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                  <text>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

-.-~-

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. • 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
.

•

••

�0

. '

'

.The Daily Sentinel .
.'

L

PageA2

LocAL • STATE

Thursday, April:i;i,

2008

'

Holzer names spotlight ·employee Father accused in cra:Sh-s~enefight
GALLIPOLIS · - Holzer
Home Health - Services
announces their April spotlight employee of' the
month, Valerie Chapman,
RN, a registered nurse for
Holzer Home Care.
Chapman graduated from
Jackson High School .in
She
became
1984;
employed
by
Adena
Regional Hospital in 2000
as a nursing assistant and as
a registered nurse in 200 I
after graduating from the .
University of Rio Grande's
Holzer School of Nursing.
In 2003, Chapman began
her employment with
Holzer Medical Center as a
· registered nurse for Holzer
Home Care's Jackson
branch located at 190
Water Street.

~!me

Valerie Chapman
She resides in Jackson
with her husband of 22
years Larry, and their three
children: Nathan, Nicole
and Noah. In her spare

CIRCLEVII+.E (AP) -·
she enjoys .c amping,
hilditg and spending time A frantic father trying to
reach his dying son is
·
with her family.
When asked · what slie · accused of shoving and
likes best about working at wrestling with a s~eriff's
Jiolzer
Home
Care, deputy who blocked his way.
Paul Carter, 46, has pleaded
Chapman said, "As a home
health nurse, I am able to not guilty to a misdemeanor .
care for peol}le of all ages charge of misconduct at an
with acute and chronic ill- emergency . scene .a s he
ness and we are able to add attempted to get to his 16a personal touch to the year-old son, Adam,~ he
duties • we perform. I also had been involved in a car
enjoy working with great accident March 25 west of this
staff."
town about 30 miles south of
Holzer Home Care pro- Columbus. Authorities say
vides skilled nursing, home Paul Carter pushed the deputy
· health aide Service_s, physi- several times and that the two
cal therapy, occupational got into a wre~tliilg match.
therapy ·a nd speech therapy before he was arrested.
. "It's tragic all the way
in Gallila, Jackson,- Meigs,
Vinton and surrounding around," city Law D~tor
counties,
and
Mason Gary Kenworthy said. "I
County in West VIrginia.
can understand both sides of

. ' :'!

...,...
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,_

..

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·$30 Gift Certificate
To On_e Of These Gr:eat Restaurants

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Hoaies. Hot or Cold.
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•

j

(aiM) IJ78-!I M

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

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· - Mail to:.Fne LuDdl

rt,,, I,
pick-umfnd~

t-712 aJ 'I \

- IO ..... t~

-

Gallipolis Dlily Tribune
81S 3rd Ave. Gallipolis, OH 45631

.1/'~\~tr~~l
.•,.,Eff.io
\ 1 .(11/'.'~.

&amp; llr .. ...... WY

... *"" tt.r., e....

p~'----------------~

Fresh h111nd diPPed Ice cream
rreeta abd mlluhalles•

a\ltQ
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___
--•.c:ara--e!.cu.,.,
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":i.,.....-.
-·· ....

.· ~~: There "IS" Such A Thing As
1
A Free Lunch!
'"COUNTRY STYLE
COOK'INAT

the circumstances."
Carter arrived soon after with Catti:r's attOrney, John ·
his son's car crossed the Farthing of Circleville.
centerline and ran head-on
into'a dump truck as he was
driving to Westfall High
School in Williamsport
where he was a student.
As he ran toward his son,
Sgt. . Cory
Bachnicki
stopped Carter, telling him
to stay back and let emer-.
gency workers work to free
• FREE Hll' T.rMII:II..,.,.
his son. Bachnicki burt his
....... - . . . . . . . lluoldyllll!
left arm aild cut a ~ee and
•10e-mlil~·~
.
hand in the fight. His radio
., Cu8lom SUit Plge - ....... ..... , mrn.l
microphone was broken.
His son died about five
( Surfupto6X
hours after the accident at a
Columbus hospital.
Sign llp1lniiMI - ·
?' rem
The charge carries a maximum sentence of six
months in jail.
A message Seelting com-

'

i'Q'~~'1h-- 1 r'~·-='l.-- • · &gt; -~ · . .·

:

ment was left Wednesday

,.

.

2

t - - - · .... ••
..t...
...... c. .... ' - - . . . . - •. :1
. . .

.
.

BY mE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

.
. . ,

. ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Never too late to help out
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: I recently
found out that when my
daughter was 7 years old,
$Jle was raped at least three
times by her 13-year-old
cousin. She had been holding this in and finally had an
emotional. meltdown. The
timing of these incidents
happened when her father
and I ~ere going through a
separation.
The cousin who did this is
now 24. His · mother spoke
with him, and he said he
recalled one of the instances,
but not all three. The mother
then told me, "We don't
know who might be lying."
S]le also stated they were
both "only kids" when it
happened and he didn't
mean to hurt her. She wants
us all to discuss it together.
: Annie, my daughter ':Vas 7
;md he was 13 - a teenager
who knew right from wrong
and selected someone who
could not fight back and
was unlikely to tell. I am
hifuriated by his mother's
suggestion that we just sit
down and talk. She is trying
to minimize the rape.
· My daughter was an
upbeat, cheerful person who
)Was involved in school and
volunteer projects. Now that
she is no longer able to hide
· the burt, she is none of those
things. Other relatives are
being supportive and I have
suggested counseling, but
She hasn't taken me up on
'he offer. What can I do for
her - and what do I do
about this cousin'! If it were
Pp to me, he would be
arrested. - Heartbroken
~r
Heartbroken:
We're not sure what you can
do about the cousin, since he
)Was only 13 and it was I I
years ago. But it's not too
late for your daughter. Please
contact the Rape, Abuse and
Incest ·National Network
(rainn.org) at 1-800-656- ·
·H OPE (1-800-656-4673),
~ask how you can help her
through this difficult time. . Dear Annie: My busb~d's mother moved in
w1th us five years ago, when
both our children were
young. I wasn't wild about
the idea, but I wanted to
please my husband. We
have a small three-bedroom
house, and at the time, our
__ ___ki·~·ds were sharing a room,
1
. there was a-spare.
· My oldest son now wants .
his own room. My husband's sister has a larger
house With a spare room,
but she hasn't offered to
take Mom and my husband
refuses to ask her.

.

Besides not doing anything around the house to
help out, which drives me
mad, the situation is putting
a strain on our marriage. At
Wits'
End
in
Washington
Dear Washington: Is
Mom capable of living
indepe_ndently? Can you
look mto nearby apartments, retirement communities or assisted living .
homes'! Call the Eldercare
Locator (eldercare.gov) at
1-8~TI-II 16 to see what
resources are available in
your area.1t is a loving gestore to allollr a parent to live
w1th you, but if it undermines your marriage and
Mom is able · to live elsewhere~ we see no reason to
continue this arrangement
Discuss all options with
your husband, and make it
clear that the current situalion is no Ion~er worlcing.
Dear Anme: I read the
letter from "Concerned
Sister," 'who asked about
. speech-reading to help communicate with a sister who
lost her hearing due to
Meniere's disease. She
should look into implants.
. I've been profoundly hard
of hearing all of my life and
have used hearing aids since
I was 5 years old (I am now
43). Lip-reading takes a
lifetime. I know: I'm quite
good at it. But to try to learn
at this stage of her life could
be frustrating.
In 2007, I underwent
Baha procedure cochlear
implant surgery for one ear
and was totally amazed.
Cochlear implants stimulate
the auditory nerve directly.
Baha implants create sound
through bone conduction.
Many insurance companies
will coxer at least part of the
cost.
. Please
tell
"Concerned" to look into
this little-known option. Sierra VISta, Ariz.

Dear Sierra VISta: Thank
you for mentioning cochlear
implants for those with
bearing loss. Anyone who
thinks he or_~ may be ~­
gible shoul4 discuss it with
an audiologist.

Anllie's Mllilbox is writby Kslhy 'MilcheU tmd
Marcy Sugar, longtiMe edJ.
ton of ~ A1111 l«••n

tell

coilllflll. Pktue e·llfllil yoiiT

qustions to ttlllfitsM4il·
box@coiiiCIUI..IId, or wriU
to: ANiie'i Mililbox, P.O.

.

'

There "IS" Such A Thing As
A Free Lunch!
Enter Here For' A

ae J•cJqooo Pike
.

$~0 Gift !Certificate

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To One Of These Great Restaurants

356 East Maio
Pomeroy, OR
740-992-6192

Gallipolis, OH
740-446-3837

Gee.llartioger Parkway
Middleport, OH .
740-991-5148

Drawing Each Week!
I

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Nlme: _ _;_.,--________________

Pholte •._____.:______________

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Clubs and
organizations

Church events

.• .

Birthdays

REAL FSTA1E TRANSFERS/
POMEROY
- Mei~s Cheadle, bon R. Cheadle,
County Recorder Kay Hill right of way, ColuJ:Qbia.
reported the following land
Rex Cheadle, Jr., Sara J.
transfers:
Cheadle, Don R. Cheadle,
Kristin N. McGee, John right of way, Columbia.
E. McGee, to Paul W.
Rex Cheadle, Jr., Sara J.
Schmittauer, deed, Scipio .
Cheadle, Don R. Cheadle,
Ivan L. Wood, Evelyn right of way, Columbia.
Wood, deed to extinguish
William
D.
Brown,
life estate.
Isabelle V. Brown, Kevin W.
Michael C. Custer, Phyllis Brown, Debra Anne Brown,
A. Custer, to Carl M. Forte, Rebecca S. Brown, Kent A.
Inge J. Forte, deed, Lebanon. Brown, · to Oxford Oil Co.,
John R. RusseU, Brenda right of way, Scipio.
.
Russell, to Michael D.
James
E . Vanaman,
Cunningham, Kellie R. Darlene M. Vanaman, to
Cunningham, deed, Olive.
Oxford Oil Co., right of
Rachel Dill, Jeremy Dill, way, Rutland.
to Don Ross, deed, Sutton.
Don Tillis, Gina Tlllili, to
Donald Johnson, ShirleY. Oxford Oil Co., right of
A. Johnson, to Murphy 011 way, Rutland. ·
Co., right of way, Letart.
Thomas 0. Stewart, Joan
M
. Stewart, to Oxford Oil
Robert V. ~· deceased,
to Timothy J. King, CarolS. Co., right of way, Rutland.
Brewer, affidavit, Salisbury.
Kenneth Rife, Sandra
Joseph L. Kirby, Jr., Rife, to Oxford Oil Co.,
Stephanie J. Kirby, to right of way, Rutland.
Aimee Pyles, deed, Sutton.
Mickey R. Hylton, Rachel
Irwin R. Lance Il, Mary F. K. Hutton, to Oxford Oil
Lance, to Irwin R. Lance Co., right of way, Rutland.
III. Mary F: Llihce, Lance . Robert E. Hart, Gail P.
Revocable Living Trust, Hart, to Oxford Oil Co:,
deed, Letart.
right of way, Rutland.
Re~~; Cheadle, Jr.. Sara J.
Joe Bolin, Janet Bolin, to
Cheadle, Don R. Cheadle, Oxford Oil Co., right of
right of way, Columbia.
way, Rutland.
Rex Cheadle, Jr., Sara J.
James Henri Bowers,
Cheadle, Don R. Cheadle, deceased,
L.
Virginia
right of way, Columbia. .
Bowers, deceased, Bowers
Rex Cheadle, Jr., Sara J. Family Revocable Trust, to

Donna J. Smith, Timothy
Smith, Shaun M. Smith,
affidavit, Sutton.
Bowers .
Family
Revocable Trust, Donna l.
Smith, to Donna J. Smith ~
deed, Sutton.
Donna J. Smith, James H.
Smith, Jr., to Donna J. Smith,
transfer at death, Sutton.
Craig L. Roush, Christine
M. Roush, to Miranda l.
Stewart,
William
D.
Stewart, Sharon S. Stewart,
Village
of
deed, . .
Middleport/Salisbury. ·
Todd A. Osborne, Carla
L. Osborne, to Richard L.
Barcus, Molly J. Barcus,
deed, Letart.
Michae!J. Hill, Mindy K.
Hill, to John P. Alkire,
Pamela Denise Alkire, deed,
Sutton.
Elsie
I.
Dodderer,
deceased, to Frank E.
Dodderer, certificate of
transfer, Olive.
Robert
L.
Wingett,
deceaseo,
to Carleton
School, Meigs lndiisiries,
Inc., deed, Village of
Syracuse.
Joseph Donald Rebecca,
Joseph D. Rebecca III,
Kelley Lea Rebecca, to
State of Ohio Department of
Transportation, deed, Olive.
Kenneth B. Young to
ODOT, deed, Olive.

· Roger L. Lovsey to
ODOT, deed, Olive .
Carol C. Grossman to
ODOT, deed, Olive.
Guy T. Hayman, Mishia
Sue Hayman , to ODOT,
deed, Olive.
Fitzpatrick ,
Stephen
Brenda Fitzpatrick, to
ODOT, deed, Olive.
Betty Emmert to Charles
Brien Burke , Judith A.
Burke, Burke Family Trust,
·
deed, Columbia.
Ronald
L.
Fisher,
Christina M. Fisher. to
David Charles Casto, Traci
Ann Casto, Charles L.
Casto, Judy I. Casto, deed.
Scipio.
Angela Baker, Angela
Petrie, Angela Baker Petrie.
Timothy Petro, to Paula
Davenport, Paula Carrillo, ..)
deed, Rutland.
Herbert Eugene Whaley,
Shelia R. Whaley, to Brian
Whaley, Gloria Whaley,
deed, Bedford.
MM)' C. LQyeJI tn Robin
M.
King,
certificate,
Columbia.
Donna Heil, Phillip Heil,
deed, Olive .
Janet Gosnell, Raymo·n
Gosnell, to Frank E.
Dodderer, deed, Olive.
Christopher M. Hutton to
Stephen J. Riggs, Stacy A.
R•ggs, deed, Rutland.

Cultural Center to host W.Va. Dance Festival

Grande.·Ch0 ra(e

riece

• . ,.,

Mt. Union Baptist Church his 89th birthday on April executive director of Meigs
6:30 p.m. Sunday. The ,30. A card shower i ~ Council on Aging, to speak.
church is located at 39081 planned. His address is Entertainment by some
Monday, April 28
Hill
Road, Lakin Nursing Home @I Mei~s students of "Grease"
RACINE
- Regular carpenter
meeting of Southern Local Pomeroy. For information Bateman Circle, Lakin, mus1cal. Take paper prodW.Va., 25287.
ucts and personal care items
School Board, 8 p.m., high call 742-2832.
Thursday,
May
1
·
POINT
ROCK.
Revival
for
women's shelter. Make
school media room.
RACINE
Eva
Teaford
reservations for lunch at
POMEROY -Regular beginning Sunday II ·a .m.
80th
birthwill
observe
her
service
at
the
Point
Rock
14. Guests are wel992-32
meeting of Meigs Count)'
day
n
May
I
.
Cards
may
be
come.
Church
of
the
Nazarene
on
Library Board, 3 p.m.,
TUPPERS PLAINS SR 689 between Wilkesville sent to her at P.O. Box 55
Pomeroy Library.
Racine,
Ohio
45771.
'
VFW Post 9053, 7 p.m. at
.J'OMEROY - Veterans and Route 32, and continuthe hall.
ing
.
through
Wednesday,
7
Service Commission, 9 .
Saturday, April 26
·
services.
Rev.
Bud
p.m.
a.m., 117 Memorial Dr.
PORTLAND
·Horse
Allman, evangelist; special
Thesday, April 29
fun show at the Portland
SYRACUSE -'Ole final music by the Brian Family
Community
center, 10 a.m.
Connection;
Sunday.
and
public meeting on the
.
Thursday,
April
24
warmups
.
start;
II a.m.
Syracuse CDBG Distress Jim and Cathy Sission ,
POMEROY
-Meigs
show
begins.
Sponsored
by
through
Grant -application, 7 p.m. at Monday .
Soil
and
Water
the Ohio River Producers.
the Syracuse Community Wednesday. Lloyd Grimm,
Board
of
Conservation
Rain cancels. For more
Center. The public is urged Jr., pastor.
Supervisors
meeting,
II
:30
information
call Bruce
to attend.
a.m., district office, Hiland McKelvey, 59o-9936 or
Road.
743-5216.
POMEROY Meigs
Monday, April 28
Wednesday, April 30
County Retired ·Teachers,
POMEROY - OH-Kan
Sunday, April17
LETART, W.Va. - John noon luncheon, Trinity Coin Club dinner, 6 p.m.,
POMEROY
E. "Jack" Ord, formerly of Church, Second Street followed
by
meeting,
Dayspring in concert at the Letart, W.Va. will observe entrance. Beth Shaver, Pomeroy Library.

p.m. programs on Friday,
April 25, .and Saturday.
April 26, in the Cultural
Center's Norman L. Fagan

::t:

~::~ vre~~~te

TOPS Club
top losers ·

----..... a..~.-..._------ -·-..-·""'··''

2008 .

Public meetings

· RIO GRANDE _ The This song is actually an Division of Culture and
Grande Chorale vocal instrumental piece, blit the History presents the 2008
Virginia
Dance
music group from the Grande Chorale sings it a West
f.Jniversity ·of Rio Grande cappella. The song has no Festival .
will hold its annual spring words, but the stodents sing
This year marks the 26th
.
concert on Friday, April 25 the instrumental sounds year of the everit.
at 8 p.m. in the Berry Fine during the performance.
Conway was born m Fort
l!Dd Performing Arts Center.
"It's physically bard to Wayne,. Ind., wh~re he
___The eYen is free.and open_UJ_ sing__sn_ fast, '.' lawr.ence began his dance .
at
__th...,e public.
. said. "The son~ is all non- &lt; he Pcrrt Wayne
. The Grande 'C hor.lle is a sense ~yUables. ·
· - - - -··- --·---~:.;....;
jazz/show choir that perOther songs of note in the
forms on campus and concert will be "When I'm
throughout the region dur- 64," by The Beatles, and
. "Birdl-and," which was
ing the school year.
: The Friday concert · will made famous by Manhattan
include a few Welsh songs Transfer. "Birdland" is an
COOLVILLE Jane
_that ·the group has been instrumental jazz piece that
Oldaker was named weekly
~sked to sing. Director the Grande Chorale also
David Lawrence explained performs in a very fun style. best weight-Joss winner
. that the group has sung
ln addition to the Friday with Betty Coen and Patti .
.t hese songs 10 previous . concert, the .Grande Chorale Gabriel runners-up at . the
years and audiences have . will also perform on April 22 meeting of 1UPS
~njoyed them greatly.
Saturday, May 3 on campus (take Off Pounds Sensibly)
#OH
2013
previously at the commencement cere- Chapter
: Law~ence
toerved for a year as the monies and at the celebra- Coolville.
Madog Faculty Fellow for lion to dedicate the newly
KOPS (Keep Off Pounds
Rio Grande's Madog Center expanded and renovated Sensibly) members Mary
Cleland, May Frost, Louise
for Welsh Studies, and Davis University Center.
researched Welsh music
The group performs at Hershey
and . Patricia
Richmond
were
in leeway.
(iuring his time as the schools and special events
Faculty Fellow. He also on campus and in the com- Plans were discussed for
faught the Grande Chorale munity during the school TOPS Area Recognition
teveral of the Welsh songs year and recently held a Days on May 2 and 3 in
pe researched, and the son~s spring break tour. lbat tour Lancaster and the Meigs
have been well received m included
stops
in County Relay for Life on
the region whenever they Washington, Williamsburg May 9 and·iO.
Leader Pat Snedden ·preand Jamestown, Lawrence
have been performed.
sented a program using the
During the Friday con- said.
"It went very well," he topic, "Sabotaging the
cert, the Grande Chorale
jwill also sing a wide range said about the tour. "It was Saboteur." The group meets
_every Tuesday at Torch
of other songs, including a really well received."
For more information, Baptist Church. Weigh-in is
Latin Motet, a 17th century
Madrigal and songs from call Lawrence al (800) 282- from 5:15 to 6:15p.m. with
The Beatles.
7201. For additional in/or- a meetin~ at 6:30 p.nr. For
call
Pat
One particuJarJy fun
matiun Oil upcoming events informatJon,
in the concert wil .be at Rio Grande, log onto Snedden at 662-2633 or
!'Aigbt of the Bumblebee." www.rio.edu.
attend a free meeting.

•

Thursday, April 24.

Community Calendar

Box 118190;-cllkllgo, 11::
60611. ·To find old more
abold Annie's Mailbox,
tmd nod fet~~~~rts by OIMr
Creators SyNlicoJe wrUen
CHARLESTON, W.Va. Schoo~. He continued at the
and cal1oonists, l'isil the Brett Conwa:r, and · V'ffenia School of the Arts,
Cre(116rs Syndicate Web Caroline
Roeber w11l perpage al www.crealon.cotri.. form as guest artists at the 7 Jo y Ballet School, and

;schedules spring concert

228 W Main, Pomeroy
992-5432

Page.A:J

'

Ballet. Currently Conway is
in his sixth season with
Alonzo King's LINES
Ballet, which is based in
San Francisco,
Rocher began her training
at the Conservatoire de
Montpellier in France with
Madame Claparede and
later stodied at the Rudta

Bejart Lausanne School in
Switzerland. In 1998, she
came to the United States to
study at the Alvin Ailey
American Dance Center and
in 1999, she was invited to
join the Dance Theatre of
Harlem Company. Rocher
was promoted to principal
dancer the following year
and performed leading roles
in The Prodigal So!J. Agon,
and Fancy Free, among oth- ·

ers. ln 2004, she moved to
Germany to JOID the
Bayerisches Staatsballett.
Rocher is now dancing with
the LINES Ballet.
The evening performantes are free and open to
the public on a first-come.
first-served basis; seating is
limited. A schedule of both
concerts is attached. ·
For . more information.
call (304) 558-0162.

�0

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'

.The Daily Sentinel .
.'

L

PageA2

LocAL • STATE

Thursday, April:i;i,

2008

'

Holzer names spotlight ·employee Father accused in cra:Sh-s~enefight
GALLIPOLIS · - Holzer
Home Health - Services
announces their April spotlight employee of' the
month, Valerie Chapman,
RN, a registered nurse for
Holzer Home Care.
Chapman graduated from
Jackson High School .in
She
became
1984;
employed
by
Adena
Regional Hospital in 2000
as a nursing assistant and as
a registered nurse in 200 I
after graduating from the .
University of Rio Grande's
Holzer School of Nursing.
In 2003, Chapman began
her employment with
Holzer Medical Center as a
· registered nurse for Holzer
Home Care's Jackson
branch located at 190
Water Street.

~!me

Valerie Chapman
She resides in Jackson
with her husband of 22
years Larry, and their three
children: Nathan, Nicole
and Noah. In her spare

CIRCLEVII+.E (AP) -·
she enjoys .c amping,
hilditg and spending time A frantic father trying to
reach his dying son is
·
with her family.
When asked · what slie · accused of shoving and
likes best about working at wrestling with a s~eriff's
Jiolzer
Home
Care, deputy who blocked his way.
Paul Carter, 46, has pleaded
Chapman said, "As a home
health nurse, I am able to not guilty to a misdemeanor .
care for peol}le of all ages charge of misconduct at an
with acute and chronic ill- emergency . scene .a s he
ness and we are able to add attempted to get to his 16a personal touch to the year-old son, Adam,~ he
duties • we perform. I also had been involved in a car
enjoy working with great accident March 25 west of this
staff."
town about 30 miles south of
Holzer Home Care pro- Columbus. Authorities say
vides skilled nursing, home Paul Carter pushed the deputy
· health aide Service_s, physi- several times and that the two
cal therapy, occupational got into a wre~tliilg match.
therapy ·a nd speech therapy before he was arrested.
. "It's tragic all the way
in Gallila, Jackson,- Meigs,
Vinton and surrounding around," city Law D~tor
counties,
and
Mason Gary Kenworthy said. "I
County in West VIrginia.
can understand both sides of

. ' :'!

...,...
-~
,_

..

E11ter Here For A

tti'IJ."--"·'-~

·$30 Gift Certificate
To On_e Of These Gr:eat Restaurants

··BEST!"
Gr-t Home Swte Breakfast

Drawing Each Week!

a.- Dinner

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Gr-tHoaooa
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..,_...._._ .... ._ ..

a

· - Mail to:.Fne LuDdl

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pick-umfnd~

t-712 aJ 'I \

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-

Gallipolis Dlily Tribune
81S 3rd Ave. Gallipolis, OH 45631

.1/'~\~tr~~l
.•,.,Eff.io
\ 1 .(11/'.'~.

&amp; llr .. ...... WY

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p~'----------------~

Fresh h111nd diPPed Ice cream
rreeta abd mlluhalles•

a\ltQ
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___
--•.c:ara--e!.cu.,.,
••·-:"
":i.,.....-.
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.· ~~: There "IS" Such A Thing As
1
A Free Lunch!
'"COUNTRY STYLE
COOK'INAT

the circumstances."
Carter arrived soon after with Catti:r's attOrney, John ·
his son's car crossed the Farthing of Circleville.
centerline and ran head-on
into'a dump truck as he was
driving to Westfall High
School in Williamsport
where he was a student.
As he ran toward his son,
Sgt. . Cory
Bachnicki
stopped Carter, telling him
to stay back and let emer-.
gency workers work to free
• FREE Hll' T.rMII:II..,.,.
his son. Bachnicki burt his
....... - . . . . . . . lluoldyllll!
left arm aild cut a ~ee and
•10e-mlil~·~
.
hand in the fight. His radio
., Cu8lom SUit Plge - ....... ..... , mrn.l
microphone was broken.
His son died about five
( Surfupto6X
hours after the accident at a
Columbus hospital.
Sign llp1lniiMI - ·
?' rem
The charge carries a maximum sentence of six
months in jail.
A message Seelting com-

'

i'Q'~~'1h-- 1 r'~·-='l.-- • · &gt; -~ · . .·

:

ment was left Wednesday

,.

.

2

t - - - · .... ••
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...... c. .... ' - - . . . . - •. :1
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.
.

BY mE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

.
. . ,

. ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Never too late to help out
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: I recently
found out that when my
daughter was 7 years old,
$Jle was raped at least three
times by her 13-year-old
cousin. She had been holding this in and finally had an
emotional. meltdown. The
timing of these incidents
happened when her father
and I ~ere going through a
separation.
The cousin who did this is
now 24. His · mother spoke
with him, and he said he
recalled one of the instances,
but not all three. The mother
then told me, "We don't
know who might be lying."
S]le also stated they were
both "only kids" when it
happened and he didn't
mean to hurt her. She wants
us all to discuss it together.
: Annie, my daughter ':Vas 7
;md he was 13 - a teenager
who knew right from wrong
and selected someone who
could not fight back and
was unlikely to tell. I am
hifuriated by his mother's
suggestion that we just sit
down and talk. She is trying
to minimize the rape.
· My daughter was an
upbeat, cheerful person who
)Was involved in school and
volunteer projects. Now that
she is no longer able to hide
· the burt, she is none of those
things. Other relatives are
being supportive and I have
suggested counseling, but
She hasn't taken me up on
'he offer. What can I do for
her - and what do I do
about this cousin'! If it were
Pp to me, he would be
arrested. - Heartbroken
~r
Heartbroken:
We're not sure what you can
do about the cousin, since he
)Was only 13 and it was I I
years ago. But it's not too
late for your daughter. Please
contact the Rape, Abuse and
Incest ·National Network
(rainn.org) at 1-800-656- ·
·H OPE (1-800-656-4673),
~ask how you can help her
through this difficult time. . Dear Annie: My busb~d's mother moved in
w1th us five years ago, when
both our children were
young. I wasn't wild about
the idea, but I wanted to
please my husband. We
have a small three-bedroom
house, and at the time, our
__ ___ki·~·ds were sharing a room,
1
. there was a-spare.
· My oldest son now wants .
his own room. My husband's sister has a larger
house With a spare room,
but she hasn't offered to
take Mom and my husband
refuses to ask her.

.

Besides not doing anything around the house to
help out, which drives me
mad, the situation is putting
a strain on our marriage. At
Wits'
End
in
Washington
Dear Washington: Is
Mom capable of living
indepe_ndently? Can you
look mto nearby apartments, retirement communities or assisted living .
homes'! Call the Eldercare
Locator (eldercare.gov) at
1-8~TI-II 16 to see what
resources are available in
your area.1t is a loving gestore to allollr a parent to live
w1th you, but if it undermines your marriage and
Mom is able · to live elsewhere~ we see no reason to
continue this arrangement
Discuss all options with
your husband, and make it
clear that the current situalion is no Ion~er worlcing.
Dear Anme: I read the
letter from "Concerned
Sister," 'who asked about
. speech-reading to help communicate with a sister who
lost her hearing due to
Meniere's disease. She
should look into implants.
. I've been profoundly hard
of hearing all of my life and
have used hearing aids since
I was 5 years old (I am now
43). Lip-reading takes a
lifetime. I know: I'm quite
good at it. But to try to learn
at this stage of her life could
be frustrating.
In 2007, I underwent
Baha procedure cochlear
implant surgery for one ear
and was totally amazed.
Cochlear implants stimulate
the auditory nerve directly.
Baha implants create sound
through bone conduction.
Many insurance companies
will coxer at least part of the
cost.
. Please
tell
"Concerned" to look into
this little-known option. Sierra VISta, Ariz.

Dear Sierra VISta: Thank
you for mentioning cochlear
implants for those with
bearing loss. Anyone who
thinks he or_~ may be ~­
gible shoul4 discuss it with
an audiologist.

Anllie's Mllilbox is writby Kslhy 'MilcheU tmd
Marcy Sugar, longtiMe edJ.
ton of ~ A1111 l«••n

tell

coilllflll. Pktue e·llfllil yoiiT

qustions to ttlllfitsM4il·
box@coiiiCIUI..IId, or wriU
to: ANiie'i Mililbox, P.O.

.

'

There "IS" Such A Thing As
A Free Lunch!
Enter Here For' A

ae J•cJqooo Pike
.

$~0 Gift !Certificate

~

To One Of These Great Restaurants

356 East Maio
Pomeroy, OR
740-992-6192

Gallipolis, OH
740-446-3837

Gee.llartioger Parkway
Middleport, OH .
740-991-5148

Drawing Each Week!
I

..

Nlme: _ _;_.,--________________

Pholte •._____.:______________

••

~

,0

".... . .

.

«. ....

..

'

Clubs and
organizations

Church events

.• .

Birthdays

REAL FSTA1E TRANSFERS/
POMEROY
- Mei~s Cheadle, bon R. Cheadle,
County Recorder Kay Hill right of way, ColuJ:Qbia.
reported the following land
Rex Cheadle, Jr., Sara J.
transfers:
Cheadle, Don R. Cheadle,
Kristin N. McGee, John right of way, Columbia.
E. McGee, to Paul W.
Rex Cheadle, Jr., Sara J.
Schmittauer, deed, Scipio .
Cheadle, Don R. Cheadle,
Ivan L. Wood, Evelyn right of way, Columbia.
Wood, deed to extinguish
William
D.
Brown,
life estate.
Isabelle V. Brown, Kevin W.
Michael C. Custer, Phyllis Brown, Debra Anne Brown,
A. Custer, to Carl M. Forte, Rebecca S. Brown, Kent A.
Inge J. Forte, deed, Lebanon. Brown, · to Oxford Oil Co.,
John R. RusseU, Brenda right of way, Scipio.
.
Russell, to Michael D.
James
E . Vanaman,
Cunningham, Kellie R. Darlene M. Vanaman, to
Cunningham, deed, Olive.
Oxford Oil Co., right of
Rachel Dill, Jeremy Dill, way, Rutland.
to Don Ross, deed, Sutton.
Don Tillis, Gina Tlllili, to
Donald Johnson, ShirleY. Oxford Oil Co., right of
A. Johnson, to Murphy 011 way, Rutland. ·
Co., right of way, Letart.
Thomas 0. Stewart, Joan
M
. Stewart, to Oxford Oil
Robert V. ~· deceased,
to Timothy J. King, CarolS. Co., right of way, Rutland.
Brewer, affidavit, Salisbury.
Kenneth Rife, Sandra
Joseph L. Kirby, Jr., Rife, to Oxford Oil Co.,
Stephanie J. Kirby, to right of way, Rutland.
Aimee Pyles, deed, Sutton.
Mickey R. Hylton, Rachel
Irwin R. Lance Il, Mary F. K. Hutton, to Oxford Oil
Lance, to Irwin R. Lance Co., right of way, Rutland.
III. Mary F: Llihce, Lance . Robert E. Hart, Gail P.
Revocable Living Trust, Hart, to Oxford Oil Co:,
deed, Letart.
right of way, Rutland.
Re~~; Cheadle, Jr.. Sara J.
Joe Bolin, Janet Bolin, to
Cheadle, Don R. Cheadle, Oxford Oil Co., right of
right of way, Columbia.
way, Rutland.
Rex Cheadle, Jr., Sara J.
James Henri Bowers,
Cheadle, Don R. Cheadle, deceased,
L.
Virginia
right of way, Columbia. .
Bowers, deceased, Bowers
Rex Cheadle, Jr., Sara J. Family Revocable Trust, to

Donna J. Smith, Timothy
Smith, Shaun M. Smith,
affidavit, Sutton.
Bowers .
Family
Revocable Trust, Donna l.
Smith, to Donna J. Smith ~
deed, Sutton.
Donna J. Smith, James H.
Smith, Jr., to Donna J. Smith,
transfer at death, Sutton.
Craig L. Roush, Christine
M. Roush, to Miranda l.
Stewart,
William
D.
Stewart, Sharon S. Stewart,
Village
of
deed, . .
Middleport/Salisbury. ·
Todd A. Osborne, Carla
L. Osborne, to Richard L.
Barcus, Molly J. Barcus,
deed, Letart.
Michae!J. Hill, Mindy K.
Hill, to John P. Alkire,
Pamela Denise Alkire, deed,
Sutton.
Elsie
I.
Dodderer,
deceased, to Frank E.
Dodderer, certificate of
transfer, Olive.
Robert
L.
Wingett,
deceaseo,
to Carleton
School, Meigs lndiisiries,
Inc., deed, Village of
Syracuse.
Joseph Donald Rebecca,
Joseph D. Rebecca III,
Kelley Lea Rebecca, to
State of Ohio Department of
Transportation, deed, Olive.
Kenneth B. Young to
ODOT, deed, Olive.

· Roger L. Lovsey to
ODOT, deed, Olive .
Carol C. Grossman to
ODOT, deed, Olive.
Guy T. Hayman, Mishia
Sue Hayman , to ODOT,
deed, Olive.
Fitzpatrick ,
Stephen
Brenda Fitzpatrick, to
ODOT, deed, Olive.
Betty Emmert to Charles
Brien Burke , Judith A.
Burke, Burke Family Trust,
·
deed, Columbia.
Ronald
L.
Fisher,
Christina M. Fisher. to
David Charles Casto, Traci
Ann Casto, Charles L.
Casto, Judy I. Casto, deed.
Scipio.
Angela Baker, Angela
Petrie, Angela Baker Petrie.
Timothy Petro, to Paula
Davenport, Paula Carrillo, ..)
deed, Rutland.
Herbert Eugene Whaley,
Shelia R. Whaley, to Brian
Whaley, Gloria Whaley,
deed, Bedford.
MM)' C. LQyeJI tn Robin
M.
King,
certificate,
Columbia.
Donna Heil, Phillip Heil,
deed, Olive .
Janet Gosnell, Raymo·n
Gosnell, to Frank E.
Dodderer, deed, Olive.
Christopher M. Hutton to
Stephen J. Riggs, Stacy A.
R•ggs, deed, Rutland.

Cultural Center to host W.Va. Dance Festival

Grande.·Ch0 ra(e

riece

• . ,.,

Mt. Union Baptist Church his 89th birthday on April executive director of Meigs
6:30 p.m. Sunday. The ,30. A card shower i ~ Council on Aging, to speak.
church is located at 39081 planned. His address is Entertainment by some
Monday, April 28
Hill
Road, Lakin Nursing Home @I Mei~s students of "Grease"
RACINE
- Regular carpenter
meeting of Southern Local Pomeroy. For information Bateman Circle, Lakin, mus1cal. Take paper prodW.Va., 25287.
ucts and personal care items
School Board, 8 p.m., high call 742-2832.
Thursday,
May
1
·
POINT
ROCK.
Revival
for
women's shelter. Make
school media room.
RACINE
Eva
Teaford
reservations for lunch at
POMEROY -Regular beginning Sunday II ·a .m.
80th
birthwill
observe
her
service
at
the
Point
Rock
14. Guests are wel992-32
meeting of Meigs Count)'
day
n
May
I
.
Cards
may
be
come.
Church
of
the
Nazarene
on
Library Board, 3 p.m.,
TUPPERS PLAINS SR 689 between Wilkesville sent to her at P.O. Box 55
Pomeroy Library.
Racine,
Ohio
45771.
'
VFW Post 9053, 7 p.m. at
.J'OMEROY - Veterans and Route 32, and continuthe hall.
ing
.
through
Wednesday,
7
Service Commission, 9 .
Saturday, April 26
·
services.
Rev.
Bud
p.m.
a.m., 117 Memorial Dr.
PORTLAND
·Horse
Allman, evangelist; special
Thesday, April 29
fun show at the Portland
SYRACUSE -'Ole final music by the Brian Family
Community
center, 10 a.m.
Connection;
Sunday.
and
public meeting on the
.
Thursday,
April
24
warmups
.
start;
II a.m.
Syracuse CDBG Distress Jim and Cathy Sission ,
POMEROY
-Meigs
show
begins.
Sponsored
by
through
Grant -application, 7 p.m. at Monday .
Soil
and
Water
the Ohio River Producers.
the Syracuse Community Wednesday. Lloyd Grimm,
Board
of
Conservation
Rain cancels. For more
Center. The public is urged Jr., pastor.
Supervisors
meeting,
II
:30
information
call Bruce
to attend.
a.m., district office, Hiland McKelvey, 59o-9936 or
Road.
743-5216.
POMEROY Meigs
Monday, April 28
Wednesday, April 30
County Retired ·Teachers,
POMEROY - OH-Kan
Sunday, April17
LETART, W.Va. - John noon luncheon, Trinity Coin Club dinner, 6 p.m.,
POMEROY
E. "Jack" Ord, formerly of Church, Second Street followed
by
meeting,
Dayspring in concert at the Letart, W.Va. will observe entrance. Beth Shaver, Pomeroy Library.

p.m. programs on Friday,
April 25, .and Saturday.
April 26, in the Cultural
Center's Norman L. Fagan

::t:

~::~ vre~~~te

TOPS Club
top losers ·

----..... a..~.-..._------ -·-..-·""'··''

2008 .

Public meetings

· RIO GRANDE _ The This song is actually an Division of Culture and
Grande Chorale vocal instrumental piece, blit the History presents the 2008
Virginia
Dance
music group from the Grande Chorale sings it a West
f.Jniversity ·of Rio Grande cappella. The song has no Festival .
will hold its annual spring words, but the stodents sing
This year marks the 26th
.
concert on Friday, April 25 the instrumental sounds year of the everit.
at 8 p.m. in the Berry Fine during the performance.
Conway was born m Fort
l!Dd Performing Arts Center.
"It's physically bard to Wayne,. Ind., wh~re he
___The eYen is free.and open_UJ_ sing__sn_ fast, '.' lawr.ence began his dance .
at
__th...,e public.
. said. "The son~ is all non- &lt; he Pcrrt Wayne
. The Grande 'C hor.lle is a sense ~yUables. ·
· - - - -··- --·---~:.;....;
jazz/show choir that perOther songs of note in the
forms on campus and concert will be "When I'm
throughout the region dur- 64," by The Beatles, and
. "Birdl-and," which was
ing the school year.
: The Friday concert · will made famous by Manhattan
include a few Welsh songs Transfer. "Birdland" is an
COOLVILLE Jane
_that ·the group has been instrumental jazz piece that
Oldaker was named weekly
~sked to sing. Director the Grande Chorale also
David Lawrence explained performs in a very fun style. best weight-Joss winner
. that the group has sung
ln addition to the Friday with Betty Coen and Patti .
.t hese songs 10 previous . concert, the .Grande Chorale Gabriel runners-up at . the
years and audiences have . will also perform on April 22 meeting of 1UPS
~njoyed them greatly.
Saturday, May 3 on campus (take Off Pounds Sensibly)
#OH
2013
previously at the commencement cere- Chapter
: Law~ence
toerved for a year as the monies and at the celebra- Coolville.
Madog Faculty Fellow for lion to dedicate the newly
KOPS (Keep Off Pounds
Rio Grande's Madog Center expanded and renovated Sensibly) members Mary
Cleland, May Frost, Louise
for Welsh Studies, and Davis University Center.
researched Welsh music
The group performs at Hershey
and . Patricia
Richmond
were
in leeway.
(iuring his time as the schools and special events
Faculty Fellow. He also on campus and in the com- Plans were discussed for
faught the Grande Chorale munity during the school TOPS Area Recognition
teveral of the Welsh songs year and recently held a Days on May 2 and 3 in
pe researched, and the son~s spring break tour. lbat tour Lancaster and the Meigs
have been well received m included
stops
in County Relay for Life on
the region whenever they Washington, Williamsburg May 9 and·iO.
Leader Pat Snedden ·preand Jamestown, Lawrence
have been performed.
sented a program using the
During the Friday con- said.
"It went very well," he topic, "Sabotaging the
cert, the Grande Chorale
jwill also sing a wide range said about the tour. "It was Saboteur." The group meets
_every Tuesday at Torch
of other songs, including a really well received."
For more information, Baptist Church. Weigh-in is
Latin Motet, a 17th century
Madrigal and songs from call Lawrence al (800) 282- from 5:15 to 6:15p.m. with
The Beatles.
7201. For additional in/or- a meetin~ at 6:30 p.nr. For
call
Pat
One particuJarJy fun
matiun Oil upcoming events informatJon,
in the concert wil .be at Rio Grande, log onto Snedden at 662-2633 or
!'Aigbt of the Bumblebee." www.rio.edu.
attend a free meeting.

•

Thursday, April 24.

Community Calendar

Box 118190;-cllkllgo, 11::
60611. ·To find old more
abold Annie's Mailbox,
tmd nod fet~~~~rts by OIMr
Creators SyNlicoJe wrUen
CHARLESTON, W.Va. Schoo~. He continued at the
and cal1oonists, l'isil the Brett Conwa:r, and · V'ffenia School of the Arts,
Cre(116rs Syndicate Web Caroline
Roeber w11l perpage al www.crealon.cotri.. form as guest artists at the 7 Jo y Ballet School, and

;schedules spring concert

228 W Main, Pomeroy
992-5432

Page.A:J

'

Ballet. Currently Conway is
in his sixth season with
Alonzo King's LINES
Ballet, which is based in
San Francisco,
Rocher began her training
at the Conservatoire de
Montpellier in France with
Madame Claparede and
later stodied at the Rudta

Bejart Lausanne School in
Switzerland. In 1998, she
came to the United States to
study at the Alvin Ailey
American Dance Center and
in 1999, she was invited to
join the Dance Theatre of
Harlem Company. Rocher
was promoted to principal
dancer the following year
and performed leading roles
in The Prodigal So!J. Agon,
and Fancy Free, among oth- ·

ers. ln 2004, she moved to
Germany to JOID the
Bayerisches Staatsballett.
Rocher is now dancing with
the LINES Ballet.
The evening performantes are free and open to
the public on a first-come.
first-served basis; seating is
limited. A schedule of both
concerts is attached. ·
For . more information.
call (304) 558-0162.

�•

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740J 992·2157
._.mydaltyMntlnel.com

'Jhur.day, Apri124, aoo8

BY RAclta BECK

mostly, the Boston-based
company, which provides
investment serviCes and
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
NEW YORK - Reality management to the likes of
hit after a few minutes into mutual and pension funds,
Dan Goodrich
State S~t Corp.'s initially seemed to giVe investors a
Publisher
up~ earnings conference lot of reasons to cheer.
call: The financial services
In the first minutes of lradCharlene Hoeflich
giant had a $3.2 billion ing on TUesday morning, the
skeleton hidden in its closet. stock rose from its Monday
General Manager-News Editor
Winning over investor close of $76.86 a share to
confidence these days does- $77. then $78 and toPPed
n't come by burying news." $79. Had it S1UCk !here, Siate
Amid today's punishing Street would have turned in
Congress shall make no law respecting an ·
fmancial crisis and econom- a decent 2 peroent price gain
. aurblishment of religion, or prohibiting the
ic downturn, shareholders fortheday.
fru exercise thereof; or abridging the frettlom of want - and deserve - to Then investors began to
know straight up about any- chew on the vague "chals~ech, of of the prus; or tht right of the peothing that could potentially lenges" that Logue talked
ple ptaetably to asstmbk, and to petition the hurt business or profits.
about five minutes into his
State S~t sent out a prepared comments during
Government for a redress ofgrievances.
news release topping 3,000 the company's call with anawords - the length of a lysts - more than·two hours
- The Arst Amendment to the U.S. Constitution magazine article at after the initial earnings
around 7 a.m on Thesday news release had gone out.
morning, The release hyped
Minutes later, . CFO Ed
its better-than-expected 45 · Resch told of bow the CO!Jlpercent gain in fli'St -quarter pany's $733 billion investearnings · per share and its ment portfolio lost $32 bilrecord revenues.
lion in value during the qllllf~I am extremely pleased
ter, from $1.1 billion at the
with this record revenue per- end of last year. The value of
formance, particularly in the portfolio, of which 40
today 's challenging environ- percent is in mort~e­
ment," CEO Ronald Logue backed securities including
said in a statement. "1be some that are subprime, had
momentum
we
have been hurt by illiquulity in the
.
achieved over the past 12 marketplace.
Dear EdiJor:
The 6ank has yet to recogmonths continues, despite
Three years ago this Labor Day, a young woman entered the negative equity llllllkets." nize those losses - which
the emergency room at the hospital. It was Labor ~~f.
There were the obligatory is why they didn't show up
weekend, and there were supposed to be doctors on
, statements about "impor- in their trumped-up earnbut they sent her home.
tant factors" that could ings release. It won't have
She died that very weekend. She was my flfSt cousin, a
affect future results. But to, either, under accounting
wife, a mother and a daughter. She was important to us. She
was buried with ber Sponge Bob socks on. ·
·
Someone made a bad mistake. The family tried to sue, but
it was a city hospital and they came after them . And that's
another story on 1ts own. A nightmare. This dido 't happen in
. Ohio, but it could be in any state in the USA because big ·
business decides who gets treated and who does not.
Politicians won't fiX the problem because it is a big busi.ness and it is especially good for all the local funeral homes.
That's my opiruon, have lost a wortcing poor loved one.
Deloris Sayre

VIEW

·Problem
Hospital mre big business

rules unless the change ·in

Kiyana Lewis

those declining values stick, place) aren't new, but ~m­
it could haunt State Street panies should be laymg
down the road, forcing it to their cards out on the table
realize those losses in com-' ... You shouldn't slip stuff in
ing quarters.
· the back door," said George
Resch went on to talk · Gutowski, a former corpOabout the value of some rate investor relations execasset-backed commercial utive who runs the
paper conduits to which it "Financial Skeptic" blog
provides liquidity. The com- that analyzes bow compa~
pany during the quarter pur- nies announce news.
.
All this pot investors on
chaSed $850 million in
COIIIIIICi\:ial paper from the edge, knocking the stock
conduits, Which cost it $12 down nearly 10 percent on
million before taxes. The Thcsday to $69.23 and the
conduits, which 2tcally selling trickled over into
issue short-term
like Wednesday. Wall S~t
commercial paper and then aualysts noted that there
use the proceeds to invest in was more risk to the compa"
longer-4ited, higher-yield- ny's capital given the poten~
ing assets, have struggled in tiallosses .
recent months as investors
Ailalysis at f1tch Ratings
have shunned risky debt.
also announced that the ·
Those off-balance-sheet company's credit rating
investment pools bold $283 could be cut. They warned
billion in assets, which State that State Street might have
S~ company manages to take a ~significant porand has agreed to provide lion" of its losses in the next
for. few quarters.
backup financing
Thesday 's disclosure raised
"The potential for future
concerns that State Street impainnent could be signifi. could face bigger losses if it cant as the length of time
bas to bring moq: conduit that the securities have
assets onto its balance sheet. ~iated increases," Fitch
State Street dtdn 't a return S3ld. ~ magnitude of the
a request for comment on potential charges is large
the way it announced the wlien compared with the
· news - which technically overall size of the company."
didn't break any securities
lbere's a lesson in this:
laws because the informa- Nobody in today 's llllllkets
tion was publicly disclosed. responds weU to surprises.

The Daily Sentinel

7

__
=:::"
7

.,_.. ...

~

_,_.,...._In_

-:

J

Gene
Lyons

settled. The caravan moved
on. My rhetorical question,
however, remained unanswered until last week,
when Obama gave an offthe~cuff response at a
$2,&lt;JOO..per~pers!!n fundrais~r i)l, yes, San Francisco, to
a :questioner woo ·asked, ill
effect, how Mr. Hope oould
possibly be having trouble
to
selling
himself
Pennsylvania
voters.
Obama didn't think he was
being recorded . Being a
black man named Barack
Obama, he allowed, was
only part of the problem.
"Our challenge," he continued "is to get penple persuaded that we can make
progress when there's, not
evidence of that in their
daily lives . You go into
some of these small towns
in Pennsylvania, and like a
lot of small towns in the
Midwest, the jobs have
been gone now for 25 years
and nothing's replaced
them. And they fell through
the Clinton administration,
and the Bush administration, · and each successive
administration has said that
somehow these communities are gonna regenerate
and they have not. And it's
not surprising then they get
bitter, they cling to guns or
religion or antipathy to
people who· aren't like
them or anti-immigrant
sentiment or antitrade sen·
timeni-~· ;kay to explain
their f~tions."

AP81'SRJESS MI'Rm3R

..

.- ,
I

badly

missed Wall Stm:t cr;pemtions, despite a 12 pcn:cot
increase in $Illes. .
E~cludiDg

el[.,......,..

special items

chance of thunderstorms.
High around 70 Chance f

. s .
.
~-~~..':.....

AEP(Ih5Ei Allm{N'SNQ)-15
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cloudy
· in
the
evening...1ben ~ming
~k,
cloudy. Lows m the

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L;W mr (IIVSEf-47.21

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lilA ..,at
a C 1 (I'*'IMCII_...._...
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Stutda•-Mosfly sunny.
~ 10.
uystutday lli&amp;llt aad

SYRACUSE- James Remington Titus, 87, of
Syracuse, passed away on Saturday, April 23, 2008, at the
Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
He was born on March 3, 1921, in Columbus, son of the
late Earl Remington and Mary Clara (Giles) Titus. Mr.
Titus was a life long member of. the Grace Episcopal
Church. He served in the Army Air Corps in World War II
and then attended· Ohio University and Franklin
University in Columbus. He was a member of the United
Steel Workers 5171, . member of the Meigs County
Historical Society, a member of the Dew Webster,
American Legion Post #39, Pomeroy, and retired as an
electrician froin Foot Mineral.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his
son, lbomas Jameson Titus, brother, Frank Titus and sister,
Elizabeth Frisch
.
He is survived by his wife, Ada Jewel Jameson Titus of
- Syracuse, daughter, Nancy Titus Kames of Austin, Texas,
son, James Morton Titus of Ona, W.Va., grandchildren:
C~ain Lucas Kames, Kadena Air furce Base, Okinawa,
Japan, Shelley Kuhn, Huntington, W.Va., Otris Titus,
. Kalabash, N.C., and Julianne Titus ofOna; Great~­
dim: Nicolas and Taylor Kuhn, Dominick and Chase Lane,
and nephews: Steven, Frank and Robert Titus of Pomeroy.
V"ISilation will be held from 7-9 p.m. on Friday, April25,
2008, at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home m Pomeroy.
Burial Will take place in Beech Grove Cemetery m
~ Pc&gt;_meroy. J?ri vale graveside services will be conducted at ·
the.CO_!Ivemence of the fillllilv:.- - - - - - Onlifie registry is available at www.~com

. RACINE - ·R11th E. Tayldr, 74, Racine, passed a~ay
Tuesday, April !2, 2008, at Cabell-Huntington Hospital,
Huitting!On, W.Va.
.
She was born in Meigs County, on Feb. 20, 1934,
daughter of the late James and Florence Shaver Black.
She married Alban L. Taylor and he preceded her in death
. on Sept II, 1992.
Ruth is survived by her two daughters, Charlene
Elizabeth Black and Edith Ann Taylor both of Racine;
eight grandchildren, Elizabeth and Alban Salser, Ralph
"Hot Rod" Settle, Jason Settle, Brian Black, Terry Black,
Linda Black and Robin Black; nine great-grandchildren,
several nieces and nephews and a special friend Ida Mae
"Jean" Gray, of Racine.
In addition to her parents and husband, she was preced·
ed in death by ·her five brothers, George Richard Black,
James Leon Black, Paul Black, Wtlmer Black, and Francis
Black, and three sisters, Anna L. Lemley, Wanda Smith
ana B-~rihaBlack. - .
-- -- . - -.. · FuneFal Services will be held at II ll.m., Friday, .April 2-5,
2008 at the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine. Officiating
· will be Rev. David Johnson. Interment will follow in .the
Sand Hill Cemetery, Long Bottom, Friends may visit with
the family one hour prior to the service. Expressions of
sympathy· may be sent to the family by visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com:

""*

a

Minn.-based

~

prinurily a $6.1 billion

~ dlarge relating 10

fortbc~

Ruth L 'llylor ·

Translation: Like the nature most of his life ,
poor. deluded peasants in Obama's ne~r run against a
Wright's
congregation , tough opponent, and it's
rednecks out in the boon- showing.
.
docks cling to superstition,
Obama' s attempts to joke
bigotry and conspiracy hi~ way through this mess
theories
because
the amuse only the already
world's too complicatc;d converted. No, Clinton's
for them to under~nd . not a convincing huntress,
Never mind that Obama 's but she defmitely knows
been touring Pennsylvania nobody pursues ducks with
touting his religious piety a "six-shooter." For criticizand opposition to NAFI'A. ing Obama's "elitism," the
Nor · that Sen. Hillary Clinton campaign, hitherto
Clinton
seized
upon run on strict standards of
Obama's remarks as clum- political correctness - too
sily as a basset hound timid even to say that it was
pouncing on a pork chop: Obama's
·
A-mote pertect expression
of psuedo.Marxist/acade· JaCKson Jt. WOO "taclalmic cant would be bard to ized" the campaign by
imagine; nor a greater gift accusing Clinton of shed"
to Sen . John McCain and ding no tears for black viethe Republicans.
tims of Hurricane Katrina,
This is what Democrats · long before Bill Clinton
get if they make an inexpe- alluded to his famous father
rienced faculty lounge - now stands accused of
lizard their presidential helping Republicans make
nominee. . People often their case.
assume that a black candiBut what should she do?
date's got "s~t sense," but Stand silently watching the
Obama increasingly comes · disaster unfold?
.
off as a classic . Ivy League
Instead, she might try
brainiac 1oo impressed by stressing that it was workhis own SAT scores to ing-class
democrats
change a tire without deliv- Obama insulted. Also that
ering an oration on the eco- far· fr?m " falling:• during
nomics of rubber tree culti- the Chnton adm1mstration,
vation.
. employment
in
Since
1968 ,
when Pennsylvania rose by more
Richard Nixon put his than 500,000 jobs between
"Southern strategy" into 1993 and 2000, while
play, two big themes have unemployment dropped
kept the GOP in the White from 7 .3 percent to 4. i
House: race, along with percent.
class and regional resentThat's the perfectly ratiomen!. Seeking to transcend nal reason many cling to
the former, Obama has Clinton's candidacy.
banded them the laner on a
(Arkansas
DemocrarsiJver platter. Republicans Gazette co/Uijlnisr Gene
won't need to caricature L1ons is a ~tiona/ maga'him as a condescending . zme award winner and ·cosnob who looks down on author of '"0e Hunting oj
working stiffs. He's already the Pres1dent (Sr. Martin.'s
done
it
to
himself. Press, 2000). You can eSbeltered; cosseted and· mail Lyons at genetreated (IS a wonder of lyons2@sbcglobalner.)

-

Northwest Airlines Corp.
rqJDrted a $4.1 billioo .loss

Delta's

As

some of its peers to R!OOid
sin)ilv aooounting adjast· .
the drop iD Delta's matket ments.
value due to sustained
John Heimhcll, chief
iCIOOid fuel prices- the air- economist fur tbe Air
line lost $274 tnillion in die T13Dspon AssooiaboD, said
first quarter. A spates- the industry is now litdy to
woman said Delta would lq)Ort a "mulltibillioo loss~
have recorded the obarge this year..
~Wboo a11 the results are
regardless of the tie,up with
Nonbwest.
in, tliis will be one &lt;Of the
Nonh~ took a $3.9 bil- worst .quatters for 1he induslion diarge of its own R:bl- lry in its bismry," he said.
The airline imlliSJry's
ed to its ow:tet value
dei:line. Its loss came bi~ aDIIWillols aune in
despite a 9 pera:ot incR.ue 2001. in me
of the
in sales, aad Nodbwest, eoo. Sept. 1 •ttadrs, ~am­
mi-s-t analysts' earnings us reported a romiJined
loss of $11 hillioa. ......._
expcctllions..
.
Excluding the acoounting . totbeATA. .
~~
.
,..,.:...ray,
aidmes
charge aad losses from
some
fuel
hedges, · have been bw•4m:d IJy die
Northwest said it would ~ rise iD fud ..iCes.
have lost $191 million iD Delta tCIOOidcd a $585 llllilthe quai'ICI:.
lion
. year-over-)'liar
· In a memo to Delta increase in tbe cost Of fuel
t-mployees We Locsday, Ed in the first qualtel:, while
.Bastiaa, Delta's plesideut Nol'thwest's fuel rosts
and rebid financial ollioeL, increased $445 million
said the airline
from a year eutier.

focus the UlOil mity of the
challmge the industry fa::es
to booome profiuble again
amid $1~ oil even with the benefits that
consolidation can bring.
"All airlines are in the
same boat," said Calyon
Securities aualyst Ray
Neidl. "'The industry annot
make mnoey at the aJm:lll
·ticket fare levels. Seats.ba..e
to come 001 of the llllllkt.
To oover higher fuel C&gt;Mts.
air fares have to go up."
Atlanta-based Delta Air
Lines Inc., the tWion's
tbinl-lalgest caniel:, said its
loss widened in the first
quana- to a wbopping $6.39
billion. A fi:w hours lata",
~

Obamas elitist gift to McCain

Some weeks ago, this column asked a rhetorical
question: What could
Democratic
presidential
candidate Barack Obama
possibly have been thinking
about, sitting in a Chjcago
pew for 20 years listening to
the crackpot effusions of the
Rev. Jeremiah Wright?
Surely,
the
one-time
LETTERS TO THE
Harvard Law ~eview editor
EDITOR
dido 't subscribe to Wright's
delusional view that the
urters to the ediror are welcome. They should be less U.S. gove1111Il1;1lt invented
• than 300 words. All letters are subject ro editing, must be the AIDS virus to extermi.
and include address and telephone number. No nate African-Americans. So
letters wi.IJ be published. utters slwuld be in
~ did bee~ his chiladdr~&amp;sing-.iuws,-nol-per~oMli1ies.·-b:treN of:
dren to ' it under God's
· (lr.sani(Atigns and individual! wil( nor be ~ccept­ audtority'l'
·· ·
publlcatipn.
•
.
~ · ·~ · · ·
many
who
.
Unlike
,
swooned over Obama's
moving speech about race, I
thought it ducked the most
salient question: Did be
buy Wright's theotactually
(USPS 213-910)
Reader Services
ogy? ,Obama's successive
Ohio v.t~Publlshlng
rationalizations failed to
. Comlctlon Patlcy .
P~ every afteinoon; Monda~
satisfy. First, be hadn 't
: Our main concern in.all stories ia to through Friday, 111 Court Street,
heard the offending ser• be aocut'8,18. If you k""'l' of an enor Pomeroy, OtHo.
,S.COnd-CIUI
mons.
Then, he'd heard
: ,In a slofy. call the newsroom st (740) pooMgO pold at Pornemy.
things
he
disagreed with,
........ : The AUOdalad Preu and
: 1192·2156.
but
treated
Wright lili: an
theOhloNewr~~ · ·· ·
P
'±
Send
addrela
cOrreo.
uncle.
Finally,
eccentric
Our l1lllln . _ . . Ia
tiorw IDJho Daily Sontinol, 111 Court
Obama said he'd have quit
(740) 112-2151.
-· ~-Ohio 457119.
I
•
the
church had his spiritual
D I bt..C extwlrlloltt . .:·
mentor
not retired.
Bllllecllptlon R8tes
"Anybody named Clinton
News
or Gore who sat still for
.,~~::~ something like !hilt," I
Elllar: Charlene Hoelllch. Eld. 12
Dilly
50'
..., "'": Bria1i Reed, Eld. 14
wrote, "would be derided as
Senior
em-.-·
A ; IIi .Beth Sargent, Ext. 13
an
inauthentic
phony
One_.
'10.27
patronizing black folk for
One ,...
'101.111
political~ -: a fater. ,a
01
lillie: o- Hairio, Eld. 15 ' 1D . . llllr No oub·
con-man. Predictably, dlis
0
a ~. D~ o.~ 0~ ocr1pllon by moll pail lllod in observation drew accusaI
•--~~-.
~·16
----·tions of racism. I respooded
0
'l'ft.: Judy Otarl&lt;, Ext 10
-·
by e-mailing news. reports
..... ba llplan
of
Obama'a fiaal ·rmuilciaGeneralllenlger
. .......... c---.
tion qf W,riJbt. As the candi13 Weeks
'3U6
et••••~•. Ext. 12
date
bad now thrown the
26 Weeks
'64.20
controversial
preacher over52 Weeks
'127.11
e-.n.tl:
board, was it still racist to
.-e~.oom
Onltldl ..... ~
criticize him? Nobody
13 Weeks
'53.55
responded.
·
26 Weeks
'107.10
the
national
media
....... mrdriii)Mi.,ltil.oom
./
52 Weeks
'214.21
declared the controversy

BY HA:U:J R. WEBER

But that's not the point .

TODAY IN HISTORY

-

The Daily Sentinel· p •

market value is consideml
"The subprirne and rnort,other than tempomy. But if gage issues (m the market-

Syrt~euse

Today is Thursday, April 24, the !15th day of 2008 .
There are 2S l days left in the year.
. - - .
.
Today's Highlight in History: On April 24, 1916, some
1,600 Irish nationalists launched the Easter Rising by seizing several key sites in Dublin, Ireland. (The rising was put
down by British forces almost a week later.)
On this date: In 1792, the national anthem of France, "La
Marseillaise," was composed by Captain Claude Joseph
Rouget de Lisle.
·
In 1800, Congress approved a bill establishing the
·
Library of Congress.
In 1877, federal troops were ordered out of New Orleans,
- endins-theNortb's-post.ci:v-il-War rul6-iu the South.
In 1898, Spain declared war on the United States ·after
rejecting America's ultimatum to withdraw from Cuba.
In 1915, the Ottoman Empire began the brutal mass
deportation of Armenians during World War I.
In 1953, British statesman Winston Churchill wa8 knighted by Queen Elizabeth 11.
In 1970, the People's Republic of China launched its first
satellite, which kept transmitting a song, "The East is Red."
In 1986, Wallis, the Duchess of Windsor, for whom King
Edward VIII hadJ!ven up the Britis~ throne, died in Paris.
Thought for 11 y: "I know of no method to secure the
,repeal of bad or obnoxious laws so effective as their stringent
execution." - Ulysses S. Grant, U.S. President (1822-1885).

'llJursday, April24, 2008

ALL BUSINESS: Investor trnst
slumps when companie_s bury news
... BUSINESS WRITBI

READER'S

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fnmPageAl

Don Snyder

. andDean

passports for the first
time.
of Cowts Marlene
Han:isoo said be&lt; staff sees
increases in passpmt applications by seasons, but has
oot seen a distinct .i ncrease
over the past year.
Delays in processing
passport applications are
no longer .a problem,
Harrison said. The U.S.
State Depal1ment advises a
six to eigbr-week-processing time, but Harriwn said
local residents usual! y
~iwe their pusports
sooner than that.

McKnight of
the Meigs
--' -eounty .

.aen:

CSEArecognizat

foroolect·
inglhe
largest

lt.mp-sum
cflikl support pay,

mentin lhe
agency's
. lilate divi-

_,.......

sion.

to the 'oheerleader oonstiruadvantage
of
V"mual the $2,500 deductible.
tion as requested by Ralph
Pawnnel
hired
On
'SuppleLearning and funding was
Weny,
advisor.
set
up
accordingly. mental contracts wm: Rusty
Special ' policy updates
Bookman, district safety
However, 34 students fromPageAl
one Middle School and all coordinator; David Deem, regarding equal educational
Mary Hawk, principal of the others in High School Middle School athletic opportunity, family md
· Middl Sch001
- are using the Academy director; and Mary Hawk, medical leave absences, and .
Metgs
hygienic management were
e
' comServices which necessitat- district test coordinator.
mended King, and then read
approved.
An
overnight
field
ttip
several letters from teachers ed that additional monies
Board members attending
extolling. his abilities and needed to be approved for . from vocational agricnlture
studentS to atteod an envi- were Roger Abbott, Ron
his willingness to help oth- payment.
ers. One of the teachers
Buckley said that the ronthon at Shawnee Nature Logan, Bai"bara Musser.
Larry Tucker, and Soott
described him as one of the most of the high school stu- Center on April 28-29 was
approved, as were changes Walton.
"brightest stars in his class" dents enrolled are making
while another referred to up credits they ne'ed in order
him as the boy with .a !o gradua!C or have other
' magic10uch:"- · -~ssues -~hich-h~ve. resul~ • ---~.·
.
Q;'
• ,.'o
0
Also .given special recog- _m credtt deficit for theu
.
'
~ --, ~ ~ ~ nition by the Board of grade level. .
.
~ v ·---·~· ~
Education and presented
In other busmess the
. pins of accomplisluiient by Board acknowle~ged a
I'EII'OIMINtAIIHmlE
Ron Logan were the donallon to the MeljlS Local
Ariel Players
spelling bee winners, both ~eneral Scholarship Fund
PI
It
from Meigs Intermediate m the amount of $5,166
Civil
Pl.y
School.
They
were from Milestone Benefits
Clly Pari!
Cheyenne Gorslene, cham- Agency, Inc. AJlP!'O_val was
April 29 -11 :00 am
pion, and Lauren Boothe, glv~n to. the adminis~I'll;llon
reserve champion.
to obtam an Amencan
Ohio Yd1 '/ Synlpllony
During the meeting the Express Corporate·Card at a
"FillA' F"
/
Board approved payment of cost of $110 to use for v~­
SOOBAE
1
an invoice in the amount of ous purchases to earn pomts
Cello
,$20,150 to Jefferson County to' cash in for instructional
,lla'j 3nl, 2008
POMEROY - Meigs Count):. Commissioners wiU meet· Educational Service Center supplies and eA:JUipment.
-Ollar. Gil 2nd Aw.
111 10 a.m. on Thursday, instead of I p.m. ,
for
V"utual
Learning
A purchase order was
G 1SIIII,OII(740)*'AJITS
Academy Services . The approved to the McCoy Air
money is paid from the inter- Conditioning Company to
vention monies in the gener- repair/replace one of. the
Skylln~ SpEEdway
chillers
at
Meigs
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Com Hole :roumament al fund, it was reponed.
Mark Rhonemus, treasur- Elementary. The · cost · is
llllllile Oay Oval· 4 miles off RL SO, 12 miles East
sponsored by the Lakeside Leade~s 4-H Club schcxi61ed for
it
$92,226
with
the
money
to
er,
reported
that
initially
Saturday has been postponed until a later date.
vl Atheas oo Co lld. 53 at Siewart.. Ohio
was anticipated that only a be provided from the diso.r-BilyJ......
few students would take trict's insurance carrier less
a- Day"-&lt;: 748--662-4111 w..... Illy: 304-54~22
while team members take
turns walking or · running
"" Friday, April2S
environment in which to
on the track throughout the
Gates Open 4 J1.11L Hot Laps 6 p.m. Raring 7 p.m.
interact with one another,
night. The event begins
fromPageAl
l..llte Model&amp;· $1,5410 to 1l'in, $175 to start.
play physically active
with a survivors lap fol fromPageAl
games, utilize safe play10 Winpd Outaw SpriDts $1,500 to 'WiD, $280 to
lowed by a reception to
Center are all sponsoring
•
ground
eA:JUipment
and
be
honor
survivors.
AMRA Modlfieds, ~ Stocks, Strftt Slod&lt;s, · ·
the event.
deterred
from
unhealthy
Immediately
following
the
The Meigs Cooperative
Foul Cylinders
.
This
year's
Meip
activities."
)
survivor'
s
lap,
caregivers
Parish
feels
:
"The
yo,uth
C.aunty Relay For L•fe 1s
FRIDAY, MAV 2 REGUV.R RACING ALL CLASSES
For those wiShing ro
who attend activities at the
May 9-10 at the MeiJ!S will walk a ·lap.
Gmenl Admission $1.5 Kids 12 under $.5 Pits $30
For more information on community center, as ·well ITUJU a donation, call Brent
County Fairgrounds . It 1s
CJir.d 0111' Websik ror our exciting 2088 sc:he4111e!
an 18-hour event that 'Relay' call JoAnn Crisp at as other residents who live Warson. interim director for
W'IV'IV.skylinesp 11 ~way,net
"
brings together teams 992-2136 or Counney Sim in the community will bene· tile Meigs Cooperative
Parish.
ar
992-74()().
fit
from
;
a
safe,
outc;ioor
throughout Meigs County ar 992-6626.

Meigs

w.

---

Local Briefs

Change meeting

Tournament canceled

Ride

~

'1£1

.

Funds

�•

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740J 992·2157
._.mydaltyMntlnel.com

'Jhur.day, Apri124, aoo8

BY RAclta BECK

mostly, the Boston-based
company, which provides
investment serviCes and
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
NEW YORK - Reality management to the likes of
hit after a few minutes into mutual and pension funds,
Dan Goodrich
State S~t Corp.'s initially seemed to giVe investors a
Publisher
up~ earnings conference lot of reasons to cheer.
call: The financial services
In the first minutes of lradCharlene Hoeflich
giant had a $3.2 billion ing on TUesday morning, the
skeleton hidden in its closet. stock rose from its Monday
General Manager-News Editor
Winning over investor close of $76.86 a share to
confidence these days does- $77. then $78 and toPPed
n't come by burying news." $79. Had it S1UCk !here, Siate
Amid today's punishing Street would have turned in
Congress shall make no law respecting an ·
fmancial crisis and econom- a decent 2 peroent price gain
. aurblishment of religion, or prohibiting the
ic downturn, shareholders fortheday.
fru exercise thereof; or abridging the frettlom of want - and deserve - to Then investors began to
know straight up about any- chew on the vague "chals~ech, of of the prus; or tht right of the peothing that could potentially lenges" that Logue talked
ple ptaetably to asstmbk, and to petition the hurt business or profits.
about five minutes into his
State S~t sent out a prepared comments during
Government for a redress ofgrievances.
news release topping 3,000 the company's call with anawords - the length of a lysts - more than·two hours
- The Arst Amendment to the U.S. Constitution magazine article at after the initial earnings
around 7 a.m on Thesday news release had gone out.
morning, The release hyped
Minutes later, . CFO Ed
its better-than-expected 45 · Resch told of bow the CO!Jlpercent gain in fli'St -quarter pany's $733 billion investearnings · per share and its ment portfolio lost $32 bilrecord revenues.
lion in value during the qllllf~I am extremely pleased
ter, from $1.1 billion at the
with this record revenue per- end of last year. The value of
formance, particularly in the portfolio, of which 40
today 's challenging environ- percent is in mort~e­
ment," CEO Ronald Logue backed securities including
said in a statement. "1be some that are subprime, had
momentum
we
have been hurt by illiquulity in the
.
achieved over the past 12 marketplace.
Dear EdiJor:
The 6ank has yet to recogmonths continues, despite
Three years ago this Labor Day, a young woman entered the negative equity llllllkets." nize those losses - which
the emergency room at the hospital. It was Labor ~~f.
There were the obligatory is why they didn't show up
weekend, and there were supposed to be doctors on
, statements about "impor- in their trumped-up earnbut they sent her home.
tant factors" that could ings release. It won't have
She died that very weekend. She was my flfSt cousin, a
affect future results. But to, either, under accounting
wife, a mother and a daughter. She was important to us. She
was buried with ber Sponge Bob socks on. ·
·
Someone made a bad mistake. The family tried to sue, but
it was a city hospital and they came after them . And that's
another story on 1ts own. A nightmare. This dido 't happen in
. Ohio, but it could be in any state in the USA because big ·
business decides who gets treated and who does not.
Politicians won't fiX the problem because it is a big busi.ness and it is especially good for all the local funeral homes.
That's my opiruon, have lost a wortcing poor loved one.
Deloris Sayre

VIEW

·Problem
Hospital mre big business

rules unless the change ·in

Kiyana Lewis

those declining values stick, place) aren't new, but ~m­
it could haunt State Street panies should be laymg
down the road, forcing it to their cards out on the table
realize those losses in com-' ... You shouldn't slip stuff in
ing quarters.
· the back door," said George
Resch went on to talk · Gutowski, a former corpOabout the value of some rate investor relations execasset-backed commercial utive who runs the
paper conduits to which it "Financial Skeptic" blog
provides liquidity. The com- that analyzes bow compa~
pany during the quarter pur- nies announce news.
.
All this pot investors on
chaSed $850 million in
COIIIIIICi\:ial paper from the edge, knocking the stock
conduits, Which cost it $12 down nearly 10 percent on
million before taxes. The Thcsday to $69.23 and the
conduits, which 2tcally selling trickled over into
issue short-term
like Wednesday. Wall S~t
commercial paper and then aualysts noted that there
use the proceeds to invest in was more risk to the compa"
longer-4ited, higher-yield- ny's capital given the poten~
ing assets, have struggled in tiallosses .
recent months as investors
Ailalysis at f1tch Ratings
have shunned risky debt.
also announced that the ·
Those off-balance-sheet company's credit rating
investment pools bold $283 could be cut. They warned
billion in assets, which State that State Street might have
S~ company manages to take a ~significant porand has agreed to provide lion" of its losses in the next
for. few quarters.
backup financing
Thesday 's disclosure raised
"The potential for future
concerns that State Street impainnent could be signifi. could face bigger losses if it cant as the length of time
bas to bring moq: conduit that the securities have
assets onto its balance sheet. ~iated increases," Fitch
State Street dtdn 't a return S3ld. ~ magnitude of the
a request for comment on potential charges is large
the way it announced the wlien compared with the
· news - which technically overall size of the company."
didn't break any securities
lbere's a lesson in this:
laws because the informa- Nobody in today 's llllllkets
tion was publicly disclosed. responds weU to surprises.

The Daily Sentinel

7

__
=:::"
7

.,_.. ...

~

_,_.,...._In_

-:

J

Gene
Lyons

settled. The caravan moved
on. My rhetorical question,
however, remained unanswered until last week,
when Obama gave an offthe~cuff response at a
$2,&lt;JOO..per~pers!!n fundrais~r i)l, yes, San Francisco, to
a :questioner woo ·asked, ill
effect, how Mr. Hope oould
possibly be having trouble
to
selling
himself
Pennsylvania
voters.
Obama didn't think he was
being recorded . Being a
black man named Barack
Obama, he allowed, was
only part of the problem.
"Our challenge," he continued "is to get penple persuaded that we can make
progress when there's, not
evidence of that in their
daily lives . You go into
some of these small towns
in Pennsylvania, and like a
lot of small towns in the
Midwest, the jobs have
been gone now for 25 years
and nothing's replaced
them. And they fell through
the Clinton administration,
and the Bush administration, · and each successive
administration has said that
somehow these communities are gonna regenerate
and they have not. And it's
not surprising then they get
bitter, they cling to guns or
religion or antipathy to
people who· aren't like
them or anti-immigrant
sentiment or antitrade sen·
timeni-~· ;kay to explain
their f~tions."

AP81'SRJESS MI'Rm3R

..

.- ,
I

badly

missed Wall Stm:t cr;pemtions, despite a 12 pcn:cot
increase in $Illes. .
E~cludiDg

el[.,......,..

special items

chance of thunderstorms.
High around 70 Chance f

. s .
.
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Stutda•-Mosfly sunny.
~ 10.
uystutday lli&amp;llt aad

SYRACUSE- James Remington Titus, 87, of
Syracuse, passed away on Saturday, April 23, 2008, at the
Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
He was born on March 3, 1921, in Columbus, son of the
late Earl Remington and Mary Clara (Giles) Titus. Mr.
Titus was a life long member of. the Grace Episcopal
Church. He served in the Army Air Corps in World War II
and then attended· Ohio University and Franklin
University in Columbus. He was a member of the United
Steel Workers 5171, . member of the Meigs County
Historical Society, a member of the Dew Webster,
American Legion Post #39, Pomeroy, and retired as an
electrician froin Foot Mineral.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his
son, lbomas Jameson Titus, brother, Frank Titus and sister,
Elizabeth Frisch
.
He is survived by his wife, Ada Jewel Jameson Titus of
- Syracuse, daughter, Nancy Titus Kames of Austin, Texas,
son, James Morton Titus of Ona, W.Va., grandchildren:
C~ain Lucas Kames, Kadena Air furce Base, Okinawa,
Japan, Shelley Kuhn, Huntington, W.Va., Otris Titus,
. Kalabash, N.C., and Julianne Titus ofOna; Great~­
dim: Nicolas and Taylor Kuhn, Dominick and Chase Lane,
and nephews: Steven, Frank and Robert Titus of Pomeroy.
V"ISilation will be held from 7-9 p.m. on Friday, April25,
2008, at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home m Pomeroy.
Burial Will take place in Beech Grove Cemetery m
~ Pc&gt;_meroy. J?ri vale graveside services will be conducted at ·
the.CO_!Ivemence of the fillllilv:.- - - - - - Onlifie registry is available at www.~com

. RACINE - ·R11th E. Tayldr, 74, Racine, passed a~ay
Tuesday, April !2, 2008, at Cabell-Huntington Hospital,
Huitting!On, W.Va.
.
She was born in Meigs County, on Feb. 20, 1934,
daughter of the late James and Florence Shaver Black.
She married Alban L. Taylor and he preceded her in death
. on Sept II, 1992.
Ruth is survived by her two daughters, Charlene
Elizabeth Black and Edith Ann Taylor both of Racine;
eight grandchildren, Elizabeth and Alban Salser, Ralph
"Hot Rod" Settle, Jason Settle, Brian Black, Terry Black,
Linda Black and Robin Black; nine great-grandchildren,
several nieces and nephews and a special friend Ida Mae
"Jean" Gray, of Racine.
In addition to her parents and husband, she was preced·
ed in death by ·her five brothers, George Richard Black,
James Leon Black, Paul Black, Wtlmer Black, and Francis
Black, and three sisters, Anna L. Lemley, Wanda Smith
ana B-~rihaBlack. - .
-- -- . - -.. · FuneFal Services will be held at II ll.m., Friday, .April 2-5,
2008 at the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine. Officiating
· will be Rev. David Johnson. Interment will follow in .the
Sand Hill Cemetery, Long Bottom, Friends may visit with
the family one hour prior to the service. Expressions of
sympathy· may be sent to the family by visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com:

""*

a

Minn.-based

~

prinurily a $6.1 billion

~ dlarge relating 10

fortbc~

Ruth L 'llylor ·

Translation: Like the nature most of his life ,
poor. deluded peasants in Obama's ne~r run against a
Wright's
congregation , tough opponent, and it's
rednecks out in the boon- showing.
.
docks cling to superstition,
Obama' s attempts to joke
bigotry and conspiracy hi~ way through this mess
theories
because
the amuse only the already
world's too complicatc;d converted. No, Clinton's
for them to under~nd . not a convincing huntress,
Never mind that Obama 's but she defmitely knows
been touring Pennsylvania nobody pursues ducks with
touting his religious piety a "six-shooter." For criticizand opposition to NAFI'A. ing Obama's "elitism," the
Nor · that Sen. Hillary Clinton campaign, hitherto
Clinton
seized
upon run on strict standards of
Obama's remarks as clum- political correctness - too
sily as a basset hound timid even to say that it was
pouncing on a pork chop: Obama's
·
A-mote pertect expression
of psuedo.Marxist/acade· JaCKson Jt. WOO "taclalmic cant would be bard to ized" the campaign by
imagine; nor a greater gift accusing Clinton of shed"
to Sen . John McCain and ding no tears for black viethe Republicans.
tims of Hurricane Katrina,
This is what Democrats · long before Bill Clinton
get if they make an inexpe- alluded to his famous father
rienced faculty lounge - now stands accused of
lizard their presidential helping Republicans make
nominee. . People often their case.
assume that a black candiBut what should she do?
date's got "s~t sense," but Stand silently watching the
Obama increasingly comes · disaster unfold?
.
off as a classic . Ivy League
Instead, she might try
brainiac 1oo impressed by stressing that it was workhis own SAT scores to ing-class
democrats
change a tire without deliv- Obama insulted. Also that
ering an oration on the eco- far· fr?m " falling:• during
nomics of rubber tree culti- the Chnton adm1mstration,
vation.
. employment
in
Since
1968 ,
when Pennsylvania rose by more
Richard Nixon put his than 500,000 jobs between
"Southern strategy" into 1993 and 2000, while
play, two big themes have unemployment dropped
kept the GOP in the White from 7 .3 percent to 4. i
House: race, along with percent.
class and regional resentThat's the perfectly ratiomen!. Seeking to transcend nal reason many cling to
the former, Obama has Clinton's candidacy.
banded them the laner on a
(Arkansas
DemocrarsiJver platter. Republicans Gazette co/Uijlnisr Gene
won't need to caricature L1ons is a ~tiona/ maga'him as a condescending . zme award winner and ·cosnob who looks down on author of '"0e Hunting oj
working stiffs. He's already the Pres1dent (Sr. Martin.'s
done
it
to
himself. Press, 2000). You can eSbeltered; cosseted and· mail Lyons at genetreated (IS a wonder of lyons2@sbcglobalner.)

-

Northwest Airlines Corp.
rqJDrted a $4.1 billioo .loss

Delta's

As

some of its peers to R!OOid
sin)ilv aooounting adjast· .
the drop iD Delta's matket ments.
value due to sustained
John Heimhcll, chief
iCIOOid fuel prices- the air- economist fur tbe Air
line lost $274 tnillion in die T13Dspon AssooiaboD, said
first quarter. A spates- the industry is now litdy to
woman said Delta would lq)Ort a "mulltibillioo loss~
have recorded the obarge this year..
~Wboo a11 the results are
regardless of the tie,up with
Nonbwest.
in, tliis will be one &lt;Of the
Nonh~ took a $3.9 bil- worst .quatters for 1he induslion diarge of its own R:bl- lry in its bismry," he said.
The airline imlliSJry's
ed to its ow:tet value
dei:line. Its loss came bi~ aDIIWillols aune in
despite a 9 pera:ot incR.ue 2001. in me
of the
in sales, aad Nodbwest, eoo. Sept. 1 •ttadrs, ~am­
mi-s-t analysts' earnings us reported a romiJined
loss of $11 hillioa. ......._
expcctllions..
.
Excluding the acoounting . totbeATA. .
~~
.
,..,.:...ray,
aidmes
charge aad losses from
some
fuel
hedges, · have been bw•4m:d IJy die
Northwest said it would ~ rise iD fud ..iCes.
have lost $191 million iD Delta tCIOOidcd a $585 llllilthe quai'ICI:.
lion
. year-over-)'liar
· In a memo to Delta increase in tbe cost Of fuel
t-mployees We Locsday, Ed in the first qualtel:, while
.Bastiaa, Delta's plesideut Nol'thwest's fuel rosts
and rebid financial ollioeL, increased $445 million
said the airline
from a year eutier.

focus the UlOil mity of the
challmge the industry fa::es
to booome profiuble again
amid $1~ oil even with the benefits that
consolidation can bring.
"All airlines are in the
same boat," said Calyon
Securities aualyst Ray
Neidl. "'The industry annot
make mnoey at the aJm:lll
·ticket fare levels. Seats.ba..e
to come 001 of the llllllkt.
To oover higher fuel C&gt;Mts.
air fares have to go up."
Atlanta-based Delta Air
Lines Inc., the tWion's
tbinl-lalgest caniel:, said its
loss widened in the first
quana- to a wbopping $6.39
billion. A fi:w hours lata",
~

Obamas elitist gift to McCain

Some weeks ago, this column asked a rhetorical
question: What could
Democratic
presidential
candidate Barack Obama
possibly have been thinking
about, sitting in a Chjcago
pew for 20 years listening to
the crackpot effusions of the
Rev. Jeremiah Wright?
Surely,
the
one-time
LETTERS TO THE
Harvard Law ~eview editor
EDITOR
dido 't subscribe to Wright's
delusional view that the
urters to the ediror are welcome. They should be less U.S. gove1111Il1;1lt invented
• than 300 words. All letters are subject ro editing, must be the AIDS virus to extermi.
and include address and telephone number. No nate African-Americans. So
letters wi.IJ be published. utters slwuld be in
~ did bee~ his chiladdr~&amp;sing-.iuws,-nol-per~oMli1ies.·-b:treN of:
dren to ' it under God's
· (lr.sani(Atigns and individual! wil( nor be ~ccept­ audtority'l'
·· ·
publlcatipn.
•
.
~ · ·~ · · ·
many
who
.
Unlike
,
swooned over Obama's
moving speech about race, I
thought it ducked the most
salient question: Did be
buy Wright's theotactually
(USPS 213-910)
Reader Services
ogy? ,Obama's successive
Ohio v.t~Publlshlng
rationalizations failed to
. Comlctlon Patlcy .
P~ every afteinoon; Monda~
satisfy. First, be hadn 't
: Our main concern in.all stories ia to through Friday, 111 Court Street,
heard the offending ser• be aocut'8,18. If you k""'l' of an enor Pomeroy, OtHo.
,S.COnd-CIUI
mons.
Then, he'd heard
: ,In a slofy. call the newsroom st (740) pooMgO pold at Pornemy.
things
he
disagreed with,
........ : The AUOdalad Preu and
: 1192·2156.
but
treated
Wright lili: an
theOhloNewr~~ · ·· ·
P
'±
Send
addrela
cOrreo.
uncle.
Finally,
eccentric
Our l1lllln . _ . . Ia
tiorw IDJho Daily Sontinol, 111 Court
Obama said he'd have quit
(740) 112-2151.
-· ~-Ohio 457119.
I
•
the
church had his spiritual
D I bt..C extwlrlloltt . .:·
mentor
not retired.
Bllllecllptlon R8tes
"Anybody named Clinton
News
or Gore who sat still for
.,~~::~ something like !hilt," I
Elllar: Charlene Hoelllch. Eld. 12
Dilly
50'
..., "'": Bria1i Reed, Eld. 14
wrote, "would be derided as
Senior
em-.-·
A ; IIi .Beth Sargent, Ext. 13
an
inauthentic
phony
One_.
'10.27
patronizing black folk for
One ,...
'101.111
political~ -: a fater. ,a
01
lillie: o- Hairio, Eld. 15 ' 1D . . llllr No oub·
con-man. Predictably, dlis
0
a ~. D~ o.~ 0~ ocr1pllon by moll pail lllod in observation drew accusaI
•--~~-.
~·16
----·tions of racism. I respooded
0
'l'ft.: Judy Otarl&lt;, Ext 10
-·
by e-mailing news. reports
..... ba llplan
of
Obama'a fiaal ·rmuilciaGeneralllenlger
. .......... c---.
tion qf W,riJbt. As the candi13 Weeks
'3U6
et••••~•. Ext. 12
date
bad now thrown the
26 Weeks
'64.20
controversial
preacher over52 Weeks
'127.11
e-.n.tl:
board, was it still racist to
.-e~.oom
Onltldl ..... ~
criticize him? Nobody
13 Weeks
'53.55
responded.
·
26 Weeks
'107.10
the
national
media
....... mrdriii)Mi.,ltil.oom
./
52 Weeks
'214.21
declared the controversy

BY HA:U:J R. WEBER

But that's not the point .

TODAY IN HISTORY

-

The Daily Sentinel· p •

market value is consideml
"The subprirne and rnort,other than tempomy. But if gage issues (m the market-

Syrt~euse

Today is Thursday, April 24, the !15th day of 2008 .
There are 2S l days left in the year.
. - - .
.
Today's Highlight in History: On April 24, 1916, some
1,600 Irish nationalists launched the Easter Rising by seizing several key sites in Dublin, Ireland. (The rising was put
down by British forces almost a week later.)
On this date: In 1792, the national anthem of France, "La
Marseillaise," was composed by Captain Claude Joseph
Rouget de Lisle.
·
In 1800, Congress approved a bill establishing the
·
Library of Congress.
In 1877, federal troops were ordered out of New Orleans,
- endins-theNortb's-post.ci:v-il-War rul6-iu the South.
In 1898, Spain declared war on the United States ·after
rejecting America's ultimatum to withdraw from Cuba.
In 1915, the Ottoman Empire began the brutal mass
deportation of Armenians during World War I.
In 1953, British statesman Winston Churchill wa8 knighted by Queen Elizabeth 11.
In 1970, the People's Republic of China launched its first
satellite, which kept transmitting a song, "The East is Red."
In 1986, Wallis, the Duchess of Windsor, for whom King
Edward VIII hadJ!ven up the Britis~ throne, died in Paris.
Thought for 11 y: "I know of no method to secure the
,repeal of bad or obnoxious laws so effective as their stringent
execution." - Ulysses S. Grant, U.S. President (1822-1885).

'llJursday, April24, 2008

ALL BUSINESS: Investor trnst
slumps when companie_s bury news
... BUSINESS WRITBI

READER'S

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Payment ·

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Geolge
Holfman,

fnmPageAl

Don Snyder

. andDean

passports for the first
time.
of Cowts Marlene
Han:isoo said be&lt; staff sees
increases in passpmt applications by seasons, but has
oot seen a distinct .i ncrease
over the past year.
Delays in processing
passport applications are
no longer .a problem,
Harrison said. The U.S.
State Depal1ment advises a
six to eigbr-week-processing time, but Harriwn said
local residents usual! y
~iwe their pusports
sooner than that.

McKnight of
the Meigs
--' -eounty .

.aen:

CSEArecognizat

foroolect·
inglhe
largest

lt.mp-sum
cflikl support pay,

mentin lhe
agency's
. lilate divi-

_,.......

sion.

to the 'oheerleader oonstiruadvantage
of
V"mual the $2,500 deductible.
tion as requested by Ralph
Pawnnel
hired
On
'SuppleLearning and funding was
Weny,
advisor.
set
up
accordingly. mental contracts wm: Rusty
Special ' policy updates
Bookman, district safety
However, 34 students fromPageAl
one Middle School and all coordinator; David Deem, regarding equal educational
Mary Hawk, principal of the others in High School Middle School athletic opportunity, family md
· Middl Sch001
- are using the Academy director; and Mary Hawk, medical leave absences, and .
Metgs
hygienic management were
e
' comServices which necessitat- district test coordinator.
mended King, and then read
approved.
An
overnight
field
ttip
several letters from teachers ed that additional monies
Board members attending
extolling. his abilities and needed to be approved for . from vocational agricnlture
studentS to atteod an envi- were Roger Abbott, Ron
his willingness to help oth- payment.
ers. One of the teachers
Buckley said that the ronthon at Shawnee Nature Logan, Bai"bara Musser.
Larry Tucker, and Soott
described him as one of the most of the high school stu- Center on April 28-29 was
approved, as were changes Walton.
"brightest stars in his class" dents enrolled are making
while another referred to up credits they ne'ed in order
him as the boy with .a !o gradua!C or have other
' magic10uch:"- · -~ssues -~hich-h~ve. resul~ • ---~.·
.
Q;'
• ,.'o
0
Also .given special recog- _m credtt deficit for theu
.
'
~ --, ~ ~ ~ nition by the Board of grade level. .
.
~ v ·---·~· ~
Education and presented
In other busmess the
. pins of accomplisluiient by Board acknowle~ged a
I'EII'OIMINtAIIHmlE
Ron Logan were the donallon to the MeljlS Local
Ariel Players
spelling bee winners, both ~eneral Scholarship Fund
PI
It
from Meigs Intermediate m the amount of $5,166
Civil
Pl.y
School.
They
were from Milestone Benefits
Clly Pari!
Cheyenne Gorslene, cham- Agency, Inc. AJlP!'O_val was
April 29 -11 :00 am
pion, and Lauren Boothe, glv~n to. the adminis~I'll;llon
reserve champion.
to obtam an Amencan
Ohio Yd1 '/ Synlpllony
During the meeting the Express Corporate·Card at a
"FillA' F"
/
Board approved payment of cost of $110 to use for v~­
SOOBAE
1
an invoice in the amount of ous purchases to earn pomts
Cello
,$20,150 to Jefferson County to' cash in for instructional
,lla'j 3nl, 2008
POMEROY - Meigs Count):. Commissioners wiU meet· Educational Service Center supplies and eA:JUipment.
-Ollar. Gil 2nd Aw.
111 10 a.m. on Thursday, instead of I p.m. ,
for
V"utual
Learning
A purchase order was
G 1SIIII,OII(740)*'AJITS
Academy Services . The approved to the McCoy Air
money is paid from the inter- Conditioning Company to
vention monies in the gener- repair/replace one of. the
Skylln~ SpEEdway
chillers
at
Meigs
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Com Hole :roumament al fund, it was reponed.
Mark Rhonemus, treasur- Elementary. The · cost · is
llllllile Oay Oval· 4 miles off RL SO, 12 miles East
sponsored by the Lakeside Leade~s 4-H Club schcxi61ed for
it
$92,226
with
the
money
to
er,
reported
that
initially
Saturday has been postponed until a later date.
vl Atheas oo Co lld. 53 at Siewart.. Ohio
was anticipated that only a be provided from the diso.r-BilyJ......
few students would take trict's insurance carrier less
a- Day"-&lt;: 748--662-4111 w..... Illy: 304-54~22
while team members take
turns walking or · running
"" Friday, April2S
environment in which to
on the track throughout the
Gates Open 4 J1.11L Hot Laps 6 p.m. Raring 7 p.m.
interact with one another,
night. The event begins
fromPageAl
l..llte Model&amp;· $1,5410 to 1l'in, $175 to start.
play physically active
with a survivors lap fol fromPageAl
games, utilize safe play10 Winpd Outaw SpriDts $1,500 to 'WiD, $280 to
lowed by a reception to
Center are all sponsoring
•
ground
eA:JUipment
and
be
honor
survivors.
AMRA Modlfieds, ~ Stocks, Strftt Slod&lt;s, · ·
the event.
deterred
from
unhealthy
Immediately
following
the
The Meigs Cooperative
Foul Cylinders
.
This
year's
Meip
activities."
)
survivor'
s
lap,
caregivers
Parish
feels
:
"The
yo,uth
C.aunty Relay For L•fe 1s
FRIDAY, MAV 2 REGUV.R RACING ALL CLASSES
For those wiShing ro
who attend activities at the
May 9-10 at the MeiJ!S will walk a ·lap.
Gmenl Admission $1.5 Kids 12 under $.5 Pits $30
For more information on community center, as ·well ITUJU a donation, call Brent
County Fairgrounds . It 1s
CJir.d 0111' Websik ror our exciting 2088 sc:he4111e!
an 18-hour event that 'Relay' call JoAnn Crisp at as other residents who live Warson. interim director for
W'IV'IV.skylinesp 11 ~way,net
"
brings together teams 992-2136 or Counney Sim in the community will bene· tile Meigs Cooperative
Parish.
ar
992-74()().
fit
from
;
a
safe,
outc;ioor
throughout Meigs County ar 992-6626.

Meigs

w.

---

Local Briefs

Change meeting

Tournament canceled

Ride

~

'1£1

.

Funds

�.\

fn'iide

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

c.w,Wii ..flr~3, . . m

..riiCTe--,, . . 116
. . . . . . . . .GIIIIiillllls, . . .

.... A6. The Daily Sentinel

www..mtyda"ilysellli"nel«&lt;om

Taylor drives home winner
as .rornadoes ground Falcons
BYGMYC-

f o u r t .h
f r a m e s
prior
to
RACINE
Jordon
Ta y I or' s
Taylor's one out, bases
g.ame winloaded single in the bottom
ning safety;
half of the seventh inning ·
The
win
snapped a 5-,5 deadloCk and
moved the
gave
the
Southern
T{)rnadoes
Tornadoes a thrilling 6-5
s p r i n g
diamond win over visiting
bas e b a II
Wahama
Wednesday
M
'
slate t0 8-4
evening.
.
.
on the :yen
. Taylor's second hit of the while Wabama dropped its
g~ chased borne Chris fifth consecutive outing to
Holter with the game win- fall to 4-10.
The Wbite Falcons, after
ning tally after Holter led off
the inning with a walk. scoring a pair in the first alld
Southern scored three times fourth innings and a single
in the second before adding run in the . third, were
single runs m the third and blanked over the fiDai three
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

BY OllaAI..BE ..

I

I

'

POMEROY - "' Wlllll
my MP3" is the dleme mllhe
annual Meigs High SdhOIJ1
variety sh0w prodnced by
Toney Dingess, music dircJc..
tor, m lbe presenttrd fOday
and Saturday ·nights iin die
MHS gymnasium . , ·
Sbm&gt;ltime is 7 p.m.. wilh
the doors openii\g at 6:30
p.m. Ticket1i Me $5 fM
adults and $3 for students lit
the d(')Of.
"This is ·our majm" func!~aiser .alld all the IIOOIIeY
goes back into 1he mu~c
program," said Dil\gess.
A!oout 85 music students
are pll!lliciipating mme lliflll[y presontarlon which features, as Dingess says,
~everything wm classii:al
to mUsic ·0 fllhe '6&amp; 110 dance
music, C0lJil1ry and pop."
He proml!ieS S0methiJ1g

MIDDLEPORT - Riverbeod Arts Council will hold a
doll .and toy show at a spning tea to be held from I to 4 p .m:
Saturday in its quarters located in the Masonic Temple
building on North Second Avenue, Middleport. ·
Many antique and collector dolls will be on display.
Shirley Huston will do a presentation on dolls at 2 p.m.
Refre.shments will be served throughout the afternoon.
Twkets will be offered for a Middleton doll to . be given
.away .at ·the May 17 at the OU Jazz concen and dance.
While there is no admission to Saturday 's doll show aml
tea, donations will be accepted. For funh~ information.
call either Donna Byer at (740)992-5123 or Donna Wilson
at (740) 992-7830.

S..

.._a.

teiliily thaw. 'Henlllllfai 1J iMcDonlld, Caleb Bevin, and
ill!l.,.lllillllll !Ud•• r aound !be pi~ ito pmctlce :thelr\l)lllts.

tl ·iit b h H

axJO!I!JutDist, and dJee .ruJ
lx: od!er d!ythm insiJiunBI-

A;gain . this yen llulie &lt;daf1ime pellftmiiiiiiCes lll'C .
Heward [8 'Show d!Ciltcopa- ~presented for the stuJUJd ~Ulger Gilmore is &lt;lllcnts·.of Meigs Middle .and
andling 80und. Special 1figb School.

fhcr,

POMEROY- An ArOOr Oay lunch fumkaiserwill benefit the P0IIleroy Blues and Jazz S~'s 'Summer Music
'Scri.es ,611 Miday at the Colllt Street Mini~Park.
The lunch menu has a Mardi Gras theme with red beans
and tice with cornbread muffins .and a drink for $5..
There is fi"ee delivery and orders can ,I,Je placed by calling
(740) 992~524. ,

Hanging Rock Junction

Bluegrass blast
set at Ha•·lford

Spring Variety Show 1ilt
SYRACUSE - A Spring Variety Show with performances by MidA'alley Christian SChool students,
---' M · Sh
d ther
a1
Deli
' v... ...., artie
ort. Dunamis an
loc artists
.and perfwmers will take place from 6 to 9 p.m. Saturday at
the Sy.racuse CoouD.unity Center.
· il'
f
hi •
"'--'- f Mid
T:he
· ' unve mg 0 an arc teet s ren..... mg 0 ·
-Valley
Christian School~=il!'bt:~, . ~~s:l:~~$;"-ve_il__ed
_·._.
• ·n
d .. ___ ., ..... d V.'-'1
Ch · ·
" h 00 ,
. · ~~~
...-t- cml - .. oy.
rl&amp;tlan '"c
'·

°

0

. . ....

8

Jazz ftstival

.....

HUN11NG10N, W.Va. -The distinctive sounds of
brass and jazz will fill the air in downtown Huntington
when the Third Annual Jazz Festival comes to Pullman
Square Saturday, April 26 from 2 to 7 p.m. '
11lC event is held in .conjunction With the 'Smithsonian
Institution lmd the ll.ntemlJ,tional Association of Jazz
Sducators to observe National Jazz Ap~iation Month.
Open t0 the public, the free event Will take place on the
Pullman Square "g£eenspace" and will feature local and
regional jazz .artists such as Bluetrane, the Marshall
Univcrsity ·Faculty Jazz Ensemble; the Zanter Trio, the MU
12 Q'c]oCk Big ~and alld guest artists Reggie Watkins,
.
trombone, and Mike Tracy, SIIJlophone.
Sponsors .are Community Trust Bank, Marshall
Umversity and the American Federation of Musicians
Music Petf()JmaDce Fund.

1

HARTRJRD, W.Va .. - The Hanging Rock Junction
bluegrass band will host .its final and biggest bluegrass
show of the season at the Hartford Community building
Friday, April 25. Music will start at 6:30 p.m.
The event will featW'e a great variety of bluegrass, gos;..1
~
and .country music. Bands scheduled to appear include the
host band, Hanging Rock Junction; Dale .Burns and the
~,um.RiY.er Boys; Rocky M9untain Bluegrass; Gary Thlly;
'E¥ery Thursday; and Big_ Po~SUID Grin. _
.
. . .
Coneessloils will be' available', arid there will Ill! door
prizes and a 50/50 cash drawing. The event is smoke-free
and alcohol-free. and is .designed for the entire family.

-- -~

·Marauders struggle to.score
against Big Blacks, lose 13-3
c..

!hffig going
m the way
off offense
&lt;PIIiHNT
PLEASANT,
a ' f ,t e r
Point ·P leasant
pulling out
W.Va. Wl1q)ped up .an exb&amp;!sting
an ex.citmg
rouiid '()f 15 baseball games
se v en th
in 17 days with a oommandinning vicing .13-3 victory in. six
tory over
M a r i e t t .a
innings over visitmg Meigs
Wednesday evening at Point
earlier in
·Pleasant High School.
llftaa
the week.
And what a turnaround
C u r t
-wednesday's g!IIIJC was for Grimm played a major role
both te.ams coropared . to in Point Pleasant's win as he
their last ciutings.
.
· continued to make his presWednesday's win was eoce felt on the mound. The
vastly different for Point Big Blacks have been
Pleasant (12-9) from its last receiving superb perforcontest where it posted just mances on the mGund from a
one hit in a 2-0 loss to handful of ace hurlers this
Buffalo w.hile Meigs (6-5) yen and Grimm has been
also traveled mthe opposite near the top of that list, pickdirection, failing to get any- · ing . up · another
win
21

Portland auction, craft
and horse shows set

POMEROY - This weekend will be a busy one in
Portland with a dinner, auction and craft show as well as
the· start of the third season of' the Ohio Rlv~ Producers
"Horse Fun Show" series.
The events begin on Friday when the Portland·Community
Centers hosts a chicken nOOdle dinner and auction. Dinnet
be~s at 6 p.m.' '_Vith the auction to follow with all proceeds
gomg to commuruty center unprovements. Tickets are $10 for
the dinner which, in addition to chicken noodles, will feature
mashed potatoes, green beans, cole slaw, rolls .and homemade
Fer additional information, VISit www.pullman- pies and cakes. Tbe auction will feature a variety of "unique" .
sq~~~Ue.com or cootact Dr. Mark Zanter, associate profe&amp;·sor items, according to PCC President Mila Raymond.
Then on Saturday an ans ana crafts show will be held at
of music at Marshal~ by e-f'llJil at zanter@mJJrshall.edu.
the center from 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. while the "Horse Full
Show" begins its third season at 11 a.m. iti the show ring
float
behind the center.
· The horse arena will open for warm ups at I 0 a.m. witb
the followmg classes: Halter, showmanship, lead-in (under
10), walk trot (18 and under), walk trot (open), western
pleasure (t8 and under), western pleasure (open), four corners, trail class, catalog race, flag r~. down alld back (12
and under), down and back (over 12), speed and control,
cones and barrels, youth poles, open poles, pee wee barrels
( I 0 and uoder)Aouth barrels (11-18), open barrels.
The majority of the classes have a $2 entry fee with trail
class being $4 The fee s go to pay for ribbons which arc
awardectin every class in the flfSt sill: places. There is a $3
grounds fee pet horse.
The PCC will provide concessions for the horse show.

-·~--- - ...-·--~ t

_____
___

.............. ....
PllUEROV - . -

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

_.n

fl ' $ · • 1
··
X

-County~·-··
p.m.

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

Gldlluf?
AIMz"*" at e..m, 5 p.m.
r

Canoe

·- -------

• ai

Meigs' Caleb Davis throws a pitch to Point Pleasant's Curt Grimm during a noM:onferenoe
boys baseball game Wednesday in Point Pleasant.

8Y Lr

"'Killg Tht, JUJd
s likle Tlillbf Will tlllho q
't.et it Be.. and~ ~
You 'lllem...
Sue Legg is the pian0

I

see I?

U..,,i :lunl/phaiD

LCl!LIMOMVD41LYREGISlER.OOM

::t:

It,.. IIIII inc1n&lt;Jeli "BGm to
be Wild,.. 1lhe CODJDdy Dille

I

DoD, toy show
set for Saturday

10 aYGY· tbe
:0pCIIS
Show
with dJe
Bllliii)' Show diane ""'''U

f0f cvctyooe

PI

"Sutwtt.lW :ptdD
Antique dolls. lik~ these from the collection of Shirley
/Huston will be included in 1he doll and toy show at the
Riverbend Arts Council Saturday.

ICII

HOEFUCHOMYOAILVSENTINEL.COM

I

frames by Michael Manuel
wqo kept the Bend Area .nine
at bay until Taylor's game
winning blow. Waham.a
enjoyed a 7-5 edge in base
hits in the contest but £pur
WHS errors played a sWrificant role in the games nnal
outcome.
Manuel emerged with the
· pitching win after relieving
$Quthem starter Kreig
Kleski in the fourth with
Derek Veazey taking the loss
in' relief of Jerry Berkley m
the seventh. Kleski allowed
three runs, all earned, on
· four hits with four strikeoots
and four free passes with

•

- · - - . a . • : m p.m.

f

tr•

I

.. . . I
- · - ( d o U b l l - ), 11
Lm.
X

.

Mllgut-.11 Lm.

,_,.-.10a.m.
:
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' ,

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. . . , . - . s p.m.
:

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

"s . . .

D

Miigo otGallla -·~· s p.m.
II'- Voolloy 119oo.!liem, 5 p.m.

---lit
--·

Uol(llllt- -..y, 5 p.m.
-Voolloy ot
5 p.m.

-.o.

v· ls toed at Eallltm, 4:30p.m.
11o1go •

-

·4:30p.m.

eil1om. 4:30p.m.

· WI'd

Fbsltftt· 30

.....
t
County oi SOUihem. 6 p.m.
7

v-.

V~ County

I

II SOUihem, 5 p.m.

fti ePHS _~th ..seve~~-itrie- .

· oUt51iDdtw~r-walb. Ue also
went 2-fm-4 at the plate
with a triple and one run batted in.
·
·
Clay Krebs led tbe Point
Pleasant · offensive attack
that racked up 13 hits, going
3-for-4 with a double and
two runs batted in while 81..
Lloyd also recorded two
k@cki~ Brock McClung and
Eric Veith' added a hit and
two RBls apiece while
Phillip Allen and Titus
Eric A8ndolphlpholo
Russell .d rove in runs with a Southern sophomore Taylor Lemley (18) is greeted by teammates at home plate after hit~
ting a home run in the second inning of a non-conference baseball game against Wahama

........... ur.m

JSthAnnual
Meigs FootbaD
Golf toomey

at Star MiU Park in Racine on Wednesday. Southern won 6-5.

Annual PVH.Hospice Tribute

SPOD'S 8IuEfs

Butterfly Release &amp; Celebration
0 WM•..;sday, May 21, 2008
PVH Main Entranee

MASON, W.Va. - The
JStbAnnual Mcigsf'_oothaiL . ~ 0
Golf Tourn.ament will be ·
held Satw:day, May 31; at ·
the Riverside Golf Course
at 8:30a.m.
The format is . a $60 per
to
person, bring your own
team four-man scramble.
Teams must have a combined handicap of 40 or
above with only one team
member. under 10. Price
For rttt:W.~about this special event
.includes golf, cart, lunch, ·
and beverqes. Prizes will
arlO
.llltft about HOipia or the "W'"'P"
be awarded for the top three

-CfNoon

0 Special gift all who attend
0 Public is oontially invited

.•

mH

teams. ·

740-992-2158 or
0064.

740-992~

CoNTACI'Us
1-74().446..2342 ext. 33
Fa-1·740441:1,001
-

-tipQ&lt;IOO~.com

Eric Rondolph, Sports Wrtw
(740) 446-2342. -

Grillf&amp;ippot1 .Grolf1, please call. (304) 675-7400.
'

For more informatio11,
contact Meigs football
coacb Mike Chancey at

Qlllo . . . . .

County Mllolgo. 5 p.m.
~-.o,sp.m.

.Wednesday.
(Jrimm went the distance

33

erondolplo001'fl&lt;lolljWooihool.com

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Bryan ........... Sports WriW

(740) ol4&amp;2342. oxt. 33

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The Daily Sentinel

c.w,Wii ..flr~3, . . m

..riiCTe--,, . . 116
. . . . . . . . .GIIIIiillllls, . . .

.... A6. The Daily Sentinel

www..mtyda"ilysellli"nel«&lt;om

Taylor drives home winner
as .rornadoes ground Falcons
BYGMYC-

f o u r t .h
f r a m e s
prior
to
RACINE
Jordon
Ta y I or' s
Taylor's one out, bases
g.ame winloaded single in the bottom
ning safety;
half of the seventh inning ·
The
win
snapped a 5-,5 deadloCk and
moved the
gave
the
Southern
T{)rnadoes
Tornadoes a thrilling 6-5
s p r i n g
diamond win over visiting
bas e b a II
Wahama
Wednesday
M
'
slate t0 8-4
evening.
.
.
on the :yen
. Taylor's second hit of the while Wabama dropped its
g~ chased borne Chris fifth consecutive outing to
Holter with the game win- fall to 4-10.
The Wbite Falcons, after
ning tally after Holter led off
the inning with a walk. scoring a pair in the first alld
Southern scored three times fourth innings and a single
in the second before adding run in the . third, were
single runs m the third and blanked over the fiDai three
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

BY OllaAI..BE ..

I

I

'

POMEROY - "' Wlllll
my MP3" is the dleme mllhe
annual Meigs High SdhOIJ1
variety sh0w prodnced by
Toney Dingess, music dircJc..
tor, m lbe presenttrd fOday
and Saturday ·nights iin die
MHS gymnasium . , ·
Sbm&gt;ltime is 7 p.m.. wilh
the doors openii\g at 6:30
p.m. Ticket1i Me $5 fM
adults and $3 for students lit
the d(')Of.
"This is ·our majm" func!~aiser .alld all the IIOOIIeY
goes back into 1he mu~c
program," said Dil\gess.
A!oout 85 music students
are pll!lliciipating mme lliflll[y presontarlon which features, as Dingess says,
~everything wm classii:al
to mUsic ·0 fllhe '6&amp; 110 dance
music, C0lJil1ry and pop."
He proml!ieS S0methiJ1g

MIDDLEPORT - Riverbeod Arts Council will hold a
doll .and toy show at a spning tea to be held from I to 4 p .m:
Saturday in its quarters located in the Masonic Temple
building on North Second Avenue, Middleport. ·
Many antique and collector dolls will be on display.
Shirley Huston will do a presentation on dolls at 2 p.m.
Refre.shments will be served throughout the afternoon.
Twkets will be offered for a Middleton doll to . be given
.away .at ·the May 17 at the OU Jazz concen and dance.
While there is no admission to Saturday 's doll show aml
tea, donations will be accepted. For funh~ information.
call either Donna Byer at (740)992-5123 or Donna Wilson
at (740) 992-7830.

S..

.._a.

teiliily thaw. 'Henlllllfai 1J iMcDonlld, Caleb Bevin, and
ill!l.,.lllillllll !Ud•• r aound !be pi~ ito pmctlce :thelr\l)lllts.

tl ·iit b h H

axJO!I!JutDist, and dJee .ruJ
lx: od!er d!ythm insiJiunBI-

A;gain . this yen llulie &lt;daf1ime pellftmiiiiiiCes lll'C .
Heward [8 'Show d!Ciltcopa- ~presented for the stuJUJd ~Ulger Gilmore is &lt;lllcnts·.of Meigs Middle .and
andling 80und. Special 1figb School.

fhcr,

POMEROY- An ArOOr Oay lunch fumkaiserwill benefit the P0IIleroy Blues and Jazz S~'s 'Summer Music
'Scri.es ,611 Miday at the Colllt Street Mini~Park.
The lunch menu has a Mardi Gras theme with red beans
and tice with cornbread muffins .and a drink for $5..
There is fi"ee delivery and orders can ,I,Je placed by calling
(740) 992~524. ,

Hanging Rock Junction

Bluegrass blast
set at Ha•·lford

Spring Variety Show 1ilt
SYRACUSE - A Spring Variety Show with performances by MidA'alley Christian SChool students,
---' M · Sh
d ther
a1
Deli
' v... ...., artie
ort. Dunamis an
loc artists
.and perfwmers will take place from 6 to 9 p.m. Saturday at
the Sy.racuse CoouD.unity Center.
· il'
f
hi •
"'--'- f Mid
T:he
· ' unve mg 0 an arc teet s ren..... mg 0 ·
-Valley
Christian School~=il!'bt:~, . ~~s:l:~~$;"-ve_il__ed
_·._.
• ·n
d .. ___ ., ..... d V.'-'1
Ch · ·
" h 00 ,
. · ~~~
...-t- cml - .. oy.
rl&amp;tlan '"c
'·

°

0

. . ....

8

Jazz ftstival

.....

HUN11NG10N, W.Va. -The distinctive sounds of
brass and jazz will fill the air in downtown Huntington
when the Third Annual Jazz Festival comes to Pullman
Square Saturday, April 26 from 2 to 7 p.m. '
11lC event is held in .conjunction With the 'Smithsonian
Institution lmd the ll.ntemlJ,tional Association of Jazz
Sducators to observe National Jazz Ap~iation Month.
Open t0 the public, the free event Will take place on the
Pullman Square "g£eenspace" and will feature local and
regional jazz .artists such as Bluetrane, the Marshall
Univcrsity ·Faculty Jazz Ensemble; the Zanter Trio, the MU
12 Q'c]oCk Big ~and alld guest artists Reggie Watkins,
.
trombone, and Mike Tracy, SIIJlophone.
Sponsors .are Community Trust Bank, Marshall
Umversity and the American Federation of Musicians
Music Petf()JmaDce Fund.

1

HARTRJRD, W.Va .. - The Hanging Rock Junction
bluegrass band will host .its final and biggest bluegrass
show of the season at the Hartford Community building
Friday, April 25. Music will start at 6:30 p.m.
The event will featW'e a great variety of bluegrass, gos;..1
~
and .country music. Bands scheduled to appear include the
host band, Hanging Rock Junction; Dale .Burns and the
~,um.RiY.er Boys; Rocky M9untain Bluegrass; Gary Thlly;
'E¥ery Thursday; and Big_ Po~SUID Grin. _
.
. . .
Coneessloils will be' available', arid there will Ill! door
prizes and a 50/50 cash drawing. The event is smoke-free
and alcohol-free. and is .designed for the entire family.

-- -~

·Marauders struggle to.score
against Big Blacks, lose 13-3
c..

!hffig going
m the way
off offense
&lt;PIIiHNT
PLEASANT,
a ' f ,t e r
Point ·P leasant
pulling out
W.Va. Wl1q)ped up .an exb&amp;!sting
an ex.citmg
rouiid '()f 15 baseball games
se v en th
in 17 days with a oommandinning vicing .13-3 victory in. six
tory over
M a r i e t t .a
innings over visitmg Meigs
Wednesday evening at Point
earlier in
·Pleasant High School.
llftaa
the week.
And what a turnaround
C u r t
-wednesday's g!IIIJC was for Grimm played a major role
both te.ams coropared . to in Point Pleasant's win as he
their last ciutings.
.
· continued to make his presWednesday's win was eoce felt on the mound. The
vastly different for Point Big Blacks have been
Pleasant (12-9) from its last receiving superb perforcontest where it posted just mances on the mGund from a
one hit in a 2-0 loss to handful of ace hurlers this
Buffalo w.hile Meigs (6-5) yen and Grimm has been
also traveled mthe opposite near the top of that list, pickdirection, failing to get any- · ing . up · another
win
21

Portland auction, craft
and horse shows set

POMEROY - This weekend will be a busy one in
Portland with a dinner, auction and craft show as well as
the· start of the third season of' the Ohio Rlv~ Producers
"Horse Fun Show" series.
The events begin on Friday when the Portland·Community
Centers hosts a chicken nOOdle dinner and auction. Dinnet
be~s at 6 p.m.' '_Vith the auction to follow with all proceeds
gomg to commuruty center unprovements. Tickets are $10 for
the dinner which, in addition to chicken noodles, will feature
mashed potatoes, green beans, cole slaw, rolls .and homemade
Fer additional information, VISit www.pullman- pies and cakes. Tbe auction will feature a variety of "unique" .
sq~~~Ue.com or cootact Dr. Mark Zanter, associate profe&amp;·sor items, according to PCC President Mila Raymond.
Then on Saturday an ans ana crafts show will be held at
of music at Marshal~ by e-f'llJil at zanter@mJJrshall.edu.
the center from 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. while the "Horse Full
Show" begins its third season at 11 a.m. iti the show ring
float
behind the center.
· The horse arena will open for warm ups at I 0 a.m. witb
the followmg classes: Halter, showmanship, lead-in (under
10), walk trot (18 and under), walk trot (open), western
pleasure (t8 and under), western pleasure (open), four corners, trail class, catalog race, flag r~. down alld back (12
and under), down and back (over 12), speed and control,
cones and barrels, youth poles, open poles, pee wee barrels
( I 0 and uoder)Aouth barrels (11-18), open barrels.
The majority of the classes have a $2 entry fee with trail
class being $4 The fee s go to pay for ribbons which arc
awardectin every class in the flfSt sill: places. There is a $3
grounds fee pet horse.
The PCC will provide concessions for the horse show.

-·~--- - ...-·--~ t

_____
___

.............. ....
PllUEROV - . -

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

_.n

fl ' $ · • 1
··
X

-County~·-··
p.m.

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

Gldlluf?
AIMz"*" at e..m, 5 p.m.
r

Canoe

·- -------

• ai

Meigs' Caleb Davis throws a pitch to Point Pleasant's Curt Grimm during a noM:onferenoe
boys baseball game Wednesday in Point Pleasant.

8Y Lr

"'Killg Tht, JUJd
s likle Tlillbf Will tlllho q
't.et it Be.. and~ ~
You 'lllem...
Sue Legg is the pian0

I

see I?

U..,,i :lunl/phaiD

LCl!LIMOMVD41LYREGISlER.OOM

::t:

It,.. IIIII inc1n&lt;Jeli "BGm to
be Wild,.. 1lhe CODJDdy Dille

I

DoD, toy show
set for Saturday

10 aYGY· tbe
:0pCIIS
Show
with dJe
Bllliii)' Show diane ""'''U

f0f cvctyooe

PI

"Sutwtt.lW :ptdD
Antique dolls. lik~ these from the collection of Shirley
/Huston will be included in 1he doll and toy show at the
Riverbend Arts Council Saturday.

ICII

HOEFUCHOMYOAILVSENTINEL.COM

I

frames by Michael Manuel
wqo kept the Bend Area .nine
at bay until Taylor's game
winning blow. Waham.a
enjoyed a 7-5 edge in base
hits in the contest but £pur
WHS errors played a sWrificant role in the games nnal
outcome.
Manuel emerged with the
· pitching win after relieving
$Quthem starter Kreig
Kleski in the fourth with
Derek Veazey taking the loss
in' relief of Jerry Berkley m
the seventh. Kleski allowed
three runs, all earned, on
· four hits with four strikeoots
and four free passes with

•

- · - - . a . • : m p.m.

f

tr•

I

.. . . I
- · - ( d o U b l l - ), 11
Lm.
X

.

Mllgut-.11 Lm.

,_,.-.10a.m.
:
'? 1 . . .

' ,

tllwe8

I •

VJr1IOn Oounty lltllolgo, 5 p.m.
. . . , . - . s p.m.
:

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

"s . . .

D

Miigo otGallla -·~· s p.m.
II'- Voolloy 119oo.!liem, 5 p.m.

---lit
--·

Uol(llllt- -..y, 5 p.m.
-Voolloy ot
5 p.m.

-.o.

v· ls toed at Eallltm, 4:30p.m.
11o1go •

-

·4:30p.m.

eil1om. 4:30p.m.

· WI'd

Fbsltftt· 30

.....
t
County oi SOUihem. 6 p.m.
7

v-.

V~ County

I

II SOUihem, 5 p.m.

fti ePHS _~th ..seve~~-itrie- .

· oUt51iDdtw~r-walb. Ue also
went 2-fm-4 at the plate
with a triple and one run batted in.
·
·
Clay Krebs led tbe Point
Pleasant · offensive attack
that racked up 13 hits, going
3-for-4 with a double and
two runs batted in while 81..
Lloyd also recorded two
k@cki~ Brock McClung and
Eric Veith' added a hit and
two RBls apiece while
Phillip Allen and Titus
Eric A8ndolphlpholo
Russell .d rove in runs with a Southern sophomore Taylor Lemley (18) is greeted by teammates at home plate after hit~
ting a home run in the second inning of a non-conference baseball game against Wahama

........... ur.m

JSthAnnual
Meigs FootbaD
Golf toomey

at Star MiU Park in Racine on Wednesday. Southern won 6-5.

Annual PVH.Hospice Tribute

SPOD'S 8IuEfs

Butterfly Release &amp; Celebration
0 WM•..;sday, May 21, 2008
PVH Main Entranee

MASON, W.Va. - The
JStbAnnual Mcigsf'_oothaiL . ~ 0
Golf Tourn.ament will be ·
held Satw:day, May 31; at ·
the Riverside Golf Course
at 8:30a.m.
The format is . a $60 per
to
person, bring your own
team four-man scramble.
Teams must have a combined handicap of 40 or
above with only one team
member. under 10. Price
For rttt:W.~about this special event
.includes golf, cart, lunch, ·
and beverqes. Prizes will
arlO
.llltft about HOipia or the "W'"'P"
be awarded for the top three

-CfNoon

0 Special gift all who attend
0 Public is oontially invited

.•

mH

teams. ·

740-992-2158 or
0064.

740-992~

CoNTACI'Us
1-74().446..2342 ext. 33
Fa-1·740441:1,001
-

-tipQ&lt;IOO~.com

Eric Rondolph, Sports Wrtw
(740) 446-2342. -

Grillf&amp;ippot1 .Grolf1, please call. (304) 675-7400.
'

For more informatio11,
contact Meigs football
coacb Mike Chancey at

Qlllo . . . . .

County Mllolgo. 5 p.m.
~-.o,sp.m.

.Wednesday.
(Jrimm went the distance

33

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p«Jssible suspensi0n, but die
they bit us with a league office optod l!l()l ro
punch. we have ro be 3ble ro ~ iW1ha" acOOn.
WASHINGTON - Two oounter their punch," said
1 tbougbl. be .,as goq to
days after hosting its final James, who then stopped got suspa!ded,~ lames said.
hockey game of die season, .md dtuckled upon realizing "He"s oor. So we prepare tor
lhe Veriron Center will be what he bad ju..&lt;a said.. "Uh, him ro be in lbe lffieup and
lhesiteforThursday'sGame 001 liliefally. Not literally.· oontitwe to do Mal we've
3 between the Cleveland let me cbange my words. If. been doing . ... Hard falls do
Cavaliers . and Washington they make a few shot~ we bappen. but lbc:re's a di1ferWWU"ds.
ha"e ro be able to oounter enoe.~
Gi\lell all the rough stuff their attack and move on."
Me.anwbile,
Haywood
tbat ·went on in Games I and
Much &lt;Of lhe talk bas ceu- again tweaked MOO: Brown
· 2, maybe the work crews tered
on
Brendl!D ro.- the -y Cle"ela)Dd ooadll
sboul.d just leave me ice Haywood's ejection fur a runs on the oourt ~lite
unoovered and let LeBron flagrant fool dull sent lames LeBron got shot or some.James and Co. play in bel- crashing ro tbe ~ d.uri~ a lhingn.
whenever
lllie
l1ldS and beavy padding- layup abempt , In lbe third Cavaliers MI-Star draws
with a penalty boll on stand- quarter of CleVeland's II~ oontact.
by for those who arc gr, Game 2 viotor)' Menday,
"C' mon,
Mike,
it's
naughty.
.
but- Ute series has been rife LeBron J~ not LeBron
~I don' t expect anything to witb haJ!d contatt. Delonte H:rown, n
Haywood said.
dmngc," Wu.aMs forward West'sm.id-airoollisionWitb "He'sootyoursoo.n
Antawn · Jamison
said Antonio Daniels looked just
Drown
laughed
off
Wednesday. "We're going 10 as dangemus as Haywood'-s Haywood's woo:ls - ~He
(X)IItinue to play .bani and ·wilh James. bill West bad bis can say what be wants about
oootinue to proteot oor'rim.n hands up to mm it liJ'li'Ciil men - and James said be
Coach Eddie Jmdan and that be was making at least a was happy to have his ooacll
the Wizards, deflecting token attempt for lhe ball.
. ~ng up ror hiiiL
That's the point JoFdan
~He's ·always defcndmg
attention away "from lbe disappointing play that has put lriod 10 mate Wednesday- me,n James said. "That's
the team in an Q-2 hole, sent .that tbe Cavaliers have been why I respoot him.n
some subtle and noHl(HiUb- just as physical as the
And so it goes., lhe •tit-fortat l!lun has overwhelmed me
tie messages about the way W"wuds.
the series is being called.
~It soems like wawhing X-and-Os. Widl&lt;!ut a ooubt,
James and the Cavaliers, t:be fouls they gave on us nope of the banter is escapnaturally. countered with a pretend you're going to ing tbe attention of .an
different point of view, with block lhe ba11 and throw image-conscious league that
James even ooining a IUIIIIe your body at lbe layup guy,n will be on high alert for any
for Washington's str.ategy: Jonlan said, "sl! lbat's · a unpleas:mtness in Game 3.
"Hack-a-B.r on."
~ood tocbnique.~
"I lbink !be referees wiU
"fm going into Game 3
As fur Haywood, be said be a little whistle-happy
thinking it's going ro~ he would continue to foul probably,n Haywood uld.
. ue,n James said. "so We:'U James "to keep him ii"om
Meanwhile, me W"uards
see what happens.~
. getting a moLtster dunk.~ He need to figure out a way to
The tone of lhe series is has said be apologized to end an eight-game playOff
su':h that James ~ to James for the flagram Game losing streak. ro Cleveland
SWitch gears When USIIlg a 2 foul, although James csaid that is OOW in il!i ~· year.
.
standard sports cliche about Wednesday that Haywood Jordan's players~ out
t:be flow of tbe game - just bad not done lD. The fuul that aH the C.avaliers bave
in case anyone misinte~pret- "'W.as :subject to re\li~: for a done so faf is hold the fOil at
~u

i'ISSOCIATED PRESS

&lt;Class~ied

.......

series.

~

Jamison :and Buller
be§m !be series will! Wbat
appeaJTed. liO be f.a\10rable
m·a tcbups
against
Ben
W;alhwe
and
WaUy
~
"''Ofensi~y. we lOOk bM-

Except _..
lillie,~ Jliiilison said, "not
~It's a di«m&gt;Di tcm1 we db!' yined enough to .make
are J1layin:g,n Ionian · said: dan play defense at ill
·"LeBron James 'WUII'l ut Gillie l. .I dUnk we biiod to
dlat Oli~o Hulls tc.in.. He. do IQJ mucil em our ovm.n
ise:dr.iontiruuy.~ .

· •.

~ .. · ~ · Wizards may have

The W"muds lft in o:Giibl&amp;; ·abO .bun lbemsel\&lt;es by
because drir dBIIe (I(Ciiilli. - da:idim_g to p~ ~uch an
nen.t pl.ayers - Jami-., 0\1e!dy physical game.
Caron Buder and Gilbm wtlidt llOIIIIC Cavaliers see :as

Arenas-$ll s~JuAA~ing..AII ·out w ~for a team
thn.le .are sboolingbdoW 40 dlil ~ ro nm die flooc.
peroent,
a aJiq!; 11le Wmmls .are .aver.aging
~· dim .a dozen points
bined Moi--12 ·
from 3-point range, eVCII. "kwcl: iii.~. ~es thim they

includat pc:lCIS•

Web5hes:
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Or

Washington Wimrds' Gilbert Nelilas, ileft., Ml:ooio Oar.iie s, oonter, anlll Amawn Jlannislm (4!)
sit on !llhe ibeliOll late ill tbe f:olllrtih qllilrt!er of lttlle Wimms' :U686 lk!ISs ltl!J ;til;le Cle\e'lllf;ld
Cavaliel'S iin Game 2 of an NM pla)'l)ff ~II senies !Momday i1il ~-

home. die s.ame .-ay the
Cllica:ge Hulls did ia the first
•twO games .mst die
Waanls · 100) _..:_· tbefore
Washingttm Wlial m win
four Straigtn and ·w.e die

The D.aily Srntinel • PlgB B3

Gtribune - Sentinel CLASSIFIED

''Hack-a-Bron" eontinu~: WJZards, Cavaliers ready for.Game 3
IIYJo

i ltiliill com

Ort;uTo

tJiftee lfo~s

did in_lihe mgul:ar 'Se3S011.
"'n. is takiing ldmm out of
dJoir game,n Cav_allm; ~- ·
w.aM Joe Smith · &lt;said.
"'Because it i.s puuii.n.g us em
the line .a lot [001'0, '!lO dlllt is
hod of t•'kii'lg aw.ay tbcir
liransitlion !baskets.~
Ami, as Smitb pOOJttd OOl,
the winner is the ream wm
lhe most p(llints; not the.mo_st
tonk
"Y&lt;&gt;u have a ten?,ency .to
want ro retahate, S:nnth
sail!. ~Butllihillk •our retali.a00!!· was .t!he win. They ·can
be as physical as they want,
but if we keep attacking~
basket and keep puttmg
pressure on llhem. then ·
lhings are going to work in
our favor.~

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

-v• •

._.,..,._.
-v·ttn-. En:Dra .....at.,.._... on the fim
wm•
fair no mora·ttw~ u. . . al1he ....- ~ b¥1111..,... _, entv 1M tnt ~.
._,a.._....,....._'-*1nlm'111t·P' ' · ;or~OI'M't.auaiiWii&amp;il ~wllt.....,.lna.ttr.t..,.lt.bleMIItton.

!fiOUCEB:rottiD__.'flubllllhiiW.,__1twttght-~a..ett,

lftttluN kMI:cai 'P

s'

.........c;w..,..dW. .eun...;_.-'*11 ........ •Ail

,.._..&lt;FM"

.-~ ..... lilt

Hwawdli- ~ ID'tt.
HDua6ng Act of 11M.
.....-.~help--.ct_..:........,.,I!DE-•• · W..wlllnotilr;cwlu;pw-=o~~p~q J
ti 1 ,.,._....._. . . . . . ..

•.Boa

•Th• _ _.,.

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Call Today! 74!l-446-4367 ,

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HIOD-214·0452

Winner
l'rowflaAeBI
Manuel
wo~ng
ful.ll"
innings allowing two runs
(ooe earned} on mree hits
with ~ 1llrikeouts and a
walk.
Berkley went six innings
allowing fi\le runs, one
eamed, on four hits while
fanning eight and w~
two. Veazey ·wallred tbree
and struck out one before
giving ·up his lone base hit
to Taylor in the final fuune.
Wahama opened the scoring in the first w.hen Veamy
smacked a double to lead
off the inning. William
Zuspan followed with .a free
pass
before
Garrett
Underwood lofted- a- lilll'llifit&gt;C fly to left to bring
Veazey borne. Znspan
would "later . soore on lbe
fust of three singles on me
night by Caleb Roach.
Southern bounced hack ·in .
the second to take lhe lead
.after K.leski and Brad
Brown reacheil on •bacll:-ro-

This newa~r will nat
knowingly ..:capt
. .¥UiltWiNiitl for ...1
-*Me which is in
viot.tion of the IIW . Our
~arenereby

infortned that all
adl(!nised in
this newspaper are
, avtl.... on M ,tAIII!I
opportunity bfl.es. ·
~Ui!!l!

Duplex for Sale on Land
Contract 740-992·5858.

Lllrry Crum/phalo

Meigs junior Clay Bolin throws to fir.st base after fielding a ball during .a non-conference
boys baseball game against Point Pleasant on Wednesday.

•

New home , never lived m
2BR, 2 baths. 3 acres more
or less in GallipoliS. Askmg

triple followed by an RBI and Davis were brought
sacrifice from Eric Veith. home on a two-run knock
Jones then reached base and from Jeffers to close the gap
fromPageBI
was driven home by a Krebs to 8-3. However that is all
double to open . up a 2-0 the offense Meigs could
. PPHS lead.
fmd .
. The Big. Blacks · addod a
hit each.
Point Pleasant scored two
In the other dugout Meigs third run in the second wben more in the bottom baJf of
posted eight hits, but failed Lloyd reached on a single the inning ~:Vben Krebs and
to turn many of those and was brough! home on D.W. Herdman rounded the
safeties into runs.
··an RBI knock from Veith bases for a 10-3 home lead
Ryan Jeffe.rs led the before putting a major and Allen, Russell and
Marauder anack going 2- wedge between themselves Griu:lm scored in the siltlh
flir-4 with two runs batted in. and Meigs in the fifth . .
to seal the 13-3 victol).'.
while Clay Bolio, Joey
Point Pleasant scored five
The Big Blacks Will get
Unbanke.s, l. T. . !;::vans, runs in lbe 1hlrd inning with some much needed Test
~Y Hutton, Jason Morris Grimm, Veith, McClung Thursday ~fore ~g
· and Caleb Davis added a hit ·and Jones driving in those to the dtamond Fnday·
each to round ·o ut the Mei.Js IICOillS to open an 8..0 lead. evening for a home
offen&amp;e.
Meigs finally found some matchup with Chapmanville
Meigs sent three players life in the fourth as Evans swtina at 6:30 p.m. MeiJs
to the mound to try to limit led o1f·with a single and two will lie back ln ICtioo
the PPHS offen11e . with straight CtTOrs on hits by Thursday w.hen Wellston
~tarter Bolin being tagged ...J~utton and Morris moved visits Rocksprings for a 5
with the Joss. Davis the runners around the d!a- p.m. start.
replaced him in the third mood. Hutton and Morris
md Heath Detwiller fin- did not make it far, howevooo 300 ~ 3_14
ilhed the ·game after taking er, as they accounted for the ·upp
215 203 13 12 1
over in the sil'ith inning.
farst two outs of the inning (HJ: Cloy Bolin, C.lob DaviS (3),
~ (6) ond J.T. EVI!lo, Joth
Point Pleasant began the before Da.vis drove in Evans .
El'tc~
MofTia (3).
Southern sophomore Jordon Taylor makes contact with a pitch during the seoond Inning of
onslaught in the first inning with an RBI single.
(12·&amp;1: cun Grimm and o.w.
a non-conference boys baseball game against Wahama at Star Mill Pari&lt; In Racine on
when Grimm; hitting in th~
Bolin then reached base
B.J. LIOI'd (6).
leedqff position, smashed a on a fielder's choice and he WP -Grimm. LP - Bolin.
Wednesday. Southam won 6-5 on Taylor's RBI single In the bottom of the seventh Inning.

Struggle

_,.,

.

$60.000. 740-44&amp;7029

Good
to the

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uWHn£

M.

p«Jssible suspensi0n, but die
they bit us with a league office optod l!l()l ro
punch. we have ro be 3ble ro ~ iW1ha" acOOn.
WASHINGTON - Two oounter their punch," said
1 tbougbl. be .,as goq to
days after hosting its final James, who then stopped got suspa!ded,~ lames said.
hockey game of die season, .md dtuckled upon realizing "He"s oor. So we prepare tor
lhe Veriron Center will be what he bad ju..&lt;a said.. "Uh, him ro be in lbe lffieup and
lhesiteforThursday'sGame 001 liliefally. Not literally.· oontitwe to do Mal we've
3 between the Cleveland let me cbange my words. If. been doing . ... Hard falls do
Cavaliers . and Washington they make a few shot~ we bappen. but lbc:re's a di1ferWWU"ds.
ha"e ro be able to oounter enoe.~
Gi\lell all the rough stuff their attack and move on."
Me.anwbile,
Haywood
tbat ·went on in Games I and
Much &lt;Of lhe talk bas ceu- again tweaked MOO: Brown
· 2, maybe the work crews tered
on
Brendl!D ro.- the -y Cle"ela)Dd ooadll
sboul.d just leave me ice Haywood's ejection fur a runs on the oourt ~lite
unoovered and let LeBron flagrant fool dull sent lames LeBron got shot or some.James and Co. play in bel- crashing ro tbe ~ d.uri~ a lhingn.
whenever
lllie
l1ldS and beavy padding- layup abempt , In lbe third Cavaliers MI-Star draws
with a penalty boll on stand- quarter of CleVeland's II~ oontact.
by for those who arc gr, Game 2 viotor)' Menday,
"C' mon,
Mike,
it's
naughty.
.
but- Ute series has been rife LeBron J~ not LeBron
~I don' t expect anything to witb haJ!d contatt. Delonte H:rown, n
Haywood said.
dmngc," Wu.aMs forward West'sm.id-airoollisionWitb "He'sootyoursoo.n
Antawn · Jamison
said Antonio Daniels looked just
Drown
laughed
off
Wednesday. "We're going 10 as dangemus as Haywood'-s Haywood's woo:ls - ~He
(X)IItinue to play .bani and ·wilh James. bill West bad bis can say what be wants about
oootinue to proteot oor'rim.n hands up to mm it liJ'li'Ciil men - and James said be
Coach Eddie Jmdan and that be was making at least a was happy to have his ooacll
the Wizards, deflecting token attempt for lhe ball.
. ~ng up ror hiiiL
That's the point JoFdan
~He's ·always defcndmg
attention away "from lbe disappointing play that has put lriod 10 mate Wednesday- me,n James said. "That's
the team in an Q-2 hole, sent .that tbe Cavaliers have been why I respoot him.n
some subtle and noHl(HiUb- just as physical as the
And so it goes., lhe •tit-fortat l!lun has overwhelmed me
tie messages about the way W"wuds.
the series is being called.
~It soems like wawhing X-and-Os. Widl&lt;!ut a ooubt,
James and the Cavaliers, t:be fouls they gave on us nope of the banter is escapnaturally. countered with a pretend you're going to ing tbe attention of .an
different point of view, with block lhe ba11 and throw image-conscious league that
James even ooining a IUIIIIe your body at lbe layup guy,n will be on high alert for any
for Washington's str.ategy: Jonlan said, "sl! lbat's · a unpleas:mtness in Game 3.
"Hack-a-B.r on."
~ood tocbnique.~
"I lbink !be referees wiU
"fm going into Game 3
As fur Haywood, be said be a little whistle-happy
thinking it's going ro~ he would continue to foul probably,n Haywood uld.
. ue,n James said. "so We:'U James "to keep him ii"om
Meanwhile, me W"uards
see what happens.~
. getting a moLtster dunk.~ He need to figure out a way to
The tone of lhe series is has said be apologized to end an eight-game playOff
su':h that James ~ to James for the flagram Game losing streak. ro Cleveland
SWitch gears When USIIlg a 2 foul, although James csaid that is OOW in il!i ~· year.
.
standard sports cliche about Wednesday that Haywood Jordan's players~ out
t:be flow of tbe game - just bad not done lD. The fuul that aH the C.avaliers bave
in case anyone misinte~pret- "'W.as :subject to re\li~: for a done so faf is hold the fOil at
~u

i'ISSOCIATED PRESS

&lt;Class~ied

.......

series.

~

Jamison :and Buller
be§m !be series will! Wbat
appeaJTed. liO be f.a\10rable
m·a tcbups
against
Ben
W;alhwe
and
WaUy
~
"''Ofensi~y. we lOOk bM-

Except _..
lillie,~ Jliiilison said, "not
~It's a di«m&gt;Di tcm1 we db!' yined enough to .make
are J1layin:g,n Ionian · said: dan play defense at ill
·"LeBron James 'WUII'l ut Gillie l. .I dUnk we biiod to
dlat Oli~o Hulls tc.in.. He. do IQJ mucil em our ovm.n
ise:dr.iontiruuy.~ .

· •.

~ .. · ~ · Wizards may have

The W"muds lft in o:Giibl&amp;; ·abO .bun lbemsel\&lt;es by
because drir dBIIe (I(Ciiilli. - da:idim_g to p~ ~uch an
nen.t pl.ayers - Jami-., 0\1e!dy physical game.
Caron Buder and Gilbm wtlidt llOIIIIC Cavaliers see :as

Arenas-$ll s~JuAA~ing..AII ·out w ~for a team
thn.le .are sboolingbdoW 40 dlil ~ ro nm die flooc.
peroent,
a aJiq!; 11le Wmmls .are .aver.aging
~· dim .a dozen points
bined Moi--12 ·
from 3-point range, eVCII. "kwcl: iii.~. ~es thim they

includat pc:lCIS•

Web5hes:
In One Week W'dh Us
www.mydailytribune.com
f.ft I
www.mydailysentinel.com
@mydailytrii!JU11le.mm REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
www.mydailyregister.com
PLUS YOUR
NOW ONUNE
To Place
Gtribun.t
Sentinel
~egisttr
YaUr
(740) c446-2342 . (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1'333
Or

Washington Wimrds' Gilbert Nelilas, ileft., Ml:ooio Oar.iie s, oonter, anlll Amawn Jlannislm (4!)
sit on !llhe ibeliOll late ill tbe f:olllrtih qllilrt!er of lttlle Wimms' :U686 lk!ISs ltl!J ;til;le Cle\e'lllf;ld
Cavaliel'S iin Game 2 of an NM pla)'l)ff ~II senies !Momday i1il ~-

home. die s.ame .-ay the
Cllica:ge Hulls did ia the first
•twO games .mst die
Waanls · 100) _..:_· tbefore
Washingttm Wlial m win
four Straigtn and ·w.e die

The D.aily Srntinel • PlgB B3

Gtribune - Sentinel CLASSIFIED

''Hack-a-Bron" eontinu~: WJZards, Cavaliers ready for.Game 3
IIYJo

i ltiliill com

Ort;uTo

tJiftee lfo~s

did in_lihe mgul:ar 'Se3S011.
"'n. is takiing ldmm out of
dJoir game,n Cav_allm; ~- ·
w.aM Joe Smith · &lt;said.
"'Because it i.s puuii.n.g us em
the line .a lot [001'0, '!lO dlllt is
hod of t•'kii'lg aw.ay tbcir
liransitlion !baskets.~
Ami, as Smitb pOOJttd OOl,
the winner is the ream wm
lhe most p(llints; not the.mo_st
tonk
"Y&lt;&gt;u have a ten?,ency .to
want ro retahate, S:nnth
sail!. ~Butllihillk •our retali.a00!!· was .t!he win. They ·can
be as physical as they want,
but if we keep attacking~
basket and keep puttmg
pressure on llhem. then ·
lhings are going to work in
our favor.~

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

-v• •

._.,..,._.
-v·ttn-. En:Dra .....at.,.._... on the fim
wm•
fair no mora·ttw~ u. . . al1he ....- ~ b¥1111..,... _, entv 1M tnt ~.
._,a.._....,....._'-*1nlm'111t·P' ' · ;or~OI'M't.auaiiWii&amp;il ~wllt.....,.lna.ttr.t..,.lt.bleMIItton.

!fiOUCEB:rottiD__.'flubllllhiiW.,__1twttght-~a..ett,

lftttluN kMI:cai 'P

s'

.........c;w..,..dW. .eun...;_.-'*11 ........ •Ail

,.._..&lt;FM"

.-~ ..... lilt

Hwawdli- ~ ID'tt.
HDua6ng Act of 11M.
.....-.~help--.ct_..:........,.,I!DE-•• · W..wlllnotilr;cwlu;pw-=o~~p~q J
ti 1 ,.,._....._. . . . . . ..

•.Boa

•Th• _ _.,.

lt~AL I
Oollllpollseo..or College

(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 74!l-446-4367 ,

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY JSSI?

No Fee Unless We Wm!

HIOD-214·0452

Winner
l'rowflaAeBI
Manuel
wo~ng
ful.ll"
innings allowing two runs
(ooe earned} on mree hits
with ~ 1llrikeouts and a
walk.
Berkley went six innings
allowing fi\le runs, one
eamed, on four hits while
fanning eight and w~
two. Veazey ·wallred tbree
and struck out one before
giving ·up his lone base hit
to Taylor in the final fuune.
Wahama opened the scoring in the first w.hen Veamy
smacked a double to lead
off the inning. William
Zuspan followed with .a free
pass
before
Garrett
Underwood lofted- a- lilll'llifit&gt;C fly to left to bring
Veazey borne. Znspan
would "later . soore on lbe
fust of three singles on me
night by Caleb Roach.
Southern bounced hack ·in .
the second to take lhe lead
.after K.leski and Brad
Brown reacheil on •bacll:-ro-

This newa~r will nat
knowingly ..:capt
. .¥UiltWiNiitl for ...1
-*Me which is in
viot.tion of the IIW . Our
~arenereby

infortned that all
adl(!nised in
this newspaper are
, avtl.... on M ,tAIII!I
opportunity bfl.es. ·
~Ui!!l!

Duplex for Sale on Land
Contract 740-992·5858.

Lllrry Crum/phalo

Meigs junior Clay Bolin throws to fir.st base after fielding a ball during .a non-conference
boys baseball game against Point Pleasant on Wednesday.

•

New home , never lived m
2BR, 2 baths. 3 acres more
or less in GallipoliS. Askmg

triple followed by an RBI and Davis were brought
sacrifice from Eric Veith. home on a two-run knock
Jones then reached base and from Jeffers to close the gap
fromPageBI
was driven home by a Krebs to 8-3. However that is all
double to open . up a 2-0 the offense Meigs could
. PPHS lead.
fmd .
. The Big. Blacks · addod a
hit each.
Point Pleasant scored two
In the other dugout Meigs third run in the second wben more in the bottom baJf of
posted eight hits, but failed Lloyd reached on a single the inning ~:Vben Krebs and
to turn many of those and was brough! home on D.W. Herdman rounded the
safeties into runs.
··an RBI knock from Veith bases for a 10-3 home lead
Ryan Jeffe.rs led the before putting a major and Allen, Russell and
Marauder anack going 2- wedge between themselves Griu:lm scored in the siltlh
flir-4 with two runs batted in. and Meigs in the fifth . .
to seal the 13-3 victol).'.
while Clay Bolio, Joey
Point Pleasant scored five
The Big Blacks Will get
Unbanke.s, l. T. . !;::vans, runs in lbe 1hlrd inning with some much needed Test
~Y Hutton, Jason Morris Grimm, Veith, McClung Thursday ~fore ~g
· and Caleb Davis added a hit ·and Jones driving in those to the dtamond Fnday·
each to round ·o ut the Mei.Js IICOillS to open an 8..0 lead. evening for a home
offen&amp;e.
Meigs finally found some matchup with Chapmanville
Meigs sent three players life in the fourth as Evans swtina at 6:30 p.m. MeiJs
to the mound to try to limit led o1f·with a single and two will lie back ln ICtioo
the PPHS offen11e . with straight CtTOrs on hits by Thursday w.hen Wellston
~tarter Bolin being tagged ...J~utton and Morris moved visits Rocksprings for a 5
with the Joss. Davis the runners around the d!a- p.m. start.
replaced him in the third mood. Hutton and Morris
md Heath Detwiller fin- did not make it far, howevooo 300 ~ 3_14
ilhed the ·game after taking er, as they accounted for the ·upp
215 203 13 12 1
over in the sil'ith inning.
farst two outs of the inning (HJ: Cloy Bolin, C.lob DaviS (3),
~ (6) ond J.T. EVI!lo, Joth
Point Pleasant began the before Da.vis drove in Evans .
El'tc~
MofTia (3).
Southern sophomore Jordon Taylor makes contact with a pitch during the seoond Inning of
onslaught in the first inning with an RBI single.
(12·&amp;1: cun Grimm and o.w.
a non-conference boys baseball game against Wahama at Star Mill Pari&lt; In Racine on
when Grimm; hitting in th~
Bolin then reached base
B.J. LIOI'd (6).
leedqff position, smashed a on a fielder's choice and he WP -Grimm. LP - Bolin.
Wednesday. Southam won 6-5 on Taylor's RBI single In the bottom of the seventh Inning.

Struggle

_,.,

.

$60.000. 740-44&amp;7029

Good
to the

Last

Word
That's the word from
subscribers who read
our newspaper daily
for captivating news
stories, dining and
entertainment reviews ,
travel deals, local
weather reports and so
much more!

,~.

-n.

~

•

.

J

�~.,.Apt 3,211111

awns; I lju

. AIIFJOOP

••COM·
REA Crosswont Punle

Ill.LoFing Me1110,.

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

. of

Betty ]o Wrllis

,...~,,,

a.t

-

•OwnerP~~WS

water, !i8W8f,

(31M)112:3017

-

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·-

-

......,

....... Ohio

"'

.. 8 6

• New l!kmle5

~

••

a•

• 15
.15 2
• Q ~ 10 8

.-

:iE'II! Bli!iMn ~Road

LoHd&amp;flfissetl'
By YfiiU'futily &amp; Ftia4s

AJriU,IJ81
~ ..1'e . .

-.-

-

April:uda

. 11.-y

-

·-

o• kr birtlullq·

RatmN.
......

PI
Al:tu

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•Cemplele
Remodeling

I

•QJ,1087
&lt;Q U ii S· .
• ~52

• 10 8 I
• 8 6 4S

.Q.J 10 9

I

Soullo
•111: •682
• A •K I

. Siqp&amp;~

• A7

s

•.A 11:1

iDeller: South

Vlllnentble:Eost'We91

-

niT iPass s NT Eall
AIIJ&gt;OSS
-

FRQIK 6 EARNEST

liSirill

~~c;~ ~ t'!&gt;

..r ·,t-Jeenmad&amp;?

tt:~

......

1he oponlflll -

.~ a~ South, in "lhree

-:be "*"",.

••

., ¥iAn Ill

-

.....

no-:trump. ·"fter

lfiOSt -

1he spade """""· What
¥OU•;&gt;Ian?
~
1odoy open ...., no- .

-!(II~

1--

~ -

20 or 21 'JXIii'IS. (The tlltal
-11tgh-carll points and, "IIJIPIIC8·
lllo, onej&gt;Ointiur a decent fi...,..rll su~ . )
'this Is 1hooretioolty lncor·
opening bill OO!ght

'ConstruQtion

and !WGlllditioniJlg .

.Qflwm

COlli

4091111-

1o111w .dummy ·-ogo hands -

ResidemiAI and N""'

Can be installed ()VCf
your existin_g roof
lnsularod roof&lt; to
save on your Heating

dan a1d
-U&amp;IAI'*
-~
21 . . .

111eruJearies
with lhe game

tlt4Lf ~J GATTU LIFT OIIJ MHQI
..AHI&gt; JOIHtl&gt; Tt¥ ltPP 011 Ttte
0~ SIDE Cf 1'llf IUI&gt;tif! ' - ~1tn

.....
.....

wopjj..

-· "._..,.trump
10-21 "'22]llllnts, wtth .&amp;goo&lt;l20

. ..11. h'b!IJ AM FIIIIIMI

'*'------col

a&gt;unting.asl!1 . (H you haw &amp; poor 20"'""- your hand contains 1wc hanoos

www:r r ·=: · · ,,......

, _ &lt;S ~ klfllltlr ....,_,. 'Illft1B
my.)
1hlnkir!g .. -~.aom .
When In 11o-ir.ump, always 1111rt ~

IWJ!IIESt. LOI.'T?t!!

n W1F MY
OWN F0Ua El&amp;s !!
I SEEN

&lt;lOS1

' ~

&amp;Removal
•Prompt and Quality

wott:·

• Reasonable Rates

*Insured
*Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591-8044

counliiJit ¥00Jr't11Jl tricks, """ .wtnnars. ·HBra, vnu havl!l .IIWin: 1Wrl
~. """ hearts, one lind
- n1he
\bu wilt
Jill 0110
1mm Clubs
-g
oan11·op11ts-2 ,
:but ¥DulOIIIIItlll ·rJIIOd to ...... 101110tting

...... c ~

O.RPENTER
SERV ICE

af~-sult.

'rbu should not tho dillmone
-.1&gt;ocauto1he&amp;uHwillbe-.

-·ttn: a&amp;
Jlse: zr•
wa.....,.
-~

-.·............ -.....
---a

BORNUJUR

'lf~

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.a'£ iOGI'\IE.K

f"""'l;Qk

#..~~T

W'I ·~~T ....

t C.OOU&gt;,

'WOOU&gt;~OU

~ll ...

UI'\/E:. 00f'

~ (IWLJ)
(r~L.,"(l)U LIV( ~ ·It\'(

·

whmhar 1he 1inaase win&amp; DT lalas. The
..mnlr'Q line Is 1D play II8COIId hantl low
and 10 -1he opening ~ lood In
hand with 1he ldng. ~ you conlinue.wtlh the aoa and anorhltr dilrnoncJ.
Slnco1hespodo'IIDOis lltlll on
~

tho-.

-nda!S .........Iltop_1rom get-

11ng1h... cbmond1rlaklend1llneln1111.
In duplicate 'tDUfnlmllnts, 1he dumrriy
'and 'dedarer may •not tiiCdlartge bolon!1he
is.-. But In
Chiclogo or ,_r bridge, Hlo

_.ng- pe.,_

- olthoJ4&gt; 'than 1he dummy his
rightS. For -.pie, he may no klfliiOr
1181&lt; his partner n he has reneged
(AMJiood).

CELEBROY OIPIIER
tJfLuiiCiiiipoi
COoldyilJolw_
.. __ """_"'""""'-·..... ~ t1aer in 1hll ciJNr lilmiB t n ll'dller

T""'1' Cbt Poquol5 B.

•• li:'WD 'O'S~SI ·VWJ$ R« Vl ·V 'IIDA 'liT
'II''V WW.UIJ. PS'IIDU W

Tt~llS

ICW.L$1,

Ill 'liT 'II f11HN 11 fSIS 'SIIIE

ECWUl .D 'D. " - 'IIWD WDASIHll 'D

PRPIKJUS SOLUTION - '"Time o on illusion; 1Jmt111ime doubly so.'
-llouglls Adams

_,.._ _ =

"GaipeJier.diem - seae·Jhe check.'·- Rollin Williams

..
:- St~\l-4£~·
1M"'..'!

----- I: I•I I ll I
.................... ._

: ~lBETAAl'IV'" '' +111&lt;1!1&amp;
, SWEET+.16A1n; l:'VE

HfiRIOl

~'" be tn.pii'IKI 10 work hara.t' ttwn
UIUIII 1or 1h088 ~u lrwe ln 1fw year
lltlaad and, as a ..ault, 1hl8 cout1 be •n
MliM118Iy rpt'DIIp8rou&amp; ~od 1or you. In

60T lD OFF ICitl.ll.Y
lD&amp; 11!1

..................t

...... a

+ll'l ' ... 'COU~ UI'5ET
'HI'iT WE 'Cti.'NCELEl&gt;

"!ll.!lft.

&lt;OI'lll"LA111'1T.

do--""

1

attempting to provide ·for your IOWICI

...... you~

r

'lhe~.

tiiOPl

yourooftln

· 1lWRIJS (~I ~ 20) -This ""'
be

a diW

of

some

~H ~m-,, but tt-rngtt

V2Ur •

OW..:

I'

etgnlfioant tmieYe-

.,

appMr'to DlhiKs as If

•!PIM'•merns 'flleN NS}' to pul ~
~11 tmow what ft took to

an. ~r.

=::."'~';;.June 20)

-

DoNJ;ng

with lot&amp; of ~1T'orll ClflafWftl ...... "'
... lo ........g you do""""""'~· The

Joogoo.-. . gnoup,the-oyoouoioupt10

" . 1 '-

~-

.

•
CH UI L
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CANCER (Juno 21.July 22) -

Si'Jpuld

=u:vatt! =~~has,_,~111=;

. Ol 'fAI..SE"'?

..

-~~:=~- -~ ·a
:"~:=.:::;.~~~.,~
come
yuuw_.o..c~1hn&gt;ugll-'-

819 not lik8ly 10
1ftlm WI' ••·
VIRGO (Aug. 2ll-Sopl. 1!2) - .... .,.
~in. cyote wheN . . •Moe Of
61CfAri'ti&amp;e
can be re~PGMI-­
bte1or ytetdlng larger r11turna ~ laUII.I .
.,... tt. most of this: ~led peri-

.. ! ! !

1

R

a*

•

~

dodio . . . .

... ~
-

-Mit.

-.lp
I . . ..

. . . . - -

r r rr r rr 1
II I ~ I1II

You ,...._

H6H

· Wise Conc:t ele

Guttering
. . Seainle!s.Guners
Roofin~. Siding, Gunern

" -~7~9657

IIH types ol coow:oaiB

740-992-5929
740-41fH698
f11111 Eiilimaboo

COWandBOY
f.WioiT!tf;, ~THERING

l\Nb KNOWING WHO WAS
IN V!U TIIIBE IJ58) TO
I( "-1. YllJ teDED

TO ICNOW. ·

c

14i " "

llid&lt; -

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
PLtJiic Audion-12 noon lollY
(for-'Y

r4:.:..~

Otywa/1,
Cc: I

t9,CIOO mls, ,_ -

01111

luil-

gogobags. -~. -

cond. $5500. finn 304-11821102

ioo3

Ex-

-

KRt oo,
condition. $975.

CIJI7~708

2005 Ndic Colt 400, 480
...... $3800. 7-1J183
01'7~1

_,.c-.

~

......,

Dli&amp;4'$

I

t "' 200

bull Has only 850 Driglnol

. . -. Uaooon - t a n k
tins. With ll1i-obossed
flame&amp; 1hroughout. Price:
&amp;

StS,CIOO.OO MUST SEE to
APPRECIATE! Pleaoe Clll
711111-!ipm 7&lt;10-1141h2217 &amp;

6pm.Qpnt 740-11411-2216

I

Trw C..
~

_._.

1998 Honda cbr,OOU.,

- · .... boa, oolt

-·-·--

..........

1

Bingo I
Friday, April 25th

.... ..

I

Additions

'-&gt; .,

~- you'l .. '" . . 08ht•t 1-. ~ time. Be W iof Ui J
1
but piiiMant : ;lei lOW to oaour from

• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
• •o's, Porches and Decks

--

'"""""'-·
w.._
AI'IID (Ma...,
~ and

_.lty

It

It -~ tl) -

-·
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Mw. bder-tl'llln.

Y"YF
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;~b)I'CICIYWI

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-·~-nat
nwreiV
,.,..... t:M withlitl 'tbfn.
..~
..

8011110 NUTZ ·

Cell: 740416-1834
lSt,_-.~FtWE'•tb h .

- Advertise
·in this space for
$64
month
I

•

..

wtth for .ome ti!M. tt oould be ~
plllManl MWI that ~1M OI:)I'MDI .
PISCES (Feb. . . , . _ 1!0) - l n g g&lt;XJd mJW11
I'OU

c.l: MARQJM CONSTRUCTION

. 740-985-4141

124 H9!land Ave.

~RIUS (Jan. 20-~. 11)-,._.

·--lty-yuu--·
from • friend you hll....,, t..'l In tD&amp;D1

I" g - New U..IJ.u!!diooc

Guaranteed Coverall

Point Pleasant, WV .
304-675-38n

"'""
tc _ . , youo Cloy - ·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22..Jan. 19) - "mo
' could be m01e fortunata tlwn UIUIII In aH·
uations that penain to your financial
wtrate•itioal. Be logical about what you
r.ed to do to •m I"Y"IONI, but don't ignofl8
81Tong hunches or lntUittW peiOiptiOnl:,

..........

740-367-4)544

.47239 Riebel Road, long llo\iom. OH

jMust be present to win)
Doors open Bl 4:00

GARF1ELD

Loc:M Coilluo:tllt

$1,000
$300 End of Month
DraWing ·

!y tD be foond 1hoougto 1011100110 WhO .....
your best in1ereals at haart. tt has ..,.._
lhing tD dQ wtth your .ntin!llamfty and witl
gladden 1he nuns of all.

ly _
. , lotwmo81
about """
..
tm. .and
, both"""'""""
~ and

Electric; Plumbing,
Remodeling, Room

·-

bUt-jUst-._. . ,.........

Soffit, Deolcs,
Doors, Windows, , .

- -) crimlnolture Y8hfde, runs.llooU
IJOII&lt;I, ground eff-. start~ bid $1100, may be seen
f'orr1oiur- Dept

od of gru~Br earning~- ·
UBRA (Slip'!. 23-0ct. 23) - If you want
to earn a good-girl or good-guy Slllmp of
~rowl . 1TiaMe e sinoere effort to nw.t
twerybody the WilY you woukl like to be
.treated. TheN II; no IIIICnJt to tha1 gotten
rule.
SGOOf'IC l!ill!t ~t•.w"" !!2) ~ Tl&gt;lt
sOiutionjiOU'WI been MIII'ChiJ1U for is ....

SAGITlMIUS (Nov. 2ll-Doc. 21) - .....
might t..t th8 n - ' to be.around qthefs,

Roofing, Siding, ,

2nd, 1!193 -

ITHINK ¥00115 15.

·· I MEAN,UIIII(A,T.
TH~TTHING. ·

,,

-DI

iil.p"

.

J.,..,....
, ...
~.,.t...
, ........- .·1· ;--1 •

· roughly, follow your cpmpanlon*tll
mstincts . ~u'll innately «now whit to 00

J

.....&amp;....;.. ~~

. ..----~ .

4

.:'!l..":":""a:.!."::' ""' • ....,_, "' 1 S Ul £ LJ

QUICK, 11\AlCIE ..
15 T~E fiRST
QIIE5TION •'m!E"

'

-

- ----·

�~.,.Apt 3,211111

awns; I lju

. AIIFJOOP

••COM·
REA Crosswont Punle

Ill.LoFing Me1110,.

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

. of

Betty ]o Wrllis

,...~,,,

a.t

-

•OwnerP~~WS

water, !i8W8f,

(31M)112:3017

-

.

·-

-

......,

....... Ohio

"'

.. 8 6

• New l!kmle5

~

••

a•

• 15
.15 2
• Q ~ 10 8

.-

:iE'II! Bli!iMn ~Road

LoHd&amp;flfissetl'
By YfiiU'futily &amp; Ftia4s

AJriU,IJ81
~ ..1'e . .

-.-

-

April:uda

. 11.-y

-

·-

o• kr birtlullq·

RatmN.
......

PI
Al:tu

.-'.

s2

liVelli

·~

......
•Cemplele
Remodeling

I

•QJ,1087
&lt;Q U ii S· .
• ~52

• 10 8 I
• 8 6 4S

.Q.J 10 9

I

Soullo
•111: •682
• A •K I

. Siqp&amp;~

• A7

s

•.A 11:1

iDeller: South

Vlllnentble:Eost'We91

-

niT iPass s NT Eall
AIIJ&gt;OSS
-

FRQIK 6 EARNEST

liSirill

~~c;~ ~ t'!&gt;

..r ·,t-Jeenmad&amp;?

tt:~

......

1he oponlflll -

.~ a~ South, in "lhree

-:be "*"",.

••

., ¥iAn Ill

-

.....

no-:trump. ·"fter

lfiOSt -

1he spade """""· What
¥OU•;&gt;Ian?
~
1odoy open ...., no- .

-!(II~

1--

~ -

20 or 21 'JXIii'IS. (The tlltal
-11tgh-carll points and, "IIJIPIIC8·
lllo, onej&gt;Ointiur a decent fi...,..rll su~ . )
'this Is 1hooretioolty lncor·
opening bill OO!ght

'ConstruQtion

and !WGlllditioniJlg .

.Qflwm

COlli

4091111-

1o111w .dummy ·-ogo hands -

ResidemiAI and N""'

Can be installed ()VCf
your existin_g roof
lnsularod roof&lt; to
save on your Heating

dan a1d
-U&amp;IAI'*
-~
21 . . .

111eruJearies
with lhe game

tlt4Lf ~J GATTU LIFT OIIJ MHQI
..AHI&gt; JOIHtl&gt; Tt¥ ltPP 011 Ttte
0~ SIDE Cf 1'llf IUI&gt;tif! ' - ~1tn

.....
.....

wopjj..

-· "._..,.trump
10-21 "'22]llllnts, wtth .&amp;goo&lt;l20

. ..11. h'b!IJ AM FIIIIIMI

'*'------col

a&gt;unting.asl!1 . (H you haw &amp; poor 20"'""- your hand contains 1wc hanoos

www:r r ·=: · · ,,......

, _ &lt;S ~ klfllltlr ....,_,. 'Illft1B
my.)
1hlnkir!g .. -~.aom .
When In 11o-ir.ump, always 1111rt ~

IWJ!IIESt. LOI.'T?t!!

n W1F MY
OWN F0Ua El&amp;s !!
I SEEN

&lt;lOS1

' ~

&amp;Removal
•Prompt and Quality

wott:·

• Reasonable Rates

*Insured
*Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591-8044

counliiJit ¥00Jr't11Jl tricks, """ .wtnnars. ·HBra, vnu havl!l .IIWin: 1Wrl
~. """ hearts, one lind
- n1he
\bu wilt
Jill 0110
1mm Clubs
-g
oan11·op11ts-2 ,
:but ¥DulOIIIIItlll ·rJIIOd to ...... 101110tting

...... c ~

O.RPENTER
SERV ICE

af~-sult.

'rbu should not tho dillmone
-.1&gt;ocauto1he&amp;uHwillbe-.

-·ttn: a&amp;
Jlse: zr•
wa.....,.
-~

-.·............ -.....
---a

BORNUJUR

'lf~

wv-

OF~~

.a'£ iOGI'\IE.K

f"""'l;Qk

#..~~T

W'I ·~~T ....

t C.OOU&gt;,

'WOOU&gt;~OU

~ll ...

UI'\/E:. 00f'

~ (IWLJ)
(r~L.,"(l)U LIV( ~ ·It\'(

·

whmhar 1he 1inaase win&amp; DT lalas. The
..mnlr'Q line Is 1D play II8COIId hantl low
and 10 -1he opening ~ lood In
hand with 1he ldng. ~ you conlinue.wtlh the aoa and anorhltr dilrnoncJ.
Slnco1hespodo'IIDOis lltlll on
~

tho-.

-nda!S .........Iltop_1rom get-

11ng1h... cbmond1rlaklend1llneln1111.
In duplicate 'tDUfnlmllnts, 1he dumrriy
'and 'dedarer may •not tiiCdlartge bolon!1he
is.-. But In
Chiclogo or ,_r bridge, Hlo

_.ng- pe.,_

- olthoJ4&gt; 'than 1he dummy his
rightS. For -.pie, he may no klfliiOr
1181&lt; his partner n he has reneged
(AMJiood).

CELEBROY OIPIIER
tJfLuiiCiiiipoi
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~ 116 •

TheDailySentitti

Thursday, April q, aoo8

•

Titans agr-ee t() send suspended Pacman to DallaS:
.

.

IRVING, Texas - The
Tennessee Titans finally
washed their hands of suspended comerbad Adam
"P.acmann
Jones . on
Wednesday, agreeint in
principle to trade him to the
· Dallas Cowboys.
·
.Cowboys
spokesman
Rich Dalryrilple confirmed
the-teams bad an agreement,
but no terms had ·been filed
with the NFL office, which
already had dosed for the
day.
The Titans al8o confinned
the deal, adding that ·terms
had to be finalized. The
team had no funher comment beyond a two-sentence e-Qlllil.
Dalrymple declined to
discuss specifics of the
trade.
"What I can confirm· is
that we have agreed •in principle with the Tennessee

Titans on a trade that will
bring Adam Jones to the
Cowboys," Dalrymple said.
:He declined to say who or
what the Cowboys might
give · up in the trade.
Specifics likely will be
an.n ounced Thursday or
Fnday, Dalrymple SB!d.
ESPN .com reported the
deal involved a fourthround draft pick this weekend and another in 2009 if
Jones piars ·this season. The
Titans would pay back that
selection in 2009 if :Jones is
not reinstated for {his season.
A-gent Manny Arora 'said
Wednesday ni,ght that they
had not been told of the
trade by either team, but
were cautiously optimistic.
Jones has talked often of his
desire to pl11y for the
Cowboys in recent weeks,
,even appearing on Michael
ilrvin's radio sbow in Texas.
""We recognize 1be fact of
wh~ we are with regards

Astmiuse7~

fourtbtoll!tup
9-3 win oWl' lws

to the league," Arora said. overall out of West Virginia, from worldng out on their been more CllgCI to trade

"We reco_gniu the fact he's and easily w.as Tennessee's
got a guaranteed contr.act best defender in 2005 and
with Tennessee, and we rec- ' 06. His four career interognize the fact there's risks ce~ns came in 2006 as he
involved at this point. We he
the Titans to an 8-8
also reoQgnize there's sig- record. He also Jed the NFL
nif~t public relations in punt-return average in
impliCations for the teams, 2006 with 12.9 yards per
and -in fact. Dallas has to sell return and three touchtickets. the knowledge their downs .
fan base has a point of view.
But six arrests and 12
· «With all that in mind, incidenfs where police were
we've said from Day I called since bemg drafted
we're willing to rework our led- to his suspension by
contract. Once the trade . NFL commissioner Roger
gets completed or official, Goodell in April 2007 for
season. · Goodell
we' II ·be ready to do our part the
because we want to play for declined to ease. that punDallas. I don 't have any ishment
when
Jones
hesitation saying we can get appealed to return after sitthis done and get it done nng out l 0 games and now
·
will only say that he •II
quickly."
Jones was scheduled far a reconsider rem stating the
. base ·salary of $1 .74 mil]jon cornerback before training
in 2008 and had been under camps open.
.contract through 2009
The Titans gave Jones
before his suspension.
permission to talk to other
He was the first defensive teams weeks ago, and· the
player drafted in 2005, sixth cornerback bad been barred

en.

POMEROY - Correcting
139 pages of household
address information is the
·next step as a committee
continues implementation of
Meigs County 's new 911
C~De~:gency service.
Tbe committee and county commissioners are also
still evaluating possible
sites for the 911 operation,
inCluding a portion of
Veterans Memorial Hospital
and the existing Emergency

INsiDE

IL\FFELT'S

Medical Services building.
EMS Dir~ctor Doug
Lavender, who has worked
clascly ·with commi.ssioners
i.n planning equipment and
other elements of the operation, said tbe Master Street
Address Guide, a database·
required for the system, has
been submitted, but additional information must be
added and corrections made
before it is ready for use as
a reference.
The MSAG provides
information about each
physical address in the

county, including a list of lions, and addresses that are Mason County. W.Vi have
house numbers on each road not -even in. the county. He been helpful in sorting out
or street from smallest to said many of those incor- the addresses and determinlargest, the direction th"e rect addresses are near ing how those homes will be
ro'l(l travels, what commu- county lines, and might· he served once the county's 911
nity the road is a pan of, and served by response units in service is operating.
the closest fire. Jaw enforce- a neighboring county.
"Obviously, we have never
l)lent, and emergency medLavender said he has been done this before, so we have
ical unit to the address.
working closely with Ed had a lot of questions, and
Lavender said the hun- Werry of the plat map and .they have been very willing
dreds and hundreds of house numbering office, to help us sort it out and tell
pages of address informa- EMS dispatchers and local ·
tion were submitted for fire departments to gather us what wO!Xs and what does
approval , and the 139 pages the correct information and no~" Lavender said.
Lavender said the comof corrections ran~e from correct the records.
mittee
has also completed a
incorrect road spelbngs and
Lavender said 91l offiother typographical correc- cials from Galli a County and
Pl•ae see aec!OI'Cis.·AJ

Diane McVey

Shaw Carpet and floor Center

• Hau isouvtlle plans

Preparing for Special Olympics

..ilumni f800ion.
'See hFA3

4147 State Route 1641

8'1 BETH S~ERG~ENT~:-=:-::-:-----cc-'A~list.o4'esterday~ winners and _

g1ves memorial·
. donation. See Page A3
.. United we stand,
divided we fall.
SeeJ&gt;¥AS

Union Stn!et
594~3571

(740)

•

• Readings inspire
thoughts on faith.
· See Pag.: AS
..'" Caring for~
helpless. See Page Afi

TODAY'S
NUMBER IS:

Powell's

FOODFAIR
70, _ ERS.l l\~n11' Strf'f''
PotTIP ' ll\

OH

WEA1HER

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o.t.lte "" .... A2
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INDEX
•

... i

2

'S

IIC110NS- 16 PAGFS

Annie~s

Em+ ....... r.

...

c,t.P Mutdl II

Editorials
Faith • Values
.
Movies

AI IF I tOiilce .

Rnmed
Requt&gt;sr Fomi~l' Ox_vge11

T!·o Jornrwm
1,tC .... ftlalt1h ., ~

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..-.n

.......-.wv

--17M711

740-446-0007
'
'

'

J

Mailbox

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics

It 's Just
A round the
Corner

Tdalny
Fll •

l!IIUfMy .........

SeeP.teA3

Residential • Commercial •
Wlloleslile • Retail

275

'

• toQal Briefs.

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

""*

.

Deldra Carleton crosses the finish One to take first place in the five meter
wheelchair duh as fellow athl•s and Meigs High School National Honor
Society students cheer her on.
.

• 'River City
amiounce 2008 stage
shows. See Plge Al

Your A.rw~'s #l Floor
Coveri(lg Dealo!

.

.

,.yers

MILL OVTLET, INC.

.•

•

BT BRIM J. REED
BREEDOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

·PageA3
• David Lee Holter, 69 ·
. • Dorothy Capehart'Whited, BO
. • Ada francis ~ 73
• Dr. Gerald Spaltcman, 47
• Bizabelh Stover, 92

It was Oriffey's first

·:zooo

• Meigs lakes over
filst plaCe in 'TVC.
SeePIFBl

0BDUARIFS

Anuyo
walk
and -~a•&lt;~tm~O~~~~;-~~---~-=:J~~~~~~~=~~-runs in 3

bomer on a seven-game
:bomestand that concludes
llwnday. The Reds will
play nine games in San.
Francisco, St. Louis and
Atlanta. Griffey hit his
200th, 300th, 400th and
SOOth homers in road
games.
Notea: Griffey's !99th
·homer with the Reds moved
him Ahead of Barry I arkin
for eighth place on the fnlllc:hise list. priffey came to
his homerowu team , in a
lade With Seattle before ibe
season. ... 38 Edwin
Encarnacion extended his
hitting streak to a careerhigh 13 games with a solo
homer in the ninth. ... The
Reds are 0-8 in series open-

Catholics hope
. papal visit boosts
senunary enrollment, As ·

Address records being evaluated in 911 process

SPORTS

PLAY COVERALL BI.NGO

CINCINNATI (AP) K.a:iuo Matsui spllllked
Houston's seven-run rally ·
with a two-nm single, and
the Astros ooasted to their
fourth straight .· victory
Wednesday night, 9-3 O¥er
the unsettled Cincinruni
Reds.
·Ken Griffey llr. hit !his
597th career homer off
Chris Sampson (I -2), the
only bright mament for the
struggling Reds, who
changed geneml lll8lllliler8
before the game. Walt
Jocketty took ov.er for
Wayne Krivsky, a show of
impatience by ileal1l owner
Bob Castellini.
Jocketty''Watched from an
upstairs boolb as ·the iReds
lost for the ninth time in 12
games. At 9-13, they're off
to their worst start in five
years.
If rigbt"hander 'Bronson
Arroyo (0-3) aoesn' t .get
turned around. the .outlook
is dreary.
The Astros knocked
Arro}'o out of the glime 'by
sendmg II batters to the
plate in the fourth inning for
seven runs. Matsui, who has
delivered three .pivotal hits
since he returned from the
disal&gt;led list, had the first of
six straight off Arroyo and
reliever Mike Lincoln.
mmngs,
his earned
run average to .56.
A day after the Astros set
a season high for runs in an
11-7 win over the 'Padres,
their lineup continued to
string hits together. Every
starter except S~n .had
at least one.
l
Darin Erstad and Hunter
Pence led the way with
three hits apiece.
It was another impressive
showing by ·the Astros in a
ballpark where they have
dominated lately. They're 91. at Great American Ban
Plll'k: over the lasi two years,
and 25-15 since it opened in
200;3.
I
.
Aheall 9-1 iii the fouith, ·
Samp80D could ohallengen
lineup that has struggled all
month, a .big factor in
Krivsky's firing. Sampson
allowed eight hits and two
runs in seven innings.
Griffey's s&lt;ilo homer in
the first inning was his first
in .a I!PID of 22 at-bats and
left.bim tMie shy of joinin&amp;
Bmy .Bonds, Hank Aaron,
Blbe Ruth, Willie Mays IIIII
SIJ!l!IIY Sosa with 600
II• u•as. .

property in February. The Jones after" news surfaced
Titans .and Cowboys nearly Monday night that the corhad a deal at the NFL own- netbac'k bad paid money to
ers • meetings last . month, a 29-year-old .man mrested .
.but talks stalled over · the for a Las Vegas strip club
issue of compensation for shooting in February 2®7
someone who hadn'4 played that left a club employee
paralyzed.
.
.
since Decerril)er 2006.
Dallas owner Jerry Jones . A police. report said that
said twice in the past week, . in the weeks after the shootincluding 11uesday, that the ing, Jones paid $15,000 10
trade was stuck m neutral. the man, who threatened to
But Patman Jones, baggage hurt' the cornerback, his
and all, is a top cornerback daughter and ' his mother;
and a dynamic kick returner Jones picked the man out of ·
who can fill some of the a police lineup last Friday,
Cowb{&gt;)'S'· biggest w~ak- helping .fulfill part . of the
nesses. '
plea deal he agreed t.o last
Jpnes also has been very December when reducing
successful lately offering two felony counts of coer·
second, and third, chances cion to conspiracy to comto players like receiver mit disorderly conduct.
Terrell Owens. The latest
But he will have tQ testify
reclamation project was under that plea deal. Jone(
Tank Johnson, who signed attorney, Robert ~gford,
during the 2007 season said Wednesday the trade
while he was still suspend- had "nothing to do" with th~
ed.
legal case in Las V~gas and
The Titans might have declined further comment. ·

·WIN UP TO $1,000 !!!·

•

u.~.

Emmet's Pub
set to open, A2

.,

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A2
Bs-6
B7

A4
As-7

their events arc as follows:
Matthew Beha, shot put, frrst place,
ROCKSPRINGS - For most of 50 meter dash, second place, softus there's no such thing as an ball throw, second place; Roger
overnight success story and achiev- Lance, I 00 meter walk. first place,
ing a goal takes a lot of work and a shot put, second place; Johnny
. lot of practice, just ask the athletes Proffitt, softball throw,. second
who are participating in the Special place, l 00 meter walk, second
Olympics Regional Games today in place; Christian Brockert. softball
Alexander.
throw. first place, 50 meter 1:1ash,
Around 40 Meigs County athletes third place, standing long jump,
are headed to the games today but second place; Haley Wallbrown.
before they left for competition, softball throw, secQnd place, 50
they earned their spots by compel- meter dash, first place, standing
ing ~n yesterday's practice events at lonB jump, second · place: Frankie
Meigs High School. This is the . Council, softball throw, third place.
niotb year that National Honor 50 meter dash, second place, standSociety students from Meigs High ing long jump, frrst place.
Jimmy ' Withrow, softball throw,
School helped organize the event
with many of those same students second place,. 50 meter dash, first
accompanying . the athletes to place, standing long jump, ihird
Alexander today.
. place; Makala Russell, softball
. T~liftllii.Beha. a .NHS itudcmt from throw, .third plac , .50 meter. dash, _,
MHS, said J'robably the biggest second place, standing long jump,
preconceive notion others have second place; Chris Edwards, ramp
about Special Olympics is thinking roll, second place, . strike with
the competition is limited to a small hand/Qat, first place; Casey Sargent,
group of people when in fact .it standing long jump, second place,
involves athletes of all ages com- - 200 meter dash, fourth place, softpeting at all levels of abilities.
ball · tlu"ow, first place ; Chris
Today, athletes competing in Should.is, softball throw, first place,
Alexander are worldng to achieve I 00 meter walk, third place, stand- ·
spots in tbe state SpeCial Olympics' ing long jump, first place; Mitchell
competition in June in Columbus.
·Powell, standing long jump, first
BSERGENT!!MY!1AILYSEI'ITINEL.CQM

DJFS Interim in
place for year
. BT BRIAN J. REED
BREEOOMVOAILVSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY -· lt will be
months before Meigs
County Commissioners hire
A3 a new director for the
of Job and
NASCAR
B2 Department
Family Services.
'Qbituaries
Barbara Chapman has
A3
'
been named interim director
Sports
8 Section of the agency, replacing
Swisher. who
Weather
A2 Michael
retired in March. She will
serve in that capacity
@-Ohio Vlll\oy l'llhllohl.,. Co.
through the end of the year,
•
Commissioner Jim Sheets
·said Thursday, under a contract with the county.
Commissipners said they
4

,·

Beth Sergent/photo

Don Buffington receives his award for placing third in the shot put event at
yesterday's wann up for today's regional Special Olympics compet~ion .
held in Alexander.
·
place, 200 meter dash, third place, wheelchair race, second place,
softball throw, second place.
softball throw. third place; Sandy
Chris Tackett, 'standi11g long Johnson, softball throw, third
J·ump, fir
· ,"st _place, 200 meter dash, pla·ce• I 00 tneter wal""' second
second .place, softball throw. third place; Jessie Bulstrom, · softball
place; Bradley Donaldspn, shot put, throw, second place. 100 · meter
fourth place, 200 meter dash,;st walk, founh pleice; Hugh Roush,
place, softball "thro", firs\ pia ; shot put, third . place, I 00 meter
Don Buff}ngton, '. spftba!l thro ' .dash, first place ; Mark Weber, softfourth place, shot put, thml place; ball throw, first place . I 00 meter
Matt Walters, shot put. first plaG~, walk, first place ; Bill Neutzling,
100 meter pash, frrst .p)ace;_C_h ns softl)all throw1 fint place, 50-motcro
McKean. softball throw, thtrd dash, first place; Tim Harris. softpl.ace, 100 meter walk, fifth place; ball throw. first place, 100 meter
Ltsa Montgomery, I 00 meter dash, dash, founh place; Mary Rankin,
third place, ·50 meter dash, third softball throw, third place, I 00
place, softball throw, fourth place; meter walk, second place.
Amber Pierce, softball throw, third
Joey Ray, shot put. second place,
phice, 100 meter wheelchair race. IOO meter dash, third place ; Mary
firstplace.
C
Michael Batton, softball throw, · · Jane urry, shot put. first place, I 00
second place. 50 meter dash , ftrst meter walk. first place: Chris Doss.
place; A11gel Day, I00 meter ·
Please see Pnf•ri"" AS

.

'One Boo~ One Comnumity'
Library program prompts timely discussions
Bv BETH SERGENT

will develop a job description for the director posiPOMEROY - The "One
tion, and . post it as
required. The position of Book, One Community"
DJFS director is no longer program · at the Meigs
a civil service position. County District Public
The director serves "at the Library is attempting to
pleasure" of the commis- raise timely. socially relesioners and is their vant issues through the use
of a book.
.
employee, Sheets said.
The MCDPL hopes ·the
During Thursday's regu;
program
becomes an annual
meeting,
Jar ' business
event
and
is meant to
Commissioners:
from all
encourage
people
• Tabled an animal claim
for rabbits filed by Howard ·· different backgrounds to
Lawrence of Long Bottom, read and discuss important
until a market price for tbe issues raised by a single
book. This year's book
rabbits can be determined.
choice is "Strange as this
............lltw.AJ · Weather Has. Been" by Ann
BSERGENTOMVOAILYSENTINEL.COM

•

~

PancAke which takes on the people to discuss timel y.
topic
of mountaintop .regional issues in a non-conremoval. Pancake will also frontational way. She also
be' participating in a tele- hopes it simply opens up the
conference with local pro- lines of communication.
gram participants in the first
Copies of "Strange as this
week of May at the Weather Has Been" are
Pomeroy Library.
available at the MCDPL
At 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday branches to check out. The
at the Pomeror Library, book's SY!Opsis features ·a
local readers o the book West Vifginia toww "in the
wi II gather for the first midst of the latest coal
time to participate in the boom, and plagued by tl!e
boek's discussion . There mountaintop removal strip
will be refreshments and mining that is ruining what
door prizes.
is left of their mountain
Brenna Call of the life ." Pancake is from
.MCDPL is organizing the Romney. ·W.Va . hUt currentj&gt;rogram and hopes it not ly lives in Seattle. Ore.
only promotes library serP311icip:)Lion' in the pro.vices but allows a variety of gram is free.

·'

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