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                  <text>. _ . 86 •

The Daily Sentind.

·--t-:k
···~*

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!A:IDDI

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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

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

:C&gt;

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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 -.. .

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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
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hoeftich@mydailysentinel.com
Limit your story to
500-750 words. 1

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Dlillll_ ......

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A6

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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

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m

PoHceiden

SPOitiS

See

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•

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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

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�NATION • WORLD

.The Daily Sentinel
r

· 8Y DEll ft

r-

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. '11ae111Uy, April U, I I D8

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'

CINUIN

NEW

~dent

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f'~esidentiBushand

Louisiana 'Gov. Bobby .Jindal, left, listen as 'MeKican President!F81ipe
Calderon makes rremerks .at .the opening of the 'Mexican Consulate in 'New Orleans,
\llonday. The 'PreSident; Calderon and Canadian Prime 'Minister Stephen Harper are in
New Orleans to attend the North American Leaders' Summn in New Orleans.
many benefits NAFTA has
brought, both to the United
'States .and to Mexico."
He said the far-reaohing
trade deal has led to the.creation of hundreds &lt;Of thousands of jobs on both sides
of t.he border, has offered
more choices to ,consumers
and has raised the qualizy of
_pr.oducts.
.
'Sens. IBaraok (!)bama .and
Hillary IRodham :Clinton,
rivBis for the Democratic
presidential nomination,
both ha'~&lt;e t.hreatened to plill
the ilJ:S . o.ut of NAFTA if
.elected .as a means to pressure Canada and Mexico to
negotiate more protections

. Otlicial: Parents
sought counseling.for
bomb plot student

for workers and t.he envj- husband made mistakes
ronment. Bush calls the idea related to NAFTA !.hat she
isolationist and reckless. ·
plans to fix. She said she
Clinton, D-N .Y., has would correct problems :that:
made opposition to new have Jed to job .JosSes, ,or .
trade deals a centerpiece of would tell Canada Jllld
her campaign and has · Mexico the United States is
vowed to at least Te-negoti- pulling out of .t he agreeate NAFTA, which has been ment. ·
blamed for 111oving blue · While Qbama and(J)inum
collar jobs to Mexico imd compete iri 11'uesda_y~s
elsewhere. Obama, D..[ll., Democratic rprimary . lin
has chided Clinton about Pennsylvania, 'Bush is .using
NA'FTA, saying it was the summit in Louisiana ellS
passed while her husband, a stage to not only 'JlfOIIl!lll:
former President Clinton, NAFTA, the wodd's ~st
was in office.
trading zone, but puSh
Recently in Pittsburgh, Congress to ratify free trade
Clinton told manufacturers deals wit.h fanarna. South ·
and union workers that her Korea and Colombia. Tine

Bouse recently put off a
vote on the Colombia frr:e
traile pact, mabng it less
Jikcly that it will be
i1!PJ11:0vcd llhis _year.
. IB:uSh~ anewforlthe
COiombiii ,deal at ~ 1'eCii'lfion of !business leaders
lMonihjy miE'ht.
.
"11 lflill_y u:nderstand that
fitis· is a tough &lt;pOlitical vote
:for some, but ifs about time
America 11ets aside petty
[pOliticS and focuses on
&amp;ing What"s right for 11ne
ll.Jnited States of America,"
he said
IBefore his nneetinas with
Ojl&amp;ron ilUid Halper, tBush
attrmiW! .a &lt;Ceremony ;to
!I'COpen the Mexican constilale in New Orleans. The
Mexican government closed
ldne consulate as a cost-savlng measure in 2002. In
:recent years, illllllinants
fro.m Mexico and across
ILatin America hav.e worked
to ~rebuild the cizy, and .tens
of:thouslmds now live •i n'the
New Orleans area.
''OurTelations are notjust
economic
jn
nature,"
Clil.derori sai.d "They also
have der;p ties.nf friendship,
and rm sure !.hat we are
goi-qg to strengthen !.hem
even more .at :this meeting.
..Those . lints
;were
1itiengibcned &lt;OD the occasion of the devastatiqg
.tragedies
caused
lby
illorricane Katrina and
illmricane :Rita. At that time
the :people of Mexico
~IICil its solidarizy to
our lbwibta'S and sisters in
!Lo•iisiau• ~ knowltbat:thousands of Mexicans have

~ iin 'tine rec:onstruetion of New Odcans.
I'm very happy today to ·see
New Orleans !!tiDCtil!l and
worldl!g." .
.._,.. .
The wmmt iWllS """" m
the city's busiDess district
nearlbe FrenchQuarter, but

~
'A~O(;IATEO PRESS ,WRn:ER

' Scientific
IProtcin
Laboratories, whi.c.h in 1llm
owns a (ChitJe8e .factoJy :Changzhou SIU. -.and 'bill's
· additiomil .raw 'lic;parin dimn
otherlJhinese SIIPP'Iicrs.
The !Food .and ~
Administration
w.amed

·ane

!DlOStilestmdive~·-­

atcr

:in U.S. lbistoly. l'he
IDlO~ '1101111 ~
' New Orleans, ,\iJ!ocl hJn..
dredS of pcqllc \&amp;1
ibe
Gulf :Coast. ~ •Of
damJ!gecbnm-elt.:b,OOO
'hlirnes and 'IDIIlle - . m.rt
800,000 lJOQIIIc, .. :Jess
ovemigtn:-ln ~ Odcan•.
a helo:ved. A....;• ., city,
progress is . illlneM :8lmost
32 months Jnnkr.
'ibe city ·lis :tqXJp~nl.Ung,
t.he music and re&amp;laUnUJt
scenes are ~ ibe
port business 1h8s .,..aily
:unprov.ed .and alns !Ia revenues are near normal. Yet it
is still dogged by crime,
Jiomclessness .and frustrations about the pace of
rebuilding efforts.

"We lbaVc data in the test

w.oo&amp;ook,

AND lbAcY SuGAR

IN 4623l&gt; {for 9CIIiors). We
hope one of these will oome
through .for you.
.
Dear
I read the
letter from "'Perplexed in
the Midwest," wbo can't
afford a diamond ring and
asked if it was OK'to get his
girlfriend cubic ltirconia,
My beloved husband W8s
an expert in diamond ootting. When we were about
to be married, he told me he
was crafting my rings hiin- .
self and.bad selected cubic
zirconia instead of diaIIIOnds because of their
astounding · beauty and

A--·

spaMe.
I was delighted, Slid Ill
my friends were amarred at
tile size and fire of those
brilliant stones. The I~
jeweler said they were
"very difficult to discern"
from diamonds 'OOstin_g
thousands more. To this day,
cubic Wronia, which is not
"cheap" -just inexpensive
and sensible - is my own
cboioe over dia.monds. -

.

'

Qubs and
AINI'Qft;..aotU-"
va~

,

~

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t

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_

~ay, Aprilll

'· ATHENS -

· Sout.hern

Board of Supervi~ meeting, 11:30 a.m., district
office:, .Hiland Road.
POMEROY Meigs
County Retired Teachers,
noon luncheon, Trinity

a •-=-~....,

o..an Syd' n

witers
flllll c:ano.•im, .,;m •

I

•

--

,.

.....

....

~-WWlf.Q~-

for women's sbelter.

Church
ll.n
'
ev~..,
~

. Salurday; Aprill6 •
CARPENTER _ First
cornbread
festival
at

Pmfect Y0u1self and Your Family Today!

Quesflons aiKI Answets About Smoke Alarms
In 1he -m of 1 fire, pii)PII1y installed and
gases rise, inslalling your Slrioke ala!TTls at
ulliullined Stlnolr.e lllrms will proyide an
the proper level will provide you willlthe
e.1r ..ning a11nn ID }'0111' household . This ealliest warning possible. Always fellow ihe
allnn could saw rour own life and those of .)11811ufactUTl!r's installation instructions.
. YIJII' ltMnd ora by providil~g the cllance ID

.....

..., • •.,.,.

itbeae Woullf/GIIISmobA--.?
,..
h

.._.,._

l£-.;;aealle

Ala 1?
In the ewnt of a lin!, a smoke alllrm can •

save rour life ..Act tnose ofyo.ur loved ones.

flllllities by Providing an urly warning
signal- so you IJI1d your~mily can
IICipe. Smole alarms
-one of the best

Manyllardwa!e, homesupply,orgeneral
merchandise stores carry smoke alarms. If
you are unsure where tc buy one in your
ctimmunity,
your local fire department

call

suggestions. Some fire departments offer
snioke alarms fer little or no cost.
Ani Smo«e .v.m.
Hard fO lrlstMI?
If your smoke alaTTTlS
are hard wired, that is
wired intc the electncal
system, you will need tc
have a qualified
electrician do the initial
installation or install •
· rep~cements For
battery powered smoke
alanns, all you will need
fer installation is a

llfllty dellices you can
~ IIIII install to
,
pWtdyouraell, your
family, and your home ..

.. .T,_dSmob
Alai

MAL Ud*l'
Then! ft1'faJ1¥
dillelart IM•lds of
SJDDka lllllrms available
on the 11111111et but they

pi••

I hic.lonilation

11-

Ill us aounc1 more
when a !laming, fast mewing fire
occurs. PIICill els:Alic alanns are quicker at
I8IISing sntuldel iug , smoky fires. Then! are
also c:ombinnon lmoke alarms 1t1at
combine ionization and photDelectric into.

Limit your story to
750wonls.

n•••ber

~.

ing the technique of stretch Health Department. The
band use. Movements are program was de signed by
geared to increaSing flexi- an exercise and dance
bility and mobility and to teacher and use a video she
improve balance, according produced called "Sit Down
to Leiftleit, and are easily and Tone Up ." The stretch
adapted to performing when . bands come in variou s
seated. Funding for the pro- resistance levels designed "
gram comes from t.he by color.
Recently the stretch band
Sisters of St. Joseph
exercising ha;; been offered
Charitable Fund.
Leifheit
and
Jenni to those enrolled in the
Dunham are t.he instruc- Partners in Care progran1
tions, having . learned t.he for seniors with memorv
technique
from
Andy loss at the Senior Citizen's
which
Kathy
Brumfield, exercise consul- Center
·
tant of t.he Meigs County McDaniel coordinates.

filii undlrtwo tlllic
type&amp;: ion2atiori and

event about·younelf
a
tllat you
like to sh•re please email to:

r

Childr~~n:~~C~h~u~rc~h~,~S~e~c:o~n;d~f~S~tr~ee~t~~E~~~~~i~~C~hnurfic~h~,-~~They=:•:e:•~¥eTY=·=h~tlfiOi;lln:nt:mean~·~s~Qf~-cc-~(o:n~a~n~o~ne~mergencytelephonenumber)
J!!ll.vide.youJttit~.some "'="--~1..,--,---

Consortium for 0 a.m.
~.lBoanLmeetiyg,...J
."'e offices, 2'0 East Circle executive din:ctor
mountain bike raee, live
,mve, Building 20, Third · Council on Aging, to spe;;ur;. gospel musiC, free train
floor, Athens.
Entertainment by some · rides, free vendor space.
Thursday, ApriU4
Meigs students of ''Grease" Cornbread
cook-off.
· POMEROY
-Meigs musical. Take paper prod- Contacl Pastor Whitt Akers,
. ~il and Water Conservation ucts and personal care items 591- I 236 for rules.

..

The Daily Sentinel
ha e
a w page every
Friday railed "Faith and FamDy". ·
Ifyou llave .a testimonial story,

r

Cf'ftlblrs SyrJirtrte flleb .

~driver.

Some

brands are self
adhesive anti wil leasily
stick tc the wall or ceiling where they are
plaoed . For all smoke alaTTTl installations,
be sure you fellow the manufacturer's
instructions.because there are i:li!lerences
between the various brands.
.
.. '
Helpiu/Tip

Jltasantl{qilttr

•

J

C:::r!,

tu: A...W's Jl•• r P.O.
Box U31M, ,.....,., 1L
flfill, 10 fUt4 O f l t cllolll Altlrie'J Jl.ator,
,
,... /flllbua . , fJdRr

Sod&gt;mtned .p halo

L.enonl Leifheit, R.N., ,lei!, confens with Kathy McDaniel , 'Partne,rs in Car:e coordinator,
befoie a session 'with seniors Sll'ffering memory 1oss enrolled in the program.

*'"

·------•....,.

•tOMIII......_. . ~

·--

POMEROY- For those
residents . looking for an
exercise program which
Bea~MRO.Dat
Dear · Ilea ~: The they can pursue at their
value of the stone is only ·o wn . pace, wit.hout cost,
one fictor in the selection of Lenora Leifheit, R.N. t.he
a ring. But it is important fait.h hased nurse at the
Community
that the recipient not be Mulberry
Center,
suggests
stretch
tricked into thinking it's
something other dum What band exercising.
@lasses are offered at I
it is.
and
5 p.m. on 1\nesdays and
A..;e 'r lllrihr is llrittnlly...,.y_.,.bll.-l 9 a.m. on Wednesdays.
M&amp;q Sqw, r..,tim eli- There is no program order
of tie AM r mlrn which means that anyone
.oole•• ,__ e -qf•,_,. can attend at anytime 'with--·irs..;l- out falling behind in learn1111', .,. ...,..

Community Calendar

.a

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

Tuesday, Aprilu, 2oo8

;.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

can live with t.he uncenainty. You have to do what lets
you sleei!!~t.
Dear
· • My dad is a
Dear AnDie: My husband
longtime
·
survivor
of
and J are in our 40s. We
·l lave been married for 15· HOdgkin's disease, but his
years and had a marril\ge battle has become a losing
ipost people would envy. OllC and the doctors say he is
terminal.
We have no children.
This wonderl'ul man bas
My husband recently
admitted to an indiscretion alwaxs been .the strength in
'wit.h a woman he has known my bfe. I would not be who
'for four years. This is not a I am today without him. I
woman he would ever take am heartbroken by what be
out in public . His pursuit of has gone through this past
ber was purely for sex. year. I want him to ~el
~ce it happened, he never something like a · last WJsb
.saw her again. (She con- son of ~. like they do
firmed this.) He only con- for sick cbildren. Is !.here
fessed because he devel- something out there to p t
:oped a medical problem and wishes for adults who
·was scared.
deserve that, too? My dad is
' · We are now separated very special, and I would
'a nd he is seeking counsel· love to n:member him with
ing for self-esteem issues. a big smile on his face. ~ has begged and pleaded IWdy's l.itde Girl
wit.h me not to divorce him,
Dear Daddy's Little
l)ut I feel as !.hough· I am Girt: While most such ~~~­
l!larried to a complete nizations deal wit.h s1ck
stranger. How could an children, there are a few for
intelligent, educated man adults, althou~ they are not
.who supposedly loves his as expansive m scope as die
wife actually go through more well-known groups.
·wit.h such an unspeakable Try · Dream Foundation
'act?. Is ·it true · "once a (dreamfoundation . com),
cheater, always a cheater"? 1528 Chapala St., Snite 304,
Is there an explanation Santa Barbara, CA 93101;
(other than rnidlife crisis) Fairygodmot.her Foundation
to assure me this was just a (fairygodmot.her.org), 213
one-time experiment? West 'Institute Pl., Snite 509,
Heartbroken in the Soutb Chicago, IL 60610; ·The
Dear Heartbroken: We Dream Lives On (thedreamdon't know why your hus- liveson.org), The Dave
'band felt the need to cheat, Bruch.hauser Fund. 9138
alt.hough t.herapy should Arion St., Suite A3 - Box
help .him find out. And we 134, Anchorage, AK 99507;
can't promise he won't do it Happiness Unlimited (hapagain, but if therapy helps piness-unlirnited.org), 310 .
him, there is a possi~:Y. Sout.h St., Morristown, NJ
this was a one-time
. 07960; Her Heart's Wisb
The issue, as always, is trust. (herheanswish.org), P.O.
Which is why we recom- Box 294, Lititz, PA 17543
mend counseling for you, (this one is for women); aDd
.too. Marriage doesri 't come Never •Too Late (neverwit.h guarantees. Counseling toolate.org),
8538
will help you decide if you Tidew!iler Dr., Indianapolis,

farfrvm areas dtiliterated qy

WASHING'FON
China and the United 'States
traded Charges Mondey
about whether a contamithreatened to something ·nant in the blood lthinner
llSSOCIAT.ED PRESS ,WRITER
''vey .violem.~
heparin caused sev.ere liller- Chan,gzlnou'SPLon'M~
'Schallenberger
was gic -reactions liriked to as ,that .the COJI1P8II.Y .Mes lllot
CHESiiER!RIEUl, S.C. &lt;Jharged with roiling J1 .;man,y ellS 81 deaths.
'have ;aaeguate .systems for
- ' A ileeril!ger accused of bomb t.hrem and · ·will be
:Federal lhealth official'S ensuril!g ihat the TaW materpii'Jlti~~g to bomb :his bigh dluu:ged II1uesday with 'jJOS- said new tests indicated .ll · rililsit uses areufeJIIIdlibat
'&amp;dhool is !I ittraight-A ·stu- iies6ion of . bomb-making solid lirik. China said .•the 1111_y impurities.arerre1110v.M.
&amp;nt ~Whose parents sought materilil, Hodge said. Be contaminant could' &lt;not bi:· lfhe IDA noted that .a!
lhe1p from mental .health was assigned ,a -lawyer, the ··•root .can se" of the many as 12 companies .in
~~_,....qicrtli~~~c'lllarni!!ed --w:illiam ~ncer.,-Wh .· -;pmblcQJ..
.
, ·•.
· ac .lll:tl jnvtilved-4n ·rlhe ~ ~ ·_'Jiihclg-,-,l:.be-=
· !lris 'head :into .a wlill
not II'Ctum .calls from i1he
Chinese offncials -sqggest- supply chain for liqlarin. lilooCI ihimw did not conw.ce'ki r*aut.horities ·said Associated Press.
ed at an embassy news con- Agency officials don '.t lain the contaminant M~y.
D.uring ·a brief court hear- .ference !.hat the problem know at what poim the con- over-sulf~ chondroitin.
IRyJJDO Schallenberger's ing Monday, the teen was with the .drug could have taminant was inli'OduCed.
IBut JiDA officials said that
parent~ took him to .a ho~~ sile!IJ but appeared .agitated · oc.c urred in the United
Hundreds of patients .have premise :is incorrect
pita1 three days before"'hrs- . ~s.·''l!yes widening at the States. They plan to visit a suffered severe allergic
The Chinese said they
Saturday .amest .after he 1ii~l of cameras awaitiqg Baxter International plant in · reactions to large doses of hope to get some samples
made ·.a 4-:inch indentation' him when he .entered in an Cherry Hill, N J., to get a t.he blood t.hinner. The FDA from Baxter for their own
lin lfbe w.allboard, :prosecu- Ol'liillle jumpsuit, bands better picture of how the said it suspects the prob- investigation.
tor !Jay Hoilge said .at a .cUffed .and .anlrJes ·shackled. finished product is manu-. lems stem from a contami·
"Wbim you liCe it, then
oowtt 'bearing.
Schallenbel'ger'1i mother .factored.
.nant that the ageney discov- you '.b elieve it," said Jlin
Scluillenberger, 18, was .and 1itepfather, !ohn and
!Raw heparin is · deriv.ed ered in SU{'Pliel! of 'IBVf ·Shaobmng, the deputy direcoot \badly injured, b.ut his !Laurie :Sittk:_y, aotild not .be from .pig intestines, · often .heparin .cormng from rQbina tor general· for the N alional .
[pllmiitS Blso called a local ll'eadled for :comment.
processed by small, unregis- - .a compound .derived ilnstitute for the Control of
mentBI bealth · clinic that
ll1beir phone nuniber was tered woikshops iii 'Ohina from animal cartilage ibat ftannaceutical
and
offered no help, Hodge said. unlisted, they di~ not .attend The raw .ingredient for so closely .mimics hc;parin Biological . Products . .in
A ·spokesman for the clinic rtbe lhearing, and their .home IBax.ter' s recalled heparin that :routine purity .tests China
would not confirm or deny about 10 miles from the ·came from Wiscoosin, based can't detect it.
Chinese exports have
.any contact with t.he family, sChool was blocked b_y "'No
citing state Jaw.
·rxesp.a ssing"
signs.
Hodge said he plans to Authorities
. . said
.ask that Schallenberger Schallenberger has eight
mKiergo a mental evaluation siblir!gs and step-siblings.
.at ihe ;teenager's bail hearSheriff Sam Parker said
lirlg Tuesday.
1he teenager':~; '"heartbrowas ken" parents . deserved
Schallenber.ger
.m::rested · after his 'Parents piaise for .calling authorities
caiJed police bec!luse he when they retrieved the
.
·ordered 10 pounds of an1tt10ntum nitra · J'rom a·
;ammonium nitrate, an post office after receivjng a
cq;losive commonly used delivery notice at home.
.as fertilizer and w.as
"'Without the parents, ·
employed in the deadly Chesterfield
County
,1995 Oklahoma City would ' ve suffered. We
bom.biQg.
.
ilhank them," Parker said.
Aut.hocities checked .the
Authorities
said
'icllool for bombs ·over the Schallenberger 's journal did
wcdrend .and on Monday 110t specify tar_gets of an
1itudents w.a.lked through attack., or a date !.hat he
newly installed .metal detec- planned to carry it out.
tors .and past Jaw officers. Randall Lear, the town's
Still, Officials said 60 ,per- police·
chief,
said
ami of the school'1&gt; 544 stu- Schallenberger was "just
,et~ .
dents s~.ed .home.
rilad at t.he world."
1be qui.et teenager wit.h a
ille I(Jolumbine anack
·slight !build .and a wispy happened nine years ago
mustache .had apparently . Sunday, but Lear sirid inves.been planning the potential- tigators do not know
ly .deadly attaok for months, whet.her there was any link
authorities said.
between · the anniversary
-nus kid bad t.he intel- and Schallenberger' s plans.
lect and the. means and the
Hodge said the teen was
IIUitmials to carry it out," set to graduate this year and
Hodge said.
· · had no hi story of bad
· Po1ioe said they discov- behavior. Schallenberger
Cl:cd • Jm.te..filled journal was on the school's acadeJauding t.he Columbine mic bowl squad .and had
ldllc::rs, an 811diotape to be won ail award from a loc~
played after he perished college a year earlier.
cJ!"iPll! .his .rampage and a
Students said the teen
~ wOlth of plans for the often ate al. one in the cafeteboaibing that included a ria and were surprised at the
..b~Jod.,drawn map of rthe accusation.
.
.llCbool
"J never !bough be' d be
""He's just a soft-spoken the dude to do something
little kid," Hodge said, like this," said James Ford.
ttMiug
,'Scballenberger a I 6-yelnr-old sophomore.

'

"

'Katrlna. White House officials said Bush's decision to
host t.he event jn New
Orleans sbows the city is
ready to be the venue for
.internafionaleveots. But.ifs
not its first big eveat. ILast
year, the cizy hoslcd col~e
football
clwJ1pjoosbip
games, the Martli. Gras and
the NBA AU-Star'Game.
Katrina roared OlliD land
on Aug. 29, 2005, md the
· Bush administration was
criticized widely for~ts slow
relijiOilse in de•Hqg ;with
rWinat 'tlmWI art 110 'Ill:

been under !increasing
·tUbe .as well as animal dlita scrutiny since problep:is
&lt;ibat 'llhows lfhis ICQIJtaminirnl · have surfaced with pet food,
1C811 ~ . eVJ:nts .t hat toot.hpaste
and
fish.
IWOiild llcli tlaclle ~ ,of Millions of Chinese toys
. 11118Ctionil ·r ~ '&amp;lil4' · ·lmet have ibeen n:called lw:anoe ·
:ilim:taf d db£ they contained lead. Health
!Food
!Drug and
Human
Services
Ai!rninisttatioll's CeDter for Secretary -Mike Leavitt said
Oru,g· Evlil~on
and Monday tbat in the .end, he
IReseamb. "'TTild doesn't tell would be sUiprised if China
iUS ihc WbOk ·storY· iBut li.t did not take S!rong .action to
ensure safer heparin ingreesnililiiihes.B l.irik."
Chine~ officillls· claimail dients.
lthat .advetse events ware
iitipOlltid lin patients who

']•

- BY KAlMY llnon•

FDA cites Chinese·finn's manufadurin.g proces-ses for bepiuin
B:r ~¥IN t=fiEtONG

BY THE BEND

PageA3 .

iReconnecting is based in trust ,

......

llSSOCIIITED PRESS WRITER

aush
.and
:.MeDcan P.residcnt Felipe
Calderan Sll'0Qg1Jl ,defended
iliree ttr.ade across N or.th
AmeFicc.a &lt;on Monday, lfendlirlg ,trlf -~U~ti-trade 'mrnatks
lthat Demoorats running f or
ttbe 'IMritc House Me usi11g
ItO aure wrn'lcing class v oters.
Openil!g .a itWlhday sumllriit With Calderon .and
Ctmadian 11rime Minister
Stephen Harper, !Bush
lhai'led 1the lbenefits of .cresslbot&amp;r lttllde despite Jl rising
~Bnist sentiment on
Capitol run. The ;president
,$ lrld rt1un 'w.hen lbe and
C81demn w.ere growing up,
Iitle border was !JlOOr, 'bun
I!Oday it'-s IJlrOspering.
'"'ur ttade has ltr~pled,
.and &lt;Our eoonomies .have
:gr.olroi/Jl;" said Bush, who
liecideil to host ilie summit
in New Orleans to showcase
its
~elrinh .
following
Hurricane !Katrina. , "This
!has !been a very :positive
"'i!P"'.Ct. tfor both our &lt;Counltllies."
·
Calderon was more specific, saying llhe North
Am.et1i.can !Free r~ade
~ment is misunder·stood. Launched in 1994,
ltbe JWCord tilirninated trade
'bamien; Jllllon_g the United
Stares, Mexico-~U~d tCanada.
'"'if stress ibis issue
!because recently N .\Fii'A
!has .come ;under criticism,"
itbe Me:rican IJlresident said.
..And I do :not believ.e that
JPCOPle Jlfe relilizing how

1

The Daily Sentinel

&amp;'

7

, .....

:Chester Boy Scout Treap 1eoe11t1y toured the Ohio State Capitol Building in Columbus with
~resentative Jimmy Stewart. They were later introduoed to the House of Aeprsssn niBiiJeS
attended a session of the House. The ~ was a part of fulfitling a ~BqUirement of 1he
-ciliz:enship and National Merit badge with Judge Scott Powell. Here with RepresentatiYe
-Stewart are from the lei!, front, Jacob Lemley, Nick Bull&lt;e, Jack Kuhn, Tyler Battler,
•{$ewart) Garren Colwell, Ethan Notlinglham, and Justin Rees; and baclt, Chase Cook, Erik
Aanestad, scout master, Dylan Morris, Marshal Aanestead, lind Ganett Ritchie.

-,_ftd

;DofA past councilors discuss rnlly plans
·: CHESTER - A practice n•IIJC"fl a shade of green for
tor t.he spring rally was roll call. Esther Smith gave
announced for I p.m. the secretary's · report, and
.Saturday with all district t.he refreshments were
bfficers present when the served by Opal Hollon and
J&gt;ast &lt;;:ouncilors Club of Dorothy Myers with Julie
..Chester
Council
323, Aeming and Charlotte
·'Daughters of America, met Grant conducting games.
at tile Chester Academy.
Members were reminded
:• The rally will be held at that the time of meetings
Academy on May 3 . has been Changed to 7:30
· embers were reminded to p.m. Attending were Doris
, · ng gifts for the tables.
Grueser, 9Jlal Eichinger,
.; Julia Aeming presided at Rut.h Sm1t.h, Laura Mae
:lhe meeting reading from N1ce, Gary Holter, Jo Ann
·.Matthew 13, followed by · Ritchie. Mary K. Holter,
·lhe Lord 's Prayer and Esther
Smit.h,
Goldie
pledge to the flag. Members Frederick, Charlotte Grant,

'E
•

. -·

Julie Aeming, Thelma
White,
Opal
Hollon,
Dorothy Myers, and a guest,
Sandra White .
At a n:cent meeting of
Chester Council condueled
b&gt;: Laura Mae Nice, coilncdor, it was reported that
Nathan Biggs was having
eye SIJ!'8CIY. Hostesses were
()pal Eichinger and l..aW'8
Mae Nice, and games were
conducted by . Ruth Smith .
and Deloris WoHe. The
spring rally was also discus!iCd with officers beiQg
advi!iCd to study their duties
before t.he Saturday practice:.

E • • boll1 ionilation and jlhotoelecll ic
•noktt I 1115-belleratdelticling
dillinctly dilfnnt yet potentially fatal fires.
and ....... llomeownets cannot pl1liliCt
what type of tire niiglrt start in ii home, the
USFA hiCUllili&amp;nds the in&amp;lalation of both ·
iol JUiioig and ptootceiB Cb ic Dr dual sensor
smoke alarms.·

In Mdilion to the basic types of alarm5,
theN.., alarms made ID 1!111111 the needs of

=~
lwwi: ilng disabilities. These
IIIRIIS
Ule llrobe lights thai ftastl andl
or ·

ID B8isl in alerting those who are
Ul1lble to ' - Allldilid smoke II n IS
when they IIIUnd.

pa:.,, ..... Do ll'ut n - l '
llllllll••nolr.e alai IllS on every level of your
home, iliduding1he ~I II me11t. Many fatal
firwl begin late at night or in the 8ll1y
11111111iing. For extruafnlty, in&amp;lall•noke
alp"lftl both inlide llld oullide ala aping
. . .. Since •niDhlllld.lTillny deadly

Pick a holiday or your birthday and replace
the batteries each year on that day. II your
Slrioke alaTTTl starts making a "chirping"
noise. replace the batteries and reset it

How Do I Keep .ySmob Aleml
Wotting?

If you have a Slrioke alaTTTl willl battenes:
1. Smoke Alarms powered by longlasting batteries are 'Designee! to •
replace tile entire unit accord1ng to
manufacturer's instructions.

2. In standard type battery powered
smoke ala!TTls , the batteries need to
. be replaced at least once per year
and the whole unit should be
replaced every S-1 0 years

3 In hard-wired, battery back up
smoke alarms, the batteries need to
be checked monthly, and replaced
at least once per year The entire
• =~houltl be
every S-1 0 .

replaaf

Souroe. U. S. Fire Administralion

�NATION • WORLD

.The Daily Sentinel
r

· 8Y DEll ft

r-

'

I

. '11ae111Uy, April U, I I D8

...
'

CINUIN

NEW

~dent

•

·---

f'~esidentiBushand

Louisiana 'Gov. Bobby .Jindal, left, listen as 'MeKican President!F81ipe
Calderon makes rremerks .at .the opening of the 'Mexican Consulate in 'New Orleans,
\llonday. The 'PreSident; Calderon and Canadian Prime 'Minister Stephen Harper are in
New Orleans to attend the North American Leaders' Summn in New Orleans.
many benefits NAFTA has
brought, both to the United
'States .and to Mexico."
He said the far-reaohing
trade deal has led to the.creation of hundreds &lt;Of thousands of jobs on both sides
of t.he border, has offered
more choices to ,consumers
and has raised the qualizy of
_pr.oducts.
.
'Sens. IBaraok (!)bama .and
Hillary IRodham :Clinton,
rivBis for the Democratic
presidential nomination,
both ha'~&lt;e t.hreatened to plill
the ilJ:S . o.ut of NAFTA if
.elected .as a means to pressure Canada and Mexico to
negotiate more protections

. Otlicial: Parents
sought counseling.for
bomb plot student

for workers and t.he envj- husband made mistakes
ronment. Bush calls the idea related to NAFTA !.hat she
isolationist and reckless. ·
plans to fix. She said she
Clinton, D-N .Y., has would correct problems :that:
made opposition to new have Jed to job .JosSes, ,or .
trade deals a centerpiece of would tell Canada Jllld
her campaign and has · Mexico the United States is
vowed to at least Te-negoti- pulling out of .t he agreeate NAFTA, which has been ment. ·
blamed for 111oving blue · While Qbama and(J)inum
collar jobs to Mexico imd compete iri 11'uesda_y~s
elsewhere. Obama, D..[ll., Democratic rprimary . lin
has chided Clinton about Pennsylvania, 'Bush is .using
NA'FTA, saying it was the summit in Louisiana ellS
passed while her husband, a stage to not only 'JlfOIIl!lll:
former President Clinton, NAFTA, the wodd's ~st
was in office.
trading zone, but puSh
Recently in Pittsburgh, Congress to ratify free trade
Clinton told manufacturers deals wit.h fanarna. South ·
and union workers that her Korea and Colombia. Tine

Bouse recently put off a
vote on the Colombia frr:e
traile pact, mabng it less
Jikcly that it will be
i1!PJ11:0vcd llhis _year.
. IB:uSh~ anewforlthe
COiombiii ,deal at ~ 1'eCii'lfion of !business leaders
lMonihjy miE'ht.
.
"11 lflill_y u:nderstand that
fitis· is a tough &lt;pOlitical vote
:for some, but ifs about time
America 11ets aside petty
[pOliticS and focuses on
&amp;ing What"s right for 11ne
ll.Jnited States of America,"
he said
IBefore his nneetinas with
Ojl&amp;ron ilUid Halper, tBush
attrmiW! .a &lt;Ceremony ;to
!I'COpen the Mexican constilale in New Orleans. The
Mexican government closed
ldne consulate as a cost-savlng measure in 2002. In
:recent years, illllllinants
fro.m Mexico and across
ILatin America hav.e worked
to ~rebuild the cizy, and .tens
of:thouslmds now live •i n'the
New Orleans area.
''OurTelations are notjust
economic
jn
nature,"
Clil.derori sai.d "They also
have der;p ties.nf friendship,
and rm sure !.hat we are
goi-qg to strengthen !.hem
even more .at :this meeting.
..Those . lints
;were
1itiengibcned &lt;OD the occasion of the devastatiqg
.tragedies
caused
lby
illorricane Katrina and
illmricane :Rita. At that time
the :people of Mexico
~IICil its solidarizy to
our lbwibta'S and sisters in
!Lo•iisiau• ~ knowltbat:thousands of Mexicans have

~ iin 'tine rec:onstruetion of New Odcans.
I'm very happy today to ·see
New Orleans !!tiDCtil!l and
worldl!g." .
.._,.. .
The wmmt iWllS """" m
the city's busiDess district
nearlbe FrenchQuarter, but

~
'A~O(;IATEO PRESS ,WRn:ER

' Scientific
IProtcin
Laboratories, whi.c.h in 1llm
owns a (ChitJe8e .factoJy :Changzhou SIU. -.and 'bill's
· additiomil .raw 'lic;parin dimn
otherlJhinese SIIPP'Iicrs.
The !Food .and ~
Administration
w.amed

·ane

!DlOStilestmdive~·-­

atcr

:in U.S. lbistoly. l'he
IDlO~ '1101111 ~
' New Orleans, ,\iJ!ocl hJn..
dredS of pcqllc \&amp;1
ibe
Gulf :Coast. ~ •Of
damJ!gecbnm-elt.:b,OOO
'hlirnes and 'IDIIlle - . m.rt
800,000 lJOQIIIc, .. :Jess
ovemigtn:-ln ~ Odcan•.
a helo:ved. A....;• ., city,
progress is . illlneM :8lmost
32 months Jnnkr.
'ibe city ·lis :tqXJp~nl.Ung,
t.he music and re&amp;laUnUJt
scenes are ~ ibe
port business 1h8s .,..aily
:unprov.ed .and alns !Ia revenues are near normal. Yet it
is still dogged by crime,
Jiomclessness .and frustrations about the pace of
rebuilding efforts.

"We lbaVc data in the test

w.oo&amp;ook,

AND lbAcY SuGAR

IN 4623l&gt; {for 9CIIiors). We
hope one of these will oome
through .for you.
.
Dear
I read the
letter from "'Perplexed in
the Midwest," wbo can't
afford a diamond ring and
asked if it was OK'to get his
girlfriend cubic ltirconia,
My beloved husband W8s
an expert in diamond ootting. When we were about
to be married, he told me he
was crafting my rings hiin- .
self and.bad selected cubic
zirconia instead of diaIIIOnds because of their
astounding · beauty and

A--·

spaMe.
I was delighted, Slid Ill
my friends were amarred at
tile size and fire of those
brilliant stones. The I~
jeweler said they were
"very difficult to discern"
from diamonds 'OOstin_g
thousands more. To this day,
cubic Wronia, which is not
"cheap" -just inexpensive
and sensible - is my own
cboioe over dia.monds. -

.

'

Qubs and
AINI'Qft;..aotU-"
va~

,

~

'·

t

..

,,

_

~ay, Aprilll

'· ATHENS -

· Sout.hern

Board of Supervi~ meeting, 11:30 a.m., district
office:, .Hiland Road.
POMEROY Meigs
County Retired Teachers,
noon luncheon, Trinity

a •-=-~....,

o..an Syd' n

witers
flllll c:ano.•im, .,;m •

I

•

--

,.

.....

....

~-WWlf.Q~-

for women's sbelter.

Church
ll.n
'
ev~..,
~

. Salurday; Aprill6 •
CARPENTER _ First
cornbread
festival
at

Pmfect Y0u1self and Your Family Today!

Quesflons aiKI Answets About Smoke Alarms
In 1he -m of 1 fire, pii)PII1y installed and
gases rise, inslalling your Slrioke ala!TTls at
ulliullined Stlnolr.e lllrms will proyide an
the proper level will provide you willlthe
e.1r ..ning a11nn ID }'0111' household . This ealliest warning possible. Always fellow ihe
allnn could saw rour own life and those of .)11811ufactUTl!r's installation instructions.
. YIJII' ltMnd ora by providil~g the cllance ID

.....

..., • •.,.,.

itbeae Woullf/GIIISmobA--.?
,..
h

.._.,._

l£-.;;aealle

Ala 1?
In the ewnt of a lin!, a smoke alllrm can •

save rour life ..Act tnose ofyo.ur loved ones.

flllllities by Providing an urly warning
signal- so you IJI1d your~mily can
IICipe. Smole alarms
-one of the best

Manyllardwa!e, homesupply,orgeneral
merchandise stores carry smoke alarms. If
you are unsure where tc buy one in your
ctimmunity,
your local fire department

call

suggestions. Some fire departments offer
snioke alarms fer little or no cost.
Ani Smo«e .v.m.
Hard fO lrlstMI?
If your smoke alaTTTlS
are hard wired, that is
wired intc the electncal
system, you will need tc
have a qualified
electrician do the initial
installation or install •
· rep~cements For
battery powered smoke
alanns, all you will need
fer installation is a

llfllty dellices you can
~ IIIII install to
,
pWtdyouraell, your
family, and your home ..

.. .T,_dSmob
Alai

MAL Ud*l'
Then! ft1'faJ1¥
dillelart IM•lds of
SJDDka lllllrms available
on the 11111111et but they

pi••

I hic.lonilation

11-

Ill us aounc1 more
when a !laming, fast mewing fire
occurs. PIICill els:Alic alanns are quicker at
I8IISing sntuldel iug , smoky fires. Then! are
also c:ombinnon lmoke alarms 1t1at
combine ionization and photDelectric into.

Limit your story to
750wonls.

n•••ber

~.

ing the technique of stretch Health Department. The
band use. Movements are program was de signed by
geared to increaSing flexi- an exercise and dance
bility and mobility and to teacher and use a video she
improve balance, according produced called "Sit Down
to Leiftleit, and are easily and Tone Up ." The stretch
adapted to performing when . bands come in variou s
seated. Funding for the pro- resistance levels designed "
gram comes from t.he by color.
Recently the stretch band
Sisters of St. Joseph
exercising ha;; been offered
Charitable Fund.
Leifheit
and
Jenni to those enrolled in the
Dunham are t.he instruc- Partners in Care progran1
tions, having . learned t.he for seniors with memorv
technique
from
Andy loss at the Senior Citizen's
which
Kathy
Brumfield, exercise consul- Center
·
tant of t.he Meigs County McDaniel coordinates.

filii undlrtwo tlllic
type&amp;: ion2atiori and

event about·younelf
a
tllat you
like to sh•re please email to:

r

Childr~~n:~~C~h~u~rc~h~,~S~e~c:o~n;d~f~S~tr~ee~t~~E~~~~~i~~C~hnurfic~h~,-~~They=:•:e:•~¥eTY=·=h~tlfiOi;lln:nt:mean~·~s~Qf~-cc-~(o:n~a~n~o~ne~mergencytelephonenumber)
J!!ll.vide.youJttit~.some "'="--~1..,--,---

Consortium for 0 a.m.
~.lBoanLmeetiyg,...J
."'e offices, 2'0 East Circle executive din:ctor
mountain bike raee, live
,mve, Building 20, Third · Council on Aging, to spe;;ur;. gospel musiC, free train
floor, Athens.
Entertainment by some · rides, free vendor space.
Thursday, ApriU4
Meigs students of ''Grease" Cornbread
cook-off.
· POMEROY
-Meigs musical. Take paper prod- Contacl Pastor Whitt Akers,
. ~il and Water Conservation ucts and personal care items 591- I 236 for rules.

..

The Daily Sentinel
ha e
a w page every
Friday railed "Faith and FamDy". ·
Ifyou llave .a testimonial story,

r

Cf'ftlblrs SyrJirtrte flleb .

~driver.

Some

brands are self
adhesive anti wil leasily
stick tc the wall or ceiling where they are
plaoed . For all smoke alaTTTl installations,
be sure you fellow the manufacturer's
instructions.because there are i:li!lerences
between the various brands.
.
.. '
Helpiu/Tip

Jltasantl{qilttr

•

J

C:::r!,

tu: A...W's Jl•• r P.O.
Box U31M, ,.....,., 1L
flfill, 10 fUt4 O f l t cllolll Altlrie'J Jl.ator,
,
,... /flllbua . , fJdRr

Sod&gt;mtned .p halo

L.enonl Leifheit, R.N., ,lei!, confens with Kathy McDaniel , 'Partne,rs in Car:e coordinator,
befoie a session 'with seniors Sll'ffering memory 1oss enrolled in the program.

*'"

·------•....,.

•tOMIII......_. . ~

·--

POMEROY- For those
residents . looking for an
exercise program which
Bea~MRO.Dat
Dear · Ilea ~: The they can pursue at their
value of the stone is only ·o wn . pace, wit.hout cost,
one fictor in the selection of Lenora Leifheit, R.N. t.he
a ring. But it is important fait.h hased nurse at the
Community
that the recipient not be Mulberry
Center,
suggests
stretch
tricked into thinking it's
something other dum What band exercising.
@lasses are offered at I
it is.
and
5 p.m. on 1\nesdays and
A..;e 'r lllrihr is llrittnlly...,.y_.,.bll.-l 9 a.m. on Wednesdays.
M&amp;q Sqw, r..,tim eli- There is no program order
of tie AM r mlrn which means that anyone
.oole•• ,__ e -qf•,_,. can attend at anytime 'with--·irs..;l- out falling behind in learn1111', .,. ...,..

Community Calendar

.a

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

Tuesday, Aprilu, 2oo8

;.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

can live with t.he uncenainty. You have to do what lets
you sleei!!~t.
Dear
· • My dad is a
Dear AnDie: My husband
longtime
·
survivor
of
and J are in our 40s. We
·l lave been married for 15· HOdgkin's disease, but his
years and had a marril\ge battle has become a losing
ipost people would envy. OllC and the doctors say he is
terminal.
We have no children.
This wonderl'ul man bas
My husband recently
admitted to an indiscretion alwaxs been .the strength in
'wit.h a woman he has known my bfe. I would not be who
'for four years. This is not a I am today without him. I
woman he would ever take am heartbroken by what be
out in public . His pursuit of has gone through this past
ber was purely for sex. year. I want him to ~el
~ce it happened, he never something like a · last WJsb
.saw her again. (She con- son of ~. like they do
firmed this.) He only con- for sick cbildren. Is !.here
fessed because he devel- something out there to p t
:oped a medical problem and wishes for adults who
·was scared.
deserve that, too? My dad is
' · We are now separated very special, and I would
'a nd he is seeking counsel· love to n:member him with
ing for self-esteem issues. a big smile on his face. ~ has begged and pleaded IWdy's l.itde Girl
wit.h me not to divorce him,
Dear Daddy's Little
l)ut I feel as !.hough· I am Girt: While most such ~~~­
l!larried to a complete nizations deal wit.h s1ck
stranger. How could an children, there are a few for
intelligent, educated man adults, althou~ they are not
.who supposedly loves his as expansive m scope as die
wife actually go through more well-known groups.
·wit.h such an unspeakable Try · Dream Foundation
'act?. Is ·it true · "once a (dreamfoundation . com),
cheater, always a cheater"? 1528 Chapala St., Snite 304,
Is there an explanation Santa Barbara, CA 93101;
(other than rnidlife crisis) Fairygodmot.her Foundation
to assure me this was just a (fairygodmot.her.org), 213
one-time experiment? West 'Institute Pl., Snite 509,
Heartbroken in the Soutb Chicago, IL 60610; ·The
Dear Heartbroken: We Dream Lives On (thedreamdon't know why your hus- liveson.org), The Dave
'band felt the need to cheat, Bruch.hauser Fund. 9138
alt.hough t.herapy should Arion St., Suite A3 - Box
help .him find out. And we 134, Anchorage, AK 99507;
can't promise he won't do it Happiness Unlimited (hapagain, but if therapy helps piness-unlirnited.org), 310 .
him, there is a possi~:Y. Sout.h St., Morristown, NJ
this was a one-time
. 07960; Her Heart's Wisb
The issue, as always, is trust. (herheanswish.org), P.O.
Which is why we recom- Box 294, Lititz, PA 17543
mend counseling for you, (this one is for women); aDd
.too. Marriage doesri 't come Never •Too Late (neverwit.h guarantees. Counseling toolate.org),
8538
will help you decide if you Tidew!iler Dr., Indianapolis,

farfrvm areas dtiliterated qy

WASHING'FON
China and the United 'States
traded Charges Mondey
about whether a contamithreatened to something ·nant in the blood lthinner
llSSOCIAT.ED PRESS ,WRITER
''vey .violem.~
heparin caused sev.ere liller- Chan,gzlnou'SPLon'M~
'Schallenberger
was gic -reactions liriked to as ,that .the COJI1P8II.Y .Mes lllot
CHESiiER!RIEUl, S.C. &lt;Jharged with roiling J1 .;man,y ellS 81 deaths.
'have ;aaeguate .systems for
- ' A ileeril!ger accused of bomb t.hrem and · ·will be
:Federal lhealth official'S ensuril!g ihat the TaW materpii'Jlti~~g to bomb :his bigh dluu:ged II1uesday with 'jJOS- said new tests indicated .ll · rililsit uses areufeJIIIdlibat
'&amp;dhool is !I ittraight-A ·stu- iies6ion of . bomb-making solid lirik. China said .•the 1111_y impurities.arerre1110v.M.
&amp;nt ~Whose parents sought materilil, Hodge said. Be contaminant could' &lt;not bi:· lfhe IDA noted that .a!
lhe1p from mental .health was assigned ,a -lawyer, the ··•root .can se" of the many as 12 companies .in
~~_,....qicrtli~~~c'lllarni!!ed --w:illiam ~ncer.,-Wh .· -;pmblcQJ..
.
, ·•.
· ac .lll:tl jnvtilved-4n ·rlhe ~ ~ ·_'Jiihclg-,-,l:.be-=
· !lris 'head :into .a wlill
not II'Ctum .calls from i1he
Chinese offncials -sqggest- supply chain for liqlarin. lilooCI ihimw did not conw.ce'ki r*aut.horities ·said Associated Press.
ed at an embassy news con- Agency officials don '.t lain the contaminant M~y.
D.uring ·a brief court hear- .ference !.hat the problem know at what poim the con- over-sulf~ chondroitin.
IRyJJDO Schallenberger's ing Monday, the teen was with the .drug could have taminant was inli'OduCed.
IBut JiDA officials said that
parent~ took him to .a ho~~ sile!IJ but appeared .agitated · oc.c urred in the United
Hundreds of patients .have premise :is incorrect
pita1 three days before"'hrs- . ~s.·''l!yes widening at the States. They plan to visit a suffered severe allergic
The Chinese said they
Saturday .amest .after he 1ii~l of cameras awaitiqg Baxter International plant in · reactions to large doses of hope to get some samples
made ·.a 4-:inch indentation' him when he .entered in an Cherry Hill, N J., to get a t.he blood t.hinner. The FDA from Baxter for their own
lin lfbe w.allboard, :prosecu- Ol'liillle jumpsuit, bands better picture of how the said it suspects the prob- investigation.
tor !Jay Hoilge said .at a .cUffed .and .anlrJes ·shackled. finished product is manu-. lems stem from a contami·
"Wbim you liCe it, then
oowtt 'bearing.
Schallenbel'ger'1i mother .factored.
.nant that the ageney discov- you '.b elieve it," said Jlin
Scluillenberger, 18, was .and 1itepfather, !ohn and
!Raw heparin is · deriv.ed ered in SU{'Pliel! of 'IBVf ·Shaobmng, the deputy direcoot \badly injured, b.ut his !Laurie :Sittk:_y, aotild not .be from .pig intestines, · often .heparin .cormng from rQbina tor general· for the N alional .
[pllmiitS Blso called a local ll'eadled for :comment.
processed by small, unregis- - .a compound .derived ilnstitute for the Control of
mentBI bealth · clinic that
ll1beir phone nuniber was tered woikshops iii 'Ohina from animal cartilage ibat ftannaceutical
and
offered no help, Hodge said. unlisted, they di~ not .attend The raw .ingredient for so closely .mimics hc;parin Biological . Products . .in
A ·spokesman for the clinic rtbe lhearing, and their .home IBax.ter' s recalled heparin that :routine purity .tests China
would not confirm or deny about 10 miles from the ·came from Wiscoosin, based can't detect it.
Chinese exports have
.any contact with t.he family, sChool was blocked b_y "'No
citing state Jaw.
·rxesp.a ssing"
signs.
Hodge said he plans to Authorities
. . said
.ask that Schallenberger Schallenberger has eight
mKiergo a mental evaluation siblir!gs and step-siblings.
.at ihe ;teenager's bail hearSheriff Sam Parker said
lirlg Tuesday.
1he teenager':~; '"heartbrowas ken" parents . deserved
Schallenber.ger
.m::rested · after his 'Parents piaise for .calling authorities
caiJed police bec!luse he when they retrieved the
.
·ordered 10 pounds of an1tt10ntum nitra · J'rom a·
;ammonium nitrate, an post office after receivjng a
cq;losive commonly used delivery notice at home.
.as fertilizer and w.as
"'Without the parents, ·
employed in the deadly Chesterfield
County
,1995 Oklahoma City would ' ve suffered. We
bom.biQg.
.
ilhank them," Parker said.
Aut.hocities checked .the
Authorities
said
'icllool for bombs ·over the Schallenberger 's journal did
wcdrend .and on Monday 110t specify tar_gets of an
1itudents w.a.lked through attack., or a date !.hat he
newly installed .metal detec- planned to carry it out.
tors .and past Jaw officers. Randall Lear, the town's
Still, Officials said 60 ,per- police·
chief,
said
ami of the school'1&gt; 544 stu- Schallenberger was "just
,et~ .
dents s~.ed .home.
rilad at t.he world."
1be qui.et teenager wit.h a
ille I(Jolumbine anack
·slight !build .and a wispy happened nine years ago
mustache .had apparently . Sunday, but Lear sirid inves.been planning the potential- tigators do not know
ly .deadly attaok for months, whet.her there was any link
authorities said.
between · the anniversary
-nus kid bad t.he intel- and Schallenberger' s plans.
lect and the. means and the
Hodge said the teen was
IIUitmials to carry it out," set to graduate this year and
Hodge said.
· · had no hi story of bad
· Po1ioe said they discov- behavior. Schallenberger
Cl:cd • Jm.te..filled journal was on the school's acadeJauding t.he Columbine mic bowl squad .and had
ldllc::rs, an 811diotape to be won ail award from a loc~
played after he perished college a year earlier.
cJ!"iPll! .his .rampage and a
Students said the teen
~ wOlth of plans for the often ate al. one in the cafeteboaibing that included a ria and were surprised at the
..b~Jod.,drawn map of rthe accusation.
.
.llCbool
"J never !bough be' d be
""He's just a soft-spoken the dude to do something
little kid," Hodge said, like this," said James Ford.
ttMiug
,'Scballenberger a I 6-yelnr-old sophomore.

'

"

'Katrlna. White House officials said Bush's decision to
host t.he event jn New
Orleans sbows the city is
ready to be the venue for
.internafionaleveots. But.ifs
not its first big eveat. ILast
year, the cizy hoslcd col~e
football
clwJ1pjoosbip
games, the Martli. Gras and
the NBA AU-Star'Game.
Katrina roared OlliD land
on Aug. 29, 2005, md the
· Bush administration was
criticized widely for~ts slow
relijiOilse in de•Hqg ;with
rWinat 'tlmWI art 110 'Ill:

been under !increasing
·tUbe .as well as animal dlita scrutiny since problep:is
&lt;ibat 'llhows lfhis ICQIJtaminirnl · have surfaced with pet food,
1C811 ~ . eVJ:nts .t hat toot.hpaste
and
fish.
IWOiild llcli tlaclle ~ ,of Millions of Chinese toys
. 11118Ctionil ·r ~ '&amp;lil4' · ·lmet have ibeen n:called lw:anoe ·
:ilim:taf d db£ they contained lead. Health
!Food
!Drug and
Human
Services
Ai!rninisttatioll's CeDter for Secretary -Mike Leavitt said
Oru,g· Evlil~on
and Monday tbat in the .end, he
IReseamb. "'TTild doesn't tell would be sUiprised if China
iUS ihc WbOk ·storY· iBut li.t did not take S!rong .action to
ensure safer heparin ingreesnililiiihes.B l.irik."
Chine~ officillls· claimail dients.
lthat .advetse events ware
iitipOlltid lin patients who

']•

- BY KAlMY llnon•

FDA cites Chinese·finn's manufadurin.g proces-ses for bepiuin
B:r ~¥IN t=fiEtONG

BY THE BEND

PageA3 .

iReconnecting is based in trust ,

......

llSSOCIIITED PRESS WRITER

aush
.and
:.MeDcan P.residcnt Felipe
Calderan Sll'0Qg1Jl ,defended
iliree ttr.ade across N or.th
AmeFicc.a &lt;on Monday, lfendlirlg ,trlf -~U~ti-trade 'mrnatks
lthat Demoorats running f or
ttbe 'IMritc House Me usi11g
ItO aure wrn'lcing class v oters.
Openil!g .a itWlhday sumllriit With Calderon .and
Ctmadian 11rime Minister
Stephen Harper, !Bush
lhai'led 1the lbenefits of .cresslbot&amp;r lttllde despite Jl rising
~Bnist sentiment on
Capitol run. The ;president
,$ lrld rt1un 'w.hen lbe and
C81demn w.ere growing up,
Iitle border was !JlOOr, 'bun
I!Oday it'-s IJlrOspering.
'"'ur ttade has ltr~pled,
.and &lt;Our eoonomies .have
:gr.olroi/Jl;" said Bush, who
liecideil to host ilie summit
in New Orleans to showcase
its
~elrinh .
following
Hurricane !Katrina. , "This
!has !been a very :positive
"'i!P"'.Ct. tfor both our &lt;Counltllies."
·
Calderon was more specific, saying llhe North
Am.et1i.can !Free r~ade
~ment is misunder·stood. Launched in 1994,
ltbe JWCord tilirninated trade
'bamien; Jllllon_g the United
Stares, Mexico-~U~d tCanada.
'"'if stress ibis issue
!because recently N .\Fii'A
!has .come ;under criticism,"
itbe Me:rican IJlresident said.
..And I do :not believ.e that
JPCOPle Jlfe relilizing how

1

The Daily Sentinel

&amp;'

7

, .....

:Chester Boy Scout Treap 1eoe11t1y toured the Ohio State Capitol Building in Columbus with
~resentative Jimmy Stewart. They were later introduoed to the House of Aeprsssn niBiiJeS
attended a session of the House. The ~ was a part of fulfitling a ~BqUirement of 1he
-ciliz:enship and National Merit badge with Judge Scott Powell. Here with RepresentatiYe
-Stewart are from the lei!, front, Jacob Lemley, Nick Bull&lt;e, Jack Kuhn, Tyler Battler,
•{$ewart) Garren Colwell, Ethan Notlinglham, and Justin Rees; and baclt, Chase Cook, Erik
Aanestad, scout master, Dylan Morris, Marshal Aanestead, lind Ganett Ritchie.

-,_ftd

;DofA past councilors discuss rnlly plans
·: CHESTER - A practice n•IIJC"fl a shade of green for
tor t.he spring rally was roll call. Esther Smith gave
announced for I p.m. the secretary's · report, and
.Saturday with all district t.he refreshments were
bfficers present when the served by Opal Hollon and
J&gt;ast &lt;;:ouncilors Club of Dorothy Myers with Julie
..Chester
Council
323, Aeming and Charlotte
·'Daughters of America, met Grant conducting games.
at tile Chester Academy.
Members were reminded
:• The rally will be held at that the time of meetings
Academy on May 3 . has been Changed to 7:30
· embers were reminded to p.m. Attending were Doris
, · ng gifts for the tables.
Grueser, 9Jlal Eichinger,
.; Julia Aeming presided at Rut.h Sm1t.h, Laura Mae
:lhe meeting reading from N1ce, Gary Holter, Jo Ann
·.Matthew 13, followed by · Ritchie. Mary K. Holter,
·lhe Lord 's Prayer and Esther
Smit.h,
Goldie
pledge to the flag. Members Frederick, Charlotte Grant,

'E
•

. -·

Julie Aeming, Thelma
White,
Opal
Hollon,
Dorothy Myers, and a guest,
Sandra White .
At a n:cent meeting of
Chester Council condueled
b&gt;: Laura Mae Nice, coilncdor, it was reported that
Nathan Biggs was having
eye SIJ!'8CIY. Hostesses were
()pal Eichinger and l..aW'8
Mae Nice, and games were
conducted by . Ruth Smith .
and Deloris WoHe. The
spring rally was also discus!iCd with officers beiQg
advi!iCd to study their duties
before t.he Saturday practice:.

E • • boll1 ionilation and jlhotoelecll ic
•noktt I 1115-belleratdelticling
dillinctly dilfnnt yet potentially fatal fires.
and ....... llomeownets cannot pl1liliCt
what type of tire niiglrt start in ii home, the
USFA hiCUllili&amp;nds the in&amp;lalation of both ·
iol JUiioig and ptootceiB Cb ic Dr dual sensor
smoke alarms.·

In Mdilion to the basic types of alarm5,
theN.., alarms made ID 1!111111 the needs of

=~
lwwi: ilng disabilities. These
IIIRIIS
Ule llrobe lights thai ftastl andl
or ·

ID B8isl in alerting those who are
Ul1lble to ' - Allldilid smoke II n IS
when they IIIUnd.

pa:.,, ..... Do ll'ut n - l '
llllllll••nolr.e alai IllS on every level of your
home, iliduding1he ~I II me11t. Many fatal
firwl begin late at night or in the 8ll1y
11111111iing. For extruafnlty, in&amp;lall•noke
alp"lftl both inlide llld oullide ala aping
. . .. Since •niDhlllld.lTillny deadly

Pick a holiday or your birthday and replace
the batteries each year on that day. II your
Slrioke alaTTTl starts making a "chirping"
noise. replace the batteries and reset it

How Do I Keep .ySmob Aleml
Wotting?

If you have a Slrioke alaTTTl willl battenes:
1. Smoke Alarms powered by longlasting batteries are 'Designee! to •
replace tile entire unit accord1ng to
manufacturer's instructions.

2. In standard type battery powered
smoke ala!TTls , the batteries need to
. be replaced at least once per year
and the whole unit should be
replaced every S-1 0 years

3 In hard-wired, battery back up
smoke alarms, the batteries need to
be checked monthly, and replaced
at least once per year The entire
• =~houltl be
every S-1 0 .

replaaf

Souroe. U. S. Fire Administralion

�/

.

PageA4

OPINION

~The Daily Sentinel

will McCain _luJndle 'are.you better off' iss~?
Tbe. nail·y. Sentm•e1 How
·
m
I

111 0ou1t

a

t • Puma

;'{1 Olllo

(740) JIN158 • FAX (7..0 992-2157
. . ..tftJ'

n,fll AwiCom

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

o.n Gaodridi
Put)lisher

Cbaltene lh allich
General Marnager~ws Editor

liD,_,

. ~:shall IJUi.r
f'BJJ"ctj".f ••
amWUfurmrt of rdigio11, «~X IN
: jiw ~ t1u1wf; "'' ••ri4.tilf1tlu ]i'etiem
· ofspticdt, .,, of tk prns; or tlu ri.flat of IN
Jlftll'k ~ tD .wti!IIK. al U1 pditin
lk Gmwmnmt for • ldms •fXJi'Nrtnrs
-lhe Arst Ama11iued to ilhe u;s. Canslitution

:TODAY IN H [STORY

Sen. 1o1111 McCain has
made :a !0011 llXt 6fwiog

be unde»Stuk CIOOIJ0IIIics,
!but be ·still bas 10 tcope 'l'iitb
dte tiller question: "Are
you •belt.cr .off now than yoo
were .eight years ago?"
!ln .a debate .at The ·GeGrge
W.asbin,gton University tOO
Feb. 25, a Iteam ,o f four
Oemooral!ic Congressmen
ll.ed lby RCj!l. IRalun Emanuel
!(III.~ demolished .a Iteam rof
RqJubticans 1led by · Rep.
Adam 1\rtnam i(fla.) by citing .a11 ~e . evidence that
Ammcans are 1101 better off
·tbanthey were whenGe!'&gt;rge
W. Bush lbecame president.
Such as: Median housell01d
•~
-m the U'-"'-~
." "•-~~
'llliDol ... -=
mse S6.000mtheeigbtyears
&lt;Of Bill Gintoo's .administraIlion, m $49 J63 but fell Ito
$48!0:!3
Bush'-s .fust
sbt Years ·in .affice. Certainly,
ifs still falling.
.Mso, the eoonamy · gnew
lby an average af 4 ;pCrcent
idnmqgtbeCiintonyeans,and
crellted :an average m.s million jebs a year. Under BuSh,
grnss domestic product lbas
grovm just 2.7 'JIC=Dt.a year
and -created J69,QOO job5 .a
year - and .a recession is
probably under way to Cllt
even ribose numbers.
1lbe pnce of gaseline m
2001 was $139 ipef gallon.
Now, it's $4. The llllliiibcr&lt;if
AlliCIIicans lacking health
.insurance was 38 million;
.now, it's 47 million. The
national debt was $5.7 trillion in 2001; now, it's $9.2
trillion. 1be .dollar was worth.
J.Cn .eiUU; now, at's .68.
And so on: The poveny
.rate, college cests, takehome pay, personal indebt-.e dness, foreign oil depen·dency and the ttade deficit
all are worse than they were
when Bush 'loOk &lt;Office.
!ln · the •G WU debate,
!Emanuel
and
fellow
Oemocrat.s Steve · Israel
(N.Y.),ArturDav.is (Ala.) and
Robert Andrews (NJ.) pumme1ed RepUblicans !Putnam,
Cathy McMoms Rodgers
t(Wash.), PaUl !Ryan (Wis.)
and llril:; Cantor (Va) with the

ciJJJk

Today is lluesday. April22. the 113th day of 2008. There
.~ 253 days ~eft in &lt;the year.
.
Troday's Highlight in Histozy: On April 22, 1889, the
·OOahon'ul Land RuSh began at noon .as thousands.ef bolllO.steadcrs ~ claims.
On this date: In 15(19, Henzy vm beCame icing of
·&amp;~gland fGllG~g !the death •Gf 'his father, Henzy ,the \111.
In 1.864, Gangress .authooi.zed ,the lllse Gf the phrase "il.n
God We Trust" •Gn roins.
In 1'944, during WO!!ld War !1!1., U.S. forces began invading
·llq;umese-beld New Guinea with amphibieus landings at
-llollimdia and Ai
.
·
In 1954, the ;:Jilic1y rtelev.ised sessions of the Senate
_Army-McCarthy lhear:ings began.
· In 1'964, President JGbnson opened the New ¥otik
.WI!Jl'Jd's Fair.
. In J970, millions of Ametiicans cancerned about the env:iromnentobseJVed the first "Earth Oay."
.
· In i1983 the West German news ma,gMine Stem
.announced the disoGvcry .o f 60 volumes ef perseruil dialiies
.purportedly Written by Adolf Hitler. However, .the dialiies
turned out to be a baax.
; In 1'994 Ridbatd M. Nix&lt;m, the 37-th president of the
.United sates, died .at a New ¥ook lbespillil feur&lt;days ,after
,suffering a strake; lbe was 8l.
.
.
.
.
iln 200(i), in a lilramatic pre-dav.~n .ralCI, armed mmugratton
·!\gents seized Elian Gonzalez from his relatives' home in
· Miami; Bian was ~reunited ·wi.th his father at Andrews Air
. F0I'Ce Base near W.asbingtan.
. Ten years ago: A young woman charged along with her
·high school sweetheart with murdering their newbom at a
Delaware motel pleaded guilty to .manslaughter. (Amy
Grossberg ended up serving neatly two years of a 2 112·
year .sentence; IBrian !Peterson served 1 112 years of a twoyear 1ienlence.j
.
.
Five years 1\gO: President iBusb .annoonced 'he would
nmninate JMan Greenspan far . a fifth rerm as !Federal
,Reserve cibairnnan. Songwmter :Felice IBzyant, who, with her
late husband, Boudleaux, wrote "Bye !Bye ILove" and ath~
EvCIIly Brothers bits, ,9iixJ in Gatlinbu~g. Tenn., at age 77.
One year age: lin the first round ef the French ;presiden---tiall~,e"eti·en,-~lserYatilve Nic!i!las S:lll'k0J:y~Jmd SGCWist-1-~:=--o­
'Segolene Royal received enoogh votes to advance to
a runoff, _which Saikozy won. ·
.· .
'
. Today' s IB:irthdays: Actress Charlotte Rae ts 82. Actress
Estelle HaE!iis is 76. 'Singer Glen Campbell is 72. Actor iJack
·Nicholson is 71. Singer Mel Carter is 65 ..Mov.ie &amp;n:ctor
D0bn Waters is t62. 'Singer P.eter Frampton is 58. Actor
·iJGSeJ)h Bottoms is 54. Acter !Ryan Stiles lis 49. \(:omedian
Byron Allen is 47. Actor Chris Makepeace lis 44. Kodk
·musician ffietchcr Dmgge is 42. ACtor Jeffrey Dean M01p11
is 42. Actress Sheryl Lee is 4.1. Actres8-'talk Show lbost
Shemti ·s~berd is 41. Country singer ~llie (Joffey is .37..
·Actress Micbelle !Ryan is 24. Acttess Amber Heard 115 22.
· Thought for 1foday: "Always lfelllember rotbcni may hate
you but thOse who bate yeu don 1t v.ful unless you ihateitbem.
At an April 3 press conferAnd ithen you destroy yourself." -Richard M. Nixan, 37th
.ence
in IBcijing, llnternational
president ofthe United 'States (1913-1994).
Olympic Committee .H.ein
'VJ:I'bruggen - asked about
tblllllllll rights in China, said
comfortably, as rejlorted by
Human Rights Watch, 1h!ll
the me "can easily :JliUve
· Leners ro the editor are welcome. They should be less that bringing the Games here
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, mKSf be has led 10 improvements."
·signed, and •include address and telt;phone number. .No But .after 1he Olympic .tm:cb
unsigne4 llener~ will be published. !Letters should he in came close to lbeing extin'good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of guished 1&gt;¥ thousands ofprothanks to Qrg'unization~ and individuals will nl!t ~ !!§Cepttester · in A1hens, . Pari~;
td for-PMhliif4.tiOft,
•
· •
. ·' ·
'London and San Frailcisco,
. the shaken IOC President
Jacques Rogge 1okll'heNew
Yott Times (~ 11) that
.the tumlihuous :reaction is
I{USfi!S 21S.O}
~ a_ "'c?sis" for that
Reader Services
august
msbtub.on.
.
. Ghio~~lb11 bta~g
A .demonstrator in San
Ca :.acUon IPollcr
Pub- awry aftomoon, -.ay
Francisco, spe&amp;king of the
Our mam cono8m in all ·stories is to
through Friday, 111 Court Street,
torch-relay reception, called
·be aa:uniiB. K you know of an """' ·P omeroy, Ohio.
Secondooclaes
that symbol "the •flame .of
in a otory, callllle llftsroom at (740) poo1ago paid at Pomeroy.
shame." 1l'o prevent further
11112.2156.
'
. . e. .. The AUOCiMed ~ and
lheOhio 'Newlplper•
idora.
crises, Roue finally called
for
China to hold to 1he
OUrniln-1 i •
IJOno Ill Tho Doily - 1 . 111 Court
guarantees
it gave to get the
{7.)\WNIS&amp;.
S1n!tal, Pou•oy, Ohio 45769. •
games: "a 'mond engagellllll!t~~M•...
:e•'ll_..salouw . .:
ment'
to Ullprov.e human
lpllun 'R IIIIa
. • r:
rights tin the months leading
Neaa
OM11110111h
·'1G.ZT
up to 1he Games" and an
'115.14
e.or. a-.~. c.t. 12 an.,..,
assurance there would be
_,
50'
' . . . .. _, · Ext."14
unfettered press freedom for
s.ntorCIIIanAq llio. _,Seig&amp;ll~ Ext 19
international
media before
0....,0.27
.,01,10
·and during the Olympics .
Slaa:aiJas ~ ,.,.. ·i'l ·..:w.noe
But as the world bas seen,
AlLaN 1' 111 • .
'? ....., O.V. +Ienis, .Ex1. 15 hUIIdredll ofOlinese human·
tD .... ~ · 'l!lo . . .
rights .activists and journal· o as 'MIII:BIM1da:Davil, ~.:t6 acrtp1ion tv m.;t P&amp;liilbrd in CC_U,_.Illll1• JullrCialk, Ext. 10
ists bav:e been imprilllllled,
and foreign telcoomm.unica.... Sl 1111 CiipUlh
tions companies have been
G1,..... Ill 111r
..... QIO!'Ir
banned
from sbowing live
19 Weeks
'32.26
Hue.a '· !Ext. 12
shots
of
1iaunmcn Square
26 Weeks
'6420
(site of the 1~89 massacre of
·52 Waaks
•
'127.11
~:
Ollnese pro-de1110CI11CY stu~Of'rltdlll)w etit el.com
Oulloldo ...... ea. ..,
dents) during the games 1s Weeks
'53.55
while forei$n reports from
26 Weeks
'107.10
Tibet
l e being blacked out.
52 Weeks
'214.2'1
....-;n\fllliiJI••MMII.com
Tile Chinese response to

C:WOSC· The only powrr-

off than they were e1gbt
government dial oould stq) years ago.
them ·was the power of the
He made a good case on
veto, .md it was rarely used" trade in Pitts~urgb. declarImplicitly, McCain made ing that "~m.g new~lbimself out to be different · kets for . Amc:nc:m . goods
~=!,
by promising, "l will lead and servtces 1s mdispens·
.... - •
across-the-board refmms in able to our future PJl!spen!y.
the federaltax code, ·remov- We can compete. With anyi.ng myriaq .cor,porate-tax 'One."Buthe's .g omgtobave
loopholes that are costly, . to keep rc:buttmg th~ do~unfair and inconsistent with ,. nant J:~Ubhc lll:IJlTCSSJon that ~~~~':"n~ a free•nw.tet eoonomy."
~ ts b~ workers. 'th
Democrats will do the
He promised regulatory
t s a
ar . case W,l
same ,1@ MrCain, and he'd reform to bring "transparen- Bush's tax c~ts. A~g
lbetter·get~..A.· with answers. . cy, accountability and per- to the Br~kings !lnsbtubon .
·~J
sons and 001p00lte respon- Tax Pohcy Center, twCI~:~ll!:y
sibility" to ~.~tivities of thirds o~ Bush'sth~ pc~
with both of rus Democratic in¥estment bAUJU&gt; and mort- went to ose m e o
gage lenders .and pledged percent of mcome and left
livals, OeJIKilCI'liiS !think lihat "no more subsidies for spe-· those making less t~?an
the 2008 update 1!111 :Ronald
$
000
!Reagan's famous ·:cuestiGn cial pleaders - no more
~00.
a year paymgf
cot;porate
welfare."
more
of
the
total burden o
fram 1980 w n be
•Com:ciing the impression federal taxes than any other
troentualun4 J:;y
that he tbelieves in laissez- income group.
ev
Y
prove vas- faiie economics,. M~~ . McCain's proposals to cut
~ ~~~:cl::~ is not declared: "&amp;onomic policy 1s ·the coopotatertax rate from 35
the incumbentpresidenttbat n?'just some ~rlemi~ exer- percent, to 25 _percent, allow
Carter was, but llemoorats cse, and we m Washington immediate wnte"()ffs of new
already .are .asserting that arenotjustpassive~. mannfac_rurlng C9Uipm~nt
McCarn's election WGuld We have a ~!ipoiiSlbility to and retain the capital gams
amaunt 10 "Bush's ·third act - and if I am .elected tax rate at 15 ~nt are !lJ
term" .because be would con- Jlll?sident. I ~tend !&gt; act defensibl~ ~ J~b-creator;;,
tiilue Bush's ((aq policy and qmcldy and decisively.
but 'M~ 1s gomg to have
extend his !tall. .cuts. It won't
For one thing, he proposes !O exp1ain why.- and ~
be 1eng before 'they start rut- !o refer:m urtemployment n cl~. why his ~nts
ling rum with the numbers.
msurnnce .and retrauung pro- tax-~g back to Clinton
·McCain bas given .two grams and create inco~e- levels w~ll hm:t the ecQDamy.
good economic speeches loss ''buffer accounts" to bde
MCCarn will hav~ .to be
lately, including Gne en workers aver but encourage clear why be ongmally
Thesday at Carnegie Mellon them to get new jobs guic~y. o:pposed Bush:S tax cuts as
University in !Pittsburgh,
He also favors .doub~g gifts to ~ ncb but now
that implicitly distinguished the deJ:lendent tax exeii1J&gt;boo favors making them permahim from Bush and cast him that Will put more money m ncnt.
.
.as an activist economic the hands of parents and
Sen.. Barack Obama b!ts
xefomner, but that won't ·be called for emergency ~- McCarn cons~tly on this,
.enolll_gh to ·beat &lt;back .the sll!'es to I~Jwer gasolme cbargmg that somewhere
. Democrats, particularly as pnces and ~ sure .student along . the w.ay. t&lt;? the
the .ecenomy worsens.
.loans ~ ~vailable this fall.;
Republican nommal!on, 1
The,closestbe came to disAll this ts fi!.ne, and there s jlUess he had to stop speak- .
tancing himself from Bush's more. McCam courag~.us- !Dg h1s ~un?, and. start towrecord was 10 say that '111 so ly .opposes farm su'!s1di~s, mg the line.
.
many ways, we need ta make f~r e!lample:" that lav1sh bJI.
iFor a candidate . w~o
a dean 'break from the worst hons on ncb ag~culture · allow~d a~ bow econo011cs
excesses of both !f10litical ente!iJ?Ia&amp;es at ~ ttme of wasn ! his strong swt,
parties. llor iRqlublicans, it boonii]\g farm pncos.
McCarn .has proyed a, q~1cli;
iitaJ:tS with .reClaiming our
1B ut to counter the num- study. But be doesn t JUSt
good name as .the party of· hers Democrats w1ll threw have to learn econormcs - ·
spending restraint.
· at him, McCain is going to be's got to teach it. The task
"Somewhere along ~ nave to ex:plain -:-- cl~arly, ·b as barely begun.
.
way, too many Repu~li~m so that ordinary ~s
Wor:on K~md~acke IS
Congress became indistm- can understand n - w~y oexecuttve editor of Ro_ll
guisbablefromthebig-spend- low 'taxeS and~trade d1d Call: the. newspaper of
ing Democrats they used to not make Amencans worse Capuol Hill. J

t:.,

=

·em: -

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, Aprilu, zooS

..

HlnyC. .........r ........

. MIDDLEPoRT - Harry C. "Peanut" Roush ill, 41, of
Wddl~rt, Ohio passed away on April 20, 2008 at Arlxlrs
.Gf Gallipolis.
He was born on Aug. 4, 1966 in Pomeroy, son of Ella
Roush tOf Middleport and Harry Roush, Jr. of Minersville.
He was .a 1985 graduate of Meigs High School and was
e,mployed at Meigs Industries.
In .addition Ito liis parents, be is survived by two sisters,
,Samantha (Mike) Folmer of Pomeroy, and Sara (John)
'T'illis of Middleport; nephews, William and Christopher
Folm~r af Pomeroy. Alexander and Van Tillis of
' Middleport; very speciltl friend, Trish Robie of Pomeroy;
;grandparents, Harry and. Edna Roush of Mason, WV and
Ella Blanche Stewart hf Middleport.
s!fe was preceded in death by his grandfather, Fred
·willilllii Stewart and a great aunt, Ethel Stitt.
Funeral ~rvices will be held .o n Thursday at 11 a.m at
Fisber-,Anderson-McDaniel , Funeral Home in Middleport
·with Gyde Fetrell officiating. Burial will follow at Gravel
-Hill Cemetery. Visiting hours will be on Wednesday from
6.8 p.m. at the funeral borne. A registzy is available on-line
iby v.isiting www.andersonmcdaniel.com

POMEROY- Thomas Leon Dorst, Sr., 60, of Pomeroy,
,passed away on Sunday, April 20, 2008, at his residence.
He was born on Feb. 24, 1948 in SllDIDer; Ohio, son of
the late Alfred Edgar and Sibyl Pearl (Smith) Dorst. Mr.
Dorst was .a truck driver for Silvan Trucking. Mr. Dorst
also enjoyed"riding ·his Honda Gold Wmg and loved the
putdoors. He was a member of the Savannab Masonic
Lodge #466.
·
· In addition to his parents, be was preceded in death by his
sister, Helen 1.0is Dorst, brother, Robert A. Dorst and
mether-1.11-'law, Betty McDaniel.
He is survived •by his wife, Robin Dorst of Pomeroy.
children: Thomas I&gt;Grst, Jr. of Oak Hill, 'fiamo and To011a
Dorst of 'Pomeroy, ~anna Dorst and Tim Connors of
Hillard, Ohio, Lisa and Rodney Credico of Mazysville,
Ohio~ Grandchildren: Darbi, Aramis, Jordan, Dominic, and
Cllyda; Brother, E. Martin and Grace Dorst of Shade, Ohio,
father-in-law, Robert McDaniel of Pomeroy, brother-inlaw, Ted Fisher of Columbus and sister-in-law ~am and
Darrell McKinney of Wellston.
.
Services will be held at I p.m. on Wednesday, April 23,
.2008, at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Pomeroy. Burial will follow in the Riverview Cemetery in
Middleport. Visitation will be held from 4 until 8 p.m. on
Tuesday, AP.ril 22, 2008, at the funeral home. Masonic
;Services will be held and conducted by the Savannah
Ledge #466 at 7:45 p.m. .
·
·
. Oriline registty is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

·.

Bodies.ofman, two
.children found in g~ge
BY TOll Bil EN
ASSOCIATED·PRESS WRITER

With gas at milestone, drivers
feeling increasingly squeezed
BY ADAM SoitRecK .
AP BUSINESS WRITER

NEW YORK - · Cabbies
here complain their takeborne pay is lhinner than it
used to be. Trucking companies across the country are
making dri¥ers slow down
to conserve fuel. Filling ·station Gwners plead that really, really, the skyrocketing
prices aren't their fault.
And the rest of us? With
gas prices · now averaging
$3.50 a gallon nationwide,
according to AAA and the
Oil
Price
Information
.Service, more and more
Americans who have to
drive are weighing the need '
for each .and every trip. .
''To get to the doctors and
all that, it's an awful lot of
money," said Carol Licata, a
75-year-old retiree from
Arnold, Pa., wbe said a brger portion of her fiXed
"income is now going toward
gas. "I don't drive that often,
but ·have to take necessary
trips ... and (gas) takes a big .
chunk out of our budget."
Some would-be drivers
are .consi4ering less energyAP photo
dependent alternatives sim- A Valero customer pumps gas at a station in Palo Alto,
ply for money's sake.
Calif. Monday. Rising gasoline prices tightened the
ln Los Angeles, for ellam- squeeze on drivers Monday, jumping to an average $3.50
pie, fiction writer Brian a gallon at filling stations across the country.
'Edwards sold his gas-guzzling Ford truck and now too much," Bak Zoumane putting added strain on'
relies on his skateboard or said as be filled up his yel- refiners and filling-station
the bus to get around. low cab at a BP station in operators, which are strugSharon Cooper of Chicago, midtown New York. The gling to pass the higher
meanwhile, said she is plan- West African immigrant said feedstock costs onto conning to buy a bicycle to use his ne:x:t car will likely be a sumers. So even as drivers
on her 2 l/2-mile commute hybrid so he won't have to pay more, retailers - the
to work.
pay so much at the pump.
most public face ·of the oil
And everyone, it seems, is . Gasoline prices typically business are getting
more than willing to join in rise in the spring as stations increasingly squeezed..
the griping.
switch over to pricier sum"The farther you get from
"lt's bell," said Jeg;U aide mer-grade fuel and demand the wellbead, the greater the
Zebib Yemane, who spent · picks up as more travelers misery," said Tom Kloza of
$5 on gas for her Chevy take to the road.
the Oil Price Information
compact at a 76 station in
But this year prices are ris- Service in Wall, N J.
downtown Los Angeles just ing even faster than nonn.al, "There's a lot of stations
so she could make it to a . experts say, because of the across the country that are
cheaper gas station east of massive jump in benchmark literally on the brink of
the area.
crude prices, which spiked to bankruptcy."
"When going downhill, I a record $117.76 a barrel
Samer Katib, the manager
used to step on the gas. Now Monday before settling a of a Marathon station in
'( don't," said Yemane, who record settlement price of Chicago, said business has
said she normally spends $117.48 on the New York · fallen at least 30 percent
$80 a week on fuel and asks Mercantile Exchange, up 79 this year because customers
people for rides and take§ cents from the previous
cuttin'g back on driving
the bus to save money.
close. It was the sixth day in and only using their cars
"Bottom· line, we can't a row prices set new records. when absolutely necessary.
afford it no more, man. It's
Those soaring pnces are
"It's just go to your work

and go home," be said of
people's driving habits these
days, adding that Cllstomers
no longer stop in for profitfattening drinks like they
used to. "They need all their
money for gas," he said.
"I wish I could make gas
prices cheaper," Katib
added. "But if we do that,
we cannot survive."
Other businesses are getting pinched as well.
Mitch Goldstone, who
owns a photo-scanning shop
in Irvine, Calif., said be
began giving out gas cards
Monday to encourage people
to shop after noticing a sharp
decline in customer traffic
- something be attributed
to soaring gas prices.
AAA
figures
show
California bas higher prices
than anywhere in the counlly,
with regular now selling for
an average of $3.86 a gallon.
"It's a mess here,"
Goldstone said. "People just
are not shopping and everyone's trying to ·figure out a
way to get people back in
their cars."
Diesel prices are rising
even higher than gasoline,
putting pressure on trucking
and other shipping companies that use the fuel to
transport goods around the
countzy.
The American Trucking
Associations on Monday
said it will host a ''fuel
strategies workshop" in
June to help fleet operators
cope with soaring prices.
ATA Chief Economist
Bob Cosiello said fuel bas·
now surpassed labor as the
trucking induslly's biggest
cost, prompting some companies to Install devices that
prevent drivers from speed;
ing. Companies are also
shelling out fo~ auxiliazy
power units and offering
bonu.ses to drivers who cut
down on idling and operate
their trucksnlrnobre. ebffilcie~tlhey.
"Every 1i e 1t e ps,
said.
Associated Press wrirers
Dave Carpenter in Chicago,
Gillian Flaccus in Irvine,
Calif, Ramesh Santanam in
· Arnold, Pa., and Solve}
Schou in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

BARBOURSV'!LLE: W.Va. -A family member found
the bodies of a man and two·cbildren Monday in a vehi·
'N&lt;Jf AN EXORCI,S'T. . ,
c:Je in a residentia) garage ami police suspect carbo!\.
monoxide poisoning'.
.
.
The bodies of the man and two girls, ages 6 and I 0, were
~~-c-c'----::--=--;-'"=~~~!~~Al 11
~;'~a6 The
p.m. Mgndliy•...B.arbuursville Police
;;
Herald-Dispatch.
.,
.
'
The · bodies were to be sent to the state Medical
EXaminer's Office in Charleston. Detective Larry Dalessio
said wlice are awaiting the results of toxicology and other
ban on cruel and unusual within 12 hours of being exe- twitched for many minutes
BY .twE CARR Slm'H
tests before determining a cause of death.
cuted in July 2003 when a before he died.
,,
"We know absolutely nothing more than that at this time. AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT punishment.
But his case got caught up federal judge delayed ·his exeThe Cooey suit and others
We're assuming cartxm monmtide poisoning," Dalessio said.
COLUMBUS
The
cution
to
give
his
new
lawyer
that
are pending could continon
a
technicality:
An
No other details were immediately available Monday . t .
more
time
to
study
the
case.
ue to affect Ohio's execution
The bouse sits on a small hill off a gravel road in a qwet, Ohio death row inmate appeals court said last year
Even if his attorneys find schedule - creating an effecwhose name is attached to a that Cooey had missed a
well-kept neighborhood in Barboursville.
· closely watched · lawsuit deadline to file the suit no other legal pp~on for tive moratorium while arguchallenging the state's lethal within two years of the date Cooey, that doesn't mean ments are aired in court, said
injection execution proce- his state-level appeals were that Biros, Frazier or one of Keith Dailey, a spokesman
•
dure lost .what may be his completed in 1995. The 17 other jnmates who have for Gov. Ted Strickland.
final
appeal Monday.
lion that its members' leadUnintentionally,
of
· three-judge panel of the signed onto the Cooey case
"Based on our initial underCHESlER - Plans are moving forward for the BQnual
won't continue their quest standing of the court's deciers consider not attending course, ·h aving the Olympics
The
decision
by
the
U.S.
Sixth
U.S.
Circuit
Coun
of
'b anquet of the Chester Alunwi Association to be held on
the .opening ceremonies of . in China has shone b~
Supreme Court, which Appeals in Cincinnati had again~t injection, Culshaw sion today, Mr. Cooey may no
''May 31 at the Eastern Elementary Cafetorium.
said.
China's "One World, · One light on China's crimes in
longer be able to proceed with
Classes to be bonored will be 1938, 1943; 1948 and recently upheld the injec- ordered the case dismissed,
The
Supreme
Court's
Dream" ev.ents (now a night- Tibet and its complicity ip
this argument, becau&amp;j: of the
· 1953. Dinner will be served at 6:30p.m. followed by a tion method in bordering saying U:S. District Judge
decision last week upheld a statute of limitations issue,
mare) wiless that impc;rious the genocide in Darfur con·
Kentucky,
could
send
Gregory
Frost
used
the
social time. Dinner music will be .provided by Chris
similar execution method in.
nationengl~W'S:in .a dialogue ducted by Sudan, Cbina':s
Kuhn. Scholarships will be awarded. Reservations are to Richard Cooey to the death wrong test for establishing Kentucky, but Ohio's pre- but others named in the suit
willl the Dalai Lama (wbo primary business partner,
will likely continue to pursue
be made by May 21. Payment of $14 which includes dues chamber even as other con- the two-year time limit.
has not ·calltld for .a &lt;boycott protector and arms SUpPlier.
When the U.S. Supreme scription for injection is the case," he said Monday.
may be sent to June Epple, 44495 Pomeroy Pike, Racine, demned prisoners continue
of the~). and Qqps it Present at the protest m San
to fight Ohio's method of Court agreed Monday, it left slightly different and ·has "There are multiple cases
Obto 45771.
encountered its own unique
Francis.c o was Mubdy
tepressiCmsm Tibet.
pending, which may or may
execution under his name.
Cooey at a legal dead end.
.
problems, including an
How long will this surge of Babradin, a .Oarfur refugee,
Two other death row
"We're still tzying to sort mmate who sat up on the not have an effect on the'
Ro~·s n:quest that -it live
Eagle Talon. This incident inmates - Kenneth Biros through what the options
entire system."
up :t,ts ~~s wasindig- moral concern by the wbo told the New York Sun
gumey at the Jieath hottse m
i§!lropcan
Plmiamcnt
and
IIJC
(~P,ijlO):~
·
remains under. inyestigalion . and :1!!rne)' F{BZier - alsn are, "Jiaid ~ll)' Culshaw, afl . soy Ule ·cMmicnls weren 't
ifiiPU · li'II.JOCI.ton, ·
•
01-=
'1 lost·a · lot of my stu" .
by Spaun.
.demand !hat the tOC stqp- !lntemationa1
lost appeals Monday.
assistant
state
public working and another whose
dents, my family members,
Other traffic accidents
~ii!¥ ;in Cbirui's &gt;iota"- COmmittt.e last? Long
fromhgeAl
Cooey ftled the lethal defender. "He doesn't have body visibly convulsed and
oge's Slvklen .recQgnition my relatives in the genollllll :daini.
;
reported last week: James injection lawsuit in 2004, anything else pending in
of
rthis ~.crisis," llfuma!l cide. This (demonstration)
•
IR&lt;ae. .wbile ·not .. au
Carter,
Pomeroy, was cited arguing that the cocktail uf those courts right now."
Dustin Barnette of Racine
IR1nl.!g-nr.....a. ....-. ••.-~ibim lSD
· 'l P&lt;hltl......
t' ·--•
·
... Tbi
' s IS
.
for
assured
cleared distance three chemicals used to put
Cooey was sentenced to
ldemanilins &lt;that
ltOrcb --'6""- '""""' ..... -6~
who was visiting a resimay, .wbiaJ began .in il 93610 lio raise with die Obinese about human beings. This is
when
be
·allegedly
backed
criminals to death in Ohio die in 1986 for raping and
dence in Pomeroy when the
·•
celebrate the coming of the ,government the jailing for 3- about human lives."
into
a
parlred
vehicle
owned
causes so much pain that it murdering two University of
items were stolen from a
However, on Sept. 11,
Olympics ·to Nazi Germany, l/2 years of China's leading
by
Franldin
J.
Ryther,
violates the Constitution's Akron students. He came
truck. Patrolman Ronnie
. spokesm!ffi
be stopped, is aware that his human rights activist, 34- Coca-Cola
Syracuse.
The
accident
Spaun is investigating.
Kelly Brooks (a corporate
lOng slfence on China's 'bro- year-old Hu Jia.
Also last week, a bit-skip oocuned ·on Second Street
As Human Rights Watch's sponsor of the Olympics)
~ledges has led to such
of contracts for Melissa
. ·accident was reported when near the Pomeroy Post Office.
on his organiz.ation as Asia . advocacy director, . told The New York Ttmes:
Conde,
Sheila Connolly,
Spaun
is
investigating.
Misty A. Brown, Rac:~e,
a cbtUge by the Paris-based Sqphie Richardson, bad "We fumly believe the
Elizabeth A. Nickels,
QyJen Hall, Betsy Martindale,
told police she was extbng
Reporters Without Borders reminded Rogge: "Hu :Jia's Olympics are a force f!ir
Pomeroy,
was
cited
for
from
Page
AI
and Janet Barnett. All ceniHolzer Meigs Clinic when
that '1t is your silence that sentence shows that you good that celebrates the best
assured
cleared
distance
fied
and classified substitute
sbe observed a woman back
bas unfortunately made all can't defend human rights in in sports, and we are proud
when
she
allegedly
failed
to
into her vehicle and drive
Melissa Badcer, elementary staff were non-renewed effecthese human .rigbts abuses China without becoming a to support the Beijing 20()8
slow down and struck a yearbook advisor; Kevin tive the end of the school year.
off.
The
2000
Chrysler
case youn;elf."
Olympics.
possible."
'
Condor received a crack to vehicle driven by Joshua M. Welsh, bead football coach;
The board also:
The Wall Street Journal
!Rogge bas broken that · The charge against Hu Jia
Mon,is, Pomeroy. The acci- Brad Quillen, bead golf
its
right
side.
Brown
said
•
Approved the potential
Need a great Auto
silence because not only and many other brave (Marcil 17) reports that
dent happened on West coatcb; and Betsy Kearns, graduation candidates for
she
tried
to
stop
!lie
driver
insurana rate'!
China's st~~Dding in the Chinese wbo have reponed · Coca Cola and other corpoMain Street near the Pool assistant high school cheer- the class of 2008 ·
the
driver
dido
'
t
but
world has been further. to-tbe world their struggles to rations have paid as much as
Stay local and caD an
• Approved the purchase
resp~md . Brown described People store. Spaun is leader advisor.
blackened, but the IOC is begin an opening for democ- $120 million, ·according to
Agent you already .
the vehicle as posstbly an investigating .
Nicole Honaker was of a new 71-passenger
fast losing stanue, endanger- racy, is "incitement to sub- some estimates, to sponsor
approved as an in-horne tutor. school bus from Truck Sales
koow and trust!
ing the credibility for years vert state power." Hu .Jia's Beijing's
Olympics.
The
board
approved
and
Service
of
Marietta.
to come of its mission, as wife, Zeng fmyan, is also a President Bush will be there.
Jessica Dillon
those free screenings include Tammy Adams as a substitute
.• Approved a job descripproclaimed in its cluuter, to fearless,
internationally
Happy vjewing, Mr.
clinical breast eltlliiis, blood cook and secretary and Judith tion for the position of
promote "a peaceful society known human-rights cham· President!
. testing of sugar and choles- West as a substitute secretary. Supervisor of Operation.
concemcd with the ~a­ pion. Their daughter - born
(Nat Hentoff ii a .1Ullionterol, caroon monoxide lung The board. also approved
from~Al
• Approved a purchase
tion of human dignity."
last.1'1ovembcr, a few weeks ally renowned authorit\' on
function, Dellascm for chaperones for the eighth- · order to Gordon Food
In a further blow to Orina, before her father's imprison- the First Amendment · and
110 East ~in 5tl-'
fteld trip to Gettysburg. ~rvices in the amount of
Leave a mesSage 'and your Osteoporosis.
and to the IOC's slllrtling ment·- is undes" house arrest .the Bill ofRights and author
The
"Think
Pink"
project
·or
$57.000
to
cover
food
costs
Poinen&gt;y, OH 4576!1
call will be returned.
decision to award the games along with her mother.
'm Ma~· and the seru .
.
of many books, including
and
Women's
Health
Days
trip
to
Myrtle
Beach.
for
March.
2008.
at
the
end
ln addition to mammograto that grim state, the
WilllOC president Rogge
War 011 the Bill of
The board approved the of the school year.
phy services, MCCI will be are purposefully held in
European Parliament .(BBC, tzy to pay a visit to them Rtg~s
the Gathering
Ohoo Mutual
areas
of
the
county
which
noo.,renewal
of a conllacl for
• Approved a three-year
offering several free health
April I 0) passed a DOllbind- between the Beijing sport- , ResiSlance (Seven Swries
lnsU11lD~ Group
screenings
during
the are medically under.;erved, Malena Stone as a cook, and contract with Reed &amp; Bauer
ing (but miiJIII!ting) n:solu- "'ing events in August?
Press, 2004 ).
'
Or visH us oo the web· www. reedbaur. ~ .
'
Women's Health Day in reducing financial and approved non-renewal due to for property, fleet and liabil·
Home · Aulo Farm Business
1ac1c of funding and necessity ity insurance.
Tuppers 0Plains. Some of logistical barriers.
_..:..._ _ _- - £ ,_ _ _- : -_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~- -- ··.-·-·-- I
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rltl A POR£,

Condeinned inmate who fought injection loses appeal

China'sjlame ofshame

Chester Alumni banquet pJanned

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

.

.

-The Daily Sentinel

. Reports

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PageA4

OPINION

~The Daily Sentinel

will McCain _luJndle 'are.you better off' iss~?
Tbe. nail·y. Sentm•e1 How
·
m
I

111 0ou1t

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;'{1 Olllo

(740) JIN158 • FAX (7..0 992-2157
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

o.n Gaodridi
Put)lisher

Cbaltene lh allich
General Marnager~ws Editor

liD,_,

. ~:shall IJUi.r
f'BJJ"ctj".f ••
amWUfurmrt of rdigio11, «~X IN
: jiw ~ t1u1wf; "'' ••ri4.tilf1tlu ]i'etiem
· ofspticdt, .,, of tk prns; or tlu ri.flat of IN
Jlftll'k ~ tD .wti!IIK. al U1 pditin
lk Gmwmnmt for • ldms •fXJi'Nrtnrs
-lhe Arst Ama11iued to ilhe u;s. Canslitution

:TODAY IN H [STORY

Sen. 1o1111 McCain has
made :a !0011 llXt 6fwiog

be unde»Stuk CIOOIJ0IIIics,
!but be ·still bas 10 tcope 'l'iitb
dte tiller question: "Are
you •belt.cr .off now than yoo
were .eight years ago?"
!ln .a debate .at The ·GeGrge
W.asbin,gton University tOO
Feb. 25, a Iteam ,o f four
Oemooral!ic Congressmen
ll.ed lby RCj!l. IRalun Emanuel
!(III.~ demolished .a Iteam rof
RqJubticans 1led by · Rep.
Adam 1\rtnam i(fla.) by citing .a11 ~e . evidence that
Ammcans are 1101 better off
·tbanthey were whenGe!'&gt;rge
W. Bush lbecame president.
Such as: Median housell01d
•~
-m the U'-"'-~
." "•-~~
'llliDol ... -=
mse S6.000mtheeigbtyears
&lt;Of Bill Gintoo's .administraIlion, m $49 J63 but fell Ito
$48!0:!3
Bush'-s .fust
sbt Years ·in .affice. Certainly,
ifs still falling.
.Mso, the eoonamy · gnew
lby an average af 4 ;pCrcent
idnmqgtbeCiintonyeans,and
crellted :an average m.s million jebs a year. Under BuSh,
grnss domestic product lbas
grovm just 2.7 'JIC=Dt.a year
and -created J69,QOO job5 .a
year - and .a recession is
probably under way to Cllt
even ribose numbers.
1lbe pnce of gaseline m
2001 was $139 ipef gallon.
Now, it's $4. The llllliiibcr&lt;if
AlliCIIicans lacking health
.insurance was 38 million;
.now, it's 47 million. The
national debt was $5.7 trillion in 2001; now, it's $9.2
trillion. 1be .dollar was worth.
J.Cn .eiUU; now, at's .68.
And so on: The poveny
.rate, college cests, takehome pay, personal indebt-.e dness, foreign oil depen·dency and the ttade deficit
all are worse than they were
when Bush 'loOk &lt;Office.
!ln · the •G WU debate,
!Emanuel
and
fellow
Oemocrat.s Steve · Israel
(N.Y.),ArturDav.is (Ala.) and
Robert Andrews (NJ.) pumme1ed RepUblicans !Putnam,
Cathy McMoms Rodgers
t(Wash.), PaUl !Ryan (Wis.)
and llril:; Cantor (Va) with the

ciJJJk

Today is lluesday. April22. the 113th day of 2008. There
.~ 253 days ~eft in &lt;the year.
.
Troday's Highlight in Histozy: On April 22, 1889, the
·OOahon'ul Land RuSh began at noon .as thousands.ef bolllO.steadcrs ~ claims.
On this date: In 15(19, Henzy vm beCame icing of
·&amp;~gland fGllG~g !the death •Gf 'his father, Henzy ,the \111.
In 1.864, Gangress .authooi.zed ,the lllse Gf the phrase "il.n
God We Trust" •Gn roins.
In 1'944, during WO!!ld War !1!1., U.S. forces began invading
·llq;umese-beld New Guinea with amphibieus landings at
-llollimdia and Ai
.
·
In 1954, the ;:Jilic1y rtelev.ised sessions of the Senate
_Army-McCarthy lhear:ings began.
· In 1'964, President JGbnson opened the New ¥otik
.WI!Jl'Jd's Fair.
. In J970, millions of Ametiicans cancerned about the env:iromnentobseJVed the first "Earth Oay."
.
· In i1983 the West German news ma,gMine Stem
.announced the disoGvcry .o f 60 volumes ef perseruil dialiies
.purportedly Written by Adolf Hitler. However, .the dialiies
turned out to be a baax.
; In 1'994 Ridbatd M. Nix&lt;m, the 37-th president of the
.United sates, died .at a New ¥ook lbespillil feur&lt;days ,after
,suffering a strake; lbe was 8l.
.
.
.
.
iln 200(i), in a lilramatic pre-dav.~n .ralCI, armed mmugratton
·!\gents seized Elian Gonzalez from his relatives' home in
· Miami; Bian was ~reunited ·wi.th his father at Andrews Air
. F0I'Ce Base near W.asbingtan.
. Ten years ago: A young woman charged along with her
·high school sweetheart with murdering their newbom at a
Delaware motel pleaded guilty to .manslaughter. (Amy
Grossberg ended up serving neatly two years of a 2 112·
year .sentence; IBrian !Peterson served 1 112 years of a twoyear 1ienlence.j
.
.
Five years 1\gO: President iBusb .annoonced 'he would
nmninate JMan Greenspan far . a fifth rerm as !Federal
,Reserve cibairnnan. Songwmter :Felice IBzyant, who, with her
late husband, Boudleaux, wrote "Bye !Bye ILove" and ath~
EvCIIly Brothers bits, ,9iixJ in Gatlinbu~g. Tenn., at age 77.
One year age: lin the first round ef the French ;presiden---tiall~,e"eti·en,-~lserYatilve Nic!i!las S:lll'k0J:y~Jmd SGCWist-1-~:=--o­
'Segolene Royal received enoogh votes to advance to
a runoff, _which Saikozy won. ·
.· .
'
. Today' s IB:irthdays: Actress Charlotte Rae ts 82. Actress
Estelle HaE!iis is 76. 'Singer Glen Campbell is 72. Actor iJack
·Nicholson is 71. Singer Mel Carter is 65 ..Mov.ie &amp;n:ctor
D0bn Waters is t62. 'Singer P.eter Frampton is 58. Actor
·iJGSeJ)h Bottoms is 54. Acter !Ryan Stiles lis 49. \(:omedian
Byron Allen is 47. Actor Chris Makepeace lis 44. Kodk
·musician ffietchcr Dmgge is 42. ACtor Jeffrey Dean M01p11
is 42. Actress Sheryl Lee is 4.1. Actres8-'talk Show lbost
Shemti ·s~berd is 41. Country singer ~llie (Joffey is .37..
·Actress Micbelle !Ryan is 24. Acttess Amber Heard 115 22.
· Thought for 1foday: "Always lfelllember rotbcni may hate
you but thOse who bate yeu don 1t v.ful unless you ihateitbem.
At an April 3 press conferAnd ithen you destroy yourself." -Richard M. Nixan, 37th
.ence
in IBcijing, llnternational
president ofthe United 'States (1913-1994).
Olympic Committee .H.ein
'VJ:I'bruggen - asked about
tblllllllll rights in China, said
comfortably, as rejlorted by
Human Rights Watch, 1h!ll
the me "can easily :JliUve
· Leners ro the editor are welcome. They should be less that bringing the Games here
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, mKSf be has led 10 improvements."
·signed, and •include address and telt;phone number. .No But .after 1he Olympic .tm:cb
unsigne4 llener~ will be published. !Letters should he in came close to lbeing extin'good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of guished 1&gt;¥ thousands ofprothanks to Qrg'unization~ and individuals will nl!t ~ !!§Cepttester · in A1hens, . Pari~;
td for-PMhliif4.tiOft,
•
· •
. ·' ·
'London and San Frailcisco,
. the shaken IOC President
Jacques Rogge 1okll'heNew
Yott Times (~ 11) that
.the tumlihuous :reaction is
I{USfi!S 21S.O}
~ a_ "'c?sis" for that
Reader Services
august
msbtub.on.
.
. Ghio~~lb11 bta~g
A .demonstrator in San
Ca :.acUon IPollcr
Pub- awry aftomoon, -.ay
Francisco, spe&amp;king of the
Our mam cono8m in all ·stories is to
through Friday, 111 Court Street,
torch-relay reception, called
·be aa:uniiB. K you know of an """' ·P omeroy, Ohio.
Secondooclaes
that symbol "the •flame .of
in a otory, callllle llftsroom at (740) poo1ago paid at Pomeroy.
shame." 1l'o prevent further
11112.2156.
'
. . e. .. The AUOCiMed ~ and
lheOhio 'Newlplper•
idora.
crises, Roue finally called
for
China to hold to 1he
OUrniln-1 i •
IJOno Ill Tho Doily - 1 . 111 Court
guarantees
it gave to get the
{7.)\WNIS&amp;.
S1n!tal, Pou•oy, Ohio 45769. •
games: "a 'mond engagellllll!t~~M•...
:e•'ll_..salouw . .:
ment'
to Ullprov.e human
lpllun 'R IIIIa
. • r:
rights tin the months leading
Neaa
OM11110111h
·'1G.ZT
up to 1he Games" and an
'115.14
e.or. a-.~. c.t. 12 an.,..,
assurance there would be
_,
50'
' . . . .. _, · Ext."14
unfettered press freedom for
s.ntorCIIIanAq llio. _,Seig&amp;ll~ Ext 19
international
media before
0....,0.27
.,01,10
·and during the Olympics .
Slaa:aiJas ~ ,.,.. ·i'l ·..:w.noe
But as the world bas seen,
AlLaN 1' 111 • .
'? ....., O.V. +Ienis, .Ex1. 15 hUIIdredll ofOlinese human·
tD .... ~ · 'l!lo . . .
rights .activists and journal· o as 'MIII:BIM1da:Davil, ~.:t6 acrtp1ion tv m.;t P&amp;liilbrd in CC_U,_.Illll1• JullrCialk, Ext. 10
ists bav:e been imprilllllled,
and foreign telcoomm.unica.... Sl 1111 CiipUlh
tions companies have been
G1,..... Ill 111r
..... QIO!'Ir
banned
from sbowing live
19 Weeks
'32.26
Hue.a '· !Ext. 12
shots
of
1iaunmcn Square
26 Weeks
'6420
(site of the 1~89 massacre of
·52 Waaks
•
'127.11
~:
Ollnese pro-de1110CI11CY stu~Of'rltdlll)w etit el.com
Oulloldo ...... ea. ..,
dents) during the games 1s Weeks
'53.55
while forei$n reports from
26 Weeks
'107.10
Tibet
l e being blacked out.
52 Weeks
'214.2'1
....-;n\fllliiJI••MMII.com
Tile Chinese response to

C:WOSC· The only powrr-

off than they were e1gbt
government dial oould stq) years ago.
them ·was the power of the
He made a good case on
veto, .md it was rarely used" trade in Pitts~urgb. declarImplicitly, McCain made ing that "~m.g new~lbimself out to be different · kets for . Amc:nc:m . goods
~=!,
by promising, "l will lead and servtces 1s mdispens·
.... - •
across-the-board refmms in able to our future PJl!spen!y.
the federaltax code, ·remov- We can compete. With anyi.ng myriaq .cor,porate-tax 'One."Buthe's .g omgtobave
loopholes that are costly, . to keep rc:buttmg th~ do~unfair and inconsistent with ,. nant J:~Ubhc lll:IJlTCSSJon that ~~~~':"n~ a free•nw.tet eoonomy."
~ ts b~ workers. 'th
Democrats will do the
He promised regulatory
t s a
ar . case W,l
same ,1@ MrCain, and he'd reform to bring "transparen- Bush's tax c~ts. A~g
lbetter·get~..A.· with answers. . cy, accountability and per- to the Br~kings !lnsbtubon .
·~J
sons and 001p00lte respon- Tax Pohcy Center, twCI~:~ll!:y
sibility" to ~.~tivities of thirds o~ Bush'sth~ pc~
with both of rus Democratic in¥estment bAUJU&gt; and mort- went to ose m e o
gage lenders .and pledged percent of mcome and left
livals, OeJIKilCI'liiS !think lihat "no more subsidies for spe-· those making less t~?an
the 2008 update 1!111 :Ronald
$
000
!Reagan's famous ·:cuestiGn cial pleaders - no more
~00.
a year paymgf
cot;porate
welfare."
more
of
the
total burden o
fram 1980 w n be
•Com:ciing the impression federal taxes than any other
troentualun4 J:;y
that he tbelieves in laissez- income group.
ev
Y
prove vas- faiie economics,. M~~ . McCain's proposals to cut
~ ~~~:cl::~ is not declared: "&amp;onomic policy 1s ·the coopotatertax rate from 35
the incumbentpresidenttbat n?'just some ~rlemi~ exer- percent, to 25 _percent, allow
Carter was, but llemoorats cse, and we m Washington immediate wnte"()ffs of new
already .are .asserting that arenotjustpassive~. mannfac_rurlng C9Uipm~nt
McCarn's election WGuld We have a ~!ipoiiSlbility to and retain the capital gams
amaunt 10 "Bush's ·third act - and if I am .elected tax rate at 15 ~nt are !lJ
term" .because be would con- Jlll?sident. I ~tend !&gt; act defensibl~ ~ J~b-creator;;,
tiilue Bush's ((aq policy and qmcldy and decisively.
but 'M~ 1s gomg to have
extend his !tall. .cuts. It won't
For one thing, he proposes !O exp1ain why.- and ~
be 1eng before 'they start rut- !o refer:m urtemployment n cl~. why his ~nts
ling rum with the numbers.
msurnnce .and retrauung pro- tax-~g back to Clinton
·McCain bas given .two grams and create inco~e- levels w~ll hm:t the ecQDamy.
good economic speeches loss ''buffer accounts" to bde
MCCarn will hav~ .to be
lately, including Gne en workers aver but encourage clear why be ongmally
Thesday at Carnegie Mellon them to get new jobs guic~y. o:pposed Bush:S tax cuts as
University in !Pittsburgh,
He also favors .doub~g gifts to ~ ncb but now
that implicitly distinguished the deJ:lendent tax exeii1J&gt;boo favors making them permahim from Bush and cast him that Will put more money m ncnt.
.
.as an activist economic the hands of parents and
Sen.. Barack Obama b!ts
xefomner, but that won't ·be called for emergency ~- McCarn cons~tly on this,
.enolll_gh to ·beat &lt;back .the sll!'es to I~Jwer gasolme cbargmg that somewhere
. Democrats, particularly as pnces and ~ sure .student along . the w.ay. t&lt;? the
the .ecenomy worsens.
.loans ~ ~vailable this fall.;
Republican nommal!on, 1
The,closestbe came to disAll this ts fi!.ne, and there s jlUess he had to stop speak- .
tancing himself from Bush's more. McCam courag~.us- !Dg h1s ~un?, and. start towrecord was 10 say that '111 so ly .opposes farm su'!s1di~s, mg the line.
.
many ways, we need ta make f~r e!lample:" that lav1sh bJI.
iFor a candidate . w~o
a dean 'break from the worst hons on ncb ag~culture · allow~d a~ bow econo011cs
excesses of both !f10litical ente!iJ?Ia&amp;es at ~ ttme of wasn ! his strong swt,
parties. llor iRqlublicans, it boonii]\g farm pncos.
McCarn .has proyed a, q~1cli;
iitaJ:tS with .reClaiming our
1B ut to counter the num- study. But be doesn t JUSt
good name as .the party of· hers Democrats w1ll threw have to learn econormcs - ·
spending restraint.
· at him, McCain is going to be's got to teach it. The task
"Somewhere along ~ nave to ex:plain -:-- cl~arly, ·b as barely begun.
.
way, too many Repu~li~m so that ordinary ~s
Wor:on K~md~acke IS
Congress became indistm- can understand n - w~y oexecuttve editor of Ro_ll
guisbablefromthebig-spend- low 'taxeS and~trade d1d Call: the. newspaper of
ing Democrats they used to not make Amencans worse Capuol Hill. J

t:.,

=

·em: -

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, Aprilu, zooS

..

HlnyC. .........r ........

. MIDDLEPoRT - Harry C. "Peanut" Roush ill, 41, of
Wddl~rt, Ohio passed away on April 20, 2008 at Arlxlrs
.Gf Gallipolis.
He was born on Aug. 4, 1966 in Pomeroy, son of Ella
Roush tOf Middleport and Harry Roush, Jr. of Minersville.
He was .a 1985 graduate of Meigs High School and was
e,mployed at Meigs Industries.
In .addition Ito liis parents, be is survived by two sisters,
,Samantha (Mike) Folmer of Pomeroy, and Sara (John)
'T'illis of Middleport; nephews, William and Christopher
Folm~r af Pomeroy. Alexander and Van Tillis of
' Middleport; very speciltl friend, Trish Robie of Pomeroy;
;grandparents, Harry and. Edna Roush of Mason, WV and
Ella Blanche Stewart hf Middleport.
s!fe was preceded in death by his grandfather, Fred
·willilllii Stewart and a great aunt, Ethel Stitt.
Funeral ~rvices will be held .o n Thursday at 11 a.m at
Fisber-,Anderson-McDaniel , Funeral Home in Middleport
·with Gyde Fetrell officiating. Burial will follow at Gravel
-Hill Cemetery. Visiting hours will be on Wednesday from
6.8 p.m. at the funeral borne. A registzy is available on-line
iby v.isiting www.andersonmcdaniel.com

POMEROY- Thomas Leon Dorst, Sr., 60, of Pomeroy,
,passed away on Sunday, April 20, 2008, at his residence.
He was born on Feb. 24, 1948 in SllDIDer; Ohio, son of
the late Alfred Edgar and Sibyl Pearl (Smith) Dorst. Mr.
Dorst was .a truck driver for Silvan Trucking. Mr. Dorst
also enjoyed"riding ·his Honda Gold Wmg and loved the
putdoors. He was a member of the Savannab Masonic
Lodge #466.
·
· In addition to his parents, be was preceded in death by his
sister, Helen 1.0is Dorst, brother, Robert A. Dorst and
mether-1.11-'law, Betty McDaniel.
He is survived •by his wife, Robin Dorst of Pomeroy.
children: Thomas I&gt;Grst, Jr. of Oak Hill, 'fiamo and To011a
Dorst of 'Pomeroy, ~anna Dorst and Tim Connors of
Hillard, Ohio, Lisa and Rodney Credico of Mazysville,
Ohio~ Grandchildren: Darbi, Aramis, Jordan, Dominic, and
Cllyda; Brother, E. Martin and Grace Dorst of Shade, Ohio,
father-in-law, Robert McDaniel of Pomeroy, brother-inlaw, Ted Fisher of Columbus and sister-in-law ~am and
Darrell McKinney of Wellston.
.
Services will be held at I p.m. on Wednesday, April 23,
.2008, at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Pomeroy. Burial will follow in the Riverview Cemetery in
Middleport. Visitation will be held from 4 until 8 p.m. on
Tuesday, AP.ril 22, 2008, at the funeral home. Masonic
;Services will be held and conducted by the Savannah
Ledge #466 at 7:45 p.m. .
·
·
. Oriline registty is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

·.

Bodies.ofman, two
.children found in g~ge
BY TOll Bil EN
ASSOCIATED·PRESS WRITER

With gas at milestone, drivers
feeling increasingly squeezed
BY ADAM SoitRecK .
AP BUSINESS WRITER

NEW YORK - · Cabbies
here complain their takeborne pay is lhinner than it
used to be. Trucking companies across the country are
making dri¥ers slow down
to conserve fuel. Filling ·station Gwners plead that really, really, the skyrocketing
prices aren't their fault.
And the rest of us? With
gas prices · now averaging
$3.50 a gallon nationwide,
according to AAA and the
Oil
Price
Information
.Service, more and more
Americans who have to
drive are weighing the need '
for each .and every trip. .
''To get to the doctors and
all that, it's an awful lot of
money," said Carol Licata, a
75-year-old retiree from
Arnold, Pa., wbe said a brger portion of her fiXed
"income is now going toward
gas. "I don't drive that often,
but ·have to take necessary
trips ... and (gas) takes a big .
chunk out of our budget."
Some would-be drivers
are .consi4ering less energyAP photo
dependent alternatives sim- A Valero customer pumps gas at a station in Palo Alto,
ply for money's sake.
Calif. Monday. Rising gasoline prices tightened the
ln Los Angeles, for ellam- squeeze on drivers Monday, jumping to an average $3.50
pie, fiction writer Brian a gallon at filling stations across the country.
'Edwards sold his gas-guzzling Ford truck and now too much," Bak Zoumane putting added strain on'
relies on his skateboard or said as be filled up his yel- refiners and filling-station
the bus to get around. low cab at a BP station in operators, which are strugSharon Cooper of Chicago, midtown New York. The gling to pass the higher
meanwhile, said she is plan- West African immigrant said feedstock costs onto conning to buy a bicycle to use his ne:x:t car will likely be a sumers. So even as drivers
on her 2 l/2-mile commute hybrid so he won't have to pay more, retailers - the
to work.
pay so much at the pump.
most public face ·of the oil
And everyone, it seems, is . Gasoline prices typically business are getting
more than willing to join in rise in the spring as stations increasingly squeezed..
the griping.
switch over to pricier sum"The farther you get from
"lt's bell," said Jeg;U aide mer-grade fuel and demand the wellbead, the greater the
Zebib Yemane, who spent · picks up as more travelers misery," said Tom Kloza of
$5 on gas for her Chevy take to the road.
the Oil Price Information
compact at a 76 station in
But this year prices are ris- Service in Wall, N J.
downtown Los Angeles just ing even faster than nonn.al, "There's a lot of stations
so she could make it to a . experts say, because of the across the country that are
cheaper gas station east of massive jump in benchmark literally on the brink of
the area.
crude prices, which spiked to bankruptcy."
"When going downhill, I a record $117.76 a barrel
Samer Katib, the manager
used to step on the gas. Now Monday before settling a of a Marathon station in
'( don't," said Yemane, who record settlement price of Chicago, said business has
said she normally spends $117.48 on the New York · fallen at least 30 percent
$80 a week on fuel and asks Mercantile Exchange, up 79 this year because customers
people for rides and take§ cents from the previous
cuttin'g back on driving
the bus to save money.
close. It was the sixth day in and only using their cars
"Bottom· line, we can't a row prices set new records. when absolutely necessary.
afford it no more, man. It's
Those soaring pnces are
"It's just go to your work

and go home," be said of
people's driving habits these
days, adding that Cllstomers
no longer stop in for profitfattening drinks like they
used to. "They need all their
money for gas," he said.
"I wish I could make gas
prices cheaper," Katib
added. "But if we do that,
we cannot survive."
Other businesses are getting pinched as well.
Mitch Goldstone, who
owns a photo-scanning shop
in Irvine, Calif., said be
began giving out gas cards
Monday to encourage people
to shop after noticing a sharp
decline in customer traffic
- something be attributed
to soaring gas prices.
AAA
figures
show
California bas higher prices
than anywhere in the counlly,
with regular now selling for
an average of $3.86 a gallon.
"It's a mess here,"
Goldstone said. "People just
are not shopping and everyone's trying to ·figure out a
way to get people back in
their cars."
Diesel prices are rising
even higher than gasoline,
putting pressure on trucking
and other shipping companies that use the fuel to
transport goods around the
countzy.
The American Trucking
Associations on Monday
said it will host a ''fuel
strategies workshop" in
June to help fleet operators
cope with soaring prices.
ATA Chief Economist
Bob Cosiello said fuel bas·
now surpassed labor as the
trucking induslly's biggest
cost, prompting some companies to Install devices that
prevent drivers from speed;
ing. Companies are also
shelling out fo~ auxiliazy
power units and offering
bonu.ses to drivers who cut
down on idling and operate
their trucksnlrnobre. ebffilcie~tlhey.
"Every 1i e 1t e ps,
said.
Associated Press wrirers
Dave Carpenter in Chicago,
Gillian Flaccus in Irvine,
Calif, Ramesh Santanam in
· Arnold, Pa., and Solve}
Schou in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

BARBOURSV'!LLE: W.Va. -A family member found
the bodies of a man and two·cbildren Monday in a vehi·
'N&lt;Jf AN EXORCI,S'T. . ,
c:Je in a residentia) garage ami police suspect carbo!\.
monoxide poisoning'.
.
.
The bodies of the man and two girls, ages 6 and I 0, were
~~-c-c'----::--=--;-'"=~~~!~~Al 11
~;'~a6 The
p.m. Mgndliy•...B.arbuursville Police
;;
Herald-Dispatch.
.,
.
'
The · bodies were to be sent to the state Medical
EXaminer's Office in Charleston. Detective Larry Dalessio
said wlice are awaiting the results of toxicology and other
ban on cruel and unusual within 12 hours of being exe- twitched for many minutes
BY .twE CARR Slm'H
tests before determining a cause of death.
cuted in July 2003 when a before he died.
,,
"We know absolutely nothing more than that at this time. AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT punishment.
But his case got caught up federal judge delayed ·his exeThe Cooey suit and others
We're assuming cartxm monmtide poisoning," Dalessio said.
COLUMBUS
The
cution
to
give
his
new
lawyer
that
are pending could continon
a
technicality:
An
No other details were immediately available Monday . t .
more
time
to
study
the
case.
ue to affect Ohio's execution
The bouse sits on a small hill off a gravel road in a qwet, Ohio death row inmate appeals court said last year
Even if his attorneys find schedule - creating an effecwhose name is attached to a that Cooey had missed a
well-kept neighborhood in Barboursville.
· closely watched · lawsuit deadline to file the suit no other legal pp~on for tive moratorium while arguchallenging the state's lethal within two years of the date Cooey, that doesn't mean ments are aired in court, said
injection execution proce- his state-level appeals were that Biros, Frazier or one of Keith Dailey, a spokesman
•
dure lost .what may be his completed in 1995. The 17 other jnmates who have for Gov. Ted Strickland.
final
appeal Monday.
lion that its members' leadUnintentionally,
of
· three-judge panel of the signed onto the Cooey case
"Based on our initial underCHESlER - Plans are moving forward for the BQnual
won't continue their quest standing of the court's deciers consider not attending course, ·h aving the Olympics
The
decision
by
the
U.S.
Sixth
U.S.
Circuit
Coun
of
'b anquet of the Chester Alunwi Association to be held on
the .opening ceremonies of . in China has shone b~
Supreme Court, which Appeals in Cincinnati had again~t injection, Culshaw sion today, Mr. Cooey may no
''May 31 at the Eastern Elementary Cafetorium.
said.
China's "One World, · One light on China's crimes in
longer be able to proceed with
Classes to be bonored will be 1938, 1943; 1948 and recently upheld the injec- ordered the case dismissed,
The
Supreme
Court's
Dream" ev.ents (now a night- Tibet and its complicity ip
this argument, becau&amp;j: of the
· 1953. Dinner will be served at 6:30p.m. followed by a tion method in bordering saying U:S. District Judge
decision last week upheld a statute of limitations issue,
mare) wiless that impc;rious the genocide in Darfur con·
Kentucky,
could
send
Gregory
Frost
used
the
social time. Dinner music will be .provided by Chris
similar execution method in.
nationengl~W'S:in .a dialogue ducted by Sudan, Cbina':s
Kuhn. Scholarships will be awarded. Reservations are to Richard Cooey to the death wrong test for establishing Kentucky, but Ohio's pre- but others named in the suit
willl the Dalai Lama (wbo primary business partner,
will likely continue to pursue
be made by May 21. Payment of $14 which includes dues chamber even as other con- the two-year time limit.
has not ·calltld for .a &lt;boycott protector and arms SUpPlier.
When the U.S. Supreme scription for injection is the case," he said Monday.
may be sent to June Epple, 44495 Pomeroy Pike, Racine, demned prisoners continue
of the~). and Qqps it Present at the protest m San
to fight Ohio's method of Court agreed Monday, it left slightly different and ·has "There are multiple cases
Obto 45771.
encountered its own unique
Francis.c o was Mubdy
tepressiCmsm Tibet.
pending, which may or may
execution under his name.
Cooey at a legal dead end.
.
problems, including an
How long will this surge of Babradin, a .Oarfur refugee,
Two other death row
"We're still tzying to sort mmate who sat up on the not have an effect on the'
Ro~·s n:quest that -it live
Eagle Talon. This incident inmates - Kenneth Biros through what the options
entire system."
up :t,ts ~~s wasindig- moral concern by the wbo told the New York Sun
gumey at the Jieath hottse m
i§!lropcan
Plmiamcnt
and
IIJC
(~P,ijlO):~
·
remains under. inyestigalion . and :1!!rne)' F{BZier - alsn are, "Jiaid ~ll)' Culshaw, afl . soy Ule ·cMmicnls weren 't
ifiiPU · li'II.JOCI.ton, ·
•
01-=
'1 lost·a · lot of my stu" .
by Spaun.
.demand !hat the tOC stqp- !lntemationa1
lost appeals Monday.
assistant
state
public working and another whose
dents, my family members,
Other traffic accidents
~ii!¥ ;in Cbirui's &gt;iota"- COmmittt.e last? Long
fromhgeAl
Cooey ftled the lethal defender. "He doesn't have body visibly convulsed and
oge's Slvklen .recQgnition my relatives in the genollllll :daini.
;
reported last week: James injection lawsuit in 2004, anything else pending in
of
rthis ~.crisis," llfuma!l cide. This (demonstration)
•
IR&lt;ae. .wbile ·not .. au
Carter,
Pomeroy, was cited arguing that the cocktail uf those courts right now."
Dustin Barnette of Racine
IR1nl.!g-nr.....a. ....-. ••.-~ibim lSD
· 'l P&lt;hltl......
t' ·--•
·
... Tbi
' s IS
.
for
assured
cleared distance three chemicals used to put
Cooey was sentenced to
ldemanilins &lt;that
ltOrcb --'6""- '""""' ..... -6~
who was visiting a resimay, .wbiaJ began .in il 93610 lio raise with die Obinese about human beings. This is
when
be
·allegedly
backed
criminals to death in Ohio die in 1986 for raping and
dence in Pomeroy when the
·•
celebrate the coming of the ,government the jailing for 3- about human lives."
into
a
parlred
vehicle
owned
causes so much pain that it murdering two University of
items were stolen from a
However, on Sept. 11,
Olympics ·to Nazi Germany, l/2 years of China's leading
by
Franldin
J.
Ryther,
violates the Constitution's Akron students. He came
truck. Patrolman Ronnie
. spokesm!ffi
be stopped, is aware that his human rights activist, 34- Coca-Cola
Syracuse.
The
accident
Spaun is investigating.
Kelly Brooks (a corporate
lOng slfence on China's 'bro- year-old Hu Jia.
Also last week, a bit-skip oocuned ·on Second Street
As Human Rights Watch's sponsor of the Olympics)
~ledges has led to such
of contracts for Melissa
. ·accident was reported when near the Pomeroy Post Office.
on his organiz.ation as Asia . advocacy director, . told The New York Ttmes:
Conde,
Sheila Connolly,
Spaun
is
investigating.
Misty A. Brown, Rac:~e,
a cbtUge by the Paris-based Sqphie Richardson, bad "We fumly believe the
Elizabeth A. Nickels,
QyJen Hall, Betsy Martindale,
told police she was extbng
Reporters Without Borders reminded Rogge: "Hu :Jia's Olympics are a force f!ir
Pomeroy,
was
cited
for
from
Page
AI
and Janet Barnett. All ceniHolzer Meigs Clinic when
that '1t is your silence that sentence shows that you good that celebrates the best
assured
cleared
distance
fied
and classified substitute
sbe observed a woman back
bas unfortunately made all can't defend human rights in in sports, and we are proud
when
she
allegedly
failed
to
into her vehicle and drive
Melissa Badcer, elementary staff were non-renewed effecthese human .rigbts abuses China without becoming a to support the Beijing 20()8
slow down and struck a yearbook advisor; Kevin tive the end of the school year.
off.
The
2000
Chrysler
case youn;elf."
Olympics.
possible."
'
Condor received a crack to vehicle driven by Joshua M. Welsh, bead football coach;
The board also:
The Wall Street Journal
!Rogge bas broken that · The charge against Hu Jia
Mon,is, Pomeroy. The acci- Brad Quillen, bead golf
its
right
side.
Brown
said
•
Approved the potential
Need a great Auto
silence because not only and many other brave (Marcil 17) reports that
dent happened on West coatcb; and Betsy Kearns, graduation candidates for
she
tried
to
stop
!lie
driver
insurana rate'!
China's st~~Dding in the Chinese wbo have reponed · Coca Cola and other corpoMain Street near the Pool assistant high school cheer- the class of 2008 ·
the
driver
dido
'
t
but
world has been further. to-tbe world their struggles to rations have paid as much as
Stay local and caD an
• Approved the purchase
resp~md . Brown described People store. Spaun is leader advisor.
blackened, but the IOC is begin an opening for democ- $120 million, ·according to
Agent you already .
the vehicle as posstbly an investigating .
Nicole Honaker was of a new 71-passenger
fast losing stanue, endanger- racy, is "incitement to sub- some estimates, to sponsor
approved as an in-horne tutor. school bus from Truck Sales
koow and trust!
ing the credibility for years vert state power." Hu .Jia's Beijing's
Olympics.
The
board
approved
and
Service
of
Marietta.
to come of its mission, as wife, Zeng fmyan, is also a President Bush will be there.
Jessica Dillon
those free screenings include Tammy Adams as a substitute
.• Approved a job descripproclaimed in its cluuter, to fearless,
internationally
Happy vjewing, Mr.
clinical breast eltlliiis, blood cook and secretary and Judith tion for the position of
promote "a peaceful society known human-rights cham· President!
. testing of sugar and choles- West as a substitute secretary. Supervisor of Operation.
concemcd with the ~a­ pion. Their daughter - born
(Nat Hentoff ii a .1Ullionterol, caroon monoxide lung The board. also approved
from~Al
• Approved a purchase
tion of human dignity."
last.1'1ovembcr, a few weeks ally renowned authorit\' on
function, Dellascm for chaperones for the eighth- · order to Gordon Food
In a further blow to Orina, before her father's imprison- the First Amendment · and
110 East ~in 5tl-'
fteld trip to Gettysburg. ~rvices in the amount of
Leave a mesSage 'and your Osteoporosis.
and to the IOC's slllrtling ment·- is undes" house arrest .the Bill ofRights and author
The
"Think
Pink"
project
·or
$57.000
to
cover
food
costs
Poinen&gt;y, OH 4576!1
call will be returned.
decision to award the games along with her mother.
'm Ma~· and the seru .
.
of many books, including
and
Women's
Health
Days
trip
to
Myrtle
Beach.
for
March.
2008.
at
the
end
ln addition to mammograto that grim state, the
WilllOC president Rogge
War 011 the Bill of
The board approved the of the school year.
phy services, MCCI will be are purposefully held in
European Parliament .(BBC, tzy to pay a visit to them Rtg~s
the Gathering
Ohoo Mutual
areas
of
the
county
which
noo.,renewal
of a conllacl for
• Approved a three-year
offering several free health
April I 0) passed a DOllbind- between the Beijing sport- , ResiSlance (Seven Swries
lnsU11lD~ Group
screenings
during
the are medically under.;erved, Malena Stone as a cook, and contract with Reed &amp; Bauer
ing (but miiJIII!ting) n:solu- "'ing events in August?
Press, 2004 ).
'
Or visH us oo the web· www. reedbaur. ~ .
'
Women's Health Day in reducing financial and approved non-renewal due to for property, fleet and liabil·
Home · Aulo Farm Business
1ac1c of funding and necessity ity insurance.
Tuppers 0Plains. Some of logistical barriers.
_..:..._ _ _- - £ ,_ _ _- : -_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~- -- ··.-·-·-- I
.. _ . .

are

rltl A POR£,

Condeinned inmate who fought injection loses appeal

China'sjlame ofshame

Chester Alumni banquet pJanned

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

.

.

-The Daily Sentinel

. Reports

*

Eastern

---·--., ........

__

a....-

----Is-·

0

et•••

-=

~-...:__-...J.j,..___,_

_

Clinic

"'J!re

•

992-3600

ant!.

.,

...... .
~

�The Daily Sentinel

LocAL •

PageA6

STATE

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

MIDDLEPORT - Tiny si&amp;.er and eliminating the
Tech
Preschool
has dilemma many parents face
announced that for the when choosing a preschool
ftrst time it will offer a progtam for their child.
summer enrichment proParents may also drop
gram for preschool chil- their children off at Trny
dren of the area.
Tech and pick them back up
According to a release after the school day is over
from Tiny Tech; the school if a half-day J?ll:lgram better
will provide care and edu- suits the family's individual
cat\on in conjunction With needs. The school is lookCara Hall Daycare. The ing into the possibility of
plan calls for Tmy Tech free transportation for all
staff members to pick chil- students if it feels the comdren up from Cara Hall munity could benefit from
Day~ for three hours of this service.
instruction, then ttansport
Mindy
Chancey,
a
them back to the daycare licensed educator, works
for the remainder . of the individually with the chilwork day.
clren to prepare them for
What this means is that kindergarten and beyond. If
children can be cared for · a child needs more ex.periregulation eompli;mce. He · ·~ 1111 entire work day ences in a cenain facet of
performs site survey :aSsess- reli~:i£ parents of the need their learning, lessons are
ments, as well as ergontl!Dic to
for a reliable baby taijored to meet the needs of
evaluations. Dr. Shidey and
his wife, Ailish are livmg in
the Athens area
Holzer Clinic is a multiple discifline heaiih care
system o over 130 physiThe Grange thanked the
POMEROY - Members
cians J::viding care in were ft!minded of the quitters for having limemilre
thirty areas of
banquet to be held stone ·place on the parking
eitpertise. With nine loca- Grange
Friday night, 7 p.m. at the area at the hall. Members
tions throughout southeast- American Legion ball on voted on Grange .delegates
ern Ohio and western West ·Pomeroy
Pike
when for convention. The legislaVIrginia. Holzer Clinic proHemlock ~Ne met tive report showed more
vides "Medical Excellence, recently
at the
. Tickets grapevines have been put
. coupled with Loc3t Caring". are available from Grange out in the Racine area. It
. Holzer Clinic is accredit- masters.
was noted that the wine
ed by die Accreditation
Rosalie Story conducted industry along Ohio's Lake
Association of AmbulatQry the meeting with Helen Erie shoreline is drawing
Health Care.
. Quivey, family activities more than 89 percent of
For a complete list of ser- comnuttee
chairman, tourists to see the wineries.
vices or to schedule an announcing the cookie conMembers learned that
appoinrment with Dr. test to be held at the May l House Bill 293 wouJd creShirley, please cal/740-589· • meeting. Any recipe can be ate an Ohio AgricuJture
3100 or visit us on the web used for the cookies which license plate with a scholarat www.holzerdinic.rom.
,
must be .accompanied by a . ship program.
.copy Qf the recipe.
. the dates for the garage

Center has .plans to evolve
into an all inclusive K-12
Christian school.
·
Parents interested iq
enrolling their child eithet:
in Tmy Tech Preschool or
Freedom .
Center
Preparatory School are
invtted to .attend an open
bouse scheduled for 7 p.IIL
Thursday at the Freedom
Center · Ministries campus;
located at 873 S. 3rd Ave.;
Middleport There will be
~ames and snacks availablll
m a carnival-type atm011•
phere, and parents will havci
an opportunity to ~ ques:
lions, tour the facility. an4 ·
sign their child up for eith~
the summer or fall ~~
Tech programs or for
.
kindergarten. For more
information call 740-992•
FREE or 740-416-5397. ·

that child. The goat of the
program is to help children
progress at a pace that is
most productive for that
child.
Tmy Tech is a state-certified preschool, and vouchers are available from the
Meigs County Department
of Job and Family Services.
The criteria for. qualify for
voucherS are available from
that agency.
Tmy Tech Preschool is the
property of Freedom Center
Ministries,
Michael
Bradford, Pastor. It was also
noted in the news release
that Freedom Center will be
.operling a Freedom Center
Preparatory School (R:P)
this fall. Tiny Tech will
offer kindergarten classes
during beginning. next fall,
but reportedly the Freedom

.

Grange banquet set for Friday in Pomeroy
Syracuse on State Route ·
'124, the old Slack home in
Middleport, the Snowden
home on New Lima Road,
and the Welch family house
which stands at the corner
of State Route 143 and State
Route 692. The book is for
sale through the Meigs
County Historical Society.
Parter, who was introduced by Kim Romine,
passed out brochures on the
underground railroad to the
Grange members.
Ziba Midkiff and Doris
EwinB were reported ilt At
tonight's 7 r.m. meeting,
practi~ wil be held for
mspectton.

and bake sale were set for
May 9 and 10 at the home of
Barllara and Jim Fry. Grange
inspection was announced
for May I. It was noted titat
the Hemlock Grange cookbook is nearing completion.
Margaret
Parker,
a
Grange member and local
historian, presented a program on the underground
railroad in Meigs County
and reported oo ,the book
recently published detailing
the events which took place
here and the routes that ran
through the county.
Among the homes she
listed were the old Adam
Roush house north of

· COLUMBUS (AP) would authoriz,e Ohio to.JOIO'
·
Southwest will try tappina
whi :h- h-...
U.S. Sen. George Voinovich the Gmll Lakes Compact of into the lakes, w ·ch old
of Ohio has written leaders eight states and two Caoa4ian 90 percent of the IWion's
p.m. Following the ,evening in the Ohio. Senate urging p-ovinces. HOwever it is~lililck fresh surface water, as their
relmll ~mony! the Our adoption of a bill that wonld m the Sen~. wbere .~ populations and political
House ~s will pre~'!' help prevent any diversion ·nents elaim rt could 1t:8il 1o clout grow. ·
··
dessert urn~. and the Civil of Great Lakes water to viohttioos-«'.Pl\lPClty tialns. "
Voinovich wrote that the
W• iaall will F Dllderwa.y • other ~~· .
.ne ag!'c:tfti!:tl\ was~~ ;-"'likes 11re V'iilltCrabte IiJ~Wadt
at 7 p.m. After the ~all about
The Ohio ijouse in vated largely by fears that that conditioos will worsen
9 p.m. ~re Will !'e a February passed a bill 1111t states in ·the booming if the compact isn't adopted.
d~mon~txatto~. of ~
· _
!Widl-lliPt
tirill• .. '
., ,....._......_____
Back in the park a sham battie will take place at 2:30

I

1\1 esll•y••. Mostly sunny.
Highs in the mid 70s. East
winds around 5 mph.
1\lesday night.•• Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
50s. East winds around 5
mph.
· Wednesd•y•.• Mostly
sunny. Highs in the upper
70s. ·East winds around 5
mph.
·
Wednesday nigbt...Partly
cloudy. Low' in· the . lower
50s. North winds around 5

the mid 70s. Chance of rain
30percent.
Friday . Diehl and
S.tunbly-.Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Lows .in
the mid 50s. Highs around
70. Chance of rain 40 percent.
S.tunby n!P'.-Mostly
cloudy
in
the
evening ...Then becoming
partly cloudy. A chance.()f
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the upper 40s,
..... 'lllundlly Cbaoce of rain 30 percent.
Dilbf-Partly cloudy. Highs · Stulcl8y...Mostly sunny.
around 80. Lows in the HiJhs .in 1be
60s.
lower 50s. '
S.llday ~ .....
Friday•••Partly
sunny Monday-.Mo';tf;'"• cloudy.
with a chance of showers Lows in the upper 40s.
and thunderstorms. Highs in Highs in .the mid 60s.

~

.Local Stocks
AEP (NY BE)- 44.37
AlciD (N"W'AO) -eo
Aihl8lllllnc. (NY BE)- 53.10
Big Laee (NY8E)- 23.54

lob e.,_ CN*SOAOI27.74
Boigua-(NY11E)-47.e7
Ca P=y Alllmftlm (NASDAQ)-73.32
a-ptiiii .(NASDAO) - 5
Channing ...,... (NASDAQ)
-4.R
City II ldl • (NUDAQ)-

••07
.
Colllne (NYBE)- 62.21
DuPoc• (NYBE)- 52.25
US._. (N'BE)-. 31.27
Gi I 11M (NYSE)- 21.30
Elldlle (NtSE)12.41

o......

,..,.. DIIWidioi I (NYSE) 3'7.50

. . Mt (£ I (NYSE) - 45.23
Krogir (NYSE)- 25.31
Umllicl8ntlte18 (NYSE)11.11

Noof A:

Soo...,.. tt (NYSE) -

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Belpre shuts
euti.ady
Marauders

RACINE - Storing eight
ntns in the ftftb inning, the
Southern Lady Tornadoes
(7-3, 4-2) ·of coach Kelly
Pape lambasted tbe Federal
Hoelting Lancers 13-3
Monda night durin girls
Tri-v:!fiey
Con1erence
Hocking Divisioo sofiball
action at Star Mill Prt The
win avenges a loss from earliet in the year at Federal
Hocking.
Southern took a 1-0 lead
in the first when Whitney
Wolfe-Riffle had a sacrifice
fly to knock in Lindsay
Buzzard who had doubled.
In the third inning, Federal
went ahead 2-1 when an
enur, a walk to Tara Russell,
a 4-3 ground out and another error let home the ntns.
RBls by Sarah Eddy,
Riffle, and ~ Turley
regained the I
for the

Southern

junior
Chelsea Pape

hosts in the third at 4-2.
Federal added a single run in
the founb.
In the fifth, Southern
broke the game wide open.
led off with a double,
· e singled, Thrley had an
RBI double, Ashley Robie
bad a two-run single,
·Breanna Taylor had a tworun double. then Chelsea
Pape and Lindsey Teaford
each JNalked. Buzzard singled, a run scored on a 5-3
ground o\)t, and Riftle had
another RBI single for the
12-3 TOrnado lead. Southeril
claimed the mercy win · by
virtue of scoring one run in
the top of the sixth inning,
the score 13-3.
Southern hitters were
Wolfe-Riffle who went 3for-3 with three RBis,
Turley was 2-4 with two
RBis, while Robie and
Taylor (2 bits) each had two

throws the
ball b!Jck to

=

M

the pitcher
after getting
an out during
a Tri-Valley
· Copference
Hocking
Division soft·
ball game
against
Federal
Hocking on
Monday.
Southern won

13-3.
Eric
Alindolphlphoto

a ,_ a ...... m

Federal
stymies
Southern's
chances for
TVC .repeat

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Wbitley Oifbd AAOlW lw''

-.m I .ady Eagles bounce back with 8-4 win over Waterford

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TUPPERS PLAINS The Eastern ffigh School
softball team continued its

strong cooference play with
an 8-4 victory over visiting
Watertilrd in a Tri-Valley
Conference
Hocking
MASON, W.Va. - Tbe Division game oo Monday.
15th Annual Meigs Football
The win improves the
!Jolf Toum~UJ~enL llfill be
held Saturday,
31, at
the Riverside Go Course ·
at 8:30a.m.
.
The format is a $60 per
person, bring your own
team four-mao scramble.
Teams must have a comEastern
bined handicap of 40 or
. Dart
~Kif
.
ldiove with IJnly •ODe tum
Duc:kley .
!Bember under 10. Price
,bicludes golf, cart, lunch, teaas ott or
tftlrd bare
&lt;J,.iaad bevera&amp;es. PrizeS will
durircttta
~ .awtll'ded for the top three
fourth
~.
mlrcofr
: For more information,
·TI1-*!IIy
p&lt;!lltlet MeiJ• football
ConfMncl
COICh Mike ChiDc:ey at
:740-992-~158 or 7~
Hocklrc

1-7~2342

CIQo "' .,
.....Dill.Glem WI'D

BY Scon WOLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

loss, Mei~s is now S-4 overall and 2-2 in the TVC
Ohio. A win would've put
the Lady Maraui!Cii liitOlr
thme-way tie for first place
in the conference with
Aleunder and Wellston.
Junior Lian Hotlman had
a double and senior Hannah
Pratt had a single for Meigs.
Hailey Ebersliach pitched
for the Lady Marauders,
striking out one and walkEric A.-tdt 'pt.lphato
ing two. Meigs coDlmi.tted Eastern seniCif l&lt;elsey Holter, left, catches the ball for a force out at second base during a Tri·Yalley Conference-Hocking
three errors.
Division softball game against Waterford on -Monday. Eastern won 8-4.
. Belpre.
finished
witb
six
.

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Golf tourney

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5 p.m.

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the ltomdown of the IMt known addlas
repartod to the Di~i&amp;ion.
If fog ICC a potllibk matdJ; )'011 1:111 cltoole IIIIC llf
the followiJt&amp; ways to stan the pooees to c:IUrt
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: BELPRE - . The Meigs
Lady Marauders softball
was held to just two
h i t s
Monday
and lost4-0
to
the
Belpre
L .a d y
~es in a
Tn-Valley
Conference
0 h i 0
Division
game:
'

time titeR will be a .demon-· at; tfa..stration of artillery with
niaht firi.ng.
JoliD li,I'IIIIIIC
On sunaiy~then: w.illJic. e-. ~Diorow·-.-~
an s-a.m. breaifast iii the
part for the reenactors. At . Hlllloliir Alll.llll t a. 2S
!l a.m. an authentic c.amp
opens with loading andf"u- atr"' 1 a •
ing, followed by a church
service at I a.m. and a --L.IMH....,.A.oo
memorial service with - - A . . I t l h liS
honor guard salute at
12.30 a.m. The camp closes at l p.m. .
•Js:.cts2S '"""' . .

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

"·

Federal Anny homecoming
to be held this weekend . Voinovich urges compact's passage· ·

Local Weather

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

, , . . . 82

1HIIra:kl

C.w bat Wlz llpill, P1ze B6

M.S., joins Holzer Clinic

GALLIPOLIS - The
Gallipolis Federal Army
Homecoming will be held
in the Gallipolis·City Park
this weekend.
Camp setup day will take
place oo Friday with activities to begin Saturday morning with a breakfaSt in the
park for reenactors only.
The morning scbednle will
include ·an authentic CI!IDP
opening followed by loadin~ and
the
dilplays.of
.
and equipineiit, an
demonstration. At 11 Lm.
til= will be Memories of a
War for Freedom in the
Ariel Theater followed by a
luncheon.
The ,afternoon sessin will
QPCn with a ladies tea at the
Our House Museum to
· which the pubic is invited.

M'z,F

Rnls lo8e 5o J&gt;rdg s, l"'ze BZ

Grant C..Shirley, M.D.,
GALLIPOUS - Holzer
Clinic announce that Grant
C. Shirley, M.D., M.S., a
board eligible occupational
medicine physician JOIRS
our team of skilled professi.onals. Dr. Shirley joins
Holzer Clinic to practice
occupational medicine at
our Athens facility located
at 224 Columbus Road,
Athens.
Dr. Shirley _received his
Doctor of Medicine from
Emory University School of
Medicine in Atlanta, . Ga.
and completed his residency
at Wright State University
School of Medicine in
Dayton. He has over 15
years experience in the field
of occupation medicine,
· f~rst as a United . States
Naval Flight surgeon
assigned to frontline Marine
Corps Fighter Squadrons,
then with a leading aircraft
manufacturing company
assisting first flights of the
US Stealth Fighter, as well
as work with BMW manufacturing. He is a designated
FAA aviation medical
examiner as well as a certified FAA CommerCial
Instrument Pilot.
Shirley will perform a
broad range of occupational
medicine procedures including acute injury treatment,
pre-screening
physical
examinations, drug/alcohol
program assistance and testm~. workers compensation
inJury assessment and treatment, as well as OSHA
mandated physicals, and

Jnside

file R81id 1$111, 8pol18 Wt1lw
{1«1) 418 2342..... 33

••tdt4A••I11j(laly-·..toom

....,... rr n .... Spof18 Wt1W
{740) 418

2340! ..... 33

~em,Jdytrllune.oom

Uny Cnlltt, Sport8 . . . .
!740) -.2342 •• . 33
~emrctr'b:ewlrta

.oom

Lady Eagles record to 4-1 in
the TVC . Hocking and
bumps them to 6-5 overall.
l'l1e Lady Wildcats are also
4-l in the cooference and are
oow 9-6 overall.
Sami Cummins had a double and three RBis for
Eastern, and teammate
Kelsey .Holter was 2-for·2
with two RBis and a walk.
Monison
was 2-forBritney
.
.

-,

3 with an RBI .
Cummins was also the
winning pitcher, throwing
all St:ven innings and striking out four along the way.
She' walked just two baners.
Lady Eagle head coach
Pam Douthin called the .victory "big" for her team after
they lost both games of a
doubleheader .at Belpre on
Saturday. Belpre's Lady

Eagles won by scores of 6-1
and4-3.
In the ftrst game, Eastern
commi ned
six errors,
including three in the sixth
inning when Belpre scored
four runs, and bad three hits.
Two of those hits came from
Allie Rawson, and the other
came from Cassie Hauber

RACINE
Adding
·insult to injury, the Federal
Hoclqng Lancers defeated ·
the Southern Tornadoes 7-6
Monday
night dur·
mg
· an
important
Tri- Valley
Hocking
Division
v a r s· i t y
baseball
. matchup at
Star Mill
Park. The
loss was a tough one, considering
that
Friday
Southern found out that
their suspended game from
April 3 was not really suspended and resulted in an g.
6 Southern loss.
ln two days, Southern
went from the top of the
Hocking Division to a possible third place standing,
pending the outcome of
Eastern's .game Monday
night.
In a repeat of Thursday's
loss to Eastern, Southern
left the base paths full 'of
stranded runners. Southern
stnuided 14 overall.
PI18M -

Sty.ies. 82

Eastern scores 10
in first, wins 14-1
BY Elite RANoot.PH
ERANDOI.P+&lt;IPMYDAI~YSENTINEL . COM

TUPPERS PLAINS The Eastern Eagles baseball
team only needed five hits to
beat the visitin&amp; Waterford
Wildcats 14-1 in a TriValle~ Conference Hocking
Diviaton
on Monday.
The Eajles li1'C now 6-7 on
the seuon and 5·1 in the
TVC Hocking. Their onl)'
conference loss came
against Federal Hockin&amp; in
their TVC opener April 7.
Zach Hendrix was 2-for-4
with a double, and Titus
Pierce earned the win. He
struck out three, walked
oone. and faced the minimum nine batters.
Eastern did almost all of
· their damage to Waterford in
the fu:st inning; they walked
six times, got four of their
five bits. and scored 10 runs
as they batted around the
order.

aame

Hendrix bad a double and
a single, Pierce had a \riple.
and Andrew Benedum bad a
single in the inning.
In the second and thi!'d the
Eagles were held scoreless,
but they used four more
walks and an error in their
last at-bat to tack on four
more runs. Up by 13 as a
result, the mercy rule kicked
in and ended the game early
after Eastern blanked
Waterford in the ftfth .
Tyler Westfall came on in
relief of Pierce in the fourth
inning. He walked one batter. Ryan Shodk replaced
Westfall in the fifth and
struck out two ·to close out
the game.
Kyle Gordon and Nick
Brannon both walked three
times for Eastern , wbo also
got walks from Pierce,
Derek Griffin, Ben Buckley,
and Greg. Barringer. The
M •n-F

tua.•

I

�The Daily Sentinel

LocAL •

PageA6

STATE

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

MIDDLEPORT - Tiny si&amp;.er and eliminating the
Tech
Preschool
has dilemma many parents face
announced that for the when choosing a preschool
ftrst time it will offer a progtam for their child.
summer enrichment proParents may also drop
gram for preschool chil- their children off at Trny
dren of the area.
Tech and pick them back up
According to a release after the school day is over
from Tiny Tech; the school if a half-day J?ll:lgram better
will provide care and edu- suits the family's individual
cat\on in conjunction With needs. The school is lookCara Hall Daycare. The ing into the possibility of
plan calls for Tmy Tech free transportation for all
staff members to pick chil- students if it feels the comdren up from Cara Hall munity could benefit from
Day~ for three hours of this service.
instruction, then ttansport
Mindy
Chancey,
a
them back to the daycare licensed educator, works
for the remainder . of the individually with the chilwork day.
clren to prepare them for
What this means is that kindergarten and beyond. If
children can be cared for · a child needs more ex.periregulation eompli;mce. He · ·~ 1111 entire work day ences in a cenain facet of
performs site survey :aSsess- reli~:i£ parents of the need their learning, lessons are
ments, as well as ergontl!Dic to
for a reliable baby taijored to meet the needs of
evaluations. Dr. Shidey and
his wife, Ailish are livmg in
the Athens area
Holzer Clinic is a multiple discifline heaiih care
system o over 130 physiThe Grange thanked the
POMEROY - Members
cians J::viding care in were ft!minded of the quitters for having limemilre
thirty areas of
banquet to be held stone ·place on the parking
eitpertise. With nine loca- Grange
Friday night, 7 p.m. at the area at the hall. Members
tions throughout southeast- American Legion ball on voted on Grange .delegates
ern Ohio and western West ·Pomeroy
Pike
when for convention. The legislaVIrginia. Holzer Clinic proHemlock ~Ne met tive report showed more
vides "Medical Excellence, recently
at the
. Tickets grapevines have been put
. coupled with Loc3t Caring". are available from Grange out in the Racine area. It
. Holzer Clinic is accredit- masters.
was noted that the wine
ed by die Accreditation
Rosalie Story conducted industry along Ohio's Lake
Association of AmbulatQry the meeting with Helen Erie shoreline is drawing
Health Care.
. Quivey, family activities more than 89 percent of
For a complete list of ser- comnuttee
chairman, tourists to see the wineries.
vices or to schedule an announcing the cookie conMembers learned that
appoinrment with Dr. test to be held at the May l House Bill 293 wouJd creShirley, please cal/740-589· • meeting. Any recipe can be ate an Ohio AgricuJture
3100 or visit us on the web used for the cookies which license plate with a scholarat www.holzerdinic.rom.
,
must be .accompanied by a . ship program.
.copy Qf the recipe.
. the dates for the garage

Center has .plans to evolve
into an all inclusive K-12
Christian school.
·
Parents interested iq
enrolling their child eithet:
in Tmy Tech Preschool or
Freedom .
Center
Preparatory School are
invtted to .attend an open
bouse scheduled for 7 p.IIL
Thursday at the Freedom
Center · Ministries campus;
located at 873 S. 3rd Ave.;
Middleport There will be
~ames and snacks availablll
m a carnival-type atm011•
phere, and parents will havci
an opportunity to ~ ques:
lions, tour the facility. an4 ·
sign their child up for eith~
the summer or fall ~~
Tech programs or for
.
kindergarten. For more
information call 740-992•
FREE or 740-416-5397. ·

that child. The goat of the
program is to help children
progress at a pace that is
most productive for that
child.
Tmy Tech is a state-certified preschool, and vouchers are available from the
Meigs County Department
of Job and Family Services.
The criteria for. qualify for
voucherS are available from
that agency.
Tmy Tech Preschool is the
property of Freedom Center
Ministries,
Michael
Bradford, Pastor. It was also
noted in the news release
that Freedom Center will be
.operling a Freedom Center
Preparatory School (R:P)
this fall. Tiny Tech will
offer kindergarten classes
during beginning. next fall,
but reportedly the Freedom

.

Grange banquet set for Friday in Pomeroy
Syracuse on State Route ·
'124, the old Slack home in
Middleport, the Snowden
home on New Lima Road,
and the Welch family house
which stands at the corner
of State Route 143 and State
Route 692. The book is for
sale through the Meigs
County Historical Society.
Parter, who was introduced by Kim Romine,
passed out brochures on the
underground railroad to the
Grange members.
Ziba Midkiff and Doris
EwinB were reported ilt At
tonight's 7 r.m. meeting,
practi~ wil be held for
mspectton.

and bake sale were set for
May 9 and 10 at the home of
Barllara and Jim Fry. Grange
inspection was announced
for May I. It was noted titat
the Hemlock Grange cookbook is nearing completion.
Margaret
Parker,
a
Grange member and local
historian, presented a program on the underground
railroad in Meigs County
and reported oo ,the book
recently published detailing
the events which took place
here and the routes that ran
through the county.
Among the homes she
listed were the old Adam
Roush house north of

· COLUMBUS (AP) would authoriz,e Ohio to.JOIO'
·
Southwest will try tappina
whi :h- h-...
U.S. Sen. George Voinovich the Gmll Lakes Compact of into the lakes, w ·ch old
of Ohio has written leaders eight states and two Caoa4ian 90 percent of the IWion's
p.m. Following the ,evening in the Ohio. Senate urging p-ovinces. HOwever it is~lililck fresh surface water, as their
relmll ~mony! the Our adoption of a bill that wonld m the Sen~. wbere .~ populations and political
House ~s will pre~'!' help prevent any diversion ·nents elaim rt could 1t:8il 1o clout grow. ·
··
dessert urn~. and the Civil of Great Lakes water to viohttioos-«'.Pl\lPClty tialns. "
Voinovich wrote that the
W• iaall will F Dllderwa.y • other ~~· .
.ne ag!'c:tfti!:tl\ was~~ ;-"'likes 11re V'iilltCrabte IiJ~Wadt
at 7 p.m. After the ~all about
The Ohio ijouse in vated largely by fears that that conditioos will worsen
9 p.m. ~re Will !'e a February passed a bill 1111t states in ·the booming if the compact isn't adopted.
d~mon~txatto~. of ~
· _
!Widl-lliPt
tirill• .. '
., ,....._......_____
Back in the park a sham battie will take place at 2:30

I

1\1 esll•y••. Mostly sunny.
Highs in the mid 70s. East
winds around 5 mph.
1\lesday night.•• Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
50s. East winds around 5
mph.
· Wednesd•y•.• Mostly
sunny. Highs in the upper
70s. ·East winds around 5
mph.
·
Wednesday nigbt...Partly
cloudy. Low' in· the . lower
50s. North winds around 5

the mid 70s. Chance of rain
30percent.
Friday . Diehl and
S.tunbly-.Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Lows .in
the mid 50s. Highs around
70. Chance of rain 40 percent.
S.tunby n!P'.-Mostly
cloudy
in
the
evening ...Then becoming
partly cloudy. A chance.()f
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the upper 40s,
..... 'lllundlly Cbaoce of rain 30 percent.
Dilbf-Partly cloudy. Highs · Stulcl8y...Mostly sunny.
around 80. Lows in the HiJhs .in 1be
60s.
lower 50s. '
S.llday ~ .....
Friday•••Partly
sunny Monday-.Mo';tf;'"• cloudy.
with a chance of showers Lows in the upper 40s.
and thunderstorms. Highs in Highs in .the mid 60s.

~

.Local Stocks
AEP (NY BE)- 44.37
AlciD (N"W'AO) -eo
Aihl8lllllnc. (NY BE)- 53.10
Big Laee (NY8E)- 23.54

lob e.,_ CN*SOAOI27.74
Boigua-(NY11E)-47.e7
Ca P=y Alllmftlm (NASDAQ)-73.32
a-ptiiii .(NASDAO) - 5
Channing ...,... (NASDAQ)
-4.R
City II ldl • (NUDAQ)-

••07
.
Colllne (NYBE)- 62.21
DuPoc• (NYBE)- 52.25
US._. (N'BE)-. 31.27
Gi I 11M (NYSE)- 21.30
Elldlle (NtSE)12.41

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Belpre shuts
euti.ady
Marauders

RACINE - Storing eight
ntns in the ftftb inning, the
Southern Lady Tornadoes
(7-3, 4-2) ·of coach Kelly
Pape lambasted tbe Federal
Hoelting Lancers 13-3
Monda night durin girls
Tri-v:!fiey
Con1erence
Hocking Divisioo sofiball
action at Star Mill Prt The
win avenges a loss from earliet in the year at Federal
Hocking.
Southern took a 1-0 lead
in the first when Whitney
Wolfe-Riffle had a sacrifice
fly to knock in Lindsay
Buzzard who had doubled.
In the third inning, Federal
went ahead 2-1 when an
enur, a walk to Tara Russell,
a 4-3 ground out and another error let home the ntns.
RBls by Sarah Eddy,
Riffle, and ~ Turley
regained the I
for the

Southern

junior
Chelsea Pape

hosts in the third at 4-2.
Federal added a single run in
the founb.
In the fifth, Southern
broke the game wide open.
led off with a double,
· e singled, Thrley had an
RBI double, Ashley Robie
bad a two-run single,
·Breanna Taylor had a tworun double. then Chelsea
Pape and Lindsey Teaford
each JNalked. Buzzard singled, a run scored on a 5-3
ground o\)t, and Riftle had
another RBI single for the
12-3 TOrnado lead. Southeril
claimed the mercy win · by
virtue of scoring one run in
the top of the sixth inning,
the score 13-3.
Southern hitters were
Wolfe-Riffle who went 3for-3 with three RBis,
Turley was 2-4 with two
RBis, while Robie and
Taylor (2 bits) each had two

throws the
ball b!Jck to

=

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the pitcher
after getting
an out during
a Tri-Valley
· Copference
Hocking
Division soft·
ball game
against
Federal
Hocking on
Monday.
Southern won

13-3.
Eric
Alindolphlphoto

a ,_ a ...... m

Federal
stymies
Southern's
chances for
TVC .repeat

SWI'R&amp;wr
'SPORl'SOMI'!WLYSENTINEL.COM

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Wbitley Oifbd AAOlW lw''

-.m I .ady Eagles bounce back with 8-4 win over Waterford

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TUPPERS PLAINS The Eastern ffigh School
softball team continued its

strong cooference play with
an 8-4 victory over visiting
Watertilrd in a Tri-Valley
Conference
Hocking
MASON, W.Va. - Tbe Division game oo Monday.
15th Annual Meigs Football
The win improves the
!Jolf Toum~UJ~enL llfill be
held Saturday,
31, at
the Riverside Go Course ·
at 8:30a.m.
.
The format is a $60 per
person, bring your own
team four-mao scramble.
Teams must have a comEastern
bined handicap of 40 or
. Dart
~Kif
.
ldiove with IJnly •ODe tum
Duc:kley .
!Bember under 10. Price
,bicludes golf, cart, lunch, teaas ott or
tftlrd bare
&lt;J,.iaad bevera&amp;es. PrizeS will
durircttta
~ .awtll'ded for the top three
fourth
~.
mlrcofr
: For more information,
·TI1-*!IIy
p&lt;!lltlet MeiJ• football
ConfMncl
COICh Mike ChiDc:ey at
:740-992-~158 or 7~
Hocklrc

1-7~2342

CIQo "' .,
.....Dill.Glem WI'D

BY Scon WOLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

loss, Mei~s is now S-4 overall and 2-2 in the TVC
Ohio. A win would've put
the Lady Maraui!Cii liitOlr
thme-way tie for first place
in the conference with
Aleunder and Wellston.
Junior Lian Hotlman had
a double and senior Hannah
Pratt had a single for Meigs.
Hailey Ebersliach pitched
for the Lady Marauders,
striking out one and walkEric A.-tdt 'pt.lphato
ing two. Meigs coDlmi.tted Eastern seniCif l&lt;elsey Holter, left, catches the ball for a force out at second base during a Tri·Yalley Conference-Hocking
three errors.
Division softball game against Waterford on -Monday. Eastern won 8-4.
. Belpre.
finished
witb
six
.

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: BELPRE - . The Meigs
Lady Marauders softball
was held to just two
h i t s
Monday
and lost4-0
to
the
Belpre
L .a d y
~es in a
Tn-Valley
Conference
0 h i 0
Division
game:
'

time titeR will be a .demon-· at; tfa..stration of artillery with
niaht firi.ng.
JoliD li,I'IIIIIIC
On sunaiy~then: w.illJic. e-. ~Diorow·-.-~
an s-a.m. breaifast iii the
part for the reenactors. At . Hlllloliir Alll.llll t a. 2S
!l a.m. an authentic c.amp
opens with loading andf"u- atr"' 1 a •
ing, followed by a church
service at I a.m. and a --L.IMH....,.A.oo
memorial service with - - A . . I t l h liS
honor guard salute at
12.30 a.m. The camp closes at l p.m. .
•Js:.cts2S '"""' . .

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

"·

Federal Anny homecoming
to be held this weekend . Voinovich urges compact's passage· ·

Local Weather

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

, , . . . 82

1HIIra:kl

C.w bat Wlz llpill, P1ze B6

M.S., joins Holzer Clinic

GALLIPOLIS - The
Gallipolis Federal Army
Homecoming will be held
in the Gallipolis·City Park
this weekend.
Camp setup day will take
place oo Friday with activities to begin Saturday morning with a breakfaSt in the
park for reenactors only.
The morning scbednle will
include ·an authentic CI!IDP
opening followed by loadin~ and
the
dilplays.of
.
and equipineiit, an
demonstration. At 11 Lm.
til= will be Memories of a
War for Freedom in the
Ariel Theater followed by a
luncheon.
The ,afternoon sessin will
QPCn with a ladies tea at the
Our House Museum to
· which the pubic is invited.

M'z,F

Rnls lo8e 5o J&gt;rdg s, l"'ze BZ

Grant C..Shirley, M.D.,
GALLIPOUS - Holzer
Clinic announce that Grant
C. Shirley, M.D., M.S., a
board eligible occupational
medicine physician JOIRS
our team of skilled professi.onals. Dr. Shirley joins
Holzer Clinic to practice
occupational medicine at
our Athens facility located
at 224 Columbus Road,
Athens.
Dr. Shirley _received his
Doctor of Medicine from
Emory University School of
Medicine in Atlanta, . Ga.
and completed his residency
at Wright State University
School of Medicine in
Dayton. He has over 15
years experience in the field
of occupation medicine,
· f~rst as a United . States
Naval Flight surgeon
assigned to frontline Marine
Corps Fighter Squadrons,
then with a leading aircraft
manufacturing company
assisting first flights of the
US Stealth Fighter, as well
as work with BMW manufacturing. He is a designated
FAA aviation medical
examiner as well as a certified FAA CommerCial
Instrument Pilot.
Shirley will perform a
broad range of occupational
medicine procedures including acute injury treatment,
pre-screening
physical
examinations, drug/alcohol
program assistance and testm~. workers compensation
inJury assessment and treatment, as well as OSHA
mandated physicals, and

Jnside

file R81id 1$111, 8pol18 Wt1lw
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Lady Eagles record to 4-1 in
the TVC . Hocking and
bumps them to 6-5 overall.
l'l1e Lady Wildcats are also
4-l in the cooference and are
oow 9-6 overall.
Sami Cummins had a double and three RBis for
Eastern, and teammate
Kelsey .Holter was 2-for·2
with two RBis and a walk.
Monison
was 2-forBritney
.
.

-,

3 with an RBI .
Cummins was also the
winning pitcher, throwing
all St:ven innings and striking out four along the way.
She' walked just two baners.
Lady Eagle head coach
Pam Douthin called the .victory "big" for her team after
they lost both games of a
doubleheader .at Belpre on
Saturday. Belpre's Lady

Eagles won by scores of 6-1
and4-3.
In the ftrst game, Eastern
commi ned
six errors,
including three in the sixth
inning when Belpre scored
four runs, and bad three hits.
Two of those hits came from
Allie Rawson, and the other
came from Cassie Hauber

RACINE
Adding
·insult to injury, the Federal
Hoclqng Lancers defeated ·
the Southern Tornadoes 7-6
Monday
night dur·
mg
· an
important
Tri- Valley
Hocking
Division
v a r s· i t y
baseball
. matchup at
Star Mill
Park. The
loss was a tough one, considering
that
Friday
Southern found out that
their suspended game from
April 3 was not really suspended and resulted in an g.
6 Southern loss.
ln two days, Southern
went from the top of the
Hocking Division to a possible third place standing,
pending the outcome of
Eastern's .game Monday
night.
In a repeat of Thursday's
loss to Eastern, Southern
left the base paths full 'of
stranded runners. Southern
stnuided 14 overall.
PI18M -

Sty.ies. 82

Eastern scores 10
in first, wins 14-1
BY Elite RANoot.PH
ERANDOI.P+&lt;IPMYDAI~YSENTINEL . COM

TUPPERS PLAINS The Eastern Eagles baseball
team only needed five hits to
beat the visitin&amp; Waterford
Wildcats 14-1 in a TriValle~ Conference Hocking
Diviaton
on Monday.
The Eajles li1'C now 6-7 on
the seuon and 5·1 in the
TVC Hocking. Their onl)'
conference loss came
against Federal Hockin&amp; in
their TVC opener April 7.
Zach Hendrix was 2-for-4
with a double, and Titus
Pierce earned the win. He
struck out three, walked
oone. and faced the minimum nine batters.
Eastern did almost all of
· their damage to Waterford in
the fu:st inning; they walked
six times, got four of their
five bits. and scored 10 runs
as they batted around the
order.

aame

Hendrix bad a double and
a single, Pierce had a \riple.
and Andrew Benedum bad a
single in the inning.
In the second and thi!'d the
Eagles were held scoreless,
but they used four more
walks and an error in their
last at-bat to tack on four
more runs. Up by 13 as a
result, the mercy rule kicked
in and ended the game early
after Eastern blanked
Waterford in the ftfth .
Tyler Westfall came on in
relief of Pierce in the fourth
inning. He walked one batter. Ryan Shodk replaced
Westfall in the fifth and
struck out two ·to close out
the game.
Kyle Gordon and Nick
Brannon both walked three
times for Eastern , wbo also
got walks from Pierce,
Derek Griffin, Ben Buckley,
and Greg. Barringer. The
M •n-F

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�pt II llitwl.com

WWW.mt1

Tuesday, Apftl 22, zoo8

www.mydailysentinel.com

Pqe B2 • The Daily Sentinel

'

Qtrtbunt - Sentinel -

:Meigs track teams at Fairland Garciaparra ho~ers Oobbers
fromPageBl
to help Los Angeles .
bea.t c•ffiCIIIIla
• tj·9•3
Sl»F REPCHIY

'

,'

FAIRLAND
The
Meigs High School track
and field teams were at the
Fairland Invitational on
Friday. where the Marauders
came away with 86.5 points
and third place in the girls
meet and 55 points and fifth
place in the boys.
South Point won for the
girls with 119 points.
Fairland won for the boys
with 173 points.
Both teams had individuals take flfSt place. Junior
Catie Wolfe was first in the
lOOm dash and the 200m
dash for the girls. and senior
Cassady Willford was tops
in the boys shot puL

There were was third in the boys l()(_Jm
seven
sec- dash,
as
was
semor
ond-place Cornelius English in the
finishes for boys 200m dash.
Meigs.
· · Meigs' only fourth-place
J u n i o r finish was the girls 4x200m
Adrian Bolin relay team.
was Second
Mason Metts. a junior,
in .the lOOm was fifth in the discus. The
hurdles and boys 4x400m and 4x800m
the
300m . relay teams were also fifth.
Woh
hurdles, and
In the l600m run, junior
cLassmate Brandon· Hanning was sixth,
Devan Soulsby was second and so was junior Kimi
in the 800m run. Relay Swisher on the girls side.
teams taking second w~ Fresh~an Olivia Bevan, in
the girls 4x800m, the grrls the grrls 3200m run, also
'4ll100m, the boys 4xl00m, took sixth.
and the boys 4x200m.
The Marauders had two
Senior Melissa Grueser seventh-place
finishes:
placed third in the discus 's ophomore Jacob Well in the
. and fi~ in the shot PU':
boys high jump and the boys
Seruor Brandan Ftsher 3200m relay team.

·

RBis. Buzzanl was 3-for-4
· with three RBis. Eddy singled. Stephaliie Cundiff singled. Pape singled. aDd
Teaford singled. Southern
They made it 5.() in . the bad 16 bits.
thUd on Loney's two-run
Summer Hatfield bad two
single, and Matt Kemp's singles for Federal. Vanessa
RBI double kpocked Beliste Castle singled. and Brooke
out of the game with .Hill singled.
. .
nobody out in the ftfth. '
1\Jrley was the wmmng
Beli~le (0-1 ). in his flfSt
pitcher with four walks and
'stut ~r opening the sea- five strikeouts, while giving
son on the disabled list due up just four hits. Hill sufto a sore right forearm, gave · fered the loss by allowing
up 12 bits aDd seven runs in 16 hits, four walks. aDd two
four innings.
strike outs.
Garciaparra. on the displays
at
Southern
Wednesday
abled list until April 16 with Ravenswood
a hand injury, hit a two-run and goes to Trimble
homer off reliever Josh Thursday.
Fogg in the sixth.
c;a, ..... 1S. Fedlall' " • '
Edwin Encarnacion and AtHS
002 100 341
Paul Bako broke up Peony's 5HS
t03 oet 13 16 1
shutout with back-to-back WP -Turley; lP- Hilt
doubles leading off the fifth
inning. Encarnacion led off
the seventh with his fifth
homer of the season and
third in two .games, and
Votto homered to lead off
fromPageBl ••
the ninth.
Notes: The Reds promol- hits and uo errors. 1be Lady
ed infielder-outfielder Jerry Eagles scored twice in the
Hairston Jr. .liJid designated second, once in the fourth,
infielder Juan Castro for and once in the ftfth.
·
assignment before the
The Lady Marauders coogame.••• Los Angeles RHP tinue a busy week of so~­
Jason Schmidt. on the dis- ball Tuesday wifh a game 111
abled list following shoul- Point Pleasant S!Mt linie
der surgery, threw 50 pitch- will be 5 p.m. Meigs is lhen
es in the bullpen Monday off Wednesday before, a
afternoon. ... Furcal's lead- game with Wellston on
off home run was the 22nd Thursday, Nelsonville-YC)d
leadoff homer of his career on Friday, and a ~
and I Oth in three seasons header against Athens oo
with the Dodgers
Saturday.
Encarnacion's bit extended
Bolpre4, ..... D
his hitting streak to II
II
000 000 0
023
games, one more than his B
020 110 X
4410
----;lP-Ebet-.
previoliS career high.

CINCINNATI (AP). Nomar Garciaparra hit his
flfSt home run since ~pl.
14 and drove in three runs,
Brad Penny stayed perfect
at Great American Ball Park
and the Los Angeles
Dodgers beat the Cincinnati
Reds 9-3 Monday night_
Rafael Furcal also homered, and James Loney aMed
three RBI s for the Dodgers,
who equaled their season
high with 15 hits after scoring one run in each of their
three losses at Atlanta last
weekend. Chan Ho Park
pitched three innings for his
first save in 330 career
pitching appearances.
Andruw
Jones
was
dropped to eighth in the
slllfting batting order for the
first ,time since Aug. 22,
1998. He went 0-for-4, lowering
the fi ve"time Allbad
the fmishing in 54.12 seconds. ·
Star's
average
to .159.
SPORTSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
A1 so finishing sixth was
Eagles' bigb·est individual the boys 4x800m relay team. . Penny (3-2) allowed a run
PARKERSBURG, W.Va.
finish.
He Their time was 9: 15.55. The and sill hits while intprov~ The Eljstem High School
took fourth boys 4x400m relay team, ing to 5-0 in five career
track. and field teams comin the 1600m meanwhile, was seventh starts at Great American.
The Dodgers needed two
peted with nine other
run with a with a time of 3:54.00.
innings
to match their runs
time
of
schools at the · Russ Parsons
For the Lady Eagles,
output
for
the previous three
Invitational on Saturday.
4 : 5 6 . 2 5 . junior Alyssa Newland in
The Eagles came away with
Martindale the 1600m run and freshman games. Furcal hit the second
an eighth place finish for the
also had the Emeri Connery in the 300m pitch of the game into the
boys team and a last place Martindale second-hi$h- hurdles both had sixth-place right-field seats for his third
est
fimsh fmishes, the highest individ- hit and second homer in
ftnish for the girls.
Buchtel won the boys with fifth place in the 3200m ually for their team, three career at -bats against
meet with 118 team points. run. His time was 10:24.75. Newland's
time
was Cincinnati starter Matt
Marietta was second with
Eastern took fourth in the 5 :52.98, while Connery's Belisle (0-1). They capital107, and Logan took third boys 4x110m relay with a was 50.84 seconds.
ized on rookie flfSt baseman
\~lith 103. Eastern's total was time of I :03.34.
The girls 4x400m relay Joey Votto's error on
13.
Eagle sophomore Mike team took seventh with a Loney's sharp grounder
On
the
girls
side, Johnson placed fifth in the time of 4:36.98, and the girls leading off the second to
Hurricane took flfSt with 99 high jump. He cleared 5'8". 4x200m relay team placed score two uneamed runs.
'"
pointS. Marietta was second, Senior Zack Newell took eighth. Their time was
finishing . half of a point fifth in the shot put with a 2:00.50.
'
two golden chances by leavahead of Gallia Academy's throw of 40'3.25" and sixth
Sophomore . Au&lt;Jrionna
ing
the bases loaded, the
93.50. The Lady Eagles fin- in the discus with a throw of Pullins was eighth in the
score 4-2.
isbed with two points.
120' . Senior Alex Burroughs long jump. Her mark was
1be Lancers regained the
fromPageBl
Senior Aaron Martindale ' was sixth in the 400m dash, 14'06".
lead
in the thitd inning. A
'
walk and two singles, the
Federal (5-l TVC)'took a second of which was a two2 -0 lead in, the. first '!lbeo run shot by Gandee, tied the
Grant Smith rode home
. ..~... m
__ _.a game. ·After Chapman gol
cC
Cory M une smP- -... the ·~ two outs, Bobby
Jared Gandee bit a .sac:rific:c; Aodenoo bit an RBI singli:
fly to Sciire McCUDe." to give the visiton . a one.
r
ld v
Southern tied it up in the run .__. 5-4. .
I
BY Scan WCIU'I
wild melee that sent Dan and •Ourteen year-o n..ory bottom half of the :.:"'-g.
....,
Momson,
·
M ay1e.
· d rabtree. N'1er was n"""""
~-~" when with two outs,IWUU
·lbe next frame, SQo!thrin
SPORTS CORR.,
~SPOND£NT
an
Ryan
D
1.1
.
.,
.-oweu
·to •LUJc·pltS. c arpenter the , spnnt hard-c harger, Chapman ·walked, Wes . once
, fought bac~
STEWART A near- inherited the lead in a one commg from 16th ~0 fifth..
Riffle doublc;c( and Brad Chris otter single4 and
capacity crowd and summer- lap shoot-out to . the finish. . V~teran Marie. Dickson m Brown reached on a. two- ~ home.on an RBI sine
liR weather greeted the sea- C!IJ"penter pulled the field the ~~fa~?US DJckwn nu~~ - base-:-enur that -brought . CJ~~~·
~.Ji
son-opening ' event at- Billy' down the backcbute , but ber zero crafted, a popular home' both runs for a 2-2 eveniag;
WhittiitgtoO
walked to put runners on
Jarrell's ·Skyline Speedway Games quickly closed the win in the AMRA modified tally. · 1..---Friday
night , where gapandposedunderthevet- main .. ~oy Roush of
Sollthemf7-4overaii,J-3 firstandtCoood,butGandce
Appalachian hotsboe Chris eran Carpenter upon the Coolville made a late race TVC) went up 4-2 in the retiredthe neJiJ. two TOI113do
Games of Evans, WV,edged turn-three entrance. Side-by• bid after fading to ninth second. After Southern's batters, the score 5-5.
Chapman seemed to gain
Freddie Carpenter by just side coming out of four, early in the race. Roush Ryan Chapman retired the
inches in a wild, wild late Carpenter held a slight edge, charged back to the front side against the Lancers the some momentum for the
model finish that had the but Oames won the drag only to have his bid fall Tornadoes went to the piate. Tornadoes, then gol a boost
entire grandstand on its feel. race down the frontstretch to short of Dickson's domi- Jordan Taylor had a one-out when SHS went up 6-5 in
Meigs County's Tommy win by two inches at the fm- nance.
double. Butch Mambout the fifth inning. Mambout
Adkins (Portland, Ohio) ish line.
Danny Talbott claimed the had an RBI single to give double, Kleski advanced
won the Four Cylinder main.
In the Four-Cylinders, 15-lap Pure Stock mai·n. SHS the lead, then Kreig him to third, thenChapman
Danviile. Indiana's Danny Tommy Adkins and Spike John Powell, Jr. was the Kleski had an RBI double. had an RBI sin$le. .Wes
Smith, one of the original Rizer, both Q( Portland, early leader in the Street ' Chapman reached on an Riffle followed wtd! a sin~
Outlaws, claimed the com- . Ohio. battled it out the entire Stock main, but on lap six error and Wes Riffle was hit gle, but once agam . The
panion 410 sprint car win. race, until Adkins took Coolville's Steve Bigley with a pitch to load the Purple and Gold left two
leading flag-to-flag to defeat advantage of lapped traffic blew by on the outside and bases.
.
runners stranded. An jnni~g
Nick Naber and Cole to pull off the win. Rizer was Jeremy
Blake
blasted
Gandee came on in relief later, Southern once agam
Duncan at the finish.
second ahead of Tim around Powell on the inside. of Federal Hocking starter left the bases loaded after
In the Late Model main Christopher,
Tony Bigley rode the b,igh side, Tyler Thompson. Gandee pushing the eusbions full
Todd Smith of Pomeroy was Pia vender, Bobby Collins, while Blake took the low retired
the side and with only one out.
set up for a good position to Matt Fizer, Jeff Blanton, groove. Blake 's line pre- Southern spent its first of · In the top of the seventh,
win the feature on the out- David Rankin, Ken Young, vailed as he went on to claim
side pole. Smith ran away and Barry Kitts.
the thrilling win over Bigley
with the win in his qualifyIn the Outlaw sprints, and Roush.
Skyline continues .regular
ing beat. but broke a shock Vetc;ran Danny Smith has
mount hefore the green flag won all but one race he has racing next Friday. April 25.
· .waved in the feature ~on raced in at Slrylinccduring ·Oates opcm 1114 p.m., warm·
Mayle took the early lead as the past two years~ Friday ups are at 6 p .m., time trials
if shol from a cannon.
was no different. Smith, -the lit 6:30 and racing at 7 p .m.
Mayle led 24 laps of the dash winner, earned the pole Adult general admission is ·
25 lap feature, but that was , alongside 16-year old Cole $15, pit passes are $30, kids
soon to change. The pack Duncan. Duncan anchored 6-12$5, and under six free.
The Skyline Speedway ;,
began to gel into lapped traf- second place for several laps
fie with five laps to go. ~fore be engaged in a race- located just 4.1 miles off v:·
Garnes
slipped
past long battle with Nick Naber. State Route 50 and 32 on
Carpenter for second, and \Vith Smith well out in front, Athens County Road · 53
then Carpenter .clamped Naber took charge of sec- ·Bethany Ridge Road.: You
down to regain the runner- pnd.
can get information . about
up slot as that duo made a
Aaron Higgins was able to the
speedway
at
bid on Mayle on the last lap. hold off veteran charger Jim http :/lwww.skylinespeedSweet victory turned sou~ Nier for fourth. Rounding way.net or call the race day
quickly for Mayle who out the top ten were Adam phone 3! 740-662-4111. For
clipped the lapped car of Strausser, Greg Mitchell, information during the week
Justin Powell, triggJng a Josh Davis, Jimmy Stinson, . please call 304-542-8322.

Eastern track and field teams
compete at Parker8burg invite

I

Stymies

·
•
fi
Games e'dges Carpenter.m Irst
. e. Speed
race 0 f season at .Sk
. ylin
. way .
c

0

0

c·'

:!ji

Bounce
f'tomPI(IeBl
for the team 'a only RBI.
Cummin1

pitched

Butem.
1be NCOnd

doubleheader

for

.

aame of the
wae c:lonr,

Sasha Collins pitched.
Monday's game went better for the Lady Eagles
despite committing four
more errors; giving them I~
In tluee games. Waterford
had one len error and one
more hit, but Eaatem acored
~even runt In the third
Inning u they batted around

.,

fourth , fifth, and seventh
innings. but the Lady Eagle
defense wouldn ' t allow
anything more, giving up
only two extra base hits for
the game.
Eaatem 11 back In action
on Tueldly, ~~I travel
to Chtlhlre to
on the

Lady Ridden of Rl ver
Valley In a 5 p.m. non-cun·
Cleland, rerence
11me.

but Belpre rallied from a 3· the order. Jet~lca
l, dlflclt lfler three lnnina• Holter, Cummine, and
llld ICOl'tCI the wlnnlna run MorTi&amp;on drove In the runa,
In lbt alxth tor tht aweep. Rlwwn knocked one more
law1011 went l·for-3 with In In the fourth with a dou·
two doubltellld three RBII. ble.
Tbe&lt;Other Eutem hit came · Waterford scored one run
'froift · Mepn Carnahan. In each of the second,
.r

CLASSIFIED

'

SPORTSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

111tr1m I. \L&amp;Iii'M:• 4

010 110 I
- 4 71'1
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001 100 X - 11•
Will (N, 4-1 'I'VC Hoalclng): LIWIOr
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,
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. . . (fol, •· 1 TVC Maolclng): CllmmiN
lncf I'll-...
w~

..;. Cllfnmllll: l.~ -l.lwlor.

The Daily Selltinel • Page 83

In One .Week With Us
Ejna!!

classified@mydai!ytribune.CXJm

·-

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Or Fa To (740) 9112-2157

Howyou&lt;111n have borders and Qnlllhics
~
added to your classified ads
(..~
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50C for small
1.00 for lan)e

Monday thru Friday

:00 a.m. to 5:00· p.

s

..... . _ . . . _ , . . . , .

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Puppy towld . .r
l'aol 011co 4-1~Shor1iogl; lcadod 111 333 Pogo 91MI,
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W"-1 t Ohio 11 ~

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..... lllrylrilnlly.gnoot- 1D announoo .. . . . , - . .... · To claim ing...-•blPNsto
or tldt)pf Jemlofe740-336- jciin our trietdy and dodical-

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Appllcaitt• rriuo1bo
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wlltt pooi1Mo ·- t o join

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qulltllycaratoourreaidentl.

Smp Ill' and 1111 out ., IlPPI&gt;

cation, M·F

dental 8881.Eind or receptionist to work in Gallipolis

4-l:'l~

· - ..,NEA,IIoc.
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III!U'W.vm!D

Sla!l . Development

Program.
An F•• Kent WilY 10 earn
tnOnl!'· Tho Now ilwn.
Cllll Marilyn 304-882·2645.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

AVONI All Areaol To Buy or
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304·
675-1&gt;429.

••••• For Sole ....... _........- ........-'-: ............. 725

' ~ •••••••••••• ,,,_,,,,,,,,,_,..............030

. Antlql-.-·········......_,_,................-...-··-·····510 ' 81b}i11l .............
•r ••wn~•lor Renl ....- ••••••.•.•••••..•~•••••.••••• 440 To watch up to 1hnle children
Auction FIN --··-·····-·····-~-.010 ages-., to 4. Muot be
Auto Pal'b 1: AcciiJNiel-.....- ..... - ......... 780

=. . . . . .

Auto Replllr .................:................................770

· A.~.

-·-·-·-···-··--710
..
lor ··-···-·····-·-······ 750
•••1' • • eanu ......-·--·-...-·-········-·550 .

Bulldlngs ...................-···- · 840
........ ()pportunltr

·-··-·····-·-·-···-.210

oble to cane to our homo
and be available 10 WOI1&lt;
Monday -Friday. P~ue
send resUme&amp; to P.O.Box
729-35, Pomeroy, Olllo
45769
c/o The Daly

Sentinel.

TrMnlng ........·-·······-·-·····--· 140

Courtside Sa• and Grill now
applications for
qualified tine cooks ana

18ekiqg

WWW.colllics.c-

Ir•

III!U'WANU!II

l·r•
•

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS

M.ahll"'lt.f1:"Grk:ator
SL
Monger: llppllcant muot

1_:

Lawn Maintenancs
oild grounds keeper for the
Holiday Inn In Gallipolis. Full

III!U'W.oom
011 'S

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P

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p;uleiinc., 1'""'-tion Of
cHec•lmhwlkN•~on

-·color, rwffgion, ••.
famlilll DllUI or nltionll
origin, or .ny Intention to

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

p;ulsnanw, flmtt.tian m
diacrlmltwtlon."

This newtp~p~r wtll not
knowingly .a.pt
. . . . . . . . . .tl for Nil
..tMe whictt Is In

vtoUation ., ........ Our

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mtann.c1 .ttw1 all

...
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d• aling~lldveaUM!CIIn
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•nt'-Ditonanlq&amp;lll

Duplex tor Sale on Land

llr'l!iO~~Ibm;~
. --....,

Contract. 740.992·5858.

I

roJtSAi£
t.,--iiiiiiiiiiiii-·

time employment tor the
armmer,permenentfulltime 0 down payment. 4 bedwill be coosidered baoed on room&amp; Large )'llrd. Covered

•

lrig.l'or

· omp. E......._ing

lillie

oertormanoo, Pick up !!Doli· deck. ~nached garago. 740·

llltllw

361·1 ~ -·

........

........

•llpoo-•-·...·-·-·-·-·-·-···---,110

_.lei ...

c.ll Todlirl
1..-n'-4134247
Ext.234T

1D 1 Coloma! Dr..
45601 . No
phone coils ptoue.
~.Ohio

Need~

Now hiring e~ to 1M

...................................... ~.............. 110 .
1..-n &amp;. o.den Equlpn.wt.........- ••••~........110

U - k ....................,.....,.........._...............ao

Found .............- .......................... 010
. LeD &amp; Acruge ....... - .......--..···--····-·-3150

Mobile Home Repolr........................:••••_ •.••.IIJI!
~le

Homea for Rent.. .............. - ............ 420
Homealor Sole........- ......... _.,_••••••.320
-..y to IAMt ......... ~.................---·--··..220
.._yc....&amp; 4 ··-··.. - ....·-..-.740 '
llnlcoll
5711

t.......-.-................-....-........
....-.on.te_...,........................-..............,.. _005

,...lor Sole ................................ -~............ 15110
Plumbltlg&amp; H6tl~og ................................- ..120
Ptuteaalaulal S. •iCII ...................;.............230
Redlo, ,., &amp; C8
110

""'*'. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Rt11 E - W - ........................- ...........110
ldwloi•'IMIJuctlon..............-.........-.........., 50

....
•Situ8tloftl

..-.led....... .... -.....................

&amp; - · -.......·-·-··-········-··-120

. . . . lor Rent ..............................................
Sporting Qooda ................. - .....................-520

SUV'• for s.Je .............- ................... - ..........720
Trvcb for Sole ........ - .................................. 71 I
UpiiiOIIIIII J' .........,,,,, ...................... -

v- For Sole.......................-

.........- 170

.... -···-·········T30

· - 10 Buy ...........................................-010
• - 10 Buy· Form SUppllea ................_120

wa•d To oo ............................... _ .......-.1•

- - 10 Aent ............................................. 711
Yen! ~ QMilpolla......................... - ....... 072
Yen! Sill "-oylllllddle .........- ............. 07.

Yenl-.f'L ~ ...... - ........................ 071

a.-~ Care n-.._

-

......_.

7~1 -1393

tor more Info
apply a1: 1480 Jattson
.Pike, GaNipolis, Ohio.
A&amp;l carriers, one ot lhe
nation'•
largelt
family
owned LTL motor freight car·
rier'8. hU immedUiile openIn
for
rt·t:-•
ga
Pit '"""

700.351.0537

PI&amp;

.._........, '-•"" ~ -.

of

12th Streat, Portamou1h,
01110 •5662 Attn: Oriv.Ed
Dept, or Fax """""' to:

_,......,.

...,.
&amp; bono-

ow " -..
·-and
......_·_- · _· Phone

-~

drl~mr

notnece~~WJ. ' MUIItbewil-

·""""""""'to:
Gallipolis Dally Tribune
Attn: Matt Rodgers

P.O.Box469
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Of email to

~

~'"'""

bath.

Accfed~ Mtlmber Accrediling 38R, 3.5 bath, 2000 sq.ft move in, central air &amp; natural
Council tar IMBpelldsm Coleges cOndo
'" Florada on gas furnace, s1one FP in
•nd Schooll \27-46.
Clearwater Island. Boat sUp 'LA. Kitchen has new oak

I

ltfb MayJJ,ANB&gt;US
.

&amp; garage. Must sell! 446· cabinets. new vinyl flooring .
lg . pantry&amp; laundry room
1822
· ·
Spac•ous master suite w:
4br, 2 AC , Pool, Ctry New F.P &amp; private entrance
1994
10•000 Haven. $139.500 call after Priced to sell $Gi M ~
lowboy
:::=s~~neaxle 6pm 304-593-8871
$88,000 . call (740~5-8751

742-4011

New log home sitting on

~· Mu&amp;l see 740-992· $79,000 304·593-{;979

1.66 acres, custom kitchen.
3BR, 2 bath. $142.900. Call
740..256-9247
·
MOIID...E Hot.m;

77 Hawthorne Ln., Pt
PleaSant, 3Dr, 1ba, 101 5/SF
Three beautthJI Prom dreBB· New floor CO'IIEtrings, freSh
as.Size 1·2. Worn only at paint , new heat pump

to:

grams.
you to b\_JY your Vinyl Siding. Shingle Aoof.
LBwn-Gare Sef'\lioe. Mowing ~OIT)eo~~ead .at rentmg.
$230 per month. 740-385·
&amp; Trimming. Free Estimates • 100 tc financ•ng
. 9948

Los&amp; than pe&lt;fect cred• c-c-:--:-=:--.,-

0,

OftolmJNny .

POST~~~ NOW

..,.,.r

'

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._,-

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-lth ·n

,,,

Office:V

ground -

· COl 1.fl00.

, _ pton l!lC! ,_ ,.;:iJ1fon 3020 or 7411-352-0550
lodging II our 8ftiPIOioM

lfter ..-ng ~
' .--- .
'
.
· oments Call Volley 92e3 for Paoopon/P- Hunllngton Fld, Ollllpolto
' ;:;:,: ~. _ . . Core Otlice. Compotltl.. fon'y • wv 25515. Ph II(J().
olfice 111 (304)773-5519 to llilgll 1011 lndudachodulo n - -·
lng hoal1h tnouranoo and
a
mlellge~.
EKPttrienoed COL driYerl

-

180tl or lox to 304-417511/F/ON
EOE

4112.

www . gorl .c . com

-

.ltrlc.com

with ,._lnd iJoDNit- Part·T'""' Storo Clol1c. - · :
nMded. Local ...,.. 740· ing b a ltiondly, outplg 21 So!ti&gt;JI Poople 10 WOrt&lt;
388-8547
clori&lt;to- ........ wlltt '""" homo uolng • ..,...,.
Soekingholptor ..
-onl'twre&gt;tll&lt;n or. Up to 5500.00 to
tekl care of parents call purct'n n , Fax r..ume to $1.,500.00
PTIFT

•-•11&gt;

(740)1192-4030

-

.Horloolt-4

•

u....

·
· .
.. 2008 3 bedroom 2 bath &amp;ec·
tional home $279 per month

2582

"""

Ooy\onl - · Fl. Big
Lotot, CA. l!lC! Pluoon
folgo, lW . Como b • poo·
hol11h.- . - . - P1too- 441· oono1 Inti!- 11 61:16

mOnth.

.

740-385·7671.
House fo&lt; sale in Racine C...:-'c-_---:::=:--::-c-

or

,.__,_rol

-

74().44~·3570

area. Appr&lt;»:. 4 acres , all 93 Clayton 3BA. 2 bath
$10,000. Also. 92 Cla~on
$57Ktyr, lnclt.des
•NOTICE•
, pro1e&amp;sionany landscaped. 2BR, t balh $7.000: Must be
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· Ranch s~e I\Ouse wnn 4
- -'
moved.
·
lNG CO recommend
bedrooms, living room, din· - -Call740·709·1179
----,-01te!Od by Elcam Se&lt;Vi&lt;:os,
• "~
t
·
not oftered w/ USPS who
that you Oo businels .. ;.,
fng room , kitchen, large am· LAND AND HOME. new 3
people you know, an
ily room, central Blr, gas heal bed. 2 bath. rncludes land,
~
NOT
to
send
mona
and 1 fireplace. Addition of a ready to move 1nto. Only 399
1
thmugt1 the mall until you large Florida room com- a month ('A'BC ) B66·56C·
.
· have investigated the plately cedar opens onto 8679. MUST SALE
SarurttyN
H
needed$7 ~
offering.
patto &amp; pool area. Heated in --:-:::::-:=--::-:cfM
aven,
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ground pool enclosed by priMODULARS see Ohio's
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largest.pisplay
. houri vary. Muet haw • hlgl
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Midwest 740·828-2750
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garage attached to hou~
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crlntinol hioiDf)', pou
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FOR SAu;
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on - • " " and drMng phone 441-1383 tor Sidled
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Inc. hiring STNA, CNA, lkllll. We offlf .a very com- w.ntld· Local eemi truck
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call 7-t0-li2·

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back yard. Up&amp;tairs: 2 t /2 lly home, on 1 acre mn wt'
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• f.R ., D.A., Kit . &amp;
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Located 5 miles from Holzer. · br. 2 ba. wllg. bonus room
GdlpaDI CltMr College near schools on corner of vinyl sided ranch has new
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plant.
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lot 1od but
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Inc., hlrit1l a FT LPN tor

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COL
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locol roody-mlx company.
lWo (2) pooltlorw open 111

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i . - 4 0 accepted
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_." Payment could be the
Ill ·I1QUiflmlnt, l'u All iiijjlljl WIO liO ICiptln
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stria confidence
Mortgage
Locators.
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to Plow 3

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Gardens
in
Haniaonvlle Area. Cell 7407~·3015 ...

licente, peu
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ilacoeptingresumestora
181'\'.
tulltirneoutaideaaleti
'-ion of
hspibWitlatMI. Appliclwrts
Help wanted at Datil: Honw SupaN
machine
mwl be brganized,
Gmup Homo. 700.992-5023 lf1op PII'IO!Itol, CNC
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act'OUilt Ii1t .. , ..le
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and build firtures, read
Can~ mUll: b8
drawing~, UH hand inlpec·
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aetf-mottva.IBd
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and a lNm player thai
chile DRiers. Prollclerlcy In
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Fabricating process in a impor1anoe al dtWeloping
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Home
Homealor S.Je............................ - ....-118

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obtain a ioan.
at requests for any large

TURNED DOWN ON
Smol&lt;e tree environment
Sond resumes to: Gall;,olis SOCIAL SECUAITY iSSI?
No Fee UnktSB We Win!
Daily Tribune, P.o : lloK 469
Gaiii&gt;Oiis. OH. 45631 CLA

• ,

9AM·SAU . •, 7..81j,$28.27111f., -

dTheo.ug..FreeWoricplaloe

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..... ,...._it i. . .l to

..vahoe payments .. r&gt;'
fees or insuranoe. Csllthe
Office at Consumer
Upcoming certified oorsing Affairs 1011 free at 1-866aasistant clasS. Must have a 278-0003 to 188m If the
higl1 school clploma or GED mongage bn&gt;l&lt;8r or
to apply. Applications may lender
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properly
be picked up at Lakin lic:ensed. (This is a public
Hospital, Monday thtOUgh · service announcement
Friday,
8am·4pm
from the Ohio VallO!'
Applications
mus1 be Publishing Company)
returned in no later -than

6472. EOE &amp; A Particlpon1 913-SIIH226, -

t!

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Office of Consume(
AffaiTs au ua you ref!.'
nanoe your nome ol

5:00 I'll, Monday throug!l
Friday. .

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Monday.

Gl

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wage and no benefits.
Applicotion&amp; can be picl&lt;ed
up at 1he Village Municipal
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, _ hoUI&gt; at B:30 AM until

Altnt·-·····-······-············-...........

ball game
against
Federal

••NeTICE**

od
1~ ;e.. il , Dllio \Iaiiey P~ishlng .with calions at llieliiirt desk . No - - - - - - ,
0 0 ""2 -lll&amp;liotil job Into, coli j o b - o r -~n~phone calls please.
213 BR on 2 acres, fenced Lookingforan·~~tam ·
Coordmator 74 :n · AmericanAoooc . ofl.abor 1• DogrM In Uechanicol
~uu~ ~·~roy.
"•-'""
LPN

C..-·······-,····-·-·····-·-·

Southern
senior Wes
Riffle leads off
second base
after hitting a:
double in ttle
fl.rst Inning of
a Tri-Valley
COnference
HOCking
Division base-

•

p - . ill!lP!lJI!imalely 20 ~e

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Ch--.y
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Tho Vllago at Rio Grande i&amp;
accepting applications 1or
the pcsttion of part time
summer mowing help. The

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REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

To Place
YOUr Ad,
Call

McCune led off with a dOllble and advanced on a 1-3
ground out 'lbroe straigbl
singles by 'l'bompioo.
Lance Sharp, and Bobby
Anderson brought booje
two runs before Soutbcm
could extinguish the flames
· lied -~'--" 7-v.
"" .·
as FH pu
Chapman led·&lt;iff the filial
inning with a double llil
speedster , Taylor Deem
came.in to run. Riffle drilled
a sinking liner to center
where Grant Smith made
tclta
divio$ snow-cone ca ,
then rifled to second to dou~~~:~runner. A fly out
and their chance to split
with the l..ancers, now solidly out in front of the TVC
Hocking.
Riffle was 3-for-4, while
Chapman wa5 2-3 with two
watb. while Mainbout and
Taylor each had two bits. .
CbaJ?man suffered the
Joss with six strikeouts and
six. walks. McCune, who
pitched the last two innings,
was the winner. Federal
pitching walked two and ·.
struck out seven.
Soothem goes ·to Trimble
Thursday.

FHHS
SHS

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Tuesday, Apftl 22, zoo8

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Pqe B2 • The Daily Sentinel

'

Qtrtbunt - Sentinel -

:Meigs track teams at Fairland Garciaparra ho~ers Oobbers
fromPageBl
to help Los Angeles .
bea.t c•ffiCIIIIla
• tj·9•3
Sl»F REPCHIY

'

,'

FAIRLAND
The
Meigs High School track
and field teams were at the
Fairland Invitational on
Friday. where the Marauders
came away with 86.5 points
and third place in the girls
meet and 55 points and fifth
place in the boys.
South Point won for the
girls with 119 points.
Fairland won for the boys
with 173 points.
Both teams had individuals take flfSt place. Junior
Catie Wolfe was first in the
lOOm dash and the 200m
dash for the girls. and senior
Cassady Willford was tops
in the boys shot puL

There were was third in the boys l()(_Jm
seven
sec- dash,
as
was
semor
ond-place Cornelius English in the
finishes for boys 200m dash.
Meigs.
· · Meigs' only fourth-place
J u n i o r finish was the girls 4x200m
Adrian Bolin relay team.
was Second
Mason Metts. a junior,
in .the lOOm was fifth in the discus. The
hurdles and boys 4x400m and 4x800m
the
300m . relay teams were also fifth.
Woh
hurdles, and
In the l600m run, junior
cLassmate Brandon· Hanning was sixth,
Devan Soulsby was second and so was junior Kimi
in the 800m run. Relay Swisher on the girls side.
teams taking second w~ Fresh~an Olivia Bevan, in
the girls 4x800m, the grrls the grrls 3200m run, also
'4ll100m, the boys 4xl00m, took sixth.
and the boys 4x200m.
The Marauders had two
Senior Melissa Grueser seventh-place
finishes:
placed third in the discus 's ophomore Jacob Well in the
. and fi~ in the shot PU':
boys high jump and the boys
Seruor Brandan Ftsher 3200m relay team.

·

RBis. Buzzanl was 3-for-4
· with three RBis. Eddy singled. Stephaliie Cundiff singled. Pape singled. aDd
Teaford singled. Southern
They made it 5.() in . the bad 16 bits.
thUd on Loney's two-run
Summer Hatfield bad two
single, and Matt Kemp's singles for Federal. Vanessa
RBI double kpocked Beliste Castle singled. and Brooke
out of the game with .Hill singled.
. .
nobody out in the ftfth. '
1\Jrley was the wmmng
Beli~le (0-1 ). in his flfSt
pitcher with four walks and
'stut ~r opening the sea- five strikeouts, while giving
son on the disabled list due up just four hits. Hill sufto a sore right forearm, gave · fered the loss by allowing
up 12 bits aDd seven runs in 16 hits, four walks. aDd two
four innings.
strike outs.
Garciaparra. on the displays
at
Southern
Wednesday
abled list until April 16 with Ravenswood
a hand injury, hit a two-run and goes to Trimble
homer off reliever Josh Thursday.
Fogg in the sixth.
c;a, ..... 1S. Fedlall' " • '
Edwin Encarnacion and AtHS
002 100 341
Paul Bako broke up Peony's 5HS
t03 oet 13 16 1
shutout with back-to-back WP -Turley; lP- Hilt
doubles leading off the fifth
inning. Encarnacion led off
the seventh with his fifth
homer of the season and
third in two .games, and
Votto homered to lead off
fromPageBl ••
the ninth.
Notes: The Reds promol- hits and uo errors. 1be Lady
ed infielder-outfielder Jerry Eagles scored twice in the
Hairston Jr. .liJid designated second, once in the fourth,
infielder Juan Castro for and once in the ftfth.
·
assignment before the
The Lady Marauders coogame.••• Los Angeles RHP tinue a busy week of so~­
Jason Schmidt. on the dis- ball Tuesday wifh a game 111
abled list following shoul- Point Pleasant S!Mt linie
der surgery, threw 50 pitch- will be 5 p.m. Meigs is lhen
es in the bullpen Monday off Wednesday before, a
afternoon. ... Furcal's lead- game with Wellston on
off home run was the 22nd Thursday, Nelsonville-YC)d
leadoff homer of his career on Friday, and a ~
and I Oth in three seasons header against Athens oo
with the Dodgers
Saturday.
Encarnacion's bit extended
Bolpre4, ..... D
his hitting streak to II
II
000 000 0
023
games, one more than his B
020 110 X
4410
----;lP-Ebet-.
previoliS career high.

CINCINNATI (AP). Nomar Garciaparra hit his
flfSt home run since ~pl.
14 and drove in three runs,
Brad Penny stayed perfect
at Great American Ball Park
and the Los Angeles
Dodgers beat the Cincinnati
Reds 9-3 Monday night_
Rafael Furcal also homered, and James Loney aMed
three RBI s for the Dodgers,
who equaled their season
high with 15 hits after scoring one run in each of their
three losses at Atlanta last
weekend. Chan Ho Park
pitched three innings for his
first save in 330 career
pitching appearances.
Andruw
Jones
was
dropped to eighth in the
slllfting batting order for the
first ,time since Aug. 22,
1998. He went 0-for-4, lowering
the fi ve"time Allbad
the fmishing in 54.12 seconds. ·
Star's
average
to .159.
SPORTSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
A1 so finishing sixth was
Eagles' bigb·est individual the boys 4x800m relay team. . Penny (3-2) allowed a run
PARKERSBURG, W.Va.
finish.
He Their time was 9: 15.55. The and sill hits while intprov~ The Eljstem High School
took fourth boys 4x400m relay team, ing to 5-0 in five career
track. and field teams comin the 1600m meanwhile, was seventh starts at Great American.
The Dodgers needed two
peted with nine other
run with a with a time of 3:54.00.
innings
to match their runs
time
of
schools at the · Russ Parsons
For the Lady Eagles,
output
for
the previous three
Invitational on Saturday.
4 : 5 6 . 2 5 . junior Alyssa Newland in
The Eagles came away with
Martindale the 1600m run and freshman games. Furcal hit the second
an eighth place finish for the
also had the Emeri Connery in the 300m pitch of the game into the
boys team and a last place Martindale second-hi$h- hurdles both had sixth-place right-field seats for his third
est
fimsh fmishes, the highest individ- hit and second homer in
ftnish for the girls.
Buchtel won the boys with fifth place in the 3200m ually for their team, three career at -bats against
meet with 118 team points. run. His time was 10:24.75. Newland's
time
was Cincinnati starter Matt
Marietta was second with
Eastern took fourth in the 5 :52.98, while Connery's Belisle (0-1). They capital107, and Logan took third boys 4x110m relay with a was 50.84 seconds.
ized on rookie flfSt baseman
\~lith 103. Eastern's total was time of I :03.34.
The girls 4x400m relay Joey Votto's error on
13.
Eagle sophomore Mike team took seventh with a Loney's sharp grounder
On
the
girls
side, Johnson placed fifth in the time of 4:36.98, and the girls leading off the second to
Hurricane took flfSt with 99 high jump. He cleared 5'8". 4x200m relay team placed score two uneamed runs.
'"
pointS. Marietta was second, Senior Zack Newell took eighth. Their time was
finishing . half of a point fifth in the shot put with a 2:00.50.
'
two golden chances by leavahead of Gallia Academy's throw of 40'3.25" and sixth
Sophomore . Au&lt;Jrionna
ing
the bases loaded, the
93.50. The Lady Eagles fin- in the discus with a throw of Pullins was eighth in the
score 4-2.
isbed with two points.
120' . Senior Alex Burroughs long jump. Her mark was
1be Lancers regained the
fromPageBl
Senior Aaron Martindale ' was sixth in the 400m dash, 14'06".
lead
in the thitd inning. A
'
walk and two singles, the
Federal (5-l TVC)'took a second of which was a two2 -0 lead in, the. first '!lbeo run shot by Gandee, tied the
Grant Smith rode home
. ..~... m
__ _.a game. ·After Chapman gol
cC
Cory M une smP- -... the ·~ two outs, Bobby
Jared Gandee bit a .sac:rific:c; Aodenoo bit an RBI singli:
fly to Sciire McCUDe." to give the visiton . a one.
r
ld v
Southern tied it up in the run .__. 5-4. .
I
BY Scan WCIU'I
wild melee that sent Dan and •Ourteen year-o n..ory bottom half of the :.:"'-g.
....,
Momson,
·
M ay1e.
· d rabtree. N'1er was n"""""
~-~" when with two outs,IWUU
·lbe next frame, SQo!thrin
SPORTS CORR.,
~SPOND£NT
an
Ryan
D
1.1
.
.,
.-oweu
·to •LUJc·pltS. c arpenter the , spnnt hard-c harger, Chapman ·walked, Wes . once
, fought bac~
STEWART A near- inherited the lead in a one commg from 16th ~0 fifth..
Riffle doublc;c( and Brad Chris otter single4 and
capacity crowd and summer- lap shoot-out to . the finish. . V~teran Marie. Dickson m Brown reached on a. two- ~ home.on an RBI sine
liR weather greeted the sea- C!IJ"penter pulled the field the ~~fa~?US DJckwn nu~~ - base-:-enur that -brought . CJ~~~·
~.Ji
son-opening ' event at- Billy' down the backcbute , but ber zero crafted, a popular home' both runs for a 2-2 eveniag;
WhittiitgtoO
walked to put runners on
Jarrell's ·Skyline Speedway Games quickly closed the win in the AMRA modified tally. · 1..---Friday
night , where gapandposedunderthevet- main .. ~oy Roush of
Sollthemf7-4overaii,J-3 firstandtCoood,butGandce
Appalachian hotsboe Chris eran Carpenter upon the Coolville made a late race TVC) went up 4-2 in the retiredthe neJiJ. two TOI113do
Games of Evans, WV,edged turn-three entrance. Side-by• bid after fading to ninth second. After Southern's batters, the score 5-5.
Chapman seemed to gain
Freddie Carpenter by just side coming out of four, early in the race. Roush Ryan Chapman retired the
inches in a wild, wild late Carpenter held a slight edge, charged back to the front side against the Lancers the some momentum for the
model finish that had the but Oames won the drag only to have his bid fall Tornadoes went to the piate. Tornadoes, then gol a boost
entire grandstand on its feel. race down the frontstretch to short of Dickson's domi- Jordan Taylor had a one-out when SHS went up 6-5 in
Meigs County's Tommy win by two inches at the fm- nance.
double. Butch Mambout the fifth inning. Mambout
Adkins (Portland, Ohio) ish line.
Danny Talbott claimed the had an RBI single to give double, Kleski advanced
won the Four Cylinder main.
In the Four-Cylinders, 15-lap Pure Stock mai·n. SHS the lead, then Kreig him to third, thenChapman
Danviile. Indiana's Danny Tommy Adkins and Spike John Powell, Jr. was the Kleski had an RBI double. had an RBI sin$le. .Wes
Smith, one of the original Rizer, both Q( Portland, early leader in the Street ' Chapman reached on an Riffle followed wtd! a sin~
Outlaws, claimed the com- . Ohio. battled it out the entire Stock main, but on lap six error and Wes Riffle was hit gle, but once agam . The
panion 410 sprint car win. race, until Adkins took Coolville's Steve Bigley with a pitch to load the Purple and Gold left two
leading flag-to-flag to defeat advantage of lapped traffic blew by on the outside and bases.
.
runners stranded. An jnni~g
Nick Naber and Cole to pull off the win. Rizer was Jeremy
Blake
blasted
Gandee came on in relief later, Southern once agam
Duncan at the finish.
second ahead of Tim around Powell on the inside. of Federal Hocking starter left the bases loaded after
In the Late Model main Christopher,
Tony Bigley rode the b,igh side, Tyler Thompson. Gandee pushing the eusbions full
Todd Smith of Pomeroy was Pia vender, Bobby Collins, while Blake took the low retired
the side and with only one out.
set up for a good position to Matt Fizer, Jeff Blanton, groove. Blake 's line pre- Southern spent its first of · In the top of the seventh,
win the feature on the out- David Rankin, Ken Young, vailed as he went on to claim
side pole. Smith ran away and Barry Kitts.
the thrilling win over Bigley
with the win in his qualifyIn the Outlaw sprints, and Roush.
Skyline continues .regular
ing beat. but broke a shock Vetc;ran Danny Smith has
mount hefore the green flag won all but one race he has racing next Friday. April 25.
· .waved in the feature ~on raced in at Slrylinccduring ·Oates opcm 1114 p.m., warm·
Mayle took the early lead as the past two years~ Friday ups are at 6 p .m., time trials
if shol from a cannon.
was no different. Smith, -the lit 6:30 and racing at 7 p .m.
Mayle led 24 laps of the dash winner, earned the pole Adult general admission is ·
25 lap feature, but that was , alongside 16-year old Cole $15, pit passes are $30, kids
soon to change. The pack Duncan. Duncan anchored 6-12$5, and under six free.
The Skyline Speedway ;,
began to gel into lapped traf- second place for several laps
fie with five laps to go. ~fore be engaged in a race- located just 4.1 miles off v:·
Garnes
slipped
past long battle with Nick Naber. State Route 50 and 32 on
Carpenter for second, and \Vith Smith well out in front, Athens County Road · 53
then Carpenter .clamped Naber took charge of sec- ·Bethany Ridge Road.: You
down to regain the runner- pnd.
can get information . about
up slot as that duo made a
Aaron Higgins was able to the
speedway
at
bid on Mayle on the last lap. hold off veteran charger Jim http :/lwww.skylinespeedSweet victory turned sou~ Nier for fourth. Rounding way.net or call the race day
quickly for Mayle who out the top ten were Adam phone 3! 740-662-4111. For
clipped the lapped car of Strausser, Greg Mitchell, information during the week
Justin Powell, triggJng a Josh Davis, Jimmy Stinson, . please call 304-542-8322.

Eastern track and field teams
compete at Parker8burg invite

I

Stymies

·
•
fi
Games e'dges Carpenter.m Irst
. e. Speed
race 0 f season at .Sk
. ylin
. way .
c

0

0

c·'

:!ji

Bounce
f'tomPI(IeBl
for the team 'a only RBI.
Cummin1

pitched

Butem.
1be NCOnd

doubleheader

for

.

aame of the
wae c:lonr,

Sasha Collins pitched.
Monday's game went better for the Lady Eagles
despite committing four
more errors; giving them I~
In tluee games. Waterford
had one len error and one
more hit, but Eaatem acored
~even runt In the third
Inning u they batted around

.,

fourth , fifth, and seventh
innings. but the Lady Eagle
defense wouldn ' t allow
anything more, giving up
only two extra base hits for
the game.
Eaatem 11 back In action
on Tueldly, ~~I travel
to Chtlhlre to
on the

Lady Ridden of Rl ver
Valley In a 5 p.m. non-cun·
Cleland, rerence
11me.

but Belpre rallied from a 3· the order. Jet~lca
l, dlflclt lfler three lnnina• Holter, Cummine, and
llld ICOl'tCI the wlnnlna run MorTi&amp;on drove In the runa,
In lbt alxth tor tht aweep. Rlwwn knocked one more
law1011 went l·for-3 with In In the fourth with a dou·
two doubltellld three RBII. ble.
Tbe&lt;Other Eutem hit came · Waterford scored one run
'froift · Mepn Carnahan. In each of the second,
.r

CLASSIFIED

'

SPORTSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

111tr1m I. \L&amp;Iii'M:• 4

010 110 I
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001 100 X - 11•
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,
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. . . (fol, •· 1 TVC Maolclng): CllmmiN
lncf I'll-...
w~

..;. Cllfnmllll: l.~ -l.lwlor.

The Daily Selltinel • Page 83

In One .Week With Us
Ejna!!

classified@mydai!ytribune.CXJm

·-

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Or Fa To (740) 9112-2157

Howyou&lt;111n have borders and Qnlllhics
~
added to your classified ads
(..~
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50C for small
1.00 for lan)e

Monday thru Friday

:00 a.m. to 5:00· p.

s

..... . _ . . . _ , . . . , .

.........
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Ollta Vlll1lr

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celebr8lion
Pomeroy ute..Overt&gt;rook
A

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Puppy towld . .r
l'aol 011co 4-1~Shor1iogl; lcadod 111 333 Pogo 91MI,
omol; " ' - ' ooo1
W"-1 t Ohio 11 ~

w11tt-

..... lllrylrilnlly.gnoot- 1D announoo .. . . . , - . .... · To claim ing...-•blPNsto
or tldt)pf Jemlofe740-336- jciin our trietdy and dodical-

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1171.

WA!I'IBI
' 10 JkJ)'

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Appllcaitt• rriuo1bo
~. Team Playoto
wlltt pooi1Mo ·- t o join

. , _.

Ul in p«Mding outMaldng,
qulltllycaratoourreaidentl.

Smp Ill' and 1111 out ., IlPPI&gt;

cation, M·F

dental 8881.Eind or receptionist to work in Gallipolis

4-l:'l~

· - ..,NEA,IIoc.
-· _

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III!U'W.vm!D

Sla!l . Development

Program.
An F•• Kent WilY 10 earn
tnOnl!'· Tho Now ilwn.
Cllll Marilyn 304-882·2645.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

AVONI All Areaol To Buy or
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304·
675-1&gt;429.

••••• For Sole ....... _........- ........-'-: ............. 725

' ~ •••••••••••• ,,,_,,,,,,,,,_,..............030

. Antlql-.-·········......_,_,................-...-··-·····510 ' 81b}i11l .............
•r ••wn~•lor Renl ....- ••••••.•.•••••..•~•••••.••••• 440 To watch up to 1hnle children
Auction FIN --··-·····-·····-~-.010 ages-., to 4. Muot be
Auto Pal'b 1: AcciiJNiel-.....- ..... - ......... 780

=. . . . . .

Auto Replllr .................:................................770

· A.~.

-·-·-·-···-··--710
..
lor ··-···-·····-·-······ 750
•••1' • • eanu ......-·--·-...-·-········-·550 .

Bulldlngs ...................-···- · 840
........ ()pportunltr

·-··-·····-·-·-···-.210

oble to cane to our homo
and be available 10 WOI1&lt;
Monday -Friday. P~ue
send resUme&amp; to P.O.Box
729-35, Pomeroy, Olllo
45769
c/o The Daly

Sentinel.

TrMnlng ........·-·······-·-·····--· 140

Courtside Sa• and Grill now
applications for
qualified tine cooks ana

18ekiqg

WWW.colllics.c-

Ir•

III!U'WANU!II

l·r•
•

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS

M.ahll"'lt.f1:"Grk:ator
SL
Monger: llppllcant muot

1_:

Lawn Maintenancs
oild grounds keeper for the
Holiday Inn In Gallipolis. Full

III!U'W.oom
011 'S

A

hir'--'-.2-- _..or-·

P

-*"'"·

oppll&lt;-• and-

r

'-eo.'--104'----.,---

l"'llltn111oN.

SolvKFs

p;uleiinc., 1'""'-tion Of
cHec•lmhwlkN•~on

-·color, rwffgion, ••.
famlilll DllUI or nltionll
origin, or .ny Intention to

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

p;ulsnanw, flmtt.tian m
diacrlmltwtlon."

This newtp~p~r wtll not
knowingly .a.pt
. . . . . . . . . .tl for Nil
..tMe whictt Is In

vtoUation ., ........ Our

I

..........herer
mtann.c1 .ttw1 all

...
_...,.,_.

d• aling~lldveaUM!CIIn
thia1uw I I

•nt'-Ditonanlq&amp;lll

Duplex tor Sale on Land

llr'l!iO~~Ibm;~
. --....,

Contract. 740.992·5858.

I

roJtSAi£
t.,--iiiiiiiiiiiii-·

time employment tor the
armmer,permenentfulltime 0 down payment. 4 bedwill be coosidered baoed on room&amp; Large )'llrd. Covered

•

lrig.l'or

· omp. E......._ing

lillie

oertormanoo, Pick up !!Doli· deck. ~nached garago. 740·

llltllw

361·1 ~ -·

........

........

•llpoo-•-·...·-·-·-·-·-·-···---,110

_.lei ...

c.ll Todlirl
1..-n'-4134247
Ext.234T

1D 1 Coloma! Dr..
45601 . No
phone coils ptoue.
~.Ohio

Need~

Now hiring e~ to 1M

...................................... ~.............. 110 .
1..-n &amp;. o.den Equlpn.wt.........- ••••~........110

U - k ....................,.....,.........._...............ao

Found .............- .......................... 010
. LeD &amp; Acruge ....... - .......--..···--····-·-3150

Mobile Home Repolr........................:••••_ •.••.IIJI!
~le

Homea for Rent.. .............. - ............ 420
Homealor Sole........- ......... _.,_••••••.320
-..y to IAMt ......... ~.................---·--··..220
.._yc....&amp; 4 ··-··.. - ....·-..-.740 '
llnlcoll
5711

t.......-.-................-....-........
....-.on.te_...,........................-..............,.. _005

,...lor Sole ................................ -~............ 15110
Plumbltlg&amp; H6tl~og ................................- ..120
Ptuteaalaulal S. •iCII ...................;.............230
Redlo, ,., &amp; C8
110

""'*'. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Rt11 E - W - ........................- ...........110
ldwloi•'IMIJuctlon..............-.........-.........., 50

....
•Situ8tloftl

..-.led....... .... -.....................

&amp; - · -.......·-·-··-········-··-120

. . . . lor Rent ..............................................
Sporting Qooda ................. - .....................-520

SUV'• for s.Je .............- ................... - ..........720
Trvcb for Sole ........ - .................................. 71 I
UpiiiOIIIIII J' .........,,,,, ...................... -

v- For Sole.......................-

.........- 170

.... -···-·········T30

· - 10 Buy ...........................................-010
• - 10 Buy· Form SUppllea ................_120

wa•d To oo ............................... _ .......-.1•

- - 10 Aent ............................................. 711
Yen! ~ QMilpolla......................... - ....... 072
Yen! Sill "-oylllllddle .........- ............. 07.

Yenl-.f'L ~ ...... - ........................ 071

a.-~ Care n-.._

-

......_.

7~1 -1393

tor more Info
apply a1: 1480 Jattson
.Pike, GaNipolis, Ohio.
A&amp;l carriers, one ot lhe
nation'•
largelt
family
owned LTL motor freight car·
rier'8. hU immedUiile openIn
for
rt·t:-•
ga
Pit '"""

700.351.0537

PI&amp;

.._........, '-•"" ~ -.

of

12th Streat, Portamou1h,
01110 •5662 Attn: Oriv.Ed
Dept, or Fax """""' to:

_,......,.

...,.
&amp; bono-

ow " -..
·-and
......_·_- · _· Phone

-~

drl~mr

notnece~~WJ. ' MUIItbewil-

·""""""""'to:
Gallipolis Dally Tribune
Attn: Matt Rodgers

P.O.Box469
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Of email to

~

~'"'""

bath.

Accfed~ Mtlmber Accrediling 38R, 3.5 bath, 2000 sq.ft move in, central air &amp; natural
Council tar IMBpelldsm Coleges cOndo
'" Florada on gas furnace, s1one FP in
•nd Schooll \27-46.
Clearwater Island. Boat sUp 'LA. Kitchen has new oak

I

ltfb MayJJ,ANB&gt;US
.

&amp; garage. Must sell! 446· cabinets. new vinyl flooring .
lg . pantry&amp; laundry room
1822
· ·
Spac•ous master suite w:
4br, 2 AC , Pool, Ctry New F.P &amp; private entrance
1994
10•000 Haven. $139.500 call after Priced to sell $Gi M ~
lowboy
:::=s~~neaxle 6pm 304-593-8871
$88,000 . call (740~5-8751

742-4011

New log home sitting on

~· Mu&amp;l see 740-992· $79,000 304·593-{;979

1.66 acres, custom kitchen.
3BR, 2 bath. $142.900. Call
740..256-9247
·
MOIID...E Hot.m;

77 Hawthorne Ln., Pt
PleaSant, 3Dr, 1ba, 101 5/SF
Three beautthJI Prom dreBB· New floor CO'IIEtrings, freSh
as.Size 1·2. Worn only at paint , new heat pump

to:

grams.
you to b\_JY your Vinyl Siding. Shingle Aoof.
LBwn-Gare Sef'\lioe. Mowing ~OIT)eo~~ead .at rentmg.
$230 per month. 740-385·
&amp; Trimming. Free Estimates • 100 tc financ•ng
. 9948

Los&amp; than pe&lt;fect cred• c-c-:--:-=:--.,-

0,

OftolmJNny .

POST~~~ NOW

..,.,.r

'

·r~

._,-

~u'

-lth ·n

,,,

Office:V

ground -

· COl 1.fl00.

, _ pton l!lC! ,_ ,.;:iJ1fon 3020 or 7411-352-0550
lodging II our 8ftiPIOioM

lfter ..-ng ~
' .--- .
'
.
· oments Call Volley 92e3 for Paoopon/P- Hunllngton Fld, Ollllpolto
' ;:;:,: ~. _ . . Core Otlice. Compotltl.. fon'y • wv 25515. Ph II(J().
olfice 111 (304)773-5519 to llilgll 1011 lndudachodulo n - -·
lng hoal1h tnouranoo and
a
mlellge~.
EKPttrienoed COL driYerl

-

180tl or lox to 304-417511/F/ON
EOE

4112.

www . gorl .c . com

-

.ltrlc.com

with ,._lnd iJoDNit- Part·T'""' Storo Clol1c. - · :
nMded. Local ...,.. 740· ing b a ltiondly, outplg 21 So!ti&gt;JI Poople 10 WOrt&lt;
388-8547
clori&lt;to- ........ wlltt '""" homo uolng • ..,...,.
Soekingholptor ..
-onl'twre&gt;tll&lt;n or. Up to 5500.00 to
tekl care of parents call purct'n n , Fax r..ume to $1.,500.00
PTIFT

•-•11&gt;

(740)1192-4030

-

.Horloolt-4

•

u....

·
· .
.. 2008 3 bedroom 2 bath &amp;ec·
tional home $279 per month

2582

"""

Ooy\onl - · Fl. Big
Lotot, CA. l!lC! Pluoon
folgo, lW . Como b • poo·
hol11h.- . - . - P1too- 441· oono1 Inti!- 11 61:16

mOnth.

.

740-385·7671.
House fo&lt; sale in Racine C...:-'c-_---:::=:--::-c-

or

,.__,_rol

-

74().44~·3570

area. Appr&lt;»:. 4 acres , all 93 Clayton 3BA. 2 bath
$10,000. Also. 92 Cla~on
$57Ktyr, lnclt.des
•NOTICE•
, pro1e&amp;sionany landscaped. 2BR, t balh $7.000: Must be
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· Ranch s~e I\Ouse wnn 4
- -'
moved.
·
lNG CO recommend
bedrooms, living room, din· - -Call740·709·1179
----,-01te!Od by Elcam Se&lt;Vi&lt;:os,
• "~
t
·
not oftered w/ USPS who
that you Oo businels .. ;.,
fng room , kitchen, large am· LAND AND HOME. new 3
people you know, an
ily room, central Blr, gas heal bed. 2 bath. rncludes land,
~
NOT
to
send
mona
and 1 fireplace. Addition of a ready to move 1nto. Only 399
1
thmugt1 the mall until you large Florida room com- a month ('A'BC ) B66·56C·
.
· have investigated the plately cedar opens onto 8679. MUST SALE
SarurttyN
H
needed$7 ~
offering.
patto &amp; pool area. Heated in --:-:::::-:=--::-:cfM
aven,
,
.00
ground pool enclosed by priMODULARS see Ohio's
17·66 per hour, ahtft walt, Own a computer? Put it to vacy fencing and land- ·
largest.pisplay
. houri vary. Muet haw • hlgl
F ·
Midwest 740·828-2750
. 'NOf'kl Upto$1500to
scaped. imshed 2 car
ttehool d~loml Dt GED,
$7500/mo PT/FT.
garage attached to hou~
mymidwesthome oom
crlntinol hioiDf)', pou
Free lntormationl
and fir0shed &amp; heated 3 cor

- - .. ~···~~ ,~,
Dlftoo EE~~

1- -lnft...,..._&amp;

I

2 bed, 2 bath, 299 a

Avg. PayS2Mum

·311-"""'::!.,~~ 27S-8359 U-l' B:3ll to :OO.
Ohio """'" Homo ~ .

I

j

Aa.ntiont
FOR SAu;
Local company offering "NO
I
DOWN P•YMENr pro· isxeo 3 Bedroom 2 Bath

WANim
To Do

r10

cltflcalldatalontoy bllli,g
1JOOitionl, 2n(J ohltt(M·F
....._10pm) 111111 ...,. min drug ICf"n an(J ba&lt;*·

tuflo,
1lonl - -· Aocopting
~ equipment and -~icatlontt for RN and
... IIUCit .. - . ; ....
~- .,_,_
LPN'o. Apply at
a ,.._, ~-M .. PI¥
Jrodc8on PIU, GaHipoltl,
on - • " " and drMng phone 441-1383 tor Sidled
roc:onl. inctudlng Ollioe or oppty Ill 1456

~75-2454

Sc:HJou;

INmlt.x::noN

Call , (740)441·1333

.......,. .... ,_.
Inc. hiring STNA, CNA, lkllll. We offlf .a very com- w.ntld· Local eemi truck
1
on 1nJdco lnd oqulplnent Home
po1ltlvo- and """11'9" ;,., COL &amp; good
0
Cant
- · poll. Full ttw1
- lnclud8l
_,
pod&lt;age
..
yanUpllnt
Qf)er ~-. TN
Pit 01m
a.
4101k
,...,._ reoord.,.....
call 7-t0-li2·

Jng to do

I

back yard. Up&amp;tairs: 2 t /2 lly home, on 1 acre mn wt'
BR&amp;bath. Downstail'!: l.R., backyard privacy fence in
• f.R ., D.A., Kit . &amp;
Ga11ipolis.this2100S0Ft.3 .
Located 5 miles from Holzer. · br. 2 ba. wllg. bonus room
GdlpaDI CltMr College near schools on corner of vinyl sided ranch has new
• (Ca!eers Close To Home) Porter Ad &amp; 554 . •sking root, attac!led carport, 2 ce•
7
367
CaP Todayi 4Q.446..4
• $85,000. Newly remodeled. garage . refinished hard·
1.fJ00.2l4-D4S2
www.g ,., , raercollegudtJ · call tm more info. 38B-0044 wo od 11 oars ·IS rea "''
.. , to

·~liD
.

.

.....,,,..". ,__
Compotiti" -

•1

Rollortaburg, WV (near
Buflolo,
WV)
plant.
c-~
·
lot 1od but
11

Pleue send resume,
""""-and 1hnle

.

Olllo Vrl/rrtoJ Homo ·
Inc., hlrit1l a FT LPN tor

Drivers needed:
COL
Dri..,. wiling to driw tor
locol roody-mlx company.
lWo (2) pooltlorw open 111

~~--····-······
.. ·····--·········-····-····'711
~~-- lhn:lwlclleL........- ...........540

would IItie!haartrom.

rs

i i i~546
i . - 4 0 accepted
1,!1) and
. p-llvor ~ l!lC! _ m._.. • .,..,,.,.....com "
_." Payment could be the
Ill ·I1QUiflmlnt, l'u All iiijjlljl WIO liO ICiptln
"""'""" filll,
1o 74Q-446.-e104
stria confidence
Mortgage
Locators.
lluilJel&gt;
(740) 367_0000

·Malt-to: AAA, !414

In Memor11tm ... -........................- -••~•. -.D20

to Plow 3

arT~~~ II
Gardens
in
Haniaonvlle Area. Cell 7407~·3015 ...

licente, peu
background checka. EOE.

....................... -···-·-·-.,0

-

-

driver~. QuiHfitd
w 'W
"'""' haw a HS Oiptoma,
valid

...,.,_ - ·-·····--···----·---···510
-lor-

'*'

along

=r.,;r=:eeu:;

-·---&amp;10

··········-·-·-·-·----····-- - - .

will

Gdipolll and P1Pieuanl
ilacoeptingresumestora
181'\'.
tulltirneoutaideaaleti
'-ion of
hspibWitlatMI. Appliclwrts
Help wanted at Datil: Honw SupaN
machine
mwl be brganized,
Gmup Homo. 700.992-5023 lf1op PII'IO!Itol, CNC
&lt;:i1lll1ivo and oble to
... Ioiii"-•II. plfform rnKtlne. manage an established
ooll,!P and Oj)Ofate CNC or
lmmodl...
..., cal'"~
act'OUilt Ii1t .. , ..le
"''111
manual machines. Design
0pot1!npl
on new customers.
and build firtures, read
Can~ mUll: b8
drawing~, UH hand inlpec·
diiclptlnad,
aetf-mottva.IBd
SB.5/MiourFT+bonuo
tion tools, complete pur·
Outbound/Inbound
and a lNm player thai
chile DRiers. Prollclerlcy In
undel"'tand&amp;'the
c.Jf Cotrler
AutuCAO. Welding
l
Day and E,..;ng Shm5
Fabricating process in a impor1anoe al dtWeloping
A~
,.., volume mordal:1uring strcM:Jg, mutualy beneficial
·PiL1 n"Jf.-1 Mbrlr
' enorho11ment. ~g &amp; bulinell relatibr8hlp&amp; with
OIM' CUSIOmer'S. Sales
Atmollp'l6fe
maintlllning
Standrud
Prlid-...-ys Operating
fiCPBrlenoe and teliable ·
Procedures,
and Training
In macllino tool 1rafWIP(Irtlllion n80811i8ry.
Fulltf you can sell and you
- . g. - t o UIO Won!
wanttoworkfulltime, I
and E!COOI. Plouo

,..,.._,

...

Help W.med ..................................... '---'--1 tO
Home
Homealor S.Je............................ - ....-118

,,...

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

obtain a ioan.
at requests for any large

TURNED DOWN ON
Smol&lt;e tree environment
Sond resumes to: Gall;,olis SOCIAL SECUAITY iSSI?
No Fee UnktSB We Win!
Daily Tribune, P.o : lloK 469
Gaiii&gt;Oiis. OH. 45631 CLA

• ,

9AM·SAU . •, 7..81j,$28.27111f., -

dTheo.ug..FreeWoricplaloe

""' &amp; -

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

-FI

;

... - - ""-tioong
tnth•'••••~
is
ubf-ct to the Fedlnl
F•r ttau.tng Act al1111
..... ,...._it i. . .l to

..vahoe payments .. r&gt;'
fees or insuranoe. Csllthe
Office at Consumer
Upcoming certified oorsing Affairs 1011 free at 1-866aasistant clasS. Must have a 278-0003 to 188m If the
higl1 school clploma or GED mongage bn&gt;l&lt;8r or
to apply. Applications may lender
i&amp;
properly
be picked up at Lakin lic:ensed. (This is a public
Hospital, Monday thtOUgh · service announcement
Friday,
8am·4pm
from the Ohio VallO!'
Applications
mus1 be Publishing Company)
returned in no later -than

6472. EOE &amp; A Particlpon1 913-SIIH226, -

t!

1'

Financial , Institution's
Office of Consume(
AffaiTs au ua you ref!.'
nanoe your nome ol

5:00 I'll, Monday throug!l
Friday. .

-···--·*

Hoc:kln&amp; on
Monday.

Gl

Borrow Smart. Contac1
Ohio Division of

hours pet' week, mlriimum
wage and no benefits.
Applicotion&amp; can be picl&lt;ed
up at 1he Village Municipal
Building during regular bu&amp;i·
, _ hoUI&gt; at B:30 AM until

Altnt·-·····-······-············-...........

ball game
against
Federal

••NeTICE**

od
1~ ;e.. il , Dllio \Iaiiey P~ishlng .with calions at llieliiirt desk . No - - - - - - ,
0 0 ""2 -lll&amp;liotil job Into, coli j o b - o r -~n~phone calls please.
213 BR on 2 acres, fenced Lookingforan·~~tam ·
Coordmator 74 :n · AmericanAoooc . ofl.abor 1• DogrM In Uechanicol
~uu~ ~·~roy.
"•-'""
LPN

C..-·······-,····-·-·····-·-·

Southern
senior Wes
Riffle leads off
second base
after hitting a:
double in ttle
fl.rst Inning of
a Tri-Valley
COnference
HOCking
Division base-

•

p - . ill!lP!lJI!imalely 20 ~e

r1

Ch--.y
110
. Pioaae "'l1lW
Elecb-lgot-. ........................~......in pen~rnJr call to Ht up an
fql .. ad for "-'t.....
interview . .. 1·9371 , 308
Eacawllltil ................................. - ...... - ...1130
F - ~..........................................110
2nd ""'· Gallipolis.
F....,. lor
430
Dr'Mrf+ d PT. . . . .
F11r1111lor Sole .........- ................ - ................ 330
paataon open in the
For~ .........................................
Golipolio . and Me9o ara.
For ....'""''''lt"'''''"' ...,....................~·······-... 111 . l'lolollllo liOOFJ. MUll Di ilill
For !WI. or Ttlido._;.............~ ....... ____HO
Ftult8&amp; ,, I a
-~
1D- "*lings-and - ·
tlnds. 20 1D 25 houts a
F....Wwct -.,._....................
weM. Job entaita ct II 00111
Glltw'lll ..........·-··-···--·-··-···
teochlqg and behind 1ho
•• ..--·-·-·-···-·-·-wheel inatnJCiion 1m new
• Gl
Hippy~
...... ____
·-·-··---...
-

'

I·F

Tho Vllago at Rio Grande i&amp;
accepting applications 1or
the pcsttion of part time
summer mowing help. The

Top OdiW • &amp;11-

Reg. (F)
1D a goof DOUitlty 9'ido P'O 11135 'US
homo only. wlltt """""' ""· currency, proof/mint 1111,
7-.5053
dia&lt;.uttll. 1111'S Coin Slq&gt;,
151 2nd "-"ue, Gr'l&amp; JliS
6 - - - ..Good ,., ..
446~:'11~'~1.2----­
-992.-!458.
or poll b - · 100. -10 buy Junk Cln,
call 100. 3B8 0884. n oo
~-goodb - . ·loovoam
g
stor.go I poclting items C1rt Coil Collo&lt;l
304-8112·2-136

&amp; llc*W ....._. ........- .......- ....710
. Can..... ~Jp ••11 .....- ...····-····-··-··-710
. e-M"' , _,.,._ ........................_ ....... 010

.

IIW'W.oom

~

·coins,
·~
·Golden 10K/1.W11!K gold ~.

nuooo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _

'

Mt•Halsm...,..fllh..,.

Wanted: An expertenced

-

WP-~; t.P-Ot'+iWi.

11
Idi;;;;;;e;;;;;;:;;;;r 1

YLE
____

..,..lgatd

AKC

b...,

_....._ . , . . , _ _ . . . . . . . . . K'If. ..................

D5ltL2J08 at COB. E.O.E.

car r 1 •

7132
8 12 I

-

· Rtgi~ttt

Sentinel

·Q:rtbunt.

IJjpee M,~cf' ·.

tt.t'IIC'Idol•• 7, 'kM ......

203 000 2
221 010 0

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

To Place
YOUr Ad,
Call

McCune led off with a dOllble and advanced on a 1-3
ground out 'lbroe straigbl
singles by 'l'bompioo.
Lance Sharp, and Bobby
Anderson brought booje
two runs before Soutbcm
could extinguish the flames
· lied -~'--" 7-v.
"" .·
as FH pu
Chapman led·&lt;iff the filial
inning with a double llil
speedster , Taylor Deem
came.in to run. Riffle drilled
a sinking liner to center
where Grant Smith made
tclta
divio$ snow-cone ca ,
then rifled to second to dou~~~:~runner. A fly out
and their chance to split
with the l..ancers, now solidly out in front of the TVC
Hocking.
Riffle was 3-for-4, while
Chapman wa5 2-3 with two
watb. while Mainbout and
Taylor each had two bits. .
CbaJ?man suffered the
Joss with six strikeouts and
six. walks. McCune, who
pitched the last two innings,
was the winner. Federal
pitching walked two and ·.
struck out seven.
Soothem goes ·to Trimble
Thursday.

FHHS
SHS

www.mydailytribiJme.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Shuts out

-

Websjtes:

'"'""""•123

~· -···•-

.com

AND AJOB
TH

IN E

cu•SSIAEDS
~

~••-

unaHached
. .

~ •-

Exi:ellent condttion 1eady to
move ln. $255,000.00, Call:
(7&lt;0)94!H217 '

NEW 2GOI 4b• · 2ba

1.700 sq ft $49,989
Mi&lt;lwest

740-828-2750
mymidwesthome.com
New home. -never li~ in. New 3 Bedroom homes !rom
2BR, 2 beth&amp;, 3 ocreo mo&lt;e •"14.36 per month. Includes
~ upgrades. t:tetivery &amp;
« less '" Galr~ ·-"1ng mal'l)'
7

.

,,.....,a. ,...,..
r::;:.======:..:S80=,000=·~74~0-446~~·~0=29~_;sat:;
·up. (740)385·2434
~

ot' Somet'hiniJ t'o sa
~....w. . S_pecia( Someone
,.

t:t

,

t.n
'

ted-s!

�111111IIIJ, Apll22, m.

lJ\UiOC&amp;

The oJily Sentinel• Page as

AIIFYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

........ .

.'

-

-

Phillip
Alder

-.....,.

-

211670 Bashlrt flolll
Racne, Ohio
-45111

JOWl'

: ~-- (I::"'..
.....

•

J 10 G 7

•J98 72
• QJ

-

•

1f1411 me . .pel

23 Kllheoine

-2 NT

111'
0111 -3 NT
Pass

33=
-.

Jfftl6
/

.....
......

an

~VINGS

-

Residential and New

Construction

TtiAT'S ~ TI¥Y
CI1£L IT A "T")C (Ol&gt;f''!
'f.-U .

ll••u• catii•IJ Jit hlllllu &gt;

1::an 'be installed over

your existing roof
blsulaledroofs-to .

.

www.r , •• u 'a ·' -.,.-

.·MAW SINe£ I IW.PED YOU
CLEAN UP Ttl' 'tA~ IN

save on your Heating
and Air Conditiooing

8 Act tunnr

&amp;Removal

"'GO

GRE .,..

------

.. "'•

-...-...

~F'

' lcall . . . . . .

11fE eoRII LOSER
'U\11\:6:\!) N=B.ftoE.ID OCT....

Vloort - . . ·•""""""'

WII-

References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @

- an
41 ,.

a-.
p
7

s
N

•
I"

of
I Uan

52

u.•

7

53 0 . , SH.... w

36 ""' ' lrin

10" ' daln
14 Koch lliid

:U - p a l l

41 "'""''.,.

.,. below-'

-?

The , _ ,, oat laking """"''l lime at
trii:O one. '100 should 1alo8 at least 30
seconds to ocunt winners lilld - . .
and to formulate your c:arnp&amp;91.
Take your time oollh this doll. '100 1101!
South, in three no-trump. West leads a
· lourtl&gt;oloighesl spade six. Yesterday,
ldl'IW Noillla ·S.... , _

•lodl!il. ., -

""'*"""

.

'"'*·

. . . . . ''X' • •

•Prompt and Quality
Work
•ReaBonable Rates
*Insured
*Experienced

41 Free tJf

-

4&amp;--

Dullol... 511 -lCIJin

21 Sl8t:lc
30 Ia s
31

9 II:Jq:ar

•tnoAMH:~

ttoat nis CDmiCIID col for GuntmY'I'Idng.
Here, ttoough. East
the loing
his """ and """""'the llpll&lt;lo 10.
How W!ltlld ""' oanlinue?
'100 hiM! Bighltnp lrirlQi: one spade,
three hear1s, two dlriilkAIS am two
cllilo. The nintt1 will come 1mm clubs,
but nvou lose a club
rnayt&gt;e the
- - will cash too many spades.
Hold 141 vour spade queen unli the third
round. Then, slriving to l&lt;eop Wtlit off the
·lead, cash vour ace am king of clubs . do nol take the club - Here, the club queen drops and you win
an OYI!!triclt But nthe q...., does 1101
_..-, p1ay a thim club. 11 Wtlit - .
the 1rid&lt;, ' - '1he11P1des- +4.·H

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Trimming

a..

45 PUiillioi
1 ..

F1151, l!ldays q..-. about dummy: He
is tallllng t1is hand. He has a long surt,
and the conttac1 is 0! no-UU111&gt;- Where
sho'*l he put that long suit?
- . "" get to lhii deal. w1ta1 is the
most mmmon made by declar-

.... the -

'(OlJ

YOLNC'S

Slanley Tree-

28

•a r .,.

r-------------""'1"1 -

.COU..D'

HONOR OF EARlli DAY•••

-

7 DD.....

39 Nattt.e
40 Dpon: or

but not today

wtilt&lt;
23 dow:OIIt

-n;-

-

x·,

~

' 4 Z I ;'fa 26 C:.:.'ll'-

35 Gc:idLI!
aiUdy
116 ~ rod&lt; 5 Have
:U ~
6 Young

Yesterday, it won,

44

3~::.in ~=--

34-

Eaot
All pass

43 ...._..

.....

1 oa.-..
2A.-...,

38 Proloin

r"~s ""~o~6 Alllf&gt; I'IOiftl
Pfi'II1LIZ:ft)! 1 COULI&gt;~'T U~l&gt;t~ITI1trll&gt;
. Tl¥ I~ST~tJCTI0~5-··
IT lftiAS SO CO~FIJSI~6 f

ploce

DOWN

1:7 " 29 c:.n...
32After

Formerly Bll'bcr'' .tuno.Pani

x 1&gt;10 NY

·- --f' r::::.. ::.
•:: .:

2fl!wclar
mi1Sbe1

De*r: South
Vulnerable: East-West -

741J.37&amp;6484
StAt 124
A illwllla,OH
GaJY Curtis- OWner

lCAi

61-ditll · 17
. . .,...,
19 Sclllr

a-

6 _5 2

• K 7 t
• AK9 3

Curtis AUlD AI ...

II

5I She las

21Walldown

• Q82
.,;AKQ

Slop &amp; Compare

.._

51W 1

1hingl
18 Pine lor
51 Lillie tid
20Ne!..rters so~··

.A!G ~

Remodeli11g

!i6111atal

15 Kindof
VIICCine
16 Clew on

-

A 5 3 2

•(omplete

Hours
7:00 All- 8:00 Pll

.......

-~

51Tconluoion
......
12 On ...... 55 F..,.;
13 Cflonge
el·-hOIIN!I

•

·GaRwes

*

7

4t WI 'Si tyj

1 Not: ,. 5

• K 5
• 6t s

•Mew Homes

1•••m7

Ullitl '

11- ........

_..
._ ..

-

ACROSS

kll&gt; OFoot.ObEl..&amp;.lU..
~t:AA\&gt;eu"&lt; Af'AAC1

740-591-8044

~ltROO..,.

-··-&lt;he

'\(OUIW(11:£111JI(.l~l6\.

·. CELEBRITY CIPHER

•

Celfbnly ~ QJilllp'lm!l

by Luis c.npos
n ai!U:IIfml QIICl!IIIOIIS t,' ~ llqi!, IJI!illl'll Jlllld

Eacn 1111« mtr1e Clttlef SUI"CCs for lniXIIer
TG&lt;lllyl cllle: Lllfll"/s G

"T . HOVBBI&lt;

BTUO

YIIUR

FZVF I I_P

&amp;II
hal the Clfthe
cltb ~were +4.has · D 'YJ UTJN IW ZOYH YR GPDZ YR
no spadtlelt
wtoen dummy 1at11es a hand containing FZTJU VYIPF , FZVF VHO Rl LHVSZTD
a long "'" 1hat is not trumps, he should
no1 no1 put rt dooom on his (9ot. - .
VJN II"TRPYB ." -BVPHTD VJNOHRIJ

CoM ~

"'~

lhe trump sun would normally go.
Ceclaror might forgal1hat he is in no~ and ttoink t11a1 the long suit ~

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' Hyou don1 try to win, you nt91f aslliOII hold till
Olympics 1n somebody's backyar(l.' · Jesse Owens

~

rinoa - . cl itt
"""'Iori:
= tat.llmplo
lhd . . . b.
..

• I

BIG NATE

J&amp;l

..... 1Q

Construction

I

W.:'a.l!!.:::..no:-

• VInyl Siding
• Aeplec•MM1t

Wlndaln

•AUUfii'li

,e

REACH 3COIJNTIES

28l'ean ~rie!IC!e

Nhnl' C I 1 &amp;e
Pleasant Valley Hospital is tum!ntly
· acceplinc «!SUmes ror a full-time Patient
. Representative. A minimum of 2 years
dinical (acute) care experience. · Clinical
management t:onsidered
beneficial.
Bachelors degrl!l! in nutSing required
(8SN) or 'current enrolhnent in a BSN

. program.
Send

CES

1510 Vlley DIM

.......... TIC. liW 15550
(lCM) 67545te

, Or fax:
J04.675-6175, Of...,.,~

I

...........

Recwcllng

..

~--

-•
'S 7
•·
7 PI 1711-

II

.COW
; . .; . .;,;_and
,; ; ,;,.;BOY
_____, ,....,--------,
....------..;...-...., r--------='1
IF. yroo., OOCT"" SAID
"""
""
YOU NEBlED 5IRGEI1Y

THIS IS WHY
&lt;or
WE~ ALL
GOING TO Fll'/_

TO LIVE. 'lOO'D EU
THE SIJ!GERY, &lt;&gt;-"'~
1!16Mf~

Ill .,.. COURT OF
CC IIUOIII PLEAS OF
:IIEIOI-COUNTY, OliO
In Rr. .. .... of
1he $ •1 1 of ........
Ulnl 1 • r
8Tipht
C1iunlli
C.. Wo. OICVIIIi1
! * lh •• of Ilia

i'oreJII """ . . . .

C1iunlli)
"" ...... -

••,..

~...

to
•qUat

_..;i.:;:l

ed II llllluma 13 ....

4411, Helga County
Died llool&lt;
Being 1he ...... ,...

delcrlbed In
llool&lt; 12, f1-v8 42,
lleJga County Deed
Aecorc:11.
""RCEL
NUUBEA:
1602512.000
The DpetlattillotiN!'Iet« Pf11ra
for ... following relief
1he TN-. aulhariiJ to
IIIIa Court gnnt
_...., 1he 1'1111 - ... loo1ll In

1'~·:-·:··="*~. ......... InC., ttl
profit

e::C:~~~
f'lPt:':;j~ N011CE "
o.
- . r...-

IIIIa

JMI"Ion

Provlchnce

111aa1onery

to

"-gulllr

a.ptlet

of " - I IEIMionliry AIIOC'-tlon, Inc., an
B411oit Church (.U Olllo 1101 for profit

Dtiecoi• of Ilia Forwt Cotpcutlan.•
Run Blptlet Chuteli) Tlila llllltar .,_ ._,
he8 tiled • petition edildUied lor ' - hlg
.............. c-y In ......... County
CoiiWhOil ·" - Cow1 Wil&amp;mali ...... Court
to _.lor 11.00 .,. 1o1- on Ilia 14th *r u1 Jutr,
1ow1ng
l1bad 1'1111 21101. beglnnlf!g et
10:00 o'cloclt ._,,
llluiiJd In Sectlait I, lllerk - E.
81M1ta
T2, IHI13W, I aile b r '0011521
· T-Ip. County D1 Hllllcl8r, S'-ta a
...... llid 8tiW of S.U1 Alia
Ohlo, -~num- 11 Locual 8ttMt, P.O.
11er ,._,-Five (25) llal! 325
Tlilrty-~ (13) Galllpolla, Ohio 41131 .
on Ken''a Run In V.B. PH: 7.......1152
Hortons Addition to FAX: 740 • • ne:z
... Vllllge., l'.:x=iif· (4) 15, 22, 21, (5).
. . . . . . uld IIIII being .-d-

-=

r,.

''

-J~~-;::::,:.;4

74Niaz

7

•• .....
,*'
AA/EOE

..,_KI

.....

l'lllv.llef llaspial

c/D ....... Im

David Lewis
740-992-6971

_ __..

•: ?Js\.3::.::.••

resumes to:
PI

•'Dick8 .
•Gar1ge1
• Pole Bulldingl
·~ Addllklna
Ownr.

•

F-&amp;tl-

740-367-o536
For Remocloll-c Uid New U..llulldlli&amp;

C.U: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

--·-

when ....-;ng -•n't ...m &lt;ight
LIBRA !Sept 23-0ct. 23i - An Invitation

you and your spouoe .-.eel"' ,mi~ht

appear to be apeo:lal and OKcltlng to you,
but atooold your one-aroc&gt;-oo~ ttolnk '"""ron~~y, - · t get .,..._ He !'' she might

,....," "" k.

lr&amp;

.._,.nt

full woll lhat an
abjootlw lo
t10!1n11011 - - b l e. 101 ~· would

-will _bol- ·"'·•··- MIIWU~,
, . lhlngo
lNI ""'
will
t .... auDDIII.

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bottom, OH

740-985-4141

IOUPlONUTZ

Cell: 740-416-1834
25+ 1ft"S u,nie~~ee Frw fi•lilrwlu•

Advertise
in this space for .
$64 per month

could be a diffemm story.
llloi.IAUS (April 20-May 20)- Foa'*'m D.
'AI
oel once said, "The only thing we
hiDe to laar is tsar ttaetf,~ and that is
advice J'O' need to bllow. Otherwise,
dot.tJts win cause vou to fail at somethtng
that ooukt haW~ been suooessfut •
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) h isn't
._.,. ~ to turn down a loan to a
friend that you really can't afbrd to .
make, 10 don't think Ill of youraett. Follow
~ common sense. instead of your
•motions m this caee . ·
CANCER (June 21 -July 22)- Don't ruin
all the anangements you'w already
made trying to please everybody which is impossll:ie, no matter how hard
you try. Do the best you can and let the
chips fall where they may.
LEO (July 23-~g . 22) - You may
believe a friend Ia in the position to open
an .important door tor you , but, in reality,
this might not be 1Ne. If your pal tells you
.he or she can't oor'T'IPfY, beiei.'e this person or you'll make )IOlireell aJok.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep1. 22) -'!bur desire
to minQie amicably with a IJOl4t of ·new
people i&amp; .admirable, but your judgment
Wfth regaRI to strangers may not be toQ
keen. Keep your guard up, eapecially

nat. Unfortunately, you might l1d8 your
financial position tar better1han It actually is and suffer the consequences.
S~GITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) ~18 i• a atrong poul)llity that you
midlt allow aomeone who is a user to
takoe advantage of your generous nature.
Interestingly, you wlll know you're being
had , yet simply won't care.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22..Jan . 19) - It'&amp;
important to ~llze that if you're not getdng me type ot results you requil'@ ,
chances are you ~ve designad a' faulty
game plan . Go back to the drawing board
to fashion a suooesaful route.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-F-eb. 19) Ask
yourwett why people who Hkiom do anything for you are the onea you are now
catering to. To make ~ worse. you
are Ignoring teliable ~. AeYer&amp;e that.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Stop
you!Wif trom Jumping in and buying
.amttnlng Impulsively. lnttHd, careful)'
•Nitpl the ttem a.s lo wMthef It la 'WCM1h
the priol, w.n when oflwred by • welllntllitiOI.td fr.....O.
ARIES (Moroh 21-April 18)- 'll&gt;u know

GARAELD

______ ______
_..;.._

.I

,,

1

Y 0 H R_U l,·•

I I I ,.
Z

I
•

rol:•~--~=-~;-~~-~-~~~-~~-~~
1

imponant to be reallstic about something
you want and lillhether you can aftord it or

Drywall,

•

where If.)IOU\Nhftnplaytt-eomee
a l&amp;adership
• ~
11-:s~
to--artan

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) -

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

,.

mants ·that raquire you to be a follower, It

I!M • -

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

Remodeling, Room
Additions
'L ocal Cotib740-317-o544

You're likely to' handle yoursetf. quite
ad~ in the year ahead in situations

A PRINT NlloliiUED
lfTTERS IN SQUARES

'11'01'

r
I

rrrrrrr1

IIIII III

SCUMI.E1S , . . . H2l"" .
Up II :Jiael- B111:t -I · 1 1 -cAlL~ 'MU
:w; '
"'l'at.ayllll . . r UtJil
• ,. gbelllelaiCAU.it~·

•·*'pll.

ARLO ~JANIS

�111111IIIJ, Apll22, m.

lJ\UiOC&amp;

The oJily Sentinel• Page as

AIIFYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

........ .

.'

-

-

Phillip
Alder

-.....,.

-

211670 Bashlrt flolll
Racne, Ohio
-45111

JOWl'

: ~-- (I::"'..
.....

•

J 10 G 7

•J98 72
• QJ

-

•

1f1411 me . .pel

23 Kllheoine

-2 NT

111'
0111 -3 NT
Pass

33=
-.

Jfftl6
/

.....
......

an

~VINGS

-

Residential and New

Construction

TtiAT'S ~ TI¥Y
CI1£L IT A "T")C (Ol&gt;f''!
'f.-U .

ll••u• catii•IJ Jit hlllllu &gt;

1::an 'be installed over

your existing roof
blsulaledroofs-to .

.

www.r , •• u 'a ·' -.,.-

.·MAW SINe£ I IW.PED YOU
CLEAN UP Ttl' 'tA~ IN

save on your Heating
and Air Conditiooing

8 Act tunnr

&amp;Removal

"'GO

GRE .,..

------

.. "'•

-...-...

~F'

' lcall . . . . . .

11fE eoRII LOSER
'U\11\:6:\!) N=B.ftoE.ID OCT....

Vloort - . . ·•""""""'

WII-

References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @

- an
41 ,.

a-.
p
7

s
N

•
I"

of
I Uan

52

u.•

7

53 0 . , SH.... w

36 ""' ' lrin

10" ' daln
14 Koch lliid

:U - p a l l

41 "'""''.,.

.,. below-'

-?

The , _ ,, oat laking """"''l lime at
trii:O one. '100 should 1alo8 at least 30
seconds to ocunt winners lilld - . .
and to formulate your c:arnp&amp;91.
Take your time oollh this doll. '100 1101!
South, in three no-trump. West leads a
· lourtl&gt;oloighesl spade six. Yesterday,
ldl'IW Noillla ·S.... , _

•lodl!il. ., -

""'*"""

.

'"'*·

. . . . . ''X' • •

•Prompt and Quality
Work
•ReaBonable Rates
*Insured
*Experienced

41 Free tJf

-

4&amp;--

Dullol... 511 -lCIJin

21 Sl8t:lc
30 Ia s
31

9 II:Jq:ar

•tnoAMH:~

ttoat nis CDmiCIID col for GuntmY'I'Idng.
Here, ttoough. East
the loing
his """ and """""'the llpll&lt;lo 10.
How W!ltlld ""' oanlinue?
'100 hiM! Bighltnp lrirlQi: one spade,
three hear1s, two dlriilkAIS am two
cllilo. The nintt1 will come 1mm clubs,
but nvou lose a club
rnayt&gt;e the
- - will cash too many spades.
Hold 141 vour spade queen unli the third
round. Then, slriving to l&lt;eop Wtlit off the
·lead, cash vour ace am king of clubs . do nol take the club - Here, the club queen drops and you win
an OYI!!triclt But nthe q...., does 1101
_..-, p1ay a thim club. 11 Wtlit - .
the 1rid&lt;, ' - '1he11P1des- +4.·H

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Trimming

a..

45 PUiillioi
1 ..

F1151, l!ldays q..-. about dummy: He
is tallllng t1is hand. He has a long surt,
and the conttac1 is 0! no-UU111&gt;- Where
sho'*l he put that long suit?
- . "" get to lhii deal. w1ta1 is the
most mmmon made by declar-

.... the -

'(OlJ

YOLNC'S

Slanley Tree-

28

•a r .,.

r-------------""'1"1 -

.COU..D'

HONOR OF EARlli DAY•••

-

7 DD.....

39 Nattt.e
40 Dpon: or

but not today

wtilt&lt;
23 dow:OIIt

-n;-

-

x·,

~

' 4 Z I ;'fa 26 C:.:.'ll'-

35 Gc:idLI!
aiUdy
116 ~ rod&lt; 5 Have
:U ~
6 Young

Yesterday, it won,

44

3~::.in ~=--

34-

Eaot
All pass

43 ...._..

.....

1 oa.-..
2A.-...,

38 Proloin

r"~s ""~o~6 Alllf&gt; I'IOiftl
Pfi'II1LIZ:ft)! 1 COULI&gt;~'T U~l&gt;t~ITI1trll&gt;
. Tl¥ I~ST~tJCTI0~5-··
IT lftiAS SO CO~FIJSI~6 f

ploce

DOWN

1:7 " 29 c:.n...
32After

Formerly Bll'bcr'' .tuno.Pani

x 1&gt;10 NY

·- --f' r::::.. ::.
•:: .:

2fl!wclar
mi1Sbe1

De*r: South
Vulnerable: East-West -

741J.37&amp;6484
StAt 124
A illwllla,OH
GaJY Curtis- OWner

lCAi

61-ditll · 17
. . .,...,
19 Sclllr

a-

6 _5 2

• K 7 t
• AK9 3

Curtis AUlD AI ...

II

5I She las

21Walldown

• Q82
.,;AKQ

Slop &amp; Compare

.._

51W 1

1hingl
18 Pine lor
51 Lillie tid
20Ne!..rters so~··

.A!G ~

Remodeli11g

!i6111atal

15 Kindof
VIICCine
16 Clew on

-

A 5 3 2

•(omplete

Hours
7:00 All- 8:00 Pll

.......

-~

51Tconluoion
......
12 On ...... 55 F..,.;
13 Cflonge
el·-hOIIN!I

•

·GaRwes

*

7

4t WI 'Si tyj

1 Not: ,. 5

• K 5
• 6t s

•Mew Homes

1•••m7

Ullitl '

11- ........

_..
._ ..

-

ACROSS

kll&gt; OFoot.ObEl..&amp;.lU..
~t:AA\&gt;eu"&lt; Af'AAC1

740-591-8044

~ltROO..,.

-··-&lt;he

'\(OUIW(11:£111JI(.l~l6\.

·. CELEBRITY CIPHER

•

Celfbnly ~ QJilllp'lm!l

by Luis c.npos
n ai!U:IIfml QIICl!IIIOIIS t,' ~ llqi!, IJI!illl'll Jlllld

Eacn 1111« mtr1e Clttlef SUI"CCs for lniXIIer
TG&lt;lllyl cllle: Lllfll"/s G

"T . HOVBBI&lt;

BTUO

YIIUR

FZVF I I_P

&amp;II
hal the Clfthe
cltb ~were +4.has · D 'YJ UTJN IW ZOYH YR GPDZ YR
no spadtlelt
wtoen dummy 1at11es a hand containing FZTJU VYIPF , FZVF VHO Rl LHVSZTD
a long "'" 1hat is not trumps, he should
no1 no1 put rt dooom on his (9ot. - .
VJN II"TRPYB ." -BVPHTD VJNOHRIJ

CoM ~

"'~

lhe trump sun would normally go.
Ceclaror might forgal1hat he is in no~ and ttoink t11a1 the long suit ~

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' Hyou don1 try to win, you nt91f aslliOII hold till
Olympics 1n somebody's backyar(l.' · Jesse Owens

~

rinoa - . cl itt
"""'Iori:
= tat.llmplo
lhd . . . b.
..

• I

BIG NATE

J&amp;l

..... 1Q

Construction

I

W.:'a.l!!.:::..no:-

• VInyl Siding
• Aeplec•MM1t

Wlndaln

•AUUfii'li

,e

REACH 3COIJNTIES

28l'ean ~rie!IC!e

Nhnl' C I 1 &amp;e
Pleasant Valley Hospital is tum!ntly
· acceplinc «!SUmes ror a full-time Patient
. Representative. A minimum of 2 years
dinical (acute) care experience. · Clinical
management t:onsidered
beneficial.
Bachelors degrl!l! in nutSing required
(8SN) or 'current enrolhnent in a BSN

. program.
Send

CES

1510 Vlley DIM

.......... TIC. liW 15550
(lCM) 67545te

, Or fax:
J04.675-6175, Of...,.,~

I

...........

Recwcllng

..

~--

-•
'S 7
•·
7 PI 1711-

II

.COW
; . .; . .;,;_and
,; ; ,;,.;BOY
_____, ,....,--------,
....------..;...-...., r--------='1
IF. yroo., OOCT"" SAID
"""
""
YOU NEBlED 5IRGEI1Y

THIS IS WHY
&lt;or
WE~ ALL
GOING TO Fll'/_

TO LIVE. 'lOO'D EU
THE SIJ!GERY, &lt;&gt;-"'~
1!16Mf~

Ill .,.. COURT OF
CC IIUOIII PLEAS OF
:IIEIOI-COUNTY, OliO
In Rr. .. .... of
1he $ •1 1 of ........
Ulnl 1 • r
8Tipht
C1iunlli
C.. Wo. OICVIIIi1
! * lh •• of Ilia

i'oreJII """ . . . .

C1iunlli)
"" ...... -

••,..

~...

to
•qUat

_..;i.:;:l

ed II llllluma 13 ....

4411, Helga County
Died llool&lt;
Being 1he ...... ,...

delcrlbed In
llool&lt; 12, f1-v8 42,
lleJga County Deed
Aecorc:11.
""RCEL
NUUBEA:
1602512.000
The DpetlattillotiN!'Iet« Pf11ra
for ... following relief
1he TN-. aulhariiJ to
IIIIa Court gnnt
_...., 1he 1'1111 - ... loo1ll In

1'~·:-·:··="*~. ......... InC., ttl
profit

e::C:~~~
f'lPt:':;j~ N011CE "
o.
- . r...-

IIIIa

JMI"Ion

Provlchnce

111aa1onery

to

"-gulllr

a.ptlet

of " - I IEIMionliry AIIOC'-tlon, Inc., an
B411oit Church (.U Olllo 1101 for profit

Dtiecoi• of Ilia Forwt Cotpcutlan.•
Run Blptlet Chuteli) Tlila llllltar .,_ ._,
he8 tiled • petition edildUied lor ' - hlg
.............. c-y In ......... County
CoiiWhOil ·" - Cow1 Wil&amp;mali ...... Court
to _.lor 11.00 .,. 1o1- on Ilia 14th *r u1 Jutr,
1ow1ng
l1bad 1'1111 21101. beglnnlf!g et
10:00 o'cloclt ._,,
llluiiJd In Sectlait I, lllerk - E.
81M1ta
T2, IHI13W, I aile b r '0011521
· T-Ip. County D1 Hllllcl8r, S'-ta a
...... llid 8tiW of S.U1 Alia
Ohlo, -~num- 11 Locual 8ttMt, P.O.
11er ,._,-Five (25) llal! 325
Tlilrty-~ (13) Galllpolla, Ohio 41131 .
on Ken''a Run In V.B. PH: 7.......1152
Hortons Addition to FAX: 740 • • ne:z
... Vllllge., l'.:x=iif· (4) 15, 22, 21, (5).
. . . . . . uld IIIII being .-d-

-=

r,.

''

-J~~-;::::,:.;4

74Niaz

7

•• .....
,*'
AA/EOE

..,_KI

.....

l'lllv.llef llaspial

c/D ....... Im

David Lewis
740-992-6971

_ __..

•: ?Js\.3::.::.••

resumes to:
PI

•'Dick8 .
•Gar1ge1
• Pole Bulldingl
·~ Addllklna
Ownr.

•

F-&amp;tl-

740-367-o536
For Remocloll-c Uid New U..llulldlli&amp;

C.U: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

--·-

when ....-;ng -•n't ...m &lt;ight
LIBRA !Sept 23-0ct. 23i - An Invitation

you and your spouoe .-.eel"' ,mi~ht

appear to be apeo:lal and OKcltlng to you,
but atooold your one-aroc&gt;-oo~ ttolnk '"""ron~~y, - · t get .,..._ He !'' she might

,....," "" k.

lr&amp;

.._,.nt

full woll lhat an
abjootlw lo
t10!1n11011 - - b l e. 101 ~· would

-will _bol- ·"'·•··- MIIWU~,
, . lhlngo
lNI ""'
will
t .... auDDIII.

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bottom, OH

740-985-4141

IOUPlONUTZ

Cell: 740-416-1834
25+ 1ft"S u,nie~~ee Frw fi•lilrwlu•

Advertise
in this space for .
$64 per month

could be a diffemm story.
llloi.IAUS (April 20-May 20)- Foa'*'m D.
'AI
oel once said, "The only thing we
hiDe to laar is tsar ttaetf,~ and that is
advice J'O' need to bllow. Otherwise,
dot.tJts win cause vou to fail at somethtng
that ooukt haW~ been suooessfut •
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) h isn't
._.,. ~ to turn down a loan to a
friend that you really can't afbrd to .
make, 10 don't think Ill of youraett. Follow
~ common sense. instead of your
•motions m this caee . ·
CANCER (June 21 -July 22)- Don't ruin
all the anangements you'w already
made trying to please everybody which is impossll:ie, no matter how hard
you try. Do the best you can and let the
chips fall where they may.
LEO (July 23-~g . 22) - You may
believe a friend Ia in the position to open
an .important door tor you , but, in reality,
this might not be 1Ne. If your pal tells you
.he or she can't oor'T'IPfY, beiei.'e this person or you'll make )IOlireell aJok.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep1. 22) -'!bur desire
to minQie amicably with a IJOl4t of ·new
people i&amp; .admirable, but your judgment
Wfth regaRI to strangers may not be toQ
keen. Keep your guard up, eapecially

nat. Unfortunately, you might l1d8 your
financial position tar better1han It actually is and suffer the consequences.
S~GITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) ~18 i• a atrong poul)llity that you
midlt allow aomeone who is a user to
takoe advantage of your generous nature.
Interestingly, you wlll know you're being
had , yet simply won't care.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22..Jan . 19) - It'&amp;
important to ~llze that if you're not getdng me type ot results you requil'@ ,
chances are you ~ve designad a' faulty
game plan . Go back to the drawing board
to fashion a suooesaful route.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-F-eb. 19) Ask
yourwett why people who Hkiom do anything for you are the onea you are now
catering to. To make ~ worse. you
are Ignoring teliable ~. AeYer&amp;e that.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Stop
you!Wif trom Jumping in and buying
.amttnlng Impulsively. lnttHd, careful)'
•Nitpl the ttem a.s lo wMthef It la 'WCM1h
the priol, w.n when oflwred by • welllntllitiOI.td fr.....O.
ARIES (Moroh 21-April 18)- 'll&gt;u know

GARAELD

______ ______
_..;.._

.I

,,

1

Y 0 H R_U l,·•

I I I ,.
Z

I
•

rol:•~--~=-~;-~~-~-~~~-~~-~~
1

imponant to be reallstic about something
you want and lillhether you can aftord it or

Drywall,

•

where If.)IOU\Nhftnplaytt-eomee
a l&amp;adership
• ~
11-:s~
to--artan

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) -

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

,.

mants ·that raquire you to be a follower, It

I!M • -

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

Remodeling, Room
Additions
'L ocal Cotib740-317-o544

You're likely to' handle yoursetf. quite
ad~ in the year ahead in situations

A PRINT NlloliiUED
lfTTERS IN SQUARES

'11'01'

r
I

rrrrrrr1

IIIII III

SCUMI.E1S , . . . H2l"" .
Up II :Jiael- B111:t -I · 1 1 -cAlL~ 'MU
:w; '
"'l'at.ayllll . . r UtJil
• ,. gbelllelaiCAU.it~·

•·*'pll.

ARLO ~JANIS

�P &amp; 86 • 'Ire llWy Seut.itel

www.a)daiJJ

I hwl ft1111

Meigs SWCD photo
contest winners, A2

Ja•ttes scores 30 as cavs
beat up Wim•1ls 116-86
BrT••Ww-••SSOC»ttn

shots the down sttefoCh with a
cJww: to win. 'They ~
cold again. but ibis time it
a.EVFLAND - Maybe had a lot to do with
Gilbert Armas was talking Cleveland's
defense.
!'!!fSS

about- ~Cavaliers.
The Cleveland team be
mel lbe Washiogtoo Wwuds
&amp;1m ~b night doesn't
loot so
le.

LeBron James SOOial 30
points, Zydnmas Dgaustls
aMrd 16, and ibe Cavalim;
played tbW besi game in
n ... dhs, blowing out Arenas
and Co. 11~86 to take a 2~
lead in an opening-round
l:l'~scries oozing wilh
1be 30-point margin of
victory was lbe lqest in

Cleveland's postseaSoll histocy. 1be Cavs were playing
in fbcir 1121h playoff pmc
James SCIOil!d 14 poiDlS in
die lhinl quaru:r when ibe
Cavs opened a 25-point lead
over the Wizards. whose
defensive scheme CIOIIliDg
iDio their lhird series in as
many JeU5 wilh Cleveland
was to slow lames by rough-

•

.......,!&amp;e

WIN UP TO $1,000 ! ! !

In addition to Mulberry
Avenue, wort will also be done
on Legion Terrace, Anne Stmet,
· East Second Street, West Second
Street, Coon Street, East Main
Street, West Maio Street,
.
..... Sapu:*'PJ 1
Butternut Avenue,
Lincoln
WO!tecs from Columbia Gas have begun replacing gas line on Mulberry Terrace and Mecbaaic StreeL
In addition to replacing line,
Al!9008 in Pomeroy. The pojacl will atled several other stleets but for now
where practical. indoor meters will
mololisls .are asked to .avoid Mulblmy Avenue if po 5 5 il)le,

OBDUARIF.S
·Pale AS
• Aclsellel Thomas Tope

HAD KilT.
MQI~DfC.

y.,,.

#l FIDor
(;o~ D«&lt;kr!

Rli Mid
.

R~q,.m

.

--

,,.. .......... .._... ......

.......

740-41416-0007

See .......u
• FIISI imrilalion

Iii Jll ttl 2iiJ

,six-year dL'Ciedilaliol1.
See
A3
·

r.

•

~· HEAP
.
.
...,,.,.~~"" ....'

progtam

eros April :J&gt;.

Pile AS

._._....._

1&amp;1 UMW discussious.

TODAY'S
NUMBER IS:

·s. Pile AS

• L..ocal.Briefs.

· See

hiJt AS

Lll'KI'......

215-J. ~Sind

" T I _ G a . . . AS

.Homestead
exemption
applications
being accepted

Jobless
rates dip
in Meigs,
GaDia

BY ClwLENE ltoER..tcH
HOEFLICHOMYDAILYSENTINELCa..4

ft.PIIa1

.t WV25551

liUrS.u

~

......
0

~·

• 11 I 'I 1 E r i e a -

'./I

BY BETH SeRGnn:

:a SllcnoNS -

U PAGES

Annie's Mailbox ·
~ndars
DianeMcYiy

N .A: • CX:C.A

a.-A

, fnlm Pate Bl

CIPI.Sc c...S Ava.e

Eagles bad II for lhe game.
Next on lhe schedule for
the Green and White is a
road game against River
Valley on Tuesday. · Start
time wiU be 5 p.m.

- 'A]'HENS
.
1/15
Wtlt u-. Street
'-

(7ffl446-7619 ..

..
·.

t"A'" .594-3571

a

13BlfOII\'DofoiLvsemNEL.COM

INDEX

Eastern

Latest Diural depicts
1920's street scene

auction, craft
and horse
shows set

;lta&amp;S IP1'dd7E!i!IIM

...............,lAc

jobless rales in Gallia and
·::S~.s were down
In Mlu:dl, Gallia COUnty's
.
- J . R 'li!Ijoblessness was put at 6.4 The latest mural in the 'Walk Into Middleport's Past" series depicts South Third Avenue
.percent, dow.n two-tenths of during the.early 20th century. It was purchased by Bruce Fisher.
!I percent from the 6.6 percent posted in February.
Meigs County, which came
in at Io.z percem in
February, liropped fiveteolhs of a pcaoent to 10.2
peroeot the following month.
Lawrence COunty's rate
was down by five-tenths of
Middleport
Mayor secured by the Middleport
a percent, from 5.4 percent
BY BAlAN J. REED
Mich~l Gerlach, who also Development Group from
in February to 4.9 ,percent in BREEDOMYOAILY.SENllNELCOM
serves as downtown revital- the
Appalachian
March. Vmton County feU
Learning
MIDDLEPORT -The ization coordinator, said the Community
? . . . . . . . . . AS
latest in a series of histori- newest mural is unusual, in Project.
The mural project is part
cal-themed murals is now in that it depicts a residential
place
in
downtown street and because it of the development group's
includes homes qtat are still ongoing effort toward
Middleport.
The picture po~tcarct scene :&gt;«n tm.N()T\!1 Third today. ~ dowptown revitalization, lt
The mufdl Is the foilrtb to ties In with a walking tour
depicts North 11tird Avenue
be
plaaed in the downtown of historic Middleport sites,
between Race and Coal
shopping
district. The first including stations on lhe
Streets in the early 1920's. It
was donated by Bruce two and the apparatus used Underground Railroad, old ·
Fisher, whose family home to hang the murals were business locations and curpurchased using $3,000 relit points of interest.
is depicted in the scene.

Portland

Fu: 314-675-7317

........

on Tuesday, revealing. that

...

Classifieds
Comics

Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A3
A3
B3-4

Bs
A4
A5
A5
BSection
A2

POMEROY
-This
~eekend will ~ a busy one
m Portland wtth a .dinner,
auction and craft show as
weU as the start of the third
season of the Ohio River
Producers "Horse Fuo
Sbow" series.
The events be~ on
Friday when the POrtland
Comoiunity Centers hosts a
chicken noodle dinner and
auction. Dinner begins at 6
p.m. with the auction to follow with all proceeds _going
to
community
center
improvements. Tickets are
$10 for the dinner whicb, in
addition to chicken noodles,
will feature mashed potatoes, green beans, cole slaw,
.rolls and homemade pies
and cakes. The auction will
feature a ¥ariety of "unique"
items, according to PCC
President Mila Raymond.

PI

771 -

,_11a•d. AS

..

•

affected.

Km St:ainmen, a spokesperson
for ~lumbia Gas, said die company is aware that particulady in the
downtown business district it may
not be possible to move lhe gas
meters outSide and the company is
fun:her aware of the aesthetic concerns some business ·owners have
in relation to relocating meters.
'There are going to be exceptions," Stammen said about what
meters will be replaaed.
Stammen also said the company
was awam of the number of festivals in Pomeroy, have been
informed of the dates and will
work around lhem in an attempt to
not block traffic. particularly on
East and West Main Streets.
Stammen added the company
obviously wants -minimal incon. venieoce~ for residents during the
project but when its done Pomeroy ·
will have "as new and modem of a

GALLIPOLIS
Unemployment fates in
southern Ohio counties
were either down slightly or
stable in March, the Ohio
Depattment of Jobs and

. menms djco(SS
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13 PQints,
"nle Wizard•' problem In
Oame 1 wu diey· mined

-

ru~

BY KEVIN Ka tY
KI&lt;EI.LYOMYDAILYmiBUNE.COM

r.

Family Oxygen

Game l, COIIJd f~ further

(10)00 4X

·be tooved outside with around 130

Oati
~~~~~-----~[~~~senn~~·
~
ce~s~~~
was
by
the
ODJFS
~

M .... SINit•G 'all

quarter,
Washington center Brendan
Haywood was ejected for a
flagrant foul ~n James.
HaywoOd didn't make much ,
of an effort to go for the ball "
and shoved James hard with
both hands as he drove. ·
Haywood, wbo h3d an
altercation with James in

Ana~

INSIDE .

See P.F A3
• Revival services
planned. See
A3
• GCCIBCBioes
JWo loc41iQrrs

third

WP - Ptttcl; LP- ~.

will remain for at least a "few
more weeks" according to one of
die employees though the entin:
Pomeroy~ may tab: -severaltoontbs to complote.

PLAY COVERALL BINGO

sil!oe a biR trade in Febnwy
changed iheir roster. As lhe
!!~l!JIJs neared, Arenas
'die Cavs out. saying
"I lhint everybody wants
Cleveland in that first
round" and "We don't think
they can Ileal us in lhe playoffs tiJnle years straight."
Those romments followed
Wu.anls faward DeShawn
Stevenson calling James
uovcaated.." .
- Washington haS lost eight ,
stmight games to Clevelaud
· in the playoffs, apd lhe
, Wu.anls will have to figure
something___c.()Ut_ before
Thursday night's Game 3 in
Washington or they'll be
heading off on summer
vacation, again oourtesy of
the Cavs.
Arenas went 2-for-lO
from the field ·and Caron
Butler and Antawn Jamison
wen: both 4-of-13 as the
Wizards' Big Three combined for 28 points. The lrio ·
spent much of the fourth
quartec sitting.
James withstood more
rough treatment by the

E-..1,a. CS-ford1
000
10 111

rr

l'OMEROY - This week
Columbia Gas begaO its SU million pipeline improvemem project
in Pomeroy, a project which ts a
compoueot of tbe company's $2
billion project to improve its
19,000-mile underground pipeline
system over the next 2S years.
Wodrets are currently digging
on Mulberry Avenue where they

•

Damon Jones.
·.· . · ·
. Wally Szi:zerl)iik· added
l S points for dle defending
Eastern CQoference champions, who . have suuggfed

w
e

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"""'"'IIL""INTOMVIli\U.YSEN11NELCOIII

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be-

discipline for the inlentiOiial ·
foul.
It was hardly the only
physical play.
In the frrst half, Arenas
was called for a technical
foul
and · Cleveland's
Anderson Varejao was ~veo
a flagrant foul after hitting
Washington's
Andray
Blatche in the face. '
The Cavs were already up
by 15 points when Haywood
was ejected, but lhey fed off
the play and pushed their
lead to 2S early in lhe fourth
on a 3-pointer by Daniel
. Oibtoo, who finialled with

SPORTS

m:J:',!

k may
for Plan B.
The Wu.anls bardly bolh~ James, who finished
wilh 12 assists and nine
n:bounds to bairly miss his
third career postseas011
triple-double. lames went to
die bench wilh 6:12 left At
that point, the Cavaliers
were leat!iug '!Y. 24 points
and coach Mike Brown
inserted
seldom-used
reserves Dwayne.Jones and

Wtzards.
. In the

•

die dilfcamce. James

tqJt Arenas iD cbcct ....
Joe Smilh did a nioe job on
Jamison. SZClltlbiK., a sew- ·
ec not blown fuc his
Wasbington mot 38 pert~e~~t debse, baudled Bull«,
from lhe field, missOd ll who d iso't right
me throws aod was Oldn:- of a hip injwy.
It diclo't Dike lol!g fuc die
bom~elod 49-34.
The Cavaliel's, wbo stag- Game I resliness·to n:tum.
Not long aftca- checkj~
geRlCI into the piKtst'aSOD,
in,
Arenas was rAiled for a
played some of fbcir best
as
be t.•mped
bast(fball in wccts to close foul
Szcu:dJiU: from bdriod An
out lhe seoond quarta:.
Wilh die S(XR lied J6.all, iDstant after die wbisde,
Dgaust.as stqlped outside to Arenas gave Cleveland's
drop a jumper. ~ a forward a hallbeaated elbow
17-4 .run
Cavs up and was sllp)ICd with tbe
53~ at
. . Gibson ~
made a 3-pointer and three
Van:j10 lheo paid back
fu:le throws in the ~ and Blardle fuc his Game I
.,,....
SZCllabiak made a · IIDpCI' clothesliDe of James by ·
ch!hhing
Washington's
big
Olelela1d
cavatiets'
Daniel
Gibson
(11
aets
COieawlilled
by
le8mn
James,
left,
and .loli
and llOOrCd on a nK
IIUIIXIOSS
the
face
md
was
Smml
(321
after
Gibson
5CIOrirC
in
lbe
fourtll
quariBr
of
Game
2
df
dilelf
Nil
pli)
:off ..S:
diehlskd
kelball series Monday in Cle\leland. Olelleland won 11686.
But Oevelmd's defense assessed die fh,grant foul

him up wilh ......
·--._..,c..,...
fouls.

.
IQg

-

Boy Scout project, A3

Lentes departs for Botswana with Peace Corps
STAFF REPORT
NEWSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RUTLAND
-John
Robert Leotes, Jr., 23, of
Rutland, has been accepted
into lhe Peace Corps. Lentes
departed
Sunday
for
Botswana.
Lentes will begin pre-service trajniog as a non-g~v­
ernmenW
orgamzauon
development and HIVIAIDS
education Peace Corps
Volunteer. Upon graduation
from volu.(lteer training in.
June, Lentes will be educating people on HJVI AIDS
while e~tpanding local capac·
ity to cope with the disease.
Lentes is the son of John
Lentes of Gallipolis and
Cathy Cultice of Rutland,
and a graduate of Meigs
Higb School in Pomeroy.
lie went on to attend
Cleveland State University,
where be earned a Bachelor

John Robert Lentn, Jr.
of Arts in international rela. lions last year.;
"Once meeting other students from foreign coun·
tries, I was given a taste of
their culture and was eager
to experience as many other
foreign cultures as possi·
ble," said Lentes.
•

..

During the fir&amp;t · three
months of bis service,
Lentes will live with a host .
family in Botswana to
· become fully immersed in
the country's language and
culture. After acquiring the
language and cultural skills
necessary to assist his community, Lentes will serve
for two years in Botswana,
living in a manner similar to
people in his host country.
Lentes joins the 292 Ohio
residents currently serving in
the Peace Corps. More than
6,072 Ohio residents bave
served in the Peace Corps
since its founding in 1961.
Botswana, located in
southern Africa, has hosted
nearly 2,000 Peace Corps
Volunteers since it was ini_.
tially established in 1966. In
1997' Peace Corps baited its
program and re-entered the
Plnn . . 111 1 1, AS

POMEROY Wbile
most people applied for and
became eligible · for the
expanded
Homestead
Property Tax Exemption last
year, those wbo did not now
have another opportunity. .
Those eligible Ohioans senior citizens and permanently and totally disabled
Ults - who did not apply
·for the credit in 2007 have
until June 2 to do so for Ibis
year. Those who have
already iJ,pplied need not
reapply.
The 2008 application
includes a box, ''Late application for prior year," that
taxpayers may check to
claim the exemption for the
2007 tax year as well.
"We are grateful to all the
individuals throughout the
state who have helped
spread the word so that
most seniors and people
with disabilities can benefit
from
the
Homestead
Exemption," said Barbara
E. Riley, director of lhe
Ohio Depanmem of Aging.
"But, we will not rest until
all eligible Ohioans are '
making the most of this
valuable tax credit:·:
Expansion .of the homestead exempuon was H key
compohent of the two-year
state budget bill proposed
by Governor Ted Strickland
and enacted by the Ohio
General Assembly last year.
It allows all Ohio citizens
age 65 and older, and permanently and totally disabled Ohioans, regardless of
income, to exempt $25,000
of the market value of the
home they owned and lived
in on Jan. 1 from property
taxes . Certain surviving
spouses of homeowners
may also qualify.
Savings will vary from
community to community.
but are expected to average
$400 per homeowner this
year. Taxpayers signing up
now arid applying the credit
to ·2007 may receive a corrected first half tax bill.,
have the entire tax savings
a!'plied to the second half
bdl or receive a refund in
the fonn of a check later this
year. depending on when
they apply, said Riley.
Meigs Countians who
qualify but have not applied
for
the
Homestead
Exemption. are urged to
contact the office of Mary
Dyer-Hill in the Courthouse
before the June 2 deadline. ·

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