (304)412· (740)388-0172.
more.
(740)446-4782. bulls; tobacco
seeder.
tra iler, double slide. excel3380.
Gallipcj!is, OH. Hrs. 11-3 (M- (740)256· 1352.
1998 .Bu ell 53 Thunderbolt len t condition, $13 ,900
S). We buy used furniture.
TRUCKS
Harl.e y Davidson engine, phon e: (74{))696'9319
Knight · model 2250 Reel
&gt;Jery 1ast sport bike, great
FOR SAl£
~~
Auggie Forage feeder with
shape, $5100. (740)985~...._~_""""~_.r scales. Good condition. Call
9857
-1 993 Chevy 3500 Turbo
200 1 Homet Bunkhouse 32',
(740)245-5047.
Diesel, Red Pickup. Dully,
12' expando. sleeps 10,
Buy or sell. Riverin e
Power Windows, Locks, 2001 Harley Road King. Teal excellent condition. $ 16,800.
Antiques, 1124 East Main
Loaded . $8,000
firm In colqr, many eMtras, one (740)441-1501
owner. excellent condition ,
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy~ 740.. L~--------,.1 (304)593-5073
992·2526. Russ Moore,
'I I~\ J( I '
29,000 mi le s. $16,000.
1 very friendly, 1 yr old male
owner.
(740)446.021 3.
Pygmy goat. Black/white. 1995 Ford F-150 XLT, 8 tl.
HOME
bed,
excellent
co
ndition.
Good
with
children .
IMPROVEIIIENI'S
New Antique Mall Opening·
Asking $6,800 OBO. Call 2003 H.D. 883,$6,300: 1996
Soon Off 177 &amp; US Rt33 in. (740)441-1590.
Honda 300 4x4, $2,500;
(740)992· 17n.
1966
BMW
K 1OOOAT.
BASEMENT
Downtown
Ravenswood, 3 AOHA registered quarter
WATERPROOFING
WV, Dealer spaces available horses, '1 sorrel gelding, 2 1999 Chevy 1 ton with 1 1 ft . $2,500. (740)245-5747.
Unconditional lifetime guar·
reaso nable charges tor bay mares, $1500 ea. OBO, utility bed. AC, cruise, lilt,
350 gas, 5 speed trans., 2004 Harley Davidson 1200 antee. Local references fur·
Booths Don't miss this {740)985-4321
Chance. Information, call :.:..~:.:.:...:.::.:.._ _ __
69,000 miles. E)(cellent con- Cust9m Sportster, loaded, nished . Established 1975.
Fred . (304)532·2710 or 3 'reg. black Angus. 2 years dition. Call (740)256-1526 or -$9,900 ceo; 304-593'·3542 , Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446 (304)273-2748
ol d. Cows $800 each. Call (740)645-0446.
n3-51B2.
0870, Roge rs . Ba sement
(740)367-7295.
Waterproofi ng.
2000 ChevrOlet-Silverado 94 Harley Davidson Ultra
l.-u.K~""u.;,~:.
4-H Pigs for Sale
1500 · LS, fully-optiOned, Classic. 10.000 miles, blue,
Begin farrowing 1!2()105 and
4)(4, bed I iner .traiteri ng· . exceBent condition, $13,500 ,
still farrowing . Pure bred
pkg.,Pewter eXt ,Charcoal {740)949-2217
6 ft. pool table, like new with
Yorl&lt;s
and crOssbreds. int.,.100k highway miles,
Culverts
ace.
Please call (740)448-2002 syn .oil, below book $12.900.
Amish oak glider, like new,
97
CABO.
Race
ready,
runs
plastic
and
metat, 6" 1nches·
or
(740)541-7491
or 304-n3-6062
real nioe. (740)446-2506.
great,
must
see
to
appreciinches
in stock. Ron
60
(740)541 -7470
ate. $1 ,000. GGIItpolis area , Evans Enterpnse, Jackson,
2002 Chevy 1500, VB ,
4th Annual
cell (740)645-0873.
OH 1(000)537-9526
JET
29,080 miles, 5spd, PSIPB,
,
Ohio
Valley
PIQ
Sale
AERATION MOTORS
AC, lilt/cruise. CD, $12,000.
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In Gallla County Fairgrounds Racon title . (304)634·5131 .
April 2, 7:30pm
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 190 pigs sired by many of
800-537-9528.
2004 FORO F·150 Lariat.
the nation's top A.l. Sires
Super Crew, 10,000mi
. COn1aC1: Kyle Deel~ Club
2yr/20,0Cl0mi warranty lett,
Pigs
loaded/ extras,
S30,®o .
Large Indoor Swimming
740-&lt;188-PIGS (388-7417) (304) 523·3500: (304)654Pool with all Accessories
740-&lt;141·5460 (COli)
9318: (304)886-1668.
including Gas Heater/Cover
Guest COnsignors:
&amp; Uner e~~:cellent condition
Bocl1mer Brothers Show
2004 Silverado 1500, Z71,
(304)n3-6000
Pigs
4WD, Loaded , still under
Graham BleSsing Farm
warranty, 29,000 miles. ask·
M- f Garand 30·06 $725
Treg Ulmer
ing $26.000 (304)675-4917
firm .
Model
29
Smith &amp; Wesson 44 mag.
Hatching Aprillth
93 Ford P-U extendcab, 8'
$525 lirm. (740)992-1529.
Black Australofps
bed, XLT, loaded, 114,000
.No Sunday ca~s
j:)ullets$1 .60-each
miles. $2195 Reduced to
- - - - - - - - - Rhode Island Red Pullets
$1895.00, (740)992-1721
NEW .NO USED STEEL
$1 .50-each
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
Austra Whhe Pullets
99 Dodge Dakota Club Cab
For
Concrete,
Angle,
$1 .50-each
SLT, Loaded V·B, 4x4, Bed·
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Butt Orphington Pullets
-liner,
Running.Boards,
$1 .60-each
Tonneau Cover, 9!;iKmi.
Grating
For
Drains,
$9,500 (304)882-2845
Toki"G Ordoro
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
. (30C)HU073
SCrap Metals Open Monday,
SEl:L YOUR TRUCK
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; - - - -- -- - HERE
Friday, Bam-4 :30pm. Closed Quarter horse, Palamlno, 3
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; years old, very gentle, geld·
Sunday. 174lll 446-7300
ing . $650. Call (740)256·
6624
·
Orlando Ol sney/Be&amp;ch area
7 days/6 nights. Paid $600 , Registered Black Angu;;
sacrifice,
$249 .
Call Bulls. 12 to 16 months.
(740'446-9856.
161 • .,~ 300
WITH"A 1'11010!
'""~
·
'
Suffolk Ewes tor sale. Call
Pool pump &amp; sand finer, lor (740)446-4838.
Call (74{))446-2342
large pool, .used 3 weeks. :.:..:::.:..:..:.:...:=:::...___
For 0et811s
Cost $300, sell $175. Yeartlng Angus Bulls, Mostly
(740)446-1127
A I. excellent bloodlines,'
priced reasonably. Slate Run
SUVS
. Prom Dnlaoeo
Farm,
Jackson
.
(740)286~~---FORiiiiiSiAU:iiiiior-,.1
2-ball gowns, 4~forinal
5395.
~bsolutely gorgeous, {4
www.slaterunfarm.com
1999 Eddie Bauer Explorer
'"'" 12: (2) size 11112. Ca
HAY
&amp;
AWD,
loaded, leather, 6 disc
~.r soiT.."!7401367-7054.
GRAIN
CD
changer,
sunroof,
92,000 mHes. $9,500 OBO.

SPA Otm.Er

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

2002 Dodge Ram 1500 SLT. 2/sli ding doors, seats 7, all
Red, 4 door, 360 automatic, power. rear air, tinted win- 1984 Fourwinns boat . 20
dows, · asking
$6,600,
37,000 miles, $16,500 OBO.
I
fr;:rot, Mercruiser. 70 hours, .
7 40 6 6 9 5 653
(740)256' 1618 or (740)256- ~~~~~~-.•_ _ _~- loaded. Cell(740)446-3200.

2002 .Pontiac Grand AM SE.
Red, A!C, CD, loaded, 56k
miles
,
Eu ro
taillights,
ATV used very little with
newly painted tra iler, $5,000 chrome accents , $8,995.
Troy built tiller, $400. Call Excellent condition. Call
(740)256 -8816..

;___;______ r ..
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
ments, furnished and unfUrnished, security deposit
requi red. no Pets, 740·9922218.

r

1983 Ford Van 6 cyl., S450.
1999 Red Pontiac Grand- 1985 Ford Va n VB 460,
AM GT, 2DR. V6-HO, PL, $600. Call(740)446-01 94
PW,
SunroOf,
Auto .
AMJFM/CD w/ equalizer &amp; 1993 Chevrolet. Astro Van.
AC .
Spoile'r
Excellent good
cond ition
ph one
Condition
still
under (304)675·50n
warranty 70,000 miles,
$6,500 (304)862-3236
2000 Ford WindSt ar LX.

MrnmLFORn~o~ 'I -------------- ~----~----~
IUJ'II

88 Ford F-150, 6cyl. 5spd,
4&gt;e4 , $2000. After 5pm,
leave message. (740)949·

or _17_4_0_12_45_·_92_6_6_
. _ __

Poodle puppies- tiny toys,
AKC, white &amp; Cream, 2 male,
Kenmore washer &amp; dryer. 1 female, (740)401·0327
accepted
• Payment co.uld be the Large capacity, white,• good UKC Toy Rat Terrier puppy.
$150.
Call
same as rent.
· cond ilion,
Shots &amp; wormed. $100. Call
Mortgage
Locators. (740)245-5469.
(740)256-6824.
(740)992-7321
FRUITS&amp;
Mayteg dryer, $95; Whirlpool
Nice country cabin on 33 washer, $95; Tapp8n gas
VEGETABLES
acres, references required, range, $150: GE refrigerator,
25 minutes from Athe ns, $150; small freezer. $150:
Kestel's Produce
· good hunting, (740)698· like new side-by-side refrig· Amish cheese &amp; lunch
7244
erator, whita, ~375 : Westing meats, fresh fruit &amp; veg.
Renovated term house. House cordfess sweeper, Open Thurs, Fri , Sat. 1 mile
Country settin g, Bidwell $75; assorted chairs , SS west of Holzer Hospital on
Jackson Pike, ph. (740)446~
area. 3BR, 1 BA, $5001rho. each.
7787· 740 339·2131 .
$400/deposit .
(740)446 SkaQgs Appliances
0116 or {740)709-9069.
76 Vine St., GallipoliS
(740)446-7396

r

200 1 Dodge Ram 4K4, 46K,
28 months on 19K remain·
inQ factory warranty, new
tires. long. bed . quad cab.
tow package, am· lm-cas~ ­
cd . loaded , one owner.
1969 Ford XL, Galuy 390. $17,600, (740)992-2459
automatic, power steering
and brakes, AC, interior 2001 Jeep Cherokee Sport
e~~:cellent 1 Mechanical excel- 4K4 price reduced , loaded
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�Page B~ • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March 3:1,2005 ·

www.mydailysentinel.com

Reds' Acevedo·surprised,
angry over latest demotion
BY Joe KAY

bullpen after the way he fin- · Sometimes that happens in
ished last season. He failed at the game. I don't want to say
his latest stint in the rotation, I was out of shap(!. In my last
5-12 with a 6.65 earned three or . four outings, I ·was
SARASOTA, Fla. - Jose going
run average in 27 starts, but doing a godd job, so that
Acevedo showed up for
spring training figuring he excelled when he was moved proves my point that I'm not
had a job secured in the to the bullpen. He didn't out of shape the ·.way they
Cincinnati Reds ' 'bullpen. All allow a run in 12 relief say."
O' Brien saw it a different
he did wasset himself up for appearances spannmg 17
way.
more heartache.
innings.
"Scales don ' t lie," O' Brien
The right-hander was angry
Acevedo figured there was
said.
"This is not intended as ·
after the Reds sent him and no way he· d get sent back to
a
criticism.
It's just a fact that
four others to the minors on the minors this year.
'·It never crossed my mind, he was not as prepared comWednesday, another U-turn in the way that r pitched last ing into camp as some of his
a career that started with so
much promise. Acevedo, 27 , year i.n the bullpen," he said. competitors."
It's been a hard fall for
was considered one · of the
The Reds saw it much dif'
ferently. Acevedo showed up Acevedo, one of four pitchers ·
AP photo
organization s . top young for camp overweight and was called up from Double-A to ·
starters when he was promotCincinnati Reds' D'Angelo Jimenez slides into third with a RBI triple in the third inning of spring
warned that he'd IJave to win fill out the rotation in 200 I.
ed from Dou.ble-A in 2001..
training
action Wednesday in Sarasota, Fla .. Waiting for the late relay is New York. Yankees
He bounced back and forth
Now, he can't even win a a job.
spot in the bullpen.
·"Coming into camp, we between the majors and . third baseman Russ Johnson.
"They toldme 1came in out were very honest about the Triple-A in each of the next
of shape," Acevedo said. competition," general manag- two seasons, but w9n .a spot in
"They also said I took this job er Dan O'Brien said. the . rotation · last spring by
for granted."
"Frankly. some others beat showing more maturity in
The
Reds
optioned him out for the job. We still how he handled setbacks on
"When the season starts, you want to g&lt;,&gt; as
SARASOTA, .Fla. (AP) - Danny Graves
Acevedo and right-hander think that Jose can be a good the mound. ·
long as you can without giving up any.thing,"
purposely jinxed a good thing . .
Now, he's starting all over
Todd Coffey to Triple-A · big-league pitcher, especially
The 'cincinnati Reds' superstitious closer Graves said. "You'll never hear me dunng the
Louisville and reassigned in a bullpen role. But he's again, insisting he's .doing
gave up liis first run of spring training - on season say anything about jinxing anybody. .
the
things
right
even
though
left-hander
Jeriome going to nee\'1 to go b&amp;ck to
"'I didn't want it to happen. I want to get the
Ruben Sierra's sixth-inning triple Wednesday
Robertson, catcher Bobby Louisville and get back on front office questions his
bad
innings out of the way because it never
- and came away from a 5-4 victory over the
preparation.
Estalella and outfielder Jason track,"
New York Yankees feeling a deep sense of fails that if you do great during the spring, you
"I'm not trying to be a
Romano to the minors.
Acevedo got hit hard in his
get there during the season and everything
relief.
Estalella requested and was first few appearances of weightlifter, a bodybuilder,"
crumbles
at once."
"I know it's bad to say," Graves said. "I still
gra'nted his refease to pursue spring training and _had an Acevedo said. "I'm happy
Sierra also hit a solo homer off Wilson, who
other jobs.
11.70 ERA when. he was with myself, with where I am, · try to get guys out, to not let them score. But allowed six hits and one run in his final appearI'm really glad that happened."
The moves essentially left demoted. He gave up 18 hits with what I do, with the way I
ance before the opener.
· Graves, who saved 41 games last season, was
the club with two decisions to and 13 runs in I 0 innings, but work out I don't know why
The Yankees got a solid performance from
getting antsy as he went deeper into spring
get down to the 25-man roster insisted his con,ditioning was- that (criticism) came out"
right-hander
Carl Pavano, maki~g his. final
The Reds plan to make their
training with a perfect earned run average- 10
limit. Right-handers ·Joe n't a factor.
appearance before a season-openmg senes. at
appearances, II innings, no runs, only eight hits Yankee Stadium against the World Senes
Valentine and Matt Belisle are
"I don't want to say David final roster cut following an
competing for the last spot in Weathers is out of shape exhibition game Saturday
allowed.
champion Boston Red Sox:
pitched bad last against Toronto in Louisville.
the bullpen, and infielders because
· He openly talked about the scoreless streak
Pavano allowed six hits and four runs, strikJacob Cruz and Luis Lopez night and gave up six runs," Although they've still got 31
on this week, hoping he'd get nicked for a run ing out five. Joe Randa doubled twice and ~as
are in the running for the final Acevedo said. referring to the players in camp, several of
before he left Florida. The Yankees granted his ·hit by a pitch, extending his hitting tear to 11 spot on the bench.
·
reliever 's performance in a them are recovering from
wish.
for-19 in his last seven games. D'Angelo
Acevedo figured he was 12-11 loss to Minnesota. injuries and won't be ready to
He iook over in the sixth inning for Paul Jimenez also had a single alld a run-scoring
guaranteed a spot in the "That 's the way it ts. start the season.
Wilson, who will start the Reds' season opener tri~le off Pavano, . who had a 2.88 ·ERA this
next Monday. Tino Martinez singled to open the spnng.
inning and Sierra drove him home with a triple
"That's the best I've felt all spring," Pavano
to right-center. John Flaherty followed with an said. "The season's corning up, this was my last
RBI single, and Graves' fears evaporated. ·
start. This is a good time to feel great. I've gotten better every start."
It's the only time he'll be happy to get hit
mentals in left down pat. He 's has been keeping himself
, BY TOM WITHERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS
made all the routine plays and focused on the game. Left
has shown off his arm on a field isn't like third base,
couple throws.
where you have to be ready
WINTER HAVEN , Fla. In a recent exhibition game, for a possible line drive comCasey Blake does a pretty fair Blake charged a grounder, ing at your head on every
imitation of funnyman Will scooped it up arid unleashed a pitch ...
Ferrell. Occasionally, he' II one-hop throw to get
There's some down time in
even bust into · one of the Cincinnati's Wily Mo Pena at left, and sometimes there's no
actor's off-the-wall characters the plate.
CLEVELAND (AP)
1985. William Green came the even the achievement ii ~sed
work at all. He's still getting
Reuben
Droughns
.
gives
the
from "Saturday Night Live."
"He has looked great," said used to the solitude of being
closest in recent years with to be. Eighteen running backs
Browns . something they 887 yards in .his 2002 rookie accomplished it last season
This
spring,
Blake, Indians manager Eric Wedge. in the outfield. At third, he
haven't had in 20 years- a season.
Cleveland's third baseman the "He looks comfortable- and l could pass the time chatting
with 10 of those backs sur-:
I,000-yard rusher.
past t.wo seasons, has nailed like what 1 see. Obviously, we with the opposing third-base
passing
The
I
,000-yard
mark
isn't
I ,200 yards.
·
Cleveland
acquired
another
impersonation : trusted his athleticism, but he coach, an umpire or a runner
Droughns from Denver in
Indians outfielder.'
hasn't missed a beat. I'm sure stopping by on his way home.
exchange
for defensive lineSigning free agent Aaron we'll have some growing
He's on his own now.
men Ebenezer Ekuban and
Boone last June meant that pains from time . to time, but
"I hear him try to chirp
Michael
Myers in a trade comBlake would have to move, he's handled it."
every once in a while to the
pleted
Wednesday
after the
and after toying with putting
There's plenty of room for infield," Crisp said .. "1 guess
players
passed
physicals.
him at second base, the improvement. Blake is. still he's going to have to talk to
A former backup fullback,
Indians instead sent Blake to learning how to quickly himself."
Droughns came out of
left field. And so far, Blake locate the cutoff man, and it's
The
relaxed
atmosphere
at
nowhere last year with I ,240
has had no trouble adjusting going to take a couple visits to
spring
training
.
hasn't
preyards rushin~ after injuries to
to·his new position.
each ballpark to learn all the
Quentin
Gnffin .and Tatum
for
another
aspect
pared
him
Wonderful opportunities ar~ available in Tom .Peden Country.
He's a natural.
tricky corners and dead spots
Bell.
Droughns
pursued
a
of
playing
in
.
the
outfield:
We are expanding our staff and need more sales people.
"You would have never on the outfield walls.
trade because he wasn't enviknown if you saw Casey _this
But overall, Blake, who has r.owdy fans. He hasn't had
No Experience is required, only a willingness to learn, work
sioned as Denver's starting
spring that he wasn't an out- been working with outfield any Florida groodmother or
as a team and have a strong initiative.
tailback next season.
.
fielder," said center fielder coach Jeff Datz, is surprised tourist get on his case: Blake's
It
remains
to
be
seen,
howCoco Crisp. "He's a great ath- how quickly he has picked certain road games in New
• Excellent Pay and Bonus Plan • Great Benefits
ever, whether Droughns is a
lete. He's done it all, and things up. His confidence York and Boston will be difbreakout star or just the latest'
• Work At The #1 Dealership
. grows with every fly ball he ferent. .
that's all that you can ask."
in
a
string
of
backs
to
reach
''I'm sure I'll have some
· Blake's adjustment hasn't slides under or line drive he
I ,000 yards behind the Denver
Call To Schedule An Interview:
exchanges
with fans this
been flawless, but his transi- chases down in the gap.
line.
Since
1995
Terrell
Davis,
tion from the infield dirt to the
"It's gone better than I year," he said. "I'm looking
Olandis Gary, Mike Anderson,
outfield grass has gone better thought," said the 31-year- forward to that."
Clinton Portis and Droughns
1-800-822-0417 • 372-2844
Blake joked that he might
than he or the Indians could old, who signed a two-year,
have all topped 1,000 yards.
475 South Church Street • Ripley, WV 25271
have imagined.
. $5.4 million contract in need some extra fielding to
Cleveland would give any"I haven't done anything to January. "It's not like you're get ready.
thing for just one of those sea''I'll have ·to practice having
embarrass myself yet," he bringing an outfielder in to
sons.
deadpanned.
play the infield who hasn't someone throw quarters and
The Browns haven't had a
He's not flashy, but Blake, seen the infield since he was lighters at me and see how I
running back surpass I ,000
who made an AL-high 26 in Little League. It would be a respond," he said. "See if I
yards since Kevin Mack and
.can dodge them. Maybe pour
errors at third base last sea- little different then."
Earnest Byner both did it in
. son, seems to have the fundaBlake's biggest adjustment ~orne be er on me. '' . .
ASSOCIATED PRESS

I,

Graves blows save, earns win

ne

Indians' Blake all right out in left

Browns look to Droughns
to turn running game upfield ·

Tom Peden Country

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

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T

All proceeds go to the Pleasant Valley Hospital Foundation and
• Saturday, June 11
• ·Banquet/Auction .......-....IPI!I!~;~LlfJrtal:lY

• $150 entry fee·per teamif~
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.

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