<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="3919" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/3919?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-16T11:53:59+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="13838">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/5b65bdc9577b3327e10c2b551b96c3c5.pdf</src>
      <authentication>60f4355174e20d2b16f16ba65f86604b</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="13850">
                  <text>•

.
: Page D6 • The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Middleport • Pomeroy • Gallipolis, OH • Point fle&lt;!sant, VWV

Sunday, Apri121J, 2008

Book club serves
as forum for
diverse opinions, Aa

HMC hosts 'Footprints
to Footsteps' ·
Celebration, A6

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o CL\''1S • \" ol.

'I 0\' ll \\ . \PR I L 21, 2ooR

.-; - . '\u . 1 &lt;) :!

""" . '"' cl .rr h "'"'"" I • .. ,"

•

SPORTS

ColtJJnbia Gas to replace pipeline in P9meroy

•Cavsopen
playoffs with win
fNer Washington. ·

Seehgl: 81

POMEROY -· Pomeroy
will be one of the ftrSt communities to benefit from
Columbia Gas of Ohio's $2
billion improvement til its
existing _pipleline systein.
Columbia
Gas
will
replace around 10,000 .feet
of pipeline in Pomeroy and
have already begun notifying customers when the
work will begin as ~ell as

when individual streets will
be done. An initial listing of
streets where work wiU be
done includes Legion
Terrace, Mulberry Avenue,
Anne Street. East Second
Street. West Second Street.
Court Street, East Main
Street, West Main Street,
Butternut Avenue, Lincoln
Terrace, Mechanic Street.
AU customers will be notified before consuuction
begins possibly this month.
Customers· will also receive

updales throughout the con- pipeline replacement could restore any landscaping that
suuction. As for who
take several months. In is disrupted.
pay for this upgrade. the cost addition to the replacement
Questions about the proof building•. maintaining and of main gas pipeline, ject can be directed to
replacing the pipeline system Columbia Gas will also be Columbia Gas employees
is shared by all customers replacing service lines that or by calling 1-800-344and is part of the monthly bill connect to the main pipeline 4077
or
going
to
they pay. Colwnbia Gas says from a home or business. www.ColumbiaGasOhio.c
customers won't have to pay and the company will relo- om.
sjJecifically for the improve- cate gas meters outside the
Columbia Gas is replacment for their Pomeroy home if not already outside . ing portions of their pipline
neighborhood.
Some digging will be nec- systems with a longer-lastWmt on individual prop- essary for the project but ing, · s~cially-designed ,
erties will be completed in Columbia Gas claims it will plastic
replacing the
one dlly though the entire do as little as possible. and existing steel pipe. ·

will

P•Pe·

Final meeting
set on Syracuse
distress grant
BY BEnt SERGENT

.

BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENT1NELCOM

OBnuARIES
Page AS
• Melvin c. Coen, 86
-

INSIDE
_._!_Print OOIIEIQtierut _

K8nfledY MilseUm.

.See.,. Al

• Conference to
discuss locally
grown foods demand.

SeePa&amp;eAl
·• Web site helps
people ~ disabilities.

SeePageA3
• Childlen's Maypole
wrapping and tea party
planned. See Page A3
•· Meigs County 4-H
:News,•.,jee Pale AS
.• BlooSnobile collects
46 units. See Pale A6

' BY BAlAN J.

REED

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDIJEP()RT- "We don't know
who is goin&amp; to be the next president.
but we kn~. will be a Democrat."
"It may bC ·a while before we know
who it is going to be. If it is Senator
Clinton, the ftrst woman President will
be a Democrat. If it is Senator Obama,
the first
of color to be President
will be a Democrat. That's something
we can be proud of."
Meigs County Democratic Party
Chairman .Henry Hunter told the
party faithful Saturday night that

i'

person

WEATHER

theirs was the "party of inclusion,"
and said its membership is at a record
high, not only across the nation but in
the county, as well.
The Pll!lY held.its annual JeffersonJackson Pinner ·Saturday night at the
Riverbend Arts Council. Athens City
Councilwoman Debbie Phillips, candidate for the Ohio House. of
Representatives, was the keynote
speaker. Hunter was elected party
chairman in March. His sister, Sue
Maison, resigned as ·party chairman in
January, when · she assumed a new
position with the . Ohio Bureau of
Motor Vehicles. County Commis~ioner

_Court nixes AEP rate hike
BY DIANE PorrOHFF
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. Mason County is going to
have to wait a little longer
for construction to begin on
the Integrated Gasification
Combined Cycle plant next
. zS~-1ZPAGES
to
American
Electric
Power's
Mountaineer
Plant
Annie's Mailbox
in New Haven.
In a ruling filed last week,
Calendars
State
the
Virginia
· Classifieds
Corporation Commission
(SCC) denied .a request
Comics
Bs from Appalachian Power
Co. (APCo), an affiliate of
Editorials
A4 AEP, for a rate increase that
would help the company
Movies
B6 · recover costs with the consuuction of the plant.
Obituaries
"This decision is disappointing,"
AEP S('?kesman
Sports
8 Section Phil Moye
s81d. "We
Weather
A.6 ' believe Appalachian Power
presented an excellent case
© •oo8 ohio v~ P ........ eo. for both the need .for the
plant and recovery of the
'costs in Virginia.
"We still believe that
lGCC p(Jwer generation
4 teehnology is the best way

INDEX

PIMNseeDa•aaaiiii.AS

Pia•~- Gr..t. AS

SHS Prom RoyalfY.

request for Mason County plant
()lUI 10 UFOMVtWLVJiB~ISlS:UXlM

SYRACUSE- The third
and final meeting of the
Community Development
Block Grant I Distress
Grant will be held at 7 p.m.,
Tuesday, April. 29 at the
Syracuse
Community
Center.
The final meeting is to
inform residents what the
majority bas chosen as worthy projects for the grant
funds and how those grant
funds will be distributed if,
in fact, the grant is awarded
to the village. All projects
were chosen by the residents via surveys which had
been !listributed and collect·
ed af the two, . previous
meetings. The $300,000
pant is used for community
Improvements and was_____
most recently reeeived by
Pomeroy which used the
funds for fire equipment,
the demolition of condemned homes and sidewalk replaCement.
The grant also requires a
$150,000 match which
does not necessarily mean
the village has to come up
with $150,000 cash, but
$150,000 worth of .local
improvements projects in
Mick Davenport had served as the act- the
village
such
as
ing chairman until the party organized improvements to Syracuse
following the March pri.mary.
M uni ci pal Park or the
Bunter said he reviewed voter regis- Syracuse
Community
tration records after the March primary, Center. At ·neKt week's
and said many long-time Republican meeting · Village Grants
families are now Democratic ones.. Writer Fred Hoffman will
Nearly twice as many registered voters also present the status of
in Hunter's home precinct in Chester several grants he has
Township cast Democratic ballots this applied for which will
year than two years ago.
count towards the $150,000
"I saw names - entire households match. The Meigs County
- that I never believed would come Commissioners
have
over to the Democratic Party, and they already promised $20,000

-'

to meet the growing
demands of our customers
i!fid to ensure future energy
supplies by allowing us to
continue to use domestic
coal reserves with Jess environmental impact" Moye
added. 'This decision continues to demonstrate the
difficulty in getting needed
power plants approved by
states when we don 'I have
clear direction regarding
future requirements to
address .climate change."
He said it is the company 's strong belief that coal
has to continue to be a bigger part of the country's
energy mix and that the
IGCC represents the best.
way coal can be ut;ed in an
environmentally-friendly ·
. manner.
AEP intends to appeal
V'~rginia's ruling .
·
Last month, Appalachian
Power received authority
Beth Set genl/photo
from the Public Service
This
past
saturday
night,
amid
a
pirate
ship
and
sandy
beach
,
Courtney
Ginther
and Tyler
Commission
of
West ·
V'UJinia to build the 629- ~1rcle were named the Southern Hi~h School Prom Queen and King, respectively. Ginther
ts the daughter of Jeff and Cindy utnther of Portland while Circle is the son of Jeff and
Sonia Circle of long Bottom.
Piun-••-.AS

..
•

A

•

..

�Page A2 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, April :u,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obama, McCain

Print collection at Kennedy Museum
. ATHENS - .. Portfolios
·and Suites from the Print
·Collection" will be exhibited
: at Kennedy Museum of Art at
:Ohio University fromApril8
,lbrough June. 29, 2008.
· 1be exhibition highlights
:contemporary prints and
: includes works by celebrat. ed masters such as Roben
: Rauschenberg,
Jennifer
: Bartlett, David Hock.ney
:and Jim Dine.
.· 1be words "portfolio'' or
:"suite" refer to a set of
:prints by an anist or group
:of artists, typically inspired
:by a particular theme or
subject matter. A totaJ of

.
i

101 prints by 165 artists,
spanning a period from
1969 to 1995, will be displayed in three galleries and
the Museum's main corridor. Visitors can also view
an additional 290 prints
from the Kennedy Museum
Collection at two kiosk stalions in the exhibition.
· ..'Ibis is first time the ponfolios and suites from our
Collection have been showcased exclusively. It is a
great opponunity to show
the variety and quality of the
Collection." According tO
Jeffrey Carr. Carr serves as
the museum's registrar and

show cash on .&amp;. ~. .~­

Thursday Family Night prois curator of the exhibition.
The museum's print collec- gram on May I 5 _from ~ to
tion was initiated by Heory 7:30 p.m. featunng pnntBY .... KUINIENN
Lin during his tenwe as dean maker and exhibition cura- .
.OSSOCI
...TED PRESS -TER
of the College of F'me Ans at tor Jeffrey Carr.
Kennedy Museum .of Art
Ohio University from July
WASHINGTON .
1971 through June 1984. is located in LilY Hall, 1be Barack Qbama raised $41
Professor emeritus of print- Ridges on the Ohio
campus
in million in March and bad $42
making, Donald Roberts, University
facililaled the project at the Athens, Ohio. Gallery hours . million available to spend
lime, The original home of are Tuesdays, Wednesdays ~~st Democratic rival
lhe prints was the university's and Fridays from noon to 5 Hillary RodiJ3Dl Qinton in
. p.m., Thursdays from noon April, campaign l:inanoe
Trisolioi Gallay.
The public is invited to an to 8 p.m., and Salu!days and Icpoits filed Sunday sbow.
Clinton aides said late
opening reception at the Sundays from I to 5 p.m.
Por more infonnation, Sl1llday she would_ I_'C~n
Museum on Friday, April II
from 6 to 8 J?.m. The muse- please calf (740) 593-]J04 raising about $20 million m
um's Education Depanment or visit the museums websi« March and that she had
more than $8 million for tbe
will
present a Third aT www.ohiou.edu/museum.
primary availa~le at the
beginning of April.
,_-..,....,...,1..,
Overall; Obama had $51

d

•

.
The Daily Sentinel

d

many sessions which will sented by Julie Fox, OSU
helpthemfindtheirnichein ExtensionDirectMarl:eting
•
the
agricultural econo- Specialist Julie is a nationMARIETIA - Locally April 26 from 9 a.m. to 4 my. new
There will be presenta- ally known expen is the
grown foods are becoming p.m. at the Washington tions on livestock, fruit, areas of small business and
the new "in-style" for con- State Community CoUege vegetables, plants, grants, marketing.
SUillei'S aU over the United
in Marietta.
marketing and manageSpeakers for this conferStates, and the demand for
The keynote presentation ment. The sessions include ence
include:
Rory
"fresh from the farm'' is will featore Dr. Joe Kovach Direct Marketing Meat Lewandowski,
OSU
growing by leaps and bound~ who set out to gross $10 per Products·, Beekeeping Extension Athens County;
as consumers worry more row foot on his research Opportunities.
.
&amp; Eric Barrett, OSU Exterlsion
and more about health issues. plots in Wooster. This is Challenges; Extending the Washington County; Hal
That couples with the equal to a robust $90,000 Growing Season ~ High Kneen, OSU Extension
demand for biofuels and per acre, in his innovative Tunnels &amp; More; Top 10 Meigs County; M.aurus
ocher farm related altema~ farm plots of mixed fruits opportunities in direct mar- Brown. OSU Extension,
tive energy sources is and vegetables. So far, keting; Pasture based live- RichlaQIJ County; Jackie
sweeping the nation., mak- based on the crops that he stock production; Berries LeBet!Il, Marietta Small
ing it a great time to be a has in production, the Ohio from May to October Business
Development
fanner. It's a great time to State University scientist Extending the Pick- Your- Center &amp; Bramble Creek
·be a farmer!
has achieved exactly that. Own ~n; Herbs: Types, Farm;
Steve
Boone,
With all of this consumer 1be two fmal ·crops in the Culture &amp; Use; How to get President of The Mid .Ohio
interest farmers are asking lineup; apples and peaches, bigber pn'ces for your prod- VaUey
Beekeepers
what they can do to grow are set to stan producing ucts; Specialty Pork &amp; Association; Ann Fugate
more products to meet these this summer.
Poultry Production On the from the Athens Fanners
needs. According to agriculAn ecological pest man~ Farm;
·Community Market; Julie Fox, OSU
· ture agents, they can intro- agement expert, Kovacb is Supported
Agriculture Extension Direct Marl:eting
duce a new crop on the midway through a six-year (CSA,s)- Getting guaran- Specialist; Joe Kovach,
farm, like vineyard. green- study of four different types · teed customers for the entire Ohio State University IPM
bouse plants, bluebenies or of polyculture ' module~ ·season; Table and Wme Program; and m King, King
a hive of bees for honey. To plots with a mix of sucb Grape Production; Business Family Fann, Albany, OH.
assist landowners the OSU high-value crops as snap Planning - Adding a crop? . Registration is only $30
Extension in Washington peas, green beans, blueber- Got an idea? Let's put the and includes lunch along
County is hosting a confer- ries, raspberries, strawber- numbers to it!; Meat Goats with
a
Conference
ence on marketing and man- ries,
tomatoes • and ·101;
Blueberry
&amp; Proceedings with details
agement that goes with. a edamame, or edible soy- Blackbell)';Production;and from all presentations from
fann busines~. .
·
beans. His presentatiQn will Finding Dollar~. cheap or the ·entire conference. A regThe 2008 Mid-Ohio be "How to gross $90,000 free..
istmtion fonn can be found ·
Valley
Agriculture per acre on your farm."
There will an afternoon at: http:l/washington.osu.edu
After the main sessio1.1 .g eneral session "Finding under "Ag Opportunities
Onportunities Conference
be held on Saturday, participants can take pan in _your farm 's customers" pre- Conference."
--'--------------------------------'--------

enswn agentto spe

lt'lelgS

a

;fu

Pope Benedict XVI

•

US church as visit ends

ing. his Olber ~~mill!:~
were nearly ~
teleOilllteting. and $3.6
lion for travel and lodging
In keeping with his lrend,
CalifO!Dia was Obama's goto fundraisiog state! ~enerating nearly $4.6 ·xnilbon in
contributions in March.
New Yon was next with ·
nearly $3.2 million.
Clinton spokesman Jay
Carson said $15 million of
Clinton's .$20 million was
raised over the lntcmeL He
said the campaign bas
raised $60 million over the
Internet since Jan. I. The
surge of 0~ support sug-

l

Bv KATHY MITCHELL

was fine, but as I got to know
AND MARCY SUGAR
her better, it became clear that
she is just using my brother. I
l)ear Annie: My sister asked. my mom what I should
won dancmg lessons for do and she said I should keep
two. Her husband couldn't
go because of his work
schedule, so she asked me. 1
agreed and asked my busb'and if he· d like to take the
classes along wjth us, but he
wasn't interested.

ili~is l~~o!s~~in:joy:

$9 millioo of that available
Onlyforthegenerale!ectioo.
The money positJoned
Obama to undertake an
expensive April campaign
in Pennsylvania, where he
has outspent Clinton and c1:1t
into her lead. Pennsylvania
votes on Tuesday.
sum inci!Jded 111011ey l'rom
Obama's fuodraising in 6,000 new donors.
.·
March Jed aU candidates, but
MI:Cain in·Mardi·~
was still lower than 1be mark dt'iOoni about $3 millioo in
he set in February, when !Je c:oolribulioos. most of it
raised more than $55 mil- maneybehadreceivedforthe
lion. He has raised $235 mil- general electi.oo. The refunds
lion in his camnoign.
set the stage for McCain to
Clinton was~ to file accept .about $84 JDiPion in
her Iepoll ·VIilb the Federal public funds for the fliii camEJoct;ioi1 Commission by .the paign. Candidates who accept
midnigbldeadline
public financing CJIUII" raise
Republican
John money from doooos for the
McCain's __,., showed he general electionampaign.
raised $1S.l.n and had
M~'s bigjjest expense
$1 1.6 miJlioo in lhe bank:. of the moolh was $3 million
The Aiiz.on11 senator's to Fidelity &amp; TIU&amp;t Bank 10
March figures were his best finish paying off a $4 million
fundraisin$ pe:fonnance of loan that had become the
the campaign.
.
focus of a sta1ema1e between
Obama spent $30.6 mil- McCain and the FEC.
lion in March - a month C~gn finaoal 1C11t11ator6
tbat began wilb tough con- want Ill make swe McCain
tests for the Dlinois senator did not use the promise ci
in Ohio .and Texas. He lost fAJbJic financing in the primathe """'ular vote to ·Clinton IY to secure the Joan. McQU
in~stateprimarieseven · waseligibleforpublicfinaoo.
lhougb be outSpent her, but ing in the primary. but QiS
he cmeraed.1 with- dele- lawyers said they did not use
gates in Texas.
that eligibility as~
His repott showed he
In :March, his operating
spent $9 mi1lioD on media expenses were $5 million,
advertisi.ut, an amount 'his
smallest
monthly
mostly spent iil fini1 days expense so far this year.
beforetlieMareh40hioand
McCain's March expensTexas primaies. ObJuna did es ranged from $758,000 for
spend 1DOIICY in Maroh for air chaners to $151.55 to a
ads in .Pennsylvania and Los Angeles florist. The .
Indiana, wbidl vote&amp; May 6. camp!lign reported a debt of
,be held off on most .of $707,000, much of out-

weren 't a couple, we were
paired With different men
who didD't have regular partners. I danced several umes
with "Joe" and we made a
good team. Another session
is scheduled to begin, and
Joe wants me to sign up as
.bis partner so we can enter
competitions at local studios.
·.. · .Here's the problem: My
sister isn't able to attend
the next session because
11he is helping her daughter
for a few weeks. My bus· .. band is adamantly opposed
to my staying in the class
with Joe now that my sister
won't be there.
I explained that aU the
iessons and competitions
are held in studios with several other people o.r esent
and it won't be any cllfferent
than the lessons I've been
taking all along. 1 told my
·husband be could oome and
watch, but anything that
doesn't include a football
doesn't interest him.
. 1 am a 46-year-old grand· mother of two. Joe is 12
years younger and in a relationship with someone. I've
offeredtointroducemyhusband to Joe, but he says no.
At first 1 was upset because
1 enjoy the dancmg so much.
Now 1 am furious that my
husband doesn't trust me.
Should I go ahead with the
iessons anyway or sit at
homeinfrontoftheTVwith
my mate? Ready To
Dance wid! tbe Stars
· Delir Keady: It's unfair of
your
. husband to -object when
be won't take the time to

California and
each
of which yielded more titan
$1 million.

SC student accused of.

plotting to bomb school

pwplle

'

•

.. ..

'

.
•

• ...

-

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

•

... .,t.,.,'

'""-

. • .,... • ...II.....

my mouth shut
Well, my brother asked to
borrow money so I lent him
some. Then I found out be
was using the money to take
Kim out She knows he
doesn't have the funds to

:e ~c:;: :~tsnire~ b:~

somewbere.
Yesterday, my brother
Submitted photo
yelled at me because I left a SenioltiEAT membem discuss the book they read for the month of April, "Sunflower and the Secret Fan," by Lisa See .
message with my opinion of Participating here.are, from the left, Bill Baasel, Joann Dodd, SenioltiEAT coordinator, Peggy Irwin and Sally Walther.
her on Kim's answering
machine. What should I dQ
if he doesn't listen to reason?- Confused
members -take turns choosing the gratifying. She likes the fact that every ·
BY HANNAH YouNG
Dear Confused: You
monthly
book. This ensures that the one panicipates and discusses thei :
AND CHRISllNA SYNODINOS
mean well, but you have -to
E.W. SCRIPPS SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM
books represent a variety of different unique ideas. "All the member' an·
stop.interfering. As hard as it
INlEANS AT O'BlENESS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
subjects and interests. According to opinionated and hearing tbeir impres··
is to watch your brother
Sally Walther, SeniorBEAT hook club sions and insight&gt; enriches my life: ·
make a mis~ this isn't
ATHENS - Senior citizens, are you member and writer, "We are always she said. To Walther. the SeniorBEAT
your business and he will looking for an outlet to express your hungry for new book suggestions."
book club is. exactly the type of book
resent and reject whatever opinions about books . and discuss
SeniorBEAT book club member · club for which she had been looking.
you suggest Don't lend him them with other adults? O'Bleness Joann Dodd, a retired social worker
The book club aJ&lt;..o serves· as a grea·
any more money, but other- Memorial Hospital's SeniorBEAT from O ' Bleness, portrays the spirit of way to network with other seniors and
wise, your mother is right. book club can be that outlet.
the group. Bhe is a book lover who make new friendships. Members lean '
Say nothing. You won't win.
The group meets every second banned herself from libraries because a Jot about fellow grou p member-.
Dar ADDie: I read the let- Monday at 10 a.m. in O'Bleness' she can' t help writing, underlining through their discu ssions and boo!.
· ter from "Abandoned and lower level room 006. Consisting of a and highlighting in books that she choices and manv 1ind others with th&lt;·
Angry," whose mother group of passionate people from all reads! "The best pan of the group is same interests. While tllere is some
seems to bave some serious ty.pes of backgrounds, this group has the exchange of different ideas," she times a debate when opinions clash, i
mentaJ and · physical prob- much to offer. For those who Jove said. "I catch things from the other is just pan of the fun for the members
Iems. 1bere may be ways to thinking critically and speaking their members that I wouldn't have noticed
Anyone age 6Q and older can becom&lt;
compel Mom to see a doctor. mind, this program may be for you.
on my own."
a member of SeniorBEAT fre e o··
I am a retired Adult
Once a month, the book club memWalther agrees that the exchange of charge by contacting O' Bieness· socia
Protective Services social bers meet to discuss a book, and the opinions is what makes the hook club services depanmem at (740) 592-9337
worker. If the daughter goes
to APS, a social worlcer will
visit Mom and ask to take
herto.adoctoLYou'dbe surprised bow often people will ·
refuse help from family, but
www.socialsecurity.gov/app ·offers a free subscription the gold ·'subscribe" banner
BY ELIZABETH CRUMP
willgow1thatotalstranger. SOCIAl. SECUAITY MANAGER, A'!HENS lyfordisability to start your service where you can sign on the right side of the page
Even if sbe ·won't go, the
application.
up to receive Disability
To lecl!'n more ahvur inj(1r
social worker will bave had
Social Security touches
The Disabilityinfo.gov Connection, a quarterly marion m·aifab!.' fin·peop/, ·
an opponunity to assess the lhe·lives of people with dis- web site shares general newsletter, as well as other with
disahiliri&lt;'s.
&lt;·isl'
situation and initiate further abilities every day. That's information about how e-mail alerts covering infor- www.disabiliryinj(&gt;.gol'. 7i ·
action. Tbe advantage of this why we joined 21 other fed- Social Security can help mation tailored to your indi- lea rn more a bow Sncia '
approach is that Mom would eral agencies to create people with disabilities, and vidual interests. Just fill in Se~·uritr. l'i.&gt;il II'\1K.wcirli.H'
direct her anger at the social www.disabiiityi.nfo.gov.
much more. The web site your email address under curit&lt;·.gol'.
Disabilityinfo.gov is a
worker and the family telawebsite
tionships would not be fur- comprehensive
ther damaged. - Rdind designed to offer people
with disabilities access to
Sod8l Womer
Dear Social Worit;er: important information they
Thanks for the sound advice. can use.
Disabilityinfu.gO'V is a.
'11DC·~JO]!
9\'!ll! ~!te !Jl)t '
·to·
contin"
.lhc'slime
sitwtion,
meet
Joe . .. ...others
Weareinsure
it will help
many
don't mind
Annie 'I Mailbox is writ- only for people with disabilHul~by jealous and
by Kilday MilclleU tlllll ities, but also for older
employers,
.think you don respect his Marcy S,.,-. /ongtiiM ~di- Americans,
SociBJ
Security
beneficiawishes. Or you can simply tors of tie A11n Lw.,hrs
ries,
communityand faithwait until your sister is avail- cobiMa. l'ktue e-mail yoiiT
·able to rejoin the sessions. It tJIIt!Stiolls to ann"sll'flil· based service providers and
might help to put your dane- box@co•CIUt ltet, or write others. Disabilityinfo.gov
ing sbne on the other foot to: Alurie'l Mllilbox, P.O. f~ures information on a
and ask yourself how you'd Box 111190, Cllic4.go, lL number of related topics.
feel if he danced exclusively 606(1. To find ouJ rn.ore The site is easy to navigate,
with another woman. Then aboll.t Annre 's Mailbox, and is organized into submake up your own mind.
and read fe~s by other ject areas, including bene. Deat Annie: I am 17 years Crtllltors Syndicak writers fits, civil rights, community
old and. my brother is two and cartoonists, visit the life, education, employ~ears older. When he staned Creators Syndicate Web ment, health, housing, techdating " Kim," everything page aJ www.creators.com. nology and transponation.
Disabilityinfo.gov also is
~·~----~------------------------ a useful information 'and
referral tool for responding
to the questions and concerns of Social Security's
nearly 50 million beneficiaSoil and Water Conservation ries. Individuals receiving
Board of Supervisors meet, Supplemental
Security
ing, 11:30 a.m., district Income (SSI), disability or
Monday, April 21
retirement benefits, as well
LETART
Letart office, Hiland Road.
POMEROY Meigs as advocates who work with
Township Trustees, 5 p.m .
. County RQiired Teachers, beneficiaries, will find
noon luncheon, Trinity answers to questions about
Church, Second ·Street worj( inc~ntives;. the appeals
entrance.
· Beth Shaver, process, MediCare and
"~+-orga-nivdions
executive director of Meigs Medicaid, youth tn\psitionCouncil on Aging, to speak. ing . from schpoJ · to work,
.
Monday, April 21
Entertainment by some accessible · transportation
. TVPPERS J PLAINS Mei~s students of "Grease"
\ S)l!Cial meellhg of Eastern musical. Take paper prod- and much more.
If you want to get specif. High School Music Boosters, ucts and personal care !terns
ic,
detailed information
6:30 p.m., music room.
for women's shelter.
about
benefits available
RACINE - Racine Area
through Social Security for
Community Organization
Church
people with disabilities, you
6:30 p.m. at Star Mill Parle.
can
go straight to the
pptluck meal. New memSaturday, April 26
spurce:
www.socialsecuribers welcome . .
CARPENTER - First
ty.gov/disability.
On Social
.
Tuesday, April 22
cornbread
festival
at
Security's website, you can
. ATHENS Southern Carpenter .Baptist Church,
even
complete your applica·Consortium for Children Ohio 143. Crafts, food ,
tion
over
the Internet from
. Jloard· meeting, 10 a.m. at mountain bike race, live the comfon of your own
the offices, 20 East Circle gospel music, free train
home.
Just
go
to
. Drive, Building 20, Third· rides, free vendor space .
Cornbread
cook-off.
f'Joor, Athens.
Contact Pastor Whitt Akers,
Thunday, April24
\'lSI r OUR NI: I\'I:S I LOCA'IIOI\
ONE MILE WEST OF ATHENS
POMEROY
- Meigs 591-1236 for rules.
1830 OLD LOG A ;\I RD . S E ·

jlt~~- ~~~~~,E~r~~un~til:--~stan~din~·~g~Ame!~n~·c~an~~~lV't~,-:·
~atte~Jnd~a~Je~s~son~~or
most
success in ·

girlfriends," Lear said.
In
his . writings.
Schallenberger . said be
.admired the two teens who
killed
13 ~pie at
Columbine High School in
Colorado in 1999 before
committing suicide, Lear
said The attack happened
nine years ago Sunday. but
Lear said investigators do not
know whether lhere was any
link between the anniversary
and Schallenberger' s plans.
Schallenberger was one of
the top students at the high
school of about 580' stu,
dents ·and bad not caused ,
any serious-problems before :
his arrest, principal Scott
Rlljikin said.
The school's Web site
lists Schallenberger ··as a
member of the 2007 acade·
mic bowl squad. He won an
academic award from
Newberry College in the
last school year.
·
The teen was in the
Chesterfield County jail
Sunday •night, charged with
possessing materials to make
bombs, the police chief said.
A bond hearing was scheduled for Monday. Other than
the bomb-making material,
no other weapons were
found at his home, Lear said.
Lear said Schallenberger'
di~ not , bave an attorney.
His parents could not immediately be located Sunday
by The Associated Press. .
Security will be tightened
at the school wben students
return Monday. Students will
walk through metal detectors
bolltlwed from a courthouse,
and bomb and drug sniffing
dogs have been Called in.
Lear said he does not expect
any problems.
Chesterfield is a town of
about 1,500 people in Dortheastem South carolina near
the North Carolina line. ·

21,2008

· . She -'s ready to
:dance with ·'stars'

m;:
contributors who give larger
amounts rould also be
encouraged to give ouline.
The March figwes do not
include the $2.5 million she
raised last week at an Elton
John conOert in New YOlk.
Carson said the event's total

NEW YORK Pope
Benedict XVI celebrated
··, · "Mass · and ~· · Jo'Jnerican ·
caSh on hand.
Catholicism in
storied
Obama
reponed
owing
Yankee Stadium on Sunday,
IJl(][C
than
$660,000
1:0
varitelling his massive U.S. flock
ous:veodors. Beside adverusto use its freedoms wisely as
be closed ·out his first papal
trip to the United States.
Benedict beamed before a
joyous crowd of 57,000,
hours lUter making a solemn
stop to fray at the site of the
Sept. I , 200 I. terrorist
attacks on the World Trade
BY J&amp;rH£Y Cot..uNs
Center.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER
· He called the · Mass "a
summons to move forward
COLUMBIA, S.C. - A
with firm resolve to use
high school senior collected
wisely the blessings of freeenough supplies to carry out
dom, in ·order· to build a
a homb attack on his school
.
IIP!IIM* and detailed the plot in a
future of hope for coming
Pope Benedict XVI gestures. to 1he crowd at New York's John F. Kerinedy International hate-filled diary that includgenerations."
And he repeated a core Airport, as Vice President Dick Cheney and his wife Lynne look on, during a farewell ce~­ ed maps of the building and
message of his six-day pil- emony at the conclusion of the Pope's visit to the U.S., on Sunday.
admiring notations about
grimage - that faith must
the Columbine killers,
play a role in public life, cit- have season's tickets," said "Shepherd One" after . a Shanksville, Pa. More than authorities said Sunday.
mg the need to oppose abor- Philip Giordano, 49, a tax farewell ceremony hosted 2;900 people were killed in
Ryan Schallenberger, 18,
attorney from Greenwich,
by
Vice
President
Dick
the
four
crashes
of
the
airwas
arrested Saturday after
tl.0 n .
.
The unwavering truth of Conn., w~o won seats m the Cheney, with Democratic liners hijacked by ai-Qaida. his parents called police
the Roman Catholic mes- loge secllon behind home presidential hopeful Hillary
"God of pe~~ce, bring yoQJ' when 10 pounds of ammoniClinton
and peace .to our violent world,"
. sage, he said, guarantees plate ..through a Pou:is~ l~t­ Rodham
nitrate was delivered tQ
. respect for the dignity _o f all, · tery. _It ·sure bea~.s ~lti!Dg tn President Clinton in atten· . thJ! pope prayed. "Turq · tQ 1-t!l~ l!bm~ in Chesterfield
da:oci. "May Ciod bless your way of love those
''indud1ng
the
most my focal c~urch.
they discovered the
defenseless of all human
Added his wtfe, Suzanne: America!" the pope said whose hearts and minds are journal, said the town 's
beings the unborn child in "I'm hoping to feel some- before depaning.
consumed with hatred."
police chief, Randall Lear.
Earlier, on a chilly, gray
the m~ther's womb." The thing from (Benedict).
Benedict invited 24 peoThe teen planned to make
crowd applauded the line.
Everyone "':ho has seen~ . morning, the pope blessed pie with ties to ground zero several· bombs ·and had aU
Worshippers filled the say~ they crumple, therr the site of the terrorist to join him: survivors, rela- the supplies needed to kill
seats, chanting, clapping .knees. buclcl~. Y~u co~ attacks and pleaded with lives of victims and four dozens at Chesterfield High
God to bring "peace to our rescue workers. He greeted School, depending on where
and waving white and yel- away ~ust feel.iJ18.different.
.
low handkerchiefs- in the
New Orleans crooner violent world."
each member of the group the devices were placed and
The visit by Benedict to individually as a string whether they included sbrapVatican's colors as the white Harry Connick Jr., on the
popemobile pulled in. At the pre-Mass ooncert ~gram. ground zero was a poignant quanet played in the back· nel, Lear said. Ammonium
end of the service the remafked -t hat he IS often moment in a trip marked by ground. In his prayer, he nitrate was used in the
festive also remembered those Oklahoma City bOmbing in
German-born
Benedict asked if be's a practicing unex,pectedly
cmwds
such
as
the
one at who, "because of their pres- 1995 that killed 168 people.
again processed out ~ol.vly, c,atholic: .
,
.. . ,
Sunday's
Mass.
serena,ded by the strains of · ,"Pracucmg? he said.
ence here that day, suffer
. ''The only thing left was
Benedict was driven in from injuries and illness."
Beethoven•s 'Qde Iafoy."
'1'm flaying for the pope
deliverin~ the bombs," the
the popemobile pan-way
Outside tbe stadium, two today. '
.
New York Deputy Fire police chief said.
dump truCks filled with sand
Benedict seemed to enjoy down a ramp now used Chief James Riches, father
Schallenberger kepu jourbloc.kadffl 16 LSi Street bls long journey to the altar mostly by construction of a fallen Sept. II firefight· naJ for more than a year that
before Mass. an·exttaieYel.of in the popemobile, waving· trucks to a spot by the nonh er, said the pope's visit gave detailed his plans for a suiti'ICUrity akx\8 wilh the'beavy to people in II,Je stands. tower 's footprint. He him consolation.
'
cide attack and included
police • presence. Pil,gtims From the altar, ho stood to walked the fmal steps, knell
" We said 'Where was maps of the school, police
wilbout uckcts ~ iiiJ' acknowledge the crowd's in silent prayer, then rose to Go4?' on 9/11, but he 's said. Tbe writings did not
apinst· metal pciljCe bmi- roar when New York ~ight a memorial candle.
come back here today and include a SJ)ecific time fnr the
Addressing a group that · they 've restored our faith," attack or die intended targets.
cades, hopix)g tO get a Cardinal .Edward Egan weiincluded survivors, clergy Riches said.
glimpse of the .a niving pope. . comedhlm.
..
He also left an audio tape
Inside, ad-splashed out·
He prrused the U.S. and public officials, be
The. site where the World to be played after he died
field willis were dr¥Cd ill·. church, .which has 65 mil- acknowledged the many Trade Center was destroyed explaining why be wanted
white witb
aild jitl-' lion members, in his homi- faiths of the victims at the is normally filled with hun- to bomb his school. Lear
low bunting. A white .altar 1y, sayi.Qg that "in this land "scene of incredible vio- dreds of workers building a wouldn't detail what was on
perched oO\'cr second base, of freedom and opportunity, lence and pai n." ·
I 02-story • skyscraper, a the tape except to say
and the papal seat covered the church has united a
The pope also prayed for memorial and transit hub. It Schallenberger was an
the pitcher's mound, sus- widely diverse flock" and "those who suffered death, bears little resemblance to angry young man.l
pended by white and yellow contributed . greatly to injury and loss" in the the debris-f14Jed pit where
"He seemed to bate the
ribbons.
Amencan soc1ety.
.
attacks at the Pentagon and &lt;..rews toiled to remove world. He haled people dif"I have never seen Yankee ' The po~ departed on a in the crasb of United twisted steel and victims' ferent from him - the rich
Stadium so beautiful, and I special airliner rfick.named f.irlines Flight 93 in remains.
boys with good-looking

Monday, April

ANNIE'S MAILBOXr

Conference
to
discuss
locally
grown tt~Ulm eman ::d'i~~ :a:, ':: ~ ~:~~~~~::r"~:'o~~.
·Ext ·.
ak

· 11 •

BY mE BEND

' PageA:3

'

Book club serves as forum for diverse opinions

.Web site helps people with disabilities

.KUBOTA.•. EVERYTHING.~~

You wANT rN'·A-TRAcro&amp;

tea

·_Community Calendar
PubHc.meetinr!'

Clubs and

e"ents

. ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

\

Children's Mayp6le·wrapping
...
and tea party planned
· CHESTER -

ON ROliTE 50/32
LANCA~fER. 011
ATHENS,OH
740-653-2827
740-593-3279
800-710-1917,
"Your Friendly Outdo~r Powl'r Equipment and Tractor S'lf"'"tore"

The Chester-Shade Historical Association

is sponsoring a tea party and Maypole wrapping I to 3 p.m.
·Saturday, April 26, at the Chester Counhouse.
: . f.ach child will also make a craft. There is a $3 charge
·for eaclr cbild attending. Children must be accomparued by
ap adult. Seating space is limited so reserva~ons need to
be made by Wednesday, April 23. Reservations ~an be
liiade by calling Kaye Fick at 985-4115 or by callrng the
Chester Courthouse at 985-9822 and giving the name and
age of each child. ·

. . . . ,.,. . ., . . _ . . llf'A.Pl,....sU~" S?ll1!1ff~1

1*1""'-'

a..

a\.l PI

..... i ....... ~ ....
. . . . . .. ldllrflll
clqlltr .....
,........ . . . ~.~ . . . . . . . . . . . !til ............ llllllllw.. .. -~

,....., ,...... • ......._._..._(llll!u..-_uu

.............. _.._.
•

llllw ..... - 31, -

~

... ...,.. •t~

Mt,. ........... .. illllll• . . - ........

.,..._.Ill
.

�Page A2 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, April :u,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obama, McCain

Print collection at Kennedy Museum
. ATHENS - .. Portfolios
·and Suites from the Print
·Collection" will be exhibited
: at Kennedy Museum of Art at
:Ohio University fromApril8
,lbrough June. 29, 2008.
· 1be exhibition highlights
:contemporary prints and
: includes works by celebrat. ed masters such as Roben
: Rauschenberg,
Jennifer
: Bartlett, David Hock.ney
:and Jim Dine.
.· 1be words "portfolio'' or
:"suite" refer to a set of
:prints by an anist or group
:of artists, typically inspired
:by a particular theme or
subject matter. A totaJ of

.
i

101 prints by 165 artists,
spanning a period from
1969 to 1995, will be displayed in three galleries and
the Museum's main corridor. Visitors can also view
an additional 290 prints
from the Kennedy Museum
Collection at two kiosk stalions in the exhibition.
· ..'Ibis is first time the ponfolios and suites from our
Collection have been showcased exclusively. It is a
great opponunity to show
the variety and quality of the
Collection." According tO
Jeffrey Carr. Carr serves as
the museum's registrar and

show cash on .&amp;. ~. .~­

Thursday Family Night prois curator of the exhibition.
The museum's print collec- gram on May I 5 _from ~ to
tion was initiated by Heory 7:30 p.m. featunng pnntBY .... KUINIENN
Lin during his tenwe as dean maker and exhibition cura- .
.OSSOCI
...TED PRESS -TER
of the College of F'me Ans at tor Jeffrey Carr.
Kennedy Museum .of Art
Ohio University from July
WASHINGTON .
1971 through June 1984. is located in LilY Hall, 1be Barack Qbama raised $41
Professor emeritus of print- Ridges on the Ohio
campus
in million in March and bad $42
making, Donald Roberts, University
facililaled the project at the Athens, Ohio. Gallery hours . million available to spend
lime, The original home of are Tuesdays, Wednesdays ~~st Democratic rival
lhe prints was the university's and Fridays from noon to 5 Hillary RodiJ3Dl Qinton in
. p.m., Thursdays from noon April, campaign l:inanoe
Trisolioi Gallay.
The public is invited to an to 8 p.m., and Salu!days and Icpoits filed Sunday sbow.
Clinton aides said late
opening reception at the Sundays from I to 5 p.m.
Por more infonnation, Sl1llday she would_ I_'C~n
Museum on Friday, April II
from 6 to 8 J?.m. The muse- please calf (740) 593-]J04 raising about $20 million m
um's Education Depanment or visit the museums websi« March and that she had
more than $8 million for tbe
will
present a Third aT www.ohiou.edu/museum.
primary availa~le at the
beginning of April.
,_-..,....,...,1..,
Overall; Obama had $51

d

•

.
The Daily Sentinel

d

many sessions which will sented by Julie Fox, OSU
helpthemfindtheirnichein ExtensionDirectMarl:eting
•
the
agricultural econo- Specialist Julie is a nationMARIETIA - Locally April 26 from 9 a.m. to 4 my. new
There will be presenta- ally known expen is the
grown foods are becoming p.m. at the Washington tions on livestock, fruit, areas of small business and
the new "in-style" for con- State Community CoUege vegetables, plants, grants, marketing.
SUillei'S aU over the United
in Marietta.
marketing and manageSpeakers for this conferStates, and the demand for
The keynote presentation ment. The sessions include ence
include:
Rory
"fresh from the farm'' is will featore Dr. Joe Kovach Direct Marketing Meat Lewandowski,
OSU
growing by leaps and bound~ who set out to gross $10 per Products·, Beekeeping Extension Athens County;
as consumers worry more row foot on his research Opportunities.
.
&amp; Eric Barrett, OSU Exterlsion
and more about health issues. plots in Wooster. This is Challenges; Extending the Washington County; Hal
That couples with the equal to a robust $90,000 Growing Season ~ High Kneen, OSU Extension
demand for biofuels and per acre, in his innovative Tunnels &amp; More; Top 10 Meigs County; M.aurus
ocher farm related altema~ farm plots of mixed fruits opportunities in direct mar- Brown. OSU Extension,
tive energy sources is and vegetables. So far, keting; Pasture based live- RichlaQIJ County; Jackie
sweeping the nation., mak- based on the crops that he stock production; Berries LeBet!Il, Marietta Small
ing it a great time to be a has in production, the Ohio from May to October Business
Development
fanner. It's a great time to State University scientist Extending the Pick- Your- Center &amp; Bramble Creek
·be a farmer!
has achieved exactly that. Own ~n; Herbs: Types, Farm;
Steve
Boone,
With all of this consumer 1be two fmal ·crops in the Culture &amp; Use; How to get President of The Mid .Ohio
interest farmers are asking lineup; apples and peaches, bigber pn'ces for your prod- VaUey
Beekeepers
what they can do to grow are set to stan producing ucts; Specialty Pork &amp; Association; Ann Fugate
more products to meet these this summer.
Poultry Production On the from the Athens Fanners
needs. According to agriculAn ecological pest man~ Farm;
·Community Market; Julie Fox, OSU
· ture agents, they can intro- agement expert, Kovacb is Supported
Agriculture Extension Direct Marl:eting
duce a new crop on the midway through a six-year (CSA,s)- Getting guaran- Specialist; Joe Kovach,
farm, like vineyard. green- study of four different types · teed customers for the entire Ohio State University IPM
bouse plants, bluebenies or of polyculture ' module~ ·season; Table and Wme Program; and m King, King
a hive of bees for honey. To plots with a mix of sucb Grape Production; Business Family Fann, Albany, OH.
assist landowners the OSU high-value crops as snap Planning - Adding a crop? . Registration is only $30
Extension in Washington peas, green beans, blueber- Got an idea? Let's put the and includes lunch along
County is hosting a confer- ries, raspberries, strawber- numbers to it!; Meat Goats with
a
Conference
ence on marketing and man- ries,
tomatoes • and ·101;
Blueberry
&amp; Proceedings with details
agement that goes with. a edamame, or edible soy- Blackbell)';Production;and from all presentations from
fann busines~. .
·
beans. His presentatiQn will Finding Dollar~. cheap or the ·entire conference. A regThe 2008 Mid-Ohio be "How to gross $90,000 free..
istmtion fonn can be found ·
Valley
Agriculture per acre on your farm."
There will an afternoon at: http:l/washington.osu.edu
After the main sessio1.1 .g eneral session "Finding under "Ag Opportunities
Onportunities Conference
be held on Saturday, participants can take pan in _your farm 's customers" pre- Conference."
--'--------------------------------'--------

enswn agentto spe

lt'lelgS

a

;fu

Pope Benedict XVI

•

US church as visit ends

ing. his Olber ~~mill!:~
were nearly ~
teleOilllteting. and $3.6
lion for travel and lodging
In keeping with his lrend,
CalifO!Dia was Obama's goto fundraisiog state! ~enerating nearly $4.6 ·xnilbon in
contributions in March.
New Yon was next with ·
nearly $3.2 million.
Clinton spokesman Jay
Carson said $15 million of
Clinton's .$20 million was
raised over the lntcmeL He
said the campaign bas
raised $60 million over the
Internet since Jan. I. The
surge of 0~ support sug-

l

Bv KATHY MITCHELL

was fine, but as I got to know
AND MARCY SUGAR
her better, it became clear that
she is just using my brother. I
l)ear Annie: My sister asked. my mom what I should
won dancmg lessons for do and she said I should keep
two. Her husband couldn't
go because of his work
schedule, so she asked me. 1
agreed and asked my busb'and if he· d like to take the
classes along wjth us, but he
wasn't interested.

ili~is l~~o!s~~in:joy:

$9 millioo of that available
Onlyforthegenerale!ectioo.
The money positJoned
Obama to undertake an
expensive April campaign
in Pennsylvania, where he
has outspent Clinton and c1:1t
into her lead. Pennsylvania
votes on Tuesday.
sum inci!Jded 111011ey l'rom
Obama's fuodraising in 6,000 new donors.
.·
March Jed aU candidates, but
MI:Cain in·Mardi·~
was still lower than 1be mark dt'iOoni about $3 millioo in
he set in February, when !Je c:oolribulioos. most of it
raised more than $55 mil- maneybehadreceivedforthe
lion. He has raised $235 mil- general electi.oo. The refunds
lion in his camnoign.
set the stage for McCain to
Clinton was~ to file accept .about $84 JDiPion in
her Iepoll ·VIilb the Federal public funds for the fliii camEJoct;ioi1 Commission by .the paign. Candidates who accept
midnigbldeadline
public financing CJIUII" raise
Republican
John money from doooos for the
McCain's __,., showed he general electionampaign.
raised $1S.l.n and had
M~'s bigjjest expense
$1 1.6 miJlioo in lhe bank:. of the moolh was $3 million
The Aiiz.on11 senator's to Fidelity &amp; TIU&amp;t Bank 10
March figures were his best finish paying off a $4 million
fundraisin$ pe:fonnance of loan that had become the
the campaign.
.
focus of a sta1ema1e between
Obama spent $30.6 mil- McCain and the FEC.
lion in March - a month C~gn finaoal 1C11t11ator6
tbat began wilb tough con- want Ill make swe McCain
tests for the Dlinois senator did not use the promise ci
in Ohio .and Texas. He lost fAJbJic financing in the primathe """'ular vote to ·Clinton IY to secure the Joan. McQU
in~stateprimarieseven · waseligibleforpublicfinaoo.
lhougb be outSpent her, but ing in the primary. but QiS
he cmeraed.1 with- dele- lawyers said they did not use
gates in Texas.
that eligibility as~
His repott showed he
In :March, his operating
spent $9 mi1lioD on media expenses were $5 million,
advertisi.ut, an amount 'his
smallest
monthly
mostly spent iil fini1 days expense so far this year.
beforetlieMareh40hioand
McCain's March expensTexas primaies. ObJuna did es ranged from $758,000 for
spend 1DOIICY in Maroh for air chaners to $151.55 to a
ads in .Pennsylvania and Los Angeles florist. The .
Indiana, wbidl vote&amp; May 6. camp!lign reported a debt of
,be held off on most .of $707,000, much of out-

weren 't a couple, we were
paired With different men
who didD't have regular partners. I danced several umes
with "Joe" and we made a
good team. Another session
is scheduled to begin, and
Joe wants me to sign up as
.bis partner so we can enter
competitions at local studios.
·.. · .Here's the problem: My
sister isn't able to attend
the next session because
11he is helping her daughter
for a few weeks. My bus· .. band is adamantly opposed
to my staying in the class
with Joe now that my sister
won't be there.
I explained that aU the
iessons and competitions
are held in studios with several other people o.r esent
and it won't be any cllfferent
than the lessons I've been
taking all along. 1 told my
·husband be could oome and
watch, but anything that
doesn't include a football
doesn't interest him.
. 1 am a 46-year-old grand· mother of two. Joe is 12
years younger and in a relationship with someone. I've
offeredtointroducemyhusband to Joe, but he says no.
At first 1 was upset because
1 enjoy the dancmg so much.
Now 1 am furious that my
husband doesn't trust me.
Should I go ahead with the
iessons anyway or sit at
homeinfrontoftheTVwith
my mate? Ready To
Dance wid! tbe Stars
· Delir Keady: It's unfair of
your
. husband to -object when
be won't take the time to

California and
each
of which yielded more titan
$1 million.

SC student accused of.

plotting to bomb school

pwplle

'

•

.. ..

'

.
•

• ...

-

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

•

... .,t.,.,'

'""-

. • .,... • ...II.....

my mouth shut
Well, my brother asked to
borrow money so I lent him
some. Then I found out be
was using the money to take
Kim out She knows he
doesn't have the funds to

:e ~c:;: :~tsnire~ b:~

somewbere.
Yesterday, my brother
Submitted photo
yelled at me because I left a SenioltiEAT membem discuss the book they read for the month of April, "Sunflower and the Secret Fan," by Lisa See .
message with my opinion of Participating here.are, from the left, Bill Baasel, Joann Dodd, SenioltiEAT coordinator, Peggy Irwin and Sally Walther.
her on Kim's answering
machine. What should I dQ
if he doesn't listen to reason?- Confused
members -take turns choosing the gratifying. She likes the fact that every ·
BY HANNAH YouNG
Dear Confused: You
monthly
book. This ensures that the one panicipates and discusses thei :
AND CHRISllNA SYNODINOS
mean well, but you have -to
E.W. SCRIPPS SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM
books represent a variety of different unique ideas. "All the member' an·
stop.interfering. As hard as it
INlEANS AT O'BlENESS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
subjects and interests. According to opinionated and hearing tbeir impres··
is to watch your brother
Sally Walther, SeniorBEAT hook club sions and insight&gt; enriches my life: ·
make a mis~ this isn't
ATHENS - Senior citizens, are you member and writer, "We are always she said. To Walther. the SeniorBEAT
your business and he will looking for an outlet to express your hungry for new book suggestions."
book club is. exactly the type of book
resent and reject whatever opinions about books . and discuss
SeniorBEAT book club member · club for which she had been looking.
you suggest Don't lend him them with other adults? O'Bleness Joann Dodd, a retired social worker
The book club aJ&lt;..o serves· as a grea·
any more money, but other- Memorial Hospital's SeniorBEAT from O ' Bleness, portrays the spirit of way to network with other seniors and
wise, your mother is right. book club can be that outlet.
the group. Bhe is a book lover who make new friendships. Members lean '
Say nothing. You won't win.
The group meets every second banned herself from libraries because a Jot about fellow grou p member-.
Dar ADDie: I read the let- Monday at 10 a.m. in O'Bleness' she can' t help writing, underlining through their discu ssions and boo!.
· ter from "Abandoned and lower level room 006. Consisting of a and highlighting in books that she choices and manv 1ind others with th&lt;·
Angry," whose mother group of passionate people from all reads! "The best pan of the group is same interests. While tllere is some
seems to bave some serious ty.pes of backgrounds, this group has the exchange of different ideas," she times a debate when opinions clash, i
mentaJ and · physical prob- much to offer. For those who Jove said. "I catch things from the other is just pan of the fun for the members
Iems. 1bere may be ways to thinking critically and speaking their members that I wouldn't have noticed
Anyone age 6Q and older can becom&lt;
compel Mom to see a doctor. mind, this program may be for you.
on my own."
a member of SeniorBEAT fre e o··
I am a retired Adult
Once a month, the book club memWalther agrees that the exchange of charge by contacting O' Bieness· socia
Protective Services social bers meet to discuss a book, and the opinions is what makes the hook club services depanmem at (740) 592-9337
worker. If the daughter goes
to APS, a social worlcer will
visit Mom and ask to take
herto.adoctoLYou'dbe surprised bow often people will ·
refuse help from family, but
www.socialsecurity.gov/app ·offers a free subscription the gold ·'subscribe" banner
BY ELIZABETH CRUMP
willgow1thatotalstranger. SOCIAl. SECUAITY MANAGER, A'!HENS lyfordisability to start your service where you can sign on the right side of the page
Even if sbe ·won't go, the
application.
up to receive Disability
To lecl!'n more ahvur inj(1r
social worker will bave had
Social Security touches
The Disabilityinfo.gov Connection, a quarterly marion m·aifab!.' fin·peop/, ·
an opponunity to assess the lhe·lives of people with dis- web site shares general newsletter, as well as other with
disahiliri&lt;'s.
&lt;·isl'
situation and initiate further abilities every day. That's information about how e-mail alerts covering infor- www.disabiliryinj(&gt;.gol'. 7i ·
action. Tbe advantage of this why we joined 21 other fed- Social Security can help mation tailored to your indi- lea rn more a bow Sncia '
approach is that Mom would eral agencies to create people with disabilities, and vidual interests. Just fill in Se~·uritr. l'i.&gt;il II'\1K.wcirli.H'
direct her anger at the social www.disabiiityi.nfo.gov.
much more. The web site your email address under curit&lt;·.gol'.
Disabilityinfo.gov is a
worker and the family telawebsite
tionships would not be fur- comprehensive
ther damaged. - Rdind designed to offer people
with disabilities access to
Sod8l Womer
Dear Social Worit;er: important information they
Thanks for the sound advice. can use.
Disabilityinfu.gO'V is a.
'11DC·~JO]!
9\'!ll! ~!te !Jl)t '
·to·
contin"
.lhc'slime
sitwtion,
meet
Joe . .. ...others
Weareinsure
it will help
many
don't mind
Annie 'I Mailbox is writ- only for people with disabilHul~by jealous and
by Kilday MilclleU tlllll ities, but also for older
employers,
.think you don respect his Marcy S,.,-. /ongtiiM ~di- Americans,
SociBJ
Security
beneficiawishes. Or you can simply tors of tie A11n Lw.,hrs
ries,
communityand faithwait until your sister is avail- cobiMa. l'ktue e-mail yoiiT
·able to rejoin the sessions. It tJIIt!Stiolls to ann"sll'flil· based service providers and
might help to put your dane- box@co•CIUt ltet, or write others. Disabilityinfo.gov
ing sbne on the other foot to: Alurie'l Mllilbox, P.O. f~ures information on a
and ask yourself how you'd Box 111190, Cllic4.go, lL number of related topics.
feel if he danced exclusively 606(1. To find ouJ rn.ore The site is easy to navigate,
with another woman. Then aboll.t Annre 's Mailbox, and is organized into submake up your own mind.
and read fe~s by other ject areas, including bene. Deat Annie: I am 17 years Crtllltors Syndicak writers fits, civil rights, community
old and. my brother is two and cartoonists, visit the life, education, employ~ears older. When he staned Creators Syndicate Web ment, health, housing, techdating " Kim," everything page aJ www.creators.com. nology and transponation.
Disabilityinfo.gov also is
~·~----~------------------------ a useful information 'and
referral tool for responding
to the questions and concerns of Social Security's
nearly 50 million beneficiaSoil and Water Conservation ries. Individuals receiving
Board of Supervisors meet, Supplemental
Security
ing, 11:30 a.m., district Income (SSI), disability or
Monday, April 21
retirement benefits, as well
LETART
Letart office, Hiland Road.
POMEROY Meigs as advocates who work with
Township Trustees, 5 p.m .
. County RQiired Teachers, beneficiaries, will find
noon luncheon, Trinity answers to questions about
Church, Second ·Street worj( inc~ntives;. the appeals
entrance.
· Beth Shaver, process, MediCare and
"~+-orga-nivdions
executive director of Meigs Medicaid, youth tn\psitionCouncil on Aging, to speak. ing . from schpoJ · to work,
.
Monday, April 21
Entertainment by some accessible · transportation
. TVPPERS J PLAINS Mei~s students of "Grease"
\ S)l!Cial meellhg of Eastern musical. Take paper prod- and much more.
If you want to get specif. High School Music Boosters, ucts and personal care !terns
ic,
detailed information
6:30 p.m., music room.
for women's shelter.
about
benefits available
RACINE - Racine Area
through Social Security for
Community Organization
Church
people with disabilities, you
6:30 p.m. at Star Mill Parle.
can
go straight to the
pptluck meal. New memSaturday, April 26
spurce:
www.socialsecuribers welcome . .
CARPENTER - First
ty.gov/disability.
On Social
.
Tuesday, April 22
cornbread
festival
at
Security's website, you can
. ATHENS Southern Carpenter .Baptist Church,
even
complete your applica·Consortium for Children Ohio 143. Crafts, food ,
tion
over
the Internet from
. Jloard· meeting, 10 a.m. at mountain bike race, live the comfon of your own
the offices, 20 East Circle gospel music, free train
home.
Just
go
to
. Drive, Building 20, Third· rides, free vendor space .
Cornbread
cook-off.
f'Joor, Athens.
Contact Pastor Whitt Akers,
Thunday, April24
\'lSI r OUR NI: I\'I:S I LOCA'IIOI\
ONE MILE WEST OF ATHENS
POMEROY
- Meigs 591-1236 for rules.
1830 OLD LOG A ;\I RD . S E ·

jlt~~- ~~~~~,E~r~~un~til:--~stan~din~·~g~Ame!~n~·c~an~~~lV't~,-:·
~atte~Jnd~a~Je~s~son~~or
most
success in ·

girlfriends," Lear said.
In
his . writings.
Schallenberger . said be
.admired the two teens who
killed
13 ~pie at
Columbine High School in
Colorado in 1999 before
committing suicide, Lear
said The attack happened
nine years ago Sunday. but
Lear said investigators do not
know whether lhere was any
link between the anniversary
and Schallenberger' s plans.
Schallenberger was one of
the top students at the high
school of about 580' stu,
dents ·and bad not caused ,
any serious-problems before :
his arrest, principal Scott
Rlljikin said.
The school's Web site
lists Schallenberger ··as a
member of the 2007 acade·
mic bowl squad. He won an
academic award from
Newberry College in the
last school year.
·
The teen was in the
Chesterfield County jail
Sunday •night, charged with
possessing materials to make
bombs, the police chief said.
A bond hearing was scheduled for Monday. Other than
the bomb-making material,
no other weapons were
found at his home, Lear said.
Lear said Schallenberger'
di~ not , bave an attorney.
His parents could not immediately be located Sunday
by The Associated Press. .
Security will be tightened
at the school wben students
return Monday. Students will
walk through metal detectors
bolltlwed from a courthouse,
and bomb and drug sniffing
dogs have been Called in.
Lear said he does not expect
any problems.
Chesterfield is a town of
about 1,500 people in Dortheastem South carolina near
the North Carolina line. ·

21,2008

· . She -'s ready to
:dance with ·'stars'

m;:
contributors who give larger
amounts rould also be
encouraged to give ouline.
The March figwes do not
include the $2.5 million she
raised last week at an Elton
John conOert in New YOlk.
Carson said the event's total

NEW YORK Pope
Benedict XVI celebrated
··, · "Mass · and ~· · Jo'Jnerican ·
caSh on hand.
Catholicism in
storied
Obama
reponed
owing
Yankee Stadium on Sunday,
IJl(][C
than
$660,000
1:0
varitelling his massive U.S. flock
ous:veodors. Beside adverusto use its freedoms wisely as
be closed ·out his first papal
trip to the United States.
Benedict beamed before a
joyous crowd of 57,000,
hours lUter making a solemn
stop to fray at the site of the
Sept. I , 200 I. terrorist
attacks on the World Trade
BY J&amp;rH£Y Cot..uNs
Center.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER
· He called the · Mass "a
summons to move forward
COLUMBIA, S.C. - A
with firm resolve to use
high school senior collected
wisely the blessings of freeenough supplies to carry out
dom, in ·order· to build a
a homb attack on his school
.
IIP!IIM* and detailed the plot in a
future of hope for coming
Pope Benedict XVI gestures. to 1he crowd at New York's John F. Kerinedy International hate-filled diary that includgenerations."
And he repeated a core Airport, as Vice President Dick Cheney and his wife Lynne look on, during a farewell ce~­ ed maps of the building and
message of his six-day pil- emony at the conclusion of the Pope's visit to the U.S., on Sunday.
admiring notations about
grimage - that faith must
the Columbine killers,
play a role in public life, cit- have season's tickets," said "Shepherd One" after . a Shanksville, Pa. More than authorities said Sunday.
mg the need to oppose abor- Philip Giordano, 49, a tax farewell ceremony hosted 2;900 people were killed in
Ryan Schallenberger, 18,
attorney from Greenwich,
by
Vice
President
Dick
the
four
crashes
of
the
airwas
arrested Saturday after
tl.0 n .
.
The unwavering truth of Conn., w~o won seats m the Cheney, with Democratic liners hijacked by ai-Qaida. his parents called police
the Roman Catholic mes- loge secllon behind home presidential hopeful Hillary
"God of pe~~ce, bring yoQJ' when 10 pounds of ammoniClinton
and peace .to our violent world,"
. sage, he said, guarantees plate ..through a Pou:is~ l~t­ Rodham
nitrate was delivered tQ
. respect for the dignity _o f all, · tery. _It ·sure bea~.s ~lti!Dg tn President Clinton in atten· . thJ! pope prayed. "Turq · tQ 1-t!l~ l!bm~ in Chesterfield
da:oci. "May Ciod bless your way of love those
''indud1ng
the
most my focal c~urch.
they discovered the
defenseless of all human
Added his wtfe, Suzanne: America!" the pope said whose hearts and minds are journal, said the town 's
beings the unborn child in "I'm hoping to feel some- before depaning.
consumed with hatred."
police chief, Randall Lear.
Earlier, on a chilly, gray
the m~ther's womb." The thing from (Benedict).
Benedict invited 24 peoThe teen planned to make
crowd applauded the line.
Everyone "':ho has seen~ . morning, the pope blessed pie with ties to ground zero several· bombs ·and had aU
Worshippers filled the say~ they crumple, therr the site of the terrorist to join him: survivors, rela- the supplies needed to kill
seats, chanting, clapping .knees. buclcl~. Y~u co~ attacks and pleaded with lives of victims and four dozens at Chesterfield High
God to bring "peace to our rescue workers. He greeted School, depending on where
and waving white and yel- away ~ust feel.iJ18.different.
.
low handkerchiefs- in the
New Orleans crooner violent world."
each member of the group the devices were placed and
The visit by Benedict to individually as a string whether they included sbrapVatican's colors as the white Harry Connick Jr., on the
popemobile pulled in. At the pre-Mass ooncert ~gram. ground zero was a poignant quanet played in the back· nel, Lear said. Ammonium
end of the service the remafked -t hat he IS often moment in a trip marked by ground. In his prayer, he nitrate was used in the
festive also remembered those Oklahoma City bOmbing in
German-born
Benedict asked if be's a practicing unex,pectedly
cmwds
such
as
the
one at who, "because of their pres- 1995 that killed 168 people.
again processed out ~ol.vly, c,atholic: .
,
.. . ,
Sunday's
Mass.
serena,ded by the strains of · ,"Pracucmg? he said.
ence here that day, suffer
. ''The only thing left was
Benedict was driven in from injuries and illness."
Beethoven•s 'Qde Iafoy."
'1'm flaying for the pope
deliverin~ the bombs," the
the popemobile pan-way
Outside tbe stadium, two today. '
.
New York Deputy Fire police chief said.
dump truCks filled with sand
Benedict seemed to enjoy down a ramp now used Chief James Riches, father
Schallenberger kepu jourbloc.kadffl 16 LSi Street bls long journey to the altar mostly by construction of a fallen Sept. II firefight· naJ for more than a year that
before Mass. an·exttaieYel.of in the popemobile, waving· trucks to a spot by the nonh er, said the pope's visit gave detailed his plans for a suiti'ICUrity akx\8 wilh the'beavy to people in II,Je stands. tower 's footprint. He him consolation.
'
cide attack and included
police • presence. Pil,gtims From the altar, ho stood to walked the fmal steps, knell
" We said 'Where was maps of the school, police
wilbout uckcts ~ iiiJ' acknowledge the crowd's in silent prayer, then rose to Go4?' on 9/11, but he 's said. Tbe writings did not
apinst· metal pciljCe bmi- roar when New York ~ight a memorial candle.
come back here today and include a SJ)ecific time fnr the
Addressing a group that · they 've restored our faith," attack or die intended targets.
cades, hopix)g tO get a Cardinal .Edward Egan weiincluded survivors, clergy Riches said.
glimpse of the .a niving pope. . comedhlm.
..
He also left an audio tape
Inside, ad-splashed out·
He prrused the U.S. and public officials, be
The. site where the World to be played after he died
field willis were dr¥Cd ill·. church, .which has 65 mil- acknowledged the many Trade Center was destroyed explaining why be wanted
white witb
aild jitl-' lion members, in his homi- faiths of the victims at the is normally filled with hun- to bomb his school. Lear
low bunting. A white .altar 1y, sayi.Qg that "in this land "scene of incredible vio- dreds of workers building a wouldn't detail what was on
perched oO\'cr second base, of freedom and opportunity, lence and pai n." ·
I 02-story • skyscraper, a the tape except to say
and the papal seat covered the church has united a
The pope also prayed for memorial and transit hub. It Schallenberger was an
the pitcher's mound, sus- widely diverse flock" and "those who suffered death, bears little resemblance to angry young man.l
pended by white and yellow contributed . greatly to injury and loss" in the the debris-f14Jed pit where
"He seemed to bate the
ribbons.
Amencan soc1ety.
.
attacks at the Pentagon and &lt;..rews toiled to remove world. He haled people dif"I have never seen Yankee ' The po~ departed on a in the crasb of United twisted steel and victims' ferent from him - the rich
Stadium so beautiful, and I special airliner rfick.named f.irlines Flight 93 in remains.
boys with good-looking

Monday, April

ANNIE'S MAILBOXr

Conference
to
discuss
locally
grown tt~Ulm eman ::d'i~~ :a:, ':: ~ ~:~~~~~::r"~:'o~~.
·Ext ·.
ak

· 11 •

BY mE BEND

' PageA:3

'

Book club serves as forum for diverse opinions

.Web site helps people with disabilities

.KUBOTA.•. EVERYTHING.~~

You wANT rN'·A-TRAcro&amp;

tea

·_Community Calendar
PubHc.meetinr!'

Clubs and

e"ents

. ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

\

Children's Mayp6le·wrapping
...
and tea party planned
· CHESTER -

ON ROliTE 50/32
LANCA~fER. 011
ATHENS,OH
740-653-2827
740-593-3279
800-710-1917,
"Your Friendly Outdo~r Powl'r Equipment and Tractor S'lf"'"tore"

The Chester-Shade Historical Association

is sponsoring a tea party and Maypole wrapping I to 3 p.m.
·Saturday, April 26, at the Chester Counhouse.
: . f.ach child will also make a craft. There is a $3 charge
·for eaclr cbild attending. Children must be accomparued by
ap adult. Seating space is limited so reserva~ons need to
be made by Wednesday, April 23. Reservations ~an be
liiade by calling Kaye Fick at 985-4115 or by callrng the
Chester Courthouse at 985-9822 and giving the name and
age of each child. ·

. . . . ,.,. . ., . . _ . . llf'A.Pl,....sU~" S?ll1!1ff~1

1*1""'-'

a..

a\.l PI

..... i ....... ~ ....
. . . . . .. ldllrflll
clqlltr .....
,........ . . . ~.~ . . . . . . . . . . . !til ............ llllllllw.. .. -~

,....., ,...... • ......._._..._(llll!u..-_uu

.............. _.._.
•

llllw ..... - 31, -

~

... ...,.. •t~

Mt,. ........... .. illllll• . . - ........

.,..._.Ill
.

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The.Daily Sentinel
111 Cowt Sbeel• PomeroJ, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157..
-.mydllllyuntlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher

•

Chartene HoefliCh

General Manager-News Editor

CottgrtS$ slr,all m~~kt no lAw rup«ting 4ft
uwbfishmmt of religion, or pmlai6iting tlu
ftu undst thtrtof; or abridging tlu .{retdllm
! of spuch; or of tlu prus; or tlu right of tlu
-: puple pua4bly to asstmble, and tg petition
·' tlu Govtrttmmt for: a reJlrus ofgrieNrras.
. - The First Amendment to the

u.s. Conslllutlon

.TODAY IN HISTORY

PageA4
Monday, April 21, zoo8

Jimmy Carter makes me sick
In mustering arguments
against · Jimmy Carter's
bead-to-bead, if 001 heart-tobean, gct-togcdlm with the
arcb-munlerers of Damasthe
Iranian-supported,
Muslim Brothedlood-linked
tenur organization openly
dedicated to the annibilation
of the state of Israel - it
becomes clear that these disastrous meetings aren' t . a
question of ' misunderstood
or overlooked facts, or a
matter of persuasion based
on such fads. They come
down to a stark choice
between evil and ,oood:· to
meet with Hamas, or not to
meet with Damas; to lend
legitimacy 10 a terror group,
· or to shun it; to .dency,or•~
degrade the
Officeofthepresl
"'
honor it funmy Carter bas
made all the wrong choices.
"~mes ,
The horror Of .t
l all ~
from the fact that Carter, as
a former president of the
United States, doesn't
choose in the anonymiry of
a private person. With lifelong reoognition for Itis permanent, if dubious, place in
American history, he makes
ltis immoral . choice as a
venerable representative of
the presidency, indeed, as
an enduring symbol of the
nation.
It was as such a sy~l ..
that the former presuJent
h~gged a fonner ~ off_icial at a recepbon m
Ramallah on Tuesday.
UnfOJ1nnalely, Carter didn' t
arrive in time for last
,friday's sermon, delivered
by a Hamas cleric and MP.

· . Today is Monday, April21 , the 112th day of 2008. There
.are 254 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History : On April 21, 1918, Baron
Manfred von Richthofen, the German ace know.n as the
,"Red Baron," was kiUed in action during World War I.
, On this date: In 1649, the Maryland Toleration Act,
which provided for freedom of worship for all Christians,
was passed by the Maryland assembly.
In 1789, John Adams was sworn in as the first vice pres.ident of the United States.
In 1816, Charlotte Bronte, author of "Jane Eyre," was
born in Thornton, England.
In 1836, an army of Texans led by Sam Houston defeated
the Mexicans at San Jacin10, assuring Texas independence.
In 1910, author Samuel Langhorne Clemens, better
known as Mark Twain, died in Redding, Conn., at age 74.
In 1940, the quiz show that asked the "$64 question,"
''Take It or Leave It,~ premiered on CBS Radio.
In 1960, Brazil inaugurated its new capital, Brasilia, trans,ferring the seat of national government from Rio ·d e Janeiro.
. In 1972, Apollo 16 astronauts John Young and Charles
Duke explored the siuface of the moon.
. .Ten years ago: Astronomers announced in Washington·
.theY bad discovered possible signs of a new faniily of plan. · ets orbiting a star 220 light-years away, the clearest evi:dence to date of worlds forming ·beyond our solar .system.
. Five years ago: Military officials in Iraq announced the
arrest of Muhammad Hamza al-Zubaydi, a key figure in the
bloody suppression of the Shiite Muslim upnsing of 1991.
State-run media in China reported the government bad dismissed Beijing's mayor foUowing the disclosure of a steep
increase in SARS cases in the Chinese ~ital. Scott
.Peterson pleaded innocent in the deaths of ltis pregnant
.wife and unborn son. Robert Cberuiyot becamr ·the 12th
~ in 13 years to win the Boston Marathon; Svelilana
va of Russia won the women's race. Iau singer
Nina Simone died in France at age 70.
: Ot!e .YilliT l!gQ: 1'!re flllli!j;!!!, 4"ll9· city
c~m·!!!~"·
,;=--~ Sami Abdui-A~Ilil41•Jumajlipl_ CJ:.Itic DfJI
. ~~~~~~~~~~-__,
.~n the job after histhree predecessors were
was himself killed by attackers in a passing car. American
billionaire Charles SIIDOnyi returned to Earth from a dream
voyage to the international il!:X:tation, riding il Russian
·capsule to a soft landing in
stan. Professional sailor
Reid Stowe and his girlfriend, Soanya Ahmad set off from
.ft:mn.North ~oboken, NJ., on a l ,()()(klay, ~o~stop .globegirdling crwse. (Aiuna!l abandoned the crwse m February ·
~008, Citing

This laying of the wrealb rrr high on the outrage meter.
seems ro have particularly b111,f or the most part, what is
dnilled Abdel Rahim. 'a rop audible from the White
aide to Palestinian Authorily House, the S!ale Deparonent ·
HolocauSt denifr - I mean, and the Congress, is so much
Palestinian
Aulhoriry · tepid background noise 10 the
Diana
President Mahmoud Abbas effect ol "We wouldn't do
West
(Arafat's longtime associate that if we were you, sir.~ Not
and
successor).
The · much else. At least 1101 unti I
Jerusalem Post reminded Rep. Sue Myrick North
readers lhat Ibis presidential Carolina Republican, got
and trnnslated by MEMRI. lt salute was a first. given lhat involved.
·
called for Islamic conquest, "U.S. Pn:sident . GeloQle W.
Bearuse Cruter's meet- .
first of Rome _
"the Bush and other top adminis- ings with the Hamas leaderCrusader capital, which has lnllion officials had refused to ship run counter to intema·
declared its bostilily to Islam, hOnor Araf.tt during their vis- tiona! agreements to isolate
and planted the bmtho:s of its to Ramallab.~ Rahim was Hamas. and '? U.S . policy
brimmino
apes and pigs in Paleslioe . positivelv
~
., with and m temauonal policy
(Koranic motifs describing enthusiasm, bwbling on to . regarding this terrori st
Jews) in Older to prevent the Carter about the day Arafat's group, Myrick has publicly
reawakening of Islam," and tomb would be moved to called on Secretary of State
then "Europe ·mltsentlrely
·
·
of the Condoleezza
Rice
ro revoke
... Jemsalem,
Pal . . "the capital
"
r·
.,.,
_
___
,
the· two Americas and even
estmtan state.
unmy ....., "" s pas.spon. .
Eastern Europe."
And these - Ab~ &amp; Co. . Hallelujah. Wit:h this
H
ld ba
h
ed (Fatah) - are the "moder· request. an American leader
coo officiaL
ve .t oo.
ugg
that eHamas
ates.'' More sueh modera- . bas ammtl y -•--"""""' a stan d'.or
And it was as such a sym- lion came out in recent news American securily interests.
bollhat the fonner president, reports that Abbas bad to be for welims of telrorism, for
along with wife, Rosalynn, convinced by Israel not to the principle of not bargainthe former first lady, visited cany out plans to bestow ing with terrorists, for an
the grave of Yasser Arafat, official honors next week on important .ally, and, perllap'
the fQunding father of global two female accessories to inost imporumt, for a grownterrorism, who, in his time Israeli murder, including the up, restorative moral order.
on Eat1h, watered it with the driver of the bomber of the Jimmy Carter should certainblood of innocents, includ- infamous 2001
Sbarro ly lose his passport for his
ing that of two American pizzeria anass.acre.
. shameful and degrading and
diplomats be ordered assasMaybe Career can arrange hannful Hamas pvertures. sinated in 1973 in Sudan. reoognition
for
these
And preferably before he
Did the thought of all this women. Having honored the flies back home.
blood temper Mr. Carter's PLO murderer Arafat.
(Diana West is a columnist
enthusiasm? Hailing Arafat's Carter would surely like to for The Washingtnn Time s.
"historic role," the 39th pres- hooor ot:hel's from his 1emJr- She is the aurlwr of 'The
ident of the United Stales ist camp. Oh, I forgoL 'The DeaJh of tlu? Grown-up:
laid a wreathofred-red- former president is already Hnw America 's Arrested
roses on the terrorist's grave, doing just that in meetings De velopment Is Bringing
calling him a "dear friend."
with Hamas munlerers even Down Western Civili:.atio1L.:·
Too bad a column can' t as they continue to 'kilL
Sh£ can be comacted via
come with a sick bag.
This would seem to regis- dianawest@veriZOILitet.)

I I&gt;ON'T

KNOW HOW

Tl-115 COULD

HAPPEN:

or,_,_

tn-...

-·

,.......... eo-.

11 - - - - - - - - -

____ -- -----

·-,...-...._.

MEIGS CO

4-HNEWS

by the next meeting.
The following {)fficers
Rebecca
Minsball
and
were cleoted: President CHES~ - Melvin C. Coea, 86, Cb 4•i•r., died on
Shayla Molden served Bay lee
SDJday,_ April 19, 2008, at The Arbors in f'""'lipolis.
COllins;
Vi ce
mliresbments.
~ves1de services will be beld ;at 1 p.m. - Tuelld.ay,
Presidclll
Wade
Collins;
.Qub .
At .another ~=t meeting Sect!etaly
April 22, 2008, at Mei¥s MemoJy GanJeas in Pomeroy.
Rebecca
of !be dub b eld at dte Ouulwell.; T~reawtt:r ·Arrang~ents are being baBdled by dJe Aodenion
Two meetings of •th e Minshall home officers Heaven Westfatl; News
McDaniel fiuneral Home.
Bactyanl
C ritllen 4-H were elected. They are Repotter
Online nlgist:ry is availJb'le at WW\1:1 aD OMII!!olaniol 001!l..
Kayla
C lub have been b eld Limdsey Houser, ptesident; HawlbcJme ; HiStmian recently at die · Meigs Abbie
H0user, Nti.Oille
Moolii.spaugh;
sa:etaiy/oc;ws
~epollter;
oonf"umed as rece!vmg Co 1y iMuseom ArmeL
Heald:~ I eader Briianna
Tbe 4-Hen; ~ discuS'SOd S'llayla Molden, beaitb ;a nd A~; 'Safety I eada necessary funding.
The ea~ · application .trips to tale., pa~ for reoreaiJi(l)n; and Malrlbew Broote Johnson; Rccre:ation
I eader
'Savanna
musl be completed and h:mwitb a ~w Bro\Will, ~etyfreotutiin.
when
to
do
it.
They
~so
Still~a-&lt;tbon,
judging
S;JMman-Hawley.
mtdy to file at tbe end of
blt nl about wo 'a'OUld be acllivi.llies anli dates Welle
A IC8IItJiing date in June
lllld American Electric J1111e. If approved, Syt:aruse
pn:sidcnt, Hattodn fur lhe diSCIIssed. Members select- was lie! illllli fun&amp;aisc:rs and
Power bas donated $2,500. would likely ~ some of
fair !heme A Ride cbe Tide
Replaoement of the roof at that mooey by fall and bave wilh Junior Fair aad :assist- ed pmjeots :after reviewmg oommunity pn!ljects Welle
pmject !books.
discussed.
village ball, fire equipment . two years to spend it.
ill,g with die 4-H Advisory
Recreation
was
k!iclr.The next meeting to be .o n
grants and lighting replaoeThe public is .urged ro Committee's Longaborger
hatl .
Lindsey
Ho user . Februa!J'· l l wi:t!h fumi· raisment at the village ball at1ead to stay informed oo basket liumdraiseL
served a veggie tray ami lng projects t o be discussed.
field have all been dis- · what c:ommnnity projects
.At bo:th ·meetm'gs tbe juice . Abbie Houser is t fil
·l(ayla HIZMtfhorne, Ne.ws
cussed as possibilities for :a themselves and lheiT neigh - gro111p WOited on a .o rajit
bring refreshments ifor next RepliJrter .
match !hough not all of bors have chosen to receive rojeot o f Dll!king bUIUil.ies m~tmg to be belli .at lhe
those projects have. been the ,gram ~oney.
and ·ducks. lkfreshmelilts adviwr' s
home.
were served by Angie Discussion will be on dues
Parter. .
and possible bake sa!le to
costs," daa1 there were '"mlo
J.osluul PMker; News help pay for T-sbitts. Abbie
meaningful price or perfor- · Rq~orter
Houser will discuss rabbits
Officers were elected and
mance guarantees or conand
demonsttate
on
foods
fundraisers
projects dis. trois for this project at this
fnmPageA.I
in Mini Meal Magic as ber . cussed at a recent meetin~
time,~
and that wheu
reffesbments:.
of the Pioneers 4-H Club at
megawau IGCC electric Appalachian Power eventuAbbie Hous«, News 1Jhe Drake home with 17
generating plant io Wm ally :attempted to .obtain a
Reporter
members and t'hree adviVi .. 1b PSC .~n•-'
"tum-Iiey conlr.lct witll fum
ll'glrua. , e
e.~ a nririno, it likely w.ill be a
The Bleedin' Omen 4-H
sotS-present
Certificate
of · Publi' c .-·---.,
·sole-ooUJrce con,t ract wi1Jh Oub---M
· ~ -~ aroh 1''at
,.. ...
..,e
. RecFeation
was
the
Convenience and Neoessily ODe bidder."
Amazing ~aoe Cbi!Ccli,
lioense plate game . l 'jna
for the plant, whidt was
..,__ &lt;UV' 4 ........,. •
TIIJIIliCI'S Plains, willh 22 .
~ scr¥ed ref.Fesbments.
u"" ......,._ "16"~ wilh lbe IDCIJjJcn md one ad!Ji.sor
filed Jan. 12, 2006. The
At aJIIDitila meellin,g die offiThe Harrisonville 4-Hcrs raers '1Wllll ins&lt;ihl'llcd, oomp~rsbillion.e
_stimatM cost is·
v~~J; attending_
met on Matdil 26 at die munity service projects
S
opposed the proposal, lbat , Officers munes .
Scipio
VfD with eight were discussed ,all!ll\g with
The project is expected to the apital cost for the pro- Molly ~- prest.d ent:
members and three adv.i.sors die basket a day ®mdraiser.
=~~·-=-=s~o~
posed plant "is significantly Sam Cline, w:e
_,...,.
higbrr than reported costs Kati.e Kdla., ~. present
an(l)Jhr meet.
Offioea-s wea:e elected;
Mason Couuty.
for other. coal-fired units.~ Haley Bush, bistonan;
'Samuel Evms gave a
In
addition to the West · The sec ·stated, ......,s .r~ MaUory Mcln...,...
.
oew 3ucigmg 'and o1Jher event repod on Slfcty. The Ficlcs,
VII'ginia filing, Appalachian
,... '~"'~
•.:r•-.
Power had filed with the posall rqxesems an exuaor- reporter; R&lt;_JSs Kel~l;ecre­ dates were discussed' anli Trussells and Dl;akes '!ieiVed
:t he next meetim;g was ~sbments.
Viroini•
for
val dinary risk that we cannot aJil.o?; Cassidy
- ..appro
allow the ratepayers of Joste Hayman, Larissa scbedUiied.
Matya Tru~&amp; Ne ws
Julia Lantz bro.t .Bqmrtu
to recover the · V'u:;inia . Viroini• in APCo's service Hayman
,
and Alex Schnier,
share of oosts associated
-,.-L--'th --~ __cety
riookies. The neil meetmg
with the plant and bad filed temtory m .assnme.~
· ~
about 4- lliO be held on April 2 with
for an eJJvironmeatld pamit
~ had as~ that 1 H youih tt:ainiug and abolil Becca Dlmobue '-" bmng
'from · lihe West Vtfiri.oia despite lbe llllOed:atl1 c::ost, ' ..4"'"
-·
- e - tbe value of 1he plant is its· I q-dliJ' ~~
.\oilr1 thnmg re!Rshments..
Jonathan Donohue. News
Department
of "potential" to ~ and a.n
ves........
"a- on
RepoiUr
Environmental Protection. seq~~ester carbon dioxide. livestock. .
From tbe time OODStruction The sec noted that the OOst
Reaeata_on was Hot
begins, it will require estimate did 001 include 1be Potato wtth Hula HO?ps
The Rocksprin,gs Raiders
approximately 48 to 54 rettufit of .the plant at !iOIDe presented
by Cass1dy
4-H Olilb met recently with
months to complete the uncertain future date with Cleland.
Ehzabeth
officers being elected and
IGCC unit by 2012 and carbon capture and seques- Lawrence served chips, pop
aciv.i.ties planned. The secwith it, lbe .capacity to trallion l.ecbnol~gy. AI'Co and sttawbe:rry cake. .
The Kids + K-9s mot on ond meeting of April was
maincain A.B&gt;-East's oblig- estimated the oost of suoh a
The neo meetmg wiU be Apri~ 9 at the Pomeroy beld
the
Rocksprings
~on..!!!in the electri.c retrofit at $200-JOO million. on April 29 .at ~mg Cbun:b of the NIWII'eDe United Mei!OOdist CJhurch .
-~The attorney general esti- ~ CJ:turch. Audrionna with lihree members and two
Freeze T~ was recrearum.
.
. AB" bas proposed IGCC mated 1Jhe retrofit oosts :at l&gt;ullins will talk to the dub ad"sors present.
technology for use .as new $300-5 00 miilion.
.
1 .about 4-H camp.
. Discussioo was on taking
Nathan
Coqk, News
base-load generation in the
The 'SCC also indi.cafed · Ms!Iory Mclntyrre, News .a ~ ro die llW'Sing home; Reporter
:n:~:.~~~ .lh~t..~ven the ab,s enceufa . R~l"--=-.:. • _.
. g~g a .Sp®s.Gr ror T-

Backyard

·Grant

N' BUSINESS WAllE!

Amber Davidson, N.ews
Reponer

U.S.A. Kids
4-HQub
The U .S.A.· Kids 4-H
Club met on April IS .at the
home ofJoyce Weddle with
12 members and two adv.i.sors p11esent. Discussian
was on Quality Assurance
and Tag-in dates; S.kill-athon and everyene 's projects and the progress they ·
have made.
There was discussions em
swine, chi cken and various
ot!her projects. ~ (l)yce Ann
Weddle gave a demonstra~
,tion an bow to lhandle
chickens, their anat(l)m¥ .and
hiDw .t o care for ll:bem.
Refiresbments ·were ,provided by Mrs. Weddle. The
next meeting wiU 'be on
May 20 at 2:00 p.m.

Pioueers

4-HCiub

Mason

Blredin' Green
4-HOub

=. :

sec

Harrisonville
4-Hers

wen:
PJeSlaent:

ru

Roc$spti•tp
Raiders
4-HCiub

=:,f ~occ\::!f~: ~ onam
eatchei-s-·-~f!t!i1id tt;:u:·
4-:u Club .
family.

announced in August
2004 its intent to schle-up a coal-fired power plant of .
IGCC tecboology and build this size (629 megawatts) ·
a
approximately
I ,200 posed additional uncertainmega~ans · of large:. com- ties and risks for Vtrginia
Registration of -old and
mercial-scale IGCC genera- ratepayers and noted that new members, a review of
tion. In addition to the this would be the largest the pmject guide with memIGCC unit at Mountaineer, · rommercial power plant to bers selecting projects, and
AEP proposed to build a . use IGCC technology con- a discussion of attending the
similar lGCC unit in Meigs striicted to date. They also 4-H kick-off and having a
Counry, Ohio.
stated that if all regulatory booth were topics discussed
IGCC technology con- approvals are given, the at a recem meeting of the
verts coal into a synthetic company. may still not con- Dream Catchers 4-H Club.
gas. that moves through sbllct the IGCC plant after The meeting was beld at the
pollutant-removal equip- it obtains more firm pricing home of the advisor,
ment before the gas is and decides that the actwll Rebecca Minsballe with
burned in a combined- rost wdpjd be 100 ltigh to seven members and one
cycle gas liUrbine to pro- warrant construction.
adiVisor attending.
duce · electricity.
The
.In the opinion of the com- • Members will discuss
process allows for more mission, "We cannot .ask projects they are interested
efficient and effective Virginia ratepayers to bear m with their parents and
reduction and removal of the en&lt;;~nnous risks _ and have their selections made
sulfur dioxides, particu- potential huge costs - of
lates and mercury from these uncertainties,"
plant emissions than conMoye said AEP wants to
ventional pulverized· coal address the concerns that
technology. IGCC plants are cited in the ruling and
from Page A.l
also offer the opportunity that the company is not givfor more effictent, less ing up any pllms of building
Huol"
~ai d;
,egstly Cllfbpq CBJlt!lre.!? r . t\!e lGCC plant in .W$:sl have,"
permanent storage m u=p Virginia.
·
"They' re tired of George
geologic formations.
·
"We intend to petition for Bush, they' re tired of his
Last year, ·the company rehearing and reconsidera- war, and they 're tired of
announced
that
the. tion and will attempt to pro- paying almost four doUars
Mountameer Plant was the , vide more definition around · for a gallon of gasoline."
"Our time has come,"
test s~ for capturing car- the costs," Moye said. "It is
bon-d1ox1de and stonng of great import.ance to Hunter said. "The ball is in
underground,
Mason County, to West our court and we cannot
· •
B~t on Monday, the SCC V1rginia, to the coal mining drop it."
denied the request for the and electric utility indusPhillips is making h~r
plllnt.
tries and to our nation's second bid for the 92nd
~g the application energy future."
house seat. She lost to State
"revaew period, the sec
received 'more than 2,300
!lr.!'~~"'l!""'!"t
written or dearonic public

Democrats

COIIllllellls.

According to a news
release, the sec found that
ApPalachian Power's pro·
posal was ~tber "reasonable" nor " dent," a fmding that
ust be made
under Vtrginia law before
Varginia consumers ·can be
charged for the eosts of a ·
new power plant.
The
found tbe cost
estimate was "001 credible"
and noteiJ that the latest cost
estimate was made in
November 2006 and had not
been updated.
The sec further noted
that Appalachian Power
price conb:act
"has no
for any appreciable portion
of the total oonstructiol)

sec

rrud

for a needy
! iffany Will 1s ·~ ~
alilon leader aru:1 .will :b e m
charge .of recreatton foc dte
April 23 meeting 10 be lbe~
at . the bome of Austm
~· Plans are to wodr
~th flbe dogs.

.Sarah
Rqmrter

Twrner,
•

,

News

;

Lak.estde Leaders
4-H Club
The I..akeside Leaders 4H Club met reeently at the
Reedsville
United
Methodist Church with 22
members and four advisors
attending.

4

'

-

--

Salem Center .
Go-Getters
4-iiOub

The Salem Center GoGetters 4-H Club met on
March 24 at the borne of
Dawn Kopec with 15
members·md two advisors
present.
The fol!lowing officers
were e'lected: !President Melissa Snowden; Vice
President
Amanda
Gilkey;
Secretary
· Morgan Russell; Treasurer
Kyle Russell; News
Reporter ·
Amber
Davidson; Safety - Kyle
VanMeter; Recreation Brayden Kopec . Project

Nelson,

New.s

WhiziCICiz

4-HCiub
The Whiz Kidz 4-H Olub
met recently at the Buok'ley
home with II members and
two advisors present.
Discussion was .on dues
wltich were set for $5 and ·
fund-rai sers . Plans were
made to put flowers at the
Chester Colll1lhouse as .a
oommuniry project and possibly paint the parlting bare
rels . The new oounry 4-H
rules were discussed.
lilection of officen; was
held. Elected were President
Morgan Werry; Vice
President
Megan
Broderick; Treasurer Sarah Martindale; Secretary
- Amanda Eason; News
..Reporter
· -Iblnil:l=_:
Buckley ; Recreation Leade&lt;
- Tyler Lee; Health Officer
- Jenna Hysell; Safety
Leader -Andrea Buckley.
The Buckleys provided
refreshments .
At another recent meeting the Whiz Kidz planned
a trip a trip to "The Beach"
in Cincinnati, and discussed.4-H camps.
Morgan 'Werry
and
Megan Broderick provided
refreshements. The next
meeting ·will be on April 21
at Bucldeys. Members are
to bring in dues and money
for pooks, available dates
for recreational outing, and
their basket-a-day tickets.
Daniel Buckle y, News
· Reporter
·

Rep . Jimmy Stewart, R- Phillips said, "and this is an
Aiban~, by just over 800 .gpen seat this time." ·
Phillips said she bas raised
votes in 2006.. Stew3111 is
running for the open Ohio seven times as niuch cash
Senate seat being vacated for her campirign than her
by Senator Joy Padgett, R7 Republican oppgnent, hll
TI1ompson, also ilf ~then·s:·· · .·
Coshocton. '
,
·
,T his Ye:n· Phillips ~ai~ is · In her remarks, Phillips
a 'fantasttc opportumly ·for discussed a number of
· her md · the Democratic issues now being addressed
Party, partly because she by the state legislature, and
bas the benefit of name ber support of Governor Ted
recognition from her frrst Stricldand's programs and
attempt at the office. She initiative~.
"People in Ohio are fru sreoeived 3,268 votes in
trated,
and they are ready for
Meigs Counry in "the 2006
a change," Phillips said. "We
election.
"I have' a bead start," need 10 win four seats to win

the niajorily in the House."
Phillips was introduced
by Davenport, who updated
those attending on local
government developments,
including the statu&gt; of new
proposed power plants and new indu stry looking · to
locate here . He also disc
cussed health care and con•
tinuing plans to locate
emergen cy room in the
counly.
Hunter also intrOduced
Brenda Phalin, candidate
for Clerk of Courts, ani!
Tom Lowery, candidate for
counly commissioner.

an

•Jxxxxxxxxxxxxxrxxxxixxxxxx;xxxrx;xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx;x;xxxxxxxxxxxxxx;4

a

a
9
:l
·Have your cbild age birth to 21 months
immunized at the Meigs County Health
Department ·
during April, 08
&amp; Be eligible for our drawing
a $25 Wal-Mart gift card.

Joshua
Reponer

:=I

Kids+K-9s
4-HOub

pany

ALL BUSINESS~· Earnings estimates for
2008 stay high, despite econoff!ic headwinds

updates
and
llivestod
requirements were discussed.
Each member bad to
report on progre ss of tbeir
projects. Baslee tball w.as
enjoyed after the. meeting.
Amber
Davidson .and
Shelby
Bi ng
served
refreshments.
The next meeting will be
at the home of OaMJ Kopec
(l)n ~ 28. Refreshments
will be served by Morgan
and Kyle Russell.

. CriUas4-H

grid

outlook for the year to a gain drop if analysts' estimates . which typically guide anaof no more ·than 5 ~1, stay Itigb, despite no evi- lysts on what their perfordown from double-digit pro- dence that the economy has mance will look. like.
NEW YORK -If we use jections a month ago.
or will soon tum it course.
James Montier, who heads
analysts'
estimates
for
cor"We
assume
the
economy
Federal
Reserve
Chainnan
global
strategy
equity
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
porate
earnings
to
gauge
the.
is
going
to
be
very
tough
and
Ben · Bemanke rec.e ntly research at Soc1ete Geneml in
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, ·must be
~oomy's
health,
we
all
remain
very
tough,"
GE
CEO
.
acknowledged
for the first London, thinks some compa-6igned, and inclrule address and telephone fiiUllber. No .
should
be
ready
to
cel~brate
Jeffrey
Immelt
said
during
a
time
that
a
realssion
was nies maybe spinning things to
·wasigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
better
times
by
the
end
of
conference
t;alJ
with
analysts.
make them seem better than
possible.
Most
economists
good taste, addressing issues, rwt personalities. Letters uf
.the
year.
·
GE
isn't
alone.
In
recent
believe 8!1'!wtb contracted in they really are. And anal ysts
tlwt!ks to argqniUiiiat1S al!d individM!Ms will nat be.oa::ept,.
· Look 111 111 1r foreca&amp;l5 for days, Alcoa 1nc. imd the first thfee mon:hs-oftlus have been '"asleep at tlie ··
ed for publication.
·
·
the second half of 2008: Wachovia Corp.'s results year and will continue on wheel" in challenging those
Profit gains for Standard &amp; both came in below ex.jJec- that path due to the slump in v1ews, o nly doing so when
Poor's 500 companies in-the lations, while UPS Inc. and housing and the pullback in there is "irrefutable proof' ·
third quarter are expected to J .C. Penney Co. revised consumer spending.
they were wrong.
.
top 14 percent ~d the their frrst-:'luarter outlooks
This isn't just a U.S.-cen'The analysts all acknowlfourth quarter could bring a down significantly.
tric problem. The global ,edge the sense of lowering
Reader Services
year-over-year sw-ge of 55
k's possible that .analysts' economic land~ is also forecasts m aggregate:
percent. That sure sounds . eSii mate~ may be way off for fragil.e , prompung the »ow.ever, when they discuss
Con lldlon Polley
OUr main conoem in all stories is to Publtlhed .....,. aftel• lOOft , Monday
like a happier economic the frrst ~· even though International
Monetary such a move with the compa.lllrough Friday, 111 Court S1nle1,
world than the one we are they've
n revising them · Fund to issue a sobering Dies they cover, the compa- ·
be ac:curate. H you know of an enor Pomeroy. onto.
Secon&lt;klaoo
living in right now.
. down for months. Back on new forecast last week that . rues' response is that it won't
In a 810ty, catt 1he newsroom at (740) pootage paid atPomelgy.
~~~so
sounds~
wishful
Jan. 4, analysts were fore- greatly raised the odds of a happen to th em .. Montier
982·2156.
~: The Asooc:illled- and
Nonlpapei }IIDCilllian.
tlunkmg, ~don t break out . casting a year-over-year 4 .7 ·worldwide economic slump. said in a note to clients. "TIJis
0.1Min number Ia
P-o I • Send add:Boo C10118C·
the champagne yet.
percent gain in S&amp;P 500
What's troublesome to ~es a fall ii;cy of cornposiGeneral Electric Co.'s earnings. By Feb. 15, that Citigroup's chief U.S. equity uon problem m which all the1
(740) 11112-2:156,
llono tD The Dolly · 111 Co:n1
-mllllli'
- · Pomeroy, Ohio 45789.
~ssive profit llliss on turned negative, with a 1.4 strategist Tobias Levkovich . , analysts think ·their' stocks
Depwtment &amp;dllleiolw - :
Fpday
should be reason percent decline ex.pected. A is that industrial production are immune from the influSubei:rlpaon RMM
Br CM'Ier
enough to be wary about month later, that was extend- will begin to wane later this ence of this cycle.''
·
OneononDI
'1027
~stic. views for the rest ed to a 7.8 percent fall and at year because banks have
That disconnect is clear in
One,...
'115.14
Cha:lene lloelllc:l:, Ext 12
of this year. The conglomer- the end of March it tumbled tightened credit standards the latest Duke University's
Oeltr
50'
A ; """·Brian Reed, Ext. 14
ate, wltich is considered a to a 9.9 perceni puUback, ' considerably on commercial Fuqua
School
of
Senior Cllblln IIJPilil"" · Beth Se:genl, Ext 13
proxy
for the overa1.1 econo- according to Citigroup. ·
and industrial loans.
Bus! nes,s/CFO Magazibe
0....-.111 .
'10.27
my, . reported first-quarter
The percentage of comp:t:
One , . .
'103.111
He also has been tracking Busmess Outl ook survey. It
&amp;aabn-e~ng.s per sh_are from Dies beating earnings esti- the narrowing difference showed 72 percent of the
Advertising
· No IUbcontmumg operatmns of 44 mates - · which Bespoke between small firms' plans 475 chief fin ancial officers
0 • Ida : Daw 'Hania, Ext. 15 oin:c1 to lw DoltJ acriptlon tJv mill pemtltled in cents compared with ana- lnvestmeni: Group says is a to. rai se prices and their . who · responded were less
o a :n B:wlda Dalila, E:&lt;l16 wtwe home catTier oeMoe II availlysts' estimates of51 cents. gauge of the marlcel' s health pricing intentions - which optimistic about the U.S.
Qs:aeJCirc.: Judy Clafk, Ext 1D
The earrungs IDISS shows - has been on the decline ~nds to _lead corporate prof- economy in March thait
.... Suba .. tpllun
f!J_w
the credit crisis and since the third quarter of last It margm trends by about they were in December, but
G1 ne~al ll8nager
global
economic dowoturil year. In the fourth quaner, two years. Given that data, only · 38 percent are Jess
O..,..• ,..caa·:ll, Ext. 12
13 Weelul
'32.26
are~'t just hurting financial about 60 percept of compa- Levkovich
sees
some optimistic about thei r own
26Weel&lt;&amp;
'64.20
buslnesses,
but
have
infected
nies
topped
analysts'
esticrimping
of
profit
margins
companies· perfonnan ce. ·
52Weel&lt;&amp;
'
127.11
E.....:
health
care
and
consumer
mates,
still
well
above
the
after the middle of this year.
Maybe they think thai their
,_o:nydailyMntinel.com
Oul8lde ..... Countr
product~, too. The Fairfield, 50 percent level seen during
Still, analysts' estimates companies are insulated
13'53.55
Conn.-b~ GE, which lyp- the bear market of 2001 and remain high, and the blame from the current downtum
26' 107.10
1cally
1hits lis earnings tat- 2002, according to Bespoke. ·tor that could go to the GE's CEO thought the same.
52'21421
g~, also revised its earnings
But that "beat" rate could companies
themsel ves, too. Now he knows bener. ·

The Daily Sentinel

Deatbs

The Daily Sentinel • Pqe As

":1w

seasickness.)

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

--m~com

C.CGI!IIl

0

- Today's Birthdays: Ice skater Werner Groebli ("Mr.
Frick") is 93. Britain's Queen Elizabeth U is 82. Singermusi~ian I~ Pop is 61. Singer-songwriter Paul Divis is 60.
j\clress Patb LuPone is 59. Actor Tony Danza is 57. Actress
.Andie MacDoweU is SO. Rock singer Robert Smith (The
.Cure) is 49. Actor John Cameron Mitchell is 45. cOmedian
Jllicole Sullivan is 38. Actor James McAvoy is 29.
·
Thought for Today: "Don't go around saying the world
:Owes you a living. The worlll owes you nothing. It was here
firsL"- Mark Twain (1835, 1910).
.

Monday, April 21, 2008

•

-CliftY

.

--FAMILY ldiiCB
1:1111.11111
.......
To Report ()lild Abuse &amp; NeqJect
/- ?4()--C1:}2~~
1-"8()()--.992-2b08

•

Child Alxseffotlire
All Rl!porls Rem:in Atr1nproJs

~

~

;;

Hotline~ 2'4 Hrs. A Dol

?

~~~

call740-992·2117 Ext. 116
. 175 Race StN&amp;t, P.O. Box 191 • Middleport, Ohio 45760
www.melpdlfa..net
~,.: M-T-W-F, 8-4:30, Thurs. 8-5:30, Sat &amp; Sun. Cloe&amp;d

a

§
8~
j:l

'"

§

ttuxs:s:nxn:~xnn:nnnx::xxxunn::xxnmxnxuu:.uunn:u:rDtn:f;

•

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The.Daily Sentinel
111 Cowt Sbeel• PomeroJ, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157..
-.mydllllyuntlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher

•

Chartene HoefliCh

General Manager-News Editor

CottgrtS$ slr,all m~~kt no lAw rup«ting 4ft
uwbfishmmt of religion, or pmlai6iting tlu
ftu undst thtrtof; or abridging tlu .{retdllm
! of spuch; or of tlu prus; or tlu right of tlu
-: puple pua4bly to asstmble, and tg petition
·' tlu Govtrttmmt for: a reJlrus ofgrieNrras.
. - The First Amendment to the

u.s. Conslllutlon

.TODAY IN HISTORY

PageA4
Monday, April 21, zoo8

Jimmy Carter makes me sick
In mustering arguments
against · Jimmy Carter's
bead-to-bead, if 001 heart-tobean, gct-togcdlm with the
arcb-munlerers of Damasthe
Iranian-supported,
Muslim Brothedlood-linked
tenur organization openly
dedicated to the annibilation
of the state of Israel - it
becomes clear that these disastrous meetings aren' t . a
question of ' misunderstood
or overlooked facts, or a
matter of persuasion based
on such fads. They come
down to a stark choice
between evil and ,oood:· to
meet with Hamas, or not to
meet with Damas; to lend
legitimacy 10 a terror group,
· or to shun it; to .dency,or•~
degrade the
Officeofthepresl
"'
honor it funmy Carter bas
made all the wrong choices.
"~mes ,
The horror Of .t
l all ~
from the fact that Carter, as
a former president of the
United States, doesn't
choose in the anonymiry of
a private person. With lifelong reoognition for Itis permanent, if dubious, place in
American history, he makes
ltis immoral . choice as a
venerable representative of
the presidency, indeed, as
an enduring symbol of the
nation.
It was as such a sy~l ..
that the former presuJent
h~gged a fonner ~ off_icial at a recepbon m
Ramallah on Tuesday.
UnfOJ1nnalely, Carter didn' t
arrive in time for last
,friday's sermon, delivered
by a Hamas cleric and MP.

· . Today is Monday, April21 , the 112th day of 2008. There
.are 254 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History : On April 21, 1918, Baron
Manfred von Richthofen, the German ace know.n as the
,"Red Baron," was kiUed in action during World War I.
, On this date: In 1649, the Maryland Toleration Act,
which provided for freedom of worship for all Christians,
was passed by the Maryland assembly.
In 1789, John Adams was sworn in as the first vice pres.ident of the United States.
In 1816, Charlotte Bronte, author of "Jane Eyre," was
born in Thornton, England.
In 1836, an army of Texans led by Sam Houston defeated
the Mexicans at San Jacin10, assuring Texas independence.
In 1910, author Samuel Langhorne Clemens, better
known as Mark Twain, died in Redding, Conn., at age 74.
In 1940, the quiz show that asked the "$64 question,"
''Take It or Leave It,~ premiered on CBS Radio.
In 1960, Brazil inaugurated its new capital, Brasilia, trans,ferring the seat of national government from Rio ·d e Janeiro.
. In 1972, Apollo 16 astronauts John Young and Charles
Duke explored the siuface of the moon.
. .Ten years ago: Astronomers announced in Washington·
.theY bad discovered possible signs of a new faniily of plan. · ets orbiting a star 220 light-years away, the clearest evi:dence to date of worlds forming ·beyond our solar .system.
. Five years ago: Military officials in Iraq announced the
arrest of Muhammad Hamza al-Zubaydi, a key figure in the
bloody suppression of the Shiite Muslim upnsing of 1991.
State-run media in China reported the government bad dismissed Beijing's mayor foUowing the disclosure of a steep
increase in SARS cases in the Chinese ~ital. Scott
.Peterson pleaded innocent in the deaths of ltis pregnant
.wife and unborn son. Robert Cberuiyot becamr ·the 12th
~ in 13 years to win the Boston Marathon; Svelilana
va of Russia won the women's race. Iau singer
Nina Simone died in France at age 70.
: Ot!e .YilliT l!gQ: 1'!re flllli!j;!!!, 4"ll9· city
c~m·!!!~"·
,;=--~ Sami Abdui-A~Ilil41•Jumajlipl_ CJ:.Itic DfJI
. ~~~~~~~~~~-__,
.~n the job after histhree predecessors were
was himself killed by attackers in a passing car. American
billionaire Charles SIIDOnyi returned to Earth from a dream
voyage to the international il!:X:tation, riding il Russian
·capsule to a soft landing in
stan. Professional sailor
Reid Stowe and his girlfriend, Soanya Ahmad set off from
.ft:mn.North ~oboken, NJ., on a l ,()()(klay, ~o~stop .globegirdling crwse. (Aiuna!l abandoned the crwse m February ·
~008, Citing

This laying of the wrealb rrr high on the outrage meter.
seems ro have particularly b111,f or the most part, what is
dnilled Abdel Rahim. 'a rop audible from the White
aide to Palestinian Authorily House, the S!ale Deparonent ·
HolocauSt denifr - I mean, and the Congress, is so much
Palestinian
Aulhoriry · tepid background noise 10 the
Diana
President Mahmoud Abbas effect ol "We wouldn't do
West
(Arafat's longtime associate that if we were you, sir.~ Not
and
successor).
The · much else. At least 1101 unti I
Jerusalem Post reminded Rep. Sue Myrick North
readers lhat Ibis presidential Carolina Republican, got
and trnnslated by MEMRI. lt salute was a first. given lhat involved.
·
called for Islamic conquest, "U.S. Pn:sident . GeloQle W.
Bearuse Cruter's meet- .
first of Rome _
"the Bush and other top adminis- ings with the Hamas leaderCrusader capital, which has lnllion officials had refused to ship run counter to intema·
declared its bostilily to Islam, hOnor Araf.tt during their vis- tiona! agreements to isolate
and planted the bmtho:s of its to Ramallab.~ Rahim was Hamas. and '? U.S . policy
brimmino
apes and pigs in Paleslioe . positivelv
~
., with and m temauonal policy
(Koranic motifs describing enthusiasm, bwbling on to . regarding this terrori st
Jews) in Older to prevent the Carter about the day Arafat's group, Myrick has publicly
reawakening of Islam," and tomb would be moved to called on Secretary of State
then "Europe ·mltsentlrely
·
·
of the Condoleezza
Rice
ro revoke
... Jemsalem,
Pal . . "the capital
"
r·
.,.,
_
___
,
the· two Americas and even
estmtan state.
unmy ....., "" s pas.spon. .
Eastern Europe."
And these - Ab~ &amp; Co. . Hallelujah. Wit:h this
H
ld ba
h
ed (Fatah) - are the "moder· request. an American leader
coo officiaL
ve .t oo.
ugg
that eHamas
ates.'' More sueh modera- . bas ammtl y -•--"""""' a stan d'.or
And it was as such a sym- lion came out in recent news American securily interests.
bollhat the fonner president, reports that Abbas bad to be for welims of telrorism, for
along with wife, Rosalynn, convinced by Israel not to the principle of not bargainthe former first lady, visited cany out plans to bestow ing with terrorists, for an
the grave of Yasser Arafat, official honors next week on important .ally, and, perllap'
the fQunding father of global two female accessories to inost imporumt, for a grownterrorism, who, in his time Israeli murder, including the up, restorative moral order.
on Eat1h, watered it with the driver of the bomber of the Jimmy Carter should certainblood of innocents, includ- infamous 2001
Sbarro ly lose his passport for his
ing that of two American pizzeria anass.acre.
. shameful and degrading and
diplomats be ordered assasMaybe Career can arrange hannful Hamas pvertures. sinated in 1973 in Sudan. reoognition
for
these
And preferably before he
Did the thought of all this women. Having honored the flies back home.
blood temper Mr. Carter's PLO murderer Arafat.
(Diana West is a columnist
enthusiasm? Hailing Arafat's Carter would surely like to for The Washingtnn Time s.
"historic role," the 39th pres- hooor ot:hel's from his 1emJr- She is the aurlwr of 'The
ident of the United Stales ist camp. Oh, I forgoL 'The DeaJh of tlu? Grown-up:
laid a wreathofred-red- former president is already Hnw America 's Arrested
roses on the terrorist's grave, doing just that in meetings De velopment Is Bringing
calling him a "dear friend."
with Hamas munlerers even Down Western Civili:.atio1L.:·
Too bad a column can' t as they continue to 'kilL
Sh£ can be comacted via
come with a sick bag.
This would seem to regis- dianawest@veriZOILitet.)

I I&gt;ON'T

KNOW HOW

Tl-115 COULD

HAPPEN:

or,_,_

tn-...

-·

,.......... eo-.

11 - - - - - - - - -

____ -- -----

·-,...-...._.

MEIGS CO

4-HNEWS

by the next meeting.
The following {)fficers
Rebecca
Minsball
and
were cleoted: President CHES~ - Melvin C. Coea, 86, Cb 4•i•r., died on
Shayla Molden served Bay lee
SDJday,_ April 19, 2008, at The Arbors in f'""'lipolis.
COllins;
Vi ce
mliresbments.
~ves1de services will be beld ;at 1 p.m. - Tuelld.ay,
Presidclll
Wade
Collins;
.Qub .
At .another ~=t meeting Sect!etaly
April 22, 2008, at Mei¥s MemoJy GanJeas in Pomeroy.
Rebecca
of !be dub b eld at dte Ouulwell.; T~reawtt:r ·Arrang~ents are being baBdled by dJe Aodenion
Two meetings of •th e Minshall home officers Heaven Westfatl; News
McDaniel fiuneral Home.
Bactyanl
C ritllen 4-H were elected. They are Repotter
Online nlgist:ry is availJb'le at WW\1:1 aD OMII!!olaniol 001!l..
Kayla
C lub have been b eld Limdsey Houser, ptesident; HawlbcJme ; HiStmian recently at die · Meigs Abbie
H0user, Nti.Oille
Moolii.spaugh;
sa:etaiy/oc;ws
~epollter;
oonf"umed as rece!vmg Co 1y iMuseom ArmeL
Heald:~ I eader Briianna
Tbe 4-Hen; ~ discuS'SOd S'llayla Molden, beaitb ;a nd A~; 'Safety I eada necessary funding.
The ea~ · application .trips to tale., pa~ for reoreaiJi(l)n; and Malrlbew Broote Johnson; Rccre:ation
I eader
'Savanna
musl be completed and h:mwitb a ~w Bro\Will, ~etyfreotutiin.
when
to
do
it.
They
~so
Still~a-&lt;tbon,
judging
S;JMman-Hawley.
mtdy to file at tbe end of
blt nl about wo 'a'OUld be acllivi.llies anli dates Welle
A IC8IItJiing date in June
lllld American Electric J1111e. If approved, Syt:aruse
pn:sidcnt, Hattodn fur lhe diSCIIssed. Members select- was lie! illllli fun&amp;aisc:rs and
Power bas donated $2,500. would likely ~ some of
fair !heme A Ride cbe Tide
Replaoement of the roof at that mooey by fall and bave wilh Junior Fair aad :assist- ed pmjeots :after reviewmg oommunity pn!ljects Welle
pmject !books.
discussed.
village ball, fire equipment . two years to spend it.
ill,g with die 4-H Advisory
Recreation
was
k!iclr.The next meeting to be .o n
grants and lighting replaoeThe public is .urged ro Committee's Longaborger
hatl .
Lindsey
Ho user . Februa!J'· l l wi:t!h fumi· raisment at the village ball at1ead to stay informed oo basket liumdraiseL
served a veggie tray ami lng projects t o be discussed.
field have all been dis- · what c:ommnnity projects
.At bo:th ·meetm'gs tbe juice . Abbie Houser is t fil
·l(ayla HIZMtfhorne, Ne.ws
cussed as possibilities for :a themselves and lheiT neigh - gro111p WOited on a .o rajit
bring refreshments ifor next RepliJrter .
match !hough not all of bors have chosen to receive rojeot o f Dll!king bUIUil.ies m~tmg to be belli .at lhe
those projects have. been the ,gram ~oney.
and ·ducks. lkfreshmelilts adviwr' s
home.
were served by Angie Discussion will be on dues
Parter. .
and possible bake sa!le to
costs," daa1 there were '"mlo
J.osluul PMker; News help pay for T-sbitts. Abbie
meaningful price or perfor- · Rq~orter
Houser will discuss rabbits
Officers were elected and
mance guarantees or conand
demonsttate
on
foods
fundraisers
projects dis. trois for this project at this
fnmPageA.I
in Mini Meal Magic as ber . cussed at a recent meetin~
time,~
and that wheu
reffesbments:.
of the Pioneers 4-H Club at
megawau IGCC electric Appalachian Power eventuAbbie Hous«, News 1Jhe Drake home with 17
generating plant io Wm ally :attempted to .obtain a
Reporter
members and t'hree adviVi .. 1b PSC .~n•-'
"tum-Iiey conlr.lct witll fum
ll'glrua. , e
e.~ a nririno, it likely w.ill be a
The Bleedin' Omen 4-H
sotS-present
Certificate
of · Publi' c .-·---.,
·sole-ooUJrce con,t ract wi1Jh Oub---M
· ~ -~ aroh 1''at
,.. ...
..,e
. RecFeation
was
the
Convenience and Neoessily ODe bidder."
Amazing ~aoe Cbi!Ccli,
lioense plate game . l 'jna
for the plant, whidt was
..,__ &lt;UV' 4 ........,. •
TIIJIIliCI'S Plains, willh 22 .
~ scr¥ed ref.Fesbments.
u"" ......,._ "16"~ wilh lbe IDCIJjJcn md one ad!Ji.sor
filed Jan. 12, 2006. The
At aJIIDitila meellin,g die offiThe Harrisonville 4-Hcrs raers '1Wllll ins&lt;ihl'llcd, oomp~rsbillion.e
_stimatM cost is·
v~~J; attending_
met on Matdil 26 at die munity service projects
S
opposed the proposal, lbat , Officers munes .
Scipio
VfD with eight were discussed ,all!ll\g with
The project is expected to the apital cost for the pro- Molly ~- prest.d ent:
members and three adv.i.sors die basket a day ®mdraiser.
=~~·-=-=s~o~
posed plant "is significantly Sam Cline, w:e
_,...,.
higbrr than reported costs Kati.e Kdla., ~. present
an(l)Jhr meet.
Offioea-s wea:e elected;
Mason Couuty.
for other. coal-fired units.~ Haley Bush, bistonan;
'Samuel Evms gave a
In
addition to the West · The sec ·stated, ......,s .r~ MaUory Mcln...,...
.
oew 3ucigmg 'and o1Jher event repod on Slfcty. The Ficlcs,
VII'ginia filing, Appalachian
,... '~"'~
•.:r•-.
Power had filed with the posall rqxesems an exuaor- reporter; R&lt;_JSs Kel~l;ecre­ dates were discussed' anli Trussells and Dl;akes '!ieiVed
:t he next meetim;g was ~sbments.
Viroini•
for
val dinary risk that we cannot aJil.o?; Cassidy
- ..appro
allow the ratepayers of Joste Hayman, Larissa scbedUiied.
Matya Tru~&amp; Ne ws
Julia Lantz bro.t .Bqmrtu
to recover the · V'u:;inia . Viroini• in APCo's service Hayman
,
and Alex Schnier,
share of oosts associated
-,.-L--'th --~ __cety
riookies. The neil meetmg
with the plant and bad filed temtory m .assnme.~
· ~
about 4- lliO be held on April 2 with
for an eJJvironmeatld pamit
~ had as~ that 1 H youih tt:ainiug and abolil Becca Dlmobue '-" bmng
'from · lihe West Vtfiri.oia despite lbe llllOed:atl1 c::ost, ' ..4"'"
-·
- e - tbe value of 1he plant is its· I q-dliJ' ~~
.\oilr1 thnmg re!Rshments..
Jonathan Donohue. News
Department
of "potential" to ~ and a.n
ves........
"a- on
RepoiUr
Environmental Protection. seq~~ester carbon dioxide. livestock. .
From tbe time OODStruction The sec noted that the OOst
Reaeata_on was Hot
begins, it will require estimate did 001 include 1be Potato wtth Hula HO?ps
The Rocksprin,gs Raiders
approximately 48 to 54 rettufit of .the plant at !iOIDe presented
by Cass1dy
4-H Olilb met recently with
months to complete the uncertain future date with Cleland.
Ehzabeth
officers being elected and
IGCC unit by 2012 and carbon capture and seques- Lawrence served chips, pop
aciv.i.ties planned. The secwith it, lbe .capacity to trallion l.ecbnol~gy. AI'Co and sttawbe:rry cake. .
The Kids + K-9s mot on ond meeting of April was
maincain A.B&gt;-East's oblig- estimated the oost of suoh a
The neo meetmg wiU be Apri~ 9 at the Pomeroy beld
the
Rocksprings
~on..!!!in the electri.c retrofit at $200-JOO million. on April 29 .at ~mg Cbun:b of the NIWII'eDe United Mei!OOdist CJhurch .
-~The attorney general esti- ~ CJ:turch. Audrionna with lihree members and two
Freeze T~ was recrearum.
.
. AB" bas proposed IGCC mated 1Jhe retrofit oosts :at l&gt;ullins will talk to the dub ad"sors present.
technology for use .as new $300-5 00 miilion.
.
1 .about 4-H camp.
. Discussioo was on taking
Nathan
Coqk, News
base-load generation in the
The 'SCC also indi.cafed · Ms!Iory Mclntyrre, News .a ~ ro die llW'Sing home; Reporter
:n:~:.~~~ .lh~t..~ven the ab,s enceufa . R~l"--=-.:. • _.
. g~g a .Sp®s.Gr ror T-

Backyard

·Grant

N' BUSINESS WAllE!

Amber Davidson, N.ews
Reponer

U.S.A. Kids
4-HQub
The U .S.A.· Kids 4-H
Club met on April IS .at the
home ofJoyce Weddle with
12 members and two adv.i.sors p11esent. Discussian
was on Quality Assurance
and Tag-in dates; S.kill-athon and everyene 's projects and the progress they ·
have made.
There was discussions em
swine, chi cken and various
ot!her projects. ~ (l)yce Ann
Weddle gave a demonstra~
,tion an bow to lhandle
chickens, their anat(l)m¥ .and
hiDw .t o care for ll:bem.
Refiresbments ·were ,provided by Mrs. Weddle. The
next meeting wiU 'be on
May 20 at 2:00 p.m.

Pioueers

4-HCiub

Mason

Blredin' Green
4-HOub

=. :

sec

Harrisonville
4-Hers

wen:
PJeSlaent:

ru

Roc$spti•tp
Raiders
4-HCiub

=:,f ~occ\::!f~: ~ onam
eatchei-s-·-~f!t!i1id tt;:u:·
4-:u Club .
family.

announced in August
2004 its intent to schle-up a coal-fired power plant of .
IGCC tecboology and build this size (629 megawatts) ·
a
approximately
I ,200 posed additional uncertainmega~ans · of large:. com- ties and risks for Vtrginia
Registration of -old and
mercial-scale IGCC genera- ratepayers and noted that new members, a review of
tion. In addition to the this would be the largest the pmject guide with memIGCC unit at Mountaineer, · rommercial power plant to bers selecting projects, and
AEP proposed to build a . use IGCC technology con- a discussion of attending the
similar lGCC unit in Meigs striicted to date. They also 4-H kick-off and having a
Counry, Ohio.
stated that if all regulatory booth were topics discussed
IGCC technology con- approvals are given, the at a recem meeting of the
verts coal into a synthetic company. may still not con- Dream Catchers 4-H Club.
gas. that moves through sbllct the IGCC plant after The meeting was beld at the
pollutant-removal equip- it obtains more firm pricing home of the advisor,
ment before the gas is and decides that the actwll Rebecca Minsballe with
burned in a combined- rost wdpjd be 100 ltigh to seven members and one
cycle gas liUrbine to pro- warrant construction.
adiVisor attending.
duce · electricity.
The
.In the opinion of the com- • Members will discuss
process allows for more mission, "We cannot .ask projects they are interested
efficient and effective Virginia ratepayers to bear m with their parents and
reduction and removal of the en&lt;;~nnous risks _ and have their selections made
sulfur dioxides, particu- potential huge costs - of
lates and mercury from these uncertainties,"
plant emissions than conMoye said AEP wants to
ventional pulverized· coal address the concerns that
technology. IGCC plants are cited in the ruling and
from Page A.l
also offer the opportunity that the company is not givfor more effictent, less ing up any pllms of building
Huol"
~ai d;
,egstly Cllfbpq CBJlt!lre.!? r . t\!e lGCC plant in .W$:sl have,"
permanent storage m u=p Virginia.
·
"They' re tired of George
geologic formations.
·
"We intend to petition for Bush, they' re tired of his
Last year, ·the company rehearing and reconsidera- war, and they 're tired of
announced
that
the. tion and will attempt to pro- paying almost four doUars
Mountameer Plant was the , vide more definition around · for a gallon of gasoline."
"Our time has come,"
test s~ for capturing car- the costs," Moye said. "It is
bon-d1ox1de and stonng of great import.ance to Hunter said. "The ball is in
underground,
Mason County, to West our court and we cannot
· •
B~t on Monday, the SCC V1rginia, to the coal mining drop it."
denied the request for the and electric utility indusPhillips is making h~r
plllnt.
tries and to our nation's second bid for the 92nd
~g the application energy future."
house seat. She lost to State
"revaew period, the sec
received 'more than 2,300
!lr.!'~~"'l!""'!"t
written or dearonic public

Democrats

COIIllllellls.

According to a news
release, the sec found that
ApPalachian Power's pro·
posal was ~tber "reasonable" nor " dent," a fmding that
ust be made
under Vtrginia law before
Varginia consumers ·can be
charged for the eosts of a ·
new power plant.
The
found tbe cost
estimate was "001 credible"
and noteiJ that the latest cost
estimate was made in
November 2006 and had not
been updated.
The sec further noted
that Appalachian Power
price conb:act
"has no
for any appreciable portion
of the total oonstructiol)

sec

rrud

for a needy
! iffany Will 1s ·~ ~
alilon leader aru:1 .will :b e m
charge .of recreatton foc dte
April 23 meeting 10 be lbe~
at . the bome of Austm
~· Plans are to wodr
~th flbe dogs.

.Sarah
Rqmrter

Twrner,
•

,

News

;

Lak.estde Leaders
4-H Club
The I..akeside Leaders 4H Club met reeently at the
Reedsville
United
Methodist Church with 22
members and four advisors
attending.

4

'

-

--

Salem Center .
Go-Getters
4-iiOub

The Salem Center GoGetters 4-H Club met on
March 24 at the borne of
Dawn Kopec with 15
members·md two advisors
present.
The fol!lowing officers
were e'lected: !President Melissa Snowden; Vice
President
Amanda
Gilkey;
Secretary
· Morgan Russell; Treasurer
Kyle Russell; News
Reporter ·
Amber
Davidson; Safety - Kyle
VanMeter; Recreation Brayden Kopec . Project

Nelson,

New.s

WhiziCICiz

4-HCiub
The Whiz Kidz 4-H Olub
met recently at the Buok'ley
home with II members and
two advisors present.
Discussion was .on dues
wltich were set for $5 and ·
fund-rai sers . Plans were
made to put flowers at the
Chester Colll1lhouse as .a
oommuniry project and possibly paint the parlting bare
rels . The new oounry 4-H
rules were discussed.
lilection of officen; was
held. Elected were President
Morgan Werry; Vice
President
Megan
Broderick; Treasurer Sarah Martindale; Secretary
- Amanda Eason; News
..Reporter
· -Iblnil:l=_:
Buckley ; Recreation Leade&lt;
- Tyler Lee; Health Officer
- Jenna Hysell; Safety
Leader -Andrea Buckley.
The Buckleys provided
refreshments .
At another recent meeting the Whiz Kidz planned
a trip a trip to "The Beach"
in Cincinnati, and discussed.4-H camps.
Morgan 'Werry
and
Megan Broderick provided
refreshements. The next
meeting ·will be on April 21
at Bucldeys. Members are
to bring in dues and money
for pooks, available dates
for recreational outing, and
their basket-a-day tickets.
Daniel Buckle y, News
· Reporter
·

Rep . Jimmy Stewart, R- Phillips said, "and this is an
Aiban~, by just over 800 .gpen seat this time." ·
Phillips said she bas raised
votes in 2006.. Stew3111 is
running for the open Ohio seven times as niuch cash
Senate seat being vacated for her campirign than her
by Senator Joy Padgett, R7 Republican oppgnent, hll
TI1ompson, also ilf ~then·s:·· · .·
Coshocton. '
,
·
,T his Ye:n· Phillips ~ai~ is · In her remarks, Phillips
a 'fantasttc opportumly ·for discussed a number of
· her md · the Democratic issues now being addressed
Party, partly because she by the state legislature, and
bas the benefit of name ber support of Governor Ted
recognition from her frrst Stricldand's programs and
attempt at the office. She initiative~.
"People in Ohio are fru sreoeived 3,268 votes in
trated,
and they are ready for
Meigs Counry in "the 2006
a change," Phillips said. "We
election.
"I have' a bead start," need 10 win four seats to win

the niajorily in the House."
Phillips was introduced
by Davenport, who updated
those attending on local
government developments,
including the statu&gt; of new
proposed power plants and new indu stry looking · to
locate here . He also disc
cussed health care and con•
tinuing plans to locate
emergen cy room in the
counly.
Hunter also intrOduced
Brenda Phalin, candidate
for Clerk of Courts, ani!
Tom Lowery, candidate for
counly commissioner.

an

•Jxxxxxxxxxxxxxrxxxxixxxxxx;xxxrx;xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx;x;xxxxxxxxxxxxxx;4

a

a
9
:l
·Have your cbild age birth to 21 months
immunized at the Meigs County Health
Department ·
during April, 08
&amp; Be eligible for our drawing
a $25 Wal-Mart gift card.

Joshua
Reponer

:=I

Kids+K-9s
4-HOub

pany

ALL BUSINESS~· Earnings estimates for
2008 stay high, despite econoff!ic headwinds

updates
and
llivestod
requirements were discussed.
Each member bad to
report on progre ss of tbeir
projects. Baslee tball w.as
enjoyed after the. meeting.
Amber
Davidson .and
Shelby
Bi ng
served
refreshments.
The next meeting will be
at the home of OaMJ Kopec
(l)n ~ 28. Refreshments
will be served by Morgan
and Kyle Russell.

. CriUas4-H

grid

outlook for the year to a gain drop if analysts' estimates . which typically guide anaof no more ·than 5 ~1, stay Itigb, despite no evi- lysts on what their perfordown from double-digit pro- dence that the economy has mance will look. like.
NEW YORK -If we use jections a month ago.
or will soon tum it course.
James Montier, who heads
analysts'
estimates
for
cor"We
assume
the
economy
Federal
Reserve
Chainnan
global
strategy
equity
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
porate
earnings
to
gauge
the.
is
going
to
be
very
tough
and
Ben · Bemanke rec.e ntly research at Soc1ete Geneml in
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, ·must be
~oomy's
health,
we
all
remain
very
tough,"
GE
CEO
.
acknowledged
for the first London, thinks some compa-6igned, and inclrule address and telephone fiiUllber. No .
should
be
ready
to
cel~brate
Jeffrey
Immelt
said
during
a
time
that
a
realssion
was nies maybe spinning things to
·wasigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
better
times
by
the
end
of
conference
t;alJ
with
analysts.
make them seem better than
possible.
Most
economists
good taste, addressing issues, rwt personalities. Letters uf
.the
year.
·
GE
isn't
alone.
In
recent
believe 8!1'!wtb contracted in they really are. And anal ysts
tlwt!ks to argqniUiiiat1S al!d individM!Ms will nat be.oa::ept,.
· Look 111 111 1r foreca&amp;l5 for days, Alcoa 1nc. imd the first thfee mon:hs-oftlus have been '"asleep at tlie ··
ed for publication.
·
·
the second half of 2008: Wachovia Corp.'s results year and will continue on wheel" in challenging those
Profit gains for Standard &amp; both came in below ex.jJec- that path due to the slump in v1ews, o nly doing so when
Poor's 500 companies in-the lations, while UPS Inc. and housing and the pullback in there is "irrefutable proof' ·
third quarter are expected to J .C. Penney Co. revised consumer spending.
they were wrong.
.
top 14 percent ~d the their frrst-:'luarter outlooks
This isn't just a U.S.-cen'The analysts all acknowlfourth quarter could bring a down significantly.
tric problem. The global ,edge the sense of lowering
Reader Services
year-over-year sw-ge of 55
k's possible that .analysts' economic land~ is also forecasts m aggregate:
percent. That sure sounds . eSii mate~ may be way off for fragil.e , prompung the »ow.ever, when they discuss
Con lldlon Polley
OUr main conoem in all stories is to Publtlhed .....,. aftel• lOOft , Monday
like a happier economic the frrst ~· even though International
Monetary such a move with the compa.lllrough Friday, 111 Court S1nle1,
world than the one we are they've
n revising them · Fund to issue a sobering Dies they cover, the compa- ·
be ac:curate. H you know of an enor Pomeroy. onto.
Secon&lt;klaoo
living in right now.
. down for months. Back on new forecast last week that . rues' response is that it won't
In a 810ty, catt 1he newsroom at (740) pootage paid atPomelgy.
~~~so
sounds~
wishful
Jan. 4, analysts were fore- greatly raised the odds of a happen to th em .. Montier
982·2156.
~: The Asooc:illled- and
Nonlpapei }IIDCilllian.
tlunkmg, ~don t break out . casting a year-over-year 4 .7 ·worldwide economic slump. said in a note to clients. "TIJis
0.1Min number Ia
P-o I • Send add:Boo C10118C·
the champagne yet.
percent gain in S&amp;P 500
What's troublesome to ~es a fall ii;cy of cornposiGeneral Electric Co.'s earnings. By Feb. 15, that Citigroup's chief U.S. equity uon problem m which all the1
(740) 11112-2:156,
llono tD The Dolly · 111 Co:n1
-mllllli'
- · Pomeroy, Ohio 45789.
~ssive profit llliss on turned negative, with a 1.4 strategist Tobias Levkovich . , analysts think ·their' stocks
Depwtment &amp;dllleiolw - :
Fpday
should be reason percent decline ex.pected. A is that industrial production are immune from the influSubei:rlpaon RMM
Br CM'Ier
enough to be wary about month later, that was extend- will begin to wane later this ence of this cycle.''
·
OneononDI
'1027
~stic. views for the rest ed to a 7.8 percent fall and at year because banks have
That disconnect is clear in
One,...
'115.14
Cha:lene lloelllc:l:, Ext 12
of this year. The conglomer- the end of March it tumbled tightened credit standards the latest Duke University's
Oeltr
50'
A ; """·Brian Reed, Ext. 14
ate, wltich is considered a to a 9.9 perceni puUback, ' considerably on commercial Fuqua
School
of
Senior Cllblln IIJPilil"" · Beth Se:genl, Ext 13
proxy
for the overa1.1 econo- according to Citigroup. ·
and industrial loans.
Bus! nes,s/CFO Magazibe
0....-.111 .
'10.27
my, . reported first-quarter
The percentage of comp:t:
One , . .
'103.111
He also has been tracking Busmess Outl ook survey. It
&amp;aabn-e~ng.s per sh_are from Dies beating earnings esti- the narrowing difference showed 72 percent of the
Advertising
· No IUbcontmumg operatmns of 44 mates - · which Bespoke between small firms' plans 475 chief fin ancial officers
0 • Ida : Daw 'Hania, Ext. 15 oin:c1 to lw DoltJ acriptlon tJv mill pemtltled in cents compared with ana- lnvestmeni: Group says is a to. rai se prices and their . who · responded were less
o a :n B:wlda Dalila, E:&lt;l16 wtwe home catTier oeMoe II availlysts' estimates of51 cents. gauge of the marlcel' s health pricing intentions - which optimistic about the U.S.
Qs:aeJCirc.: Judy Clafk, Ext 1D
The earrungs IDISS shows - has been on the decline ~nds to _lead corporate prof- economy in March thait
.... Suba .. tpllun
f!J_w
the credit crisis and since the third quarter of last It margm trends by about they were in December, but
G1 ne~al ll8nager
global
economic dowoturil year. In the fourth quaner, two years. Given that data, only · 38 percent are Jess
O..,..• ,..caa·:ll, Ext. 12
13 Weelul
'32.26
are~'t just hurting financial about 60 percept of compa- Levkovich
sees
some optimistic about thei r own
26Weel&lt;&amp;
'64.20
buslnesses,
but
have
infected
nies
topped
analysts'
esticrimping
of
profit
margins
companies· perfonnan ce. ·
52Weel&lt;&amp;
'
127.11
E.....:
health
care
and
consumer
mates,
still
well
above
the
after the middle of this year.
Maybe they think thai their
,_o:nydailyMntinel.com
Oul8lde ..... Countr
product~, too. The Fairfield, 50 percent level seen during
Still, analysts' estimates companies are insulated
13'53.55
Conn.-b~ GE, which lyp- the bear market of 2001 and remain high, and the blame from the current downtum
26' 107.10
1cally
1hits lis earnings tat- 2002, according to Bespoke. ·tor that could go to the GE's CEO thought the same.
52'21421
g~, also revised its earnings
But that "beat" rate could companies
themsel ves, too. Now he knows bener. ·

The Daily Sentinel

Deatbs

The Daily Sentinel • Pqe As

":1w

seasickness.)

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

--m~com

C.CGI!IIl

0

- Today's Birthdays: Ice skater Werner Groebli ("Mr.
Frick") is 93. Britain's Queen Elizabeth U is 82. Singermusi~ian I~ Pop is 61. Singer-songwriter Paul Divis is 60.
j\clress Patb LuPone is 59. Actor Tony Danza is 57. Actress
.Andie MacDoweU is SO. Rock singer Robert Smith (The
.Cure) is 49. Actor John Cameron Mitchell is 45. cOmedian
Jllicole Sullivan is 38. Actor James McAvoy is 29.
·
Thought for Today: "Don't go around saying the world
:Owes you a living. The worlll owes you nothing. It was here
firsL"- Mark Twain (1835, 1910).
.

Monday, April 21, 2008

•

-CliftY

.

--FAMILY ldiiCB
1:1111.11111
.......
To Report ()lild Abuse &amp; NeqJect
/- ?4()--C1:}2~~
1-"8()()--.992-2b08

•

Child Alxseffotlire
All Rl!porls Rem:in Atr1nproJs

~

~

;;

Hotline~ 2'4 Hrs. A Dol

?

~~~

call740-992·2117 Ext. 116
. 175 Race StN&amp;t, P.O. Box 191 • Middleport, Ohio 45760
www.melpdlfa..net
~,.: M-T-W-F, 8-4:30, Thurs. 8-5:30, Sat &amp; Sun. Cloe&amp;d

a

§
8~
j:l

'"

§

ttuxs:s:nxn:~xnn:nnnx::xxxunn::xxnmxnxuu:.uunn:u:rDtn:f;

•

�COMM

The Daily Sentinel

I

'

PageA6

··'·

Monday, Apri121, 2oo8

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

,..a

LdiNa P'IJitding IJJOI't rl.lllt - .

'Dille '-sin 10, ~ Bl

·'

NBA playoff roundup, hge.B6
GAl.LJ.roLIS -

Lisa

Halley, who has served as
vire preSident for
Human
Resaurces . for
Hdlzer Health Systems since
May 2007, has been named
ihe System' s ¥ice president.
. Tom Tope. !President and
Chief Executive Officer,
inadi: ihe announcement
last week,
. Born in West Uberty, Ky. ,
Ha11ey graduated from
Gallia Academy
High
School, attended Marshall
University and completed
her bachelor's &lt;degFee in
Human !Resources from the
University ·of Mluyland in
2007. Sbe began her career give her our support in
!II Holzer Medical Center in accepting fl tremendous
!'981 as an Administrative challenge as she ,guides 1he
Assistant. lin April1991, she overall provisicm afHR serbecame an assistant to the vices to maintain the Holzer
Director of PersOnneL From Health System as .the
2003 td' 2005, she served as . employer of choil:;e in
H1t Manager and from 2005 Southeastern Ohio."
-2007,asDrrector.
, .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .~

E~l:*E
ti~s~::r~~rn~~:

recrnitment, retention and
ongoing develapment of a
superim workforce.
Tape said "We congratu- ·
late Ms. Halley on this significant achievement and

. WIN UPTO $1,000 ·!!!
P·LA~ · co~IJeRA·
·LL
y
.
.
.
I

llpMpr Am, 21

&amp;ope·

Gi~a

SortboH
Waterbrd at Eas1em, 5 p.m.
Meigs til Be~. 5 p,m.
Federal HOCking at Southern. 5 p.in.
Pmrte~•zz

&amp;opp, hel
Eastom a1 RM&gt;r Valley; 5 p.m.
Marietta at Meigs, 5 p.m.

·G iota-

---

Eastem at Riwr Val~. 5 p.m.
Meigs at Point PleaSant, 4:SO p.m.

EOIIIBm. ~gs at Vinton County, 4:30

p.m. -

,

Southam at Rito'&amp;r Valley, 4:30 ·p .m.

ao,.a a.zs
, r

Wwd• ·

Eastvm at Parkar$burg South, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Point Pleasant, 5 p.m.

Glrta-.
Southam at RawnBWOOd, 5 p.m.

7

Alx•.M

--

Eastom a1 Fedo!al

5p.m.
·

-g.5 p.m. ·

at Meigs, 5 p.m.

Sputhem at Trimble, 5 p.m.

Danica Patrick
becomes first .
female driver to
win lndyCar race

Smith, Robert Smith. Marsha

David
King,
Taylor, Mic~
Neutzlina, Gregory White,
Dennis •l mmore, i(]uistine
J JU!lZ.
Jdhn RcOOvian,
Stcpbcn ~. Eliz:Jibeth
BambBA.

MllrviJ!

TODAY'S

NUMIJER·-Is:

ICon•,

.Anna
Fnmces
s~. Ridbaid 0w,pe11
8, .layce M. Hall, Jean Dum,
Mel¥a. · Tt:acy, Raymond

UJ111CF,A.-t

- JlS..l. SiiaSfiB_-

.~

DoonallaYidsQn,:aod .
CliadOtte VanMeter.

~'-WV~255!1
. ~s.a .

Middleport Norma
Wilcox, Jon Jacobs, Andrew
Harrington, and Tima.t hy
Smith.
Rutland - Ray Mueller,
Craig
Lightle,
Marta
Blackwood, and Diane
DonCarlos.
Syr.acuse
Philip .
Birrgess and Betty Hoschar.
Long Bottom - Urban
Graf, Judith Graf, Carletan
R. Thomas, Jr. and Joseph
Howard.
Racome - David Zirkle;
Charles Mugrage, Mary
Voss, Dawna Arnold . and
Denise Manuel.
. Reedsville -John Rice.
Albany - Steven Beha.
RSVP volunteers .assisting at the Bloodmobile were
Peggy Harris, Ken Harris,
Mack Leighton, Betty
lohnson, JoAnn Eads and
Virginia Michael.
. Next visit of the bloodmobile to the Senior Center
will be-on Wednesday, June
HI. Hours are l'rum 1 :~ to ·
6:30p.m.
-

Fax: 38U7S.7387
435'1. Sc •••

A"-

matlllnlllinddnll7t.JiltH

(740) 446-7619

ATHENS
7:15 Wat U... ·S bftt

. IIAJ'Ii'ELT'S
M!JIO~INC.

Eallllnwnl
IOd Snoof!ee
1

Your Area's #1 Floor

CPAP llllchi-

Covering Dealer!

Tubing
Flllllrs
Aesperonlcs

Resm8cl

Shaw Carpet and Floor Center

Resldelltlal • Commen:ial•
Wholesale • RetaU

4247 st.te Route fliO
a
~"'·

G•lllpolii,.Obiq

'MEDICAL EQUIPMKNT

......... ,...,.._... .,......y_,...._..
70 Pine Stnet • Cl!llipolis

740-4t&amp;-0007
.Mooday••• Partly sunny.
Isolated showers in the afternoon. Highs around 70. ·
· Northeast winds Sto 10 mph.
· Chance of rain 20 percent. .
. Monday ·n ighL..Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
East winds around S

Powell's

inph . .

700

. Tuelday•..Mostly sunny.
Highs in the mid 70s.
~outheast winds 5 to 10 mph.
· Tuesday · night...Par1ly
i:loudy. Lows in the lower
50s. East winds around
mph.
· Wednesday ... Mostly
&amp;unny. Highs in the mid 70s.

Ea~t Mau1 Street
P o rn,•roy. OH
/4[1-~92-5252

www toodlrmmarkels.com

WHY PAY MORE
EVERY DAY

s

;;;&gt;;:&gt;

ni&amp;ht...

cloudy. Lows in the

,...

Thunday ud 11aunday

. .upt...Partly cloudy. Highs

in the mid 70s. Lows around
50.
Friday...Par1l y
sunny
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in
1he lower 70s. Chance of
rain 30 percent.

l'wp

BY TOM WmtERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

'

15th Aminal
Meigs Football
Golf tourney

aap,-.•• .

Golf Tournament will be
held Saturday, Mi!y J l. !!t
,the Riverside Golf eonrse
at 8:30a.m.
Tlie format is a $60 per
person, bring your· own
team four-mao scramble.
Teams must have a combined handicap of 4Q · or
above with only one team
member under I0. Price
includes golf, cart, lunch,
~d beverages. Prizes will
.be awarded for the top three
teamS.
. For
infonnation,
.;ontact Meigs football
coach Mike CbaDcey at
740-992-2158 or 740-992-

Bv,.KAv
1\SSOCIATED PRESS

e - t - opcjnaOmydllyaonttnol.com
!1ppt11 Stall

Eric Aandalplt, Ssla!ta Wlftar

-

....... -..wv

(740) &lt;4-46-2342, . .. 33
. .ndolphOmydli~.oom

eryan WalterS, 8ponaWitlar
(140) 446-2342, 8Kt. 33
l!""ltertO~.com

(740) 446-2342, . .. 33

Ierum. mydallyt8gio1or"""'

•

•

Scarlet holds
oti'Gray to
win Ohio State
•
scnmmage
BY RusTY M!U£R
ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMB\JS - I f spring
pra¢ces are a springboard
to the regular season, then
Ohio State's intrasquad
scrimmage on Saturday
couldn't have been much
more su~;oessful.

-;fi!;: aev~e~ry~o)~n~e~t!'fu~:-~~
safety Kurt Coleman
"The sky's the limit."
Todd Boeckman and his
backups at quanerback,
Antonio Henton and Joe
Bauserman, each completed
a long pass that Jed to a
touchdown .as the Scarlet
beat the Gray 20-7.
The announced attendance was 76,346. but that
appeared to be inflated on a
gray and rainy day.
"J think a Jot of people
probably bought their tickets and then left when the
rain came." running back
Maurice Wells said. "I didn't see 76,000."
Ohio State officials were
trying to set a nationa'l
record for attendance at
both the men 's lacrosse
game and the spring foot-

PI

•

SH -

Sc.sltet. Ill

Reds rally:against Gagne
for 4-3 win in 10 innings

' Fu: ~ ~ -740 148 1DOi

looatiqns

w

Cavs open playotTs with.win over Washington

CoNrACrUs..

__"' __

In game two, the Eagles with three up, three down in
ag3in had no problems soor- the bottom of the inning to
ing runs early, but they earn the win .
eliminated the errors, held . Eastern hitters in game
the Golden Eagles in check, two included Gordon, who
and scored seven insurance had two, Griffin, Hendrix,
run~ to e,nd the contest early. Bninnon,
Connery, and
. Pierce s fir~t h_omer. ~ Tyler Hendrix. The Eagles
m the second mrung Wtth his had l 0 bits and no el'!'ors for
learn up 3-0, a two-run shot the game, and Belpre had
that was the eventual game- six. and three. respectively.
~mner. Belpre scored tllree
The .n ext game for Eastern
m the bo~m of the second will be Monday at bo.me
on three hits and a walk, b~t ·against
Tri-Valley
that was as close as they d Conference
Hocking
get
0· · ·
f
rf d
Pierce hit bis second
!VISIOn ?e
ate or · ·
home run in the faurth with Start llme will be 5 p.m.
one on. That made the score ·
GMII01
8-3 after E.Rstern had scored
Belpre 13,E.Hiom6
once in lhe third.
e
2121000
685 ·
008320X13122
With just three hits in the B
fifth, Eastern still managed WP - Logue: LP - Hendri&lt;.
seven scores because of
. three walks, a hit batsman,
-~.:.""'
and an ell'Or by Belpre. e
t 5 10 0
231 2 7 _
&lt;:iriffin had a two-RBI dou- e
030 oo 3£ s
ble, and Buckley finished wP- Buckley; LP- Walkins.

CLEVELAND~
·
Flanked by
· personnel, one of his • wn body- ·
BY JIM Alii • ASSOCIATED PRESS
guards and several close
friends, LeBron fames was
· MOTEGI,
Japan
escorted from the arena.
Danica Patrick was always
He was untouchable.
SUTe a woman could win a
lie could have used the .
race. And now the questions protection earlier.
about bet: will surely srop.
Bumped and banged by
· Patrick made it to the · the Wtz.ards on every drive,
~lace sbe wanted to .,e for James · scored 32 points,
s~ long Victory Lane. making two. tough shots in
S.he became the fJTSt female traffic down the stretch as
winner in lndyCar history the Cleveland Cavaliers
Sunday, capturing the Indy opened the NBA playoffs
Japan 300 in her 50th career with an intense 93-86 win
start. ·
·
over . Washington
on
"I'J?•. ~ad :! it1foally hap- Satlil'day.
pen~ ~~YP.~f-old driDetermined to shut . UJi'
ver said. ·· 'But I would be trash-talking Washington'
lying if I told you I dido 't guard DeShawn Stevenson.,
think it would 'be me."
who had called him "over. I· _ ller .owner was ecstatic, rated" last month, James .
--. --.--4--- c....in:sistitfe~or!-- YlQ.lQfteli took -a -physical nnundipo;' - - · .: a~iiit . ::- ":.4mily couJP no~ But he lea the ~aliers f~
congratuJate her enough. All their seventh straight post. of which made Patrick a bit season win over the
· teary.
· .Wizards, who had their
"When it actually bap- chanees in the fourth but
pened, maybe it Wll$ a little missed 10 straight shots and
anticlimactic," she said. scored just two points in the
"Then the emotions came final4:39.
·
out and that was a little girly
Afterward, James felt no
. Ievenson s
Ofme.'.'
need to rub it m
· Win No. 1 was a long 1ace.
~
time coming. · Patrick fm"93-86," he said, "is the
ished a career-best seventh on1y words I need to say."
James scored 20 pi:lints most of them on layups in the second half to lead the
defending
Eastern
Conference
champions,
SPOR.TS BRIEFS
wbo took a 1-0 lead in a
best"Of-seven series that got
off to a physical start and
appears to have a long way
APpholo
to go.
Game 2, or Round 2, if Referee Bob Delaney (26) separates Cleveland Cavaliers' LeBron James, left, and
you will, is Monday night.
Washington Wizards' Brendan Haywood after the two teams scuffled in the second quarter
of an NBA playoff basketball game Saturday in Cleveland. James . and Haywood both
MASON, W.Va. - The
Phs ....
received technical fouls.
15th Annual Meigs Football

Larr, erum. Spa;1e Wltlar

.,

errors, ' in the bottom of the
third, and then they added
three in the fourth and two
in the fifth. The Eagles
scored just one more in the
foq,rtb.
Eastern got two hits from
Pi.eroe and &lt;:iriffin, and. one
hit each from Gordon,
Brannon., Benedum, and
Tyler Hendrix. Belpre held a
12-8 advantage in ·h its, and
Eastern bad five errors.
Senior Dan Buckley came
on in relief of Zach Hendrix..

0064.

It's Just
Around The
Corner

LOW PRICES!

upper40s. ·

BELPRE - The Eastern
High School baseball team
split a pair (If non-confercnce games with the Belpne
Golden Eagles on Saturday.
In the first ,game, Belpne
scored eight runs in :the third
inning and rallied to overtake EHS 13-6. In game
two, the Eagles soored in
each inning, including seven
runs in the fifth, to defeat
Belpre with the mercy-rule
15-3.
Eastern is now 6-8 on the
year.
Junior . Zach Hendrix
pitched in game one, .a nd
Junior Ben Buckley pitched
the second game, striking
out one and walking two.
Titus Pierce was the man
·of the ·day for the Eagles.
The sophomore fmished
with .four hits, two . home

'runs, five RBls, and five
runs scored . .Seni~r Kyle
Gordon and junior Derek
Griftin both had three hits
rota!. Gordon had two RBls,
two walks, and four runs
scored, and Griffin bad
three RBis, a double, and
three runs scored.
Other Eagle hitters were
sophomore Nick Brannon
and
freshman
Tyler
·Hendrix, both with two hits.
Brannon had an RBI, and
Hendrix had a double. Zach
Hendrix had a double and
three walks, and sophomare
Andrew Benedum had a single and a walk. Freshman
Kyle Connery had a single
and walked twice.
In game one, the Eagles
scored two runs in the first,
a run in the .s econd, and two
more in the third to take a 50 lead. But Belpre blew up
for five hits and eight runs,
aided by three Eastern

more

FOODFAIR

40s:·

SPORTSOMYOA.ILYSENTINELCOM

s

594-3571

IIIMk

Pierce hits two home runs, Eagles sp6t at Belpre
S1IIFF II&amp;GiT

·.u

watertord at Eastem. s p.m.
Meigs til Belpre, 5 p.m.
federal Hooking at Southern, 5 p.m.

-ton

At
Wednesday's visit of the
. Red Cross Bloodmobile 1o
the Meigs Senior Center, a
total of 46 units of blood
were .collected.
.The .Q01,1ors by village
were as follows;
Ponieroy- Allen Downie,
Dana
•B unch,
Harley
Jahnson, Rebett RamSburg,
Gerald Rouallt, Barbara

. I

POMEROY - A. sehedultt ot upa;lming high
ICfiOOI wrstty sporting e1111nt&amp; Involving
telm8 tram Me1gs and Gallia counties.

Southern at Trimble, 5 p.m.

PO~OY

~ostly

locAL SCHEDULE

&amp;ope t •
Eastvm at Federal Hooking.
"Wellston at Meigs., 5 p.m.

Bloodmobile
collects 46 units

· Wedaesclay

'

Ibui

B.I NGO

~

Monday, Apri121, 20111

'

interim

AI' photo

Cincinnati Reds' EdWin Encarnacion (28) is congratulated by Paul 6ako after Encarnacion
hit a solo home run off Milwaukee-Brewers pitcher Yovanl Gallardo in the fifth inning of a
baseball game Sunday in Cincinnati. Encarnacion and Bako both hit home runs in the 10th
inning to .tie the game won by the Reds, 4-3, in 10 innings.

CINCINNATI - When
Edwin Encarnacion came to
bat in the bottom of the I Oth
against Brewers closer Eric
Gagne. the few thousand
rain-chilled fans left in the
stands began to boo.
Encarnacion expected it.
The third baseman Jet
Milwaukee {&gt;Ull ahead in the
top of the mning with yet
another error. Then he hit a
solo homer, his second of
the game, that sparked the
Cincinnati Reds toward a
slump-busting, 4:-3 win
Sunday.
.
"I knew my error could
lose the · game," said
Encarnacion, who bas six. of
Cincinnati' s II errors this
season .
Instead, Paul Bako followed with another solo shot
off Gagne ( 1- J), who was
pitching for the-fourth day-in
a row. Ken Griffey Jr. eventually ended it with a runscoring single off Salomon

Torres.
The Reds won for only the
second time .in their last nine
games, a downturn linked to
their strug~ling offense.
Down to therr last at-bat on
Sunday, they finally got it
going .
"I'm still excited,:' manager Dusty Baker said. "We
needed that one so badly big-time. That was a good
script. I can sleep tonigl!t. I
haven't slept wonb nothint:carnacion helped the
Brewers full ah,ead 3-1 in
the top o the I Oth by booting a grounder as he hurri~
to try to start a double play,
Jared Burton (1-l) let in a
run with a wild pitch, and
J.J . Hardy singled home
another.
Milwaukee was only three
outs·from a series sweep .
Manager Ned Yost didn't
have any qualms about
bringing in Gagne to pitch
for the founh straight day.

..............1

�COMM

The Daily Sentinel

I

'

PageA6

··'·

Monday, Apri121, 2oo8

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

,..a

LdiNa P'IJitding IJJOI't rl.lllt - .

'Dille '-sin 10, ~ Bl

·'

NBA playoff roundup, hge.B6
GAl.LJ.roLIS -

Lisa

Halley, who has served as
vire preSident for
Human
Resaurces . for
Hdlzer Health Systems since
May 2007, has been named
ihe System' s ¥ice president.
. Tom Tope. !President and
Chief Executive Officer,
inadi: ihe announcement
last week,
. Born in West Uberty, Ky. ,
Ha11ey graduated from
Gallia Academy
High
School, attended Marshall
University and completed
her bachelor's &lt;degFee in
Human !Resources from the
University ·of Mluyland in
2007. Sbe began her career give her our support in
!II Holzer Medical Center in accepting fl tremendous
!'981 as an Administrative challenge as she ,guides 1he
Assistant. lin April1991, she overall provisicm afHR serbecame an assistant to the vices to maintain the Holzer
Director of PersOnneL From Health System as .the
2003 td' 2005, she served as . employer of choil:;e in
H1t Manager and from 2005 Southeastern Ohio."
-2007,asDrrector.
, .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .~

E~l:*E
ti~s~::r~~rn~~:

recrnitment, retention and
ongoing develapment of a
superim workforce.
Tape said "We congratu- ·
late Ms. Halley on this significant achievement and

. WIN UPTO $1,000 ·!!!
P·LA~ · co~IJeRA·
·LL
y
.
.
.
I

llpMpr Am, 21

&amp;ope·

Gi~a

SortboH
Waterbrd at Eas1em, 5 p.m.
Meigs til Be~. 5 p,m.
Federal HOCking at Southern. 5 p.in.
Pmrte~•zz

&amp;opp, hel
Eastom a1 RM&gt;r Valley; 5 p.m.
Marietta at Meigs, 5 p.m.

·G iota-

---

Eastem at Riwr Val~. 5 p.m.
Meigs at Point PleaSant, 4:SO p.m.

EOIIIBm. ~gs at Vinton County, 4:30

p.m. -

,

Southam at Rito'&amp;r Valley, 4:30 ·p .m.

ao,.a a.zs
, r

Wwd• ·

Eastvm at Parkar$burg South, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Point Pleasant, 5 p.m.

Glrta-.
Southam at RawnBWOOd, 5 p.m.

7

Alx•.M

--

Eastom a1 Fedo!al

5p.m.
·

-g.5 p.m. ·

at Meigs, 5 p.m.

Sputhem at Trimble, 5 p.m.

Danica Patrick
becomes first .
female driver to
win lndyCar race

Smith, Robert Smith. Marsha

David
King,
Taylor, Mic~
Neutzlina, Gregory White,
Dennis •l mmore, i(]uistine
J JU!lZ.
Jdhn RcOOvian,
Stcpbcn ~. Eliz:Jibeth
BambBA.

MllrviJ!

TODAY'S

NUMIJER·-Is:

ICon•,

.Anna
Fnmces
s~. Ridbaid 0w,pe11
8, .layce M. Hall, Jean Dum,
Mel¥a. · Tt:acy, Raymond

UJ111CF,A.-t

- JlS..l. SiiaSfiB_-

.~

DoonallaYidsQn,:aod .
CliadOtte VanMeter.

~'-WV~255!1
. ~s.a .

Middleport Norma
Wilcox, Jon Jacobs, Andrew
Harrington, and Tima.t hy
Smith.
Rutland - Ray Mueller,
Craig
Lightle,
Marta
Blackwood, and Diane
DonCarlos.
Syr.acuse
Philip .
Birrgess and Betty Hoschar.
Long Bottom - Urban
Graf, Judith Graf, Carletan
R. Thomas, Jr. and Joseph
Howard.
Racome - David Zirkle;
Charles Mugrage, Mary
Voss, Dawna Arnold . and
Denise Manuel.
. Reedsville -John Rice.
Albany - Steven Beha.
RSVP volunteers .assisting at the Bloodmobile were
Peggy Harris, Ken Harris,
Mack Leighton, Betty
lohnson, JoAnn Eads and
Virginia Michael.
. Next visit of the bloodmobile to the Senior Center
will be-on Wednesday, June
HI. Hours are l'rum 1 :~ to ·
6:30p.m.
-

Fax: 38U7S.7387
435'1. Sc •••

A"-

matlllnlllinddnll7t.JiltH

(740) 446-7619

ATHENS
7:15 Wat U... ·S bftt

. IIAJ'Ii'ELT'S
M!JIO~INC.

Eallllnwnl
IOd Snoof!ee
1

Your Area's #1 Floor

CPAP llllchi-

Covering Dealer!

Tubing
Flllllrs
Aesperonlcs

Resm8cl

Shaw Carpet and Floor Center

Resldelltlal • Commen:ial•
Wholesale • RetaU

4247 st.te Route fliO
a
~"'·

G•lllpolii,.Obiq

'MEDICAL EQUIPMKNT

......... ,...,.._... .,......y_,...._..
70 Pine Stnet • Cl!llipolis

740-4t&amp;-0007
.Mooday••• Partly sunny.
Isolated showers in the afternoon. Highs around 70. ·
· Northeast winds Sto 10 mph.
· Chance of rain 20 percent. .
. Monday ·n ighL..Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
East winds around S

Powell's

inph . .

700

. Tuelday•..Mostly sunny.
Highs in the mid 70s.
~outheast winds 5 to 10 mph.
· Tuesday · night...Par1ly
i:loudy. Lows in the lower
50s. East winds around
mph.
· Wednesday ... Mostly
&amp;unny. Highs in the mid 70s.

Ea~t Mau1 Street
P o rn,•roy. OH
/4[1-~92-5252

www toodlrmmarkels.com

WHY PAY MORE
EVERY DAY

s

;;;&gt;;:&gt;

ni&amp;ht...

cloudy. Lows in the

,...

Thunday ud 11aunday

. .upt...Partly cloudy. Highs

in the mid 70s. Lows around
50.
Friday...Par1l y
sunny
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in
1he lower 70s. Chance of
rain 30 percent.

l'wp

BY TOM WmtERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

'

15th Aminal
Meigs Football
Golf tourney

aap,-.•• .

Golf Tournament will be
held Saturday, Mi!y J l. !!t
,the Riverside Golf eonrse
at 8:30a.m.
Tlie format is a $60 per
person, bring your· own
team four-mao scramble.
Teams must have a combined handicap of 4Q · or
above with only one team
member under I0. Price
includes golf, cart, lunch,
~d beverages. Prizes will
.be awarded for the top three
teamS.
. For
infonnation,
.;ontact Meigs football
coach Mike CbaDcey at
740-992-2158 or 740-992-

Bv,.KAv
1\SSOCIATED PRESS

e - t - opcjnaOmydllyaonttnol.com
!1ppt11 Stall

Eric Aandalplt, Ssla!ta Wlftar

-

....... -..wv

(740) &lt;4-46-2342, . .. 33
. .ndolphOmydli~.oom

eryan WalterS, 8ponaWitlar
(140) 446-2342, 8Kt. 33
l!""ltertO~.com

(740) 446-2342, . .. 33

Ierum. mydallyt8gio1or"""'

•

•

Scarlet holds
oti'Gray to
win Ohio State
•
scnmmage
BY RusTY M!U£R
ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMB\JS - I f spring
pra¢ces are a springboard
to the regular season, then
Ohio State's intrasquad
scrimmage on Saturday
couldn't have been much
more su~;oessful.

-;fi!;: aev~e~ry~o)~n~e~t!'fu~:-~~
safety Kurt Coleman
"The sky's the limit."
Todd Boeckman and his
backups at quanerback,
Antonio Henton and Joe
Bauserman, each completed
a long pass that Jed to a
touchdown .as the Scarlet
beat the Gray 20-7.
The announced attendance was 76,346. but that
appeared to be inflated on a
gray and rainy day.
"J think a Jot of people
probably bought their tickets and then left when the
rain came." running back
Maurice Wells said. "I didn't see 76,000."
Ohio State officials were
trying to set a nationa'l
record for attendance at
both the men 's lacrosse
game and the spring foot-

PI

•

SH -

Sc.sltet. Ill

Reds rally:against Gagne
for 4-3 win in 10 innings

' Fu: ~ ~ -740 148 1DOi

looatiqns

w

Cavs open playotTs with.win over Washington

CoNrACrUs..

__"' __

In game two, the Eagles with three up, three down in
ag3in had no problems soor- the bottom of the inning to
ing runs early, but they earn the win .
eliminated the errors, held . Eastern hitters in game
the Golden Eagles in check, two included Gordon, who
and scored seven insurance had two, Griffin, Hendrix,
run~ to e,nd the contest early. Bninnon,
Connery, and
. Pierce s fir~t h_omer. ~ Tyler Hendrix. The Eagles
m the second mrung Wtth his had l 0 bits and no el'!'ors for
learn up 3-0, a two-run shot the game, and Belpre had
that was the eventual game- six. and three. respectively.
~mner. Belpre scored tllree
The .n ext game for Eastern
m the bo~m of the second will be Monday at bo.me
on three hits and a walk, b~t ·against
Tri-Valley
that was as close as they d Conference
Hocking
get
0· · ·
f
rf d
Pierce hit bis second
!VISIOn ?e
ate or · ·
home run in the faurth with Start llme will be 5 p.m.
one on. That made the score ·
GMII01
8-3 after E.Rstern had scored
Belpre 13,E.Hiom6
once in lhe third.
e
2121000
685 ·
008320X13122
With just three hits in the B
fifth, Eastern still managed WP - Logue: LP - Hendri&lt;.
seven scores because of
. three walks, a hit batsman,
-~.:.""'
and an ell'Or by Belpre. e
t 5 10 0
231 2 7 _
&lt;:iriffin had a two-RBI dou- e
030 oo 3£ s
ble, and Buckley finished wP- Buckley; LP- Walkins.

CLEVELAND~
·
Flanked by
· personnel, one of his • wn body- ·
BY JIM Alii • ASSOCIATED PRESS
guards and several close
friends, LeBron fames was
· MOTEGI,
Japan
escorted from the arena.
Danica Patrick was always
He was untouchable.
SUTe a woman could win a
lie could have used the .
race. And now the questions protection earlier.
about bet: will surely srop.
Bumped and banged by
· Patrick made it to the · the Wtz.ards on every drive,
~lace sbe wanted to .,e for James · scored 32 points,
s~ long Victory Lane. making two. tough shots in
S.he became the fJTSt female traffic down the stretch as
winner in lndyCar history the Cleveland Cavaliers
Sunday, capturing the Indy opened the NBA playoffs
Japan 300 in her 50th career with an intense 93-86 win
start. ·
·
over . Washington
on
"I'J?•. ~ad :! it1foally hap- Satlil'day.
pen~ ~~YP.~f-old driDetermined to shut . UJi'
ver said. ·· 'But I would be trash-talking Washington'
lying if I told you I dido 't guard DeShawn Stevenson.,
think it would 'be me."
who had called him "over. I· _ ller .owner was ecstatic, rated" last month, James .
--. --.--4--- c....in:sistitfe~or!-- YlQ.lQfteli took -a -physical nnundipo;' - - · .: a~iiit . ::- ":.4mily couJP no~ But he lea the ~aliers f~
congratuJate her enough. All their seventh straight post. of which made Patrick a bit season win over the
· teary.
· .Wizards, who had their
"When it actually bap- chanees in the fourth but
pened, maybe it Wll$ a little missed 10 straight shots and
anticlimactic," she said. scored just two points in the
"Then the emotions came final4:39.
·
out and that was a little girly
Afterward, James felt no
. Ievenson s
Ofme.'.'
need to rub it m
· Win No. 1 was a long 1ace.
~
time coming. · Patrick fm"93-86," he said, "is the
ished a career-best seventh on1y words I need to say."
James scored 20 pi:lints most of them on layups in the second half to lead the
defending
Eastern
Conference
champions,
SPOR.TS BRIEFS
wbo took a 1-0 lead in a
best"Of-seven series that got
off to a physical start and
appears to have a long way
APpholo
to go.
Game 2, or Round 2, if Referee Bob Delaney (26) separates Cleveland Cavaliers' LeBron James, left, and
you will, is Monday night.
Washington Wizards' Brendan Haywood after the two teams scuffled in the second quarter
of an NBA playoff basketball game Saturday in Cleveland. James . and Haywood both
MASON, W.Va. - The
Phs ....
received technical fouls.
15th Annual Meigs Football

Larr, erum. Spa;1e Wltlar

.,

errors, ' in the bottom of the
third, and then they added
three in the fourth and two
in the fifth. The Eagles
scored just one more in the
foq,rtb.
Eastern got two hits from
Pi.eroe and &lt;:iriffin, and. one
hit each from Gordon,
Brannon., Benedum, and
Tyler Hendrix. Belpre held a
12-8 advantage in ·h its, and
Eastern bad five errors.
Senior Dan Buckley came
on in relief of Zach Hendrix..

0064.

It's Just
Around The
Corner

LOW PRICES!

upper40s. ·

BELPRE - The Eastern
High School baseball team
split a pair (If non-confercnce games with the Belpne
Golden Eagles on Saturday.
In the first ,game, Belpne
scored eight runs in :the third
inning and rallied to overtake EHS 13-6. In game
two, the Eagles soored in
each inning, including seven
runs in the fifth, to defeat
Belpre with the mercy-rule
15-3.
Eastern is now 6-8 on the
year.
Junior . Zach Hendrix
pitched in game one, .a nd
Junior Ben Buckley pitched
the second game, striking
out one and walking two.
Titus Pierce was the man
·of the ·day for the Eagles.
The sophomore fmished
with .four hits, two . home

'runs, five RBls, and five
runs scored . .Seni~r Kyle
Gordon and junior Derek
Griftin both had three hits
rota!. Gordon had two RBls,
two walks, and four runs
scored, and Griffin bad
three RBis, a double, and
three runs scored.
Other Eagle hitters were
sophomore Nick Brannon
and
freshman
Tyler
·Hendrix, both with two hits.
Brannon had an RBI, and
Hendrix had a double. Zach
Hendrix had a double and
three walks, and sophomare
Andrew Benedum had a single and a walk. Freshman
Kyle Connery had a single
and walked twice.
In game one, the Eagles
scored two runs in the first,
a run in the .s econd, and two
more in the third to take a 50 lead. But Belpre blew up
for five hits and eight runs,
aided by three Eastern

more

FOODFAIR

40s:·

SPORTSOMYOA.ILYSENTINELCOM

s

594-3571

IIIMk

Pierce hits two home runs, Eagles sp6t at Belpre
S1IIFF II&amp;GiT

·.u

watertord at Eastem. s p.m.
Meigs til Belpre, 5 p.m.
federal Hooking at Southern, 5 p.m.

-ton

At
Wednesday's visit of the
. Red Cross Bloodmobile 1o
the Meigs Senior Center, a
total of 46 units of blood
were .collected.
.The .Q01,1ors by village
were as follows;
Ponieroy- Allen Downie,
Dana
•B unch,
Harley
Jahnson, Rebett RamSburg,
Gerald Rouallt, Barbara

. I

POMEROY - A. sehedultt ot upa;lming high
ICfiOOI wrstty sporting e1111nt&amp; Involving
telm8 tram Me1gs and Gallia counties.

Southern at Trimble, 5 p.m.

PO~OY

~ostly

locAL SCHEDULE

&amp;ope t •
Eastvm at Federal Hooking.
"Wellston at Meigs., 5 p.m.

Bloodmobile
collects 46 units

· Wedaesclay

'

Ibui

B.I NGO

~

Monday, Apri121, 20111

'

interim

AI' photo

Cincinnati Reds' EdWin Encarnacion (28) is congratulated by Paul 6ako after Encarnacion
hit a solo home run off Milwaukee-Brewers pitcher Yovanl Gallardo in the fifth inning of a
baseball game Sunday in Cincinnati. Encarnacion and Bako both hit home runs in the 10th
inning to .tie the game won by the Reds, 4-3, in 10 innings.

CINCINNATI - When
Edwin Encarnacion came to
bat in the bottom of the I Oth
against Brewers closer Eric
Gagne. the few thousand
rain-chilled fans left in the
stands began to boo.
Encarnacion expected it.
The third baseman Jet
Milwaukee {&gt;Ull ahead in the
top of the mning with yet
another error. Then he hit a
solo homer, his second of
the game, that sparked the
Cincinnati Reds toward a
slump-busting, 4:-3 win
Sunday.
.
"I knew my error could
lose the · game," said
Encarnacion, who bas six. of
Cincinnati' s II errors this
season .
Instead, Paul Bako followed with another solo shot
off Gagne ( 1- J), who was
pitching for the-fourth day-in
a row. Ken Griffey Jr. eventually ended it with a runscoring single off Salomon

Torres.
The Reds won for only the
second time .in their last nine
games, a downturn linked to
their strug~ling offense.
Down to therr last at-bat on
Sunday, they finally got it
going .
"I'm still excited,:' manager Dusty Baker said. "We
needed that one so badly big-time. That was a good
script. I can sleep tonigl!t. I
haven't slept wonb nothint:carnacion helped the
Brewers full ah,ead 3-1 in
the top o the I Oth by booting a grounder as he hurri~
to try to start a double play,
Jared Burton (1-l) let in a
run with a wild pitch, and
J.J . Hardy singled home
another.
Milwaukee was only three
outs·from a series sweep .
Manager Ned Yost didn't
have any qualms about
bringing in Gagne to pitch
for the founh straight day.

..............1

�Page Bz • The Daily Sentinel

.

.

www.mydailysentinel.CIOm

Monday, April Zt. :zooS

·Monday, April21, 2008

Jantes expOCts rough stufT to continue against WizanJs
BY T011111 W1111BtS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

ClEVELAND- LeBron
JliiDCs rudn 'I oomplain about
diem at ilhe time. but thnse
lwtd shoves.. well-placed
. elbows and rougher-thanDBmtal
fduls that the
~gton Wizards inflioted upon him in Game I had
:an effecL .
One •day later, James wasa't sore. But the 6-fom~s.
250-pounder said be was a
lot ShoJter and Lighter.
~rm
about 6-4, 215
today," be joked.
Jllllles endured .a physical
:pounding in Oeveland's 93·86 win in the series opener.
.;an intense game that at times
·resembled a rugged version
·of two-handed backyard
touch frool!ball. Beginning
:wilib a l'lbot across me face
.from Andiay Blatcbe - .a
.blow he later Fetal[atod by
dlrowing .an elbow into tile
furward's chin- lames was
a marlred man. .
The Wizards hacked and
whacked hiffi.
The NBA's scoring cham-

picrn stilJ man~ed to soore
32 points.. and made the
game's two !biggest baskets
in the final I :37 as the
Cavaliers won their seventh
· straig1n postseason game
rover the Wiz.aFds., illheir fiirstround opponent llihFee years
nmnil\ll.
James
expected
tlhe
Wizards to oome afi:or him,
and he knGws 'lihey~re not
abouttG swp.
"I ha~ no problem gellling
hit," said J·ames.. who went
to dae &amp;ee-.tiwl!lw line ·14
times. "But there's a di«er.ence between a foul and a
!LeBron fotil. If rllllfs what
1'heir game plan ts; I have to
be able to get 'back up and
continue w Bet my game
speak for itself."
Sun«!ay was spent working
on adjusttnents as the teams
prepared for · Monday' s
Game 2,
Befcrre bitting the praot.ice
floor, the Wizan:ls lamented
missing open shots dcrwn the
stretch. They carried .a fcrurp0int lead into dJe foll111:b
.quarter but then went" 4-of20 in the period and misfired

on I 0 straight shots in the
final4:38.
"We had Ollf fair share of
opportunities," Caron Butler
said. "We just didn't Cl\l)italize on tlhem. You've got to
·tittish a Iteam li!Qe nhat ·when
ycru've got them dow1n
because they have a ,;upflfstar who in the ~ourth quarter can really score some
q:x!lints." ·
·
Despite BMing their eighth
sir.alg;bt G31l!le I , lhe
W'WUtds, whn .came in talk.iqg Jl lbi;g ;game, WeFe eruJOilTJiged by ·tlheir pe!if01l01ance.
~betlt Attenas ·soor.ed 24
points arul shcrw.ed signs of
beoom.iog the pre-knee
surgery Agent Zero; they
oontr(J)lled the tempo for
much of the game, and the
W'IZ3l'ds were still leading
&amp;4-82 befcrre lapsing into an
.offensive dmughl.
Antawn .bmison went 0for-S in t'he i0urth and
missed three strai~ht shots
- ·rwo of them 3s - that
oould have ohangecl the out.oome.
"i had some open shots,n
be said. "I took four or five

www.mydallySe:ltinetcom

Qertbune- Sentinel- l\egtster
CLASSIFIED

that 1 should have lfhougtn w.ants them tcr make James Saturday, Cavs ooaeh Mike
about, and a couple of 3s earn everything he .gets, Brcrwn said James ~could
where I could have -drov.e even if ilhat means they bave have played for the
and created shots fM &lt;Other to bang !him ar.ound.
Browns."
people. But I got -some
"'[was ih~~PPY that we gave
~ames gets his share of
decent ;ihots out 1here. rm -solid, llard •00Dtests in the preferential whistles that go
not beaning m~self lll.(!ISiae paint, n lhe said. "They •t o lthe :game's \biggest stars.
the head for 'laking them.~
.weren't fll\grant, but they And !Brown isaccustomedlo
Arenas d.idh 't prJWt!ioe were meant to protect . the seeing James ttake lhard ihits,
Sunday because of .a rim. And as l(l)llg .as 1they're but wonders wby 'his starsprained right wrist, but he's ~crt flagrant, I think ihey are doesn't get more calJs.
"l.f ycru watch bitn en driexpected tlllplay i n Ginne 2. · fPmfessiemil play•."
Besides fue untimely
JoFdan b!crws he can't ves, he'·s ttcymg Ito avoid
shocrting •woes, the Wi!llll1ds' .a1lcrw James 1cr get into a guys to the _r.&gt;ip.t where we
biggest mistake may ~ave !I'h)lthm, As he showed in Jast tell him, stay streng,"'
been giving lames tlhe year'-s confer~nce finals Bmwn said. ~He lmows he's
chance to put them away.
JJ,gai.nst Oetf(J)it., James single gaing to ·g et hit, and UIIIess
He always bas.
lbandedly -can win a series.
he gets absolutely clobbered,
First; he made two free
""How many times have "they 're not going to calJ the
throws to tie it 84-alJ before you ·seen LeBFon · get foul."
·
driving through traffic for .a cl!arges?" J(l)fdan said. ""He's
lames understands that
go-,ahead layup. Then, he · "5(1) good with the body con- calls won'·t always go his blasted
past
nemesis trol. He's so good .at avoid- way. He knows what's oom~
DeShawn Stevenson, who ing cllarges ,that flat out right ing in &lt;Game 2, and Game 3
had called him "averrated'' a now, we .are not ,talcing and Game 4 and .a s long .as
few 1 weeks bao"k, · .a nd cl!arges .an LeBron. Maybe the se!lies lasts- mere pundropped a runner •to put the Oelonte
West.
Maybe ·isbment.
·
Cavs in contml
[i)amcrn JGncs.
"il'm not going to tty and
Wizards coach Eddie · ~B ut" we a.in 't talcing retaliate if something hapJordan, who called lames charges on 'LeBron lames. pens," he said. "I don 't think
"the best player this side ,(\)f SG &lt;it's out there .and it's done anybody is trying to hurt me.
They do want to commit
the Roc!..")' Mountains," w.as and so be -it."
After watcbing his star hard fouls. I see that. But
pleased with the way his
players handled No. 23. He player get bounced around I've got to protect myself."

Gallia
County

OH
Websites:
In One Week With Us
www.mydailytribune.com
·
E-mail
www.mydailysentinel.com
classified@ mydailytribune.com 'REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
www.mydailyregister.com
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To -P IIIee
~ribune
Sentinel
l\egister
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342. (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

.,.c...a_I_I__..,..---:----____;Or;.;.·.;.F•-.11To

.Oflree ~to~~

MINNEAPOUS - Even
as his average hovered in the
.220s through the first two
. weeks of !!he season, Justin
M001e311 d.idn 't have to look
far to find -e ncouragement
· He may not have been
knocking the cover off ·the
ball all game long, but when
be came to the plate with
runners in seoring positicrn,
he was as clGse to a sure
tlting as there is in this game.
~You try to always look
for the positive. try to igncrre
the average and teU yourself
you want :to be up there in
lbe big situations," said
· Morneau. whose big lOthinning hit gave Minnesota a
2-1 victory over Cleveland
. on Sunday.
Morneau whiffed on his
fll"St chance to beat the"
lndiaos 'but the 2006 AL

Patrick·

7

frooi Page Bl
in the standings last year
when her best finish was
second in the race at
Detroit's Belle isle. Her first
lndyCar race was in 2005 at
Homestead-Miami.
"I've been asked so many
times when and if 1 can win
my frrst race,'' she said.
"And, finally, no more of
those questions."
Patrick was welcomed by
her family near the podium. .
"There was a lot of "I
Jove you,' and 'congratulations,' Patrick said. "My
dad said it was the best day
of his life."
Michael Andretti, coowner of Andretti Qreen
Racing; callej:l his driver a·
"{antastic ~rson."
"I'm thrilled for her that

MVP had a pFenty "good feeling wilib twcr outs ,a nd
Brendan Harris en driFd base
in tlhe IOth.
After ·strikil\g eut wi.11h a
runner on second in die
eigh11h inning, Momeau
~&gt;queered a ~le lhrtml,gh
lhe light gdC of ttbe infield
and pUDlJI""' bis Wit as Hatris
jogged borne wilh lhe wmni.ugrun.
.
Mm&lt;neau has bit safely ill
13 af b.is la.sl: 15 ;games to
raise his a"eril£e ito . Z69. He
is 9-for-15 {.600i ·wilil l1
RBis with IIIIDilers in soori.ng
positicrn this season.
~He's dte guy we want up
tlhere in big siruati(J)ns,~
Twins
manager
Ron
Gardenhlre said.

Rafael &amp;rez (Q-Il took the
loss in relief of an impressi\le staJt . from Paul Byrd.,
and ·t he defending AL.
Central cllan1pions ba111e lost
eight of :their last II.

with the worst slugging per()lev.eland's best ,chance .get .another crack .a t it.
.came -w~th pinch.;runner
"In •t he ninth inning I
centage (.354)intheA[...
ln a de11elopment as puz- J.amey CiuiFoll on second want to lbe 'liP :there. 'I n the
zling as Detroit's "6-J 3 st:a11t, !base with one out in the l'Oth inning, I want 'lo be up
l!be powediul Jrulians BiM!ql ninth. But Carlos Gomez there w.ith.1hatwintting run
was just a f.ew i)lCitlCilt8;ge made a brilliant diving catch on base," Morneau said .
points abeJ!d &lt;6frlte 1\Wls :at of a flare by Ryan 1Garko to "You have to have 1'he oon.300- But Tiillvis R•fior:r, sballcrw center field, and fulence and pr~are yourGrady SiremM.e ,andiiOOstm Gut!illiifez just missed an self for that .at-bat and say,
hcavy-swil\llin_g llm"be &lt;£im- ema-base .hit when his 'line 'AIJ night, ~ew [ want to
ply haMen'l !been~ it .drive ,crlf Pat Neshek !landed win the game."'
mdhes .outside tthe left~:f!ield
Notes: Twins iRF jason
done .early in-the fieU(l)ll·
Byrd ga~e up-&lt;eme mn :and foul tine befcrre lbe &lt;blooped Kubel bit a foul !ball in the
six P,its iin .·seven inrri~s . •out w sboJtstcrp.
first .inning that ricocheted
Fran'k!lin GullilliiTQ''ti ltB[
"'I !think ·crur hitting is ,off,aspeaker haogiog •on the
single :in the :Seoond was all goil\ll to .get ;gcring;" Byrd lfu.ird"base side. 3B &lt;Casey
ilile l.ndians ccruid . uster said. ·" lt &lt;is just .a matter of !Blake caught the ball, but
against iBik.er. ·
time. I d@n'tlthink you press per the rules, it w.a s out of
"'I itbiiik w~ iDeed to bear :the panic button m anything, play once it 1ouched 11he
&lt;do\Vn. Maybe &lt;there is 1100 !but I tthink you realize the speaker. IK&lt;ubel eventually
muoh thinking, -and &lt;We UUSl games are ;imp&lt;m:aot:and:you struck
OUt.
J.im
need to pl~y, relax, 'believe have to win games."
Rosenhaus ·made 'h is MLB
in ourselves," Casey Blake
M&lt;mleau !had .a chance to debut as ·t he Indians radio
said. 'This offense :is good. puttlte '{"wins .ahelu:l when he play-by-play
mao
on
Good things will/happen !I'm'"' carne itcr rthe plate with two WTAM, filling in fcrr il'om
us. lt' s not llihe jab ofDust one ·I(J)uts tin .the eighth, but the big Hamilton, whcr was attendguy. l'he whole group needs Canadian lefty chased a slid- ing his son·•s higb schQo1
to-do it."
.er .and was only too &lt;happy to · baseball game.

ilile ·mGnkey is linally off of you,"' saj.Q Patrick.. wl\o with about I 0 li\])S . tu go
hef. baCk,". -Wd..: .:Awhi:tti. ...:.fini~hfld 5 ~ - seoood~nd . I e lWillr.fmmfuUJ!f!h 1•f
oo.owner of AndJ:eui Green .a head of Castroneve·s on · sepond aliter D an Wbeldon
Racing. "We hl1111.e all .t he 1.5-mile· Twin Ring and.Tony Kanaan pitted on
belie"'ed in bee and she Motegi ovaL
the I 96th.
proved today mat She is .a
" It was a fuel-strategy
After flying for abou~ 12
wiuoer. Fr.mkly,l think. &lt;this race, but my team calJed it _ hours to attend the finish of
i.s the first .of maoy.n
perfectly for me,n Patrick the last raoe in the Ohllo"IP
At die 2005 Indy 500, said. «I knew l w.as on the Car World Series Sunday iin
Patrick nemty ;w~n lhe pole same strategy .as H.elio and Long
Beach,
Calif.,
and became1hc 6rsl femal.e when l passed him for the Patrick,
appearing
Ariv~ Ito lead die ~&gt;liCe. She . il.ead. I oouldn) lbelie¥e it.
refreshed and relaxed, •gave
wound up ' f!MIIllh, tbl: best This js fabulo\)s." ·
a lot of the Clledit fcrr her
finish by a woman :at Indy
Patrick started from the win to team eqgineer KyJe
and a resvlt :tbat beJpe"d her · llhlrd 11crw and made her Moyer.
claim rookie of !the
final pit ·stcrp under caqtion
"i knew that the kst 'tiliJrt
honors.
.
·
on me 14811h lap, alGng was going to be iim,pmt1iit.
Sun4ay'u~. which ,_,.as
with Castro.neves and Ed that was a good call ili'om
delayed a .day because of ll · Calpenter_ All lhe leaders the pits from Kyle Mcry.er,
wet track, was won by a were ~g it easy, ~aving who calls my race&amp;, itll pit
combination-of tJOOI oom- fuel .after lhe :ensuing on the end of the yell@w
posure and shrewd strategy. restart .and Patrick stayed flag. " she said. "It •was
Patrick took the lead from within sight, reali74ng ·she going to be close Gn .fuel..
pole-sitter
Hetio ·w ould ha"e a tlhance when but we w.ere mdie prooess
Castroneves on the I 98th the top contenders headed of giving ourselves .t he best
lap in the 200-lap race.
to the pits late "in the race.
opportunity possible.
"When I had to talk into
Patrick was as low as
"As scron as w.e .went
my radio after the race, aLII eighth place .on the I 89th green after that yellow illag,
could say was 'Thank lap, but Carpenter pi~ted it was alJ about saving

year

not get ~ down on himse)f .
and belp t:be team any w.ay,
shape or. form. n
. from Page 81
Another cool, wet .afternoon made it tough on the
The ·closer had been throw- h.irters. A · steady _rain fell
ingr well lately, converting throughout, and fans bunhis last five chances, and dled themselves in jackets
assured Yost tha-t: he could., and hooded sweat shins
against the 56-degree chill.
get those last three outs.
The oul y thing that' the
"He felt good," Yost said.
teams
managed through the
"I i:beck with my relievers
first
nine
innings was one
every day. It was pushing it
a little bit, but he felt good, homer apiece - Hardy in
the fourth, Encarnacion in
be felt loose."
the
sixth.
The feeling didn't lasL
Milwaukee's
Yovani
"I felt very good." Gagne Gallardo, activated off
the
said. "I got behind in the disabled list before the
count. That's the thing:
f
You've got to get ahead. I ~ame, allowed only our
its through eight innings. ·
didn't do that today."
The right-fiandef proved his
After G&amp;Jlle gave up the sursically repaired left knee
back·to-back homers and wali fine by throwi!IJ 112
walked Scott Hattebcra. pitches.
Salomon Torres relieved
~n Harans waa sick In
hl•
start last '1\ielldl_y, when
and pve up an infield &amp;in·
~ by Brandon Phillips, the Cub10 piled up five runi
Orlfl'ey ainalcd over the In ~~ lnnlnJI 111·5 vlcto.beld of rlaht fielder Corey ry at Wrlaley Field. He wa1
Hlrt to end the aame and back in form Sunday, allow·
Bnclrnlclon'1 ml11Cry.
Ina four hltsln elaht mnina•
"Eddie's a ~real auy," while 1trlkina out elaht.
His only alarina ini lake
' Orift'ey Hid. 'He work•
IW'd every day. He makes Cllllle agamst Hardy, one of
miltlkel, but he's able to~~o numerous Brewers hitter&amp;
up there and make up for 11. who have yet to find their
You want him to go out and stroke. The shonstop was a

Reds .

'

"'We've got to figure thij&gt;
offiense out," Indians manag•er Eri.c Wedge said. "We' ve
gm better players in there.
We've g""t JOOI!ter lhitt.ers in
there. There iis ncr excuses.
"The. guys l'hat .IU1C 'SpinniQg
their Wheels have 110 ifuJd ;a
w.ay to &lt;gel going.n
•.
Hams had ilhree lhits and .a
!h(J)me nm and Soon Baker
a'llow.ed one run and fiv.e lrits
lin -seven innings fur d:le
Twiins, who took ltW&lt;&gt; &lt;Of
ihr.ee · ilirom the Indians
rdespi~ 'SOOl'ling only five
runs · lllhe series.
Matt Guemier (1-l~ illhrew
a scoreless inning Ito :get the
win in a·aaw-soollin,g gr;inder
tbat &amp;houldD't have oome as
.a SU!prise in a game featurtiqg lllbetwo worst offenses in
the American League.
The Twins haYe sccrred
mcrre than five runs in a
game just four times this
season and entered the .day

or

fmlt-ti.me Ali-Star last season, when be hit26 homers,
but bas struggled to keep his
average above .200 in April.
Qn his fust swing .against
!Wang in the fourth, be sent
a belt-hlgh fastball toward
the .upper cleck in left fieLd
for his first 'hmner. Haroy
also ilhrew Adam Dunn out
at the" plate on a relay as he
tried to score standing up
from first base on Jeff
Keppinger's double in the
fourth inning.
Notes: ·
Mil waukee
optioned utility playCI; Joe
Dillon to Triple· A Nashville
to open a roster. ·spot for
Gallardo. Dillon was primarily a pinch hitter, going
2-for·l 0 1n nine James. ...
The Rcdl put reliever David
Woathen on die 15-day DL
with an intl~ netYc in
IUa rlaht elbow. The move .
open a lpol for RHP Matt
Belllle, who II e~pected tel
be ~etlvated off t.&amp;e DL to
atart
Monday' a
aalinll the Dodam, ...
Encarnacion has hlt in I 0
straight aames, matching
his
career
high.
. ..
Cincinnati's
Corey
Pattcr110n extended his
slump to 0-for-22.

aame

ifueL''
.
.
Patrick said, "'l'hat wa8 a
.P.miek said she hegan:l((l) ~mg. relief
7.-·~-'t-·
~ook for Castrone111es with w.iiited for
about
liiJls to gcr.
wuuld ·have happened a
"l knew I was 1"2 (p0si- long time ago, but &lt;r m not .
.t ion two~ by then . Five laps. going to argue with the prolater, I see be's backing .up, gram .. lt happened the way
iiavti.ng fuel, n she said. " I it was supposed to happen
&lt;Was like., 'Hey, k:ick it up a and I believe .everything
notch and get by. ' If this is happens for. a reason."
what~ comes dewn to, you
· Scott Dixon finished
better not think tcr yourself third; I 0.0559 seconds
I wish I had tried a little bit . behind Patrick. Wheld"'n
was fou11th and Kanaan
!harder.
"It .p robably would have fifth.
happened wbe.t ber I w.ould
ti.D Japan, Castroneves,
have pushed or D(J)t because awarded the pole position
it seemed like he was run- after qualifying was rained
Ding out of fuel quite a hit out Friday, said Patrick ran
at •the end. But it was really a great race.
"With five laps to go, I
very nice ·to drive tby him at
that i]!!Oint."
was
saving
fuel,"
Eve.n then she said she Castroneves said. "When
wasn't sure she was going Danica :passed me; [ realto win until Moyer came on ized she was the leader. She
lihe radio and told .her, "You did a great job, passed me
can .use .as much fuel as you fair and square and that
want. Bring it around, the shows . you how competi.cbec~ ftag is yours."
· tive our series is."

m

Word Ads

OearllfirM

Disp·! ay

D•lly Jn..Column: 1 : 00 p.m .

Monday thru Friday

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m..

DaaulpHDMi • ~MIIIde A PriCie • AVOid AllbrevlatiOM
• lndude ~ fillum...,. .And ~When Needed
. • a. -Should Run 1 Dllys

rI

(.:r_

S1 .00 for large

* All eels mull be prepaid*

POLIC1ES: Ohio Vdty P\lbHeNng ....,.,.. the right to edit, Ntect, or CMcel.ny eCI M q time. ErTOtS mull t. reported on the first da~ of
r i
Trtbuna Be ilh•l RligiSt.r wfM t. ~tor no moN thM tt. aw.t'af the 11f1K8 occupied by the IKTOf Mil only the first insertion. We ahall n Ot be
*ly ~ Df
....utta1rom ~ publk:.akln or amiulon of ltf1 ~ eon.ction
be lnllde In the fi rat available edition. • Bel"";;::,;.~~: ~
· .,. alwltp confktentlal. • Cunent f1llll c.rd
M ,_, ...... .t..rl...,_,.t. •rw .ubjllc:t to "'-.f.a.n.l f•lr Housing Act of 1968. • Th1s n
8Cwpta anlr Nlp ...m.d .0.
!OE
W. will nat knowingly accept.ny u.eru&amp;lng k\ viDtdon ot the law.

...,_that

...una

'liJI I

w-. •

•'*•••·

lb.Il'

WANIED I. ('_o_()i_!o_~_R'IliNTI_.'· i··.,.1 1..·10-·F·~-~).s~-EJ;-•
~

..__ _GiwAWAY
_ _ _ _... Absolute Top Dollar • sll·
verJgokl
coins,
any
Gi""'way cals.. Good !arm 10KI14KI111K gold jewelry,
· cats or pets tor ki[ls. 740· dental gold, pre 1935 US
992·2458.
. currency, proolimint sets,

Upcoming certified n~rsing
assistant class. MU5t have a
high school diploma or GED
to apply. Applications may
be picked up at Lakin

Oym a computer? Put il ia
world Up to $1500 to
$7500/mo PT/FT
Free Information!

Styroloam """"" good lor diamondo. MTS COin Shcp.
storage I paOOng Items 151 2nd Awnue, Gallipolis.
&lt;446-2842
304-882·2436

Hospital, Monday through

-.rll'""_'!':'______,

----- - - - - - ' " - - Wanted to buy Junk Cars.
TWO pielure windows
call 740-388-0884. ff no ·
53112 x ·1oo &amp; 53 112 X122 answer, leave 8 message.
50 X 54 all wood.
ean Call Collect
740...992-3514. Giveaway

'.

:z.

au•lne.s Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Diaplay: 1:00
Thursday for Sundays - - -

Now you con have bOrders and graphics
~ added to your classified ads
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50¢ for s'Tiall

1110
:~ I rK:-:IT:-a_c,.."',.."-:LY:-L-E_-:--:------------....,
kltnc•rtyle@comc•st. nat
.

liZ""--___,
11

Ad•

All Dl•play: 13 Noon

Mon...y-Frklay for ln-rtlon
In Ne1ld: Day'• Paper
Sunday In-column: 1.:00 11.m.
.1..~-,.y For SUndays Paper

• ltltt Your Aa. Wlttl A Keyword • lnciYde COmplete

Morneau drives home winning run in Twins win over Indians
Br.JoN~1
P.SSOCIATED f'RESS

(1401 446-3008_....-_ _0r_F_ax_1i_o_,__..;_99_2_-2_157__,_

Friday,
Applications

I Ocfil'""("
P,ff~ Cfltf"lO

returned in no later than

05102108 al COS. E.O.E.

+*~ ~Wl

Wanted:
29 Serious PeCJP'e 10 Work
~rom home using a computer.
Up to $500.00 to
$1,500.00 .
PTIFT
www.Home1ncome4-U.com

~f,~'f

~~"~~,~

10 fe6D

-;

aarh-4pm.
must
be

t\lr41 •

Wanted : An eJq&gt;erienced

' "·

dental asst.and or raceptioniS1 to work in Gallipolis.
Smoke free environment.

Send resumes to: Gallipo~s

'.
•'

Daily Tribune, P.O. Box 469,

.

. Gallipolis, OH. 45631 CLA
•6oJ&lt; 104

4-•1

~
Inc.

@ 2t10B by NEA,

www.familyblz123.com

j

I

L,------_.1
MoNEY

TO LoAN

Borrow Smart Contact
the Ohio Divi sion of
Fi nancial

Institution 's

OHice of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refinance your home or
obtain a loan. BEWARE

of requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or insurance. Call the
Office of Consumer

Attairs tolllree a1 1-866·
278.0003 to learn it the
mortgage brokef or
lender
is
properly
licensed (This is a public
service annou ncement
from the · Ohio Valley
Publishing Company)

All real eatate advertising
in this newspaper is
subject to the Federal

Ftir Housing Act of 1968
which makes it illegal to
advertise "any
pref@l'ence , limittltion or
discrimination based on
race, color. religion . sex
familial statUs or nalional

origin. or any intention to

I

make an~ such
prefltenoe , limitation or ·
discrimination.··
'

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
adV«tiacments 1or rae I
estate which is 1n
violation of the law. Our
refldefs are here br
informed that all
dwellings advertised in
this riewspaper are

available on an equal
opportunity bases.
Duplex tor Sale on LM
Con tract. 740-992 -5858

..

Large 2·story home on
Locust Street. Gallipolis. 4
Bedrooms. 2 Batn . KIT. FM
DR , LA, Laundry, out-build·
mg. fenced yilrd. close If
SChOOlS.
EM Cellent
Condition! 740-441- 1202

304·675·6363.
New home, never lived in.

2BA, 2 baths : 3 acres mort
or less 1n GalliPOlis. Askim
SBO.OOO. 74()..446-7029

For LHee ..................................................... 490 ·

For Sl~ ....~ ......... ~--·-~·····::•:··..~···................. ~r-'
For Slit or1'racle ...:.•:................................... 510

Cincinnati
Reds ' Ken

Griffey Jr.
celebrates
rounding first
base after
getting a hit to
drive in the winning run in the
bottom of the
loth Inning of
1 baseball
Pme11111nst
the M!I waukee

Brewers

Su-tn
Clnclnnltl.

I!'IWII'I fll'lt
bettmen
Prlnoe Fielder
Wltchel It left.

.....

Frullll &amp; Vwgwboblw ..................................... SIO
Fumllhed R -.......'.................................4&amp;0
. Ge- .tfllullng...........................................850
Gi-Y ......................................................010
Happr lda...................................................OIO·
Hay &amp; G..ln .............................................:..MO
Help
110
Home lmpro-........................:.........110
Homeo for S.le ............................. - ............. 310
Houoehold Gooda .................................... 510
Hou- for Aent ............: ......................,...... 410 ·

w-.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Small 2 Br house. Rac •n,
Area 2
outbwldtngs.cal
port.aoprox 1 acre "st1.1n~
$45,000. 740-949-2539.

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

In Memort.m ................................ ,............... 020

lnourance .....................................................130

Lawn • Gllrden Equlpmont ........................ &amp;&amp;O
L i v -.....................................................130
Lost and Found ........................................... 010
Lois &amp; Ac-aa ............................................ 31i0

Mlocoll-... .......... :...................................170
Mlocol-1 llo1orchoondlll .......................540
Mobile Home llef&gt;elr....................................IIO
Mobile"""'- for Aent ......................... _.... uo
Mobile ""'-for Bele................................ 320
Money lo L.D.n .............................................220

Motorcvclea • 4 Whaeliia ....- ....................740
MUOICIIIinltruments ................................... 570
Peroonllls ..................................................... 005
Pels1or -

................................................ 510

Plumbing &amp;llwllo• ..................... - .......... 120
Prole~ I . . ,...................................... 230
Rodl , TV &amp; C8"-ir.............:................,110
RNI
W.;Wid .....................................310

W-.. . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . .

the

SchoolS lnelruction .....................................150
Seed, P!Mrt &amp; """"'-..............................850
S~uatlono

120

space for Aent ...................:..........,.............. 410
Sparling ~ ........................................... 520
SUV'I for S.le ..............................................720
Trucks for S.le ............................................ 715
UphOI"""Y ................................................... 170

Vans For S.le...........:...................................730
Wonted lo lluy ........................:..................... OIIO
W•ntod 10 Buy- F.,... tk;~~1111 ..................120
Wanted To Do.........- ................................. 1111
Wanted 10 ........~........__ ,. ............... 470
Yard s.r. Goolllp illa........................ - .........072

Vard Sill POIMCo&gt;M'I'II:II .... _...................074
Yard S.ie-Pt. M IQI ................................ 076

--~-------4------------------~-

EKP&amp;ri~ COL drivers

wlih

·'""""'and hazmll
con.
trips. 74()...

needed. Local
:J88.8547

!f80kiOII help lor ..,.,...,. to
take care of parents call
304-ii"TS-2454

�Page Bz • The Daily Sentinel

.

.

www.mydailysentinel.CIOm

Monday, April Zt. :zooS

·Monday, April21, 2008

Jantes expOCts rough stufT to continue against WizanJs
BY T011111 W1111BtS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

ClEVELAND- LeBron
JliiDCs rudn 'I oomplain about
diem at ilhe time. but thnse
lwtd shoves.. well-placed
. elbows and rougher-thanDBmtal
fduls that the
~gton Wizards inflioted upon him in Game I had
:an effecL .
One •day later, James wasa't sore. But the 6-fom~s.
250-pounder said be was a
lot ShoJter and Lighter.
~rm
about 6-4, 215
today," be joked.
Jllllles endured .a physical
:pounding in Oeveland's 93·86 win in the series opener.
.;an intense game that at times
·resembled a rugged version
·of two-handed backyard
touch frool!ball. Beginning
:wilib a l'lbot across me face
.from Andiay Blatcbe - .a
.blow he later Fetal[atod by
dlrowing .an elbow into tile
furward's chin- lames was
a marlred man. .
The Wizards hacked and
whacked hiffi.
The NBA's scoring cham-

picrn stilJ man~ed to soore
32 points.. and made the
game's two !biggest baskets
in the final I :37 as the
Cavaliers won their seventh
· straig1n postseason game
rover the Wiz.aFds., illheir fiirstround opponent llihFee years
nmnil\ll.
James
expected
tlhe
Wizards to oome afi:or him,
and he knGws 'lihey~re not
abouttG swp.
"I ha~ no problem gellling
hit," said J·ames.. who went
to dae &amp;ee-.tiwl!lw line ·14
times. "But there's a di«er.ence between a foul and a
!LeBron fotil. If rllllfs what
1'heir game plan ts; I have to
be able to get 'back up and
continue w Bet my game
speak for itself."
Sun«!ay was spent working
on adjusttnents as the teams
prepared for · Monday' s
Game 2,
Befcrre bitting the praot.ice
floor, the Wizan:ls lamented
missing open shots dcrwn the
stretch. They carried .a fcrurp0int lead into dJe foll111:b
.quarter but then went" 4-of20 in the period and misfired

on I 0 straight shots in the
final4:38.
"We had Ollf fair share of
opportunities," Caron Butler
said. "We just didn't Cl\l)italize on tlhem. You've got to
·tittish a Iteam li!Qe nhat ·when
ycru've got them dow1n
because they have a ,;upflfstar who in the ~ourth quarter can really score some
q:x!lints." ·
·
Despite BMing their eighth
sir.alg;bt G31l!le I , lhe
W'WUtds, whn .came in talk.iqg Jl lbi;g ;game, WeFe eruJOilTJiged by ·tlheir pe!if01l01ance.
~betlt Attenas ·soor.ed 24
points arul shcrw.ed signs of
beoom.iog the pre-knee
surgery Agent Zero; they
oontr(J)lled the tempo for
much of the game, and the
W'IZ3l'ds were still leading
&amp;4-82 befcrre lapsing into an
.offensive dmughl.
Antawn .bmison went 0for-S in t'he i0urth and
missed three strai~ht shots
- ·rwo of them 3s - that
oould have ohangecl the out.oome.
"i had some open shots,n
be said. "I took four or five

www.mydallySe:ltinetcom

Qertbune- Sentinel- l\egtster
CLASSIFIED

that 1 should have lfhougtn w.ants them tcr make James Saturday, Cavs ooaeh Mike
about, and a couple of 3s earn everything he .gets, Brcrwn said James ~could
where I could have -drov.e even if ilhat means they bave have played for the
and created shots fM &lt;Other to bang !him ar.ound.
Browns."
people. But I got -some
"'[was ih~~PPY that we gave
~ames gets his share of
decent ;ihots out 1here. rm -solid, llard •00Dtests in the preferential whistles that go
not beaning m~self lll.(!ISiae paint, n lhe said. "They •t o lthe :game's \biggest stars.
the head for 'laking them.~
.weren't fll\grant, but they And !Brown isaccustomedlo
Arenas d.idh 't prJWt!ioe were meant to protect . the seeing James ttake lhard ihits,
Sunday because of .a rim. And as l(l)llg .as 1they're but wonders wby 'his starsprained right wrist, but he's ~crt flagrant, I think ihey are doesn't get more calJs.
"l.f ycru watch bitn en driexpected tlllplay i n Ginne 2. · fPmfessiemil play•."
Besides fue untimely
JoFdan b!crws he can't ves, he'·s ttcymg Ito avoid
shocrting •woes, the Wi!llll1ds' .a1lcrw James 1cr get into a guys to the _r.&gt;ip.t where we
biggest mistake may ~ave !I'h)lthm, As he showed in Jast tell him, stay streng,"'
been giving lames tlhe year'-s confer~nce finals Bmwn said. ~He lmows he's
chance to put them away.
JJ,gai.nst Oetf(J)it., James single gaing to ·g et hit, and UIIIess
He always bas.
lbandedly -can win a series.
he gets absolutely clobbered,
First; he made two free
""How many times have "they 're not going to calJ the
throws to tie it 84-alJ before you ·seen LeBFon · get foul."
·
driving through traffic for .a cl!arges?" J(l)fdan said. ""He's
lames understands that
go-,ahead layup. Then, he · "5(1) good with the body con- calls won'·t always go his blasted
past
nemesis trol. He's so good .at avoid- way. He knows what's oom~
DeShawn Stevenson, who ing cllarges ,that flat out right ing in &lt;Game 2, and Game 3
had called him "averrated'' a now, we .are not ,talcing and Game 4 and .a s long .as
few 1 weeks bao"k, · .a nd cl!arges .an LeBron. Maybe the se!lies lasts- mere pundropped a runner •to put the Oelonte
West.
Maybe ·isbment.
·
Cavs in contml
[i)amcrn JGncs.
"il'm not going to tty and
Wizards coach Eddie · ~B ut" we a.in 't talcing retaliate if something hapJordan, who called lames charges on 'LeBron lames. pens," he said. "I don 't think
"the best player this side ,(\)f SG &lt;it's out there .and it's done anybody is trying to hurt me.
They do want to commit
the Roc!..")' Mountains," w.as and so be -it."
After watcbing his star hard fouls. I see that. But
pleased with the way his
players handled No. 23. He player get bounced around I've got to protect myself."

Gallia
County

OH
Websites:
In One Week With Us
www.mydailytribune.com
·
E-mail
www.mydailysentinel.com
classified@ mydailytribune.com 'REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
www.mydailyregister.com
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To -P IIIee
~ribune
Sentinel
l\egister
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342. (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

.,.c...a_I_I__..,..---:----____;Or;.;.·.;.F•-.11To

.Oflree ~to~~

MINNEAPOUS - Even
as his average hovered in the
.220s through the first two
. weeks of !!he season, Justin
M001e311 d.idn 't have to look
far to find -e ncouragement
· He may not have been
knocking the cover off ·the
ball all game long, but when
be came to the plate with
runners in seoring positicrn,
he was as clGse to a sure
tlting as there is in this game.
~You try to always look
for the positive. try to igncrre
the average and teU yourself
you want :to be up there in
lbe big situations," said
· Morneau. whose big lOthinning hit gave Minnesota a
2-1 victory over Cleveland
. on Sunday.
Morneau whiffed on his
fll"St chance to beat the"
lndiaos 'but the 2006 AL

Patrick·

7

frooi Page Bl
in the standings last year
when her best finish was
second in the race at
Detroit's Belle isle. Her first
lndyCar race was in 2005 at
Homestead-Miami.
"I've been asked so many
times when and if 1 can win
my frrst race,'' she said.
"And, finally, no more of
those questions."
Patrick was welcomed by
her family near the podium. .
"There was a lot of "I
Jove you,' and 'congratulations,' Patrick said. "My
dad said it was the best day
of his life."
Michael Andretti, coowner of Andretti Qreen
Racing; callej:l his driver a·
"{antastic ~rson."
"I'm thrilled for her that

MVP had a pFenty "good feeling wilib twcr outs ,a nd
Brendan Harris en driFd base
in tlhe IOth.
After ·strikil\g eut wi.11h a
runner on second in die
eigh11h inning, Momeau
~&gt;queered a ~le lhrtml,gh
lhe light gdC of ttbe infield
and pUDlJI""' bis Wit as Hatris
jogged borne wilh lhe wmni.ugrun.
.
Mm&lt;neau has bit safely ill
13 af b.is la.sl: 15 ;games to
raise his a"eril£e ito . Z69. He
is 9-for-15 {.600i ·wilil l1
RBis with IIIIDilers in soori.ng
positicrn this season.
~He's dte guy we want up
tlhere in big siruati(J)ns,~
Twins
manager
Ron
Gardenhlre said.

Rafael &amp;rez (Q-Il took the
loss in relief of an impressi\le staJt . from Paul Byrd.,
and ·t he defending AL.
Central cllan1pions ba111e lost
eight of :their last II.

with the worst slugging per()lev.eland's best ,chance .get .another crack .a t it.
.came -w~th pinch.;runner
"In •t he ninth inning I
centage (.354)intheA[...
ln a de11elopment as puz- J.amey CiuiFoll on second want to lbe 'liP :there. 'I n the
zling as Detroit's "6-J 3 st:a11t, !base with one out in the l'Oth inning, I want 'lo be up
l!be powediul Jrulians BiM!ql ninth. But Carlos Gomez there w.ith.1hatwintting run
was just a f.ew i)lCitlCilt8;ge made a brilliant diving catch on base," Morneau said .
points abeJ!d &lt;6frlte 1\Wls :at of a flare by Ryan 1Garko to "You have to have 1'he oon.300- But Tiillvis R•fior:r, sballcrw center field, and fulence and pr~are yourGrady SiremM.e ,andiiOOstm Gut!illiifez just missed an self for that .at-bat and say,
hcavy-swil\llin_g llm"be &lt;£im- ema-base .hit when his 'line 'AIJ night, ~ew [ want to
ply haMen'l !been~ it .drive ,crlf Pat Neshek !landed win the game."'
mdhes .outside tthe left~:f!ield
Notes: Twins iRF jason
done .early in-the fieU(l)ll·
Byrd ga~e up-&lt;eme mn :and foul tine befcrre lbe &lt;blooped Kubel bit a foul !ball in the
six P,its iin .·seven inrri~s . •out w sboJtstcrp.
first .inning that ricocheted
Fran'k!lin GullilliiTQ''ti ltB[
"'I !think ·crur hitting is ,off,aspeaker haogiog •on the
single :in the :Seoond was all goil\ll to .get ;gcring;" Byrd lfu.ird"base side. 3B &lt;Casey
ilile l.ndians ccruid . uster said. ·" lt &lt;is just .a matter of !Blake caught the ball, but
against iBik.er. ·
time. I d@n'tlthink you press per the rules, it w.a s out of
"'I itbiiik w~ iDeed to bear :the panic button m anything, play once it 1ouched 11he
&lt;do\Vn. Maybe &lt;there is 1100 !but I tthink you realize the speaker. IK&lt;ubel eventually
muoh thinking, -and &lt;We UUSl games are ;imp&lt;m:aot:and:you struck
OUt.
J.im
need to pl~y, relax, 'believe have to win games."
Rosenhaus ·made 'h is MLB
in ourselves," Casey Blake
M&lt;mleau !had .a chance to debut as ·t he Indians radio
said. 'This offense :is good. puttlte '{"wins .ahelu:l when he play-by-play
mao
on
Good things will/happen !I'm'"' carne itcr rthe plate with two WTAM, filling in fcrr il'om
us. lt' s not llihe jab ofDust one ·I(J)uts tin .the eighth, but the big Hamilton, whcr was attendguy. l'he whole group needs Canadian lefty chased a slid- ing his son·•s higb schQo1
to-do it."
.er .and was only too &lt;happy to · baseball game.

ilile ·mGnkey is linally off of you,"' saj.Q Patrick.. wl\o with about I 0 li\])S . tu go
hef. baCk,". -Wd..: .:Awhi:tti. ...:.fini~hfld 5 ~ - seoood~nd . I e lWillr.fmmfuUJ!f!h 1•f
oo.owner of AndJ:eui Green .a head of Castroneve·s on · sepond aliter D an Wbeldon
Racing. "We hl1111.e all .t he 1.5-mile· Twin Ring and.Tony Kanaan pitted on
belie"'ed in bee and she Motegi ovaL
the I 96th.
proved today mat She is .a
" It was a fuel-strategy
After flying for abou~ 12
wiuoer. Fr.mkly,l think. &lt;this race, but my team calJed it _ hours to attend the finish of
i.s the first .of maoy.n
perfectly for me,n Patrick the last raoe in the Ohllo"IP
At die 2005 Indy 500, said. «I knew l w.as on the Car World Series Sunday iin
Patrick nemty ;w~n lhe pole same strategy .as H.elio and Long
Beach,
Calif.,
and became1hc 6rsl femal.e when l passed him for the Patrick,
appearing
Ariv~ Ito lead die ~&gt;liCe. She . il.ead. I oouldn) lbelie¥e it.
refreshed and relaxed, •gave
wound up ' f!MIIllh, tbl: best This js fabulo\)s." ·
a lot of the Clledit fcrr her
finish by a woman :at Indy
Patrick started from the win to team eqgineer KyJe
and a resvlt :tbat beJpe"d her · llhlrd 11crw and made her Moyer.
claim rookie of !the
final pit ·stcrp under caqtion
"i knew that the kst 'tiliJrt
honors.
.
·
on me 14811h lap, alGng was going to be iim,pmt1iit.
Sun4ay'u~. which ,_,.as
with Castro.neves and Ed that was a good call ili'om
delayed a .day because of ll · Calpenter_ All lhe leaders the pits from Kyle Mcry.er,
wet track, was won by a were ~g it easy, ~aving who calls my race&amp;, itll pit
combination-of tJOOI oom- fuel .after lhe :ensuing on the end of the yell@w
posure and shrewd strategy. restart .and Patrick stayed flag. " she said. "It •was
Patrick took the lead from within sight, reali74ng ·she going to be close Gn .fuel..
pole-sitter
Hetio ·w ould ha"e a tlhance when but we w.ere mdie prooess
Castroneves on the I 98th the top contenders headed of giving ourselves .t he best
lap in the 200-lap race.
to the pits late "in the race.
opportunity possible.
"When I had to talk into
Patrick was as low as
"As scron as w.e .went
my radio after the race, aLII eighth place .on the I 89th green after that yellow illag,
could say was 'Thank lap, but Carpenter pi~ted it was alJ about saving

year

not get ~ down on himse)f .
and belp t:be team any w.ay,
shape or. form. n
. from Page 81
Another cool, wet .afternoon made it tough on the
The ·closer had been throw- h.irters. A · steady _rain fell
ingr well lately, converting throughout, and fans bunhis last five chances, and dled themselves in jackets
assured Yost tha-t: he could., and hooded sweat shins
against the 56-degree chill.
get those last three outs.
The oul y thing that' the
"He felt good," Yost said.
teams
managed through the
"I i:beck with my relievers
first
nine
innings was one
every day. It was pushing it
a little bit, but he felt good, homer apiece - Hardy in
the fourth, Encarnacion in
be felt loose."
the
sixth.
The feeling didn't lasL
Milwaukee's
Yovani
"I felt very good." Gagne Gallardo, activated off
the
said. "I got behind in the disabled list before the
count. That's the thing:
f
You've got to get ahead. I ~ame, allowed only our
its through eight innings. ·
didn't do that today."
The right-fiandef proved his
After G&amp;Jlle gave up the sursically repaired left knee
back·to-back homers and wali fine by throwi!IJ 112
walked Scott Hattebcra. pitches.
Salomon Torres relieved
~n Harans waa sick In
hl•
start last '1\ielldl_y, when
and pve up an infield &amp;in·
~ by Brandon Phillips, the Cub10 piled up five runi
Orlfl'ey ainalcd over the In ~~ lnnlnJI 111·5 vlcto.beld of rlaht fielder Corey ry at Wrlaley Field. He wa1
Hlrt to end the aame and back in form Sunday, allow·
Bnclrnlclon'1 ml11Cry.
Ina four hltsln elaht mnina•
"Eddie's a ~real auy," while 1trlkina out elaht.
His only alarina ini lake
' Orift'ey Hid. 'He work•
IW'd every day. He makes Cllllle agamst Hardy, one of
miltlkel, but he's able to~~o numerous Brewers hitter&amp;
up there and make up for 11. who have yet to find their
You want him to go out and stroke. The shonstop was a

Reds .

'

"'We've got to figure thij&gt;
offiense out," Indians manag•er Eri.c Wedge said. "We' ve
gm better players in there.
We've g""t JOOI!ter lhitt.ers in
there. There iis ncr excuses.
"The. guys l'hat .IU1C 'SpinniQg
their Wheels have 110 ifuJd ;a
w.ay to &lt;gel going.n
•.
Hams had ilhree lhits and .a
!h(J)me nm and Soon Baker
a'llow.ed one run and fiv.e lrits
lin -seven innings fur d:le
Twiins, who took ltW&lt;&gt; &lt;Of
ihr.ee · ilirom the Indians
rdespi~ 'SOOl'ling only five
runs · lllhe series.
Matt Guemier (1-l~ illhrew
a scoreless inning Ito :get the
win in a·aaw-soollin,g gr;inder
tbat &amp;houldD't have oome as
.a SU!prise in a game featurtiqg lllbetwo worst offenses in
the American League.
The Twins haYe sccrred
mcrre than five runs in a
game just four times this
season and entered the .day

or

fmlt-ti.me Ali-Star last season, when be hit26 homers,
but bas struggled to keep his
average above .200 in April.
Qn his fust swing .against
!Wang in the fourth, be sent
a belt-hlgh fastball toward
the .upper cleck in left fieLd
for his first 'hmner. Haroy
also ilhrew Adam Dunn out
at the" plate on a relay as he
tried to score standing up
from first base on Jeff
Keppinger's double in the
fourth inning.
Notes: ·
Mil waukee
optioned utility playCI; Joe
Dillon to Triple· A Nashville
to open a roster. ·spot for
Gallardo. Dillon was primarily a pinch hitter, going
2-for·l 0 1n nine James. ...
The Rcdl put reliever David
Woathen on die 15-day DL
with an intl~ netYc in
IUa rlaht elbow. The move .
open a lpol for RHP Matt
Belllle, who II e~pected tel
be ~etlvated off t.&amp;e DL to
atart
Monday' a
aalinll the Dodam, ...
Encarnacion has hlt in I 0
straight aames, matching
his
career
high.
. ..
Cincinnati's
Corey
Pattcr110n extended his
slump to 0-for-22.

aame

ifueL''
.
.
Patrick said, "'l'hat wa8 a
.P.miek said she hegan:l((l) ~mg. relief
7.-·~-'t-·
~ook for Castrone111es with w.iiited for
about
liiJls to gcr.
wuuld ·have happened a
"l knew I was 1"2 (p0si- long time ago, but &lt;r m not .
.t ion two~ by then . Five laps. going to argue with the prolater, I see be's backing .up, gram .. lt happened the way
iiavti.ng fuel, n she said. " I it was supposed to happen
&lt;Was like., 'Hey, k:ick it up a and I believe .everything
notch and get by. ' If this is happens for. a reason."
what~ comes dewn to, you
· Scott Dixon finished
better not think tcr yourself third; I 0.0559 seconds
I wish I had tried a little bit . behind Patrick. Wheld"'n
was fou11th and Kanaan
!harder.
"It .p robably would have fifth.
happened wbe.t ber I w.ould
ti.D Japan, Castroneves,
have pushed or D(J)t because awarded the pole position
it seemed like he was run- after qualifying was rained
Ding out of fuel quite a hit out Friday, said Patrick ran
at •the end. But it was really a great race.
"With five laps to go, I
very nice ·to drive tby him at
that i]!!Oint."
was
saving
fuel,"
Eve.n then she said she Castroneves said. "When
wasn't sure she was going Danica :passed me; [ realto win until Moyer came on ized she was the leader. She
lihe radio and told .her, "You did a great job, passed me
can .use .as much fuel as you fair and square and that
want. Bring it around, the shows . you how competi.cbec~ ftag is yours."
· tive our series is."

m

Word Ads

OearllfirM

Disp·! ay

D•lly Jn..Column: 1 : 00 p.m .

Monday thru Friday

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m..

DaaulpHDMi • ~MIIIde A PriCie • AVOid AllbrevlatiOM
• lndude ~ fillum...,. .And ~When Needed
. • a. -Should Run 1 Dllys

rI

(.:r_

S1 .00 for large

* All eels mull be prepaid*

POLIC1ES: Ohio Vdty P\lbHeNng ....,.,.. the right to edit, Ntect, or CMcel.ny eCI M q time. ErTOtS mull t. reported on the first da~ of
r i
Trtbuna Be ilh•l RligiSt.r wfM t. ~tor no moN thM tt. aw.t'af the 11f1K8 occupied by the IKTOf Mil only the first insertion. We ahall n Ot be
*ly ~ Df
....utta1rom ~ publk:.akln or amiulon of ltf1 ~ eon.ction
be lnllde In the fi rat available edition. • Bel"";;::,;.~~: ~
· .,. alwltp confktentlal. • Cunent f1llll c.rd
M ,_, ...... .t..rl...,_,.t. •rw .ubjllc:t to "'-.f.a.n.l f•lr Housing Act of 1968. • Th1s n
8Cwpta anlr Nlp ...m.d .0.
!OE
W. will nat knowingly accept.ny u.eru&amp;lng k\ viDtdon ot the law.

...,_that

...una

'liJI I

w-. •

•'*•••·

lb.Il'

WANIED I. ('_o_()i_!o_~_R'IliNTI_.'· i··.,.1 1..·10-·F·~-~).s~-EJ;-•
~

..__ _GiwAWAY
_ _ _ _... Absolute Top Dollar • sll·
verJgokl
coins,
any
Gi""'way cals.. Good !arm 10KI14KI111K gold jewelry,
· cats or pets tor ki[ls. 740· dental gold, pre 1935 US
992·2458.
. currency, proolimint sets,

Upcoming certified n~rsing
assistant class. MU5t have a
high school diploma or GED
to apply. Applications may
be picked up at Lakin

Oym a computer? Put il ia
world Up to $1500 to
$7500/mo PT/FT
Free Information!

Styroloam """"" good lor diamondo. MTS COin Shcp.
storage I paOOng Items 151 2nd Awnue, Gallipolis.
&lt;446-2842
304-882·2436

Hospital, Monday through

-.rll'""_'!':'______,

----- - - - - - ' " - - Wanted to buy Junk Cars.
TWO pielure windows
call 740-388-0884. ff no ·
53112 x ·1oo &amp; 53 112 X122 answer, leave 8 message.
50 X 54 all wood.
ean Call Collect
740...992-3514. Giveaway

'.

:z.

au•lne.s Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Diaplay: 1:00
Thursday for Sundays - - -

Now you con have bOrders and graphics
~ added to your classified ads
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50¢ for s'Tiall

1110
:~ I rK:-:IT:-a_c,.."',.."-:LY:-L-E_-:--:------------....,
kltnc•rtyle@comc•st. nat
.

liZ""--___,
11

Ad•

All Dl•play: 13 Noon

Mon...y-Frklay for ln-rtlon
In Ne1ld: Day'• Paper
Sunday In-column: 1.:00 11.m.
.1..~-,.y For SUndays Paper

• ltltt Your Aa. Wlttl A Keyword • lnciYde COmplete

Morneau drives home winning run in Twins win over Indians
Br.JoN~1
P.SSOCIATED f'RESS

(1401 446-3008_....-_ _0r_F_ax_1i_o_,__..;_99_2_-2_157__,_

Friday,
Applications

I Ocfil'""("
P,ff~ Cfltf"lO

returned in no later than

05102108 al COS. E.O.E.

+*~ ~Wl

Wanted:
29 Serious PeCJP'e 10 Work
~rom home using a computer.
Up to $500.00 to
$1,500.00 .
PTIFT
www.Home1ncome4-U.com

~f,~'f

~~"~~,~

10 fe6D

-;

aarh-4pm.
must
be

t\lr41 •

Wanted : An eJq&gt;erienced

' "·

dental asst.and or raceptioniS1 to work in Gallipolis.
Smoke free environment.

Send resumes to: Gallipo~s

'.
•'

Daily Tribune, P.O. Box 469,

.

. Gallipolis, OH. 45631 CLA
•6oJ&lt; 104

4-•1

~
Inc.

@ 2t10B by NEA,

www.familyblz123.com

j

I

L,------_.1
MoNEY

TO LoAN

Borrow Smart Contact
the Ohio Divi sion of
Fi nancial

Institution 's

OHice of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refinance your home or
obtain a loan. BEWARE

of requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or insurance. Call the
Office of Consumer

Attairs tolllree a1 1-866·
278.0003 to learn it the
mortgage brokef or
lender
is
properly
licensed (This is a public
service annou ncement
from the · Ohio Valley
Publishing Company)

All real eatate advertising
in this newspaper is
subject to the Federal

Ftir Housing Act of 1968
which makes it illegal to
advertise "any
pref@l'ence , limittltion or
discrimination based on
race, color. religion . sex
familial statUs or nalional

origin. or any intention to

I

make an~ such
prefltenoe , limitation or ·
discrimination.··
'

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
adV«tiacments 1or rae I
estate which is 1n
violation of the law. Our
refldefs are here br
informed that all
dwellings advertised in
this riewspaper are

available on an equal
opportunity bases.
Duplex tor Sale on LM
Con tract. 740-992 -5858

..

Large 2·story home on
Locust Street. Gallipolis. 4
Bedrooms. 2 Batn . KIT. FM
DR , LA, Laundry, out-build·
mg. fenced yilrd. close If
SChOOlS.
EM Cellent
Condition! 740-441- 1202

304·675·6363.
New home, never lived in.

2BA, 2 baths : 3 acres mort
or less 1n GalliPOlis. Askim
SBO.OOO. 74()..446-7029

For LHee ..................................................... 490 ·

For Sl~ ....~ ......... ~--·-~·····::•:··..~···................. ~r-'
For Slit or1'racle ...:.•:................................... 510

Cincinnati
Reds ' Ken

Griffey Jr.
celebrates
rounding first
base after
getting a hit to
drive in the winning run in the
bottom of the
loth Inning of
1 baseball
Pme11111nst
the M!I waukee

Brewers

Su-tn
Clnclnnltl.

I!'IWII'I fll'lt
bettmen
Prlnoe Fielder
Wltchel It left.

.....

Frullll &amp; Vwgwboblw ..................................... SIO
Fumllhed R -.......'.................................4&amp;0
. Ge- .tfllullng...........................................850
Gi-Y ......................................................010
Happr lda...................................................OIO·
Hay &amp; G..ln .............................................:..MO
Help
110
Home lmpro-........................:.........110
Homeo for S.le ............................. - ............. 310
Houoehold Gooda .................................... 510
Hou- for Aent ............: ......................,...... 410 ·

w-.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Small 2 Br house. Rac •n,
Area 2
outbwldtngs.cal
port.aoprox 1 acre "st1.1n~
$45,000. 740-949-2539.

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

In Memort.m ................................ ,............... 020

lnourance .....................................................130

Lawn • Gllrden Equlpmont ........................ &amp;&amp;O
L i v -.....................................................130
Lost and Found ........................................... 010
Lois &amp; Ac-aa ............................................ 31i0

Mlocoll-... .......... :...................................170
Mlocol-1 llo1orchoondlll .......................540
Mobile Home llef&gt;elr....................................IIO
Mobile"""'- for Aent ......................... _.... uo
Mobile ""'-for Bele................................ 320
Money lo L.D.n .............................................220

Motorcvclea • 4 Whaeliia ....- ....................740
MUOICIIIinltruments ................................... 570
Peroonllls ..................................................... 005
Pels1or -

................................................ 510

Plumbing &amp;llwllo• ..................... - .......... 120
Prole~ I . . ,...................................... 230
Rodl , TV &amp; C8"-ir.............:................,110
RNI
W.;Wid .....................................310

W-.. . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . .

the

SchoolS lnelruction .....................................150
Seed, P!Mrt &amp; """"'-..............................850
S~uatlono

120

space for Aent ...................:..........,.............. 410
Sparling ~ ........................................... 520
SUV'I for S.le ..............................................720
Trucks for S.le ............................................ 715
UphOI"""Y ................................................... 170

Vans For S.le...........:...................................730
Wonted lo lluy ........................:..................... OIIO
W•ntod 10 Buy- F.,... tk;~~1111 ..................120
Wanted To Do.........- ................................. 1111
Wanted 10 ........~........__ ,. ............... 470
Yard s.r. Goolllp illa........................ - .........072

Vard Sill POIMCo&gt;M'I'II:II .... _...................074
Yard S.ie-Pt. M IQI ................................ 076

--~-------4------------------~-

EKP&amp;ri~ COL drivers

wlih

·'""""'and hazmll
con.
trips. 74()...

needed. Local
:J88.8547

!f80kiOII help lor ..,.,...,. to
take care of parents call
304-ii"TS-2454

�www.m;c' ' '

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

ttilael com

NEA Crossword Pu1:zle

BRIDGE

•

1

...:. .:::::: ;~-

7TI11 7
100:1 '

-

. """' '
......

-

--~

~

.

-' ~

'

-~-·~

- .Cflio

296708asiWI-

45771
7-2217 .

........

•

ltclln
7:00AM· 8:00PM

, West
A AI07il
; • 9 7!
• ·8~
4QH

•Newflomes

-

•Garages

•Complete

Remodeli11g

saT-

14 _.,..,

55 ....,_

1-5 -

56-

16U..CG5he
110 · 7
19 She e son

.....
sa-..

-

Gary Curtis- Owner

IIIII IJ7f
Zlf-

=-·

1,

Detller. SiJUib
Vlllamoble: East-West

.....,

zzs~~:

'..,

• -Air duct

Opening lead: • 6

....

7

•

22'-t ••• .

41

3T_.
• noo.a.p

..,,. . ,

l!i'---f

,5 . . . .

- .21 .

:,-:r
I

.

-

33s..

•
.,_,

ace'"·

,. - -

',_, 7 7

31

DUmmy's options,
(2-)
•
... c..
his and Hs

=·

-

-

p'

51--....

" v35
-~

7

5

7

45*-

8 sa.tl

a

7.

41~ . . .
a• s n
" 5
._;),f_

zs svar

...

Gl

lis'

1 '--11ildlld ~
2 "-Eatlllf'
N SUsaidiN

31 ~ ·lluddW 7
LilnrJ ..:1.

3l

lO Ocw•

DOWN

35"'36 Sifiinp

Fonnerty Barber's Auto Pam

........
-"T-· -......
·-·
....,.. -

rtt•
., ...... STar-.

!NT

St. RL 124
Re rtsvMie, OH

SIIReeiD-

· .._

• Ali~

Curtis Auto Repair
740-378 6484

fot~ii'i

....

- ...-

• s!

W AKQ
• I[ 71

111•11 mo. pd

For.~

e n · ....

13 Vawlile ._.. 54 Pl'c*st

East
A J i I
• JitiS
• Q J If I

.. Q 12

~&amp;Compare

0 1. . pw•
45 Slllpll

11 ·-,.._-o.s- S2MGII
acwt; ECce

s

• 6 IS
• AS I!
• J 10 I 7

---

-S'XW

I[

Claudf
-

4 _._

I

~

-41--

•Lt~~c..­

Phillip
Alder

•

p

11 0
35 Odll:
ll&amp;p's_,..
,.....
" ...,.... 17 Clall!
-

7

7

•n is Often 1hought 1hlt c1mny tal&lt;es no
port in the ~. - ' 10 ·lldnlcl the
""rds raquestea by ·his ""-'· the
- " "· 1lut dummy 1ros oome ·imporlanllun&lt;:1ions. Each £Ill'- · I lllill
yoo one question relating to the
11/mmy. Fils!: When -.g his tarm. in

"'*

·BARNEY
WUZ TH' POOL
lASt£ A GOOD
INVESlMENT,
SILAS

Stanley Tree. Trimming
&amp;

Removal

•Prompt and Quality
*Reasonable Rates
*I nsured
•Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591 -8044

MoAE'N
PAYIN' FER

J'OI 1 AR

ITSELF !!

ninth trick wtll come from clubs. It,
thoUgh. yoo lose 1D the clUb ·queen.
itlaybe the opponerrls will ,.., the spade

OFF MAW

liUil
Because there are.only 1wo spades on
1ho board, you -ploy hand
high. pu1!ing up ciJmmy'slring. · the
king wins, so you take 1ho club 1inesse,
_ , . tflat yoo will lllin at lees! nine

YOUN G'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
"-nod.llng

THE BORN LOSER
,.I()W l)/ll(.'((JJ ~\\00 tl&gt;,'(... r~'T '&lt;00 ~ IWmN-

a.r:trtc.l &amp; ftlumbing
Roaftng. Guttln
Vll'lyl Skltng • P•lnting

htio •nd Potd'l DeeU

~rtt&lt;mr! t'l'\ ~. NY.&gt;r

WV036725
c.

..

;

c.:

'''

.

f:'
~

I\r-·1:::---:'WOIOC ~'1'00 Mt\'t'C'1"0\N. '5\)( ~.1''5:1

~

I

. . .

\

v-WAAT-"&lt;OU'Rt C:.OI~ TO ""'
()EN'( 1'£ t&gt;.. t&gt;(&gt;..'( CIT '?

f'OUR '5E.I.JEl'"!

bE:.t&gt;I"'-TO&gt; ~(f."'- t

V C YOUNG Ill

CELEBRITY CIPIER

·-·

'Room A.ddlti9t•• •
-G.._

Work

RACI&lt; 'EM
ELWtel
UP, LUI&lt;EY !! GAVE ME
I GOT A
1WO !!

~!!IT'S

what order durnrnv put _ , the
suits?
In each doel1h~ week, H wil be impor1anl b' &lt;loclor8r to play 1ho c:ooect cord
from t h e - .. the tnt triGit
'lOu .,. South, in three •l10-1rump. West
loads • 1QIIr1h.highest spade .... What
wculd be yooqllln?
•
Al..ayS start by 00U111ing your top tritts.
_ycu- instant winners. Here, you haw
eight me opalle (~ the lold), three
.....,.; two diamoods and twocltbs. The'

-that ff yoo ploy low from the a1 trick one, East pu1o in hio ~ ·~ yoo
win the trick, then, wt1on you the
losing dub fir&gt;eue. C8Siles four
spades. ~ instead yoo duck the 9plllle
jack, East ll!lllmSthegpade nine. establishing West's su~ while the clUb queen
remains as his entry.
The sun led should be the 1ut tabled by
1ho dummy. In~ way, deolarer sees
the wMie hand bolore lleeiding to
do .. tricK
the suit.led is pul down

one..

firnl, declarer might """'Y only about
tflat suH and ig11Qf8 the J8SI of the hand.

HAS

SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

by Luis Cln:pos
OliabriiVCi;Nr cry;xopnsan ~ 1r0'11 ~byllrnousJ*Jple , ,_. -~
Uch- Wlllle~UI!stor . . . .
Trxlay•duo: E~ K

"LZ I'CI

ICH ' F FJP FC NLH , PCB

UllSf OW NVAA MCAI FIIV
CAPUSLHW

LH WCUVGCfP'W

G·OREPOJI. " •

DYWWV CNVHW

PREVIOlS SOLUTION - "I believe we need heroes. I believe wo need
certain peoplle who we can measure our own shoncomings by.· - Richtrlj
Allentlorotql .

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

•• StD~lA-&amp;~H·:
.,.,.......
,

...

.

0 ,, . . . . .

IIUDaA .P

REACH 3COUNTIES

.

ASK YOUR 006 TO

( W~EN 't'OV CLOSfD
·THE DOOR, THE
SUDDEN NOISE

COME OOT AND PLAV
TELL Ul~ I HAVE A
NEW IW.LOON ..
Help Wanted

l'lle Yoor
.~

0

Ad fu WednestlaJV

,..tR~ror

DiJ. And It Will Ru Foc FREE fu
The

Help Wanted

Mark.!

ICilJUEIS WMS

PHARMACIST
Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a lull-time
pharmacist. B ~S. Pharmacy, Pharm.D.
Pharmacy or Ph.D Pha'rmacy from
accredited college or university. WV State
l'harmid~ Uw&gt;~u.!J!. Q~~ift position.

Send resumes to:
Plennll Vitlley HaspiUI
c/o *-n Resotnes
25]0 v.Jiey Drift
Paint Plenimt. wv 15550
Orfax:

H&amp;H

Wise Concrete

Guttering

All types of concrete

Seamless Gutll&gt;rs
Roofing . Siding. G_utters
ln&amp;U!W • ilorrdo!J 74()-653-9657

&amp;t. 1307
.

~

'

I

.IJST LISTEN TO THIIT
VOICE IN50C

.-·

Free f!'stlmatM

~- ·;

Rick W'!&lt; 16\'rs Exp.

Additiorts.,

'
Local Contra~tor '

HelpW81'1ted

Pleasant . Valley Hospital · is currentiy
aa:epting resumes for a lull-time Patient
Representative. A niinimum of 2 years
dinical (acute) care experience. Oinical
management
considered
beneficial.
Bachelors degree in . nursing required
(BSN) . or current - enrollment in a BSN
program. .
,
Send resumes to: ·
..._... valley HOspihtl
. c/o Human Resourdes
2510 v.ley Drive
Point Plenimt. wv 25550
(304I67Hl40
Orfax:
304~75-6!175, or .,ty on-line lit
-· ... pv.lef.IIIJ
AA/EOE

740-992-5929
7411-416-1696

YotJI NDM CAUGHT YOU
PLAYING NINTEtllO DS
IN CHlJIQ.t AGAIN?

Roofing, Siding,
Soffn, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing.
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room

or ..,ty on-line It •• .pVIIIey.Ofl
AA/OOE

.......0

INHERENTLY KNOW !liGHT
FROM WRONG If WE

FOil GOO EXISTS IN US
ALL AND INO LONIBI
NEED THE Ql!RCH AS MY ·
MIODL£1AAN TO FEEL
CL.()S!; I0 HIM. ·

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

~75-6!115,

Help Wanted

IIREVE WE ALL

740-367~544
Free Estimates

740-367·0536
For Remodeling and New Hoose Building

Call: MARCUM

CONSTRUCTION

• Room Additions • Garages. Vinyl
. and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio\. Porches and Decks

liD W. •CII.MEI

•

47239 Riebel R0ad. Long Bonom. OH

740-985-4141
Cell: 740-416.18]4

25+ yea~ txptritnct Frtt Estimmes

Advertise ·
in this space for
$64 per month

.. .
'I

'

'

, ,

-.~.~61-llldJiiiF''

J,..
'Q

Pleas~nt

(!04167~140,

~-u•n

GOIIti·FID-..,__.._ _CHlSaeiEEP
'1 hw

1, "iullowi:c;oc4

AJti&amp;iw wiog'lll:i::lONEsaeD!EP,"

ARLO &amp;.JANIS

�www.m;c' ' '

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

ttilael com

NEA Crossword Pu1:zle

BRIDGE

•

1

...:. .:::::: ;~-

7TI11 7
100:1 '

-

. """' '
......

-

--~

~

.

-' ~

'

-~-·~

- .Cflio

296708asiWI-

45771
7-2217 .

........

•

ltclln
7:00AM· 8:00PM

, West
A AI07il
; • 9 7!
• ·8~
4QH

•Newflomes

-

•Garages

•Complete

Remodeli11g

saT-

14 _.,..,

55 ....,_

1-5 -

56-

16U..CG5he
110 · 7
19 She e son

.....
sa-..

-

Gary Curtis- Owner

IIIII IJ7f
Zlf-

=-·

1,

Detller. SiJUib
Vlllamoble: East-West

.....,

zzs~~:

'..,

• -Air duct

Opening lead: • 6

....

7

•

22'-t ••• .

41

3T_.
• noo.a.p

..,,. . ,

l!i'---f

,5 . . . .

- .21 .

:,-:r
I

.

-

33s..

•
.,_,

ace'"·

,. - -

',_, 7 7

31

DUmmy's options,
(2-)
•
... c..
his and Hs

=·

-

-

p'

51--....

" v35
-~

7

5

7

45*-

8 sa.tl

a

7.

41~ . . .
a• s n
" 5
._;),f_

zs svar

...

Gl

lis'

1 '--11ildlld ~
2 "-Eatlllf'
N SUsaidiN

31 ~ ·lluddW 7
LilnrJ ..:1.

3l

lO Ocw•

DOWN

35"'36 Sifiinp

Fonnerty Barber's Auto Pam

........
-"T-· -......
·-·
....,.. -

rtt•
., ...... STar-.

!NT

St. RL 124
Re rtsvMie, OH

SIIReeiD-

· .._

• Ali~

Curtis Auto Repair
740-378 6484

fot~ii'i

....

- ...-

• s!

W AKQ
• I[ 71

111•11 mo. pd

For.~

e n · ....

13 Vawlile ._.. 54 Pl'c*st

East
A J i I
• JitiS
• Q J If I

.. Q 12

~&amp;Compare

0 1. . pw•
45 Slllpll

11 ·-,.._-o.s- S2MGII
acwt; ECce

s

• 6 IS
• AS I!
• J 10 I 7

---

-S'XW

I[

Claudf
-

4 _._

I

~

-41--

•Lt~~c..­

Phillip
Alder

•

p

11 0
35 Odll:
ll&amp;p's_,..
,.....
" ...,.... 17 Clall!
-

7

7

•n is Often 1hought 1hlt c1mny tal&lt;es no
port in the ~. - ' 10 ·lldnlcl the
""rds raquestea by ·his ""-'· the
- " "· 1lut dummy 1ros oome ·imporlanllun&lt;:1ions. Each £Ill'- · I lllill
yoo one question relating to the
11/mmy. Fils!: When -.g his tarm. in

"'*

·BARNEY
WUZ TH' POOL
lASt£ A GOOD
INVESlMENT,
SILAS

Stanley Tree. Trimming
&amp;

Removal

•Prompt and Quality
*Reasonable Rates
*I nsured
•Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591 -8044

MoAE'N
PAYIN' FER

J'OI 1 AR

ITSELF !!

ninth trick wtll come from clubs. It,
thoUgh. yoo lose 1D the clUb ·queen.
itlaybe the opponerrls will ,.., the spade

OFF MAW

liUil
Because there are.only 1wo spades on
1ho board, you -ploy hand
high. pu1!ing up ciJmmy'slring. · the
king wins, so you take 1ho club 1inesse,
_ , . tflat yoo will lllin at lees! nine

YOUN G'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
"-nod.llng

THE BORN LOSER
,.I()W l)/ll(.'((JJ ~\\00 tl&gt;,'(... r~'T '&lt;00 ~ IWmN-

a.r:trtc.l &amp; ftlumbing
Roaftng. Guttln
Vll'lyl Skltng • P•lnting

htio •nd Potd'l DeeU

~rtt&lt;mr! t'l'\ ~. NY.&gt;r

WV036725
c.

..

;

c.:

'''

.

f:'
~

I\r-·1:::---:'WOIOC ~'1'00 Mt\'t'C'1"0\N. '5\)( ~.1''5:1

~

I

. . .

\

v-WAAT-"&lt;OU'Rt C:.OI~ TO ""'
()EN'( 1'£ t&gt;.. t&gt;(&gt;..'( CIT '?

f'OUR '5E.I.JEl'"!

bE:.t&gt;I"'-TO&gt; ~(f."'- t

V C YOUNG Ill

CELEBRITY CIPIER

·-·

'Room A.ddlti9t•• •
-G.._

Work

RACI&lt; 'EM
ELWtel
UP, LUI&lt;EY !! GAVE ME
I GOT A
1WO !!

~!!IT'S

what order durnrnv put _ , the
suits?
In each doel1h~ week, H wil be impor1anl b' &lt;loclor8r to play 1ho c:ooect cord
from t h e - .. the tnt triGit
'lOu .,. South, in three •l10-1rump. West
loads • 1QIIr1h.highest spade .... What
wculd be yooqllln?
•
Al..ayS start by 00U111ing your top tritts.
_ycu- instant winners. Here, you haw
eight me opalle (~ the lold), three
.....,.; two diamoods and twocltbs. The'

-that ff yoo ploy low from the a1 trick one, East pu1o in hio ~ ·~ yoo
win the trick, then, wt1on you the
losing dub fir&gt;eue. C8Siles four
spades. ~ instead yoo duck the 9plllle
jack, East ll!lllmSthegpade nine. establishing West's su~ while the clUb queen
remains as his entry.
The sun led should be the 1ut tabled by
1ho dummy. In~ way, deolarer sees
the wMie hand bolore lleeiding to
do .. tricK
the suit.led is pul down

one..

firnl, declarer might """'Y only about
tflat suH and ig11Qf8 the J8SI of the hand.

HAS

SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

by Luis Cln:pos
OliabriiVCi;Nr cry;xopnsan ~ 1r0'11 ~byllrnousJ*Jple , ,_. -~
Uch- Wlllle~UI!stor . . . .
Trxlay•duo: E~ K

"LZ I'CI

ICH ' F FJP FC NLH , PCB

UllSf OW NVAA MCAI FIIV
CAPUSLHW

LH WCUVGCfP'W

G·OREPOJI. " •

DYWWV CNVHW

PREVIOlS SOLUTION - "I believe we need heroes. I believe wo need
certain peoplle who we can measure our own shoncomings by.· - Richtrlj
Allentlorotql .

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

•• StD~lA-&amp;~H·:
.,.,.......
,

...

.

0 ,, . . . . .

IIUDaA .P

REACH 3COUNTIES

.

ASK YOUR 006 TO

( W~EN 't'OV CLOSfD
·THE DOOR, THE
SUDDEN NOISE

COME OOT AND PLAV
TELL Ul~ I HAVE A
NEW IW.LOON ..
Help Wanted

l'lle Yoor
.~

0

Ad fu WednestlaJV

,..tR~ror

DiJ. And It Will Ru Foc FREE fu
The

Help Wanted

Mark.!

ICilJUEIS WMS

PHARMACIST
Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a lull-time
pharmacist. B ~S. Pharmacy, Pharm.D.
Pharmacy or Ph.D Pha'rmacy from
accredited college or university. WV State
l'harmid~ Uw&gt;~u.!J!. Q~~ift position.

Send resumes to:
Plennll Vitlley HaspiUI
c/o *-n Resotnes
25]0 v.Jiey Drift
Paint Plenimt. wv 15550
Orfax:

H&amp;H

Wise Concrete

Guttering

All types of concrete

Seamless Gutll&gt;rs
Roofing . Siding. G_utters
ln&amp;U!W • ilorrdo!J 74()-653-9657

&amp;t. 1307
.

~

'

I

.IJST LISTEN TO THIIT
VOICE IN50C

.-·

Free f!'stlmatM

~- ·;

Rick W'!&lt; 16\'rs Exp.

Additiorts.,

'
Local Contra~tor '

HelpW81'1ted

Pleasant . Valley Hospital · is currentiy
aa:epting resumes for a lull-time Patient
Representative. A niinimum of 2 years
dinical (acute) care experience. Oinical
management
considered
beneficial.
Bachelors degree in . nursing required
(BSN) . or current - enrollment in a BSN
program. .
,
Send resumes to: ·
..._... valley HOspihtl
. c/o Human Resourdes
2510 v.ley Drive
Point Plenimt. wv 25550
(304I67Hl40
Orfax:
304~75-6!175, or .,ty on-line lit
-· ... pv.lef.IIIJ
AA/EOE

740-992-5929
7411-416-1696

YotJI NDM CAUGHT YOU
PLAYING NINTEtllO DS
IN CHlJIQ.t AGAIN?

Roofing, Siding,
Soffn, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing.
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room

or ..,ty on-line It •• .pVIIIey.Ofl
AA/OOE

.......0

INHERENTLY KNOW !liGHT
FROM WRONG If WE

FOil GOO EXISTS IN US
ALL AND INO LONIBI
NEED THE Ql!RCH AS MY ·
MIODL£1AAN TO FEEL
CL.()S!; I0 HIM. ·

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

~75-6!115,

Help Wanted

IIREVE WE ALL

740-367~544
Free Estimates

740-367·0536
For Remodeling and New Hoose Building

Call: MARCUM

CONSTRUCTION

• Room Additions • Garages. Vinyl
. and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio\. Porches and Decks

liD W. •CII.MEI

•

47239 Riebel R0ad. Long Bonom. OH

740-985-4141
Cell: 740-416.18]4

25+ yea~ txptritnct Frtt Estimmes

Advertise ·
in this space for
$64 per month

.. .
'I

'

'

, ,

-.~.~61-llldJiiiF''

J,..
'Q

Pleas~nt

(!04167~140,

~-u•n

GOIIti·FID-..,__.._ _CHlSaeiEEP
'1 hw

1, "iullowi:c;oc4

AJti&amp;iw wiog'lll:i::lONEsaeD!EP,"

ARLO &amp;.JANIS

�. _ . 86 •

The Daily Sentind.

·--t-:k
···~*

-

.,
•

I

!A:IDDI

'

•

Gasol, Lakers down Denver in G~me 1
BY ... ··-ICIIIIIID!D PPIEI•

LOS ANGEl FS

Pau
Gasol finally discovered
how it feels to be on die
winniiig sicle in a postseason game. Tbe 7-foot
Spaniard bad a whole lor to
do with his first vidory.
· Gasol established playoff
highs wid! 36 points :mel
eight assists and had 16
rebounds as well Sunday as
the Los Angeles Lakers
toot oommand early in 1be
ihiril quarter and beat the
Denvcc Nuggets 128-114.
Gasol, a 27-ycar-old for-

w;M·~,.,:,.stcron.acqFeb~ ~~
~ •

AUC!

points befoK picking up
two leclmical fouls with
2:10 mnai.lliD!, calling for
immcdia•e ejeaion. linas
K1eiu soomd a catcer playoff bigh 23 points and J .R.
Smith 111cW 1:5 bcfotc fooling out with 3:14lelt

••r

~ 04,
bn 1•
ORLANDO, Fla..
Dwight Ho-.1 had 25
points and ll Jdnonds, and
Jamcc;r Nclsoo ooorod 24.
points m bdp dx: Magic
beat the Raptors in the
opener of lheir first-round
series.
H~!:ard . ~red lOs~
Slrlltbut points In a
-v
fourth-quarter run diat
sealed Ori.ando's first playolf win sinc:le 2003. He also
blocked five shots .and
made 9-of-11 fmc throws.
Anthony Parter bad 24
points and 8 ~ for
Toronto, &lt;luis Bosh SCORd
21 mel Rasho Nesterovic
had 16 points and 8
rebounds. Jason Kapono
soorcd 18 off the bench.
The Raptors, who tnil.ed
by 20 points .after tbc first
quaner, drew witun five
wid! 10:24 left in .the fumdJ
on two quicl: 3-pointcrs by
Kapono and a Pathr
jlllllpeL But Toronto went
SCteless for tbc ncn 3:16
as Orlando pulled away.

spending 6 1/2 seasons with
tbc Griulic•., was 0-12 in
~ pl'Cvious postseasons.
· Kobe Btyant scored 18 of
his 32 points in tbc fin.aJ 8
tninutes to keep Los
Angeles safely ahead.
I amar Odom bad 17 points,
14 ICbounds mel six assists
mel Luke ·walton added 16
points fur tbc Lakers, who
entered havillg won eipt of
their last nine regular-seasOilgames ro earn the No. I
seed in die WesUlm
Confcrcnce.
Game 2 will be played
Wednesday night at Staples
Center before the best-ofseven series shifts to
Denver for the thinl and
fourth games.
Carmclo Anthony had 30
76eni " · l'istn 1111 16
· points and 12 rebounds fur
AUBURN tm I S, Mich.
the eighth-seeded Nuggets. - Andtc Miller SIXliCd 20
Allen Iverson also had 30 pointund Willie Green bad

Scarlet
fromPageBl
•
ball game that followed i.t at

Ohio Stadium.

..

The lacrosse mark of
52,004, set at last year's
national
semifinals in
Baltimore, was never in
jeopardy .as 29,(i(l I showed
· up early to also take in the

lacrosse lllliWh.

,.
1

t

Shortly before the kickoff
pf the foofual.l game, it
began to rain and it continued in bursts the rest of the
afternoon, · eliminating any
chance of approaching die
92,000
who
attended

.

'

Walboe bad 24 poiDts,
niae tcOOuMs aDd nwtW
a fumcbise playolf R100R1
with se- blod.s;

~a c:omcbact
Miller gave Philadelplria

~-~midway~~~"'~

IUUlut quartcl" ...r """ IU"l
lime !iiDoe late in the first.
Alta Chauncey .Billups
missed tbme of four free
!brows .and a b.yup in 2-plus
minutes late in tbc g~ be
macle two from tbc line to
pull tbc Pistons within one .
with 45 .seoonds left.
Detroit's Jason M.:axicll
drew adiaJEe oo lhe ensuing possession, giving lbe
bome team a chance ro
avoid an upset.
The Pistons set up a play
that created an open shot f01
T.ayshaun Prince, but his
jumper was short. After
AndJc lguodala made one
of two 1m: throws with II ·
seoonds left, Rasheed
Wallace missed a shot near
the basket that would have
tied it at 88.
·lguodala then made two
1m: throws wid! 7 seconds
left to sea1 the win.

nnlikie~

weeks

"Hewas rta...t;ft~
·~oc ·Ovctme
ma vei:y ilisrespmfill man-

8

bald it is to oomc in and .Small on thi!rl-:and-13,
play. Tbele's a lotofe~- belping set up Dan 1Joomn
ence earned dJroup the Helron's 1-yJII'II toucbdown
s~. That's bow spring iun llCIIf the end of the third
pracbce should be - to get quarter.
us started going into
One of the biggest bri_ght
"-'1.~
....
spots was BauSCDIIll1l, w bo
- Tailback Ohris "Bcanien is · battling Henton (and,
Wells; Brian · Robisk:ie and eventually, prized incoming
several offensive linemen freshman Tetrelle Pryor) for
did not play l:loc•nse they tbe backup spot behind
were recovering from Boeckman.
injuries.
Bauserman made bis first
Henton directed tbe appearance late in !:he half
Scarlet" offense
after and pmmptly led the Gray
Boeckman's day encled. on an '81-yard drive, comTaking over at the Gray 30 p~ .ali three ofbis pass- .
after a sboJt punt, he guided es including a 51-yllnl score
tbc Scarlet to a 17-7 lead. to laurian Wasbington. who
The ley play was Henton'li bad sliDPed behind clefenclet
32-y.ard completion to Ray · Nate Oliver near d1e goal

me

ner," James said.
~
stayed quiet in the
leading up to the series.
He squirmed through
llgauskas and West both Haywood's legs to get up .
"It's one game," W1Z8Ids went 8-for-8 from the line and the pair pushed and
coach Eddie Jordan said. and &lt;::avs (37) shot 20 morc screamed at each other.
free throws · than tbe · Cavs coach Mike Brown
"They drew first blood~"
WJ.Zards ( 17).
.
intcrve~ . ~
Resting a bothersome
Arenas played 27 minutes quickly
J31lllson came runnmg m to
back, James ·sat out the early and fouled out wid! 13 sec- the fray as Ugauskas and
part of the fOUl'th quarter. onds to go. Still &lt;&gt;ettino his Ben
Wallace
led
b
b
But once he returned to tbe
legs
after missing 66 games · Cleveland's charge.
floor, Cleveland's superstar . following knee surgery,
Haywood was slapped
foiWard came through as Agent Zem tired in tbe with a technical, · as were
usual. With the game on the &amp; urtb J ·
had 23 Jamison and James.
line, he twice got to the bas- 10 · • 3ID1son .
points and 19 rebounds and
~I was over top of him
ket and scored over WIZards StevenSon finished wid! and be got a little razzle.
!lcfenders, who had s~t three points on just 1-of-9 dazzled," Haywood said.
much of the game knocldng shooting.
him to the floor.
·
Stevenson doesn't regret
·. James expected a physical saying what he did about
game, and be got one. Not limes. But their dialogue
that he minded.
bas ended.
. "I was built for this,n be
'The
is over," .
••
""" Stevenson
- ;d. "I'm not 6-",
" ~
sai . "I didn't
pounds to shoot jumpers all say anything to him and he
· night. I go to the hol~ and I didn't say anything to me.
. ~te 7"ntacl Don t ever The series has already startdrink r m the only person ed: We don't need to talk.
feeling that."
-~ ~ ·
· We all know what's ~in the
With.::~his~ tied 14. 84; alr.lwi.i what I baiho say.
ames
""
_way 00wn He(James)isagoodplayer.
the lane and hit a ~yup 1 do what I can to get UDder
between Antawn J anuson his skin, on and off me
and Brendan Haywood with cowt.~
1:37_ rem~g. Following
Meeting for tbe third
a Bliss by Gilbert Arenas, · straight time in the postscawho 1~ the WJUTds with son, these two teams know
24_ pomts, James powered each other well. They also
. past Steven~n and dropped strongly dislike each other
a floater With 55 seconds ·and tempers boiled OVI:r in
left in the game - and one the finl1 iletlOOda of lhe first
ticlt to s~ on the 24-I!CC- balf, when Ha~ · tlatCIDII ibot clock.
·
teDed J~~~~e~ wtth a screen
. Tbe Wizards were 1till _ . midcourt.
within four, but althoup
Jamet didn't appreciate
Dalliel Gibson missed a free the foul or IIIII Haywood
throw and I ames mistiftd towered over him for severon two attempts from lbe al aeconds after the call.
line in ~final minute,
Washington's offenliC went
cold at ihe.worst time possible. I:unison missed three
strai&amp;ht outside shots, two
of diem 3-pointers, in the
final minutes.
· "They were shots I normally make, but 1 wasn't
able to convert," Jamison
said. "It's frustrating.n
Dclonte West made four
free throws in the final 15.1
seconds.to seal Cleveland's
win.
Zydrunas llgauskas added
22 points and 11 rebounds
and West finished with 16

fromPageBl

oow

"That's
lhing~o. He
ain't going to do anyrblng.
rm not going to do anything, so let's play on."
Jordan Sllld . plli1l · of
Washington's g~ plan
was to be "very physicaln m
d1e paint And eadh time,
James .came inside, tbc
WWWds let him feel it.
"When LeBron drives,
be's getting hit, hit, hit,~
Brown srud, pounding his
hand onto ibe dais to
eDIPhasize his point. "Yes,
he had 14 free throws, but if
you go back and watch the
tape, he's getting clebbered.
.He has to make sure that be

out

Wllhdsix.

L---

me

points for the Cavaliers,

stniCk

1

goes
. _.

in there and protects
get

~iJOeSIJ't

hurt.

· "'ne •thing he can't do, is
stop dlliving the ball."
James never did, and if
there were any questions
about the weUness of bis
'bad, he answered them
with a one-banded dunk olf
an alley-oop pass from
Gibson m the sccondquarter. Streaking down the left
sicle, James·wem up ,t o gr.ab
Gibson •s lob wid! his right
hand and slammed it in.
"I . teld Boobie, 'Just
throw die ball anywhere.
and I'D go· get it,"' James

Bodl teams had

andtwoen01~

m hits

The douhlrbew.- meant
nine games in :a six-day
span for die Lady F&gt;Bioons,
and bta1 coach Mike Wolfe
said his team's Jlelformance
.refllocted that.
~It's a very disappointing
result. We looked bad in me
pFeg:B~DC.~ said Wolfe. -"Not
tomak;c exouscs, but we' ve
played .almost half of our 1'1
games in die last week. The
eDe:t!Y j~ wasn' t thetc..~
But Wolfe lmows his
J_.ady Faloons .are · bener
than !bey showed with lbcir
two hits :and nine errors in
game one.
"We'R: a mucb better
team Ibm dtat,~ srud Wolfe.
"We'R: a good softball
team. rm oonfident we' D
bounce bad."
1bcir first dumce tG do so
willl be at Buffalo on
Tuesday. Game time is set
for5 p.m.

..

•

'

• Scd8n boJs lose
· '» Fadalal ttdliug.

BY a -•"-REID

s.. . ..

. MlDDI.£I'OitT
Micklk:pott
Polioe
Dtpwaoembls ldclscd dJe
name of a dJild 1ll'bo
•uiViitd in !:he Qltio River
• M"..t.~Jqlnct last Thursday

·-·

-.~.. . . . . . 1

)feports

WP- Fry; I.P- Riggs.

WI

w

. . ... . . . . . . 7
012 105 0
9102
210 221 0
7102

thefts,
accidents

MHS:Bok Crln1&gt;0Dn- Hoil Sansom.

WHS: - - -l¥&lt;Hy!IOII.

WP-~; LP - Wood.

fine.
· 1bcic arc some WOO{!uescioo the value of a Spring
game, since it is little more
dum a glorified practice thar
adds to die Ilisk •Gf a player
gellting injured.
.
CGacb Jim Tressel isn't in
that camp, however.
.
"'f you' d .ask our guys
which would dtey rather
have, one more praotice or a
spring game, tbey would tell
yeu spring game,~ be said:
1be focus and excitement
and all those things, d's
bard for us to ~licate duli
in practice. If you gave me a
choice., rd have two spring
games because I drink
they're very, very belpfui.n

BY limit 5

NlMEROY - Alleged
theft1; .and car .accidents
have recently .been reponed
lby Pameroy Chief of Police
Mank E. !Proffitt and his
depart;ment with the inci·dents Femaining . under
investigation.
Last week Sgt. Brandy
King was .a ssisting the
Mason P.o1ice Depamnent
with a tr.affic stop ail the
Pomeroy side of the
Pomeroy-MaSQn Bridge. It
was later .alleged :that a
~ """Dp''ter was found
inside the vehicle whioh had
!been detained. The Dell
computer .all~gedly .came
fmm the Mason W.al-Man.

OBDUARIES
PqfAS

. •lhot• • Oint Sr., m

t·illllli•r c_ lh

'all......_

-

'

said "He IPJ!IIy took tbatJi~

erally:"

~

-

Netes: Cavs ·C Ben
Wallace, who normally
wears bis hair i.n tight com
rows, let his afro out for
Game !1. "fm a b\g support·er of the 'fro COIIIiqg back
for the playoft'5,~ James
said. "I told bim J need to
sec it and I told ·him my kids
neededto ·secit.Hcoouldn't
say no to my kids." ...
Oleve1aod i.s ooly 7-17 in
series cpeners. ,.. Jamison
had 10 mbounds in the first
quarter. ... Washington bas
· lost eight consecutive Game
is.

I

.

!• OUIA-GIIICID&amp;
111»4i&amp;·&amp;

:C&gt;

. . ..u

'

·

·

t

:IDi••

•• a uu Mimi

aealtAID Mltt. . •llt

~c.Siu•
~-·1116),

M.D., M.S., jails H
.....
*Oiinic. See . . M ~
• TillY Ted'l aillOI.R:8S
, Slitit.a pogta·n.

clinic in need
of clients -.. .

M

BY8ml' s rr

:$1eP-.M
•Gi•9b1Ppl188t
for FitilayiA Poiti810J'.

·Qtbt •allipolis J)ail!' Qtributtt,

P.aui'JO United Metbodist

&lt;lwach in ·'nq)pcn Plains is
in .daqc:r of"canoellation

due .to I.IICk of climts.

q, .tloint IIwant •tli•ttr

SlN'f REPOIIT

Free mamiii&lt;Nit'8l1l5 arc

and The Daily Sentinel
have laqncbed a new page every
Friday called ''Faith 8nd Family".
Hyou bave a testimonial story,.
event about yourself
or even a poem that you would
.I like to share please email to:
kkeUy@mydailytribune.com
nfields@mydailyregister.com
hoeftich@mydailysentinel.com
Limit your story to
500-750 words. 1

-·~during

.

.

INDEx
'

r.Annie's Mailbox
A3
Calendars
A3
a SIICI10NS

Classmeds
.

u

B3-4

Comics

85

Editorials

A4
As
As

Movies
Obituiuies
Sports

Weather

Please.include a phone number
, myooremaL
•
••

NEWSeMVOAILYSENTINEL .GOM ,

available--::--:-~GOu.ty

Dlillll_ ......

8 Section
A6

',

'

·•·

lbe · visit which coincides
with a Women'-s Health Day
Eveat held by die Meigs
County Ca!!N':r Initiative at
1be • I 1L :Women with
iiisunulac .-e also weloome
to ·•
up and some of
lbeliC same insured women
may qualify foi lbe free
IIiiiiiJIIOglBI.
NDDDa Tones, dirccror of
lbe 1bink Pink" projea, This vehicle sustained heavy damage during an accident
helps •1aJ.,- ime mammo- iniBnlection of Ohio 7 and 124 yeslerday afternoon ~
gmns for women ages 3549 with funds from the
Susan 0 . Komen Breast
Cancer
· Research
semi-truck near the interFoundation. The Komen is
section of Obio 7 and 124
in its tbird year of providing
close to the 124 - Man.
funds ro "lbiDk Pint"
POMEROY
-Three Heavy damage was dotiC to
which al&amp;O provides $20 gas acciclents, two in Salisbury the vehicle with two people
cards m clieats •
keep Thwoship and one in Salem transported for tre.armcnt of
their
- - Township kept emergency tbeir injuries, one by Medic
meDL
prnooncl in Meigs County 5 and the Olher by private
offi:rs rcfemls to WOIDCII busy~y. .
vehicle. Also on the scene
ovcc SO who don't have
The day 1icgan when a · were mc~s of the
beal1h insUilllloe but require coal tnd tcOOrtedfy over- Pomeroy Volunteer Fin
Cree~.
turned tar !&gt;alcm 'Center. Department and OSHP,
Ho-ver. tf Torres does- No further i.nfuonatioo was which is handling the accin't mclet The James' quota avail:lblc on Ibis accidmt at clent report.
of c~. the mobile mamBy tbe time evening
time. The Ohio State
mography van will caooel ~~
Higtlway Pattol is handling rolled around another accibcral1.., the visit would not
dent was !q)Oited on Ohio 7
the accident report.
be oost effective. To IDIIkc
Then, in the afternoon a near the ThiT Gas Station
an appointment all T~ vehicle
aHeacdly driven by outsicle of Middleport. The
call -992-2161, ext. 236. a Mason t:ouDty, W.Va. accident involved two vehiman struck dJc rear of a cles with three people iniR
-aLAI

i:':fiti~~i

.,

.

'

• r

'

ls.AS

approves
personnel
contracts

lr a CwnriCJeneer at St.

, WurHEtt

•-•If

Eastern board

1UJIIIBtS PLAINS -'-A
May l3 visit by che mobile
llllllilllltpphy VIlli from

PIF ~ M

~:=~ s'!:n~~~~ ~·,

. with mcciving stolen pr
·
erty and was later transported to the Southeast Ohio
~ional JaiL
Also last week. the theft
of a PlayStation Two and
dothing was reported by

S. . . AS

•

.!

-

Tlwalbluund...,.filtw:nl •+
£11he~otaasnofchlldabllllllandf1811edln~ 'lnone..-arby
e. L'aj•tiWia Ill Job ..:1 F.wnlly s.vtc.. n. DJf'S Is partidpllling for the flnit year In "Pinwt.els for P:WN• :lton,•
1 lg:iid 'Ill ·d J
11w pndl1en1 ddlld m sa in the community. Chris ~nk is pictured baalille the . .y. c1he

.._,,..•

~ s.

foot and was later .spotled by King on the roo! of
the Save-A-Lot grocery .
..,
Sa
,
stare. "usse11 0
' · ar-gen~ ·

lOll

lldln .11 11

'DieObio ·sa.e Universily'~;

....

iiCUIII'

.BSERGENTOM¥DAILVSENllNELCOM

••
..

The child'1; body was taken
to the state medical .elUIII!iner's officeJi.!l Charleston.
W.Va. far .an .autqpsy.
Swift a4:ed anyone with
infannaticm Jibont the
chili!' s' .disa~J!Dce and
subsequent death to contact
the :police deplllltment.

Pinwheels for }lrevention · Pomeroy

-'· -lt

•
. 'n,,,

-

.

ly R:Sidence '(!In S0ulh flmnt scattched 1tlhe :area lbef.m:e
'Street ifor appr.olcimately 30 findilllg the chiijd nn the
mmutes When !her ;father, ;ri'ver at 'Jj:(i)6 p.m. Swift
J(!l!!aiban, repooted !her dis- said CPR. w.as administered
apj'lCliT.aiiOC ito the ~lice .at the scene and the child
~ .ar :S:3tii p.m.
was taken to Pleasant
Poliice oftliiocrs, fiFe V..alley Hospital. S~ was
·~ vo'luntecrs and pmnounced dead at m,a.m.
net~hrulhood vo'lililteers on Fmday .

••~n:;EtiTirNEL!COM

'&amp;

. .

• gVIcla.......
m

PoHceiden

SPOitiS

See

· -- j

•

•

910 590 12100
w 010 000 1.29
MHS (15-S): lillorlono Fry ond Kaii!Yn
Chlpiilon.
WHS (1 o-i): Krlle Riggs and MaTJI

\!

talkina

~

exe-n'"osing offers
healdt benefits, A3

~

seven

Lady Eagles get
big win over
Waterford, Bt

Stretch band

against state-ranked Man

Badl feo.Uj!s will !ct two
MASON, W.Va. -· The
days off befute Dclmit WabaJDII softball team bosthosb
Game
2
oo ed Man in a doublebeadcr
Wednesday ni.gbt.
011 S;atunby, losU\g bolh
pmes to me second~
Cdlics IM, Bsllrb 11 . Lady Billies.
BOS10N - lby Allen
The Lady F.aloons (1_0-9)
soom1 18 p:Wnts aad Kevin bad two hits, oomm1tted
Gamou bad 16 ss die two aiDe CII'Ol'S, and lost 12-1 in
ncwoomcrs who led die = o n e . Juni01 Kylie
Bos1oo Ccllics m cbe NBA's
pitdlod for Watwna.
best moon~ spatW them lo .
out four and waika win in tbcir playoff open- . Dig two.
er against the AdanliJ
Senior Kay.anna Sayre
Hawks.
and juniOt Amber 'Miy
G
.............
14.-3 each bad a hit.
arnett · -YI""" .a
· Madena Fty SlJUCk out
Hawks
IWI
with
a
j
umper,
- .....
__ _. w..,...,..
_,..._ _."ooor ...........
stuting a six-point 11osrnn · SJI
surge tmt. made it 35-27 in . fO£ MJD (IS-3).
the second quartea:. And
In g;ame two, tlhc oontest
Allen scored 10 sttaipt was much closer, and the
Cellics points midway L:ady_~oons led 7,.4 .after
thro"~" the lbUd dial li ~~,~~n~~~ ..butfi tbe_ ~y
...._
.
.....,. &gt;UJJm • vc · m •we
1
exllended_a l3-point ~ ro sixlh and went on to win '967--:JS with S:J9Ielt m tbc 7: mshman Alex Wood
penod.
. , . pitdw! for Wabama Sbc
1be !Up---seeded Celucs · had foor s!Plreouts and one
lead ranged 1mm 12 to 27 w.alk in 1iCVen imiin,gs
points tbc tCSt of the way.
~ bid two RBls and
The smmd game of tbc senior Ashley Wolfe had
best-of•seven series will be two doubles :and an RBL
~ Boston on Wednesday · Both went 2-for-4. Sayre
mgb.t.
· was also 2-for,-4 with an
E_~ghth-seedcd Atlan~ RBI. and senior Mary
whtch ended the NBA s Kebtcr went l-for-3 with a
longest playoff · drought double. TuUy had one bit
with its first appearance in and .an RBI, :and sopbo~
nine years, was led by rook- Beth RoUins bad one hit, .as
ie AI Horfutd with 20 points well.
and 10 l'ebounds and Joe
Bek Gompton pitched
JohnSGn added 19 points.
game two fur Man. Sbe

Alabama's 2007 spring his own 1-yard touchdown
game. .
piiiJillC for the Scarlet with a
l\oMkman srud no matter 48-yard oompletioo to Brian
how many w= on hand, it Hattline. The Scarlet squad
was still cnoouraging.
also SCORd on field goals of
"The fans
really eager . 48 yards by Aaron Petn'ey's
to sec what we've been and 24 yards by Mike
wOJting OD throughout •the M.attimoe.
whQle SJMit1g and dleCk out
Hartline
said
the
the yoonger guys and che Buckeyes, coming off a 12older guys to sec how I season that ended with a
they're coming along.~ he 38-24 loss to LSU in the
said after completing 12-of- BCS title game, bad a good
18 passes for 14:5 yards. spring.
"It's always nice when you
"We Dlllde · a · IQt of
. come out Ja-e and see some progress,n said Hartline,
fans saeaming for you.n
who bad six catches for .82
. Boeclnnan bad an up-.and- yards. "A lot of guys witdown day, throwing inter- nessed what it takes to comceptions to Coleman and pete at !:his level. Some
Ross HOman, but setting up young guys got to see how

who,

~:

a ~ playoff-hip 17,
helpn&amp; cbe 16ers -.a cbe
~ODS in Game I of their
6rst-RIUIId ~
The EaSWII Confermce's
second-seeded team w.s
expected beat tbe ~
scoclod Six«S by doable
diJ!Is :mel did lead by 1:5
mulway through dx: dliid
quarter.
But Pbilacldphia ldWal
to foHow the script.
Aftc- .lhc Sixers trailed
62-47, Gmon made two baskets to stan a 10-0 run lhat

Lady FalooDS drop pBir

'

.

TUPPERS PLAINS The Eastein Local Board of
Education approved supple- ·
mental contracts and other
personnel action at its
recent monthly meeting.
Five year contracts were
awarded to teachars Pat
Newland, Katie Peyton,
Sam Thompson. Brian
Bowen,
Rebecca Edwards.
~
involving a semi-truck at the Amy Gross. Carly Hayes.
· Ruthie White. Heather
Wilcoxen. Mildred Watson
and Melissa Barber. Threeyear opntracts were awarded
to Josh Fogle. Carman
tiRlly being injured and Mitchell and Belhen Bowen.
transported t&lt;l Pleasant
Two-year contracts were
Valley Hospital by Squad awarded to Judy Bunger.
33 and Medic 5. After Jennifer Seers and Connie
unconfirmed reports of the Osborne. Conti nuing consecond vehicle allegedly tracts were awarded to
being found on Zuspan Tawney Helgesen and
Hollow Road, a fowth Lester Stewan~
patient was then traJlSP011ed
Supplemental contracts
to Hotzq- Medical Center were awarded for the 2008by Squad 44 for treatment 09 school year to: Sheryl
of their injuries. The Roush, van;ity cheerleader
Middleport
Fire advisor and junior class
Department, Meigs County advisor: Sam Thompson.
Sheriff's Office and .O SHP junior high football coach:
were also on the scene.
Carty Hayes. student council
All accident reports and co-advisor; Cris Kuhn. band
additional details BIC forth - director and high school
comi.ng from the Gallia- handbell choir director:
1Meigs Post of the Ohio·
Slate Highway PatroL
M
1 a.AS

....

•-'!i

•

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="542">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9993">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="13852">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="13851">
              <text>April 21, 2008</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1280">
      <name>coen</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
