<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="3913" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/3913?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-18T12:05:58+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="13832">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/b8a7a4922d1c1f7aaec93aca979a9a5e.pdf</src>
      <authentication>bacec183f0a0fe29ddd44179a4fb7111</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="13832">
                  <text>.Pice D6 • SundayTrnas Seillioel

M"Midlqnt • Powaoy • Gallipolis, 011 • 'PQatl'!ftleal-., W¥

Ch~hade

Southem groul?
presents memonal
plaque, As

.plans chlldren's
tea party, A3

Thornton charged in court by Ethi~ Commission

SPORTS

BY BRIAN J. ReED

;.lmmelman srOOkes
fiekl ·to win Ma 'PI'S.

BREEDOMYOAilYSENTINELCOM

Seel'lleBI

IIIM9, Clluta Holzer, lr., M.D. W alilloa to ante a
tbt DOt Oily
aperlor
to Ill of die
Old~ lid Watcm Wat VhJI*, ht 1111 to
of
Ja
WCICIW.
Ollie il
Dr. Hiller's YilfOa. ·

*

POMEROY Meigs
County
Commissioner
Jeifrey L. Thornton bas
been charged in Meigs
County Court with two
criminal counts of failure to
file . fmancial disclosure
lllltements with the Ohio
Ethics Commission.
lbomton, 47, of Racine,
was to bave appeared on tbe
charges on April 4. A court

clerk said
Tbornton
was granted a oneweek continuance in
accordance
with court
policy, and
Jefltey
failed
to
11M luo1
appear on
11
.
Thursday.
Sbe said Thornton cited .illness in asking for a oontinuance and said a bencb war-

rant for failure to appear is
typically issued against
tbose wbo do not sbow up
on their court dates.
Tbe two counts allege
!bat Thornton failed to ftle
financial disclosure statements for 2005 and 2006.
They are fourtb-deg£ee
misdemeanors. A financial
disclosure statement is an
·annual report filed by many
public.
officials
and
employees.
In a FDS, the filer dis-

· closes sources of iricome, 2006, due in April, 2007.
in.vestments, real estate
Thornton has not reguholdings, and other finan- larly attended commiscial interests to belp pro-: sioners' meetings for at
teet against conflicts of · least two years, citing illinterest in bis or ber public ness, but continues to
position.
•
receive his salary from the
According to the com- . county. His term will end
plaints ·filed in Meigs Ibis year and he is not
County Court · by Molly seeking re-election .
Bruns, investigative attorA fourth-degree rnisdeney for the Ohio Ethics meanor carries a malliCommission,
Thornton mum possible penalty of
failed to file a FDS for 2005, 30 days in jail and a maxi- ·
due in April, 2006, and mum fine of $250.

Southern
Board renews
principal's
contract
BY BEIH SeiiGENr
BSERGENTOMYOAilYSENTINELCOM

OBDUARJFS'

Last week during tandergarten regis-

·~AS

•

RACINE ~ Southern High
Scbool Principal Daniel Otto,
wbo is .finishing his first year
on tbe job, received a vote of
confidence from the Soutbern
Local School Board at its
recent meeting.
Tbe Board unanimously
approved awarding bim a twoyear contract in the amount of
$61 ,812 for the first year.
In other personnel matters,
staff was ~ved for the following posttions: Tom Woods,
Roma Sa~. D!!vid Sayre, wl·unteer sOftball cOacbes fur tbe
2007-08 season. Brent Smith
as the junior higb track coach
for tbe. 2007-08 season on a
supplemental contract of
$1,202.12. Ryan Lemley and
Brent
were hired as

tration at Meigs Primary Sct~ool,
employees with the Meigs County
Dep&amp;llllletll ·of Job and Family
Seniioes .and the Meigs County
Sheriff's Olllce provided parents and
their children with fl8e fingerprinting
kits. The kits include fingerprints
taken with a digital reader, a color
photo and collecting just a little spit
from the child's mouth for a DNA
. sample Which is sealed within the
. ~- The kits were given to the parerlls and flPil8 of them are kept on
:~record ~the MCOJFS. The kits are
''meant -~-~.!!!!~1!!!1'...... oo-.1 AD .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . to

·• ~ mrR. Roach, 75

INSIDE
•

. promuWeiJid 1 Jll•eCid.IIJ..,_
paoents and law eufonJen•.tl a starting point . at~Dulcla ahlld •b64ibducted.
Pictured is Morgan Reiber18, 4, of . -....
Pomeroy, .getting his fiilgelprinlll
taken ·Deputy Rick ·Smith white

I I

'

I '

.....
OwriMIIItJ
...........
We fed tbt II •
· ·-

Rolrcr Clflle's
OIJ:IGtice

--

.. I I

·season with S\II1!lle- ·
menfal cooir.iCts .Of"'$1 ,922:96.

I

• lJCqa~Siilg
'tteqiiJdinic aimed at
~IQ «*lQS a people.
'See . . M
• Aqilrcf names
. top~ .for April.
·See . . . .u .

·• GoodSams
•ta Jfii'ig .group
.., ~ng Sambolee.
:see .. . A3
.. t.,YwCan Use.
'See . . AS
I

'

•'

•

..

.,

WF.A111ER.

Olrtaaaf,.W

...,.,,.,
,.• ...,. •
~ •

I

I

INDEX
.
•
.

.
,
a SBcnoleJ,... P PMlii!S
\

Annie's Mi.iloo'x

.Calendars
.

A3
.A3

Jackson murd~r suspect taken into custody
Vance, 40,

Classifieds
JACKSON

(nmics
· Editorials

Movies
Obituaries

sports

-

Hours

after a Wlp'8lll was issued

BSection

Weather
c_.a'*-v~r

, .. ,. ac..

•

,

Friday for ~s anest in connec6oo widt the sli~ w
a retired Jackson County
educator, Teny L. Vanoe
was taken .into custody by
Columbus polioe.
Vance is charged in tbe
deadt of 72-year-old Carol
Evans at bcr Camba Road
residence in Jackson on
Mlrcb 26 and his mother
told
the
Columbus
~atch for its Sunday
ediuon that tbe accusations
againlll bel" iOIIItre -aazy."

m Eisnangle

Hollow Road, Jacbon, was
ar«sted around ll p.m.
Friday at Ohio State
University Medical Centec,
wbere be hid gone to visit
1lruthc%, who was being
trealtld far a facial injury,
the Dispatch re{IOrted.
Vance was beld m the
Franklin County Jail pending
today in
court
m
municip
ColiiiDhus on an unrelated
drug charge.
Jackson County Sheriff
Jobn SbasU:cn 8JliiOUilCCld
Friday ~"* a wlmllll fOI"
consp~
to
oommit
tggr.iv
lllllrlla" hid been

m

maif'nwn

issued for Vance, wbose
wbereabouts were at the
time unlmown. Columbus
polioe remved a tip that
Vance would be a1 tbe ltos-

re~tsofaimela~ory

tests on evidence oollc:Qed
at the crime scene.
~
In announcing tbe warrant, Shasteen said it was
pital latec in th!= day and. the "frrst step" in closing
waiting fOI" bim wbeo tile investigation. 1be suspect's mother, Brell!!1
be aai\\ld, Sba•!llell Slid.
The sberiff has indicak:d Vance of Jactson, told tile
!bat more dwi ooe individ- Di.spatcb that bee son dido 't
ual was involved in the do anything, and she
incidenl that led to the encouraged him ·011 Friday
strangulation slaying •of to meet with authorities
Mrs. · Evans, a · fonner and eq~lain his side of tbe
teacher al,l!l principal in tbe story.
" He
didn ' t
know
Jackson City Scbools, and
that tbe inve·stigatioQ is (Evans)," sbe told the
ongoing, Sbaskf'!n told the newspaper. "He dido 't
Jacbon . County Telegram bave a reason to bun ber.
last week he was awailin&amp; That. s crazy."
'

Dale Teaford, Jamie Evans,
Richard Hill, Eber Pickens
(medical) were approved as
volunteer varsity football
assistance for the 2008 season.
Kelley Grueser was hired as
a paid junior bigb football
coacb for the 2008 season on a
supplemental contract in the
amount of $1,202.12. Sean
Grueser was approved as a
volunteer junior higb football
coacb for the 2008 season .
Rachel Hupp was bired as ·
reserve volleyball coacb for
the 2008 season on a supple. mental contract in the amount
of
$1,202.12.
Mick
Winebrenner was bired as a
golf coach for the 2008 season
on a supplemental contract in
the amount of $1,284.08.
Launa Teaford, Maranda
Bush were approved for substitute classified ' -staff. Bobbi
Parker was approved as a substitute bus driver.
The following were app!'OVed
for seJVices during the "Do Your
Best on the Test" after school
program: Bill Downie. ttansportation of cbildren, $12 per
hour not exceed $400: Alan
Crisp, Oiarisse · Knight, Amber
Schlegel, Rachel Hupp, Jenny
Manuel, Rasbel Yates. Autumn
Noms.
Lisle,
Donna
teacben;lturors, $22 per hour not
to exceed . $1,000: Wendy .
Beegle. Beth Bay, Donna Sayre, .
Shelly Barr. VicKi Hill. Tad
Lori
Hill,
Albano.
teachmlnnors. $22 per hour not
to exa:ed $500; Martie Rose.
Patti Struble, substitute teachers/tutors, $22 per hour, 1101 to
exceed
$500: · Elizabeth
Johnson,
Selena
Spencer,
Kristen Johnson, Chelsea Smith,
parprofessionalsltutors. . $9.50
per bour, oot to exceed $500.
The board ·,also approved
authorizing the treasure{ to
reque~ an advance from tbe
county auditor in the amount
of $500.000 from tbe first halfyear !aXes.
The board also approved tbe
first reading of the latest
changes, revisions and deletions to tbe district's policies.
The next meeting is scheduled for 8 p .m., April 28 at tbe
higb scbool media room.

..

�·The Daily ~tinel

Page.A:!

NAnoN • WoRLD

Monday, April14. 2008

.

Delta, Northwest eye Tuesday to · World Bank leader
urges
action
o~
possibly announce combination deal
mounting food pnces

.Community Calendar
Clubs and
organi1atiotti

BY HARRY R. WEBER
AP BUSINESS WArTER

W••h

Oli!Al

Churdl events
Meaday, Aprill4
POMEROY - Revival
services at the Old Bdbel
Free W"dl Baptist ChUJCh.
Route 7 · at Story's Run
Road, April l 4 to 18, 7 p.m.
nightly. Calvin Minnis,
evangelist SpeCial singing
eacb night Ralph Butcher,
pastor.

Birthdays
Thesday, April IS
LONG BOTTOM -·
Doris Balian! w.ill observe

••y, Aprill6

Monday, April14, 2oo8

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Kate
Chopin.
Heighton, hostess.

Monday, Aprill4
POMEROY - Big Bend.
Farm Antiques C lub, 7:30
. p .m ., Mulberry Community
: Center.
.
· POMEROY
- Meigs
· County Ganlen C lub meeting, 7 p .m., · Pomeroy
.
Library.
TUPPERS PLAINS . Easrem High School Junior
. Class Parents prom planrung meeting, 6 p .m., cafe' leria.Help from parents is
. needed

PageA3 ·

BYTHEBEND

:The Daily Sentinel

. · POMEROY
· Middlepon Lilelary Club, 2 her 80th bittbday on April
·,p.m . at the . Pomeroy 15. Cams may be sent 10her:
· Ubrary. Group discussion at 34665 Bashan Road,
on "The Awak.eni.ng" b y Long Bottom, Ohio 4:5743,
" - - -- - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - .

Is he telling you t~ whole story?
BY KAntY Mnan •
AND IIARCY SUGM

waiting period of six mootbs genuine w~ be said thank heat demonstrative in pubbetween die first dooatioo you and aSked for my cell lic,' but my husband is very
and payment to be sure tben: number, wbicb 1· gave bim.
secure in our rdationship.
Dar Allllip· I have been life 110 bealth problems.
· My husband worries Tom When we walk together
manied for 12 yean&gt; and
We' re not sure your bus- ma~ get dnmk and hurt me without my cane, I bold his
have three wonderful lids. . · band is telling you the while rm dropping off gm- ;um, whicb gives me more
I reoendy disooveced that whole story. Jn any event, oeries. What can I do to~ balance than his b.and. "With
my husband has beeo a such decisioos (and extra him? A Ceace
Him" should be more uoderSp¢111l donor for IDOie dian income) should not be kept Neipbor
Sia1tding
about
her
nine months. I roofronllld from a spouse. It creates
Dar Coocemed: You boyfriend's . feelings. How
biln after I saw die check for distrust and resentment. You are a kind soul to care about does sbe handle her balance
$6,000, and after two days have 12 years and three Tom's welfare, but alcobol wben be's not around? of pushing for iDfoildatioo, children together. Insist and weapons arc a bad mix. Also Noo-Dmom1nilive
he finally admitted it. He your husband go with you If he caBs, it's OK to ask if
Pair Also: We agree that
says be kept it a secret for counseling as a coodi- he needs anything and to get non-demonstrative people
hecanse I would not bave tioo for staying. He needs ro . groceries for him, but don't should not be forced to
approwd.
underslaDd wby you arc go inside his bouse. Also, show affection, but a person
Aooording ro him, I am angJy mough to. walk away. please oontact AI- Anon (al- wid! a balance problem
making a big deal out of
Drar Amie· Our oeigh- anoo.alateen.org) at l-88S:. should be able to count on
nolbing and be doeso 't need bor's wife died last suiDD!!'lt. 4-AL-ANON ( 1-888-425- her partner when necessary.
to answer fo- every privase S~ .t hen, "Tom" has been 2666) and ask for guidance. It isn' t "affection." It's
detail of his life as I~ as reclusive. He is also an
Dar Amlie: I disagreed assistance. If your husband
he is being a good proVIder aloobolic. He has no otber with your response to · refused to let you hold his
and a good l,'atber.
family. I've blown Tom a "With Him but Alone," tbc arm, · you'd oope, but even
I feel my m.st has been long time. We used to work: 60-year-old with MS who you might resent it.
broken, and that be does DOt together and be was a good has wonderful chemistry
Alulie's M.abox is writrespect me enough ro get . friend. Since bis wife died, with
ber · 68-year-old ,_ by llldlc-y Mitc+r" """
my inpot on this kind of we've barely spoken.
boyfriend, but he has trou- Mtuey Sqar, loftrtin Hidecision . . I am seriously
Tom .is a reiimd police ble being demonstrative. llin of
·Alta ltt•Mrs
thinking of separating. officer arid has weapons .in When walking, she would cnLr•• ~ e.-.il .,_,
Please advise me. - 0. his home. He bas lbreatened like to hold his hand i.o case pntio•s ttl t~~~~~ies..U­
FOot Oat die Dear
ooeofoorotbcr~~. l she trips. You said be's ~orwrite
DMr 0. Foot: By oiJr bave !bought ·of reaching putting his needs above ttl: Alulie~ _M.rjlber P.O.
malh, $6,000 in nine months out to Tom on numerous hers if he lets her trip Box 111190,
IL
means your husband bas occasions because I know instead of working on his 60611. To jiM olll been donating sperm at the be is depressed. Yestmiay, I inability to show affection. tlbolll Allllie.'s MlliiiHix,
approximate rate of three saw bun taking out his
I am 48 and was diagnosed a4 IWI4 /Ntrua b-y odaer
times a week. Most sperm gatbue and asked how he with MS five years ago. My c,nt~ S-y•clicG- wriUrs
banb pay about $$0 per was. 1 offered to pick up husband ordered me a band- a4 autoollim, mil •
donatioo, but more impor· groceries for hjm if be ever caJVed cane, which I .n ow Crw~~on Syuiuu Wdl
tantly, lbey oftm require a needed me 10. He was very use regularly. I bave never ~Ill
Mn.COIII.
,.,.. . '

*

'

CJrU:aio,

-·.a

Good Sams amping group·plan spring SamboRe

:C hester-Shade plans
. children's tea party

WASHINGlON - With
ai-Qaida' s influence diniin~
.ishing in Iraq, U.S. ttoops ·
bave much w.orlc to do in
s~iYi Jranian support
~-'"'-fo.- · 'tias-, -~idc:nt

·-

B!!Sh~s riitionil J!.!!OW'il
· adviser said SUDday.
"Iran .is vrxy aCtive in die
!iOIIIhrm part -of Iraq. They
1ft
· ·
Iraqis in han Who

.neea

oome~aud~uur

foroes, Iraqi forces, fulqi

Agency names toe

civilians. l'bere

1ft movements of~ There's

IIHIVements of funds,"
StqDen Hadley said. "So we
have illegal Jllilitia in . the
soutbem part of die oounby
dial really arc acting as aimina! elements that are pressing :die people down~-"
~AI-Qaida, they're on die
defensive," be added, cUing
the illegal militias as an
eme~ging lhreat. The prime
minister, Nouri al-Maliki.
"drrided it was time to tate
contl'Ol of the situalion down
tbere.... He's had some success. He's taken contml of
the !;'Oft (in Basra). But
tbere s more wodt to do."
Last
Def-ense
Secrewy Robett Gates said
the U.S. w.ill be as aggressive as possible to oountcr .
lbe :increase in Iranian s
pol't ·f or militias. He said
Iraqis "are in a position
themselves to bring some
pressures to bear on Iran.n
"I think that one of the
inta:csling developments of
Prime Minister Maliki' s
· offensive in Basra is lhat i t
bas revealed to the Shia,
panicularly, in the Iraqi
government, the level of
Jranian malign influence in
the south and on lbeir coonomic beartline through
Basra," Gates said in an
imerview aired Sunday.
" And so I tbink wbal bas
bappcoed is that lhe hand of
Inn has bet::o exposed, in a
way tbal pedlaps it had not
been before, to some of the
IraQi government,n be said.
G*s also has ldoowlAg :d that future troop wilhdraw.lls will go lllllre slowly
dlln be had initially hoped
He told a Senate
.
be expects Gen. David
US, the IQP military
o•,.•rumder in tbe war, to be
;lbte to make an assessmmt
of fllftber dtawdowns by
Jllid-SqJiealibel:
.
In die bfoadcast interview,

employee for April

i"''

-

.

Joiat

t

·

l\egi•ter ,

. . . . Daily Sentinel

R 11. ~bed-lnewpageevery

d:;

called~- aacl fa•ly".

,_have a tNiaHJoial storj,
,
event.about yourself

or even a (JCK'" ..._you would
like to share plPJne anaU to:

Dfields@mydailyngister.tUill
hoeflidl@mydailysmtifte4'om
.Limit your story to
500-750 words.

.111111

Please indude a phone number
ill your email.
·,

To Report Child AbuSe &amp; Neglect

:Local Weather
•

.

Tuesd1y ~Clear.
Lows i n the lower 30s.
Southeast. winds around 5
mph.
•
We41Besday ••• S unny .
Highs in the upper 00s.
Wedaesday
lli&amp;ld
di-cit
Tbtll'lday
algi I Mostly clear. Lows
in the mid 40s. Highs in the
lower 70s.

•

1-740--992-~

J-8CX)-&lt;)92-2608

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

I

•

impact of medications on a
.p ers on's driving abilities.
basic ·driving rules, .Jicense
renewal, local traffic hazards, adverse road conditions, "road rage." energy
meas ures.
conservation
proper vehicle use and
mamtenance, and accident
prevention tactics.
There is a $10 charge for
materials. Call O"Bleness·
Community
. Re lati on'
office at (740) 566-4814 to
register.
·
r

-.-rr
___
,
....
,
.....a

.

lrkelly&lt;imydailytribuiluooa

·=

state chapters. During the
camping season, Chapters
meet for monthly campouts
and during the winter
months meet for a variety of
activities. For more information on joining a chapter
or starting a new chapter
visit the group's websitewww.wvgoodsams.com.
Each WVGS chapter is
involved in many activities
including Dogs for the Deaf
. -aitd the Highway Clean-Up
Program plus many activities
in .their-local communities.

O'Bleness offers refresher course for older drivers

'

~t •~oli• •up Uttibum.
I

week, -

•

MINE1tAL WEllS, W.Va.
-Plans 1ft moving forwanl
for the \\at Vqinia Good
Sams. ~ Otpnizatioo
sp::ing Slmbmtee 10 be hdd
May 16-U! at lhc Butcher
Bmd4-H Grounds in Minml
Wdls, W.Va.
A Fiesta theme will be
carried oot at the camp wi.th
.a00ut500campers expected
to attend. . Local groups will provide
Maypole wfliPPing will be carried by the children attendiug
entertainment
for the "weekthe annual tea party at the Chester Courthouse.
end event. On Friday tiigbt
Sbhbang will be entertaining
tbe RVers. Saturday night
entertainment
willl
be
Sbawua Corder. A highlight
of this Samboree w.iJl be a
CHESlER - lbe Chester-Shade Histol"iall A-ssociati011 MeXican Hat Danoe Contest
will host a tea party and Maypole ~ing pmgram, 1 to ·on Saturday ~ with d1e
ice cream soaal. Each
-3 f;;" o n Saturday, April26 at abe Chester Courthouse.
.
h cbild wiU also make a ·&lt;CGift during the .alitemoon. .W VGS Chlqltcr i s pi3ot!cing
for 1bc
'
Tben:is a '$ 3 durge-:foreadl ·
'~~
patt
ny-dlc""d\ihlre~..U.Il I!PICC ii limiwd fill l'eserv~timls
lli be made tiy M .onday, A:piil 21. ReSeTValions !.ian fie largest ccamping urganiz.a•
made by calling Kaye Fiok at 985-4115 or by calling ilie tion .in the world, the Good
Chester Courthouse at 985-9822 and giving the name and Sam Club. Each spring and
faD the WVGS gather rom IIlade over~ with Oon and· Kathy Wise
age of each child planning to attend.
togelber for .a Samboree singing and entertainment (WVGS state Directors) at
. ·~-----------------------------~
(campout) for f.un alid fel- by the WVGS B3s Boom klou01@suddenlink.net or
lowship and to promote the Bah Group. Each WVGS · 482-7568.
quality
RV
lifestyle. Chapter bas duties during
Applications and WVGS
Volunteer staff and WVGS the event to help the w.e ek- Chapter information is also
Chapters work year round ·end run smoothly. Most available at all West
to provide a well organi red WVGS Chapters also have Virginia RV dealers. WVGS
event for the RVers.
fundraisers during · the volunteer staff and Chapters
. GALLIPOLIS Myrta
During tbe long weekend weekend for ,charities they visit their local RV dealers
Lynne Arms, STN A, is the
there is entertainment, ven- support.
on a regular basis to provide
Apri1 2008 Ohio Valley
dors, games, raffles, door
Applications to attend the WV RV dealers with
Home H,ealth Inc. Employee
prizes, a Chinese Auction Spring Samboree may be Samboree applications and
of the Month, according to ·
and -much -more. A big hit obtained on the groups information on their local
·April Burgett, Ohio Valley
eaoh Samboree is the website - www.wvgood- Chapters. .
Home Health administralor.
evening campfire with pop- sams .com or contacting
There are several WVGS
· : Lynne was born in
. Pomeroy and anended Meigs
High School, Buckeye Hills
Career Center and the
University of Rio Oiande.
ATHENS - O'Bleness Room 010. Participants course helps drivers update
Lynne joined the 1eam .at
Memorial
· Hospital . in must attend both sessions. their -driving knowledge IIDd
Ohio Valley ~ome Health
Atben'
will
affc:r a cla&amp;'- AU ddvCN, l'!!!pjlCilUy t0010e sldll&amp;,prevent trdffic €111shes
an April 2007.Prior to that, •
room
cOurse
aimed
at help- who arc 50 years old or and violations, and maintain
Lynne worked 25 years with
ing older people to refresh older, are invited to partici- mobility and independence.
Jiead Stan, and one year
and
inlprove their driving . pate in tbe program.
Wanda Llewellyn, AARP,
. both in the ':~ital and
s'kills.
.
Developed
by
the
driver
safety instructor, will
· bwne health se · . Lynne
O'Bleness
is
offering
the
American
Association
of
present
information about
. resides in Racine with her
Lynne received a oheck AARP
Driver
Safety Retired Persons (AARP) , normal changes in vision,
· husbaiJ.d Roben.
for $50, a .certificate, a ~gram sessioh I on the comprehensive class- ·hearing and reaction time
· Lynne is involved with the -r eserved pa*ing ·spot for
:&amp;lutbem High School Band. employee of the month, and Wednesday, April 1·6, firom room refresher oourse is associated with aging and
·, She 'ha' one daughter, her name engraved on the 1 p.in. to 5 p .m., and Session geared towanl tbe specific provide practical techniques
:J.eanie, and one granddaugb- 2008 employee of the U on Friday, April 18, from needs of drivers who are 50 to compensate for these
1 p .m. until 5 p.m. in years
old
or
older. changes. The f9llowing top: jlet:, Martina. Lynne enj0)'s Month pla~jue.
.
O
'Bleness'
Lower
Level
According
to
AARP,
the ics will also be eoven:d: the
· :'Sewing, camping and spend- • "Lynne ts .a ·pleasure to
·ing time with her family.
work with," Burgett said.
•· She said what she likes beSt "Sbe is a vrxy caing compas' ·about working at Ohio Valley siooale pelliOII, -her patients
·u
Health is "I make a. and nurses ~ vrxy highly
.nome
:(tifference in my patients' of her. Ohio Valley Home
lives and wrnll with others Health is fortunate to have
her as a part -o f their team."
::Who care about people."

&amp;t Nidi*'*

Lila Jo Cooper O&amp;lebrated
her second birthday on April

6 at her horne in Portland.
Attending the observance
were members of her family..

.

...........

�·The Daily ~tinel

Page.A:!

NAnoN • WoRLD

Monday, April14. 2008

.

Delta, Northwest eye Tuesday to · World Bank leader
urges
action
o~
possibly announce combination deal
mounting food pnces

.Community Calendar
Clubs and
organi1atiotti

BY HARRY R. WEBER
AP BUSINESS WArTER

W••h

Oli!Al

Churdl events
Meaday, Aprill4
POMEROY - Revival
services at the Old Bdbel
Free W"dl Baptist ChUJCh.
Route 7 · at Story's Run
Road, April l 4 to 18, 7 p.m.
nightly. Calvin Minnis,
evangelist SpeCial singing
eacb night Ralph Butcher,
pastor.

Birthdays
Thesday, April IS
LONG BOTTOM -·
Doris Balian! w.ill observe

••y, Aprill6

Monday, April14, 2oo8

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Kate
Chopin.
Heighton, hostess.

Monday, Aprill4
POMEROY - Big Bend.
Farm Antiques C lub, 7:30
. p .m ., Mulberry Community
: Center.
.
· POMEROY
- Meigs
· County Ganlen C lub meeting, 7 p .m., · Pomeroy
.
Library.
TUPPERS PLAINS . Easrem High School Junior
. Class Parents prom planrung meeting, 6 p .m., cafe' leria.Help from parents is
. needed

PageA3 ·

BYTHEBEND

:The Daily Sentinel

. · POMEROY
· Middlepon Lilelary Club, 2 her 80th bittbday on April
·,p.m . at the . Pomeroy 15. Cams may be sent 10her:
· Ubrary. Group discussion at 34665 Bashan Road,
on "The Awak.eni.ng" b y Long Bottom, Ohio 4:5743,
" - - -- - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - .

Is he telling you t~ whole story?
BY KAntY Mnan •
AND IIARCY SUGM

waiting period of six mootbs genuine w~ be said thank heat demonstrative in pubbetween die first dooatioo you and aSked for my cell lic,' but my husband is very
and payment to be sure tben: number, wbicb 1· gave bim.
secure in our rdationship.
Dar Allllip· I have been life 110 bealth problems.
· My husband worries Tom When we walk together
manied for 12 yean&gt; and
We' re not sure your bus- ma~ get dnmk and hurt me without my cane, I bold his
have three wonderful lids. . · band is telling you the while rm dropping off gm- ;um, whicb gives me more
I reoendy disooveced that whole story. Jn any event, oeries. What can I do to~ balance than his b.and. "With
my husband has beeo a such decisioos (and extra him? A Ceace
Him" should be more uoderSp¢111l donor for IDOie dian income) should not be kept Neipbor
Sia1tding
about
her
nine months. I roofronllld from a spouse. It creates
Dar Coocemed: You boyfriend's . feelings. How
biln after I saw die check for distrust and resentment. You are a kind soul to care about does sbe handle her balance
$6,000, and after two days have 12 years and three Tom's welfare, but alcobol wben be's not around? of pushing for iDfoildatioo, children together. Insist and weapons arc a bad mix. Also Noo-Dmom1nilive
he finally admitted it. He your husband go with you If he caBs, it's OK to ask if
Pair Also: We agree that
says be kept it a secret for counseling as a coodi- he needs anything and to get non-demonstrative people
hecanse I would not bave tioo for staying. He needs ro . groceries for him, but don't should not be forced to
approwd.
underslaDd wby you arc go inside his bouse. Also, show affection, but a person
Aooording ro him, I am angJy mough to. walk away. please oontact AI- Anon (al- wid! a balance problem
making a big deal out of
Drar Amie· Our oeigh- anoo.alateen.org) at l-88S:. should be able to count on
nolbing and be doeso 't need bor's wife died last suiDD!!'lt. 4-AL-ANON ( 1-888-425- her partner when necessary.
to answer fo- every privase S~ .t hen, "Tom" has been 2666) and ask for guidance. It isn' t "affection." It's
detail of his life as I~ as reclusive. He is also an
Dar Amlie: I disagreed assistance. If your husband
he is being a good proVIder aloobolic. He has no otber with your response to · refused to let you hold his
and a good l,'atber.
family. I've blown Tom a "With Him but Alone," tbc arm, · you'd oope, but even
I feel my m.st has been long time. We used to work: 60-year-old with MS who you might resent it.
broken, and that be does DOt together and be was a good has wonderful chemistry
Alulie's M.abox is writrespect me enough ro get . friend. Since bis wife died, with
ber · 68-year-old ,_ by llldlc-y Mitc+r" """
my inpot on this kind of we've barely spoken.
boyfriend, but he has trou- Mtuey Sqar, loftrtin Hidecision . . I am seriously
Tom .is a reiimd police ble being demonstrative. llin of
·Alta ltt•Mrs
thinking of separating. officer arid has weapons .in When walking, she would cnLr•• ~ e.-.il .,_,
Please advise me. - 0. his home. He bas lbreatened like to hold his hand i.o case pntio•s ttl t~~~~~ies..U­
FOot Oat die Dear
ooeofoorotbcr~~. l she trips. You said be's ~orwrite
DMr 0. Foot: By oiJr bave !bought ·of reaching putting his needs above ttl: Alulie~ _M.rjlber P.O.
malh, $6,000 in nine months out to Tom on numerous hers if he lets her trip Box 111190,
IL
means your husband bas occasions because I know instead of working on his 60611. To jiM olll been donating sperm at the be is depressed. Yestmiay, I inability to show affection. tlbolll Allllie.'s MlliiiHix,
approximate rate of three saw bun taking out his
I am 48 and was diagnosed a4 IWI4 /Ntrua b-y odaer
times a week. Most sperm gatbue and asked how he with MS five years ago. My c,nt~ S-y•clicG- wriUrs
banb pay about $$0 per was. 1 offered to pick up husband ordered me a band- a4 autoollim, mil •
donatioo, but more impor· groceries for hjm if be ever caJVed cane, which I .n ow Crw~~on Syuiuu Wdl
tantly, lbey oftm require a needed me 10. He was very use regularly. I bave never ~Ill
Mn.COIII.
,.,.. . '

*

'

CJrU:aio,

-·.a

Good Sams amping group·plan spring SamboRe

:C hester-Shade plans
. children's tea party

WASHINGlON - With
ai-Qaida' s influence diniin~
.ishing in Iraq, U.S. ttoops ·
bave much w.orlc to do in
s~iYi Jranian support
~-'"'-fo.- · 'tias-, -~idc:nt

·-

B!!Sh~s riitionil J!.!!OW'il
· adviser said SUDday.
"Iran .is vrxy aCtive in die
!iOIIIhrm part -of Iraq. They
1ft
· ·
Iraqis in han Who

.neea

oome~aud~uur

foroes, Iraqi forces, fulqi

Agency names toe

civilians. l'bere

1ft movements of~ There's

IIHIVements of funds,"
StqDen Hadley said. "So we
have illegal Jllilitia in . the
soutbem part of die oounby
dial really arc acting as aimina! elements that are pressing :die people down~-"
~AI-Qaida, they're on die
defensive," be added, cUing
the illegal militias as an
eme~ging lhreat. The prime
minister, Nouri al-Maliki.
"drrided it was time to tate
contl'Ol of the situalion down
tbere.... He's had some success. He's taken contml of
the !;'Oft (in Basra). But
tbere s more wodt to do."
Last
Def-ense
Secrewy Robett Gates said
the U.S. w.ill be as aggressive as possible to oountcr .
lbe :increase in Iranian s
pol't ·f or militias. He said
Iraqis "are in a position
themselves to bring some
pressures to bear on Iran.n
"I think that one of the
inta:csling developments of
Prime Minister Maliki' s
· offensive in Basra is lhat i t
bas revealed to the Shia,
panicularly, in the Iraqi
government, the level of
Jranian malign influence in
the south and on lbeir coonomic beartline through
Basra," Gates said in an
imerview aired Sunday.
" And so I tbink wbal bas
bappcoed is that lhe hand of
Inn has bet::o exposed, in a
way tbal pedlaps it had not
been before, to some of the
IraQi government,n be said.
G*s also has ldoowlAg :d that future troop wilhdraw.lls will go lllllre slowly
dlln be had initially hoped
He told a Senate
.
be expects Gen. David
US, the IQP military
o•,.•rumder in tbe war, to be
;lbte to make an assessmmt
of fllftber dtawdowns by
Jllid-SqJiealibel:
.
In die bfoadcast interview,

employee for April

i"''

-

.

Joiat

t

·

l\egi•ter ,

. . . . Daily Sentinel

R 11. ~bed-lnewpageevery

d:;

called~- aacl fa•ly".

,_have a tNiaHJoial storj,
,
event.about yourself

or even a (JCK'" ..._you would
like to share plPJne anaU to:

Dfields@mydailyngister.tUill
hoeflidl@mydailysmtifte4'om
.Limit your story to
500-750 words.

.111111

Please indude a phone number
ill your email.
·,

To Report Child AbuSe &amp; Neglect

:Local Weather
•

.

Tuesd1y ~Clear.
Lows i n the lower 30s.
Southeast. winds around 5
mph.
•
We41Besday ••• S unny .
Highs in the upper 00s.
Wedaesday
lli&amp;ld
di-cit
Tbtll'lday
algi I Mostly clear. Lows
in the mid 40s. Highs in the
lower 70s.

•

1-740--992-~

J-8CX)-&lt;)92-2608

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

I

•

impact of medications on a
.p ers on's driving abilities.
basic ·driving rules, .Jicense
renewal, local traffic hazards, adverse road conditions, "road rage." energy
meas ures.
conservation
proper vehicle use and
mamtenance, and accident
prevention tactics.
There is a $10 charge for
materials. Call O"Bleness·
Community
. Re lati on'
office at (740) 566-4814 to
register.
·
r

-.-rr
___
,
....
,
.....a

.

lrkelly&lt;imydailytribuiluooa

·=

state chapters. During the
camping season, Chapters
meet for monthly campouts
and during the winter
months meet for a variety of
activities. For more information on joining a chapter
or starting a new chapter
visit the group's websitewww.wvgoodsams.com.
Each WVGS chapter is
involved in many activities
including Dogs for the Deaf
. -aitd the Highway Clean-Up
Program plus many activities
in .their-local communities.

O'Bleness offers refresher course for older drivers

'

~t •~oli• •up Uttibum.
I

week, -

•

MINE1tAL WEllS, W.Va.
-Plans 1ft moving forwanl
for the \\at Vqinia Good
Sams. ~ Otpnizatioo
sp::ing Slmbmtee 10 be hdd
May 16-U! at lhc Butcher
Bmd4-H Grounds in Minml
Wdls, W.Va.
A Fiesta theme will be
carried oot at the camp wi.th
.a00ut500campers expected
to attend. . Local groups will provide
Maypole wfliPPing will be carried by the children attendiug
entertainment
for the "weekthe annual tea party at the Chester Courthouse.
end event. On Friday tiigbt
Sbhbang will be entertaining
tbe RVers. Saturday night
entertainment
willl
be
Sbawua Corder. A highlight
of this Samboree w.iJl be a
CHESlER - lbe Chester-Shade Histol"iall A-ssociati011 MeXican Hat Danoe Contest
will host a tea party and Maypole ~ing pmgram, 1 to ·on Saturday ~ with d1e
ice cream soaal. Each
-3 f;;" o n Saturday, April26 at abe Chester Courthouse.
.
h cbild wiU also make a ·&lt;CGift during the .alitemoon. .W VGS Chlqltcr i s pi3ot!cing
for 1bc
'
Tben:is a '$ 3 durge-:foreadl ·
'~~
patt
ny-dlc""d\ihlre~..U.Il I!PICC ii limiwd fill l'eserv~timls
lli be made tiy M .onday, A:piil 21. ReSeTValions !.ian fie largest ccamping urganiz.a•
made by calling Kaye Fiok at 985-4115 or by calling ilie tion .in the world, the Good
Chester Courthouse at 985-9822 and giving the name and Sam Club. Each spring and
faD the WVGS gather rom IIlade over~ with Oon and· Kathy Wise
age of each child planning to attend.
togelber for .a Samboree singing and entertainment (WVGS state Directors) at
. ·~-----------------------------~
(campout) for f.un alid fel- by the WVGS B3s Boom klou01@suddenlink.net or
lowship and to promote the Bah Group. Each WVGS · 482-7568.
quality
RV
lifestyle. Chapter bas duties during
Applications and WVGS
Volunteer staff and WVGS the event to help the w.e ek- Chapter information is also
Chapters work year round ·end run smoothly. Most available at all West
to provide a well organi red WVGS Chapters also have Virginia RV dealers. WVGS
event for the RVers.
fundraisers during · the volunteer staff and Chapters
. GALLIPOLIS Myrta
During tbe long weekend weekend for ,charities they visit their local RV dealers
Lynne Arms, STN A, is the
there is entertainment, ven- support.
on a regular basis to provide
Apri1 2008 Ohio Valley
dors, games, raffles, door
Applications to attend the WV RV dealers with
Home H,ealth Inc. Employee
prizes, a Chinese Auction Spring Samboree may be Samboree applications and
of the Month, according to ·
and -much -more. A big hit obtained on the groups information on their local
·April Burgett, Ohio Valley
eaoh Samboree is the website - www.wvgood- Chapters. .
Home Health administralor.
evening campfire with pop- sams .com or contacting
There are several WVGS
· : Lynne was born in
. Pomeroy and anended Meigs
High School, Buckeye Hills
Career Center and the
University of Rio Oiande.
ATHENS - O'Bleness Room 010. Participants course helps drivers update
Lynne joined the 1eam .at
Memorial
· Hospital . in must attend both sessions. their -driving knowledge IIDd
Ohio Valley ~ome Health
Atben'
will
affc:r a cla&amp;'- AU ddvCN, l'!!!pjlCilUy t0010e sldll&amp;,prevent trdffic €111shes
an April 2007.Prior to that, •
room
cOurse
aimed
at help- who arc 50 years old or and violations, and maintain
Lynne worked 25 years with
ing older people to refresh older, are invited to partici- mobility and independence.
Jiead Stan, and one year
and
inlprove their driving . pate in tbe program.
Wanda Llewellyn, AARP,
. both in the ':~ital and
s'kills.
.
Developed
by
the
driver
safety instructor, will
· bwne health se · . Lynne
O'Bleness
is
offering
the
American
Association
of
present
information about
. resides in Racine with her
Lynne received a oheck AARP
Driver
Safety Retired Persons (AARP) , normal changes in vision,
· husbaiJ.d Roben.
for $50, a .certificate, a ~gram sessioh I on the comprehensive class- ·hearing and reaction time
· Lynne is involved with the -r eserved pa*ing ·spot for
:&amp;lutbem High School Band. employee of the month, and Wednesday, April 1·6, firom room refresher oourse is associated with aging and
·, She 'ha' one daughter, her name engraved on the 1 p.in. to 5 p .m., and Session geared towanl tbe specific provide practical techniques
:J.eanie, and one granddaugb- 2008 employee of the U on Friday, April 18, from needs of drivers who are 50 to compensate for these
1 p .m. until 5 p.m. in years
old
or
older. changes. The f9llowing top: jlet:, Martina. Lynne enj0)'s Month pla~jue.
.
O
'Bleness'
Lower
Level
According
to
AARP,
the ics will also be eoven:d: the
· :'Sewing, camping and spend- • "Lynne ts .a ·pleasure to
·ing time with her family.
work with," Burgett said.
•· She said what she likes beSt "Sbe is a vrxy caing compas' ·about working at Ohio Valley siooale pelliOII, -her patients
·u
Health is "I make a. and nurses ~ vrxy highly
.nome
:(tifference in my patients' of her. Ohio Valley Home
lives and wrnll with others Health is fortunate to have
her as a part -o f their team."
::Who care about people."

&amp;t Nidi*'*

Lila Jo Cooper O&amp;lebrated
her second birthday on April

6 at her horne in Portland.
Attending the observance
were members of her family..

.

...........

�PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

R......,...y, I 6p"''C'&gt;I u email :and read: "'I :am Sgt.
Evan Vela' s &amp;lila. I dQ no
not know if you have followed my son's case but

(740)'~~-= .~~ix(74oT::0-21$7
- - Rfl I 111111 COlli

mJmo people have dr.um
similuilies between !be
Lu~t«U
siiUiltion
and

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan GoadJ icll

Evan's.~

Pmlisher

The father was ldenillg
to Mm:us Luardl, whose
"Lone SUJVivor~
· tells of fuur Navy SEALS,
Lutndl ~!hem, whose

beSt-seDer

Chartene Hoeflich
Genetal Manager-News Editor

Moaday, April1.4. 2008

Was soldier jailed to appease Iraqi 'allies'?

The Daily Sentinel

•

Co11grns sWJIIWiu '"' l4w rrspcc'lillfi1B
estlllllislunart of rdigiort, or piOIUJiitia,t tlu
fret aDtisi tluruf; or dri.lgi".f tlu fru*nra
· of spe«h, or of tlu prus; tW tlu ritftt of tlu
puph puceaiiiJ "' ~~nmt~Jk, 11111. "' pdiiUnl
tlu ~tfor a~ of,tria-en.
-The First A111etidtltlllt to 1lle U.S. CoMtilulian

•...,.,._.
. . mission
in
......
~
Afghanistan was oooipromiscd ' when two Mgban
goatbonls disoovered tbt:m
hidi!lg deep in Tlllib.an tmitory. rve written before
about the perverse but lilrely
pmspeot of lc:gal proseoulion bad home tnt
weigbed heavily on the
Americans' decision not ro
save dteir own lives and
their mission by killing the

two IIIW"IDCd At:gbans - a
..criJne~ in PC la-l.a-larul,
even When ..,,nauned" still
means deadly. After re1easing dlc: Afghans. tbe SEALS
were Gverwhelmlld by die

READER'S

Take care
Funeml pre-planning is vital _

Taliban, and in lbe ensuing
carnage, not only were tbrce
of lbe four Americans
killed, but llO were 16 mwe
U.S.· spoci.al forces, shot
oown in their heliropter by
lbe T.aliban during .a rescue
;attempt. In hls boiJk.,
Lutttcl.l has immottali red
dJe battle, wbi.oh Hhink of
.as Dealih by Rules of
!Engagement.
,The Luttrell 'SIDiy certainly opens like dJat of Sgt
.lEvan Vela, who, as part of

J

The Daily Sentinel • hge As

M1H*"ay, AprilLI, 2008

a

least~ 1he btoellit
of
doubt - nuns to .a

me

sirkming lbal ..t1.at
bas gooe ~ bc:A: is even
bigga dian Sgt. Vela':s persooal tragedy. It may well
m •
be :as big :as die ClDiin: U.S
dfolt to prev.ail in Iraq.
l:d's 1lO bd to the !alOe
of lbe "SO&lt;.aDod crime: An
~ outside ldoovtariyah, .
wbidil :as moc:ntly as last
3D eli~ .~. was in
May
w~s Swmi ~Triqle of
insurpt
·
tmitoDealb
~-«ntr.al.
'!liJIIIb or R...d.d-' l:asit
I)'
r
.
ADd
let's 1lO back to me
year wbeO lbc lleUl's "bidefl
was disoowemd by an victim of llhe "crime~:
unarmed Iraqi mao 1IVho Genei Neslr JQuodair AImade noise and lhrasbod Jmabi, a momla" of lbbill
about after: being cap1Umi province's . p!IC-Cillinont
Did I mcotioo the American lribe. Come dlc: U.S. -led
soldiefi were beat~xbaust­ invasic:m, lbc: Jenabi, like
...... _ s · · · _......_
ed and siOOJHiepriwod aficr """" UlllllS, JOIDo;;u ~
tbreedaysopc:ralingin 120- Sunni insw:gemcy.
And IOOIDe "~be ·sw:ge,~ l(l)f
degree beat1
.
lnsteacl of lettiing d!le man shordy ~ (just
go and, a Ia Luttrell'~ team. revving up around dle Vela
getting tilletl by Delllby incident I, llhe Jenabi, W.e
Suom tfmllists, Sgt. Vela's &lt;011.1er SliiDili.s, began, via
squad leader made cbo deei- ~.awakening~ ·c ouncils, to
sion Lull:rell anti his rom- join dlc: United States. At
r.adesdidn't mak-e Hedder- least l!boy sta.rt.od geti!Jing
mined die ~ man lhreat- paid to stop ·shoGting
ened his team s sat~. and Americans and staJt shootbe Oidered Sgt. Vda 1D kill ing AI Qaeda. Not dim i.t was
dJe llllllL Sgt. Vda com- always easy to make ~
plied. The Americans u:ansitioo. Lt. Cot Rober.!
retmnod m base ;alive. And Balcav.age - wbo just blq&gt;Sgt. Vela is oow fiClVing 10 pons 1'0 be the &lt;commander of
years in pri&amp;on for Dlllfdel". Evan Vela' s battaliion. .and is
A recent New YOlk Daily · said by Vela's team leailcrto
· News op.ed oolhe case was bave:pusbed fm bjgber kDD
called· ..American Sniper r.ates ifmm snipc:l's Hung Out to Dey." That e!lpiainod it dris w~y last
sums up what happened. Au;guSl lO ilhc: Wasbiiigltoo
Post "'TTie: Jenabi tribe, llbe
Qut why?
polrdem''
lbey'~ baq is
This is where ~
011ttag0 over .an inJuSii.oe to .dalt lbe At Qloda is diem.fl
So let's ~view. EW~~~ Vela
an American SC!IIdier- who

••••

Ieder .. lla•ds

in May 11007 hils~ member
of "''be All Qaoda i~ 'thorn~ .
mlJe 11/bo l:w ~sed
hls 'Squad, and ;gets IOOIIviioted of llllllFdcr in February
2008 in B~
B·agMad! It w.as Whon I
beaM 1be (JOUJ1l qJll11liiAI was
in ~dad -001 stateside,
like Olllcr wm triais - ilbat
my mitiial l(l)u1JI:a,ge lbc:Game
llhe queasy feelin,g mentii@ued :above, vmioh only
intonsiliod on lleaming llhat
S:gt. Vela's &lt;divisioo bad
act!lally !been l(l)f.&amp;Fod baok
lllllhe United States llef0re
t'be lriail began. And llhe
smcl.l of .a r:at grew stmnger
still when I il"ead dlllt the
kaqi Minister for Human
w.rc~an
Sallin,
·~~,
. l,l
8ttem3ed the lllia1. "II want ltC!I
be m~re ilhat ,any Amtri.can
s0ldier WhC!I wr,ongs an k,aqi
will go on lrial,~ Ms. Satim
w1cl rame m.ag.arine. 'I(Ev.an
V.elaj killoclan Iraqi mm. an .
lli18l1IDOd man. He must lbc:
punished."
Wetl, be was. Tl(l) die •q uesliioo "why.~ l can only o'llfer
m&lt;Jre questim:~s: ls it possib'le llhat IEv.a n Ve:la' s
BagMad &lt;OO:wlt mai1Iiial was
all fur sbGw? And can bis
punid!ment be seen ;as .a
sacrificial offering to .any l(l)f
our Iraqi "allies"?
(Diana We&amp;t is .am!'liUflnist
for 'The !W.ashingtoo limes.

21st Century
Grant Director

Scott Wolfe,
left, preseuts

a plaque in
memory of
Betty Willis to
her husband,
Dale. ASK

Coordinator
Kim Roush
and Principal
Shawn Bush

participated in
the along with
Willis' grand:son Eddie
Willis, who
participates in
the ASK program .

D.......

~""'*'

She lis •t'he authM of '"llhe
Dea!h qf Jhe GrowrNtp:

OV.CS Slll:dl!lill1ln \wtadss :4-EI ftiOBiving superior and &lt;elllll!lllent al!ll'd ollbmi • illt rthe ·• ¥ 181 !ipeech meet W8IB from
Submln.d pi abe
ilhe le1t,~ \Bait, Annie Bowman, Emily •Cannan,
OVCS
grades
1-a
achieving
superior
and
excellent
award
R!lbeKal 1BUih, Alexis Claik, A8hten .Crank, El1811 ,Bowman; .
-=ond nJIIII, lk:llel :Hd!ia~, Amy Dum, &lt;Kale!Yn Seaver, ribbons at the regional speech meeting of the Association

How America 8 Anr!sJetf
Development ls Bringing
Down We3'1em&lt;Jiviliz«tion. "
•
C(ll1 be ~d ria
dianawe&amp;ti@mniatm.Mt. j

of Christian Schools li!IBre from the left, 1ront,Jared Parissi,
Austin
Sherrill, ~iah case; Trevor Blank; second row,
Mtird lfliiW, iFelih lf31Wt, Sarah :schoonoller, &lt;Pi UIJ11 fo.1etzger,
AllliP Hdllii ijjllilelll!l, COle f'Menti, &lt;Logan !Edmonds. Satl'lai)Y Sydney Hood, DlikotaSexton, Noah Haddad , Colton Cox;
IBeaVer;aridlbadkmw,Mamhallltbxt,JonKa&amp;tivai,IBral'ldoo and back. l1DW, Harrison Luckeydoo, Kar1ee Edmonds,
Wyatt Cox, Justin eeaver, and Sha~in Metzger.
Rarjt ~. T!111101hy !Miler, .Scmtly Wood.
Eric!Bievins;~Bumeii,Mal&lt;enlieCase,MikaytaJewell;

rmr.

ovm wbmers in regional speech meet

GAl.U!I'IOUS The 4 - &lt;6, Fable/Folklore,
Oration
and,
Associati'l!lll of &lt;lhristian f.atri:otic
Dramatic
Bible
··
Prose.
SChools lbltemational Ohio
Valley Rf,gion IEletnenllllo/ Students .attended frmn !Pike .
S,p eeclt Meet was hosted by Christian Academy and
Ohie Valley Christian Cherish Christian Academy.
SdhOOl :on March 14 with '64 Each school provided judges
and volunteers. Over 40 volstudents [participating.
ova- !has hosted . thls unteers from Obio Valley
event for the · past eight IGhristian''School assisted.
Students we~ scored on
fear!i.
Ca~gories included
&lt;Cilther -oonditioos. A few dun
presentation
individually
.are .currently .under inve!!li- Pootty for grades 1- 3 ,
,gatien [nclude depression, P.0etry for grades 4 - 6, and -rec.eiv.ed· blue ribbons
&lt;CIIling disorders, osteoporo- Bible Memory for grades I - (superior oting), red rib-sis, .cancer, attention .deficit, 3, Billie memory for grades bons .(excellent rating),

Family Medirine

Melntonin may help
sleep, ·safety unlawwn
-

TODAY IN. HISTORY

.

'Today is MiiKiiy,April 14, llhe Iilith day fln!lmi.Tifidi:~==~~~
days left mthe year. . .
.
'
Today's ffigbligbt in History: On Aprill4, 1865, ~
Linool!l was shotandmonallywonnded by Jolm WtlkesBooth
while attending the ~ "'ur American Cousin" at Ford's
1bca1cr in WaShingtoo. (Linooln died 1hc:f~ iDo•ni11g.)
On this dare:: In 1775, the first American SOCiety for 1he
abolition of slavery was formed in Philadelphia
· In !828, 1he first edition of NGah Webster's "American.
Dictionary of the finglish Language" "'as published.
.
In 1902, fames 9lsb Penney upened his first store, called
The Golden Rule, in Kemmerer, Wyo.
Thought for 'f:oday: "'If the end brings me out all right,
'what is said against me won't amount to anything. If the end
brings me out wrong, I 0 angels swearing I was right would
BY lbaa. 8a:ll
M&gt; eus1NEss WRm
.make no diffomnce."- Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865).
'IU'e lfil

t,~·,...
hu.;rf .J~.,;u

ALL BUSINESS: Greenspan's woes

overshadowed by Vokker~ assessment of economy

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Leners to the editor are welcome. 1'/tey sboulfl be less
than 300 wonts. Ail letters are subject to editing, must 'be

signed, and inclutle .address and te~phone IIIUflber. No
·JUIBigned letters will be published. Letters sbow.d be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of

rl!tmb to organ/zati~ IPJd irufividlwlnvill!J(lf llt~t-

d

for publiealtim.

·

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213-1110\

. Reader Services
Cuooweluio Paller

Ohlo~~e bing

.

Published ewr; afternoon, Monday
Our ftllin conoam in all ill 10 ·lhroug!l l'riday, 111 Court Slleet,
, lie .........,_ Kyou ·k ,_ of an tlfTOf Pomeroy, Ohio.
SaoollO..:Iaas
ln.alto!y, CIH111e newsroom at (740) poolllge paid Ill""""""'·

- · - · The ~ Po- and

982·2156.

lheOioio~.

Our1llliln ,_..,..
' (1.40) -'2'151.'

a c • ant•?

1h,..-.:

r

1
• Send corrections 10 The Dolly Senllnol, 111 Court
Street, if*OihbiDJ, Qhjo 451119.

.lllec 1t

I'~~~~-

·llyca:a·lei .,,.........._

Newa

us••
o...,..,

OM

....., Cllao1ene Hoetlicl1, Ext 12
'A 4 Plio . Brian Road, Ext 14
A I • . Belh Seogarol, Elll 13

Adlcertieing

--:1121
"115M

DeHr

·10'

11enlot0P

One-

o...,..,

•-

..II»
.....

!Uaii&amp;&amp;1111Ud_.,_

0
I' ..,._,Dave Hlonil, Ext. 15 10 ... Doilv - · No oub·
ICfiption V/ maH p&amp;iii~ in . . .
0 7?2 --:-Davio, &amp;118 whtnt home carrier -.rYice il ......
f'j
......., Judr Clade, Ext. 10

-·

.....41

.26-

-

niWIOmtcWJNttitltll.com

I

Wllio:

Ot?illi
13-

II

.com

......

-....ca•ll)
'53.55

28 We9b

'"107. 10

52-

'214.21 .

____...____,""_ ____
www.

1

llilll* llelp •Caoon?r
13'32.26
'64.20
52 Weeks
' '127.11

---·--·

·-~.

NEW YORK The
more Alan. Greenspan
whines .about ·his tarniShed
legacy since leaving the
helm of the Federal
Reserve, the more his predece!;sor Paul ~lcb:r loots
to claim ·tho title as the
"greatest .central ·bank.ei
wbo .ever lived,:''
.
That's what ~span
was hailed as .in 2005, when
the economy was .booming
and inflation remained low.
f.conomists lllllded his si,gnificant contributions dur·ing his l8-year Fed 1ellUie,
which included making the
central bank more communicative and weathering two
reoessions.
. Those accolades largeJ,Y
Gvershadowod Volcker s
achievements. He loft :the
lied in 198711fter an '8-year
of steering the economy
through a tough battle
againstdooblo-digit gains in
inflation and a punishing

run

c:oooornic decline.
Voloker's legacy seems to
be soaring now, while
Greenspan's is sinking despite his intense effort .ro
shift blame away from himseH.as_dae cause.oft~y's
purushing financial cns1S.
lin an interesting juxtapositioo of events in .recem
day~, the two ~ f~ Fed
chlnrmon collided m tho
headlines. O..Cnspan. who
left Fed two years ago, took
to.printand ,televisionmedia
to defend his battered reputation. ~lckc:r, in two rare,
bld!:-~ speecbe , gave
a cntical assessment of the

•

·
studies are ver;y ~
limmary, arid you slwuld not
·
1iy
·C!In your own to use mclait ,tonin
to treat .a ny of tbeie
.e.
·.
Allnlfl'- elatonin is a oonditions.
While melatonin .is availbmmone that naturally
occurs in 0ur bodies. It is .able without .a preSOI!iption,
produced in the pineal .it should be used with caugland, ,and lit lhc:lps to .regu- ition. Alw.a.ys 'Start w.ith the
lewest possible .dose and ·
late 0ur .circadian t'hytlun •the internal ti1I!ing mecha- only after consultation with
nism that keeps us awake ih your family physician. If
the daytime and asleep dur- you take too much melatonin, it can .cause agitation
ing the night. .
Melatonin is manufac- and antiety. Wlhon ·using
tured by the body in melatonin for insomnia, .
response to being in a dark take :n ·abo.u t 10ne !hour
. en;vironment, and produc- before bedtime. You will
tiGn is decreased wi~ expo- Jmow it worked if you get a
sure to light. The female restful night's sleell and
honnones that help regulate have no fatigue &lt;Of :imtabilithe menstrual cycle Me ty itbc next .day.
Melat0nin i-s &lt;k:newn to
released in .response to
melatonin. Some ~search rnwe side dects such as
suggests that the body '·s vivid dreams and 111\ghtdecline ·in melatonin levels mares. It c1111 also disrupt
with age contributes . to Y,Our sleep .and w.ake .cycles
sleeping problems in older if not lilk.en properly. Alao,
adults. Melatonin bas also be careful if you are taking
been shown to be an antiox- other medications regularly,
idant and may boost the even oY.et-tbc-counter products. Though many drugs
Unm.une system.
Melatonin supplements and a few herbs am interact
can be used for many negatively with melatonin,
things. As you know from you should be particularly
·your friend, it has received a careful not 1&lt;&gt; use other
good deal of publicity as a sedative drugs or alcohol
. :treatment for insomnia In 1 when taking melatonin.
Because of the possibility
fact, a few scientific studies
of
these ttypes of drug interbawe shown i.t .t o be more
·effective !than .a placebo, -or actions, "I urge you again to
:sugar -pill, in treating sleep consult your physician
before trying melatonin. ·
problems.
Specifically, these studi~s
have ·found that melatonm
was boner than a placc:bo in
three areas - reducing the
·amount of time it takes to
·fall asleep, increasing the
nllfOber of hours of sleep
.and improving daytime
alertness. Other 11tudies,
bowo:vor, have ·shown these
effectitO be pnknt only for
&amp;bOrt-teJlll use - a few
days to sevCJ;al weeks.
The .effects of using melatonin supplements for an
. extended period of time
have not been studied, so its
· long-term safety is not
~ tla~.,...

cwrent economy ..and the pendent reot:arr:b fum Fact their fault."
Fecl'-s role .In creating and and Opinion Economics. "l
The more Greenspan tries
can't imagine a more outra- to spin his legacy in · :his
managing the aisis.
lbeir styles have always geous ~for a Fed chair- ·, favor, the Jess jt looks likely
contrasted, now and ·When man tooo.
·
· to happen. The public js
they were at the lied..
Greenspan has been on .growing .numb · to bis
F.conmnists say Greenspan the defensive for mooths attempts to pin the makings
.i.1; as much a JIC!IIitician as be over such attach, but
of this aisis on ·others.
is a .p olicymaker - :always .reoent days, be llw stc:PPod
~~ may be why the
looking for ~ities to up his fight ~st ithCm. attentioo shifted &lt;to Volcter
daim the -spotligh~- a tat- ~ .comJilelll&amp; .in dle in recent days. He neMer
tic that ·~ybe hindering, Financial TllDO&amp;,
Sttoc:t sought publicity .after he left
rather 'helpirlg b.iuepuJatiGn Joumal.and CNBC, be laid the Fl!d.; he .e!lpressed his
oow. lt'' ju!&gt;l the ~ .out 01 !;lsefarwby be didn' t views dCGll il'lilally oll tliii
for Volckct.
do an)\lhing wrong.
state of the ec0nemy pr
Once upon ~ time:,
"I .have no regrc:tts on lillY .mooetary policy.
Greenspan's monetary poli- .of1hc: Feilcral Reserve PQiiThis week was an eXCJOPcies and lax approach ro cies that we initiated back ti0n. During two S]X'aking
.~gulation won .him praise, .then, because I think they . engagements on Tuesday
oot criticism, An academic were very professionally and Wednesday that were
paper written in 2005 said · done," · Greenspan told · closely watched, Volck.er
he had .a legitimate claim to CNBC on J'uesclay.
·didn't sugarcoat bis assessbeing·the ~greatest" centra1
But it's hard to buy lhat ment of the roots of the curbanker evci" and touted .h is "don't blame me" argu- rent fmancial crisis . "~c fQlUJula"- where meot, giv~ the .piJilrellle()Owhereby
..oGrnplexity,
discretion f8,d!er than ·r,ules nomic predicament Pa.ul opaqueness and systematu:
went into the .F ed's decision Kastiel, who directs oco- nsks" were embedded in
mali:ing.
·
nomic .research :at The new markets - and the
But .now, in the midst Of Nortbc:m Trust Co., says the p0licies now being used to
today's financialmarkettur- facts speak for themselves.
clean it up.
moil and eoooomic downFor mstance, he notes that
" Simply stated, tlhe bright
tum, Gl:ee".'P" . who households in 2005 spent new financial system, for all
was 10gl*d IJy Britain for '$531 billion more than they its talented participants, for
bisJIC'Jbicvenc:tJts
is find- earned afterttaxes, compared all its rich rewards, has
ing 'his lepcy being called ~th the surplus of earnin~s failed the test of the market
into question.
· \ over spending of $108 btl- place," Voloker said during
Critics .say be kept inter-. lion seen in 1987 when a speec~ Tuesday to tho
est .Gites ·too low for too Greenspan took ower at the Econom•c Club of New
'long, fueling dJe housing
.
fed. Andwhileleverag~has York. "\Yha! has .·plainly
bubble.1bc:y also chargc::ibc: · surged to record htghs, been at nsk 1s a disorderly
encouraged Americans m household .ltquidity has sunk unraveling of the mutual
load. up on lev~~e, .t o near ·record lows of trust among respected marignored wllf'ni:ngs on ri~ around 9.5 percent in 2005 ket participants' upon which
mortg&lt;tgC lending and dido t hum 14.2 percent m 1987.
any strong and efficient
pro~;~trly monitor fmancial
''Greenspan's ar~ument fi.IIllilcial system must rest."
mslttutions.
that it was not bis dmng that
Those
comments
"He ~ed peop_le tobor- set off the U.S. hGusing drowned out Greenspan's
. row a.gatnst tbotr homes · bubble ~minds me of my woes. And with them
because. it would help fuel two perfect children," Volck.er began to reclam;
the economy," said Robert Kasriel said. "When they the praise and reoognitioo
Brusca, who beads the mde- appear to . err, it was never be deserves.
,.

rn

wan

..

•

--·- . ·········

•

knoWn.

1. find it interesting that
.melatonin is also being stud,
ied as an adjunctive treat~ for a wide range of

'

·white ribbont:(good rating),
and yellow (honorable
mention).
Those receiving honorable mention were the practice speeches for the judges.
These students we~ ·Colton
Cox (first grl!Qe. QVCSl
Jeremialt Case (first grade,
OVCS), Sharalin Metzger
(fust grade, OVCS) and
'Bethany Beaver (sixth
grade, OVCS)
At the awards assembly
one student from each cate-

gory was selected to do
their speech presentation,
which followed the judging.
Students from OVCS that
were selected to present
their speeches to the general
assembly were: Wyatt Cox
(first grade) jn poetry for
grades 1-3, Eric Blevins
(fourth
·. grade)
in
Fable/Folklore, Amy Ours
(sixth · grade) in Bible
Memory for grades 1-6,
Rachel Haddad (fifth grade)
in Poetry for grades 4-6.

LAW YOU CAN -USE

Mediation can resolve disputes
Q.: Wllat is mediadea!
A.: Mediation is a process
of guided negotiations. A
neutral individual, called a
mediator, discusses a dispute
or pending case with disputing parties and/or their anorneys in an.effort to resolve it
by mutwil agreement The
IDC'iJiator has no decisionmating authority. Rather, the
mediator serves as a discussion leader to help the ,partieipants negotiate more effici~y. and, hopefully, •reaCh
an agreement sooner than
1hey could on their own.

Q.; Wlult&lt;does tbe medi-

iltAJr tell tbe judge? .

A.: Next to nothing. The
mediator will only tell the
court whether or not tlje
case settled. Also; mediation discussions cannot be
admitted at trial.

&lt;Q,: aMid I lbrin&amp; witness~~ aDd abibits to the
ewJiatWa?

ness or intra-personal case,
the other party should be
present to give his/her view
of the facts and make decisiqns aoout settling, In fam ily, neighborhood, workplace, and most other disputes, both pil.rties are at the
same table. It is often impor~
tant for parties to listen to
and learn about each other's
point of view on the way to
a resolution. The mediator ,
usually will meet separately
with each side for private,
more candid discussions.

A.; No. A mediation is not
like a tEial or arbitration.
While the attorneys, parties,
and the mediatol" will discuss
the evidence, there are no
Q.: I want
day in
witnesses, :no testimony, no
court.
Why
should
I
settle?
Q.: Wluit :is .a mn'ietor! exhlbits, . no obJections, no
A.: You have evecy right
~ A mediator is an .indecross examination, and no
pendent, trained neutml who.. arguments. You may, how·· ~ 8 citiZI!n to lillflk a fair trial
works as a .diplomat to help over, bring documents that in court, but a trial is not the
people settle dispU\OS. A further. explain, clarify or only legal choice available.
mc:diator may be a court update libe fact:iiai situation. More than 95 pen;ent of all
U.S. cases filed never go to
employee, a voluntc:er lawyer
:helping a coun, cr a l.aW)!Il" cr · Q.~ 'WJII 'lie apected to trial. Some cases need a trial
because of an unusual legal
other professional in pivllle asdfy1
question,
a factual dispute,
A.: No. Mediation is a
practice. Although iJIIIIll}''
mediHIOOl are also ilaveycn, focused .negotialion process. or a seriou.s disagreement
that credential is not reqtlired. You will bee~ to listen, about a fair settlement value.
Before going to trial, you
participate in the discussions
should
consider factors such
Q.: What lldodi f4 dlses as appropriate, and make deci«*"'""""' c.n go tomedi- . sions about how Ill negotiate, as time, expense, court
delays, possible appeal, the
.adllllf
and whcrbcr or not to sea:le.
risk of a bad result, the facts
A.: Just about any kind ~f
of
lbe case becoming part of
Q.: Can tile mediatartfell
case can bernediatM. Coutts
·
a
jJUblic
record, stress.
use OJPA'!iation for bu.s, me'll'llat my cue is wadi!
A.: No. The mediator is not
personal uvwy, real estate,
Q.: Wluit bappeDs If we
lm:closure, family law, small there as a judge; jury, or libiam
't settle?
claims, and many other types . trator of the case. You and
A.:
If the parties cannot setof cases. Outside of coun, your attorney should evaluate
,
neighborhood disputes, ·con- your case and weigh the bensllillei" compJaints, land use, efits of senling. The mediaenvironmental, and many tor, .the anomeys, and die parother types of disputes can be ties will, however, discuss the
successfully mediated.
costs of going fDIWard with
litigation as compared to the
Q.: WDI the .medi8tor ·benefits of settlement
itliw!a....,' hoiluaya.e!
Q.: WW Ute other side
A.: No. The mediator can
only help the parties and he there!
A.: Generally yes, but it
attq[IICys look at the case
lf your case
depends.
more objectively, discuss
various options, review involves insurance, the
strong and weak points of insurance adjustor will be
each side's position, listen to there representing the comeach side privately, and help pany, but the other driver in
the participants find a mutu- an auto accident is usuiilly
not present. If this is a busially acceptable solution.

my

&gt;

tie at the mediation, several
things might happen. The
attorneys may agree to negotiate further later on, either
with or without formal discovery. The mediator can
schedule a follow up mediation. Certain legal questions
may need to be resolved by
the judge through motions"
before further negotiations
occur. Or the case could ultimately go to trial. There is no
penalty or extra cost for using
mediation, beyond the mediator 's fee, if any. One of the
strengths of mediation is that
parties .neither .gain nor lose
any rights or access to other
means of \!ispule!t=§91ution it
tl~t:y try i11edlation fll'Sl. ·
lAw You Ctm Use is a

consumer

weekly

legal
iltformation colwnn provill·
ed by the Ohio Sttlte &amp;r
Associmion. This 011icle WtZS
prefJtln"
by
Harold
PaMoclt, Cohurtbus meditlWr tutti arlJilralor. Anicles
appetlrifrg in this column ore

intended to provide broad,
general infomtlllion · about
the law. Before tlfJPlyiltg this
information w a specific
legal problem, reoders urged to seek the advice of 11
licensed llltOmey.
.l-~ N Ctol',r.

"''A

' I •' '.

..,

'

~

/-''." __:.

""""

·'

·t ·
0

" !;-

' '' 0 &gt;

-..;

.

Pf.RFOR\1\G;.Jl) ('l:'&lt;I'TIF

"THUMBEUNA"
April18 .. 19 '7:00

April 20 . 3:00

•th• ..

P1whow Patty begl
6 pm an s.turay the 1Mh
Call 446-ARTS tor
ReMidt~

Bo• otllct: 42112nd Awe.
ca.lllpalle, OH (140) 44I-AII1I

�PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

R......,...y, I 6p"''C'&gt;I u email :and read: "'I :am Sgt.
Evan Vela' s &amp;lila. I dQ no
not know if you have followed my son's case but

(740)'~~-= .~~ix(74oT::0-21$7
- - Rfl I 111111 COlli

mJmo people have dr.um
similuilies between !be
Lu~t«U
siiUiltion
and

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan GoadJ icll

Evan's.~

Pmlisher

The father was ldenillg
to Mm:us Luardl, whose
"Lone SUJVivor~
· tells of fuur Navy SEALS,
Lutndl ~!hem, whose

beSt-seDer

Chartene Hoeflich
Genetal Manager-News Editor

Moaday, April1.4. 2008

Was soldier jailed to appease Iraqi 'allies'?

The Daily Sentinel

•

Co11grns sWJIIWiu '"' l4w rrspcc'lillfi1B
estlllllislunart of rdigiort, or piOIUJiitia,t tlu
fret aDtisi tluruf; or dri.lgi".f tlu fru*nra
· of spe«h, or of tlu prus; tW tlu ritftt of tlu
puph puceaiiiJ "' ~~nmt~Jk, 11111. "' pdiiUnl
tlu ~tfor a~ of,tria-en.
-The First A111etidtltlllt to 1lle U.S. CoMtilulian

•...,.,._.
. . mission
in
......
~
Afghanistan was oooipromiscd ' when two Mgban
goatbonls disoovered tbt:m
hidi!lg deep in Tlllib.an tmitory. rve written before
about the perverse but lilrely
pmspeot of lc:gal proseoulion bad home tnt
weigbed heavily on the
Americans' decision not ro
save dteir own lives and
their mission by killing the

two IIIW"IDCd At:gbans - a
..criJne~ in PC la-l.a-larul,
even When ..,,nauned" still
means deadly. After re1easing dlc: Afghans. tbe SEALS
were Gverwhelmlld by die

READER'S

Take care
Funeml pre-planning is vital _

Taliban, and in lbe ensuing
carnage, not only were tbrce
of lbe four Americans
killed, but llO were 16 mwe
U.S.· spoci.al forces, shot
oown in their heliropter by
lbe T.aliban during .a rescue
;attempt. In hls boiJk.,
Lutttcl.l has immottali red
dJe battle, wbi.oh Hhink of
.as Dealih by Rules of
!Engagement.
,The Luttrell 'SIDiy certainly opens like dJat of Sgt
.lEvan Vela, who, as part of

J

The Daily Sentinel • hge As

M1H*"ay, AprilLI, 2008

a

least~ 1he btoellit
of
doubt - nuns to .a

me

sirkming lbal ..t1.at
bas gooe ~ bc:A: is even
bigga dian Sgt. Vela':s persooal tragedy. It may well
m •
be :as big :as die ClDiin: U.S
dfolt to prev.ail in Iraq.
l:d's 1lO bd to the !alOe
of lbe "SO&lt;.aDod crime: An
~ outside ldoovtariyah, .
wbidil :as moc:ntly as last
3D eli~ .~. was in
May
w~s Swmi ~Triqle of
insurpt
·
tmitoDealb
~-«ntr.al.
'!liJIIIb or R...d.d-' l:asit
I)'
r
.
ADd
let's 1lO back to me
year wbeO lbc lleUl's "bidefl
was disoowemd by an victim of llhe "crime~:
unarmed Iraqi mao 1IVho Genei Neslr JQuodair AImade noise and lhrasbod Jmabi, a momla" of lbbill
about after: being cap1Umi province's . p!IC-Cillinont
Did I mcotioo the American lribe. Come dlc: U.S. -led
soldiefi were beat~xbaust­ invasic:m, lbc: Jenabi, like
...... _ s · · · _......_
ed and siOOJHiepriwod aficr """" UlllllS, JOIDo;;u ~
tbreedaysopc:ralingin 120- Sunni insw:gemcy.
And IOOIDe "~be ·sw:ge,~ l(l)f
degree beat1
.
lnsteacl of lettiing d!le man shordy ~ (just
go and, a Ia Luttrell'~ team. revving up around dle Vela
getting tilletl by Delllby incident I, llhe Jenabi, W.e
Suom tfmllists, Sgt. Vela's &lt;011.1er SliiDili.s, began, via
squad leader made cbo deei- ~.awakening~ ·c ouncils, to
sion Lull:rell anti his rom- join dlc: United States. At
r.adesdidn't mak-e Hedder- least l!boy sta.rt.od geti!Jing
mined die ~ man lhreat- paid to stop ·shoGting
ened his team s sat~. and Americans and staJt shootbe Oidered Sgt. Vda 1D kill ing AI Qaeda. Not dim i.t was
dJe llllllL Sgt. Vda com- always easy to make ~
plied. The Americans u:ansitioo. Lt. Cot Rober.!
retmnod m base ;alive. And Balcav.age - wbo just blq&gt;Sgt. Vela is oow fiClVing 10 pons 1'0 be the &lt;commander of
years in pri&amp;on for Dlllfdel". Evan Vela' s battaliion. .and is
A recent New YOlk Daily · said by Vela's team leailcrto
· News op.ed oolhe case was bave:pusbed fm bjgber kDD
called· ..American Sniper r.ates ifmm snipc:l's Hung Out to Dey." That e!lpiainod it dris w~y last
sums up what happened. Au;guSl lO ilhc: Wasbiiigltoo
Post "'TTie: Jenabi tribe, llbe
Qut why?
polrdem''
lbey'~ baq is
This is where ~
011ttag0 over .an inJuSii.oe to .dalt lbe At Qloda is diem.fl
So let's ~view. EW~~~ Vela
an American SC!IIdier- who

••••

Ieder .. lla•ds

in May 11007 hils~ member
of "''be All Qaoda i~ 'thorn~ .
mlJe 11/bo l:w ~sed
hls 'Squad, and ;gets IOOIIviioted of llllllFdcr in February
2008 in B~
B·agMad! It w.as Whon I
beaM 1be (JOUJ1l qJll11liiAI was
in ~dad -001 stateside,
like Olllcr wm triais - ilbat
my mitiial l(l)u1JI:a,ge lbc:Game
llhe queasy feelin,g mentii@ued :above, vmioh only
intonsiliod on lleaming llhat
S:gt. Vela's &lt;divisioo bad
act!lally !been l(l)f.&amp;Fod baok
lllllhe United States llef0re
t'be lriail began. And llhe
smcl.l of .a r:at grew stmnger
still when I il"ead dlllt the
kaqi Minister for Human
w.rc~an
Sallin,
·~~,
. l,l
8ttem3ed the lllia1. "II want ltC!I
be m~re ilhat ,any Amtri.can
s0ldier WhC!I wr,ongs an k,aqi
will go on lrial,~ Ms. Satim
w1cl rame m.ag.arine. 'I(Ev.an
V.elaj killoclan Iraqi mm. an .
lli18l1IDOd man. He must lbc:
punished."
Wetl, be was. Tl(l) die •q uesliioo "why.~ l can only o'llfer
m&lt;Jre questim:~s: ls it possib'le llhat IEv.a n Ve:la' s
BagMad &lt;OO:wlt mai1Iiial was
all fur sbGw? And can bis
punid!ment be seen ;as .a
sacrificial offering to .any l(l)f
our Iraqi "allies"?
(Diana We&amp;t is .am!'liUflnist
for 'The !W.ashingtoo limes.

21st Century
Grant Director

Scott Wolfe,
left, preseuts

a plaque in
memory of
Betty Willis to
her husband,
Dale. ASK

Coordinator
Kim Roush
and Principal
Shawn Bush

participated in
the along with
Willis' grand:son Eddie
Willis, who
participates in
the ASK program .

D.......

~""'*'

She lis •t'he authM of '"llhe
Dea!h qf Jhe GrowrNtp:

OV.CS Slll:dl!lill1ln \wtadss :4-EI ftiOBiving superior and &lt;elllll!lllent al!ll'd ollbmi • illt rthe ·• ¥ 181 !ipeech meet W8IB from
Submln.d pi abe
ilhe le1t,~ \Bait, Annie Bowman, Emily •Cannan,
OVCS
grades
1-a
achieving
superior
and
excellent
award
R!lbeKal 1BUih, Alexis Claik, A8hten .Crank, El1811 ,Bowman; .
-=ond nJIIII, lk:llel :Hd!ia~, Amy Dum, &lt;Kale!Yn Seaver, ribbons at the regional speech meeting of the Association

How America 8 Anr!sJetf
Development ls Bringing
Down We3'1em&lt;Jiviliz«tion. "
•
C(ll1 be ~d ria
dianawe&amp;ti@mniatm.Mt. j

of Christian Schools li!IBre from the left, 1ront,Jared Parissi,
Austin
Sherrill, ~iah case; Trevor Blank; second row,
Mtird lfliiW, iFelih lf31Wt, Sarah :schoonoller, &lt;Pi UIJ11 fo.1etzger,
AllliP Hdllii ijjllilelll!l, COle f'Menti, &lt;Logan !Edmonds. Satl'lai)Y Sydney Hood, DlikotaSexton, Noah Haddad , Colton Cox;
IBeaVer;aridlbadkmw,Mamhallltbxt,JonKa&amp;tivai,IBral'ldoo and back. l1DW, Harrison Luckeydoo, Kar1ee Edmonds,
Wyatt Cox, Justin eeaver, and Sha~in Metzger.
Rarjt ~. T!111101hy !Miler, .Scmtly Wood.
Eric!Bievins;~Bumeii,Mal&lt;enlieCase,MikaytaJewell;

rmr.

ovm wbmers in regional speech meet

GAl.U!I'IOUS The 4 - &lt;6, Fable/Folklore,
Oration
and,
Associati'l!lll of &lt;lhristian f.atri:otic
Dramatic
Bible
··
Prose.
SChools lbltemational Ohio
Valley Rf,gion IEletnenllllo/ Students .attended frmn !Pike .
S,p eeclt Meet was hosted by Christian Academy and
Ohie Valley Christian Cherish Christian Academy.
SdhOOl :on March 14 with '64 Each school provided judges
and volunteers. Over 40 volstudents [participating.
ova- !has hosted . thls unteers from Obio Valley
event for the · past eight IGhristian''School assisted.
Students we~ scored on
fear!i.
Ca~gories included
&lt;Cilther -oonditioos. A few dun
presentation
individually
.are .currently .under inve!!li- Pootty for grades 1- 3 ,
,gatien [nclude depression, P.0etry for grades 4 - 6, and -rec.eiv.ed· blue ribbons
&lt;CIIling disorders, osteoporo- Bible Memory for grades I - (superior oting), red rib-sis, .cancer, attention .deficit, 3, Billie memory for grades bons .(excellent rating),

Family Medirine

Melntonin may help
sleep, ·safety unlawwn
-

TODAY IN. HISTORY

.

'Today is MiiKiiy,April 14, llhe Iilith day fln!lmi.Tifidi:~==~~~
days left mthe year. . .
.
'
Today's ffigbligbt in History: On Aprill4, 1865, ~
Linool!l was shotandmonallywonnded by Jolm WtlkesBooth
while attending the ~ "'ur American Cousin" at Ford's
1bca1cr in WaShingtoo. (Linooln died 1hc:f~ iDo•ni11g.)
On this dare:: In 1775, the first American SOCiety for 1he
abolition of slavery was formed in Philadelphia
· In !828, 1he first edition of NGah Webster's "American.
Dictionary of the finglish Language" "'as published.
.
In 1902, fames 9lsb Penney upened his first store, called
The Golden Rule, in Kemmerer, Wyo.
Thought for 'f:oday: "'If the end brings me out all right,
'what is said against me won't amount to anything. If the end
brings me out wrong, I 0 angels swearing I was right would
BY lbaa. 8a:ll
M&gt; eus1NEss WRm
.make no diffomnce."- Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865).
'IU'e lfil

t,~·,...
hu.;rf .J~.,;u

ALL BUSINESS: Greenspan's woes

overshadowed by Vokker~ assessment of economy

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Leners to the editor are welcome. 1'/tey sboulfl be less
than 300 wonts. Ail letters are subject to editing, must 'be

signed, and inclutle .address and te~phone IIIUflber. No
·JUIBigned letters will be published. Letters sbow.d be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of

rl!tmb to organ/zati~ IPJd irufividlwlnvill!J(lf llt~t-

d

for publiealtim.

·

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213-1110\

. Reader Services
Cuooweluio Paller

Ohlo~~e bing

.

Published ewr; afternoon, Monday
Our ftllin conoam in all ill 10 ·lhroug!l l'riday, 111 Court Slleet,
, lie .........,_ Kyou ·k ,_ of an tlfTOf Pomeroy, Ohio.
SaoollO..:Iaas
ln.alto!y, CIH111e newsroom at (740) poolllge paid Ill""""""'·

- · - · The ~ Po- and

982·2156.

lheOioio~.

Our1llliln ,_..,..
' (1.40) -'2'151.'

a c • ant•?

1h,..-.:

r

1
• Send corrections 10 The Dolly Senllnol, 111 Court
Street, if*OihbiDJ, Qhjo 451119.

.lllec 1t

I'~~~~-

·llyca:a·lei .,,.........._

Newa

us••
o...,..,

OM

....., Cllao1ene Hoetlicl1, Ext 12
'A 4 Plio . Brian Road, Ext 14
A I • . Belh Seogarol, Elll 13

Adlcertieing

--:1121
"115M

DeHr

·10'

11enlot0P

One-

o...,..,

•-

..II»
.....

!Uaii&amp;&amp;1111Ud_.,_

0
I' ..,._,Dave Hlonil, Ext. 15 10 ... Doilv - · No oub·
ICfiption V/ maH p&amp;iii~ in . . .
0 7?2 --:-Davio, &amp;118 whtnt home carrier -.rYice il ......
f'j
......., Judr Clade, Ext. 10

-·

.....41

.26-

-

niWIOmtcWJNttitltll.com

I

Wllio:

Ot?illi
13-

II

.com

......

-....ca•ll)
'53.55

28 We9b

'"107. 10

52-

'214.21 .

____...____,""_ ____
www.

1

llilll* llelp •Caoon?r
13'32.26
'64.20
52 Weeks
' '127.11

---·--·

·-~.

NEW YORK The
more Alan. Greenspan
whines .about ·his tarniShed
legacy since leaving the
helm of the Federal
Reserve, the more his predece!;sor Paul ~lcb:r loots
to claim ·tho title as the
"greatest .central ·bank.ei
wbo .ever lived,:''
.
That's what ~span
was hailed as .in 2005, when
the economy was .booming
and inflation remained low.
f.conomists lllllded his si,gnificant contributions dur·ing his l8-year Fed 1ellUie,
which included making the
central bank more communicative and weathering two
reoessions.
. Those accolades largeJ,Y
Gvershadowod Volcker s
achievements. He loft :the
lied in 198711fter an '8-year
of steering the economy
through a tough battle
againstdooblo-digit gains in
inflation and a punishing

run

c:oooornic decline.
Voloker's legacy seems to
be soaring now, while
Greenspan's is sinking despite his intense effort .ro
shift blame away from himseH.as_dae cause.oft~y's
purushing financial cns1S.
lin an interesting juxtapositioo of events in .recem
day~, the two ~ f~ Fed
chlnrmon collided m tho
headlines. O..Cnspan. who
left Fed two years ago, took
to.printand ,televisionmedia
to defend his battered reputation. ~lckc:r, in two rare,
bld!:-~ speecbe , gave
a cntical assessment of the

•

·
studies are ver;y ~
limmary, arid you slwuld not
·
1iy
·C!In your own to use mclait ,tonin
to treat .a ny of tbeie
.e.
·.
Allnlfl'- elatonin is a oonditions.
While melatonin .is availbmmone that naturally
occurs in 0ur bodies. It is .able without .a preSOI!iption,
produced in the pineal .it should be used with caugland, ,and lit lhc:lps to .regu- ition. Alw.a.ys 'Start w.ith the
lewest possible .dose and ·
late 0ur .circadian t'hytlun •the internal ti1I!ing mecha- only after consultation with
nism that keeps us awake ih your family physician. If
the daytime and asleep dur- you take too much melatonin, it can .cause agitation
ing the night. .
Melatonin is manufac- and antiety. Wlhon ·using
tured by the body in melatonin for insomnia, .
response to being in a dark take :n ·abo.u t 10ne !hour
. en;vironment, and produc- before bedtime. You will
tiGn is decreased wi~ expo- Jmow it worked if you get a
sure to light. The female restful night's sleell and
honnones that help regulate have no fatigue &lt;Of :imtabilithe menstrual cycle Me ty itbc next .day.
Melat0nin i-s &lt;k:newn to
released in .response to
melatonin. Some ~search rnwe side dects such as
suggests that the body '·s vivid dreams and 111\ghtdecline ·in melatonin levels mares. It c1111 also disrupt
with age contributes . to Y,Our sleep .and w.ake .cycles
sleeping problems in older if not lilk.en properly. Alao,
adults. Melatonin bas also be careful if you are taking
been shown to be an antiox- other medications regularly,
idant and may boost the even oY.et-tbc-counter products. Though many drugs
Unm.une system.
Melatonin supplements and a few herbs am interact
can be used for many negatively with melatonin,
things. As you know from you should be particularly
·your friend, it has received a careful not 1&lt;&gt; use other
good deal of publicity as a sedative drugs or alcohol
. :treatment for insomnia In 1 when taking melatonin.
Because of the possibility
fact, a few scientific studies
of
these ttypes of drug interbawe shown i.t .t o be more
·effective !than .a placebo, -or actions, "I urge you again to
:sugar -pill, in treating sleep consult your physician
before trying melatonin. ·
problems.
Specifically, these studi~s
have ·found that melatonm
was boner than a placc:bo in
three areas - reducing the
·amount of time it takes to
·fall asleep, increasing the
nllfOber of hours of sleep
.and improving daytime
alertness. Other 11tudies,
bowo:vor, have ·shown these
effectitO be pnknt only for
&amp;bOrt-teJlll use - a few
days to sevCJ;al weeks.
The .effects of using melatonin supplements for an
. extended period of time
have not been studied, so its
· long-term safety is not
~ tla~.,...

cwrent economy ..and the pendent reot:arr:b fum Fact their fault."
Fecl'-s role .In creating and and Opinion Economics. "l
The more Greenspan tries
can't imagine a more outra- to spin his legacy in · :his
managing the aisis.
lbeir styles have always geous ~for a Fed chair- ·, favor, the Jess jt looks likely
contrasted, now and ·When man tooo.
·
· to happen. The public js
they were at the lied..
Greenspan has been on .growing .numb · to bis
F.conmnists say Greenspan the defensive for mooths attempts to pin the makings
.i.1; as much a JIC!IIitician as be over such attach, but
of this aisis on ·others.
is a .p olicymaker - :always .reoent days, be llw stc:PPod
~~ may be why the
looking for ~ities to up his fight ~st ithCm. attentioo shifted &lt;to Volcter
daim the -spotligh~- a tat- ~ .comJilelll&amp; .in dle in recent days. He neMer
tic that ·~ybe hindering, Financial TllDO&amp;,
Sttoc:t sought publicity .after he left
rather 'helpirlg b.iuepuJatiGn Joumal.and CNBC, be laid the Fl!d.; he .e!lpressed his
oow. lt'' ju!&gt;l the ~ .out 01 !;lsefarwby be didn' t views dCGll il'lilally oll tliii
for Volckct.
do an)\lhing wrong.
state of the ec0nemy pr
Once upon ~ time:,
"I .have no regrc:tts on lillY .mooetary policy.
Greenspan's monetary poli- .of1hc: Feilcral Reserve PQiiThis week was an eXCJOPcies and lax approach ro cies that we initiated back ti0n. During two S]X'aking
.~gulation won .him praise, .then, because I think they . engagements on Tuesday
oot criticism, An academic were very professionally and Wednesday that were
paper written in 2005 said · done," · Greenspan told · closely watched, Volck.er
he had .a legitimate claim to CNBC on J'uesclay.
·didn't sugarcoat bis assessbeing·the ~greatest" centra1
But it's hard to buy lhat ment of the roots of the curbanker evci" and touted .h is "don't blame me" argu- rent fmancial crisis . "~c fQlUJula"- where meot, giv~ the .piJilrellle()Owhereby
..oGrnplexity,
discretion f8,d!er than ·r,ules nomic predicament Pa.ul opaqueness and systematu:
went into the .F ed's decision Kastiel, who directs oco- nsks" were embedded in
mali:ing.
·
nomic .research :at The new markets - and the
But .now, in the midst Of Nortbc:m Trust Co., says the p0licies now being used to
today's financialmarkettur- facts speak for themselves.
clean it up.
moil and eoooomic downFor mstance, he notes that
" Simply stated, tlhe bright
tum, Gl:ee".'P" . who households in 2005 spent new financial system, for all
was 10gl*d IJy Britain for '$531 billion more than they its talented participants, for
bisJIC'Jbicvenc:tJts
is find- earned afterttaxes, compared all its rich rewards, has
ing 'his lepcy being called ~th the surplus of earnin~s failed the test of the market
into question.
· \ over spending of $108 btl- place," Voloker said during
Critics .say be kept inter-. lion seen in 1987 when a speec~ Tuesday to tho
est .Gites ·too low for too Greenspan took ower at the Econom•c Club of New
'long, fueling dJe housing
.
fed. Andwhileleverag~has York. "\Yha! has .·plainly
bubble.1bc:y also chargc::ibc: · surged to record htghs, been at nsk 1s a disorderly
encouraged Americans m household .ltquidity has sunk unraveling of the mutual
load. up on lev~~e, .t o near ·record lows of trust among respected marignored wllf'ni:ngs on ri~ around 9.5 percent in 2005 ket participants' upon which
mortg&lt;tgC lending and dido t hum 14.2 percent m 1987.
any strong and efficient
pro~;~trly monitor fmancial
''Greenspan's ar~ument fi.IIllilcial system must rest."
mslttutions.
that it was not bis dmng that
Those
comments
"He ~ed peop_le tobor- set off the U.S. hGusing drowned out Greenspan's
. row a.gatnst tbotr homes · bubble ~minds me of my woes. And with them
because. it would help fuel two perfect children," Volck.er began to reclam;
the economy," said Robert Kasriel said. "When they the praise and reoognitioo
Brusca, who beads the mde- appear to . err, it was never be deserves.
,.

rn

wan

..

•

--·- . ·········

•

knoWn.

1. find it interesting that
.melatonin is also being stud,
ied as an adjunctive treat~ for a wide range of

'

·white ribbont:(good rating),
and yellow (honorable
mention).
Those receiving honorable mention were the practice speeches for the judges.
These students we~ ·Colton
Cox (first grl!Qe. QVCSl
Jeremialt Case (first grade,
OVCS), Sharalin Metzger
(fust grade, OVCS) and
'Bethany Beaver (sixth
grade, OVCS)
At the awards assembly
one student from each cate-

gory was selected to do
their speech presentation,
which followed the judging.
Students from OVCS that
were selected to present
their speeches to the general
assembly were: Wyatt Cox
(first grade) jn poetry for
grades 1-3, Eric Blevins
(fourth
·. grade)
in
Fable/Folklore, Amy Ours
(sixth · grade) in Bible
Memory for grades 1-6,
Rachel Haddad (fifth grade)
in Poetry for grades 4-6.

LAW YOU CAN -USE

Mediation can resolve disputes
Q.: Wllat is mediadea!
A.: Mediation is a process
of guided negotiations. A
neutral individual, called a
mediator, discusses a dispute
or pending case with disputing parties and/or their anorneys in an.effort to resolve it
by mutwil agreement The
IDC'iJiator has no decisionmating authority. Rather, the
mediator serves as a discussion leader to help the ,partieipants negotiate more effici~y. and, hopefully, •reaCh
an agreement sooner than
1hey could on their own.

Q.; Wlult&lt;does tbe medi-

iltAJr tell tbe judge? .

A.: Next to nothing. The
mediator will only tell the
court whether or not tlje
case settled. Also; mediation discussions cannot be
admitted at trial.

&lt;Q,: aMid I lbrin&amp; witness~~ aDd abibits to the
ewJiatWa?

ness or intra-personal case,
the other party should be
present to give his/her view
of the facts and make decisiqns aoout settling, In fam ily, neighborhood, workplace, and most other disputes, both pil.rties are at the
same table. It is often impor~
tant for parties to listen to
and learn about each other's
point of view on the way to
a resolution. The mediator ,
usually will meet separately
with each side for private,
more candid discussions.

A.; No. A mediation is not
like a tEial or arbitration.
While the attorneys, parties,
and the mediatol" will discuss
the evidence, there are no
Q.: I want
day in
witnesses, :no testimony, no
court.
Why
should
I
settle?
Q.: Wluit :is .a mn'ietor! exhlbits, . no obJections, no
A.: You have evecy right
~ A mediator is an .indecross examination, and no
pendent, trained neutml who.. arguments. You may, how·· ~ 8 citiZI!n to lillflk a fair trial
works as a .diplomat to help over, bring documents that in court, but a trial is not the
people settle dispU\OS. A further. explain, clarify or only legal choice available.
mc:diator may be a court update libe fact:iiai situation. More than 95 pen;ent of all
U.S. cases filed never go to
employee, a voluntc:er lawyer
:helping a coun, cr a l.aW)!Il" cr · Q.~ 'WJII 'lie apected to trial. Some cases need a trial
because of an unusual legal
other professional in pivllle asdfy1
question,
a factual dispute,
A.: No. Mediation is a
practice. Although iJIIIIll}''
mediHIOOl are also ilaveycn, focused .negotialion process. or a seriou.s disagreement
that credential is not reqtlired. You will bee~ to listen, about a fair settlement value.
Before going to trial, you
participate in the discussions
should
consider factors such
Q.: What lldodi f4 dlses as appropriate, and make deci«*"'""""' c.n go tomedi- . sions about how Ill negotiate, as time, expense, court
delays, possible appeal, the
.adllllf
and whcrbcr or not to sea:le.
risk of a bad result, the facts
A.: Just about any kind ~f
of
lbe case becoming part of
Q.: Can tile mediatartfell
case can bernediatM. Coutts
·
a
jJUblic
record, stress.
use OJPA'!iation for bu.s, me'll'llat my cue is wadi!
A.: No. The mediator is not
personal uvwy, real estate,
Q.: Wluit bappeDs If we
lm:closure, family law, small there as a judge; jury, or libiam
't settle?
claims, and many other types . trator of the case. You and
A.:
If the parties cannot setof cases. Outside of coun, your attorney should evaluate
,
neighborhood disputes, ·con- your case and weigh the bensllillei" compJaints, land use, efits of senling. The mediaenvironmental, and many tor, .the anomeys, and die parother types of disputes can be ties will, however, discuss the
successfully mediated.
costs of going fDIWard with
litigation as compared to the
Q.: WDI the .medi8tor ·benefits of settlement
itliw!a....,' hoiluaya.e!
Q.: WW Ute other side
A.: No. The mediator can
only help the parties and he there!
A.: Generally yes, but it
attq[IICys look at the case
lf your case
depends.
more objectively, discuss
various options, review involves insurance, the
strong and weak points of insurance adjustor will be
each side's position, listen to there representing the comeach side privately, and help pany, but the other driver in
the participants find a mutu- an auto accident is usuiilly
not present. If this is a busially acceptable solution.

my

&gt;

tie at the mediation, several
things might happen. The
attorneys may agree to negotiate further later on, either
with or without formal discovery. The mediator can
schedule a follow up mediation. Certain legal questions
may need to be resolved by
the judge through motions"
before further negotiations
occur. Or the case could ultimately go to trial. There is no
penalty or extra cost for using
mediation, beyond the mediator 's fee, if any. One of the
strengths of mediation is that
parties .neither .gain nor lose
any rights or access to other
means of \!ispule!t=§91ution it
tl~t:y try i11edlation fll'Sl. ·
lAw You Ctm Use is a

consumer

weekly

legal
iltformation colwnn provill·
ed by the Ohio Sttlte &amp;r
Associmion. This 011icle WtZS
prefJtln"
by
Harold
PaMoclt, Cohurtbus meditlWr tutti arlJilralor. Anicles
appetlrifrg in this column ore

intended to provide broad,
general infomtlllion · about
the law. Before tlfJPlyiltg this
information w a specific
legal problem, reoders urged to seek the advice of 11
licensed llltOmey.
.l-~ N Ctol',r.

"''A

' I •' '.

..,

'

~

/-''." __:.

""""

·'

·t ·
0

" !;-

' '' 0 &gt;

-..;

.

Pf.RFOR\1\G;.Jl) ('l:'&lt;I'TIF

"THUMBEUNA"
April18 .. 19 '7:00

April 20 . 3:00

•th• ..

P1whow Patty begl
6 pm an s.turay the 1Mh
Call 446-ARTS tor
ReMidt~

Bo• otllct: 42112nd Awe.
ca.lllpalle, OH (140) 44I-AII1I

�•

/

.

·. omo

The Daily Sentinel

•

PageA6
Monday~

April14, 2008

I.11

•+
IE

J'

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

~ .... ~ . . . . . . 81
......... -

', . . .

UC opens dog hearing c&amp;nic aimed at helping dogs and people
BY l.aA

Col•••

I

ASSOCIATED PRESS at L I EH

CINCINNATI - Sally
Disney
was
worried
because her dog Ginger was
less responsive. Disney dido 't lrnow where to go for
help until sbc beard about a
~w audiology clinic one that prqvides bearing
tests for dog§.
After having Ginger
examined
at
tbe
Bioacoustics and Canine
Audiology Clinic at tbe
University of Cincinnati,
Disney now lrnows that her
Sbeflaod s!rqxlog 11ct of
~iveness is CWJ.,., by
bearing loss and can work
on ways to communicalie
better with her.
The clinic provides indepth hearing testing for
dogs while also researching
ways to improve lbe diagnosis and oon-medical treatment of their bearing problems. It also allows students
planning to WIJit in IM!!DIO
audiology to train in techniques and equipment similar to those used for~"We also hope this clinic
will lead to improved diag. nostic techniques and lll:atmeut devices such as less
expensive and 1110re practical hearin aids for dogs
tbat hopefully
bclp
~le eventually,
said
cliruc:
director
Pe(er
Scheifele.
Wbile some specialty veteriruuy clinics and veterinary schools ~ for
deafness, audiologists say
the UC clinic in an aaldemic bealth center geared r0
Jmman needs is unuswil:
UC's clinic is staffed by a
veterinarian, audiologists,
radiologists, a sonogmpber
who does ultnlsound tests,
an animal ttaiDer and.others
in animal science IUid bioacoustics, the science involving animal bearing and
communicatioil.
Staff members usc lCSlS
including OIIC that JJI!OIS11R:s
the timing of electrical
wave8from lbe brainstem in
1Hp6i!&lt;C 10 clicks and liiOe
bunts played iDto die ear.
Anolher ooe =mmrres the
inner ..., echo IHJI""I!I!l to
. tones. If lhoae doa't pinpoidt the problem, MlUs
· and ultrasound tests also
can be done. The clinic

's

.,
I

l!

'

j
I

j

aw..-e of lhe geoeac dmf.
ness poteat:W. Brt':lldeR
alrady have been ~-·..,- ·
in81he rJinic, and s. mfdc
also eiP""'fS to iliesl dogs servicing disabled .-pie,
police and tbe mill . ·
He also wants to
pe15
ud owners wiJh tbe QIIDninnicatioo problems resulting from bearing loss.
"'fand Signals for Vllious
oommands, Dashing yard
· ligbts wben you WliJI7: the
dog to come in and ac6ons
lie stomping )'WI feet to
c«ae vilioJj4MMJS 7be dog can
feel 'are some nv:t&amp;"'CCs you
can psc, Sllid Scheifele,
who uses American Sip
f..aDguaF to OJ!DDMmM . .
wiJh Belle, his 4-ymr~
Australian shq•hc:ul.
· The avenge cost f• t.csling is about $75. The veterinarian has the OJWer Jive
the dog a mild, oral sedati1W:
to pmvent too nmcb move-

'.:t

ft

duria3

lf:Sting.
Ela:tnJdes pi-a on
lbeir beads and SIUil probes
m ~ jn *an with
resultSiad by D*'4 7
"'Ginger was just fine.w
said · Diso0', who held
Oiaf.er's J11W aodlded her
duriDg the test
·
Di$ney ..t her ·luJShand
l&gt;ave .........Jed Gillga: aod
.cJoa't blow if SCWIHIJing in
her mdy ymrs migbt bave
led to bearing loss, but are
glad dley hlil tbcif Shdtie
lr:ded
"Now dul :we know ibe
bas sewt'e lw:arint! loss in
one mr ..t milder loss in
lhe 01ber., aod some
~
levels of !!l1JID!Is ibe ~
we can do IIIDl1i to bqt her
are - use s!P to
OOmiiHmicalf:," said Dimcy.
"'t's wbat you would do to
!Jdp ~ in your family, aod Gillp iS definitely
ment

Monday, Aprill4;. .

•
Girlgel sits

...... ,., CJn an
eaaMIIii~

lalile . . . .
baingalonec:ted to '
ele CI!Oilic
moniblil~

5

7
gu
..,.'
7;

~

•

-

. . . . . . .' 7 7

SPECIAL n) ;fHE 'SENTINEL

-·llloolo·lfolleJ, 511&gt;""·

'W I - w . 'South Galla ot liiAG. 5

at lie

·. 1\cadBnw.atOt'Ti
Galia

....,._

'

G d l l - . .. q,ilicolho,SfP.111.

Ci...-.
511&gt;""·
do!&lt;llllligl, 511&gt;·" '·

CiuciiiMiiilli
Aprif9in
CiuciJRJti.

-

.S~
~
Redwom~n
Sweep
Ohio·Dominic8n
a

ecpjlmenl
IDlest her
h eaiilfl!l

Unilleisilr of

«

&lt;

--

Lj

.'fb tan•T'

bd, '5 p.'ln.
:tw. .s ~m.

Falcons
swept by
Belpre

- - . t l ' i w'llllllr,Stl&gt;·"'·
-GIIIIl--.5p.111.

.

~--·511'·"'·
J'
dol .. . . . . . !5 p.....
9e tvn'lt'....,W.Sp.m.

......

P;u;laiiGUih • Gdat

1

h),

•:so

'Jt:"·

&amp;mil.y."

WIN UP TO ,$1,000 ! ! !

capi=

MASON - The visi .
Belpre Eagles
on four Wahama errors to
take game one of a SatUrday
afternoon twin bill before
soorilig five times in the .
opening frame ·Of game two
for a sweep of the two game
set with the White Falcons
by 5-3 and 12-6 margins.
Wahama wasted a ~~le
of stron~ pitching
ormances m each game with
the White Falcons wasting a
12 strikeout performance by
junior Jerry Berldey in the
opener and a nine strikeout
outing in relief by Tyler
Kitchen in the nightcap. The
doubleheader setback drops
the Bend Area teams season
record to 2-5 on the spring
while Belpre improved to 42 with the twin victories.
WHS committed four
costly fieldin~ miscues in
the opener which led to two
unearned runs and make
Berkley the hard-luck loser
despite his complete game,
12 strikeout exhibition.
Berkley scattered seven hits

.PLAY COVERALL BINGO

max

Ntsn 1M Fill tca 112

ltP piJolo

TNIIOr :lmmelman of So.utl1 Africa ·reacts after winning the 2008 Masters golf tournament at the Augusta National ·Golf Club
In Augusta. Ga. Sunday.

:t'leW.::SIP!~tbeca:eafnes~
"''bis way of using animals is truly pioneer wod
in audiology," said Jay
Singer, chamnan of .the
clepartment of communicative disorders for the
University of Rhode Island.
"It's an e~~:citing approach
that provides tremendous

rra:~~s·:

spur~

W'z I

(740) 446-7619
· Two

ATHENS

-'""

loe~tiom

...... _ . .. . p

.......

275 West UDion Street
594-3571

.........

lhe

=

cliDics.

•

-

ASSOC!Alm PRESS

AUGUSTA,
T~eV-or

Ga.

lmmelman has nev.er

7tl ····~11J

.enough ·for a three-shot victory over Tiger Woods,
whose hopes for a calendar
Orand Slam ended with a
thud.
Woods never got within
five shots of the lead when
he was on the course, twice
missed birdie puns inside 8
feet and had to settle for a 72
and his second consecutive
runner-up · ftnish in the

rounds under par.
lmmelman, who finished
at 8-under 280, started the
)JJeek by playing a practice
roond with his boyhood idol,
· Gary Player, who won his
third Masters in 1978. and set
a record by playing for the
51st time.
Player told lmmelman he
was good enough to win the
green jacket, and he left him
· a voicemail Saturday night
that lmmelman ,played on
his speaker phone · for his
family to hear. The message:
"I know you're going to
win."
"He's been on me .all
week, telling me to believe
in myself," lmmelman said.
"He also told me to keep my
head still on putts. It's really
a special .moment, and I'm
~J~.J pull!'rl it through for

JIW75.8

Pnp1

fa:JIUIS•~

...............
. . :z '7

ala'Sl I ' ! ' ? '

~

I~
&amp;tel

• IA'A

•

I

I

I

cwa

Pull ld
Requ~st

Family Oxygen

game

·-• •

.
CoNI'ACI'
..

._ - --·rn,dollylrlbuno.com

1

.

70 Pine St~el •. G•llipolis

749-446-0007

Carminita; and their 1-year,
old son were waiting for him
behiud the green. Jacob took
hold ·Of the 18th flag, fussing
when he couldn't go into the
scoring shack to be with his
father.
lmmelman's parents also
were there lo greet him with
hugs behind the 18th green ..
His father, Johan, is the former commissioner of the
Sunshine Tour in South
Africa.
"It's his ·moment, not
mine," said the father, who
waved away a reporter.
No one doubted he was
capable of winning a major,
but maybe not this one. On1 y
four months ago, doctors
discovered a tumor in his
diapbragm that required
surgery t!lrough his back to
remove it. The tumor . WQS

Oakland
CLEVELAND (AP) Cliff Lee had an easy time
shutting down the Oakland
Athletics.
Pitching quickly and effi,
ciently in the wind and cold,
Lee helped the Cleveland
Indians end the A's fivegame winning streak with a
7-I victory Sunday.
"It was miserable, wasn 'I
fun, and as cold as its ever
been for me playing ball,"
Oakland second baseman
Mark Ellis said. "The hardest part was when the wind
kicked up. You didn't want
to he on defense too long."
Two-run doubles by
Grady Sizemore and David
. Dell11cci in the eighth .
helped the Indians win for-

felt better.
Four months .after he ,had .a
~IAlE)I'ftESS
illimor removed tir\OJJl his
back, lmmelman handled
COLUMBUS
die
wind and pressure of
Lineh~ekiel'
James
Augusta
Nali.onal far betlf:r
Larinaitis was backed lin a
than
anyone
chasing him
oomer answering questioos
after
Ohio
State's S.llllday m win the Masters, Masters.
"I learned m~ lesson there
intrasquad fiCrimmage on tbe first South African in ·.a
with rhe press, said Woods,
Satwday wbcn 7be huge green jacket in 30 years.
lmmelman held 11 together who slalted the talk about .a
high-de(, flat~ monitor above him s5IIMd show- around Amen Comer .and Grand Slam by statio~ three
ing ESPN ~ghli,ghts of ilrelehed his .1ead to as many months .ago that winrung all
LSU's :win over the as six shotsoo the back nine, four majors in the same year
Buckeyes in die na5!iona1 ~ the l.ife o.ut of a was ~easily within reason."
Masters ihat began with so
The only slam possibilities
c:hampionship game.
muchhype.
.
now
·belong to l.mn)elman, a
· ~ Laurinaitis stared .at. it
AtwG-plltt
par
on
.
t
he
,
f
ina1
28-year-old with a polished
~ac:antly, ab:n&lt;tst as if to say:
wen, tbcz it is ~ every bo'le gave hilll a 3-over 75, swing, who finally realized
_ ·· matching tbe highest f!Dlll his potential in the wiGired
rime I turn JII'DUild.
"It ~. hwts' .fiom time to roond ·bY a Masti1s champi- :Wind of Augusta and a f'ilial
PI me-'r• r1• •
'lmmelman 's
wjfe,
time but you .accept it. It's on. Even so, it was good round that yielded only four
.. · - · !IYJi.112
over with. 1liat season'i
· done wirh," be said of d!e
Buckeyes• 38-24 loss in the
title game. "Now you have
10 focus oo next season."
· The Buckeyes plit a little
BY AlM Ra1m1 •
when be allowed seven runs
more ·distaDOe between
QSOCI.I.lm I'RESS
in 2 1-3 innings of the
lhem aDd dlat lolls 'With a
Pirates' hom:: C1JICDer against
JWo-bour,
flill~
PltiSBURGH - The the Cubs, matchinJ the .
intruquad · j«~Y . scrim· Pittiblqb Pirates went fmm shortest start of the 47 he
Qlqe • Obio Stadium oa beiD,g . . . . by ,the Cubi to . bas &lt;lllllde in the majors.
Sllllrda~ dill record, dill swoepiqg the hds in. 7he
"' w.s more oonfident. I
PffeDI!I!l
die ddeue 55, same borne staod. No doubt was chlll.engiqg guys and I
44 in 7he 'oom,plicllled and it wun't a coincideoce Torn let them _aet tbcmllel ves
Qom!•nn,y looJried !.ike two out;" said Oorzeianny, I 14~ve iOIIlUI&amp; 1y11tan.
diflaeDt pttcllcn dnrlog his
winner last seuon. ''I
two litarls of the unusual stayed in the. strike zone a
112
utk.
'
lot more lhan I did the last
Ry.an Doumit. Xavier rime. We worked on a lot of
'
Nady and Jaion Bay home- thing11 between starts and I
red
and
Gorzelanny went back to att!!Cking hit·
Us
b&lt;&gt;mred back froPl one of lf:rS."
:: 1·740-448-ZMZeid. 33
his W&lt;nl career starts ro outPittsburgh was swept in
•
pitch
Cincinnati
1YQne
th1ft
games by the Cubs
,_=H40~413001
Illbnny C11eto, leading the ·from Monday throuRh
Pirates to .a 9-1 victory Wednesday only to do die
Sunday and their first series same thing to Cincinnati
sweep in nearly a year.
...,...., I Ja,SputaWII
during the weekend, the
GOru:lanny (1-1), heoom- Pirates' fJISt sweep at home
{140) 406-2M2, ... . 33
' b . ,•• ~.com
ing the only Pirates starlf:r since they took three against
other
than lan SneU to win the Astros last April 24-26.
El'll: Ra: s ..,,.., Spulta wrn.
this
season,
limited the Reds They
hadn' t
swept
{140) ... 2M2, .... 33
.
to one run and four hits Cincinnati since luly 23-25,
..-enr,Ua~tww:li1M.com
,
AP , . _
.
despite wallri ng four. over 6 2004.
· Pittsburgh Pirates' Xavier Nady (22) is greeted by teammates Doug Mientkiewicz (16) and ·
'--Yen., IF u1a W...,.
1-3
innings.
He
was
coming
Jason Bay, center, after hitting a ,two-run home run in the sixth inning of the baseball game
{1~)~. .... .33
11o11
off a no-decision Monday
k;rume~_,.,,wgl.,r.com
in Pittsburgh Sunday. Cincinnati Reds catcher Paul Baku kneels behind the plate at right.

lit lluln I' uP

:·; r

iJ.S.A Sid! snt
ILP rt,WU555t

'

Hearing loSs in dogs can
result from inherited genetic
defects and from causes
sud! as agins, drug toxicity,
noise, infection and trauma.
Scheifele said studies
show one of every five
Dalmatians in the United
States is born deaf, and dog
breeders have become more

at season

IIYDauaf

Pirab slam Cincy

ft

Medicine.

I

TODAY'S
NUMBER IS:

clinic will.
ones
around the country and helP
establish vetmuary audiofogy as a viable vocation.
"I would like to see veterinary audiologists worting
with veterinarians the
human audiologists
With ear-nose-and-throat
doctors," Scheifele said.
Veterinarians welcome
the idea of more. bearing

. "J don' t have enough dayto-day need for that kind of
expensive equiomem: in my
practice, but hi~~·­
ogy clinics centrally located
~ we could refer dogs
would he ewellent, said
veterinarian Pamela Mills
Cone, who operates tbc
Meadow Hill Veterinary
Sboooe in Lebanon. Coon.
MOn: of these cliDicS also
could bect:!.se the aWJWeDeSS of
SS and hearing problems in dogs, said
Gary Beard, assistant dean
for outreach at Au6um
University' s College of
Veterinary Medicine
Congenital deafness deafness occurring at or
near birth has been
reported in than 80 .
leeds of ~s. according to
George Slrlm, a professor
of
neuroS&lt;lience
at
Louisiana State Univenity's
School . of Veterinary

look ahead

435'/, SeclOild Aveaue

Indians

.

...._•• _sa

1

'

,

�•

/

.

·. omo

The Daily Sentinel

•

PageA6
Monday~

April14, 2008

I.11

•+
IE

J'

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

~ .... ~ . . . . . . 81
......... -

', . . .

UC opens dog hearing c&amp;nic aimed at helping dogs and people
BY l.aA

Col•••

I

ASSOCIATED PRESS at L I EH

CINCINNATI - Sally
Disney
was
worried
because her dog Ginger was
less responsive. Disney dido 't lrnow where to go for
help until sbc beard about a
~w audiology clinic one that prqvides bearing
tests for dog§.
After having Ginger
examined
at
tbe
Bioacoustics and Canine
Audiology Clinic at tbe
University of Cincinnati,
Disney now lrnows that her
Sbeflaod s!rqxlog 11ct of
~iveness is CWJ.,., by
bearing loss and can work
on ways to communicalie
better with her.
The clinic provides indepth hearing testing for
dogs while also researching
ways to improve lbe diagnosis and oon-medical treatment of their bearing problems. It also allows students
planning to WIJit in IM!!DIO
audiology to train in techniques and equipment similar to those used for~"We also hope this clinic
will lead to improved diag. nostic techniques and lll:atmeut devices such as less
expensive and 1110re practical hearin aids for dogs
tbat hopefully
bclp
~le eventually,
said
cliruc:
director
Pe(er
Scheifele.
Wbile some specialty veteriruuy clinics and veterinary schools ~ for
deafness, audiologists say
the UC clinic in an aaldemic bealth center geared r0
Jmman needs is unuswil:
UC's clinic is staffed by a
veterinarian, audiologists,
radiologists, a sonogmpber
who does ultnlsound tests,
an animal ttaiDer and.others
in animal science IUid bioacoustics, the science involving animal bearing and
communicatioil.
Staff members usc lCSlS
including OIIC that JJI!OIS11R:s
the timing of electrical
wave8from lbe brainstem in
1Hp6i!&lt;C 10 clicks and liiOe
bunts played iDto die ear.
Anolher ooe =mmrres the
inner ..., echo IHJI""I!I!l to
. tones. If lhoae doa't pinpoidt the problem, MlUs
· and ultrasound tests also
can be done. The clinic

's

.,
I

l!

'

j
I

j

aw..-e of lhe geoeac dmf.
ness poteat:W. Brt':lldeR
alrady have been ~-·..,- ·
in81he rJinic, and s. mfdc
also eiP""'fS to iliesl dogs servicing disabled .-pie,
police and tbe mill . ·
He also wants to
pe15
ud owners wiJh tbe QIIDninnicatioo problems resulting from bearing loss.
"'fand Signals for Vllious
oommands, Dashing yard
· ligbts wben you WliJI7: the
dog to come in and ac6ons
lie stomping )'WI feet to
c«ae vilioJj4MMJS 7be dog can
feel 'are some nv:t&amp;"'CCs you
can psc, Sllid Scheifele,
who uses American Sip
f..aDguaF to OJ!DDMmM . .
wiJh Belle, his 4-ymr~
Australian shq•hc:ul.
· The avenge cost f• t.csling is about $75. The veterinarian has the OJWer Jive
the dog a mild, oral sedati1W:
to pmvent too nmcb move-

'.:t

ft

duria3

lf:Sting.
Ela:tnJdes pi-a on
lbeir beads and SIUil probes
m ~ jn *an with
resultSiad by D*'4 7
"'Ginger was just fine.w
said · Diso0', who held
Oiaf.er's J11W aodlded her
duriDg the test
·
Di$ney ..t her ·luJShand
l&gt;ave .........Jed Gillga: aod
.cJoa't blow if SCWIHIJing in
her mdy ymrs migbt bave
led to bearing loss, but are
glad dley hlil tbcif Shdtie
lr:ded
"Now dul :we know ibe
bas sewt'e lw:arint! loss in
one mr ..t milder loss in
lhe 01ber., aod some
~
levels of !!l1JID!Is ibe ~
we can do IIIDl1i to bqt her
are - use s!P to
OOmiiHmicalf:," said Dimcy.
"'t's wbat you would do to
!Jdp ~ in your family, aod Gillp iS definitely
ment

Monday, Aprill4;. .

•
Girlgel sits

...... ,., CJn an
eaaMIIii~

lalile . . . .
baingalonec:ted to '
ele CI!Oilic
moniblil~

5

7
gu
..,.'
7;

~

•

-

. . . . . . .' 7 7

SPECIAL n) ;fHE 'SENTINEL

-·llloolo·lfolleJ, 511&gt;""·

'W I - w . 'South Galla ot liiAG. 5

at lie

·. 1\cadBnw.atOt'Ti
Galia

....,._

'

G d l l - . .. q,ilicolho,SfP.111.

Ci...-.
511&gt;""·
do!&lt;llllligl, 511&gt;·" '·

CiuciiiMiiilli
Aprif9in
CiuciJRJti.

-

.S~
~
Redwom~n
Sweep
Ohio·Dominic8n
a

ecpjlmenl
IDlest her
h eaiilfl!l

Unilleisilr of

«

&lt;

--

Lj

.'fb tan•T'

bd, '5 p.'ln.
:tw. .s ~m.

Falcons
swept by
Belpre

- - . t l ' i w'llllllr,Stl&gt;·"'·
-GIIIIl--.5p.111.

.

~--·511'·"'·
J'
dol .. . . . . . !5 p.....
9e tvn'lt'....,W.Sp.m.

......

P;u;laiiGUih • Gdat

1

h),

•:so

'Jt:"·

&amp;mil.y."

WIN UP TO ,$1,000 ! ! !

capi=

MASON - The visi .
Belpre Eagles
on four Wahama errors to
take game one of a SatUrday
afternoon twin bill before
soorilig five times in the .
opening frame ·Of game two
for a sweep of the two game
set with the White Falcons
by 5-3 and 12-6 margins.
Wahama wasted a ~~le
of stron~ pitching
ormances m each game with
the White Falcons wasting a
12 strikeout performance by
junior Jerry Berldey in the
opener and a nine strikeout
outing in relief by Tyler
Kitchen in the nightcap. The
doubleheader setback drops
the Bend Area teams season
record to 2-5 on the spring
while Belpre improved to 42 with the twin victories.
WHS committed four
costly fieldin~ miscues in
the opener which led to two
unearned runs and make
Berkley the hard-luck loser
despite his complete game,
12 strikeout exhibition.
Berkley scattered seven hits

.PLAY COVERALL BINGO

max

Ntsn 1M Fill tca 112

ltP piJolo

TNIIOr :lmmelman of So.utl1 Africa ·reacts after winning the 2008 Masters golf tournament at the Augusta National ·Golf Club
In Augusta. Ga. Sunday.

:t'leW.::SIP!~tbeca:eafnes~
"''bis way of using animals is truly pioneer wod
in audiology," said Jay
Singer, chamnan of .the
clepartment of communicative disorders for the
University of Rhode Island.
"It's an e~~:citing approach
that provides tremendous

rra:~~s·:

spur~

W'z I

(740) 446-7619
· Two

ATHENS

-'""

loe~tiom

...... _ . .. . p

.......

275 West UDion Street
594-3571

.........

lhe

=

cliDics.

•

-

ASSOC!Alm PRESS

AUGUSTA,
T~eV-or

Ga.

lmmelman has nev.er

7tl ····~11J

.enough ·for a three-shot victory over Tiger Woods,
whose hopes for a calendar
Orand Slam ended with a
thud.
Woods never got within
five shots of the lead when
he was on the course, twice
missed birdie puns inside 8
feet and had to settle for a 72
and his second consecutive
runner-up · ftnish in the

rounds under par.
lmmelman, who finished
at 8-under 280, started the
)JJeek by playing a practice
roond with his boyhood idol,
· Gary Player, who won his
third Masters in 1978. and set
a record by playing for the
51st time.
Player told lmmelman he
was good enough to win the
green jacket, and he left him
· a voicemail Saturday night
that lmmelman ,played on
his speaker phone · for his
family to hear. The message:
"I know you're going to
win."
"He's been on me .all
week, telling me to believe
in myself," lmmelman said.
"He also told me to keep my
head still on putts. It's really
a special .moment, and I'm
~J~.J pull!'rl it through for

JIW75.8

Pnp1

fa:JIUIS•~

...............
. . :z '7

ala'Sl I ' ! ' ? '

~

I~
&amp;tel

• IA'A

•

I

I

I

cwa

Pull ld
Requ~st

Family Oxygen

game

·-• •

.
CoNI'ACI'
..

._ - --·rn,dollylrlbuno.com

1

.

70 Pine St~el •. G•llipolis

749-446-0007

Carminita; and their 1-year,
old son were waiting for him
behiud the green. Jacob took
hold ·Of the 18th flag, fussing
when he couldn't go into the
scoring shack to be with his
father.
lmmelman's parents also
were there lo greet him with
hugs behind the 18th green ..
His father, Johan, is the former commissioner of the
Sunshine Tour in South
Africa.
"It's his ·moment, not
mine," said the father, who
waved away a reporter.
No one doubted he was
capable of winning a major,
but maybe not this one. On1 y
four months ago, doctors
discovered a tumor in his
diapbragm that required
surgery t!lrough his back to
remove it. The tumor . WQS

Oakland
CLEVELAND (AP) Cliff Lee had an easy time
shutting down the Oakland
Athletics.
Pitching quickly and effi,
ciently in the wind and cold,
Lee helped the Cleveland
Indians end the A's fivegame winning streak with a
7-I victory Sunday.
"It was miserable, wasn 'I
fun, and as cold as its ever
been for me playing ball,"
Oakland second baseman
Mark Ellis said. "The hardest part was when the wind
kicked up. You didn't want
to he on defense too long."
Two-run doubles by
Grady Sizemore and David
. Dell11cci in the eighth .
helped the Indians win for-

felt better.
Four months .after he ,had .a
~IAlE)I'ftESS
illimor removed tir\OJJl his
back, lmmelman handled
COLUMBUS
die
wind and pressure of
Lineh~ekiel'
James
Augusta
Nali.onal far betlf:r
Larinaitis was backed lin a
than
anyone
chasing him
oomer answering questioos
after
Ohio
State's S.llllday m win the Masters, Masters.
"I learned m~ lesson there
intrasquad fiCrimmage on tbe first South African in ·.a
with rhe press, said Woods,
Satwday wbcn 7be huge green jacket in 30 years.
lmmelman held 11 together who slalted the talk about .a
high-de(, flat~ monitor above him s5IIMd show- around Amen Comer .and Grand Slam by statio~ three
ing ESPN ~ghli,ghts of ilrelehed his .1ead to as many months .ago that winrung all
LSU's :win over the as six shotsoo the back nine, four majors in the same year
Buckeyes in die na5!iona1 ~ the l.ife o.ut of a was ~easily within reason."
Masters ihat began with so
The only slam possibilities
c:hampionship game.
muchhype.
.
now
·belong to l.mn)elman, a
· ~ Laurinaitis stared .at. it
AtwG-plltt
par
on
.
t
he
,
f
ina1
28-year-old with a polished
~ac:antly, ab:n&lt;tst as if to say:
wen, tbcz it is ~ every bo'le gave hilll a 3-over 75, swing, who finally realized
_ ·· matching tbe highest f!Dlll his potential in the wiGired
rime I turn JII'DUild.
"It ~. hwts' .fiom time to roond ·bY a Masti1s champi- :Wind of Augusta and a f'ilial
PI me-'r• r1• •
'lmmelman 's
wjfe,
time but you .accept it. It's on. Even so, it was good round that yielded only four
.. · - · !IYJi.112
over with. 1liat season'i
· done wirh," be said of d!e
Buckeyes• 38-24 loss in the
title game. "Now you have
10 focus oo next season."
· The Buckeyes plit a little
BY AlM Ra1m1 •
when be allowed seven runs
more ·distaDOe between
QSOCI.I.lm I'RESS
in 2 1-3 innings of the
lhem aDd dlat lolls 'With a
Pirates' hom:: C1JICDer against
JWo-bour,
flill~
PltiSBURGH - The the Cubs, matchinJ the .
intruquad · j«~Y . scrim· Pittiblqb Pirates went fmm shortest start of the 47 he
Qlqe • Obio Stadium oa beiD,g . . . . by ,the Cubi to . bas &lt;lllllde in the majors.
Sllllrda~ dill record, dill swoepiqg the hds in. 7he
"' w.s more oonfident. I
PffeDI!I!l
die ddeue 55, same borne staod. No doubt was chlll.engiqg guys and I
44 in 7he 'oom,plicllled and it wun't a coincideoce Torn let them _aet tbcmllel ves
Qom!•nn,y looJried !.ike two out;" said Oorzeianny, I 14~ve iOIIlUI&amp; 1y11tan.
diflaeDt pttcllcn dnrlog his
winner last seuon. ''I
two litarls of the unusual stayed in the. strike zone a
112
utk.
'
lot more lhan I did the last
Ry.an Doumit. Xavier rime. We worked on a lot of
'
Nady and Jaion Bay home- thing11 between starts and I
red
and
Gorzelanny went back to att!!Cking hit·
Us
b&lt;&gt;mred back froPl one of lf:rS."
:: 1·740-448-ZMZeid. 33
his W&lt;nl career starts ro outPittsburgh was swept in
•
pitch
Cincinnati
1YQne
th1ft
games by the Cubs
,_=H40~413001
Illbnny C11eto, leading the ·from Monday throuRh
Pirates to .a 9-1 victory Wednesday only to do die
Sunday and their first series same thing to Cincinnati
sweep in nearly a year.
...,...., I Ja,SputaWII
during the weekend, the
GOru:lanny (1-1), heoom- Pirates' fJISt sweep at home
{140) 406-2M2, ... . 33
' b . ,•• ~.com
ing the only Pirates starlf:r since they took three against
other
than lan SneU to win the Astros last April 24-26.
El'll: Ra: s ..,,.., Spulta wrn.
this
season,
limited the Reds They
hadn' t
swept
{140) ... 2M2, .... 33
.
to one run and four hits Cincinnati since luly 23-25,
..-enr,Ua~tww:li1M.com
,
AP , . _
.
despite wallri ng four. over 6 2004.
· Pittsburgh Pirates' Xavier Nady (22) is greeted by teammates Doug Mientkiewicz (16) and ·
'--Yen., IF u1a W...,.
1-3
innings.
He
was
coming
Jason Bay, center, after hitting a ,two-run home run in the sixth inning of the baseball game
{1~)~. .... .33
11o11
off a no-decision Monday
k;rume~_,.,,wgl.,r.com
in Pittsburgh Sunday. Cincinnati Reds catcher Paul Baku kneels behind the plate at right.

lit lluln I' uP

:·; r

iJ.S.A Sid! snt
ILP rt,WU555t

'

Hearing loSs in dogs can
result from inherited genetic
defects and from causes
sud! as agins, drug toxicity,
noise, infection and trauma.
Scheifele said studies
show one of every five
Dalmatians in the United
States is born deaf, and dog
breeders have become more

at season

IIYDauaf

Pirab slam Cincy

ft

Medicine.

I

TODAY'S
NUMBER IS:

clinic will.
ones
around the country and helP
establish vetmuary audiofogy as a viable vocation.
"I would like to see veterinary audiologists worting
with veterinarians the
human audiologists
With ear-nose-and-throat
doctors," Scheifele said.
Veterinarians welcome
the idea of more. bearing

. "J don' t have enough dayto-day need for that kind of
expensive equiomem: in my
practice, but hi~~·­
ogy clinics centrally located
~ we could refer dogs
would he ewellent, said
veterinarian Pamela Mills
Cone, who operates tbc
Meadow Hill Veterinary
Sboooe in Lebanon. Coon.
MOn: of these cliDicS also
could bect:!.se the aWJWeDeSS of
SS and hearing problems in dogs, said
Gary Beard, assistant dean
for outreach at Au6um
University' s College of
Veterinary Medicine
Congenital deafness deafness occurring at or
near birth has been
reported in than 80 .
leeds of ~s. according to
George Slrlm, a professor
of
neuroS&lt;lience
at
Louisiana State Univenity's
School . of Veterinary

look ahead

435'/, SeclOild Aveaue

Indians

.

...._•• _sa

1

'

,

�P p Bz • 'lhl; lllily Sentitd
l

•

WW

www.mydailyscntinel,cDo

3 and r-te all dime frce and emburasllcd., .roach
lbiows to put lhe Cavs ahead Mike Brown was rni11mll!!
65-fiO.
.
00 more focus 30d defeasive
. Dpusbs and AudcrsoD intensity f.roni bis squal. It
Vm:jao saxed 10 cap die cm!oC in spurts ~ lbe
.uo, w by die lime James mt half as Clevdand built a
,,.,.,,.. iD 1riJh 5:18 seven-point . lead before
.UOwiog 1be Heat to get
• - ....._ ..... __. had
.......DI!!Jl . . . _ . , _ , .
an WJ'...in '"'38 - L.1A:-.•

!.SSOCIATED I'RESS

II

\

\. CLEVFl..AND - Daniel
Gibson made a 3-poiott.r and
lhree straight free throws
early in the founb quarter to
pve Cleveland some cush- ·
Jon while LeBron James

l

''

rested. and the Cavaliers
moved closer to the E,ast"s
No. 4 seed . wilh an 84-76
win over the Mi~ Heal on
Sunday night.
Delonte Weat soored 18
points. Zydrunas Dgaustas
had 14 and 14 rebounds and
James finished with 13
points. II rebounds and
seven assists for the
:Cavaliers, who didn•t play
. well again but had enough to
·hold
off the pathetic Heat.
•
I
Cleveland only led by two
·after three quarters and did·n•t pull comfonably ahead
until there was less lluin five
minutes to go. The Cavs
swept the season .series from
Miami for the first time
since 1989-90.
Cleveland, which is only
13-12 since a major trade in
February. needs to win one
of its final two games - at
Philadelpba on Monday or
borne against Detroit on
Wednesday - to secure the
fourth seed and home-rourt
advantage· in the first round
of the NBA playoffs against

agbt-plint lead.
.
.
; ; ; .....~;face
Tile Cafttiers ba\'C . bl:m
..... of .,...., fur =r+- IIDd W'asbiugton ia lbe first
d; ·~ i a j = aDd Rlllllll fur lhe tbinl lo1raiglu
incollSistcocy bas led to year. whedle£ dley finish
SOOJe fim1nlioD.
fuwdJ or lifib. The 1eams
Afu2fumbled have bl:m on a CIOilision
--~
00111SC fur weeks, and their
away an im1de pass in die rivalry bas been fueled by
tbinl quadrl" liom James, !iOIIIe RJCC8I nash lalk.. In a
CJevdand's All-Star furwanl bl
last -.-a. Gilben
yelled at his frizzy-baired
og
tram...- wbo didn't 1llh Almas said, ~I dliak evaydle~ wdL As James body wants Cleveland in
coot a seat oo lbe beach for lhat first IOUIId." Earlier•
Wu.anls
F
DeSbaw-n
a liiiii'!IIUl, Varejao walked Stevenson called James
·:s~ die ~ exdlanged · "overrated." James was
• .
.
asked if lbe COIIllllml added
Bot later ia the founh. 10 die rivalty. "Absolutely,~
Vamjao and James seemM he said. "That's lbe last thing
to have made up.
fm going 1D say about that.~
The Cavaliers playeil most •.. Patriots WR Rmdy Moss
of the 'I" cxlll half without sat behind Cleveland's
Wally SzcudJildt and Ben bench. ... Heat roach Pat·
Walt.,.,~ of die players Riley hasn't bad much to
acquired in an 11-playCI" deal prai.se this Miami., but he •s
at lbe trading deadline. proud of F Ricky Dav\s. on
SzcudJiat went 0-fur"-3 in tlrget ID play .in all 82
10 mimdr:s and wan.,. bad games. "I give him a lot of
two points ia 10. ·
lrudos," Riley said. "He·s
After a di:pknble loss .at beien playing burt. There's a
~ oo friday, when die lot of playel'S today who
Ca~- Clll!bustled don'tplaybmC

.I •;

.

.,
i •

I

:Il ,.
'

,.........

Cleveland Cavaliers' lydrunas llgauskas {11), from uthuania, is defended by Miami I:Wat's
Joel Anthony during the fourttl quarter of an NBA basketball game Sunday in Cleo&lt; eland.
Hgauskas scored 14 points in Cleveland•s 84-76 win.

Washington. The Wizards ly over.
bave clinched at leas! the
Down 59-57 after three.
No. 5 seed.
· the Cavs outscored the Heat
Ricky Davis scored 17 12-2 - with James. was on
points and Daequan Cook the bench- in the first 4:45 ·
and Earl Barron had 13 of tbe founb 10 open a69-61 .
apiece for Miami ( 14-66), lead.
-.
'
whose dismal season is near- . Gibson, who has struggled

to find his shot since n:cuming from an ankle iajury,
triggered the run widl .a 3
thai he posed to admire loog
after it passed duough the
net. On Cleveland's neit
lrip. be was fouled by JayllOII
W.lljams ,wiDle Mil ••.,.i•'@ a

seasons.

Maybe it's a little too
early for the Pirates to talk.
about ending that streak of
15 consecutive losing .seasons, but Bay sees a lot of
positives even though they
also were 6-6 a year ago.
Doumit hit a solo homer
· in tlie second and added a
sacrifice fly, Nady hit a tworun shot in the sixth .and Bay
added a three-run drive in
llle. seventh· against reliever
Todd Colley as the Pirates
'had an easy one after winning one-run decisions the
pmvious .two nights.
Cueto (l· l }. outstandinx
ip bis first two stlllits witb ll!
stri.keouts and no walks.
wa!in't as sharp in fl#s one
as be gave up five ninit and
five hits - four for 'extra
bases - in six innings. He

S5

..-a

·"9i-.ntft:'-d¢. ,.,.

Woods boled a 70-foot
bildie pUtt on the ll th,
made an acrobatic escape
from the tn:es oo lbe 13th
and SJlU!I a wedge down the
slope oo die par-5 131h that
left him 5 feet away fur

·f.e!

laakM

rr-

the third ahead of Luis
Jlivas· run-scoring double.
Cueto struck out 22 batters nntil he fm.ally gave UJ!
a walk after being the only
pitcher since 1900 to strike
out as many as 18 and walk
none in his first two starts.
Baker was told the game
would start on tinJe, but a 9minute rain delay forced
Cueto to warm up again
brief! y after he initially
threw in the bullpen. Baker
blamed it on misconununicatiori. . though. neither he
nor Cueto said it was a factor in the right-bander's
pitching.
· . McLouth, the major
league hits leader with 22
hits in 12 games, doubled in
the sixth to extend his, season-long bitting streak to 12
games and sco.~ twice.
while reaching base ·· three
tinJes.
The Reds left nine runners on base, giving them
32 for the weekend, and
went 1~for-8 wiih runners in
scoria~ positioo to finish
the~s 6-of-35.
Notes: A s~y rain fell ·
much of the game llBtil
skits clear¢ in the eighth
iruiiag.
.. .

'

·Falcons
from Page 81

in the outing and witlked
three with the Eagles scoring an unearned tally in .the
second and another in the
fourth. The bard-throwing
junior right-hander saw bis
pitching record dip 10 J. 2
on the year in spite of fan·
ning 29 batters this spring in
only .l8.2 innings.
Wahama collected .six
base hits during game one
with Anthony Bond smacking a single and a double to
pace the bend Area offensive attack. Derek Veazey .
laced a two-run triple with
.Caleb Roach smacking a
G,arrett
two-base
hit.
Underwood and . Justin
Arnold came through with a
single· each in the two run
· ·
setback.
Belpre scored a single run ·
in the . second and third
innings before denting the

plate on dtree more occasions in the fourth for the

win. Wat:Ans ~Jbree hits,
in~udiog 'a double. with
Tate ~!'~ding a pair of singles
.-1·.,Packard and Clarlc a
sin~
for the Eagles.

.,ieee

" Wali~. felf bdllfid by a . 111M hibi ill game two but had li
5-0 ·count before staging a II walks and a hit batter Azar
Joshua Clad: rom'late . inning come-from- lreptlhe locals in contention iDg up widl a single apiece.
behind effort with a single
run in the fifth and two
more in . the sixth. Ao
Underwood single. a stolen
base and a run scoring single by Arnold put WaiJama
on the board in the fifth. A
double by Roach, a walk to
Bond, a sacrifice bunt by
Tyler Kitchen and a base
clearing triple by Veazey in
the sixth made it a 5-3
affair. WHS would put the
tying runs in scoring position in its fmal tum at the
plate after Caleb Roach
walked and Bond followed
with a double but that is as
close as the F~~ could
get w~th Belpiy! holding on
for the 5-3 win.
·
In the nightcap the visitors scored five tunes in thr.
.openi ng fraJM ani1 ne~er
looked back in securing a
12-6 triumph and a sweep
of the two game, Satunlay
afternoon . set. The Eagles
went on to add single tallies
in the second and lhird
innings before finishing off
the White Falcons with a
trio of runs in the fourth and
two more in the fifth.
Wahama m!lnaged only

until the end. Garrett
Ullderwood kept bis consecutive game hitting string
alive with a sixth inning,
two run single with Caleb
Roach"~§o driving in a paic
with a single in the thitd.
Jacob Roach came up with
the remaining WHS safety
with a sixth inning siQgle.
Underwood has hit safely
in all seven games this
spring and took .over as the
team batting leader with a
.550 average and a team
bigh ll RBfs. Derek .
Veazey hit safely in six
stt:aigb.t contests before having his streak ended during
the second game of the
aftrrnoon. Veazey is sporting a .476 average and has
driven in 10 WHS base run· iielS oo the season.
Mike Wanderer bighligbted a 10 bit Belpre attack
with a ·stunning three run
bo_., run down the tight ·
field line that left the y.anf in
a huny and ended up at Wal
Mart. Ashtoo Packard belted a pair of doubles with
P.J. W111ker and Tyler
Watkins owning a paic of
singles each. Cl.ay Ullmari

. William . Zuspan · was
with the pitj:hing
loss with Andy Grimm and
'!Yier Kitchen worlcing in
relief for the White Falcons.
·Kitchen hurled the ·fmal
four innings and despite
giving up the mammoth
home run to Waderker
pitched admirable baseball
with nine strilreouts. lhree
runs on three bits and only
two walks. Waderll:er was
the win~;~ing pitcher· for
Belpre with Clmt DOiching
the mound triumph in the
first game of the afternoon.
Wahama is slated to host
Calhoun County in a 5:00
pm contest Monday ·before
traveling to Trimble on
Thursday.
tagg~

..............
.

B

. ~1

.

011 :100 0
571
000 012 0
364
BHS (3-2): C1o!1&lt;, Logue (3). Wa11dns (4),
(li) and T-.
WHS (2-4): lle!1dey and l.lnderwood.
WP - Clark.LP -llat1dey.

w

-~
._.12.Walaswl
.

511 320 o
12102
w 002 202 0
632
BHS (4-2):
Walker (4), Tate
(6) and Clark.
·
WHS (2·5): Zuopan, A. Grtmm :(1).
Kl1chen (4) and Undo! wwd.
WP- Wlderil8r. LP -Zuopman .

B

Wa-.

. ~gue
. z sa~ms he'll COJ!· :;* or
. loser iai. die IICrim- Jeannette, Pa., doesn't come run.
said.
1mue to recrutt piayers until · 11¥1JC. .,....._
.
· to campus until the middle
"That was an unbeliev- Spring game. Tressel
•lhey actually sip a letter .of · , "J. was kind of neutral," · of the summer, so Antonio able run," B,o eckman .said. said he had pretty much

Bucks
fromPageBI

intent
. '·
·
'liesscl restated how Ohio
State handles such a ·aitua~
· What was mote UQpottint . 1ion.
•
.WII tblt lllveral m . . . . . f~e· "If a flY is DOt illtereated
iJII . B~-came
ad iD CODI.UII to -Ohio Stn:,
llld ~ 11)'1 that, we've JOt

me

altlrper focu .

- ~ 'IPit. New
)Uc:bifu coach Ric:h
ltodrl~ re~ly hu
ipOII:ell to eeVera1 1tc:rufta
Wbo have vetbally commit·
lid ·to orher Bla Ten P.'O~ Wlcbout inlntloilhl.l.

lo mow on," be llid.

llld he 111d
~ hlva "'lo beeft at
Trwlel

all."

··

- The fllUblclt IX!Iition.

Curtia. · ~. 1 llfteblcker

bla tint !foUr ~ at' Oblo

State, It lito ~ pla)'ii!J ,
other by DIJIIII; Treuel time at fullback, one Of only
ltld RodriJuez have fired two places where the

bm11llides It each o.tber. Buckeyes· lost offensive
with Tressel c~~~lainlog starters from last year. ,
. tblt coaches sho lay off . Terry, who played on ooth
athlefes who have indicated sides of the ball, said he
where they want to go and wasn't sure if he was a win-

•

· Mid the 6-foot -1, 229~der. :who is competing
Wlth semor Ryan L"ukens
ud freshman Spencer
5mitb fiJI' the job. ·
·
· He joked that he . mlsht
j111t have to go to Treieel
illld Ilk for 30" or 35 canie1
iD a ll!llt 10 he c111 ahow
h11 •lUI.
~
· .
''That'f ·What I'm talld
abo11t." he llid with a
1111ile. ''l•ve '-t tJIInl to
pt them tO 1ee tl1at. I feel I
Clll m.t (a pl1y) about 80
yard• for a toiiolidown."
- Backup quarterback.
Todd Boeckman is firmly
entrenched as the staner for
the second year in a row.
Terrelle
Pryor;
the
acclaimed recruit out of

w!Z

I

Henton and Joe Bauserman
are fighting for the backup
job now.
.
Boeckman threw two
touchdown passes to Brian
Hartline durins the scrimmage, while Henton and
Bauserman were erratic.
· "I thousht Todd waa
pretty fair 111d the other
auys were. pretty averqe,...
Tressel sa1d.
- Scrimmage stu. That
had · to be Brandon Saine,
who wlll back up, tailback
Chris "Beanie ' . Wells
when the season rolls
around. Saine broke a cOU·
pic of tackles, made a geewhiz cut and carried two
tacklers into the end zone
on a 23-yard touchdown

Saine, also seeing time
as a small fullback and in
the . I forinatloo, looked
particutarly &amp;ood when
colllins out of the backfield to Cltch pasees.
- The defenH. One of
the rew criticia1111 of Ohio
Stlte'a defenee a year qo
wu that It did not tlke the
bail
very often, fore·
juat 9tlll'lloven in 13

decided · that the .spring
game would be a scrim· mage rather than a gloritied practice because he
knew the players wanted
to set · away from tbe
monotony
of another
worko11t.
He ldded that BQC~:kman
would wear a yellow jer111y in the aame on
Saturday at Ohio Stldl11m,
11m11.
meanins Boeckman cannot
Cornerback
Malcolm be bit -by defen1ive playlenldna aald there· were en.
·
'lieaeel said he told one
wayt to imDrove.
"Don't arop intercep- defenlle ~layer; "The first
lions, strip the ball when time you ll see Todd with
the (ballcarrier) is held up a red jersey on is in the
- lbinss like that. Iust locker room on Auaust
being more agsressive 30th"- before tbe opener
going after the ball," he against Youogsiown State .

Ina

•w•r

.

"
"

'

Hll'

7

To....,G.t

;f §
mdii1''W:'i; t.if .

.

-

HOW Bl
s WilliE
' .. AdsM. AD

-Ze,I:-......,,·A!) •ri,

~~s~-:::~t!':~~ ·~

Maybe if s only 12 games.
but the Pirates are 6-6 and.
despite losing twice against
the Cubs in extra innings
with rookie relievers on the
mound, they are bitting and
pitching better than they
have in April the last few

I

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

b:: ;b;~ans\:udi~ ~~~~~~i{Utt- ~..an -:.:. !:!;

··

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPEC IS
PLUS
AD NOW ONLINE .

Wonl A ts
-...w.-cc

order. were Bob Bolen, who Mountaineers swprised bY, diey)-e do~g aor,1 ~R
led ' Mountain
State actlJally placing fifth Widiaa ,, .. rrJ$ ~: WdJ.tp g.r · .
Univa-sity to rumier-up ia llc7 conference 1J!o!11i. lbey,,'~ :.\Je'"'~. .. a ,. , .. benign and ,lhie reoovery
the NAJA natio
. oal touma- earned anat-lalgebattod.e fillidOt~1; !'
wasquick.khilwarpJIICI!II birdie.
.
.
.ment; J?onnie_ Jones,. who · NCAA tou~ .,';.-4: laid'!i~illilll!~.. Ibis week a~~
lmmelman holed bis par
ended . ~ straight years of advanced to the Sweet .~ '' · .~. ~ .• \
.illy- lllunclmB had ooly brokal
pun.
\\Wds missed, just as
~g sc;ason for the
~e Mountaineers. ~ ·~~-· '.i~ •,
.
.•.paroooe ~his five previous be bas
done the last two
~ men s baste~!)~ accooled No. 17 ~··ia ,, '.~fugii,!, • a .Morganfown Ma!!lm!
.· .
.
team With a 16-14 rerord m · lbe tioal post-seasoo PDllpf·i ~Wl' .~,.iaDd
forme~'
But be 1Jui1t 'a two-shot years on the back niDe of a
his first y~ and Monte roaches.
.
• &gt;:l,;&lt;,. ~•¥, : r Dative, is ··
lead ~~-~mck ia die major be ouoe dominated
Cater, who ,piloted S~~
''This is a great
fi!~ ~ OOIICJt&gt;~ ~ .
III:Jd .it . . . Jl "'. Br.mdt SncdeJrer and Steve
to _ the West VJrg~
said wbeo told . ~ . ~ . ~ ; ~ .71!,;-.e·.:~ . d•-ial · ~ .
-~ Resch, the last two players
with any hope. folded
(;onferenc:e football chamP! ._,_ . , I-""
"It'
. ~ . ...,......._,Jl.m.M fii!t , , ., n«W ""
• , .,
quicldy.
oo:ip.. . 54 did
.
Woods closed wilh a 72
!ng ~:~tlking pfuy;:a:~ · me .: ~se it's West' :::;: , ·
·~"-Wl9 10 ~a and bas finished third, secm~ from predecessor Vtrgm~.. 1 am very very Schaus took his . 19,5+55 ·:~Cfi,t · 9flt' 4 .11111t be ond and seoond in his last
John 1Beilein and molding ~1anve.~
. .
WVU team to tbC -~~:" tf · ·- ~-· · ....
!His three Master-s. It also was
tbrm. inro;a play style differLike . prev10u~ rectptents, in his first seascl!i: ' ~·
! ~ ll.,li~11¥dl his f'tfth JUQDer-up in a
d
what be ~
~~dhthapphiil.Y s~ the of the other ID!I·.~ 2 '~ :
·6111.•• !118.ior- .
ill was a young~· he . aw,...u wt
s ·asststant. served bisalmal!i*i' · .·· -.1&gt; . . . ~dle~aailk
lmmelman earned $135
~. Will .b e bigger- ,.JIIId ~~ and play~.
.~s was Huglris7· ~ j 'PM,~. a :lO-foOt puu millioo for bis S«&lt;!JJO) I'GA
stmnga-next.year.
.
V!li"Yfortunatetohave D1vtston I NCAA'.~tP'•-&gt; 'Chit was.·slick and danger- Tour victotj, with Woods
Picked in the preseason twiJfonncr head coaches and ance. That tied him with ous.
also finishiag second
poll of head coaches m fmish .a guy who played for me." Rick Barnes ·for the most
Ahead of him, Woods was bdJind binJ two years ago in
lOth in the Big East, the he said. "They know · what ·trips among active coaches.
gaining momen~
the Western Open.

Hup

from Page Bl

•

c!assifed@mydlll~

'!' . ...-

.· Slanf-:-..

•

~rs
ft:.-i P-. 81
.

1,_.,.:1

Late:view
Resort
in
Morgantown.
Mike Carey. who piloted
the WVU women's basketball team to a 25.8 record
and NCAA tournament
berth. finished as runner-up
in ·the balloting. WVU was
20th in the final post-season
poll of coaches.
Other top contenders. in ·

·

In One Week Wdh Us

w..,....

P.JS .

:f:!cY~~ia~:O:ayw~~

lyJ ;6 1' CCIIft

•

y,.,......,

Huggins named WVa. college coach ofyear.
MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
-Bob Huggins, who guided the West Vrrginia
University rnen·s basketball
team to a 26-11 record in bis
first season. has been elected
by state sports writers as
College Co;teh of the Year
for 2007-08.
He will be presented the
Furfari Award at the 62nd
annual Victory· Awards
Dinner, sponsored by the

7

ttribunt - Sentinel CLASSIFIED

Gibson, West lead Cavaliers to 84-76 Win over Heat
.BY T• WIWfllii.-s

Ydj

..

....,_._

~

D!SJP'wy Ads
--'a' ,.u ..... 2

-----=.....-......
• ,,_,
....c ,
a:ee.,-. s • u c
I

a

. . .

7 ; FIT 7 U _ .

5

a,•._.

n

. . . . ..._.. 'Ia

,_.

...... _.,., ,r

Gl¢11ic:s50Cfarsr;. .
$1.00farlla4)t!

I

�P p Bz • 'lhl; lllily Sentitd
l

•

WW

www.mydailyscntinel,cDo

3 and r-te all dime frce and emburasllcd., .roach
lbiows to put lhe Cavs ahead Mike Brown was rni11mll!!
65-fiO.
.
00 more focus 30d defeasive
. Dpusbs and AudcrsoD intensity f.roni bis squal. It
Vm:jao saxed 10 cap die cm!oC in spurts ~ lbe
.uo, w by die lime James mt half as Clevdand built a
,,.,.,,.. iD 1riJh 5:18 seven-point . lead before
.UOwiog 1be Heat to get
• - ....._ ..... __. had
.......DI!!Jl . . . _ . , _ , .
an WJ'...in '"'38 - L.1A:-.•

!.SSOCIATED I'RESS

II

\

\. CLEVFl..AND - Daniel
Gibson made a 3-poiott.r and
lhree straight free throws
early in the founb quarter to
pve Cleveland some cush- ·
Jon while LeBron James

l

''

rested. and the Cavaliers
moved closer to the E,ast"s
No. 4 seed . wilh an 84-76
win over the Mi~ Heal on
Sunday night.
Delonte Weat soored 18
points. Zydrunas Dgaustas
had 14 and 14 rebounds and
James finished with 13
points. II rebounds and
seven assists for the
:Cavaliers, who didn•t play
. well again but had enough to
·hold
off the pathetic Heat.
•
I
Cleveland only led by two
·after three quarters and did·n•t pull comfonably ahead
until there was less lluin five
minutes to go. The Cavs
swept the season .series from
Miami for the first time
since 1989-90.
Cleveland, which is only
13-12 since a major trade in
February. needs to win one
of its final two games - at
Philadelpba on Monday or
borne against Detroit on
Wednesday - to secure the
fourth seed and home-rourt
advantage· in the first round
of the NBA playoffs against

agbt-plint lead.
.
.
; ; ; .....~;face
Tile Cafttiers ba\'C . bl:m
..... of .,...., fur =r+- IIDd W'asbiugton ia lbe first
d; ·~ i a j = aDd Rlllllll fur lhe tbinl lo1raiglu
incollSistcocy bas led to year. whedle£ dley finish
SOOJe fim1nlioD.
fuwdJ or lifib. The 1eams
Afu2fumbled have bl:m on a CIOilision
--~
00111SC fur weeks, and their
away an im1de pass in die rivalry bas been fueled by
tbinl quadrl" liom James, !iOIIIe RJCC8I nash lalk.. In a
CJevdand's All-Star furwanl bl
last -.-a. Gilben
yelled at his frizzy-baired
og
tram...- wbo didn't 1llh Almas said, ~I dliak evaydle~ wdL As James body wants Cleveland in
coot a seat oo lbe beach for lhat first IOUIId." Earlier•
Wu.anls
F
DeSbaw-n
a liiiii'!IIUl, Varejao walked Stevenson called James
·:s~ die ~ exdlanged · "overrated." James was
• .
.
asked if lbe COIIllllml added
Bot later ia the founh. 10 die rivalty. "Absolutely,~
Vamjao and James seemM he said. "That's lbe last thing
to have made up.
fm going 1D say about that.~
The Cavaliers playeil most •.. Patriots WR Rmdy Moss
of the 'I" cxlll half without sat behind Cleveland's
Wally SzcudJildt and Ben bench. ... Heat roach Pat·
Walt.,.,~ of die players Riley hasn't bad much to
acquired in an 11-playCI" deal prai.se this Miami., but he •s
at lbe trading deadline. proud of F Ricky Dav\s. on
SzcudJiat went 0-fur"-3 in tlrget ID play .in all 82
10 mimdr:s and wan.,. bad games. "I give him a lot of
two points ia 10. ·
lrudos," Riley said. "He·s
After a di:pknble loss .at beien playing burt. There's a
~ oo friday, when die lot of playel'S today who
Ca~- Clll!bustled don'tplaybmC

.I •;

.

.,
i •

I

:Il ,.
'

,.........

Cleveland Cavaliers' lydrunas llgauskas {11), from uthuania, is defended by Miami I:Wat's
Joel Anthony during the fourttl quarter of an NBA basketball game Sunday in Cleo&lt; eland.
Hgauskas scored 14 points in Cleveland•s 84-76 win.

Washington. The Wizards ly over.
bave clinched at leas! the
Down 59-57 after three.
No. 5 seed.
· the Cavs outscored the Heat
Ricky Davis scored 17 12-2 - with James. was on
points and Daequan Cook the bench- in the first 4:45 ·
and Earl Barron had 13 of tbe founb 10 open a69-61 .
apiece for Miami ( 14-66), lead.
-.
'
whose dismal season is near- . Gibson, who has struggled

to find his shot since n:cuming from an ankle iajury,
triggered the run widl .a 3
thai he posed to admire loog
after it passed duough the
net. On Cleveland's neit
lrip. be was fouled by JayllOII
W.lljams ,wiDle Mil ••.,.i•'@ a

seasons.

Maybe it's a little too
early for the Pirates to talk.
about ending that streak of
15 consecutive losing .seasons, but Bay sees a lot of
positives even though they
also were 6-6 a year ago.
Doumit hit a solo homer
· in tlie second and added a
sacrifice fly, Nady hit a tworun shot in the sixth .and Bay
added a three-run drive in
llle. seventh· against reliever
Todd Colley as the Pirates
'had an easy one after winning one-run decisions the
pmvious .two nights.
Cueto (l· l }. outstandinx
ip bis first two stlllits witb ll!
stri.keouts and no walks.
wa!in't as sharp in fl#s one
as be gave up five ninit and
five hits - four for 'extra
bases - in six innings. He

S5

..-a

·"9i-.ntft:'-d¢. ,.,.

Woods boled a 70-foot
bildie pUtt on the ll th,
made an acrobatic escape
from the tn:es oo lbe 13th
and SJlU!I a wedge down the
slope oo die par-5 131h that
left him 5 feet away fur

·f.e!

laakM

rr-

the third ahead of Luis
Jlivas· run-scoring double.
Cueto struck out 22 batters nntil he fm.ally gave UJ!
a walk after being the only
pitcher since 1900 to strike
out as many as 18 and walk
none in his first two starts.
Baker was told the game
would start on tinJe, but a 9minute rain delay forced
Cueto to warm up again
brief! y after he initially
threw in the bullpen. Baker
blamed it on misconununicatiori. . though. neither he
nor Cueto said it was a factor in the right-bander's
pitching.
· . McLouth, the major
league hits leader with 22
hits in 12 games, doubled in
the sixth to extend his, season-long bitting streak to 12
games and sco.~ twice.
while reaching base ·· three
tinJes.
The Reds left nine runners on base, giving them
32 for the weekend, and
went 1~for-8 wiih runners in
scoria~ positioo to finish
the~s 6-of-35.
Notes: A s~y rain fell ·
much of the game llBtil
skits clear¢ in the eighth
iruiiag.
.. .

'

·Falcons
from Page 81

in the outing and witlked
three with the Eagles scoring an unearned tally in .the
second and another in the
fourth. The bard-throwing
junior right-hander saw bis
pitching record dip 10 J. 2
on the year in spite of fan·
ning 29 batters this spring in
only .l8.2 innings.
Wahama collected .six
base hits during game one
with Anthony Bond smacking a single and a double to
pace the bend Area offensive attack. Derek Veazey .
laced a two-run triple with
.Caleb Roach smacking a
G,arrett
two-base
hit.
Underwood and . Justin
Arnold came through with a
single· each in the two run
· ·
setback.
Belpre scored a single run ·
in the . second and third
innings before denting the

plate on dtree more occasions in the fourth for the

win. Wat:Ans ~Jbree hits,
in~udiog 'a double. with
Tate ~!'~ding a pair of singles
.-1·.,Packard and Clarlc a
sin~
for the Eagles.

.,ieee

" Wali~. felf bdllfid by a . 111M hibi ill game two but had li
5-0 ·count before staging a II walks and a hit batter Azar
Joshua Clad: rom'late . inning come-from- lreptlhe locals in contention iDg up widl a single apiece.
behind effort with a single
run in the fifth and two
more in . the sixth. Ao
Underwood single. a stolen
base and a run scoring single by Arnold put WaiJama
on the board in the fifth. A
double by Roach, a walk to
Bond, a sacrifice bunt by
Tyler Kitchen and a base
clearing triple by Veazey in
the sixth made it a 5-3
affair. WHS would put the
tying runs in scoring position in its fmal tum at the
plate after Caleb Roach
walked and Bond followed
with a double but that is as
close as the F~~ could
get w~th Belpiy! holding on
for the 5-3 win.
·
In the nightcap the visitors scored five tunes in thr.
.openi ng fraJM ani1 ne~er
looked back in securing a
12-6 triumph and a sweep
of the two game, Satunlay
afternoon . set. The Eagles
went on to add single tallies
in the second and lhird
innings before finishing off
the White Falcons with a
trio of runs in the fourth and
two more in the fifth.
Wahama m!lnaged only

until the end. Garrett
Ullderwood kept bis consecutive game hitting string
alive with a sixth inning,
two run single with Caleb
Roach"~§o driving in a paic
with a single in the thitd.
Jacob Roach came up with
the remaining WHS safety
with a sixth inning siQgle.
Underwood has hit safely
in all seven games this
spring and took .over as the
team batting leader with a
.550 average and a team
bigh ll RBfs. Derek .
Veazey hit safely in six
stt:aigb.t contests before having his streak ended during
the second game of the
aftrrnoon. Veazey is sporting a .476 average and has
driven in 10 WHS base run· iielS oo the season.
Mike Wanderer bighligbted a 10 bit Belpre attack
with a ·stunning three run
bo_., run down the tight ·
field line that left the y.anf in
a huny and ended up at Wal
Mart. Ashtoo Packard belted a pair of doubles with
P.J. W111ker and Tyler
Watkins owning a paic of
singles each. Cl.ay Ullmari

. William . Zuspan · was
with the pitj:hing
loss with Andy Grimm and
'!Yier Kitchen worlcing in
relief for the White Falcons.
·Kitchen hurled the ·fmal
four innings and despite
giving up the mammoth
home run to Waderker
pitched admirable baseball
with nine strilreouts. lhree
runs on three bits and only
two walks. Waderll:er was
the win~;~ing pitcher· for
Belpre with Clmt DOiching
the mound triumph in the
first game of the afternoon.
Wahama is slated to host
Calhoun County in a 5:00
pm contest Monday ·before
traveling to Trimble on
Thursday.
tagg~

..............
.

B

. ~1

.

011 :100 0
571
000 012 0
364
BHS (3-2): C1o!1&lt;, Logue (3). Wa11dns (4),
(li) and T-.
WHS (2-4): lle!1dey and l.lnderwood.
WP - Clark.LP -llat1dey.

w

-~
._.12.Walaswl
.

511 320 o
12102
w 002 202 0
632
BHS (4-2):
Walker (4), Tate
(6) and Clark.
·
WHS (2·5): Zuopan, A. Grtmm :(1).
Kl1chen (4) and Undo! wwd.
WP- Wlderil8r. LP -Zuopman .

B

Wa-.

. ~gue
. z sa~ms he'll COJ!· :;* or
. loser iai. die IICrim- Jeannette, Pa., doesn't come run.
said.
1mue to recrutt piayers until · 11¥1JC. .,....._
.
· to campus until the middle
"That was an unbeliev- Spring game. Tressel
•lhey actually sip a letter .of · , "J. was kind of neutral," · of the summer, so Antonio able run," B,o eckman .said. said he had pretty much

Bucks
fromPageBI

intent
. '·
·
'liesscl restated how Ohio
State handles such a ·aitua~
· What was mote UQpottint . 1ion.
•
.WII tblt lllveral m . . . . . f~e· "If a flY is DOt illtereated
iJII . B~-came
ad iD CODI.UII to -Ohio Stn:,
llld ~ 11)'1 that, we've JOt

me

altlrper focu .

- ~ 'IPit. New
)Uc:bifu coach Ric:h
ltodrl~ re~ly hu
ipOII:ell to eeVera1 1tc:rufta
Wbo have vetbally commit·
lid ·to orher Bla Ten P.'O~ Wlcbout inlntloilhl.l.

lo mow on," be llid.

llld he 111d
~ hlva "'lo beeft at
Trwlel

all."

··

- The fllUblclt IX!Iition.

Curtia. · ~. 1 llfteblcker

bla tint !foUr ~ at' Oblo

State, It lito ~ pla)'ii!J ,
other by DIJIIII; Treuel time at fullback, one Of only
ltld RodriJuez have fired two places where the

bm11llides It each o.tber. Buckeyes· lost offensive
with Tressel c~~~lainlog starters from last year. ,
. tblt coaches sho lay off . Terry, who played on ooth
athlefes who have indicated sides of the ball, said he
where they want to go and wasn't sure if he was a win-

•

· Mid the 6-foot -1, 229~der. :who is competing
Wlth semor Ryan L"ukens
ud freshman Spencer
5mitb fiJI' the job. ·
·
· He joked that he . mlsht
j111t have to go to Treieel
illld Ilk for 30" or 35 canie1
iD a ll!llt 10 he c111 ahow
h11 •lUI.
~
· .
''That'f ·What I'm talld
abo11t." he llid with a
1111ile. ''l•ve '-t tJIInl to
pt them tO 1ee tl1at. I feel I
Clll m.t (a pl1y) about 80
yard• for a toiiolidown."
- Backup quarterback.
Todd Boeckman is firmly
entrenched as the staner for
the second year in a row.
Terrelle
Pryor;
the
acclaimed recruit out of

w!Z

I

Henton and Joe Bauserman
are fighting for the backup
job now.
.
Boeckman threw two
touchdown passes to Brian
Hartline durins the scrimmage, while Henton and
Bauserman were erratic.
· "I thousht Todd waa
pretty fair 111d the other
auys were. pretty averqe,...
Tressel sa1d.
- Scrimmage stu. That
had · to be Brandon Saine,
who wlll back up, tailback
Chris "Beanie ' . Wells
when the season rolls
around. Saine broke a cOU·
pic of tackles, made a geewhiz cut and carried two
tacklers into the end zone
on a 23-yard touchdown

Saine, also seeing time
as a small fullback and in
the . I forinatloo, looked
particutarly &amp;ood when
colllins out of the backfield to Cltch pasees.
- The defenH. One of
the rew criticia1111 of Ohio
Stlte'a defenee a year qo
wu that It did not tlke the
bail
very often, fore·
juat 9tlll'lloven in 13

decided · that the .spring
game would be a scrim· mage rather than a gloritied practice because he
knew the players wanted
to set · away from tbe
monotony
of another
worko11t.
He ldded that BQC~:kman
would wear a yellow jer111y in the aame on
Saturday at Ohio Stldl11m,
11m11.
meanins Boeckman cannot
Cornerback
Malcolm be bit -by defen1ive playlenldna aald there· were en.
·
'lieaeel said he told one
wayt to imDrove.
"Don't arop intercep- defenlle ~layer; "The first
lions, strip the ball when time you ll see Todd with
the (ballcarrier) is held up a red jersey on is in the
- lbinss like that. Iust locker room on Auaust
being more agsressive 30th"- before tbe opener
going after the ball," he against Youogsiown State .

Ina

•w•r

.

"
"

'

Hll'

7

To....,G.t

;f §
mdii1''W:'i; t.if .

.

-

HOW Bl
s WilliE
' .. AdsM. AD

-Ze,I:-......,,·A!) •ri,

~~s~-:::~t!':~~ ·~

Maybe if s only 12 games.
but the Pirates are 6-6 and.
despite losing twice against
the Cubs in extra innings
with rookie relievers on the
mound, they are bitting and
pitching better than they
have in April the last few

I

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

b:: ;b;~ans\:udi~ ~~~~~~i{Utt- ~..an -:.:. !:!;

··

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPEC IS
PLUS
AD NOW ONLINE .

Wonl A ts
-...w.-cc

order. were Bob Bolen, who Mountaineers swprised bY, diey)-e do~g aor,1 ~R
led ' Mountain
State actlJally placing fifth Widiaa ,, .. rrJ$ ~: WdJ.tp g.r · .
Univa-sity to rumier-up ia llc7 conference 1J!o!11i. lbey,,'~ :.\Je'"'~. .. a ,. , .. benign and ,lhie reoovery
the NAJA natio
. oal touma- earned anat-lalgebattod.e fillidOt~1; !'
wasquick.khilwarpJIICI!II birdie.
.
.
.ment; J?onnie_ Jones,. who · NCAA tou~ .,';.-4: laid'!i~illilll!~.. Ibis week a~~
lmmelman holed bis par
ended . ~ straight years of advanced to the Sweet .~ '' · .~. ~ .• \
.illy- lllunclmB had ooly brokal
pun.
\\Wds missed, just as
~g sc;ason for the
~e Mountaineers. ~ ·~~-· '.i~ •,
.
.•.paroooe ~his five previous be bas
done the last two
~ men s baste~!)~ accooled No. 17 ~··ia ,, '.~fugii,!, • a .Morganfown Ma!!lm!
.· .
.
team With a 16-14 rerord m · lbe tioal post-seasoo PDllpf·i ~Wl' .~,.iaDd
forme~'
But be 1Jui1t 'a two-shot years on the back niDe of a
his first y~ and Monte roaches.
.
• &gt;:l,;&lt;,. ~•¥, : r Dative, is ··
lead ~~-~mck ia die major be ouoe dominated
Cater, who ,piloted S~~
''This is a great
fi!~ ~ OOIICJt&gt;~ ~ .
III:Jd .it . . . Jl "'. Br.mdt SncdeJrer and Steve
to _ the West VJrg~
said wbeo told . ~ . ~ . ~ ; ~ .71!,;-.e·.:~ . d•-ial · ~ .
-~ Resch, the last two players
with any hope. folded
(;onferenc:e football chamP! ._,_ . , I-""
"It'
. ~ . ...,......._,Jl.m.M fii!t , , ., n«W ""
• , .,
quicldy.
oo:ip.. . 54 did
.
Woods closed wilh a 72
!ng ~:~tlking pfuy;:a:~ · me .: ~se it's West' :::;: , ·
·~"-Wl9 10 ~a and bas finished third, secm~ from predecessor Vtrgm~.. 1 am very very Schaus took his . 19,5+55 ·:~Cfi,t · 9flt' 4 .11111t be ond and seoond in his last
John 1Beilein and molding ~1anve.~
. .
WVU team to tbC -~~:" tf · ·- ~-· · ....
!His three Master-s. It also was
tbrm. inro;a play style differLike . prev10u~ rectptents, in his first seascl!i: ' ~·
! ~ ll.,li~11¥dl his f'tfth JUQDer-up in a
d
what be ~
~~dhthapphiil.Y s~ the of the other ID!I·.~ 2 '~ :
·6111.•• !118.ior- .
ill was a young~· he . aw,...u wt
s ·asststant. served bisalmal!i*i' · .·· -.1&gt; . . . ~dle~aailk
lmmelman earned $135
~. Will .b e bigger- ,.JIIId ~~ and play~.
.~s was Huglris7· ~ j 'PM,~. a :lO-foOt puu millioo for bis S«&lt;!JJO) I'GA
stmnga-next.year.
.
V!li"Yfortunatetohave D1vtston I NCAA'.~tP'•-&gt; 'Chit was.·slick and danger- Tour victotj, with Woods
Picked in the preseason twiJfonncr head coaches and ance. That tied him with ous.
also finishiag second
poll of head coaches m fmish .a guy who played for me." Rick Barnes ·for the most
Ahead of him, Woods was bdJind binJ two years ago in
lOth in the Big East, the he said. "They know · what ·trips among active coaches.
gaining momen~
the Western Open.

Hup

from Page Bl

•

c!assifed@mydlll~

'!' . ...-

.· Slanf-:-..

•

~rs
ft:.-i P-. 81
.

1,_.,.:1

Late:view
Resort
in
Morgantown.
Mike Carey. who piloted
the WVU women's basketball team to a 25.8 record
and NCAA tournament
berth. finished as runner-up
in ·the balloting. WVU was
20th in the final post-season
poll of coaches.
Other top contenders. in ·

·

In One Week Wdh Us

w..,....

P.JS .

:f:!cY~~ia~:O:ayw~~

lyJ ;6 1' CCIIft

•

y,.,......,

Huggins named WVa. college coach ofyear.
MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
-Bob Huggins, who guided the West Vrrginia
University rnen·s basketball
team to a 26-11 record in bis
first season. has been elected
by state sports writers as
College Co;teh of the Year
for 2007-08.
He will be presented the
Furfari Award at the 62nd
annual Victory· Awards
Dinner, sponsored by the

7

ttribunt - Sentinel CLASSIFIED

Gibson, West lead Cavaliers to 84-76 Win over Heat
.BY T• WIWfllii.-s

Ydj

..

....,_._

~

D!SJP'wy Ads
--'a' ,.u ..... 2

-----=.....-......
• ,,_,
....c ,
a:ee.,-. s • u c
I

a

. . .

7 ; FIT 7 U _ .

5

a,•._.

n

. . . . ..._.. 'Ia

,_.

...... _.,., ,r

Gl¢11ic:s50Cfarsr;. .
$1.00farlla4)t!

I

�'i-'

•

p,.

n

7-

au

a

1 q

....
---1. . .
....
2

........

W:::WILE

1,

77511

..,.

.........

, ' ra
•,sum...,.,

..,.,_
-

ClliiD

•

1

-:;e:::] ...... • •

-.. --.... .-....

...
I

•••• I

..... 7 t '$ ,Giiilo.

·C

•

•• '~' ••

~.&amp;'ltiS1

7' &amp;.
1'1
-

...........
-..........
·-·. · ·ra.

REA Crosswol'd Puzzle

•mr;a:

- ...,__...
n,

""

•

11ae DUly Sa••h•l• Plge as

-..

r

•

I'

II

';
&lt;ikiWIIJr•I('I'JIO)

'

.,.1

••)a"

·II:
1.1 }

•,Q'uu ·

....... . . ; .41......
...
I...:, :
a:.;:.,:·:
,...,...,

• l'4.1

··~~·
1'51

.......

as z a ..
P.t-. ... u, u, u

•
., . .... . i

••

• Alt.lU

MASON MOWEll
. . . . 11

--~
~
ServiciJJg Lawn

SillS
frevious '!1Cp81'ienoe ~ ~Ius hut
requim£1. &amp;!nemus bene1it PJOkcQI!;
¥00 'WUIII o Ulltll!r in Sales and
Good 'Work +labits &lt;Dnd ttigh Driw
Desill!, Wf MAY BE ,JNTERESTBi) IN YOU I
Our Corpomle Trainer will ·conduct JOiel&gt; 1
1raininJ 'lliis. momb. iThis is ¥OUT DPP!·lrtuni~ I
ty 1o reach your ~II ~1.

lfmctors, 'Mowers,

IFUicr5,.Mumoy,
&lt;Crutsman, M'ID,
Briggs.&amp; Stratton
H-IHoncst
1- .Integrity
S"Servire ·
JOVean;

1stl!otuho left above

Mason GolfCourse
Harvey Rood 'Mum. JNV

. Top&lt;lluaii!Y. iiiJ6.di29'5B55

Jn .._

rn

.......,.•••.,

spcKie

=~=~

'

..

for

·

.

r~=

$64

IOIIaitd.._. . • .,._

per

lj

Ia·

'
75?llliild&lt;••

.

fi-..U-11 dedaler . •

7

MDD•Iald
2SW
-

.q..,_

.._
ZlfGooll..

41Lidl•
;:::::

......
_

.QG
Sla.

• Oorloq
JZ . . . . .

51 -

.ISS

• • IF I

-

...

t4

..

~.as~-. -dad..lollonelit- - . lle1JI*'Iing lold.• ~

ID!Idr--.. -111

••1Ch1111

-bod.

-aldtl!lill'-~

llis -.lal'slJI!IIIIIltild

liJj

llelliliog- _ . . , _ . . . .

lifi**J!I'S .,q leld.
one IIi&amp; - ).
""' .. EJs. -.g II !'Ill' - tl'ld
..,~ (Norlfs)-,...!IOflnor
Ills led.'lbu IIWSI !ird lho llllst 1111¥·
Sldhi&amp;inblr _ _ _ lhe

In IIi&amp; dalj {IIlii -

IEV'~R

1 GO I f'EEl.
LII(E 11M aEIN'
WAJD D!!

s

900 East 'S1Die :sm.t, A1hens

ill

•c ,,

.

s .......

. I

llT

Clll ....... ~ ••

-

.r-r ..... • c-.....
....
....
_
...
----·
- ..........,_. . .
- ..... ·-·
•a...:
·-·
=. · - -·

Advealise
. II ws
•
.m

ISTOfast'Siate Slnlet, h5

I
F}'
Biil"d

7

4F

DIIIII!I:Solllll '
V'
J?

Cll.......,..,..
s
.....,., ,_,....,..,,

+iOilllb I Slo(im ~ IOU!II!t.

$'HKIITJff. Hupl i1 #Mi.
-!¥a 'FnloiDIIIIIIIy.

I

5'-

UT-

IP£21

sa nhyn e
TailaWag
&amp;Aatmal

.__,...,&amp;;a,....,1he _,

. . . - -. - dtlrnr"'' I'IIWS .......
------------------~
OH, RB..AX, SN..IR'Y !! IT AIN'T
1110

DIR''~

1l4AN IT'S ·
ALVA'IS
BEEN !!

·:~ ~·" =~

J*il8rS - ... ·d iD 1D 11111
pdlllr -~ did ,.. ...., llilh a
lllorl 1lu1 ..... ~- ~
_ _ .. · - - - unle9she

C!\ R PE •&lt;.,..: =
SER\ ' (E

--*'iy-.g.,..lodo.

tl'ld Sldh .... splirlla"

ft -

Work

'
«Rea•&lt;mable Rille!;

tU!s. • -

-·--1Dfour.tano.

rGLII:tO, ~ 'rt:lU ~'«»1.,

'E•peri~

iRefereoces Available!

--lad-~!iplilo.

..-Ill

740-591-11044

'-LuiiC .I •
....,

Cellar!W.C.W·~ftm.-11rDI'nQII8ilnstl\'1nW&amp;l*JIIIe.
~lilbrr rnltle......,...-.:t&amp;tor..._

dim. .... Sldh IIIIUid

he...,_ .. lillnofln lhll oull. So,
IIIII JBi lho ...... jiB*. ariitlantlhll IIIII wl '!lin lie tril;k Then cosli
""" ......... tl'ld . . .
pilllllrStq.l.alar, "'"'1ruq&gt; tta ..
.l l ! l ' f t ! FniiJ . . . . - !IOflnBr lin tis-.!.
ft he . . lho dilmond quaen,
S!Uhmoid--12-

I'IDliU.l£fT~~?

@

CO~STRIII:'TID~

CA fAIITY CIPIER

lhll ,..,...

mt -

~ 01111

'lnsured

CORti!ER STOtH

bids,

- - tu dlm,lllowing
tu~t.n~ ;a•e-voAI!3•
.... - . . . . . . . . . (.. ooid)ln

•Prompt and Quality

cCa1Uiiacy Stanley

. . -·

Sed~-We looe
ftlljrllstl'ld--.SanEiape-

Tars'*": $~

Coustna:licwl
• Vlnyi 'S idlng

tft; wile 10 have apectfic ga.IIIS

-tilM&amp; ., h

w

'V HilT D?lltWTO CIBI?IP WI
CII:TI . I

JIYTUISZ BltiiP IHWIS II,

IRUIGVITTO IIVIGI V'll J i l l
WC?ISB 1£W I H. Rll IKBO ." - GIRIO
RWIBDI¥

-•

--15,.......... --

JilL

••;rem

.no obfec-

b.JI aMo 'Pf111Pl'8
vouraelf to be ftedJie llbOulthe W1V you
.miiiJtM them., _ moM open ,.... ate to
YWW ...- al' Wnktng, 1M 8DQII'WI' YDY'I
year~.

find autiOillllf!·

-

NES~R1~11) - "buwan't

heiiiMe to c:.rry your lair -.re Ill 'he
load at WO!tt, b&amp;a1heN • a.
b6ty you might object to ......... tg if it
ian't being
your ...... Be cioapera-

&amp;WOng,......

-·- -·
c»ne

l

I
I' I I t
IREEL

(A!&gt;rii 20) - .......
ttl. wou'l'll!l• t.m ...,...., but l.ll"'l885 you

l1WRUS

enjoy the ....... Slid8 uf liflt and a.lca
a ............. It&amp; lo ...-.:with others, roo
·may be lllbeled as dull lind~­
CWI

lJghten

Claded Ad In Wednesday's

T.
And It Ru For FREE It
Mrketpace!

JUST .we
1DMH'f..

and·"'

ing .
CANCER (June 21-.luly 22) 'bur
at doing 1hifv5 miiY ngw'
. . wou ~ to ~ things. aspeclaiiV - to whelhef 1hera is • batiBr way
of doing ~ job. Don't n.illdB to fBIII'il!wi

a , , •• , ..

..,...-,. wav

LEO (JoJy 211-Aug . 22)

tlanM tt.n ....,.,
~ ordM

SfTTL£ FOI1
Hl.l'O!EOS.

( )

Insured &amp; Bood8it

INTEiiET

~

DARE v.f.

DIEAM?!

28 Ye1111 '&amp;perionce

David Lewis
740-992-mn

--

New llouot ...........

CliO: MARCUM OONS'fltUCTION

71446-lltl .

_. this time . I JQ

• Room Additions • Garages • Vmyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

-·

47239 Riebel ROiid. Long Bonom, OH

' 740-985-4141
CcU: 740-416-1834 .

25+ ,_.~ Frw lifn ' ,

Advertise
in lhis space for
$64 per month

l'l!lr,

tt

ID wtun YDY ~ · your plans and
ilihiiolioi•. becaule lhMe is a p
11 Jl~
. _ )'UUf lliDniii may oome t.dl. to haunt
you, ............ )IOU'te ~ ~ dO
bg&amp; .- you IU!Y'· Lilt r..utts ... the
lltQry'.

UBAA (Sept. D-Oct. II)

7~7

.__,J L-----....IIIZ..--.J

lriftnt

be

..... -from ptting aut of hand.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. . 22) - 8e careful

HE!)(, I'D EV€Iol

Roofing. Siding, Gutters

lg

bel :0:~ you ID do your beat ID keep

.r:DfiMdBIJY

Seamless Gutters

.......

- ·f t -

t.

tudgM&lt;:on~ and ¥t ._.., your IICCOUniS in

Gutteri

I

-.

.....

H&amp;H

I

bit.

ontv --

- , , JE . . . . . . .

-..

up •

GEMfNI ..._, 21-Jwne 20)- E~
in do-lt-youraetf projeCts ..-ound the
hou8e will no1
wuu ~ but
tum out to be fun. How!Mtr, be samt thllt
you knOW what youn, cDing
w.tl
eq.Mpp-1 to handle thingS b8lont ......

be at the roof at
._. of f..atly ill

~

.... ..

,_, mtght

your prot:Mrns, and 1hiS

.:t.u.~~y whld. gets raur
up ~ • -'1. F.oe the t.ct&amp;
wlh .... nun.t amoun1 of liepidldiurii ,
iMd you'IMI your..ellnte.
SCORPIO
22) - Hapo
~ amount of ...,...
. . . . . might be ~ br" • 4arge
. . . at ·NIIIIty. The 1001'\811' you'le .,....
.-d
up to . . . . . . . . . betler
ytJAJ mn Q111: on wtth Ill .
SIIGITIMIUS '(Nov. 23-0oc. 21)- H
you ant poapa;ed to pay 1he priOe to gra1ify your ambtlious ilileiltioota, you ~

'-*

... -=- •coco. ...-.

to--

----- -.

n't haW ..,... probtem ruching your
goP;, Colwwl), 4 WI&gt; • at a fNe

........

~
(Doc.
19)-EWyou_you
... 22..Jon.
__
__

ly, . . . . . people In • ...m and gen.oul 1111hion . ., your maod .. PQIIIttft

nvou""•good_....,....,
.0"......
-

...,..,. ..,.,..._
18) Co- .
?
: idlw n ygu

· _,..,. won1 t.
....... pu1tW.

•

I I _.. M I

,...... -""end dolre - · .you
..,."""' 10 dD .... you . . . .. .-: •

............
........
,., ......_
,_.....
....
... _... ., .......
............ .............·..._.
.

ao -

.,, - '-""

--- --

,....
tiC (l'l!lt.
I

_ _

....,.....

IOUPTONUTZ

....

I'l -111•1
PHALSS

·~~esl'

rr t r r rr1

IIIIJI III
ICIAM IllS Milt! • ', l I , Dl
Wliaer- Ti1F- 9llty -Otilly-1BEik WAYS
'fiaw:.P .... et,• ... old . . qwietl, ....1*11*wry ........... I !ill&amp; 1HEJl( 9/An:t"

ARLO&amp;JANIS

�'i-'

•

p,.

n

7-

au

a

1 q

....
---1. . .
....
2

........

W:::WILE

1,

77511

..,.

.........

, ' ra
•,sum...,.,

..,.,_
-

ClliiD

•

1

-:;e:::] ...... • •

-.. --.... .-....

...
I

•••• I

..... 7 t '$ ,Giiilo.

·C

•

•• '~' ••

~.&amp;'ltiS1

7' &amp;.
1'1
-

...........
-..........
·-·. · ·ra.

REA Crosswol'd Puzzle

•mr;a:

- ...,__...
n,

""

•

11ae DUly Sa••h•l• Plge as

-..

r

•

I'

II

';
&lt;ikiWIIJr•I('I'JIO)

'

.,.1

••)a"

·II:
1.1 }

•,Q'uu ·

....... . . ; .41......
...
I...:, :
a:.;:.,:·:
,...,...,

• l'4.1

··~~·
1'51

.......

as z a ..
P.t-. ... u, u, u

•
., . .... . i

••

• Alt.lU

MASON MOWEll
. . . . 11

--~
~
ServiciJJg Lawn

SillS
frevious '!1Cp81'ienoe ~ ~Ius hut
requim£1. &amp;!nemus bene1it PJOkcQI!;
¥00 'WUIII o Ulltll!r in Sales and
Good 'Work +labits &lt;Dnd ttigh Driw
Desill!, Wf MAY BE ,JNTERESTBi) IN YOU I
Our Corpomle Trainer will ·conduct JOiel&gt; 1
1raininJ 'lliis. momb. iThis is ¥OUT DPP!·lrtuni~ I
ty 1o reach your ~II ~1.

lfmctors, 'Mowers,

IFUicr5,.Mumoy,
&lt;Crutsman, M'ID,
Briggs.&amp; Stratton
H-IHoncst
1- .Integrity
S"Servire ·
JOVean;

1stl!otuho left above

Mason GolfCourse
Harvey Rood 'Mum. JNV

. Top&lt;lluaii!Y. iiiJ6.di29'5B55

Jn .._

rn

.......,.•••.,

spcKie

=~=~

'

..

for

·

.

r~=

$64

IOIIaitd.._. . • .,._

per

lj

Ia·

'
75?llliild&lt;••

.

fi-..U-11 dedaler . •

7

MDD•Iald
2SW
-

.q..,_

.._
ZlfGooll..

41Lidl•
;:::::

......
_

.QG
Sla.

• Oorloq
JZ . . . . .

51 -

.ISS

• • IF I

-

...

t4

..

~.as~-. -dad..lollonelit- - . lle1JI*'Iing lold.• ~

ID!Idr--.. -111

••1Ch1111

-bod.

-aldtl!lill'-~

llis -.lal'slJI!IIIIIltild

liJj

llelliliog- _ . . , _ . . . .

lifi**J!I'S .,q leld.
one IIi&amp; - ).
""' .. EJs. -.g II !'Ill' - tl'ld
..,~ (Norlfs)-,...!IOflnor
Ills led.'lbu IIWSI !ird lho llllst 1111¥·
Sldhi&amp;inblr _ _ _ lhe

In IIi&amp; dalj {IIlii -

IEV'~R

1 GO I f'EEl.
LII(E 11M aEIN'
WAJD D!!

s

900 East 'S1Die :sm.t, A1hens

ill

•c ,,

.

s .......

. I

llT

Clll ....... ~ ••

-

.r-r ..... • c-.....
....
....
_
...
----·
- ..........,_. . .
- ..... ·-·
•a...:
·-·
=. · - -·

Advealise
. II ws
•
.m

ISTOfast'Siate Slnlet, h5

I
F}'
Biil"d

7

4F

DIIIII!I:Solllll '
V'
J?

Cll.......,..,..
s
.....,., ,_,....,..,,

+iOilllb I Slo(im ~ IOU!II!t.

$'HKIITJff. Hupl i1 #Mi.
-!¥a 'FnloiDIIIIIIIy.

I

5'-

UT-

IP£21

sa nhyn e
TailaWag
&amp;Aatmal

.__,...,&amp;;a,....,1he _,

. . . - -. - dtlrnr"'' I'IIWS .......
------------------~
OH, RB..AX, SN..IR'Y !! IT AIN'T
1110

DIR''~

1l4AN IT'S ·
ALVA'IS
BEEN !!

·:~ ~·" =~

J*il8rS - ... ·d iD 1D 11111
pdlllr -~ did ,.. ...., llilh a
lllorl 1lu1 ..... ~- ~
_ _ .. · - - - unle9she

C!\ R PE •&lt;.,..: =
SER\ ' (E

--*'iy-.g.,..lodo.

tl'ld Sldh .... splirlla"

ft -

Work

'
«Rea•&lt;mable Rille!;

tU!s. • -

-·--1Dfour.tano.

rGLII:tO, ~ 'rt:lU ~'«»1.,

'E•peri~

iRefereoces Available!

--lad-~!iplilo.

..-Ill

740-591-11044

'-LuiiC .I •
....,

Cellar!W.C.W·~ftm.-11rDI'nQII8ilnstl\'1nW&amp;l*JIIIe.
~lilbrr rnltle......,...-.:t&amp;tor..._

dim. .... Sldh IIIIUid

he...,_ .. lillnofln lhll oull. So,
IIIII JBi lho ...... jiB*. ariitlantlhll IIIII wl '!lin lie tril;k Then cosli
""" ......... tl'ld . . .
pilllllrStq.l.alar, "'"'1ruq&gt; tta ..
.l l ! l ' f t ! FniiJ . . . . - !IOflnBr lin tis-.!.
ft he . . lho dilmond quaen,
S!Uhmoid--12-

I'IDliU.l£fT~~?

@

CO~STRIII:'TID~

CA fAIITY CIPIER

lhll ,..,...

mt -

~ 01111

'lnsured

CORti!ER STOtH

bids,

- - tu dlm,lllowing
tu~t.n~ ;a•e-voAI!3•
.... - . . . . . . . . . (.. ooid)ln

•Prompt and Quality

cCa1Uiiacy Stanley

. . -·

Sed~-We looe
ftlljrllstl'ld--.SanEiape-

Tars'*": $~

Coustna:licwl
• Vlnyi 'S idlng

tft; wile 10 have apectfic ga.IIIS

-tilM&amp; ., h

w

'V HilT D?lltWTO CIBI?IP WI
CII:TI . I

JIYTUISZ BltiiP IHWIS II,

IRUIGVITTO IIVIGI V'll J i l l
WC?ISB 1£W I H. Rll IKBO ." - GIRIO
RWIBDI¥

-•

--15,.......... --

JilL

••;rem

.no obfec-

b.JI aMo 'Pf111Pl'8
vouraelf to be ftedJie llbOulthe W1V you
.miiiJtM them., _ moM open ,.... ate to
YWW ...- al' Wnktng, 1M 8DQII'WI' YDY'I
year~.

find autiOillllf!·

-

NES~R1~11) - "buwan't

heiiiMe to c:.rry your lair -.re Ill 'he
load at WO!tt, b&amp;a1heN • a.
b6ty you might object to ......... tg if it
ian't being
your ...... Be cioapera-

&amp;WOng,......

-·- -·
c»ne

l

I
I' I I t
IREEL

(A!&gt;rii 20) - .......
ttl. wou'l'll!l• t.m ...,...., but l.ll"'l885 you

l1WRUS

enjoy the ....... Slid8 uf liflt and a.lca
a ............. It&amp; lo ...-.:with others, roo
·may be lllbeled as dull lind~­
CWI

lJghten

Claded Ad In Wednesday's

T.
And It Ru For FREE It
Mrketpace!

JUST .we
1DMH'f..

and·"'

ing .
CANCER (June 21-.luly 22) 'bur
at doing 1hifv5 miiY ngw'
. . wou ~ to ~ things. aspeclaiiV - to whelhef 1hera is • batiBr way
of doing ~ job. Don't n.illdB to fBIII'il!wi

a , , •• , ..

..,...-,. wav

LEO (JoJy 211-Aug . 22)

tlanM tt.n ....,.,
~ ordM

SfTTL£ FOI1
Hl.l'O!EOS.

( )

Insured &amp; Bood8it

INTEiiET

~

DARE v.f.

DIEAM?!

28 Ye1111 '&amp;perionce

David Lewis
740-992-mn

--

New llouot ...........

CliO: MARCUM OONS'fltUCTION

71446-lltl .

_. this time . I JQ

• Room Additions • Garages • Vmyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

-·

47239 Riebel ROiid. Long Bonom, OH

' 740-985-4141
CcU: 740-416-1834 .

25+ ,_.~ Frw lifn ' ,

Advertise
in lhis space for
$64 per month

l'l!lr,

tt

ID wtun YDY ~ · your plans and
ilihiiolioi•. becaule lhMe is a p
11 Jl~
. _ )'UUf lliDniii may oome t.dl. to haunt
you, ............ )IOU'te ~ ~ dO
bg&amp; .- you IU!Y'· Lilt r..utts ... the
lltQry'.

UBAA (Sept. D-Oct. II)

7~7

.__,J L-----....IIIZ..--.J

lriftnt

be

..... -from ptting aut of hand.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. . 22) - 8e careful

HE!)(, I'D EV€Iol

Roofing. Siding, Gutters

lg

bel :0:~ you ID do your beat ID keep

.r:DfiMdBIJY

Seamless Gutters

.......

- ·f t -

t.

tudgM&lt;:on~ and ¥t ._.., your IICCOUniS in

Gutteri

I

-.

.....

H&amp;H

I

bit.

ontv --

- , , JE . . . . . . .

-..

up •

GEMfNI ..._, 21-Jwne 20)- E~
in do-lt-youraetf projeCts ..-ound the
hou8e will no1
wuu ~ but
tum out to be fun. How!Mtr, be samt thllt
you knOW what youn, cDing
w.tl
eq.Mpp-1 to handle thingS b8lont ......

be at the roof at
._. of f..atly ill

~

.... ..

,_, mtght

your prot:Mrns, and 1hiS

.:t.u.~~y whld. gets raur
up ~ • -'1. F.oe the t.ct&amp;
wlh .... nun.t amoun1 of liepidldiurii ,
iMd you'IMI your..ellnte.
SCORPIO
22) - Hapo
~ amount of ...,...
. . . . . might be ~ br" • 4arge
. . . at ·NIIIIty. The 1001'\811' you'le .,....
.-d
up to . . . . . . . . . betler
ytJAJ mn Q111: on wtth Ill .
SIIGITIMIUS '(Nov. 23-0oc. 21)- H
you ant poapa;ed to pay 1he priOe to gra1ify your ambtlious ilileiltioota, you ~

'-*

... -=- •coco. ...-.

to--

----- -.

n't haW ..,... probtem ruching your
goP;, Colwwl), 4 WI&gt; • at a fNe

........

~
(Doc.
19)-EWyou_you
... 22..Jon.
__
__

ly, . . . . . people In • ...m and gen.oul 1111hion . ., your maod .. PQIIIttft

nvou""•good_....,....,
.0"......
-

...,..,. ..,.,..._
18) Co- .
?
: idlw n ygu

· _,..,. won1 t.
....... pu1tW.

•

I I _.. M I

,...... -""end dolre - · .you
..,."""' 10 dD .... you . . . .. .-: •

............
........
,., ......_
,_.....
....
... _... ., .......
............ .............·..._.
.

ao -

.,, - '-""

--- --

,....
tiC (l'l!lt.
I

_ _

....,.....

IOUPTONUTZ

....

I'l -111•1
PHALSS

·~~esl'

rr t r r rr1

IIIIJI III
ICIAM IllS Milt! • ', l I , Dl
Wliaer- Ti1F- 9llty -Otilly-1BEik WAYS
'fiaw:.P .... et,• ... old . . qwietl, ....1*11*wry ........... I !ill&amp; 1HEJl( 9/An:t"

ARLO&amp;JANIS

�• a •·TheDcySaae

aww

.-

Z•J

s•

Jl

I

I

,, I

........

MUS excels

Delta, Northwest
directors sign off on
airlines' combination, A6

intedlptep
~·

l

A2

•
•

a-rc...rt;•
Jlirmiie .lJaim:lsllm molhes a JPlt sq, il!lt:n'iTW! !the IYIIASCIIR S• ibMW !FreSh 11i1t :500 &lt;lllltl!l ace
~ at f!lllllenllt loftelll oiilfiimallf!l• 'iW •ill IAM!Jndiile. Ariz.

-,,, l

EVEKYfiDNG·
.
YOUWANTINA TRACtOR

1

·, ' ' •

\

ul

-;-.

• Megs; Wirils lil:llfline lliJIIBI'
•1
llkSee. .at

:'\.&lt;1

,s ~

! l t . . _ I• \)

\PI{ I!

1,-,

\\\\\'·" '' d.uh ... ,· •. t.IH'l t&lt;~llt

:! (H,X

Middleport po6ce, dispatchers receive raises
. . . ••.LIIIs!m
'BREEDOMYDIII!tsENTINEl.t:Oiil

MIDDLEPORT .

· .MiddlqJott Village Council
~.a pay iincrease :for
:POlice &lt;Dfficers, .and mab-

lisbed .a pay .'SCll1c: .Jtnd

.gcbedn'le ifor police ilepattJIDCIIt w.a.ges at Monday
~·s~ularmeeting.
'Die ~e finance oom-

mfucc,

li'COOmmc:nded

~

&lt;Of ltbe 'SCII1e and
iJlliY 'increase .and it passed
council unanimously.

The Bction will pro.vjde a 75-cent raises if ·they are
Police Chief Bruce Swift.
'$] ;per-'h our raise for full- full tinie, and 45 cents if a salaried department head,
time ®fficen; .a nd ·85 cenffi ·they are part time..
will receive a five-percent
per 'heur for 1Jl1111-timc: effiThe pay schedule also increase in his sallll)'.
cers. The wage schedule . calls for longevity raises of , Mayor · Michael Gerlach
.estlihlisbc:s a starting salary six cents :per hour on the said the new wage scale
of ·$1'0.25 :per bour for .full- first, second and third . and the · pay raises will
time :patrolmen and $10 for anniver'&amp;lii)' of the police allow the village to offer a
part-tmle patrolmc:n.
department
employee's competitive wage scale
Dispatchers .are · also hire, and "Six to 12 cent~ per when compared to other
&lt;included in 1he pay raises hourforthe fourth, fifth and villages in the :uea. ln the
and the: w~e schedule. ~ixth liiiiiiversaries. An offi- past, the police department
They will 'Start at $7.30 an cer with a rank of sargent has struggled with keeping
hour, foll.-time, .and $7. 15, will receive an additiooal35 officers on the force due to
pan-time. Those .dispatchers cents per hour, .and the lieu- their leaving Middleport
now on staff will ·receive tenant will receive 60 cents. for a village that · pays a

higher wage.
"This, brings our department's pay scale closer to a
standard in the area,"
Gerlach Sllid. "We hope that
will make us more competitive in finding and keeping
good ·officers ."
Village employees in
Middleport.
including
police officers and di~-patch­
ers, are also eligible for
health insurance. The village does not charge
employees any premium for
a single plan. ·

Changes in
Pomeroy code
enfoo.;ement
111' liEn! S

IT

IISERGENT~VSBrnNEl.COM

INsiDE
• ILt1 lllllls.-n gas

·= ..

ICiilllpaaiiBtlyilmrdt•l•.- •

• OAGC. •Al
ii!J:I
Ni

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
~·

•-.a.:·~
·

·i"'2S!lfK
-~dmle
·"I W ;a bad
.__.
I've ti a .uiQB 10 ~
fp
bad: ... p...e my ram a
PapBI
ch!lft!l!OIO wiD pmes,~ Lee
CJDly dooc ~ time in '10 Wd. .,.~ diem twice
~ aad avoid Cbcir first in .a _., I ~ .mrt it
. ~ 5Wecp ... boiDc took 10 be WllOeUful.
to die AdJlrtics siooe 1hea apin dley bd a
&amp;esh 1'()1!1Wn,g report oo
So pcemher 191!9.
me, too. At dJe mtt, 1 Aid,
Aft« a 4miltule delay 'Let's :attack lhem · die
.at die stan, Lee' .(l-01 srme
w.ay.' ADd it
,got hii k.lm- 1IIOihd.~
maes out of die cold. 38
Lee tdittd dJe first Dine
~

..,..........y

dega:es wid! a ·28-&lt;de,gme
wind cbill at p!IM"time IIIII back iDto Clevd.llld'li
warm dugout, allowing
oaly ooe run and two bits
over eight innings• .lJte
left-biDder 1l1l'IICk out
eight without a walk.
wOlking in u intermittmt
wind-whipped mix of
snow md rain.
"k didn't botbc:c me. but

"'-'·-• wouldn•t wlllll
[ deuuitay
to be a bitt« today," -Lee
f1aicL "I just tried 10 tJnUw
a strike and hopefully
they'd uy to bit a bome
nan. It waso 't going out in
dial wind.~
Indirns manager Eric
nr...a
J·'--.. tbe
...Qage up ......,..

=e::!

~t~~

=

-·"v
._.of

m

in. a - . Jaly 9-li7,

l006. -· Bd hJHLeWJt
liD lbing ga a·ii. . .
triple and six doables. -Indians iDitc:n; went 0-3
widui l6.16 ERA over die
~ dime pmes. AD
dm:le S1'.alta's (Paul Bynl.
C.C. S:*adli• aarJ F.aw.to
Carmooaj. did oot last

mcm: darn 3 1-3 imi~s.
1he last lime dw happened 'll'aS Srpl. 2S-27,
19117,
when
Tom
~ Rid! Yett and
Q:Jrt.nd batmni befcm:
Ken Sduom did it aplmlt
Travili
Buck
.....led the At!gels. ... fbkbnd fell
--r
bet1ween first bawmaa to S-1 on dJe Mlld.
'
Ryu Garb aad the foul
line to open lbe fourdL
Buck scoml 00 a we&amp;
grouod sin,gle by Ellis.
Shortstop JhoDny PeAita
tried 10 mike a bare-bandcd ~ md lhrow, but
wuldn't h•ndle die wt
· Lee ID
dleo
gotP double
· D.iic
Battoo
bit into
play and ..mn:d die bit It
men be faced
A favorable bouace
ClOUid lla¥e lw II ri"w
OHland bit illlo u out.
"''d love ·t o lhll"l' a oobittu or ped«t p~Qe.~

Lee said.

t1111R

"Jti&amp;blliiOW, ·it's

i"'P*' ' ' - -

liD

jut F ' - ~· .
.· .
lucked out,"
.' lilvil HIT s"tw 24 ·

hgdj"' fom:ut.
"We

il

=d~ . wu

poled 10 bit at 1:16
{Lm.), tbeD a liale IIIK.
We didn't WIDt bolh ttadiDa llitdlen to warm up,
tbea"have to siL We fillllly
jut~ to go out aad
tty iL..
Lee didn't miDd waitiol
liD llllke his ICCODd straillat
.llnJDI start against die Ks.
On April 6 in Oa!dand, be
W.kled four bits ..t au
~ run over 6 2-3
innings in a 2-1 victory.
That win was his first
since July 1 - during a
season in which the filimer
18-pme 1Vinna' swtec1 011

..,..dla....,am•.;.
tbild,

* ·-

.IIJi·- ·. , .

..-, ptie Oe: Tat h l0 '-1
·
Oad
0,Mjja ,__..
(0-'f).'D:.....,iCIIin4
.... .
J~ .._._
lit b)' a P-4 8111
Si Ae. ·~£II .
•
~

by Qa,.tjw
·hdicd 1D11R it 3-l ia die
- · Cano11 siqhd ad
GaMin bobbled a sacrifice
by Alldy Mane. dice...._
wildly to fll'lt, 'ICodiag
Cll'lll'

CarroU to third. Siranore .
followed with an RBl sin- ~~:::!:;;;;;=~;;.;~~~~
gle to llCIIt«. .
. "'Chad hpttkd, kept us ill
· die pme," OpkJapd manager Bqb Geren said.
.~~a-.~nuz
sz s
the disabled list wid! an "11uee runs (allowed) is
abdomiMI strain. lhen usually eiiOilgh. but not
507 Mla1y lleighls •
went only S-8 with a 6.29 with Lee today.~
f'onleloy, Ott
ERA. He even was seat
N•tn: The A's have
back to die minors to try made at least ODe emil" ia
(740)-.mt
IIIII rcpin die form that six straight gameS\ their
Tal r:r.1-1n I I »G3
luld woa 44 games ·o ver the longest streak since doing
I

, .

ONIEMILE WISI'OF A1HENS
ON ROl.TIIf50/tU_ ATHENS,OH
,.. . . .:n::;9

ViiSITOUR NEWHS'fli..OCAIIIION

JDQW loGAN m:i 5.E.
~OH ·

. 7.SS.21Z1

-.nt-1917
"'W'-l'riml';yOw,...Pi' awEEpc~i...IPitf.-I'~'Sipe !dor£""

1ihtg8mmunoed.

s.e ... ..u

• f'!lqah IQ Shriellts
for tPDSI :secol•llitalf'
.liSIJDH:elJi&amp;•..k .... .U

:.

ft~us1ebi2DesW'I

bil'lhdaj. See . . A3
• SazJhem tb or Roll.
'See . . A3
• Gallia Meigs CAA
dllers bef,a:ifil assis!F&gt;li!Oe.
:See . . AJ

• J.:ocal Briefs.

·:seer. AS

• 4JJdge ·says Marshall

must ID sl1!ldents
·:i;J~ing :case.
Seer.,t AS

I'IM._•_ d,.illool!l
...
'• AS

Phillips will
keynote
Democratic
dinner

but a program
Mock accident students
which began at 9 a.m. and
at the end of the
. highlights · ended
school day, From 9 a.
to.
noon, eight students were
removed from
harsh realities randomly
their classrooms by the
ln.

Grim Reaper himself who
was dressed in black. This
was meant to emphasize
RACINE Yesterday that someone dies every 24
students. from Southern minutes from an alcohol
High
School gathered on related fatality.
BY lltuw J. REED
their school's parking lot to
After a presentation by
BREEDOMYDAILYSEN11NEL.COM
witness a head-on collision Hector Flores, a drug and
MIDDLEPORT
involving classmates, one alcohol counselor, students
Debbie IPhilli.ps. a candidate of which did not "survive." exited onto the· parking lot to
for th.e Ohio House uf during a mock, motor veht- see two..cars which had hit
~liC:IIta.tivcs, will 1x: t!!t cle accident just a f~w d~s - head"Cin in _tl!e par!&lt;:ing ·lot
keynote speaker at the before prom.
while some of their classMeigs County DciiiOCDitic
~ accident a~~ stu.~ mates were trapped in the
Party's Jeffellion-Jack:son dent s dramatized death
vehicles. Moments later a
Dinner on Saturday eveoinjl. was meant to bighli~ht the caravan of emergency vehilbe dinner will he held at conseq_uc:nces of drinking cles including Syracuse's
the Riverbend Arts Council and drivmg as well as the Engine 34 Racine's Engine
in the Middleport Masonic reality .~t ¥Dung people 27, the ' Syracuse and
~~le, according to Party are not mvmc•j&gt;le. Mem~s Pomeroy Squad, the Racine
Chamnan Henry Hunter. of the Syrru:use and Racme Police Department and Ohio.
Hunter was elected party Volunteer F1re Depart~pents State
Highway
Patrol
Southern High School Junior Oax Holman plays t~e part of·
chairman last month.
· organized the. event ,
descended upon the scene.
The
event,
e.?tttled .
Students watched as the victim during a mock head-on collision meant to promote a
Phillips is a member of
sober and safe prom experience. Racine Chief of Po.hce
.Atbc:os City Council, and is "Shattered Dreams was
a SBc.noNs- u P.ums
Curtis Jones is pictured in the foreground .
making a second run for the more than an assembly of
" Me 1iee A1 t••:t. AS
94th
Hause
Annie's Mailbox . A3
District. It is
the seat now
Calendars
A3
'
held by State
BY CtiARLENE HOEFLICH
prise visit to the Meigs Senior
Classifi~
B3-4
Rep. Jimmy
HOEFLICHOMYD~LYSENDNELCOM
Cenier
last month t() observe the .
Stewan, R•
respite program in opemtion.
Comlcs
Aibany .
POMEROY - "I think when
McDaniel said that she felt her
Stewan narI
discussed
Alzheimer's
disease
visit
brought to the attention of
Editorials
rowly ·defeatA4
and
the
devastating
effect
that
it
the
legislators
not only the' need
ed Pbillips in
is
having
on
our
families
and
for
respite
programs
as the
Movies
As Pl.._. 2006. The the community, it really caught Meigs County Councilsuch
on Aging
district
is
Obituaries
their
attention,"
said
Kathy
offers,
but
the
problems
of living
made
up
of
Meigs,
Athens,
As
McDaniel,
coorQinator
of
the
with
someone
with
Alzheimers.
Morgan
and pan of
B Section · Washington counties.
.Sports
Partnelli in Care program at the She is the caretaker of her mother wl)o. has the disease.
"This is the year the Meigs Senior Center.
Weather
McDaniel
was
talking
about
.
Meigs County was singled out
Submitted pholo
Democrats will win back
•,
lhe statehouse for the work- her April 8 trip to Columbus to for the visit with . Stewart and Kathy McDaniel , nurSe coordinator for the Partners
c ....... ow..v.aeyr III '•Co. ing men .and women of this meet with Representative Padgett because It IS one of OnJt in Care program at the Meigs Senior Citizens
area," Chairman Henry Jimmy S~wll'l and Senator Joy a few such programs i~ Center, poses . for a picture with Representative
1bc: trip was arranged
th
Ohi Th other
Hunter
said.
"Debbie Padgen.
by a . rqli'CSCntative of the
ou eastern
.~
Jimmy Stewart alter ,discussing with him the probPhillips is a proven fighter. .Alzheimcr's Association Ken factor was McDamel 8 ftrst- lams of Alzheimer's Disease and its effects on famn • - " 2 s,AI '$teW:at' !llho .had made a sur- " • • • - S11l1r are. AS· ilies and communities .
BSERGENTCIMYDAILYSENTlNEL.COM

WEATHER

-- INDEX

Legislators listen to senior care story

Bs

I

s

°· .

.

a

•

'

.

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="542">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9993">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="13834">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="13833">
              <text>April 14, 2008</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="160">
      <name>roach</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
