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T

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV
'

Fnndraiser to benefit
Relay for Life, A6

Rock samples from
beneath motind
contain rare metal, A6
~...

Cheshi.re's longevi.ty may hinge on annexation

SPORTS
• Eagles pound South
Gallia. See Page 81

BY KEVIN KELlY
' KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

. CHESHIRE - · Proponents
of a plan to annex on to the villageofCheshire are looking fgr
a public hearing laterthismonth
with the Gallia County
Commissioners to help resolve
any lingeri #.g objections or
issues overt he proposal, which
could ultimately keep Cheshire
a going concern.

OBITUARIES

American Electric Power
Ohio filed a technical objection
to the annexation plan on April
13, the deadline to submit
objections or amendments to
the plan priorto the hearing, set ·
for 7 p.m. Thursday.April28 in
the second floor rheeti ng room
of the courthouse.
The utility, which · operates
tl)e neighboring Gen.James M.
Gavin Power Plant, seeks to get
Ill acres of property it owns

withintheproposcdannexation still studying hi &gt; copy of the
area excluded so the property . tech nical objection he obtained
cancontinue w be used for com- from the commissioner&gt;.
pany purposes. AEP Ohio
"Since \lie' re still in negotiaPresident and ChiefExecuti v.e lions with AEP, I doi1 't want to
Officer Kevin Walker stressed say too much." Stinson sa id .
it's not an objection to the over- ''We ' re on a good track to
all annexation plan.
resolve thi s amicably."
Since the annexation proposThe filing appears to be a procedural concern fur AEPOhio. al was filed ·with the commissaidPaul Stinson, a Roush Lane sioners in February. AEP Ohio
resident andoneof theannexa- officials and proponents have
tion plan's backers. Stinson is met severaltimestodiscuss dif-

ferences anu 'ee k a r~,o lut i on .
AEP offered ohjecti Oth to the
group'' fir.' l anne.xmion plan
~hat

Jobless rates
fell in March

Tax collections
down $18,600
from year ago

'

KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBlJN E.COM

'

INSIDE
• School News.
$ee Page A3
• O'Bieness- offering
diabetes education
classes . See Page A3
• Apex presents check to
high school:
See Page A6

Radiation therapy for cancer treatment takes
;;1 quantum leap forward at the Holzer Center .
for Cancer Care. Our new state-of-the-art
linear accelerator delivers higher doses of
radiation over a smaller area, pinpointing
the desired treatment area with minimal
·effect on healthy tissue. Coupled with our
new CT simulator for precise treatment
planning, it improves chances for recovery
while reducing potential side effects.

J,.

REED

BREED@MY DAILYSENTINELCOM

.

Lawrence dipped fourBoth Sargent/photos
tenths of a percent to 7.2 in
Blair
Byrd.
of
the
Ohio
State
University
Veterinarian
School
sits
in
the
recovery
area of the Rural
March, and while still one of
Area
Veterinarian
Services
(RAVS)
Clin1
c
at
Carleton
School
over
the
weekend,
attending to her
eight counties along with
Gallia and Meigs with dou- patient, a dog named Sissy. The clinic provided free spaying and neutering services a,s well as
ble-digit
unemployment, immunizations, worming and routine checku'ps. RAVS was brought to Meigs County by · the
Vinton dropped from 11.1 in Meigs County Humane Society.
February to I 0.5 in March.
The stilte's unemployment
rate was 6.3 perce'}t in
March, down slightly from
th~ F~.!mJary mt~e of 6.4 p.ercent. ,
The national unemploy~
ment rate for March was 5.2
BY BETH SERGENT
percent, down from . 5.4 perBSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
.cent in, February.
"There was little change in
SYRACUSE "These
the overall labor market in
are
so
well
taken
care
animals
.Ohio in March," said Barbara
from
of,".veterinarian
student
Riley, director of the Ohio
Department of Job and Cornell University Kristin
Family Services. "A slight Maclauchlan said while
gain in construction employ- preparing a cat· for surgery at
ment was offset by lower· the Rural Area Veterinarian
employment in the leisure Services Rrogram (RAYS)
which set up shop at Carleton
and hospitality sector."
School
over the weekend.
Pike County had t.he high"You can tell these animals
est rate of unemployment in
are
loved," Maclauchlan
March, 12.3 percent. Other
added
which underlined the
counties \vith high unempoint
that
just because their
ployment rates included owners may
be able to
Adams, 10.5; Monroe, 10; afford regularnotveterinarian
Morgan, 11.4; Noble, I 0.3;
does not mean they are
and Ottawa, 10.2. Delaware care
loved· any less than those aniCounty had the lowest rate mals that routinely visit a vetat .4-.5 percent. ·
erinarian.
The number of workers
Maclauchlan was one of 22
unemployed in Ohio in veterinarian students ·. who
March was 373 ,000, down worked the RAYS Clinic, all
from 379,000 in February. of them from schools like
The number of unemployed · Cornell, The Ohio St-ate
has increased by 13,000 University
and
Purdue
over the year from 360,000. University, and from as far
The March unemployment away as Puerto Rico and
rate for Ohio was up from Canada. .
6.1 percent in March 2004.
RAYS is funded by dona. The county and city rates tions to the Humane Society Kristin . Maclauchlan. · a veterinarian . student from Cornell
are unadjusted, meaning they of the United States based in University in New York, N.Y., readies a patient for surgery at the
do not take into account sea- .New York, N.Y. These dona- free animal clinic given by the Rural Area Veterinarian Services·
sonal adjustments in emptoy- • tions allow the organization to 'Program and the Meigs County Humane Society. Maclauchlan
travel to rural areas to perform was one of 22 veterinarian students and a dedicated handful of
Meigs County 'Humane .Society volunteers who worked 'lor two·
m(i~e Associated Press
Please
see
Clinic.
AS
days,
prpviding care for nearly 100 .pets free of charge.
contributed to this story.)

POMEROY - The collection of Meigs County 's
One-pe'rcent sales tax is
down $ 18~ 651 from collections at thi s point last year.
continuing a trend that
began in 200 I.
The county has seen the
loss of nearly $1-00.000 . in
revenue for &gt;:ounty govern- ·
mern since then, · pulling an
extra burden on a county
general fund budget already
stru ggling with cuts from
other revenue sources.
Receipts of s;Iles tax revenue in April , representing
February collection. ·is up
slightly from April. 2002
- $73 .546 , compared to
$70,131 last year. The latest
report from Meigs County
Auditor
Nancy
Parker
Grueser show s a year-todate collection. however, of
$77,2~3 , $ 18,651.41
less
than last year in April.
The state pays the county
proceeds from its one-percent sales tax two months·
. after they're collected. The
sales tax is paiu into the
county general fund and
· ~1 sed for county operations.
including wages and other
expenses associated with
operating
courthouse
ot'fices.
The county commt ss loners use the proceeds of -the
tax to assi st with the county's cash flow. paying utility bills, payroll ami other
expenses. ;~nd rely on the
tax particularl y outside real
estate tax collection periods
and when : large bill ~ are
'due, such as in surun~e premioms.
One pos-itive in re viewing
the tax · collection s since
2000. however. is that
although the collection of
the tax has dwindled from
$1 . 191.746 in .2000 to
$ 1.092,525 in 2004. the
dramatic drops ' in annual
collection
have
been
reduced. Between 2000 and
200 I and between 200 I
and 2002. the count y lost
$33.000. but last year. lost .
only $ 10.000 when compared to. 2004 collections.

RAVS: Rural Area Veierinarian Services-

.Free clinic provides treatment for nearly 100 pets

• Southern crowns
prom king and queen.
See Page A5

WEAmER

All of this in a conununity cancer £~enter.
Right here, closer to you.
Detail• on Page A&amp;

INDEX
2 SEcrtONS- 12 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds'
'

•'

A3
82-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

AJ·

Editoria~s

Obituaries

A4
As

Sports

81

Weather

A6
"

© :1005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Center for

BY BRIAN

GALLIPOLIS
Joblessness in the area took
a slight downturn in the area
during .March. dala from the
Ohio Department of Jobs
and Family Services indicated.
Gallia County's utiemploy~
ment dipped seven-tenths of
a percent to I0 percent for
ttle month, while tbe jobless
rate for Meigs County, which
held steady at 12.5 percent
for January and February,
fell to .11.6 for March. .
The trend was seen in surrounding counties. Athens
went to 6.8 percent in March
from 7.5 in February, while.
Jackson fell six-tenths of a
percent from February to

9.3.

turned

Please see Cheshire. AS

BY KEVIN KELlY

Page AS
• Michael Bostick
• Don E. Mullen
• Tammy Murphy
• Fannie E: Bernard

c oni mi ..;-.io n e r ~

down in Se ptember 2004.
The dialogue between the
compan y and nearby re, idents
of Cheshire looking to join the
village has been an encouraging sign . St inson said.
The peti tion fil ed with the

•

,.

ARE
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:

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.Trust. H&lt;;&gt;pe.:. Closer to You

Toll-free 1-800-821-3860 • 740-446-5474 •

•

170 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, OH

.

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•

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:~

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PageA2

N

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, Aprilt8,

2005

•

Almost 11 million ·childre~
in developing countries die before age 5

Monday, Aprilt8,

Woodmen of America to meet Crt'''"lc for Chri st plannin ~ Roge r
Stephenson.
All
5-7 p.m. Tuesda y at IVfillic·, lllt'Cting t(,r June II Gospel on Ma;ons invited.
'
Re staurant. Members are the Levee. 7 p.m.. First
Monday, April II!
invited
to bring a frienu.
Southern Baptist Church. All
ATHENS O'l:llcness
RACINE - Ra c·ine Villa"()
interested
parties
invi!Cu
to
Memorial
Hospital
wi ll offer
Co un cil regular busine~s
Thesdity,
April
19
.lttcnd.
lnfurma
rion
at
lJ92uiabetes education class sesmeet ing. 7 p.m.. council
Monday, April 18
MIDDLEPORT - A spe- 677lJ.
~ h ambers.
sio
ns. ·The class sess iOns
RACINE - Meigs County
CARPENTER - Columbia cial meeting of Middleport
consist
of an individual
Tuberculosis staff at Racine
Lodge
3(&gt;3
..
F&amp;A.M.
will
he
Tnwn,hip Tru stees will meet
Fire Dept.. 4JOto 6 p.m. Call assessment . prior to Monday.
in speci al session 7 p.m·. at the held at 7:30p.m to pract ice i'&lt;ll:
M1ry 9. and two classes.
992-3722 for infonnation.
in spection i!l the fellowcraft
·station.
Monday.
May 9. and
Thursday, April21 '
RACINE
Soiuthern degre·e.
Wednesday. May II, from I
-~~
Thesday; Aprill9
. MIDD_LEPORT .
Loi:al Board of Educatio n.
p.m. until 4.p.m .. to comChn .;t1 an Go! I League will
POMEROY -. Meigs
·Thursday, April21
~ 7JO p.m. regular meeting.
plete the entire American
'.'t 5: 15 p.m. &lt;~t the Pme County Health .Department
RACINE
Ra cine he~111
Diabete·s Assbciation-recogHill &gt; Gnll Cours e. 1 he league wi ll offe revenin~ clinic
American Legio n Post 602
Thursday, April 21 ·
nized program.
i' op~n to anyone 14 years ? id hours from 4 to f p.m :. offerPOMEROY - Salil sbury will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the thmugh adult. For~more 1nl or- in~ the following services:
The class sessions will be
Township Trustees will meet hall for a meeting .followed· by llhltlon ca ll 99--2 070 tor ch1ldhood and adult Jmmu held , in the hospital's basea .dinner. Offic ers will be
at 6:30p.m at the town hall.
il'lent confererice rooms each
{ktail s. Sponso red . by :the nizations. blood pressure and
elected.
POMEROY -~ Meigs Soil
day. Participants are advised
Middl eport Church ol Chnst. blood sugar assessme.nt s.
POMEROY - , Mc1g&gt;i
and water Conservation
to attend both sessions of the
POMEROY
Gospe
l
on
WIC.
pre-natal
services,
head
. Di strict, noon at the Meigs County Retired Te.1chers rhc Levee event prayer and li ce screening and eradication Class. They are designed to
SWCD office, 33101 Hiland Association will meet at nuon 1 planmng. sess1on set lor 7 p.m. education, environmental
provide education and manRoad, Pomeroy.
for a luncheon and meeting at a t the F1rst Southern BaptiSt health, vital statistics and
agement skills to individuals ·
Trinity
Congregational Ch~llch : The. Concert ':' '.II be information
with diabetes or recently
general
· Church, Pomeroy . · Lenqra held on June II undeJ spml- health-related que stions.
·dia gnosed with. diabetes, so
Leilheit. Meigs County Parish sors h1p ol the Oh10 Valley
they can have full. healthy
nurse will speak on '·Help Crusade for Chri st.
·
and productive lives.
with Health Iss ues ." Di xie
Th'e goal of the class sesSayre will present a musical
Monday, April 18
Saturday, April23
sions is to offer information
POMEROY - Right to program on the 1920s rheme .
Wednesday, April 27
MIDDLEPORT - Annual
that will help . people with
Life meeting will be held at Members are reminded to take' inspect ion of Middleport
RACINE - Harry Stobart
diabete s
make
positive
7:30p. m. at the Meigs County paper products and health care Lodge 363. F&amp;AM. in the fel- will observe his 88th birthday choices about their lifestyle
Pomeroy Library. Danny items for Serenity House. lowcraft deg1'ee. 7:30p.m. fol- on April 27, Cards may be
Harmon will be the guest Re servations.
992-3214. lowing a 6:30 p.m. dinner. . sent to him at 22842
speake r.
Guests welcome.
Members arc ro take· two pies. Buektown Road, Racine ,
MIDDLEPORT - Modern
POMEROY - Ohio Vall ey Inspectin g deputy will be Ohio .

Other events

Marla Ruz1cka.
28, of Global
Exchange. leads
the chant of a
picket-lin e, out·
s ide Bayer
Corporaticr 1s
gate, in Berke ley
Monday March 5.
2001. RUZICka, .
founde r of
Campa ign for ·
In nocent Victims
in Conflict. died ·
·Saturday in a
blast. which also
killed an Iraqi and
another foreigner,
official s said.
She had been in
Iraq conducting
door-to-door surveys trying to
determine the
number of civil ian
casualties in the
country.

'

Church events

on

Clubs and
organizations

AP Photo '

2005

Birthdays

and · diabetes man;1 ge mcnt.
Barb Nakanish i. ~D . L.D..
C.D.E.. O'Bieness' re g i;ter~d
diet it ian/ce n ifi ed . diahete,
educator.
and
Laura
Ballinge r.
B.S..
R.N.•
O ' Blcnc s~· educatiO n coorui nat_or, wijl lead !he d a" sessions.
Resources and educational
literature will be a\'ailable at'
the classes. A p·hys ici an's
written
rclcrra l
usin gO'Bicness' Diabetes SelfManagement Therapy referral form is requ ired to attenj
class and should be submitted before Monday. April 25.
The referral should include
diagnosis and he,moglobin
Ale test .rcs ults if available.
For ass istance with the
referral · proce ss or more
information.
cal l
Barb
Nakanishi at (740) 592-9205.
Nakimi shi can also provide
information abbut the dates
and times of future classes.

School News

Sonshin.e circle plans spring activities

$

RACINE -. Spring_&lt;tclivitie s includin g preparing a
lloat for the Racine Flower
Festival parade and noodle s
· and baked goods for a sale
there were di scussed at last
week's meeting of the
Sunshine Circle held at
·Bethany Church .
The annual mother-daughter banquet to be held on
May 5 was planned ad members were reminded to get
n:servations
into
their
Kathryn Hart hefore April
)8 .' Plans ·were discus·sed for
·a tour to the Amish country
on June 9 with the cost to be

'''
•••

Employees, Independent Contractors, Vendors and their immediate family net eligible.

Diane McVey
1\·I.A., CCC-A
O"·ner &amp; Audiologist

&amp; MEDKAL EQUIPMENT

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70 Pi.ne Street • Callipolis

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713-5536

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www.kaaplat.com
740-446-8500
328 2nd Ave.

www.holzerclinic.com

Gallipolis, OH

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TDdlv'l

Powell's
FOODFAI

700 East Main Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

PRESCRIPTIO

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1

740-992.-$252
• · www.foodfairmk.com

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THE AREA'S ONLY
AUTHORIZED
HELlOS PROVIDER.
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825 Third Avenue

• H.ltr Care &amp;. M.lkeup
·Nail Care
·Facials &amp;. Waxing
·Massage
• Body Treatment
·.Spa .~ackages

ll6 Second

Gallipolis

Callipolis, OH 45631

30M State Route 160

446-2342

(740) 446-2933

lAcro•• ·lrom Holzer Medical Center)
Gllllpoll•. 01'110

WHY PAY MORE??
EUERY DAY
LOW PRICES!

Avenu~

(740) 441-0202
Woodland Center Compte•

and Betty Proffitt.
Oflicers reports were give n
by' Han, secretary, and Julie
Campbell , treasurer. Sterrett
read Psalms 71 :'1 and an article "Do "You Like Being
Old'?'. She reported on the
cookhook committ ee noting
that the recipe' are ready to
be typed and sent to the
prin ter.
Thank you notes were read
from Joy ce anu Bill Hoback,
To rres,
Delbert
Norma
Patterson Family. and Ed
and
Kelly
Lawson.
Donations · \V ere received
from Norma Torres . .Melanie

George, and Ann Boso. Sixty
cards on encouragement
were signed.
The
hostesses
served
refreshments to those, named
and refreshments to Holly
Stump.
Bernice Thesis,
Mattie
Beegle,
Nondus
Hendricks , Janet Theiss,
Ruth Simpson , Mabel Brace,
Sheila
Theiss.
Denise
Holman , Avis Harrison , Edna
Knopp. and Thelma Walton.
Next meeting will be May
12 with Rainer having the
program and
Sterrett and
Foreman servmg refreshments.

NELSONVILLE The or enrolled full-time in a two or moving into the position or
:Foundation for Appalachian four year college·, u·niversity, director. She had a reputation
Ohio is now accepting applica- technical or vocational school. for her kind and encouraging
tions for the Ariana R. U!loa
The scholarship fund wa' nature and was known to many
Scholarship awards .
established at the Foundation
"Ma ma Ulloa."
Scholarships are awarded on .for Appalachian Ohio to honor
She died in Dece mber 2002
the blr sis of a competitive the life and memory of Ariana but her legacy conti nues
:process. that considers finan--. R·. Ulloa. A native of Mexico. through this endowed scholar·cial need ,. academic achieve- Ariana received a degree in ship fund, created through the
.ment , extra-curricular acti'vi- chemical engineering from the contributions of Ariana'damties, cuucational goals and per- National
University
of ily. friends, and students. In
.sonal aspirations.
Mexico. She moveu to Athen&gt; . keeping with her work 111
·The candidat es forthe scholar- with her husband and fou r chi J, Int ernational Programs, the
ship wi II need to be interna- dren in 1986 and began work- · scholarship s are offered to
·tional students or students ing for the Hocking College international students .or stu•enrolled in international stud- Department of International dents pursuing a degree m
ies, ~nd have already accepted Programs in 1990, eventually international studies.

as

!

.

Scholarship applications are
available at the guidance ·oflices
of Hocking College, Ohio
University, the Foundation 's
office
and
website,
www.appalac h ianohio. org
Completed applications are to
be sent to the Foundation for
Appal.achi~n Ohio, P.O. Box
456, Nelsonville, OH 45764
Completed applications must be
received on or before May 16,
2005. Recipients of the scholarship will be notitied by or shortly after May 31,2005.

.CPR training oflered ot 0'8/eness
ATHENS
O'Bieness
Memoria! Hospital will offer a
cardiopulmonary resuscitation
(CPR) course from 6:30 p.m.
until 9:30p.m. Wednesday in
:uBieness' basement confer:ence room B-9.
The American Safety and

Health Institute course teaches
participants the &gt;ki ll s needed
to administer CPR to adults,
children
and
infants.
Participants also learn hOw to
recognize a . life-threatening
emergency, how l Q, provide
basic life support, and what to

uu in tl:le case of an airway community relations office
obstruct ion or choking. ·
. The co4rse fee of $15 per perUpon successful completion son is payable with registraof the course, participants tion . Thefee is waived for anyreceive a card to confirm that one unable to pay. For more
they attended and completed · information, call O'Bleness'
the course.
community relations departTo regis ter visit O'Bleness' ment at (740) 592-9300.

First date is·not the time to reveal your HIV status

umber
-IS•••
N

$63 a person , Kc scrvmions
for that are to be made with
Hart of Lois Sterrett. prcsi'dent.
Letha 'Proffitt and Hazel
McKelvey were hostesses
for the meeting and presented a program on spring.
Proffitt
read
"Good
and
Housekeeping"
McKelvey gave "If Mister
Clean Calls, Tell Him I'm
Not ln ." . Other membe~s
taking part in the program
were Blondena Rainer, Edie
Hubbard,
Martha
Lou
Wh.iJ,e,
Beegle ,
Jackie
Evelyn Foreman, Ann Boso

·.Ulloa Scholarship applications now available

We do the billing locally

16" 1 Toppi

Bv HARRY DUNPHY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

•

Millennium
Development
Goa(s, to achieve by 2015.
They include boosting priWASHINGTON -Almost mary school enrollments,
II million children in devel- removing obstacles to greater
oping countries die each year numbers of girls goi ng· to
before the age of 5. most of school and improving health
them from causes that are care .
Many countries have .made
preventable in · wealthier
countries, the World Bank progress toward achi ev ing
said · in a report released the goals, but Francoi s
Sunqay.
Bourguignon , the ' bank' s
The causes include acute chief economist. said: " I
'respiratory infectio n. diar- must admit tnany countries
·rhea, measles and malaria, are oil track and a huge
·which · together account for effort is needed" to help
48 percent of child deaths in them progress toward the
the
developing
world; 2015 goals. Some nations are
according to the report more behind schedu le than
. called World Devel opment others. particularly in subSahar•n Africa. ,
Indicators.
~
· m ove ment
One section of the report
'' Rapid
e that (racks progress on all the
before 1990 g
mortality rates
infants indicators. It provides evi- ·
and children would be cut by uence th at inequalities within
two-thi'rds in the following countries - between ri ch
25 years:· the report said. and · poor, urban and rural
''B,ut progre's slowed almost and male and ·female populaeverywhere in the 1990s."
lions - may be as much a
The report said only 33 barrier to achieving the goals
countries are on track to as inequalities between counreach the 2015 goal of reduc- tries.
In India, for example,
ing child mortality rates by
two•thirds from its 1990 lev- school attendance rates for
els. It said only two regions · the richest 20 percent of the
- Latin America and the population are twice as high
Caribqean and Europe and a&gt; for the poorest. And in the
.Central Asia - may be on West African nation of Mali.
track to achieve the target.
"the mortality rate of chilFive years ago world lead- dren from poor, rural' fami ers outlined a number of lies is twice as high as those
development objectives, for- from rich urban ones.'' the
mally
known
as
the ,bank report said.

Pagel\:~ ·

,

O'Bleness cffering diabetes
edt tcation classes

Public meetings

Bv BRIAN SKOLOFF
ASSOCIATED PREss wRITER

Report:

END

Community Calendar

AMERICAN ACTIVIST HELPING IRAQI FAMIUES DIES IN CAR ~OMBING
Leahy saiu he woulu speak
about Ruzicka on the Senate
lloor Monday. and po&gt;sihly
SAN FRANCISCO· - A help plan a memorial service
woman who led an effort to for the woman in Washington .
help tho., e ravaged by violence
" I said !o her father this
in Iraq fell victim to the war morning. ·A lot of people
herself when a car bomb ki lied spend their whole lives and do
her anu two other people. offi. not begi1,1 to accomplish what
tials said Sunday.
shc'·s done.'" Leahy said.
Marla RuLicka . .founder of
The young American had
Campaign· for
Innocent begun campaigning for civi lVictims in Contlict. dieu ian victi1hs in Afghanistan in
Saturday in the blast , which 2002. That work helped proalso killed an Iraqi ami anoth- duce precedent-setting legislaer foreigner, offtcials said. She tiot'l in Washington. sponsored
had be~1
·in Iraq conuucting by Leahy. au!horizing aid to
door-to- or surveys trying to Afghans who suffered 'losses
determine 1e number of civil ' in U.S. military operations. •
ian casualti s in the country.
Ruzicka got her sta11 workRu zick-a. ~8. of Lakeport. ing for non-governmental
10 years ago
at
founded CIVIC in 2003 and oroanizations
c
'
was instrumental in .securing the San , Fnmcisco-based
millions of dollars in aid human rights group Global
money from the federal gov- Exchange.
·
ernment for di stribution in
Medea Benjamin . the .
group·s director. said Ruzicka
Iraq .
U.S . Sen. Patrick Leahy. D· was a .;pretty, · peppy. vivaVt .. said it was Ruzicka's idea cious you ng woman · who
to put a spec ial fund in last wanted to learn about the
year's multibillion-dollar for-· world:'' Ru zicka workeil un
eign aid bill to help !ray is projects ran ging from AIDS in ·
whose businesses had heen Africa to the travel embargo
bombed by mistake or as cDI- against Cuba. she said.
" It 's a terrible tragedy and a
lateral damage.
"She was constantly calling tra gic irony that somebody
us to say (lawmakers were ) who devoted her 'life .to helpmDving too slowly." he said by ing the victims of war woulq
teleph.one on Sunday. "Just herse lf become a ·victim of
from the force of her personal- war. ,;·Benjamin said.
,
ity, we decided to take a
When the U.S.-Ied invasion
- c h~n 'e on it."
of Iraq hcgan in March 2003.
Ruzicka\ parents said they Ruzicka was already in
were notified of her death j~ISt Baghdad with Code Pink. said
hours after the explosion. U.S. Jodi Evans, co-founder of the
Embassy officials publi c ly women's anti-war group.
Other activists decided to
released Ruzicka 's name
Sunday.
return to the United States to
"We· ve been very worried talk about how the Iraqi people
about her but we know better' were affected by the invasion ,
than to tell our children. not to but Ruzicka made a commitdo anything. We were support- ment to stu~. Evans sa id. She
ive and just reminded her to be founded the group CIVIC that
careful ," said her mother, year.
"Marla thought she would
Nancy' Ru zicka.
She said ·her daughter had be more effective stayin g,
left her a tele phone message because once the bombs stan,
the night before her death that ed · falling , people would be
said, " Mom and dad. I love hurt and she needed to help
you. I'm OK."
them get their liyes back
"She cared about people and together," Evans said.
Even as fighting continued
gave people her love and
help ." Nancy' Ruzicka said. to rage in sections of Baghdad
·TJI remember the love she in mid-April 2003, Ruzicka
spread around the world and arrived back in the Iraqi capi·
the good ambassador that she tal. set up office in an unprowas"for her coumrv." ·
tected hotel and soon was a
A skinny. ever-smiling regular visitor to the . city's
woman with curly blond tress- makeshift
newsrooms,
es. Ruzicka was untiring and encouraging media interest in
undaunted as she went up the civilian-casualty story. ·
against military and political · "Spread the word- it will be
bureaucracies in her effort to . what we make of it." she e- .
win help for Iraqi civilian vic- maii'ed friends as she · began
tims of the war.
her Iraq work.
·
Ruzicka is· among several
Leahy'remembered Ruzicka
as a fiery youn g woman who foreign aid workers ki lled in
.,came into his office about two Iraq. · Others
included
years seeking federal money Margaret Hassan, a Briti sh aid
to aid civilians.
worker who was abducted in
Leahy said $10 million was Baghdad in October and later
added to the foreign aid bill shown . on video pleading for
last year for that .purpose and her life, and four workers for a
another $10 million has been Southern Baptist mis sionary
set aside for next year. The group who were trying to find
money was being distnbuted a way to provide clean _ w~ter to
by government aid workers people tn the Rorthern ctty of.
with Ruzicka' s help, he said. . Mosul.
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sounds like we have .a car that
DEAR ABBY: I am a blond,
can't
find its way home . Also,
' slim, 5-foot-10 female- sin- ·
it steers the conversation in
· gle and in great shape. People
one
of two paths - a detailed
• tell me I am beautiful. I am
con versation about his death .
also HIV-positive.
or one that ends .awkwardly.
· I would like to meet someDear
Should we just say we have
•one special and settle down.
Abby .
one .,on living "here" and a
:Butas soon as I meet a man I
. ' !ike, I struggle with the ques- - - - · · daughter li ving "there," and
assume the person will evention of when to reveal my
tually learn that we had anqth·
health situation. I have told
them right away and I never for him to get to know you - cr chi ld? Thi s may seem like a
' hear from them again, which I before having se~. When you silly que sti on. but it makes us
find very insulting.
are finally ready for physical not want to venture out much.
: Some of my friends tell me intimacy, you should then dis- ·_. GRIEVING IN RICH ·1 shouid date a guy for a few close your HIV status. If the MOND , VA.
DEAR GRIEVING : Your
months and then say some- man loves you, he won 't leave
thing, but I'd feel betrayed if you. If he doesn' t love you. letter illustrates once again
how dangerous it is to ask per-.
someone waited that long to good riddance.
DEAR ABBY: My husband sonal ques.tions .· Asking peotell me .
I don't want to just blurt out and I recently lost our 24- ple if they have chi ldren. or
:the information at a first ·year- old son in an automobile how many they have, can al so
· meeting. I'm very confused. accident. While the emotional be devastating to couples who
Please help me . - WANTS pain , is tremendous, we're have been unable to conceive.
In a , ituation like yours.
TO .
BE
MARRIED, now beginning to venture out
into
social
gatherin
gs_.
respond
that you had three
GAINESVILLE, FLA .
· ',DEAR WANTS TO BE Inevitably the question comes children. but one recently died
MARRIED: There is no need up, " How rriany children do in ,i C\l f accident - and then
:to wear a scarlet letter declar- you have?" How should we change the subject. Unless the
questioner has the hide of a
·.ing to anyone who shows an answer that question"
It
feels
wrong
to
acknowl
rhin oceros. he or she will be
interest that you are HIV-positive. There is EVERY reaso edge only our two remaining glad to · discuss something
· in the world to take the time to children, but saying. ··we had else.
DEAR ABBY: My fiance
get to know someone - and three, but recently lost one"

Announce ·EHS honor roll
TUPPERS PLAINS - These students were named to
the honor rull at Eastern High School for the third quarter:
Derek Baum , Chris Carroll. Cody Dill , l en Hayman, Bryan
Minear, Jaime' Reel , Darren Scarbrough. Casey Smith
Morgan Weber, Kri sta White, . Chelsea Young, Brandon
Bartee, Taylor Russell. Brittany Bissell. Cory Shatter. Erin
Weber, Andrew Bissell , Nathan Carroll. Ry,an Davis
Kelsey Holter, Kyle Rawson, Morgan Weber, all A's.
Adam . Dillard, Andy Francis, Jess ica Kehl, Sierra
Oldaker, Sara Pore, Brian Castor, Cliris Davis,. Whitley
Smith, Sara Wiggins. Sarah Boston, Samantha Brown, Kim
Castor, Kayla Collins. Ryan Davis, Steve Hudson. Jenm
Hupp, Georgana Koblentz. Tyler Lee, Shannon Luscar
Sarah Martindale.
Alex McGrath, Derek · Putman , Hollie Richard, Justin
Riebel. Amber Wilbarger. Daniel Buckley, Alex Burroughs
Josh Collins, Kyle Edwards, Lindsey Grate, Cassie Hauber
Katie !'layman, Hannah Helgesen, Tyler Kearns, . Aaron
Martindale, Sara P(jwell. Hannah Pratt, . Tiffany Rutter,
Canney Scyoc, and Nikki Young .

Brannon earns scholarship
REEDSVILLE - Marietta' College Junior Bradley D.
Brannon was awarded the Wen- Yu Ch~ng Scholirship a
the College's Spring Honors Convocation.
Dr. Edward Osborne, Coordinator of Social Sciences
Busill,ess and Leadership and a McCoy Professor in the
Department of Economics. lv)anagement and Accounting,
presented the scholarship, which is awarded to the rising
senior student majoring in the Department of Economics
Management, and Accounting with the highest cumulative ·
grade point average.
The scholarship fund was created in 1998 hy nlumni to
honor Professor Emeritus Wen- Yu "Frank" Cheng.
A graduate of Eastern High School, Brannon is working
toward a major in accounting at Mari.etta. He is the son of
Joy and Paul Brannon of Reedsville, and serves as clerk of
Olive Township.

On UNO dean's list
LIMA -Andrew R. Smith has been named to the
dean!s list at .the University of Northwestern Ohio, em·ning
a grade point average of at least 3.5 :

Local Briefs

·Proud to be a
part ofyour life.

Correction
In a story about River Bed
Tanning and . Party Supplies
in Minersvi lle, their phone
number was incorrectly listed
The correct number is .9924295.

Subscribe today • 992-2155

and I are both divorced and
over 50. My dream is to be
married on the beach in a forWEST VIRGINIA JOBS FOUNDATION
mal wedding gown.
My family says it is not
appropriate for someone rriy ·
age to wear a wedding gown. ~~~
We plan to be married this i
summer, and the gown is very
important to me . What's your
opinion° - STARRY-EYED
IN ROCHESTER, N.Y.
.DEAR STARRY-EYED:
Your family is mistaken .
According to my trusted 16th
Edition of . Emily Post's
Etiquette, you may wear a
wedding gow n if you wish although "a second- time
bride usually forgoes a train
as pa~t of 'her gown." So, have
your dream wedding, and may
your marriage be a long and
.
happy one.
Dear Abby is writte11 by
Abigail Van Burell, also
k11own as ]ea11ne Phillips,.
Tllis weeks douation will go to
and was foullded by her
Pt. Pleasarlt "Boy Scout Troop #259"
motl1er, Pauli11e Phillips.
124 HIGHLAND AVE.
PT PLEASANT, WV
Write
Dear Abby
at
(Old
Carolina
Lumber
Buildinfi
Across from CSX)
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los A11geles, CA
90069.

BINGO I

I'U
JjrUBDJr.
&amp;7'11ESDjY·
.(We wUI ~o longer
play on Sunday)
675-3877
.

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Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene·Hoeflich
General Manager-N~ws Editor

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free .exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
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READER '·S

VIEW

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Recycle
Join Earth Day obsewance
Dear Editor:
I'm b~ginn ing to · be lie ve that one of ·the reasons that families and businesses think twtce abo ut relocating to Meigs
Ctlunty is that the roads here are starting to look like path s to .
the landftll 1 Ha ve yo u seen al l the trash on the roadways lately'' I th ink this mess makes us all look like thoughtless, selfabsorbed. lazy slobs.
Recently. I did a little rese.trc h and discovered that if 23,242·
people liv.ing in Meigs Coumy (in2003) threw a piece of trash
ou t their cc~rs wmuows every day, by the time my grandsons
were my age there would be 447,189,840 pieces of trash on the
roauways. Anu that's if they only thro.w out one piece of trash.
Since we hardly get any snow anymore, maybe someday the
count y snowplows c•in push trash otT the roads instead. ·
It takes 80 to 100 years for one aluminum can to decompose. 50 to SO yea rs for one plastic soda bottle, 10 to 20-years
for a plastic. shopping bag. and styrofoam never decomposes.
April 20. 1970.20 million people took part in the first Eanh
Day ce lebration. Now, 33 years later, we' re still not doing
enough to h,elp ami the problem of trash on our roadways is
geft ing worse. I love livi ng in Me igs County. so on April 20,
I'm planning to spend some time picking up trash on the roadways. Will you help me by picking up some trash in your area?
To the Meigs County Recycling Program, thank you for
·everything that yo u do and for givi ng us a place to put our
trash. to the people who recycle on a regular basis and keep
their tras h in their cars umil they get home. I salute you.
Debra A. Bulliugtou
Rutland

PageA4

What is the deal with
Bush. Bush &amp; Clinton. and
am I the only one to find this
presidential reality show.
starring
Thetrs
Tru ly.
extremely annoying1
Diana
Wb,at we see in photo-op
West
after photo-op is something
that goes beyond protocol,
the codified strictures that
have evolved to lend that ·
'
impersonal' if awesome. c l;mging, clashinf generauignity to gatherings. ·of' tumal baggage to the JOb:
state, right down to their they can ' t help it. George
leaat prepossessing atten- Bush (41) ts the last presi-.
dees. We see instead 'The dent from the so-called
Three
Amigos,"
as Greatest Generation. Bill
Newsweek has dubbed Clinton (42) Is the first presBush, Bush &amp; Clinton. The ident from lhe Baby Boom
Three Amigos can't hiiVe Symbolicall y. they are as far
dignity; they have to have apart as World War II and the
personality. Camaraderi e. 1960s. George ·W. Bu sh (43)
Maybe even adventures may be the second president
aboard Air Force One. First from the Baby Boom , but
stop , tsunami-land, where not having opposed the
Dad and Bill offer aid and . Vietnam War as Bill Clinton
comfort io leisure wear. did, he skipped the efiteNext, it's Dad and Bill and approved New Le ft 1960s
W. in Rome, soberly suited ex.penence . (In case you
for the pope's funeral. Then, missed the . 2004 election.
it's dinner for three with George W. !:lush jomed the
Berlusconi; later, it's briefin- Air National Guard in 1968:
gs for the "troika" with at about that time, in case
Condi . What next a you missed the 1992 elecremake of "The Three tion, Bill Clinton "loathe(d)
Musketeers"?
the military.")
Of course, that 's just how
The fact is, these guy~
aren 't ali for one and one for these men started .o ut on
all. And this is where things ·their distinctly separate
get annoying. first of all, as paths to t.he Oval Office: It's
presidents tliey don ' t just what they' did there once
represent the culmination of they got behind the desk that
the democratic process at a reall y makes the buddy rougiven time - 1988, 1992, tine ring false. Or what
1996. 2000 and 2004, Clinton did there, th at is.
respectivel y. They bring And I'm not just talking

Monday, Aprilt8,

2005

Obituaries

.,

Annual RQtary pancake and sausage breakfast

Michael Bostick

about the Oval Office-over- start - •tlthou gh no thanks
la p of Mollica Lewinsky. to hiS predecessor, Clinton
oral sex. and a telephone dis- (42). whq has openly quest.:us:-,ion with a congressman uoned Bush's lcgitiniacy as
about troop movements 111 the 3000 election winner.
Shouldn · t bygones be
Bosnia - .Jith ough certainly
this lcss:t han- ha rmonic con- bygones'' Fiankly, If these
vergence is the nadir of the cl.1shes were purely private,
American presidency. The miiybe so. Certainly. they ·
grime. slop and tawdrincss wouldn · t be cm1se for disof the Clin ton years is i.nfa- cussion. 'But these were
mous. Clilminating not in the affairs ol state (absolutely no
. hiStoric Cli nton il)lpeac h- pun intended ) and· they
.ment in 1998, but in a slew involved urgent matters of
of li th-hour C lin ton par- pnnciple. "Patching things
dons in January 200 I for up." as unelected citi zens
assorted crooks and creti ns'. might or might 1101 choose tu
As far back as 1992. Bush do. isn't really an option for
(4 1) fnmo usl y placecj _ any public ser;1 ,Jnts in· this case
and all of Clinton's c h ara~ter ·- unless. of course. they
detlcie nc;Ies beyond the now cons ider the clashes to
scope of his campaig n. For have been pure ly personal.
th is we can say, .than ks 'a lot, and, worse. the principles
9eorge. Maybe , just maybe, unimportant.
lashing into · the "bimbo
One niore'thing : It may be
eruptions," the shady . deals. · a flash in the PR pan. bu t
the'draft evasion, etc ., could reports about a new bio g~a ­
have made a difference on phy of Hillary Cltnton by
Electiori Day. Probably nol , Edward Klein promi se revethoug h. Bush pere was no lations that cou ld be damagSecond-term Coming. But ing 10 the senator from New
Bush's discret ion proves a York 's presidential aspirapoint ; namely, th-at he tions. In such a case. hubby's 1
believed 111 the tradition of newfo und f1~ e nd sh i p with
the Marquis' of Queensbury those mind -your-manners.
Bushes
more than in the ghost of bl4e-blazer-born
Lee Atwater. ·By the time would only help fend off any
Bush fi ls came along, the future sleaze. A II for one and
line on the innumerable one for all ? Frankly, d iscreClinton-Gore scandals was a tion really is the better pm t
pr0 mise to ''restore honor of valor. And that's precisel y
and integrity to the Oval what protocol tells us.
Offi ce.'' This wo uld .ulti(Diana We;/ is a columni.l l
fo
r
·rile Washington Time1.
mately include a new paint
job o n Inaugu rati on Day She can he contacted J•ia
200 I. Bush (43) had a fresh dianawe.H@ ver;zcm.r1 e1.)

DUNBAR. W.V,J. - Michael Paul o~,tic~ . .1X. nf Dunhar.
W.Va. pa;sed a11 a) Frid.ty..-\pril I 5. 20il5.
He wa' employed h) Stanley Steamer Carpet Cleaner' of
Dunbar and was " nat"e or Pomeroy. lie WdS preceded in
death by hi&lt; parent s. Paul A'hky and Opal Kelly Bostick. He
was u lifelong d1e-hard Ncmh C&gt; rolnm Tarhccl&gt; fdn .
Stil'l iv1ng &gt;lie hi' son. Jared \1Jcltacl B(l' lilt tll 1-l.nnlin. hiS
stepson. Cal em Alford of Ha m •n: ,iqe ,' Chci') I Ann M,u'row
and her husband. Brian. of Hl' !''' &gt;vi!k. N.C ...and Teresa Lynn
Haldeman and her husband. Tim. ol Baxter. W Ya.; nepl1ews.
James Paul and Timothy Haldeman of Baxter; his niece,
Mackenzie Marrow ol ·Huntersvill e. N.C.: his grandmother.
Lizzi ~ Woo&lt;.! of Racitle: and se\ era I aunts . uncles' an&lt;.! couSins.
Services will be held ,Jt I p.m. un Tuesday at Keller FUneral
Home, 1236 Myers Ave .. Dunbar. W.Va.-2506-1. and burial
will follow at Grandview Memorial Pari-.. Friends may call ·
\WO hours prior to the service .
' . Memorial donations may be sent to Cheryl Ann Marrow.
14202 Cypress Coui·t. Huntersville. N.C. 2gon.

POMEROY - DonE:. Mullen , RI, Pomeroy t.lied Saturday
Apnl 16, 2005 at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Among the s~rvivors are hi s wife. Barbara F. Hackett
Mullen. sons., Sean 1Kayte). Chuck. Michael. Pa.trick (Penny)
··
Mullen and a Brother Hov.ard B. Mullen.
Services wi ll be II a.m. Wednesday April 20, 2005 at Fisher
Funeral Home in Pomeroy Fnends may call Tuesday from 4
to 8 p.m. at the funera l home. Military services will he co nutlcted by Drew Webster Post 19_ American Legiun. A com-.
plete obituary wi ll be in lue&gt;days Paper.
On-line condolences may be sent to www l'isherfunemlhome s.com.

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EDITOR
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be less than 300(words. All leiters are subject to
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and telephone numba No unsigned letters will
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addressing issues, not personalities.

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. REEDSV ILLE- Tammy Lynn M~rphy . 34, of Reedsville.
dted Saturday, ApriI '16, 2005 as the result of injuries suffered
m a motorcyele accident.
·
·
She is survived by her husband. Ro ger Murphy.
Services will be held at I p m. WediJeduy. Apriil 20, 2005 at
the Whne-Schwarzel Funeral Home. Coo lvil le. Burial wi ll be
in the Torch Cemetery, Torch. Fnends may call at the funeral
home, Tuesday, 2 to 4 and 6 to~ p.m.

COOLVILLE - Fanme E. "Bernard. '!3. of Coolvi lle died
Saturday, April·l6, 2005 at Hickory Creek Nursing' Center at
The Plain s.
Services will be held 9 a.m. Tuesday. April 19. 2005 at
White-Sshwarzel Funeral Home, Coo lville. Burial wi ll be in
the At hens Memory Garde ns, Athens. Friends may call at the
funeral home Monday. 2 to 4 and .6 to 8 p.m .

I NEED

A REMEDY
FOR THE

COST.

Southern crowns prom
king and queen
U!ho sbaby is it, anyway?

'

. . ... .

. ..

Reedlpholo

.
"~~amm··
• I , IIJ

•

of implantati on, her hu ~ba nd
These are the murky, unfawould have been the pre- miliar waters th at judges
sump! ive father, no matter today have to navigate .
what the DNA testing .Britain, the country that prorevealed, and the biological duced the first in vitro baby,
father woul d have no claim has a Ferti li zation and
Joan
to the child. But as a si ngle Embryology Auth'ority creRyan
mother, Bu ch weitz didn ' t ated by Parl iament to ove.rhave fu ll parental .rights to see the man y complicated
decide who should and questions ' that mu st be
should not be part of her al'!swered as technology hurtle s forward ..The United
appointment for implanta- child 's life.
So the courts give lots of States has no counterpart.
tion the same day as
"There is no controlling
weight
to genetics but onl y if
Buchweitz.
Buchwei tz's
·
body
to retlect all the clinithere
is
a
single
mother
baby, and the girl born to the
invol
ved.
cal,
ethical
and legal issues
married couple, were born
David Magnus, co-direc- around fertility · technology,"
10 days apart.
·
tor
of Stanford's Center for says Susan Wolf, professor
The doctor knew of the
Biomedical
Ethics. has been of law and medicine at the
mistake right after both
women were implanted, but following the . Buchweitz Uni versity of Minnesota.
he covered it up ~¥~til a whis- case closely. Though what "So because everything has
tle-blower alerted authon- happened to her and her son been all over the map state
ties. (He is about to lose his is a horrible fluke , he says by state, judges get cases th at
license, and he had to pay the permutations of parent- . defy any statutory scheme.
Buchweitz $1' million in hood that arise from fertilily There 's been a good deal of
damages .) .When the hu sband treatments demand new despair about whether this·
country is capable of central of the married ·f:o uple discov·. legal and social models.
ized reflection j11uch less
It
's
too
simple
to
rely
so
erect he was the biological
centrali
zed legislation."
heavi ly on g~netics to deterfather of Buchweitz's son mine who should be mothers . In the meantime, a mothe1
the wife used a donor egg and
fathers. "We are such a relinquishes her baby severhe sued for full custody.
culture," al days a week to a man she
gene-centered
·Last month, a judge mediMagnus
said.
"There
is an doesn't know and, according
·
ated a settlement in which
the biological father, who assumption \hat we are our to several pe9ple familia r
with both parties, · to whom
had temporary visitation geties."
Don
Kilmer,
Buchwettz's
she
has almost nothing in
rights for almost two years,
gets to share custody of attorney during the custody common. I un.derstand a
Buchweitz's son, who is battle, agrees that couris man 's sense of connection
now 3. Buchweitz, who did / give too much weight to and responsibility to a baby
not return phone call s, must biology and not enough to that carrie s hi s genes. I
send her toddler to the man's what's best for a child like · understand a mother 's desire
Buchweitz's, who now has to raise her child with stabil- ·
home several days a week.
to li ve a divided life . .
ity and consistency, in oltc
Think about this.
material
is home, wi(h one set of values.
Because this man's. sp~nn _".Gene tic
was accidentally implanted cheap," Kilmer . says. "But
We need laws as sophisti in a woman who is a com- the judge had no choice in cated and complex as the .
plete stranger, he ha~ the , this case but .10 give the guy lives we live today, ones that
right under current law to legal standin g. We need leg- recognize that families arc
step into h'er life and the life islation that takes up issues define&lt;.! by, and bound to
of her son. He can make like these that lead to confu- each other, by much strongc1
decisions about how he will sion for the child and trauma stuff than double-helixes.
be raised and where he will for the parents .... There
(Joan Rvan is a colwmii.l'l
sleep and what schools he needs to be ccrtaiirty and fur tire · San Francisco·
will attend.
llnality to some things, and Chroiricle. Send commellls
Here's the kicker: Under one of thm-e is establishing to her in care of rhis newspa·
California law, if th·e woman who your parents are (early per or send Iter. e-mail at
had been married at the time on in life)."
joannan@sfchronicle.com. t ·
,,

Brian J .

Deaths

Fannie E. Bernard

Fi guring out who your
parents are used to be a pretty simple proposition. They
were the people who kissed
your forehead when you
headed out to school and
signed you up for Girl
Scouts and barked at you for
leaving your bike in the driveway. .
Now, forget it.
In thi s age of high-tech
fertilization and conception,
deciphering parentage can
be a complex computation
for which there is often no
reliable formula. Is the par"
ent the person who, knowingly or unknowingly, contributed his or her geneti c
material ? The person who
carried the fetus in her
womb? The person who,
pours the Cheerios in the
morning and reads "Good
Night, Moon" at bedtime?
The case of Californian
Susan Buchweitz points out.
the messy consequences of a
20th-century legal system
grappling with 2 1st-century
tectmology.
She was a 48-year-old
interior decorator when she
gave birth to a boy who grew
from a donated egg fertilized
liy donated sperm. She had
tried in her early 40s to have
a child, according to news
accounts, and after two years
of counseling, decided time
was running out. She chose
the egg and sperm donors
carefully through her doctor.
She saw herself and her baby
as a family with all that the
concept implies: reJatives,
traditions, values, unbreakable bonds and unconditional love.
But when her son was 10
months old, she found out
the wrong embryo had been
implanted in her womb. It
was one of several frozen
embryos belonging to a married couple who had an

Middleport/Po .
meroy Rotary
member Mike
Cr1tes serves
Josh Ulm at
Saturday's
annual Rotary'
pancake and
sausage break·
fast at the
Meigs Senior
Center In
Pomeroy.
Rotary mem·
bers served
over 200 at the
breakfast.
which raises
funds for the
club's local ser·
vice projects .

Don E. Mullen

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, April 18, the I08th day of 2005 . There
arc 257 days left in the year.
Today' s Highlight in History: Fitiy years ago, on April 18,
1955, phySicist Albei1 Einstein (lied in Princeton, N.J., at age 76.
Today\ Birthdays: Actress Barbara Hale is 84. Blues singer
Clarence "Gate mouth" Brown is RI. Ac tor James Drury is 71 .
Actress Hayley Mills is 59. Country musician Jim Scholten
(Sawyer Brown) is 53. Actor Rick Moranis is 51. Talk show
host Conan 0' Brien is 42. Actor Eric McCormack is 42.
A~tress Mel issa Joan Hart is 29. Acalr Sean Maguire is 29.
Ac tress Alia Shawkat is 16.
Thou ght for Tod,\y.' " Imagination is more important than
knowledge."- Albert Einstein ( 1879- 1955).

The Dally., Sentinel ''• Pag~ As

www.mydailysenti.nel.com

Monday, April18, 2005

The Three Amigos'" are annoying

The Daily Sentinel .
111

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FirstEnergy, one nuclear plant
back, has another under spotlight

Two Republican
candidates report
large. stock holdings
· COLUMBL:S (A PI - Two
Republican candidates for the
2006 go,ernur·, race reported large mvestment portfolios in annual financ1al &lt;.lisclosure form &gt; filed with the
Ohio Election' Commi"ion .
Secretary of State Kenneth
Blackwell.owns' stock 111 about
200 corporations. · while.
Attorney General Jim Petro
'has stock In 86 compan ies and
in vestments in 31 mutual
funds. Both have 'hares In discount retatl giant Wai·Mart.
A third GOP c;mdicktte, sWe
Auditor Betty Montgomery.
reported only mutualli.Ind investments. lbe linahcial statement'&gt;
were tiled with the Elections
Commission on Fridav.
The candidates "were not
req uired to disclose the total
·val ue of their holdings.· but
had to reveal the so urces of
their income and investments
of more than $ 1.000. They
abo had to ui sc lose sources
of gifts and travel expenses.
Blackwe ll reported the
most travel expenses among
the three last year, wit h a
$740 tnp to Washington.
D.C .. at taxpaye r expe nse
and $5,347 -for eight trips
· paid for by outside gro ups.
Those trips mcluded four to
Washington on behalf of the
Campaign Finance lqstiiU te,
' which he chairs. the conservative Ameri ca n E:nterprisc
In stitute .
and
Salem
Communications.

.Clinic

Humane Society also finds the
RAYS crew a place to stay,
purchases pop and water for
the student&gt;. paper towels and
froin Page A1
other supplies such as cardNORTH PERRY (AP) 'They always have the abiliFi rstEnergy Corp. was sti ll ty to shut you dow n. Quite free spay and neut~rin!&gt; to board boxes used forpe~carn­
strugg ling to ge t one nuclear franldv, I don't think we're in a dogs and cats~ vacc matwn s, ers. They provided and sefved .
power plant back in operal!on position where .we're near that. " r.outine check ups and worm- six meal s for the staff over the
when a series of probl ems
two-day clinic and cleaned up
Hi story is on the side of mg. , '
afterwards
.
and botched repairs at its sec- First Energy. The NRC hasn't
'·We know what this means
ond Ohio pl.\tnt alarmed crit- sh ut down a nuclear plant to the commumty by making
With few volunteers and a
ics and put the utility In the since 1 9~7 and Strasma sa id pets who are loved be healthi- ti ght budget the Meigs Coun ty
cross hairs of reg ulators.
the typ ical sce nario invo l·;es er," RAYS Clinic Coord inator Humane Society sti ll manTh e Nl1clear Regulatory a utility halting operullons for Tammy Rouse of Knoxville. aged to do their part in providCom mi ssion. which oversees repairs rather than face a fed- Tenn. said. "And, clinics )ike ., ing free ve terinariun care to
the industry, rates as safe the eral ord er to do so.
this reduce the major cause of nearly 100 animals over the
Davi s- Be sse and Perry plants,
Still , the in1age of the death
in
cats
and weekend.
located alongside Like . Erie nalion's
''This is what we do,"
fourth -largest dogs ... euthanas ia from overI07
miles
apart.
and in ves tor-ow ned utilit y and population ."
Mei gs County Humane
FirstEnergy's Beaver Valley Perry's green light to operate . RAYS was brou ght to Society Treas urer Vi cky Baer
operation in Shippingport, Pa . may hmge on how strictl y Meigs County by the Meigs said , about her organization .
Davis-Besse, whose cor- NRC .in spectors, stung by County Humane · Society "Thi s will mean less animals
roding .shield discovered in cnticism of their handling of whose volunteers passed out . euthani zed. less injured ani2002 · ranks amo ng the ·the Davis- Besse problems, applicalions for the clinic a mals along the road, less
nation's worst nuclear proh- deal wi th Perry' s less. seriotJS month in advance at the orga- unwanted animals. We have to
lems since Thr~e Mile Island but persi stent repair issues.
ni zation 's , thrift shop in have this.''
111 197lJ, and Perry currentl y
"When you have that kind Mtddleport.
· If you wo uld like more
are among four of the U.S. ol a legacy, it's going to take
"They do all the · hard inform ation about the annual
nuc lear plants under .the a wh ile to kind of get out of work," Rouse said about vol- RAYS clinic in Meuss Coun ty
strictest NRC scruti ny. That lhat Situation,'' said Le iclich. unteers at the Meigs Count y or wis h ro volumeer your time
means more government who·
joined
one
of Hu111iJ!l~ Society, "th&lt;'Y scree n or ma~ e il .donation t.o the
inspectors in the plants mak- · FirstEnergy's · predecessor the applicants, find us a facil i- Meigs Count y Humane
ing safety checks. from top to conipan ies.
Cleve land ty and give us food."
· Society, ca ll its thrift store at
bottom .
Electric Illuminating Co.., in
The
Meigs
County 992-6064.
"Our regulatory program is 197 4 and began work on the
regulating the plants 111 a way Perry constmction in 1·975.
Cheshire had a population of
that they are operatin g safely
The
low
point
for
22
1in the 2000census, but saw
and we have the too ls to use FirstEnergy came amid a routhat amount d.wind le to about
· to improve performance tine 2002 maintenance shutfrom
Page
A1
20
after property owners who
where necessary," said Jan dowii at Davis-Besse with the
took
up AEP's offer sold and
Strasma, an NRC spokesman. discovery of corrosion on the
But Perry has been declin- plant's reac tor vessel,' the co mmi ss ioners call s for the left the communit y. Stinson's
ing in performance for the most extensive ever found at annexation of 370 acres adja-· wife April, who is the village's
past year or two, Strasma a U.S . nu clear reactor. cent to the vi ll age. The area fiscal officer, said the pop ulasaid. "We do have the author- Leaking boric ac id had eaten includes Ohio 7 up to Cook tion still ho vers around 20 peoity to shut the plant down and almost through a 6-inch-thick · Ro ad, across Roush Lane, ple and added that more·res ithat's a clear deci sion that we steel cap. The damage led to a down one side of Warson dems ma y be the key to
address every .three months. " review of 68 simil ar plants Grove Ro ad to Ohio 554 and ¢ heshire survrv ing as a muni cback into the village.
He gave no hint whether the nationwide.
ipality,
NRC was leaning toward a
The company spent $600
Backers of the move are
Amo ve todi S&gt;ol ve the vi llage
shutdown .
,mtllion makmg repairs and hopeful that if the commi s- govemment fai led in a special
FirstEnergy, which operates buying replacement ,power sioners approve annexatmn, election in February 2003.
from New Jersey to Ohio and because of a two-year shut- Cheshire's population will nol
AEP and the vil lage
gets 37 percent of its electric- down that ended "in March only be boosted by about II 0 announced in April 2002 an
ity output from nuc lear 2004.
individual s but will give some agreement over the buyout in
power. knows ·any serious
By the time Davi s- Besse , longevit y to the village, which response to co ntinu ing conmissteps could lead to a shut- about 30 miles east o,fToledo , nearly we nt out ofexistence. fn cerns about emissions at Gavin
down, accord ing to Gary R was back .in operation, the wake of AEP's bu you t of · following the mstallation of
Leidich, pn!siuent of the utili- FirstE nergy was struggling most of the homes and busi- nitrogen oxide reduction tec)1ty's nuclear subsidiary.
with the aftermath of the nesses there in 2002-03.
nol 6gy the previou s summe~.
" I think they arc concerned 2003 blackout and an emerg•
abo ut us beca use of the lega- ing pattern of repair problems
cy" of Dc~ v is-Besse. Le idich at Perry. An emergency sersaid . in an interview at the vice water pump
fail ed twice
.
heavily guarded Pe11-y plant and a broken mstrument gave
36 mtles northeast of a talse indi c•ition of elevated
Cleveland.
radiation.

Cheshire

Beth Sergent/photo

'

The 2005 Southern High School Prom ended on Saturday night
with the crowni ng of Joanne Pickens as prom queen and Tyler
Roberts as prom kmg. The prom's theme. "When the Sun
Goes Down" featured a tropical pa ra,dise beach settmg.

.

·Spaceship carrying new U.S.-Russian crew
and /tafjan docks at international space station
'

1\0ROLYOV, Russia (APJ
- A Russian spaceship carrying a U.S.-Rus sian crew
and an It alian astronaut
docked Sunday at the intema- '
tiona! space station, launching a rilfssion thlll paves the
way for the . first U.S. space
flight to the orbiting oulpost
since the Columbi a explosiOn
two years ago.
The
Soyuz
spa~eship
locked onto the station at
6:20a.m. (10:20 p.m. ESl').
The three cosmonauts who
blasted off Friday from the
Baikonur 'cosmodrome in the
Central Asian nation of

Kazakhstan were to enter the
station about three hours later
and greet the two men who
have operated the space stution for the last six momhs.
Fred Gr~g?ry,
NASA
deputy adm Jlli Strator. ~0~·
g:atulated Russtan space aliictals and satd the resum~tton ·
ol U.S. space shuttle tltghts
was on schedule.
"The return to !light activi ties for · the shuttle appears to
be_ on time,.. Gregory said.
"We arc l10pefulthat we' ll be
able to lalmch within the first
wmdow," which he said was
May 15,June 3.

The shuttl e program ha ~ the automatic parking system
been suspended for two years. had operated !lawlessly.
with lhe Ru" ian Soyuz capValery Lyndin, a mission
sule .- .;t relatively light 7 tons . control spokesman, told .the
- . heing the only means of . !TAR-TASS news agency on
gettmg astronauts to the station Saturday that the outgoing
since Columbia disintegrated crew members - Cosmonaut
as it returned to Eitlrth on 'Feb. Salizhan Sharipov and U.S.
I. 2003. Russian cargo ships astronaut Leroy Chiao - had
alone have delivered fresh tidied up the orbi tal hom~ for
supplies during the interim .
the new arrivals. cleaning all
At Ru ssian Mission Control inner panels and equtpment
Ill
Koroly(lV.
Dutside with special narJkin s.
Mo,cow. engineers mom The two were due to return
tored the docking via a·video to Earth alpng witlt Italian
feed from a ca mera affixed to Roberto 'lit tori from the
the spaceship •md broke into European Space Agency on
applause when they saw that April 25

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The Daily Sentinel

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OHO

Monday, Aprilt8,

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Meigs clobbers Wahama, Page B2
Reds put Ortiz on DL, Page B2
Pena, Reds down Houston, Page B6
Cities make bid on 2012 Olympics, Page B6

Fundraiser to bentjit Relay for Life

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

2005

Monday, Aprll18, 2005

Prt:p Softball · .,

Prep Schedule

Eastern,sweeps Warren

Monday's games .
Baseball
Ja&lt;;kson at Gatlia Academy. 5 p.m.
Whiteoak vs. South Gallta (at
University 01 Rio' Grande), 5 p.m.
Belpre at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Fedet'al Hockin·g, 5 p.m .
Southern a( Miller. 5 p.m.
. Softball
Gallla ACademy at Jackson. 5 p.m.
Belpre at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Federal Hocklng , 5 p.m ..
Southern at Miller, 5 p.m.

·Tennis
A~

TUesday's gamas
Baaeball
Southern at South GaUia, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at River Valley, 5 p.m.
SOitball
Chesapeake at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Southam at South GaUia, 5 p.m.

samples taken from beneath the ancient earthen mound are tryi ng to determine what caused
unusually high concentrations of a metal rarely seen anywhere but near Earth's molten core or
in asteroids and comets.
The American Cancer Society's 2005 Relay for Life . wi ll benefit from the New Horizons
Preschool fund ra iser which got underway last week. Donations are being taken on a
Philad:etph;a Eagles Jersey. two Eagles hats, one a MFC championship hat, and a 2005 Super
Bowl program donated by Eagles tight end and long snapper. Mike Bartrum and his fam ily, and
two of Bartrum's autographed framed Eagles team photos donated by the Pomeroy Post Office.
The drawings for winners will take place Saturday at Powell's between 10 a.m. ·and noon when
Bartr um will be there to sign autographs. He's pictured here w~th Lee Powell and the kids of
New Horizon's Preschool.

Ohio nation's Swiss .cheese capital
COLUMBUS (APl " 11·
Ci ncinnati
Bengal~
or
Cleveland Browns fans started
showi ng up at footba ll gamtls
sporti.t}g foam cheese wedges
as hats. they'd h·avc j;!OOd rc.tson.
Thci cheeseheads ·arc common. among Gree t; Bay
Pack~rs fans. bu t it turn s uut
Ohio , not Wi sconsi n, is by fa r
the nation's leading prodLtcer
of Swi ss cheese. and has been
for 20 years on.
"That's something. that people are always surprised
about," said Chuck Ellis of
Pearl Valley Cheese in Fresno
in eastern Ohio .

A handful of fa~ t ories in that · ers , tal'led making Swiss.
reg ion accnum for .o ne-third of . Known as Emmenthal in
U.S.-p(oduced Swiss cheese, , Switzerland. it's one of the
a~cord in g
to
the U.S. oldest varieties of cheese.
At one time the state had 48
Department of Agriculture.
Immigrant s
from fac tories. That number has
Sw itze rland settled near shrunk to single di gits, but .the
Am i.&gt; h farmers in Holmes and volume has steadily increased.
Tuscarawas .counti es in the Brewster Dairy is the nation's
early 1900s.
'
largest Swiss'producer at.more
"They were looking for a than 75 million pounds per
place thaf reminded them of year.
home.'' said Dee Grossman ,
Many of the factorie s remain
direc tor of the Tuscarawas family-run . John Stalder still
County Visitor's Bureau. "The pitches in at Pearl Valley,
hilly topography in this area which hi s immigrant father
was sim ilar to that."
founded 77 years ago. His four
Getting much uf their milk daughters and their sons also
fro m the Amish, the"newcom- work there.

Roc:k samples from beneath mound contain ·rare metal
CLEVELAND (A P) ·
canoes, measured 10 times
Sc ient ists studying recent beyond what is usuall y prerock •.samples taken from sent in the Earth's crust.
beneath an am:ient earthen
Since there are no lava
mound are trying to deter- fields in Ohio, some geolomine what ,caused unusually gists point to the iridium as
high concentrati ons of a evidence that the mound s.its
metal rare ly seen · anywhere upon a slightl y oblon'g crater
but near Earth's molten core created when a massive
or in asteroids and r.omets. extraterrestrial
object'
Serpellt Mound. an earthen slammed into Earth .
snake Cffigy believed to
"I .think we can suy with
have been built from about authority today that this is
1000 B.C. to A.D. 200 is an in1pact from a meteorite,"
about 60 mil es east of Mark T. Baranoski , a geoloCi ncinnati. Some believe the gist
wit h
the
Ohio
of
Natural
1.348- foot-long mo\lnd had Department
a religious function for its . Resources, told The Plain
builders, . although nobody Dealer. " It affected the
knows fcx sure what philos- region in a spectacu lar way.''
ophy and beliefs shaped its
Mike Hansen .. a retired
origin because the mou~d state geologist who runs an
builders left no . written earthquake warning system
records:
and teaches at Ohio State
Geologists onl y recentl y University, said there is no
discovered high concentra- doubt that the Serpent
fi ons of iridium !,412 feet Mound area was disturbed
beneath the mound.
by sonie unknown force. But
The levels of the silver- Hansen thin~ s the stresses
gray metal , occasionally were triggered by natural
brought up in lava from .vol- shif!s in the Earth's cru st.

,

VInton Co. at Gallia 'AcademY. 4:30 p.rri.

Photo

.~erpent Mound in Pleasant Hill is 'shown in this undated photo. Scientists studying ·recent rock

Submitted photo

&lt;~

Tennis
Gallla Academy at Marietta, 4:30 p.m.

Track

Fine grains of sand taken
from beneat h the mound
appea r deformed, under a
microscope. Around the time
the . rock&lt; were deformed.
Afri ca was pu shing into
North America · and the
Appalachian
Mountains
range was th rusting up higher than ioday's Himalayas.
Han sen sa id . He sa id a
major tectonic event like
that cou ld have created the
underground
. chaos
at
Serpent Mound.
Hansen conctdes, however, that the· meteorite
hypothesis .is gai ning atlherents among geologists.
The object, if .it did st rike
Ohio, would have bee n
gigantic, possibly up to three
times
larger than
the
Cleveland Browns Stadium
and traveling up to 45,000
mph. The heat, blast and
shockwaves from such a
.crash would have c;ll'ved a
1.000-foot-deep hole and
crushed rt\cks ·miles below
the five-mile-acro ss crater.

Gallla Academy at Fairlaml, 5 p,m.
South Gallia at Jackson , 4:30p.m.
River valley at Whaelersburg, 5 p.m. .
Eastern at Belpr~ . 5 p.m.

Weclntldey·e gamea
Booeball
Gallla Acaderriy at Warren, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Fairland •.6 p.m.
MBigs at Eastern, 5 p.m. '
Wellston at Southern. 5 p.m.
.
SOitball
Warren at.Gallia AcaQ.emy, 5 p.m.
Rivtii Valiey at Fairland, 5 p.m.
. Meigs at Eastern: 5 p.m.
Wellston at Southern, 5 p.m.

Track
River Valley at Wheelersburg, 5 p.m.

Thursday's ·gamee
Booeboll
South Gallie at Chesapeake. 5 p.m.
Soltboll
South Gallla at Chesapeake, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Point Pleasant, 5 p;m.
Wheelersburg at GaUia Academy, 5 p.m.
.Track
Eastern, Meigs at Vinton County, 5 p.m.
Friday's games

BoMba II
River Valley at SotJth Point, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Vinton County,- 5 p.m.
Eastern at Trimble, 5 p.m.
Southern at Federal Hocking, 5 p.m.
·
Softball
Coal Grove at South Gatua, 4:30 p:m.
River Valley at SotJih 'Point, 5 p.m:
Vin1on County t Meigs, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Trimble. 5 p.m.
Southern at Federal Hocking, 5 p.m.
e~~rnu

Ba8eball
Gallia Academy at RavenSWOOd,
Meigs at Athens (DH) , 11 a.m.

noon

Soltball
Meigs at Athens (DH), noon

Tt-ack

.

Gallia Academy at Pan.:ersburg, 10 a.m.

NewsCha·nnel
.

Rio Schedule

'

,,,
Monday, April 18
cjoudv. It will .he dry,
Morning '(7 a.m.--Nomr )
e'l!cepi for a sprinkle or
Cloudy
·
morni·ng. two. The rainfall . should
Temperatures will rise to begi n aro und ni',1night .
72 with todav's low of 52 Temperatures will fall from
occurring ' around 6:00am. 74 earl y thi s evening to 61.
Winds will be 5 MPH from Winds wi ll be 5 MPH from
the south turning from the the west turn ing from the
west as the morning pro- south as the· evening progresses.
gresses.
Aftemoon (1 -6 p.m. )
Ovemigllt ( 1~6 a.m.)
It, wi ll conti nue to . be
It will remain cloudy.
cloudy. Temperatures wi ll There could be a sprinkle
remain ·around 75 with or. twtJ. The rai nfall should
today \ high of 78 occur- end around I.:OOam with
ring around 3:00pm. Winds .. total acc umulations for this
will be 5 MPH from the eve nt near 0.02 inches.
west.
Temperatures will stay near
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight) 57. Winds wi ll be 5 MPH
It should ~ontinue to he from the south turni,.g

•

from the southwest as the
overnight progresses.
Thesday, April 19
Morning (7 a.m.,Noon)
Temperatures will climb
from 55 to 72 by late this
morning. Skies will range
from partly cloudy to mostly cloudy with 5 MPH
winds from the southwest.
Abemoon (1-6 p.m.)
Tfiere is a sli ght chance
we ·could see some rain.
Temperatures will
hold
steady around: 75. Skies
will be partly cloudy· to
cloudy with 5 MPH winds
· from the west turning from
the southwest as the afternoon progresses.

Today·s games

,

,
Baseball
CsdarviiiQ 91RIO, 2 p.m,

Tueaday'a games
Softball
Mount Vernon at Rio, 3 p.m.

Wedneaday;s games
Baseball
Rio at OSU·Newark. 2 p.m.
Softball
.Til1in at Rio, 2 p.m.

FINANCING FOR 36 MONiliS'
ON KUBOTA &lt; D SERIES

Thursday's games
Softball
MI . St. Joseph at Ala, 3:30p.m

\.,, .

Friday's games
Softball
Concord al Rio, 3 p.m .

Saturday's games
Baleball
ODU at Rio, 1 p,m.
Softball
West Virginia Tecl1 at ~io , 1 p.m.
Sunday, Aprtl 24

Baseball
ODU at Rio, I ,p.m.
'
Softball :
Point Park at Rio, 1 p.m.

Apex presents check to high school

•

Ohio State edges

Spartans, 8-7

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
ONE MILE WEST OF ATHENS ON 50/32
ATHENS, OH
(740) 593-3279 I (BOO) 710-1917

' I{•J I)') til.
£VEIYtH ING YOU VALUE

Charlene Hoeftlchlphoto

George .Stewart.. ieft. pre5ents a check for $300 to Matt Fields, golf c~ach at Meigs High
School. The money w;ll be used for equ;pment and· team shirts. Stewart who is em.loyed by
Apex .Engineering was the winner of a company con.test for tt:te money designated ·to go to a
sports team. To be a contestant employees had to have children or grandchldren active in a
sports program . Stewart qualified on the basis of his son Steven who is a member of the Meigs
golfers.
·
. ·, ,
•
'

,.

:10, 1~. Ill\
eQ~ I~'lllfll In if1UA!OfV I! $1f l11ti!l i TII1 11 dll ll fl KubO TI RfVtoel AC I t i!Voblt
EQmplt: II. Jl mi)AIA lot~ II 0" A.Pfll fl qUIII i Jl p tyr•~tO II of $2171 ptt $1 ,000
rxrrrowta fillto cing mro~tM Kullott Crtlltr Corp111tnoo USA '" llrt cr ro ert U • ;Grl)ljt l
Jnd 10'11. dl!"'ll" Pit't111trtl. Somt t•ttprront oDIY Su u1 IDJ aerttls on !litH and ' '"''

•Q%. A.P. ~ Tlfllntirlg lor te~ru u~ to 31!1 I!IOntlu ivt rlalllt tll! OUVh Junt

AI\W

low-rill Of~llrlt or oa ro _,. kubort COin IDi mort •nlormu an

COLUMBUS (AP)
Matt Angle hit an RBI single
in · the bottom of the ninth
inning to give Ohio State a
wild . 8-7 victory over
Michigan State on Sunday.
With one out and runners
on first and !\I!Cond, Angle .
singled up the middle off
Spartans rig!it-hander Drew
Mahan (0- 1). Eric . Fryer
came around to score from
second base to end the game.
·. The Buckeyes (18-13, 4-S
Big Ten) had a 7-3 lead heading into the ninth bu't
Michiga n State rallied to tie
the game on Sean Walker's
one-out grand s l ~m off Ohio
S~ate·
reliever
Trey ·
Fausnaugh (2- 1).
Walker hit two home runs
and drove in five for the
Spartans ( 15- 18, 6-6), who ·
nearly became the first Big
Ten team. to sweep a series
from Ohio State at nine-yearold Bill Davis Stadium.
Jebidiah Stephen went 3for-4 and Paul Farinacci
s~ored three runs for the
Buckeyes, who finished with
13 hiis.
I

T UPPERS PLAINS • Errors can be your worst
enemy in the game of soft. ball.
Eastern found it to be its
best fri end Saturday in a
doubleheade r sweep of
Warren by counts of 9-5 and
3- 1.
The Eagles (9-3) benefitted from 13 Warri&lt;lr miscues
in the non-co nference double
dip. and two solid pitching
performances fro m Krista
White sealed ttie deal on the
So.utheastern Ohio Athletic
Legue power.
White, who pitched all 14
innings in both Eastern wins,
Bryan Walters/phOto
surrendered a total of seven
Eastern's Casey 'smith, above, ·lays down a bunt during game hits and th ree walks in her
two of Saturday's doubleheader with Warren . Smith had th ree pair of triumphs. White also
hits and a run scored for the Eagles in two victories.
.fa nned II on the day.

In game Bissell scored twice in the
one, Eastern victory.
jumped out Sara Barrin ger added a hi t,
toa7-0lead a run and two RB! s fpr
through fpur P:astern ii1 that contesi.
innings · of Jennifer Annes anti Casey
play. Warren StJlith each had a hit and two
countered in run s scored .
the
fifth Culver.
Morris . and
with a mark- Clatterbuck all had a hit and
er. but the a ruri scor~d for Warren. with
White
E a g t' e · s Morris and Clatterbuck each
res po nq e d
with .two in their half of the .adding an RBI to the settlfth for a 9-1 advantage..
back.
'
,.
The Warriors rebounded Hu rde1 was. s.~udl ed "•.th
· h
. h b
the loss. allowtng seve n htts
for th ree tn
t e ·SIX_t '
ut . and ·six wulks over six
Eastern answered w ith two innings. Hurder did strike
111surance runs 111 ItS half of out seven in the defeat.
the inning: WHS added one White was just as mastermore ru~ 111 the seventh , but ful against Warren in ganie
11 wasn ,t enough to over- two. not surretjj;leri ng a run
come Eastern in its 9-5 win. unti I the top o fThe seve nth.
White and Brittany Bi ssell Her four hit, four strikeout
each had two hits in the performance kept· the guests
opener, with White knocki ng
·
in three and scoring once. Please see Eastern. 86

Prt:p BasEball

Redmen

Eagles pound South Gallia

Softball

BY BRYAN WALTERS

Tennla

Salurdtly'a

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAllYTRIBU NE.C; OM

·BWALTERS®MYDAILYTRJBUNE.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern baseball extended
its current winning streak
to II game s following
Saturday's double header
sweep of South Gallia by
counts of 21-11 and 15-5.
The Eagles ( 12-1 ) completed a second straight
week of perfect baseball
by wrapping up the Rebels
(4-6) in I I innings, winning both games of the
•· twin billing with mercy
rulings.
The Green and White
pounded out 29 hits in the
pair of non-league con-·
tests, wins that pushed
Eastern to its best start
under EHS coach Brian
Bowen.
Corey Shaffer. ken
Amsbary and Ryan Smith
each blasted three hits in
the game one win, ·with
Amsbary and Shaffer scoring five runs apiece in that
contest. Matt Morris also
chipped in two runs and
two hits in the five-inning
contest.
Amsbary went the distance for the hosts. allowing 12 hits and nine earned
runs in the .winning .decision. Amsbary also fanned
four ami walked four.
Bernie. Fu lks was saddled with the game one .
loss. going five innings
17
and
surrendering
earned runs on 16 hits.
. F11lk·s walked eight and
fanned four for the Rebels.
Jon Well s led South
Gallia " with three hits,
while Josh Wright scored
three runs and added a pair
Please

see Pound. Bl

.

.

Rlo sweeps
Mountain
State
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO OVP

Bryan 'Walters/photo

Eastern pinch-runner Dustin Cowdery, above, rou nds third and heads home du ring the sixth
inning of game two against South. Gall ia Saturday. Cowdery scored on the play.

RIO GRANDE - It was a
tale of two games for the
Uni versi ty of Rio Gra nde
Redwomen soft ball team on
Sunday ·afternoon at S tanl ey
Evans Field against visiting
State.
Rio
Mountain
slammed the Lagy Cougars
13-1 in the first game, and
came from behind to wi n the
mghtcap 3-2.
Ri o Grande ( 1·8-12) scored
early and often in the fi rst
game. The Redwomen plated
at least one run in· every
innin g.
T?,ey scored four in the
first lil n[ng, jun ior ri ght fielder Jenny Olding had a tworun triple, fo ll owed by a runscori ng single by se ni or first
baseman Amy Co nn , who
la ter scored o n an RBI hll by
freshman second sacker
Talya Gillespie .
Conn and so phomore
catcher Michele Deuwiller
added RBI hit s in the second
innin g. Olding clubbed a
three-ru n home run in the
third and junior shortstop
Kristen Chevalier tripled
home two ruris in the foun·h
inn ing. Olding ' totaled fi ve
RBI on the day.
Fres hman center fielder
Jess ica Ross continued lier
outstanding week of play
going 2-for-3 wit h three runs
scored and two stolen bases.
Freshman DH Miranda Laws
was also 2-for-3 with three
runs scored.
Mountain State ( 13-19)
Pl~ase

.,

see Sweeps, Bl

Rio.baseball splits with Tiffin. Rio sweeps-Urbana
Bv

sixth save of the year. He triumph . Tiffin collected
came on .in the fifth inning only three hi ts.
with the bases loaded and
Game two was full of
TIFFIN
'The the Redmen holding on to missed opportunities for
University of Rio Grande an 8-5 lead. Sato put the the Redmen. Rio managed
Redmen 'baseball team had . rally astde and breezed only one run despite chalkplenty of offense 011 · through the fmal two ing .up 10 hits. Chau was
Saturday afte rnoon but frames .to secure the WI~ ·- 3- for- 3 with a double.
was only able to gain a
Sophomore
MtRe Pe.terman was 2-for-4 and
sp lit in . a doubleheader Warren had a huge game, sophomore backstop Gage
with Tiffin, winning 'the gomg 3-for-4 wtth a two- Mellor was z:for-4 and
first game 10-5 and drop- run hom~ run ~nd a dou- knocked · in Rio's only run.
ping game two 7-l.
ble. Jumor M1ke Golom
Junior Dustin Gibbs
Rio Grande (23· 12, 10-2 was 3-for-5 wtt~ a tnple absorbed ihe lo..s for Rio.
AMCS) welcomed junior and an RBI. Jumor Kev111 Gibbs (5-3) . lasted five
hurler Barry Roe back 10 Dolan also had btg day at in·nings, giving up eight
the mound after recovering the plate . Dolan was 3-for- hits and thr~e walks with
from shoulder difficulties. ' 4 wtth three RBis.
four stri.keouts .
Roe went. 2 1/3 innings in
Senior Scott Peterman . Tiffin with the split is
his return and left when was 2-for-4 With an RBI now 18-18 on the season
problem s reoccurred in his and tied the school-record and 8-7 in AMC South
'
with 'four stolen bast!s in a Divi sion play. The two
shoulder
Mike Osborne came on single game. Sophomore team s will wrap-up the
se r.ies
Ol)
to relieve Roe and collect- Nate Chau went 2,for-3 · four•game
ed his second victory of with a double and an RBI. Sunday with a doublethe season. Freshman clos- · The Redmen banged out header. Game time is set
er Kenta Sato notched hi s 15 hits in the first game for I p.m.
MARK

SPECIAL

WtWAMS
ro·ow

'

Kri stcn
C,hevalie r.
Michelle Detwiller
and
Jenny Phillips all added a hit
each and all three scored a·
URBANA
The
University of R'io Grande run . Senior first baseman
Redwomen . softba ll team Amy Conn was 1-for-3 with
rebounded from a pair of a home run. her llr~t of the
season.
losses at Ohio Dominican on Junior Andrea Lotycz went
Wedne sday to score a dou- the distance in ·~ollecting her'
bleheader sweep of Urbana eig ht·h victory of the year in
on Saturday afternoon. 6 - 2 13 decision·~. Sh~ .&gt;truck out .
and .3-1, o n the road in five and scattered six hits
Mide ast while giving up the two ru.ns.
American
Conference South Div ision In !:!ame two. Rio was able
action.
tu squeak out a one-run vicRio Grande-(16- 12, 5 '- 3 tory with the deciding run
AMCS ) was sparked by coming on a double off the
leadoff batter · Je ~sica Ro ss.
H'IJ ' d bat of junior Stepha nie
.Th e fres hman from 1 tar • Flower,(
OH went 4-tor-4 at th~ plate Ross once again played a
and scored two runs '" the , key role ·in the sparking the
first gam~ vtctory. Fellow Red women' offe n~~ .
She
f!eshman Miranda .La~ s was. 2-for-4 at the plate with
came away wtth two htts 1n a run scored . Laws was '1three plate appearances and.
Please see Rio, 86
knocked in a couple of runs .
•
Bv

MARK WtLLIAMS
SPECIAl TO OVP

'

�I

•

Monday; April18, 2005

Page 82 • T11e Daily Sentinel

Fife~
.,

Meigs clobber Wahama, 16-1

BY GARY CLARK
SP"RTS CORRESPONDENT

bleachers in
the SIXth.

D
MASON. W

.'

www.mydailyscntinel.com

\',1. -

Eddte

.1

I'

e

Fife dubbed two home lli11S
for the second d.1y 111 a tow to
supply the offen se .md E11c
Cull ums furntshed a str(l n g

Poole
.tho
h.td a tlu ee
h 1l attetnoon
for
th e
M e 1 c ,
C
u 11 Lt v

outing
on
the
mound
S.tturcl.t} .tfternooi1 .ts the ' Js·
iting Metgs M.traudets fe.t ,t·
ed on host Wah.una by a I fi. I

squad w ith ; 1
tnple and a
pa 1r ot sing les to dnve

marg)n.
· •
The M.trauders han ged out
13 hits and tonk .Jdv.tnt.Jge o f
seven Whne F.tlcon em11s m
cnnsin~ to th e o u e - s tded dt.J·
ti10nd ~ Jclo 1y
Metgs "ored
one mn 111 th e f1 rst before
'addtng s tx m th e second. o ne
Ill the thu·d . two m the ti l t h
atid stx m o re 111 the SIXth
betore the g&lt;~ me was 1)1€\'Ct·
fully h al ted due to the I 0 run

rule.
.'

The win 1111p mved the
Marauders spnn g s late to 8-3
o n the season while Wahama
saw its live · g .une "' inning
s treak come to an abrupt e nd·
ing as the Bend Atea nme
fall s to 11 -4
Fite added a double and
e tg ht RBI 's to go "'1th IllS tw o
home run day with the Metgs
catc h er dril ling a g rand s lam
round tripper m the second
b efore a ddmg a three run shot
in the into the left fteld

0

Fife

li1

b.mers Cu llums ga1 c up d
le,tdoll
stn~lc to
ll e&lt;tth
St,llllcl fot t11c fust WHS htt
ol the: day · One out I.tier
Brenton Clc~rk ,tlso smglcu
but C ull llms esc· .tped the
F.tlcon "il'Unn~ th1edl b\ ~et ­
tmg c1 doubl e tll.ty to JetlteLthe
s ide .
Wall.lmd scoted th lo11e run
of th e contest 1n the fow th
.tfter Jeshtta Bran ch walked
and swtp.:d. second bcfote
Dustm Vicke1s brought him
home with a double to cente r
Hr.mdon h11vle1 h .td the lone
tem.u n mg b.tse hll l ot the
Bend A Ted te~un wnh d \IIH!le
111 the l1fth
Ch.JLI , ze 1kle su tte1ed the
mound se t bc~ ak to1 WHS With
Zet kk .tllowmg eight tu ns
(o nl yti'O ec~medl on f 1ve hits
with th ree stt Jkenuts dnd t wo
walks (&gt;ver t he f1rst three
frames. Br.ttKh fini s hed up
fot the Whtte Falcon s a n d
was roughed up to the tune of
e 1ght run s (live earned) ·on
erght htts wnh .t coup le o t
s tnkeouts and t"o tree pass;
es
Me1gs 1' &gt;c he dul ed IA1 h ost
Belpre tod,t) m .t T11 - V.tlley
Cn nfe 1e nc'e Ohto dlVIstOn
showdown at 5 p 111.

three 1uns ' Chu ck Da1 ts
smc~ckecl a double ,md a tnp le
w tth Mike Davts commg up
wnh a cou ple ot smg les to
b1mg home a p.111
Che t
Wigal c ame up wn h a th1ee
base k1to.;k w1t h C ullum s a n d
Grover rounding out the
M.trauder safettes with a sm·
1
g le e a ch.
C ullums lnnited .1 h ot·h Jt1
ting Wahamu team to JUst one
1 un on lour hils tn gu mg the
dt stance lot Metgs. C ull u m s
tan n e d SIX and walked JWil
one i n pick1ng up the win.
The White Falcons s h oddy
d etensc led to nmc unearned
run s und du g the Mason
Co unt y tea m .t hol e that
pro ved to be too much to
cltmb out o f .
Whil e the
· Falcon defense wa s fa ll1ng
apart the W.1hama offense
Meigs 16, Wahama 1
161
026 16 13 1
was experiencing trouble ge t· Me1gs
Wahama 000
100 1 4 7
ring to C ullums.
Zerkle (3-2) Branch (4) and Stafford
After retiring the tirs t six Cu llums (WP) and F1 fe HR - F1fe 2

Reds Pot RHP Ortiz on
DL with. groin·injury
C I NC I NNAT I
(~ P)
R1gh1-hander K,unon Orttzc
went on the 15-day dtsab l.ed

ened.

r.Jlhc 1 th.111 h.t' c h1m go out

He thtew
off a mound

there

and

to

good. but the g1otn wa&gt;

theu

rotat1on

again.
Otuz st r mncd ht s gro m on
of spr ing traimng He h ad to
m1" .t st,llt l.1st W e d nesday
Louis whe n 11 u g ht·

ten ible

The R eds didn't immcdt·

felt

bo then n g

c1 p1tch dtll ing th e final week

111 St

s:ttu rda y
•

CLAS 'S IFIED

coulJ
h.lppcn. "
p!lchtng
coac h Don Gullett s.1 id

lt s t Su ndu y w ith d sore gJOtn,
leavmg the C1ncin na ti Reds
shuttle

dlld ... omething

~weeps
from PageBl

H a rle ss npped a tw o - ou t
s ingle 10 left field, plating
Oldmg to g ive Rto . the o n ~­
run advantage
Law s (8-5) re tired th e
Lady Cougars m order Ill the
seventh to complete th e
game and pick up th e win.
Laws tann ed fiv e and scat tered tour hits whtle allowmg no earned runs.
Stephanie Barrow was the
tough
lu c k
loser
for
Mountam State. She g a ve up
only eight hi ts and three
runs in s tx innings.
Ro ss w as the offensl'e
leader for the Redwomen
goi n g 2-for-3 at the plate
wttll' a run scored and an
RBI.
Rio increases its winmng
streak to f o ur games as they
head b ac k into American
Mideast Conference South
Divi s ion p~ay on Tues da y .
The Redwomen host Mount
Vernon Nazare ne at Evans
Field at 3 p . m.

Get A Jump

on
SAVINGS

c

NOTICES

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Bids will be accepted
STATE
OF
OHIO
until 4:00 p.m. April
DEPARTMENT
OF
22, 2005 at Middleport
TRANSPORTATION
V.lllage Halt.
Columbus, Oh1o
The Village has the
Office of Contracts
right to reject any &amp;
legal Copy Number:
all bids.
050282 .
Sandy
lannaretli,
Seated proposals w11t
Mayor
be accepted from pre- . Village of Middleport
qualified bidders at
(4) 14, 15, 18, 19 4 tc
the ODOT Office of
Contracts unlit 10:00
Public 'Notice
a.m. on May 11 , 2005.
Project 050282 IS
OHIO DEPARTMENT
located in
Meigs
OF
INSURANCE
County, SR 124·12. 12
NOTICE OF OPPOR· •
and is a Bridge
TUNITY FOR HEARReplacement
(1
ING
Bridge) project. The
According to records
date set for compleon file with the Ohio
tion of this work shalt
Department
ol
be as set forth in the
Insurance, each of lhe
bidding
proposal.
Individuals
listed
Plans
and
below currently holds
Specifications are on
an Insurance agent's
ftle in the Department
license in the state ol
of Transportation.
Ohio and eech · has
(4) 18, 24
flitted to meet the
continuing education
Public Notice
requirements
of
Section 3905.481 ol
PUBLIC NOTICE
the Revised Code tor
~eigs
County
the 2002-2003 compll·
Metropolitan
ance per1od.
Authority has schedPursuant
to
uled a hearing on
Section 3905.482 and
Administrative Plan
Chapter 119 of the
changes at their reguRevised Code, each
lar meeting, April
individual
listed
21st, 2005 at7:00 p.m.
below 1s hereby notiAll interested parties
fied
that
the
may attend at the
Superintendent
Authority office at117
Intends to revoke hiS
East Memonal Drive.
or
her
insurance
Jean Trusse!!
licenses. He or she
Executive' Director
may request a haar(4) 18
mg pursuant to oho
Revised
Code
Public Notice
Chapter 119. The
request
must
be
The
Village
of
made on or before
Middleport is offering
May 23, 2005. Such
for bid one 1994 request should be
Whitley Trailer, 12' x
addressed to: Sharon
40' long. Has ACand Green,
Hearing
heal. Trailer haa been
Administrator. Ohio
uaed for class rooms
Department
ol
and a,..11 ' x 19 ' each.
tnauronca, 2100 Stella
They have axtaa but
Court,
Columbus,
no wheels, has boll
Ohio 43215· 1067.
on the tongue.
Dexter, Tad L DOB :
Can be Hln at 1he 04/0311967
31970
M i ddlepor t
Hy1111 . Run Road,
Elementary School or
Pomer~, OH 45769.
coli 1112·5711 and uk
At the hearing, the
tndlvlduet may appear
lor Don.

him :1 day l.1ter.

Oil

s i,JJI

spo t

last

9.

Wednesday. al so w tll

take

" You want t o get thts right

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REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

who llldJe an eme rgency

The Reds put him
the dts·
ab!ed li s t Jet t odc tl' e to Ap1il
the day alter he m.Jde ht s
on l:,&lt; s tatt

Gallt.i Covill) OH

a te l) I Ji·l h" "oste1 spo t
R 1ght- hander Matt Belisle.

hi s

111

Ortiz's

pl.1c'e

Monday

night

.tu,tmst th e Chtcagn Cubs.
~

L

·agency, or the individual may present h1s
or her position, arguments or contentions
in writing and, at the
hearing, he or she
may present evidence
and examine witnesses appearing for and
against h1m or her.
If an 1ndiv1dual does
not time~y request a
hearing no hearing
witt be held and an
order revoking his or
her insurance license
shalt be issued.
Stephen C. Hombach
Staff Counsel
Me1gs County
(4)4,11,18

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~70
L

Pound
from Page 81
of ba se h i ts.
The
Red
a nd
Gold
r e b o unded m cely in game
two , sconng five run s 111 the
top h a lf of the first inning
agamst EHS starter Chris
M ye r s .
Fwm that point the host s
would respond with IS unan swere d runs offen s ively, and
Myers would allow only one
h1t the re mamder of the way.
Mye rs r ecorded four s tnke·
outs and three walks in the
s i x- 111n1n g
wm , allowmg
three hit s and four runs in the

decisiOn.
Se,en South Galha errors
also
hetred the Eastern
cause . Those mi s haps led to a
loss for starter Steve Pelfrey,
who allowed 13 htts and 10
earned runs m the setback
P e l frey dtd fan fo ur and walk
one.
Sha ffe r again had three htts
(or Eastern, and Phtl Pt e rce
matched that e ffort wtth three
safe ttes. Pi e rc e al so scored
four ttmes 111 the I male.
Mye r s 1i nd Joel Lync h eac h
had two hit s and two runs
scored.
Wright, Pelfrey and Jake
Whtteman had th e lone hits
for the vi s itors. That trio,
alon g w tth Fulks a nd W e ll s,
e ach scored a run m game

to Stewart
Tn-Valley,

Confere nc e Hocking diviSion
lilt with Fed,ral Hocking,
while South Gallia is s l a ted
to play Wh1 te oak at Rto
Grande to day. Both games
a re sc h e dul e d for 5 p . m.

IS

seek mg

ca li on skJIIs.

(5 Innings)
SGall!a
Eastern

212
525

42
11125
45
21 16 3
Bern1e Fulks ant;l Jos n Wngh l Ken
Amsbary and Chns Myers WP
Amsba ry LP - Fulks

Eastern 15, South Gallla 5
(6 innings)
SGallla
Soo ooo 5 37
Eastern
001 356 15 13 3
Steve Pelfrey and Josh Wr1ght Ch riS
Mye rs and Terry Durst WP - Myer s LP

- Pelfrey

•

d

abtli ry to wmk with cxistm g

loa n o ff lCCIS a nu Ch iel Le ndmg Otllcer lO
develop an unde r st'andm g of all aspects of
ua t must ha ve a h1gh school diploma or
eqruvalent a nd two to th ree years ex p en ·

MOVING SALE

ence in coll ectiOns ts desired. A va hd

Ite ms from
Mary Young's
home of 40 years a t
742 112 East Mmn
Street, P o meroy,
behind old
m otorcycle shop
Sunday &amp; Monday,
old glasswar,e and ·
dishes, b1cycles,
toys, Chnstmas
lights , decorations
and flowers ,
televiSIOn set, tw1n
bed complete, sets
of m1dn1ght blue
stoneware, line

driver's license 1s a lso required. Pay scale

If so, you qualify for a

Senior Discount*
on your home delivered
subscription!
Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon
below and drop off or
mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

will he cofnmensurate Wtth ex penence
Inte rested tndt&gt;tdual s

may

p1ck up a n

apphcation at or send res ume to Human
Resource &lt; Admm Js lrator, 2 t I W Second
Street. Pomeroy. Oh1o Member FDIC and
Equal Opportulllt y Employer "

Get Your Message Across ·
.
· With A DallY 5entlnel

'BULLETIN BOARD
'9"" column' inch weekdays
'16"'\ column inch Sat.

m1sc. 1tems.
COMMERCIAL GAS STOVE
10 Burn~rs 2 Large Ovens
Make us an offer•
Can be seen at
SACRED HEART CHURCH
Pomeroy 992·5698 tor appointment
' New one would cost $5.000

~alltpolh~

1Dail!' tErtbune

~oint ,tllea~ant 1\egt~ter

The Daily Septinel
{i)unbap· 'CEime.s -~enttnel
P•••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••
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Subscriber's Name - .:........---,----

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• Sal" exptn...,. pn!femd but 1101 rtqulred

Lemleys Auction
Ant1que Auct1on Serv1ces and more

1

ConuniiOIIS triiAJng program otTmd.
Un,"'ue Bonus·l.tvel Program

I

Our 111.. profCISiofla~ IR highly pal~

1

J day weekend &lt;Very moodt I day off p&lt;nctk

1

Please stop in for an interview.

ESTATE AUCTION
Sat., April23 10:00 am
Look for complete ltsling 1n
Wednesday' F'aper

AMVETS BLDG,
Off Burnette Road
Gallipolis (Kanauga), Oh10

252 Upper Riv~r Rd., Gallipolis. OH 456.31

Business Days Prior To
Publication

For Sundays Paper

Thursday for Sundays Pa

• ·All ads must be prepaid'

• Include Phone Number And Address Wh en Needed
• Ads Should Run 1 Day s

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Address -~-----·~--City/State/Zip ~-----· __

Phone'---~----~~~-Mall or drop off this coupon along
with a copy ol your photo I D to
Ohio Valley PubllahJng P.O. Box 469. Gattlpotla, OH 45631

•

' 1:

KtT

POLICIES Oh 1o Valley Pubhahmg reserve• the nght to ed1t, rtlecl, or cance l any ad at any time. Errors muat be reported on the flflll
Trlbllne-Sentmei ·Reglster Will be responsible tor no more then the cost ot the space occup1ed by the error and only the l1rat maertton
any loss or expense that re~ ults from the pubhcat1on or omission of an advarhnment Correction will be made In the flrat &amp;\l&amp;llab1e edition
are always conf1dent1al • Current rate card applies • All real estate advtrtlaemente are aubject to the Federal Falr Hous1ng" Act of 1968 •
accepts only help wanted ada meet ing EOE standarda We wlll not
accept
i
1n violation of the law

t.,r__PR_r.~~-VIil~iiiN;;,AI_.ilrJI ~r.tO_.....~.~-~IFSi i~i· -"""'
i ·-M•ooif~Oi\LEiiilii.lii&lt;\li iOfio~I.ES_.,I

&amp; CARLYLE

WI :~

lwnght@tc net

DtRECTV
FREE OVD PLAYER
FRii! Et.!Uipllltllll &amp; l1 1t1tuU
up to 4 Roo ms
call today for FREE
HBO Max, &amp; Starz
1·600·S23·7SS6
for Details

'"

100WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts
wood 1tems
Matenals prov1ded
To $480/wk
Free 1nlormat1on pkg 24 hr

New 2 bedroom home only
S172/mbnth Includes ale
th:l llvory am.! set UIJ 740·
385 9946

SAVE-SAVE-SAVE
Stock models at olct pnces
2005 models arrwlny• Now
Coles Mob1le Homes
15266 US 50 East Athens
Oh10
45701 . {740)592 1972
New 3 Bedroom Home only
$198/month Includes ale 'Where You Get Your
delivery and set up 740- Money·s Worth"
38S-9946
I'C:I"""-:~---.,

I-ll \IISI\11

801-428-4649

0

1997 Palm Harbor Double
W1de with 5 acres land. lived
1n one year 1/2' Drywall
must see $30 000 J1m H1l l
Road. Mason County call
(304)675·6 118 or [304)576·
3389 for Appt

b
0

••

•

2 bedroom 1 bath, hv1ng
room dl n1ng room, kitche n
basemeflt .Jn New f'laven
$23,500 (304)882·2350

L 'f~ I'!;

© 2005 b

~~
NEA, Inc.

r.r"::tor-------, Lawn c8re. BIQ &amp; small
HELl• WANTEI&gt;
yards Will do mowmg and
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _,., tnmmmg Call anyt1me, no
answer leave message
You can stop look1ng!
(740)441 ·9128.
we have the perfeCt JOb - - - - - - - - for you'
Lawn Mow1ng Serv1ce
Yo u can earn up to $8/hou r Free
Est 1mates
Call
and receive paid tram 1ng (740)256·9058
vacations and holidays
Mike Pooe
We also offer a full benefits
package and both day and Roohn g Siding, Porches
night shift pOSitions are
Decks Phone (740)388available
8329
Mow1ng and Lawn Care and
G1ve us a calltodayt
Brush
Cutt1 ng
Cdll
1·877-463·6247 ext 2455 {740)446·2506 ·
Need" a Break? Here IS you
150
SCH!llliB
Opportunity . to go on
INSJ'KucnoN
Vacat1on Need Mom, D,ad
or Handicapped loved One
Gallipolis Career Coll8ge cared for
I have one
'(Ca reers Close To Home) Open1ng fo~ a Female1 Full·
Ca ll Today I 740-446-4367. \'me Cal\(304)675·6183
1 800·214·0452
S8nd Stone Top So1l
www galltpD IIScareercolloge com
Actro.tdtted Membet Accredtt 1ng Sk1dsteer- loader work Call
Couocll for Independent Co l ages (740)24S-581 5 or (740)44t ·
and Schools 12748
1509
~~~=~.,;,;:::;..._ __,

·------·r
70

1\&lt;IISCEIJANEOUS

DIRECT
TV Free 4 room
hOokup Free HD B1g Screen

II'\\"\( I\!

~"'to~;;;;;..,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.,
BUSIN~ ·
~==0;l'I'O;R11JN;;ITY:'~

J V 800-263·2640

2-story 7 room house 4
bedroom 2 bath 2 porches
{1 closed In) deck, 2/3 acre
flat lot Heat pump R1ver
Valley School
DIStriCt
Bu lavllle Pike
$69 500
(740)367·7272
-------3·Bed ro om.
1 Bath
Re mo lded Full easement
Appliances
mcluded
OutbUi lding &amp; 24FT Pool
188 Pa rk Dnve (304)67 5
7460
403 Spnng Ave Pomeroy
Oh10.. One fa m1\y home for
80 years St1 ll hke new 3
bedrooms 1 1/2 baths
$50,000 992·2426

New 4 bedroom 2 bath
ANil HtHLIJINGS
home only $49 098 00
Includes ale, delivery. and MEDICAL OFFICE SPACE
set up 740 385 9948
la1rly new fac1hty app rox
1200 sq ft 1n Athens
Newer ranch sty le home, 3 Ample park1ng Avai lable
BR, 1 bath House has cen- 1mmed1a1ely lnqu1ne s send
tral a1 r heat new carpet and to PO Box 121 Athens
hardwood tloor1ng B1g deck
on 1 ac re of ground Super
clean Must see Kelly Or off
of Georges Creek $78 500
(304)210·8:.:'38
- - - - - - - - - •Bu1 ldmg lot 801C100 w1th
Nicely remodeled 3 bed- water lap septiC tank
room house 10 Rutland, Located on St R1 7, S
$32 000 call Ruffell at Sol &amp; 742l?56 ·5043
·
Bloom, (7 40)541 ·3251
REAl E.&lt;;rAIT
W&lt;~.N'Il.D
Racme. Oh10· beaut1ful1 1/2
story Cape Cod house Want to,buy a 3 bedroom 2
w/wrap around porch 4 bed· bath home Ga ri!;ge bAse·
roofllS, 3 baths, ready to fm· ment 3- 10 acres 1s des1 r·
1sh basemEJf\t, s1tuated on 3 able All cash
Me1gs
acres w/separate 24x36 Gall1a or Athens County
polebarn garage, small barn 740 992·6300
w/loft, stocked pond Great
place for k1ds &amp; pets or
ret1remenl $179,900 OO,,for
appornt ment (7401985·3327
1" 10
HOUSES

!"""

Ranch Bnck Home 3Br 1Ba
2/Car-Gara ge ,
Basement/Sunroom
All
Appliances 1ncludeQ 6y
iiRRO'ntm•nl IJIMI68~·2230
or (304)533-6636

Attention!
Local company offer1ng ' NO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
www.orvb.com
grams for you to buy you r
Home Listings
home ms lead of renting
L1st
your
home by callmg
• 100% fman cmg
[740)446-3620
· Less th an perfect cred1t
ac cepted
V1ew photos/info online
• Payment cou ld be thesame as rent
PRICE REDU CED'
Mortgage
L~ca t ors
Redwood Cape Cod
(740)992-732 1
ome 9 5 Acres 4
Bidwell Porter area 3 bed· Bedro om 2 Bath, 2 Car
arage Above Ground
roo m 2 bath 5 acres cus·
Pool
Bidwell , OH
tame r oak cab ine ts and
woodwork $138,500 Call Slacked Pond Code 914
r Calll740)388·0410
740 )367· 71a1,
;::::::::::::::::;
bedroom 3 bath 4 5
cres, 2 5 car garage
ackson OH $250 000
Firm Code 2255 or call
740)286·4750

(

All

real estate advertising

1nt F'i easant, WV 4
ed room 1 bath Many
men1 t1es Code 2165 or
all(304)67S-412S

in th1s newspaper IS

j

Carpet Sale II!
Berber and pad Installed m 3
MONEY
bedroom home for $1 136+ L_
. . . .,.;I'Oi;i,iLoiiiii.v;iiiO..-"
tax {Based on 660 sq ft. ..,
and standard rn stallahon) r-"""-::e"a"'n"g""'n"'a"'n"'
c'"'a- ,
For Free In· hOme estimates lnst1tufl0n approv1 ng Small
call
Buckeye
Carpets
Bus1ness, Mortgage
(740)649-2844
Personal and VehiCle
Carpet Sale"'
Loans Immediate
Plush carpet and pad
response ·
1nstalled 1n 3 bedroom home
' Qlve us a call at
for 51 _06 3+ tcix (Based on 1·866·228·7063' Or apply
onlme at
660 sq ft and standard
rnstallat1on) For FreEl m· ~-~~,n~.,~~~m:an~lf~n~an~"~al~~
home
est1mates
call
Buckeye Carpels 1740)649·
••NO'riCE**
2844
orrow Smart Contac
DHK
he Oh10 01\/ ISIOn o
Cleamng &amp; Powerwash1ng.
rnanc1al
InstitUtion'
Let· Us·Help-You Clean-er
ff1ce of Consume
up lll N o Matter What The
~a 1 rs BEFORE you ref1
Job ts We W1ll Get-er·
ance your home o
OoneiJI For
btatn a loan BEWAA
All You re lns1de/Outs1de
f requests for any larg
Need? Were the Ones lor
dvance payments o
You Call Karen or Dave at
ees or Insurance Callth
740--985!3633, Businesses.
ff1ce of Consume
A es lderlllal / homes,
f1a1rs ton free at 1·
Contracts.
Anytime,
78·0003 to learn tf th
Anyplace .
Clean
All,
broke r o
P0werwash1ng Remodeling
IS
proper!
ender
etc
ICensed (ThiS IS a PU
No Job Is To Dirty' II

:

subject to the Federal
Fair Housing AC1 of 1968

It Illegal to
"any
preference, limitation dr

whlc~

makes

advertise

discrimination based on
race, color, rellg1on, se•

familial status or natlonot
origin , or any lnt.ntlon to
make any such
preference, limitation or

d1acrlmmatlon '
This newspaper will nat
knowingly accept
advertisements for real
"estate which Is In

violation"of the law Our
reeders are hereby
lnformed that all
dwelllngs advert ised In

thia newspaper ara
equal

available on an

3 bed room Cohdo w1th riVe r
v1ew
lull
basement
Galhpolts Ferry $700 montt1
Call (740)446·3481
3BR bn.ck house m
Mercerv11le 1B R apt m
Crown C1ty Cable electnc,
water fur (740)256·8132
4 rooms &amp; bath $300
month 52 Oli ve St Call
(740)446-394S
AHentlon!
Local company offermg NO
DOWN PAYMENT pro
grams tor you to buy your
home Instead of rentmg
· 10o c~g f1nancmg
• Less than perfect cred1!
ac(.;epted
· Payment could be the
same as ren t
Mortgage
Locators
1740)992-7321
MoutLE Ho~tt-~
IUR REJ-.'F
2 bedroom mob1ie home on
Pole Cat Ad $425 month
plus utilities $425 depos11
Call 1740)446 4107
2 bedroom. all electnc very

I' (740)446-1409
nJce 1n,c11y no pets Phone
!UK
SALE.
or (740)446·
.___
__
_ _ _ 2003

i

-----,----_.-

1993 Mans1on mobile home14x60 2 bedroom, 1 bath,
total electnc good cond1t10n,
central a1r, stove refr'lgerator,
must pe moved $8 ooo.
(740)949·90 16

3 bedroom mo011e home for
rent m Pomeroy ,area , No
Pets 992·5858
- - - - - - -3 Bedroom ii~ll E~ectnc
Remolded
S4001month
t304)675-3332

1994 Clayton Norr1s 14x70
2 bath ref/sto-we.
vmyVundQPinmng 2 decks
$14,SOO OBO 1740)388·
. 8739

iTra11er tor rent All electnc
a1r cond•t1onmg Excellent
cond11t0 n 14x70 2brl1bath
Country settmg {740)44b·
7127 (740)441·9536

2 BA

opportunity baHt.

AP~IITI\ ltJ\l'S
2002 Clayton 16x80 mob1 le
fUR RENt
home
Shmgled
roofGrandv1ew Estates subdiVI $25 999 Call (740)446·
0
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartme nls
s1on JUSt off At 160- 3 BR 1 781 7
3!4
baths,
remodeled
on
Beech Street m
kitchen w/Maytag bullt·ms, For Sale· 1979 Homette, 2 Middleport turmshed Utili·
fam 1lyroom wlbu1IHn bar bedroom w/central a1r tJe~ pa1d depOsit &amp; refer·
ut1llty
room
w1th $3,495 00 ·call (740) 385· ences requ1red no pets
washer/dryer updated wm· 4367
(740)992·0165
dows and doors fenced
1 and 2 bedroom apa rt·
backyard $132,500 0%
For Sale, 14X70 3 bed· ments rurmshed and unfurDown Shown by appoint- room, set up 10 Country
me nt
P1Ctures
at Homes, $6 995 00 Move m n1shed secunty depOSit
requ1red no pets 740·992·
www orvb com code Jf4505 today ' Ca\1 (740)385·4367
2218
Call (740)446·8325
Mlll Creek Road, Gallipolis Inventory Clearance New 3 2 bedroom apartment for
home rent. Rac1ne, OH DepOtit
Georges Portable Sawmill, ~:;:;::::::::::~ Excellent Cond1t1on &amp; bedroom
don't haul your logs 10 tha tv
Location
Bnck Front $239 00/mon th In cludes required, no pets (740)992·
milt JUSt call 304"675 1957
PR~
WllhNmyl Siding Storage A/C Qel1very and Set-up 5174 740·441 -0110 1ea11e
me 4sage
Call M'ke, (7401385-7671
Lawn care · All types,
SER\'ICB
Bldg No Land Contracts
Dependable, expenenced. ..._
A.tter 5pm (~)675-5038
3 bedroom apartm eot 1n
Inventory Clearance f'lew 4 Middleport No Pets 992·
No JOb to small Call
TURNED DOWN ON
Home 5858
Ka
S
I? Must Sale Repossessed bedroom
(740)379·92 97 ra
OCIAL SECURITY ISS
Homes Locations Galtlpolls S319 OO{month
Includes
- - - - - -- - No F u 1
w Wi 1
ess e n
&amp; cr-·n
W1ll stay w1th Elderly anytee••• n582
"" C1~
'' Contact N~
~· AIC DeUvery and Set-up Modern 1 bedroom apt Call
3345
·uuu·
•
Huffman 800-333-6910
Call Hamid, (740)385·9948 (740)44&amp;0390
t1me (304)675·6781

r

• -

'

. . . . . . FiliiRiiiRiiEiiiilST
.
_ _.

MOBU.E Hmm;

I

·~-----------------------------­
'
I

BustNt:ss

·----iiiiliiliili_._

FOR SAl.~

.

~

1-"'l

HOME.~

fltO

r

FOUND

tJ

S~id~:~~ In-Column: 1:00 p .m.'" Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.

F

A grow1ng H VA C company
IS look ing for an all-around
person to do heatlng,cool·
mg The pe rson must have 1
year or more of e)(penence
m 1nstallat1on and techn1ca 1
Should be or w1ll be cern·
f1 ed Pay on expenence If
mterE!Sted m bemg the Best
se nd resume to CLA Box
548 . clo Gal li polis Tnbun e
LosT AND
1
TO Buv
PO Box 469 GalhpDIIS OH
~
Absolute Top Dollar U S 45631
Black w/brown male puppy Si lver and Gold Co1ns An Excellent way to ~ earn
Found 1n Porter area Proofsets Gold Rmgs US money The New A.von
Currency,-M T S Co1n Shop
{740)366·0173
151
Second
lwen-Le Call Manlyn 304·882·2645
AppiiC&lt;:~IIons for Secretan al·
Found Black male dog Lab Gallipolis. 740-446·28"42
www ,comtcs com
Pos1tton -6va1lable at 2309m1x w/red collar, near
Jackson·Avenue PI PI
Roosevelt S,c hool area
Must-be-returned 1n person r.1"::1 or""""'-~--...,.,
(304)675- 11 38
Older us ed sc hool band by 4pm Fnday,Apnl 22
HELP w .,\ NTED
Instruments
Trumpets
;;;;;::~
Fow)d male Yellow spayed &amp; Saxopho nes TromboMs,
Are you 1n.terested m a
neutered older Cat aro und etc Older N1ntendo games
rewarding pOSitiOn? PAIS !S
Dollar Gener.al 1n New Large lots on ly {740)388· currently accept1ng app11ca
News Reporter
Haven (304)882·3218
8692
t1 ons for fu ll/part 11me drrect Galt1polis Da1ly Tr1bu ne
care pos1t10ns for the Mason has an 1mmedtate open·
· Lost 2 Jack Russell Terners
County area providing res1
mg for a full t1me News
: 1 Brown/white mal e 1
den11a l/com mun lty Skill tra1n
Reporter Please send
brown black whi te female Want to buy acreage m lng Wit h 1n d lVId ua Is WI! h resume wrl Img an d
lost 1n Flat Rocl&lt; area Sun Galha Co Mm1mum 1 5·2 MRJDD High school dlplo
cover letter to Jim
Apnl 'Oth Reward (304)675- acres (740)418-7000 leave ma or GED reqwed No Freeland 825 T!md Ave
7474
message
expenence necessa ry
IG
• a•lloi'p•o•I". O•
.h'•o•4•
56•3•1_.
Cnm1nal background che~k · '
r~QftlreQ Mu.~ hi':~'-'~ r~llab.[e Parame.d1cs
&amp;
EMT s
CLASSIFIED INDEX
transportation Hourly rate needed Apply at 1354
4x4's Fer Sale .............................................. 725
startm g $7-$8 00/hour Galt Jackson P1ke, GaU1polls
Announcement .. ................•....•.••..........•••.•.. 030
1·304·373- 1011
Antiques ......................................... ,........ ,... 530
AVONI All Areasl To Buy or Secunty Off1cers needed
Apartments lor Rent ................................... 440
Sell Shirley Spears 304· Mason Counly $6 50/hr
Auction and Flea Market... .......................... OBO
6_7_S_1_4_2_9_____ Ca ll M-F 9am·5p'11 1·800·
Aula Parts &amp; Accessories ................•...•..••. 760
275·8359 EEO
Auto Repatr .................................................. 770
Door to Door Sa lesAutos lor Sate ........................................ ! .... . 710
Representatives
and
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale ............................. 750
&amp;
Support
Satellite Insta lle rs Great Serv1ce
Building Suppltes ..................................... ... sso
CnmmiSSions call Today Adm1 mstrator wanted tor the
B~stness and Buildings ............................. 340
Me1g s County boa rd of
(304)675·7.105
Business Opportunity ... ............................. 210
Mental Retardation and
Drivers Needed.
Developmental d1sab!l1t1es
Business Training ....................................... 140
COL Onvers w1llmg to dmre hOurs
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
eoo
400PM
for local ready·mlx compa· Bachelors degree-meets or
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
ny Expenence 1s preferred IS ellglbl9 for certification'
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 010
but not necessary Dnver Valid
Onver s
l1cense
Child/Elderly Care ............. ,......................... 190
must be Willing to do pre· reqwred Keyboarding sk1IIS"
ElectricaURelrigeration ............................... 840
ma1ntenance on trucks &amp; and experience With word
Equipment for Ren\.. ....... , .................... , ...... 480
eq tnpnlent. yard work &amp;
process1ng requ1red dn e
Excavating ... ..... ;....................................., .... 830
other
miscellaneous cho res year expenence 1n MRDD
Farm Equipment ........................................ .. 610
Expenence operatmg equ1p· F"1eld
Send resume
Farms lor Rent ............................. ,.............. 430
ment &amp; extra sk1lls such- as by Monda y, M&lt;'ly 2 2005
Farms lor Sale ............................................. 330
weld1ng a plus
MCBMROD PO BoiC 307
For Lease ..................................................... 490
Call (304)937·3410
Syracuse Oh10 45779
For Sale ..... .. ................................................. 585
For Sate or Trade ......................................... 590
Exper1ence Farm Hand
Fruita &amp; Vegetabtes ................................... .. 580
Must know how to run equ1p· Sports Reporter
Furnished Rooms ......... ............................... 450
Galhoolis Da11y Tnbune has
ment Call (304)675·1743
General Hauting ............. ......................... ..... 850
an 1mmed1ate open1n g for a
rap tcs es1gner
Gtveaway ................................................... ... 040
full t ~me Sports Repo rter
allipolls Da1ly Tnbune 1 The 1deal cand1date w1ll
Happy Ads ............. ,.......................... ,........ ...oso
cc:epting resumes fo r
Hay &amp; Grain ................................................. ,640
have sports report1 nglwnt1n g
ull
tune
Graphic
Help Wanted ................................................. 110
sk1lls, qua rk and photoshop
es1gner Please subm1
knowledge a w1llmgne.ss to
Home Improvements .................................. 810
our
resume cover letter, work evenmgs and week
Homes tor Sale ....a ...................................... 310
nd references to J1
ends Please send resume
Household Goods ....................................... 510
Freeland, 825 lh1rd Ave , wr~tnlQ samples and cover
' Houses lor Rent .......................................... 410
alii ohs, Oh1o 45631
letter to J1m Freeland 825
In Memoriam ................................................ 020
Third Ave GallipoliS OhiO
Insurance ... ......................................:.......... 130
HELP WANTED
45631
L~&amp; Garden Equlpment........................ 660
HARDWARE STOAEILUM·
Lovestock................ ,..................................... 630
BER YARD, seekmg quah· ~--.,----Lost and Found ................. ,......................... 060
fled sales person expen·
THE CHARLESTON
Lots &amp; Acreag, ............................... ,............ 350
enced m hardware &amp; build·
GAZETIE
Miscellaneous .......................................... ... . 170
IF.IQ rr\atenals . '{740)992· News!)aper Gamer Needed
Miscellaneous Merchandlse ........................ 540
2709 ask for John
From Ripley to
Mobile Home Repair, ............................... ... 860
Polf\t Pleasant
Mobile Homes lor Rent ............................. ..420
Help wanted Darst Adult Earn about $1200 monthly
Mobile Homes lor Sale ................................ 320
Group Home, (740)992
befo re expenses
· Money to Loan ............................................. 220
5023
ApprOXIrT)81ely 4 to 5 novrs
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ........................ .740 .
a day
Local Plumbmg and Heat1ng Dependable vehicle a must
Mustcallnslrumenta ......................... .......... 570
Company m neoo at a
Personals .........••••••••.••••••••••••...••..•.•..•..••....:. 005
Call 1-BOO·WVA NEWS
Plumber w1th a m1n1mum of•
Pets for Sate ............ , ................................... 560
ext 1709
5 'years experrence Salary
Plumbing &amp; Haatlng .................................... 820
!;lased on
e)(per1ence
Professtonpl Sarvlcea ................................. 230
Emergency
Interested
applicants
please WANTED
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repatr ........ ~........... ,......... 160
Relief
Workers
{Substitutes)
send resume to Plumber
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
PO Box 122, Jackson, OH needed to work w1th people
Schools tnstruction ..................................... f50
With mental retardation m
45640
Seed Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
the Btdwell area Hours are
Sttuat'ions Wanted ....................................... 120
MCClure's Restaurant now scheduled
as
needed
Space for Rent ............................................. 460
h1r,ng all locatiOns, full br evemngs weekends and
Sponlng Goods ........................................... 520
parf·trme, pick up app/1ca- m1dmghts
H1gtJ school
SUV's for Sate .............................................. 720
t1on at location &amp; brmg tlack d1ploma/GEO vahd dnver's
Trucks lor Sale ............................................ 715
between
10 OOam
&amp; license and three years
Upholstery ..............., ................................... 870
11 OOam
Monday thru good dnvrng eJipenence
vans For Salp...............................................730
=S=aru='="=ay,__ _ _ _ __ required $7 00/hr Send
• Wanted to Buy ......... ,............ ,...................... Q90
Need 10 people to sell Avon resume
to
Buckeye
• Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies .................. 620
Call (740)446-3358
Community Se'rvlces , P.O
viinied To Do ..................!...............;........... 180
Box 604 Jackson , OH
wanted to Rent ............... ,............................ 470
f)art 11me cook &amp; wa1tress 45640 Deadline fo r appll·
Yard Sale- Gattipolla.I.................................. 072
wanted at Pt Pleasant cants 4/22105 Pre-employ•
' ng Equal
Yard Sate-Pomeroy/Mtddle..l...................... 074
Moose Lodge P1ck-up apph· ment drug teSt1
Yard Sate-Pl. Plaallnl :............................ , .. 076
opportunity Employer
cat1o n at the lodge

r

Eastern 21, South Gall Ia 11

Hefp Wanted

the Collecnon Depanment. Th1 s mdJvJd·

H,e lp Wanted

tWO .
Eastern he a d s
today · fat
a

..

•Honest SWF lookmg for L_..;,Ft,:;,~E;:,:;AI\1,;,::,:\RK:;,:~
IIT;,..J
Honest SWM 55yrs or older,
for
tnendsh1 p/ more AUCTI0N· Modular House
Re;;~o'" lo P 0. Box 1059, and Tools &amp; EqUipment
Buckeye H1lls
Career
Center R1 o Grande, Oh1o
T&amp;E at 11 OOam House at
GtVEAW\Y
12 00 Noon on May 7. 2005
(740)245 5334
'
Adorable 8 week old pup·
p1es Brown w11h short ha1r
992·6315
Carolma Flea Market Now
Free mason Jars, Some blue Open Outs1de
Accept1ng
{740)256·6043
Vendors
Yard
Sa les,
Produce
Fn·Sai·Sun
To Giveaway Gurnea Pig to (304)675·5516
Good Home (304)675·5265
WANilill

Bryan Walters/photo
Eastern ' s Cody Gerlach (11) lines a smgle to ce nter dunn g Saturday 's double dip w1th South
Ga ll1a The Eagles won both contest by merc y rule.

possess good &gt;erbal and w ntten commu ni-

and 3 sets of
l2;~;;_~{;[J ' china,
good Silverware, I

All Display : 12 Noon 2

Monday- Fridav for In5ertion
In N e xt Day's Paper

• Start Your Ads With A Kevwdrd • Include Complete
Description • Include A Pr1ce • A\IOid Abbrev•at1.on s

I \11'1 0 .. \II :\I

YARJ&gt;SALE

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
~Jr1'o
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 504 for small
$1 .00 for large

Display Ads

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

~ ~~-~.~lN.~.t s..~~ ~~:A:u:cn::O:N:!\:.=~1~ ~1~10~~~~~~~
HEl l' Wo\NTEI&gt;

.....
-

CLASSIFIEDS! Are you 65
or older?

·,

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

A loca l financml mslllutton

Announcements

ll\egtster

Sentinel

992-2156 (304)' 675-1333
Call Today••• (7 40) 446-2342 (740)
Or
To (740) 992-2157

fullllme co llec to r. Thts mdt\ldual mu st

Shop
Classifieds.!

Utrtbune ·

.To Place

Help Wanted

in person, by his or
her attorney, or by
such other representative as is permitted
to practice before the

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Z!Crtbune - Sentin~l - Register

\\'&lt;It \( E\11 \IS

Rio mustered 12 hil s m the
game one win.
The. Redwo men sco r e d
first in the opening inning of
game two. Ros s tnpled to
nght center and scored o n a
scored its' onlv run in the
s a fety squeeze from Junior
second
innn1g ,
putting
Brandt Jones.
together three two-out hits
Mountain State took the
to score the run. Jennifer
lead tn the second inning.
Sloan knocked home Sarah
Genesis Coli reached on an
Kaufm a n to make the score
to s tart the inning
4- 1 a t the ttme . Sloan and error
moved to second on a s acn.
Breann e Harper led the
f1ce from Harper and scored
Mountain State offense with
on a throwmg error from
two hits e ach .
R10 's Jone s . Rapp later douJunior Andrea
Lotycz
bled home Tara Leffel to
went th e distance to get the
g1ve the Lady Cougars a 2- 1
wm. Lotycz (9-5 ) escaped
lea d
trouble m the tirs t mning
The lead las ted unttl the
and was touched fo r a run in
bottom of th e ftflh mning
the second and then 'was
when the Redwomen tied
nearly lights out after that.. the game. Ross s mgled oft
She totaled fr ve tnmngs,
th e glove of Mountain Slate
seven hits , one run, two " second base man Temma
s tnkeouts and three w a lks.
Chow to score pinch runner
Mountain State starter and
Shannon Criswell
lose r Sarah
Rapp
was
R10 captured the lead m
chased from the pitcher 's
the home stxlh when fresh ·
Circle 111 the third mning.
man
backstop
Whttney

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Monday, April iS, 2005

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_

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•-

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•

�"

Page B4 • The
•

D~ily

AI' I~TIJ E""IS
lllK RE~,

4 WHEELERS

.\lEHt.ll\NiliSE

Apt lor rent 5350 00 plus t H P Star Conveltrble deep
oepos11 All urllu,es rncluaed well pump S100 (740)446No pets allm,ed 740-1:192- 0232
2274
•
24 -32 3 stall Pole Bar'l For
storage
only
Prrvate.·
BEAUTIFUL
APART- 5200 mo on At ?· Gallrpolls
MENTS
AT ~ BUDGET tH0)446-..:!782
PRICES AT JACKSON
JET
ESTATES , 52 Westv.ood
AERATION MOTORS
Dnve from 5344 •o 5~42
Walk to shop &amp; m!:Wies Ca!l Reparred New &amp; Reburlt Jfl
740-.:1-16-2568
' Eq~JJ I StocK Cal( Ron Evans. 1800-537-9528
Housmg Opportu.T11 ty

Auto llsllngs.
Ust your auto by calling

Vrew photoslmto online
1984 Ford F- 150 XLT, ·
51W, Automatic, Run s
ood. Code A25 or Call
740)446-3620.

I

(740)446-1519

t61t dual a)(le car tra iler.
$500! Honda's, Ch e11 y·s,
excellent condilion $1,100. Jeep's,
Eel.
Police
Gracious hv1ng 1 and 2 bed·
(740)445-5630 aftor 7pm
Impounds! Cars Jrom $500
roorn apartments at· V1lla.ge
ror lrst rr~ gs 800-391-5227
Manor
and
P1vers1de
Wolff Tanning Beds
EXT
390 1
Apartmunts in Middleport.
Huge selectlbn
From $295-$444 Call 740lmrriedrate Delrvery
992-5064 Equal Housmg
Frnancrng
1969 Ford XL. Galaxy 390,
Opportun111es
1-800-894-6997
automatrc . power steering
(740)446-65.79.
and brakes, AC , rnterror
Nrce 2br. Apartment.w1Gas
Hea11AC. IOC&lt;! ted in Pt
excellent, Mechantcal 8)(CelBUILilJN&lt;:
Ien!, body good: Neecls
Plea _ Aefndg/Gas-Kllchen
St
minor repair and parnt.
Range Furnrshed
WID
$3,300.00 080. •(740)696Hookup
1 5300/Month
S200/Deposrt(304)675-7628 Block. brrck. sewer prpes, J 373. (740)59 t -5888.
c-~---'---'----'----- '•wrndows. lrntel s, etc. Claude
P1_!3Asant Valley 1\partment Wmters, Rio Grande. OH
1979 Mercury Marquis,
Are now taki ng·Applrc&lt;Hrons Call740-245-5121.
Good
Looking Classic Car.
tor 2BR 38 R &amp; 4BR . 560
PKI'S
11
2,000
on Origrnal Motor
Appllcatrons are
taken
row SALE
call (304)610-4650 leave
Monday thru Fnday, from
message $900
9 00 A M.-4 PM. Office IS
Located at 11 51 Evergreen 2 male Toy Poodles. 9 wks
Mazda
Mlata
Drive Pornt Plea sant, WV old 1st shots and wormed 199t
Phone No rs (304)675- (740)44 1-9478 "'(740)446- Convertible, 30 MPG, beau22 10.
5806 E H.O
trlul new pamt and top.

"''-11'-'

Tam
Tov.nhous e
Apartment s. Very Spac rous.
2 Bedrooms. CIA, 1 112
Bath, Adlllt Pool &amp; Baby ,
Pool. PallO. Star! $385/Mo.
No Pets. LeaSe Plu s
Security Deposrt Requrred.
(740)446-3481.
Three beautrful unrurnrshed
apartments
Overlooking
Gallipolis Ci ty Park. One BR
S40ttTwo BR . $600 2 story
town-house. 3-4 BR , $900
Ref erences requrred no
pets, sec\Jrrty deposit. Call
7-10-446-2325.
740·4464425 or 7.40-441-7875.

AKC Lab pups, Chocolate. 2
female- $200 each . . Cal l
(740}4 18-5522.
AKC tncolor . Beagle pups.
Shots, wormed. $100 each
Steve Staplt;! ton (740)2561619 or( 740)446·4172 ,

"'*"""

Butterfly Kol

3 to 9 inches Lots of Colors,
Healthy Ph one (304)675 5043

Male black Lab. 1 year old ,
&gt;Jery fr iendiy.
neulere d
Tw1n R1Vers Tower 1s accept- minds well . had all shots.
ing appltca110ns for wait1n g 575 .00 (740)992 -3973 I'J
list lor Hud-subs1zed. 1- br. message
apartment call 675-6679
Mate Boxer, 1 yr, $125.
EHO
(740)985-3431
SI-'1\L'E
Shar-Per ,puppres, 7 wks.
fOR Rfl'&lt;' l'
old ,
lo ts
of
wrinkl'e ;
(740)992-9105
For Lease: Office or reta il
spflces 1n very good condi - Two Male AKC Col,lie pupti on Downtown Gallipolis. pies. Sable/White, born
Apprmc. 1600 sq. tt. each . 1 2120105, shots and wormed .
or 2 baths Le aSe pnce $300/each (304)675-8898
negotrable to encourage leave rnessage.
Call
new
business.
FRUfi'S &amp;
(740)446-4425 or (740)446Vn;~:JAI\1 . "~3936.
"'--..;~;;,;,;;;;:o:i;w:;.,,;J
For Rent: Ground level lux·
ury otfrce sur te(s) tor rent
3.4, or 7 room surte. utilities
included. Surles offer Private
restroom dedicated lo area.
private entrance. and ample
parking For further information contact . Jackre at
(740)446-7866
\11-1~ 1

&gt;10

11\\lliSI

HOUSEHOLil

Gm1 ~

r

·

·SUVS

Jlll9 \\'to lshto"nRd'.

25 Years Experience

Pomeroy, Ohio -15769
' Phone: 740-992-24.12

David Lewis

740-992-6~71

ROGER HYSELL
GHRHGE

' Insured

r

Rocky Hupp Insurance

::;;;;:;:;===::~

Pomeroy, Ohio
25 Years Loca l Ex rlence

I'

SuturdU)' April. 23,

in Ohio and WV

Ncw ·Homcs • Vinyl
• Rcplm.:emcnt
Wtmluws • Roo tin g .

$75.00 ($25.00 Non·

Refundable Deposit)

~al740-992-9444

COMMERCIAL and

or Email person6@verizon. Net

RESJDENTIAL

WV, OH and allle~a!

FREE ESTIMATES

(

' ()~11'\!'li\

•

{.flOyll&gt; ANl&gt; ll.lll N ~ l&gt;
1'-115 MAil~IAGE:?

V

L

I

Pomeroy. OH

740-992-9922

BARNEY
I STITCHED IT OVER
TH ' WINTER OF '99-'00 !!

Radius Mower ) 30 Inch.cutting width 1o 50
inch cutting width 3 year warranty
I&amp;!l TRACTQR S~ &amp; EOlJIPMENT
ril(ltllnthe h""t1
C l.,!er

!185-4384

·I"

~
,1180
.
[}40198..... l-~
..

;-s_

"?

After 6pm \.~) ._(-;-.~
(B&amp;Iore 6pm

.

!t1 ~~;·: ~

~

~

Flowers &amp; V~:getabll' pl~nls Flat-$6.95
10" Hanging llaskets-20 Varieties
$5.95 - $7.95

Pel1!nnials 6' '- 10'' $2.95 · $5.95
Potted Plants 4". 12" $1.25 • $12.95
12" Fe'r ns $10.95

.

f

~

THE BORN LOSER

~

rrf\1&gt; SI'IOOWSLI! Wf'' (l. f-11-\~ffi'f p-l'O LOVE". \0 .i&lt;NOW Wl-\f\I'!OU""l
· 1.1,~'-JE". &amp;.E".\'-1 UP \0 5\~C.t. TI-\E.~I
~E.\'1 'IOU Slt-iC.f.
1
SC.I-\OOL

M•
•

leov•Messo~fu1Dl :m~;.;~;~:;~@$.i1

1996 Yamaha Royal Star
Tour Classrc. Under 10,000
miles, asktng $5,800 Call
992-1325

1998 Buell 53 ThundeiboH
Harley Davidson engine.
very fast sport bike, great
sh~pe . $5100. (740)9859.8: .:5:.:7_______
1999 Harley Aoadl&lt;lng. Red ..
9,000 miles, tour pac. tuggage rack , tots more,
$14,500.
(740)446-4525
after 5pm.

A~,(Jl}_l;

"i l l(\ II 1 ..,

, HO~IE
IMPROVFMFNJS

Call B.D. Consl.
l'or all yOur humt!.
repair needs, roofing,

siding, add-uns,
'r emodeling etc.,

leave mcssa e

,...

Construction
,

Improve me nt Ne!.!ds
• Sid ing • Window s
• D ecks • Porches
• Ceramic Ti le &amp;
Hardwood Flooring
• Garages

BIG NATE

• Ktlchens • Bath s

Ractne, OH
740-2~7-2t62 or

740-416-3508
14 y rs. Ex peri ence
I mo

HOWARD l. ·
WRITESEl S SONS
R es idential -

Commercial

*Free Estlmltls.

Janet Jeffers
33795 Hiland Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

MANlEY'S
SEUSTORAGE
· 97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

10x10x10x20
992-l194
or 992-66l5

ROBERT
BISSEll

CONSTRUCDOII
Homes

• Garages

Culverts
STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
work

St. Rt.68 J Darwin, OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553
.R estockin.g /,a·t£• Model Salm9e
and After .M ar·ket Parts

• Complete
Remod~ling

140-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

4 5

No answers,
only limericks
A few en trants to my Chnstfnas
Competition submitted only limericks .
One such person was Tanya Bl atnick,
!rom Burhng lon. Ontar1o
There once was a merc hant of Vinesse. I
Who thoUght success would be a fmesse.
I But the king pro...ed 10 be wrong , / It was
not wh6re it belonged, I So, mstead of
more, he golless.
'
You have Q-J·9-7 opposrle A-1 0-6-6· 3
HoW Wou ld you play the suit? ·
Normally, fmessrng fo r the king rs a noDrainer. It gives you a 50·50 shot lor ftve
tricl(§ in !he suit To cas h the ace . trying to
drop the srngtetorr l&lt;mg offside, Is math a·
matlcally absurd - about a si11 percent
chance But 1 can thmk of lhreo orrcvm stances when it would bg right to reject
the Jinesse. What are they ? .
The ''easy" one is when the bidding tells
you that the finesse W!ll fail. Then , go for
the drop.
Perhaps you know you r opponent wi ll
always cover an honor wrth an honor so:
if he doesn't cover, he hasn 't got it- you
might as well try the ace .
Lastly, there ts the theme of 'this deal.
Agamst th ree no-trumr. West leads .the
spade live: four, queen, l&lt;ing Wha't next?
South has seven top tr icks, so needs only
two more from clubs, But it Eas t wins a
trick , th ere is a risk that a spad'e r9tu rn
will. ktll the con tract. So, as an avordance
play. declarer should lead the club queen
{to encourage a cover), then go up with
dummy's ace. If the i rnesse is working.
this costs only an o&gt;Je rtnck Here, though,
declarer wins 11 lrtcks inste~. of the

Tuesday, April19, 2005
By Bernice Bede Oaol
You may perrodically experren ce a
OH. YEA+&lt;
number ol unexpected changes from
T J\JO::.T C AME
P~YCHOLOGICA.L T RAUMA I
lrm e to lr me rn th e yea r ahead.
fROM SOCIAL
H owever, even the ones that appear
~TU D I ES
lo be harmful will turn out to be tor
your ul!rmate be netrt.
ARIE S (M arch 2 i - Aprit 19) Financra l cond1t rons co uld be a bit
unpredrctable to r you today, but don't
gnash yd'Gr teeth dver them If you
k;eep ynur coo t, what you drop rn one
area YO I.I 'II PICk UP In angth!'/f.
TAURU S (April 20· May 20) - Your
enthusrasm regarding a cause you're
promoting today may -be very contagrous. yet lor some unknown reason
the very pe rson yoU'd like to brrng on
board may not see things your way
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20) ~ You 're
[ !-lAVE A MUFFIN J.IERE
SHE WANTS TO YES,
MAYSE SHE LIKES
WI-IAT DID
apt tQ have m'any vo lunteefs early in
FOR
LUN CH ..YOU DON 'T
the day when you're far more etfecl jve
EASIER QUESTIONS
SHE SA'! 'r=-=-. KNOW IF THERE MA'AM
at operating rndependently tha n you
J.IAPPEN TO ~AVE A'llli'
may be later when you lire You'd bet6RAPE JE LL'( IN YOUR
QVE5TION5
ter accept he lp when rt's offered.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- T hrs is
DE5K,
YOU, MA'AM'?
not a good day to put you r support in
back of new enterprises · that mlght
operate along linE:tS ·unfamrhar to you .
· If things should go awry. the so lutions
~=;;f . wou ld be too co nfo unding.
LEO (July 23- Au g. 22) - If th ere. I S
som ethrn g imp ortant you want to
accornplrs h t oday, stay away from
people who try to tell you how everything should be' done. Bystanders w1ll
lend to contuse your efforts
V'tRGO !Aug . 23-S(lpt . 22) - You
have thy abihty to clarify your remark s
in Ways so that your Intent. is not mls,cons trued. Mako sure you do so today
when big things are at stake.
LIB RA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Shou ld
you find yourself in a financial pickle
today. don't be too proud to seek outSide aid. You s t and a good chance o f
getting help, so long CIS you don't wal t
until too late Jn the day.
'
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No&gt;J. 22) h1
. order to be a successful entrepreneur.
knowledge and know-how are essenttat and today w rtl be no e:.ceplion .
Charm , v.nt and one-lrnerS can serve
as door openers. bu t be ready with
la,::ts.
'
·
S AG t TTAAtU ~ (NO'J. 23-0ec. 2 1) Unfortunately, you may find Ieday's
assignments to be a btl more trying
than usual. not because of their di tf i' culty bvt because your rea l int9rests
co ulcf be focused on something total SO
'THE:N,
WHA'T.
ty oille renl .
•
.1 HAD A 'Tii.RRIBI..Ii.
HAVE WE 1.-J::ARNJi.D ~_..-.__ _
CAPR IC ORN \Dec. 22- Jan. ' 9) - A
MORNING&lt;•••
~ FROM 1'HI!)?
rrtt between you and someone about
whom you ' ca re a great deal can be
patched up today it you show a willrngness to m&amp;ke amends. However,
the overtures Will have to t;Je made by
you .&lt;
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20- Feb ~9 ) - An
rmportant ObJBCtt&gt;Je can be ach ieved
today by taking the mos t direct and
"
honest routes avarlable to you II yoU
in tact cleve r tactiCs. you're extremely
lrkely to get thrown off-track.
PISCES (Feb. 20- Mar'ch 20) ~ When
1t comes to competiti&gt;Je invotvame,;ts
wrth others today, you can w1n by
to tally concentrating on your own abil~
•rtres Don"t be ov"rawed by your opponent's flash and dazzle.

SUNSHINE 'CLUB

740·742·2293

GARFIELD

NORTHUP DODGE

29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Oh1o
45771

740.94&amp;-2217

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH
•

· Now

Available At

B.\l ll\1 Ll ll\JBER
Scorpion Tractors
" Taking The Sting Out Of
Hard Wurk !"

Mid-Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

.BAUM LUMBER

SHADE RIVER AG SERVICE
35537 Sl. Rt. 7 Nortb
Pomeroy, Ohio

St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301

•
'

------~---

Capone

59 Persist
'

ta Nick of " Cape
Fear"
20 Lacking
22 My mind ·
- - blank
23 FolleH and
Howard
24 Quay.
27 Bold look
29 Sigh
of content
30 Wild ducks ·
34 Cer parts
37 Absent·

•

DOWN

1 Ripken .
of baseball
2 - - equal

3
4

5
6
7

8

minded
9

murmur
38 Spanish .Iitle
39 401(k) kin
41 Flog
43 Fergie's
daughter

o

1
13

19

44 A B-vitamln 21

waitress
24 Take It on
the ·25 Paris water
basis
Sarge's
26 Channels
pooch
2-t 3
Mr. Nielsen 27 Zhivago' s
Under sail
love
(2 wda.)
28 Windy City
train s
Zodiac sian
"'Dragne1'1
30 Some
adults
org.
Parachute
31 LeHer
material
·· after pi
Kelly's
32 Excavated
33 Oulel! ·
co· host
lmp•essed . 35 S&amp;L
protector
Tel Aviv
36 Slrldihg
coin
Mao - -tung
along
" Alice"
39 Piano part

40 Scolding .
41 !nslalled '
electricity
42 Can't help
bu1 (2 wds.)

43 Post-sneeze
word.
44 Pharaoh's
river
45 Columbus '
smalles1
ship
47 Teeny bit
48 High notes
51 - -de-sac
53 Former JFK

arrival

CELEBRITY CIPHER
Cel!bnr~

by Luis Campos
.
C1pher cryptograms are createa from quotations Dy famo'JS oeo~e. pEl$1ano present.
Eaf:fl f!r~er rnll'le CiPher stands lor anott1er
Today'sCiue. P BQuBIS G

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LOP!VK

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "Taxes . . are tho dues !hat we pay fa r the priv1lege
of membership in an organtzed soc tety." - Franklin D. Roosevelt
(C)200 5byNEA, lnc. 4-16

·THAl

DA.I~Y

S@\\J.!lA-~ttf~®

WORD
~AMI

PUl!liR
- - - -- - - Edittd by Cl4Y A. POHAN

0 lour
ReariOnge let!ers of
scrombl!d word'

the
below lo form four s1mpl e words

TH~UIS

.,

.--------, "'

I

R E~ N 0 p I .,~

I ·I

·J

Is I

Sy L A L T

I

"You must remember,' the
park&gt;anger told tne campers
"Nature doesn'J try to persuade
you ....... you."

:..:.::,..1..::..;.1;.)..:;.1_:_..,1--J ()
If-,&amp;,.,.-,:1_.J
__
..!__-.l--.J-'-..1.

L -.L.

Comple:e th • chwckie qooled

by l illmg 111 !he mi~s1ng words
you develop from s•ep No. 3 beloW

DO

Call Gary Stanley

252 Upper River Road • Galli~lis
74G-44"6".0842 • 949-1155 Evenings
BG0-446-0842

&lt;-lbur 'Birthday:

ARE AN'&lt;

•·Affordable Rates

Hill 's Self
Storage

G

AstroGraph

M'&lt;

• References,
Available
• Free Estimates

$265 ton (While Suppy Last)

•

East
All pass

PEANUTS

Advertise
in this
space for $1 04
per month.

• More stable form ol Nilrcigen
• Made wilh White Potash
less dus~ More consistent)
• Inc\ udes secondary nutrient sullur
• 18 spread t r buggie s available for use
• Airway pasture renovai.ors and seeders
available to rent.
I "--Lic1ens.ed agron omist on staff available for
consulting.
,

Call (740)446-2342
For Deta11s

Whaleyts Auto
Parts

See Brem or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5 :00
Sat. 8:30-Noon
Sun. Clo sed

"Middleport's only
Sell-Storage"

• New

IF FORTY FIVE MINUTES
WITH MRS
GODFREY ISN'T
TRAtJMATt C.
I. DON 'T
IS

NATE , /\ tJ ART T ~ERAPJ ~T
WORKS WITH PEOPLE
TO HELP T+lt.t1 OVEF&lt; ·
COME SOME SOil.T OF

• Room Add . • Rooting

"No Job To Smaii"

3 NT

eight he gets if he takes the club finesse ..

17-17-17,.

WITH A PHOTO!

II

Storage
, SxiO, lOxiO,
IOxiS, IOx20,
10x30

94&amp;-1405
plastic and metal , 6" inches50 mches in stock Ron
Evans Enterprise, Jackson,
OH 1(800)537-952B

I 'l

I'\ C.. .

(740) 992-5232

Alllypes of r oofi ng:
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Shingle, Flat. Mclal Unconditional lifetime guar· New or Repair
antee. Local references furSeamless Guucr nished. Established 1975.
D ownspout - Sidin g
Call 24 Hrs_ (740) 446'0870, Rogers Ba sement ·
Waterproofing ~

High and Dry

,

~OOGLE:

Phone

free estimates
(740) 992-2979

A ll Your H ome

T~IANGL~:·

4wd (I year warranly)

• I'arm 1•ro Tractors 20 horse- 30 horse
loader s, finish mowers, tillers ·
~ ARRIVAl, ZTR Dixon (Zero Thrn

j

Must saJe, 1984 Corwhe,
poyble K Club pigs
Farrowed Jan 22 thru March 350 engine. (740)992-6797
10, call Kevig or Ike (Kevrn)
SELL . YOUR CAR
at (740)698-6231
Buy or sell
Rrverrne
HERE
Antiques, 1124 East Marn Need 'rrde lor mini horse
on SR 124 E Pomeroy, 740- from Rutland
Ohio to
992-2526 · Rus s Moore Wardensvrne WV Can you
owner '
help? (30 4 )87 4~4169

'

''BIG SQUA~~
STO#lY AIOVT Tt-IAT
fALL-$ INTO
.fTOl&gt;GY BANIC~Il wt'-10 WllONG CI~CL-~
MIX~l&gt; wI Tt-l ,.4 FAST
C,AUSING fATAL

with shuttle transmission
4-wd, remote hydraulics 3 yeur warrunty
•u• Also availa ble••u
• Task Master Tr3;ctors 26 horse • 38 hor:se,

11:

39728 SR I 43

NOrth

Pass

'
FRANK
&amp; EARNEST

~ Hubbard's Greenhouse
Syracuse, OH
~
liNDA'S PAINTING •~ 740-992-577fi '

r

West

I NT

Opening lead:

30 Yrs. Exp. • 1ns. Owner: Ronnie Jones.

Let me do it for youl

011e 's memory.

South

+ •

Tate the PAIN &amp;!~~Ci~~~~..·@.~~·
NOW OPEN
~
out of PAINTING! ~ •

Let u11 help ym1
clwo.'w a lmoti11g
tribute to your lm•ed

\( RH.
\HINl ~IE\

...

D ealer: South
Vulnerable: B oth

ur

740-992·7599

states must be 21'.

"' K

... Q J 9 7

starling at 27 horse - .57 horse

Sidmg • New 'Gdrages

t Q J lU 7

+ A K 6,

New Dealer tor Momana Tractors

Mason VFW

[ 0 ~175 4

4 K J 2

Free Estimates

BUILDERS InC.

. ¥

58 Gore and

lrosh
17 Size above

mad.

Q9 7

• QJ 2

E:flfl/1~, wtiAT'5 YOllfl
~~Al&gt;LIN~ fOil 'Tt-l~

2005
9:00A.M.

•

AI0 ,853

sOuth

Tree Service

BISSEll

t:I.a

East

4

• 9 l
... 54 2

JONES'

992-6215 wv 036125

16 Former

3~2

Wl'St

• uu

Bucket Truck

V.C. YOUNG Ill

, . . ,• •

MONTY

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

992-5'682

(15

46 Songlike
49 Tax org.
1 Aloof .
. 50 Pleasant
5 Completely &gt;2 Oppononls
8 Heston's gp, 54 Allowed
11 - up (pay) 55 Lions'
12 Mild brews
quarry
14 Hedge
56 All-purpose
shrub
vehicles
15 ' Back
57 Shogun's
muscles
capital

olo AtU863

74Q-667-0700 1-888-HUPP234

SERVICE '·

'Il-l- HI

4

• 85

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med _•
Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

CARP~NTER

j)

¥ ~K

1~;!~T;uppers Plains, OH
I'
45783

YOUNG:s

NIM CIU!Caleil

•

41800 SR #7

Free' [stimutes

I

No rth

and Financial Services

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrrcat &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• P11tio and Porch Decks
We do it all except
furnace work

2002 Slingray 20 11. open
Dow, Red/ White. 5.0 liter VB. Hustler trailer, excellent
co nd., garage kept , pnce
new $ 24.000 sel l' $ tS ,7DO.
.ca ll Troy Krebs 304-675·
8828

1991 Che...y S-10, 4 3, V6 , 21 foot Cabrn Crui ser boat.
4x4, $4,600 OBO Ca ll . 1979, 350 motor. Ru ns
(304)675 -561,2.
g oo ~ . needs work, $1,300.
(740)2 56-8856, (740)2562001 ·Jeep CheroKee Sport
9228
4x4 price reduced, loaded
CD ,towrn·g package 54,000 84 Bayliner 19FT, w/trailer,
miles $9,200-0BO 304-675· Cubby Cabrn, Auns Good
31_4_ __ _ _ __
$3,200 080 (304)675·8056
$4,750 . (304)654-521 1 or _1_:_
(740)446-7484.
2003 Dodge Duly, 4x4 ,
CAMI!ERS &amp;
black, ·4 door, 6 speed ,
MoroR HoMES .
engme,
nerf
bars,'
Cummrns
1992
Ca dillac
Sedan
st~ i n les s body mol dings ,
Devi ~le , 50,000 actual miles.
·~03" 34~ Jayco 5th wheel. 1EMcellent Condition. $3,800 diamond plate tool Do)( &amp; 12'slrde ou t Like new, many
bed
sides,
retractable
1304)675-3354
extras: (740)3-39-0218. ·
goose neck ball, 59,000
mriEls. $29,000 (740)256·
1984 pop-up Skamper,
1993 Ford Taurus Wagon. -· 9247 or (740)645-0,870 .
160.000 miles. Books at •""",.,;..,;,...;.;.;.,;..;;;...;,._., excellent condition, ale,
heat, sleeps 6, $2,500,
VANS
$ 1450, well maintained,
(740)949-2709
good co ndrtjon $1099/0BO L---F·OiiR-SiiAiiUil:-_.1
(304)882·3640
.
1992· 29' Airstram E11calla.
1997 Ford Con&gt;Jersion Van, Very good co ndrlion . twin
1997 Mustang Convertible. 74,000' miles, 8)(Cellent con- beds_Ph_(740)645-4454 .
New Top, 4 new-TAres, Front dilron, new tires , $9,800,
1998 30' fifth wheel travel
end Alignment &amp; Sticker, Arr, (740)992-2945
trail er. double slide, excelCrui se, Tilt, Power Winclows
1998 Astra van, 48 .000 lent condition, $13,900
&amp; Seats , Factory Ste reo ,
miles. wheelchair lift, ac , phone: (740)~98·9319
CO/Tape , V6 , Automatic cassette player. (740)742- -:--:-,-------;-._ _:___ __ _
Excellent Condition 85,000 8612
2001 Hornet Bunkhouse 32',
rnlles(304) 576-2383 $6.900
,
- 12 ' expand o, sleeps 10,
40
MoroRCYCl..F.sl
excellent condition Si 6,800.
4 WHEELERS
. (740)441 -1501
1999 Dodge Intrepid, Good
Conditron , Clea·n $4,000
1'982 Honda 500 Trike 2004 Sunseeker 25 ft. Class
(304)675-6986
Faring wlstereo system. Dk C, motor home, loaded,
----~---- blue E&gt;Jenrngs {740 )256 • 1$45,000. (740)645-3230.
2000 Chrysler Concord . 6 870 $3 000
N~e car, $4,800 OBO Call .- _ _ __· _ _·_ _ __ ~i4 foot Le1sure Ti mes
camper. Everythrr g works.
(7.40)256-1539 or (740)256- "1985
GL 1200
·Wing
ready to camp, $1,200.
1343.
"Aspencade. blue. new tires.
(740)256-8856 or (740)256new pragressi&gt;Je front and 9228
·owoo Mere"ru Myst1que. rear suspens1on, CB radjo,
'
White, 4 "door,
sedan, . AMIFM Cassette , lots at 24FT 1976 Star Craft
58,000
miles.
$.4,600. chrome, 88,000 mtles, very Camping Trarleri No Trtle.
(740)645-2359 after Spm.
good conditron , $4,000, $1 ,500 (304)675-63 19 or
phone (740)541-0537
(304)882-2230

Kessel's Produce
Am rsh cheese &amp; lunch
meats. fresh lrurt &amp; veg.
Open Thurs. Fri, Sat. 1 mile 2000 Monte Carlo 48,000
wesl of Holzer Hos prtal on mrles, V-6 Eng . Exc. Cond.
$8,000 (304)675-5305
Jac~son Prke. ph (740)4467787- 740 339-2131.
2001 Cavalier, 5 speed,
Fnu. SAl£
$3.895, Two 1999 Saturns,
$3,495 &amp; $3.695: Two 2000
Stratus, $4,195 &amp; $4,395;
6 rental units on 4 lots.
1999 &amp; 1997 A&gt;Jengers,
Yearly rncome o&gt;Jer $26.000. $2 ,895 &amp; . $4,995 , 1995
Some owner Jrnancing pos- Dakota ext. cab V6 , auto,
srble. (740)446-431 3
AJC, $2,695. Others in stock.
3 months/3,000 miles warBedroom !urniture. ·end
ranty,
tables. microwave stand. air
Cook Motof.s
conditioner. treadmrll. wed (740)446-01 03
drng Clrass, prom dresses,
328 Jackson Pi~e
Call
outdoor
shutters.
(740)256-1304. '
2002 Cadillac Deville, white
I \In I Sl 1'1'111..,
diamond , fully equipjJed,
&amp; 1111 , 11)(),
factory warranty, 22,900
mrles . like new. $24.995.
10
FARM
(740)256-, 428
EQuiPMENT

Yearling Angus Bulls, Mostly
A t e)(cetlent bloodlines,prrced reasonably. Slate Run
Farm , Jackson. (740)286.
5395 ~
www slateruntarm com

~f~~w~~~,:

&amp; Mc:rruRS

molor, $3,500 , (740)992·
6914
2001 Lincoln Navigator. -19-:-9-3---22--5-lt-._C_h_a_p-ar-ra-1
AWD. 5.4 VB, 3rd row seat- boat, 235hp Mercru rser
ing, cassette/CO-changer, · eng , cuddy cabin , portapctheated/cooled~seats , low 11, stove . bimrni top, new
mrles , excellent condition, cockpit cover, full boat cover.
Eagle trailer. Excelient condllion. 1740)379-2740.

r

.Sohd Oak Vrrgrma House
Exc Con
Chrna Hutch
$550.00 Sohd oak tabl~'&gt; &amp; 5
r.:harrs $200.00 Camp Set
chma &amp; glass also for sale
Call 740-247-2475

James A Will Jr.
Owner

, mKSALE

FOR SALE

1976 CJ-7 Jeep Soft 'top ,
facto ry V-8 , automatic,
runs/drr ves great, •' tancy
rims , $2,500. (740)44~9389

and Replacement

J" 1ll-t5709i!! }·ah(:X.J.wru

1987'20' Pontoon boat with
11 996 trailer &amp; 50hp Mere.

L---

CONCRE'I'E
CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal

E-m11il

Motorcycle for sate, 2003
Honda $ hadow 750 Spirit,
Excellent Con dition, 4,500
Mrles ,
Extras.
$4.800
(304)675-8089
BoATS

l.~WIS

Complete small
engine repair

Honcla CA250A, like. new.
leSs than 20 hours. $2.500
OBO Call (740)256-6817.

Hot Point washer $95 ,
'Kenmore dryer. $95: GE'
relrrgerator $95. Fngrdarre
electrrc range S95, ltke new
Wh rrlpool washer $150: like
new Rjnger washer. $200;
2004 8B3 HarJey Davrson,
small chest freezer. $ 150,
Kenmore side-by-s1de refrigblack, 4,700 miles, $7,500.
erator, $300, TNrn srze ' bed
(740)645·3230
(no mattresslbO)( spnngs)
575: Love seat 575· chestol-d,rawers. $45: booksht~lf.
$35
'
Skaggs Appliance
93 Lincoln Town'Car. 81 ,000
76 Vrne Street
9N Ford Tractor wlbr~sh
miles. Very nice , $4,500.
(740)446-7398.
hog, $2,500 New 5fl. brush
(740)446-1759
hOgs- $400. Blades. $175.
Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark
Sout.hern AJS (740)446 Chapel Road . Porter, Ohro
8554.
95 3000 GT Mrtsub1shr
(740)446 -7444 t-877-830- - - - - - - -- · Garage kept , . A Locke~
'}162 Free Estrmates. Ea::.y
Bale wagon 19 ft. Stolfus $7,000 Frrm (304)6 75-3631
frnancrng _90 days ·same as
krcker wagon . Remo&gt;Jable
cash Vrsai Ma£ter Card. steel racks Ul&lt;e new trres
Drrve- a- lrttle save alot.
'98 2 door Chevy Cav1ter,
and bed. (740)245-0485
white. ac, 10 disc CD changThompsons Apolrance &amp;
er, {lutomatic', new tires. new
Reparr-675· 7388 For sale,
LIVfSrocK
brakes. excellent condrtlon.
re-condrtloned automa trc
$3.500,
call
Heather
washers &amp; dryers relrrgera·
(740)949-2249
'
2
Donkeys
&gt;Jery
gentle.
t
tors
gas and electrrc
ranges, arr condrtroners. and Jack Donkey, 1 Geldmg
wringer washers , Wrll do Don~ey Both are under one 99 Chevy Malibu LS. V6, 4do6r,
automatic,
fu lly
reparrs on major brands rn year old ' 740-985-3555
loaded. CD, aluminum
stlOp or at your hOme
4-H Market Meat Goats. ·wheels, 65,000k. $4,795
Used ~rlilture Store. 130 Mason County born and (740)379-2748.'
Bulavrlle Prke Appliances. rarsed (304)882-3144.
mattresses
dresSfi!rs
couches d:nettes. r.eclmers, Boar Brlly goal. 15mo. gen - BMW Z3 . '99. Special
grave monuments, much tle . ~ t 25 Young Brllys &amp; Edition. 22,000 mrtes, dark.
more
{740) 446-4782 Weathers meat goats SSO green , $19,999. (304)4 12·
Gallipolrs. OH hrs. 11-3 (M· (740)446-4172, (7 40)256· 33110
1619
S) We buy used lumrture

r

/IIJI's Smd
Dtglll• • . , ,

97 CABO. R act~ ready, runs
great. must see to appreciate. $1 .000. Galllpo!is area
cell (74~)645-0873

FOR SALE
Po(e
Barn
30x50)( 10'- TobaccO Plants for sclle, Ca ll
$6,795 rncludes Parn led (740)446-7843,
Metal. Slider Free Delrvery.
1 ~93 Fi50. No dents. no
24)(32x10· $4 .595 . _, I \11'\ ~'\. t. \ tWI ' I ~uu ·
rust , 95,000 miles, $3,200.
40~6~)(12 $.13.995 , Craf1sman 42 ~ Mower 15 Call
(740)2 45-5815
or
(937)599-7740 http:@ation- 112-HP Kohler engine, e)(cel- (740)418-9026.
Widepolebarns.com
lent
conditron .
$700
(304)675-4 67 5 after 5Pm,
Pool pump &amp; sand filter. for
22-Aemington Speedmaster
large pool used 3 weeks. $200
.
Cost $300. sell $175
II{\ \'l'i Jl{ I\ Ill)\
(740)446•1127.
mK S..u:

•

94 Harley Oa&gt;Jidson Ultra
Classtc , 10,000 mrtes. blue,·
excellent con ditr~ n , $13,500,
(740)949-2217

T!U!Ll\5

Puzzle

Crossword

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder ·

2005 Honda CAF250 Ne'.ler
been raced Call (740)2455815 or (740)418·9026.

1993 Ford Mustang LX . 4
I , AutomatiC , AIJnS
cod. Code A26 or Ca rt
740)446·3620

NEA

BRIDGE

2001 Harley Road Kmg. Teal
rn color, many extras, one
owner. excellent condition.
29.000 miles. $16,000.
(740)446-02 13

(740~6-3620

and,or small houses FOR Fcir
Concrete.
Angle ..( 74o)b43 _0836
RENT Call (7401441·1111 Cnannet Flat Bar. Steel '--,,.;.------,...., •
1960 Willys Jeep Truck,
. &amp;'
•
for applrcatron 8 rnlorrhatron Gratmg
For
Drains.
•
tuLAl'
uns Good. New Parts.
Drrveways &amp; Walkways l&amp;L
GRAIN
Downtown Pt Plee.sant All S.crap Metals Open Monday.
iew Online or Call
Electric
one
bedroom Tuesda 11. Wednesday &amp;
740)446 -3620.
Square bales of orchard
Apar troent lor rent Oepos rt Fnday. 8ar:rl-4 ;30pm. Closed
grass hay, $1 50. {740)9928 Refere nces requrred Thursd ay. Saturday
&amp;
2070
(304)675-3788
Sunday (740)446~7300

Furn1shed 2 &amp; 3 room apl s Ranch Ktng 22hp lawn tracClean. no pets Re ference &amp; tur Kohler engine 50in cut.
depos1t · requ1red . · Call excellent cr;rndr tron. $1 200.

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

Wide Glide. Low mileage.
excellent condition. Call
(740)441 -099 1

www,orvb.com

(740)2~6-1330

r

.

www.mydailysentinel.com

fOOt Harley. Davidson Oyna

Palommo mare. 17 years
old well broken . bu t lor
experrencecl rider only
$ 1 500 (must see to apprecrate ).
15 ye\ r old Bay geldmg, hke
to pace ' (natu rally) . Also
needs experrenced rider,
S1.200.
J-11'2 year old Sorrell (red)
gelding. Broke to lead. tre
and very gentle. SBDO Call

CONV_ENIENTLY LOCAl:- - ~-------- Regrstered black Ang us Bull
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE !
NEW AND USED STEEL for sale. S years ollj Daytim e
Townhouse
apanments, Steel Beams. Prpe Reb~r { 74 a)SS2 -6520.
e&gt;Jen rng

For
Lease. ·2
Floor.
Spa'crous
,
Total ly
RemodeliJd. 2 Bedroom. t
H2 Baths. UnlurmsHed
Apartment
New Water
Hea1er 9nd Applrances
DownlOwn
Gallrpolrs
, ,.. Secunt~· and Key Deposrt
Requrred .
No
Pets
Re ferences ·
RequrreP
(7401 446-6882, M-F 8.005:00

Monday, April 18, 2005
ALLEY OOP

40 Moro~C\'Ll.E•;/

~ IL&lt;;tl] L I ~EO!!;

....._,

Monday, April18, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

Sentinel

•

SC:RAM-LElS ANSWERS · - -i

Mu.o;ket- S-:ar- Wo::!d- Ethics- COST LESS ·
_The lather :old his love slruck teenage son th~l complimen ts pleased girls more lhan flowers and Ihey C{)ST
.LESS

ARLO&amp; JANIS

50 ~OW'5 SU#!M£R
AT YOUI21)\D'5 GO lOG,
RUTI·F ·

\.IKE 1beE

THI':I WE.~K, WE. CO~r!IM
WiTilll'tiJr...ue: "G:tl.l£" ~rli':tP':I
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''I'

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

wWw.rnydailysentinel.corn

· Monday, April18, 2005

Rio splits again with Tiffin· Pena; .·Reds down Houston, 6-5 ·
.

.

.

'

two- run

SPECI AL TO OV P

•

·

·

1

'";!,,,

2012 Summer Games bid cities to
make pitches to Olympic officials ·
BY STEPHEN

WtLSON

ASSOCIATED PRE SS

BERLIN _ Less than tlirec
months before the vote. the
tive cities vying- for the :2012
Summer G~mes are gett ing a
chance to make the ir pitches IO
a big Olympic audience.
Paris. London. New Yorli.
Madrid and Moscow are se nding high-level de legati o ns to a
conference in Berlin. where
they will present their bids to
Olympic s ports fe de rati on
leaders.
30
With
mo re tha n
International
Ol ymp ic
Committee members ex pected
to attend, the meeting o tTers
h
· t. h
·
the Iast maJOr s owcasc or l e
bid cities.bet'ore the sess ion in
' Singapore at which the host
city will be se lected July 6.
·' lt's the largest gathering of
IOC members and leaders of
· international federation s that
there will be between no w and
Singapore ." New York bid
leader Dan Doct'oroff said.
"It's a· very important mile'
stone and test. ''
Each city has been allotted
.JO minutes to make a presentation Sunday to· the Association
of
Summer
Ol ympi r.'
International
Federations.
which"covers 2,Xspan s. Many
of the federati on pres idents
also are IOC member&gt; e ligible
to vote in Singapore .
'' lt's a shop win dow...

ASSOCI'ATEU PRESS

home run and a

triple, Peterman went 2-for-3
with a couple of RBl ,s, Chau
TIFFI N - For the se,·o nd
wuf\ 2-for-4 and junior short consec ut ive J ay th e Ri o
stop Matt M,\rtin was 2-for-4
Grande Red men' allll Tiffin
with an RBI.
Drago ns split' a double header
Fres hman , Kenta Sa to
in
American
~1 ideas\
Con fe renc e Snutli O iv i.sinti .
smacked a two- run home run.
hase.ball acti on ·or.t S unda y
wh ic h gave the· Redmen an 8-·
afte rnoon. Rio took th e fi rst
6 lead at the ti ttle.
game ir1 a slugfcst L'l- 10 and
Brown {3 - 1) was the tough
the · wi n for th e Red meri .
Tirti n gamed &lt;I co nt rowrsm Chau is now 4-2 on the sea- lu'"' k loser for Rio Grande.
lJ-8 win 111 the second game.
After the two wild affairs
Ril• Grande. ( 2~-U . l l-.1
.·
tl"l)
loo
r.e"
lt
'
'·e
S d
h
- I'
AMCS) banged Olll 16 hits in
'-. 111'
' u
'
on 1111 ay t e two teams sp tl
the game -n ne ons laug ht. ano the r RllJ victo ry but con- the fou r-game seri es at ·2-2.
Juni or second basema n .Mike trow rsy arose a t the end of
''I'm upset·." said Ri o
the seve nth innin g. Rio
G.olom was J- for-5 ft'o m the Gra nde had a one run '· lead .at Gran de Head Coac h Bra d
leadoff spot wnh a do ubk. X-7 an d fr eshman. re i iever Warnimont after th e second
scnt or ce nt crl•elder Scot t Chri s Brown induced wh·tt game defeat. '' But the bottom
Peterrnan · had anot her solid · Ri o thou&lt;&gt; ht was a oame-e nd - line is, we did what we had to
d '~Y offe•:s iw ly ~oing J : fur-5 mg 3-6-3" doubl e p~ty.. As the do, split on the road.
w1th a P&lt;"'
&lt;md &lt;' Rcdm
' ' ve JUSt
· got to utk·e care
· bles
f" · h ,
. . .. e n were celcbrattilg •·. ·&lt;"vve
. · o ·f dou
run batted. 111 . JUnior trs t . ase- Tt flrn ·Head · Coach Lonny · f"b .· · .
..
man Michae'l Branon wa.s ]: Allen arg ned that Chau's foot 0 RusGmessdnow:
b k
for-4 with a home run and wets not on the base on the
·to ran e Wt 11. get ac 10
four RBi s. and jun io r clllcher returr) throw. The call was busrness •Oil .M~nd ay when
Jorge Morales hnJ hi s bes t subseque ntl y rGv crsed by the . they ~ost Cedar\ tile tn a douday as ,l Red men pl,aye r bel t- home plate umpi re and "as a bleheader. Thts doubk d1p IS
ing two ho me run&gt; and col - result the Dragons scored the a make-up from the ftnal two
leering fi ve RBI en ni ute to a tying run on a passed ball. games of four-game . serres
Ti ffin ( 19 - 19, 9-8 AMCS) that was ratned. out tn late
3-for-4 effo rt at the plate.
So phomore southpaw Nate would wrn the ga me 111 the February. Game tune ts set for
Chau went five innin g ~ to ge t e tghth ·rnmn g.
2 p.m. at Robert Evans F1eld.

Lo ndon
bid
chairman the . same 201 2 meeting:
Sebastian Coe said . "The only Michael Bloomberg (New
two questions worth asking in York ),
Ken
Livingstone
this whole process are: why (London), Bertrand Delanoe
and how'' If' you can answer (Pari s),
Yuri
Luzhkov
both of those in an internation· {Moscow) and Alberto Ruiz
· a1so
al sening, then I think · you're (iallard on (·Madn'd ). parrs
'in good sllapc."
is . se nding Fren.ch . Sports
The bjd c.ities appeared Minister
J_i! an-Francoi s
before the European Olympic Lamour.
Committees in Dllbrovnik;
The IOC evaluation comcroaua.
· · 1ate 1ast year. and the missiOn
· · comp
' 1eted 1ts
· ins pee- •
Oceania Olympic Committees tion tour of the tlve cities last ·
·111 Bns
· b ane. Austra 1ra.
· ear1·1er month and is compiling a
th IS
' mon th . 1n comt'noe week s,· report assessing their technical
th ey ' II ta ke
· the'tr c·•mpa•'gns
•
· to plan s. The report, which won't
Afri can Olympic meetings in rank the cities .. will be released
Ghana and another European
h · · Alb ·
June 6 ·
gat enng m
Uilla .
There's been plenty of spec- ·
Hut the . Berlin conference ulation about how the cities ·
offe rs the bi ggest stage .
stack up.
Besides. giving presentations,
''The honest truth 1·5 that
h b'd · · ·
t
h'b
t e 1 ctttes can se up ex 1 - : nobody· know s," Coe said.
it stands at SportAccord, an
industry summit held in con- &lt;'The,people I speak to regularjunction with IOC executive ly basically teH me it's too
board mee tings.
close to call .
· The bid delegates are stay"This is a competition , and
ing in Berlin for several day s, like all good competitions.
plenty of time for lobbying in will go absolutely to the wire.
the hal lways and making per- This is not a time to blink."
sonal co nnections that might
Paris, making its third bid in ·
switt'g votes in Singapore .
20 years, has been considered
'"It 's very important to meet the front-runner from the outall the peOple directly," Paris set and mmains the bookinakbid chie f Philippe Baudillon ers · favorite . Unlike rivals
said. "It's not onl y a 10-minute London and New York, Paris
· presentatio n. it's a chance to has an Olympic stadium ·in
share our vision and show that place - the Stade de France,
we want to be real partners which hosted the 1998 World
with the IOC."
Cup soo;:cer fmal and 200_3
For the first time. the may-,. world track &amp; field champ•ors of all fi ve cities will be at unships.

•

BY JOE KAY

Gol om was 2-for-5 with a

BY MAR.K WtWAMS

ClNC INNAII - Wily Mo
Pe na hit a three-nm homer so
deep into the upper deck that
it drew a.n extra standing ov ation Sunday, · the n hit a
tiebreaklng double in the
. eighth inning th at sent th&gt;
C incinnati Reds to a 6-5 vic. tory Mer the Houston Astros.
After losing ·12 strai ght
g tu)lCS to the Astros since Just
Jul y 3 1; the Ret.ls wn n the last
two wi th solid start ing pitching. a11 awc~nme swing and a
late comehw.:k.
Pe n ~1 · s

fourth -i nning homer

oil B randon Duck worth
c•'asheJ down in the upper.
dec k in left-center tleld, an
estimated 498 feet from home
plate. Fans in · ri ght field
bowed ~nd gave Pi'na a standing ovation for the secondlongest homer in Great
American Hall · Park's three
se a ~"m s.

Eastem·
from Page Bl
at ' bay bui seemed 10 go for
not a; EHS was al so held
scoreless until the bottom of
th f 1fth
. •• . •
e
.
• •
_ In th.al pivotal lrame,
Georgana
Eastern s'
Koblentz walked with one
aw ay.
Smith
singled
Koblentz over to third, giving the hosts a runner in
·scoring positi on. Koblentz
wotild score on White' s single for a 1-0 lead.
·
The Eagles added two
in ore in the sixth when a
leadoff error allowed Cassie
Nutte r to reach safely.

Joe Randa had a more modest
two-run
shot "off
Duckworth. who lasted tl vc
innings in his ti rst start th is
season and · left trailing 5-3.
After the Astms tied it in the
seve nth. Randa singled off
Chad Quall s (l - 1) with one
u.ut in lh,i: eighth and came
around on Pena· s double, to
tlte wctll in ri ght.
.
·Ryan Wagner ( 1- 1) struck
ou t th~ side iti the eighth.·and
Danny Graves, got his fourth ·
save in four chances.
·
Reds starter Aaro!'t Harai1u
~tad only one bad moment i~
si·x inn ing,;. Jast)n Lane's
three-run ho mer in the fourth .
The A.slros pulled' eve n
against C incinnati's bull pen
in the seventh, when Chri s
Burke singled home the tyi ng
run for his lirst career RBI.
Lane has three homers thi s
season off the Reds .'. Paul
Wilson _ .a .Pair of two-ruit
shots and a three-run drive.
His three-run shot off Harang
gave him I 0 RB.I s on the four

Rehabilitation Center
obserVes open house, A3

homers.
· Lane tied his career high
with four hnme nms last season in 107 at-bats. This time ,
he got No. ~ in only ri s 44th
a! -bat.
Pena had hi s breakout season last ye ar afier Ken Griffey
Jr. Lure his hamstring. requiring surgery in August. The·big
outfielder linall y wu'ted hittin" the. breakin g ball and lay.
ing oil bad pitches, allo.w:ng
him to put his' incredibl e
power to Lise _ he hits balls to
the · deepest re&lt;tchcs of the
park in batting ~ r act ice.
His latest drive left the ·bal
will; . such an author itative .
"crack!" that everyone on the
field stood and watched it soar
toward the upper deck. Only
one ball has gone farther' in
the pai-k _ last August, Adam
Dunn hit one that cleared the
hatter' s eve in center and ·
came to rest on ' driftwood in.
the Ohio Ri ver, some 535 feet .
from home plate.
~

.
..

~

Middleport • Pomer.oy, Ohio --

from PageBl
fo r- 3 with an RBI and
junior Jenny Olding was 1.for-3. Junior third basema'n

• Belpre soars past
Marauders. See Pa!)e 81

Page AS
• Ruth E. Leifheit, 89
· • Junior Long, 66
• Don 1;:. Mullen, 81
· • Jed Will, Jr., 51

.

Details on Pace A6

INDEX

·Health Care Edition
to be published

$(t99_ ..
... ' 549
'649
'999

$799... .
"'-fn... . . . . .

JUIIMI
lUng '""· ...

•

--

12 PAGFS

Calendars

A:3

Classifieds

B2-4

I

Mav20,2005
•

Peck was charged with illegal possessio n of a dru~ docu.
mem
and appeared in " Meigs
County Co urt on April 14.
whe11 the charge was ame nded to attempted possess ion
with a $500 fine. 5400 of
. wh ic h was 's uspended, $70 in
cou rt costs. 90 days in .1 ail.
su s pend~d . 40 hours in contmunity service and tw o years
probation.
Copen was charged with
. illegal possession of drug
documents and appeared in

'•.,.

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A:3

Editorials

M

Obituaries

As

Sports

Hurrv, lime is
running ou11

· weather

BSection
A6

® aoos Ohio Volley l'ublishiD!!: c...

'

POMEROY - Five students from Ea stern Junior
High School vi sited Carleton
School recently to read books
using
American
Sign
Language (ASL) to preschool
and school age students as
part of Deaf Aw areness Week.
"This . experience ·clumge s
them," Eastern ASL teac her
· Carly Hayes said. "The students see ·a di fferent s id~ ' of
life here (at Carleton)."
The Easte rn
students
included seventh- and eighth graders Tasha Barber, Aaron
· Moore, Zach Moore . Katlyn
Sauvage and Emily Welch .
who read/si gned bogks about
colors and animal s.
. Sandy Blakeman, manager
· of Community Services for
the Deaf and Hard of Hear ing
for Southern Ohio Medical
Center in Portsmouth was
one of many vendors at the
recent Deaf Awareness and
Beth Sercent/photo
Health
Fair held at Meigs
Eastern Junior High School seventh-graders Tasha Barber and Zach Moore were two of five stu·
dents who used American Sign language to read books about colors and anima ls to students High Scnool.
at Carleton School as part of Deaf Awareness Week .
Please see Deaf, AS
,•,,

Meig ., Co unt y Co urt on April
1-l. when she was released on ·
'a SI 0.000 recogni zance bond .
Her pre liminary hearing is set
for I I :Jo it.m. 011 April 28.
Copen also w;is cited in.
Pomeroy Mayor' s Court for
dri vi m~ with no dri ver's lice nse.
"We ·ha ve zero toler,mce for
the se types . of crimes,''
Pro!Ti !l said. "Fruth Pharmacy
arid Holzer Cl ini c e mployees
should be co mmende d for
their vigilancl' in recognizing
this type of behav ior."

I

Reedsville
woman dies
in accident
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MY DAILYSENTINEL.CO M

!UPPERS PLAI NS - A
t;1tal accident o ver th e weekend on Ohi o 681 four miles
east of Tuppers Plain s
remains un der i,n ves ti gation
by the Gallia-Meigs Post of
ihe State Hi ghway Patro l.
Autho ri ties identifi ed the
vtcttm of the colli sion
between a car and a motorcycl e as Tamm y L. Murphy. 34,
Reedsvill e. who wa s pronounc ed dead at the sce ne of
the 8:40 p.m. Saturda y crash
by Dr. Douglas Hun ter,
Meigs Counl y co ro ne r.
She was a passeng er: on a
inotorcycl e dri ven by Roge r
L. Murphy, 3\l. Reedsvill e.
that was eastbound when it
went le ft' of cen ter &lt;lllcl ' truck
head-on a westbound car dri w n by Brittany D. Coss in.
18, Reedsvi lle.
The occupants ot· the
Please see Accident. A5

,...,

Dickens' bond increased Long Bottom woman trapped in car overnight
J.
bers said Holter was last Trussell in. a search of the rura l
seeit
Sunday afternoon..
road s surround ing Holter's
after .weekend ·arrest
Deputy
Sheriff . Scott home ncar the Bashan comBY BRIAN
REED
BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINEL .COM

BY BRIAN J. REED
SREED@MYDAILYSENTtNEL.COM

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

....... ............ '499
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..... '399
'479
' 799

·

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
'

WEATIIER ·

$599_w

Pomeroy
Police Chief Mat;k E Proftltt
credits the insight of both
Fruths Pharmacy and Meigs
Holzer Clinic employees for
recently · recognizing an
alleged forged pre scription
for the pain killer Percocet.
According to the Pomeroy
Police Qepartment report, two
females, Michelle M. Copen,
28, Cheshire, and Erica N.

and detained Copen for questioning . Copen allegedly told
Casto that she and Peck forged
the prescription.
·
Whe n Caslo · questioned
Peck, whom the anginal prescription belonged to , Peck
allegedly conlirmed that both
she and Cope.n had changed the
wording on the sc ript. Peck
also alle gedly said that she
.allowed Copen to use her rnedical card to get the prescription.
Both women were placed
under arrest at the scene .

,•'

• OVCS presents
. winter sports awards.
See Page A3
• Wild fire burns in
Wayne National Forest.
See Page AS
• New program supervisor
named. See Page AS
• Meigs honor rolls .
See Page A6

Wl'a ,..,..

POM~ROY

Peck, 18, Cheshire, allegedly
attempted to 1111 a forged prescri ptton at Fruths Pharmacy
at around 5:33p.m. on April9 .
The report states that
employees
from
Fruth s
Pharmacy
contacted the
unnamed physician at Holzer
Clinic who had written the
script. The physician informed
Fruth s employees that he had
written th e prescription for
Traubel , not Percocet.
Pomeroy Patrol man Jonathan
Casto was cillled to the scene

J

and Daily Sentinel

!;If

SERGENT

BY BETH SERGENT

•.

t.,u.wry """

. .Bv BETH

B~E~GENT@MYDAI LYSENTINEL.COM

I

INSIDE

Serta ~t saoep.r .

W\\\\ ,mvdailv"'""""' ·''""

:!00;)

.RAISING DEAF AWARENESS

Hrancli Jo nes also plated a
Urbana falh to 6: 15 on
run with a sacrifice.
. the season and . 1-5 in the
Luws (7-5) pi cked up the AMC South Divi sion .
win by going the di stanc e.
Ri o Grande will host
She stru c k out three. Mountain State on Sunday
walked one and sur.ren- in non- conference action .
dered six hits and tw o run s Game on e will begin at ·2
(one earned).
p.m.

&lt;!9alltpohs 11Baflp m:rthune
t}otnt ~leasant i\egtster

ll iESD.\Y. ,\1'1{11 . t&lt;J ,

Police credit employees with recognizing alleged forged prescription

SPORTS

Morgan We ber followed Nutter and Weber each
with a single to give Eastern · &gt;Cored once.
runners on the corners with
Clatterbu ck;
Morr is,
· nobodY away.
Culver and C hevalier each
Shana Snyder ' s single ·had a hit for Warren in the
... Plated Nutter and ga ve EHS. twilight setback.
Eastern heads to Stewart'
a 2-0 advantage. . then
Koblent z reached on ,. an today. for a Tri -Valley
· error that plated Weber· for a Conf, rence Hocking divi'
. three-run. advantage.
· s·ion · tilt witb Federal
Warren· added it s lone run
Hoc kin g. G,a me time is
in the seventh, as Pottmyer.
sc heduled for 5 p.m .
...
scored on a Morris doubl e to
cut the lead to 3-I. .Thal was
Eastern 9, Warren 5
as close as th e Warri o rs Wmron . 000 0 13 1 - 53 9
Eastern
102 222
x - 974
, would get.
Hurder and Martin . Krista Wll ite and
Smith led the Eagles with Casey Smith ; WP . - Wh ite. LP two safeties, while White. Hurder.
Bissell , Nutter, Weber and
Eastern 3, Warren ~
Snyder rounded out the htt Warren 000 000 1 , - .1 4 4
000 01 2 x - 3 7 0
Eastern
column for the victors.
Cl atte rbu c~ and Martin . Kri sta White and
Koblentz and White each Casey Smith ; WP - Wh ite. LP had an RHI.while Knbl entz, Hurder.

'

-

;;o CF~TS • \oL ;;4 . No, th&lt;J

OBITUARIES

Rio

. Target stores to
clamp down on cold
medicines used to "Inake
methamphetamine, A2

. · Rocks;J?rings.

charges, and was released on a
$100,000 personal recognizance bond. Following that
MIDDLEPORT
- A appearance, Dickens appeared
Middleport man out on bond before Conimon Pleas Court
on multiple drug charges Judge Fred W. Crow lll on a
appeared Monday in Meigs motion to revoke bond tiled by
County Court on new charges·' ASsistant Prosecuting Attorney
alleging he kidnapped and Richard Hedges in connecti1&gt;n
assaulted a Middleport man, with the new charges agamst
and remains in sheriff'-s cus- Dickens. Crow set a cash bond
tody on a new cash bond set of $55,000. Dickens remained
in Common Pleas Court.
in the sheriff's custody at press
Elisha ·«Lacey" Dickens, time.
.
25, North Third Avenue,
Meanwhile, Hani.sandJoshua
Middleport, was · charged Dickens were released on
over the weekend with $100,(XX) personal recognizance
charges of felonious assault bonds. Pomeroy attorney Denise
and kidnapping, and receiv- BWJCe was appointed to repreing .stolen property, after sent Harris, and the Athens pubdeputies received a ,report lie defender was appointed to
that an unidentitled man had represent Joshua Dickens.
Elisha Dickens originally
been held against his will and
assaulted by.a group of men. was released on his own recogBen Harris, Jr., Middlepon, nizapce after appearing before
and
Joshua
Dickens, Crow on the March indictment,
Pomeroy, also were charged ·and additional felony charges
in the incident and appeared are expected.as the result of the
Monday morning . before discovery of crack cocaine and
Judge Steven L Story. An . presmption medications in his
investigating officer said yes- vehicll; at the time of his am:st
terday charges may be filed on the indictment.
Dickens and Brandi Hicks,
against others in the alleged
kidnapping and assault matter. 20, Middlepon, were arrested
Elisha Dickens appeared on Ohio 833 near · Rose Hill
before County Coun Judge . Road on the warrant .of indictSteven L Story on Monday . ment charging four drug-relatmoming on the weekend .• ed charges.

POMEROY A Long Trussell .said interviews with
Bottom woman was trapped family and friend s led him to
ih her overturned car for near- an investigation of sales
ly 24 hours before she was records at Wai-Mart in
found Monday afternoon.
Mason, W,Va .. which revealed
Mary · K. Holter, 81 , that Holter had written a
Holter Road , was found in check at the store late Sunday
her car over an embankment afternoon. A store security
oti · Wipple Road . near . tape showed her leaving the
Pomeroy 'after her family store parking lor and crossing
reported her mis sing yester- the Pomeroy/Mason Bridge.
day morning. Family mem Family . members joined

munitv yes terday morn ing.
Her vehi cle was found at midday yesterday. and Holter was
transpor1ed by medical helicopter to St. Ma ry\ Hos pital
in Huntington. W.Va.
Tru ssell said he 11·as not
immediately aw are of Holter's
condition, but swd she was
consciou s enough to tell him
and medical personnel that .i he ·
had been trapped overnight. •

Brian J. Reed/ (llloto

A Long Bottom woman was trapped in this vehicle overnight Sunday. Mary Holter was found yesterday afternoon and transported to a Huntington, W.Va . hospita l by med ical hel icopter.

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            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>April 18, 2005</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
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  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="232">
      <name>bernard</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2963">
      <name>bostick</name>
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    <tag tagId="3532">
      <name>mullen</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="87">
      <name>murphy</name>
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  </tagContainer>
</item>
