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GAimENING

Growing frUit trees can
beau · your garden, too
BY LEE REICH
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

What could be more delightful than
to be able to pluck and eat fruit from a
t~ee that you also admire for its beauty?
Every quality valued in a landscape
tree - whether it's textured bark, fall
leaf color, bright llowers, even decorative . fruits - can also be found in
some trees bearing edible fruits.
FIRST, A REALITY CHECK
When it comes to "luscious landscaping·• with fruit trees, special considerations are needed. Think twice
before planting an especially bountiful
tree near a terrace or driveway. Excess
dropped fruit could create a mess.
And producing fruit - e'speciall y
high-quality fruit ~ demands an extra
measure of energy from a tree, so also
pay attention to choosing a site with
sun and soil that suits it.
Pests might present a problem when
landscaping with fruit. which can he
as attractive to pests as to us humans.
Yet trying to spray one fruit tree nestled among other plants or growing
near a terrace brings its own set of
problems . You don 't want pesticides to
1 fall on nearby plants or in areas \liherc
people - especially children - play
or lounge outdoors.
The best way to avoid the need for
spraying is to do something ebe
before you even plant: Choose an
appropriate tree for your region , one
that is handsome and pest resistant.
and bears tasty fruits.
Fortunately. in every region of the
country there are plenty of handsome
trees that yield edible fruits without
the need for spraying or, in some
cases. even pruning. And some fruit
trees are adaptable just about everywhere.
LARGE, LUSCIOUS FRUITED,
ORNAMENTAL TREES .
. Among larger trees, for example,
consider
American
persimmon
(Diospyros americana) and hackberry ·
(Celtis occidentalis).
Persimmon has gracefully arch ing
limbs, checkered bark and slightly
bluish leaves . The rich, sweet fruits of

American persimmon have the. taste
and texture of wet, dried apricots that
have been dipped in honey along with
a dash of spice. They dangle like
Christmas ornaments from the branches well into fall.
Hackberr· is relllted to American
elm and has a similarly pleasing, vaseshaped growth habit. The real beauty
of this plant is more subtle, though,
and that is it~ bark , which is gray and
punctuated with corky ridges that cast
crisp shadows reminiscent of a lunar
landscape. The fruits. ripening in. late
summe r and fall. are small. round and
as sweet as dates. although the llesh is
admittedly sparse.,
FRUITS FROM MEDIUM-SIZE
l'REES·
Two examples of medium-size ornamental trees bearing edible fruits are
cornclian cherry (Comus mas) and
pawpaw (Asimina triloba).
Carnelian cherry is mostly planted
as ·an ornamental only because people
don't realize that the fruit is edible .
The fruits look and taste very much
·
like tart chen-ies.
Pawpaw (Asimina triloba) is a lush
tree whose large, dark green leaves
would look perfectly at home in a
tropical forest. \he fruit has a creamy_
texture and fla'ior much like banana,
along with hints of pineapple, avocado
and mango. Despite its tropical· airs,
pawpaw happily survives fri~id winters where temperatures d•p well
below zero.
SMALL,
PRETTY
TREES
BEARING TASTY FRUITS
If you lack the space to plant a large
or medium-size tree , there are a number of small trees that are pretty and
bear tasty morsels .
Juneben-y (Amelanchier spp:), for
example. This tree is a cloud of white
blossoms in spring. and fiery 'purple .
orange and yellow leaves in fall. Even
in winter, juneberries liven. the landscape subtly with their smooth, gray
bark and neat form. The blueben-ysize fruit is sweet and juicy, with the
richness of sweet chen-y and a hint of
almond.
· Medlar (Mespilus germanica),
another small tree, has large white or

AP photo

A pawpaw tree is seen in this photo in
Scarsdale, N.Y. Pawpaw (Asimina triloba) is a 'lush tree whose large, dark
green lea\flts would look pertectly at
home in a tropical forest. The fruit has
a creamy texture and flavor much like
banana, along with hints of pineapple,
avocado and mango. Despite its tropical airs, pawpaw happily survivf;ls frigid
winters where temperatures dip well
below zero.
pinkish blossoms., each handsomely
framed by a whorl of dark green
!Caves. The fruits that follow are interesting, if not attractive, resembling
small, russeted apples, tinged yellow
and flared open at the end opposite the
stem. After harvest, the fruits soften to
the texture and flavor of old-fashioned
applesauce, brisk and winy.
The trees mentioned abpve represent
only a slice of the pie of what's available for landscaping with fruit trees.
There are many others: quince,
Korean pine, mulben-y . and the rare
shipova, to name a few.
With only minimal effort on your
part, mostly in selecting the right plant
for beauty, adaptability and flavor, you
can have your cake (the tree) and eat it
(the fruit), tool

. Sunday, Aprilt9, 2009

A good tool makes
the kindest cuts
If you're going to buy just one toc;&gt;l for pruning, make it
a pair of handh-eld pruning shears. 1
This is the tool you'll use for pruning roses and for most
cuts on fruit plants, houseplants. and young ornamental
trees and bushes.
SHEARS' BUSINESS END
.
The business ends of pruning shears have either anvil or
bypass blades. With anvil shears. a sharp blade comes
down on the flat edge of an opposing blade. The flat edge
is soft metal so as not to dull the opposing sharp edge.
Bypass shears, in contrast. work more like scissors , with
two sharp blades sliding past each other.
Anvil shears generally are cheaper than bypass shears, and
the price difference is reflected in the. resulting cut. Too often,
anvil blades crush part of the stem at the end of the cut. And
ifthe two blades do not mate perfectly, the resulting incomplete cut leaves the severed stem hanging by a thread·of bark.
That wide, tla~ened blade also makes _it difficult to get the
tool righ\ up against the base of the stem you want to remove.
Because a pair of hand shears is such a useful tool - one
you might drop i0 to your back pocket each time you walk
out to the garden - check out weight; hand fit and balance
before settling on one. Can the blades be removed for
sharpening or replacement? A bypass pruner should have
an adjustable tension screw so the blades can be made to
dose easily. yet be tight enough not to bind on a stem.
SIZE AND OTHER FEATURES
Some shears are tailored to fit small hands or left hands.
The blades of some bypass shears are hooked at the end to
help prevent a stem from slipping free of the jaws as you cut.
Other shears achieve the same effect with a rolling action of
one ~ypass blade along the other as the handle is squeezed. A
ratcheting action makes it easier to .slice through thick stems,
but you do have to squeeze repeatedly for a single cut.
Shears might ease hand strain by having grips that rotate
as you make the cut.
CARE
Give any pair of pruning shears care and it will give you
years of service. Dirt can nick or dull sharj) edges, so give the
blades an occasional wipe with an oil-dabbed rag. Clean off
sap with a rag .dipped in a solvent such as kerosene.
Periodically apply a few drops of oil to the bolt that joins theblades, as well as to the spring that spreads the handles.
Pruning shears cut most easily and quickly if their blades are
sharp, and clean cuts heal quickest. On anvil shears, sharpen
only one blade, and sharpen it on both sides. On bypass shears,
sharpen both blades, each on its outside edge only.
For all their us.efulness, pruning shears are not for pruning ·
. everything. Never at1empt to shimmy and wiggle the tool
through branches; this could hurt the plant and the shears.
Stems huskier than about a half-inch -across call for use
of a lopper or pruning saw.
And when it comes to nipping out shoot tips on outdoor
chrysanthemums or indoor avocados, for example, no tool
is more convenient or useful than your thumbnail.

Only t6K Mlos, N&lt;fN ~Trade!

MUSTSEEI

... tsen lss•sdr •....,. • • •

·

SALE $26,900

·
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.
2tiR,
4x4~
56K Miles HiiA

-PRiceito co"i8,•

-4x4,
· Cloth
71 Seating.
SLE Model,
Custom
P. SQts, Sunioof, Only 31K Miles

·

SALE $17,900

'

_,Or l'llu Oft• .., ... Milt

LTModel, Red, Sunnlol
te.t11er &amp; More, Only 21K t.titeo ·

Bnwe Elcl .. leatller Seating
One Owner. Must Sot!

SALE $13,900

·

Loided wioPIIons ·
Only 14K Miteo ·

COMPARE@ $16,900

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
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SALE $10,900

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.. 'SALE $13,900
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·

- i.iilifetlle'Ei&lt;i.: P Seats, P. Lock

•.

Cruise &amp; Tdt. Only 17KMies

.

SALE $13,800·

Bob Cook, Louis Bush, ~like l!ilergent
Don carter or Ronnie Arrowood
ror Your Autornothe Needs.

Brllk &amp; OMAC rlnandne4wllallle
Payments to &amp;!It Your IUdlet

eralore.com

• Indians' 14-run second
dooms Yankees.
SeePageBl

BY BETH SERGENT
· BSEAGENTOMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - Voters in
'Pomeroy will be faced with
two issues on the upcoming
May 5 ballot, including to
participate (or not) in a gasaggregation program and to
vote for (or vote do,wn) an
increase in the village
incorpe tax.
. Cllfrently, the village has a
one percent income tax on
those both working and liv-

•

ing · in Pomeroy who earn
income. The lax is usually
handled · through payroll
deductions. Pomeroy Village
Coun~'c'l . voted to place a
one-q · arter of a percent
· incre
on the ballot which,
if passed, would raise 'the
tot.al income tax to one and
one-quarter percent. Only
those who live in Pomeroy
will get a chance to vote on
the measure unlike those
who work in the village, pay
the tax but live elsewhere.

Page AS
• Harold 'Hade' Bland, n
• Gladys L. Freeman, 59
• Herbert Pu9,h, 83

•

Mayor John Musser has
said those on a fixed income
will not be affected by the
increaSe. Those who have
retired but decide to go back
to work earning new income
would pay the income tax
only on that neVJ income.
Musser has also said the
increase which would go
into effect June I if passed·
and would bring in $80,000
annually to the village's gen·
eml fund. In his proposal to
council• earlier this. year, ·

•

Musser · said he felt the as the head of a bargaining
increase was.the only way to unit I buying group for resi- ·
maintain cun-ent services dents who wish to partici ·
with village revenues contin· . pate in the program. The
uing to "dwindle" ~.nd village would then attempt
expenses continuing to grow. to purchase natural gas at a
The.other issue the voters reduced rate in comparison
will be considering is partic- to other utility companies ..
ipatio·n in a gas-aggregation This would affect cusprogram whi~h . Pomeroy tomers, including commerCouncil feels may ultimate- cial customers, not already
ly save residents money on on a gas U!ility company's
home heating bills.
plari. By bargaining with a
The issue, if passed, will
Please SH Voting, AS
allow village officials to act

ARC grant

Bv BRIAN

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTIIMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

.RAClNE - Racine has
been approved to receive a
from
the
grant
Appalachian
Regional
Commission in the amount
of $(66,513 to aid in the
· 4evelopment of its,. new
commercial business diskeeps
trici,-.according .to Mayor
some Bush secrets.
J. Scott Hill.
See Page A2
The new commercial ·
business
district, located
•.Modern Woodmen
directly across the street
plan local cemetery •
from Hill's Gas Station,
work. See Page A3
will eventually include a
Dollar
General Store and
. • Law You Can Use:
the
relocated · Home
. Motorcyclists need ·
National Bank.
· special insurance.
"This grant will he! p us
open ·uf the rest of the com· See Page AS
merc,ia development area,"
• ABLE offers .basic . .
Hill said.
,
algebra . .See, Page AS
The ARC grant specifically
relates
to the.
· • Roller coaster
upgrade
and
extension
of
lhat plunges 215
Sycamore Street. The pro;teet opens in Ohio.
ject .tentatively . includes
six catch basins, 1,678 lin- ·
. See Page AS
ear feet of curb and gutter,
. • US boycotting,
600 ' ton of asphalt, 3,740
· fran starring, at
linear feet of·concrete for
four-inch sidewalk , 300
UN raCism meeting.
linear feet of C-900 water
.See Page A6
line, four gate valves, one
fire hydrant , grading,
seeding and mulching.
Hill said with the help of
. Meigs County Engineer
Eugene Tripplet, · the vii·
lage came up with an engi·
neer 's estimate for the
entire
project
at
$208,147.20. In addition
to the $166k promised
· from ARC, Hill said the
county
has
promised
$20,000 in Community
Development Block Grant
mooey" leavipg the v\llage
to borrow around $10,000
Details on Page AS
to pay for the project.
, .
If the village hadn t
received the ARC grant,
Bill said it would've definitely "hindered development into that area." Hill
' a SECrtoNs - ta PAGES
said
by
developing
Annie's Mailbox
A3 Sycamore Street as an
entrance, this can also miniCalendars
A3 mize traffic problems at
Fifth and Elm Streets which
Classifieds
B3-4 is ·already a busy intersection. Hill said HNB plans to
Comics
use the newly upgraded
Sycamore Street as its
Editorials
A4 entrance.
Hill said the village
Obituaries
As recently
sent back the
paperwork
to receive the
Sports
B Section
grant but has not received
the funds, yet. He hopes to
Weather
As see,
work at least begin on
the
site
by the end of the
© 2009 Ohio Valley PublL1hlng Co.
summer and he didn't anticipate this hindering construction of the Dollar
General Store to be located
next to HNB .

WEATHER '

INDEx

•

"'" \\ \'. ~~~ ~ da il ~ ..,t•n l !nt·l tom

Commissioners ·
will assume
control of law
library operation

Commercial
OBITUARIES development .
plans under way

.,

~

Racine .
•
receives
$166K

Bs

H't..l.ICK.

Printed on 100%
Ret:ycled/:\ewsprint

Pomeroy voting.on two Issues

I

SPORTS

:! 0 . :!OOl)

•

•

• ot&gt;arrrB

_ . . . , ................ ,4'1111

.......,.,. ...,...........

-

INSIDE ·

.

AWO, Ra'ven Black Ext WI NeWill Lelther, All the power
optloos you 'MlUid expect!, NAV ROo. Onty 3$: Milef

computer donation, Aa

BY lEE REtCH

ON NEW. .IMPALAS
UP TO 72 MONTHS

--~~·
flrme•M•urmu
4DR, Pid&lt;up. PI1&gt;RI.IIner, SR5

Senior Center reteives

FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

iii···
'

O'Bleness joins ·
Lifeline of Ohio'on
organ donations, A3

•

'

J. REED

BREEOIIMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY Mei~s
County Commissioners Will
assume control of the county's law library under a new
state law.
.
·The library is now run by
the Meigs County Bar
Association and funded
through court fees collected
for that purpose. The library
is open to the public under
courthouse supervision.
Judge Steven L. Story and
Law Librarian Chanilelle
Spradling attended the commissioners' meeting .,pn
Friday to discuss t)le transfer of the library's operations.
Spradling is a part-time
county employee whose
primary responsibility is to
the
library's
update
research materials and
maintain the room, located
in the courthouse.
Story said t~e library
requires much less in ten-ns
of staffing and printed materials, because most research
is conducted on the county's
Westlaw online research
system: Because of the ease
of' using that system, few
books are now purchased.
· The library's operation
is financed through court
fees collected from all
three of the county's court
systems. It is open to the
public to use.
Because the cost of operating the library is so much
lower now with the advent
.
Beth Sergent/photo of computers and online
This weekend Brad Brown of -Racine, (left) and Rashell Boso of Portland were crowned research tools, more money
Southern High School's prom king and queen, respectively. Brown is the son of Joe and is returned to the county
general fund than ever
Beth Brown, Boso ls the daughter of Teresa Barker and Tom,Boso. .
.
before, Story said. Unspent
· library revenue goes into
the general fund at the end
of each year.
Gladys Cummins
The aaily operation of the
and Pastor Peter
library
will not change,
Martindale, repreStory
said.
However, a new
senting the Meigs
Law Library Resource
County National ·
Board
will be appointed by
Day of Prayer
commissioners
and judges
Committee, join
to
oversee
it.
The,
board will
County .
have rule-making authority,
Commissioners
hiring authority, and authorMichael Bartrum ,
ity to enter into contracts.
Tom Anderson and
Other business
Midk Davenport in
Commissioners. met with
proclaiming the
County Engineer Eugene
local observance
Triplett, and requested that
on May 7 at the
he organize a committee to ·
courthouse.
review subdivision regulaBrian J. Reed/photo
tions and that the committee
make recommendations to
comm•ss1oners
about
changes needed. Triplett
said the county's only subdivision
regulations were
Praver Committee, discussed will be closed at Mulberry
Bv BRIAN J. REED
plans for the week~long Avenue and East Second developed in the 1970's,
BREED;IIMYDAILYSENTINEL COM
observance. It will begin at 3 Street at Lynn Street imd and updates could address
POMEROY Meigs p.m. on May 3 with a pray~r Court Street will be closed potential problems with current and proposed subdivi·
County
Commissioners circle around the courthouse'. during the observance.
.sions
before they arise.
A closing service will be
At 7 p.m. on May 6. youth
signed a proclamation last
Commissioners
also
week designating May 7 as night events will be held on held at 7 p.m. on May 7 at
the parking lot, where vol- approved payment of bills
the National Day of Prayer the Pomeroy parking lot.
the
amount
of
A breakfast will be served unteers will read the Bible in
here. The county courthouse
$163,794.51.
will serve as the backdrop td public offi~ials at all lev- during the·week.
Present
were
Meigs County's obser-for a community prayer ser- els of local goverment at
Mick
vice on that date.
· 7:30a.m. on May 7, and the vance of tl)e annual event is Commissioners
Davenport,
Tom
Anderson
secondconsidered
the
Pastor Peter Martindale and courthou se prayer service
Gladys Cummins, represent- will be held from I 1:30 a .111. largest in the state, local and Michael Bartrum, and
Clerk Gloria Kloes.
ing the local National Day of to noon. Wes~ Second Street organizers say.

...

�ACROSS THE NATION

.The Daily Sentinel

Loss still
felt 14
years after
OK City
bombing
BY TIM TALLEY
ASSOCI ATEO PRESS 'WRITER

OKLAHOMA CITY

'- II was 14 years ago

when Doris Battle's parents were killed in the
Oklahoma City bombing, .
just two of the 168 people who died during the .
nation's worst domestic
terrorist attack.
·'I cart 't go home and
see · him anymore,"
Battle said of her father,
Calvin Battle, who died
with· her mother Peota
when the Oklahoma
City 'federal building
was bombed on April
19, 1995. And Battle.
said the passage of time
has not diminished the
·loss she still feels.
Battle was among 400
people who gathered
Sunday to observe the
14th anniversary of the
!XJmblng of the nine-storY
Alfred P. Murrah F.xleral
Building, an attack that
also injured hundreds of
people. The explosion of
a !ruck loaded with 4,000
pounds of ammonium
nitrate and fuel oil tore
the face off the building
and caused millions of
dollars in damage to other
downtown slructllres. ·
Timothy McVeigh was
·executed in· .200 I ·and
Terry Nichols is serving
multiple life 8entences on
federal and state convictions ror their convictions ·.
in
· the · · bombing.
Prosecutors had said the .
plot was an auempF to
avenge the deaths,of aboul ·.
80 people in the govern- .
ment srege at the Branch
Davidian compound in ·
Waco, Texas,exactly.two
y~earlier. • ··.··.. . · ..... ·.·
·Dr.. • raul Heath,: ·a
retired .psy9hologist witb
the · · ·. · Veterans
Administration 3J1d a
bembing "· • su~ivor,
attended the. cereiJIOI!Y ·at
'\he bombing · 1Jlettjq~al.
where J ,68 ·~rripty chaits
symboli~g the vicWriil ·

stt ort.

~· . ·~assy

t'ieltl

where tlie ·bUilding sloodt
. "Th~ . memory . of . tbe
bomllin~ i~jiJst as. clear

to4&amp;y ..as' i~. 'l\!alfthe ,c;ll!Y,;

.aft~ . tbe ·liombing. The

·,
t

'

memories run just like ii'
video ill my head," Heath
said; who placed flowers
at a gtanite memori~l for .
surviyo(s like himself. .
· Retired Marine · St11ff
SgL Ted Krey tie~
AmeriCan•flags to chairs·
bearing the names of Sgt.
Benj;~min ' . LaRanzo
Davis· . and,
Capt.
~andolph A. G?t~a.n.
killed m . the b~tldiqg's•
Marine Corps recruiting .

office. ·

"They're· fellow brothers. Marines are-like .that,"
said Krey; who was pat!
of a rescue team after the
,bombing
a few
.feet away when rescuers
pulled Guzman's · body
out of thetubble.
·
Richard Williams; the
building's former assis•
. tant manager, said it was
important that survivors .
and Victims' . family
members remember both ·
victims and rescuers.
"We will always do
this," said Williams,
who · was seriously
injured in the bombing.
"We're going · to do
· ·something every year.".
: During· the . ceremony,
the crowd observed 1(i8
seconds of sileQce and
survivors and victims'
family members read vic~
tiri)s' .names at the spot
that the Rev, 1bm Ogburn
of First Baptist Church of
Oklahc:&gt;ma City calle'd
'· "holy 'ground." ·
"h) our faith, we found
qope.~· he s;~id. ~·we were
wounded but no~ brolce!l.''

and was

On the Net
Memorial:
http://www.oklahomacirynationalmemorial.org/

PageA2
Monday, April2o, 2009

An occasional look at
g&lt;H'ermnellf promises and
holl' 11'1'11 they are kept.

J.

SNIFFEN

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON
Despite a pledge to open
government, the Obama
administration has endorsed
a Bush-era decision to keep
secret key details of an FBI
computer database · that
allows agents and analysts
to search a billion documents with a wealth of persoqal information about
Americans and foreigners.
President Barack Obama's
Justice · Department quietly
told a federal court in
Washington last week that it
would not second-guess the
previous administration's
decisions to withhold some
information about the
bureau's Investigative Data
Warehouse.
.
The Electronic Frontier
Foundation. a digital rights
advocacy group. had sued
under the Freedom of tiled in federal court last
Information Act to get · Monday with no other pubrecords showing how the lie word from ' the ·current
FBI protects the privacy of administration.
On April 3, the Obama
Americans whose personal
information winds up in the administration issued no
vast database .
presidential statement or
As a result. there is no general Justice Department
public list of all the databas- news release when it told a
es the FBI sucks into this federal court in San
·computer warehouse; no Francisco that a lawsuit by
information on how individ- AT&amp;T custom·ers to stop ·
uals can correct errors about domestic wiretapping by the
them in this FBI database: National Security Agency
and rio public access to must be halted to avoid disassessments the bureau did closing state secrets.
· of the warehouse's impact · Instead, a court brief con- ·
on Americans' privacy.
taining the decision was
"ill light of.all the fanfare filed electronically with the
at the highest levels of the San Francisco court at 8
administration about a new p.m. EDT Friday.
transparency policy, it's
Schmaler said the depattremarkable that not one n\ent had a statement· pr~- ·
word of additional material pared in case anyone .called
has been released as a result to a,sk about the filing. But
of that new policy," said in the NSA case, and the
David Sobel, the founda- FBI case, the department
did not follow ,the Bush
tion's lawyer in the case.
· The administration's han- administration· practice of edling of the . decision fit a mailing reporters a copy of
pattern that emerged this government briefs in newsmonth:' Highly visible worthy cases as soon as
announcements
when they are filed .with a ~ourt.
· Obama bPeaks with Bush
During the presidential
policy in order to open hid- campaign, Obama said
den government files. but an Bush invoked the state
almost stealthy rollout of secrets privilege too often,
decisions when Obama and Holder has ordered a
endorses secrecy.
review of those cases. But
"There has been a lack of Obarna has since reasse.rtconsistency on the pat! of . ed it . in "two cases where
the administration when it Bush earlier claimed it. to
comes to secrecy issues," prevent disclosure of his
said James Dempsey, vice anti-terror tactics.
president for public policy
The NSA wiretapping
at the Center for Democracy case, filed shortly before
and Technology, an open . Bush left office, was the
government
advocate. first time Obama asserted
"They do seem to be tom the privilege on his own to
between two conflicting try to kill a suit.
Last Monday's decision
tendencies: One is openness
and other is a control-the- not to release additional
news tendency ..But it's still documents about the FBI
early in the administration, data warehouse was the first
so I cut them some slack for one about a_ pending case
not having this fully thought .since Holder issued the new
out yet."
freedom of information
Justice
Department standard and said Bush-era
spokeswoman
Tracy decisions involved in pend. Schmaler offered a different ing suits could be revisited.
· explanation: "Some withU.S. District Judge
holdings are necessary in Reggie Walton had given
order to protect privacy, the .government 60 days to
national security and other decide whether the new
interests."
guidelines might alter its
There's no lack of ope'n- position. The government's
ness when Obama changes response declining' to disBush policies.
close more data did not say
On his first day in office, whether . the
Justice
Obama reversed a policy on Department used the time to
releasing government docu- re-evaluate the Bush-era
ments so there is a "pre- decisions.
sumpt.ion in favor of discloComparing the Obama
· sure." Attorney General decisions, attorney Sobel
Eric Holder promptly beat said. "The 'torture' memos
()bama's .deadline by two affected a handful of people
months for issuing new . while this database patenguidelines that urged tially affects ·millions of
release unless "foreseeable American citizens. The
harm" would result.
average American wa, not
· With a flourish. the Justice likely to be tortured at the
Department has opened two Guantanamo B.ay prison,
batches of secret legal opin - but they are likely to have
ions crafted 'to · support information about them in
Bush's
anti-terrorism this massive database which
polices. Jusi Thursday, four remains a blac~ hole. We
Bush-era legal opinions that don't even know what mate. relaxed restrictions against rial they 're collecting."
torture of prisoners were
Begun in 2004 , the data
made public, accompanied warehouse contains at least
by a department news 53 databases that are
release and a statement from refreshed regularly. Nearly
Obama.
three-quarters of the data
In contrast. the decision comes from outside the FBI.
to endorse Bush's withhold- Some 13,500 FBI agents,
ing of records ~bout the 2,000 FBI analysts and
FBI's data warehouse was selected other federal, state

and local law enforcement
officers on joint task forces
with the. FBI can access the
material, which inc.ludes
unclassified documents and
data classified confidential
or secret, but not top secret.
· The heavily censored
documents already released
show . the warehouse contains the FBI's electronic
case files; its lists of people
and groups "associated
with" violent gangs and terrorist organizations; criminal histories ·from the
National Crime Information
Center;. messages between
the FBI and pther agencies;
newspaper stories from 1
around the world; data

about lost , stolen or fraudulent passports; CIA intelligence reports: suspicious
banking activitY reports:
and lists of people barred
from aircraft or subject to
extra searches before !lying.
But the names of more
than half the data sets in the
warehoitse are blacked out.
In
the
· Justice
Department's brief. FBl
freedom of ·information
chief David Hardy said that
"knowledge of · the d:;tta
sources ... would enable
inoividuals involved in
criminal or ierrorist activities to adapt their activities
and methods to avoid de tee·
tion." New department

Find ways to de-stress
from workplace

BY SUSANNAH ELLIOTT

i

OHIO UNIVERSITY
JOURNALI SM INTERN

But shouldn't we have our
own time. as well'! His chi'·
dren are included in everyATHENS - As names on
Dear Annie: A few years thing, even adult New
: organ transplant waiting
ago, the company I work for Year's Eve . parties . He
Jtsts multrply, .Lifeline .. of
laid off a number of would never consider getOhio finds ' more ways to
employees.
This ba\1 a dev- ting a baby-sitter because he
educate
Ohioans
and
astating
effect
on morale,' misses his children so much
encourage or~an and tissue
but those o{ us who when they are with their
donation across the state.
remained
picked up the mother and doesn't want to
More
than
101 ,000
slack.
leave their side when they
Americans are on organ
The
situation
hasn't
are
spending time with him.
transplant waiting lists .curimproved,
and
IQ-hoor
days
·
Is
there a time and place
rently, and 8.500 of those
are still the norm. I go in for children lobe present. or
waiting
are
Ohioans.
early
and stay late to do the am I just overreacting? According . to the U.S.
ne~essary
paperwork. Shamefully Jealous
Department of Health and
are
underDear Jealous: Your
Because
we
Human Services. 77 people
staffed,
everyone
else
is
boyfriend
is having a comreceive organ transplants
also overworked. If I don "t mon divorce· guilt reaction.
each day. but I9 people die
do
it, it won't get done.
He's trying to make up to
each day waiting for trans~y
wife
suggested
I
work
his daughters for the time he
plants that can't happen
my
regular
shift.
and
that
if
doesn't
spend with them.
because of the organ donor
the
work
doesn't
get
done,
but
he's
overdoing it by
shortage.
someone
hij!her
up
would
allowing
them to attend
On Nov. 14, · 199S,
finally realize there is a adult parties and interfere
Athens . County resident
problem. This is really not with his romantic relationJohn Bise became one. of
an
option. I feel personally ships. The girls do need to
·those lucky 77 people. He
responsible
for my depart- come first, however. Try to
said Friday the 13th
ment,
and
if
things are left find a way to incorporate
became a lucky day for him
Submltt8d photo unfinished, innocent people ·them into as manyact1vities
because it was on that day John Bise, left, stands with Lynn O'Leary, RN, Lifeline of Ohio liaison for O'Bieness
will suffer.
as you can, while gently
that he received · a phone
Memorial
Hospital.
O'Leary
arranged
to
have
a
panel
of
the
Lifeline
of
Ohio
Donor
Family
I
worry
constantly.
It
.informing
your boyfriend
call telling him he could
me
up
at
night.
I
canthat
overindulgence
does
keeps
Quilt
displayed
at
the
hospital
in.
recognition
of
Ohio
Organ
and
Tissue
Donation
receiv~ a heart transplant.
not
get
more
help
as
the
·
them
no
favors.
Bise, . ari ambassador for Awareness. The quilt was created by family members to honor their loved ones who, in
Dear Annie: I feel so sad
company has an ongoing
· ·
Lifeline of Ohio, has since death, passed on the "gift of life" ·to others.
hiring
freeze.
I
enjoy
what
I
for
the women who are
become an educator for '
·
.
.
also
a
large
part
of
GIFT
His
other
passion,
though,
do
when
I'm
not
constantly
ashamed
to have guests in
organ donation and a . JUst taken m dtfferent
and
groups
like
it
across
overworked
and
stressed
their
homes
. I'm 60 and
is
ensuring
that
more
people
·source of support for fel- dosages.
Somettmes,
out.
For
several
reasons;
.
have
lived
in .everything
Ohio.
On
April
18,
Lifeline
on organ transplant waiting
low transplant recipients. though, members prov~de
Bise participates in an · support to others outstde of Ohio will hold a Walk of lists enjoy happy endings changing jobs is not possi- . from a c&lt;)mp trailer to a
ble at .this time. I feel five-bedroom home. ·
.Hope from l to 4 p.m. in · like his.
County th~ ¥roup~.
Athens/Meigs
trapped.
Any . sug~estions?
While ·a young military
the
Chillicothe
Yoctangee
Through
organ
donation,
group called GIFT (Giving
I m gettmg ready tO·!alk
Sleepless
m
the
wife,
I was blessed to parInspiration
For to a woman w~ose ·son d1ed, Park to increase awareness one person can save the
Suburbs
ticipate
in a women's study
Transplantation), a part of and . ~.he ~~nat~~ hts about organ and tissue lives of up to seven people.
Dear Sleepless: Many called
The
Gracious
Lifeline of Ohio. Most organs, he sard. She ts donation. On April 22, the Just one individual's tissue
employers
keep
expenses
Woman.
I
learned
that
a gragroup
will
hold
.
a
donation
can
benefit
as
members of GIIT are having a hard time with it,
down
by
making
employees
cious
woman
makes
people
recipients of successful · a~d somettmes we ~an pro- "Candlelight Vigil of liope. many as 50 people.
Remembrance
and
To become an organ and do the work of two (or feel comfortable in her
organ transplants, and the. vtde some comfort.
·group meets each month to
Meetmgs o.f GI~ are Celebration" at 7-:30p.m. at tissue donor, one can regis- three). Unfortun.atel&gt;', in. the home, whether it is a hovel
. share their experiences and casual, somet1mes rnvolv- the Lifeline of Ohio Donor ter at the time of their driver current economrc s1tuanon, or a palace. The key is
·give support to one another. mg crafts or meetmg at . Memorial Park on Kinnear license renewal. Ohio the alternative is sometimes focusing on the comfort of
Donor Registry enrollment to close up shop altogether. your guest, not yourself.
Bise said the advice and members ' homes for cook- Road in 'Columbus.
Most people ru;e genuineBise said that after he .forms are available at If your company can afford
perspective members give outs. Its next meeting is at 7
to
hire
more
workers
but
ly
honored to be invited to
·one another is very valu- p.m. at ·O'l31eness Hosp1tal . receiv~d his transplant, he Lifeline 'of Ohio's Web site,
able. "It's a very scary i~ Athens. Meeting loca- was fortunate .enough to be www.lifelineofohio.org, or refuses, it means you are share a bit of your life. If.
.thing, not knowing anything lions alternate each month · back horne in time for the Bureau of Motor being taken advantage of "friends" tum up their noses
·about it at first," he said.
between Athens and Meigs Christmas. and he did not Vehicles' Web site at and your wife's suggestion at what you have to offer,
have any of the health prob- www.ohiobmv.com. For · is valid. If, however, the it's their problem. not yours.
Bise said that members. County. ·
.
is teetering on the Gracious living is possible
"Our GIFT group is open lems that some' people expe- free donor cards or more company
who range in age from
brink of insolvency, you at any economic level. :middle school students to to anybody with questions rience after receiving a new information about organ don't have a lot of options. Shreveport, La.
·;senior citizens, often dis- or th.ou&amp;~ts. abou! organ organ . .Rise now works part- and tissue donation, contact You need to find a way. to
Dear Shreveport: A
·cuss the srde effects of donat1on, B1se sard. "It's time at. the Chauncey Fire
1
Lifeline "!Ohio at 1-800- de-stress:
. lov~Jy idea, although for
.:their medicine. He said · open to anybody and every- Depaf1:ment and enjoys 525-5667 or O'Bleness
Do you have a relaxing some it is easier ·said thim
.:that most of their medi- body.':
working on show cars on Memorial Hospital at (740) . hobby you can devote time done.
';cines are · similar, but are
Community outreach is the weekends.
592-4812.
to on a weekend? How
Annie's Mailbox is writabout scheduling dinner and ten by !athy Mitchell and
a movie once a week? A Marcy Sugar, longtime edi:
half-hour at the gym can tors of the ·Ann Landers
work wonders for your psy- column. Please e-mail your
&lt; POMEROY - 'The Area
.
. ~=-~
che, and don't discount the questions to anniesmail·:Agency on Aging 8 (AAA8)
benefits of a long, hot show- box@comcast.net, or write
;scrvi ng Meigs County has
er or bath.
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
·donated two "gently used" ..
Dear Annie: I am embar- Box 118190, Chicago, IL
rassed to admit this, but I 606JI. To find out more
:computers to the Meigs ~~~~
· :county Council on Aging
. am
jealous
of
my abo!lt Annie's Mailbox,
boyfriend's two daughters · and read features by other .
.;for use at the Senior Center
from his previous marriage . Creators Syndicate writers
·in Pomeroy.
· r~~ · !love his·children and know and cartoonists, visit the
.: "As AAA8 u~grades
-~ ._' f~ \
they should be the most Creators Syndicate Web
:;computer
equ1pment,
important people in his life. page at www.creators.com.
:;Senior Centers across the
·region received equipment
:donations from AAA8 for
:use in their centers," said
;AAA8 Planner Mindy
·Cayton. "The computers
:that' Meigs County was
VFW Post 9053, 7 p.m .. at
.:using were ·12 years old the hall.
:.so this is a very welcome
Monday,April20
:new addition to their equipLETART FALLS
·
&lt;:ment inventory.''
Letart
Township Trustees, 5
Meigs
County .
·: The
· Friday, April 24
p.m.
.
.
~Council on . Aging, Inc .
MIDDLEPORT · - Free
Thursday,April 23
~ (MCCoA) coordinates all
community dinner, 5 p.m.,
POMEROY
Meigs
colder adult programs through
Soil
and
Water Middleport Church of
.-.the Meigs Multipurpose
Conservation District Board Christ Family Life Center.
Submitted photo
. : Senior Center, said Cayton,
of Supervisors, 11:30 a.m. Goulash, fresh vegetables.
::-noting that the purpose of the Computer equipment was donated to Jhe Meigs Senior Center by the Area Agency on at the district office, 33101 green beans and dessert will
..MCCoA is . to provide ser· Aging 8. Here with the computers are Mindy Cayton, front, of the Area Ageny, with Rhonda Highland Road, Pomeroy.
be served family-style.
~ vices to Meigs County's
Rathburn, left back, and Tammy Cremeans .of the Senior Center.
Doors open at 3:30.
::older population that enables
:and promotes "aging in residents age 60 and older. vided the following services handicap access and home
place .'' All older adults resid- In 2008, 172 Meigs County in Meigs County: Senior modifications that ensure
jng in Meigs Coullty are residents received $950,170 Farmers Market Nutrition safety and mobility for .
Monday, April 20
_encouraged to pattlcipate in in PASSPORT services pro- Program · (SFMNP) . allows income-eligible seniors. In
Monday,
April
20
LONG
B011'0M
·:ihe. Multipurpose Senior vided by 40 providers. The ·income-eligible
eligible addition, AAA8 funded over
POMEROY
Inspection
Center's scheduled activities .. PASSPORT program deliv- seniors, 'to use five dollar 4,000 congregate meals; and of Chapter .186, OES, 7:30 Pearl Powell. former resi-.
dent of Long ·Bottom, will
Buckeye Hills Area ered nearly 11,200 · meals , coupons to buy · produce: nearly 5,600 home-deliv•
p.m.
at
the
Chester
Masonic
observe her · 80th birthday
:Agency on Aging is the provided over 52,000 hours $5,210 in coupons were ered meals with grants from
Hall.
on April 20. Cards can be
'area's administrator of of personal care and nearly redeemed with 114 seniors a variety of sources.
POMEROY
Meigs
sent to her at I 210 17th St.,
'PASSPORTservices, a cost- 1,700 ·hours of homemaker participating. The . Housing
For more information on
County
Garden
Clubs,
6
Vienna, W.Va. 26105.
among other coordinator completed three services, call 1-800-331- p.m., Pomeroy Library.
.·effective, !n-home alterna- s.ervices
Thursday, April23
projects for $14,980; these · 2644 or . visit www.areaa. .ti ve to nursing nome c.are resources.
Thesday,
April
21
SYRACUSE
Ann
,for Medicaid'eligible Ohio
Last year, AAA8 also pro- projects are geared toward gency8 .org.
CHESTER - Chester Sauvage will observe her
Council 323, Daughters of 90th birthday on April 23.
America, 7:30 pm.at the hall. Cards may be sent to her at
Thursday,April23
P.O. Box 4 . Syracuse. Ohio
TUPPERS PLAINS 45779.
POMEROY - Two local ·purchase around the Mei'gs sparking a new level of coordinator for the local initiative , agrees. "On Join
projects. will be completed County Museum in Pomeroy understanding and respect.
•
by groups of volunteers begilming a 9:30 a.m.
· "As a community· minded Hands Day, we want to •
•.
Taking Applications
Both groups need .more organization,
Modem improve the quality of life
from the Modem Woodmen
Camps of Pomeroy and volunteers to assist with the Woodmen has a proud his- in our area. By connecting
,. Gallipolis on Join Hands two projects.
tory .of sponsoring Join with others in the communi· HUD Subsidized
Jorn
Hands
Day
is
the
Day," says Steve ty. we can make an even
Hands
Day, May 2
Etflclency/1
Bedroom
Volunteers from
the only national day of service VanSpeybroeck, Modem greater impact.''
For more information or
Burlingham Camp will be designed to bring youth and Woodmen's fraternal direc·
;; 50yrs or qualifying dlaablllty
cleaning up ~he Alfred adults together to plan and tor. "We're inviting arid to volunteer your time to ~,,ALl · ~
Low Income priority
•
, Ceo;tetery located ·On State implement volunteer ser- encouraging other commu- help with the local Join
I(;
lfllllli{S
t
74D-992-7022
Route 681 beginning at 9 vice projects in their com- nity organizations to Join Hands Day project, co11tact
~ Alll ~~~
Silverheels
a.m. and those from the munities. As the generations with us to make a differ- Colburn at 740-992-5628,
ence.,.
or visit wwwJnodem-wood- • ~/,.....,~ A Realty Company-EHO
Gallipolis Camp will be work side by side, they
•
Dale Col burn, project meiJ.org.
planting tlowers they will learn more about each other,
•
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

O'BLENESS HOSPITAL

guidance for deletions like
t)lis cautions agencies to
"ensure that they are not
· withiJolding based .on ~pee ­
ulative or absttact"fears.''
·The released documents .
also show the FBI assesse&lt;)
the data warehouse's impact
on
the
privacy
of
Americans, but won't make
those assessments public
because it believes federal
Jaw doesn't require ihat.
The new Justice guidance,
however. Sl!YS agencies
"should not withb.old information simply because .
(they) may do so legally." It
urges release of information
that can · be made , public
without "foreseeable harm."

jS enior Center rec~ives . computer donation

•

~

a
.

"

Community Calendar
Public meetings

Other events

Clubs and
organizations

'

..

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'

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Birthday

Modem Woodmen plan local cemetery work

3A HP, 3-CYLINDERKUBOTA DIESEL ENGINE

I

•

Monday, April2o, 2009

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Donor recipient member of Athens/Meigs GIFT program .

In this Jan . 20 file
photo President
Barack Obama talks
to former President
George W. Bush as
former Vice
President Dick
Cheney listens,
right, after Obama
deliv~red his inaugural address at the
U.S. Capitol in
Washington .
Obama's Justice
Department quietly ·
told a federal court
in mid-April 2009
that it would not second-guess the pr91!i'
ous administration's
decisions to withhol.d
some information
about the ,FBI's
'"Investigative Data
Warehouse.
.AP pfloto

PageA3

BY THE BEND
ol

PROMISES, PROMISES
Obama keeps some Bush secrets
BY MICHAEL

The Daily Sentinel

�ACROSS THE NATION

.The Daily Sentinel

Loss still
felt 14
years after
OK City
bombing
BY TIM TALLEY
ASSOCI ATEO PRESS 'WRITER

OKLAHOMA CITY

'- II was 14 years ago

when Doris Battle's parents were killed in the
Oklahoma City bombing, .
just two of the 168 people who died during the .
nation's worst domestic
terrorist attack.
·'I cart 't go home and
see · him anymore,"
Battle said of her father,
Calvin Battle, who died
with· her mother Peota
when the Oklahoma
City 'federal building
was bombed on April
19, 1995. And Battle.
said the passage of time
has not diminished the
·loss she still feels.
Battle was among 400
people who gathered
Sunday to observe the
14th anniversary of the
!XJmblng of the nine-storY
Alfred P. Murrah F.xleral
Building, an attack that
also injured hundreds of
people. The explosion of
a !ruck loaded with 4,000
pounds of ammonium
nitrate and fuel oil tore
the face off the building
and caused millions of
dollars in damage to other
downtown slructllres. ·
Timothy McVeigh was
·executed in· .200 I ·and
Terry Nichols is serving
multiple life 8entences on
federal and state convictions ror their convictions ·.
in
· the · · bombing.
Prosecutors had said the .
plot was an auempF to
avenge the deaths,of aboul ·.
80 people in the govern- .
ment srege at the Branch
Davidian compound in ·
Waco, Texas,exactly.two
y~earlier. • ··.··.. . · ..... ·.·
·Dr.. • raul Heath,: ·a
retired .psy9hologist witb
the · · ·. · Veterans
Administration 3J1d a
bembing "· • su~ivor,
attended the. cereiJIOI!Y ·at
'\he bombing · 1Jlettjq~al.
where J ,68 ·~rripty chaits
symboli~g the vicWriil ·

stt ort.

~· . ·~assy

t'ieltl

where tlie ·bUilding sloodt
. "Th~ . memory . of . tbe
bomllin~ i~jiJst as. clear

to4&amp;y ..as' i~. 'l\!alfthe ,c;ll!Y,;

.aft~ . tbe ·liombing. The

·,
t

'

memories run just like ii'
video ill my head," Heath
said; who placed flowers
at a gtanite memori~l for .
surviyo(s like himself. .
· Retired Marine · St11ff
SgL Ted Krey tie~
AmeriCan•flags to chairs·
bearing the names of Sgt.
Benj;~min ' . LaRanzo
Davis· . and,
Capt.
~andolph A. G?t~a.n.
killed m . the b~tldiqg's•
Marine Corps recruiting .

office. ·

"They're· fellow brothers. Marines are-like .that,"
said Krey; who was pat!
of a rescue team after the
,bombing
a few
.feet away when rescuers
pulled Guzman's · body
out of thetubble.
·
Richard Williams; the
building's former assis•
. tant manager, said it was
important that survivors .
and Victims' . family
members remember both ·
victims and rescuers.
"We will always do
this," said Williams,
who · was seriously
injured in the bombing.
"We're going · to do
· ·something every year.".
: During· the . ceremony,
the crowd observed 1(i8
seconds of sileQce and
survivors and victims'
family members read vic~
tiri)s' .names at the spot
that the Rev, 1bm Ogburn
of First Baptist Church of
Oklahc:&gt;ma City calle'd
'· "holy 'ground." ·
"h) our faith, we found
qope.~· he s;~id. ~·we were
wounded but no~ brolce!l.''

and was

On the Net
Memorial:
http://www.oklahomacirynationalmemorial.org/

PageA2
Monday, April2o, 2009

An occasional look at
g&lt;H'ermnellf promises and
holl' 11'1'11 they are kept.

J.

SNIFFEN

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON
Despite a pledge to open
government, the Obama
administration has endorsed
a Bush-era decision to keep
secret key details of an FBI
computer database · that
allows agents and analysts
to search a billion documents with a wealth of persoqal information about
Americans and foreigners.
President Barack Obama's
Justice · Department quietly
told a federal court in
Washington last week that it
would not second-guess the
previous administration's
decisions to withhold some
information about the
bureau's Investigative Data
Warehouse.
.
The Electronic Frontier
Foundation. a digital rights
advocacy group. had sued
under the Freedom of tiled in federal court last
Information Act to get · Monday with no other pubrecords showing how the lie word from ' the ·current
FBI protects the privacy of administration.
On April 3, the Obama
Americans whose personal
information winds up in the administration issued no
vast database .
presidential statement or
As a result. there is no general Justice Department
public list of all the databas- news release when it told a
es the FBI sucks into this federal court in San
·computer warehouse; no Francisco that a lawsuit by
information on how individ- AT&amp;T custom·ers to stop ·
uals can correct errors about domestic wiretapping by the
them in this FBI database: National Security Agency
and rio public access to must be halted to avoid disassessments the bureau did closing state secrets.
· of the warehouse's impact · Instead, a court brief con- ·
on Americans' privacy.
taining the decision was
"ill light of.all the fanfare filed electronically with the
at the highest levels of the San Francisco court at 8
administration about a new p.m. EDT Friday.
transparency policy, it's
Schmaler said the depattremarkable that not one n\ent had a statement· pr~- ·
word of additional material pared in case anyone .called
has been released as a result to a,sk about the filing. But
of that new policy," said in the NSA case, and the
David Sobel, the founda- FBI case, the department
did not follow ,the Bush
tion's lawyer in the case.
· The administration's han- administration· practice of edling of the . decision fit a mailing reporters a copy of
pattern that emerged this government briefs in newsmonth:' Highly visible worthy cases as soon as
announcements
when they are filed .with a ~ourt.
· Obama bPeaks with Bush
During the presidential
policy in order to open hid- campaign, Obama said
den government files. but an Bush invoked the state
almost stealthy rollout of secrets privilege too often,
decisions when Obama and Holder has ordered a
endorses secrecy.
review of those cases. But
"There has been a lack of Obarna has since reasse.rtconsistency on the pat! of . ed it . in "two cases where
the administration when it Bush earlier claimed it. to
comes to secrecy issues," prevent disclosure of his
said James Dempsey, vice anti-terror tactics.
president for public policy
The NSA wiretapping
at the Center for Democracy case, filed shortly before
and Technology, an open . Bush left office, was the
government
advocate. first time Obama asserted
"They do seem to be tom the privilege on his own to
between two conflicting try to kill a suit.
Last Monday's decision
tendencies: One is openness
and other is a control-the- not to release additional
news tendency ..But it's still documents about the FBI
early in the administration, data warehouse was the first
so I cut them some slack for one about a_ pending case
not having this fully thought .since Holder issued the new
out yet."
freedom of information
Justice
Department standard and said Bush-era
spokeswoman
Tracy decisions involved in pend. Schmaler offered a different ing suits could be revisited.
· explanation: "Some withU.S. District Judge
holdings are necessary in Reggie Walton had given
order to protect privacy, the .government 60 days to
national security and other decide whether the new
interests."
guidelines might alter its
There's no lack of ope'n- position. The government's
ness when Obama changes response declining' to disBush policies.
close more data did not say
On his first day in office, whether . the
Justice
Obama reversed a policy on Department used the time to
releasing government docu- re-evaluate the Bush-era
ments so there is a "pre- decisions.
sumpt.ion in favor of discloComparing the Obama
· sure." Attorney General decisions, attorney Sobel
Eric Holder promptly beat said. "The 'torture' memos
()bama's .deadline by two affected a handful of people
months for issuing new . while this database patenguidelines that urged tially affects ·millions of
release unless "foreseeable American citizens. The
harm" would result.
average American wa, not
· With a flourish. the Justice likely to be tortured at the
Department has opened two Guantanamo B.ay prison,
batches of secret legal opin - but they are likely to have
ions crafted 'to · support information about them in
Bush's
anti-terrorism this massive database which
polices. Jusi Thursday, four remains a blac~ hole. We
Bush-era legal opinions that don't even know what mate. relaxed restrictions against rial they 're collecting."
torture of prisoners were
Begun in 2004 , the data
made public, accompanied warehouse contains at least
by a department news 53 databases that are
release and a statement from refreshed regularly. Nearly
Obama.
three-quarters of the data
In contrast. the decision comes from outside the FBI.
to endorse Bush's withhold- Some 13,500 FBI agents,
ing of records ~bout the 2,000 FBI analysts and
FBI's data warehouse was selected other federal, state

and local law enforcement
officers on joint task forces
with the. FBI can access the
material, which inc.ludes
unclassified documents and
data classified confidential
or secret, but not top secret.
· The heavily censored
documents already released
show . the warehouse contains the FBI's electronic
case files; its lists of people
and groups "associated
with" violent gangs and terrorist organizations; criminal histories ·from the
National Crime Information
Center;. messages between
the FBI and pther agencies;
newspaper stories from 1
around the world; data

about lost , stolen or fraudulent passports; CIA intelligence reports: suspicious
banking activitY reports:
and lists of people barred
from aircraft or subject to
extra searches before !lying.
But the names of more
than half the data sets in the
warehoitse are blacked out.
In
the
· Justice
Department's brief. FBl
freedom of ·information
chief David Hardy said that
"knowledge of · the d:;tta
sources ... would enable
inoividuals involved in
criminal or ierrorist activities to adapt their activities
and methods to avoid de tee·
tion." New department

Find ways to de-stress
from workplace

BY SUSANNAH ELLIOTT

i

OHIO UNIVERSITY
JOURNALI SM INTERN

But shouldn't we have our
own time. as well'! His chi'·
dren are included in everyATHENS - As names on
Dear Annie: A few years thing, even adult New
: organ transplant waiting
ago, the company I work for Year's Eve . parties . He
Jtsts multrply, .Lifeline .. of
laid off a number of would never consider getOhio finds ' more ways to
employees.
This ba\1 a dev- ting a baby-sitter because he
educate
Ohioans
and
astating
effect
on morale,' misses his children so much
encourage or~an and tissue
but those o{ us who when they are with their
donation across the state.
remained
picked up the mother and doesn't want to
More
than
101 ,000
slack.
leave their side when they
Americans are on organ
The
situation
hasn't
are
spending time with him.
transplant waiting lists .curimproved,
and
IQ-hoor
days
·
Is
there a time and place
rently, and 8.500 of those
are still the norm. I go in for children lobe present. or
waiting
are
Ohioans.
early
and stay late to do the am I just overreacting? According . to the U.S.
ne~essary
paperwork. Shamefully Jealous
Department of Health and
are
underDear Jealous: Your
Because
we
Human Services. 77 people
staffed,
everyone
else
is
boyfriend
is having a comreceive organ transplants
also overworked. If I don "t mon divorce· guilt reaction.
each day. but I9 people die
do
it, it won't get done.
He's trying to make up to
each day waiting for trans~y
wife
suggested
I
work
his daughters for the time he
plants that can't happen
my
regular
shift.
and
that
if
doesn't
spend with them.
because of the organ donor
the
work
doesn't
get
done,
but
he's
overdoing it by
shortage.
someone
hij!her
up
would
allowing
them to attend
On Nov. 14, · 199S,
finally realize there is a adult parties and interfere
Athens . County resident
problem. This is really not with his romantic relationJohn Bise became one. of
an
option. I feel personally ships. The girls do need to
·those lucky 77 people. He
responsible
for my depart- come first, however. Try to
said Friday the 13th
ment,
and
if
things are left find a way to incorporate
became a lucky day for him
Submltt8d photo unfinished, innocent people ·them into as manyact1vities
because it was on that day John Bise, left, stands with Lynn O'Leary, RN, Lifeline of Ohio liaison for O'Bieness
will suffer.
as you can, while gently
that he received · a phone
Memorial
Hospital.
O'Leary
arranged
to
have
a
panel
of
the
Lifeline
of
Ohio
Donor
Family
I
worry
constantly.
It
.informing
your boyfriend
call telling him he could
me
up
at
night.
I
canthat
overindulgence
does
keeps
Quilt
displayed
at
the
hospital
in.
recognition
of
Ohio
Organ
and
Tissue
Donation
receiv~ a heart transplant.
not
get
more
help
as
the
·
them
no
favors.
Bise, . ari ambassador for Awareness. The quilt was created by family members to honor their loved ones who, in
Dear Annie: I feel so sad
company has an ongoing
· ·
Lifeline of Ohio, has since death, passed on the "gift of life" ·to others.
hiring
freeze.
I
enjoy
what
I
for
the women who are
become an educator for '
·
.
.
also
a
large
part
of
GIFT
His
other
passion,
though,
do
when
I'm
not
constantly
ashamed
to have guests in
organ donation and a . JUst taken m dtfferent
and
groups
like
it
across
overworked
and
stressed
their
homes
. I'm 60 and
is
ensuring
that
more
people
·source of support for fel- dosages.
Somettmes,
out.
For
several
reasons;
.
have
lived
in .everything
Ohio.
On
April
18,
Lifeline
on organ transplant waiting
low transplant recipients. though, members prov~de
Bise participates in an · support to others outstde of Ohio will hold a Walk of lists enjoy happy endings changing jobs is not possi- . from a c&lt;)mp trailer to a
ble at .this time. I feel five-bedroom home. ·
.Hope from l to 4 p.m. in · like his.
County th~ ¥roup~.
Athens/Meigs
trapped.
Any . sug~estions?
While ·a young military
the
Chillicothe
Yoctangee
Through
organ
donation,
group called GIFT (Giving
I m gettmg ready tO·!alk
Sleepless
m
the
wife,
I was blessed to parInspiration
For to a woman w~ose ·son d1ed, Park to increase awareness one person can save the
Suburbs
ticipate
in a women's study
Transplantation), a part of and . ~.he ~~nat~~ hts about organ and tissue lives of up to seven people.
Dear Sleepless: Many called
The
Gracious
Lifeline of Ohio. Most organs, he sard. She ts donation. On April 22, the Just one individual's tissue
employers
keep
expenses
Woman.
I
learned
that
a gragroup
will
hold
.
a
donation
can
benefit
as
members of GIIT are having a hard time with it,
down
by
making
employees
cious
woman
makes
people
recipients of successful · a~d somettmes we ~an pro- "Candlelight Vigil of liope. many as 50 people.
Remembrance
and
To become an organ and do the work of two (or feel comfortable in her
organ transplants, and the. vtde some comfort.
·group meets each month to
Meetmgs o.f GI~ are Celebration" at 7-:30p.m. at tissue donor, one can regis- three). Unfortun.atel&gt;', in. the home, whether it is a hovel
. share their experiences and casual, somet1mes rnvolv- the Lifeline of Ohio Donor ter at the time of their driver current economrc s1tuanon, or a palace. The key is
·give support to one another. mg crafts or meetmg at . Memorial Park on Kinnear license renewal. Ohio the alternative is sometimes focusing on the comfort of
Donor Registry enrollment to close up shop altogether. your guest, not yourself.
Bise said the advice and members ' homes for cook- Road in 'Columbus.
Most people ru;e genuineBise said that after he .forms are available at If your company can afford
perspective members give outs. Its next meeting is at 7
to
hire
more
workers
but
ly
honored to be invited to
·one another is very valu- p.m. at ·O'l31eness Hosp1tal . receiv~d his transplant, he Lifeline 'of Ohio's Web site,
able. "It's a very scary i~ Athens. Meeting loca- was fortunate .enough to be www.lifelineofohio.org, or refuses, it means you are share a bit of your life. If.
.thing, not knowing anything lions alternate each month · back horne in time for the Bureau of Motor being taken advantage of "friends" tum up their noses
·about it at first," he said.
between Athens and Meigs Christmas. and he did not Vehicles' Web site at and your wife's suggestion at what you have to offer,
have any of the health prob- www.ohiobmv.com. For · is valid. If, however, the it's their problem. not yours.
Bise said that members. County. ·
.
is teetering on the Gracious living is possible
"Our GIFT group is open lems that some' people expe- free donor cards or more company
who range in age from
brink of insolvency, you at any economic level. :middle school students to to anybody with questions rience after receiving a new information about organ don't have a lot of options. Shreveport, La.
·;senior citizens, often dis- or th.ou&amp;~ts. abou! organ organ . .Rise now works part- and tissue donation, contact You need to find a way. to
Dear Shreveport: A
·cuss the srde effects of donat1on, B1se sard. "It's time at. the Chauncey Fire
1
Lifeline "!Ohio at 1-800- de-stress:
. lov~Jy idea, although for
.:their medicine. He said · open to anybody and every- Depaf1:ment and enjoys 525-5667 or O'Bleness
Do you have a relaxing some it is easier ·said thim
.:that most of their medi- body.':
working on show cars on Memorial Hospital at (740) . hobby you can devote time done.
';cines are · similar, but are
Community outreach is the weekends.
592-4812.
to on a weekend? How
Annie's Mailbox is writabout scheduling dinner and ten by !athy Mitchell and
a movie once a week? A Marcy Sugar, longtime edi:
half-hour at the gym can tors of the ·Ann Landers
work wonders for your psy- column. Please e-mail your
&lt; POMEROY - 'The Area
.
. ~=-~
che, and don't discount the questions to anniesmail·:Agency on Aging 8 (AAA8)
benefits of a long, hot show- box@comcast.net, or write
;scrvi ng Meigs County has
er or bath.
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
·donated two "gently used" ..
Dear Annie: I am embar- Box 118190, Chicago, IL
rassed to admit this, but I 606JI. To find out more
:computers to the Meigs ~~~~
· :county Council on Aging
. am
jealous
of
my abo!lt Annie's Mailbox,
boyfriend's two daughters · and read features by other .
.;for use at the Senior Center
from his previous marriage . Creators Syndicate writers
·in Pomeroy.
· r~~ · !love his·children and know and cartoonists, visit the
.: "As AAA8 u~grades
-~ ._' f~ \
they should be the most Creators Syndicate Web
:;computer
equ1pment,
important people in his life. page at www.creators.com.
:;Senior Centers across the
·region received equipment
:donations from AAA8 for
:use in their centers," said
;AAA8 Planner Mindy
·Cayton. "The computers
:that' Meigs County was
VFW Post 9053, 7 p.m .. at
.:using were ·12 years old the hall.
:.so this is a very welcome
Monday,April20
:new addition to their equipLETART FALLS
·
&lt;:ment inventory.''
Letart
Township Trustees, 5
Meigs
County .
·: The
· Friday, April 24
p.m.
.
.
~Council on . Aging, Inc .
MIDDLEPORT · - Free
Thursday,April 23
~ (MCCoA) coordinates all
community dinner, 5 p.m.,
POMEROY
Meigs
colder adult programs through
Soil
and
Water Middleport Church of
.-.the Meigs Multipurpose
Conservation District Board Christ Family Life Center.
Submitted photo
. : Senior Center, said Cayton,
of Supervisors, 11:30 a.m. Goulash, fresh vegetables.
::-noting that the purpose of the Computer equipment was donated to Jhe Meigs Senior Center by the Area Agency on at the district office, 33101 green beans and dessert will
..MCCoA is . to provide ser· Aging 8. Here with the computers are Mindy Cayton, front, of the Area Ageny, with Rhonda Highland Road, Pomeroy.
be served family-style.
~ vices to Meigs County's
Rathburn, left back, and Tammy Cremeans .of the Senior Center.
Doors open at 3:30.
::older population that enables
:and promotes "aging in residents age 60 and older. vided the following services handicap access and home
place .'' All older adults resid- In 2008, 172 Meigs County in Meigs County: Senior modifications that ensure
jng in Meigs Coullty are residents received $950,170 Farmers Market Nutrition safety and mobility for .
Monday, April 20
_encouraged to pattlcipate in in PASSPORT services pro- Program · (SFMNP) . allows income-eligible seniors. In
Monday,
April
20
LONG
B011'0M
·:ihe. Multipurpose Senior vided by 40 providers. The ·income-eligible
eligible addition, AAA8 funded over
POMEROY
Inspection
Center's scheduled activities .. PASSPORT program deliv- seniors, 'to use five dollar 4,000 congregate meals; and of Chapter .186, OES, 7:30 Pearl Powell. former resi-.
dent of Long ·Bottom, will
Buckeye Hills Area ered nearly 11,200 · meals , coupons to buy · produce: nearly 5,600 home-deliv•
p.m.
at
the
Chester
Masonic
observe her · 80th birthday
:Agency on Aging is the provided over 52,000 hours $5,210 in coupons were ered meals with grants from
Hall.
on April 20. Cards can be
'area's administrator of of personal care and nearly redeemed with 114 seniors a variety of sources.
POMEROY
Meigs
sent to her at I 210 17th St.,
'PASSPORTservices, a cost- 1,700 ·hours of homemaker participating. The . Housing
For more information on
County
Garden
Clubs,
6
Vienna, W.Va. 26105.
among other coordinator completed three services, call 1-800-331- p.m., Pomeroy Library.
.·effective, !n-home alterna- s.ervices
Thursday, April23
projects for $14,980; these · 2644 or . visit www.areaa. .ti ve to nursing nome c.are resources.
Thesday,
April
21
SYRACUSE
Ann
,for Medicaid'eligible Ohio
Last year, AAA8 also pro- projects are geared toward gency8 .org.
CHESTER - Chester Sauvage will observe her
Council 323, Daughters of 90th birthday on April 23.
America, 7:30 pm.at the hall. Cards may be sent to her at
Thursday,April23
P.O. Box 4 . Syracuse. Ohio
TUPPERS PLAINS 45779.
POMEROY - Two local ·purchase around the Mei'gs sparking a new level of coordinator for the local initiative , agrees. "On Join
projects. will be completed County Museum in Pomeroy understanding and respect.
•
by groups of volunteers begilming a 9:30 a.m.
· "As a community· minded Hands Day, we want to •
•.
Taking Applications
Both groups need .more organization,
Modem improve the quality of life
from the Modem Woodmen
Camps of Pomeroy and volunteers to assist with the Woodmen has a proud his- in our area. By connecting
,. Gallipolis on Join Hands two projects.
tory .of sponsoring Join with others in the communi· HUD Subsidized
Jorn
Hands
Day
is
the
Day," says Steve ty. we can make an even
Hands
Day, May 2
Etflclency/1
Bedroom
Volunteers from
the only national day of service VanSpeybroeck, Modem greater impact.''
For more information or
Burlingham Camp will be designed to bring youth and Woodmen's fraternal direc·
;; 50yrs or qualifying dlaablllty
cleaning up ~he Alfred adults together to plan and tor. "We're inviting arid to volunteer your time to ~,,ALl · ~
Low Income priority
•
, Ceo;tetery located ·On State implement volunteer ser- encouraging other commu- help with the local Join
I(;
lfllllli{S
t
74D-992-7022
Route 681 beginning at 9 vice projects in their com- nity organizations to Join Hands Day project, co11tact
~ Alll ~~~
Silverheels
a.m. and those from the munities. As the generations with us to make a differ- Colburn at 740-992-5628,
ence.,.
or visit wwwJnodem-wood- • ~/,.....,~ A Realty Company-EHO
Gallipolis Camp will be work side by side, they
•
Dale Col burn, project meiJ.org.
planting tlowers they will learn more about each other,
•
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

O'BLENESS HOSPITAL

guidance for deletions like
t)lis cautions agencies to
"ensure that they are not
· withiJolding based .on ~pee ­
ulative or absttact"fears.''
·The released documents .
also show the FBI assesse&lt;)
the data warehouse's impact
on
the
privacy
of
Americans, but won't make
those assessments public
because it believes federal
Jaw doesn't require ihat.
The new Justice guidance,
however. Sl!YS agencies
"should not withb.old information simply because .
(they) may do so legally." It
urges release of information
that can · be made , public
without "foreseeable harm."

jS enior Center rec~ives . computer donation

•

~

a
.

"

Community Calendar
Public meetings

Other events

Clubs and
organizations

'

..

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

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Birthday

Modem Woodmen plan local cemetery work

3A HP, 3-CYLINDERKUBOTA DIESEL ENGINE

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•

Monday, April2o, 2009

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Donor recipient member of Athens/Meigs GIFT program .

In this Jan . 20 file
photo President
Barack Obama talks
to former President
George W. Bush as
former Vice
President Dick
Cheney listens,
right, after Obama
deliv~red his inaugural address at the
U.S. Capitol in
Washington .
Obama's Justice
Department quietly ·
told a federal court
in mid-April 2009
that it would not second-guess the pr91!i'
ous administration's
decisions to withhol.d
some information
about the ,FBI's
'"Investigative Data
Warehouse.
.AP pfloto

PageA3

BY THE BEND
ol

PROMISES, PROMISES
Obama keeps some Bush secrets
BY MICHAEL

The Daily Sentinel

�.

:The Daily Sentinel
..

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 ·FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law r6Specting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
:· 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
the Government for a redress ofgrieva!'ces.
- The First Amendment tQ the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, April 20, the !lOth day of 2009. There
are 255 days left in the year.
.
Today's Highlight in History:
Ten years ago, on April 20, 1999, the Columbine High
School massacre took place in Colorado as two students ,
Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, shot and · killed 12 classmates and one teacher before taking their own lives.
On this date:
In 18 I2, the fourth vice president of the United States ,
George Clinton , died in Washington at age 72, becoming
the first vice president to die while in otfice .
.. In 1836, Congress voted to establish the Wisconsin
Territory.
In 1889, Adolf Hitler was born in Braunau am Inn ,
Austria.
·
In 1945, during World War II, allied forces took control
of th~ Germah cities of Nuremberg and Stuttgart.
In 1949, scientists at the Mayo Clinic announced they 'd
succeeded in synthesizing a hormone found to be useful in
treating rheumatoid arthritis; the substance was named
hcortisone." ,
ln 1968, Pierre Elliott Trudeau was sworn in as prime
minister of Canada,
In 1971, the U.S. Supreme Court, in .Swann v. CharlotteMecklenburg Board of Education , unanimously upheld the
use of busing to achieve racial desegregation in schools.
ln 1972;the manned lunar module from Apollo 16 landed on the moon.
In 1978, a Korean Air Lines Boeing 707 crash-landed i'n
northwestern Russia after being fired on by a Soviet interceptor after entering Soviet airspace . Two passengers were
killed.
· In 1988, gunmen who'd hijacked a Kuwait Airways
jumbo jet were allowed safe passage out of Algeria under
an agreement that freed the remaining 31 hostages and
ended a IS-day siege in which two passengers were slain.
· Five years ago: A tornado tore tbrougi] north-central
Illinois. killing eighi people. A judge ordered Multnomah
County, Ore., to stop issuing gay marriage licenses - but
also ordered the state to recognize the 3,000 licenses
already granted in the county.
· One year ago: Before a full house at Yankee Stadium,
Pope Benedict XVI celebrated his final Mass in the United
States, blessing his enormous U.S. flock and telling
Americans to use their freedoms wisely. Secretary of State
(:ondoleezza Rice mocked anti-Amencan cleric Muqtada
ai-Sadr as a coward during a visit to Iraq. Danica Patrick
. became the first female winner in lndyCar history, captur. ing the Indy Japan 300.in her 50th career start.
Today's Birthdays: Supreme Court Justice John Paul
·Stevens is S9. Actor Leslie Phillips is 85. Actor George
l'akei is 72. Singer Johnny Tillotson is 70. Actor Ryan
O'Neal is 68. Bluegrass singer-musician Doyle Lawson
(Quicksilver) is 65.
. Thought for Today: "If anyone tells you something
, strange about the world, something you had never heard
before, do not laugh but listen attentively; make him repeat
it, make him explain it; no doubt there is something there
~orth taking hold of." - Georges Duhamel. French author
.( 1884-1966).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. Thev should be tess
than 300 words. All lerters are subject ro· editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
,unsigned letters will be published. Leriers should be in
-good taste, addressing issue;&gt;, not personalities. Leiters of
. thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept•·
: ed for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
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(UsPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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PageA4

OPINION

Monday; April2o, 2009

Team 0 turns lift on sanity UJith (right-wing extremists'
I've got it.
for Islamic terrorism.
oriented" pathologies that are
But not too far. That is, therefore beyond civilized
After reading and rereading lhe surreal Department
Napolitano, who supports political discourse. So, too, is
of Homeland Security intel
the DHS report. is plenty opposition to overweening
report on
·'right-wing
conlent to deal in the politics fedeml powers and "sinsleextremi sm" that clearly desof fear - just not fear of issue" opposition to abortion.
ignates conservative politiDiana
blam . Fear of conservati&gt;rn, What we are seeing, in other
cal dissent as part of the
West
however. is OK by her.
words, is .the most extraordithreat. I finally fi1,ured out
· How to make! it stick'l The nary governmental attempt in
why il all seems so familiar.
DHS report repeatedly reach- history to limit the spectrum of
First, there's .the report's . L.;..ll...!....
cs back for inspiration to the debate by· demonizing a range
leading villain, the "military
The fact is. we've seen this 1995 Oklahoma City bomb- of positions as "right-wing
veteran" returning from war · cast of characters before _ ing of a federal building, cit- extremism." 1his attempt is
in Iraq and Afghanistan ing "military veteran" and surely not only unconstitutionthe "potential ·tone wolf' ter- nhany times ~foreH- lln ~- doniestic terrorist Timothy al but also un-American.
0
rorist with the lethal capabil- 1 e schloc
yw
McVeigh. one 6f 42 million
But nm in the Obama era.
movies that year after year har·
ities. That could raise goose vest a diseased crop of villains veterans who, not incidentally, This is a time when the folbumps in anyone, right?
from the American heartland,. have not blown up a federal lowing statement would surely
Then there are the "white endlessly returning them to the · building, as American Legion set off a red alert with all fedsupremacists" well known screen as the "crazed veteran," chief David Rehbein noted in . eral, state, local and tribal law
for their "longstanding the "religious zealot" and the · an outraged letter to enforcement authorities whO
exploitation of social issues anti-Immigration
"Nazi :". Napolitano. But while the received Homeland's report:
"What we have to do is
such a' ab01tion, interracial' . These are the stock villains _ DBS report is thin on Specifics
crime and same-sex mar· all-racist, naturally _ who are and devoid of sources, it . bring back the recognition
riitge." (I don 't get the con- now similarly demonized in · nonetheless quite helpfully that the people of this country
nection either.) According to the government 's repor-t: .
exposes the federal govern- can solve it1 problems. I stiU
the govemmeni, we just
This fantastic worldview ment's oulmgeous strategy to believe the answer to any
might see a growing move- that sees the country imperiled portray conservatism as ·problem lies with the people.
I believe in state's rights and I
ment of similarly pro-life, by military heroes, traditional "right-wing extremism."
pro-law-and-order, pro-mar- values and even border secUJiThe repot1 detines the tenn believe in people doing as
riage ... "white suprema- ty meshes pertectly with ·the this way: "Right-wingextrem- mucb as they can for themcists ."' Enough to make any- also-official flip side t~;~ . such ismintheUnitedStatescanbe selves at the community level
one hyperventilate, of course. paranoid liberal fantasy: broadly divided into those and at the private level. I
And what about the "right- namely, the harmlessness of groups, movements. and believe we have distorted the
wing extremist" who "adopts the Islamic brand or ·'extrem- adherents that ru·e. primru·ily balance of our govemment
the immigration issue as a ism." which Homeland · hate-oriented (based on hatred today by giving powers that
call to action"? Or the "many Security . Secretmy Janet of particular religious. racial or were , never intended to be
right-wing extremists" who Napolitano recently renamed, ethnic groups), and those that given in the Constitution to
"are antagonistic toward the and with a sn'llight face, "man- are mainly antigovernment, . that federal establishment."
In the language of
new presidential administra- caused disasters." Hollywood, rejecting federal authority in
tion and its perceived" or course, doesn't touch such favor of state or local autliori- . Homeland Security~ which
extremist"
perceived? - "stance on a "extremism" either. sticking ty. or rejecting government " right-wing
range of issues" including with right-wingers-gone-wild anthority entirely. It may preparing for "right-wing
immigmtion, expanding gov- to the very la1t reel.
include groups and individuals radicalization and recruitBut Hollywood-fantasy- that are dedicated to a single ment"" said that?
emment programs and gun
control? According . to the turned-Washington-reality issue. such a1 opposition to
Ronald Reagan.
report, such "right-wing isn't simply cnunmy enter- abortion or immigration."
· (Diana West is the author
extremists are increasingly tainment. It presents a grave
Presto - the federal gov- of "The Death of the Growngalvanized by these concerns menace to political discourse emment lta1 just taken key up: How America's Arrested
and leverage them as drivers in this country. "We want to conservative positions, from Development Is Bringing
for recruitment." Sounds like move away from the poliiics opposition to Islamic law to Down Western Civilization,"
a GOP voter drive to me. Cue of fear," Napolitano declared support for security along our and blogs at dianawest net.
up 1'Psycho"-strains of last month to explain her ~ew Mexican border, and cast tl1em She can be contacted via
shrieking violins.
secretary-caused euphem1sm as p1imitive, "primar.ilihate- dianawest@ vefizon.ner).
WUATEVER
V,_.IVERSE

MV TASTE'S DE.TE:RNHNEP

"JJ.IE.S'TVLEs, 7HE~S,
-n.lE MUSIC, -ntE. MoVrES,
EVEN "fl..E F.oo~

··Obituaries

Analysis: Obama experiences a week of change.
States," he said in a statement
on the totture .memos that
cbuld easily have beey~ written
WASHINGTON. - .In a about the troop withdrawal.
whirlwind week of change,
Attorney General Eric ·
President Barack Obania Holder added one more
jettisoned Bush administra- assurance, announcing . the
tion policy on greenhouse administration would pay
gases, shone an unforgiving legal expenses for anyone in
light on its support for tor- the intelligence agency who ·
ture as an interrogation tac- needs a lawyer as a result of
tic and eased its restrictions canying out interrogations .
on Cuba.
covered by the memos.
But there are limits. even
Holder also formally
to · this new president's revoked every. legal opinion
power, and a campaign or memo issued · during ·
pledge to seek· a ban on Bush's presidency that justi·
assault weapons is an early . fied interrogation programs,
casualty as a result.
a largely symbolic step
And while the promise of .since Obama had already
arguably said his administration
change · was
Obama's single most pow- wou.ld not rely on them .
The release of the· docu- .
erful asset m last year's
campaign , the week demon- ments had been the subject
strated anew how carefully of a long, fierce debate,
he calibrates its Impact.
with a deadline looming as
"We have been through a the result of a lawsuit
dark and painful chapter in brought by the American
our history," · the president Civil Uberties Union.
No lawsuit drove the tim·
said In a statement that
accompanied the release of ing of the new Cuba policy,
once-secret memos outlining which was released in the
torture techniques the Bush · run-up to Obama 's first
. presidential trip to Central
administration allowed.
"!lut at a time of great America . And .here again.
challenges and di sturbing Obama went further than
disunity. nothing will be some wanted and not us far
gained by spending our time as others had hoped .
and ener11y laying blame for
Under the new policy, the
1he past .'
, •
admini stration lifted restricThat was des igned as a tions on Cuban-Americans
reassurance to the CIA who want to travel and send
employees who carried out money to Iheir island homewaterboarding , whkh simu- land and Creed U.S .
lates drowning , and the telecommunications compaother harsh interrogation nies to seek business there.
Some of the changes
techniques that former
President George W. Bush specifica ll y undid what
once sanctioned and that Bush had impose&lt;;!: tight·
Obama has now banned ened travel restrictions on
much as hi s decision to Americans wishing to visit
leave combat troops in Iraq relatives in Cuba: limiting
a few month s longer than he payments to immedi ale
once promi sed wa' a bow to family; and bans on seeds.
the Pentagon.
clothmg, personal hygiene
·..1 will alway&gt; do whatever items. veterinary medicines
is necessary to protect the and - later - cell phone.~
national security of the United from hu ma nitarian pa~ce b.
BY DAVID ESPO

AP SP ECIAL CORRESPONDENT

But the broader embargo
remains in place a' it has since
the Kennedy administration, its
existence meant now as then to
ptod the Cuban government
into democratic reforms.
In response to the
announcement,
Cuban
President Raul Castro said he
is ready to put "everything"
on· the table in talks with
Americans. including questions· of human rights and .
political prisoners. If so, .that
would mark a change from
decades of Cuban insistence
that those issues were not
subject for discussion .
Secretary of State Hillary
Rodham Clinton pronounced
Castro's comments an overture , and said , "We are taking
a very serious look at how
we intend to respond.''
Still. despite sentiment
within the
IS-member
~aribbean Community''? lift
the U.S. embargo, Jammca s
prime minister: . Brnce
Golding, said the organization had agreed not to push
Obama too h&lt;rrd on the issue.
By contrast, there was little that was nuanced about
the
Environmental
Protection
Agency 's
announcement Friday that
carbon · dioxide and five
other greenhouse gases
emitted by cars and many
industrial plants ''endanger
public health and welf:tre .''
It was prompted by a
Supreme Coutt ruling two
years ago ti)at said greenhouse gases are pollutants .
under the Clean Au· Act and
must be regulated if found
to be a danger 1o human
hea llh or public welfare .
Confronted with the high
coutt's decision . the Bush
administmtion smiled. leaving
for Obama :m i''ue he was
onl y too happy to seite. EPA
Administrator Lisa Jackson
' aid while the agency i' prepared to move forward with

'

I

~

.

regulations under the Clean
Air Act, the administration
would rather defer · to
Congress.
"The (EPA) decision is a
game changer," said Rep. Ed
Markey. D-Mass., who is
involved in drafting legislatio·n to limit greenhouse emisSions.
For all the changes Obama
has piled up since 'taking
office 87 days ago, his retreat
on assaull weapons is hardly
unique. He has already yielded on other relatively minor
issues. giving in to veterans
groups during the budget
debate, for example.
Pressed by Mexican
President Felipe Calderon
to help stem the flow of military-style assault weapons
from the United States ,
Obama said he still believed
that the ban !\lade sense .
And yet, he added: "None
of us .are under any illusion ·
that reinstatin¥ that ban
would be easy.' He said he
would focus instead on
using existing laws to stop
the flow of weapons prized
by elements of the Mexican
drug trade .
If anything , Obama's
closest allies in Congress
are probably relieved.
Speaker Nancy Pelosi · of
Califomia signaled as much
several weeks ago after
Holder said the administration
wanted to renew a ban that
lapsed and that the powerful
National Rifle Association
opposes strenuously.
"One good place to start
would be to enforce the
laws that are on the books
tight now," she said on Feb .
26 . " And I think the evidence points this out, that
the 'Bush administration was
not enforcing law."
(DMi&lt;l Espo lras CO\•~red
politics and govemment for
The Associate.d Press for
mort! tlrmi 25 years) .

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailrsentinel.com

20, 2009

..

Gladys L Freeman

.
.
RACINE - Gladys L. Freeman, 59, Racine , passed
away at her residence Sunday April 19,2009.
.
Born in Meigs County on Dec. 31, 1949 she was the
daughter of the late Millard and Esta Reeves Brickles. She
was employed at Ohio University.
·
She is survived by her husband Melvin .B. Freeman, chi!- .
dren James (Laura) Barker of Wellston, Ronald (Deb)
Barker, and Jason Barker all of The Plains; step-childten
Shari Eblin, Judy (Ronnie) Hawley, Jeanette (Rick)
Lunsford all of Racine; 13 grandchildren and 10 greatgra11dchildten; a sister Carolyn (Jack) Perry of Pageville;
. ·and several nieces and nephews.
ln addition to her parents she was preceded in death by a
sisterJuanita BrickJes, a brother Larry Brickles, and a stepsons Donnie and Douglas Freeman.
Services will be at 1 p.m ., Wednesday at Bigony-Jordan ·
Funeral Home with Rev. Jan Lavender officiating. Burial
will be in Wells Cemetery. Visitation is from 2-4 p.m: and
6-8 p.ni. tomorrow at the funeral home.
You may sign the guest register or leave a condolence for
family
.the
.
. at www.bigonyjordanfuneralh(!me',corh,
.

Congressional art?
•

Deaths
Harold J. 'Hade' Bland
MASON - Harold J. "Hade" B]and, 77, of Mason,
W.Va. died Saturday, April 18, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
He is survived by his wife, Leta Bland of Mason.
Visitaion will be held from II a.rfi. to ·[ p.m. on Tuesday,
April 21, at the Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home.
Graveside. seritice will be held Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. at the
Graham Cemetery, New Haven, W.Va. with Pastor Charlie
Cundiff officiating.

Herbert flugh
RACINE - Herbert Pugh , 83 , of Racine died Sunday,
April 19, 2009 at the Pt.Pieasant Nursing and Rehabilitation
Center. Arrangements are incomplete and wtll be announced
. by the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy..

.

Monday ...Showers likely.
Wednesday ... Mostly
Highs around 60. South cloudy
in
the
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance morning ...Then becoming
· of rain 70 percent.
partly sunny. A 30 .~erce~t
Monday night ...Cioudy. chance of showers. Highs m
Showers likely in the · the .lower 50s.
evening ...Then a chance. of
Wednesday
night ...
showers after midnight. Mostly cloudy · m the
Lows in the mid 40s. evening ...Then becoming
Southwest winds 10 to 15 partly cloudy. Lows in the
mph. Chance of rain 60 per- lower 30s.
cent.
Thursday and Thursday
Thesday...Showers likely. night ...Mostly clear. Highs
Highs in the lower 50s . . in the upper 60s. Lows in
Southwest winds 10 to 15 the mid 40s.
•
mph. Chance of rain 60 .per-.
Frlday...Sunny. Hjghs in
cent.
.
the upper 70s.
Thesday night ...Cioudy
Friday night through
with a 50 percent chance of Sunday ...Partly
cloudy.
showers. Lows in the upper Lows · in the loWer 50s.
30s. West winds 5 to 10 mph. Highs in the lower 80s;

POMEROY - The Meigs schooling. may want to help
County Adult Basic and their ~ildten with algebraic
Literacy Education (ABLE) ·concepts, or may wish to
program is announcing a . refresh skills in algebra.
Interested adults· are
special opportunity for adults
to brush up on basic algebra ilsli:ed to. pre-reg·ister by
iii a stress-free setting.
· calling the ABLE center at
.
The six weekly sessions 740-992-5808.
The
six
.one-hour
sessions
will begin on April 27, at 6
'p.m. at the Middleport ABLE · are offered at no cost to par·Center located in the base- ticipatin~ adults. Under the
ment of the Middleport supervisiOn of the AthensLibrary. No IUllde or credit Meigs Educational Service
will be offered for the classes. Center, the Meigs County
The classes will be geared ABLE program is funded
toward adults who may by a grant from the Ohio
wish to look toward further Board of Regents.

· Returns from Afghanistan

.

.

.

·

Beth Sorgentlpholl&gt;

us Congressman Charlie Wilson (far right) recently visited the University of Rio Grande's Meigs Center to attend the

Congressional Art Show. The show featun3d work from high school_ students across the congres~man·~ d1stnct. :hough
he didn't judge the works, Wilson met with the winner, Andrew Kas1ck, of Manetta H1gh School. Kastck s work will hang
in the Cannon Tunnel of the US Cap~ol· for one year. Meigs H1gh School students who submitted work to the show mcluded Adrian Bolin, Stevie Bunce, Jacob Dunn, Caitlin Leslie. Pictured with Wilson is Brent Patterson, director of URG's
Meigs Center and Alex Victory, student from Meigs Middle School who attended the show.

Local Weather

ABLE offers
basic algebra
..

'

'

Monday, April

'

LAW YOU CAN USE

Motorcyclists need special insurance
Q: Why do I need motor- for the repair or replace- ance is $12.500 for bcidily
. ment of your motor vehicle i·njury to or death ·of one
cycle insurance? · ·
A: In Ohio, it is illegal to in the event of an accident. individual in any one accidrive any motor vehicle If you· finance the purchase dent; $25,000 fot bodily
without insurance or other of a motor vehicle, your injury to or death of two or
financial responsibility (FR) lender also may require you more individuals in any one ·
proof. Since a motorcycle to buy phys1cal damage accident; and $7,500 for
injury to the property of
qualifies as a motor vehtcle, coverage.
others
in any one accident .
you must purchase motor·
Keep
in
mind, accidents frecycle insurance to comply · Q: 1 still live ai home.Am
with
Ohio's
financial 1 covered under my par- quently result · in damages
ents' motorcyclt insurance that exceed those minimum
responsibility laws. :
if 1 drive their motorcycle? coverage . limits, If the atA: You 'II need to read the fault driver's insurance poi'
Q: But I have car insurpolicy
or, ask the insurance · icy limits are exceeded, then
ance. Can't car insurance
also cQver my motorcycle? agent or insurance compa- the at fault driver may be
A: No, your motorcycle ny, since the answer can personally responsible to
pay the difference not covwould not be insured by vary.
ered
by the automobile
your private passenger autoinsurance
policy.
Q:
Do
I
have
to
wear
a
mobile insurance policy. If
you own both a car and a helmet?
A: Ohio motor vehicle
Q: Might my motorcycle
motorcycle, you 'II need to
purchase both types of laws do require certain oper- insurance my policy cover
msurililce policies so that ators to wear a helmet wben me .if 1 ride someone else's
driving a motorcycle, so you motorcycle?
both vehicles are covered.
should familiarize yourself . A: You 'II need to read
Q: WhiJt are the differ· with Ohio Jaw. Information your policy or ask your
.ences between motorcycle on helmet laws can be found agent or insurance company
insurance and car insur- at the Ohio Bureau of Motor . this question since the
Vehicles'
Web
site: · answer and policy language
ance?
http://ohiobmv.com..
Yo.u can vary. Your insurance
. A: The insurance poliCies
to
·
see
tf policy might not prov,ide
should
also
check
are similar. Both types of
policies provide liability your insurance company coverage if · you ride a
coverage, which pays on requires you to wear a he!- friend's motorcycle or if
you let a friend borrow your
your behalf for ·another per- met.
motorcycle.
son's injuries or death and
Q:
What
are
the
mini:
their property damage
Q: · What factors are
resulting from an accident if mum reqllirements for
taken
into accollnt to deteryou were found to be at motorcycle insurance?
A: For all types of motor mine my premium?
fault. Both types of policies
A: Factors include the
vehicles,.
including motorprovide the option to purmotorcycle's
engine size. its
cycles,
the
.
minimum
chase physical damage cov.
age
and
how
often you ride.
erage, which would provide amount of required insur-

· RACINE - Army Specialist Teddi_ Pauley v:ho has
served in Afghanistan for the past year, 1s now stattoned at
Fort Campbell, Ky. She returned to ·the States thr~e weeks
·ago and already has her orders to go to Iraq m 2010.
Specialist Pauley spent the weekend m Racme w1th her par-. MASON . Ohio (AP) - A
. ents, Melvin and Mary Forester.
new steel roller coaster at
th~ Kings Island amusement
park opened this weekend,
thrilling eager fans with
twists and turns at speeds of
. larger group , it's thought the Again, those already in a up to 80 mph.
Jackson Thurnquist . 13,
price for the utility would gas .utility program are not
·
said
the ·dizzying 3-minute
eligible
.
until
·
their
contract
be lower than what the indi·
on
the park's largest and
trip
vidual would be offered expires with their current
fastest coaster was the best
provider.
directly.
Pomeroy had · assistance · Even if the ballot issue he's ever experienced . well
placing the issue on the bal- passes, this doesn't obligate worth the $I 81 in allowance
lot from Volunteer Energy Pomeroy to enter mto a con- money he paid to be one of
Services, Columbus, a for- tract with Volunteer Energy its first riders ,
"I would have paid one
profit company that buys Services if an agreement
natural gas and sells it can't be reached. If an billion ," the Montgomery
through
municipalities agreement is reached, there resident said .:
The park, about 25 miles
through contracts with cities are two. required public
and villages. If residents meetings to discuss that northeast of Cincinnati, aucapprove the issu~ , Pomeroy agreement and inform resi- tioned th~ first public ride
would be bargammg w1th dents of the negotiated rates . on the new Diamondbi!Ck to
Communities already set benefit an Ohio nonprofit
Voluntee•· Energy Services
up
to negotiate lower rates group_called A Ki~ Again,
for those reduced rates .
However, even if the ballot on purchasing natural . gas which supports outmgs for
issues passes, t~is does~'t from Volunteer Ene~gy children with life-threatenmean all restdents m · Services are Brooklyn, ing illnesses .
The online charity auction
Pomeroy have to participate Alliance, Marion , Gallipolis
and
Mount
Vernon.
A
simi$102,000 as 256
collected
in the program. Res1dents
lar
issue
is
on
the
ballot
in
people won t?e ri_ght to .be
can continue to keep their
on Saturday s firSt tnps
current utilit~ if they wish. the city of Athens.
around the $22 mi Ilion
structure, the park said.
Some seats were donated
to the nonprofit and its ben·
eficiaries . .
Subscribe
today
• 992-215S
The highest bid for a seat.
.
.-.. '

Be sure to ask your insurance agent or company if
you can receive a discount
for belonging to an association such as the American
Motorcycle Association qr
for taking safety courses.

Q: Will my insurance
cover · any passengers on
my motorcycle?
.. .
A: Your policy's liability
coverage pays on your
behalf for another person)
injuries or death from ap
accident if you were found
to be at fault, which woula
include coverage for any
passenger on your motorcycle who might pe injured or
killed in such an accident.
You may also want to consider purchasing optional
medical payments coveJ·
age. This coverage pays f~r
necessary qredical and
f11neral expenses incurred
by you or your passengers
due to an accident, regardless of whose fault it is, '

This "Law You Can Use"
colllmll was provided by
the Ohio State Bar
Association. It was prepared by Mary Jo Hudson,
director of. the · Ohio
Department of I11suranct.
The column offer.; general
information about.the law.
Seek a11 attorney's advice
before applying this infor·
motion to a legal problem .
. '·

Roller coaster that plunges 215 feet opens in Ohio

.VotingrromPageAI

Proud to be apan of your life.,

$5,000, came from the
Pleasanton , Calif., software
company
Blackhawk
Network, which makes the
park's gift cards .
Jacob H:~rti g, 15 , won the
official first seat and took it
wearing a No. I on the back
of his T-shirt. The teen, .
from Alexa!ldria, Ky., rode
with his father and said the
initial 215-foot plunge was
his favorite part. ·
The track also features
two helix twists · and a
splashdown ending.
DediCated roller coaster
enthusiasts also had given
positive reviews of the
mile-long track after special
preview rides Friday.
"The park has real!~
deserved a coaster like this, '
said Dave Altman, vice
president of the American
Coaster Enthusiasts, who
drove from Pittsburgh to try
it out . "Not many coasters
are being built right now
because of the economy, but
it was worth the wait."
Park officials say they
hope the new · coaster
AP photj)
attracts vi sitors who are
choosing to relax near home Guests ride o~ the new Diamondback roller coaster during
instead of taking pricey a VIP preview, Friday, at Kings Island Amusement Park in
Mason , Ohio. The park opened to the public Saturday.
vacations this year.

�.

:The Daily Sentinel
..

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 ·FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law r6Specting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
:· 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
the Government for a redress ofgrieva!'ces.
- The First Amendment tQ the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, April 20, the !lOth day of 2009. There
are 255 days left in the year.
.
Today's Highlight in History:
Ten years ago, on April 20, 1999, the Columbine High
School massacre took place in Colorado as two students ,
Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, shot and · killed 12 classmates and one teacher before taking their own lives.
On this date:
In 18 I2, the fourth vice president of the United States ,
George Clinton , died in Washington at age 72, becoming
the first vice president to die while in otfice .
.. In 1836, Congress voted to establish the Wisconsin
Territory.
In 1889, Adolf Hitler was born in Braunau am Inn ,
Austria.
·
In 1945, during World War II, allied forces took control
of th~ Germah cities of Nuremberg and Stuttgart.
In 1949, scientists at the Mayo Clinic announced they 'd
succeeded in synthesizing a hormone found to be useful in
treating rheumatoid arthritis; the substance was named
hcortisone." ,
ln 1968, Pierre Elliott Trudeau was sworn in as prime
minister of Canada,
In 1971, the U.S. Supreme Court, in .Swann v. CharlotteMecklenburg Board of Education , unanimously upheld the
use of busing to achieve racial desegregation in schools.
ln 1972;the manned lunar module from Apollo 16 landed on the moon.
In 1978, a Korean Air Lines Boeing 707 crash-landed i'n
northwestern Russia after being fired on by a Soviet interceptor after entering Soviet airspace . Two passengers were
killed.
· In 1988, gunmen who'd hijacked a Kuwait Airways
jumbo jet were allowed safe passage out of Algeria under
an agreement that freed the remaining 31 hostages and
ended a IS-day siege in which two passengers were slain.
· Five years ago: A tornado tore tbrougi] north-central
Illinois. killing eighi people. A judge ordered Multnomah
County, Ore., to stop issuing gay marriage licenses - but
also ordered the state to recognize the 3,000 licenses
already granted in the county.
· One year ago: Before a full house at Yankee Stadium,
Pope Benedict XVI celebrated his final Mass in the United
States, blessing his enormous U.S. flock and telling
Americans to use their freedoms wisely. Secretary of State
(:ondoleezza Rice mocked anti-Amencan cleric Muqtada
ai-Sadr as a coward during a visit to Iraq. Danica Patrick
. became the first female winner in lndyCar history, captur. ing the Indy Japan 300.in her 50th career start.
Today's Birthdays: Supreme Court Justice John Paul
·Stevens is S9. Actor Leslie Phillips is 85. Actor George
l'akei is 72. Singer Johnny Tillotson is 70. Actor Ryan
O'Neal is 68. Bluegrass singer-musician Doyle Lawson
(Quicksilver) is 65.
. Thought for Today: "If anyone tells you something
, strange about the world, something you had never heard
before, do not laugh but listen attentively; make him repeat
it, make him explain it; no doubt there is something there
~orth taking hold of." - Georges Duhamel. French author
.( 1884-1966).

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. thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept•·
: ed for publication.

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PageA4

OPINION

Monday; April2o, 2009

Team 0 turns lift on sanity UJith (right-wing extremists'
I've got it.
for Islamic terrorism.
oriented" pathologies that are
But not too far. That is, therefore beyond civilized
After reading and rereading lhe surreal Department
Napolitano, who supports political discourse. So, too, is
of Homeland Security intel
the DHS report. is plenty opposition to overweening
report on
·'right-wing
conlent to deal in the politics fedeml powers and "sinsleextremi sm" that clearly desof fear - just not fear of issue" opposition to abortion.
ignates conservative politiDiana
blam . Fear of conservati&gt;rn, What we are seeing, in other
cal dissent as part of the
West
however. is OK by her.
words, is .the most extraordithreat. I finally fi1,ured out
· How to make! it stick'l The nary governmental attempt in
why il all seems so familiar.
DHS report repeatedly reach- history to limit the spectrum of
First, there's .the report's . L.;..ll...!....
cs back for inspiration to the debate by· demonizing a range
leading villain, the "military
The fact is. we've seen this 1995 Oklahoma City bomb- of positions as "right-wing
veteran" returning from war · cast of characters before _ ing of a federal building, cit- extremism." 1his attempt is
in Iraq and Afghanistan ing "military veteran" and surely not only unconstitutionthe "potential ·tone wolf' ter- nhany times ~foreH- lln ~- doniestic terrorist Timothy al but also un-American.
0
rorist with the lethal capabil- 1 e schloc
yw
McVeigh. one 6f 42 million
But nm in the Obama era.
movies that year after year har·
ities. That could raise goose vest a diseased crop of villains veterans who, not incidentally, This is a time when the folbumps in anyone, right?
from the American heartland,. have not blown up a federal lowing statement would surely
Then there are the "white endlessly returning them to the · building, as American Legion set off a red alert with all fedsupremacists" well known screen as the "crazed veteran," chief David Rehbein noted in . eral, state, local and tribal law
for their "longstanding the "religious zealot" and the · an outraged letter to enforcement authorities whO
exploitation of social issues anti-Immigration
"Nazi :". Napolitano. But while the received Homeland's report:
"What we have to do is
such a' ab01tion, interracial' . These are the stock villains _ DBS report is thin on Specifics
crime and same-sex mar· all-racist, naturally _ who are and devoid of sources, it . bring back the recognition
riitge." (I don 't get the con- now similarly demonized in · nonetheless quite helpfully that the people of this country
nection either.) According to the government 's repor-t: .
exposes the federal govern- can solve it1 problems. I stiU
the govemmeni, we just
This fantastic worldview ment's oulmgeous strategy to believe the answer to any
might see a growing move- that sees the country imperiled portray conservatism as ·problem lies with the people.
I believe in state's rights and I
ment of similarly pro-life, by military heroes, traditional "right-wing extremism."
pro-law-and-order, pro-mar- values and even border secUJiThe repot1 detines the tenn believe in people doing as
riage ... "white suprema- ty meshes pertectly with ·the this way: "Right-wingextrem- mucb as they can for themcists ."' Enough to make any- also-official flip side t~;~ . such ismintheUnitedStatescanbe selves at the community level
one hyperventilate, of course. paranoid liberal fantasy: broadly divided into those and at the private level. I
And what about the "right- namely, the harmlessness of groups, movements. and believe we have distorted the
wing extremist" who "adopts the Islamic brand or ·'extrem- adherents that ru·e. primru·ily balance of our govemment
the immigration issue as a ism." which Homeland · hate-oriented (based on hatred today by giving powers that
call to action"? Or the "many Security . Secretmy Janet of particular religious. racial or were , never intended to be
right-wing extremists" who Napolitano recently renamed, ethnic groups), and those that given in the Constitution to
"are antagonistic toward the and with a sn'llight face, "man- are mainly antigovernment, . that federal establishment."
In the language of
new presidential administra- caused disasters." Hollywood, rejecting federal authority in
tion and its perceived" or course, doesn't touch such favor of state or local autliori- . Homeland Security~ which
extremist"
perceived? - "stance on a "extremism" either. sticking ty. or rejecting government " right-wing
range of issues" including with right-wingers-gone-wild anthority entirely. It may preparing for "right-wing
immigmtion, expanding gov- to the very la1t reel.
include groups and individuals radicalization and recruitBut Hollywood-fantasy- that are dedicated to a single ment"" said that?
emment programs and gun
control? According . to the turned-Washington-reality issue. such a1 opposition to
Ronald Reagan.
report, such "right-wing isn't simply cnunmy enter- abortion or immigration."
· (Diana West is the author
extremists are increasingly tainment. It presents a grave
Presto - the federal gov- of "The Death of the Growngalvanized by these concerns menace to political discourse emment lta1 just taken key up: How America's Arrested
and leverage them as drivers in this country. "We want to conservative positions, from Development Is Bringing
for recruitment." Sounds like move away from the poliiics opposition to Islamic law to Down Western Civilization,"
a GOP voter drive to me. Cue of fear," Napolitano declared support for security along our and blogs at dianawest net.
up 1'Psycho"-strains of last month to explain her ~ew Mexican border, and cast tl1em She can be contacted via
shrieking violins.
secretary-caused euphem1sm as p1imitive, "primar.ilihate- dianawest@ vefizon.ner).
WUATEVER
V,_.IVERSE

MV TASTE'S DE.TE:RNHNEP

"JJ.IE.S'TVLEs, 7HE~S,
-n.lE MUSIC, -ntE. MoVrES,
EVEN "fl..E F.oo~

··Obituaries

Analysis: Obama experiences a week of change.
States," he said in a statement
on the totture .memos that
cbuld easily have beey~ written
WASHINGTON. - .In a about the troop withdrawal.
whirlwind week of change,
Attorney General Eric ·
President Barack Obania Holder added one more
jettisoned Bush administra- assurance, announcing . the
tion policy on greenhouse administration would pay
gases, shone an unforgiving legal expenses for anyone in
light on its support for tor- the intelligence agency who ·
ture as an interrogation tac- needs a lawyer as a result of
tic and eased its restrictions canying out interrogations .
on Cuba.
covered by the memos.
But there are limits. even
Holder also formally
to · this new president's revoked every. legal opinion
power, and a campaign or memo issued · during ·
pledge to seek· a ban on Bush's presidency that justi·
assault weapons is an early . fied interrogation programs,
casualty as a result.
a largely symbolic step
And while the promise of .since Obama had already
arguably said his administration
change · was
Obama's single most pow- wou.ld not rely on them .
The release of the· docu- .
erful asset m last year's
campaign , the week demon- ments had been the subject
strated anew how carefully of a long, fierce debate,
he calibrates its Impact.
with a deadline looming as
"We have been through a the result of a lawsuit
dark and painful chapter in brought by the American
our history," · the president Civil Uberties Union.
No lawsuit drove the tim·
said In a statement that
accompanied the release of ing of the new Cuba policy,
once-secret memos outlining which was released in the
torture techniques the Bush · run-up to Obama 's first
. presidential trip to Central
administration allowed.
"!lut at a time of great America . And .here again.
challenges and di sturbing Obama went further than
disunity. nothing will be some wanted and not us far
gained by spending our time as others had hoped .
and ener11y laying blame for
Under the new policy, the
1he past .'
, •
admini stration lifted restricThat was des igned as a tions on Cuban-Americans
reassurance to the CIA who want to travel and send
employees who carried out money to Iheir island homewaterboarding , whkh simu- land and Creed U.S .
lates drowning , and the telecommunications compaother harsh interrogation nies to seek business there.
Some of the changes
techniques that former
President George W. Bush specifica ll y undid what
once sanctioned and that Bush had impose&lt;;!: tight·
Obama has now banned ened travel restrictions on
much as hi s decision to Americans wishing to visit
leave combat troops in Iraq relatives in Cuba: limiting
a few month s longer than he payments to immedi ale
once promi sed wa' a bow to family; and bans on seeds.
the Pentagon.
clothmg, personal hygiene
·..1 will alway&gt; do whatever items. veterinary medicines
is necessary to protect the and - later - cell phone.~
national security of the United from hu ma nitarian pa~ce b.
BY DAVID ESPO

AP SP ECIAL CORRESPONDENT

But the broader embargo
remains in place a' it has since
the Kennedy administration, its
existence meant now as then to
ptod the Cuban government
into democratic reforms.
In response to the
announcement,
Cuban
President Raul Castro said he
is ready to put "everything"
on· the table in talks with
Americans. including questions· of human rights and .
political prisoners. If so, .that
would mark a change from
decades of Cuban insistence
that those issues were not
subject for discussion .
Secretary of State Hillary
Rodham Clinton pronounced
Castro's comments an overture , and said , "We are taking
a very serious look at how
we intend to respond.''
Still. despite sentiment
within the
IS-member
~aribbean Community''? lift
the U.S. embargo, Jammca s
prime minister: . Brnce
Golding, said the organization had agreed not to push
Obama too h&lt;rrd on the issue.
By contrast, there was little that was nuanced about
the
Environmental
Protection
Agency 's
announcement Friday that
carbon · dioxide and five
other greenhouse gases
emitted by cars and many
industrial plants ''endanger
public health and welf:tre .''
It was prompted by a
Supreme Coutt ruling two
years ago ti)at said greenhouse gases are pollutants .
under the Clean Au· Act and
must be regulated if found
to be a danger 1o human
hea llh or public welfare .
Confronted with the high
coutt's decision . the Bush
administmtion smiled. leaving
for Obama :m i''ue he was
onl y too happy to seite. EPA
Administrator Lisa Jackson
' aid while the agency i' prepared to move forward with

'

I

~

.

regulations under the Clean
Air Act, the administration
would rather defer · to
Congress.
"The (EPA) decision is a
game changer," said Rep. Ed
Markey. D-Mass., who is
involved in drafting legislatio·n to limit greenhouse emisSions.
For all the changes Obama
has piled up since 'taking
office 87 days ago, his retreat
on assaull weapons is hardly
unique. He has already yielded on other relatively minor
issues. giving in to veterans
groups during the budget
debate, for example.
Pressed by Mexican
President Felipe Calderon
to help stem the flow of military-style assault weapons
from the United States ,
Obama said he still believed
that the ban !\lade sense .
And yet, he added: "None
of us .are under any illusion ·
that reinstatin¥ that ban
would be easy.' He said he
would focus instead on
using existing laws to stop
the flow of weapons prized
by elements of the Mexican
drug trade .
If anything , Obama's
closest allies in Congress
are probably relieved.
Speaker Nancy Pelosi · of
Califomia signaled as much
several weeks ago after
Holder said the administration
wanted to renew a ban that
lapsed and that the powerful
National Rifle Association
opposes strenuously.
"One good place to start
would be to enforce the
laws that are on the books
tight now," she said on Feb .
26 . " And I think the evidence points this out, that
the 'Bush administration was
not enforcing law."
(DMi&lt;l Espo lras CO\•~red
politics and govemment for
The Associate.d Press for
mort! tlrmi 25 years) .

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailrsentinel.com

20, 2009

..

Gladys L Freeman

.
.
RACINE - Gladys L. Freeman, 59, Racine , passed
away at her residence Sunday April 19,2009.
.
Born in Meigs County on Dec. 31, 1949 she was the
daughter of the late Millard and Esta Reeves Brickles. She
was employed at Ohio University.
·
She is survived by her husband Melvin .B. Freeman, chi!- .
dren James (Laura) Barker of Wellston, Ronald (Deb)
Barker, and Jason Barker all of The Plains; step-childten
Shari Eblin, Judy (Ronnie) Hawley, Jeanette (Rick)
Lunsford all of Racine; 13 grandchildren and 10 greatgra11dchildten; a sister Carolyn (Jack) Perry of Pageville;
. ·and several nieces and nephews.
ln addition to her parents she was preceded in death by a
sisterJuanita BrickJes, a brother Larry Brickles, and a stepsons Donnie and Douglas Freeman.
Services will be at 1 p.m ., Wednesday at Bigony-Jordan ·
Funeral Home with Rev. Jan Lavender officiating. Burial
will be in Wells Cemetery. Visitation is from 2-4 p.m: and
6-8 p.ni. tomorrow at the funeral home.
You may sign the guest register or leave a condolence for
family
.the
.
. at www.bigonyjordanfuneralh(!me',corh,
.

Congressional art?
•

Deaths
Harold J. 'Hade' Bland
MASON - Harold J. "Hade" B]and, 77, of Mason,
W.Va. died Saturday, April 18, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
He is survived by his wife, Leta Bland of Mason.
Visitaion will be held from II a.rfi. to ·[ p.m. on Tuesday,
April 21, at the Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home.
Graveside. seritice will be held Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. at the
Graham Cemetery, New Haven, W.Va. with Pastor Charlie
Cundiff officiating.

Herbert flugh
RACINE - Herbert Pugh , 83 , of Racine died Sunday,
April 19, 2009 at the Pt.Pieasant Nursing and Rehabilitation
Center. Arrangements are incomplete and wtll be announced
. by the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy..

.

Monday ...Showers likely.
Wednesday ... Mostly
Highs around 60. South cloudy
in
the
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance morning ...Then becoming
· of rain 70 percent.
partly sunny. A 30 .~erce~t
Monday night ...Cioudy. chance of showers. Highs m
Showers likely in the · the .lower 50s.
evening ...Then a chance. of
Wednesday
night ...
showers after midnight. Mostly cloudy · m the
Lows in the mid 40s. evening ...Then becoming
Southwest winds 10 to 15 partly cloudy. Lows in the
mph. Chance of rain 60 per- lower 30s.
cent.
Thursday and Thursday
Thesday...Showers likely. night ...Mostly clear. Highs
Highs in the lower 50s . . in the upper 60s. Lows in
Southwest winds 10 to 15 the mid 40s.
•
mph. Chance of rain 60 .per-.
Frlday...Sunny. Hjghs in
cent.
.
the upper 70s.
Thesday night ...Cioudy
Friday night through
with a 50 percent chance of Sunday ...Partly
cloudy.
showers. Lows in the upper Lows · in the loWer 50s.
30s. West winds 5 to 10 mph. Highs in the lower 80s;

POMEROY - The Meigs schooling. may want to help
County Adult Basic and their ~ildten with algebraic
Literacy Education (ABLE) ·concepts, or may wish to
program is announcing a . refresh skills in algebra.
Interested adults· are
special opportunity for adults
to brush up on basic algebra ilsli:ed to. pre-reg·ister by
iii a stress-free setting.
· calling the ABLE center at
.
The six weekly sessions 740-992-5808.
The
six
.one-hour
sessions
will begin on April 27, at 6
'p.m. at the Middleport ABLE · are offered at no cost to par·Center located in the base- ticipatin~ adults. Under the
ment of the Middleport supervisiOn of the AthensLibrary. No IUllde or credit Meigs Educational Service
will be offered for the classes. Center, the Meigs County
The classes will be geared ABLE program is funded
toward adults who may by a grant from the Ohio
wish to look toward further Board of Regents.

· Returns from Afghanistan

.

.

.

·

Beth Sorgentlpholl&gt;

us Congressman Charlie Wilson (far right) recently visited the University of Rio Grande's Meigs Center to attend the

Congressional Art Show. The show featun3d work from high school_ students across the congres~man·~ d1stnct. :hough
he didn't judge the works, Wilson met with the winner, Andrew Kas1ck, of Manetta H1gh School. Kastck s work will hang
in the Cannon Tunnel of the US Cap~ol· for one year. Meigs H1gh School students who submitted work to the show mcluded Adrian Bolin, Stevie Bunce, Jacob Dunn, Caitlin Leslie. Pictured with Wilson is Brent Patterson, director of URG's
Meigs Center and Alex Victory, student from Meigs Middle School who attended the show.

Local Weather

ABLE offers
basic algebra
..

'

'

Monday, April

'

LAW YOU CAN USE

Motorcyclists need special insurance
Q: Why do I need motor- for the repair or replace- ance is $12.500 for bcidily
. ment of your motor vehicle i·njury to or death ·of one
cycle insurance? · ·
A: In Ohio, it is illegal to in the event of an accident. individual in any one accidrive any motor vehicle If you· finance the purchase dent; $25,000 fot bodily
without insurance or other of a motor vehicle, your injury to or death of two or
financial responsibility (FR) lender also may require you more individuals in any one ·
proof. Since a motorcycle to buy phys1cal damage accident; and $7,500 for
injury to the property of
qualifies as a motor vehtcle, coverage.
others
in any one accident .
you must purchase motor·
Keep
in
mind, accidents frecycle insurance to comply · Q: 1 still live ai home.Am
with
Ohio's
financial 1 covered under my par- quently result · in damages
ents' motorcyclt insurance that exceed those minimum
responsibility laws. :
if 1 drive their motorcycle? coverage . limits, If the atA: You 'II need to read the fault driver's insurance poi'
Q: But I have car insurpolicy
or, ask the insurance · icy limits are exceeded, then
ance. Can't car insurance
also cQver my motorcycle? agent or insurance compa- the at fault driver may be
A: No, your motorcycle ny, since the answer can personally responsible to
pay the difference not covwould not be insured by vary.
ered
by the automobile
your private passenger autoinsurance
policy.
Q:
Do
I
have
to
wear
a
mobile insurance policy. If
you own both a car and a helmet?
A: Ohio motor vehicle
Q: Might my motorcycle
motorcycle, you 'II need to
purchase both types of laws do require certain oper- insurance my policy cover
msurililce policies so that ators to wear a helmet wben me .if 1 ride someone else's
driving a motorcycle, so you motorcycle?
both vehicles are covered.
should familiarize yourself . A: You 'II need to read
Q: WhiJt are the differ· with Ohio Jaw. Information your policy or ask your
.ences between motorcycle on helmet laws can be found agent or insurance company
insurance and car insur- at the Ohio Bureau of Motor . this question since the
Vehicles'
Web
site: · answer and policy language
ance?
http://ohiobmv.com..
Yo.u can vary. Your insurance
. A: The insurance poliCies
to
·
see
tf policy might not prov,ide
should
also
check
are similar. Both types of
policies provide liability your insurance company coverage if · you ride a
coverage, which pays on requires you to wear a he!- friend's motorcycle or if
you let a friend borrow your
your behalf for ·another per- met.
motorcycle.
son's injuries or death and
Q:
What
are
the
mini:
their property damage
Q: · What factors are
resulting from an accident if mum reqllirements for
taken
into accollnt to deteryou were found to be at motorcycle insurance?
A: For all types of motor mine my premium?
fault. Both types of policies
A: Factors include the
vehicles,.
including motorprovide the option to purmotorcycle's
engine size. its
cycles,
the
.
minimum
chase physical damage cov.
age
and
how
often you ride.
erage, which would provide amount of required insur-

· RACINE - Army Specialist Teddi_ Pauley v:ho has
served in Afghanistan for the past year, 1s now stattoned at
Fort Campbell, Ky. She returned to ·the States thr~e weeks
·ago and already has her orders to go to Iraq m 2010.
Specialist Pauley spent the weekend m Racme w1th her par-. MASON . Ohio (AP) - A
. ents, Melvin and Mary Forester.
new steel roller coaster at
th~ Kings Island amusement
park opened this weekend,
thrilling eager fans with
twists and turns at speeds of
. larger group , it's thought the Again, those already in a up to 80 mph.
Jackson Thurnquist . 13,
price for the utility would gas .utility program are not
·
said
the ·dizzying 3-minute
eligible
.
until
·
their
contract
be lower than what the indi·
on
the park's largest and
trip
vidual would be offered expires with their current
fastest coaster was the best
provider.
directly.
Pomeroy had · assistance · Even if the ballot issue he's ever experienced . well
placing the issue on the bal- passes, this doesn't obligate worth the $I 81 in allowance
lot from Volunteer Energy Pomeroy to enter mto a con- money he paid to be one of
Services, Columbus, a for- tract with Volunteer Energy its first riders ,
"I would have paid one
profit company that buys Services if an agreement
natural gas and sells it can't be reached. If an billion ," the Montgomery
through
municipalities agreement is reached, there resident said .:
The park, about 25 miles
through contracts with cities are two. required public
and villages. If residents meetings to discuss that northeast of Cincinnati, aucapprove the issu~ , Pomeroy agreement and inform resi- tioned th~ first public ride
would be bargammg w1th dents of the negotiated rates . on the new Diamondbi!Ck to
Communities already set benefit an Ohio nonprofit
Voluntee•· Energy Services
up
to negotiate lower rates group_called A Ki~ Again,
for those reduced rates .
However, even if the ballot on purchasing natural . gas which supports outmgs for
issues passes, t~is does~'t from Volunteer Ene~gy children with life-threatenmean all restdents m · Services are Brooklyn, ing illnesses .
The online charity auction
Pomeroy have to participate Alliance, Marion , Gallipolis
and
Mount
Vernon.
A
simi$102,000 as 256
collected
in the program. Res1dents
lar
issue
is
on
the
ballot
in
people won t?e ri_ght to .be
can continue to keep their
on Saturday s firSt tnps
current utilit~ if they wish. the city of Athens.
around the $22 mi Ilion
structure, the park said.
Some seats were donated
to the nonprofit and its ben·
eficiaries . .
Subscribe
today
• 992-215S
The highest bid for a seat.
.
.-.. '

Be sure to ask your insurance agent or company if
you can receive a discount
for belonging to an association such as the American
Motorcycle Association qr
for taking safety courses.

Q: Will my insurance
cover · any passengers on
my motorcycle?
.. .
A: Your policy's liability
coverage pays on your
behalf for another person)
injuries or death from ap
accident if you were found
to be at fault, which woula
include coverage for any
passenger on your motorcycle who might pe injured or
killed in such an accident.
You may also want to consider purchasing optional
medical payments coveJ·
age. This coverage pays f~r
necessary qredical and
f11neral expenses incurred
by you or your passengers
due to an accident, regardless of whose fault it is, '

This "Law You Can Use"
colllmll was provided by
the Ohio State Bar
Association. It was prepared by Mary Jo Hudson,
director of. the · Ohio
Department of I11suranct.
The column offer.; general
information about.the law.
Seek a11 attorney's advice
before applying this infor·
motion to a legal problem .
. '·

Roller coaster that plunges 215 feet opens in Ohio

.VotingrromPageAI

Proud to be apan of your life.,

$5,000, came from the
Pleasanton , Calif., software
company
Blackhawk
Network, which makes the
park's gift cards .
Jacob H:~rti g, 15 , won the
official first seat and took it
wearing a No. I on the back
of his T-shirt. The teen, .
from Alexa!ldria, Ky., rode
with his father and said the
initial 215-foot plunge was
his favorite part. ·
The track also features
two helix twists · and a
splashdown ending.
DediCated roller coaster
enthusiasts also had given
positive reviews of the
mile-long track after special
preview rides Friday.
"The park has real!~
deserved a coaster like this, '
said Dave Altman, vice
president of the American
Coaster Enthusiasts, who
drove from Pittsburgh to try
it out . "Not many coasters
are being built right now
because of the economy, but
it was worth the wait."
Park officials say they
hope the new · coaster
AP photj)
attracts vi sitors who are
choosing to relax near home Guests ride o~ the new Diamondback roller coaster during
instead of taking pricey a VIP preview, Friday, at Kings Island Amusement Park in
Mason , Ohio. The park opened to the public Saturday.
vacations this year.

�The' Daily Sentinel
·~

~ageA6

ARouND THE WoRLD

Inside

Monday, April20, 2009

Kennedy in court, Page B2

\.

·Coins, mufninjes _and statues
: _point to Cleopatra tomb .

Bv CELEAN JAcossoN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

Sheftlekl hits SOOth, Page B2
I

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Monday, Apri12&amp;, 2009

BURG EL-ARAB, Egypt - Egypt's top archaeologist
·made his version of a sales pitch Sunday, presenting 22
coins, I 0 mummies, and a fragment of a mask with a cleft
chin as evidence that the discovery of the lost tomb of Mark .
Antony and Cleopatra is at hand.
Zahi Haw ass showed off the ancient treasures to journalists during a tour of a 2,000-year-old temple to the god
Osiris, where they were found. He believes the site near the
Mediterranean Sea contains the tomb of the doomed lovers
that has been shrouded in mystery for so long.
"In my opinion, if this tomb is found, it will be one of the
most important discoveries of the 21st century because of
the love between Cleopatra and Mark Antony, and because
of the sad story of theu death," he said.
· Mark Antony and Cleopatra challenged Caesar Augustus
for control of the Roman Empire more than two millenia·
ago. Their armies were defeated and rather than submit to
capture, the lovers committed suicide - Mark Antony by
his sword, Cleopatra with a poisonous asp.
.
.
The Roman historian Plutarch said Caesat allowed the
two to be buried together, but their tomb was iiever found .
Hawass' claim is the latest spectacular announcement by
the archaeologist, who continues to capitalize on the
world's fascination with ancient Egypt. He regularly
unveils discoveries that are often met with skepticism and
bemuse men! by Egyptologists abroad.
In the past, archaeologists have not always backed
Hawass' more enthusiastic claims and suggested a degree
of caution is sometimes warranted.
With his trademark Indiana Jones-style hat, Hawass guided
journalists through the Toposiris Magna temple 30 miles (50
kilomete~s) from Egypt's ancient s-;aside capital. of
Alexandna. One by one; he held up the frmts of three years of
excavation by a team from the Dominican Republic, including.
the fragment of a mask bearing a distinctive cleft chin.
"If you look at the face of Mark Antony, many believed
he had this cleft on his chin and that's why I thought this
could be Mark Antony," said Hawass.
·
.
· But he admitted they "are not sure 100 percent" and
joked that the mask could depict Richard Burton, the actor
who played Mark Antony in the 1963 movie "Cleopatra"
also starring Elizabeth Taylor.
Kathleen Martinez, the Dominican archaeologist who has
been excavating the site for the last three years, said she chose
the temple based on 12 years of studying the life of Cleopatra.
"I believe it could be Taposiris Magna because it was the
most sacred temple of its time," she said, explaining that
the lovers were buried in a temple rather than a public tomb
to protect them from the Romans.
.
Inside the temple enclosure, Martinez's team also found
coins bearing Cleopatra's name and face, as well as the
carvings that could represent the doomed lovers.
·
-For Hawass, however, the most significant element was
the recent discovery of tombs from the same time period
ringing the area around the temple. The tombs included 10
mummies of apparent nobles. · .
.
.
"The discovery of the cemelery this week really convinced me that there is · someone important buried inside
this temple,'' he told. television cameras while standing .
inside ,a rough cut tomb surrounded by niches fjlled with ·
bones andwhole skeletons.
·
"No one would be buried outside a temple without a reason. We saw that in 'the pharaonic days, they were always
buried beside pyramids,' he said.
·
The discovery of the cemetery prompted Haw ass to conduct a study of the temple with ground-penetrating radar,
which revealed three possible sites for subterranean burial
chambers 40 feet (12 meters) underground.
Excavations will start Tuesday, said Hawass, who predicted the mystery of the resting place for the two would
finally be solved. A second radar study is set for April 22.

US boycotting, Iran starring, at UN raci~m meeting
GENEVA (AP) - The
Nations opens its
first global racism conference in eight years on
Monday with the U.S. and
at least seven other countries boycotting the event
out of concern that Islamic
· countries will demand that
it denounce Israel and ban
criticism of Islam.
The administration of
President Barack Obama.
America's first black head
of
state, . announced
Saturday .that it would boycott "with regret" the weeklong meeting in Geneva.
which already is experiencing much of the bickering
imd political infighting that
marred the 200 I conference
in Durban. South Africa.
The
Netherlands,
Germany and New Zealand
announced their boycotts
Sunday and Monday, while
Australia, Canada, Israel
and Italy already bad said
they would not attend.
.. 1 would love to be
involved in ·a useful conference that addressed continuing issues of racism and discrimination around the
globe,'' Obama said in
Trinidad on Sunday after
attending the Summit of the
Americas.
But he .said the language
of the U.N.'s draft declaration risked a reprise of
Du,ban . during which
"folks expressed antagonism toward Israel in ways
that were often times completely hypocritical and
counterproductive."
"We expressed i'n the
run-~p to this conference
our concerns that if you
adopted all of the language
from £00 I. that's not
something we can sign up
for:· Obama said.
"Hopefully some concrete
steps come out of the conference that we can partner

Bl

~entinel

Bv PAUL ScHEMM

JOHANNESBURG - A·
frail, 90-year-old NelsonMandcla struggled to the
stage Sunday at the ANC's
last rally before South
Africa's election. making a
surprise appearance to the
cheers of 100,000 supporters
while countrymen
watched on national TV.
· He wore a T-short embla- ·
zoned with the face of Jacob
Zuma. the party's popular
presidential candidate who
drew almost as mighty a
cheer from the fans gam.
erect
in
central
Johannesburg days before
Wednesday's patl iamentary ·
elections.
Mandela began his visit
with a drive around a field
in a golf cart with Zuma at
his side. Then Mandel a was
helped onto the s!3ge; where
he was seuted next to former
wife
Winnie
Madikizela-Mandela, one
of the ANC's most popular
leaders.
Mandela did not address
the crowd but Iistened as a
AP photo
brief video message he had
recorded earlier was shown Former South African president Nelson Mandala, center, arrives with the help of ANC
on a giant screen.
President Jacob Zuma, left, and former wife Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, right, for the final
In his message, Mandela election rally at the Ell.is Park stadium in Johannesburg, South Africa, Sunday. Nelson
said the ANC was best Mandela made an unannounced appearance Sunday at the African National Congress'
placed to lead . South last major rally before parliamentary. elections in South Africa, a boost for the party after
Africans in "our primary an internal power struggle and scandals surrounding its presidential candidate.
task" of eradicating poverty and improving the lives
The theme of the rally, of green, gold and black president in 1999 by thenof a ' black majority . "We are winning,'' reflect- joined
skimpily
clad President Thabo Mbeki
neglected under apartheid ed the party's optimism. women - also in the party who fired him , in 2005,
and still far behind whites Members of' parliament colors - Sunday. Young when Zumu was implicated
and an emerging. tiny elect the president , and men and women brought a in the corruption trial of a
black elite.
considering the ANC's touch of bling with their close friend and financial
Mandela looked in strong overwhelming popularity, glitter-encrusted T-shirts adviser.
spirits and smiled and Zuma, 67. is virtually reading .. Young, Gifted
Pros~utors announced
waved to the crowd.
earlier
this month they
and
ANC."
assured of becoming presiIt · was only the second dent.
The ANC launched its would not pursue a separate
appearance of this camSome say the former campaign with promises ·of corruption case . against
paign for Mandela, who guerrilla is the country's massive public spending to Zuma because of procedural
has laq~ely retired from most 'popular leader since create jobs. It has pulled problems, ·though they said
public It fe. But no one has Mandela.
back on such rhetoric in the they still believed they had
doubted his loyalty to the
Walter Kwatsi, a 33- face of the global economic a strong case. In 2006,
party that South Africans yeat-old
supermarket downturn, and Zuma on Zuma was acquitted of rape
embrace for defeating worker who carried a . Sunday stressed the modest accusations.
·
apartheid, and building handmade poster compar- goal of keeping job losses in
Zuma's populist touch
homes and creating jobs ing Zuma to President check. Bur Zuma also contrasts with Mbeki's
since it won power in the Barack Obama, was among promised investment 111 aloofness.
first all-race vote in 1994.
the millions of poor South transportation·, education
Some ofthe most enthuMandela , who was jailed Africans who believe the and health care to build a siastic , cheers . Zuma
for 27 years for his opposi~ ANC leader will bring base for growth "once the received Sunday followed
tion to apartheid, served much-wanted
his promise tQ "do things
improve- recovery begins."
one term as the nation's ments to their lives.
Zuma, who joined the differently'' in a new
president. from 1994 to · " All the people love ANC in 195'), was jailed administration.
1999. The constitution Jacob Zuma," Kwatsi said for I 0 years on Robben
"We have seen excitement
allows two, but he stepped Sunday. ..He's the man Island, alongside Mandela about the ANC that we have
aside for younger leaders who's going to deliver and other heroes of ·rhe not witnessed since the
and to focus on fighting · deliver water, electricity, anti-apartheid struggle. He release of Madiba and the
AIDS and supporting houses, jobs. everything."
also spent l 5 years in 1994 elections," he said,
international peacemaking
Old ladies in starched exile.
referring to Mandela by his
efforts .
outfits in the ANC colors
He was appointed deputy clan name.

Un~ted

The_Daily

with other countries on to first day.
.
· actually reduce discriminaHe arrived in Geneva on
tion around the globe, but Sunday evening and met
.this wasn't an opportunity privately with President
to do it," he said.
Hans-Rudolf Merz of
·Some European countries Switzerland', the country
are still deciding whether that represents the diploto attend the U.N. confer- matic interests of the
ence. which runs through United States in the Islamic
April 24. Britain said it will republic.
send diplomats, despite
The pullout of Germany
concerns the meeting could is significant since it has
become a forum for played a leading :role . in
Holocaust denial or anti- U.N. anti-racism efforts as a
Semitic attacks. 1
result of its troubled historiAt .the Vatican ,, Pope cal legacy: In recent meetBenedict XVI said the con- ings, it has expressed disterence is needed to elimi- may about some governnate racial
intolerance ments' attempts to downaround the world. Asia . play the significance of the
News. a Catholic · news Holocaust_
agency that is part of the
Germany said Sunday
missionary arm of the that it made its boycott deciVatican, said of the pope 's sion after consulting with
comment: "The Holy See is other European Union
· distancing itself from the nations.
criticisms of some Weste.m
"This decision was not
countries."
easy.'' said German Foreign
"I am sbocked and . Minister
Frank-Walter
deeply disappointed by the Steinmeier. "As in Durban
United States' decision not in 200 I. this conference
to attend," said U.N. could be abused by others
human rights chief Navi as a platform for their interPillay. who is hosting the ests. We cannot accept
that," he said.
·
conference·.
She · conceded some
New Zealand's Foreign
countries were focusing Minister Murray McCully
solely on one or two issues said Monday he was not satto the detriment of the fig lit isfied the wording of the
against intolerance, but draft statement would pre·said it is essential that the vent the conferenve from
issue of racism be tackled "descending into the same
globally.
kind of rancorous and
The major.sticking point; unprodu~tive debate that
regarding the proposed final took place in 200 I."
U.N. declaration are its
The bland U.N. draft
implied criticism of Israel statement does not mention
and an attempt_ by Muslim / Israel by name. but· it reafgovernments to ban all crit- finns the Durban statement
icism of Islam, Sharia law. · and its reference to the
the prophet Muhammad and plight of Palestinians . That
other tenets of their faith.
document was agreed after
President the United States and Israel
Iranian
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad walked out over attempts
who repeatedly has called to liken Zionism - the
for the destruction of Israel movement to establish a
and denied the Holocaust Jewi sh state in the Holy
- is slated to speak on the ),..and - to racism.

Ciasal fleets

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LocAL ScHEDULE
·""""""'
..........
ol "9&gt;
IChool
i'8l'$ity- sporing
events itM:M"Ig teams

from Galla Md Ueig&amp; C9Ullias.
•
Mgndar April 20
.
Bne0all
Eastern vs. Trimble, 5 p.m.
GalUa Academy at L6gan, 5 p.m.
Meigs vs. Vinton County, 5 p.m.
Point Plea!ijlnt at Wahama, 5 p.m.

Southem VS. Waterford, s· p.m.
'
Softball
Eastern vs. Trimble. 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at logan, 5 p.m.
Meigs vs. Vinton County. 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Sissonville, e p.m.
SOUtham vs. Waterford, 5 p.m.
Tennla
Gania Academy""· Portsmoulh, 4:30 p.m
point Pleasant vs. Poca, 5 p.m.
llAHdQ, April 21
. 88Hblll
Ee.st8irn vs. Gallla Academy;S p.m.
Meigs at Feder&amp;~! Hocking, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Fairland, 5:30 p.m.
River Valley at Miller, 5 p.m.
Wahama at Charleston Catholic, B pJn.
SOuthern vs. Wirl County, 5 p.m.

SOftball
Eastern vs. Warren 5 p.m.
.·.
Gadia Academy vs. Ches&amp;peltke, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Federal Hocking, 5 P.m.
Rive·r Valley at Miller, 5 p.m.
Southam at ~IMtflswood , 5 p.m.

Trick and Fluid
Eastern at Athens 4:30p.m.
Oallla Acaoamy at Coal Grove. 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Soull1 Point Quad, 5 p.m.
Wahama w. Trimble, 5 p.m
·
. Tennle
fl1lnl Ploasant"' Hunlklgton SLJoo, 4 p.m.

~·

Wodhelday. April 22

: ·

Ba10ball

e~ern vs. Whiteoak at Chillicothe, 5 p.m.

Qallia Academy at Portsmouth, 5 p.m.
Rolnt Pleasant vs. Buffalo, 6 p.m.
Aiver Valley lit Coal Grove, 5 p.m.
W8h8ma at Southern, 4:30p.m.
SOftball
Eastern vs. Whiteoak at Chillk:othe 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Portsmouth 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant vs. Wahama, 5 p.m.
River Valley at eoa1 G{ove, 5 p.m.
Hannan vs. South Gatlla, 5 p.m.
Tennla
9allla Academy vs. Wheelersburg, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant vs. Wahama. 4:30p.m.

Prep Track and
. .Field Roundup

·Lady Angels
top Relays
STAFF REPORTS
MDSSPORTSCIMYDAILYSENflNELCOM

LOGAN - The Gallia
Academy track team showed
up at !he Mingo Relays in
Logan with one goal in mind
- to win. That's exactly what
the Blue Angels did. Scoing
160.33 points to blow the
competition out of the water,
Galh~ Academy's girls track
team was unstoppable at
Saturday's meet.
; The scoring frenzy qegan
with the 100 meter dash
with senior Alexis Geiger
~nd junior Kara Jackson fini~hing first and second with
limes of 12.58 and 12.77,
respectively.
: The back-to-hack finish
· occured again in the 200
.ineterdash with Jackson taking first with a time o{ 26.57
and Tonia Logan taking second with a time of28.07.
Galli a
Academy's
Samantha Barnes took first
in the 800 meter relay with a
time of 2:25.48 with team. mate McKenna Warner fin·ishing fourth with a time of
2:39.14.
Iilue Anq;el's freshman
Payton A'dkms took first in
the 1600 meter run with a
time .o f 5:35.37, finishing
almost 30 seconds ahead of
the nearest competition.
Lauren Adkrns of the
squad finished second in the
3200 meter relay with a
time of 12:04.80.
The second place finishes
continued in the 100 and
300 meter hurdles with Brea
Close clocking in at 15 .97
;md 49.82, respectively.
· The Blue Angles took top
spots in. the 4x 100 meter
and 4x200 meter relays with
times of 51.53 and 1:50.63
respectively.
: Both of the successful
squads were made up of
~lose, Logan, Jackson and
Geiger.
Genna Baker, Barnes, P.
Adkins, and Warner ran for
the 4x400 meter relay to
finish third with a time of

NEW YORK (AP) -The Girardi said. "We expected
jokes started flying as the pitching to be a ~trcr\2th and
Cleveland Indians piled up sometimes it .has heen. But
runs in the second inning at other times not.
Saturday. Ben Francisco was
It was the most rum for the
glad he wasn't in the field . Indians -since they beat. New
Ryan Garko was hoping to York 22-0 on Aug. 31, 2004.
avoid making another out.
at the old Yankee Stadium.
It was one fun day for the The 22 .runs also tied the
Tribe ·at the Ne:w York Yankees' record for most
Yankees' swanky new home. allowed in a home game.
Asdrub:U Cabrera hit a · Choo delivered the first big
· ~d slam and an Rln single . blow in the second, hitting a
10 Cleveland's ·14-run second rlcye-run drive off Wang to
~ the biggest inning ever give Cleveland a 3-2 lead.
against New York - and the Asdrubal Cabrera singled in a
Indians set the bar for Yankee run. DeRosa had a two-run
Stadium's new record book, double and Martinez had an
coasting to a 224 victory.
RBI single before Wang wa' ·
"It was just one of those replaced by Anthony Claggett,
games for the entire ream ," who wa~ making his major
said Mark D'eRosa, who 'league debut after being
went 4-for-7 and tied a recalled
from
Triple-A
career high with six RBls. Scmnton/Wilkes-Barre before
"Just a lot of guys getting the game~
good swings."
Wang. (0-3) was charged
. DeRosa .and Shin Soo- with eight runs and eight hits
Chao hit three-run homers, in I 1-3 innings, giving him
Travis
Hafner,
Grady a 34.50 ERA in three starts
Sizemore and Victor Martinez this year. He went 5-0 with a
had solo shots and manager 3 .23 ERA in six April starts
Eric Wedge earned his SOOth last season.
"Actually, I thought he
victory. · Jhonny Peralta had
three hits and two RB[s after threw more good sinkerballs
missing Friday's 6-5 loss with today but that inning got out of
a strained left elbow.
haild and we need to fix that,''
The Indians chased strug- Girardi said. "We have some
gling starter Chien-Ming time. We have a day off I think
Wang and set several marks Thursday and we're going to
that could stand for a while have to decide what's best for second iime in the series as
at New York's $1.5 billion Chien-Ming Wang and the C.laggett struck out DeRosa
for the final out. Yankees
ballpark. The 14 runs wen; team."
.
outfielder
Nick Swisher
The Yankees .could skip
the most scored in the secpit&amp;hed
a
scoreless
inning
ond inning of &lt;i major league Wang's next tum in the rotagame, according to the Elias tion but Girardi said the during a blowout loss at
Sports Bureau. The runs and team hasn't made a decision Tampa Bay on Monday.
· Wang and Claggett com13 hits in the inning were a yet.
bined
to throw 69 pitches
franchise record for a
Peralta doubled in two
Yankees opponent.
more .runs after Wang left during the half-inning,
"We did a good job of not and Asdrubal Cabrera hit a which lasted 37 minutes.
"We knew it was long,"
missing pitches and we drive .t.o right on a 3-1 fitch
squared a lot' of balls up for h1s first homer o the Francisco said. "I think I
today,'' Wedge said.
·
year. Sizemore followed was talking to Grady, I'm
Mark Teixeira and Melky Cabrera''s shot with his like, 'It would suck to be on
Cabrera each hit a two-run fourth homer to make it 14-2 defense right now, just sitting out there."'
homer for the Yankees, who as the crowd booed loudly.
.
were embarrassed in two of · By .then, the party was on
The "We want Swisher!"
their first three regular-sea- in the lndiaJ)S' du~out.
chant returned when Hafner
son ~ames at their new field. · "There's some tunny stuff hit his fourth homer of the
New York lost 10-2 in its that's said,'' DeRosa said. season in the eighth.
.
Fausto Carmona (1-2) was
home opener Thursday "Obviously Garko made the
when Cleveland scored nine first out and didn't want to the beneficiary of the Indians'
runs in the sevenih inning.
make another out in the big day at the plate, working
"I haven't seen this many same inning."
six innings in his first victory
big innings in u long while,'' . The fans started chanting of the season. He allowed
Yankees
manager Joe "We want Swisher!" for the four runs and six hits.

Cleveland
Indians'
Grady
Sizemore,
left, and
Asdrubal
Cabrera celebrate after
scoring on a
hit by Mark
DeRosa.in
the second
inning during
a Major
League
Baseball
game 1
Saturday, at .
Yankee
Stadium in
New York.
AP pholo

Carmona
surrendered
Teixeira's third homer in the
first as the crowd of 45,167
filed in on a picturesque day in
New York. Even with the
beautiful, 75-degree weather,
the I ,800 Le~ends Suite seats
. i~ the first nme rows tinging
the plate, which cost between
$500 and $2,625 each, had
long strings of empty chairs.
Sizemore and Hafner each
had three hits and scored
three times. Cabrera tied a
career mark with foor hits
.and five -RBis.
Notes: Yankees 3B Alex
Rodriguez (right hip surgery)
rook 75 swings and hit several
long homers during his third
consecutive day of batting
practice in Florida. Rodriguez,
expected to rejoin the team by
May l5, also took grounders
on the infield dirt for the first
time and increased the intensity of his running program ... ,

Cleveland
Cavaliers'
LeBron James
(23) shoots over
Detroit Pistons'
Rasheed Wallace
(30) in the third
quarter of a firstround NBA basketball playoff
game Saturday,
in Cleveland.
James scorad 34
points in a 102·
64win.
AP pholo

Yankees RF Xavier Nady
(right elbow) had a non-dye
MRI and team physician
Christopher Ahmad wants to
consult with Dr. Lewis Yocum
before deciding what to do
next. Yocum performed
Tommy John surgery on
Nady's elbow in September
200 I. ... ln&lt;!ians OF David
Dellucci (strained left calf) is
scheduled to begin a rehab
assignment with Triple-A
Columbus on Monday. . ..
Plate umpire Ed Hickox was
struck on his helmet by a foul
ball off the bat of Cleveland's
Ben Francisco in the sixth
irinirig. He left the field for a
moment and returned with a
Yankees catcher's mask on.
But second base umpire Tom
Hallion replaced him behind
the plate in the eighth. A
spokesman for the Yankees
said he was taken to a hospital
for observation.

Rodriguez
baffles Reds
in 7-0 victory
for Astros
HOUSTON (AP)
Wandy Rodri$uez pumped
his fist after fmishing off ~
sterling performance 'with a
strikeout, getting out of the
only jam he faced in seven
mnmgs .

Cavaliers roll over·Pistons

CLEVELAND (AP) ~ Cavs the league's most domLeBron James crossed mi&lt;f- · inant team - home or away
court and launched the bali - during the regular season.
toward the basket more than momentum and a 12-point
40 feet away as the hom · halftime lead.
sounded.
Cleveland held off one
· As Cleveland's star. the second-half surge by-Detroit
Detroit Pistons, 20.000 fans while James was on the
· and a TV audience watched bench and closed out the
the shot's arching flight. Pistons , who will try to even
James never stopped running. the best-of-seven series in
~:33.73.
"I was going to ch&lt;L.&lt;&gt;e it until Game 2 on Tuesday night.
: The team of Warner, P. it went in the hoop," h~ said.
To do that , Detroit will
and. A. Adkins, and Barnes
Off · the
backboard, have to devise soqJething to
iook first in the 4x300 meter through the rim, then the net. slow the brilliant James , who
telay finishing with a time " It was halftime . It was had his way for 41 minutes .
pf 10:22.57.
over.
The likely MVP went 13-of· For the field events,
James banked in a stunning 20 from the field. 11 -of- 14
Karen Vanco tied in the ~igh 3-pointer at the end of the frrst from the line and didn't comjump in a third place fipish half and finished with 38 mit a turnover. Cleveland had
with a distance of 4- 10.
points , eight rebounds and only live miscues, u pbstseaGei~er and Barnes rac.ked
seven assists as the Cavaliers son fmnchise record .
up pomts in the long jump embarked on their quest for a
''It's tough when he is
witfi Geiger taking first and first NBA championship with going like that," Pistons forBarnes taking third with a 102-84 win over the Pistons ward Antonio McDyess
jumps of 16-08 and 14- 11. in Game I on Saturday.
said. "No matter what you
respectively.
James' 41-footer demoral- do: trap. he's going to .make
Please.see Roundup. 86 ized the Pistons and gave the that play: contest shots. he ·s

•

dOODIS

I

making shots. He's goi11g to which came in as a No.8 seed
the bucket and being fouled . and could be in for a shorter
It's just tough ,"
· postseason run after making
Asked about his range the Eastern Conference finals
afterward. James paused.
the past six years.
·
.. Uh," he said. "Pretty
Prstons forward Tayshaun
much unlimited."
Prince had just four points
So, it seems, is everything - 10 below his average else about him .
' in 37 minutes. He was wearThe Piston s have seen ing a large wrap . on hi s
James ' act in the playoffs injured back after the game .
before, and still don 't know
James closed the opening
how to deal with him.
half with another one of
"We have to know where those plays that defines his
LeBron is at all times," greatness.
Richard Hamilton said.
After Hamilton 's jumper
"When you score 38 against brought the Pistons to 54-45
us. we can't have that and with two seconds left,James
have a chance. We .have to fig- took the inbounds on the tly,
·UI'C out a way to stop him:·
blew past Prince on the far
Joe Smith scored 13 points sideline and dropped his
and Zydrunas llgauskas had long 3-pointer. By the time it
12 and 10 rebounds for the tumbled to the floor, James
Cavs. who pushed the tempo was nearly under the basket.
in the second half and outran
He then paused and stood
the aging Pistons .
·
on the baseline, soaking in
Rodney Stuckey scored 20
·
and Hamilton 1s for Detroit. Please see cavaliers, BJ

Rodriguez allowed two
hits and tied his career best
with 10 strikeouts to lead
the Houston Astros to. a 7-0 .
victory
against
the
Cincinnati
Reds
on
·Saturday ni'ght.
"I've never seen him do.that
before,'' Astros manager Cecil
Cooper said Rodriguez's
display of emotion. "It's good,
good for him
"Wandy has been as good
as any p1tcher in the game
right now. · He is really
throwing the ball well."
Ivan Rodriguez came out
of an extended slump with
only his second multi-hit
game. His two doubles gave
him three for the year and
his two RBis doubled his
total for the season.
Bur the catcher wanted to
talk about his pitcher.
"He did a great j~:~b ,"
Pudge ~aid. "He threw a lot
of strike ones. He used his
fastball a lot and his breaking ball was good. It was a
12-to-6 breaking ball. He
threw a great game."
ln · (he seventh_, Wandy
Rodriguez (1-l) gave up his

rare

Pl. .se see Reds, BJ

�The' Daily Sentinel
·~

~ageA6

ARouND THE WoRLD

Inside

Monday, April20, 2009

Kennedy in court, Page B2

\.

·Coins, mufninjes _and statues
: _point to Cleopatra tomb .

Bv CELEAN JAcossoN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

Sheftlekl hits SOOth, Page B2
I

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Monday, Apri12&amp;, 2009

BURG EL-ARAB, Egypt - Egypt's top archaeologist
·made his version of a sales pitch Sunday, presenting 22
coins, I 0 mummies, and a fragment of a mask with a cleft
chin as evidence that the discovery of the lost tomb of Mark .
Antony and Cleopatra is at hand.
Zahi Haw ass showed off the ancient treasures to journalists during a tour of a 2,000-year-old temple to the god
Osiris, where they were found. He believes the site near the
Mediterranean Sea contains the tomb of the doomed lovers
that has been shrouded in mystery for so long.
"In my opinion, if this tomb is found, it will be one of the
most important discoveries of the 21st century because of
the love between Cleopatra and Mark Antony, and because
of the sad story of theu death," he said.
· Mark Antony and Cleopatra challenged Caesar Augustus
for control of the Roman Empire more than two millenia·
ago. Their armies were defeated and rather than submit to
capture, the lovers committed suicide - Mark Antony by
his sword, Cleopatra with a poisonous asp.
.
.
The Roman historian Plutarch said Caesat allowed the
two to be buried together, but their tomb was iiever found .
Hawass' claim is the latest spectacular announcement by
the archaeologist, who continues to capitalize on the
world's fascination with ancient Egypt. He regularly
unveils discoveries that are often met with skepticism and
bemuse men! by Egyptologists abroad.
In the past, archaeologists have not always backed
Hawass' more enthusiastic claims and suggested a degree
of caution is sometimes warranted.
With his trademark Indiana Jones-style hat, Hawass guided
journalists through the Toposiris Magna temple 30 miles (50
kilomete~s) from Egypt's ancient s-;aside capital. of
Alexandna. One by one; he held up the frmts of three years of
excavation by a team from the Dominican Republic, including.
the fragment of a mask bearing a distinctive cleft chin.
"If you look at the face of Mark Antony, many believed
he had this cleft on his chin and that's why I thought this
could be Mark Antony," said Hawass.
·
.
· But he admitted they "are not sure 100 percent" and
joked that the mask could depict Richard Burton, the actor
who played Mark Antony in the 1963 movie "Cleopatra"
also starring Elizabeth Taylor.
Kathleen Martinez, the Dominican archaeologist who has
been excavating the site for the last three years, said she chose
the temple based on 12 years of studying the life of Cleopatra.
"I believe it could be Taposiris Magna because it was the
most sacred temple of its time," she said, explaining that
the lovers were buried in a temple rather than a public tomb
to protect them from the Romans.
.
Inside the temple enclosure, Martinez's team also found
coins bearing Cleopatra's name and face, as well as the
carvings that could represent the doomed lovers.
·
-For Hawass, however, the most significant element was
the recent discovery of tombs from the same time period
ringing the area around the temple. The tombs included 10
mummies of apparent nobles. · .
.
.
"The discovery of the cemelery this week really convinced me that there is · someone important buried inside
this temple,'' he told. television cameras while standing .
inside ,a rough cut tomb surrounded by niches fjlled with ·
bones andwhole skeletons.
·
"No one would be buried outside a temple without a reason. We saw that in 'the pharaonic days, they were always
buried beside pyramids,' he said.
·
The discovery of the cemetery prompted Haw ass to conduct a study of the temple with ground-penetrating radar,
which revealed three possible sites for subterranean burial
chambers 40 feet (12 meters) underground.
Excavations will start Tuesday, said Hawass, who predicted the mystery of the resting place for the two would
finally be solved. A second radar study is set for April 22.

US boycotting, Iran starring, at UN raci~m meeting
GENEVA (AP) - The
Nations opens its
first global racism conference in eight years on
Monday with the U.S. and
at least seven other countries boycotting the event
out of concern that Islamic
· countries will demand that
it denounce Israel and ban
criticism of Islam.
The administration of
President Barack Obama.
America's first black head
of
state, . announced
Saturday .that it would boycott "with regret" the weeklong meeting in Geneva.
which already is experiencing much of the bickering
imd political infighting that
marred the 200 I conference
in Durban. South Africa.
The
Netherlands,
Germany and New Zealand
announced their boycotts
Sunday and Monday, while
Australia, Canada, Israel
and Italy already bad said
they would not attend.
.. 1 would love to be
involved in ·a useful conference that addressed continuing issues of racism and discrimination around the
globe,'' Obama said in
Trinidad on Sunday after
attending the Summit of the
Americas.
But he .said the language
of the U.N.'s draft declaration risked a reprise of
Du,ban . during which
"folks expressed antagonism toward Israel in ways
that were often times completely hypocritical and
counterproductive."
"We expressed i'n the
run-~p to this conference
our concerns that if you
adopted all of the language
from £00 I. that's not
something we can sign up
for:· Obama said.
"Hopefully some concrete
steps come out of the conference that we can partner

Bl

~entinel

Bv PAUL ScHEMM

JOHANNESBURG - A·
frail, 90-year-old NelsonMandcla struggled to the
stage Sunday at the ANC's
last rally before South
Africa's election. making a
surprise appearance to the
cheers of 100,000 supporters
while countrymen
watched on national TV.
· He wore a T-short embla- ·
zoned with the face of Jacob
Zuma. the party's popular
presidential candidate who
drew almost as mighty a
cheer from the fans gam.
erect
in
central
Johannesburg days before
Wednesday's patl iamentary ·
elections.
Mandela began his visit
with a drive around a field
in a golf cart with Zuma at
his side. Then Mandel a was
helped onto the s!3ge; where
he was seuted next to former
wife
Winnie
Madikizela-Mandela, one
of the ANC's most popular
leaders.
Mandela did not address
the crowd but Iistened as a
AP photo
brief video message he had
recorded earlier was shown Former South African president Nelson Mandala, center, arrives with the help of ANC
on a giant screen.
President Jacob Zuma, left, and former wife Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, right, for the final
In his message, Mandela election rally at the Ell.is Park stadium in Johannesburg, South Africa, Sunday. Nelson
said the ANC was best Mandela made an unannounced appearance Sunday at the African National Congress'
placed to lead . South last major rally before parliamentary. elections in South Africa, a boost for the party after
Africans in "our primary an internal power struggle and scandals surrounding its presidential candidate.
task" of eradicating poverty and improving the lives
The theme of the rally, of green, gold and black president in 1999 by thenof a ' black majority . "We are winning,'' reflect- joined
skimpily
clad President Thabo Mbeki
neglected under apartheid ed the party's optimism. women - also in the party who fired him , in 2005,
and still far behind whites Members of' parliament colors - Sunday. Young when Zumu was implicated
and an emerging. tiny elect the president , and men and women brought a in the corruption trial of a
black elite.
considering the ANC's touch of bling with their close friend and financial
Mandela looked in strong overwhelming popularity, glitter-encrusted T-shirts adviser.
spirits and smiled and Zuma, 67. is virtually reading .. Young, Gifted
Pros~utors announced
waved to the crowd.
earlier
this month they
and
ANC."
assured of becoming presiIt · was only the second dent.
The ANC launched its would not pursue a separate
appearance of this camSome say the former campaign with promises ·of corruption case . against
paign for Mandela, who guerrilla is the country's massive public spending to Zuma because of procedural
has laq~ely retired from most 'popular leader since create jobs. It has pulled problems, ·though they said
public It fe. But no one has Mandela.
back on such rhetoric in the they still believed they had
doubted his loyalty to the
Walter Kwatsi, a 33- face of the global economic a strong case. In 2006,
party that South Africans yeat-old
supermarket downturn, and Zuma on Zuma was acquitted of rape
embrace for defeating worker who carried a . Sunday stressed the modest accusations.
·
apartheid, and building handmade poster compar- goal of keeping job losses in
Zuma's populist touch
homes and creating jobs ing Zuma to President check. Bur Zuma also contrasts with Mbeki's
since it won power in the Barack Obama, was among promised investment 111 aloofness.
first all-race vote in 1994.
the millions of poor South transportation·, education
Some ofthe most enthuMandela , who was jailed Africans who believe the and health care to build a siastic , cheers . Zuma
for 27 years for his opposi~ ANC leader will bring base for growth "once the received Sunday followed
tion to apartheid, served much-wanted
his promise tQ "do things
improve- recovery begins."
one term as the nation's ments to their lives.
Zuma, who joined the differently'' in a new
president. from 1994 to · " All the people love ANC in 195'), was jailed administration.
1999. The constitution Jacob Zuma," Kwatsi said for I 0 years on Robben
"We have seen excitement
allows two, but he stepped Sunday. ..He's the man Island, alongside Mandela about the ANC that we have
aside for younger leaders who's going to deliver and other heroes of ·rhe not witnessed since the
and to focus on fighting · deliver water, electricity, anti-apartheid struggle. He release of Madiba and the
AIDS and supporting houses, jobs. everything."
also spent l 5 years in 1994 elections," he said,
international peacemaking
Old ladies in starched exile.
referring to Mandela by his
efforts .
outfits in the ANC colors
He was appointed deputy clan name.

Un~ted

The_Daily

with other countries on to first day.
.
· actually reduce discriminaHe arrived in Geneva on
tion around the globe, but Sunday evening and met
.this wasn't an opportunity privately with President
to do it," he said.
Hans-Rudolf Merz of
·Some European countries Switzerland', the country
are still deciding whether that represents the diploto attend the U.N. confer- matic interests of the
ence. which runs through United States in the Islamic
April 24. Britain said it will republic.
send diplomats, despite
The pullout of Germany
concerns the meeting could is significant since it has
become a forum for played a leading :role . in
Holocaust denial or anti- U.N. anti-racism efforts as a
Semitic attacks. 1
result of its troubled historiAt .the Vatican ,, Pope cal legacy: In recent meetBenedict XVI said the con- ings, it has expressed disterence is needed to elimi- may about some governnate racial
intolerance ments' attempts to downaround the world. Asia . play the significance of the
News. a Catholic · news Holocaust_
agency that is part of the
Germany said Sunday
missionary arm of the that it made its boycott deciVatican, said of the pope 's sion after consulting with
comment: "The Holy See is other European Union
· distancing itself from the nations.
criticisms of some Weste.m
"This decision was not
countries."
easy.'' said German Foreign
"I am sbocked and . Minister
Frank-Walter
deeply disappointed by the Steinmeier. "As in Durban
United States' decision not in 200 I. this conference
to attend," said U.N. could be abused by others
human rights chief Navi as a platform for their interPillay. who is hosting the ests. We cannot accept
that," he said.
·
conference·.
She · conceded some
New Zealand's Foreign
countries were focusing Minister Murray McCully
solely on one or two issues said Monday he was not satto the detriment of the fig lit isfied the wording of the
against intolerance, but draft statement would pre·said it is essential that the vent the conferenve from
issue of racism be tackled "descending into the same
globally.
kind of rancorous and
The major.sticking point; unprodu~tive debate that
regarding the proposed final took place in 200 I."
U.N. declaration are its
The bland U.N. draft
implied criticism of Israel statement does not mention
and an attempt_ by Muslim / Israel by name. but· it reafgovernments to ban all crit- finns the Durban statement
icism of Islam, Sharia law. · and its reference to the
the prophet Muhammad and plight of Palestinians . That
other tenets of their faith.
document was agreed after
President the United States and Israel
Iranian
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad walked out over attempts
who repeatedly has called to liken Zionism - the
for the destruction of Israel movement to establish a
and denied the Holocaust Jewi sh state in the Holy
- is slated to speak on the ),..and - to racism.

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LocAL ScHEDULE
·""""""'
..........
ol "9&gt;
IChool
i'8l'$ity- sporing
events itM:M"Ig teams

from Galla Md Ueig&amp; C9Ullias.
•
Mgndar April 20
.
Bne0all
Eastern vs. Trimble, 5 p.m.
GalUa Academy at L6gan, 5 p.m.
Meigs vs. Vinton County, 5 p.m.
Point Plea!ijlnt at Wahama, 5 p.m.

Southem VS. Waterford, s· p.m.
'
Softball
Eastern vs. Trimble. 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at logan, 5 p.m.
Meigs vs. Vinton County. 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Sissonville, e p.m.
SOUtham vs. Waterford, 5 p.m.
Tennla
Gania Academy""· Portsmoulh, 4:30 p.m
point Pleasant vs. Poca, 5 p.m.
llAHdQ, April 21
. 88Hblll
Ee.st8irn vs. Gallla Academy;S p.m.
Meigs at Feder&amp;~! Hocking, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Fairland, 5:30 p.m.
River Valley at Miller, 5 p.m.
Wahama at Charleston Catholic, B pJn.
SOuthern vs. Wirl County, 5 p.m.

SOftball
Eastern vs. Warren 5 p.m.
.·.
Gadia Academy vs. Ches&amp;peltke, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Federal Hocking, 5 P.m.
Rive·r Valley at Miller, 5 p.m.
Southam at ~IMtflswood , 5 p.m.

Trick and Fluid
Eastern at Athens 4:30p.m.
Oallla Acaoamy at Coal Grove. 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Soull1 Point Quad, 5 p.m.
Wahama w. Trimble, 5 p.m
·
. Tennle
fl1lnl Ploasant"' Hunlklgton SLJoo, 4 p.m.

~·

Wodhelday. April 22

: ·

Ba10ball

e~ern vs. Whiteoak at Chillicothe, 5 p.m.

Qallia Academy at Portsmouth, 5 p.m.
Rolnt Pleasant vs. Buffalo, 6 p.m.
Aiver Valley lit Coal Grove, 5 p.m.
W8h8ma at Southern, 4:30p.m.
SOftball
Eastern vs. Whiteoak at Chillk:othe 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Portsmouth 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant vs. Wahama, 5 p.m.
River Valley at eoa1 G{ove, 5 p.m.
Hannan vs. South Gatlla, 5 p.m.
Tennla
9allla Academy vs. Wheelersburg, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant vs. Wahama. 4:30p.m.

Prep Track and
. .Field Roundup

·Lady Angels
top Relays
STAFF REPORTS
MDSSPORTSCIMYDAILYSENflNELCOM

LOGAN - The Gallia
Academy track team showed
up at !he Mingo Relays in
Logan with one goal in mind
- to win. That's exactly what
the Blue Angels did. Scoing
160.33 points to blow the
competition out of the water,
Galh~ Academy's girls track
team was unstoppable at
Saturday's meet.
; The scoring frenzy qegan
with the 100 meter dash
with senior Alexis Geiger
~nd junior Kara Jackson fini~hing first and second with
limes of 12.58 and 12.77,
respectively.
: The back-to-hack finish
· occured again in the 200
.ineterdash with Jackson taking first with a time o{ 26.57
and Tonia Logan taking second with a time of28.07.
Galli a
Academy's
Samantha Barnes took first
in the 800 meter relay with a
time of 2:25.48 with team. mate McKenna Warner fin·ishing fourth with a time of
2:39.14.
Iilue Anq;el's freshman
Payton A'dkms took first in
the 1600 meter run with a
time .o f 5:35.37, finishing
almost 30 seconds ahead of
the nearest competition.
Lauren Adkrns of the
squad finished second in the
3200 meter relay with a
time of 12:04.80.
The second place finishes
continued in the 100 and
300 meter hurdles with Brea
Close clocking in at 15 .97
;md 49.82, respectively.
· The Blue Angles took top
spots in. the 4x 100 meter
and 4x200 meter relays with
times of 51.53 and 1:50.63
respectively.
: Both of the successful
squads were made up of
~lose, Logan, Jackson and
Geiger.
Genna Baker, Barnes, P.
Adkins, and Warner ran for
the 4x400 meter relay to
finish third with a time of

NEW YORK (AP) -The Girardi said. "We expected
jokes started flying as the pitching to be a ~trcr\2th and
Cleveland Indians piled up sometimes it .has heen. But
runs in the second inning at other times not.
Saturday. Ben Francisco was
It was the most rum for the
glad he wasn't in the field . Indians -since they beat. New
Ryan Garko was hoping to York 22-0 on Aug. 31, 2004.
avoid making another out.
at the old Yankee Stadium.
It was one fun day for the The 22 .runs also tied the
Tribe ·at the Ne:w York Yankees' record for most
Yankees' swanky new home. allowed in a home game.
Asdrub:U Cabrera hit a · Choo delivered the first big
· ~d slam and an Rln single . blow in the second, hitting a
10 Cleveland's ·14-run second rlcye-run drive off Wang to
~ the biggest inning ever give Cleveland a 3-2 lead.
against New York - and the Asdrubal Cabrera singled in a
Indians set the bar for Yankee run. DeRosa had a two-run
Stadium's new record book, double and Martinez had an
coasting to a 224 victory.
RBI single before Wang wa' ·
"It was just one of those replaced by Anthony Claggett,
games for the entire ream ," who wa~ making his major
said Mark D'eRosa, who 'league debut after being
went 4-for-7 and tied a recalled
from
Triple-A
career high with six RBls. Scmnton/Wilkes-Barre before
"Just a lot of guys getting the game~
good swings."
Wang. (0-3) was charged
. DeRosa .and Shin Soo- with eight runs and eight hits
Chao hit three-run homers, in I 1-3 innings, giving him
Travis
Hafner,
Grady a 34.50 ERA in three starts
Sizemore and Victor Martinez this year. He went 5-0 with a
had solo shots and manager 3 .23 ERA in six April starts
Eric Wedge earned his SOOth last season.
"Actually, I thought he
victory. · Jhonny Peralta had
three hits and two RB[s after threw more good sinkerballs
missing Friday's 6-5 loss with today but that inning got out of
a strained left elbow.
haild and we need to fix that,''
The Indians chased strug- Girardi said. "We have some
gling starter Chien-Ming time. We have a day off I think
Wang and set several marks Thursday and we're going to
that could stand for a while have to decide what's best for second iime in the series as
at New York's $1.5 billion Chien-Ming Wang and the C.laggett struck out DeRosa
for the final out. Yankees
ballpark. The 14 runs wen; team."
.
outfielder
Nick Swisher
The Yankees .could skip
the most scored in the secpit&amp;hed
a
scoreless
inning
ond inning of &lt;i major league Wang's next tum in the rotagame, according to the Elias tion but Girardi said the during a blowout loss at
Sports Bureau. The runs and team hasn't made a decision Tampa Bay on Monday.
· Wang and Claggett com13 hits in the inning were a yet.
bined
to throw 69 pitches
franchise record for a
Peralta doubled in two
Yankees opponent.
more .runs after Wang left during the half-inning,
"We did a good job of not and Asdrubal Cabrera hit a which lasted 37 minutes.
"We knew it was long,"
missing pitches and we drive .t.o right on a 3-1 fitch
squared a lot' of balls up for h1s first homer o the Francisco said. "I think I
today,'' Wedge said.
·
year. Sizemore followed was talking to Grady, I'm
Mark Teixeira and Melky Cabrera''s shot with his like, 'It would suck to be on
Cabrera each hit a two-run fourth homer to make it 14-2 defense right now, just sitting out there."'
homer for the Yankees, who as the crowd booed loudly.
.
were embarrassed in two of · By .then, the party was on
The "We want Swisher!"
their first three regular-sea- in the lndiaJ)S' du~out.
chant returned when Hafner
son ~ames at their new field. · "There's some tunny stuff hit his fourth homer of the
New York lost 10-2 in its that's said,'' DeRosa said. season in the eighth.
.
Fausto Carmona (1-2) was
home opener Thursday "Obviously Garko made the
when Cleveland scored nine first out and didn't want to the beneficiary of the Indians'
runs in the sevenih inning.
make another out in the big day at the plate, working
"I haven't seen this many same inning."
six innings in his first victory
big innings in u long while,'' . The fans started chanting of the season. He allowed
Yankees
manager Joe "We want Swisher!" for the four runs and six hits.

Cleveland
Indians'
Grady
Sizemore,
left, and
Asdrubal
Cabrera celebrate after
scoring on a
hit by Mark
DeRosa.in
the second
inning during
a Major
League
Baseball
game 1
Saturday, at .
Yankee
Stadium in
New York.
AP pholo

Carmona
surrendered
Teixeira's third homer in the
first as the crowd of 45,167
filed in on a picturesque day in
New York. Even with the
beautiful, 75-degree weather,
the I ,800 Le~ends Suite seats
. i~ the first nme rows tinging
the plate, which cost between
$500 and $2,625 each, had
long strings of empty chairs.
Sizemore and Hafner each
had three hits and scored
three times. Cabrera tied a
career mark with foor hits
.and five -RBis.
Notes: Yankees 3B Alex
Rodriguez (right hip surgery)
rook 75 swings and hit several
long homers during his third
consecutive day of batting
practice in Florida. Rodriguez,
expected to rejoin the team by
May l5, also took grounders
on the infield dirt for the first
time and increased the intensity of his running program ... ,

Cleveland
Cavaliers'
LeBron James
(23) shoots over
Detroit Pistons'
Rasheed Wallace
(30) in the third
quarter of a firstround NBA basketball playoff
game Saturday,
in Cleveland.
James scorad 34
points in a 102·
64win.
AP pholo

Yankees RF Xavier Nady
(right elbow) had a non-dye
MRI and team physician
Christopher Ahmad wants to
consult with Dr. Lewis Yocum
before deciding what to do
next. Yocum performed
Tommy John surgery on
Nady's elbow in September
200 I. ... ln&lt;!ians OF David
Dellucci (strained left calf) is
scheduled to begin a rehab
assignment with Triple-A
Columbus on Monday. . ..
Plate umpire Ed Hickox was
struck on his helmet by a foul
ball off the bat of Cleveland's
Ben Francisco in the sixth
irinirig. He left the field for a
moment and returned with a
Yankees catcher's mask on.
But second base umpire Tom
Hallion replaced him behind
the plate in the eighth. A
spokesman for the Yankees
said he was taken to a hospital
for observation.

Rodriguez
baffles Reds
in 7-0 victory
for Astros
HOUSTON (AP)
Wandy Rodri$uez pumped
his fist after fmishing off ~
sterling performance 'with a
strikeout, getting out of the
only jam he faced in seven
mnmgs .

Cavaliers roll over·Pistons

CLEVELAND (AP) ~ Cavs the league's most domLeBron James crossed mi&lt;f- · inant team - home or away
court and launched the bali - during the regular season.
toward the basket more than momentum and a 12-point
40 feet away as the hom · halftime lead.
sounded.
Cleveland held off one
· As Cleveland's star. the second-half surge by-Detroit
Detroit Pistons, 20.000 fans while James was on the
· and a TV audience watched bench and closed out the
the shot's arching flight. Pistons , who will try to even
James never stopped running. the best-of-seven series in
~:33.73.
"I was going to ch&lt;L.&lt;&gt;e it until Game 2 on Tuesday night.
: The team of Warner, P. it went in the hoop," h~ said.
To do that , Detroit will
and. A. Adkins, and Barnes
Off · the
backboard, have to devise soqJething to
iook first in the 4x300 meter through the rim, then the net. slow the brilliant James , who
telay finishing with a time " It was halftime . It was had his way for 41 minutes .
pf 10:22.57.
over.
The likely MVP went 13-of· For the field events,
James banked in a stunning 20 from the field. 11 -of- 14
Karen Vanco tied in the ~igh 3-pointer at the end of the frrst from the line and didn't comjump in a third place fipish half and finished with 38 mit a turnover. Cleveland had
with a distance of 4- 10.
points , eight rebounds and only live miscues, u pbstseaGei~er and Barnes rac.ked
seven assists as the Cavaliers son fmnchise record .
up pomts in the long jump embarked on their quest for a
''It's tough when he is
witfi Geiger taking first and first NBA championship with going like that," Pistons forBarnes taking third with a 102-84 win over the Pistons ward Antonio McDyess
jumps of 16-08 and 14- 11. in Game I on Saturday.
said. "No matter what you
respectively.
James' 41-footer demoral- do: trap. he's going to .make
Please.see Roundup. 86 ized the Pistons and gave the that play: contest shots. he ·s

•

dOODIS

I

making shots. He's goi11g to which came in as a No.8 seed
the bucket and being fouled . and could be in for a shorter
It's just tough ,"
· postseason run after making
Asked about his range the Eastern Conference finals
afterward. James paused.
the past six years.
·
.. Uh," he said. "Pretty
Prstons forward Tayshaun
much unlimited."
Prince had just four points
So, it seems, is everything - 10 below his average else about him .
' in 37 minutes. He was wearThe Piston s have seen ing a large wrap . on hi s
James ' act in the playoffs injured back after the game .
before, and still don 't know
James closed the opening
how to deal with him.
half with another one of
"We have to know where those plays that defines his
LeBron is at all times," greatness.
Richard Hamilton said.
After Hamilton 's jumper
"When you score 38 against brought the Pistons to 54-45
us. we can't have that and with two seconds left,James
have a chance. We .have to fig- took the inbounds on the tly,
·UI'C out a way to stop him:·
blew past Prince on the far
Joe Smith scored 13 points sideline and dropped his
and Zydrunas llgauskas had long 3-pointer. By the time it
12 and 10 rebounds for the tumbled to the floor, James
Cavs. who pushed the tempo was nearly under the basket.
in the second half and outran
He then paused and stood
the aging Pistons .
·
on the baseline, soaking in
Rodney Stuckey scored 20
·
and Hamilton 1s for Detroit. Please see cavaliers, BJ

Rodriguez allowed two
hits and tied his career best
with 10 strikeouts to lead
the Houston Astros to. a 7-0 .
victory
against
the
Cincinnati
Reds
on
·Saturday ni'ght.
"I've never seen him do.that
before,'' Astros manager Cecil
Cooper said Rodriguez's
display of emotion. "It's good,
good for him
"Wandy has been as good
as any p1tcher in the game
right now. · He is really
throwing the ball well."
Ivan Rodriguez came out
of an extended slump with
only his second multi-hit
game. His two doubles gave
him three for the year and
his two RBis doubled his
total for the season.
Bur the catcher wanted to
talk about his pitcher.
"He did a great j~:~b ,"
Pudge ~aid. "He threw a lot
of strike ones. He used his
fastball a lot and his breaking ball was good. It was a
12-to-6 breaking ball. He
threw a great game."
ln · (he seventh_, Wandy
Rodriguez (1-l) gave up his

rare

Pl. .se see Reds, BJ

�·Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, April 20,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2009

Monday, April 20, 2009

W'Nw.mydailysentlnel.com

m;rtbune - Sentin

Sheffield hits sooth honte nut

photo

In this Jan. 31 file phot~. of Mississippi
coach
Andy Kennedy gesturing towards his players during a
basksetball game in Starkville, Miss. Kennedy may be nearing a plea deal that will help him avoid a trial on a misdemeanor assault charge in Cincinnati.

Missi~sippi

coach

Kennedy goes .to
court in Ohio

NEW YORK (AP) him get that, to hit that at
Gary Sheffield hit his SOOth that time, to tie the game ...
home run Friday night t.o that was big for us."
became the 25th player in
At 40 years, 143 days.
major league history to Sheffield is the fourth-oldest
reach the mile&gt;tone, belting player to hit 500 behind
a drive
to left off Willie McCovey (40 years,
!vlilwaukee's Mitch Stetter 171 days), Eddie Murray
leading off the seventh (40. 194) and (Ted Williams
inning.
41,291),
The nine-time All-Star
Sheffield was 0-for-4
hit a full-count pitch an with t.hree walks for the
estimated 38i feet, his first Mets before the homer. He
hit qf .the season for the made his first start of the
New York Mets after being season Wednesday after
cut by the Detroit Tigers signing with New York on
the last week Of spring April 4. ' Sheffield was
training.
stu11ned when the Tigers
"Just to join that 500 released hi111 March 31,
c)ub, you know. Now I can saying they wanted a more
say 'I'm in the club and, versatile player to fill his
. you know, 't's like getting spot.
your degree. Nobody can
Earlier in the spring, he
. never take thai away from talked about bringing his
you," Sheffield said after family, including uncle and
· the Mets beai the Brewers former Mets ace Dwight.
5-4.
'
Gooden, to Toronto for
Sheffield pumped both · Detroit's first series of the
arms in the air as he season in case he hit No.
approached
first
and 500. .
rounded the bases as camHis wife and children
eras flashed all over Citi were among the crowd of
.Fi'eld. He touched home 36,436 on Friday night.
,
plate and pointed to ·the
"It has been nerve wracksky with both arms after ing for them, especially not
the pinch-hit shot, then knowing when I'm going to
h'ugged on-deck batter Jose get to play," he said.
Reyes.
'
He also got some pregame
He received congratula'to- advice from former Mets
ry hugs and high-fives from star Darryl Strawberry. ·
his new teammates, who · "He told me, 'Just relax
came out of .the dugout as and do whllt you · do,"'
fans gave Sheffield an ova-. Sheffield said. . ·
tion.
Sheffield · joins
Ken
"They were very happy. Griffey Jr. (613), Alex
They've been very sup- Rodriguez
(553), · Jim
portive ever since I got Thome (543) and Manny
here," Sheffield
said. Ramirez (527) as tlie only
That's all we've. been talk- active players to reach the
ing about. as well as win- milestone.
ning a championship and
Known as much for his
what I bring to this team . outspoken personality as
... They've been very spe- he is for hi s vicious swing
cia! to me."
that made him one of the
The homer, the second as most feared hitters in the
a pinch-hitter, tied the game, . Sheffield joined
score at 4-all: It was Hank Aaron, Willie Mays,
ca'ught
by
Chris Barry
Bonds,'
Frank
Matcovich, a 22-year-old · Robinson and Reggie
Mets fan from Suffer.n, Jackson as the only playN.Y., wearing a Keith ers with 500 homers plus
Hernandez jersey.
at least 2,500 hits, I ,500
"He has been a great addi- RBis and 200 stolen
tion to the chemistry of the bases.
team. When he's not playSheffield is connected to
ing, he's talki ng to guys Bonds in another manner.
about hitting, what he looks He told a 2003 grand jury
for, thdse types of things," that he took a performanceMets manager Jerry Manuel enhancer called "the. cream"
said. "And, you know, that was given to him by
every time. you call on him, Bonds' trainer, but did ·not
he seems to put together .a know it contained illegal
pretty good at-bat. So to see substances.

CINCINNATI (AP) - Mississippi basketball coach
Andy Kennedy hopes· to have his assault case settled on
Monday instead of facing an assault trial in Hamilton
County Municipal Court.
Even if the criminal case is settled in a plea bargain,
Kennedy is embroiled in lawsuits over his arrest in
December on a misdemeanor assault charge. A cab driver
claimed that Kennedy punched him and called him a terrorist when the team was in town for a game.
Ole Miss athletic director Pete Boone said in a statement
'last week that Kennedy " is keeping me informed, and he is
hopeful there ,will be a resolution on Monday." He faces up
to six months in jail if convicted.
Lawyers for Kennedy and cab driver Mohamed Moctar
Ould Jiddou didn't return phone messages on Friday to discuss the 'status of the CI!Se. However, a document filed in
court last week involving a witness subpoena indicated
there would be no trial on Monday.
Kennedy was the interim coach at the University of
Cincinnati for one season after Bob Huggins was ousted.
He went to .Mississippi and returned io town for a game
against Louisville on Dec. 18 as part of the SEC/Big East
.
InvitationaL
Kennedy was at a downtown bar with friends and Ole
Miss staff the night before the game and hailed a cab.
Jiddou, a 25"year-old native of northwest Africa, said
Kennedy an.d four others tried to get into his cab, which
was more than it could legally carry.
The cab driver said he told Kennedy he couldn't take the
entire party, and the coach hit him in the face, calling him
"bin. Laden, Saddam Hussein." Police said the left side of
Jiddou 's.face was swo llen afterward.
Kennedy was released from jail in time to coach the .
game. Following a 77-68 loss to · Louisville, Kennedy
referred to the "heinous accusations" made by the cab driver.
,
The case escalat.e d when Kennedy sued Jiddou for
alleged defamation, along with a valet who saiQ he. witnessed the altercation. Jiddou and the valet countersued. In·
those civil oases, the lawye(s are wrangling over whether
depositions should be delayed until the criminal case is settled.

Cavaliers
fromPageBl
the love from Cleveland's
fans, who have watched
him perform similar feats
before.
Did he call glass?
·'Yeah," he said. "After I
hit it."
The Pistons left the floor
shaken.
" Man," Stuckey said of
James' big shot. "It is what
it is. He made it. and they
,got a bit of momentum."
Detroit regrouped and
came out hungry after halftime. The Pistons hung
around by knocking cl'own
jumpers and managed to
pull within 80-72 early in
the fourth quarter on Will
Bynum's basket with 8:50
left, forcing the Cavs to call
a timeout.
James checked back in at
that point. and when play
resumed, guard Mo Williams.
who didn't shoot well in his
first . playoff game with
Cleveland, made a 3-pointer
and the Cavs were on their
way to an easy win.
· About the only thing, that
didn't go James' way was
that his beloved New York
Yankees gave up 14 runs in
one inning to the Cleveland
Indians.
·
James, as is almost
always the case, was the difference .
When he wasn't scoring,
he was setting up his teammates f(lr easy baskets.

''It's contagious," said
Williams, who went 5-of-14.
"You see that he's the reason
why this team is the way that
it is. When you have your best
player being that un,selfish,
you find yourself being the
same way."
·
For a large chunk of the
first half,. an expected defensive struggle between two of
the East's roughest teams was
an offensive extrayaganza.
The Cavs and Pistons traded
baskets - .most on' jumpers
- and threatened to take a
game expected to end in the
70s or 80s into triple digits.
When Rasheed Wallace
. clropped a short shot in the
lane to bring the Pistons
within 37-36, Detroit was
shooting an eye-popping 65
percent (15-of-23) from the
floor and getting good looks
against the league ·s best
defense. Cleveland was
nearly as hot, hanging
around the 60 percent mark.
The Pistons finally coole~.
and the Cavs took off.
James fed a no-look pass
- left-handed - across the
lane to Smith for a dunk ,
igniting a 20-9 run that gave
Cleveland a 12-point halftimebulge.
Detroit missed 12 of its
final 15 shots in the opening
half. an untimely drought it
never.overcame.
"To come in and slroot 46
percent , only . have seven
turnovers and be that close
on the boards, it should
have been closer than an ISpoint game," Pistons coach
M ichae I Curry said.

Reds
fromPageBl
first two walks •. but struck
out · Layuce Nix •. filling il,l
t'pr the injured Jay Bruce, to
etid tlie threat:
· "Tonight, my breaking
ball was very nice ; so I used
it a lot," Rodriguez said.
And about the frrst pump?
"I felt happy because in
that situation, I wanted to

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AP photo

New York Mets' Gary Sheffield (10) reacts to the crowd
alter hitting his SOOth home run during the seventh inning of
a baseball game against the Milwaukee Brewers on Friday,
in New York.
Slowed
by
shoulder for me as well as my famiinjuries and other problems 1y."
last season. Sheffield hit just
Sheffield was pursued by
.225 with 19 homers and 57 several tearns. including the
RBis. He was released by Phillies, before signing with ·
·
·
Detroit after hitting .178 New York.
He. said the allure of
with five homers in 45
spring training at-bats this returning to New York year.
where he played for the
"Everything happens for Yankees · from 2004-06 a reason. you know." was a big draw.
Gooden. was a star pitcher
Sheffield said. ''There was
a reason why I hit 19 home for the Mets in the 1980s
runs in stead of 20 last and, '90s and encour~J,ged
year. I could have did it him several time~ over the
then, but there was a rea- years to. sign with the Mets.
·son wh.y me havi'ng get Sheffield nearly did on mul:
released and then coming tiple occasions, but it never
here and doing it on the quite worked out thai he
biggest stage, So it makes would call Shea Stadium
it that much more special home .

get that guy out and I did."
( 1-2) went six innings and .
The Reds were impressed . allowed five runs un I 0 hils.
too.
He struck out six and
'That was
good a curve walked one and didn't think'
ball as I've seen Wandy he threw too badly.
·throw," manager Dusty Baker : "I got six ground balls and
said:"He threw it pn any ebunt they went right where every. and' at any time. The velocity l;xxly was .not," fiarang ~aid.
difference on it was ·15 to 20 ~·I~ was frustrating: When you
milesper,hourandthisearly.m ,_ make good pitcheSI!Rd don't
the season, 0\lr hitters wereiJ't get outs, it's tllat ·way. It was
lillie to adjust to it.
··
just one .of.thbse Jllghts. You
"But I'm not making any :can'tdoanythingaboutit."
Chris Sampson and Jeff
excuses. He threw a great
game tonight."
Fulchino ~ach pitched a hit. Reds starter Aaron Harang less inning to complete the

as

combined .two-hitter and
Houston's first· shutout of
the season.
Back-to-back RBI singles
by Hunter Pence and Geoff
B!urn gave the Astros a 2-0
lead in the first.
Carlo~ Lee doubled into
the left corner to drive in
Michael Bourn from second
for a ·3-0 lead in the fifth.
With the bases loaded in the
seventh, Blum doubled to tight
field to score two runs. Ivan
Rodriguez then doubled in two
more runs for a 7-0 lead.

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ATV ............................................................. 1005

Bicycles .. ,...................................... ,............ 101 0

Cemetery Plota .......................................... 3005

HeaHh ................................-........................... 326
t1eatlng &amp; Coollng ................................ ~ .... -328
Home Improvements 330

Commerclal. ......................................- ••••.•• 3010
Condomlnluma .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Ownar ..................................... 3020
Houaea for Sal~ ............................;............ 302.5
Land (AcrMge) .............. ,...................... ,.... 3030
Lots ·········--·····-·····-··-···-···········-·······-..········3035
Went to buy ................................................ 3040
Real Eatate Rentale ................................... 3500
Apertmenta/Tawnhoua• .,....................... 3505

Prota.•lonal Servlcea ................................. 342

Tara
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Apartmer6 - 2BR, 1.5
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Boate1Acceeeorlea .................................... 1015
C4mperJRVa &amp;: Trallera ............................. 1020
Motorcyclea ............................................... 10~
Other .......................................................... 1030
Want to buy ............................................... 1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto Renl8VLeaee ..................................... 2005
Autoa .........................................................~ 2010
Ctaallc/Antlquea ....................................... 2015
Commercial/Industrial~ ............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Acceaaorlea ...............................~ .. 2025
Sports Utlllty ...... ~....................................... 2030
Trucko ............., ...................... c.................... 2035
Utility Trellera ........................,_,, ............... 2040
Vane .....·....................................................... 2045
Want to buy ........................... :................... 2050
Real Estate Salea ............................... ,...... 3000

Flnanclal ........................................ - .............322

Plumblng/Eiaclricel ...................................... 340

playground, (trash,
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TrliMIIEnlel'tflllnmant .............................. :... 352
Ananclat .......................................................400
Financial Servlcea ...........................;........... 405
lnaurance .................................................... 410
Money to Lend .....- ..........................:........... 415
EducaUon ..................................................... 500
Bueineea a Trade School ........................... sos
lnetrucllon &amp; Trelnlng ................................. 510
Lessona ........................................................ 515
Personel ....................................................... 520

Anlmela ........................................................ 600
Animal Suppliea ................................_......... 605

Horeea .........................................................-610
LlveetOC:k ..............................~ ...........: ........... 615
Peta.................................. ,............................ 620

want to buy ................................. ~ ................ 625

Agriculture ................................................... 700

Ferm Equlpment .......................................... 705
Garden I Produce ........ - ............................. 710
Hay, Feed, seed, Grain ............................... 715
Hunting I Land ......................................... .-. 720

want to buy ...~ .............................................. 725
Merchandise ............................................- .• 900
Antlques ....................................................... 905
Appllance ..................................................... 910
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Baf91iln 8aHrnent ....................................... 920
Col~ibles .................................................. 925

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Equipment1Supplle1 ... .................................935
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Educa1ion ....................... 1......... , ................. 6016
Electrical Plumblng ....... - .... ,. ~ ..·-·········--··6018
Employment Agencl................................8020
Entertelnment .............- ............................ 1022
Food 5ervlcea............................................8024
GOWirnment • F.cleral JObl .................... 6026
Help anted-- Genertl .......... .......... - ............ 6028
'--w EnfOI'C8:ft'MKit .......................................8030

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Menagenwnt/Super¥1aory ........................ 8034
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want to buy .................................................. 97~

Musical ................................. , ..................... 6040
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CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legala ...........................................................100
Announcemente .................................... :..... 200
Birthday/Anniverury ................................... 205
Happy Ada ... :................................:............... 210
Lost &amp; Found ............. .................................. 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Noticea ......................................................... 225
Pereonala .........,........................................... 230
Wanted .........................................:.............. 235

lnaurance ....... .............................................. 332
Lawn Servtce ...............................................334
Mualc1Dance1Drama .................................... 336
Other S&amp;rvlc.a ........................................... -338

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Building ~ateriala ....................................... 306
Bualnaae ...................................................... 308
Calerlng .................:. ..........~........................... 310
Chltd/Ektorty Core ........................................ 312
Computere .......................-............................ 314
Contractort .................................................. 316
Domeetlca1Janltorlal ................................... 318
Electrlcal ............... ,...................................... 320

.

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Monday, April 20,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2009

Monday, April 20, 2009

W'Nw.mydailysentlnel.com

m;rtbune - Sentin

Sheffield hits sooth honte nut

photo

In this Jan. 31 file phot~. of Mississippi
coach
Andy Kennedy gesturing towards his players during a
basksetball game in Starkville, Miss. Kennedy may be nearing a plea deal that will help him avoid a trial on a misdemeanor assault charge in Cincinnati.

Missi~sippi

coach

Kennedy goes .to
court in Ohio

NEW YORK (AP) him get that, to hit that at
Gary Sheffield hit his SOOth that time, to tie the game ...
home run Friday night t.o that was big for us."
became the 25th player in
At 40 years, 143 days.
major league history to Sheffield is the fourth-oldest
reach the mile&gt;tone, belting player to hit 500 behind
a drive
to left off Willie McCovey (40 years,
!vlilwaukee's Mitch Stetter 171 days), Eddie Murray
leading off the seventh (40. 194) and (Ted Williams
inning.
41,291),
The nine-time All-Star
Sheffield was 0-for-4
hit a full-count pitch an with t.hree walks for the
estimated 38i feet, his first Mets before the homer. He
hit qf .the season for the made his first start of the
New York Mets after being season Wednesday after
cut by the Detroit Tigers signing with New York on
the last week Of spring April 4. ' Sheffield was
training.
stu11ned when the Tigers
"Just to join that 500 released hi111 March 31,
c)ub, you know. Now I can saying they wanted a more
say 'I'm in the club and, versatile player to fill his
. you know, 't's like getting spot.
your degree. Nobody can
Earlier in the spring, he
. never take thai away from talked about bringing his
you," Sheffield said after family, including uncle and
· the Mets beai the Brewers former Mets ace Dwight.
5-4.
'
Gooden, to Toronto for
Sheffield pumped both · Detroit's first series of the
arms in the air as he season in case he hit No.
approached
first
and 500. .
rounded the bases as camHis wife and children
eras flashed all over Citi were among the crowd of
.Fi'eld. He touched home 36,436 on Friday night.
,
plate and pointed to ·the
"It has been nerve wracksky with both arms after ing for them, especially not
the pinch-hit shot, then knowing when I'm going to
h'ugged on-deck batter Jose get to play," he said.
Reyes.
'
He also got some pregame
He received congratula'to- advice from former Mets
ry hugs and high-fives from star Darryl Strawberry. ·
his new teammates, who · "He told me, 'Just relax
came out of .the dugout as and do whllt you · do,"'
fans gave Sheffield an ova-. Sheffield said. . ·
tion.
Sheffield · joins
Ken
"They were very happy. Griffey Jr. (613), Alex
They've been very sup- Rodriguez
(553), · Jim
portive ever since I got Thome (543) and Manny
here," Sheffield
said. Ramirez (527) as tlie only
That's all we've. been talk- active players to reach the
ing about. as well as win- milestone.
ning a championship and
Known as much for his
what I bring to this team . outspoken personality as
... They've been very spe- he is for hi s vicious swing
cia! to me."
that made him one of the
The homer, the second as most feared hitters in the
a pinch-hitter, tied the game, . Sheffield joined
score at 4-all: It was Hank Aaron, Willie Mays,
ca'ught
by
Chris Barry
Bonds,'
Frank
Matcovich, a 22-year-old · Robinson and Reggie
Mets fan from Suffer.n, Jackson as the only playN.Y., wearing a Keith ers with 500 homers plus
Hernandez jersey.
at least 2,500 hits, I ,500
"He has been a great addi- RBis and 200 stolen
tion to the chemistry of the bases.
team. When he's not playSheffield is connected to
ing, he's talki ng to guys Bonds in another manner.
about hitting, what he looks He told a 2003 grand jury
for, thdse types of things," that he took a performanceMets manager Jerry Manuel enhancer called "the. cream"
said. "And, you know, that was given to him by
every time. you call on him, Bonds' trainer, but did ·not
he seems to put together .a know it contained illegal
pretty good at-bat. So to see substances.

CINCINNATI (AP) - Mississippi basketball coach
Andy Kennedy hopes· to have his assault case settled on
Monday instead of facing an assault trial in Hamilton
County Municipal Court.
Even if the criminal case is settled in a plea bargain,
Kennedy is embroiled in lawsuits over his arrest in
December on a misdemeanor assault charge. A cab driver
claimed that Kennedy punched him and called him a terrorist when the team was in town for a game.
Ole Miss athletic director Pete Boone said in a statement
'last week that Kennedy " is keeping me informed, and he is
hopeful there ,will be a resolution on Monday." He faces up
to six months in jail if convicted.
Lawyers for Kennedy and cab driver Mohamed Moctar
Ould Jiddou didn't return phone messages on Friday to discuss the 'status of the CI!Se. However, a document filed in
court last week involving a witness subpoena indicated
there would be no trial on Monday.
Kennedy was the interim coach at the University of
Cincinnati for one season after Bob Huggins was ousted.
He went to .Mississippi and returned io town for a game
against Louisville on Dec. 18 as part of the SEC/Big East
.
InvitationaL
Kennedy was at a downtown bar with friends and Ole
Miss staff the night before the game and hailed a cab.
Jiddou, a 25"year-old native of northwest Africa, said
Kennedy an.d four others tried to get into his cab, which
was more than it could legally carry.
The cab driver said he told Kennedy he couldn't take the
entire party, and the coach hit him in the face, calling him
"bin. Laden, Saddam Hussein." Police said the left side of
Jiddou 's.face was swo llen afterward.
Kennedy was released from jail in time to coach the .
game. Following a 77-68 loss to · Louisville, Kennedy
referred to the "heinous accusations" made by the cab driver.
,
The case escalat.e d when Kennedy sued Jiddou for
alleged defamation, along with a valet who saiQ he. witnessed the altercation. Jiddou and the valet countersued. In·
those civil oases, the lawye(s are wrangling over whether
depositions should be delayed until the criminal case is settled.

Cavaliers
fromPageBl
the love from Cleveland's
fans, who have watched
him perform similar feats
before.
Did he call glass?
·'Yeah," he said. "After I
hit it."
The Pistons left the floor
shaken.
" Man," Stuckey said of
James' big shot. "It is what
it is. He made it. and they
,got a bit of momentum."
Detroit regrouped and
came out hungry after halftime. The Pistons hung
around by knocking cl'own
jumpers and managed to
pull within 80-72 early in
the fourth quarter on Will
Bynum's basket with 8:50
left, forcing the Cavs to call
a timeout.
James checked back in at
that point. and when play
resumed, guard Mo Williams.
who didn't shoot well in his
first . playoff game with
Cleveland, made a 3-pointer
and the Cavs were on their
way to an easy win.
· About the only thing, that
didn't go James' way was
that his beloved New York
Yankees gave up 14 runs in
one inning to the Cleveland
Indians.
·
James, as is almost
always the case, was the difference .
When he wasn't scoring,
he was setting up his teammates f(lr easy baskets.

''It's contagious," said
Williams, who went 5-of-14.
"You see that he's the reason
why this team is the way that
it is. When you have your best
player being that un,selfish,
you find yourself being the
same way."
·
For a large chunk of the
first half,. an expected defensive struggle between two of
the East's roughest teams was
an offensive extrayaganza.
The Cavs and Pistons traded
baskets - .most on' jumpers
- and threatened to take a
game expected to end in the
70s or 80s into triple digits.
When Rasheed Wallace
. clropped a short shot in the
lane to bring the Pistons
within 37-36, Detroit was
shooting an eye-popping 65
percent (15-of-23) from the
floor and getting good looks
against the league ·s best
defense. Cleveland was
nearly as hot, hanging
around the 60 percent mark.
The Pistons finally coole~.
and the Cavs took off.
James fed a no-look pass
- left-handed - across the
lane to Smith for a dunk ,
igniting a 20-9 run that gave
Cleveland a 12-point halftimebulge.
Detroit missed 12 of its
final 15 shots in the opening
half. an untimely drought it
never.overcame.
"To come in and slroot 46
percent , only . have seven
turnovers and be that close
on the boards, it should
have been closer than an ISpoint game," Pistons coach
M ichae I Curry said.

Reds
fromPageBl
first two walks •. but struck
out · Layuce Nix •. filling il,l
t'pr the injured Jay Bruce, to
etid tlie threat:
· "Tonight, my breaking
ball was very nice ; so I used
it a lot," Rodriguez said.
And about the frrst pump?
"I felt happy because in
that situation, I wanted to

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AP photo

New York Mets' Gary Sheffield (10) reacts to the crowd
alter hitting his SOOth home run during the seventh inning of
a baseball game against the Milwaukee Brewers on Friday,
in New York.
Slowed
by
shoulder for me as well as my famiinjuries and other problems 1y."
last season. Sheffield hit just
Sheffield was pursued by
.225 with 19 homers and 57 several tearns. including the
RBis. He was released by Phillies, before signing with ·
·
·
Detroit after hitting .178 New York.
He. said the allure of
with five homers in 45
spring training at-bats this returning to New York year.
where he played for the
"Everything happens for Yankees · from 2004-06 a reason. you know." was a big draw.
Gooden. was a star pitcher
Sheffield said. ''There was
a reason why I hit 19 home for the Mets in the 1980s
runs in stead of 20 last and, '90s and encour~J,ged
year. I could have did it him several time~ over the
then, but there was a rea- years to. sign with the Mets.
·son wh.y me havi'ng get Sheffield nearly did on mul:
released and then coming tiple occasions, but it never
here and doing it on the quite worked out thai he
biggest stage, So it makes would call Shea Stadium
it that much more special home .

get that guy out and I did."
( 1-2) went six innings and .
The Reds were impressed . allowed five runs un I 0 hils.
too.
He struck out six and
'That was
good a curve walked one and didn't think'
ball as I've seen Wandy he threw too badly.
·throw," manager Dusty Baker : "I got six ground balls and
said:"He threw it pn any ebunt they went right where every. and' at any time. The velocity l;xxly was .not," fiarang ~aid.
difference on it was ·15 to 20 ~·I~ was frustrating: When you
milesper,hourandthisearly.m ,_ make good pitcheSI!Rd don't
the season, 0\lr hitters wereiJ't get outs, it's tllat ·way. It was
lillie to adjust to it.
··
just one .of.thbse Jllghts. You
"But I'm not making any :can'tdoanythingaboutit."
Chris Sampson and Jeff
excuses. He threw a great
game tonight."
Fulchino ~ach pitched a hit. Reds starter Aaron Harang less inning to complete the

as

combined .two-hitter and
Houston's first· shutout of
the season.
Back-to-back RBI singles
by Hunter Pence and Geoff
B!urn gave the Astros a 2-0
lead in the first.
Carlo~ Lee doubled into
the left corner to drive in
Michael Bourn from second
for a ·3-0 lead in the fifth.
With the bases loaded in the
seventh, Blum doubled to tight
field to score two runs. Ivan
Rodriguez then doubled in two
more runs for a 7-0 lead.

Must

BaHmtnt

loti &amp;found
Found on S. Park Dr.
male hurlting dog, White
wl Brown spots med.
size. 304-67P·5890.

Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Loclit references fu"rnished. Established 1975. Ca1124 Hrs: ·
740-446-0870, Rogers
Basam~nl

Money To Lond

Waterproofing.

•pace occ:uph,.j
the error and

first Insertion.
I not be liable
losa or •11oenol&lt;!
results f~om
ol
witt

In tho
~vallab~ edition.

ures.
hava bfien
placed 111 ads at
·the · Gallipolis
Dally Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any· pictures
that are not

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. Sports Uttlly

1-600·214.()452
oalllpoliacaraercollege.&amp;du
Accrvdiled Member Accredit·
ing Couneil for lndependel"ll

For sale 5hd. Black He~­
lerds
875·900
#

Ccnages and SchooiS"l274B

304·875·2443.

Angus

Servlcet.:................................... :.................. 300
Appliance Servtce ....................................... 302
Automotive, ................................................. 304

Bulls,exceMent

bloodHnas,

Priced

Reasonably.
www.slaterui.angus.com
(740)266-5395
418.()633

or

Recreational Vahlcla• .............................. ,1000
ATV ............................................................. 1005

Bicycles .. ,...................................... ,............ 101 0

Cemetery Plota .......................................... 3005

HeaHh ................................-........................... 326
t1eatlng &amp; Coollng ................................ ~ .... -328
Home Improvements 330

Commerclal. ......................................- ••••.•• 3010
Condomlnluma .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Ownar ..................................... 3020
Houaea for Sal~ ............................;............ 302.5
Land (AcrMge) .............. ,...................... ,.... 3030
Lots ·········--·····-·····-··-···-···········-·······-..········3035
Went to buy ................................................ 3040
Real Eatate Rentale ................................... 3500
Apertmenta/Tawnhoua• .,....................... 3505

Prota.•lonal Servlcea ................................. 342

Tara
Townhouse
Apartmer6 - 2BR, 1.5
bath, back patio, pool,

Boate1Acceeeorlea .................................... 1015
C4mperJRVa &amp;: Trallera ............................. 1020
Motorcyclea ............................................... 10~
Other .......................................................... 1030
Want to buy ............................................... 1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto Renl8VLeaee ..................................... 2005
Autoa .........................................................~ 2010
Ctaallc/Antlquea ....................................... 2015
Commercial/Industrial~ ............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Acceaaorlea ...............................~ .. 2025
Sports Utlllty ...... ~....................................... 2030
Trucko ............., ...................... c.................... 2035
Utility Trellera ........................,_,, ............... 2040
Vane .....·....................................................... 2045
Want to buy ........................... :................... 2050
Real Estate Salea ............................... ,...... 3000

Flnanclal ........................................ - .............322

Plumblng/Eiaclricel ...................................... 340

playground, (trash,
age,
water

$425/rent,

Tax1Accountlng ............................................ 350
TrliMIIEnlel'tflllnmant .............................. :... 352
Ananclat .......................................................400
Financial Servlcea ...........................;........... 405
lnaurance .................................................... 410
Money to Lend .....- ..........................:........... 415
EducaUon ..................................................... 500
Bueineea a Trade School ........................... sos
lnetrucllon &amp; Trelnlng ................................. 510
Lessona ........................................................ 515
Personel ....................................................... 520

Anlmela ........................................................ 600
Animal Suppliea ................................_......... 605

Horeea .........................................................-610
LlveetOC:k ..............................~ ...........: ........... 615
Peta.................................. ,............................ 620

want to buy ................................. ~ ................ 625

Agriculture ................................................... 700

Ferm Equlpment .......................................... 705
Garden I Produce ........ - ............................. 710
Hay, Feed, seed, Grain ............................... 715
Hunting I Land ......................................... .-. 720

want to buy ...~ .............................................. 725
Merchandise ............................................- .• 900
Antlques ....................................................... 905
Appllance ..................................................... 910
Auctlona ............... ·........................................ 915
Baf91iln 8aHrnent ....................................... 920
Col~ibles .................................................. 925

Computers .................................................... i30
Equipment1Supplle1 ... .................................935
Flea Marketa ................................................. 9&amp;0
Fuel Oil CoaltWOO&lt;IIGas ............................. 945
Furniture ...................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport.................................... 955
Kid 'a Corner .................................................. HO

Houantor Rent ....................-........ :........... 35~
Lend (Acreage).,...: .................................... ~25
Storage: ....... ;.......... ~ ...........;........................ 3535

Want to Rent ................................ .-............. 3540
Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
Lots .......................................... :..................4005
Movera ........................................................4010
Rentale ....................................................... 4l015

Salet .. ~........................................................ 4020

SuppUet ......... ............................................ 4025
W•nt to Buy .. - .........'.. ................................. 4030

Re1ort Property ......................................... SOOO
Resort Property for Hte ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent ................ m·•·····-5050
Employment ...............................................6000
Accountfnplflnlncill .......................- ....... 8002
Admlniatretlve/Profeulonal .....................~

Caahlar/CJerk ..................... ~ ...................... S006
Child/Elderly C.re ..................................... 6008·
Ctertcal .................. , ............................~····- .. 6010 .
Constructlon ......................................... - ... ,,6012
Drtvera a Delivery ..................................... 6014
Educa1ion ....................... 1......... , ................. 6016
Electrical Plumblng ....... - .... ,. ~ ..·-·········--··6018
Employment Agencl................................8020
Entertelnment .............- ............................ 1022
Food 5ervlcea............................................8024
GOWirnment • F.cleral JObl .................... 6026
Help anted-- Genertl .......... .......... - ............ 6028
'--w EnfOI'C8:ft'MKit .......................................8030

MelntenencWDorne.t.ic ................ - ..........11032
Menagenwnt/Super¥1aory ........................ 8034
Mec:~anlce .................................................. &amp;036
Medlcai .......................................................&amp;038

want to buy .................................................. 97~

Musical ................................. , ..................... 6040
Plr1-Tlll\e--Temporer~a ............................. &amp;042
Re~r•nta ............................................... 6044
Sa .••_ ......................................................8048
Tech leal Tredet .......................................

Yanl Sei9 ... ,................................................. 975

Textl~octory .........................,............... 6052

Miacellaneout...............................................

eoso

sew-

pd.)

$425/sec.

dep. Caii740-645.S599 ·

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I

NEA, Inc

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legala ...........................................................100
Announcemente .................................... :..... 200
Birthday/Anniverury ................................... 205
Happy Ada ... :................................:............... 210
Lost &amp; Found ............. .................................. 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Noticea ......................................................... 225
Pereonala .........,........................................... 230
Wanted .........................................:.............. 235

lnaurance ....... .............................................. 332
Lawn Servtce ...............................................334
Mualc1Dance1Drama .................................... 336
Other S&amp;rvlc.a ........................................... -338

'

Hou111 For Sali

r r o~ncrill

400

Watarpruoftnil

Building ~ateriala ....................................... 306
Bualnaae ...................................................... 308
Calerlng .................:. ..........~........................... 310
Chltd/Ektorty Core ........................................ 312
Computere .......................-............................ 314
Contractort .................................................. 316
Domeetlca1Janltorlal ................................... 318
Electrlcal ............... ,...................................... 320

.

I

• surt n•r Acla Wlltt A bVWOt'd • Jacluft to•plet•
Dac:rtptl•• • lndHe A Prll::c • AWI]II AlittrnlatiDn•
• lnc:lde PhDtae Nulllber Alld AddnM·W•• NeNed
• Adl SIID•Id ~· 7 D..,.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

MONDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

'

Wettslles:
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Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, April 20, 2009
ALLEYOOP
For rent- 3br. atl .elec. aH

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DOG WARDEN/
SHELTER MANAGER

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45679

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Mission: To ensure
safety within tl'1e
humanlanlfTlal

relationShip by
eliminating animal
cruelty and companion
animal overpopulation.
SUmmary:
Under general
supervision from

Coonty Commlssione(S;
oversees the
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955, Educate the
public, maintain ~ffie1ent
operation of the animal

shelter. at1empt to
reunite animals wltti
their owners, place pets
in permanent caring
homes, and facilitate a
qLI!Ck horTlane death for

R.L.HOLLON
TRUCKING
Dump truck
•
.serv1ce

tion lo detail. Please MACHINIST
send resume and reler-

ences to
gallipolisaccouritant@
1
gmaitcom
Alhton, WV - Highly
or mail to CLA 101 PO skilled
machinist
Box 469, GaiW polis, OH needed.
4563t
1

Sunset
Homes

Hill's Self
Storage

Bryan Reeves

29625 Bashan Road
Racine. OH 45771

Custom Built

homes, roofs, .

740..949-2217

garages/pole ·
buildings, ·

Sizes&amp; X tO'
1o10'xao'

We do driveways
We Haul
Limestone-'Gravel
Dirt· Ag-Lime

additions, drywall,
siding, etc.

740·985-4422

740-742-3411

L &amp; L Tire Barn
44087 Wipple Rd.

Po'mcroy, OH
(5 Points)

New &amp; Used Tires.
We buy used tires.
computer wheol
alignmenls. We also
do Duers. tight
·

mec-hanic work.
complefe ~rvice oil
changes, small engine
repair: ,
We service and

7:00

Hours
am • 8:QO

caring

for

•

Comme~hd•

Dirt, Limestone,

• Free Estimates
(740) 992-3009 .

.

Residential

www.bllftkscdb.com

FRANK &amp; EARNEST ·

TttiN~ .I'M MY
OWN INO~ST rMMY

;t

/ . Jt,AV$r .I Ll~~
..

~~l&gt;~!

¥

BARNEY .
WHATTA YA

www.-luHI'bbldrJ...,...

MY NEW
ELViNEY,

OF

THINK

FROCK, ·

TOO MUCH i'

I WOULDN'T
SAY THAT,
LUREEN!!

' Room 1\ddHions &amp;
Remodeling ·
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp;
Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
·VInyl Siding &amp;
Painting
• Patio .and Porch

Racine, Ohio 740-247·2019

T~( ECO~I&lt;\'{

IS

.11-\PI&gt;.C.it"&lt;&gt; OUR

CeU: 74Q-416·5D47

f

email:

lrshadlrm@aol.com

'Tfl.O~~~L(., /&lt;\IJ!&gt;i 'IOU )1
N.'N/&gt;..'{~ ~E. '(0\JJi:.

.::...t

f\NI'ol..'t;&gt;'DTO (,RO~')

For

ANew Home?
TrY the
Classifieds!!

"

Vour partner opens

l.ara~. nner frDHn,lwads

on

$10 per lb Cash Qnly
Pmt is required in udvance

Sh.ipmenrs nrrive every

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Oef:ks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
Local Canlractor

7 40-367-0544
Free Eotlmates

7 40·367·0536

H&amp;H
· GuHering
Seamless Gutters
Rooting, Sklin9. Guners
Insured &amp; Bonded
. 740-653-9657

J&amp;L
Construction
• VInyl ~ldlng
• Reptacamenl
Windows
• Ro9flng
·Decks
··Gareges
• Pole Buildings
• Raom 1\ddlllons.
Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2332
Johnson's Tree

Service
Gallfpolls, OH 45631

Insured, Free
Estlmales,20yrs EJ~:p.
740-441-9387
Rick Johnson-Owner

'' .. Wml LON6
SLACK EARS.!

·~

OFWHYI

STVQOFOAM

DO~T Lll&lt;£ WALL DOING.,.

,r1Ef'MN1.

740·992·1m

(()\(1&lt;111
I IJ\S Iilii 110\

Z9 Years Experience

David Lewis .

Windows and
Vinyl Siding
Specialists, LTD

(740) 742-2563
• Siding • Vinyl
Windows • Melal
and Shi!IJ!l• Roofs
• Decks • Additions
•Electrical

Tutldoy, Aprtt 21 . 200i
By Bomlce Bode O.ol
In the year ahead, you will get a chance
10 elevate youf targets and rise to
greater heights when condlllona that
afl'eot your work or career begin ·to
undergo subltan1ial lrnprov.ments.
They'll be exactly what yOu need,.·
TAURUS (April 20-Mav 20) - A~hciugh
you tend to be 8 lone worker, arrange·
ments with others wit~ wortc Ol.ll quite
well. In fact, e'tlftn situatiOns wh8re the
proceed$ are ehared will go well.
'
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - BeciUH
you're an easy person to work with. even
those who UBI,JS.IIy don't mix wefl with ·coworkers will do tine. You'll set an aumpl.e tl'lal they will follow Wllllf'lgly. .
r - . - - . : . - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Serious
mattera shoutr:t etways be taken sertous~
ly. but you'll i.mderttand that a dash of
hope can make things eaatar" for-,very·
one. Tempered with optimism, you'll find
that middle g~llJldLEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - An opportunity
of" a vast nature might be presented to
you all because of the klndrlets ot a
friend's lntarvanlton. This person
befleves you wouk:J be perfect for those ·
. who have Instigated the venture,
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - If you han·

.. WHO SEEMS TO BE A SERGeANT
IN TJ.lE FOREI6N LE610N?"

WH•TTHE ,
1'\
ww ~
HECK .lJST ""'=""''"""
HAPPENED? '· 1~011!"
COMtiiJWII
(
~

• Plumbing

• P()le Barns.

74b-591-8044
Pleusc leave messa 'C

Advertise
in this space for
$70 per month

LIBRA ($apt 23-Qct. 23) - Timing
and
project.
11deo are trending In your lavor witll
regard to financial concerns. Do not procrastinate about taking care ol morters
that coukhtrengthonyourmatenalba,..
SCORPIO {Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -A definite
course ol direction can be ~:~at With
regard to somethfilg !hat has been'

about

7 Tearoom
e
9 Labe a
11 Grounds

rafter

Fish organ .

,51 Tolorlled

seeders

35 Magrilto'o

name

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Ciphef cryi*JQrams aJecrellled lfom quot!IDIIB bOJ IMIOUs oeoo1e past i1111JJISIIII. ::
Eactllflll!lr rn !he Clpl\er stands lor nth!r

·

Today's clurr J equals u

" AHCHAX
LW

VLIT

'

AHMMHKJlET

XLKB
ULGEW

LW

HW

~Fe b .

2Q-March 20) -AlthOugh

\ltY

6\Ut-111\f.~ I

'Nf\AT I~ 'PLIR.
FAVoR:\\~
Co\1\'\I~Y
~w;.;&gt;

ARIES (March 21·April19) -In order to
be ltle moe! effective. don't try to do
&amp;YBfllhing youree ft Delegate what
needa doing to !hose who are experts
and who can do a better job than you.

SOUP TO NUTZ

''•
•

H· tEP

MXLWHRZ .X

.
....
..
,.

LI

A· I X K X W W.L G T E P G XW P Z C X HE ,"

• G X I X A X W K L 'G EX W
!PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "I

go io Paris, I go to London, 190 to Rome, and I'

Ialways say, 'There's no place hke New YOrk.'"· Robert Oe Niro ·

,

#

THAT DAILY

PUULIR
ORoarta~gt ltltt~

ol lil1
lour scrambled wordl be.low Ia form four olmplo wordl.

K 0 EV E

•. 1 I ·I' I
GR I R0
I.

I I II

r·'

I

.. .
I

0
N
\
~

The famous miUionaire
philanthropisf once gave
his formula for success. He
said, "Rise early, work late,

VASHIL , .
M~~~r-'-1'1-lai-rl§rll • ~C"!P,!trt

SCRAM-J.ETS ANSWERS 4/t?m
. Embryo- Drown - llegcl- Whrten-GOOD forTI !EM

"Listen to opinions of others," the profesSor told the
duss, "ii may not help you, but ifmight~ GOOD for

. THEM."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

Focu!i

knots.

GRIZZWELLS

·

Mounflln
goel

48 -do plume

8 C~nter'o 31 Cotton

w

Ann bone •
Vlocld
Flc11onll

...rJ----1 threatening
to get total ly out of ceintrof.
Others may not be able to establish the

you won't deliberately seek out t"'rge,
testy antsngtemanls, you won't be lnllm·
k:lated or shy awav from them, eilhar.
Intuitively, you'!! knoW how to sort out the

*Prompt and Quaiity
Work

References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @

you're en!huslastic. lt'l necestary to
soften your serious nature ab0!-14. the

PISCES

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
~ Reasonable Rutc ~

'litur'lllrtlldlr:

Cia! galna, because substantial rab,lms
can be gleaned from arrangements
where yoU are prepared to work hard for
what you earn.

Insured

*Insured
'" Experienced

AstroGraph

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fab. 19) -

Fn!\! Es:timates ·

Replaccf11cnt

24 In a frenzy 43
25 Allton aut 44
26 GooH ogg 45
27 Seeger of
folk music · 46
28 Chilled
29 Snooping 47

on _
your a~ bltl ous urge~ ~or large llnan·

. 740-992-6971

Stop &amp; Compare

McEntire
3 WhHellos
4 Vaccine
5 Game-show
·
6
a

requisites - but YQU can.
SA.GITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ee. 2.1) ........
YoU're anything but helpless, whieti .will
jJrove true when you take an unprO:ductlwt situation and adjus1 In a manner so
that it becomes·an outstanding achleveF----1 ment tor all to applaud.
..:.:.-......-.:.--' CAPRICORN (09C. 22.Jan. 19) - Your
loyally lo your family and friendS IS
unsurpalilsed and one of your noblaM
attributes. All wilt see !his In action when
a pal Is In dire need of support. and
you're the one who comes through. ·

I I Ill\

• New Homes

Remodeling

In embarlt

\'~

COIISTBUCnoN
·Garages
• Comptele

~age

preparing your

~OU ~OW,

\

ROBERT
BISSEll

41

..

_:;. .; . ,;. ;. ;.______, ~~;;,~~~~;r,;l r-::::=:::::=;:~;;;-, r----------,
OONf.DR.•
..A~DTHAT'S HEY, WHAT'S
MV
TAATBIG
rHE ST"'"
·

37 Wager
_
36 Yet to come
39 IAH's

the bidding with one

are

die ttllngs In an optimistic manner, you
can- awaken auppol1 In others with
regard to Important plans about WhiCh

r

12 Wyoming
range
18 Two to twO
20 Summer
In France
22 Crane

sun

G
. (740) 742-2563

34 Checll·

t-eo

Partner opens,
righty doubles
of a suit. . You

31 Schmooze
32 Kind of
system
33 Building
alto
cashing
needs
35 66 and
36 Flawer·
arranging

your j~ck.

&gt;--

on
SAVINGS

All pass

4•

~

work

lnfoCiSiOn

East
Obi. . ·
Pass

response when ·suddenly ·your.. right·
hand opponent makos a takeout double .
How does that affect yoor calls?
Let's spend some time looking at 11te
pos~bilities: First a new
atlhe one·
tevetls still forcing. But remeinber that W
y&lt;iu have at least 10 high-card points.
you have 1tte option of starting with
redouble. Basically, when yoo have10·
• o ·•
-t"t-tAV!if 4·20
plus points. you decide whether you
want to describe ycur hand aOd by to ·
find your side's best contract. or to start
with redouble, panty or primarily with 1tte
i'tention ot bylng to e~ract a penally
lrorri 1tte opponents, who pemaps have
made a m~lake emaring 1tte suction.
In this case, ycu (South) cciutd redouble. ·
planning to bid spades over heMS. but'ij
is sensibts to bid 11te r~e·card su~ Then.
when North raises spades. you mlglll
jump 10 game. However, ~ is reasonable
to make a game-try, which North is
happy to accep).
West leads the heart lour. East takes
two tricks in the suit before exding w~h a
diamond. How would you continue?
With three side-suit k&gt;sers (two hearts
and one club), you have to play the
. "t\.L AAVE.
0'/E.R· -ooq trump suit without toss. Normally, With
nine lrunps missing the queen, you
!&gt;tfi\PL\f'IO,;no~ \~ "''R~
would play off the ace end king. But do
C.Ot-\PL\Ct&gt;-1£\) lf\AN not
Iorge( East's lakeout dOubte: This
.'((}.) 1'\(&gt;.,'{
I promised at leas11hree cards in each at
the unbid suils. And d is parhcula~y dange~ous to double when short in spades.
So,. play a spade to dummy's ace_, then
lake ihe. spade llnas\ll); leading· li&gt;w to

.

FIND
AJOB
OR ANEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

-Wood

42 Ralher
hrs.
45 Unfamiliar
10 Luau wreath 49 RN'a knack
11 Tam
50 False name
13 Just aol
52 Publicity
lhought!
info
14 Wane
53 Fil9'1*itlirg
15 Popup
16 Stlclty- 54 Tllickfy
17 Taku on
oettled
fuel (2 wcto,) 55 Shedo tree
19 Is rile wilh 56 Yield
21 Robull
es a return
energy
57 HBO rival
22 Scribble
56 Really big
down
lees
23 Knighlo'
wlvea
DOWN

booms
42 Handy
26 Bot.tngpiece
30 Famous tall 1 Shako - -1 23 Painter
swab
word
2 Ms.
Salvaclof (hyph.)

Opening lead: • 4

Etde~y?

u.s.

24

l'a!s

WI/IlNlNG

Paul Rowe

t+

Pass

TO BAGI' T~t

Hardwood cabinetry And Ful'nHUre

""'""'""'""'"""""'""'""
• Ability to accu·
EmplOyment Ag•nc:i.. rately · cut ·various · male &lt;USSJCqR _,.$f()bn0tt II l'un
&amp; ~emale . · lllreads, lns-,~ .,..,·,?kwl "
Grovndskeeper needed
eluding buttress ·
Now Sclliflg:
in Rio Grande, OH
• Experience machln• Ford &amp; Motorcmft
Previous e:rcp. req. Must lng materials or various
Parts • Engine....
be 18 end possess HS
hardness and machlnTrnnsrer Cases &amp;
Diploma/GED. Pay
lng characterlaUca .
Transmissions
$7.30/hr, Call
• A!lllhy to read
·, Aftennarket·
.·
.
Kelty Services
drawings
and
make
Replace men!" Sheet
Sealed praposats will THE DEPARTMENT OF Its tenor,lhe conditions will be oubmilled to a
800-295-9470 or
porta to appropriate
- be received at the of· ADMINISTRATIVE SER- ola mortgage deed vote a! tho people of
304-529-2t41
apectllcattons
Metal &amp; Coinponenrs
Frw All Make~ ul' Vehid~)
given to It to secure slid Pomeroy VIllage 11
• Famiiia~ty w~h
flee af the Clark·Trea- VICES.
Rutine, Ohio
surer, 2581 Third St., Bidders muat camply paymanl of tho said tho Special Election to ~~f.;'!"~d;;;o;S.;;M;;;';;;ce;;•="' shop salaly routines
Syracuee, Ohio 45n9 wllh · the prevailing note and conveying be hold In lha Pomeroy ~
· and procedures
740-949-1956
until 3:00 p.m. local wage rates on Public the premises-described Vllla_ge, Ohio, at the Dietary Cook
• Lift truck operation
· time on May 7, 2009, for lmpravementsln Meigs therlln have been bro- ·regular place(s) af val· Applications
Are Now to a ptuo
furnishing all labor, rna- County and the VIllage ken and the ·same has lng lhereln, on the 5th Being Accepted For · A.
• Candldl1es must
terlals and equipment of Syracuse, Ohio ss become
day of May, 2009, the Part-Time, t ·9pm Dietary be eligible for
aliCUTTING EDGE
necessary to complete determined by the Ohio absolute. The Com- question ol an . ordl- Cook, EKpelience Pre- cret clearance. ·
the proJect knOwn as Bureau ol Employment plaint further prays that nance providing for the ferred/AeterenceS
. Re· s~nd your resume Or a
LAWN CARE
Syracuse Street lm- Servlcea; wage and the
Defa-nclant(a) a.uthorlty ol ~omeroy. quired, Applicants · May completed
applrcation
Commercial &amp;
provemants, and · will Hour Dlvlalon, (614) named above be re- Vlilagalo aggregate the Apply Daily, Mon.·Sun. torm (call to request one
Residential
be publicly opened and 644-2239 and must also qufred to anawer and retail natUral gas loads 9-4pm, Come Join Our or print one from
Free
Estimates
-aloud at7 PM, Mey comply with Federal set up lhalr lnterealln tacated In tile Vllitlge of Team!'! You'll Be Glad www utroninc.com/ca•
Lawn
Maintenance
7, 2001, at the regular Prevailing Wage Rates. laid rul Ba~ate OJ. be Pomeroy, and lor that You Didl Aavemswood r.eers) by email , tax or
• Landsc~ping
village. council ~eet- The Vll_
lage of Syracuae forever barred from ai- purpose, enter Into Care
Center,
1113 mail to
lng.
reserves the right to aertlng the same, for ae.rvlce agreements to Washington St., Ravens· Attn. B. Davis
• Power Washing
t:ontract document&amp;, waive any Irregularities foreclosure af said faclllllle for those .w,
ood
,.
, ,w,v;,
, e,.o,.,e,
. ""'"""' UTAON, inc.
Seth Carlelon
bid ah•ts, plans and and to retect any or all mortgage, the marshal- loads the sale and pur· -:944~
Innovation
or.
(740) 517-5432
..,..lflcatlons can be bidslng of any liens, end chase of natural gas, Holp Want.d ·General Manassas. VA 20t to
Jeff Stetbem
TeL
703-369-5552/Fax
ablltlnecl at eald afllce Eric D. Cunningham, tho sale ol said reales· such aggraga~on to
(7401
517-6883
Monday through Friday Mayor Village of Syra- tate, ind further that accur automaUcally ex·
S Earn Extralltonay $ . 703 _369 _5298
from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 CU88
the proceeds of said capt where any person lndepen~nt Centractors Toll Free 866•231 _2476 ·
p.m.
(4) 20, 27, (5) 4
oata ·be applied to pay- elects to opt out?
{must b6 at iaast t 8) ·
lnent of Plalnllff's elalm The polls lor the alecneeded to deliver the
Mec:hQnia
Port.Timo/Tomporori01
Each bidder to required
lo furnish wllh Its proIn tho proper order ol tlon will be open at6:30 Ohio Valley Phone Book ~~~~~~;;;;;~
. poaal, at'lfld Gua.r anty
Public Notice
Its priority and for' such a.m. and remain open
in Gallipofis, WeHsl()fl &amp; Service Tecnnlcian posi· Now accepting resum&amp;S
and Con'tract Bond In
other and further relief until 7:30 p.m. on eltc·
surrounding areas.
tion available tor diesel for part .time position at
accordance with Sac- IN THE COURT OF aa Ia jUII and ' equl· tlon·day.
1-888-606-81100
and hydraulics. E•pori- local electron~ &amp; cell
lion 153.54 a! the Ohio COMMON
PLEAS teblo- Tile Dofondant(a) By ardor of tha Board -~~~"!"'""!"'"-- ence
necessary. phone store ·1n MiddleReviled Cade. Bid so- MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO named upon ara r&amp;- ot Etectlana a! Meigs .
HeaitiVRot~romont
&amp; pOrt. Send resumos to
curtly furnished In VANDERBILT · MORT· · qulred to answer on or County, Ohio
Benefits. Fax resume 10 AS 106 N. 2nd Ave , MidBond torm, shall be I• GAGE AND ·fiNANCE, before the lwlnty, Jahn N. lhla
Work lor a top
740 _44!i- 9t 04 ar e-mail dleport. Oh 45760. No
sued by 1 Surety Com- INC.
eighth day fallowing· Chair
empioY.,r, commined 1o
to LLCOCAREQ.COM
phone calls please.
peny or Carporatlan Plalntlfl
tho last dale of public&amp;- Rita D. Smith
ofienn9 empioymenl
llconleclln the Stllte of vs.
tlon, On day of June 1, Director
opportunities " our areal
Modica!
01110 ta pravltle said TALMADGE D. LEWIS, 2009, or a judgment Dated April I , 2009
su_rety. .
AIKIA .
may be rendered 11 (4) 20, 27 ·
Earn up to $25,000/yr+ ENA's I ResideM
Eoch Proposal must T. LEWIS, olal
prayed for heroin.
·
after six manlhsi
Aostllants
Robert K- Hogan AllorPubliC Notice
interviews Are Now Becontain the lull nama of Delendanla
the party or parties Case No. 08CV186
nay tor Plaintiff Javltch,
t.mployees are needed
ing Conducted For CNA
aubmttung lhe pro- Judge: Crow
Block &amp; Rathbone, LLP Notice of Election on
to provide customer
&amp; Resident Assistant · Po·
,po..l and all persons Legal Notice
602 Main St, Suite 500 Proposition
service over the pl"lone
silions If You Are A Car.tnlat;eated
therein. Wanda Lee Morris, Clnclnnati,OH 45202
R.C. 3501.11(G)
lng, Enthusiast~ &amp; De·
:£achblddarmuslsub- whose lilt known od· (513)74&lt;1-9600
Nollcolo heraby ·glven
peMable Person. Then
1 Hiring Full Time .
.mllevltlenca Ollis ax· dress fa 50475 Bigley (513) 744-9602 Facslm· lila! In pursuance of
Positions (2 -1 t pm)
We Want You To Join
perlencos an projects Ridge ROIKI, Long
lie
Ordlnanca of lhe Vlt-·
Our Team Come On
1 Hiring Part lime
af similar slza and Bottom, OH 45743, will (4) 20, 27, (5) 4
lage Council oflha VII·
Positions (8:00-t :30pm) Ov.er &amp; Check Us Dull
complex.tty. The owner take notice that on the
.lage of Pomeroy, Ohio,
You'll Be Glad You Did!
1 OFF on Sunday
lntanda and requires 2nd of March, 2009
passed on the 9th day
f weekly Bonus
Competitive
CNA
tll.t thia project be PlalntHf flied Its
Public Notice
a! February, 2009, there
Onsile
Doctm
Wages,
Paid
Vacations.
1
·completed no later than Amended Complalnt·ln
wilt be submitted tO a
Paid Meals, Many Other
1 Fun &amp; Protesslonat
'July 15, 2009.
CaM NurY\I)er 08CV 186 Notice Of Lien Sale
vote ol the people of
Working Environment
Benefits,
Ravenswoo'd
•All contractors and In the Melga CoUnty The personal property said Pomeroy Village at
Care
Cantec,
1113
1 Complete Benefits
: aubcontl'tlctora
In- Common Pleas Court, andcontentiofthetol· the Special Elecllon to·
Package
washington St., Ravenswith lhe pra)eCI ollaglng that Dofon- Iawing slarage units be held In lhe Pomeroy
wood , wv, Reterences
will, to the ex1ent prac- danl(s) hava or claim to will be iuctloned for Village, Ohio, · at the
Schedulllntorvlew
~;eq~u~ired;·;E.~O~.E~.==,...:;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;~;;;
llcobt. uao Ohio prod· have an lntarestln lhe solo to satisfy the lien regular place(s) of vot·
Today!
ucto,
malorlals, reel ellate commonly of. Hartwell Slorage.
lng therein, on lho 5th
Stan Work Mondayt
'!l"'icll, and tabor In knawn as 50475 Biljley Tho aata will be held at day of May, 2009, the
1-aaa-tMC-PAYU
the Implementation of Ridge Road, Lang Bot· the Hartwell Storage Ia· question of an ardl·
Exu457
lhelr prajecl. Addition· tom, OH 457.43, and cliHy, 34055 Laurel nanco providing lor a
• ally, contractor comp_
ll- also known as Parcel W
. ood Rd., Pomeroy, 1/4 percent levy on In·
Apply.tnfOclaton.com
onllne:
hn :1.
: anco with lhe equal· Number ot-01484.007 OhiO on May 9, 200911 came lo provide lor
me
von ng
0
, omplayment opportu· of
tile
Auditor's 10:00 a.m.
current services 11
Work
nlty requlremenll af Rtcordo of
Meigs Unit 148
provided In the Pollee
Sunday &amp; MondaY OFF
0111a Administrative County, Ohla.
Ron Carr
Department and Street
Gail tor Interview
Code Chapter 123,the Said percal Is mare P.O. Bax324 .
Departman~ ellectlvo
1417-463-6248
Gonrnor'o Executive partrcutarly described Pomeroy, Ottla45769 ·Juno 1, 2009, be
Menbonexu193t
·Order a! 1972, and In Exhibit "A" aitached (4) 20, 27
·
paslecl?
·
L,.;;;:;;;;;:;;;:;;;;.;,;,;;.:;;.._j
. Govemor'a Exacuttve to Plaintiff's mortgage
The ·polls for the alec· AVON! AU Areas' To Buy
Order 84-9 ahlll be ra- flied In Volume 231,
lion will be open II 6:30 or Sell SMiay Spoa"'
qulred.
Page 115, an the Mar~h
Public Notice
a.m. and remain open 304-s 75 _1429
2006
In
the
uniii7:3D p.m_ on elec·
DOMESTIC STEEL USE 20,
REQUIREMENTS AS Rocordar'a Office of Notice of Election on Uon day .
Proposition
By order of the Board
SPECIFIED IN SEC. Meigs County, Ohio.
liON 153.001 OF THE The Complaint further R.C. 3501 .11.(G)
. of Eloctians of Meigs,
REVISED CODE APPLY allogeslllat by man of Natlco Ia hereby given County, Ohio.
TO THIS PROJECT_ default of lhe Dofon· that In pursuance a! John N_.thle
COPIES OF SECTION dant(s),
Ordlnonca af the VII· Chair
153-001 OF THE RE· Talmadge D- Lewla, loge Council allho .VI~ Rita D. Smith
VISEO CODE CAN BE a/tila T. Lewis, In ttio loge of Pomeroy, Ohio, Director
OBTAINED FROM ANY payment of a promla· paned on tho 9th dey Dated Aprll1 , 200$
OF THE OFFICES OF sory nate according to of February, 20091hare ~4) 20, 27

West North

South

Custom Home Building
Steel Frame Buildings

(Cell)

Q J 10

Deale~ North
Vulnerable: Neither

Pomeroy, Ohio

or 740-591-3726

Jon Van Meter &amp;

KJ543

+6s

co.

Buikling. Remodeling
Genj!rul repair

Owners:

• 76 53
• A4

8 2

4 98752
·Soulb

-ri

• Recent e.11perlence
with .(l1anual
lathes,
milling
machines,
saws; ·and radial drills
* Ability to llold tolerance1 to .0005" on fine

Q 9 8 .

. AKQU

. J 9&amp;43

prn

Dump Truck Service
. We Haul Gravel,

740-992-3220

East
-.

+K

S&amp;L .·
Trucking

1

A 7 62
8 5
A 94
KQJIO

West
• 10

MONTY

(740) 992-5344
Mon-Fri
8:00am- 4:30pm
Sat. 8:00am- 12
We appreciate 10rtr

lhe Position requires :

Home
health
aides
needed in Pliny, Buffalo,
Putnam &amp; Mason &lt;;;ounty
areas, good pay, bonus
J)rogr.am,
·
benefits.
1-866-1'66-9832
or
1-304· 766·9830.

home

• 7'

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION

Coal Elc ....
Call Wall or Sandy

•
•
+
+

WV03672~

Enjoy

39 Wanting
40 Inquiring
sounds
41 Gults~sl

1 Wool!
4 Shall's

Nort•

winlerize boats and
RV's.

and certification as a
euthanasia technician.
Please apply at:
Department elf Jobs &amp;
· Family Services
848 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Application Deadline:
oliApril27,

•

7 Chicago

unwanted animals.
Qualiflcatlonl :
Ability to calcu late

fractionS. decimals and
percentages and to
read and write common
vocatlula_ry plus~ 1000
hours training in Ohio's
statutes regarding
animal control (or 12
months experience);
100 hours tra1ning in
caring for and handling
of healthy and dis&amp;ased
animals (or one (1) '
mon th eKperience; one
( t } cburse in public
relations (or one {1)
month experience); or ,
equivalent; must
possess a valid Ohio
drivers license, First
A.1d/CPR certification

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

I

,

The Daily Sentinel

· The Daily Sentinel • Page 85~

www.mydailysentinel.com

~

d,\,

�www.mydailysentinel.com.

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, April 20, 2009
ALLEYOOP
For rent- 3br. atl .elec. aH

Attention Business Owners

included lg. deck·&amp;
yard 304-812-7214

Free on·line business Listings

03 ' Mansion

Easy to setuo. upqrades ava!iabiel

DoubleWkfe, 3br. Master&lt;
Bedroom with Full Bath,
Full bath off lamily room.
Family Room has a firep.lace,
Den,
Spacious
kitchen
with
. large
Oinig Room. $35,000.
Must . move
yourself
t -740-645-5288

on
www .mydailysentinel.com
I

I

2-3

..

.

;Need. aW$bs._fQr)'OIJI~?
&lt;&gt;.·~· ,._

Salu

Country

I

. -.-;¢:·r.::~- ·· ..-r-- · --~~~""'·

' ' -, "

;-,.: ,·.;,:~_\;::~ ",·.

.. • Need
to.driVe I110r&amp; IQCal Cli$!DnleB.to your~?
·
:
.·· .

• ~to oelomby®rsea!dt tags? {Seoift.~

70

living-

SA.

on

11

26

3-SSA,
property.

Many floor plans! · Easy
Financing! We own the
bank.
Call
todayl
ass-2t5,5774
bath, lg.
c/a. kit appl.,
·740-949-2944,

14x70, 2 br1 1

closets,
wid,

740416-8014

"AA" Country Living
3 or _4 Bedroom 2 Bat!l
Owiler will Finance
Call 10 be Pre Qualified

740-423-9728
For Sale I 2x60 2 br. 1

b8..
mobile
home
$t500.00
304-593-3494

We can help!
Simple. Affordable. Effective.
Upgrade Your Business Listing for as low as $420/annually*
'SlVER IIPQI'ilfe ~· At1 iiiOii GOLD &amp;PLATNUN. Pi'tprjlntnt disW.r!IJ l'illlblt..

(\

Monday, April 20, 2009

More online advertising Ojtportunilies are now av~lable at MvDailvSentineLcom
Contact your sales consultant to to help you set-up you FREE listing arid more 11formatioo a bo~
Upgraded Business Listings.

Call now! to set·up vour
FREE ONLINE BUSINESS LISTING

.740-992-2155

·The Proctorville
Difference"
$1 and a deed is all you
.need 10 own your dream
home. Call Nowr .
Freedom Homes . •
888-585-llt 67

Emplo(mert

6000

· Accounflng I financial
Full-time
busy accounting office in GalhpO·
lis for immEidlate employment. Accounting degree
and el(perience required.
Must have good organiza1ional skills and tl'1'e
ability to .work independently with strong ~tten·
Accounlant:

position

with

accepted tor tile
lottowing position:
DOG WARDEN/
SHELTER MANAGER

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45679

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Mission: To ensure
safety within tl'1e
humanlanlfTlal

relationShip by
eliminating animal
cruelty and companion
animal overpopulation.
SUmmary:
Under general
supervision from

Coonty Commlssione(S;
oversees the
enlorcement ol Ohio
Rev1sed Code Chapter
955, Educate the
public, maintain ~ffie1ent
operation of the animal

shelter. at1empt to
reunite animals wltti
their owners, place pets
in permanent caring
homes, and facilitate a
qLI!Ck horTlane death for

R.L.HOLLON
TRUCKING
Dump truck
•
.serv1ce

tion lo detail. Please MACHINIST
send resume and reler-

ences to
gallipolisaccouritant@
1
gmaitcom
Alhton, WV - Highly
or mail to CLA 101 PO skilled
machinist
Box 469, GaiW polis, OH needed.
4563t
1

Sunset
Homes

Hill's Self
Storage

Bryan Reeves

29625 Bashan Road
Racine. OH 45771

Custom Built

homes, roofs, .

740..949-2217

garages/pole ·
buildings, ·

Sizes&amp; X tO'
1o10'xao'

We do driveways
We Haul
Limestone-'Gravel
Dirt· Ag-Lime

additions, drywall,
siding, etc.

740·985-4422

740-742-3411

L &amp; L Tire Barn
44087 Wipple Rd.

Po'mcroy, OH
(5 Points)

New &amp; Used Tires.
We buy used tires.
computer wheol
alignmenls. We also
do Duers. tight
·

mec-hanic work.
complefe ~rvice oil
changes, small engine
repair: ,
We service and

7:00

Hours
am • 8:QO

caring

for

•

Comme~hd•

Dirt, Limestone,

• Free Estimates
(740) 992-3009 .

.

Residential

www.bllftkscdb.com

FRANK &amp; EARNEST ·

TttiN~ .I'M MY
OWN INO~ST rMMY

;t

/ . Jt,AV$r .I Ll~~
..

~~l&gt;~!

¥

BARNEY .
WHATTA YA

www.-luHI'bbldrJ...,...

MY NEW
ELViNEY,

OF

THINK

FROCK, ·

TOO MUCH i'

I WOULDN'T
SAY THAT,
LUREEN!!

' Room 1\ddHions &amp;
Remodeling ·
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp;
Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
·VInyl Siding &amp;
Painting
• Patio .and Porch

Racine, Ohio 740-247·2019

T~( ECO~I&lt;\'{

IS

.11-\PI&gt;.C.it"&lt;&gt; OUR

CeU: 74Q-416·5D47

f

email:

lrshadlrm@aol.com

'Tfl.O~~~L(., /&lt;\IJ!&gt;i 'IOU )1
N.'N/&gt;..'{~ ~E. '(0\JJi:.

.::...t

f\NI'ol..'t;&gt;'DTO (,RO~')

For

ANew Home?
TrY the
Classifieds!!

"

Vour partner opens

l.ara~. nner frDHn,lwads

on

$10 per lb Cash Qnly
Pmt is required in udvance

Sh.ipmenrs nrrive every

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Oef:ks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
Local Canlractor

7 40-367-0544
Free Eotlmates

7 40·367·0536

H&amp;H
· GuHering
Seamless Gutters
Rooting, Sklin9. Guners
Insured &amp; Bonded
. 740-653-9657

J&amp;L
Construction
• VInyl ~ldlng
• Reptacamenl
Windows
• Ro9flng
·Decks
··Gareges
• Pole Buildings
• Raom 1\ddlllons.
Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2332
Johnson's Tree

Service
Gallfpolls, OH 45631

Insured, Free
Estlmales,20yrs EJ~:p.
740-441-9387
Rick Johnson-Owner

'' .. Wml LON6
SLACK EARS.!

·~

OFWHYI

STVQOFOAM

DO~T Lll&lt;£ WALL DOING.,.

,r1Ef'MN1.

740·992·1m

(()\(1&lt;111
I IJ\S Iilii 110\

Z9 Years Experience

David Lewis .

Windows and
Vinyl Siding
Specialists, LTD

(740) 742-2563
• Siding • Vinyl
Windows • Melal
and Shi!IJ!l• Roofs
• Decks • Additions
•Electrical

Tutldoy, Aprtt 21 . 200i
By Bomlce Bode O.ol
In the year ahead, you will get a chance
10 elevate youf targets and rise to
greater heights when condlllona that
afl'eot your work or career begin ·to
undergo subltan1ial lrnprov.ments.
They'll be exactly what yOu need,.·
TAURUS (April 20-Mav 20) - A~hciugh
you tend to be 8 lone worker, arrange·
ments with others wit~ wortc Ol.ll quite
well. In fact, e'tlftn situatiOns wh8re the
proceed$ are ehared will go well.
'
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - BeciUH
you're an easy person to work with. even
those who UBI,JS.IIy don't mix wefl with ·coworkers will do tine. You'll set an aumpl.e tl'lal they will follow Wllllf'lgly. .
r - . - - . : . - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Serious
mattera shoutr:t etways be taken sertous~
ly. but you'll i.mderttand that a dash of
hope can make things eaatar" for-,very·
one. Tempered with optimism, you'll find
that middle g~llJldLEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - An opportunity
of" a vast nature might be presented to
you all because of the klndrlets ot a
friend's lntarvanlton. This person
befleves you wouk:J be perfect for those ·
. who have Instigated the venture,
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - If you han·

.. WHO SEEMS TO BE A SERGeANT
IN TJ.lE FOREI6N LE610N?"

WH•TTHE ,
1'\
ww ~
HECK .lJST ""'=""''"""
HAPPENED? '· 1~011!"
COMtiiJWII
(
~

• Plumbing

• P()le Barns.

74b-591-8044
Pleusc leave messa 'C

Advertise
in this space for
$70 per month

LIBRA ($apt 23-Qct. 23) - Timing
and
project.
11deo are trending In your lavor witll
regard to financial concerns. Do not procrastinate about taking care ol morters
that coukhtrengthonyourmatenalba,..
SCORPIO {Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -A definite
course ol direction can be ~:~at With
regard to somethfilg !hat has been'

about

7 Tearoom
e
9 Labe a
11 Grounds

rafter

Fish organ .

,51 Tolorlled

seeders

35 Magrilto'o

name

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Ciphef cryi*JQrams aJecrellled lfom quot!IDIIB bOJ IMIOUs oeoo1e past i1111JJISIIII. ::
Eactllflll!lr rn !he Clpl\er stands lor nth!r

·

Today's clurr J equals u

" AHCHAX
LW

VLIT

'

AHMMHKJlET

XLKB
ULGEW

LW

HW

~Fe b .

2Q-March 20) -AlthOugh

\ltY

6\Ut-111\f.~ I

'Nf\AT I~ 'PLIR.
FAVoR:\\~
Co\1\'\I~Y
~w;.;&gt;

ARIES (March 21·April19) -In order to
be ltle moe! effective. don't try to do
&amp;YBfllhing youree ft Delegate what
needa doing to !hose who are experts
and who can do a better job than you.

SOUP TO NUTZ

''•
•

H· tEP

MXLWHRZ .X

.
....
..
,.

LI

A· I X K X W W.L G T E P G XW P Z C X HE ,"

• G X I X A X W K L 'G EX W
!PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "I

go io Paris, I go to London, 190 to Rome, and I'

Ialways say, 'There's no place hke New YOrk.'"· Robert Oe Niro ·

,

#

THAT DAILY

PUULIR
ORoarta~gt ltltt~

ol lil1
lour scrambled wordl be.low Ia form four olmplo wordl.

K 0 EV E

•. 1 I ·I' I
GR I R0
I.

I I II

r·'

I

.. .
I

0
N
\
~

The famous miUionaire
philanthropisf once gave
his formula for success. He
said, "Rise early, work late,

VASHIL , .
M~~~r-'-1'1-lai-rl§rll • ~C"!P,!trt

SCRAM-J.ETS ANSWERS 4/t?m
. Embryo- Drown - llegcl- Whrten-GOOD forTI !EM

"Listen to opinions of others," the profesSor told the
duss, "ii may not help you, but ifmight~ GOOD for

. THEM."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

Focu!i

knots.

GRIZZWELLS

·

Mounflln
goel

48 -do plume

8 C~nter'o 31 Cotton

w

Ann bone •
Vlocld
Flc11onll

...rJ----1 threatening
to get total ly out of ceintrof.
Others may not be able to establish the

you won't deliberately seek out t"'rge,
testy antsngtemanls, you won't be lnllm·
k:lated or shy awav from them, eilhar.
Intuitively, you'!! knoW how to sort out the

*Prompt and Quaiity
Work

References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @

you're en!huslastic. lt'l necestary to
soften your serious nature ab0!-14. the

PISCES

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
~ Reasonable Rutc ~

'litur'lllrtlldlr:

Cia! galna, because substantial rab,lms
can be gleaned from arrangements
where yoU are prepared to work hard for
what you earn.

Insured

*Insured
'" Experienced

AstroGraph

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fab. 19) -

Fn!\! Es:timates ·

Replaccf11cnt

24 In a frenzy 43
25 Allton aut 44
26 GooH ogg 45
27 Seeger of
folk music · 46
28 Chilled
29 Snooping 47

on _
your a~ bltl ous urge~ ~or large llnan·

. 740-992-6971

Stop &amp; Compare

McEntire
3 WhHellos
4 Vaccine
5 Game-show
·
6
a

requisites - but YQU can.
SA.GITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ee. 2.1) ........
YoU're anything but helpless, whieti .will
jJrove true when you take an unprO:ductlwt situation and adjus1 In a manner so
that it becomes·an outstanding achleveF----1 ment tor all to applaud.
..:.:.-......-.:.--' CAPRICORN (09C. 22.Jan. 19) - Your
loyally lo your family and friendS IS
unsurpalilsed and one of your noblaM
attributes. All wilt see !his In action when
a pal Is In dire need of support. and
you're the one who comes through. ·

I I Ill\

• New Homes

Remodeling

In embarlt

\'~

COIISTBUCnoN
·Garages
• Comptele

~age

preparing your

~OU ~OW,

\

ROBERT
BISSEll

41

..

_:;. .; . ,;. ;. ;.______, ~~;;,~~~~;r,;l r-::::=:::::=;:~;;;-, r----------,
OONf.DR.•
..A~DTHAT'S HEY, WHAT'S
MV
TAATBIG
rHE ST"'"
·

37 Wager
_
36 Yet to come
39 IAH's

the bidding with one

are

die ttllngs In an optimistic manner, you
can- awaken auppol1 In others with
regard to Important plans about WhiCh

r

12 Wyoming
range
18 Two to twO
20 Summer
In France
22 Crane

sun

G
. (740) 742-2563

34 Checll·

t-eo

Partner opens,
righty doubles
of a suit. . You

31 Schmooze
32 Kind of
system
33 Building
alto
cashing
needs
35 66 and
36 Flawer·
arranging

your j~ck.

&gt;--

on
SAVINGS

All pass

4•

~

work

lnfoCiSiOn

East
Obi. . ·
Pass

response when ·suddenly ·your.. right·
hand opponent makos a takeout double .
How does that affect yoor calls?
Let's spend some time looking at 11te
pos~bilities: First a new
atlhe one·
tevetls still forcing. But remeinber that W
y&lt;iu have at least 10 high-card points.
you have 1tte option of starting with
redouble. Basically, when yoo have10·
• o ·•
-t"t-tAV!if 4·20
plus points. you decide whether you
want to describe ycur hand aOd by to ·
find your side's best contract. or to start
with redouble, panty or primarily with 1tte
i'tention ot bylng to e~ract a penally
lrorri 1tte opponents, who pemaps have
made a m~lake emaring 1tte suction.
In this case, ycu (South) cciutd redouble. ·
planning to bid spades over heMS. but'ij
is sensibts to bid 11te r~e·card su~ Then.
when North raises spades. you mlglll
jump 10 game. However, ~ is reasonable
to make a game-try, which North is
happy to accep).
West leads the heart lour. East takes
two tricks in the suit before exding w~h a
diamond. How would you continue?
With three side-suit k&gt;sers (two hearts
and one club), you have to play the
. "t\.L AAVE.
0'/E.R· -ooq trump suit without toss. Normally, With
nine lrunps missing the queen, you
!&gt;tfi\PL\f'IO,;no~ \~ "''R~
would play off the ace end king. But do
C.Ot-\PL\Ct&gt;-1£\) lf\AN not
Iorge( East's lakeout dOubte: This
.'((}.) 1'\(&gt;.,'{
I promised at leas11hree cards in each at
the unbid suils. And d is parhcula~y dange~ous to double when short in spades.
So,. play a spade to dummy's ace_, then
lake ihe. spade llnas\ll); leading· li&gt;w to

.

FIND
AJOB
OR ANEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

-Wood

42 Ralher
hrs.
45 Unfamiliar
10 Luau wreath 49 RN'a knack
11 Tam
50 False name
13 Just aol
52 Publicity
lhought!
info
14 Wane
53 Fil9'1*itlirg
15 Popup
16 Stlclty- 54 Tllickfy
17 Taku on
oettled
fuel (2 wcto,) 55 Shedo tree
19 Is rile wilh 56 Yield
21 Robull
es a return
energy
57 HBO rival
22 Scribble
56 Really big
down
lees
23 Knighlo'
wlvea
DOWN

booms
42 Handy
26 Bot.tngpiece
30 Famous tall 1 Shako - -1 23 Painter
swab
word
2 Ms.
Salvaclof (hyph.)

Opening lead: • 4

Etde~y?

u.s.

24

l'a!s

WI/IlNlNG

Paul Rowe

t+

Pass

TO BAGI' T~t

Hardwood cabinetry And Ful'nHUre

""'""'""'""'"""""'""'""
• Ability to accu·
EmplOyment Ag•nc:i.. rately · cut ·various · male &lt;USSJCqR _,.$f()bn0tt II l'un
&amp; ~emale . · lllreads, lns-,~ .,..,·,?kwl "
Grovndskeeper needed
eluding buttress ·
Now Sclliflg:
in Rio Grande, OH
• Experience machln• Ford &amp; Motorcmft
Previous e:rcp. req. Must lng materials or various
Parts • Engine....
be 18 end possess HS
hardness and machlnTrnnsrer Cases &amp;
Diploma/GED. Pay
lng characterlaUca .
Transmissions
$7.30/hr, Call
• A!lllhy to read
·, Aftennarket·
.·
.
Kelty Services
drawings
and
make
Replace men!" Sheet
Sealed praposats will THE DEPARTMENT OF Its tenor,lhe conditions will be oubmilled to a
800-295-9470 or
porta to appropriate
- be received at the of· ADMINISTRATIVE SER- ola mortgage deed vote a! tho people of
304-529-2t41
apectllcattons
Metal &amp; Coinponenrs
Frw All Make~ ul' Vehid~)
given to It to secure slid Pomeroy VIllage 11
• Famiiia~ty w~h
flee af the Clark·Trea- VICES.
Rutine, Ohio
surer, 2581 Third St., Bidders muat camply paymanl of tho said tho Special Election to ~~f.;'!"~d;;;o;S.;;M;;;';;;ce;;•="' shop salaly routines
Syracuee, Ohio 45n9 wllh · the prevailing note and conveying be hold In lha Pomeroy ~
· and procedures
740-949-1956
until 3:00 p.m. local wage rates on Public the premises-described Vllla_ge, Ohio, at the Dietary Cook
• Lift truck operation
· time on May 7, 2009, for lmpravementsln Meigs therlln have been bro- ·regular place(s) af val· Applications
Are Now to a ptuo
furnishing all labor, rna- County and the VIllage ken and the ·same has lng lhereln, on the 5th Being Accepted For · A.
• Candldl1es must
terlals and equipment of Syracuse, Ohio ss become
day of May, 2009, the Part-Time, t ·9pm Dietary be eligible for
aliCUTTING EDGE
necessary to complete determined by the Ohio absolute. The Com- question ol an . ordl- Cook, EKpelience Pre- cret clearance. ·
the proJect knOwn as Bureau ol Employment plaint further prays that nance providing for the ferred/AeterenceS
. Re· s~nd your resume Or a
LAWN CARE
Syracuse Street lm- Servlcea; wage and the
Defa-nclant(a) a.uthorlty ol ~omeroy. quired, Applicants · May completed
applrcation
Commercial &amp;
provemants, and · will Hour Dlvlalon, (614) named above be re- Vlilagalo aggregate the Apply Daily, Mon.·Sun. torm (call to request one
Residential
be publicly opened and 644-2239 and must also qufred to anawer and retail natUral gas loads 9-4pm, Come Join Our or print one from
Free
Estimates
-aloud at7 PM, Mey comply with Federal set up lhalr lnterealln tacated In tile Vllitlge of Team!'! You'll Be Glad www utroninc.com/ca•
Lawn
Maintenance
7, 2001, at the regular Prevailing Wage Rates. laid rul Ba~ate OJ. be Pomeroy, and lor that You Didl Aavemswood r.eers) by email , tax or
• Landsc~ping
village. council ~eet- The Vll_
lage of Syracuae forever barred from ai- purpose, enter Into Care
Center,
1113 mail to
lng.
reserves the right to aertlng the same, for ae.rvlce agreements to Washington St., Ravens· Attn. B. Davis
• Power Washing
t:ontract document&amp;, waive any Irregularities foreclosure af said faclllllle for those .w,
ood
,.
, ,w,v;,
, e,.o,.,e,
. ""'"""' UTAON, inc.
Seth Carlelon
bid ah•ts, plans and and to retect any or all mortgage, the marshal- loads the sale and pur· -:944~
Innovation
or.
(740) 517-5432
..,..lflcatlons can be bidslng of any liens, end chase of natural gas, Holp Want.d ·General Manassas. VA 20t to
Jeff Stetbem
TeL
703-369-5552/Fax
ablltlnecl at eald afllce Eric D. Cunningham, tho sale ol said reales· such aggraga~on to
(7401
517-6883
Monday through Friday Mayor Village of Syra- tate, ind further that accur automaUcally ex·
S Earn Extralltonay $ . 703 _369 _5298
from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 CU88
the proceeds of said capt where any person lndepen~nt Centractors Toll Free 866•231 _2476 ·
p.m.
(4) 20, 27, (5) 4
oata ·be applied to pay- elects to opt out?
{must b6 at iaast t 8) ·
lnent of Plalnllff's elalm The polls lor the alecneeded to deliver the
Mec:hQnia
Port.Timo/Tomporori01
Each bidder to required
lo furnish wllh Its proIn tho proper order ol tlon will be open at6:30 Ohio Valley Phone Book ~~~~~~;;;;;~
. poaal, at'lfld Gua.r anty
Public Notice
Its priority and for' such a.m. and remain open
in Gallipofis, WeHsl()fl &amp; Service Tecnnlcian posi· Now accepting resum&amp;S
and Con'tract Bond In
other and further relief until 7:30 p.m. on eltc·
surrounding areas.
tion available tor diesel for part .time position at
accordance with Sac- IN THE COURT OF aa Ia jUII and ' equl· tlon·day.
1-888-606-81100
and hydraulics. E•pori- local electron~ &amp; cell
lion 153.54 a! the Ohio COMMON
PLEAS teblo- Tile Dofondant(a) By ardor of tha Board -~~~"!"'""!"'"-- ence
necessary. phone store ·1n MiddleReviled Cade. Bid so- MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO named upon ara r&amp;- ot Etectlana a! Meigs .
HeaitiVRot~romont
&amp; pOrt. Send resumos to
curtly furnished In VANDERBILT · MORT· · qulred to answer on or County, Ohio
Benefits. Fax resume 10 AS 106 N. 2nd Ave , MidBond torm, shall be I• GAGE AND ·fiNANCE, before the lwlnty, Jahn N. lhla
Work lor a top
740 _44!i- 9t 04 ar e-mail dleport. Oh 45760. No
sued by 1 Surety Com- INC.
eighth day fallowing· Chair
empioY.,r, commined 1o
to LLCOCAREQ.COM
phone calls please.
peny or Carporatlan Plalntlfl
tho last dale of public&amp;- Rita D. Smith
ofienn9 empioymenl
llconleclln the Stllte of vs.
tlon, On day of June 1, Director
opportunities " our areal
Modica!
01110 ta pravltle said TALMADGE D. LEWIS, 2009, or a judgment Dated April I , 2009
su_rety. .
AIKIA .
may be rendered 11 (4) 20, 27 ·
Earn up to $25,000/yr+ ENA's I ResideM
Eoch Proposal must T. LEWIS, olal
prayed for heroin.
·
after six manlhsi
Aostllants
Robert K- Hogan AllorPubliC Notice
interviews Are Now Becontain the lull nama of Delendanla
the party or parties Case No. 08CV186
nay tor Plaintiff Javltch,
t.mployees are needed
ing Conducted For CNA
aubmttung lhe pro- Judge: Crow
Block &amp; Rathbone, LLP Notice of Election on
to provide customer
&amp; Resident Assistant · Po·
,po..l and all persons Legal Notice
602 Main St, Suite 500 Proposition
service over the pl"lone
silions If You Are A Car.tnlat;eated
therein. Wanda Lee Morris, Clnclnnati,OH 45202
R.C. 3501.11(G)
lng, Enthusiast~ &amp; De·
:£achblddarmuslsub- whose lilt known od· (513)74&lt;1-9600
Nollcolo heraby ·glven
peMable Person. Then
1 Hiring Full Time .
.mllevltlenca Ollis ax· dress fa 50475 Bigley (513) 744-9602 Facslm· lila! In pursuance of
Positions (2 -1 t pm)
We Want You To Join
perlencos an projects Ridge ROIKI, Long
lie
Ordlnanca of lhe Vlt-·
Our Team Come On
1 Hiring Part lime
af similar slza and Bottom, OH 45743, will (4) 20, 27, (5) 4
lage Council oflha VII·
Positions (8:00-t :30pm) Ov.er &amp; Check Us Dull
complex.tty. The owner take notice that on the
.lage of Pomeroy, Ohio,
You'll Be Glad You Did!
1 OFF on Sunday
lntanda and requires 2nd of March, 2009
passed on the 9th day
f weekly Bonus
Competitive
CNA
tll.t thia project be PlalntHf flied Its
Public Notice
a! February, 2009, there
Onsile
Doctm
Wages,
Paid
Vacations.
1
·completed no later than Amended Complalnt·ln
wilt be submitted tO a
Paid Meals, Many Other
1 Fun &amp; Protesslonat
'July 15, 2009.
CaM NurY\I)er 08CV 186 Notice Of Lien Sale
vote ol the people of
Working Environment
Benefits,
Ravenswoo'd
•All contractors and In the Melga CoUnty The personal property said Pomeroy Village at
Care
Cantec,
1113
1 Complete Benefits
: aubcontl'tlctora
In- Common Pleas Court, andcontentiofthetol· the Special Elecllon to·
Package
washington St., Ravenswith lhe pra)eCI ollaglng that Dofon- Iawing slarage units be held In lhe Pomeroy
wood , wv, Reterences
will, to the ex1ent prac- danl(s) hava or claim to will be iuctloned for Village, Ohio, · at the
Schedulllntorvlew
~;eq~u~ired;·;E.~O~.E~.==,...:;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;~;;;
llcobt. uao Ohio prod· have an lntarestln lhe solo to satisfy the lien regular place(s) of vot·
Today!
ucto,
malorlals, reel ellate commonly of. Hartwell Slorage.
lng therein, on lho 5th
Stan Work Mondayt
'!l"'icll, and tabor In knawn as 50475 Biljley Tho aata will be held at day of May, 2009, the
1-aaa-tMC-PAYU
the Implementation of Ridge Road, Lang Bot· the Hartwell Storage Ia· question of an ardl·
Exu457
lhelr prajecl. Addition· tom, OH 457.43, and cliHy, 34055 Laurel nanco providing lor a
• ally, contractor comp_
ll- also known as Parcel W
. ood Rd., Pomeroy, 1/4 percent levy on In·
Apply.tnfOclaton.com
onllne:
hn :1.
: anco with lhe equal· Number ot-01484.007 OhiO on May 9, 200911 came lo provide lor
me
von ng
0
, omplayment opportu· of
tile
Auditor's 10:00 a.m.
current services 11
Work
nlty requlremenll af Rtcordo of
Meigs Unit 148
provided In the Pollee
Sunday &amp; MondaY OFF
0111a Administrative County, Ohla.
Ron Carr
Department and Street
Gail tor Interview
Code Chapter 123,the Said percal Is mare P.O. Bax324 .
Departman~ ellectlvo
1417-463-6248
Gonrnor'o Executive partrcutarly described Pomeroy, Ottla45769 ·Juno 1, 2009, be
Menbonexu193t
·Order a! 1972, and In Exhibit "A" aitached (4) 20, 27
·
paslecl?
·
L,.;;;:;;;;;:;;;:;;;;.;,;,;;.:;;.._j
. Govemor'a Exacuttve to Plaintiff's mortgage
The ·polls for the alec· AVON! AU Areas' To Buy
Order 84-9 ahlll be ra- flied In Volume 231,
lion will be open II 6:30 or Sell SMiay Spoa"'
qulred.
Page 115, an the Mar~h
Public Notice
a.m. and remain open 304-s 75 _1429
2006
In
the
uniii7:3D p.m_ on elec·
DOMESTIC STEEL USE 20,
REQUIREMENTS AS Rocordar'a Office of Notice of Election on Uon day .
Proposition
By order of the Board
SPECIFIED IN SEC. Meigs County, Ohio.
liON 153.001 OF THE The Complaint further R.C. 3501 .11.(G)
. of Eloctians of Meigs,
REVISED CODE APPLY allogeslllat by man of Natlco Ia hereby given County, Ohio.
TO THIS PROJECT_ default of lhe Dofon· that In pursuance a! John N_.thle
COPIES OF SECTION dant(s),
Ordlnonca af the VII· Chair
153-001 OF THE RE· Talmadge D- Lewla, loge Council allho .VI~ Rita D. Smith
VISEO CODE CAN BE a/tila T. Lewis, In ttio loge of Pomeroy, Ohio, Director
OBTAINED FROM ANY payment of a promla· paned on tho 9th dey Dated Aprll1 , 200$
OF THE OFFICES OF sory nate according to of February, 20091hare ~4) 20, 27

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The Daily Sentinel

· The Daily Sentinel • Page 85~

www.mydailysentinel.com

~

d,\,

�Page 86 •

The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Roundup

Mike Johnson. Jo~h Hllpp. event with River Valley's Zak Tholllill&gt;, and Crystal Adkins.
B .J . Moore . and Klint Deel taking flfSI with a distance
River Valley's Ciara
Conner) tal-.ing st:cond place of 126-03. and Eastern's Kelly Layne. freshman. was the
from Page 81
with a time of 9: 13.4.
Winebrenner taking third with only local finishing in the
In
the
bovs
4x200
meter
a
throw of 111.02.75.
top four for the 1600 meter
Throwing
far
Gallia
relay
River
Valley
and
South
And
again
with
the
high
run. finishing fourth our of
Academy was Natalie Clo&gt;e
for
jump.
River
Valley's
Holliday
II with a time of 6:57.8 .
Galiia
both
earned
points
who fm•shed second in the
thCir
&gt;4uacb
with
their
relay
took
third
in
the
event
with
a
In the girls4x 100 meter relay
shot put with a distance of 3208. Allie Troester joined in her teams taking second and jump of 5-08. Eastern's both River Valley and South
Johnson took fourth reaching Gallia earned pomts for their
teammate~ success by taking founh phH:e re,pectively..
Runnin2
for
the
Siher
and
the height of 5-06.
squads. River Valley's temn of
first in the discu' with a throw
Black
'were
Parker
River
Valley
was
a
domiStephanie
Isaac, Aubrey Rice,
of no.
Hollin~,worth.
Jamil
nate
presence
in
the
long
JaiNai
Fields.
and Kayla.Smith
The Blue Angels' counter'
parts - the Blue Devils also Srepne)·. Patrick Williams. jump with Baird taking sec- took the f111ot place spot with a
made their mark at the and Chad Smith who ran a ond with a distance of 17- time of 57.8. South Gallia's
time of I :-IS.9 collectively.
01.5. and Harrson taking relayers · Natasha Adkins,
Mingo Relays.
The
Rehel
team
was
made
third having jumped 16-11·. Jackie Bums, Taylor Wolford,
Taking fourth in the 100
up
of'
Jerrod
Potter.
Gene
River Valley's final con- and Crystal Adkins took third
meter dash was Auslin
Warren,
Aaron
Gwinn.
and
tributer
to their total score was with ·a time of I :00.2.
Wilson with a time of 1!.55.
Eastern's Emeri Connery
Wilson was the only individ- Josh Cooper who finished Dee I who was no match for
with a time of 1:51.3.
the nine other throwers in the beat out the competition,
ual finisher for the squad.
Eastern ·s Keith Aeiker shot put. Dee! took first place taking first in the 400 meter
The boys placed in a handwas.
the only local athlete with a throw of 43-045, over dash with a time of I :04.6.
ful of the relays, taking
placing
in the 1600 meter a foot farther than the second
In the 300 meter hurdles,
fourth in the 4x 100 meter.
River Valley's J. Hager took
4x200 meter. and the 4x400 run,placing second out of 17 place finisher.
River Valley finished sec- second 'With a time of 51.7,
meter relays. as well as a other opponents. finishing
ond overall with a score of and South Gallia's Andrea
fourth place finish in the . with a time of 5:01.7.
Eastelll..
again
was
the
solo
106. just three points behind Thomas and Adria Stapleton
4x 100 meter shuttle. hurdles.
local
finisher.
this
time
in
the
the
first pi \Ice spot.
took the third and fourth
Th'e Blue Devils took third
in the 4x 1600 meter relay 4xl00 meter relay taking third . . The local ladies of the three place . spots with times of
with a time of 25:49 and place with a time of 49.6. The schools also were forces to be 57.5 and 58.5 respectively.
The 800 meter run proved
topped the 800 sprint med- Eagles· relay team was com- reckoned With at the meet.
prised
of
Fred
Hernandez.
Klint
In
the
girls
100
meter
dash.
to
be Eastern's event with
ley with a time of I :48.07.
Connery,
Kelly
Winebrenner.
South
Gallia's
Micaela
Owens
Emeri
Connery taking first
The members of the first
and
Mike
Johnson.
took
second
place
with
a
time
with
a
time of 2:38.6, more
place team were Wilson. Tyler
Ri~er Valley dominated of 14.3, with teammate than 12 seconds ahead of the
Campbell. Cory Straight, and
the boys 300 meter hurdles Natasha Adkins tying' with second place finisher, ani!
Paolo Asruquipan.
. The Gallia Academy track with junior Hollingsworth River Valley's Aubrey Rice for Audrionna Pullins taking
learn looks forward to their taking second with a time of the third place spot with time fourth with a time of 2:55.7.
River Valley took first and
ilext competition, Tuesday at 47.5. and freshman Aaron of 14.4. Eastern's Audrionna
Harrison
taking
third
with
a
Pullins
finished
fourth
with
a
second
in the 200 meter dash
Coal Grove. starting at 5 p.m.
time of 48.9.
time of 145.
with senior Amanda Hager's
Eastern's Josh Hupp and
River Valley fared well in time of 29.5 and freshman
VINTON COUNTYMEET
Keith Aeiker finished third the 4x800 meter relay with a JaiNai Fields finish of 30.5.
McARTHUR _ The ath- and fourth in the 800 meter thim place finish made by
The Lady Raiders' Chloe
Jeres of Meigs and Gallia run with times of 2:19.2 and Kelsey Sands, .JaiNai Fields, Houck finished third in the
counties made their marks on · 2:20.6, respectively.
Katie Roberts, and Ciara 3200 meter run with a time
River Valley's strength Layne clocking in at 12:38.3. of 17.55.8, adding to River
Tuesday as they performed
with speed and strength at the continued on to the 200
River Valley's .momenrum Valley's point total. .
Vinton County High School meter dash with&gt; a first place continued into the .100 meter · The girls 4x400 Silver and
track meet.
finish by senior Zach Baird . hurdles with Kayla Smith tak- Black relay team took first
On the track were a mix of with a time of 23.5.
ing first with a time of 165 with J. Hager, A. Hager,
Raiders, Rebels,and Eagles, all
Eastern's Connery took and Jessica Hager taking third Isaac and Sands running to
competing for the top seed and second behind Baird wilh a with a time of 17 .9.
finish with a time of 4:44.0.
the glory of taking first against time of 24.3.
The Lady Raiders then South Gallia's relay team
the five other opponents.
The Raiders and Eagles dominated the 4x200 meter · finished third with Thomas,
placed again, this time in the relay with a first place finish Stapleton, Hudson, and
A d
h d'd
St~i~~~het~y~ym~ei off 4x400 meter relay. The Silver of 2:01.8. Jess1ca Hager, Adkins clocking in at 5:15.6.
with . a bang was River and · Black team of David Kelsey Sands, Kayla Smith,
The local female athletes
Valley's Parker Hollingsworth Holliday, Cody Caner, Baird. and A!flanda Hager were the swept the discus throw with
_ the junior Rebel who and Hollingsworth took first in arhletes that clocked in the River Valley's Katie Roberts
placed second in the 110 the event with a time of 3:55.9. first place finish.
.
. taking first with a distance of
meter hurdles with a time of The Green and White squad fmSouth Gallia finished behind 98-01.5, Eastern's Haley
19.1.
ishedh thHird withH Keithd Aeikerd, Ri·ver fiVallc;_Y wfith a second Pherdas takfing second with a
1
The next success in· the 1os
upp, eman ez an pace
Ims.. o 2:08 .0 . 111e t row o 86-04 .5, South
meet came from Eastern's Moore clocking in at 4:11.9.
Lady Rebels' 4x200 team was Gallia's Savanna Hatfield tak4x800 meter relay team of
The River Valley/Eastern made up of Natasha Adkins, ing third .at 77-04.5. and
show continued into the discus Adria Stapleton, Andrea Eastern's Zari Roush finishing

I

Monday, April 2o, 2009
and te~mmate Kara Jackson
taking the second place spot.
Jackson also took second in
the 200 meter dash.
Gallia Academy's relay
team took first in the 4x200
meter event with a time of
I :49 and continued their
success in the 4xl00 meter
relay where they took first
with a time of 51.2.
McKenna Warner of
Gallia Academy placed
founh in the 1600 meter run,
racking up points for the
squad.
Barnes and Adkins took
third and fourth in the 400
meter dash respectively, also
adding to the Blue Angels:
running total.
Close's speed in the hurdles transfered over into the
300 meter event. again taking first place, finishing with
·
a time of 49.4.
Lauren Adkins added to
the team's first place finishers with her number one spot
in the 800 meter run, clocking in at 2:34.2.
The ladies of Gall ia
Academy ended up .taking
fiTS! in the overall invitational
with a score of 146,41 points ·
ahead of the closest fmisher.
The ladies of South Gallia
also were a presence at the
invitational, fmishing fourth in
the 4xl00 meter relay and second in the 4x400 meter relay.
Individually. South Gallia's
Adria Stapleton took third in
the 300 meter hurdles.
Overall, the Lady Rebels
beat out Chesapeake, Wayne,
Green, and Rock Hill finishing
eighth.
Gallia Academy's Blue
Devils also placed m a handful of events, starting with
the 4x800 meter relay in
which they took second.
Jonathon Caldwell of the
Devils took fourth in the 110
meter high hurdles, making
his mark as the only individual placing at the invitational.
The Blue Devils finished
second in the 4x200 meter
relays, -second in the 4x 100.
meter relays, second in the
4x400 meter relays, placing
sixth overall.
Both local squads ran and
threw hard at.the invitational,
providing a tough environment for the other opponents.

fourth with a throw of 75-10.
Eastern's Morgan Burt
tied for second in the high
jump will! a height of 4-06.
Isaac of. River Valley took
the fourth place finish with a
jump of 4-04. ·
Eastern's Pullins took third
in the long jump with a distance of 13.00.25 with River
Valley's Rice finishing a spot
behindwithajumpofl2.055.
Our local throwers also
proved to be stiff competition
with Eastern's Perdas finishing second with a throw of2905, River Valley's Katie
Roberts finishing third with a
throw of 29.02, and Eastern's
Roush taking founh with a
distanceof27-{)85.
The Lady Raiders took first
overall with a score of 118
against their five opponents
in 17 ·events. The ladies of
Eastern sealed a .fourth place
finish with a score of 65.
All the local squads performed well, providing
tough competition at the
Vinton County n:ieet.
GIOVANNI'S INVtTAnONAL
COAL GROVE - The
Gallia teams showed up in
Coal Grove on Friday ready to
bring it on the track. The Gallia
Academy and South Gallia
squads competed in Giovanni's
lnvitatioiJal racking up points
in the various events.
Gallia Academy's Blue
Angels were a presence at
the 12 team mvitational
placing in many events.
In the field events, Allie
Troester · took second in the
shot put and first in the high
jump with a ooight of. 5' I.
Ale~ is Geiger took top seed in
the long jump with a distance
of 16'10.25 with teammate
Samantha Barnes finishing
right behind in second place.
When the Angels took it to
the field, their success didn't
skip a beat.
Gallia Academy's Brea Close
took flfSt in the I00 meter hurdles with a time of 16.9, followed by teammate Kaysey
Jamison finishing fourth.
The squad had a back-tohack tirst and secon · place
finish in the 100 meter dash
with Alexis Gei~er leading
the event with a lime of 12.5

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case

SPORTS
• Reds rally to beat
Astros. See Page 81
Nelsonville on a 10-count
indictment charging two
counts of murder, three
POMEROY
The counts of kidnapping, aggradefense team· representing vated robbery.. aggravated
Charles S. Williams will burglary, tampering with evi· independently test DNA dence, and grand theft of a
evidence collected by inves- motor vehicle. He is accused
tigators into the murder of of strangling Jackson to
Doris Jackson .
death in her Tuppers P)ains
· Judge Fred W. Crow III home on Feb. 23.
granted a defense motion
Shortly after Williams
Monday to allow . indepen- was arraigned last . week ,
dent testing of blood and Attorneys Charles Knight
DNA evidence found on a and William Eachus filed a
pair of boots. Crow conduct- motion to allow their own
ed a hearing on pending expert to test the blood sammotions in the case Monday. ple. The sample will be
Williams is in the destroyed once testing is
Southeastern Regional Jail in completed, but Crow
BY BRIAN

J. REED

eREEOOMYOAJLYSENTINELCOM .

stopped short at allowing
the defense expert to be present at the Ohio Bureau of
Criminal Identification and
Investigation laboratory
· when the state performs the
DNA testing.
· Instead, Crow ordered a
seven-day notification to
the defense team in advance
of the testing, and will set a
hearing before the testing is
performed , so the defense's
test can be performed
before the sample is
destroyed.
Crow set a hearing Tor
May 4.to hear other ~efen se
motions, including a motion
for a psychiatric evaluation

of Williams. At Williams·
arraignment last week,
Knight resenred the right to
withdraw Williams' not
guilty pleas to two counts of
murder in exchange for
pleas of not guilty by reason
of insanity. once psychiatric
testing has been completed.
Crow granted· a defense
motion that ~II evidence be
catalogued, and another
requiring prosecutors to disclose any possibly e}lculpatory evidence which might
discredit the prosecution's
charges against Williams.
Other pending motions
will be heard at the May 4
hearing .

Bond
reduction
denied in
Games case
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEOOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

. POMEROY
Judge
· Fred W. Crow Ill denied a
motion for a reduced bond
in the case of a Pomeroy
man accused of tampering
with evidence in the murder
of Doris Jackson.
Garnes' ·
attorney,
Christopher
Tenoglia,
,requested the bond reduction at the initial pre-trial in
Garnes' case, held Monday,
Prosecuting
Attorney
Colleen . Williams said
James Lee Games provided
false infonnation to investigators, h&amp;s a past criminal
record and could be a flight
risk if he were to be released
on a lower bond.
According to Tenoglia,
Games is a lifelong resident
of Meigs County, and while
he has had "some contact
with law enforcement," the
$7 5 .000 boild keeping Gatnes
in jail is not customary given
...•
the
charges against him.
·
,,i . •'
,•.
Tenoglia
asked
that
. .
Games be released from jail
...
....
and placed under house
.I
arrest. Tenaglia said Garnes
,. .
has "employment pending,~·
and said Garnes' confinement impaired his abili!y 'to
interview and ·consult with ·
his client.
·
·
Crow denied the defendant's motion. Garnes will
remain in the Meigs County
Jail ,_ where he has been
incarcerated since his arrest
in March .
Garnes was indicted for
receiving stolen property,
tampering with .evidence
and obstructing justice. The
charges relate 10 the removal
of Jackson's car ·from her.
garage to ·Athens . . The car
was reported stolen at the
same time Jack son was
·reported missing and was
recovered several days later.
Garnes has not been
charged with any role in
Beth Sergentlphoto Jackson's death. His trial on
Yesterday morning The Daily Sentinel received word that the center span on the old Pomeroy Mason Bridge (pictured the three counts in the indicthere yesterday evening) would be detonated with explosives between 8-9 a.m. today: Due to printing schedules, by lhe ment has been set for May 14.
time this newspaper hits the streets the span will be silting in the Ohio River rather than suspended above Il...maybe? Did
the 81-year old structure get yet anotherreprieve? We shall see.
.
.

FINAL FAREWELL?

OBITUARIES
. Page AS
• Herbert Pugh, 83 ··

'

INSIDE
· • When unhealthy'toods
hijack overeaters' . brains.
see Page A2
~ Study paints picture
of collegiate mental
heatth. See Page A2
• Bloodmobile comes to
. Pomeroy. See Page A3
• Holzer recognizes
lab professionals.
See Page A3
• AEP patrols to
begin in Meigs,
surrounding counties.
See Page AS
• For the Record.
See Pltge AS ·
• Ohio lab studies webs,
: hoping to mimic spider
silk. See Page AS
• Recession pits small
banks against big
: banks. See Page A6

.WEATHER

..
~.

·.··~...

~

Stream Sweep held under sunny sides
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - The s1,m
was. shining, the volunteers
turned out, and a dump
truck filled with trash collected from along Leading
Creek was hauled away.
.It was the ninth annual
Leading Creek Stream
Sweep sponsored by the
Meigs Soil and Water
Convervation
District;
Oelalla on Plge AB
Rutland Township Board of
Trustees, Meigs Transfer
StewartStation, and
Johnson Post 9926 of the
Veterans of. Foreign Wars.
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGFS
About 40 volunteers
showed up ·at tlie Jim
Annie's Mailbox
A3 Vennari Park on the perfect
Sat~rday · morning to help
Calendars
A3 pick up trash from along the
creek. There was enough to
Classifieds
B3-4 fill one of Rutland
dump trucks.
Comics ·
Bs Township's
Submitted photo
In return for their work
Glenn
Stout,
right,
of
McArthur,
and
Jim
Freeman
of
Racine
transfer
debris
and
oth~r items
were treated to a pizza
Editorials
A4 . they
party at noon and given one collected during the Leading Creek Stream Sweep Saturday Into Rutland Townships dump
of
the exculsive 2009 truck lor hauling to the Meigs Transfer Station.
Obituaries
As Leading
Creek Steam
The River Sweep offers
Last year more than 21 ,000
the banks of waterways will
Sweep
!-shirts.
Sports
B Section
an
opportunity for citizens
people
volunteered,
to
collect
be
·on
June
.
20
when
the
It was an event which was
to
play an active role in
Weather
A6 started In 200 I at the Ohio River Sweep is held in trash and debris from the
Rutland Fireman's Park and several Meigs County loca- riverbanks along the 3,000 . improving the environment.
has
been held every year tions. The River Sweep is miles of shoreline frm To determine local cleanup
!f:J ao09 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.
since on the third Saturday sponsored by the Ohio Pittsburgh , Pa. to Cairo, Ill , sites or get other infomlaValley
Water The result has been mproved tion; residents may call
of April, roughly coin&lt;;iding River
toll-free
Sanitation Commission and . water quality and increased ORSANCO's
with Earth Day.
The next local volunteer Educational Foundation and recreational use of the Ohio River Sweep otline. 1800359-3977.
River and its tributaries.
effort toward cleaning up is now in its 19!11 year.

INDEX

REASOR OUTDOOR EQUIPMENT CO.

. National groups
partner with Wayne
National Forest, As

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$5,199**

THE TANK'"
M48/54/60/72

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Home National
Bank to anchor
new Racine
business district

BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE
Home
National Bank traces its
roots back to 1910 and in
20 I 0 the roots wi II go qeeper. just in a different location and a_new buil(ling.
Accord mg
to
HN B
President Bill Nease, the
bank is planning to build a
new building and become
the anchor of a new commercial business district in
Racine. Currently. that new
business district includes u
con1mitment to build a new
Dollar General Store which
will sit next to the bank with
the familiar name·.
The new 7.500 sq_uarefoot HNB building Will be
located at I03 Fifth Street,
according to Nease. Nease
hopes to· lease at least 600
squa~ feet of space in the
new building and has been
talking .to an insurance
agent and attorney as possible candidates to move into
the space. In addition. the
new bank will have a threelane drive thru and ATM.
Nease said meetings with
architects are still ongoing
to decide the exterior look
of the building though the

Please see Blnk. AS

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