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                  <text>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
QqJi1 f1DIIIBL

Btrooks
•
, .....,....,.,..,,

Aud~

145 o

•1M! aJYcllb

h

(

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

BYBE:niSB

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

Jrivcto

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. ·

�•

CoMM

;

Wede

PageA2
A

, hi

Page.A:J

BY mE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

ANNIE~S

Wednesday, April~ 2008

MAILBOX

•

•

First invitation is most important
8Y KAmr IIITaaiL

Explain the -situation to
N.atasha And .as'k if you
c(}uld meet .up Clater, .after
Dear .4 • ?' "'Britany~ ~s you have escorted Br.itany
tin a special ed progrlliii .at home. If not, you can
my sChool She lis II'CIIlly .alw.ayll .aSk her out another
nice .JIIld I ey to ~include lbcr time. We blow it isn't the
tin (J(}I)versations with my Slime idling, but il' s :the
ifr.iends. A1 the end ,of the right lthing.
Dear .t=rie: [s :it Approyeat, there is .a · separate
priate
for a mother :to tell
pr-01I1 d'or t he· -students in
SJWli ,, ed. iBritan_y aslred if beT son secrets and :then
I w.anted 1:0 go lllld I told say, ~!D0n·~ ~ lthem to
your wife"?
her lweuld.
My mofher~in-Jaw conllbe prdbleni is, there is
.
stant,ly
:confi&amp;s in my .husJlll!'ltlurr girl. "'Nlltllsba,"
'II!JJwiis.asenior au different band Jllld then tinstructs him
scb001. We 'both lcind &lt;Of not 10 iiCll Jl!C·. A mother
_!have feelings for eacl1 other, lihould lllot expect .a man to
lbut iifs 11101 .euctly •official. iJrec.;p &lt;things froin his wife. I
She JU; .a year older than me.' have asked my husband to
Last wed, Natasha .asked ;if tell his mother to stop, but
lw.anted 110 go to :her pmm, !he won'\. What's a wife to
whiCh lis &lt;6Jl lthe same night .da?-111e 0 7 -·DMrO 5 "f r. Row ilo
as Britany';;.
I .donlt w.ant lo bDJ1 you blow :ibere .are secrets?
lbitany'-s d'ee1i11gs or bave Is she whispering in his ear
peeple :think I'm .a jdk. BUI in :firont of you? This would
:if I go wJth Britany, there 'be ru.de .aJiil she should
wen"t tle Jlllofhcr clumce to stop. Does :your husband
ge with Natasba because w11 you he has A secret but
llhe's a senior. Wihat shoUld oui'~ · ~ li? This · tis .a
I do? Friends er deliberJlle attempt .to get
your goat and he ought to
li1 5 ~p'!
·
OeM' 'Frielld: You have 1rnoCk: l1 off.
Husbands .and wives
1:0 go with 8ritany becaulle
you mptei! her invitation· sboUJ.dni keep things from
first Jllld !that is what A each other, but :these are not
stand-up guy does. We your huSband's secrets. His
lrnow you'rl rather be with mother is centitled to confide
Nlltllsba, but if you .aban- in :her son without 'having 10
doo 18ritany now, you will lilso confide in her daugh:feelterrible .and it will prey ter-in-law. llf ~ is having
on your-conscienceforever. pl'Oblems with Dad, this is
' A'ND MMICI SuGMt

,

First l'llr:le

S ' u?

-,_.....

Rlidland !Boy 'Scout TITOOp 24C!J mcerilly mmpleted a Cllmlmunity S61Vice project ~y installing mari&lt;er signs at ithe
.,..llances ol ithe 'Mei!jS Primal}' School in iRutland. Thejpni~­
jed •as seleCted by ilhe scouts due m :the 1!ladmess .ut '!be
elillrances .at niJhl. lf.mm :the left are SCiilllls, Umtgan
T!Ucker, Oeril&lt; ttill, !Kyle VanMeter, Jake IPieroe, with 'Randy
Hill SCOI:ltmaster. •

I' AP.ze as
"Spoit%/111ne Mlakim'iqg"
Sf:IX!JIJI!J PJaDe

I' dPI
s
'Sii ns · A R t'!lutilln ci Whad We Do~

.

SWCDPHOTO

ltevival services planned. : roJNT ROCK -

The !Point R.ock ChurCh of the
Nazarene, located &lt;611 State Route &gt;689 (between Willresville
fmd Route 32), will •begin :revival services Sunday .at 11
1Lm. JriJd .continue &amp;t:ough Wcdnesilay, ~ 30 with
evening liC!Vices .at 7 rp.m.
: Reverend Bud Mlman will •be theev~elist Jlfeaclring in
qcl1 service. Music on 'Sunday will 'be pFovided •by ~The
Brian F.am:ily Clonnection." Jim and Cathy 'Sisson w.ill be
jlresem music Monday through Wednesday. Lloyd D.
Grimm. ~r- ·is pastor of :the church.

CON'I'FST

•

pnmunity Calendar
Ouhsand
: :organizations

bers ·Local Stocks
discu9' Chopin novel .- .-,.-.-SEf---....
~_

POMEROY 'The
Awakening,~ a novel by

Kate Chopin first published
in 1899, was !be subject of
..., ____ .
_..__
...........s1011 wucn members
of die Middlq!IJrl Literary

.
1be hOc aids 1lridr her
~wimminsout ialo die :sea
roo m aad . . . umoNe 10
~
7

AJolw.norh

Awa;;:;.i;i~ was

-rhe
hauprd

_Q_uh met !"'CCJl11 at lb!: .Jmm mnst - ljbnyic;s for
~O_'Y Library.
11W1y yean; ala its primGay Perrin guided the in!. it ~ in
discussion beo-innin_o wilh a die 1950~s and RlCc:ived
.,.__,of_ the a¢laim for die aulhor '4llbo
brief ~iography
~wbo":asbom m St. was m:ngnimd as gifted
Louis, Mo. m 1851. The Yllita:.
. ,
~gbter of a sueocss~
The ncxt Q!C!'ting of the
~~she married Middleport Literary Club
mto . a Jli01D111Cnt French will be April 30 at the
Creole family. Kate OlcJpin Pomeroy Lilnry. Pr-esident
_was widowed at the age of Nadine Goebel will !le!Ve as
dlirty-two with six chilclrcn hostess. Phyllis Hackett
to rear. She wrote shon sto- will R:view "Ma""'-'er: a
.
b" b
"A-J
'?:::.-- .
nes . W IC Were WI..., y Story
..of
Courage,
published _a nd was a CommllDlty, and War" by
re~ literary figut'C Nathaniel Pbilbriok.
until she wrote "The
Awakening" which disllltbcd critics and the public. She died in 1904.
History of the period
'Shows that many women's
literary groups, including
eur
own
Middlep01t
literary Club, weR: begun
in the late,IROO's amid dise pssion 6f die "woman
problem." lt was a time
when women were involved
in movements like prohibition and demandmg the
right to vote.
The main character of
the
book
is
Edna
Pontellier, a well-bred
woman of the late 19th
Century who, lite the
aulhor, has a French Creole
husband. His condescend·
ing and inoonsiderate attitude toward his attractive
wife is apparent to the
reader. As the story progresses Edna becomes less
and less the dutiful molher
and wife that she is expected to be and spends more
time in painting and other
less accepted dalliances.
Prepared stody questions
were presented and members shared their i~s­
sions of the novel, its characters and the author. 1be
discussion was lively and
· spirited
with
varied
insights being shared and
enjoyed, The consensus of
opinion of tile group at the
conclusion of the: discussion seemed to be t.hat Edna
Pontellier went overlloard
in abandoning her home,
husband and ·children to
follow her own desires.
f---~--

.

.

Local Weather

- - 6 1 _-••!_- . ....... SNQt •
OlliltYIIIIya-:CIIIp.
A I' flllc.fiVSE)(MASDAQ)-25
11.31
•
·
aiT(IIVWf-aa
• - . t.a1s (llf~- 12.11
P '
(IIA'D'QI- a••
~~•(II.SOAQ)P t * t(lliSE'j-a-we
-Pi II (11111. . . . . -1il.15
•
•
(I""' SE) _ _ .._ • .. ·
•(MAS:- ::...,

Wed•esday.•• ~astl y 'Highs around 1!(i)_ East winds
SllliiiY· Highs in the upper .around 5 Jl1Ph.
.
'l'lnlnday "g', P.artly
7&amp;. Southeast winds
.1FOOilli! .5 mp1L .,Becoming cloudy. l.0ws in ilhe lower
OOitb J~round 5 mph in the 5Gs.
.aftcmoon. .
Friday-PIIIll!ly sunn_y in
w
·~ n• g 7 Partly
the morning.•.Then brJoom.
"loudy. Lows around .511. ing mostly cloudy. A dJance
- nA1
-NMheasl---winds---.amund~ . of- sbo.w.en; Jllld---dtun&lt;W
Q - tl i(II'SIMCit-UD Rljii'Diilal--~ '
storms. Highs in the mid 70s.
in die evening.
au
1 (II'SQAQ) s-.u :r • (111.,... ... •
r
iday-Mosdy
sunny.
Chance
•of rain 30 peulent.
~ U1
t6.S2
...... llllaldllil*llna
_..... 11'11 ?', • ,.. ._..,
;u.S
• ....
'"=:"'
7

hfr:' f

·
I

'

7

81.;;;t·; ...-

T

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- . . . .. . . . . -

.c.

=-I1AI
0 p
11
, us 811* (lftSEf- 3U0
o
IS(IIISEjJ-21.41
will= " " (IIVSE)
32.33
llwlet Dru' I IlLII (IIVSQ37-!'
• '" F• (N'ISEf -45.15
Knlgw'(IIVSE)-2U3
U q f BIW • ~ _
7

_

. _

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17_.

lbiiA s.. Sw11 (IIYSE)-

-

!»'~~~~=-

Is--·

-tiiYJEi
u::J7 ¥
DllJiriiiDc:k
p.a ET •
s ., .
llw
7io I . :IP- Zl.
210111, gwcHldwiiiJ Edl
d
llw 'I' . .,, •
._-.I!; G Sz 7 Ill
(r.a)441-9M1..SI 5 )

:

w

71

'j •

.at 3968] Carpenter Hill
Road, Pomeroy. For information call 742-2832.
I
roJN1' ROCK- Rewiv.al
I
:be_ginning
'Sunday nJ .a.m.
: : 'DIIInlday. April
GAUJI':OUS
lege ·was -~ .acoredita·-roMBtOY
-Meigs seMce At the Point Rook Gallqx!lis Cararr College tiou until December 3J ,
Soil .arid W.aterConservation (]burCh of the Nazarene on has r.eccived a six-year · · 2013.
·
·
Board of Supervisors lllCCt- SR 1689 between.W:illrmlle .accreditation from lhe . Ga:: .has been oontinuii!J:l, U :30 a.m.. district and Route 32, Jllld continu- AcCmlliing Council for ously .accredited -since 1975.
ing through Wednesday, 7 indq:lcndent Colleges and
·l!l:ffice, Hiland Road.
The co11cge offers associPO~OY Meigs p.m. serv.iceli. Rev. Bud Schools. ·
au: degree IPrl!lgrams lin
Clounty Retired Teachers, Allman, •e vqlilist; !pcia1,
1he Accrediting Council accounting,
!business
noon luncheon, r rinity music ey ltbe Brian F.amily for Independent CollegeS Jmd administration, computer
Church. Second Street Connection, Sunday, :and Sdhools is listed.as a national- l\PJ)lications tecbnolo$}',
cntranoe. Beth Shaver, e,~tec­ Jim and Cathy Sission, ly-recognized .acCrediting technical support ~st,
throu,gb agency by the U. s_ executive ofl'ice adrninistrauti"e .direc:ior _oaf Meigs Monday
Wednesday.
Uoyd
Grimm,
Cooncil on Aging, to speak.
Ocpartmcnt of &lt;Ednc.atioo. ItS lion, and modical office
Eotenairunent by some 'r~ pastor.
ac.creditation .of.clegree-grant- administration, .alon~ with
Meigs studen1s of 'Grease"
ing institulioos Jilso is mJO_g- several shorter diploma
musical.Take paper products
-nized by tbe Council for courses .
and personal care ite!Ds fot
Higher
Elducation
Finaocia1 .aid Jllld job
Wed Esla,,Apri130
women's shell«-MakeTCSCI-~ -Placement assistance is
i.EfART, W.\1&amp;---- John Accreditatilm
vations for lunch .at 992- Ji. _"Jack;" oro; formerly -of . The...accmditati~n ~an avllilable. to !hose who quill. 3214. Guests are WCicorne.
Leuu:t, W.Va will observe his with a sclf-study of all iry, and the college is
TUPPERS PLAINS 89th bin:bday on Apri130. A departments of the college approved for the training -of
VFW Post 905.3, 7 p.m. at card Shower is planned. His including fiscal office, veterans. The college is
the hall .
address is Lakin N uriing financial assistance. admis- owned by Robert L. .and
Home ·@I Bateman Circle. sions, placement, and edu- Jeanette Shirey.
cation.
f"or information about
Lakin, W.Va., 25287 . .
The council evaluates the classes or programs affered
'IlHmiday, May t
RACINE- Eva Teaford self-study and sends a _team · at OCC, call 446-4367,
:
Sunday, April%7
observe her 80th birth- of expens in the workings 800-214-0452, or visit the
will
• POMEROY- Dayspring
In concen at the Mt. Union day n May I. Cards may be of all departments for an on- web site at www.gallipolis~4plist Church 6:30 p .m. sent to her at P.O. Box 55, site review. The evaluation. careercollege.edM. Summer
was favorable and 1he ool- quarter begins lu'ly 7.
~Y- The church is Jocat- Racine, Ohio 45771.

'$ IWO In Point p
(3M)S14GIT4.M
S5PC..

·-

1..00

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

.._

.... ..

I

Comins Soon!
Tbe New lfo\zer Ciaic Athens
Bast~ Sbeet . .
Ope ..; . p.n 21108

StrtMII:•M'tC i t11 '- 0H 4 57t0

....

• - ~ ....... t..'

Crleators SyJUJicate Web
p~~geat www.c~ors.com.

.
,

•

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468-66_8~

-

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a or 412.12008. o

f.-~YW~rtiiU»..mnge . Fmardltrof&amp;o~llfrM

N•rbi·'Mk:h!lla mQnlll)l

~

.cc:o.nt., OllrUIIn hnNC.1'iofli'WIJlricttont. will ~~~ - TllJflafltni ,.,., ilmil«&lt; to 6 per mooth no
more ...., 3 r'rWII ile by ct.d£5 Pl'yabla to ,. lt*d :~. draft: or rt.tilt ~ A. P v "' Atlnuld
PWIWI V'ViM:I - ~tmd.-.~~W...q.dtoc:twnge.

740.589.3100

Cllllaafta ,_ .._.,_.._

......

Ore(llors Symljcaw wriiters

ani! canooliists, visit .the

S99.wu,;, anc1 , .55% tor~ at 11o.ooo.oo ..... 9.999 99
·aa tunQI wilt notNTfl the tr*'DeludPry raw "'*' •
t:CIIII*d; ~ - !hill m1Q' ftlldual tM nurnt.~Qif 0.)'11 m ltw W'Firuductury '"* f"'"Od- A.
monthly~ ... wllbe . . . - d If tt. ~ manthfy 1»1111011,.... ~ $10.000.00.
~:~~~Mr:. C~K SS~ .aoo.oo

~IIIIMl . . .:cura~

Dr. _Shirley petfornws a broad
,of procedures.
_He is available Sdays a wcck at Holzer

l'hele are eutt enlly not enough foster or
adoptille homes in our county. Children are
being forced to go to homes 0' "side our area,
laaving ac::hoQI, teachers, and friends b&amp;hild.

.. .... .

abo1l1 Annie's Mllilbox,
and r.ea4 featllr-e&amp; "-" otlter

•m

•

•·

(j(J{jlJ. ::'o jiniJ Oll1 ,_,.,,

II:CCMI"'IIlftV, Fundi from~ Qnlo ~ Blnk aaxJUna do not qullify b-1hf' 180 t~ay
•••ACIOtJ t'M. " - the f;tlttAuttary pericx;J .,;pDc, acaJUJtt -'1
lh8 ~ Mwllfot.
W11Ct1 flllli CU'f'tiiJI'f 2.o5\J /II,P.'i. fOr betlln'*l o1 SHlO,OOO.OC 1:6 rnm~. 1.90% A P 'I' fal

Oinic Athens.

.

to: A.nnie'&amp; MlliliHJ.K. P. 0 .
IJor UBil90, Olicitgo., ll.

'"o\S,O,OOD.OO mnmurn inllllll o.-ll f'8QIIIil.a 10 oper&lt; me .ccount otr.r ~to.....,

bei~g

c:=s.ma..-

to Gnflie,;IIUlil-:_ ·
DOJr@coiiiCQNt.'IU!l, &lt;ttr writt'

w:•..,._v.ovbc.com

IS

~P.O.se~~nl•175

qJ~estilms

OHIO VALLEY BANK.

•

.....................
~--=

we.

love it. lt's obvious that you:
deeply love and respect oneanother· and are willing t~
work through whatevei.
problems
arise ;
Congratulations.
Dear Readers: Today i ~
Administrative Professional!..
Day. If you have assistantS:
who make your job ceasierz
let them know how muchthey .are appreciated.
:
Aturie '' MailiHtt iif 'llrit.,:
.ten 113' l{athy Mildle11 fiUill.
Marcy S~tgar, IJnaj:J · e retli.tors of the ,t., Umileri.
•Column. i'kau~ yoW:

Open a Maoon-Watch now and get a 3 .44%
Interest Rate (3.50% A .P. Y.) for the ftrSt 180 -days
(6 months). After 180 days, current rates apply_

Her
life

99l&lt;ARE

Canada
Dear Coutented:

.EARN CO RATES WiiHOUl

a Ill

torri
apart

madly Jn love? From whai
we read in your column, thi~
is 'not normal behavior. --:
&lt;Jontented Couple in;

3.50% A.P.Y.·

7

-

.:..,. -~- .. '·' . .... . - •' ........ . . . ........... . . _,..__. .. .,..._,,. ~. . ... . ... -~ . - .. . . .

Birlhdays

:: ChUrch events

.kl1 11

cause for jealousy. lf she is
telling !him that your houseleeping skills are lousy, h!=
should ignore her and so
should you. If she is repeating gossip, what do you
car.e? We bet if you stop
.being so upset, it will happen lt;Ss often.
Dear Aneiie: What 's
wrong with. us ? My wife
and ~ don't argue. We share
chores. When 1 was working, she fed me, but -since I
retired, a cook most of our
dinners and she insists on
cleaning up.
We never had problems
with !leX. We always did it
When we: were both in the
mood. Every day she tells
me how much she loves me
.and ~ do the same . She
m:ver complains when I go
to meetings and insists I
wllk'e ber up when J .come in
1ate. She encourages me to
go sk\ing or ftshing alone
since she doesn''t enjoy
these activities.
Row can two people be
married .and live together
:f91:_Qver 60 years and still be

GCC receives·
six-yeaf accreditation

~

:u

· Literary dub

not your business and no

•

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CoMM

;

Wede

PageA2
A

, hi

Page.A:J

BY mE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

ANNIE~S

Wednesday, April~ 2008

MAILBOX

•

•

First invitation is most important
8Y KAmr IIITaaiL

Explain the -situation to
N.atasha And .as'k if you
c(}uld meet .up Clater, .after
Dear .4 • ?' "'Britany~ ~s you have escorted Br.itany
tin a special ed progrlliii .at home. If not, you can
my sChool She lis II'CIIlly .alw.ayll .aSk her out another
nice .JIIld I ey to ~include lbcr time. We blow it isn't the
tin (J(}I)versations with my Slime idling, but il' s :the
ifr.iends. A1 the end ,of the right lthing.
Dear .t=rie: [s :it Approyeat, there is .a · separate
priate
for a mother :to tell
pr-01I1 d'or t he· -students in
SJWli ,, ed. iBritan_y aslred if beT son secrets and :then
I w.anted 1:0 go lllld I told say, ~!D0n·~ ~ lthem to
your wife"?
her lweuld.
My mofher~in-Jaw conllbe prdbleni is, there is
.
stant,ly
:confi&amp;s in my .husJlll!'ltlurr girl. "'Nlltllsba,"
'II!JJwiis.asenior au different band Jllld then tinstructs him
scb001. We 'both lcind &lt;Of not 10 iiCll Jl!C·. A mother
_!have feelings for eacl1 other, lihould lllot expect .a man to
lbut iifs 11101 .euctly •official. iJrec.;p &lt;things froin his wife. I
She JU; .a year older than me.' have asked my husband to
Last wed, Natasha .asked ;if tell his mother to stop, but
lw.anted 110 go to :her pmm, !he won'\. What's a wife to
whiCh lis &lt;6Jl lthe same night .da?-111e 0 7 -·DMrO 5 "f r. Row ilo
as Britany';;.
I .donlt w.ant lo bDJ1 you blow :ibere .are secrets?
lbitany'-s d'ee1i11gs or bave Is she whispering in his ear
peeple :think I'm .a jdk. BUI in :firont of you? This would
:if I go wJth Britany, there 'be ru.de .aJiil she should
wen"t tle Jlllofhcr clumce to stop. Does :your husband
ge with Natasba because w11 you he has A secret but
llhe's a senior. Wihat shoUld oui'~ · ~ li? This · tis .a
I do? Friends er deliberJlle attempt .to get
your goat and he ought to
li1 5 ~p'!
·
OeM' 'Frielld: You have 1rnoCk: l1 off.
Husbands .and wives
1:0 go with 8ritany becaulle
you mptei! her invitation· sboUJ.dni keep things from
first Jllld !that is what A each other, but :these are not
stand-up guy does. We your huSband's secrets. His
lrnow you'rl rather be with mother is centitled to confide
Nlltllsba, but if you .aban- in :her son without 'having 10
doo 18ritany now, you will lilso confide in her daugh:feelterrible .and it will prey ter-in-law. llf ~ is having
on your-conscienceforever. pl'Oblems with Dad, this is
' A'ND MMICI SuGMt

,

First l'llr:le

S ' u?

-,_.....

Rlidland !Boy 'Scout TITOOp 24C!J mcerilly mmpleted a Cllmlmunity S61Vice project ~y installing mari&lt;er signs at ithe
.,..llances ol ithe 'Mei!jS Primal}' School in iRutland. Thejpni~­
jed •as seleCted by ilhe scouts due m :the 1!ladmess .ut '!be
elillrances .at niJhl. lf.mm :the left are SCiilllls, Umtgan
T!Ucker, Oeril&lt; ttill, !Kyle VanMeter, Jake IPieroe, with 'Randy
Hill SCOI:ltmaster. •

I' AP.ze as
"Spoit%/111ne Mlakim'iqg"
Sf:IX!JIJI!J PJaDe

I' dPI
s
'Sii ns · A R t'!lutilln ci Whad We Do~

.

SWCDPHOTO

ltevival services planned. : roJNT ROCK -

The !Point R.ock ChurCh of the
Nazarene, located &lt;611 State Route &gt;689 (between Willresville
fmd Route 32), will •begin :revival services Sunday .at 11
1Lm. JriJd .continue &amp;t:ough Wcdnesilay, ~ 30 with
evening liC!Vices .at 7 rp.m.
: Reverend Bud Mlman will •be theev~elist Jlfeaclring in
qcl1 service. Music on 'Sunday will 'be pFovided •by ~The
Brian F.am:ily Clonnection." Jim and Cathy 'Sisson w.ill be
jlresem music Monday through Wednesday. Lloyd D.
Grimm. ~r- ·is pastor of :the church.

CON'I'FST

•

pnmunity Calendar
Ouhsand
: :organizations

bers ·Local Stocks
discu9' Chopin novel .- .-,.-.-SEf---....
~_

POMEROY 'The
Awakening,~ a novel by

Kate Chopin first published
in 1899, was !be subject of
..., ____ .
_..__
...........s1011 wucn members
of die Middlq!IJrl Literary

.
1be hOc aids 1lridr her
~wimminsout ialo die :sea
roo m aad . . . umoNe 10
~
7

AJolw.norh

Awa;;:;.i;i~ was

-rhe
hauprd

_Q_uh met !"'CCJl11 at lb!: .Jmm mnst - ljbnyic;s for
~O_'Y Library.
11W1y yean; ala its primGay Perrin guided the in!. it ~ in
discussion beo-innin_o wilh a die 1950~s and RlCc:ived
.,.__,of_ the a¢laim for die aulhor '4llbo
brief ~iography
~wbo":asbom m St. was m:ngnimd as gifted
Louis, Mo. m 1851. The Yllita:.
. ,
~gbter of a sueocss~
The ncxt Q!C!'ting of the
~~she married Middleport Literary Club
mto . a Jli01D111Cnt French will be April 30 at the
Creole family. Kate OlcJpin Pomeroy Lilnry. Pr-esident
_was widowed at the age of Nadine Goebel will !le!Ve as
dlirty-two with six chilclrcn hostess. Phyllis Hackett
to rear. She wrote shon sto- will R:view "Ma""'-'er: a
.
b" b
"A-J
'?:::.-- .
nes . W IC Were WI..., y Story
..of
Courage,
published _a nd was a CommllDlty, and War" by
re~ literary figut'C Nathaniel Pbilbriok.
until she wrote "The
Awakening" which disllltbcd critics and the public. She died in 1904.
History of the period
'Shows that many women's
literary groups, including
eur
own
Middlep01t
literary Club, weR: begun
in the late,IROO's amid dise pssion 6f die "woman
problem." lt was a time
when women were involved
in movements like prohibition and demandmg the
right to vote.
The main character of
the
book
is
Edna
Pontellier, a well-bred
woman of the late 19th
Century who, lite the
aulhor, has a French Creole
husband. His condescend·
ing and inoonsiderate attitude toward his attractive
wife is apparent to the
reader. As the story progresses Edna becomes less
and less the dutiful molher
and wife that she is expected to be and spends more
time in painting and other
less accepted dalliances.
Prepared stody questions
were presented and members shared their i~s­
sions of the novel, its characters and the author. 1be
discussion was lively and
· spirited
with
varied
insights being shared and
enjoyed, The consensus of
opinion of tile group at the
conclusion of the: discussion seemed to be t.hat Edna
Pontellier went overlloard
in abandoning her home,
husband and ·children to
follow her own desires.
f---~--

.

.

Local Weather

- - 6 1 _-••!_- . ....... SNQt •
OlliltYIIIIya-:CIIIp.
A I' flllc.fiVSE)(MASDAQ)-25
11.31
•
·
aiT(IIVWf-aa
• - . t.a1s (llf~- 12.11
P '
(IIA'D'QI- a••
~~•(II.SOAQ)P t * t(lliSE'j-a-we
-Pi II (11111. . . . . -1il.15
•
•
(I""' SE) _ _ .._ • .. ·
•(MAS:- ::...,

Wed•esday.•• ~astl y 'Highs around 1!(i)_ East winds
SllliiiY· Highs in the upper .around 5 Jl1Ph.
.
'l'lnlnday "g', P.artly
7&amp;. Southeast winds
.1FOOilli! .5 mp1L .,Becoming cloudy. l.0ws in ilhe lower
OOitb J~round 5 mph in the 5Gs.
.aftcmoon. .
Friday-PIIIll!ly sunn_y in
w
·~ n• g 7 Partly
the morning.•.Then brJoom.
"loudy. Lows around .511. ing mostly cloudy. A dJance
- nA1
-NMheasl---winds---.amund~ . of- sbo.w.en; Jllld---dtun&lt;W
Q - tl i(II'SIMCit-UD Rljii'Diilal--~ '
storms. Highs in the mid 70s.
in die evening.
au
1 (II'SQAQ) s-.u :r • (111.,... ... •
r
iday-Mosdy
sunny.
Chance
•of rain 30 peulent.
~ U1
t6.S2
...... llllaldllil*llna
_..... 11'11 ?', • ,.. ._..,
;u.S
• ....
'"=:"'
7

hfr:' f

·
I

'

7

81.;;;t·; ...-

T

I

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7

- . . . .. . . . . -

.c.

=-I1AI
0 p
11
, us 811* (lftSEf- 3U0
o
IS(IIISEjJ-21.41
will= " " (IIVSE)
32.33
llwlet Dru' I IlLII (IIVSQ37-!'
• '" F• (N'ISEf -45.15
Knlgw'(IIVSE)-2U3
U q f BIW • ~ _
7

_

. _

0

17_.

lbiiA s.. Sw11 (IIYSE)-

-

!»'~~~~=-

Is--·

-tiiYJEi
u::J7 ¥
DllJiriiiDc:k
p.a ET •
s ., .
llw
7io I . :IP- Zl.
210111, gwcHldwiiiJ Edl
d
llw 'I' . .,, •
._-.I!; G Sz 7 Ill
(r.a)441-9M1..SI 5 )

:

w

71

'j •

.at 3968] Carpenter Hill
Road, Pomeroy. For information call 742-2832.
I
roJN1' ROCK- Rewiv.al
I
:be_ginning
'Sunday nJ .a.m.
: : 'DIIInlday. April
GAUJI':OUS
lege ·was -~ .acoredita·-roMBtOY
-Meigs seMce At the Point Rook Gallqx!lis Cararr College tiou until December 3J ,
Soil .arid W.aterConservation (]burCh of the Nazarene on has r.eccived a six-year · · 2013.
·
·
Board of Supervisors lllCCt- SR 1689 between.W:illrmlle .accreditation from lhe . Ga:: .has been oontinuii!J:l, U :30 a.m.. district and Route 32, Jllld continu- AcCmlliing Council for ously .accredited -since 1975.
ing through Wednesday, 7 indq:lcndent Colleges and
·l!l:ffice, Hiland Road.
The co11cge offers associPO~OY Meigs p.m. serv.iceli. Rev. Bud Schools. ·
au: degree IPrl!lgrams lin
Clounty Retired Teachers, Allman, •e vqlilist; !pcia1,
1he Accrediting Council accounting,
!business
noon luncheon, r rinity music ey ltbe Brian F.amily for Independent CollegeS Jmd administration, computer
Church. Second Street Connection, Sunday, :and Sdhools is listed.as a national- l\PJ)lications tecbnolo$}',
cntranoe. Beth Shaver, e,~tec­ Jim and Cathy Sission, ly-recognized .acCrediting technical support ~st,
throu,gb agency by the U. s_ executive ofl'ice adrninistrauti"e .direc:ior _oaf Meigs Monday
Wednesday.
Uoyd
Grimm,
Cooncil on Aging, to speak.
Ocpartmcnt of &lt;Ednc.atioo. ItS lion, and modical office
Eotenairunent by some 'r~ pastor.
ac.creditation .of.clegree-grant- administration, .alon~ with
Meigs studen1s of 'Grease"
ing institulioos Jilso is mJO_g- several shorter diploma
musical.Take paper products
-nized by tbe Council for courses .
and personal care ite!Ds fot
Higher
Elducation
Finaocia1 .aid Jllld job
Wed Esla,,Apri130
women's shell«-MakeTCSCI-~ -Placement assistance is
i.EfART, W.\1&amp;---- John Accreditatilm
vations for lunch .at 992- Ji. _"Jack;" oro; formerly -of . The...accmditati~n ~an avllilable. to !hose who quill. 3214. Guests are WCicorne.
Leuu:t, W.Va will observe his with a sclf-study of all iry, and the college is
TUPPERS PLAINS 89th bin:bday on Apri130. A departments of the college approved for the training -of
VFW Post 905.3, 7 p.m. at card Shower is planned. His including fiscal office, veterans. The college is
the hall .
address is Lakin N uriing financial assistance. admis- owned by Robert L. .and
Home ·@I Bateman Circle. sions, placement, and edu- Jeanette Shirey.
cation.
f"or information about
Lakin, W.Va., 25287 . .
The council evaluates the classes or programs affered
'IlHmiday, May t
RACINE- Eva Teaford self-study and sends a _team · at OCC, call 446-4367,
:
Sunday, April%7
observe her 80th birth- of expens in the workings 800-214-0452, or visit the
will
• POMEROY- Dayspring
In concen at the Mt. Union day n May I. Cards may be of all departments for an on- web site at www.gallipolis~4plist Church 6:30 p .m. sent to her at P.O. Box 55, site review. The evaluation. careercollege.edM. Summer
was favorable and 1he ool- quarter begins lu'ly 7.
~Y- The church is Jocat- Racine, Ohio 45771.

'$ IWO In Point p
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Tbe New lfo\zer Ciaic Athens
Bast~ Sbeet . .
Ope ..; . p.n 21108

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f.-~YW~rtiiU»..mnge . Fmardltrof&amp;o~llfrM

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more ...., 3 r'rWII ile by ct.d£5 Pl'yabla to ,. lt*d :~. draft: or rt.tilt ~ A. P v "' Atlnuld
PWIWI V'ViM:I - ~tmd.-.~~W...q.dtoc:twnge.

740.589.3100

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Ore(llors Symljcaw wriiters

ani! canooliists, visit .the

S99.wu,;, anc1 , .55% tor~ at 11o.ooo.oo ..... 9.999 99
·aa tunQI wilt notNTfl the tr*'DeludPry raw "'*' •
t:CIIII*d; ~ - !hill m1Q' ftlldual tM nurnt.~Qif 0.)'11 m ltw W'Firuductury '"* f"'"Od- A.
monthly~ ... wllbe . . . - d If tt. ~ manthfy 1»1111011,.... ~ $10.000.00.
~:~~~Mr:. C~K SS~ .aoo.oo

~IIIIMl . . .:cura~

Dr. _Shirley petfornws a broad
,of procedures.
_He is available Sdays a wcck at Holzer

l'hele are eutt enlly not enough foster or
adoptille homes in our county. Children are
being forced to go to homes 0' "side our area,
laaving ac::hoQI, teachers, and friends b&amp;hild.

.. .... .

abo1l1 Annie's Mllilbox,
and r.ea4 featllr-e&amp; "-" otlter

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II:CCMI"'IIlftV, Fundi from~ Qnlo ~ Blnk aaxJUna do not qullify b-1hf' 180 t~ay
•••ACIOtJ t'M. " - the f;tlttAuttary pericx;J .,;pDc, acaJUJtt -'1
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W11Ct1 flllli CU'f'tiiJI'f 2.o5\J /II,P.'i. fOr betlln'*l o1 SHlO,OOO.OC 1:6 rnm~. 1.90% A P 'I' fal

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qJ~estilms

OHIO VALLEY BANK.

•

.....................
~--=

we.

love it. lt's obvious that you:
deeply love and respect oneanother· and are willing t~
work through whatevei.
problems
arise ;
Congratulations.
Dear Readers: Today i ~
Administrative Professional!..
Day. If you have assistantS:
who make your job ceasierz
let them know how muchthey .are appreciated.
:
Aturie '' MailiHtt iif 'llrit.,:
.ten 113' l{athy Mildle11 fiUill.
Marcy S~tgar, IJnaj:J · e retli.tors of the ,t., Umileri.
•Column. i'kau~ yoW:

Open a Maoon-Watch now and get a 3 .44%
Interest Rate (3.50% A .P. Y.) for the ftrSt 180 -days
(6 months). After 180 days, current rates apply_

Her
life

99l&lt;ARE

Canada
Dear Coutented:

.EARN CO RATES WiiHOUl

a Ill

torri
apart

madly Jn love? From whai
we read in your column, thi~
is 'not normal behavior. --:
&lt;Jontented Couple in;

3.50% A.P.Y.·

7

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Birlhdays

:: ChUrch events

.kl1 11

cause for jealousy. lf she is
telling !him that your houseleeping skills are lousy, h!=
should ignore her and so
should you. If she is repeating gossip, what do you
car.e? We bet if you stop
.being so upset, it will happen lt;Ss often.
Dear Aneiie: What 's
wrong with. us ? My wife
and ~ don't argue. We share
chores. When 1 was working, she fed me, but -since I
retired, a cook most of our
dinners and she insists on
cleaning up.
We never had problems
with !leX. We always did it
When we: were both in the
mood. Every day she tells
me how much she loves me
.and ~ do the same . She
m:ver complains when I go
to meetings and insists I
wllk'e ber up when J .come in
1ate. She encourages me to
go sk\ing or ftshing alone
since she doesn''t enjoy
these activities.
Row can two people be
married .and live together
:f91:_Qver 60 years and still be

GCC receives·
six-yeaf accreditation

~

:u

· Literary dub

not your business and no

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�PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

W"'•csdv~April Q,

2008

[n ibe T1111-up to Pope
~Benedict XVI'-s visit to 1he
United States, there w.as .a
tremendous disphv Of unseriousness .at the "'National
Press ClUb, followed by a
-saorilege .a:t .a nearby
W.asbmgton, D.C., 'church.
A misguided group clil.Ied
the Women'-s Ordination
Conference held a protest
'""""'S conf-n- and
- .a ..--~·~ ~
.an .all-woman "mass" .at a
local Methodist chur.:h. The

OhiO Valley P.ub1is1mg Co.

o.n Go!Niiicb
'Publisher

a-te ne Ha 1lich
General 'Manager-'News ElifitOr

group, as the name suggests, wants to see "t:be
or~tion of women. as
~~ &amp;aeons .and bisllops. Sadly, the group doesn t .un~d .women or
the: Catholtc&lt;Church.
iln a statement, WOC
.exe;cnti ve director Ais'!a
Taylor dec~: "'The ~1ore to ordain. wo~ 1s a
bla~nt . maoifestatJon of
-ltbe RISA;;aidl;aillto hilS. Cui eM 'i dnn se1us~ m the chur~'h th!~~
has ·wider repercussiOns m
the world.
"'In the three year~ of his
papacy, Pope BenediCt X\1
11bday· is Wednesday, April 23, the -!14th day of 2008. has made a few .encouragmg
statements .about
1'hcre Jlre 252 days left "in the year.
wo~en,
but he -bas d~ne
11bday's iBigtilight in History: April 23, 1564, is believed
to be the birthdate of English poet .and dramatist William !'othmg that -suggests willmgness to open the dtscus'Stuikespeare; be died 52 years later, also on April 23:
On :this date: [n 1789, President..elect George W.asbington sion on women's ordinamoved into the fll'St executive mansion, the Franklin tion. That's why for his
81st birthday, we Bre offer!House, in New York.
.
In 1791, lames Buchanan, the 15th president of tbt: ing the pope a present the
gift of women, their leaderUnited States, was bom in IFrimklin Conley, 1Pa.
ln 1896, the Vitascope ~stem for projecting mov~s onto ship, .talents, .experiences
and unique perspectives."
.a scn~en w.as publicly demonstrated in New 'Vrnt: City.
ln 1940, about 200 people died in the Rhythm Night Club The group trailed the pope
mobile to papal events with
iFire in Natchez, Miss.
iln 1958, ltbe film noir thriller 1'ouch of Evil," starring .a billboard truck that
Cbarlton Heston, '~ Leigh .and G&gt;H;oo Welles, who also asked: "Pope Benedict,
How long must women
~ w.as re)easell.
ln 1968, student ;protesters began occupying buildings on wait for equality? Ordain
1he cam.pus of Colwribia Uni~qy in New Yott; pOllix Catholic Women."
As they .are stuck on their
put down :the protests a w~ later.
.
In 1968, .the Methodist Churcll .and the 1Ev.ange1ical
United Brethren Church merged to form :the 'United
Methodist Church.
· ~n J 969, Sirllan 'Sirhan w.as' sentenced·to death for .assas· ·
-sinating New York Sen_IRabert F. Kennedy. (1l1he sentence
w.as later minced to life .imprisonment.~
·
[n 1985, .the coca-.cola Company lltliiOIIIICild it w.as
clumging ibe -secret flavor fOI'IIItila for COke. (Negative
pUblic reaction forced the company to resume selling ibe
original version).
In 1988, .a feileml bill) on -smoking during .domestic airline~ of :two hours or less went into effect.
· Ten yurs ago: hines Earl !Ray, 1he ex..convict ~"d
confessed to assassinating the !Rev. 'Martin I other King Jr.
in 1968 and then insisted be' d been :franied, died at a
Nashville, Teno., hospital ai age .7 0.
·
·
Five years ago: •Global healih officials warned travelers
to avoid Beijing and Toronto, where .they might get the
:SARS virus .and export itto new :loCations. !U.S. negotiators
met with North Korean and Qrinese reptcjC!UBtives in
IBeijing for the first three-way meeting by :the goVernments
- since the K0I1!811 Wllf. Al)l!"rieBD Aidineti tepofttd a
dollar first-quarter loss.
Today's Birthdays: Actress-turned-diplomat Sbirley
Temple Bllwk is 80. Actor Alan Oppenheimer is 78. Actor
!David Birney is 69. Actor Lee Majors is~- Actress Blair
Brown is 60. Actress Joyce DeWitt is 59.. Actor lames
Russo is 55. Filmtnaker-author Michael MO(e is 54.
Aotn:ss Judy Davis is 53. Actress Valerie Bertinelli is 4~
Actor George Lopez is 47. Rock musician Gcn is 44. U.S.
Olympic gold medal sl6er Donna Weinbrecht is ·43.
Country musician Tim Womack (Sons of the Desert) is 40.
Actor Barry WatSon is 34. Actress Jaime King is 29. Actor
Aaron Hill is 25. Actor Matthew Underwood :is 18.
Thought for Toctar: "... We are such stuff/As dreams are
made on, and our little life/ Is rounded with a ~-" William Shakespeare ·(1564-}616), from '"The Thmpcst"

TODAY IN HISTORY

!-"·

Our •IMin ............
(7401112-215&amp;.
V t llwwllMIIIliiiillui•.rr.

. Ne••

a...: Charlene-· Ext. 12
Aq
Aq

• · Brian-· Ext. 14 ·
liN. a.tli Sergent, Ext. 13

M••tlaing
0 1

lllila: Daw Harrio, Ext. 15
57 lllila: Davis. Ext 16
'"'c.: Judy Climt. Ext. 10

It

Gli'181 .. lla.....,
Chariene Hoaftid I, Ext. 12

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new.Omydai)li61 ltii el.awn

www.rnydlitJWitii181.aJm

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Ave., Gallipolis; ~
~ wben ftAllying for office, 8010 Ohio 7 Nmh,
Cheshire; or the Meigs
Also, a copy of the appli- Community Action HEAP
cant's recent Clectric bill is office at 1369 Powell St.,
~ It is also suggested Middleport.
Applicatioos
that you provide .a birth cer- will be.taken by appointinent
tificate or other form of citi- from 8:30 to 1'0:45 a.m., .and
.zenship for the primary from I to 3:30p.m. Monday
.,._,licaot. This can be pass- dnoogh Thursday.
pm. military service records,
''As ·in previous years, we
votel' ~&gt;::gistra?ion, etc.
are still operating under the
The following income appointment system to
levels by household size apply
for
Emergency
Shook! be used to determine HEAP," Edwards said
eJiP.bility. These income
Contact 992-6629 (Meigs
guidelines represent the 175 · County) and 367-7341
peicenl calculation and are (Gallia Comity) to schedule
revised annually. Allowable your appointment. The toll- ·
annual inoome for a 1 per- . free number for Regular
liiOil household is $17,867;
HEAP inquiries is (800)
tiiV0 persons, $23,957; three 282-0880. For the bearing
people, $30,047; four peo- impaired with a teltcOmmup'le, $36,137, five, people, nication device for the deaf
$42,227; and six people, (TOO) 1-800-686-1557.
$48,317 _ HousehOlds with
For furrher information,
more thlin six members contact the Cheshire office.
sbould add an additional at 367-7341 or 992-6629.

these periods Ia qualify later

Brooks, Henderson lead recent UMW discussions

S.tmntrip Poker Run
-FOMI'lWY - A scholarship poker nm to honor "lost

ALFRED- Ruth Brooks 81 friendship calls. 1icasurer
had the program, "Learning Osie FoUmd gaveller rqxrt
for a Lifetime," and Thelma
Henderson based ber proHenderson had the mission gram on .an article in
report, "Real Beauty versus IR.c~se magazine. We are
Reel Beauty" during lbe to live fruitful lives and be
recent meeting of the Alfred .advocates .of the eanh' s
United Methodist Women, resources_ We are to demonstr.ate tiCal beauty for the
held at the church.
Seven members were pre- Wodd and become Gospel
sent: The meal was served for the world God laves.
by Ruth Broots, vice presiBrooks'
program is
dent. Members read the designed to Observe :the call
UMW Purpose, and reported to prayer and sCif denial.

lbc goal and focus scripture

sen by . Follrod for the
were read.
prayer calendar birthday
Brooks and the ~up par- card. Helen Wolf will do the
ticipated in readings, dis- May prayer calendar.
oossions and prayer during
The next meeting will be
the program. An offering May
13 with Sarah
. was taken to fund programs Caldwell doing the program
Jll mission institutions relat- and Mary Jo Barringer the
ed to the United Metliodist refreshments.
Women .and the United
AtleDWng were Ruth
Methodist GCnentl Board of Brooks, Mary Jo Buckley,
Global Ministries.
Sarah Caldwell. Kathy
Muriel Henderson, a mis- Corbin, Osie Follrod, Thelma
sioiiill)l in 'Mexico, w.as cho- Henderson and Helen Wolf.

bto11ir:rs~ 'Om Michael, Jimmy Lee, John Holsinger and Jeff
"Sluggo~Glasswill beheld on Saturday. The cost is $10.

lot ICI'OSi from Gloeckner's CafC, -where the run will start
aJIIl finish. The first bike will leave .at noon, the last bike
Ifill ·come in .at 5 p.m. The run's first stop is in West
\!ii,gitiia, so lliders are advised to bring their helmets. ·
Slops include The Hut in New Haven, W.Va., Hogg
Haven in Gallipolis, River City Sports Bar in Pomeroy,
)Jbany VFW. Summerfield's in Chest'er and Gloeckner's.
Plaques will be awarded and an auction will be held at
5:30p.m. Food will be served and OJ Cory will play music.
Breakfast will be served from 9-11 a.m. at the Fraternal
Order of Eagles 2171 by the ladies' auxiliary.
.All proceeds will go toward scholarsbips for students in
f,astern, Meigs, Southern or Wahama graduating classes.
, Information is available at 992-5853.

TillS CAN
ONLY LEAD
10 1ROUBt.E.

.

Festival allll'ded
ALBANY -The cornbread festival to be held Saturday
at .C arpenter Baptisti:'hurch has "been canceled.

Spring variety show
SYRACUSE - A spring variety show will be held
from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Syracuse Community Center. The
event is -sponsored by Mid· Valley Christian . School and
WJOS Television.
Performing will be students ()f the school, and
Delivered, Martie Short, Dun.amis, and other local artists.
lbi: e~ening will i_nclude the u~v~iling of ~e archi~'s
~dering .o f the Mid·Valley Chrisnan School s new butldmg. Concessions will be available. All p.roceeds go toward
the buildipg project.

· -GasHne
,.
•

'

The Daily Sentinel

~ incame must be

.:. Sigoup is Bum I 0 a.m. to &amp;10011 at the Pomeroy parking

Celebrities should buy magazines
. .Jeaiuring my-baby pictures

A steaming-hot celebrity
couple just had a 'baby!
Wow! What iocm:lible peo:.
pie they must be. Not only
can they ai:t, but they can
(USPS 21Ma))
III?Ike a baby, too! Everyone
'Ohio 'Vall!c,'~Ubll Mug
Jim
knows how hard it is to
Mullan
III?Ike a baby. It's not &lt;like
Published 8\f!'Y aftelnocM1, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court S -.
any two people can do it the
POmeroy, Ohio.
5econrklass
very first time they try, no
postage paid ., f'oii*''Oif·
matter
what high school
..... . .. The AaociateCI PwMi and
they '.re
~ eve.n if they . 'been thousands of celebrity
db, tsn t a celebrity baby babies who never received ·
better than all ot:la ·babies the · recognition
they
because her parents are deserved. ..
famous?
.
And let's face it, having a
... ,. I r ·~
It's a ~ell-known f~t celebrity baby is a good
that the children of the rich career move. By having a
One IIIDIIIh
.,U7
One , . .
and famous . are happier baby, mom and dad get the
~
10'
than
other chtldren and that kind of publicity they would
....._CM ,..._
they
always .turn ou~ to be get only by checking into
One.,11.27
the ~ost gtvmg, smcere, Betty Ford or by having a
wonderful
grownups. · domestic dispute - or by
SlilliuiiMi--ln....,. to . . llllllll'- No ~at's ~hy w~ ·b!JY IIUI8a· • suddenly appearing on "The
ocrjptlon Ill'.,.. ...,, • d In zmes wtth their piCtures on View" looking 20 years .
the covers.
younger than they did last
Thank goodness
Us week.
...,
a
c tptdan
Weekly and People pay top
Make a bad movie? No
.......... Coo llJ
dollar to feature those baby problem, have a baby. L.ast
13 We8lca
'32,26
pictures, or we migbt not CD flop? Have a baby. TV
26 WMica
'64.20
even know the celebrity had series about to be canceled?
52'127.11
a baby. It's sad to think that Have a baby. Twins could
otn ?I ..._. CouollJ '
before Us and People start- get you an Academy Award,
13 Waeb
'53.55
ed making big-money deals triplets could mean script
26 Waeb
'107.10
52Waaks
'21421 • for the pictures of celebrity approval and a percentage
spawn that there must have of the gross. Celebrity quin-

in lbe p:og~am. Ex•?qolc:s of $6,090 to the yearly in&lt;iome.
diC9C type situations could
Both Emergency HEAP
occur from layoff, strike, and Regular HEAP applicaretimncnt, disability or death tions can be completed at the
of a !ipouse or bousehold Gallia Community Aaion
member.
Documentation HEAP office., 859 1biJd

$250. Homeowners or
renters may qualify if their
total household income is at
or below 17.5 ;peroent of fed.
eral poverty guidelines.
The Regular HEAP program oilers begnin~ assis·
lance once per beating season to low income households while defraying die
•bigh cost ofbome ~ng.
Regular HEAP-pays .a portion of eligible households'
winter heating bills. The
amount :of assistance is
determined by: mal boosehold income, the mpnber of
people in the household .and
the type uf' hcati~ fuel
used.The iJimme guideliDes
for both programs ihe
same. However, Regular
12 months income while
the past three months
income is acceptable for
Emergency HEAl&gt;.
The U-mootb period or
tbme-month period for Idle
~ is det.ermincd from dlle
of application mlong it possible fur SOOIC Ulh
deaused inomoe ·during

m

'

·,

The Daily Sentinel'• Pqe As

HEAP~equires the:~

rromrageAt

Leners to the editor are welcome. They should ·be less .
than 300 wonk. All letters are ~ubject to editing, mMSt be
:SigMd, and include address and telePhone number. No .
:fUISigned letters will be publi&amp;~d. Leners ~hould be in
woo4 t~e. addressing ' issues, not persOfi{Jlities. Letters of
'tlwnb ltJ organlwion.r antf.illdi\iidua/8 wm filii#¥ a~pt•
.ed for publicariort

•

Emergency HEAP program ends April30

--u

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR.

' 11112·2156.

Obituaries .

www.mydailysentinel.com

NEWSOMYDi'llYS&amp;ITINELCOM

'
IUilion,
1Vlrilcnce .ad presence of women in the
boole of St. Peter and his
eJ!II}oitatioo:"
During 41 iflCCcl1 m!ltome plijla1 successors. Female
!this February, Beoellict saints anil vinues por.traycd
. il'citerated John aol's ,mes- as women: Omriiy, 1lhlth,
sage: '11n the face ,of cultur- Prudence .a nd Justice.
.81 .and .political -ellJll'ent's Charity is presented .as 8
thatatte111Pttoeliminate, or mother .nursing .a biiby, with
~ least &lt;to .obfuscate ,and .additional children .at her
roofuse, the -sexual differ- feet 1.thought of !be many
ences · written into hum.ao · stay-at-home moms doin$
ft.,,_ .oonsideting them to the grassroots wo:rt. of ciwversion of ·"equality," the ·-..,
ibe cultural oonstructicms, it lizatiln)-building. Perhap·s
fundamental problem with lis neceSsary to recall the the most famous wo&amp; of an
the group .and its message -,;~ 0 f God that oreated in St. Peter's is the "Piet.. ..,i•
·
is that whatever Benedict
-says or does will not be ltb!= human 'beiqg mlile and a moving tribuu: to .a moth.enough for them. They .are !female, with a unity .and ..at er's sacrificial devotion and
not open to listening, bllt to tbe ~ nme .an original love, depicting the 'Mother
· dictating an unwotik.able .and CQ111Piemcntaty differ- of God with ber dying cbild
.·
agenda. u they were open ence. HUIIIllll :nature and in ber arms.
To
rake
the
conventional
to it, they would bear and the cnltnm1 ililnension are
see the Roman Catholic ·integrated .an ample and feminist view 6f the Catholic
Church,s embrace .and ccle- ~mplex process that con· Church in relation to bow n
bration of women_ Women sti1utes the formation of the views women is 't o miss the
will not be priests, but they identity ·Of ~ach, where real .message ·Of new femiwill always be an essentiaJ both dimensions the nism ·it offen;: .a prayerfu'l
llart of the Church_
feminine and the masculine ode to ;the important diffcir:,
·Pope John Paul Iii may - crnrespond to .and ·COm- ences between men aiu:l
women, the obscuring of
have been best in articuht- .Plete each other." .
ing . the Catholi.c perspecJohn J&gt;aul the G~ and which has .gotten our broader
tive on women _ with the
former
Cardinal culture into 'loads of trouble
great love, .appreciation Ratzinger have not been over the last. few decades. To
.and:, to use a popular word, reinventing a women.Julting state that "In the face of one
empowerment. He wrote in church. They nave been closed door after another,
his
1995
encyclical reiterating what ; Christ •Catholic women have bee11
"'Evangelium Vitae" ("The · taught and what's at tbe innovative, courag~us and
Gospel of Life"): "In trans- very heart of the Catholic faithful to the church," as the
forining culture so that it Church. The Gospel tells us women of the Women 'ii
supports life, worrfen occu- • that the people left standing Ordination Conference dQ.
py .a place, in thought and at the foot of•Ciirist's croci- suggests they ' ve never been
action, which is unique .and fixion were women - no to St. Peter's, where the
decisive. It depends on weaker sex, but stalwart doors are open and full of .
them to promote a 'new supports. Women are build- celebration for an essential
feminism' which Tejects ing the foundation, which is part of God's creation:
the temptation of imitating carved into the walls of the women.
(Kathryn Lopez is the edi·
models of 'male domina- Church. When I recently
tor
'Of National Review
tion,' io order to acknowl- toured St. Peter's Basilica
edge and affirm the true for the first time, my group Online (www.nationalre·
genius of women in every of traveling American view.com). She can be con·
a.~pect of the life of society, female
commentators racted at klopez@narionaland overcome all discrimi- noticed the overwhe).ming review.com)

ENERGY!

Cutw:liui11tallcy
• Our main concern in all stories is to
' be aCcurate. tt rou tmow ot an efTt)r
in a story. oaH the -room a1 (7&lt;4())

I h;y, April Q, 2008

Jlibmen are welcome

The Daily Sentinel

Reader Services

WNh

tuplets? You just won a When somebody at the
five-picture deal .a nd your office shows me a picture of
own production company. · their brand new grandchild,
Give the new baby a I give it a long, serious ·look
strange name and there's an .· and pretend tbat I'm comextra three weeks of public- mining the child's face to
ity money qm't buy. · · . memory. Now, if I ever run
Aooupleofyc:arsafterthe into the kid. say. when he's
hoopla dies down anc:i your 18. I'll be able to say, "Hey,
career ·starts sagging again, aren't you Kathy' s grandthere's nothing better than a s&lt;ln? I. recognize you from
long, drawn-out divorce your J!Icture." But, io truth;
with a huge custody battle Kathy s new grandson looks
over little Kuweegee or lit· exactly like Bob's new son,
tleGranolatogetthatphaoe Pete's new daughter and
ringing again.
Sally and Rhonda 's new•
A friend from another born grandchildren. It's like
country asked me what the trying to tell the differenCCI
odd name of one celebrity bety;een Us and People.
:
I wonder whether celebribaby meant in English. 1
told her .it's our word for tic:s· would buy .a magaiine
"she who'll bC in rehab by wsth my family's picture on
14." Remember, naming the cover. Would they want
yout kid something they to see my brother's new
will get teased about at grandson's pictures? Would
school will pay publicity they be curious to learn
dividends for years to oome_ more about people they
When the other children doo 't know, aren't related to
find out that your kid's and have never mel'! Just a
name means "I come in gue~s. but I'd say "No."
peace" in Klingon, every
(Jrm Mullen is tile autlw,:
one of their schoolyard of '11 Take.s a Village Idiot:
scraps will be covered by C~l1catrrrg the Simple
Us and People.
Lift and "Babv's First
Personally, I'm immune TW:.oo." You can reach him
t
baby-picture mania. alJun_mullen@mywa.\:com.l

gas delivery system as anywhere in the state."
1be new line is a medium
pressure line, replacing the
existing low pressure line.
When mdcrs are replaced at
a ~sldenae urbusine\is.,. this
replacement is to be done in

· one day at ·no additional
cost · to the customer.
Columbia Gas will make
personal contact with customers prior to shutting off
service and to schedule re·
light appointments.
Columbia Gas is also
responsible for re&amp;toring
any sort of property which
· is disturbed such aS pavement; -lidewulk, gllfW!fis;
lawns, etc.

sure

(open), four corners,
trail class, catalog race. flag
race, down and back ( 12
and under), down and back
rr.. rageAt
(over 12), speed and conI
Then on Saturday an arts trol, cones and barrels,
and crafts .s haw will be held · youth poles, open poles, pee
at the center from 9 a.m. - 5 wee barrels (1 0 and under),
. p.m. while the "Horse Fun youth barrels ( 11-18), open
Show" begins its third sea- barrels.
The majority of the classson at 11 a;m. in the show
es have a $2 entry fee with
ring behind the center.
· 1be horse arena will open trail class being $4. The fees
for wann ups .at 10 a.m. go to pay for ribbons which
with the following classes: are awarded in every class
Halter, showmanship, lead· in the first six places. There
in (under 10), walk trot (18 is a $3 grounds fee per
and under), wal~ trot · horse.
The PCC will provide con·
(open), western pleasure ( 18
cessions
for the horse show.
and under), western plea-

Portland

for AIDS orphans·, and
assist in planning, organiz·
iog, and conducting prevention-related
activities.
fmmPieeAl
Botswana currently hosts 76
nation in 2003 with an exclu- volunteers.
The Peace Corps is cele·
sive fucus 011 HlV/AIDS.
brating
a 47-year legacy of
While serving, Volunteers ·
strive to train community service at home and abroad.
members in HlV/AIDS pre- Currently there are 8,000
vention, initiate prevention volunteers abroad, a.37-year
programs, motivate support high for volunteers in the

Lentes

•

Bv DAVID ESPO.

"Rranse of you, die tide
is
hmnii1g.~
·
A1ID 8£nt Foul«
ASSOCIATED.PRESS WRIT'EFIS
Her vicloty, while q;xn.
fortable, set up another critPHILADELPHJA
ical test in two weeks time
Hill81)' Rodham Clinton in Indiana. North Carolina
ground out .a gritty victory in votes the same ·.day, and
the Pennsylvania primary Obama already is thede?lf
Tuesday night, defeating favorite in a Southern state
Barack Obama and staving .with a .large black populaoff elimination in their his- tion.
·
tone race for the Democratic
"Now. it's up to you,
presidential nomination.
Indiana,n Obama said at a
"Some counted me out rally of his own in Evansville
and said to drop out," the after Pennsylvania denied
former first lady told sup- him a victoty that might have
porter~ cheering her triumph
made the nomination his.
in a slate where she was out·
He
criticized __ John
spent by more than twa=to=--:McC;!in, .the Bl;J!ublican
one. "But the American peO- presidential nominee-inpie don't quit. And they waiting, by name as offerdeserve a president who ing more of the same polidoesn' t quit, either."
cies advocated by President

BuSh. ADd he took aim at
Cliat?JD without mentioning

her by oame. "We can calculate .and poll-test our
positions and tell everyone
exactl.y w~ they want to
hear.n be S8ld 'Xlr we can
bethepartythatdoeso'tjust
focus on how to win, but
why we should."
In a campaign UJlUi[ed by
increasingly
personal
attacks, Ointon was win.ning 55 percent of the vote
to 45 percent for her rival
with 94 percerit counted in
Pennsylvania.
A preliminary tabulation
showed her gaining at least
52 national convention delegates to 46 for Obama;
with 60 still to be awarded
That left Obama with

'

Police identify three dead in Barboursville
Police had dehyed releas- .occjll'l'ed. One of the three .
BARBOURSVILLE ,
Police have not ruled the
W.Va. (AP) - Police have incident .a murder-suicicte: ing the names until they - Meek is not sure which
identified a father and his two Meek said. 1berc are no could contact the girls' - spoke to a relative 'earty.
young daughters who died of su~ .and investigators mother, Maggie Sines, who Sunday morning.
Neighbors said the family
cartlon monoxide poisoning do not know what led to the was in Belize .at the time of
the
deaths_
She
has
since
was
friendly but kept largein a parlood car, but they say deaths.
been
notified,
Meek
said,
.
ly
to
themselves. There was
"In.the !:lack of ID.Y mind, I
authorities may never determine what happened.
have an idea, 6ut I don't and is returning to West no history of problems at
the residence, Meek said
Jeffery Sines, 38, .and his . know that for a fact,~ be Vn-ginia.
'They were both wonderdaughters Haley, 1&lt;0, and told the newspaper. ~It's
l.JJey, .5, were found Monday like I told the gomdparents ful, cute little children,"
evening .in a car padred in a -we don't know what hap- said Kathy Smith, the girls'
garage at the family home pened. We .bopc to get some aunt. "They were just loving
off
Main
Street, answers from the Medical children, full of life. They
Barbaursville Polioe Chief Examioer's Office. We may IQved everyone."
Police have not deterAlan Meek told The Herald- never know for sure what ·
mined
whcon the deaths
happeped,'~
· Dispatch on 1\le~.. ·
Ohio ¥alley

Rates

The state says Ohio's

unemployment rate was 5_7
percent in March, up from
5.3
percent in February.
fmmPageAl
Initial figures released last
week show that the number
by three-tenths of a percent, of unemployed workers in
from 8_8 percent to 8.5 per· March was 344,000, up
cent,
and Washington from 316,000 in February.
County saw its rate fall The number of unemployed
5.9 percent in workers has increased by
from
February to 5.5 percent in · 15,000 in the ~year. ·
March, a drop of four-tenths
The ra1e this March was
of a percent.
up frOm 5.5 percent a year
Unemployment rose one- earlier.
tenth of a percent in Athens
The state's 5.7 percent
County, from 5.9 percent in figure tops the natiooal ntte
February to 6 percent the of 5.I percent.
following month. Jackson
County· s jobless rate was
unchanged from February at
8.4 percent

more

field. Since 1961,
than
190.000 Volunteers have
helped promote !I better
un~erstanding
between
A!F,ricans and the people
of the 139 countries wbere
Volunteers have served.
Peace Corps volunteers
must be U.S. citizens and at
least 18 years of age. Peace
Corps service is a 27-month
commitment.

•

The Ohio Department of
Job and Family Services
says Ohio continued to feel
the effects of a weaker
economy in March_ Overall,
losses in goods-producing
industries overshadowed
smaller gains in the serviceproviding industries.
(The .Associated P"ss
contributed lo this report, )

•

•

Symphony

"FINALE"
SOOBAE
Cello

Saturday
lily 3rd. 21108
Boll Ollloe; -2nd Aft.
GIR'I II,OH(7e)-.aRTS

~iMr.Aprill4 UMip M • l:lGp •

'

AaaJ-S

Sllllt(&amp;tllisojJ

Us d ersAu 11 •

llillllrCIIanaa; U 1 I I ll?

7.....1-FREE'.
iAtJ ·~
Ft I !d,_ Cenlef PI I •

416-5397
fj Sdlooi

�PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

W"'•csdv~April Q,

2008

[n ibe T1111-up to Pope
~Benedict XVI'-s visit to 1he
United States, there w.as .a
tremendous disphv Of unseriousness .at the "'National
Press ClUb, followed by a
-saorilege .a:t .a nearby
W.asbmgton, D.C., 'church.
A misguided group clil.Ied
the Women'-s Ordination
Conference held a protest
'""""'S conf-n- and
- .a ..--~·~ ~
.an .all-woman "mass" .at a
local Methodist chur.:h. The

OhiO Valley P.ub1is1mg Co.

o.n Go!Niiicb
'Publisher

a-te ne Ha 1lich
General 'Manager-'News ElifitOr

group, as the name suggests, wants to see "t:be
or~tion of women. as
~~ &amp;aeons .and bisllops. Sadly, the group doesn t .un~d .women or
the: Catholtc&lt;Church.
iln a statement, WOC
.exe;cnti ve director Ais'!a
Taylor dec~: "'The ~1ore to ordain. wo~ 1s a
bla~nt . maoifestatJon of
-ltbe RISA;;aidl;aillto hilS. Cui eM 'i dnn se1us~ m the chur~'h th!~~
has ·wider repercussiOns m
the world.
"'In the three year~ of his
papacy, Pope BenediCt X\1
11bday· is Wednesday, April 23, the -!14th day of 2008. has made a few .encouragmg
statements .about
1'hcre Jlre 252 days left "in the year.
wo~en,
but he -bas d~ne
11bday's iBigtilight in History: April 23, 1564, is believed
to be the birthdate of English poet .and dramatist William !'othmg that -suggests willmgness to open the dtscus'Stuikespeare; be died 52 years later, also on April 23:
On :this date: [n 1789, President..elect George W.asbington sion on women's ordinamoved into the fll'St executive mansion, the Franklin tion. That's why for his
81st birthday, we Bre offer!House, in New York.
.
In 1791, lames Buchanan, the 15th president of tbt: ing the pope a present the
gift of women, their leaderUnited States, was bom in IFrimklin Conley, 1Pa.
ln 1896, the Vitascope ~stem for projecting mov~s onto ship, .talents, .experiences
and unique perspectives."
.a scn~en w.as publicly demonstrated in New 'Vrnt: City.
ln 1940, about 200 people died in the Rhythm Night Club The group trailed the pope
mobile to papal events with
iFire in Natchez, Miss.
iln 1958, ltbe film noir thriller 1'ouch of Evil," starring .a billboard truck that
Cbarlton Heston, '~ Leigh .and G&gt;H;oo Welles, who also asked: "Pope Benedict,
How long must women
~ w.as re)easell.
ln 1968, student ;protesters began occupying buildings on wait for equality? Ordain
1he cam.pus of Colwribia Uni~qy in New Yott; pOllix Catholic Women."
As they .are stuck on their
put down :the protests a w~ later.
.
In 1968, .the Methodist Churcll .and the 1Ev.ange1ical
United Brethren Church merged to form :the 'United
Methodist Church.
· ~n J 969, Sirllan 'Sirhan w.as' sentenced·to death for .assas· ·
-sinating New York Sen_IRabert F. Kennedy. (1l1he sentence
w.as later minced to life .imprisonment.~
·
[n 1985, .the coca-.cola Company lltliiOIIIICild it w.as
clumging ibe -secret flavor fOI'IIItila for COke. (Negative
pUblic reaction forced the company to resume selling ibe
original version).
In 1988, .a feileml bill) on -smoking during .domestic airline~ of :two hours or less went into effect.
· Ten yurs ago: hines Earl !Ray, 1he ex..convict ~"d
confessed to assassinating the !Rev. 'Martin I other King Jr.
in 1968 and then insisted be' d been :franied, died at a
Nashville, Teno., hospital ai age .7 0.
·
·
Five years ago: •Global healih officials warned travelers
to avoid Beijing and Toronto, where .they might get the
:SARS virus .and export itto new :loCations. !U.S. negotiators
met with North Korean and Qrinese reptcjC!UBtives in
IBeijing for the first three-way meeting by :the goVernments
- since the K0I1!811 Wllf. Al)l!"rieBD Aidineti tepofttd a
dollar first-quarter loss.
Today's Birthdays: Actress-turned-diplomat Sbirley
Temple Bllwk is 80. Actor Alan Oppenheimer is 78. Actor
!David Birney is 69. Actor Lee Majors is~- Actress Blair
Brown is 60. Actress Joyce DeWitt is 59.. Actor lames
Russo is 55. Filmtnaker-author Michael MO(e is 54.
Aotn:ss Judy Davis is 53. Actress Valerie Bertinelli is 4~
Actor George Lopez is 47. Rock musician Gcn is 44. U.S.
Olympic gold medal sl6er Donna Weinbrecht is ·43.
Country musician Tim Womack (Sons of the Desert) is 40.
Actor Barry WatSon is 34. Actress Jaime King is 29. Actor
Aaron Hill is 25. Actor Matthew Underwood :is 18.
Thought for Toctar: "... We are such stuff/As dreams are
made on, and our little life/ Is rounded with a ~-" William Shakespeare ·(1564-}616), from '"The Thmpcst"

TODAY IN HISTORY

!-"·

Our •IMin ............
(7401112-215&amp;.
V t llwwllMIIIliiiillui•.rr.

. Ne••

a...: Charlene-· Ext. 12
Aq
Aq

• · Brian-· Ext. 14 ·
liN. a.tli Sergent, Ext. 13

M••tlaing
0 1

lllila: Daw Harrio, Ext. 15
57 lllila: Davis. Ext 16
'"'c.: Judy Climt. Ext. 10

It

Gli'181 .. lla.....,
Chariene Hoaftid I, Ext. 12

-;

e-...?5;
new.Omydai)li61 ltii el.awn

www.rnydlitJWitii181.aJm

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

__

.,,5.14

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.,...

----·-·

__ _____ __• _
,

'

Ave., Gallipolis; ~
~ wben ftAllying for office, 8010 Ohio 7 Nmh,
Cheshire; or the Meigs
Also, a copy of the appli- Community Action HEAP
cant's recent Clectric bill is office at 1369 Powell St.,
~ It is also suggested Middleport.
Applicatioos
that you provide .a birth cer- will be.taken by appointinent
tificate or other form of citi- from 8:30 to 1'0:45 a.m., .and
.zenship for the primary from I to 3:30p.m. Monday
.,._,licaot. This can be pass- dnoogh Thursday.
pm. military service records,
''As ·in previous years, we
votel' ~&gt;::gistra?ion, etc.
are still operating under the
The following income appointment system to
levels by household size apply
for
Emergency
Shook! be used to determine HEAP," Edwards said
eJiP.bility. These income
Contact 992-6629 (Meigs
guidelines represent the 175 · County) and 367-7341
peicenl calculation and are (Gallia Comity) to schedule
revised annually. Allowable your appointment. The toll- ·
annual inoome for a 1 per- . free number for Regular
liiOil household is $17,867;
HEAP inquiries is (800)
tiiV0 persons, $23,957; three 282-0880. For the bearing
people, $30,047; four peo- impaired with a teltcOmmup'le, $36,137, five, people, nication device for the deaf
$42,227; and six people, (TOO) 1-800-686-1557.
$48,317 _ HousehOlds with
For furrher information,
more thlin six members contact the Cheshire office.
sbould add an additional at 367-7341 or 992-6629.

these periods Ia qualify later

Brooks, Henderson lead recent UMW discussions

S.tmntrip Poker Run
-FOMI'lWY - A scholarship poker nm to honor "lost

ALFRED- Ruth Brooks 81 friendship calls. 1icasurer
had the program, "Learning Osie FoUmd gaveller rqxrt
for a Lifetime," and Thelma
Henderson based ber proHenderson had the mission gram on .an article in
report, "Real Beauty versus IR.c~se magazine. We are
Reel Beauty" during lbe to live fruitful lives and be
recent meeting of the Alfred .advocates .of the eanh' s
United Methodist Women, resources_ We are to demonstr.ate tiCal beauty for the
held at the church.
Seven members were pre- Wodd and become Gospel
sent: The meal was served for the world God laves.
by Ruth Broots, vice presiBrooks'
program is
dent. Members read the designed to Observe :the call
UMW Purpose, and reported to prayer and sCif denial.

lbc goal and focus scripture

sen by . Follrod for the
were read.
prayer calendar birthday
Brooks and the ~up par- card. Helen Wolf will do the
ticipated in readings, dis- May prayer calendar.
oossions and prayer during
The next meeting will be
the program. An offering May
13 with Sarah
. was taken to fund programs Caldwell doing the program
Jll mission institutions relat- and Mary Jo Barringer the
ed to the United Metliodist refreshments.
Women .and the United
AtleDWng were Ruth
Methodist GCnentl Board of Brooks, Mary Jo Buckley,
Global Ministries.
Sarah Caldwell. Kathy
Muriel Henderson, a mis- Corbin, Osie Follrod, Thelma
sioiiill)l in 'Mexico, w.as cho- Henderson and Helen Wolf.

bto11ir:rs~ 'Om Michael, Jimmy Lee, John Holsinger and Jeff
"Sluggo~Glasswill beheld on Saturday. The cost is $10.

lot ICI'OSi from Gloeckner's CafC, -where the run will start
aJIIl finish. The first bike will leave .at noon, the last bike
Ifill ·come in .at 5 p.m. The run's first stop is in West
\!ii,gitiia, so lliders are advised to bring their helmets. ·
Slops include The Hut in New Haven, W.Va., Hogg
Haven in Gallipolis, River City Sports Bar in Pomeroy,
)Jbany VFW. Summerfield's in Chest'er and Gloeckner's.
Plaques will be awarded and an auction will be held at
5:30p.m. Food will be served and OJ Cory will play music.
Breakfast will be served from 9-11 a.m. at the Fraternal
Order of Eagles 2171 by the ladies' auxiliary.
.All proceeds will go toward scholarsbips for students in
f,astern, Meigs, Southern or Wahama graduating classes.
, Information is available at 992-5853.

TillS CAN
ONLY LEAD
10 1ROUBt.E.

.

Festival allll'ded
ALBANY -The cornbread festival to be held Saturday
at .C arpenter Baptisti:'hurch has "been canceled.

Spring variety show
SYRACUSE - A spring variety show will be held
from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Syracuse Community Center. The
event is -sponsored by Mid· Valley Christian . School and
WJOS Television.
Performing will be students ()f the school, and
Delivered, Martie Short, Dun.amis, and other local artists.
lbi: e~ening will i_nclude the u~v~iling of ~e archi~'s
~dering .o f the Mid·Valley Chrisnan School s new butldmg. Concessions will be available. All p.roceeds go toward
the buildipg project.

· -GasHne
,.
•

'

The Daily Sentinel

~ incame must be

.:. Sigoup is Bum I 0 a.m. to &amp;10011 at the Pomeroy parking

Celebrities should buy magazines
. .Jeaiuring my-baby pictures

A steaming-hot celebrity
couple just had a 'baby!
Wow! What iocm:lible peo:.
pie they must be. Not only
can they ai:t, but they can
(USPS 21Ma))
III?Ike a baby, too! Everyone
'Ohio 'Vall!c,'~Ubll Mug
Jim
knows how hard it is to
Mullan
III?Ike a baby. It's not &lt;like
Published 8\f!'Y aftelnocM1, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court S -.
any two people can do it the
POmeroy, Ohio.
5econrklass
very first time they try, no
postage paid ., f'oii*''Oif·
matter
what high school
..... . .. The AaociateCI PwMi and
they '.re
~ eve.n if they . 'been thousands of celebrity
db, tsn t a celebrity baby babies who never received ·
better than all ot:la ·babies the · recognition
they
because her parents are deserved. ..
famous?
.
And let's face it, having a
... ,. I r ·~
It's a ~ell-known f~t celebrity baby is a good
that the children of the rich career move. By having a
One IIIDIIIh
.,U7
One , . .
and famous . are happier baby, mom and dad get the
~
10'
than
other chtldren and that kind of publicity they would
....._CM ,..._
they
always .turn ou~ to be get only by checking into
One.,11.27
the ~ost gtvmg, smcere, Betty Ford or by having a
wonderful
grownups. · domestic dispute - or by
SlilliuiiMi--ln....,. to . . llllllll'- No ~at's ~hy w~ ·b!JY IIUI8a· • suddenly appearing on "The
ocrjptlon Ill'.,.. ...,, • d In zmes wtth their piCtures on View" looking 20 years .
the covers.
younger than they did last
Thank goodness
Us week.
...,
a
c tptdan
Weekly and People pay top
Make a bad movie? No
.......... Coo llJ
dollar to feature those baby problem, have a baby. L.ast
13 We8lca
'32,26
pictures, or we migbt not CD flop? Have a baby. TV
26 WMica
'64.20
even know the celebrity had series about to be canceled?
52'127.11
a baby. It's sad to think that Have a baby. Twins could
otn ?I ..._. CouollJ '
before Us and People start- get you an Academy Award,
13 Waeb
'53.55
ed making big-money deals triplets could mean script
26 Waeb
'107.10
52Waaks
'21421 • for the pictures of celebrity approval and a percentage
spawn that there must have of the gross. Celebrity quin-

in lbe p:og~am. Ex•?qolc:s of $6,090 to the yearly in&lt;iome.
diC9C type situations could
Both Emergency HEAP
occur from layoff, strike, and Regular HEAP applicaretimncnt, disability or death tions can be completed at the
of a !ipouse or bousehold Gallia Community Aaion
member.
Documentation HEAP office., 859 1biJd

$250. Homeowners or
renters may qualify if their
total household income is at
or below 17.5 ;peroent of fed.
eral poverty guidelines.
The Regular HEAP program oilers begnin~ assis·
lance once per beating season to low income households while defraying die
•bigh cost ofbome ~ng.
Regular HEAP-pays .a portion of eligible households'
winter heating bills. The
amount :of assistance is
determined by: mal boosehold income, the mpnber of
people in the household .and
the type uf' hcati~ fuel
used.The iJimme guideliDes
for both programs ihe
same. However, Regular
12 months income while
the past three months
income is acceptable for
Emergency HEAl&gt;.
The U-mootb period or
tbme-month period for Idle
~ is det.ermincd from dlle
of application mlong it possible fur SOOIC Ulh
deaused inomoe ·during

m

'

·,

The Daily Sentinel'• Pqe As

HEAP~equires the:~

rromrageAt

Leners to the editor are welcome. They should ·be less .
than 300 wonk. All letters are ~ubject to editing, mMSt be
:SigMd, and include address and telePhone number. No .
:fUISigned letters will be publi&amp;~d. Leners ~hould be in
woo4 t~e. addressing ' issues, not persOfi{Jlities. Letters of
'tlwnb ltJ organlwion.r antf.illdi\iidua/8 wm filii#¥ a~pt•
.ed for publicariort

•

Emergency HEAP program ends April30

--u

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR.

' 11112·2156.

Obituaries .

www.mydailysentinel.com

NEWSOMYDi'llYS&amp;ITINELCOM

'
IUilion,
1Vlrilcnce .ad presence of women in the
boole of St. Peter and his
eJ!II}oitatioo:"
During 41 iflCCcl1 m!ltome plijla1 successors. Female
!this February, Beoellict saints anil vinues por.traycd
. il'citerated John aol's ,mes- as women: Omriiy, 1lhlth,
sage: '11n the face ,of cultur- Prudence .a nd Justice.
.81 .and .political -ellJll'ent's Charity is presented .as 8
thatatte111Pttoeliminate, or mother .nursing .a biiby, with
~ least &lt;to .obfuscate ,and .additional children .at her
roofuse, the -sexual differ- feet 1.thought of !be many
ences · written into hum.ao · stay-at-home moms doin$
ft.,,_ .oonsideting them to the grassroots wo:rt. of ciwversion of ·"equality," the ·-..,
ibe cultural oonstructicms, it lizatiln)-building. Perhap·s
fundamental problem with lis neceSsary to recall the the most famous wo&amp; of an
the group .and its message -,;~ 0 f God that oreated in St. Peter's is the "Piet.. ..,i•
·
is that whatever Benedict
-says or does will not be ltb!= human 'beiqg mlile and a moving tribuu: to .a moth.enough for them. They .are !female, with a unity .and ..at er's sacrificial devotion and
not open to listening, bllt to tbe ~ nme .an original love, depicting the 'Mother
· dictating an unwotik.able .and CQ111Piemcntaty differ- of God with ber dying cbild
.·
agenda. u they were open ence. HUIIIllll :nature and in ber arms.
To
rake
the
conventional
to it, they would bear and the cnltnm1 ililnension are
see the Roman Catholic ·integrated .an ample and feminist view 6f the Catholic
Church,s embrace .and ccle- ~mplex process that con· Church in relation to bow n
bration of women_ Women sti1utes the formation of the views women is 't o miss the
will not be priests, but they identity ·Of ~ach, where real .message ·Of new femiwill always be an essentiaJ both dimensions the nism ·it offen;: .a prayerfu'l
llart of the Church_
feminine and the masculine ode to ;the important diffcir:,
·Pope John Paul Iii may - crnrespond to .and ·COm- ences between men aiu:l
women, the obscuring of
have been best in articuht- .Plete each other." .
ing . the Catholi.c perspecJohn J&gt;aul the G~ and which has .gotten our broader
tive on women _ with the
former
Cardinal culture into 'loads of trouble
great love, .appreciation Ratzinger have not been over the last. few decades. To
.and:, to use a popular word, reinventing a women.Julting state that "In the face of one
empowerment. He wrote in church. They nave been closed door after another,
his
1995
encyclical reiterating what ; Christ •Catholic women have bee11
"'Evangelium Vitae" ("The · taught and what's at tbe innovative, courag~us and
Gospel of Life"): "In trans- very heart of the Catholic faithful to the church," as the
forining culture so that it Church. The Gospel tells us women of the Women 'ii
supports life, worrfen occu- • that the people left standing Ordination Conference dQ.
py .a place, in thought and at the foot of•Ciirist's croci- suggests they ' ve never been
action, which is unique .and fixion were women - no to St. Peter's, where the
decisive. It depends on weaker sex, but stalwart doors are open and full of .
them to promote a 'new supports. Women are build- celebration for an essential
feminism' which Tejects ing the foundation, which is part of God's creation:
the temptation of imitating carved into the walls of the women.
(Kathryn Lopez is the edi·
models of 'male domina- Church. When I recently
tor
'Of National Review
tion,' io order to acknowl- toured St. Peter's Basilica
edge and affirm the true for the first time, my group Online (www.nationalre·
genius of women in every of traveling American view.com). She can be con·
a.~pect of the life of society, female
commentators racted at klopez@narionaland overcome all discrimi- noticed the overwhe).ming review.com)

ENERGY!

Cutw:liui11tallcy
• Our main concern in all stories is to
' be aCcurate. tt rou tmow ot an efTt)r
in a story. oaH the -room a1 (7&lt;4())

I h;y, April Q, 2008

Jlibmen are welcome

The Daily Sentinel

Reader Services

WNh

tuplets? You just won a When somebody at the
five-picture deal .a nd your office shows me a picture of
own production company. · their brand new grandchild,
Give the new baby a I give it a long, serious ·look
strange name and there's an .· and pretend tbat I'm comextra three weeks of public- mining the child's face to
ity money qm't buy. · · . memory. Now, if I ever run
Aooupleofyc:arsafterthe into the kid. say. when he's
hoopla dies down anc:i your 18. I'll be able to say, "Hey,
career ·starts sagging again, aren't you Kathy' s grandthere's nothing better than a s&lt;ln? I. recognize you from
long, drawn-out divorce your J!Icture." But, io truth;
with a huge custody battle Kathy s new grandson looks
over little Kuweegee or lit· exactly like Bob's new son,
tleGranolatogetthatphaoe Pete's new daughter and
ringing again.
Sally and Rhonda 's new•
A friend from another born grandchildren. It's like
country asked me what the trying to tell the differenCCI
odd name of one celebrity bety;een Us and People.
:
I wonder whether celebribaby meant in English. 1
told her .it's our word for tic:s· would buy .a magaiine
"she who'll bC in rehab by wsth my family's picture on
14." Remember, naming the cover. Would they want
yout kid something they to see my brother's new
will get teased about at grandson's pictures? Would
school will pay publicity they be curious to learn
dividends for years to oome_ more about people they
When the other children doo 't know, aren't related to
find out that your kid's and have never mel'! Just a
name means "I come in gue~s. but I'd say "No."
peace" in Klingon, every
(Jrm Mullen is tile autlw,:
one of their schoolyard of '11 Take.s a Village Idiot:
scraps will be covered by C~l1catrrrg the Simple
Us and People.
Lift and "Babv's First
Personally, I'm immune TW:.oo." You can reach him
t
baby-picture mania. alJun_mullen@mywa.\:com.l

gas delivery system as anywhere in the state."
1be new line is a medium
pressure line, replacing the
existing low pressure line.
When mdcrs are replaced at
a ~sldenae urbusine\is.,. this
replacement is to be done in

· one day at ·no additional
cost · to the customer.
Columbia Gas will make
personal contact with customers prior to shutting off
service and to schedule re·
light appointments.
Columbia Gas is also
responsible for re&amp;toring
any sort of property which
· is disturbed such aS pavement; -lidewulk, gllfW!fis;
lawns, etc.

sure

(open), four corners,
trail class, catalog race. flag
race, down and back ( 12
and under), down and back
rr.. rageAt
(over 12), speed and conI
Then on Saturday an arts trol, cones and barrels,
and crafts .s haw will be held · youth poles, open poles, pee
at the center from 9 a.m. - 5 wee barrels (1 0 and under),
. p.m. while the "Horse Fun youth barrels ( 11-18), open
Show" begins its third sea- barrels.
The majority of the classson at 11 a;m. in the show
es have a $2 entry fee with
ring behind the center.
· 1be horse arena will open trail class being $4. The fees
for wann ups .at 10 a.m. go to pay for ribbons which
with the following classes: are awarded in every class
Halter, showmanship, lead· in the first six places. There
in (under 10), walk trot (18 is a $3 grounds fee per
and under), wal~ trot · horse.
The PCC will provide con·
(open), western pleasure ( 18
cessions
for the horse show.
and under), western plea-

Portland

for AIDS orphans·, and
assist in planning, organiz·
iog, and conducting prevention-related
activities.
fmmPieeAl
Botswana currently hosts 76
nation in 2003 with an exclu- volunteers.
The Peace Corps is cele·
sive fucus 011 HlV/AIDS.
brating
a 47-year legacy of
While serving, Volunteers ·
strive to train community service at home and abroad.
members in HlV/AIDS pre- Currently there are 8,000
vention, initiate prevention volunteers abroad, a.37-year
programs, motivate support high for volunteers in the

Lentes

•

Bv DAVID ESPO.

"Rranse of you, die tide
is
hmnii1g.~
·
A1ID 8£nt Foul«
ASSOCIATED.PRESS WRIT'EFIS
Her vicloty, while q;xn.
fortable, set up another critPHILADELPHJA
ical test in two weeks time
Hill81)' Rodham Clinton in Indiana. North Carolina
ground out .a gritty victory in votes the same ·.day, and
the Pennsylvania primary Obama already is thede?lf
Tuesday night, defeating favorite in a Southern state
Barack Obama and staving .with a .large black populaoff elimination in their his- tion.
·
tone race for the Democratic
"Now. it's up to you,
presidential nomination.
Indiana,n Obama said at a
"Some counted me out rally of his own in Evansville
and said to drop out," the after Pennsylvania denied
former first lady told sup- him a victoty that might have
porter~ cheering her triumph
made the nomination his.
in a slate where she was out·
He
criticized __ John
spent by more than twa=to=--:McC;!in, .the Bl;J!ublican
one. "But the American peO- presidential nominee-inpie don't quit. And they waiting, by name as offerdeserve a president who ing more of the same polidoesn' t quit, either."
cies advocated by President

BuSh. ADd he took aim at
Cliat?JD without mentioning

her by oame. "We can calculate .and poll-test our
positions and tell everyone
exactl.y w~ they want to
hear.n be S8ld 'Xlr we can
bethepartythatdoeso'tjust
focus on how to win, but
why we should."
In a campaign UJlUi[ed by
increasingly
personal
attacks, Ointon was win.ning 55 percent of the vote
to 45 percent for her rival
with 94 percerit counted in
Pennsylvania.
A preliminary tabulation
showed her gaining at least
52 national convention delegates to 46 for Obama;
with 60 still to be awarded
That left Obama with

'

Police identify three dead in Barboursville
Police had dehyed releas- .occjll'l'ed. One of the three .
BARBOURSVILLE ,
Police have not ruled the
W.Va. (AP) - Police have incident .a murder-suicicte: ing the names until they - Meek is not sure which
identified a father and his two Meek said. 1berc are no could contact the girls' - spoke to a relative 'earty.
young daughters who died of su~ .and investigators mother, Maggie Sines, who Sunday morning.
Neighbors said the family
cartlon monoxide poisoning do not know what led to the was in Belize .at the time of
the
deaths_
She
has
since
was
friendly but kept largein a parlood car, but they say deaths.
been
notified,
Meek
said,
.
ly
to
themselves. There was
"In.the !:lack of ID.Y mind, I
authorities may never determine what happened.
have an idea, 6ut I don't and is returning to West no history of problems at
the residence, Meek said
Jeffery Sines, 38, .and his . know that for a fact,~ be Vn-ginia.
'They were both wonderdaughters Haley, 1&lt;0, and told the newspaper. ~It's
l.JJey, .5, were found Monday like I told the gomdparents ful, cute little children,"
evening .in a car padred in a -we don't know what hap- said Kathy Smith, the girls'
garage at the family home pened. We .bopc to get some aunt. "They were just loving
off
Main
Street, answers from the Medical children, full of life. They
Barbaursville Polioe Chief Examioer's Office. We may IQved everyone."
Police have not deterAlan Meek told The Herald- never know for sure what ·
mined
whcon the deaths
happeped,'~
· Dispatch on 1\le~.. ·
Ohio ¥alley

Rates

The state says Ohio's

unemployment rate was 5_7
percent in March, up from
5.3
percent in February.
fmmPageAl
Initial figures released last
week show that the number
by three-tenths of a percent, of unemployed workers in
from 8_8 percent to 8.5 per· March was 344,000, up
cent,
and Washington from 316,000 in February.
County saw its rate fall The number of unemployed
5.9 percent in workers has increased by
from
February to 5.5 percent in · 15,000 in the ~year. ·
March, a drop of four-tenths
The ra1e this March was
of a percent.
up frOm 5.5 percent a year
Unemployment rose one- earlier.
tenth of a percent in Athens
The state's 5.7 percent
County, from 5.9 percent in figure tops the natiooal ntte
February to 6 percent the of 5.I percent.
following month. Jackson
County· s jobless rate was
unchanged from February at
8.4 percent

more

field. Since 1961,
than
190.000 Volunteers have
helped promote !I better
un~erstanding
between
A!F,ricans and the people
of the 139 countries wbere
Volunteers have served.
Peace Corps volunteers
must be U.S. citizens and at
least 18 years of age. Peace
Corps service is a 27-month
commitment.

•

The Ohio Department of
Job and Family Services
says Ohio continued to feel
the effects of a weaker
economy in March_ Overall,
losses in goods-producing
industries overshadowed
smaller gains in the serviceproviding industries.
(The .Associated P"ss
contributed lo this report, )

•

•

Symphony

"FINALE"
SOOBAE
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Saturday
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Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Page A6 • The Daily Sa dille!

Bl

'fh:e Daily Sentinel

u.s.
as

Wed.....y, Apri123, 2008

Valuabl_e Presidential Golden Dollar coins being given away free with orders for Framed Money
Gallery, buf frame shop workers under strain of Public rush, impose household liniit of- 2
.
.

Free,money: national halrblt dogyifA phone lies as peoaJie euertvAae saa&amp;rllle to brNI 72ho.. deaclne
·ar-K.~

IJioiiVflt5A1 M£01ol. 51~01C oi.TE

Have you heard about the free money
giveaway that's sweeping the nation?
Well, listen up because here it is.
Everyone who gets in on this will be •mcmg

the tiist to get the lJ.S. Govemment's duEling new Presidential Dollar coins.
But the government is not the·c metod!•nlr
The World Reserve has just announced it is
banding out the entire year of the valuable
coins free.
Tbeseextraordinaryeoinsarebeinggmm
away free to everyone who heats the dellll. line to cover shipping and the discounted
$28 framing fee for the newly unveiled Pres-.
idential Framed Money Gallery.
. So, what's the catch?
There is none. Just be absolutely SUl'e to
cill in your claim before the 72 hour deadline if you want to get the entire four coin
year set of PreSidential coins free.
This is all happening because the World
Reserve is issuing the Presidential Framed
Money Gallery to the general public to display all forty of the U.S. Government's first
ever Presidential Dollar coins. Rations of
these never-cireulated coins are uncertain
because each dolla:r coin is only minted
for just 93 days according to the release
schedule of the U. S. Government.
"These new Presidential coins are so stunning because they're actually engraved with

•

•

lArry~

Hairston

edge lettering bearing the date, Mint maM,
IN GOD WE TRUST and E PLURJBUS
UNUM, which results in the coin's rare tactile
. fee~• said Director Aaron L. Strylrer from
.the World Reserve Monetary Exchange.
"'nce they're gone, they're gone and by
law once the U.S. Government &amp;hilts off,
they will never he minted again. That's why
the World's premier private monetary ex- • SNEM P£M: This is the incredible Framed Presidential Money.•Gallery displaying the Presidential Doilar coins that are being given away free
for ~veryone who beau the order deadline for the Framed Money Gallery. Zachary Brown, age 6, was so .excited just to touch them then jumped for
change is widely advertising its p1aDS to is- joy when nis grandmother ordered him the Framed Money Gallery and he was handed the entire first year of coins free. The unveiling of the Framed
sue the Presidential Framed Money Gallery Presidential Money Gallery stole the show from -presidential performers Tim Watters and Brent Mendenhall who were helping to hand out the. free
along with the free coins. We want to make coins- Readers oftodoy's newspaper can still call the direct claim line for the next 72 hours to be among the first to also get them free.
absolutely sure readers of qn. llewapaper
... ..
~
•• " ••
'"'
know that there are only 7! hours left on 'Will be forcedtobandoutmilliUDSofdoiJU's BD entire JI!U' d Pr 'LAU.l l)oDar coins is a real steal.
. this -llllllouncement to cet tbe
year of the valuable new Presidenti•l- Dollan ~
.
"To be !I1110ilg the llrst to get ~ ...
of Presidential .Mar eoine ,._,• Stlyter free to the genaJII public," Btryk« aaid.
What 4oes..U this mean for Jll!llll? · , •...,•.,;.w'NJI PreatientMJ Dollar
J011 IIIUIIt
said.
Collectors ue trying to get all they can
Well, &lt;llilin values always fluctuate. But, Jllli1ll! sure you get through to the Dirett Claim
Those wbo get m on this :free giWaway because these are no ordinary .eoins. These j~ think if you would have saved jU8t
'Wines if lines are busy please be {J8ti&amp;d .~
by cl•iming the Framed lloney Gallery 1rill • are real U.S. Government first iasuea in uneireulated Eisenhower Dollar from as · Stryker said.
have a mag'nificeat display to show off the never-cireulated condition. Smut eollec- reeently as 1918. Believe it or not, it's DOW
But '1'/hatever you do keep tljing, because
entire &lt;:olleetioll.-'llf
40 "Of the valuahle tors lmow how valuable first jasue_(!Qins worth UOO" more today. So, getting four all claims 1rill be honored before the 7! bour
--U.~ ~ That's wilY it's so can become
.
Presidential Dollar ·ooms free with ~ deadline expires. ••f7·c-=~----c-c
important to beat the 7211our deadline l'igbt
And, since everyone is tryingtogettlieni; Presiclential Fii.iiieil llloney Gallery for
On the worldWIBe web.' www.wrme.net .
now.
one thing is for sure, those lucky enough the twenty-eight dollar
•. ..
•
·~ • ·
•At the rate we are giving these away we to get in on tbis now are eertain to get disrouDt.ed framing fee
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has4bits,
Reds beat
Dodgers ·

Presidential Dollar coins ha ~ coliectprs scrambling to get them
because of the never·before·seen special edge engraving. Now
that everyone else is catching on, the direct claim lines to get
them free are being flooded with calls.

COl' S: liON: Everyone who gets the free
Presidential Dollar coins along with the Presidential Framed
Money Gallery will have a very · valuable collection of U.S.
Government coins that you would expect to only see.hanging

t
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under guard in our nation's capital.

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tory over the DodRers, who
~ 11-3 against Cincinnati
since 2006. TWo struggling
ljncups took !UmS trn:M;it~g
out during the short series.

After scoring only lhmc
over the weekend
while getting swep! in
Atlanta, the Dodgers piled
up 15 bits in a 9-3 win on
Monday night. Hairston, ,
batting .421. in the minors,
was ca!lcd up before dial
game, and got the Reds
rolling a day later.
~He bad a great game,~
.Bam said. ~ue was hoi in
Triple-A. Most times, whi::n .
you·~ bot in one place,
yoo'n be hoi anywbere.ft
He' quic-kly wanned to the
of the lineu .
singfed and doubled off Hong.(]rlb Kuo (6l ), then singled borne a pair
of run~ off Soon Proctor u
the Reds pul!ed ahead 7-1
after five mnings. HaiiSton
also singled home .a run in
the eighth, becoming the
first Reds player to get four
hits in a ~ this season.
"It's mce just to be u:f.
beae
' ft U
-!•
. , agam,
n•unton
Sll • .
"-It's good to get bad: to the
big le~pes. lbc~'s no
Olber plaCe 1o play.ft
.· Dunn aDd 'Phillips added
1110s

solo bomen - far Pbillips,
his first in 72 at•bats - as
!be Reds piled up. a seasonhigh~~ bUs.

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{UO) U6 2342, .a..33

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e••!dC411••fhJ••*'•.oom

•

opener
against
R i v e r
Valley earlier in the
year,
the

Alll:des Dodgers.
1be Red&amp; split dleirtwo-

Eric Aa ' lph, 1lp D 111 Wrtllr

•

s e a s o n

each homered Tuesday
night, leadi~~g the Reds to an
· 8-l victory over 1be Los

Sportl..,

j

CHESHIRE What
goes around, comes around .
After Eastern claimed a.
...3
borne . victory · in its

leadoff bitter, and Adam
Dunn and Brandon Phillips

E1MII-JPQttte~aiw•li••·com

who

BY ll!naw WADBIS
BWALTERSQ!IMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

his debut as Cioci.Daali's

,__ H.U .... ""'8

Framed Money Gallery is a real steal at just $28 for those
beat the deadline and get the free coins.

Lady
Raiders
rnlly past
Eastern, 4-3

· CINCINNATI - Wben
..
Du lbter made
card, be
decided
to
pu! tbe
Cincinnati Reds' new~ hitter at tile '!'I' of 1be order.
. His thinking? Jerry
Hairston· Jr. must be doiJ1g
sMvming . .
Hairston bad fuur bits in

CoNl'ACrUS

the look an everyone's face when they recel\ie the Framed Money
Gallery with the entire first year of Presidential Dollars coins !Tee.

WHS won the contest 16-5.

.....

t-aD0-181-:UM

• &amp;ERWliE LOVES TfE GFT OF MDIEY; The valuable • 1'UINS /IMY llOOM tN1'0 A SHOWPlACE: The Framed
coins ..e only being reiHsedfrom tile U.S. Goweo n'''"''t.for93 days Money Gallery is so impressive, local frame shops can charge.
each, then only four times a year, for tile 11&amp;)(! nine years. So ilmgine $231 but a special discounted framing fee is being given so the

Spri~.

~SOilaTED ~'RES$

~ton

• MIWONS IN AlEE MONEY: The giveaway of these • VAU tABLE

rMii·--=Js.a

Meigs' Stlellie Bailey leads off first while Point Pleasant's Miranda Thompsl'n ,prepares for
the .play dufing the fourth imning of a nigh school softball game Tuesday night in Rock

.. Wflllr

33

.com

I.Mry CMn/plllllo

Meigs' Caleb Davis reoeilles congratulations from teammate Ryan Jeffers after crossing home plate in the seventh inning
for the winning run in a nigh school baseball .game against Marietta Tuesday in Rock Springs. Meigs won 4-3.

r ...
1

...

4-3

,

.... ;C..
LO~YDAILYREGISTER.COM

ROCK SPRINGS
Meigs srored two runs in ,tiJe
bottom of the seventh inning
to etase a one-run deficit and
claim an e~iling 4-3 vlcwry
over
visiting
Marietta
Tuesday night at Meigs
HiR:h School.
Coming into the fuial
inning down 3-2, Jason
Morris led off the frame
with a double followed
immedia~ely by an RBI poke

from Caleb
Davis
to
knot
the
score 3-3.
·
Clay Bolin
then joined
llis -teammate on the
diamond
after reaching on an
error and
A a r o n
Story ripped a single to load
the bases with·none out.
With Meigs (6-4) holding

all the momentom, Brian

Delong came through in &gt;tbe
tense moment with an RBI
single to right field, bringing
home Davis for the go-ahead
run giving the Marauders a
thriUin~;J4-3 victory.
· Moms · led the , Meigs
offensive charge, going a
perfect 3-for-3 at the plate
with a double and two runs
scored. Brian Delong added
a double and a single and
Ryan Jeffers was 2-for-3,
helping rack up the II hit
contest.

Bolin, Dunfee, Davis and
J. T. Evans rounded out the
Marauder bitters with a
knock apiece.
No one from Marietta bad
more than one hit.
Marietta, who struggled
with just five bits, instead
used .nearly ba!:f a dozen
Meigs errors to move around
the diamond. In fact the
Tigers scored all three runs
off of Marauder errors.
Bien scored Marietta ·~

Raiders
returned
the favor Tuesday evening
with a narrow 4-3 borne triumph during a non-conference softball matcbup.
The Lady Raiders (4-9)
fell behind 3-1 after fiTe
innings ·Of play. but rallied
.to score two runs in the bot·
tom of the sixth to knot
things at three apiece headed into the final inning of
regulation.
After working · ,out of a
small jam in the Lady
. Eagles' balf of the seventh.
staning RVHS hurler Kari
McFann helped her own
cause in the bottom half of
.the inning by delivering a
bases-loaded single
which drove in Jenna Ward
and gave the Silver and
Black the hard-fought. one·
n1n deci~ion .
.
McFann - who pitched
seven solid innings in pick·
ing up the winning decision
- allowed just three hits.
one earned run. two walks
and a hit ·one ·bimer in the
contest. The senior's game-

""••--.a PIIIn-F c'•.R
Charleston Catholic blanks .Falcons Buffalo slams Wahama
CHARLEStON, W.Va.
The Wahama White
Falcon · baseball nine suffered its fourth I 0-run loss
in a row Tuesday .evening
after falling to ctlarleston
Catholic by a I 0-0 margin.
Offensively thC\White
Falcons managed only three
bits on the evening and wete
shut out for the first time Ibis
season. Three Faloon pitchers failed to hold the Irish in
cbeck
as
Charleston
Catholic pounded out 14 bits
in handing · the White
Falcons its fourth oonseculive setback. . The loss
dropped tbe Bend Area
teams season slate to 4-9 on
the year while Charleston

· Catholic improved to 9-12
with the home triumph.
The Irish soored three,
first inning runs on a leadoff
single by McKown, a double
by Baird and a two run
homer by Pack. Another
tally in the second eKtended
the Catholic lead to 4-0
. pefore the hosts blew the
contest open with five runs
in the tbinL Tbe game was
balled in the bottom baif of
the fifth because of the 10
run rule after Charleston

Catholic scored its tenth run·
of the day.
Wahama got a single by ·
William Zuspan in the second, a single by Garrett
Uoderwood in the fourth
and a single by Derek
Veamy in the fifth but that
would be 411 the oifense ·the
local diamond nine could
muster. The Mason County
nine would see only four
other base runners Jhroughout the five inning contest
with I lieob Roach reaching
on an enur, Veazey being hit
by a pitch and Zuspan and
Caleb Roach drawing a
base-{)n-balls.
Pack.
tbe
Kanawha
Valley's leading bitter, had a
pair of singles tn go with bis

PI

n•-••••'s.• m

BY LA t C..
LCRUMOMYDIIil.YREGISTER.COM

BUFFALO, W.Va. -It is
safe to say Tue&amp;day did not
go as · planned for the
Wahama softball team.
After taking Buffalo (208) down to the wire just a
week. ago in a 5-3 home
I
the Lad Fa!
(10oss,
y
oons .
IO) bad a complete coU~se
in the mad contest falling
11-0 in five innings

in .
Alex Wood got the Start
for Wahama, going less
than an inning before suf·
fering" an injury. Kylie
· Riggs replaced her in that
first and finished out the
contest.
· Buffalo wasted little time
jumping out front. opening
a 4-0 lead after one and
e~ttended that advantage to
7-0 after two . The Lady
Bison tben tacked four fore
more in the founh to take
an 11·0 lead and held on for
the shutout in the final
inning to end the game ·in
the fifth .

Tuesday
evening
in
Buffalo.
Buffalo's Dingess pitched
a shutout in picking up the
victory while her team
added nine offensive runs
~~ut~.to11 . -0
in support. Bla:ke led that ~
~~ :
~ 1 932
offensive charge, going 3- wHs 110.101. """' Wood, Kylie A•gll'
&amp;
3 WI'th a home run, a · BHS
(1 1 and Mary K-r.
tOT(2!J.B) omgess and Wllhams
double and five runs batted WP - o.ngess LP- Wood

°

••

�-~

..... _

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Page A6 • The Daily Sa dille!

Bl

'fh:e Daily Sentinel

u.s.
as

Wed.....y, Apri123, 2008

Valuabl_e Presidential Golden Dollar coins being given away free with orders for Framed Money
Gallery, buf frame shop workers under strain of Public rush, impose household liniit of- 2
.
.

Free,money: national halrblt dogyifA phone lies as peoaJie euertvAae saa&amp;rllle to brNI 72ho.. deaclne
·ar-K.~

IJioiiVflt5A1 M£01ol. 51~01C oi.TE

Have you heard about the free money
giveaway that's sweeping the nation?
Well, listen up because here it is.
Everyone who gets in on this will be •mcmg

the tiist to get the lJ.S. Govemment's duEling new Presidential Dollar coins.
But the government is not the·c metod!•nlr
The World Reserve has just announced it is
banding out the entire year of the valuable
coins free.
Tbeseextraordinaryeoinsarebeinggmm
away free to everyone who heats the dellll. line to cover shipping and the discounted
$28 framing fee for the newly unveiled Pres-.
idential Framed Money Gallery.
. So, what's the catch?
There is none. Just be absolutely SUl'e to
cill in your claim before the 72 hour deadline if you want to get the entire four coin
year set of PreSidential coins free.
This is all happening because the World
Reserve is issuing the Presidential Framed
Money Gallery to the general public to display all forty of the U.S. Government's first
ever Presidential Dollar coins. Rations of
these never-cireulated coins are uncertain
because each dolla:r coin is only minted
for just 93 days according to the release
schedule of the U. S. Government.
"These new Presidential coins are so stunning because they're actually engraved with

•

•

lArry~

Hairston

edge lettering bearing the date, Mint maM,
IN GOD WE TRUST and E PLURJBUS
UNUM, which results in the coin's rare tactile
. fee~• said Director Aaron L. Strylrer from
.the World Reserve Monetary Exchange.
"'nce they're gone, they're gone and by
law once the U.S. Government &amp;hilts off,
they will never he minted again. That's why
the World's premier private monetary ex- • SNEM P£M: This is the incredible Framed Presidential Money.•Gallery displaying the Presidential Doilar coins that are being given away free
for ~veryone who beau the order deadline for the Framed Money Gallery. Zachary Brown, age 6, was so .excited just to touch them then jumped for
change is widely advertising its p1aDS to is- joy when nis grandmother ordered him the Framed Money Gallery and he was handed the entire first year of coins free. The unveiling of the Framed
sue the Presidential Framed Money Gallery Presidential Money Gallery stole the show from -presidential performers Tim Watters and Brent Mendenhall who were helping to hand out the. free
along with the free coins. We want to make coins- Readers oftodoy's newspaper can still call the direct claim line for the next 72 hours to be among the first to also get them free.
absolutely sure readers of qn. llewapaper
... ..
~
•• " ••
'"'
know that there are only 7! hours left on 'Will be forcedtobandoutmilliUDSofdoiJU's BD entire JI!U' d Pr 'LAU.l l)oDar coins is a real steal.
. this -llllllouncement to cet tbe
year of the valuable new Presidenti•l- Dollan ~
.
"To be !I1110ilg the llrst to get ~ ...
of Presidential .Mar eoine ,._,• Stlyter free to the genaJII public," Btryk« aaid.
What 4oes..U this mean for Jll!llll? · , •...,•.,;.w'NJI PreatientMJ Dollar
J011 IIIUIIt
said.
Collectors ue trying to get all they can
Well, &lt;llilin values always fluctuate. But, Jllli1ll! sure you get through to the Dirett Claim
Those wbo get m on this :free giWaway because these are no ordinary .eoins. These j~ think if you would have saved jU8t
'Wines if lines are busy please be {J8ti&amp;d .~
by cl•iming the Framed lloney Gallery 1rill • are real U.S. Government first iasuea in uneireulated Eisenhower Dollar from as · Stryker said.
have a mag'nificeat display to show off the never-cireulated condition. Smut eollec- reeently as 1918. Believe it or not, it's DOW
But '1'/hatever you do keep tljing, because
entire &lt;:olleetioll.-'llf
40 "Of the valuahle tors lmow how valuable first jasue_(!Qins worth UOO" more today. So, getting four all claims 1rill be honored before the 7! bour
--U.~ ~ That's wilY it's so can become
.
Presidential Dollar ·ooms free with ~ deadline expires. ••f7·c-=~----c-c
important to beat the 7211our deadline l'igbt
And, since everyone is tryingtogettlieni; Presiclential Fii.iiieil llloney Gallery for
On the worldWIBe web.' www.wrme.net .
now.
one thing is for sure, those lucky enough the twenty-eight dollar
•. ..
•
·~ • ·
•At the rate we are giving these away we to get in on tbis now are eertain to get disrouDt.ed framing fee
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has4bits,
Reds beat
Dodgers ·

Presidential Dollar coins ha ~ coliectprs scrambling to get them
because of the never·before·seen special edge engraving. Now
that everyone else is catching on, the direct claim lines to get
them free are being flooded with calls.

COl' S: liON: Everyone who gets the free
Presidential Dollar coins along with the Presidential Framed
Money Gallery will have a very · valuable collection of U.S.
Government coins that you would expect to only see.hanging

t
~

under guard in our nation's capital.

--

AI..C. .. £F.&amp;

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tory over the DodRers, who
~ 11-3 against Cincinnati
since 2006. TWo struggling
ljncups took !UmS trn:M;it~g
out during the short series.

After scoring only lhmc
over the weekend
while getting swep! in
Atlanta, the Dodgers piled
up 15 bits in a 9-3 win on
Monday night. Hairston, ,
batting .421. in the minors,
was ca!lcd up before dial
game, and got the Reds
rolling a day later.
~He bad a great game,~
.Bam said. ~ue was hoi in
Triple-A. Most times, whi::n .
you·~ bot in one place,
yoo'n be hoi anywbere.ft
He' quic-kly wanned to the
of the lineu .
singfed and doubled off Hong.(]rlb Kuo (6l ), then singled borne a pair
of run~ off Soon Proctor u
the Reds pul!ed ahead 7-1
after five mnings. HaiiSton
also singled home .a run in
the eighth, becoming the
first Reds player to get four
hits in a ~ this season.
"It's mce just to be u:f.
beae
' ft U
-!•
. , agam,
n•unton
Sll • .
"-It's good to get bad: to the
big le~pes. lbc~'s no
Olber plaCe 1o play.ft
.· Dunn aDd 'Phillips added
1110s

solo bomen - far Pbillips,
his first in 72 at•bats - as
!be Reds piled up. a seasonhigh~~ bUs.

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{UO) U6 2342, .a..33

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-== -pme~c-­

e••!dC411••fhJ••*'•.oom

•

opener
against
R i v e r
Valley earlier in the
year,
the

Alll:des Dodgers.
1be Red&amp; split dleirtwo-

Eric Aa ' lph, 1lp D 111 Wrtllr

•

s e a s o n

each homered Tuesday
night, leadi~~g the Reds to an
· 8-l victory over 1be Los

Sportl..,

j

CHESHIRE What
goes around, comes around .
After Eastern claimed a.
...3
borne . victory · in its

leadoff bitter, and Adam
Dunn and Brandon Phillips

E1MII-JPQttte~aiw•li••·com

who

BY ll!naw WADBIS
BWALTERSQ!IMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

his debut as Cioci.Daali's

,__ H.U .... ""'8

Framed Money Gallery is a real steal at just $28 for those
beat the deadline and get the free coins.

Lady
Raiders
rnlly past
Eastern, 4-3

· CINCINNATI - Wben
..
Du lbter made
card, be
decided
to
pu! tbe
Cincinnati Reds' new~ hitter at tile '!'I' of 1be order.
. His thinking? Jerry
Hairston· Jr. must be doiJ1g
sMvming . .
Hairston bad fuur bits in

CoNl'ACrUS

the look an everyone's face when they recel\ie the Framed Money
Gallery with the entire first year of Presidential Dollars coins !Tee.

WHS won the contest 16-5.

.....

t-aD0-181-:UM

• &amp;ERWliE LOVES TfE GFT OF MDIEY; The valuable • 1'UINS /IMY llOOM tN1'0 A SHOWPlACE: The Framed
coins ..e only being reiHsedfrom tile U.S. Goweo n'''"''t.for93 days Money Gallery is so impressive, local frame shops can charge.
each, then only four times a year, for tile 11&amp;)(! nine years. So ilmgine $231 but a special discounted framing fee is being given so the

Spri~.

~SOilaTED ~'RES$

~ton

• MIWONS IN AlEE MONEY: The giveaway of these • VAU tABLE

rMii·--=Js.a

Meigs' Stlellie Bailey leads off first while Point Pleasant's Miranda Thompsl'n ,prepares for
the .play dufing the fourth imning of a nigh school softball game Tuesday night in Rock

.. Wflllr

33

.com

I.Mry CMn/plllllo

Meigs' Caleb Davis reoeilles congratulations from teammate Ryan Jeffers after crossing home plate in the seventh inning
for the winning run in a nigh school baseball .game against Marietta Tuesday in Rock Springs. Meigs won 4-3.

r ...
1

...

4-3

,

.... ;C..
LO~YDAILYREGISTER.COM

ROCK SPRINGS
Meigs srored two runs in ,tiJe
bottom of the seventh inning
to etase a one-run deficit and
claim an e~iling 4-3 vlcwry
over
visiting
Marietta
Tuesday night at Meigs
HiR:h School.
Coming into the fuial
inning down 3-2, Jason
Morris led off the frame
with a double followed
immedia~ely by an RBI poke

from Caleb
Davis
to
knot
the
score 3-3.
·
Clay Bolin
then joined
llis -teammate on the
diamond
after reaching on an
error and
A a r o n
Story ripped a single to load
the bases with·none out.
With Meigs (6-4) holding

all the momentom, Brian

Delong came through in &gt;tbe
tense moment with an RBI
single to right field, bringing
home Davis for the go-ahead
run giving the Marauders a
thriUin~;J4-3 victory.
· Moms · led the , Meigs
offensive charge, going a
perfect 3-for-3 at the plate
with a double and two runs
scored. Brian Delong added
a double and a single and
Ryan Jeffers was 2-for-3,
helping rack up the II hit
contest.

Bolin, Dunfee, Davis and
J. T. Evans rounded out the
Marauder bitters with a
knock apiece.
No one from Marietta bad
more than one hit.
Marietta, who struggled
with just five bits, instead
used .nearly ba!:f a dozen
Meigs errors to move around
the diamond. In fact the
Tigers scored all three runs
off of Marauder errors.
Bien scored Marietta ·~

Raiders
returned
the favor Tuesday evening
with a narrow 4-3 borne triumph during a non-conference softball matcbup.
The Lady Raiders (4-9)
fell behind 3-1 after fiTe
innings ·Of play. but rallied
.to score two runs in the bot·
tom of the sixth to knot
things at three apiece headed into the final inning of
regulation.
After working · ,out of a
small jam in the Lady
. Eagles' balf of the seventh.
staning RVHS hurler Kari
McFann helped her own
cause in the bottom half of
.the inning by delivering a
bases-loaded single
which drove in Jenna Ward
and gave the Silver and
Black the hard-fought. one·
n1n deci~ion .
.
McFann - who pitched
seven solid innings in pick·
ing up the winning decision
- allowed just three hits.
one earned run. two walks
and a hit ·one ·bimer in the
contest. The senior's game-

""••--.a PIIIn-F c'•.R
Charleston Catholic blanks .Falcons Buffalo slams Wahama
CHARLEStON, W.Va.
The Wahama White
Falcon · baseball nine suffered its fourth I 0-run loss
in a row Tuesday .evening
after falling to ctlarleston
Catholic by a I 0-0 margin.
Offensively thC\White
Falcons managed only three
bits on the evening and wete
shut out for the first time Ibis
season. Three Faloon pitchers failed to hold the Irish in
cbeck
as
Charleston
Catholic pounded out 14 bits
in handing · the White
Falcons its fourth oonseculive setback. . The loss
dropped tbe Bend Area
teams season slate to 4-9 on
the year while Charleston

· Catholic improved to 9-12
with the home triumph.
The Irish soored three,
first inning runs on a leadoff
single by McKown, a double
by Baird and a two run
homer by Pack. Another
tally in the second eKtended
the Catholic lead to 4-0
. pefore the hosts blew the
contest open with five runs
in the tbinL Tbe game was
balled in the bottom baif of
the fifth because of the 10
run rule after Charleston

Catholic scored its tenth run·
of the day.
Wahama got a single by ·
William Zuspan in the second, a single by Garrett
Uoderwood in the fourth
and a single by Derek
Veamy in the fifth but that
would be 411 the oifense ·the
local diamond nine could
muster. The Mason County
nine would see only four
other base runners Jhroughout the five inning contest
with I lieob Roach reaching
on an enur, Veazey being hit
by a pitch and Zuspan and
Caleb Roach drawing a
base-{)n-balls.
Pack.
tbe
Kanawha
Valley's leading bitter, had a
pair of singles tn go with bis

PI

n•-••••'s.• m

BY LA t C..
LCRUMOMYDIIil.YREGISTER.COM

BUFFALO, W.Va. -It is
safe to say Tue&amp;day did not
go as · planned for the
Wahama softball team.
After taking Buffalo (208) down to the wire just a
week. ago in a 5-3 home
I
the Lad Fa!
(10oss,
y
oons .
IO) bad a complete coU~se
in the mad contest falling
11-0 in five innings

in .
Alex Wood got the Start
for Wahama, going less
than an inning before suf·
fering" an injury. Kylie
· Riggs replaced her in that
first and finished out the
contest.
· Buffalo wasted little time
jumping out front. opening
a 4-0 lead after one and
e~ttended that advantage to
7-0 after two . The Lady
Bison tben tacked four fore
more in the founh to take
an 11·0 lead and held on for
the shutout in the final
inning to end the game ·in
the fifth .

Tuesday
evening
in
Buffalo.
Buffalo's Dingess pitched
a shutout in picking up the
victory while her team
added nine offensive runs
~~ut~.to11 . -0
in support. Bla:ke led that ~
~~ :
~ 1 932
offensive charge, going 3- wHs 110.101. """' Wood, Kylie A•gll'
&amp;
3 WI'th a home run, a · BHS
(1 1 and Mary K-r.
tOT(2!J.B) omgess and Wllhams
double and five runs batted WP - o.ngess LP- Wood

°

••

�Wednesday, April q, 2008

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Qertbune - Sentinel -

Long signs with·Dolphins, will be top pick
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Pet

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stlouis (\VIIIII ) I '2..()) at Pltl8burgh

(SnoH 2·1). 7:0S;p;m.
Floridll (Miller' ~-ot AUanla (Bennatt().

0), 7~0p.m.
N.Y.- ( _ , . . . 2·2) atWBshlngmn
( - . g ll-1), ~:10 p.m.
HouiiDn (Sompson o-2) at Clncinnotl
·(Airc¥&gt; o-2). 7:10p.m.
·

Ptilllillllpl:ia (l:lamals 2-2) at'M-..to:e
~ 0-3), 8:05 p.m.
·CIIIcogo Coos (Hill 1.0) at Colorado
{II6J: I I 1-1), 8:95 p:m.
Son Froncisco (Coin 0-2) at San Diogo

_

~2-1),10:05p. m.

,....,.

.

Anmna (Haran 3-0) at LA. Dodgem
(l.oM 1-1),10:10p.m.

Houlton at Cincinnati, 12:35 p.m .
l'l*dolphia at M I - . 1:05 p.m.
CI1Digo Cubs a1 Cololado. 5:05 p.m.
Sl. Lnuil at Pt-.!llh. 7:05p.m.
- a t A11on1a, 7:10p.m.
N.Y. at WashlngiOn, 7:10p.m.
s.n Francisco a1 San Diego, 10:05 p.m.
-..,at LA Dodgers, 10:10 p.m .

Blanks
hoPageBl
first :inning round trippet
while Goolsby also had
.three hits in the outing.
Baird swatted a single and a
double with Prudnick blast-

ing a three run borne run in
die Irish third. Wood, Corey
and Varley added a single
each for the Charleston
(;.lhalic C9U'e

UnderwoOd was ~ed
with the· pitching sethack
for W.ahama with Caleb
Ruach and Andy Grimm

Reds
fNnPigeBt
'

Edinson Volquez (3-0)

•l

reinaincd unbeaten in four
starts by giving up three hits
and a run in seven innings,
for
his longest
Cincinnati so far. The Reds
got Volquez fmm Texas in
;the trade for Josh Hamilton
last December.
The Reds ,have scored
eisdlt or more runs in ·three
of'bis four starts.
Ken Griffey Jr. went {}.
for-4, leaving him four
homers shy of No. 600.
IGriffey .basn't homened during the first fiye games of
;the homestand, which concludes on Thursday. The
Reds then head for nine

t

awearance

Wm
hohgeBl
first run in the opening

.. ,.,.. frame off of a Meigs error

and Robinson followed
suite in the second when he
scomd off of an em&gt;r to give
tbe visitors a 2-Q lead.
Marietta then chipped in
atiother run in the fifth
Whea Robinsdn again toot
advBntage of a free !iCOI1e
when be crossed home plak;
after an eiJOr to open up a 3-

\

I

0 Ttger lead.
Ho\vever in the home balf
of the fifth Meigs finally
caught file.
Jc:fien led off the inniq
wid1 a siDgJe followed by 1
R~lle from Morrill and
Davi11 hit a sacrifice ill
move tbe 1'IIIIDin into acor·
illl position. Bolin dKm
ripped 1 single to brin&amp;
bailie 1 score and Map
tMed another run .from
Davia IIIIer in tbe iMiDI to
dole lbe pp to 3-2.

Afttt:t a strona defensiw
.aDd in the top of tbe sixdl
I' ip lried to tie it up when
EVIDI ripped a double with

two oats, but and flyout .in
- the next at bat ended the

ROOring porential.

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N .Y. von~caes 9, ChicOgo Whl1s s... 5
'M innasobl 5 , Ooktond 4
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11 •
1 , .. Texu (Mendoza 11-2) al OatroH
(Rogoll 1-S), 7:05p.m.
'
L.A. A"fflls (Garlond 2.2) at Boston
(lllat5ozoka4-D). 7 ·05 p.m.
TorOnto ll'rll _, 2.21 vs. Tampa Bay
(Hammel H) at «lsslmmee, Fla., 7:1D
p.m.
e-land (Com!Dna 2·1) at Ka,..

~~~-:;::,~;~1 at Clllc;ogo
Whle Soot (Vazquoz s- 11 . 8 , 11 p.m.
Minnesota (Bonaer 1·3) at Oaldand
(Gaudin 1·1), 10:05 p.m.
Battimore (O.Cabrere 1.0) at Saa111e
(Sliva S.O). 10:10 p.m.

...,.......,.. -

Texas et Detroit, 1:05 p.m.
•• p.m.
LA. Ange Is at 8oston, 1 :~
Minnoaota at Oaldand. 3:35p.m.

The Miami Do1phins were
grinning TUesday, roo. They
signed the Midi\gan · eft

a five-year:OOOiract
with '$30 ririllion guaranteccl.
and they'll select bim with
the top . pick in the draft
Saturday.
1be deal allows the
J)(Jiphins and Loog to avoid
a :possible 'holdout.
"'t's mllly important for .us
to know Jake is gning to be
on ;the field for us on time
when ~· camp begins
'"'S
in July," coac .uny par.ano
said. "lbat was aitical." .
Long's total contract pack•
is for $57.75 million,
said :a person faJDiliar with
....,
·n· n·ons who didn't
oego a
.
. want to be Identified because
the Dolphins declined to
reveal terms. Last year's top
pick, JaMarcus · Russell,
signed for $61 rnillio.n with
the Oakland Raiders but
missed all of trdining camp
before reaehing a deal.
Long becomes the highestpaid lineman in the NFL and
a 6-".oot-7, 315-pound cor.nerstone in a rebuilding pro-

Toronto vs. Tampa Bay a1 «&lt;sslmmee,

Fill .. 7:10p.m.

Cleveland .at Kansas Ctty, 8:10p.m.
N.Y.
at Cllicago White Sox.

Yo-•

8:11p.m.

I - a t -. 1D,Dplf!':

also tniling &lt;011 idle ibi1l for
the Whlte fillcons. P.ack
went the distance itO pick up
,the will fM'ihe fii&amp;h with his .
ithree bit, eight · strikeout
Sbut0Ul.
· Wahama will try and
bring an .end to its current
losing •Skid when the Bend
•_
1
,...,e a team trave s to
Southern for a 5 p.m. elate
with the Tornadoes before
b
·
Wi
C
osUng
rrt ' ounty on
1bUI'llday.

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Oakland
12 '9
Saanle
1 1 10

7

role as the NFL's No. I draft
pick, leaning into a news
conference microphone to
talk: about his mean streak
while his mother sat in the
comer, nodding. as she

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seemed at ease in his new

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LP - Unde:wood.

--Pol!k .

ject for the new Dolphins
Reaching a contraCt &amp;F,· ~ in 20()6 and 2007. He
regUrle Jed by Bill Paroeiis.: ment before the draft 1sn t f1mshed second to LSU
Last season Miami went 1- unprecedented. The Houston defensive tac~le Glenn
15, and the offensive line bas Teuns si_gned defens1ve end Dorsey 10 balloung las! seabeen a chronic problem in Mario Williams as the1r No. son for the ~mbardi and
recent years.
1 pick on the eve of the 2006 Outland trophies.
~Jake was our guy from draft.
Lloyd Carr, who coached
the beginning." ~manCondon, who represen~s Long at Michigan, said he
ager Jeff Ireland said "Jake sevcrnl tn~ prospects, said bad several conversations
Long was on the top of our lhere's enough time for the with Parcells in recent
board for a long time. 1bere Rams to reach a deal with a weeks.
wasn't a \W\111~ lot of debate. playerl~fore they make the
"I know this: Jake Long is
We thought 1t was a very second p1ck Samrday. .
his type of player," Cm
good fit with the Miami
"My understanding •s St. said. "Jake is passionate
Dolphins."
. Louis is _on . the d~k," about the game, and I don't
With many olher needs as Condon S8ld.wuh a sm1le:
think there is anything that
well . . the Do'lphins were
The oilly other offens•ve he lacks."
interested in tra£!iqg the tnp lineman _taken with the No .. !
The Dolphins decided to .
p1ck for muJI:qlle lower choice smce 1970 was Oh10 use the top pick on offense
choices. Wbea m Suitot:s State tackle Orlando Pace, rather than take Dorsey,
surfaCed, they ~ ne~- who made the .Pro Bowl Virginia defensive end Chris
allons last w~ With Long s seven. ~nsecunve um~s Long or Ohio State lincag,en~ Tom Gondon.
after JOmmg the. Rams m backer Vernon Gholston. It
'Its such a~ ~nor to 1997. _The ~lphms would Uims out lreland's commerit
be_ tht;, No. ,1 P•~ . Long be thri~ed With 8 compllflf- last week about drafting "a
Said. . I don l ,think tt ·~ bl~ achievement by Lon~-.
pillar of your defense" was a
sunk m yet. It ~ something
~ake bas .all the q~alittes slip of the tongue - or a
every k:td dreams about fm we re looking for m our
k cree
just real excited that it hap- , linemen," said Spara_no, ~ho s~'he:. . 1i n.
to kn
pened. Now f'm coming to a coached the offens1ve .line
a s or me
o~;
great place."
with the Dallas Cowboys. and you .to ~uess a!&gt;out,
Long flew to South florida "~I.C:s ~ery tough, smart and Ireland said With a smile ..
with his parents · Tuesday disciplined. 'l'hose are the . The drama ma;Y ~ wssmoming for the news confer- people we want to sunuund mg, but Long
plans ,tn
ence. The Dolphins said they ourselves with here."
fly to New York on
didn't conduct contract talks
Long said he's glad he'll . Wednesday and ~nd the
with any other potential be reporting to training d~aft. The ~lphins ha~
picks.
on tiJ!le; because be' II e~ght other picks and four ?f
" It was a very straightforto adJUSt to the faster ~e first 64, and they remain
ward negotiation," Condon speed of the NFL ganie.
m th~ II!arket for more
Temperament won't be an offensive lm.emen, 3: quartersaid. "They didn't leverage
us with other players, and we issue, be said.
.back, a receiver, a tight ~nd,
didn't tell them we wanted to
Lollil stalted 40 games at cornerbacks, defensive bnebe on some different team or Michigan and was Big Ten men and linebackers.
•
any ofthosek:indsofthings." offensive lineman of the
At left taclde, they're set;

sun

Gallia
County
OH

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----------------------------------------------

Eagles
fromP,.Bl
winning safety w.as lilso her
only hit ·of :the; night;

~ ~::~ ~:
earned runs off of
starter Sllni CUmmins,

Rose reached on an enur to
Kirsten Carter bad ~o
give the hosts two baserun- .hits for 1he victors, followed
ners with nobody out. Holly by McFann, Birchfield,
early edge.
l'aylM broug'bt borne! .b!Mh Ward and Hardway with
RVHS" responded in its Birobfield and .Rose wilh a one each. Davis, Kat Bland
hlilf,.ofme fourth with :a om. , · Sing1e, tying diings at tbree and B.ritney Morrison bad :a
T.em1 Po!ter was• lliit ibY :~ 9 .• re.
. . ·'
safety each for the Lady
pitch, thenmaugcd to.ut
01minjns led otJ.t he EHS Eagles.
herwayaroundto~:Rh ~venth by reaching oil~ River Valley returns to
a 1ltolen .lbase ·lllllil :a l'"... error, then advanced to sec~ Ohio Valley Conference
ball. Katclyn Birchfield ond wben Megan Carnahan action today when it hosts
then reached on an errur, was hit by a pitch with twG Coal Grove. Eastern travcll;
allowing Pmtcr to score ,and ~ ~~ a~~ght a ~,P­ to Stewart on Thursday for~
~ita2-1 contest.
uplfordlediinl.out,tbeli'die TVC Hock:io,g matchup
'The Green and White got Lady Raiders '!WI2!1 to ;the against Federal Hocking.
tthat run right back in the plate. ·
· · .· '
Both games will start .at ' 5
1ifth''8S Ryan Davis led off
Ward · and
Briliaay p.m.
the inning wi\h a double, Hardway led off the fnune
then later scored when with bl!ct-to-back bit's, ~
Cleland grounded into a
Griffith lw:ali £aalam 000210 o -- ~sss·
72
fielder's choice for a 3-1
to lo:ed tlie bases .A V8lloy 000 102 ,
advanta~e .
with nobody out. McFann .EHS (6-6); Soml C&lt;mwnino ond Alllo
RlWBbtl.
'fpen m the bottom gfthe dl'ill.eda2-l olfering to left- HVHS
(4-9): Kari McFann and Terra"'
sixth; Birchfield led things center, :endi~ 1he game in a Porter.
.
WP- McFann: lP- Cummins.
off with a·single and Kaylee 4-3 decision itt the hosts.
nobody out. Kat Bland
delivered a two-RBI double
two batters tater for dlat

ms
who .

was crediteil with !the !losing
decison. OJmmins allowed
two walks anc'l hit a batter in
her seven· innings of wod.
McFann struck out seven
and Cummins fanned five.
Eastern struck first in the
fGUI'Ih, plating a pair·of runs
ilo, t11roc ,a l~ lead. Jessica
Clohmd reached on an error,
then Kelsey. Holter was
walked to give the guests
two
baserunners
with

-v-.r·.-1

!';g:.,'l'rie

left elbow last I uly and had
some soreness in the elbow ·
during spring training. :He
has thrown more pitcheS" in
each of his three fitalts,
encouraging manager Joe
Torre to stiCk with him for ·and a single, Anna Sommer
was 2-for-5 with two runs
at least one more s~.
scored
Charmee Smith had
The newest member · of
a
triple
and a single,
the Reds did the most damhad two
Jennifer
Wickline
age.
The 31-year.:Old Hairston hits and Miranda Thompson
signed a contract on March added a hit.
And Point Reasan' 'W.ast-.
3 after the Reds were reased
little time~
· . 1lutt
sured ;by Major League
high-powered
Baseball that be wouldn't
The Dodgers couldn't face di51&lt;ipline for his men- rolling.
The Lady Knights scored
overcome a ·poor start by tion in the Mitchell Repon.
three
runs in the first as
Kuo, who gave up eight Hairston was accused of
Cottrill,
Darst and Snmmer
hits and five runs in 3 2-3 buying human growth bor;
innings. The left-bander mone from .a former New led off the inning with a
hasn't lJIII(Ie it to the flftli Yodi: MeIS clubhouse .allen- doUble and ·twO singles and
all three scoied to open up a
inning in any of his three dant.
starts.
It was Hairston's seventh 3-0 PPHS lead. Me1gs
Kuo had surgery · to four-hit game and his first answered in the home half
of the inning w~ Meri
remove bone chips from his · since July 22, 2005.
VanMeter reached on 11 ii!ngle and was d.rivcahom:e.by
Bm to. make the soore 3-l
in favnr nf the vi~tors . . _
However that close • gin did not last long u idle
Lady Knights found· lbl!ir
groove in the third.
Wyant led off the imling
with a double, followed by a
Wickline walk ·and a Jones
score with Smith driving
home a number of those
runs with a triple to the left
field fence. Cottrill then
walked and Darst helped
drive in a few more as Point
Pleasant finished wid{' five
runs to rack up an &amp;-I lead.
Meigs answered with a
pair in the bottom half of
the inning wben Mick:i
Barnes reached on an error
and Bm smashed a deep
home run to m•teJ field to
close the gap to 8-3.
But that 1s all the closer
Meigs would get as PPHS
SCOI1ld two in.tile fourth and
fifth innings to eldend the
advantqe to 12-3. Wyant
and Jones troored in tbe
fourth on singles while
Mews' Almm Story bllll durtrc the 11Mntll
of a hiCh Cottrill and Wyant rouncled
.chool baHblll pme aplnat Mlll1etta Tunday In .Rock the diamond for runs in tbe
fifth .
~The Lady Mara!lders
It was a solid overall travels to Point Pleasant for added another run in bottom
half of the fifth wben
niJbt for die Maraude~ aS p.m. swt.
with nearly a do:r.ea hits.
VanMeter reached on .an
......, ... · a
Meigs will return to lllo
error and w~ driven home
110 010 · 0
353
000 aiO 2
41 \.(i
on a Barnes double to make
action Wednesday .when it lllo

.games in San Francisco, St.
Louis .and Atlanta.
After ·their one-game
lbreakout;1De1)00gers were
back to scoring one run a
~arne - itheir total output
m four of the last five.
"We've just got to put it
to$ethcr and get it going,"
S8ld Mi!:t .Kemp, who was
O-for-3with a walk:. "We're
going ' .to be dangerous
when everybody. gets on
the .same page. We're going
throuoow.'p bard
. times rig_ht .

CLASSIFIED

~ense

Meigs' Amy Barr pitches during a high school softball gaine
against Point Pleasant Tuesday in Rock Springs.

the score 12-4.
· and Shellie Bailey who had
Point Pleasant fmally put two hits apiece. VanMe\Cf
the preverbal nail in the cof- and Barnes added the other
.fin in the seventh when hits for the home squad.
Cottrill, Darst and Sommer
Point Pleasant and Meigs
led off the inning .with sin- will both take Wednesday
ales and a triple from Wyant off and return to action
6rought everyone borne. Thursday. PPHS hosts
Wyant was then. b~ught Ripley on Thursday while
borne on a W!c~me stngle he Lady Marauden host
to push the VISitor I~ to Wellston. Both games will
16-4.
begin at S p m.
Meigs added one more
· ·
run in its final at bat when
-"
• 1e. .... 1
Barr reacbed on a walk and PP 3011 ao •
rounded the diutond for a
te1e s
runS
. to end the SCOrillg at 16Ill
~': o 010 1
The

fo:'l

Lady

Marauders
a
total of six
~~
bits in the oss led by Bm

-DftD-"
•

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Oorat.

117-7):

em~~y -

-

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MHS 15-5): Am!~-- Erin P. .
WP-Jonw. LP- liM.
HR- Ill: Ban, lhltd inn1111J,.,. an.

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�Wednesday, April q, 2008

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Qertbune - Sentinel -

Long signs with·Dolphins, will be top pick
a...ua
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stlouis (\VIIIII ) I '2..()) at Pltl8burgh

(SnoH 2·1). 7:0S;p;m.
Floridll (Miller' ~-ot AUanla (Bennatt().

0), 7~0p.m.
N.Y.- ( _ , . . . 2·2) atWBshlngmn
( - . g ll-1), ~:10 p.m.
HouiiDn (Sompson o-2) at Clncinnotl
·(Airc¥&gt; o-2). 7:10p.m.
·

Ptilllillllpl:ia (l:lamals 2-2) at'M-..to:e
~ 0-3), 8:05 p.m.
·CIIIcogo Coos (Hill 1.0) at Colorado
{II6J: I I 1-1), 8:95 p:m.
Son Froncisco (Coin 0-2) at San Diogo

_

~2-1),10:05p. m.

,....,.

.

Anmna (Haran 3-0) at LA. Dodgem
(l.oM 1-1),10:10p.m.

Houlton at Cincinnati, 12:35 p.m .
l'l*dolphia at M I - . 1:05 p.m.
CI1Digo Cubs a1 Cololado. 5:05 p.m.
Sl. Lnuil at Pt-.!llh. 7:05p.m.
- a t A11on1a, 7:10p.m.
N.Y. at WashlngiOn, 7:10p.m.
s.n Francisco a1 San Diego, 10:05 p.m.
-..,at LA Dodgers, 10:10 p.m .

Blanks
hoPageBl
first :inning round trippet
while Goolsby also had
.three hits in the outing.
Baird swatted a single and a
double with Prudnick blast-

ing a three run borne run in
die Irish third. Wood, Corey
and Varley added a single
each for the Charleston
(;.lhalic C9U'e

UnderwoOd was ~ed
with the· pitching sethack
for W.ahama with Caleb
Ruach and Andy Grimm

Reds
fNnPigeBt
'

Edinson Volquez (3-0)

•l

reinaincd unbeaten in four
starts by giving up three hits
and a run in seven innings,
for
his longest
Cincinnati so far. The Reds
got Volquez fmm Texas in
;the trade for Josh Hamilton
last December.
The Reds ,have scored
eisdlt or more runs in ·three
of'bis four starts.
Ken Griffey Jr. went {}.
for-4, leaving him four
homers shy of No. 600.
IGriffey .basn't homened during the first fiye games of
;the homestand, which concludes on Thursday. The
Reds then head for nine

t

awearance

Wm
hohgeBl
first run in the opening

.. ,.,.. frame off of a Meigs error

and Robinson followed
suite in the second when he
scomd off of an em&gt;r to give
tbe visitors a 2-Q lead.
Marietta then chipped in
atiother run in the fifth
Whea Robinsdn again toot
advBntage of a free !iCOI1e
when be crossed home plak;
after an eiJOr to open up a 3-

\

I

0 Ttger lead.
Ho\vever in the home balf
of the fifth Meigs finally
caught file.
Jc:fien led off the inniq
wid1 a siDgJe followed by 1
R~lle from Morrill and
Davi11 hit a sacrifice ill
move tbe 1'IIIIDin into acor·
illl position. Bolin dKm
ripped 1 single to brin&amp;
bailie 1 score and Map
tMed another run .from
Davia IIIIer in tbe iMiDI to
dole lbe pp to 3-2.

Afttt:t a strona defensiw
.aDd in the top of tbe sixdl
I' ip lried to tie it up when
EVIDI ripped a double with

two oats, but and flyout .in
- the next at bat ended the

ROOring porential.

PctGB

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Texu

.33S

5

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sinilecL

I JlaBosiDn B. Tens 3
0e1rott 5. Toronlo 1

Boston 7, LA. Angol&amp; s

T - Boy s. To1D111D 4
~nd 15, Konou Clly 1
N .Y. von~caes 9, ChicOgo Whl1s s... 5
'M innasobl 5 , Ooktond 4
Saollle 4. Baltilno,. 2
11 •
1 , .. Texu (Mendoza 11-2) al OatroH
(Rogoll 1-S), 7:05p.m.
'
L.A. A"fflls (Garlond 2.2) at Boston
(lllat5ozoka4-D). 7 ·05 p.m.
TorOnto ll'rll _, 2.21 vs. Tampa Bay
(Hammel H) at «lsslmmee, Fla., 7:1D
p.m.
e-land (Com!Dna 2·1) at Ka,..

~~~-:;::,~;~1 at Clllc;ogo
Whle Soot (Vazquoz s- 11 . 8 , 11 p.m.
Minnesota (Bonaer 1·3) at Oaldand
(Gaudin 1·1), 10:05 p.m.
Battimore (O.Cabrere 1.0) at Saa111e
(Sliva S.O). 10:10 p.m.

...,.......,.. -

Texas et Detroit, 1:05 p.m.
•• p.m.
LA. Ange Is at 8oston, 1 :~
Minnoaota at Oaldand. 3:35p.m.

The Miami Do1phins were
grinning TUesday, roo. They
signed the Midi\gan · eft

a five-year:OOOiract
with '$30 ririllion guaranteccl.
and they'll select bim with
the top . pick in the draft
Saturday.
1be deal allows the
J)(Jiphins and Loog to avoid
a :possible 'holdout.
"'t's mllly important for .us
to know Jake is gning to be
on ;the field for us on time
when ~· camp begins
'"'S
in July," coac .uny par.ano
said. "lbat was aitical." .
Long's total contract pack•
is for $57.75 million,
said :a person faJDiliar with
....,
·n· n·ons who didn't
oego a
.
. want to be Identified because
the Dolphins declined to
reveal terms. Last year's top
pick, JaMarcus · Russell,
signed for $61 rnillio.n with
the Oakland Raiders but
missed all of trdining camp
before reaehing a deal.
Long becomes the highestpaid lineman in the NFL and
a 6-".oot-7, 315-pound cor.nerstone in a rebuilding pro-

Toronto vs. Tampa Bay a1 «&lt;sslmmee,

Fill .. 7:10p.m.

Cleveland .at Kansas Ctty, 8:10p.m.
N.Y.
at Cllicago White Sox.

Yo-•

8:11p.m.

I - a t -. 1D,Dplf!':

also tniling &lt;011 idle ibi1l for
the Whlte fillcons. P.ack
went the distance itO pick up
,the will fM'ihe fii&amp;h with his .
ithree bit, eight · strikeout
Sbut0Ul.
· Wahama will try and
bring an .end to its current
losing •Skid when the Bend
•_
1
,...,e a team trave s to
Southern for a 5 p.m. elate
with the Tornadoes before
b
·
Wi
C
osUng
rrt ' ounty on
1bUI'llday.

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Los Angoles12 g
Oakland
12 '9
Saanle
1 1 10

7

role as the NFL's No. I draft
pick, leaning into a news
conference microphone to
talk: about his mean streak
while his mother sat in the
comer, nodding. as she

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DAVIE, Aa. -Jake Long
seemed at ease in his new

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Glrimm·(S) and Bond, u - . - (5).

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LP - Unde:wood.

--Pol!k .

ject for the new Dolphins
Reaching a contraCt &amp;F,· ~ in 20()6 and 2007. He
regUrle Jed by Bill Paroeiis.: ment before the draft 1sn t f1mshed second to LSU
Last season Miami went 1- unprecedented. The Houston defensive tac~le Glenn
15, and the offensive line bas Teuns si_gned defens1ve end Dorsey 10 balloung las! seabeen a chronic problem in Mario Williams as the1r No. son for the ~mbardi and
recent years.
1 pick on the eve of the 2006 Outland trophies.
~Jake was our guy from draft.
Lloyd Carr, who coached
the beginning." ~manCondon, who represen~s Long at Michigan, said he
ager Jeff Ireland said "Jake sevcrnl tn~ prospects, said bad several conversations
Long was on the top of our lhere's enough time for the with Parcells in recent
board for a long time. 1bere Rams to reach a deal with a weeks.
wasn't a \W\111~ lot of debate. playerl~fore they make the
"I know this: Jake Long is
We thought 1t was a very second p1ck Samrday. .
his type of player," Cm
good fit with the Miami
"My understanding •s St. said. "Jake is passionate
Dolphins."
. Louis is _on . the d~k," about the game, and I don't
With many olher needs as Condon S8ld.wuh a sm1le:
think there is anything that
well . . the Do'lphins were
The oilly other offens•ve he lacks."
interested in tra£!iqg the tnp lineman _taken with the No .. !
The Dolphins decided to .
p1ck for muJI:qlle lower choice smce 1970 was Oh10 use the top pick on offense
choices. Wbea m Suitot:s State tackle Orlando Pace, rather than take Dorsey,
surfaCed, they ~ ne~- who made the .Pro Bowl Virginia defensive end Chris
allons last w~ With Long s seven. ~nsecunve um~s Long or Ohio State lincag,en~ Tom Gondon.
after JOmmg the. Rams m backer Vernon Gholston. It
'Its such a~ ~nor to 1997. _The ~lphms would Uims out lreland's commerit
be_ tht;, No. ,1 P•~ . Long be thri~ed With 8 compllflf- last week about drafting "a
Said. . I don l ,think tt ·~ bl~ achievement by Lon~-.
pillar of your defense" was a
sunk m yet. It ~ something
~ake bas .all the q~alittes slip of the tongue - or a
every k:td dreams about fm we re looking for m our
k cree
just real excited that it hap- , linemen," said Spara_no, ~ho s~'he:. . 1i n.
to kn
pened. Now f'm coming to a coached the offens1ve .line
a s or me
o~;
great place."
with the Dallas Cowboys. and you .to ~uess a!&gt;out,
Long flew to South florida "~I.C:s ~ery tough, smart and Ireland said With a smile ..
with his parents · Tuesday disciplined. 'l'hose are the . The drama ma;Y ~ wssmoming for the news confer- people we want to sunuund mg, but Long
plans ,tn
ence. The Dolphins said they ourselves with here."
fly to New York on
didn't conduct contract talks
Long said he's glad he'll . Wednesday and ~nd the
with any other potential be reporting to training d~aft. The ~lphins ha~
picks.
on tiJ!le; because be' II e~ght other picks and four ?f
" It was a very straightforto adJUSt to the faster ~e first 64, and they remain
ward negotiation," Condon speed of the NFL ganie.
m th~ II!arket for more
Temperament won't be an offensive lm.emen, 3: quartersaid. "They didn't leverage
us with other players, and we issue, be said.
.back, a receiver, a tight ~nd,
didn't tell them we wanted to
Lollil stalted 40 games at cornerbacks, defensive bnebe on some different team or Michigan and was Big Ten men and linebackers.
•
any ofthosek:indsofthings." offensive lineman of the
At left taclde, they're set;

sun

Gallia
County
OH

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----------------------------------------------

Eagles
fromP,.Bl
winning safety w.as lilso her
only hit ·of :the; night;

~ ~::~ ~:
earned runs off of
starter Sllni CUmmins,

Rose reached on an enur to
Kirsten Carter bad ~o
give the hosts two baserun- .hits for 1he victors, followed
ners with nobody out. Holly by McFann, Birchfield,
early edge.
l'aylM broug'bt borne! .b!Mh Ward and Hardway with
RVHS" responded in its Birobfield and .Rose wilh a one each. Davis, Kat Bland
hlilf,.ofme fourth with :a om. , · Sing1e, tying diings at tbree and B.ritney Morrison bad :a
T.em1 Po!ter was• lliit ibY :~ 9 .• re.
. . ·'
safety each for the Lady
pitch, thenmaugcd to.ut
01minjns led otJ.t he EHS Eagles.
herwayaroundto~:Rh ~venth by reaching oil~ River Valley returns to
a 1ltolen .lbase ·lllllil :a l'"... error, then advanced to sec~ Ohio Valley Conference
ball. Katclyn Birchfield ond wben Megan Carnahan action today when it hosts
then reached on an errur, was hit by a pitch with twG Coal Grove. Eastern travcll;
allowing Pmtcr to score ,and ~ ~~ a~~ght a ~,P­ to Stewart on Thursday for~
~ita2-1 contest.
uplfordlediinl.out,tbeli'die TVC Hock:io,g matchup
'The Green and White got Lady Raiders '!WI2!1 to ;the against Federal Hocking.
tthat run right back in the plate. ·
· · .· '
Both games will start .at ' 5
1ifth''8S Ryan Davis led off
Ward · and
Briliaay p.m.
the inning wi\h a double, Hardway led off the fnune
then later scored when with bl!ct-to-back bit's, ~
Cleland grounded into a
Griffith lw:ali £aalam 000210 o -- ~sss·
72
fielder's choice for a 3-1
to lo:ed tlie bases .A V8lloy 000 102 ,
advanta~e .
with nobody out. McFann .EHS (6-6); Soml C&lt;mwnino ond Alllo
RlWBbtl.
'fpen m the bottom gfthe dl'ill.eda2-l olfering to left- HVHS
(4-9): Kari McFann and Terra"'
sixth; Birchfield led things center, :endi~ 1he game in a Porter.
.
WP- McFann: lP- Cummins.
off with a·single and Kaylee 4-3 decision itt the hosts.
nobody out. Kat Bland
delivered a two-RBI double
two batters tater for dlat

ms
who .

was crediteil with !the !losing
decison. OJmmins allowed
two walks anc'l hit a batter in
her seven· innings of wod.
McFann struck out seven
and Cummins fanned five.
Eastern struck first in the
fGUI'Ih, plating a pair·of runs
ilo, t11roc ,a l~ lead. Jessica
Clohmd reached on an error,
then Kelsey. Holter was
walked to give the guests
two
baserunners
with

-v-.r·.-1

!';g:.,'l'rie

left elbow last I uly and had
some soreness in the elbow ·
during spring training. :He
has thrown more pitcheS" in
each of his three fitalts,
encouraging manager Joe
Torre to stiCk with him for ·and a single, Anna Sommer
was 2-for-5 with two runs
at least one more s~.
scored
Charmee Smith had
The newest member · of
a
triple
and a single,
the Reds did the most damhad two
Jennifer
Wickline
age.
The 31-year.:Old Hairston hits and Miranda Thompson
signed a contract on March added a hit.
And Point Reasan' 'W.ast-.
3 after the Reds were reased
little time~
· . 1lutt
sured ;by Major League
high-powered
Baseball that be wouldn't
The Dodgers couldn't face di51&lt;ipline for his men- rolling.
The Lady Knights scored
overcome a ·poor start by tion in the Mitchell Repon.
three
runs in the first as
Kuo, who gave up eight Hairston was accused of
Cottrill,
Darst and Snmmer
hits and five runs in 3 2-3 buying human growth bor;
innings. The left-bander mone from .a former New led off the inning with a
hasn't lJIII(Ie it to the flftli Yodi: MeIS clubhouse .allen- doUble and ·twO singles and
all three scoied to open up a
inning in any of his three dant.
starts.
It was Hairston's seventh 3-0 PPHS lead. Me1gs
Kuo had surgery · to four-hit game and his first answered in the home half
of the inning w~ Meri
remove bone chips from his · since July 22, 2005.
VanMeter reached on 11 ii!ngle and was d.rivcahom:e.by
Bm to. make the soore 3-l
in favnr nf the vi~tors . . _
However that close • gin did not last long u idle
Lady Knights found· lbl!ir
groove in the third.
Wyant led off the imling
with a double, followed by a
Wickline walk ·and a Jones
score with Smith driving
home a number of those
runs with a triple to the left
field fence. Cottrill then
walked and Darst helped
drive in a few more as Point
Pleasant finished wid{' five
runs to rack up an &amp;-I lead.
Meigs answered with a
pair in the bottom half of
the inning wben Mick:i
Barnes reached on an error
and Bm smashed a deep
home run to m•teJ field to
close the gap to 8-3.
But that 1s all the closer
Meigs would get as PPHS
SCOI1ld two in.tile fourth and
fifth innings to eldend the
advantqe to 12-3. Wyant
and Jones troored in tbe
fourth on singles while
Mews' Almm Story bllll durtrc the 11Mntll
of a hiCh Cottrill and Wyant rouncled
.chool baHblll pme aplnat Mlll1etta Tunday In .Rock the diamond for runs in tbe
fifth .
~The Lady Mara!lders
It was a solid overall travels to Point Pleasant for added another run in bottom
half of the fifth wben
niJbt for die Maraude~ aS p.m. swt.
with nearly a do:r.ea hits.
VanMeter reached on .an
......, ... · a
Meigs will return to lllo
error and w~ driven home
110 010 · 0
353
000 aiO 2
41 \.(i
on a Barnes double to make
action Wednesday .when it lllo

.games in San Francisco, St.
Louis .and Atlanta.
After ·their one-game
lbreakout;1De1)00gers were
back to scoring one run a
~arne - itheir total output
m four of the last five.
"We've just got to put it
to$ethcr and get it going,"
S8ld Mi!:t .Kemp, who was
O-for-3with a walk:. "We're
going ' .to be dangerous
when everybody. gets on
the .same page. We're going
throuoow.'p bard
. times rig_ht .

CLASSIFIED

~ense

Meigs' Amy Barr pitches during a high school softball gaine
against Point Pleasant Tuesday in Rock Springs.

the score 12-4.
· and Shellie Bailey who had
Point Pleasant fmally put two hits apiece. VanMe\Cf
the preverbal nail in the cof- and Barnes added the other
.fin in the seventh when hits for the home squad.
Cottrill, Darst and Sommer
Point Pleasant and Meigs
led off the inning .with sin- will both take Wednesday
ales and a triple from Wyant off and return to action
6rought everyone borne. Thursday. PPHS hosts
Wyant was then. b~ught Ripley on Thursday while
borne on a W!c~me stngle he Lady Marauden host
to push the VISitor I~ to Wellston. Both games will
16-4.
begin at S p m.
Meigs added one more
· ·
run in its final at bat when
-"
• 1e. .... 1
Barr reacbed on a walk and PP 3011 ao •
rounded the diutond for a
te1e s
runS
. to end the SCOrillg at 16Ill
~': o 010 1
The

fo:'l

Lady

Marauders
a
total of six
~~
bits in the oss led by Bm

-DftD-"
•

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Oorat.

117-7):

em~~y -

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MHS 15-5): Am!~-- Erin P. .
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HR- Ill: Ban, lhltd inn1111J,.,. an.

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PREVIOUS SOI.UTON - "11881Jy lil&lt;ebooks thal'you·can kllll D1 hoar as
midi as ihnk about. 1hai are so graphi: and vi;ual.• • Laurie AndeiSOII

-- Sfa\\4}\\-4£~·
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28 Yean Eqirem-

• Pole BuildingS

•llcDnAddiliona
Owner:

David Lewis
7to-9921971

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.WELL. MA'I'IE A L.ITTLE

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NOOtol !ASKETBAU. ..

7411-416-1691 .

ree Estlmaies

7~9657

2nd Annual Tack Sale
Saturday, April 26
.6pm

.Jlil.Y OLD

740-992-5929

JnSUred " BondiJd

1&lt;11156
I-.,-~-+-~~

'

Auciio:IBBIS:

Ric« Pearson 4166
R.f. Stein #1510 .
. JoeAninglon 11462

Drywall, .
lOCIII Coub acu
740-367~
Frile &amp;tin...,.

740-367..Q53&amp;

Fer R

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- Room Additions • Gar,c~ges • ·vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Pon:hes and Decks

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•
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aJINmnony.
.
LIBRA (Sept 29-0ct. 29) - " " ' oh&lt;&gt;Udn'1 haw eny ·trowte gding .wtt.r to
ll88ilt .you with a difficult IUk or . .lgn~ - · The .prot:Mm Ia that thl8i peraon's
on!y talent might be hi8 or hef, good

hii11usrimi!Nrs:y.!.'-J91-·.,.,. ~
....
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Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

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tmamiOne.
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ARIES (Mon:h 21.....,.. 11) - No ono
~~Jt!U af1WI ...... QIIIXId ~

748-985-4141

JS+~._..... Free£~

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to yoUr financial ~~Mil baing. but llha'&amp;l not
ba around wha{1 It ~ to , . . , . of
thrt hNrt. t(nowtnQ ttwt ~.,. on your

Call: MARCUM Q)NSTRUCTION

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bouom. OH

1-

Luokmoy-youinwoyo--

o• :0 g .... Ne"· Houoe Buildia&amp;

-· - ·

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-

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CAPRICORN (Dec . 22~JIIn . 19) Although .y our perceptiora and hunches
ara nNtaonably ac curate, 'there is a
strong ~lilY that ycu might re.;igger
them to mean what you want, and in so
doing, minimize thair worth
~RIUS (Jan. 20--Feb. 19) When
evaluating otherA , tllll8 caN to jLJdge
them on their qua'*'- of chal'llcter and
not en their material Mlfth. Tttow mnonu
your tnendl who t.¥8 'lhe IIMt COf.lla M
the ones who ofl8r the mc:.t.
PISCES (...,, oo-. 20) - Lody

Remodeling, R.oo
Additions

304-m'5-5463

~HY.

FHIU

attn 11t0 ,....arkatMe tolel'llnce and
patienl:», but then tum around and allow
no mllfVin br error.

Roofing, Siding,
Soft#, Decks,
DootS, Windows,
· Electric, Plumbing, '

Rt. 62 NoJth Of Pl. Pleasant, wv

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.

aelling •
with reg~n:l to
mercial irwol¥ementa. tf ~ let your
intensily-get the ~ of you, It coutd tum
a 1)0tef'~Ual cultomer intO a craie.
SAGITT"AIUS (Nov. 23·0ec. 21 ) "1\&gt;u'U ~y two 8IICttwne 8idlt&amp; 4n your
dealing&amp; with friends. At ttm., you'll

Willo 16

CORNER STONE
COKSTRIICTI ()N

Mason Co. fairgrounds

'

Mting needs. MOTe Hriouc thOught

THArs _ _

1

J1

:1

should t. appiMid ·to Mrioul matllmi.
VIRClO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) EnoOc
behav+or '.tlouid not be allowed to •urtaoe When tt comee to wour dMtirp wtth
«wed ooes. «you don't • .._,. to a dellcd&amp; balantl&amp;, fridiDn w11.m.e and tmJda

COW and;,;;BI;,:O'f;.:____, . - - - - - - - - , w-------. ,..,------,

.

'

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migt11 be qulle Hllllty and
enhilnoe tun and gamM, but it maw' not
be too wiae to IlPPY thlm to your mar-

••••••

Seamless Gutters

$10 Admission
• WeiJ.Known ~
(l;a:1ene Thompson &amp; More)
• Panel Discussions
• Valuable Seminars
• Book Sighing free 3 :30 . 4:301·:
CaH 740-339-0530

HKJO . " - GTHVP HEEVWOti

In 1he year ahead, you're IW.fy to be
most fortunate when wondng on matters
or profects that YQU thtnk of as jabot'&amp; of
lOve. Ootng eo wll put you on the rtgtrt
fr'ld( when it comes to mHlng 'aome big
bucks u wei .
TAURUS ("""I 20-Mo;' 20) - A Joi'1l
endeaVOf can only aucx:e«t If both PI''"
tiel; ~ e~~n !1\llke aome Wnd'Of contribution. tf me anangemen1 tacics pamy,
the entire sttuation wtll1all apart wtthout
any chafDS of BIJCCI88&amp; .
GEMtNI (May 2hJune 20) - ~ day
wll be juat fine tf you hang out with companions who are conaiderate and gentle.
Shoutd an erratic or ·. .,.._lve type ;om
1he group, howe'ler, thing&amp; will become
extremely unnerving.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - 9houtd
you oet ln\IOIY9d tn • competftlve apon
With associates, don't make Winning
owrly important. H tt..l's your 'o nty ab;e!:tive, It could bring out aome ct\llraCier
flaws you wouldn't want ·~ .
LEO (July ~Aug . 22) - Your imaglna·

·I'll•"*"
W"•edautl

Rooiing. Siding, Gutters

10:00 - 4:30

• aw :GAI AKG RVIIO - t:XVCK LFK

,.

types Of

Saturday, Ap:il26, 2008

11 H IIH£M I L "- . liTKU' .EW'II W11WON

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·Mason CQunty Fair

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409 Main St at
The Lowe Hotel

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Get Published
Seminar

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Elttl _. 11 theciplwl URis far nthlr.
7oday'6 COle: Pequa&lt; N

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1toat a - . 'Willi? NO
apadas, partnet'l" -riitlo ltoat
deeiarerllas ~ ljOIItle lenglh

Construction

8Ml lfiQion (OH·IN-Wlf..KY) dull kl- lhll

Help.. 1 d

tions,

• VJnrl Siding

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m lf,dansby wnous PQIB. pun ,._c.

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is titought

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CElEBRITY

Vas, dunwny mi!Y uk his par1nor H he
has mnegod, And in 1hlo cuuntry •
- . ntiiY aleo uk hi&amp; parlnel.
Uridur World Bridge Fedelllliiun raguia·

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revolving nature of constrlplant upgmde
projects. You may ba away from home tor
lllllended patiods. These projacts are 2
yr$.., 1st 9hlft. Traval COSis and holidBys
paid. TRiining provided. Statting pay $1416hr. If qualified fax an Uf'hiOO resume to:
' 614-716-2272 denoting 'Cost Tech" on the
~
page, lmmad. considanltion.
Excellent ~y!

..,m., you ...., four palllnlial

in 111011 BUll. You DtDliiCII
avoid conceding 10 1he IIIIlS, . .
musi do aamaitllng aloout 1hat haarl
· loser - and do~-· You
I'Ml diamorll · on whi&lt;to you can
pitch """ heor1s !rom tho bo.m. Then
you can ru11 your.Iaiii tosort on lhe :..m.
But since you are , '"hing winnln in
your hand, you-. tatl·enlry "'your
hand. You must- lie firlitriok on the
board wiih the 'hearlldng. Then pii!Jia
dilmond. No ··ilno .. .... llglliio:

YOUNGS

'

ancl contrac1s
exparianoe beneficial. Proficient in Excel
anJ Wool, some Po11erPoint eJqJe~ienoe
wWd be a !)Ius. Must be willing to tlllvvl
anJ WGII&lt; 0T at dii!Bient plant sites in the

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Accounting ~
COSis, .some ~ development. industrial
or process plant background would bi!

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oitler 10 l11llloa ihreellD'Nitp
lad&lt;1hree ..,. lind do not~ a long

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sull fit. you show """ spades,
'Nor1h ~ ·mgame in 1hat aull. -

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------------------------------Subscriber's Name _ _ __ _ __ •
~ ------------------

righls .... doclaotr should do at
1rid&lt; one.
.
FIDII. 1t11r11he dumnr; llllt Hhe
has llln8QIId ( -)? lily.
ask his partner 1toe same
Sealnd, you am South, in four spades .
West leads 1he hear! queen. Holll would

youplanlloeplat;?
Alter you open one no-trump, Norlll

.H elp W.lliid

Cost Techl.

•anipolif •up 1Jrillane
J)oiat J)Ita•ald ~·
The Daily Sentinel
6uua..p Ctmn: -6tntind

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uFfs

IN 111E
C1 •SSiflEDS

....... y1&amp;
- lliid
.......

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

This - . ...... .iooi&lt;ing at durrrny$

~. viANT TO
NA~f Tt¥N lAY

/

•Insured
*E&lt;pericnoed
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591 -8044

Pleasant Valley· Hospital i5 cutrently
accepting re5umu for a full-t ime
C.wdiiiiiUi. - Phllrmad5t. 8.5. Pharmacy, Pharm.o_
&amp;o811eni math and EDI lilclls, gananil Pharmacy-ur-Jih-.0 Pharmaq from
;ICC!editerl college or university. WV 5lale
oompuler lmolllaJ;,e, pnw, mal hal oJiing
Pharmacist
Litensu:e. Dayshift posilioiL
e!CpBr a plus. Must ba llliling ID lm9l (OH.
Send
re5UIT1eS
to:
WVsKY·IN) . anJ WOII&lt; OT. ·Requi1e wry
gooJ work alhics and illlQI ess 10 learn.
C/ol?
•
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T1aining provided. satirlg pay $1&amp;-17Alr.
ZSJ8MerDIM
The9e projacls aJe 2 yna, 1st lihlll, travel
fllli::l..
__ .., 15SSI
llOSis and flofidays paid. Fax (JIM) 6JS.4MI. &amp;I. IJI7
immed. with "Mat.Coord." on CCMir JIIIOI!IO
Oofax:
(614) 716-2272. Eoccalant~l

helpful,

the first trick? .

~

Woo\

ttaotor Dlowl' I
- , . - . . 1 &lt;11200
bu.i~. Has
850 ""
. 'ginal
M ooly Metallic
nk

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Whereto win

*Prompl and Quality

· sa 4 ••:

when you pay for &amp; 6 or 12
month sybscription on your
home delivered subscription!

I

St. Rt 124
AIUIWile,QH '
Gaty (;UJtis- Owner

&amp;Removal

2004 Yamaha 450 YFZ ·
$2,900 30oll-57&amp;2951
.
2005 Ar.:tic; Cat 400, 480
milos. $3601) . 740-64!;-1683
or 7.().446.3821

..._ial

K 7 S

740-37M414

Trimming

'2003
Honda
E~toelenl: Condition. $975.
Caii740-446-!170B

SI,CIOO

• «852
9 A BI

Deiler: Soulll
Vldual\ble: Neither

Curtil Auto AIP!ilr

Stanley Tree-

:::.==~=-==-

"'""-"""'
'-liiOEX'

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• a s1

)QOOI'S, one

Artie Cat, ._Wheeler .

EOE

Senior Discount*

1

111-411 mo.IJld

Residential and New
Consttuotion
Can be installed over
your e&lt;isting roof
Insulattod roofs to
save on your Heating
and Air Conditioning
cost

9!1, $7llll:J04.&lt;l82-321!5

(740,.,...-.-

• ;z

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_11_02
_ _ _ _ __

2003

• 7t J

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~$50~.7~.a~-~~~3S~~~~~-~,.~~~~~~

so, you

•

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7:00 All· 1:811 Pll

Jlllll-2111

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$50.-lod.- - ..

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l'.lopOolllll'lo-·1 •.
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-lor 1 or 2 )J80111o, owlor- (740)367.()547.
. tan1o &amp; SI800d $50.

Bi

---2111

or709-1657

san

Gavin.

6t your~

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1 jiaooroldmale-ooon- •-- D.~ ~ · · - m&amp;ilos1: IIIOOflw-~'d
.
with _ ., $200. -..- -~. ~~ ·~·~··
ms.
"" a.. ~Tara,
TIMlloouso (740)645-3372.
·
&amp;cellent Breod:ng, .Top llames throug11out. Prioe:
llpaotoooentB, \lory Spociooos,
Parlomoance,
Priced $16,000.00 MUST SEE to
94 IIH, 2BR 2 bath, 1H11D0- ' 2 BodiiMII&amp;, C/to., 1 112 W
(II) dragon R o' 8 S 0 n a b I Y · ..PPRECIATEI Please call
u - · $40Do'montlo + Bath, Adull Pool &amp; Bo:l'l'
www.sla1erunangus.com. 7am·5pm 740-949-2217 &amp;
· 6 mloslrom . _ POol, PoMo,
S42Mio. Good homo only. Goeat pot, (7.a)286-5395
lipm·llpon 7411-94&amp;.2216

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IU .7 I

.s171'

7.,1.2217

Harvey Road M...., WV

01 ilodge~CiubCab,

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MiddleportN. 3rdAIIe.,2Br.
· - . n o pots,dtlp. &amp; -

RPI&amp;.OhiO

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29610 8ashln Road

H-Honesl
I- Integrity
S-Servi""
10 ¥ears
I sr Rood to left &lt;Jbov•
Mason Golf Course

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1illm. Murray,
C'Dftsmlll. MTP.
Briggs &amp;. Stnnon

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i&lt;eSII&gt;~ral&lt;es~
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$1EB.AIIal••-l

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3825

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Servicing Lawn
TractorS, Mowers,

'J'Illm

Exc. Cond.,

-·

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.........:.

JM-77~1

. · .
Pulllic Auction-12 noon 1111
2nd, 1993 Honda. (fonnerly
flood -cle) cnm:nal fo11o:·
ture vetm:Je, runsltoo«s
good, ground eftoo:ts, stan·
ingbid$BOO, may!JI&gt;seon
l'omen:i!' Polloo Depl

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MASON MOWEll

n&gt;., 98 Lac, 61rtcs, BO
:446:::_:7.:,
278
~·--~-

WWW . CARMICHAEL -

SHEDs-

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_
GES,,-10
D • ..,_.
u.ocooldlti;;~- ~""g... All.:::""..:~
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'mAILERS.COIA 74G'«&amp;- 41&lt;4,

B d"""' Apta. at VIllage ~:
Bacldooe, Diesel $5,500.
it•o:oideApto.in Tuesday, WtodoaUy
Call 74!1-2!i1H11!90
Middleport, from $327 to fridlol', llam-4:~ . Cloood SOle or1 King Kilter 1111ers.
$592 . 740-992-51160. Equol Thuosday, SatuotJay &amp; 4, 5 &amp; 6 ft. Jim's Forno
Housing O!J!&gt;urtunitl'.
&amp;rlday (740)446-7SOO
· .E&lt;luipment. Call 74().446.

-too'

oent.
Smoll, ,._,
Liv. Am, BR, Eat-in Kit &amp;
Bath. $300 per_mo., $300
Deposit. No smoking. No
pots. Cal740-.3667

I

eworythlng $4800
7.,. .;·

RepaiTed, New I ~ In Have ~ priced a John
Sieck. Call Ron E\ei"S, ~ • Deere lately? 'Ybu11 be sur~
3BR,
$500/month - - - - - - . , . . - - 1100-53].9528.
prisedl Check DOJ1 our used
$3501doopoo~. . 441-1489 Fumistoed 1\jot, 2nd """· lEW MD UIED S'i&amp;L inwontory
al
.
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www
.
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COM
1998 Honda cbr110Dxk,
~~-..,.;;;";;
·
Upstaios, All lllilhles pd. Stool Boo
Pipe ~
1BR, No Pets, Gallipolis,
ms,
C&amp;nniehaeiEquipment. 74(). 1~,000 mts, new tires and
· brakes, tank bra, soft lug4 Bedlwn House for Rant
For
Conaete,
Angle, 44&amp;2412
$600/rom
$60illdopOiiit Call446-9523
. Chenroel, Flat Bar, Steal
,
gage bags. and """"'· Mint
(740) 44&amp;4000 or '.JII7-77fl2 Go 1 1 Uoolnjj 1 lind 2 cntlng
For
i)qjns, ll... k!
l'eryU&amp;Oil
40 cond. $5500. finn !l04.fi82-

;

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(7.a)992-2067
·4 Cov, 5 Tours, Sun, 8 Vll!1l,
05 300LT, 00 Must, 77

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(3CM)I82-3017

--3652

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.

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74Q.578-1030- !;pm.

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2
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2002 John
Series. good heavy duty loader outf1;._, ~~
-·90-tg.
tirOi, 1iAIS
loaded wl 11"!1·..-.
• ·7
molhanc&gt;, 1m11 bumper wl ::1116::::_1_ _ _ _ __
weigltts. side entry stop, 1998 lluiok Cantury, 68,000
re.af ._arms. one OWI18f, mHes. white.. w/atr and

GolDs

COII&lt;EIIIEIIITLl' LOCAT- -

··a ll an::l. $5700. 0111
.

' !&amp;Jlt
l . . .zp

7211_tor_

07
Mltsubishi Eclipoo onloe. l.oool """'"'"'""
• Spydor GT Conv tt 500 - - 1975.
Deere 790 rms. OIC. Cand. ~go.. Call 2c His. (740) . . .
engine, C.4. I """"'· all lervi- t&gt;y ~70, l'l_.. Boseman!

~

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01c1s A1om. 4dr, - .

•

wilh 9177 or 740-645-2399
ED ol 4U I U&amp; "f1
2 _.. n EB1', INTEGRrTY. KIEFER
Tapartments, o1so, popup blind and nile BUILT
VALLEY
and/Or small houses FOR vi&amp;ian-.J-1317 HORSE / LIVESTOCK
·RENT.. eau (740)441-1 111
Mtnt•.-:s 'mAII.ERS, LOAD MAX
1or appioatlon &amp; lnlorrniOion.
l\li1ai:JwUSE
EQUIPMENT TRAILERS,
.
CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
H 0 M E 5. T E A 0 E A
a_, ·
3 po4nt disk for sole, CARGO /C ONCESSION
...p&amp;i bii&amp;llls
(740)742-3062
TRAILERS. B+W GOOSE•21.31Mdoom aplll'tmenls
.
,
1i 'n NECK
HITCHES.
&lt;Car:tnol- &amp; NC
Electric E~
ono g CARMICHAEL
EQUIPel!octiwo $750, MENT I CARMICHAEL
1-.op
o:cmor Tub, TIWLEAS SALES &amp; SEAnaw$1,50()~79&amp;1 VICE. SPECIAL 20FT
$5(J.$II(IImoro
Hal Tlb 1 Swim 5po 0u11oL GOOSENECK FLATBED
•Dwnorpayswater.-. ' $1000oii. Hugo_.,, $3999. VIEW OUR ENTIRE
,_
Naw Styles. l1oe Dellvory.
TRAILER INVENTORY AT

.
"'"""-·
· or, 1ul -

. - , 2 corgarage, 11650.
7
3
4044NXI ·
3 -.om houoo in

doopooit

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10mi- _ ,_
_,_,_
on SR 141 . .... ~ $2200. COl 7.0.

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41

Alder

includod. Coli (7.a)367-

All -

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Philp

~opeod":::: -n.ilois 740 4.S I

ss.95

Sell - - &amp; , _,
motclllng -erlredlner,
-lingo I :bed, large
1'1 • oiUt ill good
Cand. Call 7.0.367-7115,
'""'"n
i ft n o -

2111', 1 - · 1636 Chatham dep.&amp;
,lfll.
.....,;: 446 4234 or 740- '(7.a)992-o165
1013 Bd. 1
Ill! -

Corpot

)11:1 •••••• $10.00 &amp; !4).

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lloiiOhon Carpet. 2212
E' I
52 Westwood """'· Gallipolis, Oh
Driw, flom $365 to $580, 7 _ 7... •
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WWW.mydliiJI Bdillel.com

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-Troller lot 1or - · 1BR Apt.hoOkups.
in Spring Volloy. ·in 2003 HIIVn!l- 4•
pal' - ooptic o n d - 1,1 WID
Vioit for $1 ,0oll1 . So11irV lor $01.
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www.sprlng-volley~- e.:. CDntl.24&amp;9782
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110111LE HOME LOT FOR tios.com or col ~3&amp;2

1 1 - e d 1Mng room $3.00 111111o. Burgunciy. 110tgo &amp; -

..plus--.-=-

RENT, 1031 GoorgosCnook . 211Ropc, (7i!o)C4Hit94

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·

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211r,$295. plus 1110

3 Br,$:195,

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institution Is an .Equal
2 br., ooun~ry, S52!;. utiitieS, Opportunity PfO\Iider and
IICOIIIIS ttl -.11eigs EIJI)lloyer.
tJuo oou1os 740-7~4·
. 30W!!I9-0205
Beed1 St., II~. 2 br.

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furnished apt., no pals,
required,

85,310 - . 9DDd -

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NO po11 S400 mo+ SOl
....mty ·depooft, (740)td23314

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contact Paul at 7~

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3

BodoOWl House in
Syroc:usot. $500/month +

....,.., IQI """· No 1'8ts.
(304)675-5332 7*1-59HI265

3br
in · No
Pets.Houoo
$400 month, $400

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3br Houle in Hawon,
No Polo,_ $400 month,
. ' ....,..,
_3652 $01

T011Quallty. 6116-929-5655

.:::.::=...:::.:::.::=-

~

IIOTORS

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2Br at Jolonsons Mobile
Home Pao1&lt;. cafl . . .2003
2BR, 2 - · all ol-ic

in USA 1lwoo canroloooooooll. 740-1192.()165.
colodonlori: ':&amp;3()and .
1.1\'llSf()(](
HoMm 1 -.om tuo- 1&amp;24. Wlllael1or _ , . ,
ooishod apt,', clap. &amp; - owad. Coli Today
4'-l'igs &amp; Hamp Coos
oncos. No ~.740.992IIUGE savings!
giltS-~-. Cal1740-464-

(AEP) CIA, 9101 SR ! N, 0165.

740- Nice

CheshireOitlo.

4.S 4234 or 740-208-7861
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4
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seoo
- month plus dopooit,
Gallipolis Forry 740-4419931 or 7~

quiet

21111

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4073 or 7i0-947...C726.

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4116-1271
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740-992Lllzy Fleeoe

• 1606.
LMistock.

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t~~~m .441-D1111
ing 1Jlplitl11hoo 1or -.g _.old. \lory lowing. $150. 1'17n1' goat kids. 1 black
llol Ito' - -· Hlr 7.0.'.167-7124
doe $75, &amp; 1 brown wetloor
1oomo 1or- in tho
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740-441-5551
Malo, 1 112 _ . old. 11ory
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NO PETS -rtment
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Tllldng applidlohB Ito' 2BRc • .J1679
lbs. $01. -..sHelp WwMd
no pats, $275hnontto
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HAS

SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

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740-367.()119 - -*'!11

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JUST OON'T ICNOW

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IT'S .lEST A lOME !!
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in four

CARPENTER
SERVICE

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PREVIOUS SOI.UTON - "11881Jy lil&lt;ebooks thal'you·can kllll D1 hoar as
midi as ihnk about. 1hai are so graphi: and vi;ual.• • Laurie AndeiSOII

-- Sfa\\4}\\-4£~·
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28 Yean Eqirem-

• Pole BuildingS

•llcDnAddiliona
Owner:

David Lewis
7to-9921971

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.WELL. MA'I'IE A L.ITTLE

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NOOtol !ASKETBAU. ..

7411-416-1691 .

ree Estlmaies

7~9657

2nd Annual Tack Sale
Saturday, April 26
.6pm

.Jlil.Y OLD

740-992-5929

JnSUred " BondiJd

1&lt;11156
I-.,-~-+-~~

'

Auciio:IBBIS:

Ric« Pearson 4166
R.f. Stein #1510 .
. JoeAninglon 11462

Drywall, .
lOCIII Coub acu
740-367~
Frile &amp;tin...,.

740-367..Q53&amp;

Fer R

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- Room Additions • Gar,c~ges • ·vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Pon:hes and Decks

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•
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aJINmnony.
.
LIBRA (Sept 29-0ct. 29) - " " ' oh&lt;&gt;Udn'1 haw eny ·trowte gding .wtt.r to
ll88ilt .you with a difficult IUk or . .lgn~ - · The .prot:Mm Ia that thl8i peraon's
on!y talent might be hi8 or hef, good

hii11usrimi!Nrs:y.!.'-J91-·.,.,. ~
....
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Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

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tmamiOne.
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ARIES (Mon:h 21.....,.. 11) - No ono
~~Jt!U af1WI ...... QIIIXId ~

748-985-4141

JS+~._..... Free£~

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--

to yoUr financial ~~Mil baing. but llha'&amp;l not
ba around wha{1 It ~ to , . . , . of
thrt hNrt. t(nowtnQ ttwt ~.,. on your

Call: MARCUM Q)NSTRUCTION

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bouom. OH

1-

Luokmoy-youinwoyo--

o• :0 g .... Ne"· Houoe Buildia&amp;

-· - ·

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-

I]

CAPRICORN (Dec . 22~JIIn . 19) Although .y our perceptiora and hunches
ara nNtaonably ac curate, 'there is a
strong ~lilY that ycu might re.;igger
them to mean what you want, and in so
doing, minimize thair worth
~RIUS (Jan. 20--Feb. 19) When
evaluating otherA , tllll8 caN to jLJdge
them on their qua'*'- of chal'llcter and
not en their material Mlfth. Tttow mnonu
your tnendl who t.¥8 'lhe IIMt COf.lla M
the ones who ofl8r the mc:.t.
PISCES (...,, oo-. 20) - Lody

Remodeling, R.oo
Additions

304-m'5-5463

~HY.

FHIU

attn 11t0 ,....arkatMe tolel'llnce and
patienl:», but then tum around and allow
no mllfVin br error.

Roofing, Siding,
Soft#, Decks,
DootS, Windows,
· Electric, Plumbing, '

Rt. 62 NoJth Of Pl. Pleasant, wv

l

l

.

aelling •
with reg~n:l to
mercial irwol¥ementa. tf ~ let your
intensily-get the ~ of you, It coutd tum
a 1)0tef'~Ual cultomer intO a craie.
SAGITT"AIUS (Nov. 23·0ec. 21 ) "1\&gt;u'U ~y two 8IICttwne 8idlt&amp; 4n your
dealing&amp; with friends. At ttm., you'll

Willo 16

CORNER STONE
COKSTRIICTI ()N

Mason Co. fairgrounds

'

Mting needs. MOTe Hriouc thOught

THArs _ _

1

J1

:1

should t. appiMid ·to Mrioul matllmi.
VIRClO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) EnoOc
behav+or '.tlouid not be allowed to •urtaoe When tt comee to wour dMtirp wtth
«wed ooes. «you don't • .._,. to a dellcd&amp; balantl&amp;, fridiDn w11.m.e and tmJda

COW and;,;;BI;,:O'f;.:____, . - - - - - - - - , w-------. ,..,------,

.

'

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migt11 be qulle Hllllty and
enhilnoe tun and gamM, but it maw' not
be too wiae to IlPPY thlm to your mar-

••••••

Seamless Gutters

$10 Admission
• WeiJ.Known ~
(l;a:1ene Thompson &amp; More)
• Panel Discussions
• Valuable Seminars
• Book Sighing free 3 :30 . 4:301·:
CaH 740-339-0530

HKJO . " - GTHVP HEEVWOti

In 1he year ahead, you're IW.fy to be
most fortunate when wondng on matters
or profects that YQU thtnk of as jabot'&amp; of
lOve. Ootng eo wll put you on the rtgtrt
fr'ld( when it comes to mHlng 'aome big
bucks u wei .
TAURUS ("""I 20-Mo;' 20) - A Joi'1l
endeaVOf can only aucx:e«t If both PI''"
tiel; ~ e~~n !1\llke aome Wnd'Of contribution. tf me anangemen1 tacics pamy,
the entire sttuation wtll1all apart wtthout
any chafDS of BIJCCI88&amp; .
GEMtNI (May 2hJune 20) - ~ day
wll be juat fine tf you hang out with companions who are conaiderate and gentle.
Shoutd an erratic or ·. .,.._lve type ;om
1he group, howe'ler, thing&amp; will become
extremely unnerving.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - 9houtd
you oet ln\IOIY9d tn • competftlve apon
With associates, don't make Winning
owrly important. H tt..l's your 'o nty ab;e!:tive, It could bring out aome ct\llraCier
flaws you wouldn't want ·~ .
LEO (July ~Aug . 22) - Your imaglna·

·I'll•"*"
W"•edautl

Rooiing. Siding, Gutters

10:00 - 4:30

• aw :GAI AKG RVIIO - t:XVCK LFK

,.

types Of

Saturday, Ap:il26, 2008

11 H IIH£M I L "- . liTKU' .EW'II W11WON

'

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·Mason CQunty Fair

"JI. •VOI 'Ytl WP VE 'E lt:VTP , EKPJFLVOI

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409 Main St at
The Lowe Hotel

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Get Published
Seminar

••
••
•

.

Elttl _. 11 theciplwl URis far nthlr.
7oday'6 COle: Pequa&lt; N

•

1toat a - . 'Willi? NO
apadas, partnet'l" -riitlo ltoat
deeiarerllas ~ ljOIItle lenglh

Construction

8Ml lfiQion (OH·IN-Wlf..KY) dull kl- lhll

Help.. 1 d

tions,

• VJnrl Siding

I

by Luis Cln:pol
m lf,dansby wnous PQIB. pun ,._c.

~ ~~.n Cfllllll

is titought

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CElEBRITY

Vas, dunwny mi!Y uk his par1nor H he
has mnegod, And in 1hlo cuuntry •
- . ntiiY aleo uk hi&amp; parlnel.
Uridur World Bridge Fedelllliiun raguia·

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revolving nature of constrlplant upgmde
projects. You may ba away from home tor
lllllended patiods. These projacts are 2
yr$.., 1st 9hlft. Traval COSis and holidBys
paid. TRiining provided. Statting pay $1416hr. If qualified fax an Uf'hiOO resume to:
' 614-716-2272 denoting 'Cost Tech" on the
~
page, lmmad. considanltion.
Excellent ~y!

..,m., you ...., four palllnlial

in 111011 BUll. You DtDliiCII
avoid conceding 10 1he IIIIlS, . .
musi do aamaitllng aloout 1hat haarl
· loser - and do~-· You
I'Ml diamorll · on whi&lt;to you can
pitch """ heor1s !rom tho bo.m. Then
you can ru11 your.Iaiii tosort on lhe :..m.
But since you are , '"hing winnln in
your hand, you-. tatl·enlry "'your
hand. You must- lie firlitriok on the
board wiih the 'hearlldng. Then pii!Jia
dilmond. No ··ilno .. .... llglliio:

YOUNGS

'

ancl contrac1s
exparianoe beneficial. Proficient in Excel
anJ Wool, some Po11erPoint eJqJe~ienoe
wWd be a !)Ius. Must be willing to tlllvvl
anJ WGII&lt; 0T at dii!Bient plant sites in the

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Accounting ~
COSis, .some ~ development. industrial
or process plant background would bi!

Phone' ----------~-----------

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oitler 10 l11llloa ihreellD'Nitp
lad&lt;1hree ..,. lind do not~ a long

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· uses S!Jqlman 101r; to1ind a~ major·
sull fit. you show """ spades,
'Nor1h ~ ·mgame in 1hat aull. -

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------------------------------Subscriber's Name _ _ __ _ __ •
~ ------------------

righls .... doclaotr should do at
1rid&lt; one.
.
FIDII. 1t11r11he dumnr; llllt Hhe
has llln8QIId ( -)? lily.
ask his partner 1toe same
Sealnd, you am South, in four spades .
West leads 1he hear! queen. Holll would

youplanlloeplat;?
Alter you open one no-trump, Norlll

.H elp W.lliid

Cost Techl.

•anipolif •up 1Jrillane
J)oiat J)Ita•ald ~·
The Daily Sentinel
6uua..p Ctmn: -6tntind

-r

If

uFfs

IN 111E
C1 •SSiflEDS

....... y1&amp;
- lliid
.......

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

This - . ...... .iooi&lt;ing at durrrny$

~. viANT TO
NA~f Tt¥N lAY

/

•Insured
*E&lt;pericnoed
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591 -8044

Pleasant Valley· Hospital i5 cutrently
accepting re5umu for a full-t ime
C.wdiiiiiUi. - Phllrmad5t. 8.5. Pharmacy, Pharm.o_
&amp;o811eni math and EDI lilclls, gananil Pharmacy-ur-Jih-.0 Pharmaq from
;ICC!editerl college or university. WV 5lale
oompuler lmolllaJ;,e, pnw, mal hal oJiing
Pharmacist
Litensu:e. Dayshift posilioiL
e!CpBr a plus. Must ba llliling ID lm9l (OH.
Send
re5UIT1eS
to:
WVsKY·IN) . anJ WOII&lt; OT. ·Requi1e wry
gooJ work alhics and illlQI ess 10 learn.
C/ol?
•
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T1aining provided. satirlg pay $1&amp;-17Alr.
ZSJ8MerDIM
The9e projacls aJe 2 yna, 1st lihlll, travel
fllli::l..
__ .., 15SSI
llOSis and flofidays paid. Fax (JIM) 6JS.4MI. &amp;I. IJI7
immed. with "Mat.Coord." on CCMir JIIIOI!IO
Oofax:
(614) 716-2272. Eoccalant~l

helpful,

the first trick? .

~

Woo\

ttaotor Dlowl' I
- , . - . . 1 &lt;11200
bu.i~. Has
850 ""
. 'ginal
M ooly Metallic
nk

q

Whereto win

*Prompl and Quality

· sa 4 ••:

when you pay for &amp; 6 or 12
month sybscription on your
home delivered subscription!

I

St. Rt 124
AIUIWile,QH '
Gaty (;UJtis- Owner

&amp;Removal

2004 Yamaha 450 YFZ ·
$2,900 30oll-57&amp;2951
.
2005 Ar.:tic; Cat 400, 480
milos. $3601) . 740-64!;-1683
or 7.().446.3821

..._ial

K 7 S

740-37M414

Trimming

'2003
Honda
E~toelenl: Condition. $975.
Caii740-446-!170B

SI,CIOO

• «852
9 A BI

Deiler: Soulll
Vldual\ble: Neither

Curtil Auto AIP!ilr

Stanley Tree-

:::.==~=-==-

"'""-"""'
'-liiOEX'

-

*Aii .l l

• a s1

)QOOI'S, one

Artie Cat, ._Wheeler .

EOE

Senior Discount*

1

111-411 mo.IJld

Residential and New
Consttuotion
Can be installed over
your e&lt;isting roof
Insulattod roofs to
save on your Heating
and Air Conditioning
cost

9!1, $7llll:J04.&lt;l82-321!5

(740,.,...-.-

• ;z

• K QJ

_11_02
_ _ _ _ __

2003

• 7t J

•

~$50~.7~.a~-~~~3S~~~~~-~,.~~~~~~

so, you

•

Hours
7:00 All· 1:811 Pll

Jlllll-2111

...

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........._ Ohio
• ~' ~ ..,, ' '

$50.-lod.- - ..

_....,
l'.lopOolllll'lo-·1 •.
liD
..
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-lor 1 or 2 )J80111o, owlor- (740)367.()547.
. tan1o &amp; SI800d $50.

Bi

---2111

or709-1657

san

Gavin.

6t your~

.....
.....

.--lHE

1 jiaooroldmale-ooon- •-- D.~ ~ · · - m&amp;ilos1: IIIOOflw-~'d
.
with _ ., $200. -..- -~. ~~ ·~·~··
ms.
"" a.. ~Tara,
TIMlloouso (740)645-3372.
·
&amp;cellent Breod:ng, .Top llames throug11out. Prioe:
llpaotoooentB, \lory Spociooos,
Parlomoance,
Priced $16,000.00 MUST SEE to
94 IIH, 2BR 2 bath, 1H11D0- ' 2 BodiiMII&amp;, C/to., 1 112 W
(II) dragon R o' 8 S 0 n a b I Y · ..PPRECIATEI Please call
u - · $40Do'montlo + Bath, Adull Pool &amp; Bo:l'l'
www.sla1erunangus.com. 7am·5pm 740-949-2217 &amp;
· 6 mloslrom . _ POol, PoMo,
S42Mio. Good homo only. Goeat pot, (7.a)286-5395
lipm·llpon 7411-94&amp;.2216

-

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Q J 10.
IU .7 I

.s171'

7.,1.2217

Harvey Road M...., WV

01 ilodge~CiubCab,

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MiddleportN. 3rdAIIe.,2Br.
· - . n o pots,dtlp. &amp; -

RPI&amp;.OhiO

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29610 8ashln Road

H-Honesl
I- Integrity
S-Servi""
10 ¥ears
I sr Rood to left &lt;Jbov•
Mason Golf Course

I'OR

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-

-· -

1illm. Murray,
C'Dftsmlll. MTP.
Briggs &amp;. Stnnon

" " '·

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i&lt;eSII&gt;~ral&lt;es~
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Bacldooe, Diesel $5,500.
it•o:oideApto.in Tuesday, WtodoaUy
Call 74!1-2!i1H11!90
Middleport, from $327 to fridlol', llam-4:~ . Cloood SOle or1 King Kilter 1111ers.
$592 . 740-992-51160. Equol Thuosday, SatuotJay &amp; 4, 5 &amp; 6 ft. Jim's Forno
Housing O!J!&gt;urtunitl'.
&amp;rlday (740)446-7SOO
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Smoll, ,._,
Liv. Am, BR, Eat-in Kit &amp;
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Deposit. No smoking. No
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$500/month - - - - - - . , . . - - 1100-53].9528.
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· brakes, tank bra, soft lug4 Bedlwn House for Rant
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$600/rom
$60illdopOiiit Call446-9523
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(740) 44&amp;4000 or '.JII7-77fl2 Go 1 1 Uoolnjj 1 lind 2 cntlng
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VALLEY
and/Or small houses FOR vi&amp;ian-.J-1317 HORSE / LIVESTOCK
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1or appioatlon &amp; lnlorrniOion.
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$5(J.$II(IImoro
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�r.,. 86. The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday,~

q, 2008

Lewis says Chad Johnson should keep his word and sit out
'IT JoE""'

ASSOCIA'JV) PRESS

. I

CINCINNATI The
Ben gals : are calling Chad
Johnson's bluff.
Ttred oflhereoeiver's posturin~ for a trade, coach
Marvin Lewis said Tuesday
that Johnson Wc!uld keep his
word and sit out 1he season
- the strongest comment
yet from an organization that
IS reluctant to let him go:
1be Bengals also turned
down Washington's offer of
two high-round draft picks
for Johnson, wbo had hoped
to be traded before the draft
this weekend. The move
indicated that Joboson will
be staying in Cincinnati, like.
itoroot.
Lewis also said that linebacker David Pollack is
. leaning toward reliirement.
The former first-round draft
pick broke a bone in his neck
while making a taclde Alluring the 2006 season and
weni through months of difficult healing and rehabilitation.
Pallack's decision isn't . a
surprise. He lhas said .all
along .that be doubted he
would return if there were a
chance he could injure his
neck again.
Lewis was pointed in his
cornrnents about Johnson.
The Pro Bowl receiver has
beeq disgruntled since the
middle ·of last season, when
his look-at-me antics came
under criticism.
He became the epitome of
Cincinnati's 7-'9 season
when be sniped at qllllllterback Carson Palmer during a
loss to New England.
Johnson tail the wrong mute
on a pass play, resulting in a
game-turning i11terception ~
He initially bialn.ed Palmer
for the problem.
Since the end of last season, Johnson has been lobbying for a trade even
though be agreed to a longterm deal with the Bengals
two years ago. Johnson's
contract would pay' him $3
million next season and
enends through 2010, with a ·
club optipn for 2011.
·· ~~ Jebnson stopped-

Oeveland
romps
.·Kansas Cio/
· KANSAS CIT¥, Mo.
(AP) - Casey Blake had a
grand slam and six RBis and
C.C. Sa:bathia sttuck out 11
in his flrit victOry, leading
the Oeveland 'Indians to a
15-1 rout of&lt;the~sasCity·
Royals on Tuesday night. ·
Blake, the No. ·9 hitter,
was 4-for-4 with a single
and a grand ·s lam and two
RBI doubles ·i n the Indians'
17 -hit · attack.
David
Dellucci and Jhonny .Peralta
also homered and Franklin
Gutierrez had a three-run
double for Cleveland, which
came in with the lOth-wOFSt
run total and . low.est slugging percentage in the
league.
Sabathia (1 - 3) went six
innings and gave up only
fOIIf hits and two ~ wall-s ..
Mal'k Teahen· and Jose·
Guillen each struck out three
times against the reigning
Cy Young Award winner.
Gil Meche ( 1-3) lasted·
just 3 1-3 innings as his
ERA ballooned to 8.00 and
the Royals lost their fifth
straight. The right-hander
gave up eight runs on nine
·hits, had one walk lllld two
stt:ikeouts in his lihorte&amp;t outing of the year..
Sabathia struck out tbC
side in each of the first two
inning~ while also giving up
1luee singb. He gave up
another lingle to Dav.id
DeJesus 1e8dina off the
third, got a dOuble-play
grounder
from
Madt
Grudzielanek and then
fanned Teahen for the second time.
Sabathia was in trouble .in ·
the first, with ru1111eiS at the
c:Orllefi and two out, but got
Guillen to chase a 2-21)itch.
· Guillen, the right-fielder
who was s~ to a· threeyear, $36 rni11ion COIIIlact to
put some pop in a weak lineup, was O-for-4 with · four
strikeouts. He's batting .165
with one borne run and nine .
RBis.
The Royals had l3 strikeouts altogether.

•.

: a contract through 2011.
. . He's stated without an
opportunity to go to a differ~.
ent team and·a new contract,
be wasn't going to play. I
'
think be' s a man of his word
and says be's not going to
pla so do 't la "
J'~ Tu:sJy!Y·momin:.
Lewis said the Bengals hadn't received a IIllde offer for
Johnson. Later in the day,
the club released a statement
saying it had turned down an
offer from Washington,
which-was willing to give.up
its first-round pick .md a
conditional third-round pick
next year.
talking to reporters in
1be club bas been consisCincinnati, he has done tent in saying i.t won't IIllde
numerous national inter- the Pro Bowl receiver, wbo
views during which he became the franchise leader
threatened to sit out the sea- in career catches and !fards
son if be's nnt 1raded. Lewis last season. · He caught 93
responded li'uesday by say- passes for a team-record
ing he should follow .t hroug 1,440 yards.
with his threat.
Other teams have traded
"I've stated our case with
ay stars when they started
Chad," lewis said. "He has 'N!collllin" g divisive. Bengals

owner Mike Brown bas a up for ·mandato!")' team must prove he can stay out
hiSioly of refusing to give in activities, the recetver took of trouble.
.·
to player demands. When issue with him.
· "Thete'.s an oppoihfnity,
running back Corey Dillon
On Tuesday, . Palmer Jl?SSlbly, if we want, to keep
tried to force the team to declined to discuss 1t further. · him on the football team and
trade him in 2003 the · "I take it with a grain of. have the oppottullity for him
Bengals waited until' after salt," said Palmer, who ~s to ~mpe~ f?,T a~ster spot,"
the season to send him to' wodcing out with the team !D lewts satd. He s got to .do
New England.
Cincinnati. ·"I've moved on things the ri~t way _conIn that case, it was more and I'm over it. I'm not real- ·stantly. That still remams to
~ut getting rid of a player ly going to comment on 1t be seen, ~hether be can hanthey no longer needed much more."
die that kind of.~tiny dayRudi Johnson had emerged
Asked if the two could get 1D and day-out.
.
as the starter - than ·i t was along if Johnson stays,
Pollack, a first-round piCk
about satisfying Dillon.
Palmer said, "I've always o~t of ~rgia in 2005, burt
The Bengals need Johnson been a forgiving guy, and I his neck m 1he second game
in the .. sbort-tetm. No. 3 hope he's here because he's of the 2006 season. He bad
receiver ' Chris Henry was a good player, and I hope to surgery and has ~ a full
released ~ yet another see him here."
recov~ from the tnjury, ~
arrest·~ earlier tllis month,
It's been an eventful doesn ~want ·t o take~ risk:
.!eavini.lbe Bengals wi~_lit- mo~th for. the Beogals. of h~g the neck agam.
.tle depth at the post'!on. BeSides ge~g nd of Henry,
~w1s .•al~ to Pollack
They might take a recetver they had linebacker Odell earlier ~s month to get an
high in the draft this week- Thurman reinstated by the 1dea of his .plans.
end.
NFL on · Monday. Thunnan
"David has expressed IG
Johnson · didn't return a was suspended for the last me: Where he's beaded is
phone message Tuesday. two seasons afte~ skipping a ~tireme!Jt," Lewis said. "He
Last week, when Palmer told drug .test and getttng arrested IS not ~mpletely C?mfortreporters _that Johnson had for dru_nk:~n. driving.
still ~ble (~1th) where be IS ruedassured him he would show
Lew1s satd Thurman
1cally.

'M HS variety show
opens Friday, A6

Bluegrass blast set
at Hartford, A6

· Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio ·
-~ (' t I ' IS • \ ol. :;- . "\o . 11-JJ

I I II ){'-,I)\'\

\PIOI :!.4 :!ooH

"\"' m~da!h..,t·ntult · !

.

·Meigs offers new technology opportunity

SPORTS
• Taylor's single
. gives Soulhem win.

Recognizes student excellence

SeePaieBl

BY CltARL£NE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICHOMYDAlLYSENTINELOGM

POMEROY- A new11ocbnology

course giving senior students an
opportunity to get hands-oo computer repair and maintenance experi·eoce will be introduced to the Meigs

WIN UP TO $1,000 ! ! !

~

PlAY· COVERALL BINGO

·nr::r

School cwriculum next fall. .
At
night's meeting 1he
Meigs
Board of Education
approved the innovative program
after hearing presentations from
Matt Simpson, technology coordinator, and Scott Brinker, instructor,
on
proposal. .
According to Superintendent
Wtlliam Buckley, the program will
provide hands-on. experience for students who plan to enter 1he tech
maintenance field as weD as resume
material in applying for a job. He said
that it should also provide some relief
in the worldqad of the Meigs technology.staff when it comes to minor

the

OBrroARIES
i

Page AS
• Kiyana Lewis, 2
· • Ruth E. taylor, 74 .
· • James Titus, 87.

repairs and maintenance issues . .
Students will be working only in
the Meigs .Local Schools, said
Buckley, although be did not rule
out consideration of an expansion to
outside jobs sometime in the future. ·
"The participating students will
· receive one credit while getting
some real job experience they .can
put &lt;&gt;n a resume," . he added.
He .also noted that some seniors
with an interest in computer maintenance and more than one study hall
period in a day might want to spend
one of those periods to add work
experience.
Prior to the technology staff's
presentations about the new program, the Boar.d recognized Austin
Ch811et. Hoellk:h/phalo .
King, an eighth grader at Meigs Austin King accepts a pin of recognition for service to Meigs Middle School
Middle School for his assistance in from Meigs Local Board Member Ron Logan. Also recognized and premaintaining technology equipment .
sented pins were Lauren Sooth, left, Meigs County spelling bee reserve
at the school .
champion, and Cheyenne Gorslene, Meigs County spelling bee champion.
AS
Both are students at Meigs lntennediate.

,. ....... 's•

Passp«»rt
denial leads
toJargest
support

'

INSIDE

Funds needed
for community
center project
BY BETti SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYOAILYSENTINEI-COM

payment
8Y BillA" J. REa

RAiiCI;T'S
-·~··•c.
Yow Area's #l Floor
L1J110".~

Ttib'ng

FilLa
AIIJI Glics
A ':1dl

liS.,&amp; :Sidt SireS
ft. Ph I, WV 25551
ltU75-1136
fu: JN.475-7317
rhaw'gf · -• 1' r · -· w

It's Just
Around The
Comer

Request Family Oxygen

- BI&amp;DeM¥DAILVSENT1NELOOM

. MIDDLEPQRT -'Some
U.S. pasiipcins

.ll'e denied

because · they owe back

Colleriftg Dealer!

. child sup,p ort, ·a nd last

year, a lump-sum payment

Shaw Carpet and l'1oor CaW

made locally just for that
was recognized by
the State •.
---The- - Meigs
Tea&amp;on

ResitJeolilll• c--rew •
WJrinalr •lt&amp;WI
4U7 sam R-168
Gallipolis, 01t1o

?%II Ohio
.._.{140)..,.1n1

Two iocutlu/ll'
11t .... ftlfthf.r,.,...... .-on

.,....,._,wv

7D t'lne Slnet • o.llipolis

740·446-0007

-.-~-

"'

_...

. • Doll, Vi ahow·set for

1.1 Jll Ul ~IIJ

. Satutday. See . . . A6
• GaJ1P* Fsdelal
Mrrt Homecoming
·sdledule..-See ... A6
: • Holzer names ·~
etnpkJ) ee. See
Al
• Real estate transfels.
:-see ... ':U

r.

Powetrs

FOODFAIR
70U

Ei1~. ~ Mam Strcc1
Ponw roy. OH
7 40 ·~ 9~L5252

Diane McVey
M.A. -CCC-A
Owner&amp;
Audiologist

w w w. loodlr~i r mmket s.co m

WHY PAY MORE ??
EVERY DAY
LOW PRICES'

415'h S

'A.-.-.,.

(740) 446-7619

•

ATHENS
ZT.SWaf t-..Sb t
594-357 1
•

Depattment nf -•"'IL.. ~~+
Family Services
Support
Eilforcernent
~ency was I:CCOgnized
il:cently for collectiJig the
~est lump sum payment
in Its division .
A man was denied a passport following a records
check that indicated he
owed $11,917.96 in back
support. Until it was paid in
full, he would not be issued
a passport. .
With passport regulations tougher than ever,
the state's · child support
agencies are seeing more
cases like this- -o ne, said
Don Snyder, supervisor.
Now that U.S. citizens
will be required to present
a passport to enter .Other
NO!th American countries
- at least in some cir,
J. llu!llp!lolo
cumstances - more peQ- candidates for Prom ~ and Prom
King at Eastem High School are.from left: Heaven
ple than ever are securing Westfall, Katie Hayman, Morgan Werry, Megan Broderick; and Matt Sebo, Nathan carroll,
..
......,
toAJ
Jack NelrJell, and Kyk! Gordon. The prom will be held at the schOol on Saturday night .

ll SllcnoNS -uPMlll&amp;

Annie's Mailbox
Calendars
Classifieds

Comics
' Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Places to go
A6
Sports
8 Section
W~er
e.&gt; ltUD8 Ohio Valle)' P. ' " , ,

•

•

PI xe -

Funds. AS

8Y BETH SEAGEr«
B

·

POMEROY - Now that
the days are longer and ·
w~. the pla)'ground at
the Mul6erry Tornrnunity
Center flays host to rest·
dents o all ~s utilizing
playground fac11ities which
are undergoing a renovation
which costs money.
The Meigs Cooperative
Parish's
Mulberry
Community Center is in
need of funds to finish that
playgroum:t renovationana
to build a shelter bouse.
The project has a goal of
installing a safe, outdoor
recreation area for residents
of Pomeroy and Meigs
County to utilize from dusk
to down, seven days a week.
The community center
had previously received
$20,000 from the Meigs
County Commissioners and
$20,000 from the Pomeroy
Distress .Grant to begin
playground renovations but
this still leaves a shortfall of
around $15;(100 needed to
complete ·the
project.
Currently the basketball
court and fencing have been
placed but the playground
still needs additional equipment, benches and · trash
receptacles.
As for the shelter house.
thul proje.ct is laeld ng
around $12;()00" at the
moment

Ride for a Cure set

o.t*onPegeAI

•

.TODAY'S
NUMBER IS:

t t " 'l

As
C..

13ENTOMVDAILYl&amp;(TINELCOM

POMEROY - Different motorcycle groups as
well as individual riders are planning to come
together in the battle against cancer.
1be Meigs County Relay For Life' s Second.
Annual Ride for a Cure is set to begin at noon,
Saturoay, May 3 on the .Farmers Bank customer
padting lot, 'lin or shine. The actual ride begins at I
p.m. 1be first 100 to register will receive .a free Tshirt and a skull cap. A donation of$15 for singles or
$25 for couples is appreciated with funds benefiting
the local Relay event.
1be ride will last for around one and one-half
hours with free food and refreshments served at
Faded Run State Park where the ride ends. In addition, several door and cash drawings will be given ·
away and a small auction will be held at tbe patt..
· Woody. Stines of Farmers Bank is an organizer of
the event and said: "All of our lives have been
touched by cancer and this event will help in the
'fight against cancer.' Every penny counts in belpin~;
to fmd a cure for this disc;_ase that has affected all of
our lives in some way."
.
In addition to Farmers Bank, Home National
BaM, Dettwiller Lumber, King 's Hat:dware,
811111 ......- Wecan Fabrications and Mark Porter GM Service Riders from across Meigs County are joining ·f on.w and att8nding the Meigs County
Relay For
n a
Life's Second Annual Aide lor a Cure event on May 3. rain or shine.
'•
' ~ '

.

_...,AI
.

•

••

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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="13860">
              <text>April 23, 2008</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="5">
      <name>thomas</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1221">
      <name>tope</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
