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MUS excels

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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
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-~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
~

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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 ......,..

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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*' ' ' - -

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

hgdj"' fom:ut.
"We

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=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

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Si Ae. ·~£II .
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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
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ONIEMILE WISI'OF A1HENS
ON ROl.TIIf50/tU_ ATHENS,OH
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ViiSITOUR NEWHS'fli..OCAIIIION

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bil'lhdaj. See . . A3
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• 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

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The Daily Sentinel

Page.A2

LocAL • STATE

Tuesday, A(ri 1.5. aoo8

A·N NIE'S MAILBOX

•

Striving to make a difference

'fW lay, Aprill5
RUTLAND - Rutland
·. Vill~e Council, special
· :meetmg to discuss person. ·neL 7 p .m., oouncil's cliambers.

Clubs
and
.
.
orgamratiom

'l

'

Tyler Utile, left, and Ben C!Wiek were the shoM:ase ·.m,
. .
"·! • IPI ICE
ners in the. JnfoTTTlation Technology, Netwo!t Sys" IllS, all- BedrtMJics ~Left 'lll right, Ty Myers, Thomas 10ein,
egO!)' with their "Data flecovery"·project. ·
Jr., Cornelius English, and Austin Dunfee .

laoee Arms and Nathaniel Davis were the showcase winners in the. Horticulture category with their 'Wagon
Bench" project.

excels
intechprep
• •
_· competition
I.

.,

!POMEROY Meigs Network Systems categocy
High School tech prep stu- with their "Data Recovecy"
dents participated in the . project.
2008 Washington-MorganStudents
. earning
"
Superior"
included:
in the
Meigs Consortium College
Electronics
category:
Austin
Tech Prep Showcase held
recently at the Washington Dunfee, Cornelius English,
State Community College 1'y Myers. and Thomas
Klein. Jr. with '\Robotics";
in Marietta
Other school conweting in the Senior Health
. in the eight different show- Technology
categocy:
case areas were Washington Samantha DeQuasie and
·County Career Center and Malinda Barnhart with
Morgan High School.
"Non-Blood Specimens"; in
Dennis Eichinger, Tech the
Junior
Health
Coordinator
at Technology
categocy:
Prep
S!JI..te Alyssa Longstreth, Decca
Washington
Community
College, Owen, and Kayla Russell
"Obesity";
in
reported that 315 students with
,participated in !54 projects. Horticulture:
Brittany
Junior Health Technology Varian and Bethany Lee
with the largest number of . with "Squirrel Den;" Corey
student projects had 36 pro- Jarvis and H8!Ulab Wtlliams
jects. The second largest with "Wishing Well," and
number of projects was for Eric Wood and Evan
Automotive with 26, Senior Yeauger with "PPann!r"; and
Jlealth Technology with 23, in Information Thcbnology:
Electronics
with
23, Interactive Media: Alisha
Horticultw:e
with
21, Ch,apman, Ashley Mayes.
Interactive Media with 18, · and Colten iBlanlrensbip
Networking with 5, and with "Promotion of the
Memcal
~~ Ohio River liar Company.'.'
Stuj!mas
· •
M~ IIICIIt 'Wii11 l.
Meigs students being . ""Excellent" • in
·• 8le
named Showcase Winners Electronics ~ .inclw1./
in their respective cate- e4Jonatban ·BIUIIton.Josbua
gories included Lacee Arms Burnem and Ernie Welsh
and Nathaniel Davis in the with "Tesla Coils"; in the
Horticulture category with Junior Health Technology
their "Wagon Bench" pro- category: Shawntay Garnes
ject and Ben CopPick an!! and Stephanie Donaldson
til; wiih ''AriorcXia" i11dlilijlnaTyler . b ittle · m
Information Technology, Lydic, Samantha Pridemore,

Interactive
Superior: Left t9 right, -'shier 'Mayes,
Cotten Blankenship, and Alisha Chapman.

Senior Health Technology Superior: Lllft1D right, Samantha
DeQuasie and Malinda Barnhart.

c::
,_,seap_e
fami

Myen wiih "1:

z

C

:•• w.ilt

~;

":; Dedi

"ilh1ey Smithd

'Side Table" ·;and .Carrie

Phelps with ~w~ Around
Tme Bench. '
Earning excellent in
information Technology:
Interactive Media: Joe
Rosier with "Promotion of a

-mw Mel~ ~Ounll' Dog
Shelter;

m

Horticulture 'Superiors: LBft 10 right, kneeling, Be1hany Lee,
Hannah Williams, and · Evan Yeauger; and standing,
Britlany Varian, Eric Wood, and Corey Jarvis
ing of "Good" in the Senior
Health Technology category
included
Michelle
Scarbrough and Jess ica
Sbects with "Butterfly
Technique .
. for
Phlebotomy~;
in J.unior
Health Technology: Ontna
Quillen and Bobbi Riffie
with "Bulima" and Destiny
Dotson and Shannon Elliott
with
"Trimester
of
~gnancy";
· and
in

and Deanna Cundiff with
"Massage Therapy"; in 1he
Horticulture

Junior Health TedmolQQY Supei'ior.
to rjgtit, ~
longsliedi, Becca Owen, and ~il!lwselt

lnf~o!!. ~

Infonnation

Black with "Promotion of
Wrres and Wood."
All Showcase Winners of
each categoly will be invited to the annual Senior
Recognition Dinner May 2
where they will be awarded
. prizes.

'fecllnoJogy: ·

lnteraettve Media: Brittany

Landfills growing as coal-plants try·for cleaner air
CONESVILLE (AP) . Near AEP's existing plant
The state has approved two in eastern.Ohio's Conesville,
landfills and is ~;onsidering a convoy &lt;if dump bUCks
another. four to bwy mil- moves . the blaCk ash and
lions of tons of ash and dried gray sluilge 10 a new
slud,ge produced at coal- landfill. Columbus-based
AEP, Fu:stEnergy and other
fired power plants.
When Ohio's coal-based Ohio utilities have built simpower plants updated their ilar landfills to accommoenvironmental safeguards to date these millions of tons of
comply with federal rules. sludge and ash.
they reduced pollution com"It's pan of the whole
ing from smokestacks. But process. You have the
they also kept more poilu- scrubber on one end and a
tion on the ground so, landfill on the other," said
instead of billowing into the Mark Durbin. a firstEnergy
air, more of the waster is spokesman.
carted away from the plants
The new landfills are lined
in dump pucks.
·
with synthetic materials and
"h 's obyiolisly another clay to keep the wastHrom
problem · wl tlf &lt;:mil," said groulldwlltei Cuinpanies
Sandy Buchanan, director still IIIOIIitor. 'the groundwaof Ohio Citizen Action and ter ·for :soxic metals tblt can
critic of American Electric be in the waste and might
Power's plans for a new seep into the warer supply.
coal plant in Meigs County
The state ~ has
in southeast Ohio.
· approved plans to build· two
"You end up with all this JandfiJls and is considering at
ash and slud~e with coal least four more. Near
that you don t have with Fir$tEnergy's
plant
in
Jefferson County in eastern
other kinds of power." .

Ohio, the state Environmental cut in sulfur dioxide emisProtection Agency approved sions and a 61 · per~nt cut in
a site that would !l!ke a~ much nitrogen oxide emissions by
as 1.6 million tons of sludge 20 I 5. The aim is to reduce
each year. •
· j he amount of .smog, acid
"It has to go -somewhere," rain and soot tied to power
Durbin said.
production.
A 2005 rule from tlie U.S.
An Ohio EPA official said
EPA required a 57 percent dumping the waste in land-

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S4gnUpOnll,.l _...__ _

Ol:bt eatlipolti mail!' lrihune,
Gtbt Joint Jltasant i\tg(sttt
and The Daily Sentinel
have launched a new page every
Friday ealled ''Faith and Family".
If you have a testimonial story,
life-changing event about yourself
or even a poem tbat you would
like to share please email to:

started by small fan

CINCINNATI (AP) bas left our community griefThe fire that killed two ·fire- stricken, we .must Still evalufighters was causedby a mal- are the situation and apply
functioning f(lll and had the appwptiate law," Deters
nothing to do with marijuana said. "Sometimes the law
being grown in the basement, does not COil'llSpond with the
· enonnity of the tragedy."
a prosecutor said Monday.
lf the plants had conColerl!in Township fire
tributed to the deaths of the Capt. Robin Broxtennan,
furliMters, the homeowners 37, and frrefighter Brian
could have been charged Schira, 29, died in the blaze
with
manslaughlel:, that destroyed the two-story,
Hamiltun County Prosecutor four-bedroom home April 4 .
Joe Deters said. Instead. a Homeowners Matt and
charge of cuJti, at ing mari- Sharyn Cones es~ ap .
juana will be presented to a
Deters said it wa; .) 1~at
grand jury later this week from a malfunction,
. fan
after investigators determine i n a nearby cedar . oset
how much pot the five plants where orchids were being
grown in the basement that
would have yielded.
"While this tragic si tua tion started the fire.

•

• IO • m&amp;Utdd. . . . wlhWeblnlil!
• CUllom St.t f1gl: • new&amp;, ....,... &amp; morel

'

Prosecutor: Fire that killed
fin~fighters

fills is better than putting
into the Skies.
"We're taking this materi- .
al and containing it in a protected facility," said Andrew
Booker, a supervisor in the
agency' s solid waste di vision. "I think it's unambiguously an improvement...

•AEWJT-..... .....
•lnltwttU·· •iV · t!etl&gt;yourblltltyllll

kkelly@mydailytribune.com
nfields@mydeiiJregister.mm
hoeftich@mydailysentinel.com
Li~it your story to
500-750 words.
Please include a phone·number
in your e,mail.
•

,,

.

Tuesday, Apri115,

.Community Calendar
Publicmedi

t
l

PageAa

BY THE BEND.

The Daily Sentinel

'

Wftlnesday, Aprillrfi
. POMEROY
Middleport Literary Club, 2
p .m. at the Pomeroy
·Library. Group discussion
·o n "The Awakeningfl by
·Kate . Chopin.
Olita
. Heighton, hostess.
S!duday, April 19
R.AUNE
Pomeroy/Racine Lodge
. 164 special meeting, 8 a .m.
: Degree work in the-Entered
· A,pprentioe .degree on four
: ·candidates. Breakfast at 7
: a.m. with degree work to

follow. Call Randy Smith
at 508-0816.
with

C!';,Aprilll

BY KA1HY .. tee=· •

lUPPERS PLAINS Spc:cia! meeting of East-em
mgb
School
M.usic
Boosters, 6:30 p.m., music

.MID IIAACY SuGIIR

~ A=n'e· Did you
~ 'dlat young -people

room.

. _ ~ lll8ke .a positive diff~athc world? In fact,

Church events

~: o f young people
~~ every year, and
s.t.nby, Aprill9
the number continues to
MIDDLEPORT - Kelly
Please let ypur readers
Perry will be singing 7 p.m . . know about the 20th Annual
at the Middlepon Church &lt;&gt;f
Global Youth Service Day,
the Nazarene. Everyb wel- April 25-27, 2008.
come, refreshments followDuring tbis three-day
ing.
-event, held in the United
·S Marcby, April lei
States and around the world,
CARPENTER -first young people, with the help
oombread .festival
at of mentors, parents, teachCarpenter ·BI\Ptist Church, ·ers .and volunteers, will
Ohio 143. Crafts, food, . address community needs
mountain bike race, live through servi~ and servi~­
gospel music, free train leaming projects that target
rides, free vendor space. climate change, education,
Cornbread
cook-off. child obesity, urban decay
Contact Pastor Whitt Akers, and many -other issues.
591-1236 for rules.
l'his .event spollights what
today' s youth are doing to
make a differen~ in the
world. When given •t he
opportunity, young people
.w;e
great assets and
resources to their communities, provimng unique per·
.Plants." Watkins is the spectives and skills.
·
l'ot"
more
information, your
supervisor for the . gardens
can
visit
located on •Blennerhasserl readers
www.ysa.org,
or
write
to
Island near Belpre, Ohio.
Youth
Service
America,
1101
Shirley Hamm, county
contact person for Region 11, i Sth St. N.W., Suite 200,
announced that the cost of Washington, D.C . 20005.
the event is $15 per person They .can also find volunteer
which includes lunch. A halfday registration for those
who do not want lunch costs
$8. Registmtions are 10 be
sent to Margaret MIDT3y by
April i6. O .A.G.C . members
may invite guests. Members
are reminded to bring plants,
old arranging materials, containers, magazines, etc. for
the sales1ables.
Set-up for ·the event will
take pi~ at 6:30 p.m. on
April 25 at the First Soutbem
Baptist Chu~ch . Anyone
with questions should call
Hamm at 949-2256.

grow.

: O.A.G.C. spring
·meeting announced
POMEROY - The Ohio
: ·Association of Garden
: Clubs' Region II spring
· meeting will be held 11n
: Saturday, April 26 at the
: First Southern Baptist
: ·Church on Pomeroy Pike.
· Registration begins at
: 8:30 a:m ., followed by the
: business meeting at 9 :30
. ·am. The ,speaker seheduled
. for the morning session will
: be Dave Me Shaffrey, an
: associate biology ~rofessor
: at Marietta College, whose
· _topic is "Damselflies and
&gt;Dragonflies." McShaffrey
: · co-edited a book about dam. selflies and dragonflies for
. the Ohio Biology Survey.
The afternoon speaker
will be Linda Watkins,
.whose
topic
is
" Biennerhassett Gardens'
Native
and
Heirloom

opportunities in their commurutJes at www,serveoetorg.
Steve
Culbertson,
Pluit II md
Youth
Senice Amelica
Dear Steve CUlbertson:
Thanks so much for letting
us on~ again mention this
worthwhile project. We hope
all our readers, young or old,
will check out the websites '
you mention and become
mvolved in local volunteer
programs. It's also a wonderful educational opportunity
for teachers and students.
Dear. Amur I find your
·column quite helpful and was
wondering if you are aware
of any medical solutions for
getting rid of body hair.
I have tried the traditional
ways of shaving and waxing
(that hurt), but they're not
enough. I really have an
overabundan~ everywhere
on my body, including my
back and ears. I swim quite
a bit at our local YMCA,
and there was a·receot family swimming event where
one of the topics of pool
conversation was excessive
hair. It made me very
uncomfortable.
If you could please advise
me, it will be most appreciated. - lllillois Man
Dear Dliaois: Some ·
excess body bait, especially .
on women, can be due to a
hormonal imbalan~. See

em,

your doctor for a complete
checkup and mention your
con~m s. Otherwise, the
best methods are the traditiona! ones, such a5 shaving,
waxing and depilatories, and
yo11 might be a good candi~
date for laser removal or
electrolysis, which will give
you more permanent results.
Dear Annie: You want to
know how kids feel when
Mom leaves the marriage?
My parents div~ when I
was 17. Mom cheated on Dad
with a · man who killed his
wife during a custody dispute. Mom testified as a character witness in his defense.
Mom was caring and
involved when I was young.
After I turned 13, the main
attention I got came in the
form of rules and punishments. Annie, all I ever did
was get straight A's. I never
touched drugs or alcohol or
messed around with boys.
I don't blam·e her for
divorcing Dad. He was diffi_cult. We kids alternated
one week at each parent's
house. However, sinCe my
academic, athletic and
social life was so full, I
.asked whether I could move
monthly rather than weekly.
Mom insisted she couldn't
have me .around for a whole
month at a time because I
was "impossible to live
with." So I stayed with Dad.

I fin'\llY had to tell my
mother I didn't want to bear
from her anymore because
it only made me unhappy.
Now, years later, she wants
to mend the relationship. I
told her to pay Dad back for
a fair share of my college
tuition. (She received a sizable inheri~ and can well
afford it.) But apparently her
feud with my father is. more
imponant than a relationship
with me. Sometimes
Mom is the Cb •!!r
Dear Sometimes: Too
bad Mom ·i·s more interested
in herself than in you. Our
condolences.
Annie's Snippet tor
Income 'lilx Day ·(cndit
humorist F.J. Raymond):
"Next to being shot at and
missed, nothing is really
· quite as satisfying as an ·
income tax refund."
· Allllie 's Mailboz is writ-

ten by Katlty Mitclri!U ami
Marcy Sagar, longtilne editors of tire Ann tn•"~s
column. Pleose e-mail yoar
qaestions to onniesmail-

box@coi!ICPSLrret, or 'Write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL

60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbo;r:,
arul rwul jf!fii.Ju'f!s .by adler

Creators Syt~dioote writers
arul ollltoonists, visa tire

·Creators Syll4icllh Web
poge Ill www.crealon.coJIL

Riffle celebrates 90th birthday ·
Bernice Riffle did some line dancing
and clogging with the Swinging
Seniors before obseiving her 90th
birthcjay with the dancers Monday.
The group presented tier with a tier
of cupcakes to share during a social
gathering that followed the dance
session. Mrs. Riffle has been dancing
with the group for many years and
apparently is detennined to keep
right on dancing. Surrounding her for
a picture were dancers from the left,
Blondena Rainer, Hazel Wilson,
'honoree, Joan Y@y anil Alice·
Wamsley, and baCk, Lee and Don
Young, Shirley Simmons, judy
McDaniel, Myrna VanMeter, Bill and
Linda Mclain, Eva King, and Alice
La~om . The Swinging Seniors meet
every Monday from 1 to 2 p.m. at the
Mulberry Community Center. Anyone,
!1£1nior or not, can join the· group:

:Prep&amp;qng students for

:post secondary so~
The
: MARIETTA
· OACHE and Was~£on
.:state C ommuni!)'
ge
· will host Charles Ramos of
ACT on Wednesday, May 7
at 6 p .m. to present · an
evening workshop entitled
"Preparing Our Students for
Post Sec11ndary Suc~ss."
. Ramos will discuss the
results of the ACT National
Cuniculum Survey and as
· well as the college readiness
of the class of 2007 in Ohio.
The purpose of the f
National
Curricul ullj'
Survey is to "define the gap
. between what middle and
· high school teachers are
currently teaching and what
college instructors believe
is important for entering
students to know."
· Ramos's presentation will
focus on the results of the
NCS and provide action steps
to tackle problem areas &lt;&gt;f the
high school curriculum.
The second. half of Mr.

2008

Ramos's presentation will
(II'Ovide infomllltioo ~~~-

the perfurmance of 1
200'7 graduating !ICniors wbo
look 1he ACT as sophomores, .

=---' SUbm- photo

juniors, or · seniors. Topic
areas will include: academic
achievement, measuring college readiness and early iodicators of college reaitioe~s.
RACINE - The Southern Local
ACT is an independent,
School
District re~ntly released its
not-for-profit organization
honor
roll
for the third nine weeks
that provides more than a
grading
period.
hundred
assessment,
Seniors, all A's, Morgan Brown,
research, infOrmation, and
Lindsey
Buzzard, Erin Chapman,
program management serRyan
Chapman,
Heather Cunmff,
vices in the broad areas of
El-Dabaja,
·
Chelsea
Freeman,
Sarah
education and workforce
Courtney Ginther, Abigail Jenkins,
development.
This presentation is free Ashley Weddle. A and B, Teddy
and open to any area educa- Brown, Tyler Circle, Ericka Cogar,
tors and educational profes- Stephanie Cunmff, J.R. Grady,
sionals. Light refreshments December HensJ.ey, Mikayla Krider,
Matt Lehew, Krystle Marler, Butch
will be se!Ved.
For more information, or Marnhout, Wes Riffle, Ashley Robie,
ro pre-register for this event, Anthony Shamblin, Andrew Smeck,
please contact Amy Denni.s Kaylyn Spradling.
Juniors, all A's, Merri Collins, Bryan
at adennis@wscc.edu or
Chris Holter, Drew Hoover,
Harris,
740-374-8716.
E_ll!ma f{unter, J()~ha Jon~s; !!rillany
Meldali, Chelsea Pape, Samantha
Patterson, Weston Roberts, Jaime
Warner. A and B, John Brauer, Tiffanie
li&gt;ecm, Brody Flint, Kyle Goode, Paul
Powell, April Ricbartls.
Sophomores, all A' s, Michael
Manuel, Cyle Rees, Breanna Taylor,
CH,ESHIRE - The GalliaThe Ohio Benefit Bank is Lynzee Tucker, Katie Woods. A and B,
:Meigs Community Action an internet~ counselor- Cbeyene Dunn, Jame~ Evans, Dustin
:Agency .is now offering a assisted service designed· to Salser, Dustin Smeck, Jordan Taylor,
·new benefit assis~ ser- assist clients overcome the Lindsay Teaford, Ashley Walker.
vice. "''bis service will great- devastating effects of poverFreshmen, all A' s, Eric Buzzard,
&lt;ly enhanoe our ability to ty and to help strengthen Zachary ManueL A and B, Trevor
.serve the people of Gallia ,and their economic condition . Flint, Joey Forester, Mickale Hill,
Meigs Counties," explained Our counselors will guide Charley Pyles, Braxton Thorla, Adam
• Tom
Reed,
Executive individuals through the pro- Warden, TYler Wolfe.
Eighth grade, all A's, Emily Ash,
Director
and
Sandra gram, assisting. in the appli: Edwanis, Division Director cation process for progruns
they may be eligible for. The
.:for Community Action.
Benefit
Bank provides an
. · The Ohio Benefit Bank
· ·was initiated by Governor easy and efficient way to pro·. Ted Strickland for the pur- vide benefits to those wbo
,pose of helping low and need them most, by provid. -moderate income, Ohioans ing the client with a comput: :claim taX cremts and public er generated application for
·:benefits such as food/nutri - them to present to an agency,
' ·tion programs, health care business, association, etc. for
; ·and prescription drug pro- potential benefits.
Screenings are free and
; grams, child care support
; :programs, and energy as sis- available by appoinhnent at
' ;tance programs, some of any of our (4) locations:
859
Third
: ·which are currently provid- Gallipolis,
446- 1018;
; ·ed · through Community Avenue,
· :Action.
Benefi t
Bank Cheshire, 8010 N. SR 7,
:;Counselors are available, by 367-7341 ; Middleport, 1369
:·appointment, in all Gallia- Powell Street, 992-2222·;
•
: ' Meigs Community Action and"'Middlepon. 122 N. ' tl • • I '
Second Avenue, 992-5266.
::Agency Offices.
•

S.O UTHERN, HONOR ROLL

Gallia-Meigs CAA
offers benefit assistance

.

'
•

Alison Brown, Olivia Searls, Hope
Teaford, Natalie Wood . A and B,
Martina Arms, Ceairra Curran.
Andrew Ginther, Chase Graham,
Amber Hayman, Katelyn Hill, Marcus
Hill, Kelsey Holsinger, ·Chel sea
Holter, Miranda Holter, Kelly
Humphrey, Emily 'Manuel, Morgan
McMillan, Clayton Moore, Emma
Powell, Jessica R.iffle, Andrew
Roseberry, Abbie Williams. .
Seventh grade , all A's, Timoth y
Elam, Austin Johnson, Jennifer
McCoy, Shelby Pickens, Stefani,e
Pyles, Kody Wolfe. A and B,
Christopher Chaney, Angelica Eynon,
Cole Graham, Megan McGee, Adam
Pape, Cody Taylor, Whitney Weddle.
Sixth grade, all A's, Baylee Hupp,
DJ~ Sellers, Chris Yeater. A and B,
Ryan Butcher, Ryan Dau ~ heny,
Darien Diddle, Brandon Grueser,
Cameron Harmon, Fernando . Herrera,
Jordan Huddleston, Lacey Hupp,
Katie Jenkins, Nathan Leamond,
Taylor McNickle, Jamie O ' Brien,
Ca..o;ey Pickens, Allison Taylor, Chris
Rayburn.
Fifth grade, all A's, Ashley Baker,
Matt Folmer, Bradley McCoy, Chais
Rodriguez, Tristen Wolfe. A and B,
Dustin Burns, TYler Casey, Brandon.
Counts, Sophie Gui other, Addie
Hayman, Jacob Hoback, Caitlyn
Holter,
Cassie
Roush,
Ryan
Schenkelberg, Gage Smith, Bethany
Thei ss, Cameron Yates.

Fourth grade, all A' s. Ma'tlison
Maynard, Jansen Wolfe. A and B, Kari
Arnold, Alison Deem, Sydney Diddle,
Jeremy Dutton, Tanner Grubb.
Cameryn Hannon, Parker Hill , Theron
Johnson, Demitrious Lamm, Ashlev
Lickliter, Joe Morris, M&amp;ddy Quillen,
Sylvia Richards, Gabe Riffle, Andrew
Shockey, Elizabeth Teaford . Crew
Warden, Elizabeth Wolfe.
Third grade, all A's, Clayton Boso,
Sierra Cleland, Abbi Dailey, Daniel
Dunfee; Marissa Johnson , Marlee
Maynard, Trey Pickens, Macie
. Rodri guez , Crenson Rogers. Sara
Schenkelherg. A and B, Adzuki
Albano, Katie Barton, Tyler Custer,
Talon Drummer, Jordan Fisher, Leia
Gilmore, Gage Hensley, Eli Hunter,
Lucas Hunter, Blake Johnson, Haley
Musser, Paith Teaford, Tanner Thorla,
Eddie Willi s.
Second g rade, all A's, Katie
Butc her, Kali Cleland, Sydne y
Cleland, Jo\i sha Ervin, Hannah
Evans, M ika yla Grubb, Spencer
Harri son, Andee Hill. John Hoback,
Kyle Law son, Sailor Warden. A and
B, Kendra Barton, Laramie Blevins,
Chandler Cummins, William Elston,
Andrew Evans, Miranda Greenlee,
Jaide n Hood , Dameson Jenkins,
Lauren Lavender, Arianna Lick.liter,
Austin Mc Kibben, Rand y Moore,
Emil y Phillips, Rachael Rice, Jacob
Riffle, Autumn Ritchart, Jane Rou sh,
Kendra Wh ite. Conner Wolfe.

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�•

The Daily Sentinel

Page.A2

LocAL • STATE

Tuesday, A(ri 1.5. aoo8

A·N NIE'S MAILBOX

•

Striving to make a difference

'fW lay, Aprill5
RUTLAND - Rutland
·. Vill~e Council, special
· :meetmg to discuss person. ·neL 7 p .m., oouncil's cliambers.

Clubs
and
.
.
orgamratiom

'l

'

Tyler Utile, left, and Ben C!Wiek were the shoM:ase ·.m,
. .
"·! • IPI ICE
ners in the. JnfoTTTlation Technology, Netwo!t Sys" IllS, all- BedrtMJics ~Left 'lll right, Ty Myers, Thomas 10ein,
egO!)' with their "Data flecovery"·project. ·
Jr., Cornelius English, and Austin Dunfee .

laoee Arms and Nathaniel Davis were the showcase winners in the. Horticulture category with their 'Wagon
Bench" project.

excels
intechprep
• •
_· competition
I.

.,

!POMEROY Meigs Network Systems categocy
High School tech prep stu- with their "Data Recovecy"
dents participated in the . project.
2008 Washington-MorganStudents
. earning
"
Superior"
included:
in the
Meigs Consortium College
Electronics
category:
Austin
Tech Prep Showcase held
recently at the Washington Dunfee, Cornelius English,
State Community College 1'y Myers. and Thomas
Klein. Jr. with '\Robotics";
in Marietta
Other school conweting in the Senior Health
. in the eight different show- Technology
categocy:
case areas were Washington Samantha DeQuasie and
·County Career Center and Malinda Barnhart with
Morgan High School.
"Non-Blood Specimens"; in
Dennis Eichinger, Tech the
Junior
Health
Coordinator
at Technology
categocy:
Prep
S!JI..te Alyssa Longstreth, Decca
Washington
Community
College, Owen, and Kayla Russell
"Obesity";
in
reported that 315 students with
,participated in !54 projects. Horticulture:
Brittany
Junior Health Technology Varian and Bethany Lee
with the largest number of . with "Squirrel Den;" Corey
student projects had 36 pro- Jarvis and H8!Ulab Wtlliams
jects. The second largest with "Wishing Well," and
number of projects was for Eric Wood and Evan
Automotive with 26, Senior Yeauger with "PPann!r"; and
Jlealth Technology with 23, in Information Thcbnology:
Electronics
with
23, Interactive Media: Alisha
Horticultw:e
with
21, Ch,apman, Ashley Mayes.
Interactive Media with 18, · and Colten iBlanlrensbip
Networking with 5, and with "Promotion of the
Memcal
~~ Ohio River liar Company.'.'
Stuj!mas
· •
M~ IIICIIt 'Wii11 l.
Meigs students being . ""Excellent" • in
·• 8le
named Showcase Winners Electronics ~ .inclw1./
in their respective cate- e4Jonatban ·BIUIIton.Josbua
gories included Lacee Arms Burnem and Ernie Welsh
and Nathaniel Davis in the with "Tesla Coils"; in the
Horticulture category with Junior Health Technology
their "Wagon Bench" pro- category: Shawntay Garnes
ject and Ben CopPick an!! and Stephanie Donaldson
til; wiih ''AriorcXia" i11dlilijlnaTyler . b ittle · m
Information Technology, Lydic, Samantha Pridemore,

Interactive
Superior: Left t9 right, -'shier 'Mayes,
Cotten Blankenship, and Alisha Chapman.

Senior Health Technology Superior: Lllft1D right, Samantha
DeQuasie and Malinda Barnhart.

c::
,_,seap_e
fami

Myen wiih "1:

z

C

:•• w.ilt

~;

":; Dedi

"ilh1ey Smithd

'Side Table" ·;and .Carrie

Phelps with ~w~ Around
Tme Bench. '
Earning excellent in
information Technology:
Interactive Media: Joe
Rosier with "Promotion of a

-mw Mel~ ~Ounll' Dog
Shelter;

m

Horticulture 'Superiors: LBft 10 right, kneeling, Be1hany Lee,
Hannah Williams, and · Evan Yeauger; and standing,
Britlany Varian, Eric Wood, and Corey Jarvis
ing of "Good" in the Senior
Health Technology category
included
Michelle
Scarbrough and Jess ica
Sbects with "Butterfly
Technique .
. for
Phlebotomy~;
in J.unior
Health Technology: Ontna
Quillen and Bobbi Riffie
with "Bulima" and Destiny
Dotson and Shannon Elliott
with
"Trimester
of
~gnancy";
· and
in

and Deanna Cundiff with
"Massage Therapy"; in 1he
Horticulture

Junior Health TedmolQQY Supei'ior.
to rjgtit, ~
longsliedi, Becca Owen, and ~il!lwselt

lnf~o!!. ~

Infonnation

Black with "Promotion of
Wrres and Wood."
All Showcase Winners of
each categoly will be invited to the annual Senior
Recognition Dinner May 2
where they will be awarded
. prizes.

'fecllnoJogy: ·

lnteraettve Media: Brittany

Landfills growing as coal-plants try·for cleaner air
CONESVILLE (AP) . Near AEP's existing plant
The state has approved two in eastern.Ohio's Conesville,
landfills and is ~;onsidering a convoy &lt;if dump bUCks
another. four to bwy mil- moves . the blaCk ash and
lions of tons of ash and dried gray sluilge 10 a new
slud,ge produced at coal- landfill. Columbus-based
AEP, Fu:stEnergy and other
fired power plants.
When Ohio's coal-based Ohio utilities have built simpower plants updated their ilar landfills to accommoenvironmental safeguards to date these millions of tons of
comply with federal rules. sludge and ash.
they reduced pollution com"It's pan of the whole
ing from smokestacks. But process. You have the
they also kept more poilu- scrubber on one end and a
tion on the ground so, landfill on the other," said
instead of billowing into the Mark Durbin. a firstEnergy
air, more of the waster is spokesman.
carted away from the plants
The new landfills are lined
in dump pucks.
·
with synthetic materials and
"h 's obyiolisly another clay to keep the wastHrom
problem · wl tlf &lt;:mil," said groulldwlltei Cuinpanies
Sandy Buchanan, director still IIIOIIitor. 'the groundwaof Ohio Citizen Action and ter ·for :soxic metals tblt can
critic of American Electric be in the waste and might
Power's plans for a new seep into the warer supply.
coal plant in Meigs County
The state ~ has
in southeast Ohio.
· approved plans to build· two
"You end up with all this JandfiJls and is considering at
ash and slud~e with coal least four more. Near
that you don t have with Fir$tEnergy's
plant
in
Jefferson County in eastern
other kinds of power." .

Ohio, the state Environmental cut in sulfur dioxide emisProtection Agency approved sions and a 61 · per~nt cut in
a site that would !l!ke a~ much nitrogen oxide emissions by
as 1.6 million tons of sludge 20 I 5. The aim is to reduce
each year. •
· j he amount of .smog, acid
"It has to go -somewhere," rain and soot tied to power
Durbin said.
production.
A 2005 rule from tlie U.S.
An Ohio EPA official said
EPA required a 57 percent dumping the waste in land-

t

•

•

m

e
-

SurfuplotfXjp

-.rf y

;.omo~e'~

S4gnUpOnll,.l _...__ _

Ol:bt eatlipolti mail!' lrihune,
Gtbt Joint Jltasant i\tg(sttt
and The Daily Sentinel
have launched a new page every
Friday ealled ''Faith and Family".
If you have a testimonial story,
life-changing event about yourself
or even a poem tbat you would
like to share please email to:

started by small fan

CINCINNATI (AP) bas left our community griefThe fire that killed two ·fire- stricken, we .must Still evalufighters was causedby a mal- are the situation and apply
functioning f(lll and had the appwptiate law," Deters
nothing to do with marijuana said. "Sometimes the law
being grown in the basement, does not COil'llSpond with the
· enonnity of the tragedy."
a prosecutor said Monday.
lf the plants had conColerl!in Township fire
tributed to the deaths of the Capt. Robin Broxtennan,
furliMters, the homeowners 37, and frrefighter Brian
could have been charged Schira, 29, died in the blaze
with
manslaughlel:, that destroyed the two-story,
Hamiltun County Prosecutor four-bedroom home April 4 .
Joe Deters said. Instead. a Homeowners Matt and
charge of cuJti, at ing mari- Sharyn Cones es~ ap .
juana will be presented to a
Deters said it wa; .) 1~at
grand jury later this week from a malfunction,
. fan
after investigators determine i n a nearby cedar . oset
how much pot the five plants where orchids were being
grown in the basement that
would have yielded.
"While this tragic si tua tion started the fire.

•

• IO • m&amp;Utdd. . . . wlhWeblnlil!
• CUllom St.t f1gl: • new&amp;, ....,... &amp; morel

'

Prosecutor: Fire that killed
fin~fighters

fills is better than putting
into the Skies.
"We're taking this materi- .
al and containing it in a protected facility," said Andrew
Booker, a supervisor in the
agency' s solid waste di vision. "I think it's unambiguously an improvement...

•AEWJT-..... .....
•lnltwttU·· •iV · t!etl&gt;yourblltltyllll

kkelly@mydailytribune.com
nfields@mydeiiJregister.mm
hoeftich@mydailysentinel.com
Li~it your story to
500-750 words.
Please include a phone·number
in your e,mail.
•

,,

.

Tuesday, Apri115,

.Community Calendar
Publicmedi

t
l

PageAa

BY THE BEND.

The Daily Sentinel

'

Wftlnesday, Aprillrfi
. POMEROY
Middleport Literary Club, 2
p .m. at the Pomeroy
·Library. Group discussion
·o n "The Awakeningfl by
·Kate . Chopin.
Olita
. Heighton, hostess.
S!duday, April 19
R.AUNE
Pomeroy/Racine Lodge
. 164 special meeting, 8 a .m.
: Degree work in the-Entered
· A,pprentioe .degree on four
: ·candidates. Breakfast at 7
: a.m. with degree work to

follow. Call Randy Smith
at 508-0816.
with

C!';,Aprilll

BY KA1HY .. tee=· •

lUPPERS PLAINS Spc:cia! meeting of East-em
mgb
School
M.usic
Boosters, 6:30 p.m., music

.MID IIAACY SuGIIR

~ A=n'e· Did you
~ 'dlat young -people

room.

. _ ~ lll8ke .a positive diff~athc world? In fact,

Church events

~: o f young people
~~ every year, and
s.t.nby, Aprill9
the number continues to
MIDDLEPORT - Kelly
Please let ypur readers
Perry will be singing 7 p.m . . know about the 20th Annual
at the Middlepon Church &lt;&gt;f
Global Youth Service Day,
the Nazarene. Everyb wel- April 25-27, 2008.
come, refreshments followDuring tbis three-day
ing.
-event, held in the United
·S Marcby, April lei
States and around the world,
CARPENTER -first young people, with the help
oombread .festival
at of mentors, parents, teachCarpenter ·BI\Ptist Church, ·ers .and volunteers, will
Ohio 143. Crafts, food, . address community needs
mountain bike race, live through servi~ and servi~­
gospel music, free train leaming projects that target
rides, free vendor space. climate change, education,
Cornbread
cook-off. child obesity, urban decay
Contact Pastor Whitt Akers, and many -other issues.
591-1236 for rules.
l'his .event spollights what
today' s youth are doing to
make a differen~ in the
world. When given •t he
opportunity, young people
.w;e
great assets and
resources to their communities, provimng unique per·
.Plants." Watkins is the spectives and skills.
·
l'ot"
more
information, your
supervisor for the . gardens
can
visit
located on •Blennerhasserl readers
www.ysa.org,
or
write
to
Island near Belpre, Ohio.
Youth
Service
America,
1101
Shirley Hamm, county
contact person for Region 11, i Sth St. N.W., Suite 200,
announced that the cost of Washington, D.C . 20005.
the event is $15 per person They .can also find volunteer
which includes lunch. A halfday registration for those
who do not want lunch costs
$8. Registmtions are 10 be
sent to Margaret MIDT3y by
April i6. O .A.G.C . members
may invite guests. Members
are reminded to bring plants,
old arranging materials, containers, magazines, etc. for
the sales1ables.
Set-up for ·the event will
take pi~ at 6:30 p.m. on
April 25 at the First Soutbem
Baptist Chu~ch . Anyone
with questions should call
Hamm at 949-2256.

grow.

: O.A.G.C. spring
·meeting announced
POMEROY - The Ohio
: ·Association of Garden
: Clubs' Region II spring
· meeting will be held 11n
: Saturday, April 26 at the
: First Southern Baptist
: ·Church on Pomeroy Pike.
· Registration begins at
: 8:30 a:m ., followed by the
: business meeting at 9 :30
. ·am. The ,speaker seheduled
. for the morning session will
: be Dave Me Shaffrey, an
: associate biology ~rofessor
: at Marietta College, whose
· _topic is "Damselflies and
&gt;Dragonflies." McShaffrey
: · co-edited a book about dam. selflies and dragonflies for
. the Ohio Biology Survey.
The afternoon speaker
will be Linda Watkins,
.whose
topic
is
" Biennerhassett Gardens'
Native
and
Heirloom

opportunities in their commurutJes at www,serveoetorg.
Steve
Culbertson,
Pluit II md
Youth
Senice Amelica
Dear Steve CUlbertson:
Thanks so much for letting
us on~ again mention this
worthwhile project. We hope
all our readers, young or old,
will check out the websites '
you mention and become
mvolved in local volunteer
programs. It's also a wonderful educational opportunity
for teachers and students.
Dear. Amur I find your
·column quite helpful and was
wondering if you are aware
of any medical solutions for
getting rid of body hair.
I have tried the traditional
ways of shaving and waxing
(that hurt), but they're not
enough. I really have an
overabundan~ everywhere
on my body, including my
back and ears. I swim quite
a bit at our local YMCA,
and there was a·receot family swimming event where
one of the topics of pool
conversation was excessive
hair. It made me very
uncomfortable.
If you could please advise
me, it will be most appreciated. - lllillois Man
Dear Dliaois: Some ·
excess body bait, especially .
on women, can be due to a
hormonal imbalan~. See

em,

your doctor for a complete
checkup and mention your
con~m s. Otherwise, the
best methods are the traditiona! ones, such a5 shaving,
waxing and depilatories, and
yo11 might be a good candi~
date for laser removal or
electrolysis, which will give
you more permanent results.
Dear Annie: You want to
know how kids feel when
Mom leaves the marriage?
My parents div~ when I
was 17. Mom cheated on Dad
with a · man who killed his
wife during a custody dispute. Mom testified as a character witness in his defense.
Mom was caring and
involved when I was young.
After I turned 13, the main
attention I got came in the
form of rules and punishments. Annie, all I ever did
was get straight A's. I never
touched drugs or alcohol or
messed around with boys.
I don't blam·e her for
divorcing Dad. He was diffi_cult. We kids alternated
one week at each parent's
house. However, sinCe my
academic, athletic and
social life was so full, I
.asked whether I could move
monthly rather than weekly.
Mom insisted she couldn't
have me .around for a whole
month at a time because I
was "impossible to live
with." So I stayed with Dad.

I fin'\llY had to tell my
mother I didn't want to bear
from her anymore because
it only made me unhappy.
Now, years later, she wants
to mend the relationship. I
told her to pay Dad back for
a fair share of my college
tuition. (She received a sizable inheri~ and can well
afford it.) But apparently her
feud with my father is. more
imponant than a relationship
with me. Sometimes
Mom is the Cb •!!r
Dear Sometimes: Too
bad Mom ·i·s more interested
in herself than in you. Our
condolences.
Annie's Snippet tor
Income 'lilx Day ·(cndit
humorist F.J. Raymond):
"Next to being shot at and
missed, nothing is really
· quite as satisfying as an ·
income tax refund."
· Allllie 's Mailboz is writ-

ten by Katlty Mitclri!U ami
Marcy Sagar, longtilne editors of tire Ann tn•"~s
column. Pleose e-mail yoar
qaestions to onniesmail-

box@coi!ICPSLrret, or 'Write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL

60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbo;r:,
arul rwul jf!fii.Ju'f!s .by adler

Creators Syt~dioote writers
arul ollltoonists, visa tire

·Creators Syll4icllh Web
poge Ill www.crealon.coJIL

Riffle celebrates 90th birthday ·
Bernice Riffle did some line dancing
and clogging with the Swinging
Seniors before obseiving her 90th
birthcjay with the dancers Monday.
The group presented tier with a tier
of cupcakes to share during a social
gathering that followed the dance
session. Mrs. Riffle has been dancing
with the group for many years and
apparently is detennined to keep
right on dancing. Surrounding her for
a picture were dancers from the left,
Blondena Rainer, Hazel Wilson,
'honoree, Joan Y@y anil Alice·
Wamsley, and baCk, Lee and Don
Young, Shirley Simmons, judy
McDaniel, Myrna VanMeter, Bill and
Linda Mclain, Eva King, and Alice
La~om . The Swinging Seniors meet
every Monday from 1 to 2 p.m. at the
Mulberry Community Center. Anyone,
!1£1nior or not, can join the· group:

:Prep&amp;qng students for

:post secondary so~
The
: MARIETTA
· OACHE and Was~£on
.:state C ommuni!)'
ge
· will host Charles Ramos of
ACT on Wednesday, May 7
at 6 p .m. to present · an
evening workshop entitled
"Preparing Our Students for
Post Sec11ndary Suc~ss."
. Ramos will discuss the
results of the ACT National
Cuniculum Survey and as
· well as the college readiness
of the class of 2007 in Ohio.
The purpose of the f
National
Curricul ullj'
Survey is to "define the gap
. between what middle and
· high school teachers are
currently teaching and what
college instructors believe
is important for entering
students to know."
· Ramos's presentation will
focus on the results of the
NCS and provide action steps
to tackle problem areas &lt;&gt;f the
high school curriculum.
The second. half of Mr.

2008

Ramos's presentation will
(II'Ovide infomllltioo ~~~-

the perfurmance of 1
200'7 graduating !ICniors wbo
look 1he ACT as sophomores, .

=---' SUbm- photo

juniors, or · seniors. Topic
areas will include: academic
achievement, measuring college readiness and early iodicators of college reaitioe~s.
RACINE - The Southern Local
ACT is an independent,
School
District re~ntly released its
not-for-profit organization
honor
roll
for the third nine weeks
that provides more than a
grading
period.
hundred
assessment,
Seniors, all A's, Morgan Brown,
research, infOrmation, and
Lindsey
Buzzard, Erin Chapman,
program management serRyan
Chapman,
Heather Cunmff,
vices in the broad areas of
El-Dabaja,
·
Chelsea
Freeman,
Sarah
education and workforce
Courtney Ginther, Abigail Jenkins,
development.
This presentation is free Ashley Weddle. A and B, Teddy
and open to any area educa- Brown, Tyler Circle, Ericka Cogar,
tors and educational profes- Stephanie Cunmff, J.R. Grady,
sionals. Light refreshments December HensJ.ey, Mikayla Krider,
Matt Lehew, Krystle Marler, Butch
will be se!Ved.
For more information, or Marnhout, Wes Riffle, Ashley Robie,
ro pre-register for this event, Anthony Shamblin, Andrew Smeck,
please contact Amy Denni.s Kaylyn Spradling.
Juniors, all A's, Merri Collins, Bryan
at adennis@wscc.edu or
Chris Holter, Drew Hoover,
Harris,
740-374-8716.
E_ll!ma f{unter, J()~ha Jon~s; !!rillany
Meldali, Chelsea Pape, Samantha
Patterson, Weston Roberts, Jaime
Warner. A and B, John Brauer, Tiffanie
li&gt;ecm, Brody Flint, Kyle Goode, Paul
Powell, April Ricbartls.
Sophomores, all A' s, Michael
Manuel, Cyle Rees, Breanna Taylor,
CH,ESHIRE - The GalliaThe Ohio Benefit Bank is Lynzee Tucker, Katie Woods. A and B,
:Meigs Community Action an internet~ counselor- Cbeyene Dunn, Jame~ Evans, Dustin
:Agency .is now offering a assisted service designed· to Salser, Dustin Smeck, Jordan Taylor,
·new benefit assis~ ser- assist clients overcome the Lindsay Teaford, Ashley Walker.
vice. "''bis service will great- devastating effects of poverFreshmen, all A' s, Eric Buzzard,
&lt;ly enhanoe our ability to ty and to help strengthen Zachary ManueL A and B, Trevor
.serve the people of Gallia ,and their economic condition . Flint, Joey Forester, Mickale Hill,
Meigs Counties," explained Our counselors will guide Charley Pyles, Braxton Thorla, Adam
• Tom
Reed,
Executive individuals through the pro- Warden, TYler Wolfe.
Eighth grade, all A's, Emily Ash,
Director
and
Sandra gram, assisting. in the appli: Edwanis, Division Director cation process for progruns
they may be eligible for. The
.:for Community Action.
Benefit
Bank provides an
. · The Ohio Benefit Bank
· ·was initiated by Governor easy and efficient way to pro·. Ted Strickland for the pur- vide benefits to those wbo
,pose of helping low and need them most, by provid. -moderate income, Ohioans ing the client with a comput: :claim taX cremts and public er generated application for
·:benefits such as food/nutri - them to present to an agency,
' ·tion programs, health care business, association, etc. for
; ·and prescription drug pro- potential benefits.
Screenings are free and
; grams, child care support
; :programs, and energy as sis- available by appoinhnent at
' ;tance programs, some of any of our (4) locations:
859
Third
: ·which are currently provid- Gallipolis,
446- 1018;
; ·ed · through Community Avenue,
· :Action.
Benefi t
Bank Cheshire, 8010 N. SR 7,
:;Counselors are available, by 367-7341 ; Middleport, 1369
:·appointment, in all Gallia- Powell Street, 992-2222·;
•
: ' Meigs Community Action and"'Middlepon. 122 N. ' tl • • I '
Second Avenue, 992-5266.
::Agency Offices.
•

S.O UTHERN, HONOR ROLL

Gallia-Meigs CAA
offers benefit assistance

.

'
•

Alison Brown, Olivia Searls, Hope
Teaford, Natalie Wood . A and B,
Martina Arms, Ceairra Curran.
Andrew Ginther, Chase Graham,
Amber Hayman, Katelyn Hill, Marcus
Hill, Kelsey Holsinger, ·Chel sea
Holter, Miranda Holter, Kelly
Humphrey, Emily 'Manuel, Morgan
McMillan, Clayton Moore, Emma
Powell, Jessica R.iffle, Andrew
Roseberry, Abbie Williams. .
Seventh grade , all A's, Timoth y
Elam, Austin Johnson, Jennifer
McCoy, Shelby Pickens, Stefani,e
Pyles, Kody Wolfe. A and B,
Christopher Chaney, Angelica Eynon,
Cole Graham, Megan McGee, Adam
Pape, Cody Taylor, Whitney Weddle.
Sixth grade, all A's, Baylee Hupp,
DJ~ Sellers, Chris Yeater. A and B,
Ryan Butcher, Ryan Dau ~ heny,
Darien Diddle, Brandon Grueser,
Cameron Harmon, Fernando . Herrera,
Jordan Huddleston, Lacey Hupp,
Katie Jenkins, Nathan Leamond,
Taylor McNickle, Jamie O ' Brien,
Ca..o;ey Pickens, Allison Taylor, Chris
Rayburn.
Fifth grade, all A's, Ashley Baker,
Matt Folmer, Bradley McCoy, Chais
Rodriguez, Tristen Wolfe. A and B,
Dustin Burns, TYler Casey, Brandon.
Counts, Sophie Gui other, Addie
Hayman, Jacob Hoback, Caitlyn
Holter,
Cassie
Roush,
Ryan
Schenkelberg, Gage Smith, Bethany
Thei ss, Cameron Yates.

Fourth grade, all A' s. Ma'tlison
Maynard, Jansen Wolfe. A and B, Kari
Arnold, Alison Deem, Sydney Diddle,
Jeremy Dutton, Tanner Grubb.
Cameryn Hannon, Parker Hill , Theron
Johnson, Demitrious Lamm, Ashlev
Lickliter, Joe Morris, M&amp;ddy Quillen,
Sylvia Richards, Gabe Riffle, Andrew
Shockey, Elizabeth Teaford . Crew
Warden, Elizabeth Wolfe.
Third grade, all A's, Clayton Boso,
Sierra Cleland, Abbi Dailey, Daniel
Dunfee; Marissa Johnson , Marlee
Maynard, Trey Pickens, Macie
. Rodri guez , Crenson Rogers. Sara
Schenkelherg. A and B, Adzuki
Albano, Katie Barton, Tyler Custer,
Talon Drummer, Jordan Fisher, Leia
Gilmore, Gage Hensley, Eli Hunter,
Lucas Hunter, Blake Johnson, Haley
Musser, Paith Teaford, Tanner Thorla,
Eddie Willi s.
Second g rade, all A's, Katie
Butc her, Kali Cleland, Sydne y
Cleland, Jo\i sha Ervin, Hannah
Evans, M ika yla Grubb, Spencer
Harri son, Andee Hill. John Hoback,
Kyle Law son, Sailor Warden. A and
B, Kendra Barton, Laramie Blevins,
Chandler Cummins, William Elston,
Andrew Evans, Miranda Greenlee,
Jaide n Hood , Dameson Jenkins,
Lauren Lavender, Arianna Lick.liter,
Austin Mc Kibben, Rand y Moore,
Emil y Phillips, Rachael Rice, Jacob
Riffle, Autumn Ritchart, Jane Rou sh,
Kendra Wh ite. Conner Wolfe.

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Dan Goodrich
Charlene Hoeftich
General Manager-News Editor

Co•grus sludl malu IW LJw ruprcting an
ut4Wislunmt of religion, or prohibitiJtg tht
fru V«rdu thnetif; or abri4gi,.g tht Jrtdom
of sperch, or of tht prus; or tht right of tht
peopk ~to asstmblt, arul to ·petition
t1u Go.Ptrluntllt for a ,t'fllrus of gritvaJKtS.

•

The .Arst Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

.

TODAY ·IN HISTORY
Today. is Tuesday, April 15, the 106th day of 2008. There
.are 260 days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History: ·ln the early hours of April
15, 1912, the British luxury liner RMS Titanic sank in the
North Atlantic off- Newfoundland, l~ss than three hours
,after striking an iceberg. Some 1.,500 people died.
On this date: In 1817, the first American school for the
,deaf opened in Hartford, Conn.
In 1850, the city of San Francisco was incorporated.
. In 1861, .three days after the Confederate attack on Fort
.sumter, S.C., President Lincoln declared a state of insur:rection and called out Union troops.
. iln 1865, President Lincoln died, several hours after being
·shot at Ford's Theater in Washington by John Wilkes Booth.
:Andrew Johnson became the nation's 17th president
. In 1945, during World War ll, British and Canadian troops
'liberated the Nazi concentration camp Bergen-Belsen.
In 1947., Jackie Robinson, baseball's. first black major
league player, made his official debut with the Brooklyn
Dodgers on opening day. (The Dodgers defeated the
Boston Braves, 5-3.)
In 1959, Cuban leader Fidel Castl'O arrived in
Washington to begin a goodwill tour of the United States,
In 1986, the United States lauru;hed an air raid against Libya
in response to the bombing of a discotheque in Berlin on April
·5; Libya said 37 people,lllOSIIy civilians, were killed.
In 1989, 96 people died in a crush of soccer fans at
Hillsborough Stadium in Sheffield, England.
In 199Q, actress Greta Garbo died in New Yurk at age 84.
Ten years ago: Pol Pot; the notorious leader ofthe Khmer
Rouge, died at age 7 3, evading prosecution for the deaths
of 2 million Cambodians.
f'ive years ago: Looters and arsonists ransacked Il;aq's
Nltimlill illwwy• .as -n .as lr~~q's priociplilhleniic ~'
In the Netherlands; Volkert van aer .Graaf, the killer of
politician Pim formyn. was sentenced.to 18 years in prison.
Umpire Laz Diaz was attacked by a fan during a game .
between the Kansas City Royals and Chicago White Sox;
the fan, £ric Dybas, was later sentenced to six months in
jail and 30 months probation. .
One year ago: RiOI .police beat and delairu:d OOZCIIS .of
1111ti•IEremlin'ilemonstrators in St. Petersbmg,.,Russia. on 11
second ilay oT protem again Sf !he government of President
Vladimir Putin. Brant Parker. who illustrated "The WlZIU'd
of Id" comic strip, died in Lynchburg, Va., at age 86, just
days after the passing of the strip's writer, Johnny Hart. ·
Today 's Birthdays: Actor Michael Ansara is 86. Country
singer· Roy Clark is 75. Rock singer-guitarist Dave
Edmunds is 64. Actress Lois Chiles is.61. Writer-producer
I jnda Bloodworth-Thomason is 61. Actress Amy Wright is
58. Columnist Heloise is 57. Actress-screenwriter Emma
Thompson is 49. Singer Samantha Fox is 42. Rock musician Ed O'Brien (Radiohead) is 40. Actor flex Alexander
is 38. Actor Danny Pino is 34. Actor-writer Seth Rogen is ·
· 26. Actress Alice Braga is 25. Acttc:ss Emma Watson is 18.
Thought for Today: "Patriotism is your conviction that this
country is superior to all lither countries because you were bnm
in it."- Bernard Shaw, Irish-born playwright (1856-1950).

'
:,

'

..

-

' - - -"- _.:,•
--

-.
-·..............
-""""'

-.c.nr

______ -------

•

to us all, that disres~ for what this Constitution
the Justices' "presumption means in multiple dimenof correclness" would vio- sions of our lives - in
late the Constitution's sepa- action would be a stimulus
to fmd out more not only
ration of powers!
Where did he find that in about that document but
the Constitution'/
also the llitriguing, exciting
Having read Madison's history of the Constitution.
notes
of
the
1787
In a lead edi.Orial (Oct. 2,
Constitutioual Convention, 2007), USA Today noted:
and copious analyses of that "Where cameras have
document by constitutional entered (the lower) court~lars,l haven't seen .any -rooms and legislatures, the
basis that the opening ofour experience has generally .
very highest tribunal to the gone _better than oppoqents
p:ople it judges is ll vio!.!l- ~ and been a boon to
tion of Madison's assuraace openness in government"
of our: "Right - of freely The Washington Times
examining public characters added·that "at her conftrmaand measures, and of free tion hearings in 1993,
communications 811)0ng the Jusiice
Ruth
Bader
people thereon, which has Ginsburg said that televised
ever been justly deemed the proceedings
(of
the
only effectual guardian of Supreme Court) 'would be
evecy other rigbt." He did good for the public ."'
not exclude the Supreme Justice William Brennan
Court. ·
·
told me the same thing.
KennCdy himself, when
At future confirmation
he speaks at schools, warns: hearings for Supreme Court
"We are in danger of baving nominees by any president,
a generation that is simply the
Senate
Judiciary
ignorant of the principles Committee should ask each
that this country stands for of them whether they agree
and its history. You cannot with Ginsburg and Brennan
preserve .what you don't - and, if not, why not'/ I
understand. You cannot am sure C-SPAN would run
defend what you do not oral arguments, in full, of
lrnow." And when .I talk at significant cases, and might
middle and high schools, as even open an auxiliary
.well as colleges, I have channel for all oral arguoften repeated Kennedy's ments because some of the
essential warning - espe- cases with the least obvious
cially now, as we · fight to impact on the public end up
protect and preserve wbo changing many lives. Wby
we are that, "the shut us out1 .
Constitution needs renewal
(Nal Hentolf iS a nation~ understanding eacb ally renownt!d aulhoriry on
generation, or else it's not the First Ameruilru!nt and
going to last~
· the Bill ofRights and author
For alJ of us, including of many books, including
lbose wbo read the tabloids, "TilL War on the !Jill of
orcing these nine Americans Rights and w Gathering
- wbo continually argue Resislanc~" (Sevt!n Stories
among themselves about Press, 2004) .

'·
·------~---

Local Stocks

Highs in the mid 70s.
Friday
night.••Panl y
cloudy in the evening...Then
becoming mostly cloudy. A
30 percent chanee of showers. Lows around 50.
.
Satunlay..:.Mostly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the upper
60s.
Saturday night.-Mostly
cloudy with a 50 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the upper 405.
Sunday_.Mostly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance of
showers. Higbs in the lower
70s.
Sunday nigbt. .. Mostly
cloudy with a 30 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the upper 40s.

AEP (NYSE)- U.61 ·
Akzo (NASDAQ}-' 81
Aehlllnd Inc. (NYSE) - 51.01
Big Lola .INYSE) - 21..82
Bob E - (NASDAQ)27.25
llolgw.n,&amp; (NYSE)- 42.13
Clntury Aluminum (NASDAQ)

-111.92

ChMnplan (NASDAQ)- 5.01
CMnnlng Shops (NASDAQ)

-ua

City 1\uldlng (NASDAQ) -

37.2!1
Collins (NYSE) - 62.51
Dut&gt;ont (NYSE) - 48.811
US Bank (NYSE)- 31.67
Gannett (NYSE)- 27.85
. General Electric (NYSE) 31.75
· Hartey-Davidsun (NYSE) 35.t3
JP Morgan (NYSE)- 41.50
Kroger (NYSE) - 23.62 ,
Umiled Brands (NYSE) 11.58

llolfoll ~ CNYSEI-

56. 1!1

.

Ohio ¥111181 Bane Cmp. (NA&amp;DAQ)-25
B8T (NYSE)- 3CU5
PlotJ711 (NASDAQ)- 22.47
PliNk~ (NYSE)- 10.•
Psanlar (NASDAQ) -13.15
Rocba77 {N\'SE)- 51..81
Roclly . . _ (NASDAQ)5.25

Rupt Dutl:h Shall- 7UG
' Seats Holding (NASDAQ)101.43
.
Wei-Miirt (NYSE)- 55.15
Wendy's (NYSE)- 22.51
Worthington (NYSEJ- 11M
Daily stock Iaporta- . . f
p.m. ET dOSing qu~a.a elf
lnlnsactlons lor Apri114,
211718, jWOtrided by EdwMI
Jones finlnci8l adv\aola . _
Mil7s in Gllllipolis -''(740) 4f1C
!Mt1 .ad ........, 11&amp;111810 In
Point Pleasant .. (37M) 674017t. Member S7PC.

.

Senior care

Local Briefs
Village dWtup set
. RACINE - The Village of Racine will hold a village clean
up week. All items should be placed by the curb iJn the fol·lowing days: Thursday April 17, Elm Street to Main Street,
friday, April 18, Main Street to YeUowbush Road. There will
be one last trip through the village on Monday, April21. The
.village cannot haul away furniture, appliances, tires, gas tanks,
.batteries 01' yard w,;~Ste. Ca11949-2296 with any questions.

Immunization clinic
POMEROY - The Meigs County Health Department
will bold a childhood immunization clinic from 9-11 a.m.
and 1-3 p.m. today.

Woodmen dinner
POMEROY- The Modem Woodmen wiU have a dinner,
·5 to 7 p.in. Tuesday (tonight) at Captain De's Seafood in.
G;lllipolis. $2.50
. off
. each person's meal. Family door prize.
.

On display
POMEROY- David and Brandy Rankin wiU have their
·stock care on display at Alligator Jack.'s Saturday from I 0
a.m: to 2 p_m_ for the public to view.

AlFRFD- The Alfred United Methodist Chun::h will bost
its Annual Breakfast and Baked Goods Auction. Bm.a.&amp;st
begins at 6:30a.m. and the miction is at 10 a.m., April26.

POMEROY -. Karr Audiology and Hearing Aids will
provide free hearing screenings for Meigs County residents
aged 55 or older from J.O_a..Jll.__,_ 2 p.m., Tuesday, Apri122_
at the Meigll County Hcalth-De!"'rtment. Call Debbie-Jones
if992-2161, ext. 23lto schedule an appointment

-

Imperia/, exclusive Supreme Court of the United States

a-,..

-=

•

Tuesday...Sunny. Highs
around 60. Light and variable winds... Becoming
REYNOLDSBURG - John H. Allensworth, age 62. of northwest around 5 mph in
ReynoldsbuQ! passed away on April 14, 2008 at Mt. · the afternoon.
.
Cannel East.
.
Tuesday nigbt.••Ciear.
He was born Dec 30, 1945 to the late Robert and Lows in the lower 30s.
Flossie (Frecker) Allensworth. John was a graduate of ,Northwest wiods around 5
.Middleport High School , Ohio University and received{ inpb
. in
the
·his Master's Degree from Miilmi University. He was :a evenin~ ... Becoming light
.teacher and coached football, basketball and golf before · and vanable.
becoming the Jr. High Principal. His career was cut short
Wednesday ... Sunny.
in 1976 with Multiple Sclerosis; but he continued ·to Higbs. in the upper 60s.
enjoy life with his family and friends.
·
.
South winds 5 to 10 mph.
. He is survived by bis wife of 40 years, Judy
Wedamlay night...Clear. .
(W'Udermuth); daughters, Kristin (Brad) Longaberger and Lows in the lower 40s.
Courtney (David) Flower; grandchildren, Parker, Seth and South winds around 5 mph.
·Nathan Flower, Drew and Kate Longaberger.
'lbursday and 'lbarsday
Friends may call on Thursday, April 17, from 12 till 3 nigllt...Moslly clear. Highs
p.m. at Worthington Christian Church with services at 3 in the mid 70s. Lows in the
p.m. with Marshall Hayden, Jim lnader and Paul Barnes rnid40s.
officiating. Burial will be in Riverview Cemetery in
Friday•••Mostly sunny.
.Middleport, on Friday at 10 am.
·
ln lieu of flowers the family suggests contribution to the
. M.S . Society, 6155 Rockside Rd., Suite 202, Independence,
Obio44131.
. Online condolences are available at www.pfeiferfuner.al.com.
·
from Page AI

Hearing screenings set

...-c.t.n- '

•

John H. Menswcw 111

I.

.....

c ..... .......

•

Local Weather

hand knowledge of the
many problems fae&lt;!d by
families.
McDanie! · said the visit
gave her an opportunity to
discuss the respite program
and the lack of funding. "I
.also talked about the need
for more space at the Senior
Clenter and hqw we bad to
divide the room with a
divider in ooler to have an
area for our respite group to
meet. Then we talked about
the baby boomer population
corning to the age when
Alzheimer's . begins and
what that means in a community."
McDaniel. said she commended state legislators on
their recent passage of the
"silver alert" program. "It is
much like the Amber alert
tor children," she explained,
"assisting families in locating
seniors · with
AlZheimer's wbo ge.t lost,"
McDaniel
said
she
returned borne after having

Changes

Breakfast, auction set

I
dearly
wish our
·
Founding Fathers James
Madison and' Alexander
Hamilton had been able to
see Supreme Coon Justices
Anthony Kennedy and
Nat
Clarence Thomas explain on
llentoff
C-SPAN's "America and the
LETTERS TO THE
Courts" (Marcb 28) why
they and nearly all their colEDITOR
leagues are so hostilely
Leners to the editor are welcome. They shouJ{I be less
rhan 300 words. All letters are subject 10 editing, must be against allowing millions of personalities involved as
Americans to see the High opposed to the substance of
signed, and' include address and telephone rnunber. No Court
on television during the case."
IUISigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
the revealing &lt;PI ~ts.
From their bigb seats
good taste, addres~tng ismes. '""' permoolilies. Ldt~rs of
On that C-SPAN pro- above us aU, both these
thanks ICI organiZalions and individuals will 1101 be acceptin excerpts from the Justices ignore that they
gram,
ed for publication.
Kennedy-Thomas testimo- serve on a public court, paid
ny before a House coDimit- by taxpayer funds; and
tee, Kennedy, sternly lectut- beCause of increasingly liming that Congress sbould ited coverage of the Supreme
not legislate this. intrusion Coon in newspapers and on
into
a key process in bow both broadcast anp cable
Reader Services ·
(USPS 213-110)
and
why they make their television, many Americans
Ohio Vlll~~l..hlng
decisions, whicb affect .so know little of these nine dis'Ooiiectloil Poky
.
Our
In
. all
. .
Publistood OYIIfll afternoon. Monday
many of us, explained: "We tant aJbiten&gt; of our rights and
rna conoem m
stones •• to ·through Friday, 111 Coun Stfaet,
teach 'that we're judged by Jil:aties in so many spheres
be~ - tf you know of ,a n error · Pomeroy, Ohio.
Sec:ond'"Ciass
what we wrile and by what of our existence.
In a ~. call the MWSrOOm at (740) poatago paid ot.Pomeooy.
we .~i~.... I dO £!01. want · As a member of the press,
992.-2156.
77 * . The .•Baa ial&amp;l3 PrMs am
the Ohio 'Ne ,..., Allociiltio;, _
an msidious dynamic mlro- having been at some oral
p ...
1 • Send addrea c:onwc&gt;
duced into my oowt .that arguments, lean testify that
Our lllllln number Is
tiono
.
t
o
The
Dllily
·
111
Court
would affect ~ relations in the exchanges between
(740) 182-2156.
Stmet, Poo•emy, Ohio ti769 .
that
I have With my· col- the justices and the lawyers
D 2 llsw• axlllwlllllkww ...: ·
leagues.
before them - as weU as
•
Stltlecilpllool ......
"It woul~ be ~lpful for during the often aesty, bare. . CWi11wOI'IIIDiariOIIII:
Ona ,_,.,
"1Gn
the collegial re~. ... I ly disguised aiticisms by
"11SM
Ct-.lloellictt, Ext. 12 ··0..,_.
don't want to think that one the justices of one another
Oallr
..
A; ... - -. Ext. 14
of my col~ues asked a . - the temperaments and
A 4 ... 118111 Son .... tt. Ext. 13
question because he or . she characters of these loomingan."10.27
"101.10
was on TV. And I don't ly powerful deciders of
&amp;'
•
~..ntr. .....
want
that temptation to what we can and can't do
Adtiert' lng
exist. ... We (Justices) think with our lives illuminate
ID tw IJIIIr No ouf&gt;.
0 7
Hams, Ert 15 acriptlon t:,. mill pan-., In that we should be entitled to why they sometimes come
p 7 7 - - D a v i s, Ext 16
at least a presumption of to the conclusions they
. a..JC$Ic.: Judy C7ark, Ext. 10
correctness and to some reacb. Not disembodied
deference in determining sages, Supreme Court jus,.... - . Cm ••
how
best to preserve the tkes are human, '&amp;Clliletimes
a ..... ,~ . Ext 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
dynamic
of the wonderful very human.
26'64.20
proceeding
that we know as
In similar atimooy
52'127.11
oral argument"
before a previous ~
0'*'*
Agreeing, Thomas said, siooal C01IIIIIi1ec, K Air.
13-.
~-55
"The concern is that you has D;10fe thaa •i• nf hllll if
26'107.10
begin
to bave a son of a Congress wee to .ialilllllll
52'21421
.mf31t•MIM.com
tabloid effect because of the the oral ~ll!$.81!1!11-

·-Dave

Obi~

·

Judging by his agile perviolence and created breath1be most interesting part
ing room," although he did of Obama's performance,
formance at Tuesday's Iraq
not take the opportoru'ty ·to though, was bis laying
hearings, Sen. Barack
Obama now is . opting for
:tnt~ '·
admit that he was wrong last down of what constitutes
the famous George Aiken
'';, ~~ ~ · ' year to predict that the surge "success" or "a manageable
formula from Vielnam days:
,. ,, ·'
would fail and to vote to cut situation" in iraq.
Declare victory and get out
off funds for U.S. troops.
· His standard seems to be
Or, rather, as an update on
--- •
Obama didn't, to his cred" "a messy. sloppy status quo
the
late
Vermont
'
it, say that no political but (Where) there's not, you
progress had been achieved know, huge outbreaks of
Republican's 1966 idea,
Obama would declare tbe situsing the surge's "breathing · violence, there· s stiU coruation in Iraq "manageable"
room." He just said it "has ruption, but the country is
and
drastically
reduce to1d reporters 1ast mon~ · not been taken the way we .struggling along, but it's not
that she favored witltdrawal
American forces- possibly, regardless . of conditions all would like it"
a threat to its neighbors and
he suggested, to just 30,000.
Iraq's parliament has it's not an 'AI Qaeda base."
Of the three presidential P~r:.~m~~rself as a approved a pension law, deObama's line of questioncandidates displaying their Senate leader _ . possibly, Baathification reform and a ing seemed to suggest his
intellectual wares in ques- her future career path _ by provincial powers law that thinking. He's for setting a
· . will lead to provincial elec- timetable for withdrawal to
tioning Gen. David Petraeus
and U.S. Ambassador to insisting that Bush subiDit lions in October. Oil rev- pressure the Iraqis to.ward
·
to Congress his proposed
Iraq Ryan Crocker, Obama agreement with Iraq for a enues are being sh:lred, and political settlement and for
surely was the most subtle continued U.S. troop pres- Iraq's former Sunni-Shiite . accepting "a messy, sloppy
civil war has stopped.
·
status quo" to justify stickand shrewd.
ence. He won't, of course.
He also gave a bit of a
McCain, whose long arguIn all, 12 of the 18 "bench- ing to the timetable.
That's the Aiken formula
hint of how he would prac- ment for more troops in Iraq III8lb" set out last year for
tice his much-promised has been vindicated by the Iraqi political progress have - define success down . so
bipartisanship if he were surge's stunning military been achieved. No one' s sat- it's easy to justify retreat.
elected president: He would and partial political success, isfied. but it is definite
Crocker responded to
coordinate and cooperate did use the moment to progress. This, Obama did Obama that, sure, "when
with Republicans when they deflect charges {especially not acknowledge.
Iraq gets to the pOint that it
agree with him.
. Obama 's) that he wants to
Obama hewed to the can carry forward its further
Democratic Party line in dis- development ... with still a
By contrdst, Sens. John keep troops in Iraq forever.
"Our goal _my goal_ missing as a "paradeofhorri- lot· of problems, but where
McCain
and
Hillary
Rodham Clinton basically is an Iraq that no longer bles" the likely consequences they and we would have a
delivered dueling campaign needs American 'troops," be of too-hasty U.S. withdrawal fair certitude that they can
speeches over which was said, "and 1 believe that we - renewed ethnic violence drive it forward themselves
more "irresponsible"- too- can achieve the goal perllaps and a collapse of U.S. influ- without significant dan~er
hasty troop withdrawals ·.or sooner than many imagine." ence in the world.
of having the whole thmg
But it was Obama who
AUying himself with the slip away from them again,
continuing present policy.
Clinton, wbo has rushed took most advantage of the argument that the United then clearly, our presence
from Obarna's right on Iraq televised hearings to n:nder States is economically lind diminisbes markedly.
"But," be said, "that's not
policy to his left in a desper- a nuanced- even silken- militarily "overstretched'' by
Iraq, Obama cited Republican where we are now." And
ate attempt to' salvage her performance.
vresidential
campaign,
In a statement rare among Sens. George Voinovich, that's right. The problem
JOined other Democrats in Democrats, he declared "we Dick Lugar and OIUck Hagel. with the Aiken solution My guess is this will be a · and Obama's ·- is that to
refusing to acknoWledge any all have the greatest interest
progress
achieved
by seeing a successful resolu- pattern wben a President declare "victory" or "suePresident Bush's troop surge. tion to Iraq." The party line Obilf!:Ui pushes his liberal cess" wben it's not really
Clinton said that she is that ilraq is a "quagmire" agenda. Like Bus!t, he '11 try there is to ensure defeat. .
favored a "responsible and or (Clinton's words) a to pick off as many votes in
(Morton Kondracke is
carefully planned withdraw- "failed policy."
. the other party as he needs executive editor of Roll
al," but her communications
Obama
acknowledged - as opposed to seeking Call, the newspaper' of
director, Howllfd Wolfson, that "the surge has reduced broad bipartisan agreement Capitol Hill.)

The Daily Sentinel

1

~oo8

.! !!'.' .

Publisher

•

Tuesday, Apri115,

Obama wins 'Petraeusprimary'
for best use of Senate Iraq hearing·

The Daily Sentinel
\

PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

'WWW.mydallysentinel.com

from Page AI

.

Musser said he'd spoken
to Village Solicitor Cbris
Tenoglia about the situation
and Tenoglia advised he felt
tlJm: was no real problem
with the code ~nforcem~t
__l!ffioer also hem~ a police
'!"k"f ~ IOOg as Wonna~onolJ!Bined dunng ueniJII
inspection wasn' t used to
arrest a person. No one

Judge says Marshall inust ID
students in downloading case

Accident

HUNTiNGTON, W.Va.
Marshall also contended
(AP) - A federal judge says that identifying the students
Marshall University must ~ould violate privacy laws.
identify seven students who . · The recording industry
. the music ·industry claims said companies only wanted
. have iUegally downloaded identifying information that
music from the Internet.
Marshall already acknowiU.S . Magistrate Maurice edged having. In a court filG. Taylor refused on ing. the industry said it
Monday to quash a subpoe- believed
Marshall
n~ obtained by the music "responded to a virtually
industry that seeks the stu- · identical subpoena less than
dents' names . Taylor gave · a year ago. with no cries of
Marshall 30 days to comply undue burden."
after an amended subpoena · Twelve people were ideo-is filed.
tified as a result of the preMarshall had argull\1 that · vious subpoena granted by a
the subpoena was too broad federal judge in 2007. The
~nd placed an undue burden: Recording
lndu Uy
on the university's limited Association of ·,America
resources. ln court filings, sued three of those people
Marshall said it would cost for copyright infiingement
an estimated $337.50 to Two of the lawsuits were
investigate eac.h of the settled and a default judgseven Internet . protocol ment was entered in the.
addresses.
third case.

emergency personnel treated and extricated the .victims who were bloody and
unconseious. Over the .publie address system dispatcher Joey Riffle fielded radio
calls in real time. The emer-·
gency workers worked
through a parking lot of
glass and busted taillights
while junior Dax Holman
rested on the pavement in a
pool of l&gt;lood. Holman was
pronounced "dead" at the
scene when County Coroner
_Douglas Hunter arrived.
Holman was then put onlo a
streiCber and placed in the
back of a vehicle belonging
to Cremeens Funeral Home.
Students then went into
the
gymnasium
for
Holman's. memorial, com-

· "We are proud to have her
on the Democratic ballot this
year, and the party is ready
to do everything we can to
ensure that she will take that
seat for the people."
"This is an · important
election year, as every presidential election year is, and
i1 is vital that ·every

Democrat 'With a stake in
this election get involved
and work hard for the victories we need and this community deserves." ·
· Tickets for the dinner are
$15 and· are available at the
door.' ifbe dinner will be
served at 6 p_m. A social
hour is set for 5.

Philli
. ps
fromPllgeAl
She has sbown that she can
campaign, and that she
came so close two years ago
demonstrates that she is a
strong candidate."

from Page AI

s..bntl- . , _

Joining Kathy McDaniel, rigi1t, at the State House for a meeting with Senator Joy Padgett,
were Ken Stewart and Melissa Gandee, Alzheimers Association representatives. Respite
care programs, such liS the ooe in Meigs County, and 11vailable funding were 11mong the
topics discussed.

.s pent about 45 ;-;;;1tes
each with Stewart and
Padgett feeling tbat she
had "gotten a little attention for the problems of

those with memory loss,
how it crushes the family,
the; importance of providing some relief for the
caregivers, and the need

elaborated on whether on
not an actual incident resulted in the conversation and
the subsequent "gray area."
Proffitt..said due to Spalin
. being othe!Wise occupied at
the department be recommended Pomeroy Police
Dispatcher Joey Riffle for·
the position at the starting
pay rate for officers whicb
is $10.23 per hour.
· In-otber-c:ouncil business:
CiiiiDcil ~ to I'lisc
tHe water· _fUnd appropria·
lions by $239,750 to reflect

a grant received for the
Lincoln Hill waterline
replacement project.
Terry Congo was awarded
die bid to mow &amp;ocb Grove
Cemetery. The bid' was for
13 mowings for $1,150.
· Council approved the
offer of. Young's Carpenter
Service to paint the gazebos
on the Pomeroy Parkin_g Lot
if the village purchased the

plete with a keepsake
memorial
program.
Students then sat in front of
a casket as fellow student
Erin Chapman, who played
the "drunk driver." was led
into the service in an
orange jumpsuit by Ohio
State Highway Patrolman
Sean Cunningham and
Racine · Chief of Police
Curtis Jones.
Pastor Ryan Eaton from
the Racine First Baptis7
. Church then presided over
the funeral. Eaton said he
wanted the student body to
know many 'things in life
were uncertain though death
was a certaint)l. He wanted '
students not to just think
about the ''here and now"'
but about ''eterility'' and that
God l&lt;;lVes them.
Although
organizers
knew they wouldn' t reach
all students, they hoped to

reach some with the dramalic reenactment.
"They think they're invincible at this age but they· re
not,"
SHS · Guidance
Counselor Jennifer Holt
said, remarking that she saw
some of the students tear up
during the realistic event.
Sandi . Smith of the
Syracuse Volunteer Fire
Department said the idea
calne from the internet alld
she along with fellow firefighters Shannon Smith
and Racine Chief Jamie
'Jones decided to help pull
the event together with the
help of many.
Those participating in the
mock event were : The
Syracu se Volunteer Fire
Department, The Racine

fifiti~Ji1·~mut •llteDailySrlir.I•JBt JRlttie

.

.

.

$17,391 in fees, fines and
forfeitures. df that amount,
$3,843.56. was collected in
parking meter money, tickets and padring pmnits. .
The meeting adjourned
into executive .session to
discuss personnel and disciplinary matters in the police
department. Both ·Proffitt
and Assistant Chief of .
Police
Alan
Queen
paint;~~
-.~ addressed council:- At~ ·
TJie mayor's report [or ,time, there Waf nQ report of
March - was approved with any action being.taken after
the village · taking in the executive session.

sell

Volunteer Fire Department,
the staff of Southern High
School, the Ohio State
Highway Patrol, the Racine
Police Department, the
Syracuse and Pomeroy
Squads.
Med
Flight,
Cremeens Funeral Home,
Dr. Douglas Hunter, Pastor
Ryan Eaton, Hector Flores,
Riverside Towing, Francis
Florist. Valerie Robens
from ·
the
.Lakin
Correction a! Center.
Students who participated
in the accident reenactment
were Holman . Chapman,
Kreig
Klenski,.
Ryan
Chapman.
Stephanie
Cundiff.

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PF..RFOR\oll)rl.f. Atl1i CT..\l'Rf.

..

"THUMBEUNA"
April t8 &amp; 19 7:00
April20 3:00
Presllow Patty beginning •
6 pm on Slltunlly the 19111
Call 446-ARlS tor
Reaervalions
tiOll Olfice: 4212nd .....
a.tNpolis, OH (740) 446-M1'S. _

Call today! (740) 44&amp;.2342
(740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1

,

{

for funding."
Meigs County's program
is in its second year. It is .
operated with a coordinator
and a staff of volunteers.

f r you!

Over 35,000 Readers everyissuel
•

·.

�1t1 Court Street • Pon..-oy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740J 992-2157
-.m~ly••ntlnel.com

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

Co•grus sludl malu IW LJw ruprcting an
ut4Wislunmt of religion, or prohibitiJtg tht
fru V«rdu thnetif; or abri4gi,.g tht Jrtdom
of sperch, or of tht prus; or tht right of tht
peopk ~to asstmblt, arul to ·petition
t1u Go.Ptrluntllt for a ,t'fllrus of gritvaJKtS.

•

The .Arst Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

.

TODAY ·IN HISTORY
Today. is Tuesday, April 15, the 106th day of 2008. There
.are 260 days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History: ·ln the early hours of April
15, 1912, the British luxury liner RMS Titanic sank in the
North Atlantic off- Newfoundland, l~ss than three hours
,after striking an iceberg. Some 1.,500 people died.
On this date: In 1817, the first American school for the
,deaf opened in Hartford, Conn.
In 1850, the city of San Francisco was incorporated.
. In 1861, .three days after the Confederate attack on Fort
.sumter, S.C., President Lincoln declared a state of insur:rection and called out Union troops.
. iln 1865, President Lincoln died, several hours after being
·shot at Ford's Theater in Washington by John Wilkes Booth.
:Andrew Johnson became the nation's 17th president
. In 1945, during World War ll, British and Canadian troops
'liberated the Nazi concentration camp Bergen-Belsen.
In 1947., Jackie Robinson, baseball's. first black major
league player, made his official debut with the Brooklyn
Dodgers on opening day. (The Dodgers defeated the
Boston Braves, 5-3.)
In 1959, Cuban leader Fidel Castl'O arrived in
Washington to begin a goodwill tour of the United States,
In 1986, the United States lauru;hed an air raid against Libya
in response to the bombing of a discotheque in Berlin on April
·5; Libya said 37 people,lllOSIIy civilians, were killed.
In 1989, 96 people died in a crush of soccer fans at
Hillsborough Stadium in Sheffield, England.
In 199Q, actress Greta Garbo died in New Yurk at age 84.
Ten years ago: Pol Pot; the notorious leader ofthe Khmer
Rouge, died at age 7 3, evading prosecution for the deaths
of 2 million Cambodians.
f'ive years ago: Looters and arsonists ransacked Il;aq's
Nltimlill illwwy• .as -n .as lr~~q's priociplilhleniic ~'
In the Netherlands; Volkert van aer .Graaf, the killer of
politician Pim formyn. was sentenced.to 18 years in prison.
Umpire Laz Diaz was attacked by a fan during a game .
between the Kansas City Royals and Chicago White Sox;
the fan, £ric Dybas, was later sentenced to six months in
jail and 30 months probation. .
One year ago: RiOI .police beat and delairu:d OOZCIIS .of
1111ti•IEremlin'ilemonstrators in St. Petersbmg,.,Russia. on 11
second ilay oT protem again Sf !he government of President
Vladimir Putin. Brant Parker. who illustrated "The WlZIU'd
of Id" comic strip, died in Lynchburg, Va., at age 86, just
days after the passing of the strip's writer, Johnny Hart. ·
Today 's Birthdays: Actor Michael Ansara is 86. Country
singer· Roy Clark is 75. Rock singer-guitarist Dave
Edmunds is 64. Actress Lois Chiles is.61. Writer-producer
I jnda Bloodworth-Thomason is 61. Actress Amy Wright is
58. Columnist Heloise is 57. Actress-screenwriter Emma
Thompson is 49. Singer Samantha Fox is 42. Rock musician Ed O'Brien (Radiohead) is 40. Actor flex Alexander
is 38. Actor Danny Pino is 34. Actor-writer Seth Rogen is ·
· 26. Actress Alice Braga is 25. Acttc:ss Emma Watson is 18.
Thought for Today: "Patriotism is your conviction that this
country is superior to all lither countries because you were bnm
in it."- Bernard Shaw, Irish-born playwright (1856-1950).

'
:,

'

..

-

' - - -"- _.:,•
--

-.
-·..............
-""""'

-.c.nr

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•

to us all, that disres~ for what this Constitution
the Justices' "presumption means in multiple dimenof correclness" would vio- sions of our lives - in
late the Constitution's sepa- action would be a stimulus
to fmd out more not only
ration of powers!
Where did he find that in about that document but
the Constitution'/
also the llitriguing, exciting
Having read Madison's history of the Constitution.
notes
of
the
1787
In a lead edi.Orial (Oct. 2,
Constitutioual Convention, 2007), USA Today noted:
and copious analyses of that "Where cameras have
document by constitutional entered (the lower) court~lars,l haven't seen .any -rooms and legislatures, the
basis that the opening ofour experience has generally .
very highest tribunal to the gone _better than oppoqents
p:ople it judges is ll vio!.!l- ~ and been a boon to
tion of Madison's assuraace openness in government"
of our: "Right - of freely The Washington Times
examining public characters added·that "at her conftrmaand measures, and of free tion hearings in 1993,
communications 811)0ng the Jusiice
Ruth
Bader
people thereon, which has Ginsburg said that televised
ever been justly deemed the proceedings
(of
the
only effectual guardian of Supreme Court) 'would be
evecy other rigbt." He did good for the public ."'
not exclude the Supreme Justice William Brennan
Court. ·
·
told me the same thing.
KennCdy himself, when
At future confirmation
he speaks at schools, warns: hearings for Supreme Court
"We are in danger of baving nominees by any president,
a generation that is simply the
Senate
Judiciary
ignorant of the principles Committee should ask each
that this country stands for of them whether they agree
and its history. You cannot with Ginsburg and Brennan
preserve .what you don't - and, if not, why not'/ I
understand. You cannot am sure C-SPAN would run
defend what you do not oral arguments, in full, of
lrnow." And when .I talk at significant cases, and might
middle and high schools, as even open an auxiliary
.well as colleges, I have channel for all oral arguoften repeated Kennedy's ments because some of the
essential warning - espe- cases with the least obvious
cially now, as we · fight to impact on the public end up
protect and preserve wbo changing many lives. Wby
we are that, "the shut us out1 .
Constitution needs renewal
(Nal Hentolf iS a nation~ understanding eacb ally renownt!d aulhoriry on
generation, or else it's not the First Ameruilru!nt and
going to last~
· the Bill ofRights and author
For alJ of us, including of many books, including
lbose wbo read the tabloids, "TilL War on the !Jill of
orcing these nine Americans Rights and w Gathering
- wbo continually argue Resislanc~" (Sevt!n Stories
among themselves about Press, 2004) .

'·
·------~---

Local Stocks

Highs in the mid 70s.
Friday
night.••Panl y
cloudy in the evening...Then
becoming mostly cloudy. A
30 percent chanee of showers. Lows around 50.
.
Satunlay..:.Mostly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the upper
60s.
Saturday night.-Mostly
cloudy with a 50 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the upper 405.
Sunday_.Mostly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance of
showers. Higbs in the lower
70s.
Sunday nigbt. .. Mostly
cloudy with a 30 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the upper 40s.

AEP (NYSE)- U.61 ·
Akzo (NASDAQ}-' 81
Aehlllnd Inc. (NYSE) - 51.01
Big Lola .INYSE) - 21..82
Bob E - (NASDAQ)27.25
llolgw.n,&amp; (NYSE)- 42.13
Clntury Aluminum (NASDAQ)

-111.92

ChMnplan (NASDAQ)- 5.01
CMnnlng Shops (NASDAQ)

-ua

City 1\uldlng (NASDAQ) -

37.2!1
Collins (NYSE) - 62.51
Dut&gt;ont (NYSE) - 48.811
US Bank (NYSE)- 31.67
Gannett (NYSE)- 27.85
. General Electric (NYSE) 31.75
· Hartey-Davidsun (NYSE) 35.t3
JP Morgan (NYSE)- 41.50
Kroger (NYSE) - 23.62 ,
Umiled Brands (NYSE) 11.58

llolfoll ~ CNYSEI-

56. 1!1

.

Ohio ¥111181 Bane Cmp. (NA&amp;DAQ)-25
B8T (NYSE)- 3CU5
PlotJ711 (NASDAQ)- 22.47
PliNk~ (NYSE)- 10.•
Psanlar (NASDAQ) -13.15
Rocba77 {N\'SE)- 51..81
Roclly . . _ (NASDAQ)5.25

Rupt Dutl:h Shall- 7UG
' Seats Holding (NASDAQ)101.43
.
Wei-Miirt (NYSE)- 55.15
Wendy's (NYSE)- 22.51
Worthington (NYSEJ- 11M
Daily stock Iaporta- . . f
p.m. ET dOSing qu~a.a elf
lnlnsactlons lor Apri114,
211718, jWOtrided by EdwMI
Jones finlnci8l adv\aola . _
Mil7s in Gllllipolis -''(740) 4f1C
!Mt1 .ad ........, 11&amp;111810 In
Point Pleasant .. (37M) 674017t. Member S7PC.

.

Senior care

Local Briefs
Village dWtup set
. RACINE - The Village of Racine will hold a village clean
up week. All items should be placed by the curb iJn the fol·lowing days: Thursday April 17, Elm Street to Main Street,
friday, April 18, Main Street to YeUowbush Road. There will
be one last trip through the village on Monday, April21. The
.village cannot haul away furniture, appliances, tires, gas tanks,
.batteries 01' yard w,;~Ste. Ca11949-2296 with any questions.

Immunization clinic
POMEROY - The Meigs County Health Department
will bold a childhood immunization clinic from 9-11 a.m.
and 1-3 p.m. today.

Woodmen dinner
POMEROY- The Modem Woodmen wiU have a dinner,
·5 to 7 p.in. Tuesday (tonight) at Captain De's Seafood in.
G;lllipolis. $2.50
. off
. each person's meal. Family door prize.
.

On display
POMEROY- David and Brandy Rankin wiU have their
·stock care on display at Alligator Jack.'s Saturday from I 0
a.m: to 2 p_m_ for the public to view.

AlFRFD- The Alfred United Methodist Chun::h will bost
its Annual Breakfast and Baked Goods Auction. Bm.a.&amp;st
begins at 6:30a.m. and the miction is at 10 a.m., April26.

POMEROY -. Karr Audiology and Hearing Aids will
provide free hearing screenings for Meigs County residents
aged 55 or older from J.O_a..Jll.__,_ 2 p.m., Tuesday, Apri122_
at the Meigll County Hcalth-De!"'rtment. Call Debbie-Jones
if992-2161, ext. 23lto schedule an appointment

-

Imperia/, exclusive Supreme Court of the United States

a-,..

-=

•

Tuesday...Sunny. Highs
around 60. Light and variable winds... Becoming
REYNOLDSBURG - John H. Allensworth, age 62. of northwest around 5 mph in
ReynoldsbuQ! passed away on April 14, 2008 at Mt. · the afternoon.
.
Cannel East.
.
Tuesday nigbt.••Ciear.
He was born Dec 30, 1945 to the late Robert and Lows in the lower 30s.
Flossie (Frecker) Allensworth. John was a graduate of ,Northwest wiods around 5
.Middleport High School , Ohio University and received{ inpb
. in
the
·his Master's Degree from Miilmi University. He was :a evenin~ ... Becoming light
.teacher and coached football, basketball and golf before · and vanable.
becoming the Jr. High Principal. His career was cut short
Wednesday ... Sunny.
in 1976 with Multiple Sclerosis; but he continued ·to Higbs. in the upper 60s.
enjoy life with his family and friends.
·
.
South winds 5 to 10 mph.
. He is survived by bis wife of 40 years, Judy
Wedamlay night...Clear. .
(W'Udermuth); daughters, Kristin (Brad) Longaberger and Lows in the lower 40s.
Courtney (David) Flower; grandchildren, Parker, Seth and South winds around 5 mph.
·Nathan Flower, Drew and Kate Longaberger.
'lbursday and 'lbarsday
Friends may call on Thursday, April 17, from 12 till 3 nigllt...Moslly clear. Highs
p.m. at Worthington Christian Church with services at 3 in the mid 70s. Lows in the
p.m. with Marshall Hayden, Jim lnader and Paul Barnes rnid40s.
officiating. Burial will be in Riverview Cemetery in
Friday•••Mostly sunny.
.Middleport, on Friday at 10 am.
·
ln lieu of flowers the family suggests contribution to the
. M.S . Society, 6155 Rockside Rd., Suite 202, Independence,
Obio44131.
. Online condolences are available at www.pfeiferfuner.al.com.
·
from Page AI

Hearing screenings set

...-c.t.n- '

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John H. Menswcw 111

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Local Weather

hand knowledge of the
many problems fae&lt;!d by
families.
McDanie! · said the visit
gave her an opportunity to
discuss the respite program
and the lack of funding. "I
.also talked about the need
for more space at the Senior
Clenter and hqw we bad to
divide the room with a
divider in ooler to have an
area for our respite group to
meet. Then we talked about
the baby boomer population
corning to the age when
Alzheimer's . begins and
what that means in a community."
McDaniel. said she commended state legislators on
their recent passage of the
"silver alert" program. "It is
much like the Amber alert
tor children," she explained,
"assisting families in locating
seniors · with
AlZheimer's wbo ge.t lost,"
McDaniel
said
she
returned borne after having

Changes

Breakfast, auction set

I
dearly
wish our
·
Founding Fathers James
Madison and' Alexander
Hamilton had been able to
see Supreme Coon Justices
Anthony Kennedy and
Nat
Clarence Thomas explain on
llentoff
C-SPAN's "America and the
LETTERS TO THE
Courts" (Marcb 28) why
they and nearly all their colEDITOR
leagues are so hostilely
Leners to the editor are welcome. They shouJ{I be less
rhan 300 words. All letters are subject 10 editing, must be against allowing millions of personalities involved as
Americans to see the High opposed to the substance of
signed, and' include address and telephone rnunber. No Court
on television during the case."
IUISigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
the revealing &lt;PI ~ts.
From their bigb seats
good taste, addres~tng ismes. '""' permoolilies. Ldt~rs of
On that C-SPAN pro- above us aU, both these
thanks ICI organiZalions and individuals will 1101 be acceptin excerpts from the Justices ignore that they
gram,
ed for publication.
Kennedy-Thomas testimo- serve on a public court, paid
ny before a House coDimit- by taxpayer funds; and
tee, Kennedy, sternly lectut- beCause of increasingly liming that Congress sbould ited coverage of the Supreme
not legislate this. intrusion Coon in newspapers and on
into
a key process in bow both broadcast anp cable
Reader Services ·
(USPS 213-110)
and
why they make their television, many Americans
Ohio Vlll~~l..hlng
decisions, whicb affect .so know little of these nine dis'Ooiiectloil Poky
.
Our
In
. all
. .
Publistood OYIIfll afternoon. Monday
many of us, explained: "We tant aJbiten&gt; of our rights and
rna conoem m
stones •• to ·through Friday, 111 Coun Stfaet,
teach 'that we're judged by Jil:aties in so many spheres
be~ - tf you know of ,a n error · Pomeroy, Ohio.
Sec:ond'"Ciass
what we wrile and by what of our existence.
In a ~. call the MWSrOOm at (740) poatago paid ot.Pomeooy.
we .~i~.... I dO £!01. want · As a member of the press,
992.-2156.
77 * . The .•Baa ial&amp;l3 PrMs am
the Ohio 'Ne ,..., Allociiltio;, _
an msidious dynamic mlro- having been at some oral
p ...
1 • Send addrea c:onwc&gt;
duced into my oowt .that arguments, lean testify that
Our lllllln number Is
tiono
.
t
o
The
Dllily
·
111
Court
would affect ~ relations in the exchanges between
(740) 182-2156.
Stmet, Poo•emy, Ohio ti769 .
that
I have With my· col- the justices and the lawyers
D 2 llsw• axlllwlllllkww ...: ·
leagues.
before them - as weU as
•
Stltlecilpllool ......
"It woul~ be ~lpful for during the often aesty, bare. . CWi11wOI'IIIDiariOIIII:
Ona ,_,.,
"1Gn
the collegial re~. ... I ly disguised aiticisms by
"11SM
Ct-.lloellictt, Ext. 12 ··0..,_.
don't want to think that one the justices of one another
Oallr
..
A; ... - -. Ext. 14
of my col~ues asked a . - the temperaments and
A 4 ... 118111 Son .... tt. Ext. 13
question because he or . she characters of these loomingan."10.27
"101.10
was on TV. And I don't ly powerful deciders of
&amp;'
•
~..ntr. .....
want
that temptation to what we can and can't do
Adtiert' lng
exist. ... We (Justices) think with our lives illuminate
ID tw IJIIIr No ouf&gt;.
0 7
Hams, Ert 15 acriptlon t:,. mill pan-., In that we should be entitled to why they sometimes come
p 7 7 - - D a v i s, Ext 16
at least a presumption of to the conclusions they
. a..JC$Ic.: Judy C7ark, Ext. 10
correctness and to some reacb. Not disembodied
deference in determining sages, Supreme Court jus,.... - . Cm ••
how
best to preserve the tkes are human, '&amp;Clliletimes
a ..... ,~ . Ext 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
dynamic
of the wonderful very human.
26'64.20
proceeding
that we know as
In similar atimooy
52'127.11
oral argument"
before a previous ~
0'*'*
Agreeing, Thomas said, siooal C01IIIIIi1ec, K Air.
13-.
~-55
"The concern is that you has D;10fe thaa •i• nf hllll if
26'107.10
begin
to bave a son of a Congress wee to .ialilllllll
52'21421
.mf31t•MIM.com
tabloid effect because of the the oral ~ll!$.81!1!11-

·-Dave

Obi~

·

Judging by his agile perviolence and created breath1be most interesting part
ing room," although he did of Obama's performance,
formance at Tuesday's Iraq
not take the opportoru'ty ·to though, was bis laying
hearings, Sen. Barack
Obama now is . opting for
:tnt~ '·
admit that he was wrong last down of what constitutes
the famous George Aiken
'';, ~~ ~ · ' year to predict that the surge "success" or "a manageable
formula from Vielnam days:
,. ,, ·'
would fail and to vote to cut situation" in iraq.
Declare victory and get out
off funds for U.S. troops.
· His standard seems to be
Or, rather, as an update on
--- •
Obama didn't, to his cred" "a messy. sloppy status quo
the
late
Vermont
'
it, say that no political but (Where) there's not, you
progress had been achieved know, huge outbreaks of
Republican's 1966 idea,
Obama would declare tbe situsing the surge's "breathing · violence, there· s stiU coruation in Iraq "manageable"
room." He just said it "has ruption, but the country is
and
drastically
reduce to1d reporters 1ast mon~ · not been taken the way we .struggling along, but it's not
that she favored witltdrawal
American forces- possibly, regardless . of conditions all would like it"
a threat to its neighbors and
he suggested, to just 30,000.
Iraq's parliament has it's not an 'AI Qaeda base."
Of the three presidential P~r:.~m~~rself as a approved a pension law, deObama's line of questioncandidates displaying their Senate leader _ . possibly, Baathification reform and a ing seemed to suggest his
intellectual wares in ques- her future career path _ by provincial powers law that thinking. He's for setting a
· . will lead to provincial elec- timetable for withdrawal to
tioning Gen. David Petraeus
and U.S. Ambassador to insisting that Bush subiDit lions in October. Oil rev- pressure the Iraqis to.ward
·
to Congress his proposed
Iraq Ryan Crocker, Obama agreement with Iraq for a enues are being sh:lred, and political settlement and for
surely was the most subtle continued U.S. troop pres- Iraq's former Sunni-Shiite . accepting "a messy, sloppy
civil war has stopped.
·
status quo" to justify stickand shrewd.
ence. He won't, of course.
He also gave a bit of a
McCain, whose long arguIn all, 12 of the 18 "bench- ing to the timetable.
That's the Aiken formula
hint of how he would prac- ment for more troops in Iraq III8lb" set out last year for
tice his much-promised has been vindicated by the Iraqi political progress have - define success down . so
bipartisanship if he were surge's stunning military been achieved. No one' s sat- it's easy to justify retreat.
elected president: He would and partial political success, isfied. but it is definite
Crocker responded to
coordinate and cooperate did use the moment to progress. This, Obama did Obama that, sure, "when
with Republicans when they deflect charges {especially not acknowledge.
Iraq gets to the pOint that it
agree with him.
. Obama 's) that he wants to
Obama hewed to the can carry forward its further
Democratic Party line in dis- development ... with still a
By contrdst, Sens. John keep troops in Iraq forever.
"Our goal _my goal_ missing as a "paradeofhorri- lot· of problems, but where
McCain
and
Hillary
Rodham Clinton basically is an Iraq that no longer bles" the likely consequences they and we would have a
delivered dueling campaign needs American 'troops," be of too-hasty U.S. withdrawal fair certitude that they can
speeches over which was said, "and 1 believe that we - renewed ethnic violence drive it forward themselves
more "irresponsible"- too- can achieve the goal perllaps and a collapse of U.S. influ- without significant dan~er
hasty troop withdrawals ·.or sooner than many imagine." ence in the world.
of having the whole thmg
But it was Obama who
AUying himself with the slip away from them again,
continuing present policy.
Clinton, wbo has rushed took most advantage of the argument that the United then clearly, our presence
from Obarna's right on Iraq televised hearings to n:nder States is economically lind diminisbes markedly.
"But," be said, "that's not
policy to his left in a desper- a nuanced- even silken- militarily "overstretched'' by
Iraq, Obama cited Republican where we are now." And
ate attempt to' salvage her performance.
vresidential
campaign,
In a statement rare among Sens. George Voinovich, that's right. The problem
JOined other Democrats in Democrats, he declared "we Dick Lugar and OIUck Hagel. with the Aiken solution My guess is this will be a · and Obama's ·- is that to
refusing to acknoWledge any all have the greatest interest
progress
achieved
by seeing a successful resolu- pattern wben a President declare "victory" or "suePresident Bush's troop surge. tion to Iraq." The party line Obilf!:Ui pushes his liberal cess" wben it's not really
Clinton said that she is that ilraq is a "quagmire" agenda. Like Bus!t, he '11 try there is to ensure defeat. .
favored a "responsible and or (Clinton's words) a to pick off as many votes in
(Morton Kondracke is
carefully planned withdraw- "failed policy."
. the other party as he needs executive editor of Roll
al," but her communications
Obama
acknowledged - as opposed to seeking Call, the newspaper' of
director, Howllfd Wolfson, that "the surge has reduced broad bipartisan agreement Capitol Hill.)

The Daily Sentinel

1

~oo8

.! !!'.' .

Publisher

•

Tuesday, Apri115,

Obama wins 'Petraeusprimary'
for best use of Senate Iraq hearing·

The Daily Sentinel
\

PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

'WWW.mydallysentinel.com

from Page AI

.

Musser said he'd spoken
to Village Solicitor Cbris
Tenoglia about the situation
and Tenoglia advised he felt
tlJm: was no real problem
with the code ~nforcem~t
__l!ffioer also hem~ a police
'!"k"f ~ IOOg as Wonna~onolJ!Bined dunng ueniJII
inspection wasn' t used to
arrest a person. No one

Judge says Marshall inust ID
students in downloading case

Accident

HUNTiNGTON, W.Va.
Marshall also contended
(AP) - A federal judge says that identifying the students
Marshall University must ~ould violate privacy laws.
identify seven students who . · The recording industry
. the music ·industry claims said companies only wanted
. have iUegally downloaded identifying information that
music from the Internet.
Marshall already acknowiU.S . Magistrate Maurice edged having. In a court filG. Taylor refused on ing. the industry said it
Monday to quash a subpoe- believed
Marshall
n~ obtained by the music "responded to a virtually
industry that seeks the stu- · identical subpoena less than
dents' names . Taylor gave · a year ago. with no cries of
Marshall 30 days to comply undue burden."
after an amended subpoena · Twelve people were ideo-is filed.
tified as a result of the preMarshall had argull\1 that · vious subpoena granted by a
the subpoena was too broad federal judge in 2007. The
~nd placed an undue burden: Recording
lndu Uy
on the university's limited Association of ·,America
resources. ln court filings, sued three of those people
Marshall said it would cost for copyright infiingement
an estimated $337.50 to Two of the lawsuits were
investigate eac.h of the settled and a default judgseven Internet . protocol ment was entered in the.
addresses.
third case.

emergency personnel treated and extricated the .victims who were bloody and
unconseious. Over the .publie address system dispatcher Joey Riffle fielded radio
calls in real time. The emer-·
gency workers worked
through a parking lot of
glass and busted taillights
while junior Dax Holman
rested on the pavement in a
pool of l&gt;lood. Holman was
pronounced "dead" at the
scene when County Coroner
_Douglas Hunter arrived.
Holman was then put onlo a
streiCber and placed in the
back of a vehicle belonging
to Cremeens Funeral Home.
Students then went into
the
gymnasium
for
Holman's. memorial, com-

· "We are proud to have her
on the Democratic ballot this
year, and the party is ready
to do everything we can to
ensure that she will take that
seat for the people."
"This is an · important
election year, as every presidential election year is, and
i1 is vital that ·every

Democrat 'With a stake in
this election get involved
and work hard for the victories we need and this community deserves." ·
· Tickets for the dinner are
$15 and· are available at the
door.' ifbe dinner will be
served at 6 p_m. A social
hour is set for 5.

Philli
. ps
fromPllgeAl
She has sbown that she can
campaign, and that she
came so close two years ago
demonstrates that she is a
strong candidate."

from Page AI

s..bntl- . , _

Joining Kathy McDaniel, rigi1t, at the State House for a meeting with Senator Joy Padgett,
were Ken Stewart and Melissa Gandee, Alzheimers Association representatives. Respite
care programs, such liS the ooe in Meigs County, and 11vailable funding were 11mong the
topics discussed.

.s pent about 45 ;-;;;1tes
each with Stewart and
Padgett feeling tbat she
had "gotten a little attention for the problems of

those with memory loss,
how it crushes the family,
the; importance of providing some relief for the
caregivers, and the need

elaborated on whether on
not an actual incident resulted in the conversation and
the subsequent "gray area."
Proffitt..said due to Spalin
. being othe!Wise occupied at
the department be recommended Pomeroy Police
Dispatcher Joey Riffle for·
the position at the starting
pay rate for officers whicb
is $10.23 per hour.
· In-otber-c:ouncil business:
CiiiiDcil ~ to I'lisc
tHe water· _fUnd appropria·
lions by $239,750 to reflect

a grant received for the
Lincoln Hill waterline
replacement project.
Terry Congo was awarded
die bid to mow &amp;ocb Grove
Cemetery. The bid' was for
13 mowings for $1,150.
· Council approved the
offer of. Young's Carpenter
Service to paint the gazebos
on the Pomeroy Parkin_g Lot
if the village purchased the

plete with a keepsake
memorial
program.
Students then sat in front of
a casket as fellow student
Erin Chapman, who played
the "drunk driver." was led
into the service in an
orange jumpsuit by Ohio
State Highway Patrolman
Sean Cunningham and
Racine · Chief of Police
Curtis Jones.
Pastor Ryan Eaton from
the Racine First Baptis7
. Church then presided over
the funeral. Eaton said he
wanted the student body to
know many 'things in life
were uncertain though death
was a certaint)l. He wanted '
students not to just think
about the ''here and now"'
but about ''eterility'' and that
God l&lt;;lVes them.
Although
organizers
knew they wouldn' t reach
all students, they hoped to

reach some with the dramalic reenactment.
"They think they're invincible at this age but they· re
not,"
SHS · Guidance
Counselor Jennifer Holt
said, remarking that she saw
some of the students tear up
during the realistic event.
Sandi . Smith of the
Syracuse Volunteer Fire
Department said the idea
calne from the internet alld
she along with fellow firefighters Shannon Smith
and Racine Chief Jamie
'Jones decided to help pull
the event together with the
help of many.
Those participating in the
mock event were : The
Syracu se Volunteer Fire
Department, The Racine

fifiti~Ji1·~mut •llteDailySrlir.I•JBt JRlttie

.

.

.

$17,391 in fees, fines and
forfeitures. df that amount,
$3,843.56. was collected in
parking meter money, tickets and padring pmnits. .
The meeting adjourned
into executive .session to
discuss personnel and disciplinary matters in the police
department. Both ·Proffitt
and Assistant Chief of .
Police
Alan
Queen
paint;~~
-.~ addressed council:- At~ ·
TJie mayor's report [or ,time, there Waf nQ report of
March - was approved with any action being.taken after
the village · taking in the executive session.

sell

Volunteer Fire Department,
the staff of Southern High
School, the Ohio State
Highway Patrol, the Racine
Police Department, the
Syracuse and Pomeroy
Squads.
Med
Flight,
Cremeens Funeral Home,
Dr. Douglas Hunter, Pastor
Ryan Eaton, Hector Flores,
Riverside Towing, Francis
Florist. Valerie Robens
from ·
the
.Lakin
Correction a! Center.
Students who participated
in the accident reenactment
were Holman . Chapman,
Kreig
Klenski,.
Ryan
Chapman.
Stephanie
Cundiff.

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"THUMBEUNA"
April t8 &amp; 19 7:00
April20 3:00
Presllow Patty beginning •
6 pm on Slltunlly the 19111
Call 446-ARlS tor
Reaervalions
tiOll Olfice: 4212nd .....
a.tNpolis, OH (740) 446-M1'S. _

Call today! (740) 44&amp;.2342
(740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1

,

{

for funding."
Meigs County's program
is in its second year. It is .
operated with a coordinator
and a staff of volunteers.

f r you!

Over 35,000 Readers everyissuel
•

·.

�-.

ACROSS THE NATION

The Daily Sentinel

Pagel\6

Inside

NBL playoff roandup, Paeell2

Delta, ·Northwest directorS sign
otT on airlines' combination,
creating world's biggest carrier
BY HARRY R. WEBER
AP BUSINESS WRITER

ATLANTA - Delta Air
Lines Inc. and Northwest
Airlines Corp., squeeZed by
record high fuel priQCS and a
slowing economy, are combining in a stock-swap deal
that would create the
world's biggest carrier.
The boards of both companies gave the deal the go·
ahead Monday.
l1le announcement could
spur other airline combinations. The most likely SCJe·
nario that has been talked
about is a potential deal
-between
United
and
Continental airlines.
Under the terms of the
Delta transaclion, NOI1hwest
shareholders will receive 1.25
Delta shares for each
Northwest share they own.
The exchange 11llio •qxc:seu\s
a premium to Northwest
shareholders of 16.8 pc:atent
based on Monday's closing
stock pices.
That currently values
Northwest at almost $3.63
billion'based 011 277 million
Northwest shares that the
c:'!li:ies said ate OlJts
.
Delta said the combined
airline, wbich will be called
Delta, will have an
·
value of $17.7 billion,
includes the combined market values of the two compatlies and combined net debt.
It will be based in Atlanta,
and . Delta CEO Richard
Anderson will bead the combined company.
.
· Delta Chairman Daniel
C
will become cbairman
of~ new board of directors
and
Northwest
Chairman Roy Bostoclc will
become vice chairman.
Delta President and Chief
Financial
Officer
Ed
Bastian will tetain his ·titles.
The new board will be

Dave Stevens, chairman they should have hrou~t us
of the Nonhwest branch of in and discussed it wtth ·us
the Air Line Pilots .earlier," he said.
Association, said hi"a pre- · Lee Mo;tk, head of
pared statement, "The risk · Delta's pilots union, said
to Northwest Airlines and Delta hopes cooler heads ·
to the · Northwest pilot will prevail.
"It takes two to tip.t."
group from letting this.
merger proceed, as it is · Moak told The Associated
now structured. is simply Press. "We don't see a fiJbt
too great."
• here. We see a cooperanve
Northwest .didn't consult relationship · widi
the
with the union that repre- Northwest pilots to bring
sents its baggage handlers, everybody to parity as soon
ramp workers and ticket as possible."
agents. said Joseph Tiberi, a
The two pilots unions
spokesman
for
the were unable to agree on
International Association of integrating seniority lists
Machinists and Aerospace before the combination was
Workers.
announced. A joint oontract
"If the airline wanted the they had reached was never
support of their employees consummated

Caw ed&amp;e 76fn, Page B6

·.

Thesday, April 15, 2008
~ScHEDULE
POW:RCW' - " IIChldule ol upt;:Qming high
8CftOOI -~ ..,mng events involving
-..na fnlm llllgl end Gl!llill countiec.
r

!

- . II Fort fryo. 5 p.ni.
Moigo at Jldalon, 4:30p.m.

aa,.n

floulh

111'111*0

GMIScAll 7

A Northwest Air1ines' plane IJIOves ~ a ground ctew before takeoff at Los Angeles
International Airport Monday. Delta Air Lines Inc. and Northwest Airlines Corp. Squeezed
by record high fuel prices and a slowing economy, are combining in a stock-sap deal thai
WO\Jkl create the world's biggest carrier.

Soult1 Gallia Ill Souttlem,_5 p.m.

, . 7 Apr

17

ea,.enrllrn
Ellnm at Sou1hom, 5 p.m .

--- -----

01 Soo1hem, s p.m.
-.wlllt&gt;-)brk 01 Meigs, 5 p.m.

ftilll9

SO,. B

11

It 7

A - r a t -. 5p.m.

PLAY COVERALL BINGO

.
-ndlr
at E-.n, 5 p.m.
F!lvor Valiay Ill Moigo. 5 p.m.
Melgo at fairland. 5 p.m.
Southom at Ook Hftl, 4:30p.m.

•

•• 7 . . ,.
.
ltoi!rll 1 I
_ a t . _ , . ( - ). raon

.

EIInmatBoipN~.noon

. at

-fllburg.10 a.m.

Eastern ·
girls .shut
out Miller
SWf'R&amp;owf
SPO!lTSOMYDAILYSENTINa.COM

CORNING
Cassi
Hauber had the only nm
liatted in. and Sami
Cumniins
pitcbed a
one-hit
shutout of
the Miller
L a d .Y
Falcons m
a Tri-Valley
Conference·

etn

Egylpnwd l!ld
'a
CPAP 118ch..._
Male
TUbing
Rll8ra .

••pao."llc• - . -

Ho ~l;l ng

Anmrcl

435'12 Second AftDIII
(740) 446-7619

Ha111ur

Reque•t Family Orygen

ATHENS
%75 WZIIt Ullioa SCnet

ID Pine Street • Gallipolis

594-3571

FOODFAIR

-·~life:.

-oo E :b I

Yow And's #l Fklor
Covniltg lktJIN!

P

740-446-0007

Powell's

a•nu:r•

M;11n SIH'f'l

P~nH'r;.ly .

OH

'40-~t; ;' -:1L~2

wwv. 1oodt;:nrrntl rtwt s rom

It's Just

WHY PAY MORE ?;:o

Around The
Corner ·

EVERY DAY

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adal•
Wh' . . . . . .

LOW PRICES'

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TODAY'S
NUMBER IS:

I

I .

Division
softball
game on

Monday.
· : Eastern remains undefeated in the TVC Hocking at 3() and have just one loss on
lhe season, improving to S-1 ·
:overall. Cummins won her
third straight game, striking
out .four batters and walking
two. The sophomore had a
no-hitter . . through
six
inr:xs.
y Eagle hits came
from senior Kelsey Holter
and freshman
Jessica
Cleland. Holter scored the
only nm in the top of the
secOnd after a leadoff single
and then steals of second
~d third base. Hauber came
to die plate two batters later
and drove in the eventual
winning run.
: Cleland's hit came in the
lhinl With two oulii. · .
The Lady Faloons were
stymied all game, reaching
base just three times. They
broke up the no-hitter with a
leadoff single in the bottom
Of the seventh before having
Ou:ir next · three batters
retiied to end the game.
: Eastern oomes home for
liDother prot on Tuesday
When tbe t.ly .Bulldogs of
Athens High School tta\&gt;el
' tO Tuppers Plains. Game
lime is aet for 5 p.m.

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Ettc: Rwldolpb. 5polt8 Writer
(740) 446 2342. 1111. 33
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8iywl Wahl!~, $pol1a Wrtllw
(740) -.:1342, art. 33

--Omydlllylrlbune.oom

LMy Cnlm, Spor1r Wrfter
(740) -.:11142, .... 33
ICrumO~IIIr!r.com

BatiOn.

•
-- .. -·· . ·- ... ~.--- ·-

. Apr; 11
t •
Gallia 01 Southom. 5 p.m.
,..

WIN UPTO $1,000 !!!

of the IICgu.
-based
IIOll-pilot
~loyees of boCh
nies will get a 4 perceill
equity stake in tbe new airline when the cbl cloaes.
Delta said
No!lhwest pilots _. .union representing most of
Northwest's ground work,rzs iJlllllediarely llllllOiliiOed
1hey would fight the combi-

. u.s.

e-m Boovor. 5 p.m.

o\1h0nl iot · 5 p.m.
Galjo Academy Ill-Meigs. 5 p.m.

.

... , . -r

- -·· ..-···----- •..

•'
-~

I

Tornadoes overwhelm Waterford 21-0
Br Scou WCII.R

Southern
hitters were
Marnhout
WATERFORD 1_l¥:
with a home
Southern Tornadoes whirled
run ·and sinup a stonn and drenched the
gle, Kreig
Waterford Wildcats · by a
KJeski ·a sin21-0
tally
gle,
Ryan
whopping
Monday night during boys
C h a p m a ri
Tri-Valley
Conference
had a double
Hocking Division varsity
. and single,
baseball
action
in • M•••IOUt Lemley
a
Waterford. Southern (5-l, 2- home run, Brad Brown a
0) leads the Tri-Valley single, Michael Manuel a
Conference but has a sus- single, Jordon Taylor a sinpeOded game to make up gle, Anthony Shamblin a
with Federal Hocking.
.single, Zach Ash a single,
Southern brought out the and two sirigle~ by J.D.
heavy artillery as Butch Whittington.
l1le lone Wildcat hit went
Mamhout drilled a grand
slam home run and sopho- to Alex Lang, a single to left
more Taylor Lemley rocket- in the first inning.
ed a solo shot over the wall
Coach Ryan Lemley said,
in the big timber exhibition . . ''I'm pleased with our
SI'ORTS _CORRESPONDENT

----

Southom Ill

'

m

I

5 R

A1hens •t Ealllim, 5 ·p.m.

l3 IIII"J!beR,

!Dille up of

a.;ts

GaHia kodam!llll Meigs. 5 p.m.

em:

·seven of whom will come
from Delta's board, includ- .
ing Anderson, and five of '
whom -will come from
Northwest's board, including Bostock and Doug
Steenland, the current
Northwest CEO. One direc·
- tor will come· from lhc Air
Line Pilots Association, the
union that represents pilots
from both carriers. Anderson
told reporters on a conference call it will be a Delta
pilot hOlding the voting seat
"We are confident the
iransaction will go forward
be
approved,"
and .
Steenland said.
There will be an unspecified number of job cuts or
transfers through the consolidation of overlapping corporate and administrative
functions, Delta said. The
two airlines employ more
than 80,000 people combined. The company expects
no involuntary furloughs of
front-line employees and
said the existing pension
.plans _for both companies'
employees will be protected.
· Delta doesn't plan to
close ·any . tilt two airlines· hubs.
Delta also said that it has
agreed with its pilot leadership to extend its existing
collective bargaining agmement through the end of
2012. The agreement,
which is subject to pilot rat- .
ification, wil:l aliow the
combined company to.realize the revenue synergies of
the transaction, Delta said.
It also provides the Delta
pilots a 3.5 peroent 'equity
stake in the new company
and other enhancements to
their CUITent cotttracl.
1be agreement does not
rover Non:hwest pilots.
Delta said it will use itli
best efforts to reach a combined Delta-N~ Pilot
lgfeement, illclu.t;n• reao•lution of pilot~ imegration, prior to tbe cJosinc

,

flaps

Neloonvl ...)brk Ill Meigs, 5 p.m.

~

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Ledy Faloons win IJi&amp;, P-ee Bl

Tuesday, ApriltS, 2008

offense and our pitching.
Ryan and Jordan both did
well on the mound tonight .
We are getting better as we
get some playing time in.
We have some big games
coming up this week . We
just have to be our best
every time we hit the field."
Southern scored four in
the first inning when Kleski
reached on an error,
Chapman was hit by a pitch,
Brown reached on an clrror
that let in two runs, Holter
slammed a liner that
knocked home a run as he
reached on an error, and
Taylor reached on an error
that scored Holter, the score
4-0.
In 'the second inning, a
double by Chapman and
RBI singles by Holter and

Lady

Wildcats
rally to beat

Shamblin highlighted a
five-run frame. Southern
now led 9-0. In the third,
Chapman knocked home
Klesld with a run , Brown
knocked home a run; and
another run came home ·on
BY Scan WOLFE
Taylor's fielder's · choice.
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT ·
SHS led 12-0.
Greene came in during the
WATERFORD -· The
fourth frame for the 'Cats on Waterford Wildcats posted·a
the mound, but his success
5-3 comewas limited to an eight-run
f r o m exhibition. Two errors, and
behind vicsingles by Kleski, Ash, and
tory over
Whittington, followed by
t
h ·e
Mamhout's grand slam
Southern
highlighted the offense for
L a d y
Tornadoes
the Tornado fourth. SHS led .
Monday
20-0. A Lemley home run in
night durthe fifth made it 21-0 forthe
ing girls
final.
Tri-Valley
Roble
. Conference
Plaae - Tomadns. 111
Hocking Division varsity
softball action. .
Southern (4-3, 1-2) scored
three runs in the first inning
when Sarah Eddy singled
and stole second and third,
then Whitney Wolfe-Riffle
walked and stole second.
Senior Ashley Robie then

Southern

Marauders trounce Spartans 11-1
BY EIIC RMMIIJIII
ERANDO~LYSENTlNEL.COM

ROCKSPRINGS - One
Plmn•-•·•1
week after beating 2007 coconference
champion
Wellston,
t
h
e
Marauders
basebal.l
team faced
STAFF REPORT
the other
SPORTS®MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
school they
shared the
CORNING
Jake
Tri-Valley
Lynch had eight strikeouts
Uitllnlr.ar
Conference
from the mound and went 20 h i 0
for-3 at the
Division title with last seaplate, helpson.
ing · the
And with II nms in five
Eastern
innings, Meigs remained
Eagles
undefeated in rhe&lt;division
baseball
with a mercy-rule! ~~
team
defeat
over thc:.t\lexander Spartans
the
Miller
on Mooffay night.
Falcons 9-1 ·
Joey Unbank:es, Corey
in · a TriHutton, and Justin Cotterill
Val"ley
all had a double and two hits
Conference .
Hendrix
for the Marauders, who
Hocking
improve to 4-0 in the TVC
Division ,g.ame on Monday.
Ohio.-The Spartans already .
Eastern I S now 3-i'i overall
have more losses in the
and
- 2-1 in ~ the TVC
division than ihey had last
Hocking.
season at 1-3. They're 1-4
Lynch earned the win,
overall.
pitching five innings and
Unbankes led Meigs with
walking none. Titus Pierce
four runs batted in. The
came
on in relief to start the
junior also reached base on
sixth
and
struck out three of
an error, soored three nms,
the six batters he faced.
and had two steals.
Lynch had two RBis to go .
Hutton, also a junior, had
with
his t~o hits, and junior
two RBis and soored a run,
Zach
Hendrix had a double,
while Cotterill went 2-for-2
.
two
hits.
and a team-high
with a walk., a steal. and an
three RBis. Eagle sophoRBl.
more Andrew Benedum had
..The gu:ys came through, .
a
double and two RBis. ·
hitting the ball hard," said
Eric Rllndolph/pholo
Other Eastern hits came
Meigs · head roach Jeremy Meigs junior Jason Morris scor~s one of six Marauder runs during the fourth inning of a Tri·
V&amp;lley Conference Ohio Divisioin baseball game against AleKander on Monday. Meigs .won
the game 11-1.

Eagles get
win at Miller

Meigs wins nine-inning
battle with Alexander
BY Ellie RAIIDiiLM

didn't give
up,
and
they fought
to the end
against a
very good
Alexander

ERIINOO~LYSEN11NEL.COM

POMEROY - After losing a three-nm lead in the
sixth inning, the Meigs Lady
Marauders maintained !herr
composure and fought off
the
Alexander · · Lady
Spartans for a 7-6 extrainnings victory in a TriVallef Conference Ohio
Divis1on softball game on
Monday.
Playint.:::!" home but not
at honie
se of unfavorable field conditions, Meigs
won its third game in a row
and improved to 3-2 on the
season and 2-1 in the TVC
Ohio.
Senior Amy Bm had a
double and the game-winning hit in the bottom of tbe
ninth.
After sophomore Meri
VanMeter had reached base
on an error and junior Lian
Hoffman was walked, Barr
hit a shot to the fence to
send VanMeter home for her
1
second RBI.
"I'm real! y proud of
them," said Meigs head
coacb Dave Fife, who noted
how evenly-matched the
two ~ea~Rs appeared to be.
"They stuck with it, they

team.',.

Meigs
finished
with
12
hits, while
Alexander
had 10. Both teams bad two

errors.
Junior Hailey Ebersbach
bad another solid outing on
the mound for the Lady
Marauders. She pitched all
nine innings and earned the
win, striting out four batters
and w.alking just one.
Hoffinan and sophomore
SbanaJI&lt;: Smith, like Barr,
both ·Ud l double and two
hits on ·the day, while sophomore Ml.cki Barnes had .
three hits and scored two
runs . Sophomore Tricia
Smith had a triple with two
RBls, and senior Hannah
Pratt had a hit. a walk, and a
run scored.
Senior Kelsey Fife · had a
walk and a run soored, .and
Eric liM~
freshman Chandra Stanley Meigs senior Amy Barr makes contact with a pitch du ring a Tri·Valley Conference Ohio
Division softball game with Alexander on Monday. Meigs won 7-6 in extra innings -When Barr
drove ~n the game-winning run.

..1 1...••-····1

�-.

ACROSS THE NATION

The Daily Sentinel

Pagel\6

Inside

NBL playoff roandup, Paeell2

Delta, ·Northwest directorS sign
otT on airlines' combination,
creating world's biggest carrier
BY HARRY R. WEBER
AP BUSINESS WRITER

ATLANTA - Delta Air
Lines Inc. and Northwest
Airlines Corp., squeeZed by
record high fuel priQCS and a
slowing economy, are combining in a stock-swap deal
that would create the
world's biggest carrier.
The boards of both companies gave the deal the go·
ahead Monday.
l1le announcement could
spur other airline combinations. The most likely SCJe·
nario that has been talked
about is a potential deal
-between
United
and
Continental airlines.
Under the terms of the
Delta transaclion, NOI1hwest
shareholders will receive 1.25
Delta shares for each
Northwest share they own.
The exchange 11llio •qxc:seu\s
a premium to Northwest
shareholders of 16.8 pc:atent
based on Monday's closing
stock pices.
That currently values
Northwest at almost $3.63
billion'based 011 277 million
Northwest shares that the
c:'!li:ies said ate OlJts
.
Delta said the combined
airline, wbich will be called
Delta, will have an
·
value of $17.7 billion,
includes the combined market values of the two compatlies and combined net debt.
It will be based in Atlanta,
and . Delta CEO Richard
Anderson will bead the combined company.
.
· Delta Chairman Daniel
C
will become cbairman
of~ new board of directors
and
Northwest
Chairman Roy Bostoclc will
become vice chairman.
Delta President and Chief
Financial
Officer
Ed
Bastian will tetain his ·titles.
The new board will be

Dave Stevens, chairman they should have hrou~t us
of the Nonhwest branch of in and discussed it wtth ·us
the Air Line Pilots .earlier," he said.
Association, said hi"a pre- · Lee Mo;tk, head of
pared statement, "The risk · Delta's pilots union, said
to Northwest Airlines and Delta hopes cooler heads ·
to the · Northwest pilot will prevail.
"It takes two to tip.t."
group from letting this.
merger proceed, as it is · Moak told The Associated
now structured. is simply Press. "We don't see a fiJbt
too great."
• here. We see a cooperanve
Northwest .didn't consult relationship · widi
the
with the union that repre- Northwest pilots to bring
sents its baggage handlers, everybody to parity as soon
ramp workers and ticket as possible."
agents. said Joseph Tiberi, a
The two pilots unions
spokesman
for
the were unable to agree on
International Association of integrating seniority lists
Machinists and Aerospace before the combination was
Workers.
announced. A joint oontract
"If the airline wanted the they had reached was never
support of their employees consummated

Caw ed&amp;e 76fn, Page B6

·.

Thesday, April 15, 2008
~ScHEDULE
POW:RCW' - " IIChldule ol upt;:Qming high
8CftOOI -~ ..,mng events involving
-..na fnlm llllgl end Gl!llill countiec.
r

!

- . II Fort fryo. 5 p.ni.
Moigo at Jldalon, 4:30p.m.

aa,.n

floulh

111'111*0

GMIScAll 7

A Northwest Air1ines' plane IJIOves ~ a ground ctew before takeoff at Los Angeles
International Airport Monday. Delta Air Lines Inc. and Northwest Airlines Corp. Squeezed
by record high fuel prices and a slowing economy, are combining in a stock-sap deal thai
WO\Jkl create the world's biggest carrier.

Soult1 Gallia Ill Souttlem,_5 p.m.

, . 7 Apr

17

ea,.enrllrn
Ellnm at Sou1hom, 5 p.m .

--- -----

01 Soo1hem, s p.m.
-.wlllt&gt;-)brk 01 Meigs, 5 p.m.

ftilll9

SO,. B

11

It 7

A - r a t -. 5p.m.

PLAY COVERALL BINGO

.
-ndlr
at E-.n, 5 p.m.
F!lvor Valiay Ill Moigo. 5 p.m.
Melgo at fairland. 5 p.m.
Southom at Ook Hftl, 4:30p.m.

•

•• 7 . . ,.
.
ltoi!rll 1 I
_ a t . _ , . ( - ). raon

.

EIInmatBoipN~.noon

. at

-fllburg.10 a.m.

Eastern ·
girls .shut
out Miller
SWf'R&amp;owf
SPO!lTSOMYDAILYSENTINa.COM

CORNING
Cassi
Hauber had the only nm
liatted in. and Sami
Cumniins
pitcbed a
one-hit
shutout of
the Miller
L a d .Y
Falcons m
a Tri-Valley
Conference·

etn

Egylpnwd l!ld
'a
CPAP 118ch..._
Male
TUbing
Rll8ra .

••pao."llc• - . -

Ho ~l;l ng

Anmrcl

435'12 Second AftDIII
(740) 446-7619

Ha111ur

Reque•t Family Orygen

ATHENS
%75 WZIIt Ullioa SCnet

ID Pine Street • Gallipolis

594-3571

FOODFAIR

-·~life:.

-oo E :b I

Yow And's #l Fklor
Covniltg lktJIN!

P

740-446-0007

Powell's

a•nu:r•

M;11n SIH'f'l

P~nH'r;.ly .

OH

'40-~t; ;' -:1L~2

wwv. 1oodt;:nrrntl rtwt s rom

It's Just

WHY PAY MORE ?;:o

Around The
Corner ·

EVERY DAY

,, 'W•C•
adal•
Wh' . . . . . .

LOW PRICES'

··-----·-..,
Twp lqcqliqiU'

•

TODAY'S
NUMBER IS:

I

I .

Division
softball
game on

Monday.
· : Eastern remains undefeated in the TVC Hocking at 3() and have just one loss on
lhe season, improving to S-1 ·
:overall. Cummins won her
third straight game, striking
out .four batters and walking
two. The sophomore had a
no-hitter . . through
six
inr:xs.
y Eagle hits came
from senior Kelsey Holter
and freshman
Jessica
Cleland. Holter scored the
only nm in the top of the
secOnd after a leadoff single
and then steals of second
~d third base. Hauber came
to die plate two batters later
and drove in the eventual
winning run.
: Cleland's hit came in the
lhinl With two oulii. · .
The Lady Faloons were
stymied all game, reaching
base just three times. They
broke up the no-hitter with a
leadoff single in the bottom
Of the seventh before having
Ou:ir next · three batters
retiied to end the game.
: Eastern oomes home for
liDother prot on Tuesday
When tbe t.ly .Bulldogs of
Athens High School tta\&gt;el
' tO Tuppers Plains. Game
lime is aet for 5 p.m.

-··-·

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Ettc: Rwldolpb. 5polt8 Writer
(740) 446 2342. 1111. 33
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(740) -.:1342, art. 33

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BatiOn.

•
-- .. -·· . ·- ... ~.--- ·-

. Apr; 11
t •
Gallia 01 Southom. 5 p.m.
,..

WIN UPTO $1,000 !!!

of the IICgu.
-based
IIOll-pilot
~loyees of boCh
nies will get a 4 perceill
equity stake in tbe new airline when the cbl cloaes.
Delta said
No!lhwest pilots _. .union representing most of
Northwest's ground work,rzs iJlllllediarely llllllOiliiOed
1hey would fight the combi-

. u.s.

e-m Boovor. 5 p.m.

o\1h0nl iot · 5 p.m.
Galjo Academy Ill-Meigs. 5 p.m.

.

... , . -r

- -·· ..-···----- •..

•'
-~

I

Tornadoes overwhelm Waterford 21-0
Br Scou WCII.R

Southern
hitters were
Marnhout
WATERFORD 1_l¥:
with a home
Southern Tornadoes whirled
run ·and sinup a stonn and drenched the
gle, Kreig
Waterford Wildcats · by a
KJeski ·a sin21-0
tally
gle,
Ryan
whopping
Monday night during boys
C h a p m a ri
Tri-Valley
Conference
had a double
Hocking Division varsity
. and single,
baseball
action
in • M•••IOUt Lemley
a
Waterford. Southern (5-l, 2- home run, Brad Brown a
0) leads the Tri-Valley single, Michael Manuel a
Conference but has a sus- single, Jordon Taylor a sinpeOded game to make up gle, Anthony Shamblin a
with Federal Hocking.
.single, Zach Ash a single,
Southern brought out the and two sirigle~ by J.D.
heavy artillery as Butch Whittington.
l1le lone Wildcat hit went
Mamhout drilled a grand
slam home run and sopho- to Alex Lang, a single to left
more Taylor Lemley rocket- in the first inning.
ed a solo shot over the wall
Coach Ryan Lemley said,
in the big timber exhibition . . ''I'm pleased with our
SI'ORTS _CORRESPONDENT

----

Southom Ill

'

m

I

5 R

A1hens •t Ealllim, 5 ·p.m.

l3 IIII"J!beR,

!Dille up of

a.;ts

GaHia kodam!llll Meigs. 5 p.m.

em:

·seven of whom will come
from Delta's board, includ- .
ing Anderson, and five of '
whom -will come from
Northwest's board, including Bostock and Doug
Steenland, the current
Northwest CEO. One direc·
- tor will come· from lhc Air
Line Pilots Association, the
union that represents pilots
from both carriers. Anderson
told reporters on a conference call it will be a Delta
pilot hOlding the voting seat
"We are confident the
iransaction will go forward
be
approved,"
and .
Steenland said.
There will be an unspecified number of job cuts or
transfers through the consolidation of overlapping corporate and administrative
functions, Delta said. The
two airlines employ more
than 80,000 people combined. The company expects
no involuntary furloughs of
front-line employees and
said the existing pension
.plans _for both companies'
employees will be protected.
· Delta doesn't plan to
close ·any . tilt two airlines· hubs.
Delta also said that it has
agreed with its pilot leadership to extend its existing
collective bargaining agmement through the end of
2012. The agreement,
which is subject to pilot rat- .
ification, wil:l aliow the
combined company to.realize the revenue synergies of
the transaction, Delta said.
It also provides the Delta
pilots a 3.5 peroent 'equity
stake in the new company
and other enhancements to
their CUITent cotttracl.
1be agreement does not
rover Non:hwest pilots.
Delta said it will use itli
best efforts to reach a combined Delta-N~ Pilot
lgfeement, illclu.t;n• reao•lution of pilot~ imegration, prior to tbe cJosinc

,

flaps

Neloonvl ...)brk Ill Meigs, 5 p.m.

~

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Ledy Faloons win IJi&amp;, P-ee Bl

Tuesday, ApriltS, 2008

offense and our pitching.
Ryan and Jordan both did
well on the mound tonight .
We are getting better as we
get some playing time in.
We have some big games
coming up this week . We
just have to be our best
every time we hit the field."
Southern scored four in
the first inning when Kleski
reached on an error,
Chapman was hit by a pitch,
Brown reached on an clrror
that let in two runs, Holter
slammed a liner that
knocked home a run as he
reached on an error, and
Taylor reached on an error
that scored Holter, the score
4-0.
In 'the second inning, a
double by Chapman and
RBI singles by Holter and

Lady

Wildcats
rally to beat

Shamblin highlighted a
five-run frame. Southern
now led 9-0. In the third,
Chapman knocked home
Klesld with a run , Brown
knocked home a run; and
another run came home ·on
BY Scan WOLFE
Taylor's fielder's · choice.
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT ·
SHS led 12-0.
Greene came in during the
WATERFORD -· The
fourth frame for the 'Cats on Waterford Wildcats posted·a
the mound, but his success
5-3 comewas limited to an eight-run
f r o m exhibition. Two errors, and
behind vicsingles by Kleski, Ash, and
tory over
Whittington, followed by
t
h ·e
Mamhout's grand slam
Southern
highlighted the offense for
L a d y
Tornadoes
the Tornado fourth. SHS led .
Monday
20-0. A Lemley home run in
night durthe fifth made it 21-0 forthe
ing girls
final.
Tri-Valley
Roble
. Conference
Plaae - Tomadns. 111
Hocking Division varsity
softball action. .
Southern (4-3, 1-2) scored
three runs in the first inning
when Sarah Eddy singled
and stole second and third,
then Whitney Wolfe-Riffle
walked and stole second.
Senior Ashley Robie then

Southern

Marauders trounce Spartans 11-1
BY EIIC RMMIIJIII
ERANDO~LYSENTlNEL.COM

ROCKSPRINGS - One
Plmn•-•·•1
week after beating 2007 coconference
champion
Wellston,
t
h
e
Marauders
basebal.l
team faced
STAFF REPORT
the other
SPORTS®MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
school they
shared the
CORNING
Jake
Tri-Valley
Lynch had eight strikeouts
Uitllnlr.ar
Conference
from the mound and went 20 h i 0
for-3 at the
Division title with last seaplate, helpson.
ing · the
And with II nms in five
Eastern
innings, Meigs remained
Eagles
undefeated in rhe&lt;division
baseball
with a mercy-rule! ~~
team
defeat
over thc:.t\lexander Spartans
the
Miller
on Mooffay night.
Falcons 9-1 ·
Joey Unbank:es, Corey
in · a TriHutton, and Justin Cotterill
Val"ley
all had a double and two hits
Conference .
Hendrix
for the Marauders, who
Hocking
improve to 4-0 in the TVC
Division ,g.ame on Monday.
Ohio.-The Spartans already .
Eastern I S now 3-i'i overall
have more losses in the
and
- 2-1 in ~ the TVC
division than ihey had last
Hocking.
season at 1-3. They're 1-4
Lynch earned the win,
overall.
pitching five innings and
Unbankes led Meigs with
walking none. Titus Pierce
four runs batted in. The
came
on in relief to start the
junior also reached base on
sixth
and
struck out three of
an error, soored three nms,
the six batters he faced.
and had two steals.
Lynch had two RBis to go .
Hutton, also a junior, had
with
his t~o hits, and junior
two RBis and soored a run,
Zach
Hendrix had a double,
while Cotterill went 2-for-2
.
two
hits.
and a team-high
with a walk., a steal. and an
three RBis. Eagle sophoRBl.
more Andrew Benedum had
..The gu:ys came through, .
a
double and two RBis. ·
hitting the ball hard," said
Eric Rllndolph/pholo
Other Eastern hits came
Meigs · head roach Jeremy Meigs junior Jason Morris scor~s one of six Marauder runs during the fourth inning of a Tri·
V&amp;lley Conference Ohio Divisioin baseball game against AleKander on Monday. Meigs .won
the game 11-1.

Eagles get
win at Miller

Meigs wins nine-inning
battle with Alexander
BY Ellie RAIIDiiLM

didn't give
up,
and
they fought
to the end
against a
very good
Alexander

ERIINOO~LYSEN11NEL.COM

POMEROY - After losing a three-nm lead in the
sixth inning, the Meigs Lady
Marauders maintained !herr
composure and fought off
the
Alexander · · Lady
Spartans for a 7-6 extrainnings victory in a TriVallef Conference Ohio
Divis1on softball game on
Monday.
Playint.:::!" home but not
at honie
se of unfavorable field conditions, Meigs
won its third game in a row
and improved to 3-2 on the
season and 2-1 in the TVC
Ohio.
Senior Amy Bm had a
double and the game-winning hit in the bottom of tbe
ninth.
After sophomore Meri
VanMeter had reached base
on an error and junior Lian
Hoffman was walked, Barr
hit a shot to the fence to
send VanMeter home for her
1
second RBI.
"I'm real! y proud of
them," said Meigs head
coacb Dave Fife, who noted
how evenly-matched the
two ~ea~Rs appeared to be.
"They stuck with it, they

team.',.

Meigs
finished
with
12
hits, while
Alexander
had 10. Both teams bad two

errors.
Junior Hailey Ebersbach
bad another solid outing on
the mound for the Lady
Marauders. She pitched all
nine innings and earned the
win, striting out four batters
and w.alking just one.
Hoffinan and sophomore
SbanaJI&lt;: Smith, like Barr,
both ·Ud l double and two
hits on ·the day, while sophomore Ml.cki Barnes had .
three hits and scored two
runs . Sophomore Tricia
Smith had a triple with two
RBls, and senior Hannah
Pratt had a hit. a walk, and a
run scored.
Senior Kelsey Fife · had a
walk and a run soored, .and
Eric liM~
freshman Chandra Stanley Meigs senior Amy Barr makes contact with a pitch du ring a Tri·Valley Conference Ohio
Division softball game with Alexander on Monday. Meigs won 7-6 in extra innings -When Barr
drove ~n the game-winning run.

..1 1...••-····1

�Page B2 • ·J re Daily Sentinel

'

l

www.mydailys'entinel.com

Tuesday, April IS, 2008
Pittsburgh
Penguins'
Sidney Crosby,
left, cele- ,
brates his goal
against the
Ottawa
Senators'
Martin Gerber
in the third
Pefiod of
Game 3of
NHL Stanley
Cup~ round
Mckey .playoff
actioA at ~he
Scotiabank
Place in
Ottawa .on
Monday.

Lady Falcons score 31 runs in pair

of victories over Calhoun County
Bv lARRY CRUM

(,

I

''

,.

·

www.mydailysentinel.com

.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

- Sentinel - l\e

t!trt~une

C LAS S'l FIE D

Wahama scored a tOo of
Wood also picked up her
runs in the first and second second varsity win of the
innings and added a pair in season. fanning seven and
HARTFORD, W.Va. the:third to take an 8-0 lead walking eight
in six
With tbe team finally stan- . before rocking the Red innings.
ing to click. Wahama made Devils with seven runs in
StilL de spite the big outMonday· s contest against the fourth to put the game ing for Wahama. Calhoun ·
visiting Cal~oun County out of reach.
CoUiity found a way to keep
Despite the big score, t)le it close.
look easy wtth a pair of
wms over the Red Devils.
Lady Falcons managed just
The Red Devil s openecj
The Lady Falcons (7-5), . four hits. with Kylie Riggs ' up an 8-2 lead after two ·
frnally back above .500 on. going 2-for-3, Haley Davis innings of before Waharna
the season , dommated game had a triple with three runs went wild with a seven run
one With a 15-0 VIctory m batted in and Mary Kebler third to take -a 9-8 lead.
~.......: .; . :" "'1
four mmngs while the sec- posted a single. Riggs also From there the Ladv
AP phOIO
· ond game presented more -racked up the pitching vic- Falcons defense held th~
~----~------------~
?fa challenge, but sull fell tory, going · four innings visitors . scoreless while
m favor of Wahama by a with five strikeouts and two WHS tacked on seven runs
16-8 margm.
walks
over the final two innings to
"I am feeling good about
G ·
tabb d
.th
less Gerber. Hossa capped Friday.
BY THE Ass0ctii1BJ P'WESS
.3 . lot of things."
said
reen was
e WI
seal the 16-8 win .
Pavel Datsy.uk scored 40
the
oomeback with a power-·
Wahama head coach Mike the loll'S for _ Calhoun
Ball was tagged with the
seconds
into the fmal period
play
goal
at
8:55,
Sidney
Wolfe. "We have a lot of County, fannmg t'-':'o and pitching Joss for t)le Red · OTTAWA
to
give
Detroit a 3-2 lead,
Nick Foligno scored I: II
games coming up and this walkmg II m four mmn~s ·Devils; posting eight walks Crosby, Jordan Staal and
and Detroit looked prime to
week will show what -we of work. On offense Jarvis and three strikeouts. Carilli Marian Hossa scored in the ·into the second to give for
take a stranglehold on the
third period to lift 'the Ottawa.
have. 1 want to see how our an~ Ball provided ~e on!~ provided the only offense
series.
Pittsburgh Penguins to a 4-1
pitchers do with so many ac~10n at the plate wtth a hit for the visitors, going 2-for- victory over the Ottawa
· Pftdators 5,
games ahead."
apiece.
2.
Senators on Monday night,
Red Wmgs 3
Wild 3, Avalanche 2, OT
Monday's games were
Game two was much
Wahama's busy week will taking a 3-0 lead in their
NASHVILLE, Tenn.
DENVER- Pierre-Marc
two of a scheduled eight closer, but the results stayed continue Tuesday when it first-round series.
Jason Amott scored with Bouchard took the pass from
games. two of which the same _ with a 16-8 travels to Wirt County for a
Maxime Talbot scored in 3:581eft in the final period, . Brian Rolston from behind
against teams ranked in the :"'ah~a victory. However double-header begi nnillg at the second period and Hossa the second Nashville goal in the net and sent it past Jose
top five in the state, to be m th!s game_, Wahama _4:30p.m.
also had two assists to push 9 seconds, and the PFedators Theodore II :58 into overplayed this week by the found Its offenstve groove.
·his former team to the brink ·rallied tci get back into the time to lift Minnesota.
Game 1
The Lady Falcons posted
Lady Falcons as. rain and
of elimination one year after first-round series.
It was the third sllraight
W.hiiM 15, Calhoun County 0
post~nements have packed 14 hits in the second game .cc
beating
Pittsburgh
in
fjve
Ryan
Suter
tied
the
game
·
o
vertime
!lame in this first000 0
022
this week full of softball.
led by Kaula Young who w
games on its way to. the just 9 seconds · earlier, round senes, with the Wild
332 7
1540
- As for Monday, the Lady was .3-for-5 with a triple. CCHS {4--7): G~n and Jarvis.
St:anley Cup fmals.
putting a slap shot from the winning two of them.
Crosby got the tiebreaking left side past Dominik
The Wild were ontshot 40Falcons got plenty of rest to double and three runs batted WHS (6-5): Kylie&lt;Aiggs and Mary Kabler.
WP- Riggs. LP- Kabler. •
goal
12
seconds
into
the
Hasek.
who
had
dominated
30
in regulation but conprepare with two quick ~~-· Af!~ber Tully had two
third. stunnin~ ,the Senators' the Predators for most of the trolled the extra period with
wins.
hils wtth four RBls, Taylor
Gllme2
crowd with his first goal .of game and the series. Martin most .o f the action in the
Game one saw plenty of -Hysell was 3-for-4 with two
- · 15, COihoUn County 8
.the playoffs :after busting in Erat scoled an ernpty-netter Colorado zone, outshooting
scoring but little offense RBis and Davis, Chelsea cc
620 00 822
on a 2-on-1 break and~- · with 41 seconds left to seal theAvalanche.lJ-7.
w
117
25
16143
from Wahama as past balls Hicks, Ashley Wolfe, Alex
CCHS (4-8): Ball and Jarvis.
Brent Burns and Rolston
and nearly a dozen walks Wood, Deidra Peters and _ WHS (7-5): Alex Wood and Deldra ping a shot that beat Martin the omne~from-behind win.
Geibet ~titk ·side.
NashviiJie, which trails 2- scored in the third jleriod for
_ moved players around the M!IJ'Y .Kebler had a hit
Staal
made
it
3-l
just
1:18
I,
will look to tie tl:le series Minnesota.
-~~1iiamond.
apiece.
WP ...!Woo&lt;£ LP- Ball,
later, :crashing the net and in Game 4 on Wodnesday
Andrew Brunnette and Joe
•
redirecting
ICristopher night, and the series will Salcic had the Avalanche's
for the second out of the with nine hits and no errors. Letang pass behind a help- then shift back to Detroit on goals.
fourth and then struck out
Grimm was pleased with
the next batter to end the his team's effort and ·
Smith's two-RBI triple put threatened.in the ninth if not
inning. lleLong returned in believes they can replicate
fromPageBl
'the
Lalily Marauders back in for. VanMeter. With the
the fifth and struck out the the kind of performance
front 5-3.
· leadoff and potential gothey had against Alexander
Grimm. "Justin Cotterill last two batters he faced.
doublecl
to
get
Hoffman
ahead runner on in tliie top
froni
Page
Bl
had a real big, night."
~we brought Bryan !Jack when facing 'otJier teams.
Uito
scoring
position
in
the
of the ninth, VanMeter
"As long as 1hey stay
Junior Bryan DeLong did in the game, he got his confifilh,
then
Shanalle
Srni&gt;
t
h
turned a crucial UDassisted
the majority of the pitching fidence level back up and relaxed and go 1o the plate had two walks.
got an RBI single to add double play to clear- the
for Meigs and earned the staned throwing strikes ·with a · lot of confidence,
bases. The second baseman · ·
another run for Meigs.
Meigs
~
runs
in
lbe
lhey're capable of hitting
win. He struck out eight bat- again," said Grimm:
led
to
the
sixth,
tl:len
fielded a grounder on
That
first
and
.
seooDd,
but
ters and walked three. · - Offensively,
DeLong the baseball like that. They Alexander bad two Qf·ibeir when Alexander erased the the next at -bat to retire the
Seni_or Austin
Dunfee went 1-for-2 with an RBI, a did a fmejob," he said.
Meigs goes right back to own in the ~to • tile three-run deficit on five side.
pitched- two-thirds of one walk, two stolen bases, and
~at lhree 1111KapirJ.. '
hits.
The Lady Ma~~lil.ers·
inning. They gave up a two runs. Junior Clay Bolin work Tuesday with another · The .Lady S
tOOk
Meigs
was
on
the
verge
of
return
ro their owl! field on
combined one hit on the also had a hit and scored a home game against Gallia the lead
winning
the
game
in
seven
aDd
Tuesday
for a. 5 p.m: game
day.
run. Sophomore Ryan Academy. First pitch will be only time In lbe fOUdh widl innings after VanMeter was against the Gallia Academy
"Bryan pitched real well," Jeffers had a hit, two RBI.s, thrown at 5 p.m.
a run, but Walks by 1\ife and hit by a pitch and Hoffman Blue Angels.
said Grimm. "He started to and scored a run.
Stanley and bits by Dames , bad a single, hut two pop
1118
Melga 7, AleUndlr I
struggle Jhere in the fourth
Junior J.T_ Evans had a A
' : ' " ~~·
""~1\
and Pmtt tied it lbe bot- Hies ended the inning. .
A
002 103 000 · 6102
inning, and we brought walk and a run scored, as M
301 e1
119 o
Alexander might have M
rom of the inning~ ;1IIIdlbeo
110 ~10 OOl_ - ~ 1t22
Austin in, and he got us out did junior Jason Monis and NtS (1-&lt;1, 1-3 rvc Ohio): Moritz, Gall
. - ....
A1~1 Bl\d Ctol&lt;!o!&lt;lI ded J'am
of a bases ·on
_ ('-w ith)
· - . seniOr
ron tory; . w ho _- •s
(.,2, 4:.o TV&lt;; . QfiiQI;. ~!Long ,
II CI!Up(e .OU[S."
replaced E:Y3JlS in the
Ilfd\. -DuntH (~). DeLong (5) ond_Elllll1S.
Dunfee forced a pop fly
The Marauders finished WP- DeLong; LP- Moritz.
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.(:oM

'.

· Tuesday, April15, 2008

Gallia
County

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wooded location. $199,900.
Call for an appt. 74Q-245·
m25

-------

,...,. .

3BA, 3.5 bath, 2000 sq. h.
condo In
Florida
on
Clea1W!11er Island. Boa1 sNp

\IIPf, ~0 /fiiCQMlO'..,.AX
~~fl)b .

~J:"ge. Must sell! 446-

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Only 304~75-6327

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Sundav In-column: 1 ·: 00 p.m • . Sund.y Dlaplay: 1 .:00
For Sundays Paper
Thu....:lay for Sund•p

Auction Saturday 6pm
2 (M) OU1llide dogs. 1 pan Over 20 Hcoon hound/black &amp; tan. 1 CeNMa, Dog l Cld Food,
LabiOhow mi.Wiact. Great CotfM, Frwh Produce,
wlchlldren.446-4769

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Looking for an updated family home, on 1 acre mil w/
bad(yard privacy fence in

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br. 2 ba. w/ lg. bonus rQOm
vinyl sided ranch has new
roof, anact'led carport, 2 car
garage , refinished hardwood floors is ready to
move in , central air &amp; natural
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lg. partry&amp; faundry room
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$88,000. call (740)645-8751

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Meigs junior J. T. Evans takes a moment to regroup anei- takii'C a pitch off his catcher's
mask during a Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division game against Alexander on Monday.

I

Rally
frQID . . . Bl
roped a 3-0 pitcll over the
wall for a three-run 1lome
lUll and 3-0 Soutbem lad.

I

-5outhem's tcaey Tllrtey
·dieD went 10 wed on tbe
; mound for the Thmado
· 1110rm. Sbe retired the side
. · iD order, then Soothem fol. lowed in the same I1UIIIDCI'
: with a 1-2-3 inning by
· ~ie
Lawlor,
the

: Wateif&lt;Jod starter and even: lull winner. Thrley gave up
: a 51nile to Mariah Thatcher
but struck out the other
-three

batters

·w.nord sq;ond.
- Offensively,
never really

in

the

Southern
threatened

agam, ·g etting to second seventh with two out when
base just twice when She was hit by a pitch. A
Stephanie ·Cundiff 1'l"¥'hrd strike out ended the game llli
on a fielder's choice and Southern fell to defeat.
stole second in the foW'Ih
Lawlor posted the win
and Brearura llylor ilnaled with one strikeout and just
and stole second in the tiftb. one walk. '1\uiey suft'ea:od
In lbe Widtiiford founh, ·the lou despite a good
Sidney Lawlor rwfwd on effort with 'Iilii strikeoutti
an error and rode home on a and
OJIC walk. Southern

KaitJ. Stewart home IUD.
: , ; ttill beld die J..2
qe, but dart lkiet 1uttred
on the borima.
.
Ill . tile Waterford fifth.
Tana WaUve •W
Mfllle Lawlor ~ her
hnn\1:, dlerl Llurell .........
doubled home a run, Sidney
Lawlor imgled and sbe
scored on a iacrifioe fly by

Just

bid fi"' hkl- s.n.b Eddy
• • • • Albley Robie •
home ND and two slnJ!es;
aad 8reanna Taylor 1 sinde. Wataford hitters were
Lawlor,· Bolner, S. Lawlor,
Stewart, Thatcher, Negri,
aDd Wallace.
Southern hosts
Gallia Wednesday.

Kaitlyn Stewart, the scpre
S-3. Soothem went down in SHS
order in the sixth, then &amp;aW • WHS
Hannah Miller reach in .the . WP -

w:ohw:':
DDO

South

1
Hall 3 5 1
230 X
511

Lowtor; LP - Turtoy.

Meigs junior Lian .Hoffman throws the ball back to the infield after a base hit during a Tri- . ·
Valley Conference Ohio Division game against Alexander on Monday.

Eagles

ished with just two hits,
both coming from Griffin,
who went 2-for-3.
fnmPageBl
Despite an improved
fromPageBl
effort in gaine two, the
from junior De!U. Griffin, Eagle&amp; still had trouble
Waterford ~ching struck
who also had an RBI, and slowing the high-powered out none, w 8
seven, and
Hawks, whO woo the game gave .up thirteen hits.
senior Tyler Keams.
Both teams scored one 11-5.
Greene came on in relief .of
Griffin was oo fire for the Matt. McCutcheon in the
run In the first, but Easrem
inning.
Ryan
drove or walked illllCVCII in aetond game, going 4-for-4 fourth
the iCCO!td, batritll II'OWid with two doubles, three runs Chapman got the win for
the order and blowq die ICO!ed,. · ud an RBI. , the Tomai1oes and now
g•rne open. Tbe FalCC?D• Hendrix wa&amp; 2-for-3 ·with owns a 4-0 record, striking
had no re&amp;ponse, IJCWIII three RBls. and Pieloe went ·OUt four and walkitll three
just three hits the rest of tbC 3-for-4 with a double. while gi viag up the lone
Wildcat hit. Joidaa Taylor
wa_y.
5oDbomore Nidt Brannon came
on in relief and sttuclr.
The win got the EqJes batl 1 bit ind dn)ve In the
out
all
six batten he faced
back in10 tlie win column other Eq1e run.
.
while walkins none and
following two losses on
Ealltem return&amp; home giving up no hits.
- .
Saturday againll Berlin Tunday for 1 game against
Southern goes to Beaver-,
Hiland.
Athens. Scheduled- start Eastern Tuesday and hostti ·
In the fli'St pme -o f the time is S p.m.
South Gallia Wednesday.
doqbJeheader. the Hawks
scored 10 111115 iD five
a.1wn.11,· tat ladO
7 I wl,-.1
21130
171 .000 0
870 1 SHS G3 11 innings and mercy-ruled EIll
1110 WO 0
150
WHS
000
DO
0
111
Eastern 1().(). &amp;stem fin- WI'-~;LP-o-.
WP - CMpfnan; LP -t.loe-.

Tornadoes

.

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Reeidential Tree Trimmer,
muo1 k.- locol apecios. must be lo

......

CURRENT EVENTS

Climb--· ._. _.

TECHNOWGY

e.perience, dean driving

record, COIIII~ Class

A

or B Uconoo, p...,&lt;IP&lt;&gt;Jrment

drug

tost ,

COMICS SPillS

£EO

~--10:
Tree C..~·
' 'hr
•

88 n-.;- RDIKI. Gollipoli&amp;

-g

------: Plants in
Garden eenter Futi/Pirt
time 886-56S-7537

~ lief n Grll """ Oh 45131

oppicalians for.
quollied line cooks and
dNh ••hels. Pllae ~
in perwxl or Clll to 181 ~an
intaJ ..... 441 ·9371 ' 308
2nd INs, Glllipoli&amp;.

ENTERTAINMENT

or call ~15

and ·more•••

Somllone to Iron at my
- - - - - - - hourla. Mul1 have , __

fiEDERAL

BODBS. 446-4996

POSTAL JOBS
Super -~ io ~ 1or
S17 .&amp;t-S2827rlw.. now hir- alronl.- uooc:illle. ing.I'Dr........._..•ntr.e be 6 to wort&lt; 1l&amp;xible

e

-·····job

info, cal·
AmoriconAiooc. oflobor1

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rol&lt;llls.

91S.59N226, 2 -- ..,.,. loWrY in ......
calls piooR.

'

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The Dilly Sentinel
992-2155

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�Page B2 • ·J re Daily Sentinel

'

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www.mydailys'entinel.com

Tuesday, April IS, 2008
Pittsburgh
Penguins'
Sidney Crosby,
left, cele- ,
brates his goal
against the
Ottawa
Senators'
Martin Gerber
in the third
Pefiod of
Game 3of
NHL Stanley
Cup~ round
Mckey .playoff
actioA at ~he
Scotiabank
Place in
Ottawa .on
Monday.

Lady Falcons score 31 runs in pair

of victories over Calhoun County
Bv lARRY CRUM

(,

I

''

,.

·

www.mydailysentinel.com

.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

- Sentinel - l\e

t!trt~une

C LAS S'l FIE D

Wahama scored a tOo of
Wood also picked up her
runs in the first and second second varsity win of the
innings and added a pair in season. fanning seven and
HARTFORD, W.Va. the:third to take an 8-0 lead walking eight
in six
With tbe team finally stan- . before rocking the Red innings.
ing to click. Wahama made Devils with seven runs in
StilL de spite the big outMonday· s contest against the fourth to put the game ing for Wahama. Calhoun ·
visiting Cal~oun County out of reach.
CoUiity found a way to keep
Despite the big score, t)le it close.
look easy wtth a pair of
wms over the Red Devils.
Lady Falcons managed just
The Red Devil s openecj
The Lady Falcons (7-5), . four hits. with Kylie Riggs ' up an 8-2 lead after two ·
frnally back above .500 on. going 2-for-3, Haley Davis innings of before Waharna
the season , dommated game had a triple with three runs went wild with a seven run
one With a 15-0 VIctory m batted in and Mary Kebler third to take -a 9-8 lead.
~.......: .; . :" "'1
four mmngs while the sec- posted a single. Riggs also From there the Ladv
AP phOIO
· ond game presented more -racked up the pitching vic- Falcons defense held th~
~----~------------~
?fa challenge, but sull fell tory, going · four innings visitors . scoreless while
m favor of Wahama by a with five strikeouts and two WHS tacked on seven runs
16-8 margm.
walks
over the final two innings to
"I am feeling good about
G ·
tabb d
.th
less Gerber. Hossa capped Friday.
BY THE Ass0ctii1BJ P'WESS
.3 . lot of things."
said
reen was
e WI
seal the 16-8 win .
Pavel Datsy.uk scored 40
the
oomeback with a power-·
Wahama head coach Mike the loll'S for _ Calhoun
Ball was tagged with the
seconds
into the fmal period
play
goal
at
8:55,
Sidney
Wolfe. "We have a lot of County, fannmg t'-':'o and pitching Joss for t)le Red · OTTAWA
to
give
Detroit a 3-2 lead,
Nick Foligno scored I: II
games coming up and this walkmg II m four mmn~s ·Devils; posting eight walks Crosby, Jordan Staal and
and Detroit looked prime to
week will show what -we of work. On offense Jarvis and three strikeouts. Carilli Marian Hossa scored in the ·into the second to give for
take a stranglehold on the
third period to lift 'the Ottawa.
have. 1 want to see how our an~ Ball provided ~e on!~ provided the only offense
series.
Pittsburgh Penguins to a 4-1
pitchers do with so many ac~10n at the plate wtth a hit for the visitors, going 2-for- victory over the Ottawa
· Pftdators 5,
games ahead."
apiece.
2.
Senators on Monday night,
Red Wmgs 3
Wild 3, Avalanche 2, OT
Monday's games were
Game two was much
Wahama's busy week will taking a 3-0 lead in their
NASHVILLE, Tenn.
DENVER- Pierre-Marc
two of a scheduled eight closer, but the results stayed continue Tuesday when it first-round series.
Jason Amott scored with Bouchard took the pass from
games. two of which the same _ with a 16-8 travels to Wirt County for a
Maxime Talbot scored in 3:581eft in the final period, . Brian Rolston from behind
against teams ranked in the :"'ah~a victory. However double-header begi nnillg at the second period and Hossa the second Nashville goal in the net and sent it past Jose
top five in the state, to be m th!s game_, Wahama _4:30p.m.
also had two assists to push 9 seconds, and the PFedators Theodore II :58 into overplayed this week by the found Its offenstve groove.
·his former team to the brink ·rallied tci get back into the time to lift Minnesota.
Game 1
The Lady Falcons posted
Lady Falcons as. rain and
of elimination one year after first-round series.
It was the third sllraight
W.hiiM 15, Calhoun County 0
post~nements have packed 14 hits in the second game .cc
beating
Pittsburgh
in
fjve
Ryan
Suter
tied
the
game
·
o
vertime
!lame in this first000 0
022
this week full of softball.
led by Kaula Young who w
games on its way to. the just 9 seconds · earlier, round senes, with the Wild
332 7
1540
- As for Monday, the Lady was .3-for-5 with a triple. CCHS {4--7): G~n and Jarvis.
St:anley Cup fmals.
putting a slap shot from the winning two of them.
Crosby got the tiebreaking left side past Dominik
The Wild were ontshot 40Falcons got plenty of rest to double and three runs batted WHS (6-5): Kylie&lt;Aiggs and Mary Kabler.
WP- Riggs. LP- Kabler. •
goal
12
seconds
into
the
Hasek.
who
had
dominated
30
in regulation but conprepare with two quick ~~-· Af!~ber Tully had two
third. stunnin~ ,the Senators' the Predators for most of the trolled the extra period with
wins.
hils wtth four RBls, Taylor
Gllme2
crowd with his first goal .of game and the series. Martin most .o f the action in the
Game one saw plenty of -Hysell was 3-for-4 with two
- · 15, COihoUn County 8
.the playoffs :after busting in Erat scoled an ernpty-netter Colorado zone, outshooting
scoring but little offense RBis and Davis, Chelsea cc
620 00 822
on a 2-on-1 break and~- · with 41 seconds left to seal theAvalanche.lJ-7.
w
117
25
16143
from Wahama as past balls Hicks, Ashley Wolfe, Alex
CCHS (4-8): Ball and Jarvis.
Brent Burns and Rolston
and nearly a dozen walks Wood, Deidra Peters and _ WHS (7-5): Alex Wood and Deldra ping a shot that beat Martin the omne~from-behind win.
Geibet ~titk ·side.
NashviiJie, which trails 2- scored in the third jleriod for
_ moved players around the M!IJ'Y .Kebler had a hit
Staal
made
it
3-l
just
1:18
I,
will look to tie tl:le series Minnesota.
-~~1iiamond.
apiece.
WP ...!Woo&lt;£ LP- Ball,
later, :crashing the net and in Game 4 on Wodnesday
Andrew Brunnette and Joe
•
redirecting
ICristopher night, and the series will Salcic had the Avalanche's
for the second out of the with nine hits and no errors. Letang pass behind a help- then shift back to Detroit on goals.
fourth and then struck out
Grimm was pleased with
the next batter to end the his team's effort and ·
Smith's two-RBI triple put threatened.in the ninth if not
inning. lleLong returned in believes they can replicate
fromPageBl
'the
Lalily Marauders back in for. VanMeter. With the
the fifth and struck out the the kind of performance
front 5-3.
· leadoff and potential gothey had against Alexander
Grimm. "Justin Cotterill last two batters he faced.
doublecl
to
get
Hoffman
ahead runner on in tliie top
froni
Page
Bl
had a real big, night."
~we brought Bryan !Jack when facing 'otJier teams.
Uito
scoring
position
in
the
of the ninth, VanMeter
"As long as 1hey stay
Junior Bryan DeLong did in the game, he got his confifilh,
then
Shanalle
Srni&gt;
t
h
turned a crucial UDassisted
the majority of the pitching fidence level back up and relaxed and go 1o the plate had two walks.
got an RBI single to add double play to clear- the
for Meigs and earned the staned throwing strikes ·with a · lot of confidence,
bases. The second baseman · ·
another run for Meigs.
Meigs
~
runs
in
lbe
lhey're capable of hitting
win. He struck out eight bat- again," said Grimm:
led
to
the
sixth,
tl:len
fielded a grounder on
That
first
and
.
seooDd,
but
ters and walked three. · - Offensively,
DeLong the baseball like that. They Alexander bad two Qf·ibeir when Alexander erased the the next at -bat to retire the
Seni_or Austin
Dunfee went 1-for-2 with an RBI, a did a fmejob," he said.
Meigs goes right back to own in the ~to • tile three-run deficit on five side.
pitched- two-thirds of one walk, two stolen bases, and
~at lhree 1111KapirJ.. '
hits.
The Lady Ma~~lil.ers·
inning. They gave up a two runs. Junior Clay Bolin work Tuesday with another · The .Lady S
tOOk
Meigs
was
on
the
verge
of
return
ro their owl! field on
combined one hit on the also had a hit and scored a home game against Gallia the lead
winning
the
game
in
seven
aDd
Tuesday
for a. 5 p.m: game
day.
run. Sophomore Ryan Academy. First pitch will be only time In lbe fOUdh widl innings after VanMeter was against the Gallia Academy
"Bryan pitched real well," Jeffers had a hit, two RBI.s, thrown at 5 p.m.
a run, but Walks by 1\ife and hit by a pitch and Hoffman Blue Angels.
said Grimm. "He started to and scored a run.
Stanley and bits by Dames , bad a single, hut two pop
1118
Melga 7, AleUndlr I
struggle Jhere in the fourth
Junior J.T_ Evans had a A
' : ' " ~~·
""~1\
and Pmtt tied it lbe bot- Hies ended the inning. .
A
002 103 000 · 6102
inning, and we brought walk and a run scored, as M
301 e1
119 o
Alexander might have M
rom of the inning~ ;1IIIdlbeo
110 ~10 OOl_ - ~ 1t22
Austin in, and he got us out did junior Jason Monis and NtS (1-&lt;1, 1-3 rvc Ohio): Moritz, Gall
. - ....
A1~1 Bl\d Ctol&lt;!o!&lt;lI ded J'am
of a bases ·on
_ ('-w ith)
· - . seniOr
ron tory; . w ho _- •s
(.,2, 4:.o TV&lt;; . QfiiQI;. ~!Long ,
II CI!Up(e .OU[S."
replaced E:Y3JlS in the
Ilfd\. -DuntH (~). DeLong (5) ond_Elllll1S.
Dunfee forced a pop fly
The Marauders finished WP- DeLong; LP- Moritz.
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.(:oM

'.

· Tuesday, April15, 2008

Gallia
County

OH

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occup

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trained. 1 (F) ti9or striped &amp;
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Great w/ child~n. 446-4769

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kltncorlylee&lt;;omcast.net

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C1"086 Creek Auction Buffalo

•

2000 Custom Built Cape I

Cod.

4BR

2 SA

Fin,

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Basement, located outside

I ._,_,.10

Uquld'llde. Lots o1 Uoed
Starting to
sell high quality knives such
as Case, Buol&lt; &amp; Mossy
Oak. Buiding 15 lull. Visa
and Mas1er Corti &amp; Deb11
550-1616 S1ephen

r"&amp;,oo'l

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of Rio Grande in a beautiful
wooded location. $199,900.
Call for an appt. 74Q-245·
m25

-------

,...,. .

3BA, 3.5 bath, 2000 sq. h.
condo In
Florida
on
Clea1W!11er Island. Boa1 sNp

\IIPf, ~0 /fiiCQMlO'..,.AX
~~fl)b .

~J:"ge. Must sell! 446-

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Only 304~75-6327

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Auction Saturday 6pm
2 (M) OU1llide dogs. 1 pan Over 20 Hcoon hound/black &amp; tan. 1 CeNMa, Dog l Cld Food,
LabiOhow mi.Wiact. Great CotfM, Frwh Produce,
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ad.vertl~e "any
preference, limttatton or
diRrimln.tign bnMi an
fllce, color, religion, sex
tarnlllal at8t:US Of MtiOMI
orlgfn, or •ny int.ntlon to

make any •uch

preterenoe, limitation or
diKJimlnltion."

•

.. -----"'""~==

Looking for an updated family home, on 1 acre mil w/
bad(yard privacy fence in

Gallipolis. this 2100 SO Ft. 3
br. 2 ba. w/ lg. bonus rQOm
vinyl sided ranch has new
roof, anact'led carport, 2 car
garage , refinished hardwood floors is ready to
move in , central air &amp; natural
gas furnace. stone· FP in
LR. Kitchen has new oak
cabinets, new vinyl Hoorin~.
lg. partry&amp; faundry room
SpacioUs .master suite w/
F.P &amp; ·private entrance.

P'riced to sell IOBcOOO Now
$88,000. call (740)645-8751

fo~ ~
m

s·

-

...,....
.,"'""'onl ··-"'41
WI IIIII nat-~
In

1111 ....

'

INDEX

¥

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'

'

'
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'

'
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'

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-S.Sale··············-······················-····
.for Sate ............................. no
II lleo ................................- ....550
71 0

t (

't }

,,,,,
f

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Ellt.2347

:
AIIIII•If ..........................................- •.•. no

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1•87H63-G.7

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............................. 340

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Etic ·R and lplwpl;utu
,E fte Ria

t %l:Jpt n

Meigs junior J. T. Evans takes a moment to regroup anei- takii'C a pitch off his catcher's
mask during a Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division game against Alexander on Monday.

I

Rally
frQID . . . Bl
roped a 3-0 pitcll over the
wall for a three-run 1lome
lUll and 3-0 Soutbem lad.

I

-5outhem's tcaey Tllrtey
·dieD went 10 wed on tbe
; mound for the Thmado
· 1110rm. Sbe retired the side
. · iD order, then Soothem fol. lowed in the same I1UIIIDCI'
: with a 1-2-3 inning by
· ~ie
Lawlor,
the

: Wateif&lt;Jod starter and even: lull winner. Thrley gave up
: a 51nile to Mariah Thatcher
but struck out the other
-three

batters

·w.nord sq;ond.
- Offensively,
never really

in

the

Southern
threatened

agam, ·g etting to second seventh with two out when
base just twice when She was hit by a pitch. A
Stephanie ·Cundiff 1'l"¥'hrd strike out ended the game llli
on a fielder's choice and Southern fell to defeat.
stole second in the foW'Ih
Lawlor posted the win
and Brearura llylor ilnaled with one strikeout and just
and stole second in the tiftb. one walk. '1\uiey suft'ea:od
In lbe Widtiiford founh, ·the lou despite a good
Sidney Lawlor rwfwd on effort with 'Iilii strikeoutti
an error and rode home on a and
OJIC walk. Southern

KaitJ. Stewart home IUD.
: , ; ttill beld die J..2
qe, but dart lkiet 1uttred
on the borima.
.
Ill . tile Waterford fifth.
Tana WaUve •W
Mfllle Lawlor ~ her
hnn\1:, dlerl Llurell .........
doubled home a run, Sidney
Lawlor imgled and sbe
scored on a iacrifioe fly by

Just

bid fi"' hkl- s.n.b Eddy
• • • • Albley Robie •
home ND and two slnJ!es;
aad 8reanna Taylor 1 sinde. Wataford hitters were
Lawlor,· Bolner, S. Lawlor,
Stewart, Thatcher, Negri,
aDd Wallace.
Southern hosts
Gallia Wednesday.

Kaitlyn Stewart, the scpre
S-3. Soothem went down in SHS
order in the sixth, then &amp;aW • WHS
Hannah Miller reach in .the . WP -

w:ohw:':
DDO

South

1
Hall 3 5 1
230 X
511

Lowtor; LP - Turtoy.

Meigs junior Lian .Hoffman throws the ball back to the infield after a base hit during a Tri- . ·
Valley Conference Ohio Division game against Alexander on Monday.

Eagles

ished with just two hits,
both coming from Griffin,
who went 2-for-3.
fnmPageBl
Despite an improved
fromPageBl
effort in gaine two, the
from junior De!U. Griffin, Eagle&amp; still had trouble
Waterford ~ching struck
who also had an RBI, and slowing the high-powered out none, w 8
seven, and
Hawks, whO woo the game gave .up thirteen hits.
senior Tyler Keams.
Both teams scored one 11-5.
Greene came on in relief .of
Griffin was oo fire for the Matt. McCutcheon in the
run In the first, but Easrem
inning.
Ryan
drove or walked illllCVCII in aetond game, going 4-for-4 fourth
the iCCO!td, batritll II'OWid with two doubles, three runs Chapman got the win for
the order and blowq die ICO!ed,. · ud an RBI. , the Tomai1oes and now
g•rne open. Tbe FalCC?D• Hendrix wa&amp; 2-for-3 ·with owns a 4-0 record, striking
had no re&amp;ponse, IJCWIII three RBls. and Pieloe went ·OUt four and walkitll three
just three hits the rest of tbC 3-for-4 with a double. while gi viag up the lone
Wildcat hit. Joidaa Taylor
wa_y.
5oDbomore Nidt Brannon came
on in relief and sttuclr.
The win got the EqJes batl 1 bit ind dn)ve In the
out
all
six batten he faced
back in10 tlie win column other Eq1e run.
.
while walkins none and
following two losses on
Ealltem return&amp; home giving up no hits.
- .
Saturday againll Berlin Tunday for 1 game against
Southern goes to Beaver-,
Hiland.
Athens. Scheduled- start Eastern Tuesday and hostti ·
In the fli'St pme -o f the time is S p.m.
South Gallia Wednesday.
doqbJeheader. the Hawks
scored 10 111115 iD five
a.1wn.11,· tat ladO
7 I wl,-.1
21130
171 .000 0
870 1 SHS G3 11 innings and mercy-ruled EIll
1110 WO 0
150
WHS
000
DO
0
111
Eastern 1().(). &amp;stem fin- WI'-~;LP-o-.
WP - CMpfnan; LP -t.loe-.

Tornadoes

.

J

•

Reeidential Tree Trimmer,
muo1 k.- locol apecios. must be lo

......

CURRENT EVENTS

Climb--· ._. _.

TECHNOWGY

e.perience, dean driving

record, COIIII~ Class

A

or B Uconoo, p...,&lt;IP&lt;&gt;Jrment

drug

tost ,

COMICS SPillS

£EO

~--10:
Tree C..~·
' 'hr
•

88 n-.;- RDIKI. Gollipoli&amp;

-g

------: Plants in
Garden eenter Futi/Pirt
time 886-56S-7537

~ lief n Grll """ Oh 45131

oppicalians for.
quollied line cooks and
dNh ••hels. Pllae ~
in perwxl or Clll to 181 ~an
intaJ ..... 441 ·9371 ' 308
2nd INs, Glllipoli&amp;.

ENTERTAINMENT

or call ~15

and ·more•••

Somllone to Iron at my
- - - - - - - hourla. Mul1 have , __

fiEDERAL

BODBS. 446-4996

POSTAL JOBS
Super -~ io ~ 1or
S17 .&amp;t-S2827rlw.. now hir- alronl.- uooc:illle. ing.I'Dr........._..•ntr.e be 6 to wort&lt; 1l&amp;xible

e

-·····job

info, cal·
AmoriconAiooc. oflobor1

c- -

-~-­
rol&lt;llls.

91S.59N226, 2 -- ..,.,. loWrY in ......
calls piooR.

'

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. To Subsaibe Call

The Dilly Sentinel
992-2155

· no pl1one

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Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesd8y,April15,2008

~~~~~~~~~~·~l

Tuesday, April15, 2008
ALLEYOOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

'

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
U.-3bod2bothon .50

DooriiT_,
3 B&lt;ldroom House In
- P I cnt
Syracuse. $500/monlh +
-$100a month. 0wnar
financing-. 74Q.4.06- 41h Street 01liee Space or Hud App. No 3571J
Retail Space 1,300 sq. ft. (304)675-5332 weekends
Phooo ~75-3788
74Q.sg1.()265

-

r

MODI• AfiS- Ohio's

lorgost~.oy

I

L&lt;mi &amp;

A~~-~~
~~

· M - 740-828-2750

mymid•e~home .corn

•

--4br·2ba

6acrvsmlloro·LeftForkAd

t ,700sqft $49,9EI9

: '.r : ' t ' k e. Pricedto

M740.fl2B-2750
myrnid•ustltome.oorn

MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
RENT, 103HleorgesCreel&lt;

New3Badroomhomesfrom Rd, . .H111
. , Include&amp; trailer lot lor rent. • ·~-34
$214 36 per month
"t"nll o
m - . ~..... deli\101)' &amp;
---·• - - ·
sM-op. (740)365-2434
USED -ES 38R from
$1,900 down. Save $5000!
740-828-2750
mymid..slloome.com

riO

~
JiORIIFM'

2BR in Acllaville- dis- Friday, from' to 4pm,
tricl7"'367~"
Office is located at 1151
IJull&lt;!ing, graan dis~ ~Eve~
Or,
Point
tiict, $550 depooil and $550 3BR, 2 bath, S47511nooll.
Pteuant,
wv
amonnopell,call740-245- 740-367-7762
25550. 30U75·
5806
0372
· 1oranappllcatlou.
ldoaltor1or2peoplo, - :Jlr House in New , _ ,, no pets. 5 mites from Twin -.,Tower is lllOIIpt·
No ,__ $400 rnort11, $400 Gavin. no caUs after 1ng "''"' 1, 8 lor ~
deposit- ~
5pm... 1.0181
listlorHuci-&lt;I&amp;Diized. 1. 1Jr
Taking IIPI&gt;IIcatlon&amp; tor apartmentfor
4 BedfODm House tor Ftem 14x71l, 3BR, 1 bath in ooun- eklrlrlyld l - call 675$600/rent
$600/0ep~it
.
try ......... RioGrandearaa 6679
Equal
Housir\g
(740) 446-4060or367-7762
--..
Call 245-5893
Opponunily

I

3Br11lath1cargarage, OUI

h

Small 2br oottage, Bulavll~
Pike, W~te~ftra&amp;hs
no
pats. Re · eq~ 35 ep
388 1100
-

pdcixJ

deposh304-882·3652

$300/dep. 446-3617

•-;:;::::;:;======~=;=====~~,

r

Ii

APtum.mm
POIIIIFM'

SPM:E
lUI RIM:

•

Lo~-----·· L.,~--tiiii.--_.1
1 and tuniishBtf
2 bedroom
ments,
and apanunfur-

an--

20x30 room avaHable for
rvnt. - I lor
small
group or busine&amp;s. loca1ed
1 blooi from the parlt Call

FlO

~

2BR; WID hookup, ·dose 10
Rio Grande, also, 1BA · ~--llliiiiiiiiiiit--'
Cabin. 740-286-5789 ar New oouch &amp; chairs $325.
..1-3702
Table &amp; 4 chair$ $200. Full
-Apts.IIIJM:boo BIS &amp; mattress $150.

E-.

52 Wes1wo0d
Drive, from $365 to $560.
740-446·2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
institution is an Equl1
Opportunity Provider and

'

Senior Discount*

E~oyer.

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your .
home delivered subscription!

Beech St, Middiepoft, 2 br.
furnished apt. , no pets.
dep.&amp;
ref.
required,
(740)992-()~65

'

•

ED•AFFORIMBLEI

illi •

iii •

iiil •

.•

;;; i i - -

i i i i - i i . i i iii

.

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ferroa. Ample storage avail-

-Dep, Req . 446-7654

EllmView
Apartments
•2&amp;3 bedroorrr apartments
-central heat &amp; A/C

•All electric- averaging
$50-$60/month
•Owner pays walBr, sewer.

1rash

(304)882-3017

I

til

: . Oi!YJ~tate!Zip ----'--:::----:-~·"---,---=1
I

: _ Phone'------~------

'

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1

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AN'nQ{D.

MONTY

• Garaces

7---2217 ·

•Complere
Remodeling

~&amp;-

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':=;:::::::::::~
pd

r

~~~~~~~=
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MASON MOWER
384-773-5061

rtl5e
RUVe

~

0

space
Cor

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

$64
per

). Integrity

S-Service
IOYears
1st Road to left a/J&lt;&gt;w
Mason GolfCourse

TA~ING

Tttt t4rGtt

r-=======~=~~====~

T~EI~

OPPONENTS!

wee Special Desogn l309, 11:---:::----,
Dam:
Champton
Htll
Cheyenne 889. Proven.., :
HoME

---

*Prompt and Quality
Work
*Reasonable Rates
*Insured
*Experienced
References Available!
(:all Gary Stanley @
740-591-8044

Eiscbicala Plumbing

R-&amp;Guttoro

YI¥SidlntJ. Po-a
Pda .... Pcw:h o.cb

WV031725
'v C YOUNG Ill
.., - -

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THE BORN LOSER

P"C0Ut-111t-IC. YOUR C.Oit.l:'l, ""
r----u E:f-\,G\IEF?

..

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T~E.'(

~

::.A'(, A. PW!-1'(

::J..VO&gt; !:&gt; A. POIINY
· ~E.t&gt;!

'

,.-01-.\ THI~ !».'(, 1 CAA'I ~p ""
BUT TI-ll ~K, A. PWI-IY ::J..Vfl&gt;.
I:'l A. PENNY Tl\l&lt;Et&gt; !

j

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ii!iiiiiiiiii;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;~ca~u7~40-~992~-7~508;..

·

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Hyundai

Acoent

Corid.

Partner leads,
you read and win

'J

SOMETHING

·~~·
Owner:

"F;;,sr-"""':TIIII=-a-~--...,
~
FOR SAul
'--oiiiiiiiiii;._.

IF

lngs,pamnts oruight$150M,--$160-F noro-negotiable
85 GMC Sieml, .toto of ,_
CASH. 740-992-{)219.
parts. $1500 obo. 446-9584

MA'{eE lrLL
RUN FOR
PRESIDENT

Guttering
SeamtessGuttet:S
Roofing, Siding. (lutll!rs

catland BOY

'~~~

IF WE'RE GOING TO I3E
HUNDI!EDAII2ES,
WE11£ GOING TO NEED AN
1\WESOME WEB SITE.

~

J)' -;;.,·.r-

lnsumd&amp;B&lt;lndiJd
740-653-9657

spadeS.)
There is a strong temptation to try to
cash a seoond hear1 tnc:k, but it ts a disaster. South ruffs. draws trumps, and
runs dummy's
to colect two owr·
tricks. (~tho qut!en and jad&lt; of clubs do
not drop , deClarer pJavs a diamond to his
king, hOping you, the opener, hold the

ace.)
Even H you aTe getting two heart tri!its,
you will probably also need two diamond
trk*s. So, you should Shift to the dia·
mond queen at trick two. Declarer will

a.nc.._..,

btl

-

MM-CWI Chun:h af
Christ FamliJ LiCe
Clnllf, 437 -.
ill' I i CAt,
Ohio, an tile third
w.cltte 'oy of ~~.

eo..,.......

Ita
- - · for the pur. 110M of ' Clitgttn n tho niNCllionolwc:ttoiW .......
• ftiiiW PI ' tw
- . . . uld
n 114.
Jo
Ann
ert.p,
10

s

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131 27, !4) a, t, 15

Ill 11tE COURT OF
CQUIIIDN PLSS OF
IIEJQS COU!nY, OliO
in Ita: in . . - " '

...777 I.., .,_

Old tw• fill . . FONit PcowldJ Ice

R... 81,1111 Cll-.)
- - · · lllootwllh
tho ...... Countw
CoiiKIGI fllael Court
IOMIIforS1JIIIIte_lol-._
~
......:
... 1 In I b' I ••
12, N«11W, 8 7 I rtj
Twtllltl;l, Countw of
11e1go ...., 111111 of
Ohio, tiMitllt: .._ .......
bar rw.nty-F!w (25)
Thllty-~ (U)
on KMr.. In Y.B.
llooto&lt;ta Addttlan to
. . . . . . al PuiiciaDJ,
aald Pill - . , _ .
1111 • 'lla1Un11 11 flllll
441, ...... Oountw
illiiAI 8ooft:
1

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Cltufcll
CIM No. IICII'illil
llelng lhe -

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... 801 ~ORal!
l CAN'T' l-IVE
W11HOIJ1 YOU!

.....

PUIUCNO'ilCE
. . ~.'hct111yto
Dobbie - . ,..,._ --r .. .,... flf " - 1 illeiiD'*W • Sit- lliNin -In
2111111, II 4:80 p.m. BIStiwl . Olui'C:tl IIU .,..
prtlla •
10
KCD . . .

GARF1ELD

A&amp;&amp;Gci.UCMt, Inc., an n. · p;~I=IU=:.
Ohio not Car pra1tt ...... I I
1Ly .. ....
lhllt&gt;'C auot . . . .

Alg W

Ia.... Blljlilll
A.Uaci. . IR, Inc., ...
011111 for prolll
Cu;pca si L•

·- ·~-Now u - Bulldla&amp;
c.: MARCUM CONSTRUCRON

"'

• Room Additions.• Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Oeck:s

...-.

Jiilo- m.-

for lmlo4

In the ...... Countr
CQSWIIOft ...... Court

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bottom. OH

ontho141hd1Jof-.....,,
2111111, beginning II
10:80 o'c:loc* i.m.
11M&lt;
E.
.....
liilli5i5
"-Hidoy, . _ · fo
S. nd111a
11 . . _ Slnll, P.O.

740-985-4141
Cell: 740-416-1834
25+ ,_.,. e~ou F- Em-.

Advertise
in this spa~e for
$64 per l'nonth

ac. &amp;25

"I; llo , Ohio 45U1
lilt: 740 •• 1152
fiU:140 •• o

14) 15, 22, 21, 15).

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boetions
39 Polilhos

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filh

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
~ Ceo~'~« CI)'PIJgf8IIIS are aearecl lmm IJliiiiiiD!IIIIV 18nO.IS peep~!. paSt .xi JII'IIIRED ll!!let: mthe CO* stands lor llllitlef

Tadat s due. R - Y

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KJEDZK

TRTEFL

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HFTDIKFH

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TWZMNH

WJKF

NZZCT NDCF
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YMYYZTF ."

TDLZK

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'I fool greatly honored to have aballpark I1II1IOd
after me, especially sonce I've boon thrown out of so many.' ·Casey ,Siongel

'hlr.' lkll I::

Into reality.

en! from your way ol doing things, they
could be good for you , so try to be more
open-minded . You'll be happy when
thtngs go well.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - Un~ you are
.;:autious and detail conscious where
money issues arit conoemed , you could
easily find yourseH obligated t o UflEilll; ·
pected lees hidden in the fine print. Don't
get caught in that old trap.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - There
shouldn't be any problem with your organl.ra1ional skills. but when tt comes to
delegating worM. 10· others. It could be
.another stery. Assign tasks to those who
have the talent to carry them out.
LIBRA (Sf!Rl. 23-0ct 23) - Whe n left to
yooo prerogative, you're a good worker;
bl.ft when pressed into doing things that
aren't of your Choosing, II could be a different game. Try to be cooperative
instead o1 obStinate.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -

IIU DUCOtil of lhe- ~IICIIbed In
Foreal Run Bltpllll lool&lt; 12. 11-ee 42,
Cllwdl)
11e11s ·Countw o.c1
10 Mil 10 Recat...
MRC'EL
Inc. wll P1owldance Aaaullr NUMER:
1._.
Ill lhe 1 1 - . , . llltpllll DISIUOO

32 nzitl~~4~"""
,.
~-.;- ~b.

:=--.

AstroGraph

eKtremely . capable of

l*lllcels ..... . . _
.,.. the ..,.... - lngofttoe--•
of
F.._.

P11itdcw8' 1

Vou are East, defending against four
spades. Your partner leads the heart

CANCER (JlK1EI 21-July 22) - Instead of
resisting Changes because they 're differ-

F J'

·H&amp;H

l::'.:'r':e a
:•••
27

3 .._-

. score.

one. Seek a harmonic solution; find unity
of purpose.

El . .

, ......

2

43 £ploW I ...
-

ly for what you think they can do for you.
H your motives .are purely setf-servi(IQ,
others will quickly perceive lt. and It will
negatlwly aftec1 any type of relationship.
GEMINI (May. 21-June 20~ Family
members will stan pulling in different
dinlctions concerning a domesttc matter
in ways that could be upsetting to BVery·

742-2332

•••

42 "'......

annual income-tax returns. But if you get
the defense right , the refund is a plus

your desires

........

7 77 1

.....

1 Swttatliltg 24 T to mop
25 . . _

TAURUS . ("Ptil 20-May 20) - Accep1
friends .for Whom they are and not mere-

,_~.

11-111'1

FOR YOU!!

==::..

:10
31 Canic:o

dlr

21 O n -

31Gotl . .
31-11111
41 511 ...
-CiilltiLI

also temper yoUr expectations wlth a
large dose of realism . II will take a lot
more 1han just Wishful ttllnklng to tum

...1.=5=1=1

HAS

DOWN

J

It

Mark Twatn said, "Be careful when reading heatth books; you may die of a mis·
prine
Be caraful when reading partner's opening lead: you may find the killing
defense. Yes. it can be taxing, even on
April 15, when Americans submit their

opportunities are at hand.
ARIES (Maron 21.-AQril Ul) - Aemam ~
hopelul and optimistic at all times. bU1

=--···
-·

7

--dots

Ncl-

. Une"-

·~
• Declar

I WAS 601N6 TO RIJN
FOR CLASS PRESIDENT, 8UT
I CAAN6ED M'{ MIND..

••. THE

,.
Pass

Eul

• VInyl Siding
• Rep' *ii6nt .
.'Windows

740-367-G53&amp;

~709.fl33:-=9~
. ==--=-=Mttsubishi
Eclipse
07

Pass

.-

-· April1&amp;,
2008
or Bernice
8ede 0.01

• Glttages
• Pole Buildings

F.- Elllitu•

24

In the year ahead, there are many indicators that coukt point to several .previously Ignored ways to ger.rate additional tncome. Be on your toes and ready to
"tTY new things , once you racognlle ttle&amp;e

Hatchback. 5 speed trans,
65,310 miles, good conde
tloo. needs Catalytic convert·
er. Asking $2200. Call 740-

m~.

s1to11; wormed,good mart&lt;-

Drywall,

740-367.()544

CKC t:tag. Vor1de1Shihtzu Spyder GT Conv. 11 ,500
Hybrid puppy. Non-shed·
exc.
gerage 'kapt,
ding, brindle color~ 740. 1 0wner, all services b~
3 3 9 • 3 4 5 3 . auth. dealer,
loaded,
www.SunnyDayPuppies.co gntylrJB.y. $22.500. 7«&gt;-446m
·
7861
Gorman Rottwsllers, 1.. ·

J&amp;L
Construction

Remodeling, Room

1,,--tiiiiiiiiiO...O
01

Pass

G
Additions
LOCIIII cOnbactui

Aums
FOR SAul

t •

p •••
10 D'Utbel ... 35 Aaa&amp;IILIII
57 ~·~
35 - . . . . ,

20 -birds
22 23

cover with his king, and West will win
with his ace. Now West, knowing lhat
South began wlttl a singleton heart, will
cash the diamond 10 and play his last
diamond to defeat the contract. Brilliant!

riO

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,

with

clubs

l,.:,.:::;;.=:.;.:;.:.:::;:;;;::.i:;.l

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

. pl.ce

18

spades, but that is unlikely. ·It is
mUCh more sensible to make life as clfticult as possble tor West, the responder.
Over one spade, Wes1 would be happy
to bid two hearts. Over four spades, he
has to pass. (Note thai you can escape
tor minus 300 in five hearts doubled,
which is a goOd save against a vunerable game. But, o1 course, n would be a
phantom sacrifice if you could beat tour

~~~~_.._~~~B"-._~~~~i

1

5$ · -

toll'

RIGHT !!

t

Roam
1111 •••
...,, ;u.. Uug
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ll{(lj'.rl,

SERVICE

&amp;Removal

1 SOA-MA
I!
I WUZ

I
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CARPENTER

Trimming

-

Salicil
bo
dr

South might miss a slam by jumping 1o

Ir----.
~

I!==~2.4~!l9~St.~R.~t~160~:·:C~~:IIpolls::;;~
YOUNGS
Stanley Tree-

West

011-Gutr

........ Jonoo..17'1'-· 56s-'l"hicl&lt; 58- 13·r.:c--·s
I ·
'D Spoin llld

Souuo

Siberio
Ooli Ioiii

continue?

I'M SORRY,
ELVINEY!!

740.446.9200

. 52
53
54

~in

two: three, nine, seven. How would you

BARNEY

_ , $4,SOO ~5-8625

Top Quality.

~AI&gt;.

ONLY ltGAliSE
IT:f' A ltTTE~
POSITION FOil
....- TttllOWING
Mlll&gt; ON

/ .

month

HI!Vey Rood M"""'. WV

loungef, auto,exoelomoon-

breeding soundness """"'· R\1 Service a1 Carmiohael
Weight 0:!117108: 1410 _lb. Trallers740~;.31!25
Blnh Dno: _0913012005 Sore:

606-929-5655 .

f'OLITIGIAN5 SAY TtttY'~E

•

, .. -""""'
15 -

-wwoad

Opening lead: • 2

I'

H-Honest

. tamarack

MomR lbmi

9 8 7 ~

Vulnerable: Nortb-Souih

In th"IS

..,. -

,......,..Z-3294
Servicing Lawn
TraciOrS,Mowers,
Tdlers, Murray,
Craftsman, MTD.
Briggs &amp; Stratton

...,.,N,
, HVI"w""""'·
front ald .rear rad&lt;s, swan.,
tires,

Q 10

Dealer. East

.a.•.

2222

wjtctl

A K

• K 96
4 3

Stop &amp; Compare

7:1111 All - 8:1111 Pll

tactory oonnection sus·
....,_, good plaslic and
tires, many extras, good
shape $3300. 304-675-

I

9AKJ 109
• Q J 32
4 QJ

•A108
• a 6 s .2

50

16 Dulling

• 7

Hounl

to AoiiWIS

·1

(extraol

• 6.

a

tiling
41 OUt42 Deep blue

49. ~

7

Eu;t

• J '
• 8 5 4 .2

a

Hoi Tub I Swim Spa Outlet.
S1000oft. Hugeseleclion.
New S1yles. Free Delivery.

~

.

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.1 -.----.---.;..----- -·------------ -·
iiiii!JII ____
.FI
. EDS
I
.As·
SI
·
'
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EMPLOYMENT

- - -- - - - : - Ha"' you priced a John
Deere \ately? 'tbu'l bl SIX·
prised1 Check out our Ull8d
inventory
It

"-lllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiioor'

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cme

.

'

•New Homes

s

West

2005

3825

Q6

• 75 4
.fiAK109 7 t

)

_. -

WWW . CARMICHAEL- 6pm-9pm 740-949-2216
,
TRAtlERS.COM 74().446Hond8 CRF 450R
_ with

2001 2911 Fifth Wheel
Camper Keyslone-Sprinter.
Queen Island bed, super
slide (Dinotte and couch),
rear lounge with rodutr
recliner and roctter, sleeps
6, ga~age kept, Exoaltent
Condition. Phone 304-675304 ~ 59 3-4 349
SAV 8180 Traveler 004, 2039 or
Dam:
Sunset
Valle~ $12,995 080, Priood below
Skymere 2305. Passed NADA tow rutalf .

2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112 long haired · Dachshund,
Beth, AduR Pool &amp; Baby 6monlhs,
trained, all
Pool, Patio, Start S4251Mo. shots &amp; wormed asking
No Pets, · lease ~Ius $300 3()4.sg3-3820
SacuriiY 0epoe11 Required, - - - - - - - (740)367-()547.
AKC Reg. Shilzu puppies. 7
'---=-'-'-'---- wks old, first shots. 1
Rooms ltii Rent. No pots, brown/white
(M),
·3
7
blad&lt;lwt1ite
. S300. 1401_or_(M)
7_4_0&lt;;4_5-86_
_5_

' Ohio V.lley Publishing P.O. Box 469, G.lllpolls, 0H '5!131 :

'•

!p999.
VIEw
OUR ENTlRE
APPRECIATE!
Pt.... call
TRAILER
INVENlORY
AT 7am-5pm
740-949-2217
&amp;

Diohes,Cande Holde!s.Bud Courthoose,_ .Ohio. Salting
Vases, Decooatlve Plates 1751lead. Oob Barrows and
ShirloyTemple,
Cake Gills. Roger Benlley. 937·
Stands,Cruots,Oillamps,Co 584-2398.
keSign,novetty Glass ttems,
Organs,
Show 40hd., blk &amp; bwt, Heifers,
Pump
•~Coko
s;~C.......
..,
Ill' ........... Sign· avg, 750-775 304-675-2443
Much more Misc.
By after 7pm
Appoln1man1 Only - 740-992- Regi~ered Angus Butts:
Blnh Olio: 0910212006 Sire:
4197.

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments, Very Spacious, 1 CKC rogiotered male Aid

I

I

~

'-'

211670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio .
45771

Dov-

reasonabi~·Heisey, 446-2412

1y. 740-367-7886

I

111111 or drop on this coupOn •lang
with • copy of your photo ID to

j

r

antee. Local references fur$592. 740.992-5064. Equal
Housing Opportunity.
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar .can for pricirlg 740·245- nished. Established 1975.
For
Concrete;
Angle, 5506
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446Modem 1 Bedroom Apt., Channel, Flat BAr, Steel , - - - - : - - - : - - 0870, ~is Basement
Call (740)446.()390
Grating
For
Orains, Registered BlacK Angus
Waterproofing.
~· &amp; Wall&lt;ways. L&amp;l Sui. 7~1-7205 or 740Nice quiet
2BR apt . Scrap "'etals Open Monday, 446-7410
References
&amp; deposit Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
~red. No 1'!!1s,446· 1271 fridJY, ~Ill-4:30pm. CIOOiiil .
Of 7()9::1657
Thurti18Vr... .. Saturday . _1_ 2006 Craft5man - Spada!__
BR apt. Vine 81reet, Suridtr;. (740)446-7300
ECII~Iawn """"":-'12"0UI,
I'EI5
22 HP.
Static Onve.
Gallipolis. Weekly 01 month-

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- .-

plris

PIC

• 2
•

40.._.•

-45--

11 Accotri

12 -

......,.,,:J'~

---&amp;

560 LongTractor00 H.P,
Bush Hog, IT . 2001 Harley
883
Phone&gt;Wl·1104atter Spm. Spor1slar, 5500 mileo, VMY
.
Good Condi1ion $4500
EBY, INTEGRITY, KIEFER AITII, (740)384-5443
BUILT,
VALLEY ~-:-::-:-:-:::----:=
HoRsEtuvEsTocK 2002- Spor1sman 90
TRAILERS, LOAD MAX Excellent Condition. $1000
EQUIPMENT ·TR.O.ILERS, 74G-446-1170after4pm
CARGO
EXPRESS
&amp; 2003 Arti Cal &lt;·Wheeler
H o ME ST E A 0 ER
c
'
CARGO/CONCESSION 90 · $700 304-675-3285
TRAILERS. B+W GOOSE· 2005 Horter .
NECK
HITCHES. Feclory c.-... ·1 of 200
CARMICHAEL
EOUIP• buiR. Has only 850 original
IAENT I CARMICHAEL miles. Maroon Momllic lanl&lt;
TRAILERS SALES &amp; SEA· &amp; tins. Wrth emboosed
VICE. SPECIAL
20FT ftamos lhroughool. Price:
GOOSENECK' FLATBED $16,000.00 MUST SEE to

'

s~

7

1

~ - M!!,!! y11~ S1ock. Ca11 Roro Evans. 1- Siru: SAVNewOosign0081 ,
WAI&amp;APOWICIIIiii(J
Manoi'IMflfWrskjeApts. in800
=::.:..:
-5:.:37:..-9:.:52:.:8:.:·_ _ _ _ Dam: Suns;vt Lynn 1106
Proven. U&amp;ed 85 a clean-up Unconditional tite1ime guarMiddlepon, from $327 10 HEW AND USED STEEL bull.

:

'

10nmtlt - ·

2006 ,......., White ~• ........... 7.
...,ll'"'
Von · V6 •'
bulk head, 42,000 miles,

JET
AERATION MOTORS
used as a clean-up bull. ,
-GI-1-cl-,___llvlng
___
1_o_nd_2 Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Bii1h Ddt: 05-11-2004

I

I

H :-

g1e u1e m.n., 1iuclt Low 111111y
on
A/C
mllolge. DT466 · As 0""1'"1--· Duol -.g
n e w -1\lr - brllkes. dooro,wrydeon $3.200
Recent noed•oicel i1opec· obo. 740-388-1520

r

I

Address------,------

"""'~-

19841t*"olllli&lt;Aidi1900Bin-

'loy-.

Plymoul&gt;

Downtown apt. 3BR, 1 112 agne!i,Cut,Earty "merican 361h Annual Bentley Pig 4-lllltMHIIer 300EX, $1 ,000
bath, CIA. Carpet/Hamwood -.,Tumblen;,Winos,Champ
P r e s s e d • Sale. Friday "Pril 18th. (740~
floors. kit appl. included, Shot,Cartoon,Liqueurs,Serv J :30pm. Fayatte County Fair
WID hookup, No pets pre- ing
Dishes,
Covered Grounds,
Washington
CAMPOS &amp;

iii-

: Subscriber's Name------'--

sate: Berber Cafll81 $5.95
yd remnaniB $40.00 &amp; up.
Mollohan Carpet 2212
Eastem /We, Gaiii&gt;Oiis, Oh
740-&gt;Wl-7...

RENT COli (740)441·1111 ge,Faber
Ware,
lor applM:ation &amp; -.,ation. Deprossion,Ruby,Cobaii',Gr

6unbap Gttmtl-6entinel
• • • -- • • -

388-0173

TownhOuse
apartments.
and/or small houses FOR Americ.na,Fenton,Cambrid

•allipolif ••il!' tltribune
t)oint !)ltafattt ltegittter
. The Daily Sentinel··.
I

Monohan Fum. Porter, OH

·

•Washer/dryer hoc*;up

..... -

1999

I

..
=

Ulildnl....

1
4 EqtiiiOr

Alder

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· Glass for sate-cottectionS.t&gt;y WWW . CAREQ . COM -2006---\luna--,ha-B:-.-4WD=
the pteco-good gtaso poced . Cannichael ~- 740- ~-- 3000 Ill ~ ""-~·

Here's all you
need to do...
Fill out the coupon below
.and drop off or mail it with a
copy.of your photo m.

i •
• •

FOR S.W: .

•~

,

VANS

ACROSS

Phillip

Taking applications 1t&gt;r 2BR, Very nice 2BR,
Must Sell, looks &amp; runs lllol
no
pets ,
$275/month Rodney, attached garage. Business.
Best Offers new 304--437~1448
mctt.des water and sewer. $425/month. Dep. &amp; Ret. aooepted 304-440-0111
Fteq.446-280.1 •
S2q0dep. 446·36t7
500 KawaSaki Mule $2200 L--=--:.

, 2BA apt . (740) .. 1-o194

•

~
-

lion, and.amont W!llnopectton stldcar AIHaon auto.
·
$6500 2001 12 ton tag
tra'ller. · Electric bral&lt;es
naar $4,500.
Going Out fll

nished, and houses In
Pomer:a; and Middleport,
88Cl.trify deposit required. no
pets, 740-992-2216.

If so, you qualify for a

01 Cl&gt;ovy 2500
HOLT, Crew Cab, Long Bed,
4K4, Alisor1 Trans., 135,000
runs _ ,_ $12,900
-7«).388-1520

Ir·__

F.uaw

6llll

. WHY PAY RENT? 3 bed 2 3br House in Mason. No Taking applications for 30r.
bath, S199 a month. 740- Pets, $400 month, $400 no
polS.
$375/month

4-46·3384

2BR $450/dep. $450/rent + Plo-nt Vtl/rwi ,opts is,_ S-P1410. $100aacfl, 1st
- 645-3592
taking IO)plicatior•lor 2. 3 &amp; &amp; wormed, no PIIJOIS,
4 BA HUO Subsidiled apts, (740)691H1475
2Br a1 Johnsons Mobile (304)675-5806. Applicolions
Home Part&lt;. Call446-2003
... taken Monday ltwotqt

'ftfUO

J

You're

ma~ing

shrewd
decisions m situations where the stakes
are high. However. when dealing wtrh
miniscule costs, you could thoughtleuty
allow things to add up to one hefty sum
SAGITTARIU S (Nov. 23-0 ec . 21) Make allowances fo1 uneKP8Cf:ed cont:n·
genc6es, and si.Joceu ·will not be denied
you . Your blueprlm ald what actually
dewelops • t this time aAt apt tc be poles

apart. Be ready for 81l)'thing .
CAPRICORN {Dee . .22-Jan. 19) - 'tbu
won't lOok good m front at thOH you
want to lmpr•ss If you take an uny6eldlng
~ltlon on flaue8 that ~u tcnow llftla
about. tt'Hbe embanw.•lng " you'r. dlallenged .
AQUARIUS (.-n. 20-Feb. , 91 - Unlels
~ul . • trt.nf:l whg • Ill Informed

rcu"-

oould draw you mto 1 fll'lanclal morua. "
you dow thll to happM , ~l l ha¥1 to
NiP Pllltorflour ~~~ m -.
"IICEB (!jOb.
20) - Only you
aM ~I'IMIOI ~ ~Inti: wMn It
0011101 U&gt;Oihoni -lng I -talon lboul
• Joint endlllvor In wnleh you•,. lrwol¥1d.
IPHtc up tl' vau went ~r lnte,..

20'-

10111ed.

SOUP10NUTZ

ePR~e:=~slfmRS l' r r ,. r r I
t;

I

u~~~:i~e urrm

I I l, I I I I

ICIAM&gt;IIIS AISI/a -·H•U
a- -lt.abel- Slllly- Spil!ttll - LllSS . t l . 1
~ :'«)'is* belt policy, btlllhc
Ill paliJ:f
lioldan is P"'iC LESS lid LESS.

*

ARLO&amp; JANIS

�)

.

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesd8y,April15,2008

~~~~~~~~~~·~l

Tuesday, April15, 2008
ALLEYOOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

'

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
U.-3bod2bothon .50

DooriiT_,
3 B&lt;ldroom House In
- P I cnt
Syracuse. $500/monlh +
-$100a month. 0wnar
financing-. 74Q.4.06- 41h Street 01liee Space or Hud App. No 3571J
Retail Space 1,300 sq. ft. (304)675-5332 weekends
Phooo ~75-3788
74Q.sg1.()265

-

r

MODI• AfiS- Ohio's

lorgost~.oy

I

L&lt;mi &amp;

A~~-~~
~~

· M - 740-828-2750

mymid•e~home .corn

•

--4br·2ba

6acrvsmlloro·LeftForkAd

t ,700sqft $49,9EI9

: '.r : ' t ' k e. Pricedto

M740.fl2B-2750
myrnid•ustltome.oorn

MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
RENT, 103HleorgesCreel&lt;

New3Badroomhomesfrom Rd, . .H111
. , Include&amp; trailer lot lor rent. • ·~-34
$214 36 per month
"t"nll o
m - . ~..... deli\101)' &amp;
---·• - - ·
sM-op. (740)365-2434
USED -ES 38R from
$1,900 down. Save $5000!
740-828-2750
mymid..slloome.com

riO

~
JiORIIFM'

2BR in Acllaville- dis- Friday, from' to 4pm,
tricl7"'367~"
Office is located at 1151
IJull&lt;!ing, graan dis~ ~Eve~
Or,
Point
tiict, $550 depooil and $550 3BR, 2 bath, S47511nooll.
Pteuant,
wv
amonnopell,call740-245- 740-367-7762
25550. 30U75·
5806
0372
· 1oranappllcatlou.
ldoaltor1or2peoplo, - :Jlr House in New , _ ,, no pets. 5 mites from Twin -.,Tower is lllOIIpt·
No ,__ $400 rnort11, $400 Gavin. no caUs after 1ng "''"' 1, 8 lor ~
deposit- ~
5pm... 1.0181
listlorHuci-&lt;I&amp;Diized. 1. 1Jr
Taking IIPI&gt;IIcatlon&amp; tor apartmentfor
4 BedfODm House tor Ftem 14x71l, 3BR, 1 bath in ooun- eklrlrlyld l - call 675$600/rent
$600/0ep~it
.
try ......... RioGrandearaa 6679
Equal
Housir\g
(740) 446-4060or367-7762
--..
Call 245-5893
Opponunily

I

3Br11lath1cargarage, OUI

h

Small 2br oottage, Bulavll~
Pike, W~te~ftra&amp;hs
no
pats. Re · eq~ 35 ep
388 1100
-

pdcixJ

deposh304-882·3652

$300/dep. 446-3617

•-;:;::::;:;======~=;=====~~,

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APtum.mm
POIIIIFM'

SPM:E
lUI RIM:

•

Lo~-----·· L.,~--tiiii.--_.1
1 and tuniishBtf
2 bedroom
ments,
and apanunfur-

an--

20x30 room avaHable for
rvnt. - I lor
small
group or busine&amp;s. loca1ed
1 blooi from the parlt Call

FlO

~

2BR; WID hookup, ·dose 10
Rio Grande, also, 1BA · ~--llliiiiiiiiiiit--'
Cabin. 740-286-5789 ar New oouch &amp; chairs $325.
..1-3702
Table &amp; 4 chair$ $200. Full
-Apts.IIIJM:boo BIS &amp; mattress $150.

E-.

52 Wes1wo0d
Drive, from $365 to $560.
740-446·2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity. This
institution is an Equl1
Opportunity Provider and

'

Senior Discount*

E~oyer.

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your .
home delivered subscription!

Beech St, Middiepoft, 2 br.
furnished apt. , no pets.
dep.&amp;
ref.
required,
(740)992-()~65

'

•

ED•AFFORIMBLEI

illi •

iii •

iiil •

.•

;;; i i - -

i i i i - i i . i i iii

.

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1

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ferroa. Ample storage avail-

-Dep, Req . 446-7654

EllmView
Apartments
•2&amp;3 bedroorrr apartments
-central heat &amp; A/C

•All electric- averaging
$50-$60/month
•Owner pays walBr, sewer.

1rash

(304)882-3017

I

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: . Oi!YJ~tate!Zip ----'--:::----:-~·"---,---=1
I

: _ Phone'------~------

'

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MONTY

• Garaces

7---2217 ·

•Complere
Remodeling

~&amp;-

r

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':=;:::::::::::~
pd

r

~~~~~~~=
r

MASON MOWER
384-773-5061

rtl5e
RUVe

~

0

space
Cor

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

$64
per

). Integrity

S-Service
IOYears
1st Road to left a/J&lt;&gt;w
Mason GolfCourse

TA~ING

Tttt t4rGtt

r-=======~=~~====~

T~EI~

OPPONENTS!

wee Special Desogn l309, 11:---:::----,
Dam:
Champton
Htll
Cheyenne 889. Proven.., :
HoME

---

*Prompt and Quality
Work
*Reasonable Rates
*Insured
*Experienced
References Available!
(:all Gary Stanley @
740-591-8044

Eiscbicala Plumbing

R-&amp;Guttoro

YI¥SidlntJ. Po-a
Pda .... Pcw:h o.cb

WV031725
'v C YOUNG Ill
.., - -

'

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THE BORN LOSER

P"C0Ut-111t-IC. YOUR C.Oit.l:'l, ""
r----u E:f-\,G\IEF?

..

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T~E.'(

~

::.A'(, A. PW!-1'(

::J..VO&gt; !:&gt; A. POIINY
· ~E.t&gt;!

'

,.-01-.\ THI~ !».'(, 1 CAA'I ~p ""
BUT TI-ll ~K, A. PWI-IY ::J..Vfl&gt;.
I:'l A. PENNY Tl\l&lt;Et&gt; !

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ii!iiiiiiiiii;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;~ca~u7~40-~992~-7~508;..

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Hyundai

Acoent

Corid.

Partner leads,
you read and win

'J

SOMETHING

·~~·
Owner:

"F;;,sr-"""':TIIII=-a-~--...,
~
FOR SAul
'--oiiiiiiiiii;._.

IF

lngs,pamnts oruight$150M,--$160-F noro-negotiable
85 GMC Sieml, .toto of ,_
CASH. 740-992-{)219.
parts. $1500 obo. 446-9584

MA'{eE lrLL
RUN FOR
PRESIDENT

Guttering
SeamtessGuttet:S
Roofing, Siding. (lutll!rs

catland BOY

'~~~

IF WE'RE GOING TO I3E
HUNDI!EDAII2ES,
WE11£ GOING TO NEED AN
1\WESOME WEB SITE.

~

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lnsumd&amp;B&lt;lndiJd
740-653-9657

spadeS.)
There is a strong temptation to try to
cash a seoond hear1 tnc:k, but it ts a disaster. South ruffs. draws trumps, and
runs dummy's
to colect two owr·
tricks. (~tho qut!en and jad&lt; of clubs do
not drop , deClarer pJavs a diamond to his
king, hOping you, the opener, hold the

ace.)
Even H you aTe getting two heart tri!its,
you will probably also need two diamond
trk*s. So, you should Shift to the dia·
mond queen at trick two. Declarer will

a.nc.._..,

btl

-

MM-CWI Chun:h af
Christ FamliJ LiCe
Clnllf, 437 -.
ill' I i CAt,
Ohio, an tile third
w.cltte 'oy of ~~.

eo..,.......

Ita
- - · for the pur. 110M of ' Clitgttn n tho niNCllionolwc:ttoiW .......
• ftiiiW PI ' tw
- . . . uld
n 114.
Jo
Ann
ert.p,
10

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131 27, !4) a, t, 15

Ill 11tE COURT OF
CQUIIIDN PLSS OF
IIEJQS COU!nY, OliO
in Ita: in . . - " '

...777 I.., .,_

Old tw• fill . . FONit PcowldJ Ice

R... 81,1111 Cll-.)
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tho ...... Countw
CoiiKIGI fllael Court
IOMIIforS1JIIIIte_lol-._
~
......:
... 1 In I b' I ••
12, N«11W, 8 7 I rtj
Twtllltl;l, Countw of
11e1go ...., 111111 of
Ohio, tiMitllt: .._ .......
bar rw.nty-F!w (25)
Thllty-~ (U)
on KMr.. In Y.B.
llooto&lt;ta Addttlan to
. . . . . . al PuiiciaDJ,
aald Pill - . , _ .
1111 • 'lla1Un11 11 flllll
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1

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Cltufcll
CIM No. IICII'illil
llelng lhe -

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... 801 ~ORal!
l CAN'T' l-IVE
W11HOIJ1 YOU!

.....

PUIUCNO'ilCE
. . ~.'hct111yto
Dobbie - . ,..,._ --r .. .,... flf " - 1 illeiiD'*W • Sit- lliNin -In
2111111, II 4:80 p.m. BIStiwl . Olui'C:tl IIU .,..
prtlla •
10
KCD . . .

GARF1ELD

A&amp;&amp;Gci.UCMt, Inc., an n. · p;~I=IU=:.
Ohio not Car pra1tt ...... I I
1Ly .. ....
lhllt&gt;'C auot . . . .

Alg W

Ia.... Blljlilll
A.Uaci. . IR, Inc., ...
011111 for prolll
Cu;pca si L•

·- ·~-Now u - Bulldla&amp;
c.: MARCUM CONSTRUCRON

"'

• Room Additions.• Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Oeck:s

...-.

Jiilo- m.-

for lmlo4

In the ...... Countr
CQSWIIOft ...... Court

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bottom. OH

ontho141hd1Jof-.....,,
2111111, beginning II
10:80 o'c:loc* i.m.
11M&lt;
E.
.....
liilli5i5
"-Hidoy, . _ · fo
S. nd111a
11 . . _ Slnll, P.O.

740-985-4141
Cell: 740-416-1834
25+ ,_.,. e~ou F- Em-.

Advertise
in this spa~e for
$64 per l'nonth

ac. &amp;25

"I; llo , Ohio 45U1
lilt: 740 •• 1152
fiU:140 •• o

14) 15, 22, 21, 15).

....

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35

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31 Goes tar

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a Comet--

boetions
39 Polilhos

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33 ~Gcn

51 Unlht+ lwd
filh

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
~ Ceo~'~« CI)'PIJgf8IIIS are aearecl lmm IJliiiiiiD!IIIIV 18nO.IS peep~!. paSt .xi JII'IIIRED ll!!let: mthe CO* stands lor llllitlef

Tadat s due. R - Y

" EWF

KJEDZK

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TWZMNH

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YMYYZTF ."

TDLZK

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'I fool greatly honored to have aballpark I1II1IOd
after me, especially sonce I've boon thrown out of so many.' ·Casey ,Siongel

'hlr.' lkll I::

Into reality.

en! from your way ol doing things, they
could be good for you , so try to be more
open-minded . You'll be happy when
thtngs go well.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - Un~ you are
.;:autious and detail conscious where
money issues arit conoemed , you could
easily find yourseH obligated t o UflEilll; ·
pected lees hidden in the fine print. Don't
get caught in that old trap.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - There
shouldn't be any problem with your organl.ra1ional skills. but when tt comes to
delegating worM. 10· others. It could be
.another stery. Assign tasks to those who
have the talent to carry them out.
LIBRA (Sf!Rl. 23-0ct 23) - Whe n left to
yooo prerogative, you're a good worker;
bl.ft when pressed into doing things that
aren't of your Choosing, II could be a different game. Try to be cooperative
instead o1 obStinate.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -

IIU DUCOtil of lhe- ~IICIIbed In
Foreal Run Bltpllll lool&lt; 12. 11-ee 42,
Cllwdl)
11e11s ·Countw o.c1
10 Mil 10 Recat...
MRC'EL
Inc. wll P1owldance Aaaullr NUMER:
1._.
Ill lhe 1 1 - . , . llltpllll DISIUOO

32 nzitl~~4~"""
,.
~-.;- ~b.

:=--.

AstroGraph

eKtremely . capable of

l*lllcels ..... . . _
.,.. the ..,.... - lngofttoe--•
of
F.._.

P11itdcw8' 1

Vou are East, defending against four
spades. Your partner leads the heart

CANCER (JlK1EI 21-July 22) - Instead of
resisting Changes because they 're differ-

F J'

·H&amp;H

l::'.:'r':e a
:•••
27

3 .._-

. score.

one. Seek a harmonic solution; find unity
of purpose.

El . .

, ......

2

43 £ploW I ...
-

ly for what you think they can do for you.
H your motives .are purely setf-servi(IQ,
others will quickly perceive lt. and It will
negatlwly aftec1 any type of relationship.
GEMINI (May. 21-June 20~ Family
members will stan pulling in different
dinlctions concerning a domesttc matter
in ways that could be upsetting to BVery·

742-2332

•••

42 "'......

annual income-tax returns. But if you get
the defense right , the refund is a plus

your desires

........

7 77 1

.....

1 Swttatliltg 24 T to mop
25 . . _

TAURUS . ("Ptil 20-May 20) - Accep1
friends .for Whom they are and not mere-

,_~.

11-111'1

FOR YOU!!

==::..

:10
31 Canic:o

dlr

21 O n -

31Gotl . .
31-11111
41 511 ...
-CiilltiLI

also temper yoUr expectations wlth a
large dose of realism . II will take a lot
more 1han just Wishful ttllnklng to tum

...1.=5=1=1

HAS

DOWN

J

It

Mark Twatn said, "Be careful when reading heatth books; you may die of a mis·
prine
Be caraful when reading partner's opening lead: you may find the killing
defense. Yes. it can be taxing, even on
April 15, when Americans submit their

opportunities are at hand.
ARIES (Maron 21.-AQril Ul) - Aemam ~
hopelul and optimistic at all times. bU1

=--···
-·

7

--dots

Ncl-

. Une"-

·~
• Declar

I WAS 601N6 TO RIJN
FOR CLASS PRESIDENT, 8UT
I CAAN6ED M'{ MIND..

••. THE

,.
Pass

Eul

• VInyl Siding
• Rep' *ii6nt .
.'Windows

740-367-G53&amp;

~709.fl33:-=9~
. ==--=-=Mttsubishi
Eclipse
07

Pass

.-

-· April1&amp;,
2008
or Bernice
8ede 0.01

• Glttages
• Pole Buildings

F.- Elllitu•

24

In the year ahead, there are many indicators that coukt point to several .previously Ignored ways to ger.rate additional tncome. Be on your toes and ready to
"tTY new things , once you racognlle ttle&amp;e

Hatchback. 5 speed trans,
65,310 miles, good conde
tloo. needs Catalytic convert·
er. Asking $2200. Call 740-

m~.

s1to11; wormed,good mart&lt;-

Drywall,

740-367.()544

CKC t:tag. Vor1de1Shihtzu Spyder GT Conv. 11 ,500
Hybrid puppy. Non-shed·
exc.
gerage 'kapt,
ding, brindle color~ 740. 1 0wner, all services b~
3 3 9 • 3 4 5 3 . auth. dealer,
loaded,
www.SunnyDayPuppies.co gntylrJB.y. $22.500. 7«&gt;-446m
·
7861
Gorman Rottwsllers, 1.. ·

J&amp;L
Construction

Remodeling, Room

1,,--tiiiiiiiiiO...O
01

Pass

G
Additions
LOCIIII cOnbactui

Aums
FOR SAul

t •

p •••
10 D'Utbel ... 35 Aaa&amp;IILIII
57 ~·~
35 - . . . . ,

20 -birds
22 23

cover with his king, and West will win
with his ace. Now West, knowing lhat
South began wlttl a singleton heart, will
cash the diamond 10 and play his last
diamond to defeat the contract. Brilliant!

riO

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,

with

clubs

l,.:,.:::;;.=:.;.:;.:.:::;:;;;::.i:;.l

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

. pl.ce

18

spades, but that is unlikely. ·It is
mUCh more sensible to make life as clfticult as possble tor West, the responder.
Over one spade, Wes1 would be happy
to bid two hearts. Over four spades, he
has to pass. (Note thai you can escape
tor minus 300 in five hearts doubled,
which is a goOd save against a vunerable game. But, o1 course, n would be a
phantom sacrifice if you could beat tour

~~~~_.._~~~B"-._~~~~i

1

5$ · -

toll'

RIGHT !!

t

Roam
1111 •••
...,, ;u.. Uug
I

J

ll{(lj'.rl,

SERVICE

&amp;Removal

1 SOA-MA
I!
I WUZ

I
'}~:&gt;l j

CARPENTER

Trimming

-

Salicil
bo
dr

South might miss a slam by jumping 1o

Ir----.
~

I!==~2.4~!l9~St.~R.~t~160~:·:C~~:IIpolls::;;~
YOUNGS
Stanley Tree-

West

011-Gutr

........ Jonoo..17'1'-· 56s-'l"hicl&lt; 58- 13·r.:c--·s
I ·
'D Spoin llld

Souuo

Siberio
Ooli Ioiii

continue?

I'M SORRY,
ELVINEY!!

740.446.9200

. 52
53
54

~in

two: three, nine, seven. How would you

BARNEY

_ , $4,SOO ~5-8625

Top Quality.

~AI&gt;.

ONLY ltGAliSE
IT:f' A ltTTE~
POSITION FOil
....- TttllOWING
Mlll&gt; ON

/ .

month

HI!Vey Rood M"""'. WV

loungef, auto,exoelomoon-

breeding soundness """"'· R\1 Service a1 Carmiohael
Weight 0:!117108: 1410 _lb. Trallers740~;.31!25
Blnh Dno: _0913012005 Sore:

606-929-5655 .

f'OLITIGIAN5 SAY TtttY'~E

•

, .. -""""'
15 -

-wwoad

Opening lead: • 2

I'

H-Honest

. tamarack

MomR lbmi

9 8 7 ~

Vulnerable: Nortb-Souih

In th"IS

..,. -

,......,..Z-3294
Servicing Lawn
TraciOrS,Mowers,
Tdlers, Murray,
Craftsman, MTD.
Briggs &amp; Stratton

...,.,N,
, HVI"w""""'·
front ald .rear rad&lt;s, swan.,
tires,

Q 10

Dealer. East

.a.•.

2222

wjtctl

A K

• K 96
4 3

Stop &amp; Compare

7:1111 All - 8:1111 Pll

tactory oonnection sus·
....,_, good plaslic and
tires, many extras, good
shape $3300. 304-675-

I

9AKJ 109
• Q J 32
4 QJ

•A108
• a 6 s .2

50

16 Dulling

• 7

Hounl

to AoiiWIS

·1

(extraol

• 6.

a

tiling
41 OUt42 Deep blue

49. ~

7

Eu;t

• J '
• 8 5 4 .2

a

Hoi Tub I Swim Spa Outlet.
S1000oft. Hugeseleclion.
New S1yles. Free Delivery.

~

.

I

.1 -.----.---.;..----- -·------------ -·
iiiii!JII ____
.FI
. EDS
I
.As·
SI
·
'
.
C
EMPLOYMENT

- - -- - - - : - Ha"' you priced a John
Deere \ately? 'tbu'l bl SIX·
prised1 Check out our Ull8d
inventory
It

"-lllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiioor'

r

MK'IJ•~

cme

.

'

•New Homes

s

West

2005

3825

Q6

• 75 4
.fiAK109 7 t

)

_. -

WWW . CARMICHAEL- 6pm-9pm 740-949-2216
,
TRAtlERS.COM 74().446Hond8 CRF 450R
_ with

2001 2911 Fifth Wheel
Camper Keyslone-Sprinter.
Queen Island bed, super
slide (Dinotte and couch),
rear lounge with rodutr
recliner and roctter, sleeps
6, ga~age kept, Exoaltent
Condition. Phone 304-675304 ~ 59 3-4 349
SAV 8180 Traveler 004, 2039 or
Dam:
Sunset
Valle~ $12,995 080, Priood below
Skymere 2305. Passed NADA tow rutalf .

2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112 long haired · Dachshund,
Beth, AduR Pool &amp; Baby 6monlhs,
trained, all
Pool, Patio, Start S4251Mo. shots &amp; wormed asking
No Pets, · lease ~Ius $300 3()4.sg3-3820
SacuriiY 0epoe11 Required, - - - - - - - (740)367-()547.
AKC Reg. Shilzu puppies. 7
'---=-'-'-'---- wks old, first shots. 1
Rooms ltii Rent. No pots, brown/white
(M),
·3
7
blad&lt;lwt1ite
. S300. 1401_or_(M)
7_4_0&lt;;4_5-86_
_5_

' Ohio V.lley Publishing P.O. Box 469, G.lllpolls, 0H '5!131 :

'•

!p999.
VIEw
OUR ENTlRE
APPRECIATE!
Pt.... call
TRAILER
INVENlORY
AT 7am-5pm
740-949-2217
&amp;

Diohes,Cande Holde!s.Bud Courthoose,_ .Ohio. Salting
Vases, Decooatlve Plates 1751lead. Oob Barrows and
ShirloyTemple,
Cake Gills. Roger Benlley. 937·
Stands,Cruots,Oillamps,Co 584-2398.
keSign,novetty Glass ttems,
Organs,
Show 40hd., blk &amp; bwt, Heifers,
Pump
•~Coko
s;~C.......
..,
Ill' ........... Sign· avg, 750-775 304-675-2443
Much more Misc.
By after 7pm
Appoln1man1 Only - 740-992- Regi~ered Angus Butts:
Blnh Olio: 0910212006 Sire:
4197.

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments, Very Spacious, 1 CKC rogiotered male Aid

I

I

~

'-'

211670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio .
45771

Dov-

reasonabi~·Heisey, 446-2412

1y. 740-367-7886

I

111111 or drop on this coupOn •lang
with • copy of your photo ID to

j

r

antee. Local references fur$592. 740.992-5064. Equal
Housing Opportunity.
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar .can for pricirlg 740·245- nished. Established 1975.
For
Concrete;
Angle, 5506
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446Modem 1 Bedroom Apt., Channel, Flat BAr, Steel , - - - - : - - - : - - 0870, ~is Basement
Call (740)446.()390
Grating
For
Orains, Registered BlacK Angus
Waterproofing.
~· &amp; Wall&lt;ways. L&amp;l Sui. 7~1-7205 or 740Nice quiet
2BR apt . Scrap "'etals Open Monday, 446-7410
References
&amp; deposit Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
~red. No 1'!!1s,446· 1271 fridJY, ~Ill-4:30pm. CIOOiiil .
Of 7()9::1657
Thurti18Vr... .. Saturday . _1_ 2006 Craft5man - Spada!__
BR apt. Vine 81reet, Suridtr;. (740)446-7300
ECII~Iawn """"":-'12"0UI,
I'EI5
22 HP.
Static Onve.
Gallipolis. Weekly 01 month-

I
I
I

I

I

- .-

plris

PIC

• 2
•

40.._.•

-45--

11 Accotri

12 -

......,.,,:J'~

---&amp;

560 LongTractor00 H.P,
Bush Hog, IT . 2001 Harley
883
Phone&gt;Wl·1104atter Spm. Spor1slar, 5500 mileo, VMY
.
Good Condi1ion $4500
EBY, INTEGRITY, KIEFER AITII, (740)384-5443
BUILT,
VALLEY ~-:-::-:-:-:::----:=
HoRsEtuvEsTocK 2002- Spor1sman 90
TRAILERS, LOAD MAX Excellent Condition. $1000
EQUIPMENT ·TR.O.ILERS, 74G-446-1170after4pm
CARGO
EXPRESS
&amp; 2003 Arti Cal &lt;·Wheeler
H o ME ST E A 0 ER
c
'
CARGO/CONCESSION 90 · $700 304-675-3285
TRAILERS. B+W GOOSE· 2005 Horter .
NECK
HITCHES. Feclory c.-... ·1 of 200
CARMICHAEL
EOUIP• buiR. Has only 850 original
IAENT I CARMICHAEL miles. Maroon Momllic lanl&lt;
TRAILERS SALES &amp; SEA· &amp; tins. Wrth emboosed
VICE. SPECIAL
20FT ftamos lhroughool. Price:
GOOSENECK' FLATBED $16,000.00 MUST SEE to

'

s~

7

1

~ - M!!,!! y11~ S1ock. Ca11 Roro Evans. 1- Siru: SAVNewOosign0081 ,
WAI&amp;APOWICIIIiii(J
Manoi'IMflfWrskjeApts. in800
=::.:..:
-5:.:37:..-9:.:52:.:8:.:·_ _ _ _ Dam: Suns;vt Lynn 1106
Proven. U&amp;ed 85 a clean-up Unconditional tite1ime guarMiddlepon, from $327 10 HEW AND USED STEEL bull.

:

'

10nmtlt - ·

2006 ,......., White ~• ........... 7.
...,ll'"'
Von · V6 •'
bulk head, 42,000 miles,

JET
AERATION MOTORS
used as a clean-up bull. ,
-GI-1-cl-,___llvlng
___
1_o_nd_2 Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Bii1h Ddt: 05-11-2004

I

I

H :-

g1e u1e m.n., 1iuclt Low 111111y
on
A/C
mllolge. DT466 · As 0""1'"1--· Duol -.g
n e w -1\lr - brllkes. dooro,wrydeon $3.200
Recent noed•oicel i1opec· obo. 740-388-1520

r

I

Address------,------

"""'~-

19841t*"olllli&lt;Aidi1900Bin-

'loy-.

Plymoul&gt;

Downtown apt. 3BR, 1 112 agne!i,Cut,Earty "merican 361h Annual Bentley Pig 4-lllltMHIIer 300EX, $1 ,000
bath, CIA. Carpet/Hamwood -.,Tumblen;,Winos,Champ
P r e s s e d • Sale. Friday "Pril 18th. (740~
floors. kit appl. included, Shot,Cartoon,Liqueurs,Serv J :30pm. Fayatte County Fair
WID hookup, No pets pre- ing
Dishes,
Covered Grounds,
Washington
CAMPOS &amp;

iii-

: Subscriber's Name------'--

sate: Berber Cafll81 $5.95
yd remnaniB $40.00 &amp; up.
Mollohan Carpet 2212
Eastem /We, Gaiii&gt;Oiis, Oh
740-&gt;Wl-7...

RENT COli (740)441·1111 ge,Faber
Ware,
lor applM:ation &amp; -.,ation. Deprossion,Ruby,Cobaii',Gr

6unbap Gttmtl-6entinel
• • • -- • • -

388-0173

TownhOuse
apartments.
and/or small houses FOR Americ.na,Fenton,Cambrid

•allipolif ••il!' tltribune
t)oint !)ltafattt ltegittter
. The Daily Sentinel··.
I

Monohan Fum. Porter, OH

·

•Washer/dryer hoc*;up

..... -

1999

I

..
=

Ulildnl....

1
4 EqtiiiOr

Alder

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· Glass for sate-cottectionS.t&gt;y WWW . CAREQ . COM -2006---\luna--,ha-B:-.-4WD=
the pteco-good gtaso poced . Cannichael ~- 740- ~-- 3000 Ill ~ ""-~·

Here's all you
need to do...
Fill out the coupon below
.and drop off or mail it with a
copy.of your photo m.

i •
• •

FOR S.W: .

•~

,

VANS

ACROSS

Phillip

Taking applications 1t&gt;r 2BR, Very nice 2BR,
Must Sell, looks &amp; runs lllol
no
pets ,
$275/month Rodney, attached garage. Business.
Best Offers new 304--437~1448
mctt.des water and sewer. $425/month. Dep. &amp; Ret. aooepted 304-440-0111
Fteq.446-280.1 •
S2q0dep. 446·36t7
500 KawaSaki Mule $2200 L--=--:.

, 2BA apt . (740) .. 1-o194

•

~
-

lion, and.amont W!llnopectton stldcar AIHaon auto.
·
$6500 2001 12 ton tag
tra'ller. · Electric bral&lt;es
naar $4,500.
Going Out fll

nished, and houses In
Pomer:a; and Middleport,
88Cl.trify deposit required. no
pets, 740-992-2216.

If so, you qualify for a

01 Cl&gt;ovy 2500
HOLT, Crew Cab, Long Bed,
4K4, Alisor1 Trans., 135,000
runs _ ,_ $12,900
-7«).388-1520

Ir·__

F.uaw

6llll

. WHY PAY RENT? 3 bed 2 3br House in Mason. No Taking applications for 30r.
bath, S199 a month. 740- Pets, $400 month, $400 no
polS.
$375/month

4-46·3384

2BR $450/dep. $450/rent + Plo-nt Vtl/rwi ,opts is,_ S-P1410. $100aacfl, 1st
- 645-3592
taking IO)plicatior•lor 2. 3 &amp; &amp; wormed, no PIIJOIS,
4 BA HUO Subsidiled apts, (740)691H1475
2Br a1 Johnsons Mobile (304)675-5806. Applicolions
Home Part&lt;. Call446-2003
... taken Monday ltwotqt

'ftfUO

J

You're

ma~ing

shrewd
decisions m situations where the stakes
are high. However. when dealing wtrh
miniscule costs, you could thoughtleuty
allow things to add up to one hefty sum
SAGITTARIU S (Nov. 23-0 ec . 21) Make allowances fo1 uneKP8Cf:ed cont:n·
genc6es, and si.Joceu ·will not be denied
you . Your blueprlm ald what actually
dewelops • t this time aAt apt tc be poles

apart. Be ready for 81l)'thing .
CAPRICORN {Dee . .22-Jan. 19) - 'tbu
won't lOok good m front at thOH you
want to lmpr•ss If you take an uny6eldlng
~ltlon on flaue8 that ~u tcnow llftla
about. tt'Hbe embanw.•lng " you'r. dlallenged .
AQUARIUS (.-n. 20-Feb. , 91 - Unlels
~ul . • trt.nf:l whg • Ill Informed

rcu"-

oould draw you mto 1 fll'lanclal morua. "
you dow thll to happM , ~l l ha¥1 to
NiP Pllltorflour ~~~ m -.
"IICEB (!jOb.
20) - Only you
aM ~I'IMIOI ~ ~Inti: wMn It
0011101 U&gt;Oihoni -lng I -talon lboul
• Joint endlllvor In wnleh you•,. lrwol¥1d.
IPHtc up tl' vau went ~r lnte,..

20'-

10111ed.

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t;

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ICIAM&gt;IIIS AISI/a -·H•U
a- -lt.abel- Slllly- Spil!ttll - LllSS . t l . 1
~ :'«)'is* belt policy, btlllhc
Ill paliJ:f
lioldan is P"'iC LESS lid LESS.

*

ARLO&amp; JANIS

�P

w 86 • The t:lilly Sentiuel

'

Brown's free throws lift Cavaliers
to 91-90 win over Philadelphia
LeBroo James had his shot
-'SSOCIATED PRESS
. blocked by Dalembert with
- - - - - - - - 0.9 seconds left and lhe ball
PHILADELPHIA- 1)le went straight to Brown .
76ers saw Devin Brown's Brown went up for lhe basshot fall short, beard the · ket and Dalembea came at
bliZUI" and ilancd toward lhe him from bis right side and
lockec room for an apparent tbe pair collided for lhe foul.
victory celebration.
"You feel like you just got
Game over? Not so fast.
seriously slapped in ·t he
Officials reviewed the face, fl Stxers
Andre
fmal sequence for several lguodala said. "It was iik;C
minutes before deciding that we had the 'W' and it was
Sixers
center
Samuel marlced off."
Dalemben fouled Brown
James scored 27 points,
with 0.2 seconds left and Zydrunas Hgauskas had 22
"brought Philadelphia back to and tbe Oiwlias clincbod
tbe COUJt for the free throws. bOme-«lllrt advautage in the
Minutes after the game first round of the play0ffs..
was seemingly over, Brown
Brown smiled while he
sank the pressure-pacted explained why dido 't think
free throws to lift the be d get the foul call.
Oeveland Cavaliers to a 91"Because I wear 33, not
90 win over the Sixers on 23," he said, malrjng a referMouday nil!ht and clinch the .ence to James' number
f0Ul1h Seedin the East.
The defending Eastern
"I heard a whistle," Brown Conf=ce champs and No.
said. "It was just a matter of 4 seed Cavaliers get to start
the officials going bact and their title defense at home
cha.g the otbec ·Official's against the Washington
opinion_:.. But I did bear a Wizards. The Cavs and
whistle ··
WlZBI'ds will play in the first
While the Sixers ran off round for the third straight
tbe oourt, tbe mfs huddled at year.
midoourt to ·look at the
"This is what we set out to
mplay. The Cavaliers ·stayed do,fl Cavs coach Mike
on the bench, with some Brown · said. "We tind ·o f
peeting over and hoping to took the long way, but we
bear the decisioo.
have it."
field-goal
Brown said be planDod to
Because
attempts and fouls at the end rest James and Ben Wallace:
of each quarter are mview- on Wednesday ~ht against
able, the mfs took their time Detroit. They'll Join guard
to make sum the right call Sasha Pavlovic, who left
was made. Dalembert was with a sprained left ankle in
whistled for his sixth foul the drinl quarter. Pavlovic,
for making contact on who averl\ged 7.5 points,
Brown's drive to the hoop. was fouled on a baseline
"There's contact on the jumper and badly twisted his
play by Dalemben," refeme ankle on an awkward landGreg Willard told a pool ing ..
mporter.
Miller 'scored 26 points
Sixers roach . Maurice and Williams had 21 for the
· Cheeks argued with the mfs strUggling Sixers, who have
. and . guard Andre Mille~ lost all the momentum built
)JUnted the ball in frustra- during a torrid 1'1-4 March
tion.
·
that shot them up ·the East
The Sixers appeared to standings. Philadelphia (40have won after Lou 41) has lost lhme straight
Williams hit a fadeaway and ~ under .500 lor
jumper with 5.1 seronds left the first tune since Iiley were
- his second go-ahead bas- 34-35 on March. 21 .
et in the final minute.
While the 76ers already

liT OM Ciasnlll

I

rorward

..._,'"

t•
I

'

•

LaWn. &amp; Garden edition
inside today's Sentinel ·

Cleveland
Indians desig-

nated hitter
Travi9 Hafner
singleS
Boston Red
Sox starting
pitCher Jon
Lester to drive
in two runs in
the fifth inning
of a baseball
game Monday.

serured a playoff spot, they
w~ trying to stay out die
seventh seed and avoid .a
first-round matchup wilb
Detroit. No such luck..
Philadelphia will get the
Pistons and the Raptors will
be the sixth seed and play

o«

OdaOOo.
Thie 76ers need a · win
Wednesday at Charlotite in
the season finale to reach the
.500 mark for the first time
since 2004-05.
,
Williams scored i 2 points
in the fourth, hitting one bi,g '
shot after another to nilly .the
Sixers bact from 12 down
early in the quarter.
James fired an ovedlead
pass to Dgausbs, who easily spun around Dalembert
.for an uncontested layup and
an .87 ~86 lead.
Williams and Brown
exchanged layups and the
Sixers trailed by one. Then
Williams buried a 19-footet
liT TOM Wm1 i
ASSOCIATED PRESS
from the right side and the
Fan ~iation Crowd
erupted m cheers one final
ClEVELAND .- Manny
time in the mgular season.
Ramirez wasn't sure if
In a flash, the win was Indians closer Joe Borowski
gone.
tbmw him a fastbaH or a
"To be a winner, then a changeup.
. ,
loser, 1bat's pretty toogh,fl
He was certain ~f ·o ne
Cheekli said.
dting, howeYer.
The 76ers mireated to the
"~t was right there," he
loc.t er room where they said.
watched tbe final minutes on
Then, it was over ·there.
TV. Miller had already startRamirez hit a two-'run
ed to remove his ankle homer - No. 493 of his
career- and Boston, down
braces.
""The mfemes made a deci- one entering the ninth
sion and we have to live inning, rallied for three runs
with it," Miller said.
agaiiist Borowski for a 6-4
Notes: Phillies IB ~t~ win Monday night over
H0ward,
SS Jimmy
Ro . s CleYe
· Jand ·m
· a st unnmg
·
and
reliever
J,C. Romero
·rerun of last October's AI.
also attended the game. ··· championship series.
Saint Joseph's coach Phi!l
RanJitu's shot to left .off
MarteJt_watched part of thHee BGrowski (0-2) was j·ust the
game uum press row.
·
coached Cavs Delonte West latest · Red Sox comeback
and Dwayne .Jones on HawkJ against tbe Indians. Last
Hill .... lguodala 1hanked the fallAL,
BoCsStondrafillied lirom ~fans for coming before the 1
e JCJt to UC&lt;lt
game. "Even thllUJ!lh it's Fan Cleveland and adYance to
Appreciation Night, for the the World Series. The states
first time in a wbile, this weren't nearly as high this
won't be our last home game time, but the Red Sox came
of the season. Enjoy the through again.
playoffs!" he said.
And so did Ramirez, who

•
• Eagles lose at home 1o
Athel'ls.See . . . BI ·

bit his 132nd career home Lou 'Gehrig and ifred
run at Progressive Field, McGriff for 24th on the
which was known as Jacobs career list. ·
Field during the eight-plus
Borow~ has blown two
seasons he played in saves in a row, and is so
Cleveland.
concerned about a loss in
Wi.th the Indians leading velocity that he's going to
4-3, Borowski, whose every have his arm examined.
appearance i.s Jill adventure, "rm graspin~ at straws. I
came in to try to close it out think we're gomg to get it
But the right-hander, who chectod. Maybe it's nothled the AL w.ith 45 saves in ing, maybe i.t is. It's drivin,g
2007~ gave up a leadoffdou- me crazy, too," be said.
ble in the ninth to Julio
Mike Timlin (1-ll pitched
Lugo, snapping the short- a perfect eighth and
stop's 0-for-16 slump. Coco Jonathan Papelbon worked
Crisp sacrificed on a ban~- the ninth for his fifth save.
bang pla1y at first and Dustin But Boston middle reliever
Pedroia followed with a sac- Julian Tavarell!: was the
rifice fly to deep left, scor- unsung star. He worked out
· ..
• .ugo .t o t1e
· 11
· 4-all•
1 aded JBID
· m
' the
mg
of a ,____
""""s-o
With the Indians shifted to fifth by striking out Ryan
the right, David Ortiz Garm and Jason Michaels
dropped a bloop single into · to teep the Red Sox down
"left his second hit. 4-1.
Ranii.rez
then
belted
Ortiz, benched Sunday in
Borowski's first .Pitch into the throes of his worst
~ freqkft-.fieltld s~ts.:_~ pla_cthe ~fior~ hian.ttind. g . ~~~hil's· awvener~
1111 """
:..e
uen y :vtsl~ w1
long 'b alls while a member age from .070 to .I 04.
of the Indians.
Jake Westbrook, tbe loser
The homer - his 16th in last October's decisive
against his focmer team game, was in line to get the
tied the long-haired hitting win before Borowski tbmw
machine with Hall of Farner it .away.
,

Ifhe

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEDO MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

wa!Tiling davs of spring
are bringing out baseball players and coaches, as they pre.
pare for another season.
General Hartinger Park in
Middleport was busy Monday
with young players beginning
their practices. This team of
young girls on a coach-pitch
team was hard at work on ·
their batting skills, keeping
their eye on the ban and
learning the important eyehand coordination required
to be a strong hitter.

MIDDLEPORT
'Parents who allow their
children to destroy park
property .in Middleport
should be fmed, according
to the chairman of the village's recreation committee.
At Monday evening's
regular meeting, Council
Member Jean Craig discussed continuing problems with vandalism m the
village's parks, especially
at Dave Diles Park in the
downtown shopping district. A sign constructed by
Councib):lan
· . Craj_g
Wehrung has bee~ dam. aged beyond repair by children climbing on 1t and
. destroying the letters.
Craig said parents who
pennit their children · to
.destroy park piOpeaty should
be cited to mayor's cowt •.

OiJnuAIUES
Page AS
· • Ruth Fanner, 86

• Student inducted
into honor society.
SeePIIeA3

. • Family MedicineAllergy tiMtltlent. _ .
A'oiDidanoe, medicatiOn
.or shots. See PIF A3
• Cleanl4) from 1999
· Ohio tire fire completed.
SeePageAJ
• 'For the Record.

- "Pamm

SeePage AS
• Holzer selects April
Physician of the Month.
· See P1ee AS
• Ohio man held in-S
deaths found dead
in cell. See Page AS
.

WEA111ER

....... J.RII • • Dill

&amp;!IIIWilli .

I-·

13

AI
'

Councll increases fiscal officer salary
Finattce committee cites savings, added respiJrisibilities
BY BRIAN J. REED
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
Village
Council approved a salary
increase of $8,000 for
Fiscal Officer Susan Baker
at Monday evening's regular meeting.
After meeting in execu.tive session, council agreed
unanimous!y
to
raise
Bater's
saJary
from
$24,000 to $3;!.&lt;JOO. While
Bater is entitled to free
health
through the
village · as ·a full-time
employee, she does not
receive it. Her salary is paid
through seven different village departments: General
fund, refuse, cemetery,
sewer, stnlets and water.
Council was presented
with a written ·analysis of
the fiscal offu:e's operation,
and cost savings Baker bas
.helped implement, from
"Finance
Committee
Chairman Rae Moore.
Baker, Moore said, "came
into an office that 'had been
completely mishandled and
throu h her diligence and
knowfedgc, has been turned

...
.

Classifieds

Comics

Bs
A4
As
As

f.ditoriafs'
.
Movies

Joint Jlta~antltgilttr The Daily Smtinel

Obituaries

740-992-2155

Sports .
Weather

BSection'
As

@aooll OJUo V•Bey pn' "

' ~ . . Co.

•

.'

'·

.

'.

.... .....,,llpl

ta
Many area drivers ana once again experiencing sticker
shock as gasoline prices were on the rise this week. With
drive-otis being an expensive problem, soma statioos ana
requiring customers pre-pay for their gasoline or use a
credit card at the pump.

Calendars

. -,.

into an efficient and moneysaving department."
"Govemment accounting,
with all its rules and regulations, requires a · vast
amount of knowledge, particularly with its contant
changes rather than the set
rules that govern other
of accounting,"
forms
,
Moore said.
Moore referred to the
results of a disastrous state
audit from several years
ago, which revealed that
the village's bank statements had not been reconciled for years, that
deposits were not made in a
·timely fashion, and other
.
irregularities.
Since Baker has assumed
the office of fiscal officer,
the village has begun to
realize savings from costcutting measums jllld close
monitoring of . village
finances, Moore said.
Baker has also assumed
added responsibilities as a
liaison between the village
income tax operation and
the Regional Income Tax
Administration agency that
will begin operating the
deplll'tlilent later this year.

BAEEDOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Annie's Mailbox

T' :•

--

destructive behavior . by
their children should have
to answer for it," Craig said .
"If we're building something up just to allow it be
tom down, this committee
of volunteers need not
waste our lime."
The .recreation committee
began last year to. paint and
repair equipment, plant new
p-eenery and make other
1111provements to the parts.
The village also began
development of a new
neighborhood park on
Beech Street, named in
honor of the late council
member
Ferman Moore.
'

r!

. a SECllONS - tit P.wES

nw.my~.rom

b~k the use of the drug dog
to two days a week after discussing gasoline _prices and
what was then called tlie
decreased performance of
the unit. Proffitt saijl donations to the program had
also stopped coming in a
few months ago and the
fund had been expended for
training , etc.
Queen declined comment
on the situation al this time .

Batter up!

INDEX

304-675-1333

in
Loqg
Bottom .
Technically the dog belongs
to the village though the
dog and program were
financed through private
donations throughout the
community. The village did
pay for gasoline to transport
the dog to and from the
Pomeroy Police Department
in a specially equipped
vehicle when it was on duty.
Council had recently cut

·village park
vandalism

REACH 3 COUNTIES

'

suspension was not of a Ruth Spaun abstained from
criminal nature.
· the vote while Co~o~ncil
After a lengthy ~:xecutive Members · Shawn Arnott,
POMEROY - The future session whem both Queen George Stewart, Mary
of the Pomeroy K-9 Unit is and Proffitt separately McAngus, Jim Sisson and
uncertain now •t hat K-9 addressed Pomeroy Village Pete Barnhart voted in favor
Officer and Assistant Chief Council during Monday of the request,
.
of Police Alan Queen ·his night: s meeting., Mayor
Proffitt said no decision
been placed on~~ John
Musser
upheld bas been made concerning
' Pomeroy Chief of Police Proffitt's request to suspend the K-9 unit's future at this
Mark E. Proffitt declined to Queen. Council approved time or the fate of Jonesy,
comment on the suspension Proffitt's request with a five the drug dog which .resides
except to firmly state the to one vote. Councilwoman with Queen at his residence

addrmses
.

INSibE

Place Your Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register or
DaUy Sentine~ And It WiD Run For FREE In
The Tri.County Marketplace!

BY BE:nt SERGENT

BSEF liiENT.uvoM.YSENTINELCOM

Council

5

2

Fub1re ofPo~neroy K~9 unit uncertaln

SPORIS

z homers as Boston
rallies past Cleveland 6-4

!_

Concert planned for
Saturday night, A3

Pain at th~ pump
BY 8ErH SePoalT
IISERGEI'II"OIILYDM.Y!iENllNELCOM

POMEROY - Drivers
received a familiar shoot
when gasoline 1ooi: a nearly
10 cent per gallo'l ju~ in
Pomeroy from Sunday rught
to Monday morning, though
all of ~~!~County is feeling a s· · pinch.
A gallon of regular
unleaded gasoline had been
holding steady at around
$3.35 a galloo in Pomeroy

when Monday morning it
shot up to $3 .45 and $3.43 .
Last week drivers in Mason
County, W.Va. were paying
around $3A5 for a gallon of
regular unleaded and this
past Saturday gasoline was
as low as $3.25 a gallon for
regular
unleaded
in
Gallipolis though that
changed this week when the
price went to $3.36.
The situation is lite Iy to

r

- • ru

..
'

•,

insurance

•

i. •

.

'

.

.

'·

Council voted to outsource
that department . at ari estimated annual cost savings ·
of $50,000 per year.
Baker has implemented
various programs that lowered or will lower workers
compensation premiums by
thou sands
of dollars .
Moore said .
"We would be hard
pressed to find anyone
with the knowledge or
dedication (B aker) possesses, and we cannot
afford to pay the amount
she is worth .- Moore said.
"but take inlo consideration the .extra thousands of
dollats she is saving the
village, the fact that her
salary is divided · between
six different accounts and
the vital importance a fis cal officer plays ." . .
Mayor Michael Gerlach
said the savings Baker ·s
programs and suggestions
have helped create also help
justify a larger salary.
"We don ·, wam to spend
money too fast. but a1 1he
same time, the savings these
programs have made possi-·
ble allow us to do this,"
Gerlach said Monday.

'·

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