<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="3928" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/3928?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-14T21:54:15+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="13847">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/1adb8514ad31636893c9ae8949a303be.pdf</src>
      <authentication>96d75ea76afcfc431dd4edb70da365af</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="13877">
                  <text>. '

PageD6:

GARDENING

Student council
•
• •
sponsonng
IDlDl

Students participate
\in Ea•th Day, A2

SEEDS

G STARtS
'

'

Sunday, April r,, 2008'

Relay for Ufe, A6

BY DJAN FOSDICK
RlR ll&lt;E ASSOCIAtm 1'11ESS

It's a wonder you can' t
detect a pulse from a seed,
considenng all the life
within.
Even before they genoinate, you can · predict how
their life cycle will evolve.
Each seed carries a genetic
mix that determines hardiness and disease tolerance,
plant size, texture and
color
and
d istinctive
blooms or fruit.
Then there are the differences visible only to the
practiced eye between conventional seeds and their
organic equivalents. The
variations can malre all the
difference in your garden.
"They come from alto- ·
gether different circumstances. so they have altogether different traits," said
Frank Morton; a seedsman
and plant breeder from
Philomath, Ore.
Organic seeds are often
large - containing their .
own food reserves. Their
roots dig deeper to mine
the soil and spread leaves
quickly to stay ahead of Organic seedli~ are grown from light trays inside a home in New Market, Va. April 8 . Organic seeds generally have more
weeds. In other words, vigor and genetic diversity than t!1eir conventional counterparts. They have to be bred to resist many kinds of pest pressures.
.
they can flourish in poor
soil and compete with is often drenched in chenliIn the grand scheme of
other plants.
cals, he said. Organic seeds backyard gardening, workOrganic growers are are free of that kind of pro- ing with ~c seeds is
learning to 9LPCCl more duction - and good ones more a malter of lifestyle
vigor from ( their seeds, are also bred to resist pest than it is utility, said Ellen
Morton said. While conven- pressures.
Ogden, of Manchester
tional seeds and hybrids
It remains debatable, Village, Vt., co-founder of
often have one gene that though, whether organic the "1be Cook's Garden," a
stands up to pathogens, seeds produce a more fla- seed catalog for gardenen;;
organic seeds have lhe kind vorful harvest than convenwho love to cook.
of disease resistance found
"We need to be more
tional strains.
in nature.
Monon says it's no con~ careful with what we're
"That means a variety of
test
when he compares con- putting into the ground," •
things working together to ·
ventional
tomatoes to said Ogden, who designs
give a plant a strong constigardens. ·
tution and a' belter ability to. organic - although that kitchen
be
because
he's
getand
everymay
·"Herbicides
combat ailments," he said.
ling
them
locally,
so
they
thing else. Whoever uses
Then there are the enviaren't
traveling
as
far
after
organic
seeds is thinking a
ronmental benefi~.
being
picked.
And
genes
little
more
about what
''Commercial seed FWeventually
tell.
they're
doing."
ing is one of the most mten"You can give them all
sive users of farm chemicals
On the Net:
going," said Jim Gerritsen, the composts and fertilizers
For IIIOR! about plturting
who with his wife, Megan, and clean things you want
operates WoodPrairie Farm but if a particular ~t with . organic vegetable Bags of organic soil are seen in New Market, va. April 2 .
isn't genetically predis- . seeds, see this University of Good gardening starts from the ground up with a good seed
in Bridgewater, Maine.
Cooperative starter, potting soil or growing mixture: Gardeners using
•n conventional seed pro:- posed to crispness, it won't · Florida
duction, soil must be free of make any diffen:nce," · Extension · Service bulletin: organic seeds will want a olean soil, ot a growing medium
"plant pests," so. the ground Morton said.
lmp:/ledis.ifas.ujf.edu/hs227 made up of natural products and absent of any chemicals.

,.,. .......

.

Soil type makes
a big difference
when you
ganJen using
organic seeds
So heie you are, fashionably green wilh organic seeds. nawrnl fertilizers, a fresh sbipmeot of
live beneficial bugs.
What are you planning 10
do about your dirt1
Good organic gardening startS from the
ground up.
..
"You get 1hc best of
everydling when you take
good, lusb soil dial will
produoe lhe taslie&amp;1.
n:bealtbiest"""'"".
"" vegccables available,~ said fun Geuiasm,
who owns and opcares
WoodPrairie Fann in·
Bridgewarec, Maire.
lfs one lhi.og, howevec.; 10 ~efine lhe soil in a
large planling bod, where
it becomes a seasonal
matter of tesling, amending aild tilling. It's quite
anolher when you want a
specific blend for small
raised gardens, palio gardens and pots. 'lben you ..
can dip into lhe soores of
mixes available commercially by the bag.
"Our organic soils are
growing very fast as a
new product offering much faster lhan lhe average organic product,~
said Steve Titko, Director
of Technical Selvices,
Growing Media, for The
ScottsMiracle-Gro Co.
Using nalnral jDateriaiS.
offen;; belter plliot nutri- .
tion and means· you're .
dealing with a living ecological system, said
Frank Morton, a seedsman and plant broeder
from · Philomath, Ore.
Instead of just holding .
the plant up, organic soil
can sustain bacteria,
earthworms and "everything functional to theplant arid its roQts."

•
..
...••
Middleport • Pomervy., Ohio
j&lt;t( I

\l'-, •\ 111.;;-. "\ ll.t'l-

BY Be •• J.. REED · '
I!REEDOJMMtL'I'SE!N1111NEL.COitt

POMEROY- American
Elocuic Power ·said pas•
sage o f Senate Hill 221,
regulating die electricity
iDdusuy, will oot oeoessarily determine if lbe &lt;rom,pany will build a dean· coal
generating plant in Meigs
County, but its provisions

support
Celebrate Natio~al Volunteer Week

.PaJeAS

•

• Kulliss Lee 8laley. -40
•01isqlher
Higgitilol•n. 2B

•

INSIDE

-· --...1
I""'

•

:....

.... 4+1 News NOles.

.,_

s..-..u

• Gat yo&amp;M' bal6"it
\atalion lalaronline.
See ... A3

~on .....

INDEX

By

a:counts, better.

lial impaot on electricity pos1ttve for the state,"
prices in Ohio.~
McHenry said.
"AAthough lbe timpact will
"We will work with the
be more defined through •the PUCO to ensure ~e
PUCO process, it appears the filings necessary to have
1!hat .t he House amendments an order by :Jan. l , 2009."
a
workable
pFovide
In March, the Ohio
appl'03Ch gging forward, Supreme Court reversed a
including preserving a mar- decision by the Public
!ret rate option and a mecha- Utilities Commission of Ohio
. lllism for future investment
,. re-AEP.AS
in Ohio, which we believe is

-causmg
concerns,
POMEROY ~ House
Bill I 03 is causing concern
from municipalities and
support from landlords.
Same municipalities feel
bill could cause local
water systems to feel a
financial pinch if landlords
are only liable for up to
$200 or are excluded altogether from having a financial respOnsibility to pay a
water bill owed by a tenant.
Dave Spencer, treasurer
.o f Racine Village, said this
· bill could pose an undue
stress on local water systems
trying to collect delinThil 8lgn !Uding "Volunlaars at:~ Shining 'Stars" want up at tlile Stt!ilior Citizens Center this morning. O~laylng It here
are11'om the lett, Diana Co11111, RSVP COOI'dlnalor, and voiUAtaers, Setty .!lonnson, Juanita ~ouaf:\, 'Polly C.urt11, Mack quent fees. Racine's village
ordinance is wri1ten so that
l..elgllbl, and JUne Kloes.
'
landlords are responsible
for the water biUs and no
water· or trash accounts are
put in a tenant's name.
Racine currently has 354
1
water customers with an
estimated 30 percent of
those being renters ..
BY CtwLaE 1toEJ:1..!cH
4t.SVP vplunteers · provide .
Spencer fear~ if the bill
HOEFLICI-IOMVOAILYSENTINEL.COM
more dian their SkillS .and knowlpasses it could lead to delinedge, lhey •give l:heir friendship,
quencies which then puts a
POMEROY - When senior they give themselves." said
strain on the whole system,
c1tuens
become
actively Diana Coates, progmm coordinaincluding customers who
-IJ~f.~~~- .as volunteers theY,_.mt · rnr for !!le Meig~ Cooney Council .
P&lt;!f theif wal.er fees on time.
strengthen coitlmunilies on Aging. "The opportunities are .
Raising rates and additional .
through lhe servi.ce they provide. as diverse .as the vo1unteers themfees are just two scenarios
but they e~ce the satisfac- selves," she addM "Volunteers
smaller water systems could
tion of havmg mntributed 1beir select a service geared to specific
pOSsibly be faced with to
time aod effort 110 .the betterment inteJ:ests, sometimes consistent
stay operating in. the blac k,
of -others.
,
with past pmfessional careers,
according to Spencer.
"\nlunteers
Sbinin
" . "" Stars" otller limes ~elating to their avoHB 103 was introduced
real!i' a sign in front of the Meigs cation or bobby."
on March 8 and currently
·Senior Cmtcr whe~e iast
'rwo of ·lhe best-knovm pro:
rests in the Local and
year
die Retimi Semor · grams carried out by retiied
Municipal Government and
~Jilie!:l"
··~ .:(RS~) 7Q siJnirir · ..,olunturs · ben :.. .are.LJ rllill1 - ... _· R~:vltn lizntion
Committee.
-~
men ~·anil women CO!IIributed· a · Yesteryear ·and Seniors in ,
total of 31 ,174 hours .in volun-· Schools. At Yestel)'ear, which has
State
Repre sentative
teer service ~ 29 dilferent s~s. been ongoing for more than 20
Jimmy Stewart (R-Albany )
· Older ~h1oans ll'C_ bemg years the senior wolunteen;; share
said although hi s knowl saluted this week, April 27 ~ lheir ta1ents with hundreds of fifth
edge of the bill is limited at
May 3, by t!Je O~o grade students who embrace the
this pOint, ne has recently
~artment of AgiDg which · skills and crafts r:1 generati.C!lllS
heard from landlords. low
JOms the natu~n m the obser- past and use that infmmation to
Numerous crafts and skills are tau,ght by, the income advocates as well as
vance of Nabo~ Volunteer cmicb their own Jives.
local government officials
RSVP volunteers at Yesteryear. Here Lawrence
Week. Tho theme ts "Volunteer
Eblin instructs Kyle Riffle in some leather work.
Phase- HI IOJ, A5
to Change th~ World."
,. 171 . . V I l I a. A5

the

-

Senior volunteers
tagged Shining stars'

.u

Students design, install device· EHS
.

.

••

RIO GRANDE-- ·Eight students from
•
A3 , the Univemty of Rio Gr.ande bad the
Annie's Mailbox
opportunity roceody to gain real-world
A3 experience by building an important
• Calendars
83-4 . new machine for a J:egional roawany.
Classifieds
The dudents are all in the manufaoturing icchnology piogtiDI. and *orkcd on
Comics ·
the project in a class taught by Mike
Dyer. The students actually designed,
Sditorials
built and installed a brand new machine
Q:ovies
for Appalachian Timber in Sutton, W.Va .
Dyer eX;plained that Appalachian
Obituaries
Ttmber makes railroad ties and beams,
B Section and said the employees have to carry
Sports
and stack the heavy beams by hand.
Weather
A3 The company came to him to see if he
i:l -~v.tloyr ,, F ;(lo.
and hi s students could de sign a
J113Chine to take over the heavy lifting
and help the employees. Dyer has
wort.od with the company before, just
as he and hi s students work with other
1 companies in the region .

-

. BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTtNEL.COM

are

SeePlfFA5

~
aU

locating a $2 billion plant in
Lebanon
Township.
McHemy said that depision
will remain in the hands of
lbe
P.ublic
Utillil!i.es
Commission of Ohio.
"The . provisions for
investment in r-ene-wables
and energy efficiency
liJli!'CIIf 110 strike an appFopnate balance between the
·eovironmem and lhe poten-

•

.• Reed &amp; BalM"
'after houts' hek1

Get the same !tanking you already know. Only better.
Visit wesllanco.cem for more .information.

shoutd .allow AEP to
"move furw.ard."
Meli.ssa·Mc:Hemy of AEP
.said th~ are mecrumisms
for .investmentli in new
emorgy included in lbe !bill
as passed by the Ohio
House last week, but said i1
is too ·eady 110 detemline if
lhe OODlplUly will be .ab]e to
recover costs for lhe plant
- ibe primluy Gbstacile in

HB103

See PIF ·A3
. • OU keyboaR:I &amp;enilw
. sdledlllled for Jlnt 6-7.
SeePIFA6

..

"'"' · "'·'daii~-.·IIIIIH·I.'"''"'

\1'1{!1 .!X . :.!OOH

SPORTS

• All slsrcheedaa•s
, . , . tllllional tide.

Starting April 28th, Oak Hill Banks is officially WesBanco Bank.

\ltl\!l\)

Students in electrical design classes at

Rio •Grande helped Dyer and his stu-

dents desi,gn the new machine for the
company, and then his students built it.
1be machine moves the beams down a
line, and then stacks them so that they.
can be picked up with a forklift.
Previously, the employees had to manually lift the beams, which weighed
between 200 and 250 pounds, and stack
them by band.
Dyer and his students installed the
fiCSt part of the machine over a weekend
earlier ·in the semester, but when it was
set up it did not work properly so they
had to tear it back: down again. They
then fixed a. problem in the design, ·and
then set it back up again.
It is oow working properly, and .Oyer
and.his students
are putting in the ne w
.
equipment m stages.
Appalachian Timber is happy with the
won:· the Rio Grande students have been
doing oo the project. and Dyer and his

Kyle Gordon and
Heaven Westfall
were named
Prom King and
Queen at
Eastern High
School Saturday.
Brien J . Aeedlpholo

.

,. . . . . -..,he,AS

•

"

•

�•'

Page·A2

• STATE

The Daily Sentinel

Students participate in Earth Day .
'

Community Calendar

4-H News Notes

'"I :Spy in !tile Kitchen.~ SafCo/ Star Mill Pmt: iin R aeine. A
The
:giiiDCS . w~ recreation. Fllll' commUDity project of cleaning
'
project!; ~Will lbe -discussed at up ·&lt;the pat and [phntill8 lflowen; will he dooe.
die iDCn meetiJ18.
RJ~G~y
Ca~.
News
Meflum liamb£n, News
Projects for the fair, die new
Reporter
rules foc .animal projects, .and ~r
commnn'i!y project ideas discussed at the reoent IIJ!"t''i'V!
11te Clover
.of i1he SuMvocs 4-H (Jlub held
1be Kids &amp; K-'9s 4-H Club
at \the lh~ .of Kody, Thistcn,
The Glover Olub met .on
met
0D Mauih [1{1, 2008 at the
Conner and Baylee W-01fe. A,pril6 at Mikayh v~·s
bcm~e
of C arla Hqpwn with
borne with seventeen members !loose with five tmembel's and
an4 one :adrisor .ancmding.
oae advisor pcscul. 1lbe dub t1u:ce =beni JDJd Mwo adviThe [ 7 merrtbcn Jllld an advi- mme :and ;allltbe ,o1fu:ers were sors .attending. It w.a&amp;
sor present diBcussed •the mar- e1ectcd Fundrai!iC!'S, .oommuni- .anoounced fuat ~g Warden
ket lhog project as ill w.ay Of ily 'liei\Wce .and crlnr.atjana} pro- Tom ft'offitt would be .at the
11txt meeting and .a 11/Uit to .the
P"" wen: malilll'i!.
.
bc1ping
""""""'"
""ride
'"l1lc:re wen: no ~ vetctinmy clinic was planned.
on ilhcir ,pmjcru. Sum!I!I'JI'QIJ!P
and iimpmlant dates for 4U Mcwwts as .it was .an m:ganiu- There was also .a &lt;di8cussion on
lli0Dalmaefulg. .
the Relay for Life.
members w:as also discussed.
~fleece rdBg wys were ma~
A scavenger bunt was conA snewball fight and tibng
.
a
s
rteUeation. Oulla Htwton
ducted
lby
Mikayla
VanMatre.
in the woods was ,tJhe recreSai:.ab TWller Kxved
.and
R.efres1uncnts
were
served
by
ation. It w:as decided &lt;that .a
refoo!illunbiitfi.
1lhe flcece . dug
decision QD .a oommunity pre- Ann Ramey.
Miikay.!a VanMatre, New ,tays made ib,y mcmben; will T!e
ject ·would ibe made soon .and
don!tt'".d
Reponer
membersrup plqletWork wauld
Avstin Jlil1n; News ~r
be oompleted.
1be Olover Club IIDtt on
Tristen Wolfe, News Reponer
April 20. 2008 .at the OOme &lt;(llf
.Mikayla VanMatre w.itb five
member!; and .one advisor
The Busy Beaven; 4-H Club
The 4Fun 4-H Oub met .attemtitl£ llwe fund il"llisers met on April l3 at ltbe Zion
wen: planned. Dues of$[ per
recently at the home &lt;&gt;f Racbael 1iitCiiqg were set .and demoo- Oumih ofCbristwith l 4mCI1)bers .and two adviSOI'Ii Jescnt.
Churdh
·""'- datyb!lp
·
- l t ..._ w.ilh
...... ·sev.en
•
' meiDbcr&amp;
•.
gutjopt:,;:::rsand:a.......,,
Bl!IOb were passed •out, tag day
AUU UJlJ;:t; -411.:1n&amp;m5 ""''rwlfte'..
was
set for May 11.7, and Jb.ake
'
'
~
~~·-'"""
Oub 1_111DC aDif lim4
!Kdfie!Necoe~foorof ;We was
p.111!!1l!:d fiJI' July 5 at ·
were~~ ~ wa •;11m i:lli1ll)ja
club memWJilinart
.as
.a ifi:mdmi~~«.
~· Hetdi Willis :and BllKlC .. Ibm &lt;the !pii'CIIIliJDJdh&lt;Jwlto
Gtcg:Sif:wart tiC!Ved tefresbHawley serv~~~- · ·. . . . TI;, ~ .enjoyed aoments.
Tile next meeting will
At Jlllother moent meetlllg,
-.
llefremments ·were
be
en
May 18 at the Zion
~=.were~ Jllld pro- 'SCI'Wed by KYfie .and KaJCb
Church
of Ouist. Glovet'budi;
~s dumusscd. Kic:k:batl as King. 11he neu IIDCeting will ,be
enJoyed by the group, and 00 May 4.at 1:30. Members are are :to do :a~ .project.
Carolann 'Stewan; News
Sbanda and Brent Welch to b!Jiqgs SbJikes.
Reporter
served refreshments.
Mikayla VanMarr.e. News
'
Heidi Willis, News Reponer Reponer·

.

SUbmlftldJI!dD

Columbus airport eyes new
·tenninal amid industiy uncertainty

-

organizations

.d

.

•*• " .

.....

ItO._..

.cials will :then have to make a case for
tee increases lhat would help pay for
the new tennina1 and Ol!her preJeot5.
·
But industJy .experts don't see ;111
end to high fuel prices, and airlines an:
likely to resist any extra oosts.
In Indianapolis, where Roberts was
an aiJport lloard member before coming to Columbus, a new terminal is set
to open in October after 30 years of
planning.
"The air! ines fought it toolih and
nail. We ..finally bad to just pull the
trigger," said lobn Kish, executive
The Salem Center GeThe Wooley, Bu:lley'-s and
director of the llndianapolis airpm:t.
G .e tters . 4-H Club met on .More 4-H Olub mel on April
. "They seem to have come around."
fiedera1 and state money, bends :and March 2 9, at lihe home of 13, .at the Rod Beegle borne
Other financing tools would .also help Dawn Kopeck with i-6 mem- with 21 meniben; and tw.e.adv.ipay for planned expansion at Pon bers and two advisors attend- SOOi present. Quality Assnnmce
ing. Discussion was .about jobs .and w.ays to prepare- kids fur
· Oe~bu5.
Dirt is already being moved to redi- for tbe kids and teen's in the Skill-a-Thon were disaasscd.
Rhett Beegle ~ A'Ustin
•· teet 'ltbe liDiin road into the airport and dub, reports. and leaders. A
fO crew .:a IDCW jet taxiway. About $8 lesson was given .on safety. Rose gave •tepoL1S on!Hetmi'!B
millim iiniedt:ral money is flltldin,g the · During the lesson . members 'Safety Precauti005 .and the ·
tui.w.aJ ·~ Half the oost oi the had to pull paperclips out of a in'\portance of wearing ear
·
road~ . is being covered by the bag and say .o ne thing they :plugs.
..\my !Ritchie and Rod lkqle
Ohio Dqwtment of Transportatiou, .lrnew about safety.
Amber 'Davison gave a served refreshments. 1be next
withtbeodalnilf-about$20million
- ooming from the .airport authority.
report on her coaking .project ~ will be .e n May 4 at

COLUMBUS (AP) - Recent dccisions by three airlint;s to reduce fljgbts
through Port Columbus Intemational
Aiiport will lead to a drop in travelers
thi~ year and will push back the
planned opening of a new tennina1 until
at least 2018, an airport official said.
A record 7.7 million passengers
passedlllrough the airport in 2007.
But with the closun earlier this
. month uf Golumbus-based low-cost
can:i.er. Skybus Airlines, the decision
by JetBlue Airways to pull ont of lihe
anportinJanuary and Delta AirLines'
announcement in March of .additional
.deep cuts in its schedule, .airport officilils expect the number of pasSCJ18CA
to diup to about 7.2 million this year.
The drop will ·cause plans for the
opening of a new terminal, ·w,bidJ
.would replace the 1950s-era bnildin_g,
to be pushed back from 2015 to at
least 2018, Elaine Roberts, chief CIICCutive of the Columbus Regional
Airport Authority, ,teJd board meml• c~;
recently.
Port Columbus' five-year lease
agreemc;nt with ifs remaining aidines
expires at the end of 2009. Airpmtoffi~

Salem Center

Go-Getters

Public medings
·· · Monday, A.prill8
• "RACINE
- Regular
irieeting of Southern' Local
School Board, 8 p.m., high
school media room .
" POMEROY -Regular
ineeting of Meigs Cout'lty
Librlll)' Board, 3 p.m.,
Pomeroy Library.
POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission. 9
a.m., 117 Memorial Dr.
'' SYRACUSE
Conunittee ·meeting of the
Syracuse Village Pool, 7:30
p&gt;m. at village ball.
Thesday, 1\pril .Z!J
. SYRACUSE· - The final

Busy Beaten

4Fun4-BOW.

Wooley, Bully's
andMDR

Whiz Kid:r:

· The Whiz Kidl 4-H Club
met on 'March 30 at the home
,o f Pam Buckley · with ten
members and two advisors
attending. It was agTecd to be
.a team in th! Relay for Life.
Mandy Roush gave a safety
talk on wearing your seat belt.
!Johann Wolfe showed the club
his Venus ¥ly Trap plant and
told abOut it's care and what
he feeds it.
.
Refreshments w.erc served by
the Bucldey's. Members were
.reminded to •bring their dues to
the next meeting .
Andrea Bu.ckley,
News
Reponer

REACH 3 COUNTIES

Dear Allftie:

Bit1hdays

'
We4nesclay, Aplil JO
lETART, WVa. - John
E "Jack~ Ord, fonnerly of
Letart, W.Va. will observe
bis 89th birthday on April
30. A card 'Shower is
planned. His address is
Lakin Nursing Home @ I
Bateman Circle, Lakin,
W.Va., 25287.
lbursda~. May 1
RACINE
Eva
Teaford will observe her
80th birthday on May 1.
Cards may be sent to her
at P.O. Box 55., Racine,
Ohio 45771.

·Get your benefit
.verification letter online
.. a.. EuzAaEliH CRUMP

income letter in the maiL If
you need one sooner, you'll
want to call us at 1-800Sometimes, ·people need 772-1213 (TifY 1-800-325written verification &lt;Df their 0778) or visit your local
benefit status or income Social Security office.
.
Social
But for many people, simamount
from
Security. Perhaps you're ply' requesting the letter
ready to make a major pur- online and waiting for it to
chase and you're negotiat- arrive·in the mail is the most
ing a loan from a bank or convenient way to get the
financial institution. Or proof you need.
maybe you're applying for
.. state benefits or moving into
Question: What should I
a ·new apartment or home.
do if my Social Security
" ·. Whatever your reason: ..card is lost or stolen?
Answer: The best soloSocial Security makes it
easy for you to get the writ- tion to prevent tbat from
t;n verification you need happening is to keep your ·
and you can do ·it online at Social Security card in a
www.socialsecurity.gov. Just safe place. Never carry it
lOOk in the left column under with you unless you know it
"What you can do online" will be required, such as at a
and select the "Request a job interview. If you want to
Proof of Income letter" link. safeguard your Social
The "Proof of lnoome" let- Security. card and number,
ter is sometimes called a you can take these steps:
"'budget letter," a "benefits
• Visit the Federal Trade
letter" or a "proof of award Commission's
identity
lener." The letter can be used theft
page .
at
as proof of your income not www.ftc .gov/bcp/edu/micr
just for a loan, but lor any..&gt; osites/idtheft;
• Educate yourself about
third pany that requires
proof of your income.
identity theft;
.
; In addition to offering proof
• Monitor your credit
of your income: the lener is reports; and
also an official document th.at
• Read 1dentity Theft And
verifies. your Medicare and Your
Social
Security
health insurance coverage, Number at www.socialsecuretirement status, disability rity.gov/pubs/10064.html.
status and age.
f'vr more'information. visit
From the time that you our website at www.socialse. complete the online request, cu ril)~gov or call us toll-free
it will take about 10 days for' at 1-800-772·1213 (ITY Jjou to receive ther proof of 800-325-0778). ·
SociALSECUAITY'MANAGER.ATHENS

·Brewer celebrates birthday
-~-

Drug behavior affects everyone in family

public meeting on the
Syracuse •ODBG Di stress
Grant application, 7 p.m.,
;
Syracuse
Community
Center. Public urged to
Monday, A.pril28
·POMEROY - OH-Kan attend.
RUTLAND -Leading
Coin Club dinner, 6 p.m.,
.Creek
Conserv!lncy
followed
by meeting,
District, special board meetPo meroy Library.
.ing, personnel matters.

JC.tsandK-9s

Oub

--., · -

Monday, Apri128, zoo8

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Clubs and

Sunivors
4-BOub

.

PageA3

r

'

Kindergarten students at 'E a$ffim Elementacy (pictured) recently spent the
. month participating •in urth Day activities, linoluding raising mciney to plant a
pink dogwood tree outside their classrooms. The tree was purchased and planted by Hupp Landscaping •in Long Bottom by Josh Hupp (pictured) but students
also participated by placing handfuls of dirt around the baSe of the tree. Each
&amp;ll.ldent also received a special "Tree Adoption" certificate. Teachers Julie Spaun.
and Chris Wilson used :the Earth 'Day teaching un~ to help students realize the
impertanoe·of keeping the Ear:th clean, flealthy, safe and beautiful by doing "random acts of environinental kindness."

BYTHEBEND

!he Daily Sentinel

- -

J&gt;ciMEROv- - -J1lstlliiie
Brewer celebrated her sixtll
IJirthday April 19 with a
at r.;tcDonalds .' Cake
and ice cream were served
with happy meals and
games were played .
.. · Attending besides
Stephanie

r

recently
discovered that my husband
is addicted to paiiilcillers.
He buys them ill:TI~Y from
them
peop Ie (he c
"friends") on the street.
I have noticed a mar·ked
change in his +personality
since be's been. taking the
drugs . 1 know this is common in drug :abusers, but I
need to clarify whether his
behavior constitutes emotional abuse.
For example, we had a
disagreement about his 21year-old 'SOD who lives with
us and .also uses drugs .
When I suggested his sbn
pick up .a fter himself, my
husband became irate and
very threatening in his
demeanor. He said things
like, "You bener remember
who supports you" and "If
r m not good enough for
you, then leave."
I'm a bit afraid of him
now because I don 't ·know
when be will explode. Drug
rehab is out of the question
since be ·bas informed me
th.at I have the problem, not
him. I worry about him
being arrested pr the police
coming to the house and
sending .m y 16-year-old
daughter to foster care.
Since be absolutely refuse s
to get help and I absolutely

cannot live like this, would
Y,OU leave him if you were
me?- Not Sure
Dear
Not
Sure:
Normally, we would recommend counseling first, and it
would still be a good idea to
see someone, but you have a
16-ye.ar-old daughter who is
surely affected by the
behavior of her stepfather
and stepbrother, and her
welfare must come before
anything else. Since you
believe your husband is
becoming erratic and threatening, it would be best to
contact
the
National
Domestic Violence Hotline
at 1-800-799-S.AfE (1-800799-7233) before taking the
next step. Also contact NarAnon (na.r-anon.org) .at 1800-477-'6291 or AI-Anon
(al-anon.alateen.org) at 1888-4-AL-ANON (1-888425-2666) for family affected by drug addicts. Your
entire family needs help.
Dear i\nnie: I wort as a
receptionist for my son and
daughter-in-law. Each of
their
ether
assistants
receives a $100 employee
birthday check. When my
birthday comes around,
however, I get nothing. My
son says they already get
me a gift since I ·am
"Mom" and cannot justify
giving me two. .
I believe the employee
check. is a separate thing.

Don 't get me wrong. My O\lr son is a completely d.ifson is a wonderful and gen- ferent person who is often
erous gift giver, but he also moody, compulsive and
has. family members who angry. The most heartdo tlie sanie for him and his breaking pan is that he is
wife. I am in no way treat- aware of the change and
ed better than other . wants so badly to have his
eQlployees · because I am "old self' back but knows
related. I am hurt over this. he cannot·. Nothing is the
Am l being selfish? same for any of us and
there is ~o end.
.
F..mp1oyee Mom ·
Dear Mom: If the pracThe family of a person
tice can afford to give you who suffers a brain injury
the same bonus check as sometimes grieves . just as
everyone else, you should much as if their loved one
receive &lt;&gt;ne. Whatever per-· has died. They rieed to be
sonal birthday gift your son . allowed to do so. gets you is separate . Healtbniken Mom
Although Y0\1 might keep in
Dear Mom: Our hearts
mind th.at if be begins giv- are breaking for you and
ing you a check. at work., your son. If you haven't yet
your birthday gift may be contacted the 'Brain Injury
substantially less generous. A'ssociation of America
That, however, would be (biausa.org), please do so.
'his choice.
Their support could be very
Dear Annie: Thre,e years helpful. The number is !ago, my son was in an auto 800-444-6443.
. Annie's Mailbox is writ~
accident that ·nearly killed
him. He survived, but suf- ten by Kathy MiicheU 'a nd
fered severe facial trauma Marcy Sugar, longtillu ediand sustained a traumatic tors of the Ann Lmulers
brain injury. Because he column. Please e•lllllil your
· was not. expected to live or lpli!Stions to anniesmailrecover to the degree that be box@comcast.net, or ·Write
has, my husband and I have to: Annie's Mailbox, P.·O.
beard over and over how Box . 118190, Chicago, IL
lucky we are th.at he is alive 60611, To find ollt more
and bow grateful we should about Annie's Mailbox,
be to have our son.
and read features by other
Although we do thank Creators Syndicate wrilers
God he is still with us, we and cartoonists, visit the
do not feel "lucky." As a Creators Syndicate Web
result of the brain injury, page at www.creators.com.

AU-star cheerleaders C41Pture national title
. GALLIPOLIS
Cheerleaders m Chris
Smith's
Xtreme
'C heemastics All-Stars program do more than win
national
cheerleading
championships they
also learn valuable skills
that translate into what
they are doing now as well
as later on in college and
life goals.
·
If you would, picture a
small group of cheerleaders,
numbering · I 0, most of
which had never done
cheerleading
like this
before, meaning they were
performing not only tumbling and dance routines,
but a! su stunts, some of
which were quite difficult at
their level. They did all of
this and more in two min.utes and 30 seconds.
They .started at Level 3
and eventual!" moved to
Level 4 (there ·"are six levels
in all-star · cheerleading),
practicing every Saturday
and Sunday, working very
· hard for three or four hours
each day. Yes, they ended
up very· tired. bruised and
battered, but as a team they
pushed on.
. Sumin~ in September
2007, Smith, with the help

Subm-photo

Chris Smith's Xtreme Cheemastics All-Stars won a national championship at the Elite
Cheer Dance 'Nationals in March.

of Michelle Green, was able only first pl,ace, but a
. to take the girls through national championship at
many competitions and Elite Cheer and Dance
finally, at the last competi- National Championships in
tion of the season in March 2008.
The evolution of Xtreme
Columbus at the c~~~~~
Cbeemastics and its all-star
center, these·
~
program is · a Cinderella
believe they

storv to ~ sur~t Smith
and-his staff will co tinue.to
try their . hardest
giving
the best instruction possible
to the All-Stars, as well as
anyone else who des.ires to
be the best cheerleader she
can Be.

parry

~

!!D!i Jasiah,
grandmother.· Diana Brewer, Zoie and

Gallipolis Daily ·
Point
Register or
Daily Sentine~And It Will Ru For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

~··"' ~oint flrasant

April Davis, Bradley and
lae Kimes, Kim and Justin
Brewer, Jennifer Jala, Bryan
·!llld B.J. Young, Chaddi~
and Shannan Brewer, Lon,
Jasmine Brewer
~hucky, Hannah, Emily and
·Charlie
ltebecca Young , Amanda, grandparents,
knna and Ryan Dill, . Brewer, Sr.,. Lady and
Natalie, Kaci, and Alex and Ronald Davts, Ronnea,
Oavid Woolard.
Danny, Sierra and Kayla
·:Sending gifts were her Hudson, and Paige Gillian.

J

.and The Daily Sentinel
have lau.oched a new page every
Friday called "Faith and Family".
H you have a testimonial story,
life-changing event ~bout' yourself
Of even a poem that you would
like to share please email to:

.

..

Local Weather
'

'

'lt.Mipolis lail~ lrlbunt

Joint Jltuantltgilttr

740-446-2342

..

.

•• -· &lt;&lt;&gt;- _ _ _

. ...

~...

•

'

..

-

.. . . . .

304-()75-1333
www.mydailyregU.mm

•

•

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

•

*.~ · 4··~ · "'-·

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

.

. .. . _ .

Wednesday night.•• Partl y
cloudy. Highs. in the mid
60s. Lows in the mid 40s.
Thuniday aad Thursday
nigbt...Partly cloudy. Highs
in the mid 70s. U&gt;ws in the
mid 50s.
Friday...Partly sunny with
showers and thunderstorms
likely. Highs in the upper 70s.
Chance of rairi 60 peroent.
Friday pight. ••Cioudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstonns. Lows in
the lower 50s. Chance of
rain 50 percent.
Saturday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs
around 70. Chance of min
30 percent.

•-M o ad ay ... C I o u d y.
Showers lik.ely in the morning .. .Then a chance of
ihowers in the afternoon .
Highs in the mid 50s. West
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance
b( rain 70 percent.
f'.-Monday night... Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of showers. Cooler
w.ith lows in the upper 30s.
West winds 5 10 10 mph.
! Tuesday•••Partly
SUIJDY
with a 20 percent chance of
~wers. Highs in tbe lower
50s. West winds 5 to I 0 mph.
· Tuesday nigbt...Partl y
cloudy. Lows in the lower
30s. Northwest winds 5 to
10 mph.
Wednesday
and

- .....
.

~

..

..

.

. ....... .

•egtster

kkeUy@mydailytribune.com ·
nfields@ mydailyregistef.Conr
hoeftich@mydailysentinel.com
Limit your story to
500-750 words.
PI~ include a phone number

in your email.
. .........

�•'

Page·A2

• STATE

The Daily Sentinel

Students participate in Earth Day .
'

Community Calendar

4-H News Notes

'"I :Spy in !tile Kitchen.~ SafCo/ Star Mill Pmt: iin R aeine. A
The
:giiiDCS . w~ recreation. Fllll' commUDity project of cleaning
'
project!; ~Will lbe -discussed at up ·&lt;the pat and [phntill8 lflowen; will he dooe.
die iDCn meetiJ18.
RJ~G~y
Ca~.
News
Meflum liamb£n, News
Projects for the fair, die new
Reporter
rules foc .animal projects, .and ~r
commnn'i!y project ideas discussed at the reoent IIJ!"t''i'V!
11te Clover
.of i1he SuMvocs 4-H (Jlub held
1be Kids &amp; K-'9s 4-H Club
at \the lh~ .of Kody, Thistcn,
The Glover Olub met .on
met
0D Mauih [1{1, 2008 at the
Conner and Baylee W-01fe. A,pril6 at Mikayh v~·s
bcm~e
of C arla Hqpwn with
borne with seventeen members !loose with five tmembel's and
an4 one :adrisor .ancmding.
oae advisor pcscul. 1lbe dub t1u:ce =beni JDJd Mwo adviThe [ 7 merrtbcn Jllld an advi- mme :and ;allltbe ,o1fu:ers were sors .attending. It w.a&amp;
sor present diBcussed •the mar- e1ectcd Fundrai!iC!'S, .oommuni- .anoounced fuat ~g Warden
ket lhog project as ill w.ay Of ily 'liei\Wce .and crlnr.atjana} pro- Tom ft'offitt would be .at the
11txt meeting and .a 11/Uit to .the
P"" wen: malilll'i!.
.
bc1ping
""""""'"
""ride
'"l1lc:re wen: no ~ vetctinmy clinic was planned.
on ilhcir ,pmjcru. Sum!I!I'JI'QIJ!P
and iimpmlant dates for 4U Mcwwts as .it was .an m:ganiu- There was also .a &lt;di8cussion on
lli0Dalmaefulg. .
the Relay for Life.
members w:as also discussed.
~fleece rdBg wys were ma~
A scavenger bunt was conA snewball fight and tibng
.
a
s
rteUeation. Oulla Htwton
ducted
lby
Mikayla
VanMatre.
in the woods was ,tJhe recreSai:.ab TWller Kxved
.and
R.efres1uncnts
were
served
by
ation. It w:as decided &lt;that .a
refoo!illunbiitfi.
1lhe flcece . dug
decision QD .a oommunity pre- Ann Ramey.
Miikay.!a VanMatre, New ,tays made ib,y mcmben; will T!e
ject ·would ibe made soon .and
don!tt'".d
Reponer
membersrup plqletWork wauld
Avstin Jlil1n; News ~r
be oompleted.
1be Olover Club IIDtt on
Tristen Wolfe, News Reponer
April 20. 2008 .at the OOme &lt;(llf
.Mikayla VanMatre w.itb five
member!; and .one advisor
The Busy Beaven; 4-H Club
The 4Fun 4-H Oub met .attemtitl£ llwe fund il"llisers met on April l3 at ltbe Zion
wen: planned. Dues of$[ per
recently at the home &lt;&gt;f Racbael 1iitCiiqg were set .and demoo- Oumih ofCbristwith l 4mCI1)bers .and two adviSOI'Ii Jescnt.
Churdh
·""'- datyb!lp
·
- l t ..._ w.ilh
...... ·sev.en
•
' meiDbcr&amp;
•.
gutjopt:,;:::rsand:a.......,,
Bl!IOb were passed •out, tag day
AUU UJlJ;:t; -411.:1n&amp;m5 ""''rwlfte'..
was
set for May 11.7, and Jb.ake
'
'
~
~~·-'"""
Oub 1_111DC aDif lim4
!Kdfie!Necoe~foorof ;We was
p.111!!1l!:d fiJI' July 5 at ·
were~~ ~ wa •;11m i:lli1ll)ja
club memWJilinart
.as
.a ifi:mdmi~~«.
~· Hetdi Willis :and BllKlC .. Ibm &lt;the !pii'CIIIliJDJdh&lt;Jwlto
Gtcg:Sif:wart tiC!Ved tefresbHawley serv~~~- · ·. . . . TI;, ~ .enjoyed aoments.
Tile next meeting will
At Jlllother moent meetlllg,
-.
llefremments ·were
be
en
May 18 at the Zion
~=.were~ Jllld pro- 'SCI'Wed by KYfie .and KaJCb
Church
of Ouist. Glovet'budi;
~s dumusscd. Kic:k:batl as King. 11he neu IIDCeting will ,be
enJoyed by the group, and 00 May 4.at 1:30. Members are are :to do :a~ .project.
Carolann 'Stewan; News
Sbanda and Brent Welch to b!Jiqgs SbJikes.
Reporter
served refreshments.
Mikayla VanMarr.e. News
'
Heidi Willis, News Reponer Reponer·

.

SUbmlftldJI!dD

Columbus airport eyes new
·tenninal amid industiy uncertainty

-

organizations

.d

.

•*• " .

.....

ItO._..

.cials will :then have to make a case for
tee increases lhat would help pay for
the new tennina1 and Ol!her preJeot5.
·
But industJy .experts don't see ;111
end to high fuel prices, and airlines an:
likely to resist any extra oosts.
In Indianapolis, where Roberts was
an aiJport lloard member before coming to Columbus, a new terminal is set
to open in October after 30 years of
planning.
"The air! ines fought it toolih and
nail. We ..finally bad to just pull the
trigger," said lobn Kish, executive
The Salem Center GeThe Wooley, Bu:lley'-s and
director of the llndianapolis airpm:t.
G .e tters . 4-H Club met on .More 4-H Olub mel on April
. "They seem to have come around."
fiedera1 and state money, bends :and March 2 9, at lihe home of 13, .at the Rod Beegle borne
Other financing tools would .also help Dawn Kopeck with i-6 mem- with 21 meniben; and tw.e.adv.ipay for planned expansion at Pon bers and two advisors attend- SOOi present. Quality Assnnmce
ing. Discussion was .about jobs .and w.ays to prepare- kids fur
· Oe~bu5.
Dirt is already being moved to redi- for tbe kids and teen's in the Skill-a-Thon were disaasscd.
Rhett Beegle ~ A'Ustin
•· teet 'ltbe liDiin road into the airport and dub, reports. and leaders. A
fO crew .:a IDCW jet taxiway. About $8 lesson was given .on safety. Rose gave •tepoL1S on!Hetmi'!B
millim iiniedt:ral money is flltldin,g the · During the lesson . members 'Safety Precauti005 .and the ·
tui.w.aJ ·~ Half the oost oi the had to pull paperclips out of a in'\portance of wearing ear
·
road~ . is being covered by the bag and say .o ne thing they :plugs.
..\my !Ritchie and Rod lkqle
Ohio Dqwtment of Transportatiou, .lrnew about safety.
Amber 'Davison gave a served refreshments. 1be next
withtbeodalnilf-about$20million
- ooming from the .airport authority.
report on her coaking .project ~ will be .e n May 4 at

COLUMBUS (AP) - Recent dccisions by three airlint;s to reduce fljgbts
through Port Columbus Intemational
Aiiport will lead to a drop in travelers
thi~ year and will push back the
planned opening of a new tennina1 until
at least 2018, an airport official said.
A record 7.7 million passengers
passedlllrough the airport in 2007.
But with the closun earlier this
. month uf Golumbus-based low-cost
can:i.er. Skybus Airlines, the decision
by JetBlue Airways to pull ont of lihe
anportinJanuary and Delta AirLines'
announcement in March of .additional
.deep cuts in its schedule, .airport officilils expect the number of pasSCJ18CA
to diup to about 7.2 million this year.
The drop will ·cause plans for the
opening of a new terminal, ·w,bidJ
.would replace the 1950s-era bnildin_g,
to be pushed back from 2015 to at
least 2018, Elaine Roberts, chief CIICCutive of the Columbus Regional
Airport Authority, ,teJd board meml• c~;
recently.
Port Columbus' five-year lease
agreemc;nt with ifs remaining aidines
expires at the end of 2009. Airpmtoffi~

Salem Center

Go-Getters

Public medings
·· · Monday, A.prill8
• "RACINE
- Regular
irieeting of Southern' Local
School Board, 8 p.m., high
school media room .
" POMEROY -Regular
ineeting of Meigs Cout'lty
Librlll)' Board, 3 p.m.,
Pomeroy Library.
POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission. 9
a.m., 117 Memorial Dr.
'' SYRACUSE
Conunittee ·meeting of the
Syracuse Village Pool, 7:30
p&gt;m. at village ball.
Thesday, 1\pril .Z!J
. SYRACUSE· - The final

Busy Beaten

4Fun4-BOW.

Wooley, Bully's
andMDR

Whiz Kid:r:

· The Whiz Kidl 4-H Club
met on 'March 30 at the home
,o f Pam Buckley · with ten
members and two advisors
attending. It was agTecd to be
.a team in th! Relay for Life.
Mandy Roush gave a safety
talk on wearing your seat belt.
!Johann Wolfe showed the club
his Venus ¥ly Trap plant and
told abOut it's care and what
he feeds it.
.
Refreshments w.erc served by
the Bucldey's. Members were
.reminded to •bring their dues to
the next meeting .
Andrea Bu.ckley,
News
Reponer

REACH 3 COUNTIES

Dear Allftie:

Bit1hdays

'
We4nesclay, Aplil JO
lETART, WVa. - John
E "Jack~ Ord, fonnerly of
Letart, W.Va. will observe
bis 89th birthday on April
30. A card 'Shower is
planned. His address is
Lakin Nursing Home @ I
Bateman Circle, Lakin,
W.Va., 25287.
lbursda~. May 1
RACINE
Eva
Teaford will observe her
80th birthday on May 1.
Cards may be sent to her
at P.O. Box 55., Racine,
Ohio 45771.

·Get your benefit
.verification letter online
.. a.. EuzAaEliH CRUMP

income letter in the maiL If
you need one sooner, you'll
want to call us at 1-800Sometimes, ·people need 772-1213 (TifY 1-800-325written verification &lt;Df their 0778) or visit your local
benefit status or income Social Security office.
.
Social
But for many people, simamount
from
Security. Perhaps you're ply' requesting the letter
ready to make a major pur- online and waiting for it to
chase and you're negotiat- arrive·in the mail is the most
ing a loan from a bank or convenient way to get the
financial institution. Or proof you need.
maybe you're applying for
.. state benefits or moving into
Question: What should I
a ·new apartment or home.
do if my Social Security
" ·. Whatever your reason: ..card is lost or stolen?
Answer: The best soloSocial Security makes it
easy for you to get the writ- tion to prevent tbat from
t;n verification you need happening is to keep your ·
and you can do ·it online at Social Security card in a
www.socialsecurity.gov. Just safe place. Never carry it
lOOk in the left column under with you unless you know it
"What you can do online" will be required, such as at a
and select the "Request a job interview. If you want to
Proof of Income letter" link. safeguard your Social
The "Proof of lnoome" let- Security. card and number,
ter is sometimes called a you can take these steps:
"'budget letter," a "benefits
• Visit the Federal Trade
letter" or a "proof of award Commission's
identity
lener." The letter can be used theft
page .
at
as proof of your income not www.ftc .gov/bcp/edu/micr
just for a loan, but lor any..&gt; osites/idtheft;
• Educate yourself about
third pany that requires
proof of your income.
identity theft;
.
; In addition to offering proof
• Monitor your credit
of your income: the lener is reports; and
also an official document th.at
• Read 1dentity Theft And
verifies. your Medicare and Your
Social
Security
health insurance coverage, Number at www.socialsecuretirement status, disability rity.gov/pubs/10064.html.
status and age.
f'vr more'information. visit
From the time that you our website at www.socialse. complete the online request, cu ril)~gov or call us toll-free
it will take about 10 days for' at 1-800-772·1213 (ITY Jjou to receive ther proof of 800-325-0778). ·
SociALSECUAITY'MANAGER.ATHENS

·Brewer celebrates birthday
-~-

Drug behavior affects everyone in family

public meeting on the
Syracuse •ODBG Di stress
Grant application, 7 p.m.,
;
Syracuse
Community
Center. Public urged to
Monday, A.pril28
·POMEROY - OH-Kan attend.
RUTLAND -Leading
Coin Club dinner, 6 p.m.,
.Creek
Conserv!lncy
followed
by meeting,
District, special board meetPo meroy Library.
.ing, personnel matters.

JC.tsandK-9s

Oub

--., · -

Monday, Apri128, zoo8

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Clubs and

Sunivors
4-BOub

.

PageA3

r

'

Kindergarten students at 'E a$ffim Elementacy (pictured) recently spent the
. month participating •in urth Day activities, linoluding raising mciney to plant a
pink dogwood tree outside their classrooms. The tree was purchased and planted by Hupp Landscaping •in Long Bottom by Josh Hupp (pictured) but students
also participated by placing handfuls of dirt around the baSe of the tree. Each
&amp;ll.ldent also received a special "Tree Adoption" certificate. Teachers Julie Spaun.
and Chris Wilson used :the Earth 'Day teaching un~ to help students realize the
impertanoe·of keeping the Ear:th clean, flealthy, safe and beautiful by doing "random acts of environinental kindness."

BYTHEBEND

!he Daily Sentinel

- -

J&gt;ciMEROv- - -J1lstlliiie
Brewer celebrated her sixtll
IJirthday April 19 with a
at r.;tcDonalds .' Cake
and ice cream were served
with happy meals and
games were played .
.. · Attending besides
Stephanie

r

recently
discovered that my husband
is addicted to paiiilcillers.
He buys them ill:TI~Y from
them
peop Ie (he c
"friends") on the street.
I have noticed a mar·ked
change in his +personality
since be's been. taking the
drugs . 1 know this is common in drug :abusers, but I
need to clarify whether his
behavior constitutes emotional abuse.
For example, we had a
disagreement about his 21year-old 'SOD who lives with
us and .also uses drugs .
When I suggested his sbn
pick up .a fter himself, my
husband became irate and
very threatening in his
demeanor. He said things
like, "You bener remember
who supports you" and "If
r m not good enough for
you, then leave."
I'm a bit afraid of him
now because I don 't ·know
when be will explode. Drug
rehab is out of the question
since be ·bas informed me
th.at I have the problem, not
him. I worry about him
being arrested pr the police
coming to the house and
sending .m y 16-year-old
daughter to foster care.
Since be absolutely refuse s
to get help and I absolutely

cannot live like this, would
Y,OU leave him if you were
me?- Not Sure
Dear
Not
Sure:
Normally, we would recommend counseling first, and it
would still be a good idea to
see someone, but you have a
16-ye.ar-old daughter who is
surely affected by the
behavior of her stepfather
and stepbrother, and her
welfare must come before
anything else. Since you
believe your husband is
becoming erratic and threatening, it would be best to
contact
the
National
Domestic Violence Hotline
at 1-800-799-S.AfE (1-800799-7233) before taking the
next step. Also contact NarAnon (na.r-anon.org) .at 1800-477-'6291 or AI-Anon
(al-anon.alateen.org) at 1888-4-AL-ANON (1-888425-2666) for family affected by drug addicts. Your
entire family needs help.
Dear i\nnie: I wort as a
receptionist for my son and
daughter-in-law. Each of
their
ether
assistants
receives a $100 employee
birthday check. When my
birthday comes around,
however, I get nothing. My
son says they already get
me a gift since I ·am
"Mom" and cannot justify
giving me two. .
I believe the employee
check. is a separate thing.

Don 't get me wrong. My O\lr son is a completely d.ifson is a wonderful and gen- ferent person who is often
erous gift giver, but he also moody, compulsive and
has. family members who angry. The most heartdo tlie sanie for him and his breaking pan is that he is
wife. I am in no way treat- aware of the change and
ed better than other . wants so badly to have his
eQlployees · because I am "old self' back but knows
related. I am hurt over this. he cannot·. Nothing is the
Am l being selfish? same for any of us and
there is ~o end.
.
F..mp1oyee Mom ·
Dear Mom: If the pracThe family of a person
tice can afford to give you who suffers a brain injury
the same bonus check as sometimes grieves . just as
everyone else, you should much as if their loved one
receive &lt;&gt;ne. Whatever per-· has died. They rieed to be
sonal birthday gift your son . allowed to do so. gets you is separate . Healtbniken Mom
Although Y0\1 might keep in
Dear Mom: Our hearts
mind th.at if be begins giv- are breaking for you and
ing you a check. at work., your son. If you haven't yet
your birthday gift may be contacted the 'Brain Injury
substantially less generous. A'ssociation of America
That, however, would be (biausa.org), please do so.
'his choice.
Their support could be very
Dear Annie: Thre,e years helpful. The number is !ago, my son was in an auto 800-444-6443.
. Annie's Mailbox is writ~
accident that ·nearly killed
him. He survived, but suf- ten by Kathy MiicheU 'a nd
fered severe facial trauma Marcy Sugar, longtillu ediand sustained a traumatic tors of the Ann Lmulers
brain injury. Because he column. Please e•lllllil your
· was not. expected to live or lpli!Stions to anniesmailrecover to the degree that be box@comcast.net, or ·Write
has, my husband and I have to: Annie's Mailbox, P.·O.
beard over and over how Box . 118190, Chicago, IL
lucky we are th.at he is alive 60611, To find ollt more
and bow grateful we should about Annie's Mailbox,
be to have our son.
and read features by other
Although we do thank Creators Syndicate wrilers
God he is still with us, we and cartoonists, visit the
do not feel "lucky." As a Creators Syndicate Web
result of the brain injury, page at www.creators.com.

AU-star cheerleaders C41Pture national title
. GALLIPOLIS
Cheerleaders m Chris
Smith's
Xtreme
'C heemastics All-Stars program do more than win
national
cheerleading
championships they
also learn valuable skills
that translate into what
they are doing now as well
as later on in college and
life goals.
·
If you would, picture a
small group of cheerleaders,
numbering · I 0, most of
which had never done
cheerleading
like this
before, meaning they were
performing not only tumbling and dance routines,
but a! su stunts, some of
which were quite difficult at
their level. They did all of
this and more in two min.utes and 30 seconds.
They .started at Level 3
and eventual!" moved to
Level 4 (there ·"are six levels
in all-star · cheerleading),
practicing every Saturday
and Sunday, working very
· hard for three or four hours
each day. Yes, they ended
up very· tired. bruised and
battered, but as a team they
pushed on.
. Sumin~ in September
2007, Smith, with the help

Subm-photo

Chris Smith's Xtreme Cheemastics All-Stars won a national championship at the Elite
Cheer Dance 'Nationals in March.

of Michelle Green, was able only first pl,ace, but a
. to take the girls through national championship at
many competitions and Elite Cheer and Dance
finally, at the last competi- National Championships in
tion of the season in March 2008.
The evolution of Xtreme
Columbus at the c~~~~~
Cbeemastics and its all-star
center, these·
~
program is · a Cinderella
believe they

storv to ~ sur~t Smith
and-his staff will co tinue.to
try their . hardest
giving
the best instruction possible
to the All-Stars, as well as
anyone else who des.ires to
be the best cheerleader she
can Be.

parry

~

!!D!i Jasiah,
grandmother.· Diana Brewer, Zoie and

Gallipolis Daily ·
Point
Register or
Daily Sentine~And It Will Ru For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

~··"' ~oint flrasant

April Davis, Bradley and
lae Kimes, Kim and Justin
Brewer, Jennifer Jala, Bryan
·!llld B.J. Young, Chaddi~
and Shannan Brewer, Lon,
Jasmine Brewer
~hucky, Hannah, Emily and
·Charlie
ltebecca Young , Amanda, grandparents,
knna and Ryan Dill, . Brewer, Sr.,. Lady and
Natalie, Kaci, and Alex and Ronald Davts, Ronnea,
Oavid Woolard.
Danny, Sierra and Kayla
·:Sending gifts were her Hudson, and Paige Gillian.

J

.and The Daily Sentinel
have lau.oched a new page every
Friday called "Faith and Family".
H you have a testimonial story,
life-changing event ~bout' yourself
Of even a poem that you would
like to share please email to:

.

..

Local Weather
'

'

'lt.Mipolis lail~ lrlbunt

Joint Jltuantltgilttr

740-446-2342

..

.

•• -· &lt;&lt;&gt;- _ _ _

. ...

~...

•

'

..

-

.. . . . .

304-()75-1333
www.mydailyregU.mm

•

•

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

•

*.~ · 4··~ · "'-·

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

.

. .. . _ .

Wednesday night.•• Partl y
cloudy. Highs. in the mid
60s. Lows in the mid 40s.
Thuniday aad Thursday
nigbt...Partly cloudy. Highs
in the mid 70s. U&gt;ws in the
mid 50s.
Friday...Partly sunny with
showers and thunderstorms
likely. Highs in the upper 70s.
Chance of rairi 60 peroent.
Friday pight. ••Cioudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstonns. Lows in
the lower 50s. Chance of
rain 50 percent.
Saturday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs
around 70. Chance of min
30 percent.

•-M o ad ay ... C I o u d y.
Showers lik.ely in the morning .. .Then a chance of
ihowers in the afternoon .
Highs in the mid 50s. West
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance
b( rain 70 percent.
f'.-Monday night... Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of showers. Cooler
w.ith lows in the upper 30s.
West winds 5 10 10 mph.
! Tuesday•••Partly
SUIJDY
with a 20 percent chance of
~wers. Highs in tbe lower
50s. West winds 5 to I 0 mph.
· Tuesday nigbt...Partl y
cloudy. Lows in the lower
30s. Northwest winds 5 to
10 mph.
Wednesday
and

- .....
.

~

..

..

.

. ....... .

•egtster

kkeUy@mydailytribune.com ·
nfields@ mydailyregistef.Conr
hoeftich@mydailysentinel.com
Limit your story to
500-750 words.
PI~ include a phone number

in your email.
. .........

�'

OPINION

Tbe Daily Sentinel
'

•

111 CoudSb-I!·~.OhiD

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mfdaltj 11 618l.ICDIR

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodl ic:h'
Publisher

Oharlene Haaftich
General Manager-News Editor

· Cmtgms sltall malu '"' law rapectiflg 4lt
atldllishfflmt of rdigiofl, Dr prohiJ,itiltg du
frre ocncise tlroeof; or 4bri4giflg tlu freehm
Dj Speech, "' of tJu press; or the right .Df du
~ rtaaaflly to assmtflle, arul to petition

du Govemfflmt for a redress of~riwart«S.

- J.he First Amerodment to the U.S. Constitution

T p DAY IN HIS T 0 R Y
Today is Monday, Apri128. the I i 9th day of 2008. There
are 247 days left in the year.
.
Today's Highligh~ in History: On Apri128, 1758, the~
president of the Uruted States, James Monroe, was born m
Westmoreland County, Va.
Qo this date: In 1788, Maryland became the seventh state,
to .ratify the U.S. Constitution.
·
In 1789, there was a mutiny on HMS Bounty as the crew
of the British ship set Capt. Willialn Bligh and I 8 sailors
·
adrift in a launch in the South Pacific.
i(n 1918, Gavrilo Princip, the assassin of Archduke Franz
Ferdinand of Austria and the archduke's wife, Sophie, died
in prison of ruberculosis.
·
In 1945, Italian dictator Benito Mussolini andjris mistress, Clara Petacci, were executed by Italian partisans as
they attempted to flee the country.
In 1958, the United States. conducted the first of 35
nuclear test explosions in the Pacific Proving Ground as
part of Operation Hardtack I.
1n 1967, heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali
refused to be inducted into the Arm~. the same day Gen.
William C. Westmoreland told Congress the U.S. "would
prevail in Vietnam."
In 1988, a flight attendant was killed and more than 60
persons injured when part of the roof of ari Aloha Airlines
Boeing .737 tore off during a flight from Hilo to Honolulu.
!In 1996, a man anned with a semiautomatic Fifle opened
fire on tourists on the Austtalian island of Tasmania,ldlling
35 people; he was captured by police lifter a 12-hour standoff at a guest cottage.
Ten years ago: Social Security's ttustees in their annual
report predicted three extra years of full pension benefits ior
retiring baby boomers before a potential cash sbortfall in
2032. The Senate opened a new round of hearings on alleged
abuse and mismanagement at the lntemalllevenue Service.
Five years ~o: Qn ·Saddam Hus!lein's 66111 •binbday, ilelo~~:u inside and o~ide Iraq agreed to hold a nationmeeting and fashion a temporary, post-SaMam government The Soyuz space capsule CIIII}'i!1g a U.S.4~ussian
space crew docked with the international ~pCC station.
· One y.ear ago: A suicide car bomber .slmc'k in Karbala,
~· Jtilling at least 63 people. · A suici&amp; attack on
Pakistan's Interior Minister. Aftab :Khan Sherpao,lcilled28
people; the official was slightly hurt. :Deirth .claimed
"Tonight Show" assistant conductor Tommy Newsom at
age 78 and character actor Dabbs Greer at 90.
Today's Birthdays: Author Harper Lee is 82. Actresssinger Ann-Margret is 67. Actress Marcia Strassman is 60.
Actor Pan! GuiHoyle ("CSf') is 59. "Tonight Show" host
Jay Leno is 58. Actress Mary McDonnell is 55. Rock. singermusician Kim Gordon (Sonic Youth) is 55. Rapper Too
Short is 42. Actress Bridget Moynahan is 37. Actor Cbris
Young is 37. Rapper Big Gipp is 35. Actor Jo~e Garcia is
35. Actress Penelope Cruz is 34. Actor Nate Richert is 30.
Actress Jessica Alba is 27. Actress Aleisha Allen is 17.
Thought for Todl!,y: "Without heroes; we are all plain
people and don't know how far· we can go."- Bernard
· ··
Mofamud, Amerii@!ID~tbor .(JQ}-4-l~(i), .,- · - -

· Re,ading U.S. Rep. Sue
Myrick's
"Wilke
Up
America" ageoda - a I 0point plan targeting potential jihadist infilttati.on into
Ibis country's military. security, educational .a nd financial institntions - triggers
mixed emotions.
First, relief. Finally, there
1s' an .e lected official who
understands ihe urgency of
these festering national
security threats. Vntually
every other elected U.'S .
official; up to and including
the president · (and presidential candidates) has
shockingly ignored these
same ·threats. ·Which leads
· to a flash of panic: How
could our leaders haYe
allowed so many years go
by without taking action?
Then comes, for me at
least, a sense ohesolve to
help Myrick. ·accomplish
her goals by trying to boost
a much-needed national
conversation about .the
Jihadist threat at home.
The North Carolina
Republican's plan warms up
.with two calls for investigations into those U.S . chaplains, in both the US military and the prison system,
who were approved by
Abdurahman Alamoudi, the
convicted terrorist and
Muslim Brotherhood (MB)
member now serving 23
years in prison.
(Normal person's reaction: What do you mean an
MB member later convicted of terrorism chose our
Muslim
military
and
prison chaplains? Tell me
more. Government reaction: Zzzzz.)
· •In the early 19?Qs, back

GTAHifR. .

TIE COl III!JS"DIS"..--u ·
~
.
""''-"

IIY RIICIEL IIEcK
,.. ousoNESS Wllll£11

good .taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Lettefs of CEOs ·n.ussed the mark.. 'n

p_ath of today's credit criSIS. That's why .we shoul~n't take too senously thelf
predictions that it is almost
over now.
Some of Wall Street's
biggest names have been
proc1ainting in recent week.s
that the worst of ·the financial market tUrmoil is likely
done'. JPMorgan Chase's
Jamie Dimon drinks it is
"maybe 75 peri:ent to SOpercent over," while OoldmaR
Sachs' Lloyd Blanl&lt;fein says
"we're closer to the end 1han
the beginning."
Those kind .o f COIIUIIc:nts
helped put .a positive spin
on what · otherwise would
have been a tough ea:niinBs
season for fmancial companies, which beve tallied
massive losses as mortgage
and other debt woes ·continued to weigh on their
businesses.
It's in the CEOs' best
interests to steer sentiment
hig~people foCI better
about tli stare of tbe llCOnOmy or
cial markets,
that will lead to more deals
or stock. trading and will
boost bank profits.
The data don't back. up
their happy views, however. We're still stuck in a

·

·The Daily Sentinel
(usps 21.H IIO)

Ohio VIII~Pubi~M!Ing
~

Pubiahed """'Y attemaon, 'Monday

Our main concenr in all stories is to through Friday, 111 Court Street,
be accura1e. K you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-clus
In alto!y, call lite .-room at (740) poaoage paid at Pomeroy.

•
OUr 111111n number Ia

(740) 1112-2151.

Me ·, ..,: The Associated Preas and
· lheOhio~-·
~- Send address correc·
lionl to The DAIIy .Sontinol, 111 COurt

Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 451119.

&amp;.lbecllptiOn
......
By.....,.ar
_
_

Newa .
._., Chartene Hoeflicll, Ext. 12
As;,,... Brian Reed, Ext. 14
II p llii, Batll Sergent, Ext. 13

·. Advertialng

a......

"10.27
"115.14
Dlolly
"110"
Ienior Clllan0... - " "
.,11.27
"103.111

an.,_.
an.,_.

Stt«A... lllliiV -

lhOlJd 1Wnl in ad*~»

No Sub·
0.1 11 tw.: Dave Hamo, Ext. 15 diNe! ID lhO
ocrlpllon ~ nWI ""'"- In . , _
Ottillltw.: Brerlda.Da'lia, Ext 16 Wllenlhomeconlef-ioiMIII(:loaJCino.: Judy c;tarl&lt;, Ext. 10

General Manager
Char1el1e Hoeflich. Ext . 12

.-Omydaityaerrtinel.com

'.

. · Christopher S. Higginbotham. 28, Racine, died Saturday,
;April 26, 2008.
. liuneral arrangements will be announced by Aodenion. .McDaniel Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
.

.. Antioch College in Ohio has
·final commencement ceremony

repatri-

trustees are vciy proud of
you."
About 200 students were
enrolled during the academic year.. Faculty and ' Students
found creative ways to finish the year, witih many
llriRI-year students cramming tiheir junior and
seniors together to graduate.
Shane Creepingbear, ·a
Japanese and media-ascommunicitliOn major, said
the year was one of the most
intense of his life.
sooner.
"I kind of envisioned it as
. . . A group of wealthy running down the hall and
alumni and former trustees out the door while the build~
- . ~rambled to raise money ing was bunJing," he said.
. to porchase the school, but He and 44 other graduates
. negotiations brok.e down still have
wodc 10 lin' when the group couldn't ish before fuHy meeting
come up with $12.2 mil- their degree· requirements.
' lion (0 take over operations Antioch awarded degrees
and k.eep the school run- tentatively to those stu·
dents, who can finish OO'{)ps
ning.
Some of the 101 gradu- and Stndy abroad through
, ates who gatitered in an the fall and still cam a 2008
, 'auditorium Saturday were · degree
from
Antioch
. still holding out hope that a College.
peal cou1d be reached.
The college, founded in
· . "I wish I had somethinr, 1852 and located about 15
to tell you, but I don't, ' miles east of Dayton, is the
-1&gt;aid
trustee
S.h aron flagship
for
Antioch
Merriman. "But we know University, which has other
many of you broke your campuses on the East and
necks to graduate and the West coasts.

... YELLOW
SPRINGS
( AP) Cash"strapped
, Antioch College had its last
, commencement ceremony
,saturday as officials moved
· ahead with plans to close
, the school ·Ibis summer for.
.
. atleast a year.
The school announced
. ]jist year that because of
. declining enrollment, heavy
. ,dglendence on tuition and a
.mta!J endowment the col. lege would close to reorga..nize and reopen in 2012 or

some

ON THE EIGHTH DAY, HE
SHolllP HAVE TAkEN IT BACK
FOR 5AFEKEEPIN6.

-·

Mtlll SUbec.t lpllon

IMide ..... County
13 Weel&lt;s
'32.26
26 Weel&lt;s
'64.20
52 Weel&lt;s
'127 .11
Outakle llllelp County
13 Weeks
'
'53.55
26 Weeks
'107.10
52 Weeks
'21421

painful housing downturn,
mortgage defaults con$ue

And in"&lt;. July Citigroup's
CEO Chuck . Prince said:

one in three of those CEOs
polled put the likelihood .of

VOill( :__· ~Bii~~~~a;~~.t!!~~t~a=~i,t.ejj:~W.1t~{~-:"Jt~~~~ili~-~~~;&lt;t

tJu:inks to organizations and individUGls will not be accept- forecasung the destrucuve

9112-2156. .

: , Kurtiss ~ ~raley, 40, Pomeroy, died Friday, April 25,
· 2008, at his res1dence.
.
.
· · Funeral arrangements will be announoed by Cremeens
. ; t:"mrcaJ Home, Gallipolis.
·

·

.

.

'

-

Beth Sergentlpholo

.

1lle Meigs County Chamber of Commerce along wittt Reed &amp; Baur Insurance Agency recently held an "after hours" event
at Reed &amp; Baur at 220 East Main Street lbe event leatured light refreshments and door prizes to showcase the agency
which olfers home, auto, fann and busiJ us iAsur:ance. P.iclurecl at 1he .after hours event (from left) are Teresa Spencer,
B~l QuiCkel, Michelle Donovan, Ed Zatta; Jessica Oilton, Lany Butctler, David Koenig. Reed &amp; Baur are open from 8:30
a.m. - 5 p.m., Monday-Friday, 8:30 a.m. -noon, SatUrdays. Phone 992-3600.

O'Bieness to host pink tea event May 3

The a fashion show of Talbots imaging at a cost of approx- or surgical planning.
.
.
Memorial apparel and door prizes. imately $500,000.
For · more information or
Hospital · Development Each guest attending the
Digital
mammography to purcha,se rickets, please
Couucil will host a PinkTea event will receive a free gift. increases the rate of early call the O 'Bleness commuevent Saturday, May 3, at the
'{ickets are available at detection of some cancers nity relations department at
University Mall to support its $20 each; two for $30; and a and enhances images to bet- (740) 592·9300 or visit
fundraisi!1g efforts for digital group of .e ight for $125. Ia' delect di&lt;case in dense Weatherby 's Gift Shop at
· I1Uil1IIDOgl'ily technology.
Proceeds wilfhelp purchase breast ·tissue. The recbnology 0 'Bleness. Tickets also can
Guests at the event will digital mamm«tgraphy tech- will allowO'Bieness to serve lie purchased at the Arhens
.
• enjoy tea, sweets and nology for the hospitaL The 30 eerceot
patients and County Convention and
light of the. Supreme Comt sna.cks. The PinkTea also technology wiD enhance easily send test results to spe- Visitors Bureau wcated at
decision, AEP said it will not will feature a silent auction, film technology for breast cialists for a second opinion 667 East State St., Athens.
consider locating a plant in - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ _ . : __ _ _ _ _ __
fromPageAl
Meigs County or anywhere
else in &lt;)hio unless it is per.a]]owing AFP to recover $24 mitted to recover oonstrucBY DAVID' KclEIIG
The CEOs of United and lion would have trumped would cut I , I 00 jobs.
million in epgineering and tion costs from customers.
AP BUSINESS WRITER
US
Airways are both vocal Dclta-Nrnhwest in size.
"We
are
somewhat
The
compromise
·
bill
design OOSlS ·for the plant.
proponents
of
airline
me;wg"Every
U.S.
carrier,
relieved,"
said
the
union
Recovering costs paid by util- passed still places rates
DAllAS - Cootinental crs. But US Airways laCks including Continental, is . spokesman. ·Mark Adams.
ity companies for new gener- . under the regulation of the
Airlines
Inc. said Simday it the strong · international under enormous pressure "We look around at the firstating facilities is addressed in Pl}CO, but does not neceswould
not
pursue aii;O!Dbina- routes that made Continental from record high fuel prices, quarter fmancials from the
SB 221, Governor Ted sarily guarantee cost recovlion
with
another
caniec right an ~lt'e partner.
a slowing U.S. economy and other legacy caniers. Do you
Strickland's energy bill. In ery for new generation.
A US'Airways spokesman a weak dollar," Kellner told really want to swim out to a
away, a surprising moVe after
weeks of growing ~- declined to comment.
employees. "In today's harsh drowning man and just get
"Today's seniors are lion that it woulcl jom with
Continental's board held a environment, we must con- pulled down with themr'
healthier, more active and United Airlines to (;reate the speciallneering 'Sunday and tioue to adjust our business
Kellner had long said
better educated than ever world's biggest airline:.
voted mwnimoosly to aban- model to ensure we success- Continental would prefer to
. from Page Al
Continental Chainrian· and don a~
fully navigate through these remain independent - if
before, and they expect and
want to remain active · past Chief Executive Lawrence
'Still,
Continental difficult times, so that in the the landscape of the airline
The emphasis of the traditional retirement age," Kellner said in a messag~ 10 appeared to leave the door futnre we can once again industry stayed the same.
But Kellner opened the
Seniors in Schools program said Barbara E. Riley, direc- employees that the Houston- open to an alliance with grow and prosper."
Continental expects to door to merger speculation
is on presenting Meigs tor of the Ohio Department based airline was better off · .another carrier. The airline
has
reportedly
discussed
spend
$1.2 billion more on this month by saying that the
alone
than
merging.
of
Aging.
"For
some
this
County history to third
"We
have
significant
cuisuch
an
an;mgement
with
fuel
this
year than it did in Delta deal had changed the
graders in schools of the means staying in the workanlf
finanAMR
Corp.,
the
parent
of
·
2007.
To
cope
with the added la.ndscape, and by exercising
The
program place, but for many others it tural, operational
county.
. exposes the students to · means volunteering their cial strengths compared to American Airlines, in which cost, the airline plans to take a right .to buy out
county government opera- time and talents to a worthy the rest of the industry, and the compatries would work some older, Jess-fuel·effi- Northwest's veto powernver
tion§ and includes vis1ts to cause. They support educa- we want to protect and together in many ways but cient planes out of service a .Continental merger non, eeonomie ili!velopment, ~nb.ang: !hog ~trengtht- not merge tllelroperatlons. over the nextl2 iiiDnth and although that move cost only
' coliithouse offi&amp;s.
Airlines have been- oonsid- to reduce its u.s. capacity by $100 once NorthweST agreed
. Nursing homes, librmes, health care and senior ser- which we believe would be
placed
at
risk
in
a
merger
ering
COIISOlidarion as a way 5 percent beginning' this falL to be purchased by Delta.
historical societies, hospitals vices in their communities."
to
cut
oosts and raise fares in'·
A
spokesman
for
Continental
and
its
with
another
carrier
in
Senior volunteers are the,
and hospice programs,
today's
environment,"
the
face
of
record
fuel
prices.
Continental's
union
pilots
regional
subsidiaries
operhealth agencies, pre-schools, "shining stars" of many
Delta Air Lines Inc. said pilots were pleased that ate about' 3. I00 dail y '
and community' organization communities and Ibis week Kellner told employees.
·
Alth?u_gh
tt
reported
an
announced
earliec Ibis month -the company won't pursue a flight s. Continental has
and
are other sites the Meigs County Council
$80
Dlllbon
los~
m
the~~
ithasagreedtQbuy·Northwest
merger.giventhew~kcon- . major hubs in Newark, N.J..
County senior on Aging salutes .those who
qua~Ur~ GG ntmental - li~~fup.i!lirstook:-~ dititu . of; ptheCV&lt;~!TL ... H\lUf!lOH~mi- Cl~vl!liuu.l. .· •
lllife'[Jj~ .and;t&lt;llent.
widely . viewed- 11!1 · the.~- -deal mar wOUld ~ the UAL; for exampte. Iosl ··ond-strongesl U.S. c_arner 10 world's largest carrier. A $537 millic,m in the first
GRA"'D
•
fmanc1al
terms, behind only Continental-United cOmbina- quarter and announced it
ongoing and he hasn't
~~ . se:;
·~
' • " ,, '"'" •C• .ont ,,. ' " '
• •'
·
formed a solid opinion Of Southwest Airlines Co. ,
the bill either way at this which has indicated it isn 'I rr~!!!!!i!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!i~~=·~
interested in a merger.
piJint.
Taking Applications
Continental's
decision
HB 103 sponsors are liststnnned United's parent, UAL
about the bill still in com- . ed as Louis W. Blessing (R- Corp., which had been in
mittee, a committee Stewart Cincinnati), Bob Gibbs (R- advanced
HUD SW.Idlzed
talks
with
does not sit on. Stewart said Lakeville), Tom Brinkman, Continental and expected to
Efflclency/1 Bedl oom
he understands testimony is Jr., (R-Cincinnati).
50yrS or qualifying dleablllty
complete a deal by early May.
'
But last week, UALreportLow Income Priority
ed a $537 million loss in the
740-992-7022
Townsend, who is from ftrst quarter - · its biggest
Marietta, said there were no loss since emerging from
Silverheels
initial blueprints for the pro- bankruptcy in 2006, and larg- •
THEYE!I Mli!ID'Th
A
Realty Company-E;:HO
•
an
even
ject,
which
made
it
~M&lt;Ji I~Mi ~~ FUJI FEST
tromPqeAl
than Wal.l Street expected. l!i&amp;~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiliiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~·~
better leamilljl experience. · .er
UAL's stock market value
Dyer explamed that when plunged 35 ~fit.
ffiXXJXJXXXXIXJXXIXXXJXUXXIXllXXXX~Y~XXXXJXXU.U.l..l..l.XXllllU.:.%.X:X.U.~
·.students have been able to
his
students
are
out
working
oomplete the .work under
Glenn Tilton, UAL's H
H
in their careers, there will chairman and CEO, signaled H
H
the bid price.
· 1be second-year students come times when they have late Sunday that he would
:wodcing on the project are to fiX a machine or build a
new piece of equipment
Tom Magoto, Cody· Faulk, very
quickly, and they will
"Consolipation is under- ~
~
,Matt
Townsend,
'Ory
have
no blueprints to work way - ensuring you have ~
Harrison, Darrell Holland,
T
0
Reporl
Child
&amp;
Neglect
•
•
~
.,,/\_
?L.co
~
Mark Bass, Jessica Brown from. He trains his students the ri~ht partner is every- ~
to be able to handle differ.and Ryan Miller. .
.
thing,' Tilton said in a state/-7"1\TCf/2-.JUJO
~aH
/-800-Cf/2-2608
'1t's been amazmg expen- ent situations at work, and- )lnent. "We will pursue all
~
'&gt;&lt;'ence," said M~. who is said this project was a good options to ensure a strong,
learning
tool
for
them.
sustainable
future
for
our
from Bellefontatne. The stu''They're learning to airline and will not shy away ~
. Child
Hotline
~
4ents have learned a great
think,
that
's
the
maio
,deai through being able · to
from the tough choices nee- t= '
DDIY\rls rvr;~'
o,_,1·,. ~""""".c.
t . · """
essary to create value for our ~
I • v&lt;f"""
II.A ~ ,.,. IVf '1' • .........,
'f
woct on the job site building thing," Dyer said.
For more information on shareholders and benefit our
Hotline Opefl24 Hrs. A Day
M
machine that will be used
the
project
the
Rio
Grande
employees and customers." .
rv..,
~y the company. he _said .
7 '-""'1'S
Ray Neidl , an analyst ~
H
, Harrison, who IS from students have been working
on
for
Appalachian
Timber.
·w1th Calyon Secunt1es. satd ~ ,
H
Gallipolis, added that the
or
for
more
infonnation
on
Continental's
exit
leaves
US
H
For
~~~Cn
lnfor11111tton
~1174o-992-2117
Ext.
116
~
students learned a lot by
the
rrliUIUfacturing
technolAirways
Group
Inc.
as
a
~
·us
Race
Slreet,
P.O.,Box
191
•
Middleport,
Ohio
45760
~
working on this project, as
ogy
program,
call
Dyer
at
potential
merger
partner
for
~
Www.rnetgadjfa.net
.
Houra:
M-T-W~.
~:30,
Thurs.
8-5:30,
Sat
&amp;
Sun.
Closed
~
· opposed ·to working just on
(800) 282-7201.
United. .
ttunnrmxxxx::xnmnnmxnmxrmnniiUin:In:n.nn::::xxxx~
projects in the classroom .
.
.
AlliENS

0' Bleness

.

more

AEP

-L4LL BUSINESS: Banks'-credit crisis over? Not so fast
1

.

the s!lldent visa program

that is supposed to bring
21,000 Saudi students to
this country, Myrick would
attach the condition that the
Saudis rewrite their textbooks to omit incitement
against
non- Muslims;
.W!st
regarding religious visas
for imams, she would
require of Islamic countries
Ieciprocal visa arrangewhen be was something of a
ments for non-Muslim clerWashington power broker,
gy; and regarding U.S.
Alamoudi ·helped set up the
training of Saudi security
Pentagon's Muslim cliapforces,
she would insist that
·
lain corps in conJunction
the
Saudis
prosecute
with .t he Institute of Islamic
known
AI
Qaeda
financiers
and Arabic Sciences in introduce a bill to make
and
stop
releasing
America, a Saudi-funded preaching, publishing, dis0....,.,.tinn that s.pecializes in tributing or. financing calls ated Guantanamo Bay ter.-·-for the death of Americans rorists in exchange for their
what you might call or American troOps an act of pledges not to attack. ...
Jihadism 10 I. (Way to be sedition or solicitation of Saudi Arabia. She will also
awak.e, Pentagon.)
treason. She also wants to be introducing a bill til
Alamoodi went to prison ask the GAO to assess total block the sale of state-Qfback in 2004, but no one
since, in the military or the sovereign wealth fund the-art offensive munitions
prisons, seems to have taken investment in the United to Saudi Arabia, especially
Direct
Attack.
a second look. at what his States. Such massive funds, Joint
prodigies might be preach- owned and controlled by Munitions or IDAMs.
Ambitious? You bet.
mg (terrorism? treason? governments, first came to
Myrick
deserves an "A" for
whatever?). Myrick: plans to many Americans' attention .
with the recent pure~ by effort for filling the l.eadeTcheck: into it herself.
Next, she plans to ask the the United Arab Emirates of ship vacuum left . ' by
Government Acco~ting . a large stake in Citigroup; in Republicans and Democrats
Office (GAO) to examine recent years, however, there alike regarding these and
the process by which the has been a spike in such for- other home-front threats.
FBI
.a nd
Defense eign government invest- Whether she can accomDepartment select Arabic me_nt i? the .United StaU:s. plish her goals, she will cer.e ducate
translators. Of · particular • !Ills raises co~cerns (that IS, tainl y · help
concern to .Myrick - but 1t should rat~ concerns) Americans on · gravely
not, incredibly, to the FBI• or about the polincal goals of important issues most of our
the Defense Department - .. such funds - for example, politicians are too ..timid to
is these two agencies' mind- the spread of Islanuc law talk about.
(Diana West is a columnist
boggling practi.ce of adver- through "Sharia-compliant
rising for recruits in , what banking_."
Thankfully, for The Washington Tune's.
s~ js the author of "The
can only be described as Mynck ts_concerned.
pro-terrorism publications.
The last few points on the Death of 1he Grown-up:
(Normal person's reac- Myrick agenda focus on the Hbw Americas Arrested
tion: What do you mean appalling lack of reciproci- development Is Bringing
the government is trolling ty and common sense in Down Western Civilization:"
pro-terrorism sites . for· our nation's dealings with She can be contacted via
Arabic
translators? Saudi Arabia. Regarding diana west@ verizon.net.)

....

Reed ·&amp; Baur 'after hours' held·

·Volunteers

t,!!!/~:nerr~n:st:~l f:~!tu~~d~e't.:J:s;::J:;~ ~NEW

Co: ;ecllun Policr

Deaths

.'

. Letterf to rhe editor are welcome. They 3 hould be less
than 300 word.~. All/etters are subject to editing, must be

Reader Services

Govemment •reaction: Did
someone say something?)
Next on the congresswoman's to-do list ·is a call
for an Internal Revenue
Service investigation into
the nonprofit status of the
Hamas-link.ed Council on
American·lslamic Relations
(CAIR). Such stalus restricts
"lobbying on behalf of a foreign government," but, as
Myrick notes, plenty of foreign funds have found their
f"AJR' 00ff,
way into .._
s
ers to
beg the question.
Another Myrick plan is to

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

-.niydailysentinel.com

Continental Airlines tells employees it won't seek merger

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

edfor publication.

Monday, April28, 2008

Monday, April 28, zoOS

Myrick aces, D. C. flunks Jihadism 101 '

The Daily Sentinel

''

PageA4

consumers.
·Credit-risk womes, which
have ravaged financial mark.ets since last summer,
haven't diminished either.
1be gap between the interest
rate on the three-month
Tm!Sury bills and the threemonth London Interbank
Offered Rate - referred to
as the closely watc!led
"TED" spread - has been
.:widening, .ind.iC!Itin$ · that
lenders are.avo~~g n!ill:.
Thcaedi.t cns1S has led to
~ than '$200· billion in
wnte-doWJ?-S ~en by banks
and financial fiims over the
last year ·- far more •than
anyone.~ expected, given
the oplllll1sm of those companics' CEOs last summer.
As th~ housing market
contracuon
accelerated
and s_ubpnme borrowers
were mcreasmgly defaultiDg on their home loans in
the first part of 2007, those
exccuti·ves were telling us
not to worry.
Last June, B_ear Steams
CFO Sam Moh~aro talk.ed
about _how the high level of
subprune
mortgage
~efaults hadn't "spilled"
mto other ':lfCBS of the mark.et. M,errill L¥nch CEO
S~ 0 ~~ smd ~ subpnmc · cns1s was reasonably well contamed."

will be complicated. But as
long as the music is playing
you've got to get up and
dance. We're still dancing."
All those executives are
no~ out of work and all
therr banks are now ·wallflowers. ·
By August, risk aversion
spread through the marketplace, and has since paralyzed credit markets and
~aused a tightening of lendmg stan~s for consumers
and busmesses.
That's. why we .might
want to listen cautiously lri
what the bank CEOs are
saying .now. Richard Fuld,
CEO of Lehman Brothers,
commented at the coinpany's annual meeting that
the worst is "behind us."
Morgan Sta~ey CEO John
Mack told mvestors that
the collapse of the subpril):le market in the U.S.
has reached its eighth
innin~ or maybe the "top of
the n~th."
.
We1ghing against that are
findings of a new CEO survey . from the F1.nanc1al
Serv1ces Forum, wh1ch represents 20 of the largest
U.S. fmancial companies.
The s_urvey sho~ed that
e~ecuuves by a wtde margm ~lieved that the current
credu turmoil has far to go;

....
'

members is current Merrill
Lynch CEO John Thain
who reported on Thursday
that the investment bank
had a $2 14 billion frrstquarter l~ss and writedowns of $6.5 billion on its
debt including mortgagJ:- ·
related secun
. 'ties and lceveraged loans:
·
'
"I hope those who say we
are at the end are correct. 1
am somewhat more skepti. c~l." Thain told. the .
Fmancial Times after the
earnfugs w~re released.
· Last summer, Bank of
America's Ken Lewis
seemed confident that the
end was nearing. for the
housing slump. On Monday
the Charlotte, N.C .-based
bank said its profits tumblejJ
77 percent in the frrst quarter due to trading losses and
a $3.3 billion increase in
reserves for problem loans.
"I think frrst it would be
too early to strike liP the
band and sing happy days
are here again," Lewis said
Monday on a conference
cal~ with analysts during
whtch he said the situation
in the capital markets was
particularly tough in March.
Forget about ninth, or even
eighth inning. Maybe we
haven't even gotten to the
seventh innin~stretch yet.

.

..

HB103
rromr.At

TheMaptes

Device

~r t~~:en:~~~~u~~tn

aDIPAiftlll'r OF- UD FAMILY SEIIICD E

E

CIILDID SEIIICD DmSIOI

.

E

Abuse

H'

AI''

a

a

Abuse

8

AWeeJc

,

•

'

'

·-

J

�'

OPINION

Tbe Daily Sentinel
'

•

111 CoudSb-I!·~.OhiD

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mfdaltj 11 618l.ICDIR

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodl ic:h'
Publisher

Oharlene Haaftich
General Manager-News Editor

· Cmtgms sltall malu '"' law rapectiflg 4lt
atldllishfflmt of rdigiofl, Dr prohiJ,itiltg du
frre ocncise tlroeof; or 4bri4giflg tlu freehm
Dj Speech, "' of tJu press; or the right .Df du
~ rtaaaflly to assmtflle, arul to petition

du Govemfflmt for a redress of~riwart«S.

- J.he First Amerodment to the U.S. Constitution

T p DAY IN HIS T 0 R Y
Today is Monday, Apri128. the I i 9th day of 2008. There
are 247 days left in the year.
.
Today's Highligh~ in History: On Apri128, 1758, the~
president of the Uruted States, James Monroe, was born m
Westmoreland County, Va.
Qo this date: In 1788, Maryland became the seventh state,
to .ratify the U.S. Constitution.
·
In 1789, there was a mutiny on HMS Bounty as the crew
of the British ship set Capt. Willialn Bligh and I 8 sailors
·
adrift in a launch in the South Pacific.
i(n 1918, Gavrilo Princip, the assassin of Archduke Franz
Ferdinand of Austria and the archduke's wife, Sophie, died
in prison of ruberculosis.
·
In 1945, Italian dictator Benito Mussolini andjris mistress, Clara Petacci, were executed by Italian partisans as
they attempted to flee the country.
In 1958, the United States. conducted the first of 35
nuclear test explosions in the Pacific Proving Ground as
part of Operation Hardtack I.
1n 1967, heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali
refused to be inducted into the Arm~. the same day Gen.
William C. Westmoreland told Congress the U.S. "would
prevail in Vietnam."
In 1988, a flight attendant was killed and more than 60
persons injured when part of the roof of ari Aloha Airlines
Boeing .737 tore off during a flight from Hilo to Honolulu.
!In 1996, a man anned with a semiautomatic Fifle opened
fire on tourists on the Austtalian island of Tasmania,ldlling
35 people; he was captured by police lifter a 12-hour standoff at a guest cottage.
Ten years ago: Social Security's ttustees in their annual
report predicted three extra years of full pension benefits ior
retiring baby boomers before a potential cash sbortfall in
2032. The Senate opened a new round of hearings on alleged
abuse and mismanagement at the lntemalllevenue Service.
Five years ~o: Qn ·Saddam Hus!lein's 66111 •binbday, ilelo~~:u inside and o~ide Iraq agreed to hold a nationmeeting and fashion a temporary, post-SaMam government The Soyuz space capsule CIIII}'i!1g a U.S.4~ussian
space crew docked with the international ~pCC station.
· One y.ear ago: A suicide car bomber .slmc'k in Karbala,
~· Jtilling at least 63 people. · A suici&amp; attack on
Pakistan's Interior Minister. Aftab :Khan Sherpao,lcilled28
people; the official was slightly hurt. :Deirth .claimed
"Tonight Show" assistant conductor Tommy Newsom at
age 78 and character actor Dabbs Greer at 90.
Today's Birthdays: Author Harper Lee is 82. Actresssinger Ann-Margret is 67. Actress Marcia Strassman is 60.
Actor Pan! GuiHoyle ("CSf') is 59. "Tonight Show" host
Jay Leno is 58. Actress Mary McDonnell is 55. Rock. singermusician Kim Gordon (Sonic Youth) is 55. Rapper Too
Short is 42. Actress Bridget Moynahan is 37. Actor Cbris
Young is 37. Rapper Big Gipp is 35. Actor Jo~e Garcia is
35. Actress Penelope Cruz is 34. Actor Nate Richert is 30.
Actress Jessica Alba is 27. Actress Aleisha Allen is 17.
Thought for Todl!,y: "Without heroes; we are all plain
people and don't know how far· we can go."- Bernard
· ··
Mofamud, Amerii@!ID~tbor .(JQ}-4-l~(i), .,- · - -

· Re,ading U.S. Rep. Sue
Myrick's
"Wilke
Up
America" ageoda - a I 0point plan targeting potential jihadist infilttati.on into
Ibis country's military. security, educational .a nd financial institntions - triggers
mixed emotions.
First, relief. Finally, there
1s' an .e lected official who
understands ihe urgency of
these festering national
security threats. Vntually
every other elected U.'S .
official; up to and including
the president · (and presidential candidates) has
shockingly ignored these
same ·threats. ·Which leads
· to a flash of panic: How
could our leaders haYe
allowed so many years go
by without taking action?
Then comes, for me at
least, a sense ohesolve to
help Myrick. ·accomplish
her goals by trying to boost
a much-needed national
conversation about .the
Jihadist threat at home.
The North Carolina
Republican's plan warms up
.with two calls for investigations into those U.S . chaplains, in both the US military and the prison system,
who were approved by
Abdurahman Alamoudi, the
convicted terrorist and
Muslim Brotherhood (MB)
member now serving 23
years in prison.
(Normal person's reaction: What do you mean an
MB member later convicted of terrorism chose our
Muslim
military
and
prison chaplains? Tell me
more. Government reaction: Zzzzz.)
· •In the early 19?Qs, back

GTAHifR. .

TIE COl III!JS"DIS"..--u ·
~
.
""''-"

IIY RIICIEL IIEcK
,.. ousoNESS Wllll£11

good .taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Lettefs of CEOs ·n.ussed the mark.. 'n

p_ath of today's credit criSIS. That's why .we shoul~n't take too senously thelf
predictions that it is almost
over now.
Some of Wall Street's
biggest names have been
proc1ainting in recent week.s
that the worst of ·the financial market tUrmoil is likely
done'. JPMorgan Chase's
Jamie Dimon drinks it is
"maybe 75 peri:ent to SOpercent over," while OoldmaR
Sachs' Lloyd Blanl&lt;fein says
"we're closer to the end 1han
the beginning."
Those kind .o f COIIUIIc:nts
helped put .a positive spin
on what · otherwise would
have been a tough ea:niinBs
season for fmancial companies, which beve tallied
massive losses as mortgage
and other debt woes ·continued to weigh on their
businesses.
It's in the CEOs' best
interests to steer sentiment
hig~people foCI better
about tli stare of tbe llCOnOmy or
cial markets,
that will lead to more deals
or stock. trading and will
boost bank profits.
The data don't back. up
their happy views, however. We're still stuck in a

·

·The Daily Sentinel
(usps 21.H IIO)

Ohio VIII~Pubi~M!Ing
~

Pubiahed """'Y attemaon, 'Monday

Our main concenr in all stories is to through Friday, 111 Court Street,
be accura1e. K you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-clus
In alto!y, call lite .-room at (740) poaoage paid at Pomeroy.

•
OUr 111111n number Ia

(740) 1112-2151.

Me ·, ..,: The Associated Preas and
· lheOhio~-·
~- Send address correc·
lionl to The DAIIy .Sontinol, 111 COurt

Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 451119.

&amp;.lbecllptiOn
......
By.....,.ar
_
_

Newa .
._., Chartene Hoeflicll, Ext. 12
As;,,... Brian Reed, Ext. 14
II p llii, Batll Sergent, Ext. 13

·. Advertialng

a......

"10.27
"115.14
Dlolly
"110"
Ienior Clllan0... - " "
.,11.27
"103.111

an.,_.
an.,_.

Stt«A... lllliiV -

lhOlJd 1Wnl in ad*~»

No Sub·
0.1 11 tw.: Dave Hamo, Ext. 15 diNe! ID lhO
ocrlpllon ~ nWI ""'"- In . , _
Ottillltw.: Brerlda.Da'lia, Ext 16 Wllenlhomeconlef-ioiMIII(:loaJCino.: Judy c;tarl&lt;, Ext. 10

General Manager
Char1el1e Hoeflich. Ext . 12

.-Omydaityaerrtinel.com

'.

. · Christopher S. Higginbotham. 28, Racine, died Saturday,
;April 26, 2008.
. liuneral arrangements will be announced by Aodenion. .McDaniel Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
.

.. Antioch College in Ohio has
·final commencement ceremony

repatri-

trustees are vciy proud of
you."
About 200 students were
enrolled during the academic year.. Faculty and ' Students
found creative ways to finish the year, witih many
llriRI-year students cramming tiheir junior and
seniors together to graduate.
Shane Creepingbear, ·a
Japanese and media-ascommunicitliOn major, said
the year was one of the most
intense of his life.
sooner.
"I kind of envisioned it as
. . . A group of wealthy running down the hall and
alumni and former trustees out the door while the build~
- . ~rambled to raise money ing was bunJing," he said.
. to porchase the school, but He and 44 other graduates
. negotiations brok.e down still have
wodc 10 lin' when the group couldn't ish before fuHy meeting
come up with $12.2 mil- their degree· requirements.
' lion (0 take over operations Antioch awarded degrees
and k.eep the school run- tentatively to those stu·
dents, who can finish OO'{)ps
ning.
Some of the 101 gradu- and Stndy abroad through
, ates who gatitered in an the fall and still cam a 2008
, 'auditorium Saturday were · degree
from
Antioch
. still holding out hope that a College.
peal cou1d be reached.
The college, founded in
· . "I wish I had somethinr, 1852 and located about 15
to tell you, but I don't, ' miles east of Dayton, is the
-1&gt;aid
trustee
S.h aron flagship
for
Antioch
Merriman. "But we know University, which has other
many of you broke your campuses on the East and
necks to graduate and the West coasts.

... YELLOW
SPRINGS
( AP) Cash"strapped
, Antioch College had its last
, commencement ceremony
,saturday as officials moved
· ahead with plans to close
, the school ·Ibis summer for.
.
. atleast a year.
The school announced
. ]jist year that because of
. declining enrollment, heavy
. ,dglendence on tuition and a
.mta!J endowment the col. lege would close to reorga..nize and reopen in 2012 or

some

ON THE EIGHTH DAY, HE
SHolllP HAVE TAkEN IT BACK
FOR 5AFEKEEPIN6.

-·

Mtlll SUbec.t lpllon

IMide ..... County
13 Weel&lt;s
'32.26
26 Weel&lt;s
'64.20
52 Weel&lt;s
'127 .11
Outakle llllelp County
13 Weeks
'
'53.55
26 Weeks
'107.10
52 Weeks
'21421

painful housing downturn,
mortgage defaults con$ue

And in"&lt;. July Citigroup's
CEO Chuck . Prince said:

one in three of those CEOs
polled put the likelihood .of

VOill( :__· ~Bii~~~~a;~~.t!!~~t~a=~i,t.ejj:~W.1t~{~-:"Jt~~~~ili~-~~~;&lt;t

tJu:inks to organizations and individUGls will not be accept- forecasung the destrucuve

9112-2156. .

: , Kurtiss ~ ~raley, 40, Pomeroy, died Friday, April 25,
· 2008, at his res1dence.
.
.
· · Funeral arrangements will be announoed by Cremeens
. ; t:"mrcaJ Home, Gallipolis.
·

·

.

.

'

-

Beth Sergentlpholo

.

1lle Meigs County Chamber of Commerce along wittt Reed &amp; Baur Insurance Agency recently held an "after hours" event
at Reed &amp; Baur at 220 East Main Street lbe event leatured light refreshments and door prizes to showcase the agency
which olfers home, auto, fann and busiJ us iAsur:ance. P.iclurecl at 1he .after hours event (from left) are Teresa Spencer,
B~l QuiCkel, Michelle Donovan, Ed Zatta; Jessica Oilton, Lany Butctler, David Koenig. Reed &amp; Baur are open from 8:30
a.m. - 5 p.m., Monday-Friday, 8:30 a.m. -noon, SatUrdays. Phone 992-3600.

O'Bieness to host pink tea event May 3

The a fashion show of Talbots imaging at a cost of approx- or surgical planning.
.
.
Memorial apparel and door prizes. imately $500,000.
For · more information or
Hospital · Development Each guest attending the
Digital
mammography to purcha,se rickets, please
Couucil will host a PinkTea event will receive a free gift. increases the rate of early call the O 'Bleness commuevent Saturday, May 3, at the
'{ickets are available at detection of some cancers nity relations department at
University Mall to support its $20 each; two for $30; and a and enhances images to bet- (740) 592·9300 or visit
fundraisi!1g efforts for digital group of .e ight for $125. Ia' delect di&lt;case in dense Weatherby 's Gift Shop at
· I1Uil1IIDOgl'ily technology.
Proceeds wilfhelp purchase breast ·tissue. The recbnology 0 'Bleness. Tickets also can
Guests at the event will digital mamm«tgraphy tech- will allowO'Bieness to serve lie purchased at the Arhens
.
• enjoy tea, sweets and nology for the hospitaL The 30 eerceot
patients and County Convention and
light of the. Supreme Comt sna.cks. The PinkTea also technology wiD enhance easily send test results to spe- Visitors Bureau wcated at
decision, AEP said it will not will feature a silent auction, film technology for breast cialists for a second opinion 667 East State St., Athens.
consider locating a plant in - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ _ . : __ _ _ _ _ __
fromPageAl
Meigs County or anywhere
else in &lt;)hio unless it is per.a]]owing AFP to recover $24 mitted to recover oonstrucBY DAVID' KclEIIG
The CEOs of United and lion would have trumped would cut I , I 00 jobs.
million in epgineering and tion costs from customers.
AP BUSINESS WRITER
US
Airways are both vocal Dclta-Nrnhwest in size.
"We
are
somewhat
The
compromise
·
bill
design OOSlS ·for the plant.
proponents
of
airline
me;wg"Every
U.S.
carrier,
relieved,"
said
the
union
Recovering costs paid by util- passed still places rates
DAllAS - Cootinental crs. But US Airways laCks including Continental, is . spokesman. ·Mark Adams.
ity companies for new gener- . under the regulation of the
Airlines
Inc. said Simday it the strong · international under enormous pressure "We look around at the firstating facilities is addressed in Pl}CO, but does not neceswould
not
pursue aii;O!Dbina- routes that made Continental from record high fuel prices, quarter fmancials from the
SB 221, Governor Ted sarily guarantee cost recovlion
with
another
caniec right an ~lt'e partner.
a slowing U.S. economy and other legacy caniers. Do you
Strickland's energy bill. In ery for new generation.
A US'Airways spokesman a weak dollar," Kellner told really want to swim out to a
away, a surprising moVe after
weeks of growing ~- declined to comment.
employees. "In today's harsh drowning man and just get
"Today's seniors are lion that it woulcl jom with
Continental's board held a environment, we must con- pulled down with themr'
healthier, more active and United Airlines to (;reate the speciallneering 'Sunday and tioue to adjust our business
Kellner had long said
better educated than ever world's biggest airline:.
voted mwnimoosly to aban- model to ensure we success- Continental would prefer to
. from Page Al
Continental Chainrian· and don a~
fully navigate through these remain independent - if
before, and they expect and
want to remain active · past Chief Executive Lawrence
'Still,
Continental difficult times, so that in the the landscape of the airline
The emphasis of the traditional retirement age," Kellner said in a messag~ 10 appeared to leave the door futnre we can once again industry stayed the same.
But Kellner opened the
Seniors in Schools program said Barbara E. Riley, direc- employees that the Houston- open to an alliance with grow and prosper."
Continental expects to door to merger speculation
is on presenting Meigs tor of the Ohio Department based airline was better off · .another carrier. The airline
has
reportedly
discussed
spend
$1.2 billion more on this month by saying that the
alone
than
merging.
of
Aging.
"For
some
this
County history to third
"We
have
significant
cuisuch
an
an;mgement
with
fuel
this
year than it did in Delta deal had changed the
graders in schools of the means staying in the workanlf
finanAMR
Corp.,
the
parent
of
·
2007.
To
cope
with the added la.ndscape, and by exercising
The
program place, but for many others it tural, operational
county.
. exposes the students to · means volunteering their cial strengths compared to American Airlines, in which cost, the airline plans to take a right .to buy out
county government opera- time and talents to a worthy the rest of the industry, and the compatries would work some older, Jess-fuel·effi- Northwest's veto powernver
tion§ and includes vis1ts to cause. They support educa- we want to protect and together in many ways but cient planes out of service a .Continental merger non, eeonomie ili!velopment, ~nb.ang: !hog ~trengtht- not merge tllelroperatlons. over the nextl2 iiiDnth and although that move cost only
' coliithouse offi&amp;s.
Airlines have been- oonsid- to reduce its u.s. capacity by $100 once NorthweST agreed
. Nursing homes, librmes, health care and senior ser- which we believe would be
placed
at
risk
in
a
merger
ering
COIISOlidarion as a way 5 percent beginning' this falL to be purchased by Delta.
historical societies, hospitals vices in their communities."
to
cut
oosts and raise fares in'·
A
spokesman
for
Continental
and
its
with
another
carrier
in
Senior volunteers are the,
and hospice programs,
today's
environment,"
the
face
of
record
fuel
prices.
Continental's
union
pilots
regional
subsidiaries
operhealth agencies, pre-schools, "shining stars" of many
Delta Air Lines Inc. said pilots were pleased that ate about' 3. I00 dail y '
and community' organization communities and Ibis week Kellner told employees.
·
Alth?u_gh
tt
reported
an
announced
earliec Ibis month -the company won't pursue a flight s. Continental has
and
are other sites the Meigs County Council
$80
Dlllbon
los~
m
the~~
ithasagreedtQbuy·Northwest
merger.giventhew~kcon- . major hubs in Newark, N.J..
County senior on Aging salutes .those who
qua~Ur~ GG ntmental - li~~fup.i!lirstook:-~ dititu . of; ptheCV&lt;~!TL ... H\lUf!lOH~mi- Cl~vl!liuu.l. .· •
lllife'[Jj~ .and;t&lt;llent.
widely . viewed- 11!1 · the.~- -deal mar wOUld ~ the UAL; for exampte. Iosl ··ond-strongesl U.S. c_arner 10 world's largest carrier. A $537 millic,m in the first
GRA"'D
•
fmanc1al
terms, behind only Continental-United cOmbina- quarter and announced it
ongoing and he hasn't
~~ . se:;
·~
' • " ,, '"'" •C• .ont ,,. ' " '
• •'
·
formed a solid opinion Of Southwest Airlines Co. ,
the bill either way at this which has indicated it isn 'I rr~!!!!!i!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!i~~=·~
interested in a merger.
piJint.
Taking Applications
Continental's
decision
HB 103 sponsors are liststnnned United's parent, UAL
about the bill still in com- . ed as Louis W. Blessing (R- Corp., which had been in
mittee, a committee Stewart Cincinnati), Bob Gibbs (R- advanced
HUD SW.Idlzed
talks
with
does not sit on. Stewart said Lakeville), Tom Brinkman, Continental and expected to
Efflclency/1 Bedl oom
he understands testimony is Jr., (R-Cincinnati).
50yrS or qualifying dleablllty
complete a deal by early May.
'
But last week, UALreportLow Income Priority
ed a $537 million loss in the
740-992-7022
Townsend, who is from ftrst quarter - · its biggest
Marietta, said there were no loss since emerging from
Silverheels
initial blueprints for the pro- bankruptcy in 2006, and larg- •
THEYE!I Mli!ID'Th
A
Realty Company-E;:HO
•
an
even
ject,
which
made
it
~M&lt;Ji I~Mi ~~ FUJI FEST
tromPqeAl
than Wal.l Street expected. l!i&amp;~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiliiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~·~
better leamilljl experience. · .er
UAL's stock market value
Dyer explamed that when plunged 35 ~fit.
ffiXXJXJXXXXIXJXXIXXXJXUXXIXllXXXX~Y~XXXXJXXU.U.l..l..l.XXllllU.:.%.X:X.U.~
·.students have been able to
his
students
are
out
working
oomplete the .work under
Glenn Tilton, UAL's H
H
in their careers, there will chairman and CEO, signaled H
H
the bid price.
· 1be second-year students come times when they have late Sunday that he would
:wodcing on the project are to fiX a machine or build a
new piece of equipment
Tom Magoto, Cody· Faulk, very
quickly, and they will
"Consolipation is under- ~
~
,Matt
Townsend,
'Ory
have
no blueprints to work way - ensuring you have ~
Harrison, Darrell Holland,
T
0
Reporl
Child
&amp;
Neglect
•
•
~
.,,/\_
?L.co
~
Mark Bass, Jessica Brown from. He trains his students the ri~ht partner is every- ~
to be able to handle differ.and Ryan Miller. .
.
thing,' Tilton said in a state/-7"1\TCf/2-.JUJO
~aH
/-800-Cf/2-2608
'1t's been amazmg expen- ent situations at work, and- )lnent. "We will pursue all
~
'&gt;&lt;'ence," said M~. who is said this project was a good options to ensure a strong,
learning
tool
for
them.
sustainable
future
for
our
from Bellefontatne. The stu''They're learning to airline and will not shy away ~
. Child
Hotline
~
4ents have learned a great
think,
that
's
the
maio
,deai through being able · to
from the tough choices nee- t= '
DDIY\rls rvr;~'
o,_,1·,. ~""""".c.
t . · """
essary to create value for our ~
I • v&lt;f"""
II.A ~ ,.,. IVf '1' • .........,
'f
woct on the job site building thing," Dyer said.
For more information on shareholders and benefit our
Hotline Opefl24 Hrs. A Day
M
machine that will be used
the
project
the
Rio
Grande
employees and customers." .
rv..,
~y the company. he _said .
7 '-""'1'S
Ray Neidl , an analyst ~
H
, Harrison, who IS from students have been working
on
for
Appalachian
Timber.
·w1th Calyon Secunt1es. satd ~ ,
H
Gallipolis, added that the
or
for
more
infonnation
on
Continental's
exit
leaves
US
H
For
~~~Cn
lnfor11111tton
~1174o-992-2117
Ext.
116
~
students learned a lot by
the
rrliUIUfacturing
technolAirways
Group
Inc.
as
a
~
·us
Race
Slreet,
P.O.,Box
191
•
Middleport,
Ohio
45760
~
working on this project, as
ogy
program,
call
Dyer
at
potential
merger
partner
for
~
Www.rnetgadjfa.net
.
Houra:
M-T-W~.
~:30,
Thurs.
8-5:30,
Sat
&amp;
Sun.
Closed
~
· opposed ·to working just on
(800) 282-7201.
United. .
ttunnrmxxxx::xnmnnmxnmxrmnniiUin:In:n.nn::::xxxx~
projects in the classroom .
.
.
AlliENS

0' Bleness

.

more

AEP

-L4LL BUSINESS: Banks'-credit crisis over? Not so fast
1

.

the s!lldent visa program

that is supposed to bring
21,000 Saudi students to
this country, Myrick would
attach the condition that the
Saudis rewrite their textbooks to omit incitement
against
non- Muslims;
.W!st
regarding religious visas
for imams, she would
require of Islamic countries
Ieciprocal visa arrangewhen be was something of a
ments for non-Muslim clerWashington power broker,
gy; and regarding U.S.
Alamoudi ·helped set up the
training of Saudi security
Pentagon's Muslim cliapforces,
she would insist that
·
lain corps in conJunction
the
Saudis
prosecute
with .t he Institute of Islamic
known
AI
Qaeda
financiers
and Arabic Sciences in introduce a bill to make
and
stop
releasing
America, a Saudi-funded preaching, publishing, dis0....,.,.tinn that s.pecializes in tributing or. financing calls ated Guantanamo Bay ter.-·-for the death of Americans rorists in exchange for their
what you might call or American troOps an act of pledges not to attack. ...
Jihadism 10 I. (Way to be sedition or solicitation of Saudi Arabia. She will also
awak.e, Pentagon.)
treason. She also wants to be introducing a bill til
Alamoodi went to prison ask the GAO to assess total block the sale of state-Qfback in 2004, but no one
since, in the military or the sovereign wealth fund the-art offensive munitions
prisons, seems to have taken investment in the United to Saudi Arabia, especially
Direct
Attack.
a second look. at what his States. Such massive funds, Joint
prodigies might be preach- owned and controlled by Munitions or IDAMs.
Ambitious? You bet.
mg (terrorism? treason? governments, first came to
Myrick
deserves an "A" for
whatever?). Myrick: plans to many Americans' attention .
with the recent pure~ by effort for filling the l.eadeTcheck: into it herself.
Next, she plans to ask the the United Arab Emirates of ship vacuum left . ' by
Government Acco~ting . a large stake in Citigroup; in Republicans and Democrats
Office (GAO) to examine recent years, however, there alike regarding these and
the process by which the has been a spike in such for- other home-front threats.
FBI
.a nd
Defense eign government invest- Whether she can accomDepartment select Arabic me_nt i? the .United StaU:s. plish her goals, she will cer.e ducate
translators. Of · particular • !Ills raises co~cerns (that IS, tainl y · help
concern to .Myrick - but 1t should rat~ concerns) Americans on · gravely
not, incredibly, to the FBI• or about the polincal goals of important issues most of our
the Defense Department - .. such funds - for example, politicians are too ..timid to
is these two agencies' mind- the spread of Islanuc law talk about.
(Diana West is a columnist
boggling practi.ce of adver- through "Sharia-compliant
rising for recruits in , what banking_."
Thankfully, for The Washington Tune's.
s~ js the author of "The
can only be described as Mynck ts_concerned.
pro-terrorism publications.
The last few points on the Death of 1he Grown-up:
(Normal person's reac- Myrick agenda focus on the Hbw Americas Arrested
tion: What do you mean appalling lack of reciproci- development Is Bringing
the government is trolling ty and common sense in Down Western Civilization:"
pro-terrorism sites . for· our nation's dealings with She can be contacted via
Arabic
translators? Saudi Arabia. Regarding diana west@ verizon.net.)

....

Reed ·&amp; Baur 'after hours' held·

·Volunteers

t,!!!/~:nerr~n:st:~l f:~!tu~~d~e't.:J:s;::J:;~ ~NEW

Co: ;ecllun Policr

Deaths

.'

. Letterf to rhe editor are welcome. They 3 hould be less
than 300 word.~. All/etters are subject to editing, must be

Reader Services

Govemment •reaction: Did
someone say something?)
Next on the congresswoman's to-do list ·is a call
for an Internal Revenue
Service investigation into
the nonprofit status of the
Hamas-link.ed Council on
American·lslamic Relations
(CAIR). Such stalus restricts
"lobbying on behalf of a foreign government," but, as
Myrick notes, plenty of foreign funds have found their
f"AJR' 00ff,
way into .._
s
ers to
beg the question.
Another Myrick plan is to

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

-.niydailysentinel.com

Continental Airlines tells employees it won't seek merger

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

edfor publication.

Monday, April28, 2008

Monday, April 28, zoOS

Myrick aces, D. C. flunks Jihadism 101 '

The Daily Sentinel

''

PageA4

consumers.
·Credit-risk womes, which
have ravaged financial mark.ets since last summer,
haven't diminished either.
1be gap between the interest
rate on the three-month
Tm!Sury bills and the threemonth London Interbank
Offered Rate - referred to
as the closely watc!led
"TED" spread - has been
.:widening, .ind.iC!Itin$ · that
lenders are.avo~~g n!ill:.
Thcaedi.t cns1S has led to
~ than '$200· billion in
wnte-doWJ?-S ~en by banks
and financial fiims over the
last year ·- far more •than
anyone.~ expected, given
the oplllll1sm of those companics' CEOs last summer.
As th~ housing market
contracuon
accelerated
and s_ubpnme borrowers
were mcreasmgly defaultiDg on their home loans in
the first part of 2007, those
exccuti·ves were telling us
not to worry.
Last June, B_ear Steams
CFO Sam Moh~aro talk.ed
about _how the high level of
subprune
mortgage
~efaults hadn't "spilled"
mto other ':lfCBS of the mark.et. M,errill L¥nch CEO
S~ 0 ~~ smd ~ subpnmc · cns1s was reasonably well contamed."

will be complicated. But as
long as the music is playing
you've got to get up and
dance. We're still dancing."
All those executives are
no~ out of work and all
therr banks are now ·wallflowers. ·
By August, risk aversion
spread through the marketplace, and has since paralyzed credit markets and
~aused a tightening of lendmg stan~s for consumers
and busmesses.
That's. why we .might
want to listen cautiously lri
what the bank CEOs are
saying .now. Richard Fuld,
CEO of Lehman Brothers,
commented at the coinpany's annual meeting that
the worst is "behind us."
Morgan Sta~ey CEO John
Mack told mvestors that
the collapse of the subpril):le market in the U.S.
has reached its eighth
innin~ or maybe the "top of
the n~th."
.
We1ghing against that are
findings of a new CEO survey . from the F1.nanc1al
Serv1ces Forum, wh1ch represents 20 of the largest
U.S. fmancial companies.
The s_urvey sho~ed that
e~ecuuves by a wtde margm ~lieved that the current
credu turmoil has far to go;

....
'

members is current Merrill
Lynch CEO John Thain
who reported on Thursday
that the investment bank
had a $2 14 billion frrstquarter l~ss and writedowns of $6.5 billion on its
debt including mortgagJ:- ·
related secun
. 'ties and lceveraged loans:
·
'
"I hope those who say we
are at the end are correct. 1
am somewhat more skepti. c~l." Thain told. the .
Fmancial Times after the
earnfugs w~re released.
· Last summer, Bank of
America's Ken Lewis
seemed confident that the
end was nearing. for the
housing slump. On Monday
the Charlotte, N.C .-based
bank said its profits tumblejJ
77 percent in the frrst quarter due to trading losses and
a $3.3 billion increase in
reserves for problem loans.
"I think frrst it would be
too early to strike liP the
band and sing happy days
are here again," Lewis said
Monday on a conference
cal~ with analysts during
whtch he said the situation
in the capital markets was
particularly tough in March.
Forget about ninth, or even
eighth inning. Maybe we
haven't even gotten to the
seventh innin~stretch yet.

.

..

HB103
rromr.At

TheMaptes

Device

~r t~~:en:~~~~u~~tn

aDIPAiftlll'r OF- UD FAMILY SEIIICD E

E

CIILDID SEIIICD DmSIOI

.

E

Abuse

H'

AI''

a

a

Abuse

8

AWeeJc

,

•

'

'

·-

J

�'

PageA6

CoMM

The Daily Sentinel
•

'nrltle .

Monday, April28, 2oo8

00 keyboard seminar

mini Relay for Life .
•..-::~

scheduled for June 6-7
ATHENS - The Ohio be eooouraged to share ideas
University School of Musi~ and dialogue with clinicians
will host. a keyboard peda· and fellow attendees.
gogy seminar on Friday and
The n:gistnltion fee is
Sarurday, June 6 and 7, in only $3) for teachers llJld
Athens with fearured clini- $1'5
for
students.
cian Dr. Jane· Magrath, Registration includes a box
widely !mown autbor of the lunch on Satwday. Tbe
book "The Piani.st's Guide seminar provides .an opporto StandaFd Teaching and tunity to earn undergtadlJale ' ·
Performance Literature."
or graduate c redit as wen as .
The pub! ication has a
CEU
(Continuing
become a classic .reference. Educli:ion Units) option
work for pianists through- from Ohio University. . In .
out the country and order to receive academic
Magrath's wort in me area credit additional f~ a,pply.
of the standard classical . Fo~ more information
teaching literature has been
about fus and re,gistra- '
central to the current
visit
lion
~evival of interest in this
edwpia
www.lifelong.ohio
..
music throughout the
no or call 740.51)3.9925. .
United States.
Magrath
and
Ohio To l.earo more .abollJ rhe
conlaet
Dt:
University teyboll!'d facultY. semina~
members Paul Bane, Gail .Christopher Fisher at
Berenson, Sylvia . Eckes, fisherc@ ohio. edtt.
Christopher Fisher, .Andie
Gribou
and
Richard
Syracuse will lead piano
instructors throu~h work- ·
shops, presentations and
pelformances that will provide enrichment oppm:w:ities. Session topics mdude;
matching music to students,
Beethoven's thought about
pedaling, motivating . students while finding meaning, using improvisation as
a creative tool, an introduction to the organ, strategies
for coping with performance anxiety, the
of
group piano teachin , and
cboosin~ literature to peak
student mterest.
On . Friday evening, the
seminar will include a
recital by faculty members,
each of whom is an accomplished professional in
music. Participants at the
)ieminar will have an opportunity on Saturday for open
lessons . and a master class .
'with tht:se faculty members.
Barte has taught organ
and music history at Ohio
·University's School of
Music since 1997. He was
the 2005 recipient of the
.Distinguished ;
school's
Teaching Award.
Berenson, the president of
Music Teachers National
Association, has perfonned
and lectured in .over thirty
states and six countries and
115-ASildl Slnlit
is one. of the ·co-authors of
PL ......., WV l555t
"A SymposiUm for Pianists
31U75-7tl6
and Teachers: Strategies to
Fu:~7317
Develop Mind and Body for
aha H' i 8 " · ' Rn.
Optimal Performance."
Eckes has had an active
Alltol'h--'8 ' ~n'
performing career following
Llfel.ba.rity
debuts at Aula Hall Norway,
Aa
I
' f I 1nrt A.-.=Y
Lincoln Center's Alice •
llepn:le ....
Tully Hall, and Carnegie
Recital Hall: She has perforrned
in
Europe,
Scandina-via, and China.
Fisher teaches ·both group
and applied piano and
courses in piano pedagogy
at Ohio University and will
.soo11-relgas@-a group 'piano
pedagogy textbook conttacted for publication by
Oxford University Press.
Gribou has performed as
a pianist in such venues
Lincoln Center, lbe United

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

ML8. . . , . . . . 11 .
B •u1utT' 'g . . . .
Is a I . U: Slillry alii" • g'!, . . . 86
I

The Student Council ot:
Meigs High School is sponsoring a mini Relay for Life,
on May 16. A variety of activities wiN ta\e place during 'the
day with .aR profits to be
donated to the American
Cancer Society. The MHS
Class of 201 1 donated a custom-made basket in the
school's ·colors to the Student
Coimcil to be used as .a
Chinese auction item. The
MHS Student Council members have Chinese ali!Ction
tickets for sa:le. Additional
infonnation on the basket
can be obtaill1ed from !:he
·'
MHS' freShman class. Among
those working on the project .
are from 'the left, Student
Council members, l:lffany
Mytko., Angela Stllart, and .
Ashley Wervey, and freshman Class off10ers, Shellie
Bailey and Col!nor Swartz.

Monday, Apri128, :!008
.

A-·. . . ,. .,

LocAL ScmiDULE
rooERO'I'hloh
Wlool varsity aportlng ewrrt:t involving
teams from ·u.tgslftCI Gallll ooumlel.
7

. . . .

.....
7
. _ at 'Gollil Acodemy, Sp.m.

"''-Iloilo!&lt;··- · 5 p.m.

--at ..,..
----

Sp.m.
-~~ Soull1em. '51).m.

-~at-..•:sov.m
. . . .

Moigs ·OIGollia~.

5 p.m.
5 ·p.m.
Soult1 Golliallll!olrilnd. .S p.m.

-

PoiiSIIICIJ.ilh.GIIIIil .. 5 11J1, '5:p..m.

v.J1oJ wt Southom, 5 p.m .

Soulh Glllla Ill FUtond, 5 p.m.

Soibmlltlld phalo

An

-

o(one in October was quickly cbillod for the New Yoit

Yankees.
Moments after beating the
Oeveland Indians 1-0, the
Yankees lost a shocker;
Jorge Posada is headed to
the disabled list for the first

time.
"It's · very disappointing,n

·v.iloJIIISOUtllom,

-

ASSOCIATED PRESS

April win with all the tenure

. _ 111- Acodemy, Sl).m.
Ri.er~ 01 FV~ond, Sp.m.
CouniJ«Molgs, S!&gt;•m..
Soulhem, 5 p.m.

1

BYT•Wmas
CLEVELAND

V"-Coonty ·c~,

r

Wang leads Yankees past Indians

said New York's dependable
catcher, bothered by a !iOJ:e
shoul.der for weeks. "It's

probably the most disap- pitches and got the Yankees
pointing tiring in my career." back to .500.
The trotibl~ news ·on
But Wang's fine outing
Posada came after Chien- · was overshadowed · by
Ming Wang shut down Posada, who has started
Cleveland fur seven innings more games than any AL
and
outpitched
C.C. catcher in the past eight seaSabathia, who gave up a sons. He has caught at least
home run to Melky Cabrera 137 regular-season games
as .tbe Yankees snapped a each year since 2000 and
three-game losing streak.
appeared in 78 postseason
Wang {5..0) allowed four games in the span.
hits, struck out a season"It's bard tO lose a guy likf:
high nine and became ·the Jorge," said closer Mariano
AL's only iiive-game winner. Rivera, who worked the
Only one Oeveland runner ninth for his 450th ·career
reached third a:gainst the .
P112n._ ... 1.111
ri.gbt-hander, who made 1l3

i

Gelllo-..ywt-.4:30~m.

-rfcnd. Meigl, Southom · - - ·
4:30p.m.

WIN UPTO $1,000 !!!

PLAY . COVERA~l BINGO

r

,..

__

· DRAFT·
.....

--

. ~2. R11T11 - Chril Long .

';GE ·HI. 6-S- Wt. 272 • Vilglnil

·4.i'loidoni-Domm1fiB- HI. 6-1 -WI. 210- A...._.
5. Chloll- Glenn o.:.roo,
.OT • Ht. 6-1 -WI. 297 · l.SU

8, Jaguars- De- HaMil'
DE • Ht. 6-5 - Wl. .271 - Florida

Diane McVey
M.A. -CCC-A

·9.~1o-KofthR""""

0WIIor&amp;

LS- Ht. W- WI. 240 · USC

Audiologist

,

1 0 . - - Jarod '...,
LS · Ht. W- WI. 242- Tan: 11 . Bill&amp; - IAodis McKelvin
!OB- Ht. 5-10 ·WI. 190- TltJI'

435'1. Se r•..w A• 1 1t
(740) 446-7619

•12.lllonooo -Ryan Clady
1

•

~or · Hl. H • Wt. 309 • Boiee State
' 13. _,.-Jonathon-~
;118- Ht. 5-10 .- WI. 236 ·Oregon

{740) 594-3571

_JODAY'S .
NUMBER IS:

•

7

.1!6. T.ana -lluono&lt;Brown

.
.
:rr. Clloogora-- e-n

oQr • HI. 6-'1· WI. 315 V~ Tec:tl

•

.CS • Ht. 6-0 ·WI. 191 ·AriZOna

. . . 1'---

:JI.

MQI

s

'

.•

1 · - L. -**ton

;DC&lt;k;N • Wt. 2116 • U9C
•. • '
.'

B•itD:r'S

~ -tt:" . 1111.101 • 1!1. c:-una
:DT

OUft.ll:1'. DfC,

Yolli Arm's #1 Floor
Cot~erittg Dealer!

'10. Jolt- Dullln :lE · HI. N ·WI. iU · 1'..-due

,-

...~. Gil. . - ~ Pllllllpl

Male

._'HI. N • Wl. l11· Mlloml
'

Tubing

.

CoNTACT US
.
.

Rnl deuti81 • CGmmerdal •
WboleAie • llrtall

:

1-740-446-2342 ext. 33

Reqru:n Flllllily Orygett

'

no-u&amp;OOOJ

..._

741 Ul 2117

Elte Rnndolph, SpurD WriiPi

'!..

f'oiO) 446 2342, oat. !J3

lo• ~·•"'l"'llltWiilioiOI.oom

ery.n W&amp;ltln, Sp111111 Wrtlzr
(740) -.2342. oat. !J3

•

k

ztts aOmyddytribuol.oom

l..-y C1um, Sportn Writer
(1ol0) 4&lt;46-2342, oat. 33

- -----·-- - .. -

---

ASSOCIATED PRESS

5

.-

7G Pine sn.t. c.llpaftl

......,..._

$57.75 million, $30 million
of it guaranteed.
"1 was a little more
NEW
YORK
Things
relaxed
just !mowing where
' 14. Burs - Chris WIHiams
:OT • Ht. 6-6 • Wt. S15 - Vandorblll
were going so normally, so I was going and just bein~
predictably at Saturday's here to make it official,'
; 15. Cheffl- B10nden Albert
NFL draft. All six players Long said. "That solidified it
100 - Ht. 6-li · WI. 1109 - Virginia
the league invited to the fes- all. It was just breathtaking
16. C.rdlnllls- D. Rodgoro-Cromarlie
011· Ht. 6-1 • WI. 111&lt;4 • T......,._ St. tivities hit the stage .in the to walk out there and shake
first half.dozen selections.
the commissioner's hand
17. Lions - Cherll ..
.
Yawn.
.
and
hold up that jerse,r It
or. 111. tlill • Wt. st~ . Booton Go.
lben caibe the · wake-up . was a dream cbme uue. •
18.- - Joo A.cco
call: trade after trade after
Chris Long of Virginia,
QB • Ht. IHi ' WI. 236 - O..ns
trade, affecting 14 of the 31 Matt Ryan of Boston
first-round
picks.
College, Dar~en Mcfadden
.J9. Panlhani-Jell Otah
t()T • Ht. 6-6 • Wt. 322. Pill
At one point, five of seven of Altansas, Glenn Dorsey
sel~ons ~ ~n ~red. of national c!_twppion LSU
l·'ijjo11ithttlere while later, ll ~~. ank Y!l-1119!! Gho)~tgn gf
1 '
five of six. ·
·- Ohio State didn't have to
'21 . Falcons - Som BaiGor
Jake
Long
~ust
sat
back
wait long to w3lk under the
.oT • HI. 6-'1 • WI. 3011 - USC
and smiled- right from the floodlights, either. It was the
outset.
.
frrst time since the NFL
2.2. ~--,RBHt. 5-10- WI. 207 • Mra.The Michigan tackle began inviting multiple
already had signed with the prospects in 1993 and they
2 3 . - - R. U..odooihlll
fiB. Ht. 5-10. Wt. 225 - ·Miami DoiJ?hins as the top all went at the very beginoverall choice. He inked a ning of the proceedings.
24. Tltano- Chrio Johnlon
So unlike last year,
when
_RB • Ht. 5-11 · WI. 197 • Eut C,rollno five-year contract worth
.

ATHENS
l7S West Ulliolt Street

:a~--­

Allin
Relpetonlca
Relmecl

. 'iWASHINGroN ·-

OT • Ht. 6-0 • Wt. 9011 • USC

U·Ht. s-10 · Wt.197- s. Florida

s.a "

ASSOCIATED PRESS

~- ---Ells

l\ro .lpr.p#qnr

CPAP Machines

•

IIYHo rRDFE.-.:11

-11 .... - Vemon G - .
DE· Ht. 6-3· Wl.2116- Ohio'BMM

0 XL Ill, Ohio
...... (740)-1711

Ea·t~•tllld

West's 31ifts ·Cavs
over Wizards 100-97

:1. FaJccna - 'M ill Ryan
·QB • Ht. 6-5 • WI. 255 • Bo01on Co.

Am~Gan,.,.J~

- New · Mulill- Gofiliort4um.- .
Many of his compositions
have received Emmy nominations.
Syracuse has won numerous competitions
and
awards, and has toured
extensively in the United
States, Canada, Europe,
· Africa and the Middle East
as recitalist, guest soloist,
and chamber musician. As a
Fulbright Scholar he studied
in Rome, Italy, at the St.
Cecilia · Academy under
Carlo Zecchi.
Tlu:oughout the seminar,
piano teachers and other
music educators with discover valuable professional
enrichment opportunities.
Round-table diseussions and
infonnal conversations will

Cavaliers' Delonte West (13) goes to the basket
against Washington Wizards' Gilbert Arenas, back, during the
third quarter of game 4 of an NBA basketball first-round playoff game Sunday in Washington. The Cavaliers won 100-97.

1 .'Dolphins - - LDng
''OT -•Ht. 6-7 • Wt SIS -lilichlgon

Erie·--

- Nation§, HrKtl'OO

Cle~land

•

~c:rumemydollyrogio1er.eom

.

K)ng

teammates told him was a
closed fist before tumbling
to the court. James kept his
balance and stepped toward
Stevenson, who got up and
stepped toward James.
They exchanged words,
but that was it, before team- ·
mates stepped in between.
"If we was on the ·park,
so~netl:ti.'1~g definitely would

James lost his crown.
All right, so it was his burgundy headband that went
flying when LeBron James
took a shot to the noggin
from · DeShawo Stevenson,
their simmering feud nearly
boiling over. James kept his
oool, allowing the flagrant "But,"~fat~~;a~~~
foul to spart him and his that's ,
Cleveland Cavaliers.
They want
At game's end. James was James this
Notre Dame's Brady Quinn just as collected, drawing working."
of
Washington
Stevenson's take'
had to wait hours to be cho- waves
Wizards defenders before
"That's how it goes.'' he ·
sen.
"lt's great to see the green dishing to Delonte West for said. "It was a big game for
room empty,'' said defensive a .tiebreaking 3-pointer with us."
Now the Cavaliers, who
end Long, who went second 5.4 seconds left. That shot.
along with James' 34 points eliminated the Wizards in
to St. Louis.
"It's a blessing to be here, and 12 rebounds, led the each of the previous two
they only ask six guys to Cavaliers to a I 00-97 victo- postseasons, have conttol,
come," DEILB Gholston ry on Sunday an.d a 3- 1 lead with Game 5 on Wednesday
tlleir . _best-of-seven · at Cleveland .
· added. "Funny how it in
James goLhelp Sunda)'
wprk.ed. out, teams made Eastern .Conference playoff
series .
from more than just West, !
good selections." ·
"Tiiere's
been
some whose career · playoff-high
After St. Louis tO!Ik the
actw1t.Jes 21 points included five 3son of Pro Football Hall of extracurricular
Farner Howie Long, Ryan, going on outside and inside pointers. Daniel Gibson
who could solve ~e quarter- this series;" James said, "but made four 3s, and Ben
llaGk llfQblWJII In ·Ailanta;. I' Vt' '~~ ' il'bk !!2 ~~y Wallace hJIQ 1 rebound~ -.
f,ocused." ~~' ·~ .
part of remarkable- 51-31
went to the Falcons.
The Wizards were ahead edge on the boards · for
following a long-standing
tradition, Oakland went for . by a point with 3 112 min- Cleveland.
the gamebreaker in running utes left in the frrst half · One small sequence that
back Mcfadden, prompting when James drove to the epitomized things; At the
the fans to boo loudly., Many basket, and Stevenson came end of the third quarter. Joe
wanted
the
two-time from behind and swiped a Smith's three-point play folhand out, clipping the Cavs'
star with what James said " ne . _ c.•an, B1
", ..... Dnrfl. 8J

a

Volquez pitches
Reds past Giants
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
- Edinson Volquez is one
of the few Cincinnati pitchers who ha&amp;n 't had to worry
about run support this season. When he'&amp; been on the

mound, the Reds score in
bunches.
Volquez struck out a
career-high 10 in seven
innings, llrandon Phillips
homered twice and the. Reds
used a six-run ftrst inning to
rotigh up BIIIT)' Zito in a I 01 win over the San
Francisco Giants on Sunday.
It was the fourth time in
five stans by Volquez that
the Rods have backed him
with at least eight runs. Each
time, the Cincinnati righthander was won.
"I dido 't even throw one
pitch in the game and I
looked at the bo;!rd and saw
\

six runs," .Volquez said.
"When you get some runs
early you're like; 'It's easy
today. Just go out the~e and
do what you do."'
Volquez (4..{)) allowed one
run and five hits to win his
thiid consecutive start, and
Ryan Freel's two-run single
keyed the six-run ftrst
inning for Cincinnati. Freel
later doubled and scored as
the Reds won consecutive
games for the ftrst time in
more than two weeks.
Zito, winless in his first
six starts for the flfSt time in
his career, gave up eight
runs and &gt;even hits while
walking three in only three
innings . The left-hander,
who signed a-$126 million,
seven-year deal prior to last

PI

ns•- .... 81

AP photo

Cincinnati Reds' Brandon Phillips. right, is congratulated by teammate Edwin Encarnacion
after Phillips hit a solo home run off of San Francisco Giants relief pitcher Patrick Misch in
the ninth inning of a baseball game Sunday in San Francisco. Reds won 10-1.
'

�'

PageA6

CoMM

The Daily Sentinel
•

'nrltle .

Monday, April28, 2oo8

00 keyboard seminar

mini Relay for Life .
•..-::~

scheduled for June 6-7
ATHENS - The Ohio be eooouraged to share ideas
University School of Musi~ and dialogue with clinicians
will host. a keyboard peda· and fellow attendees.
gogy seminar on Friday and
The n:gistnltion fee is
Sarurday, June 6 and 7, in only $3) for teachers llJld
Athens with fearured clini- $1'5
for
students.
cian Dr. Jane· Magrath, Registration includes a box
widely !mown autbor of the lunch on Satwday. Tbe
book "The Piani.st's Guide seminar provides .an opporto StandaFd Teaching and tunity to earn undergtadlJale ' ·
Performance Literature."
or graduate c redit as wen as .
The pub! ication has a
CEU
(Continuing
become a classic .reference. Educli:ion Units) option
work for pianists through- from Ohio University. . In .
out the country and order to receive academic
Magrath's wort in me area credit additional f~ a,pply.
of the standard classical . Fo~ more information
teaching literature has been
about fus and re,gistra- '
central to the current
visit
lion
~evival of interest in this
edwpia
www.lifelong.ohio
..
music throughout the
no or call 740.51)3.9925. .
United States.
Magrath
and
Ohio To l.earo more .abollJ rhe
conlaet
Dt:
University teyboll!'d facultY. semina~
members Paul Bane, Gail .Christopher Fisher at
Berenson, Sylvia . Eckes, fisherc@ ohio. edtt.
Christopher Fisher, .Andie
Gribou
and
Richard
Syracuse will lead piano
instructors throu~h work- ·
shops, presentations and
pelformances that will provide enrichment oppm:w:ities. Session topics mdude;
matching music to students,
Beethoven's thought about
pedaling, motivating . students while finding meaning, using improvisation as
a creative tool, an introduction to the organ, strategies
for coping with performance anxiety, the
of
group piano teachin , and
cboosin~ literature to peak
student mterest.
On . Friday evening, the
seminar will include a
recital by faculty members,
each of whom is an accomplished professional in
music. Participants at the
)ieminar will have an opportunity on Saturday for open
lessons . and a master class .
'with tht:se faculty members.
Barte has taught organ
and music history at Ohio
·University's School of
Music since 1997. He was
the 2005 recipient of the
.Distinguished ;
school's
Teaching Award.
Berenson, the president of
Music Teachers National
Association, has perfonned
and lectured in .over thirty
states and six countries and
115-ASildl Slnlit
is one. of the ·co-authors of
PL ......., WV l555t
"A SymposiUm for Pianists
31U75-7tl6
and Teachers: Strategies to
Fu:~7317
Develop Mind and Body for
aha H' i 8 " · ' Rn.
Optimal Performance."
Eckes has had an active
Alltol'h--'8 ' ~n'
performing career following
Llfel.ba.rity
debuts at Aula Hall Norway,
Aa
I
' f I 1nrt A.-.=Y
Lincoln Center's Alice •
llepn:le ....
Tully Hall, and Carnegie
Recital Hall: She has perforrned
in
Europe,
Scandina-via, and China.
Fisher teaches ·both group
and applied piano and
courses in piano pedagogy
at Ohio University and will
.soo11-relgas@-a group 'piano
pedagogy textbook conttacted for publication by
Oxford University Press.
Gribou has performed as
a pianist in such venues
Lincoln Center, lbe United

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

ML8. . . , . . . . 11 .
B •u1utT' 'g . . . .
Is a I . U: Slillry alii" • g'!, . . . 86
I

The Student Council ot:
Meigs High School is sponsoring a mini Relay for Life,
on May 16. A variety of activities wiN ta\e place during 'the
day with .aR profits to be
donated to the American
Cancer Society. The MHS
Class of 201 1 donated a custom-made basket in the
school's ·colors to the Student
Coimcil to be used as .a
Chinese auction item. The
MHS Student Council members have Chinese ali!Ction
tickets for sa:le. Additional
infonnation on the basket
can be obtaill1ed from !:he
·'
MHS' freShman class. Among
those working on the project .
are from 'the left, Student
Council members, l:lffany
Mytko., Angela Stllart, and .
Ashley Wervey, and freshman Class off10ers, Shellie
Bailey and Col!nor Swartz.

Monday, Apri128, :!008
.

A-·. . . ,. .,

LocAL ScmiDULE
rooERO'I'hloh
Wlool varsity aportlng ewrrt:t involving
teams from ·u.tgslftCI Gallll ooumlel.
7

. . . .

.....
7
. _ at 'Gollil Acodemy, Sp.m.

"''-Iloilo!&lt;··- · 5 p.m.

--at ..,..
----

Sp.m.
-~~ Soull1em. '51).m.

-~at-..•:sov.m
. . . .

Moigs ·OIGollia~.

5 p.m.
5 ·p.m.
Soult1 Golliallll!olrilnd. .S p.m.

-

PoiiSIIICIJ.ilh.GIIIIil .. 5 11J1, '5:p..m.

v.J1oJ wt Southom, 5 p.m .

Soulh Glllla Ill FUtond, 5 p.m.

Soibmlltlld phalo

An

-

o(one in October was quickly cbillod for the New Yoit

Yankees.
Moments after beating the
Oeveland Indians 1-0, the
Yankees lost a shocker;
Jorge Posada is headed to
the disabled list for the first

time.
"It's · very disappointing,n

·v.iloJIIISOUtllom,

-

ASSOCIATED PRESS

April win with all the tenure

. _ 111- Acodemy, Sl).m.
Ri.er~ 01 FV~ond, Sp.m.
CouniJ«Molgs, S!&gt;•m..
Soulhem, 5 p.m.

1

BYT•Wmas
CLEVELAND

V"-Coonty ·c~,

r

Wang leads Yankees past Indians

said New York's dependable
catcher, bothered by a !iOJ:e
shoul.der for weeks. "It's

probably the most disap- pitches and got the Yankees
pointing tiring in my career." back to .500.
The trotibl~ news ·on
But Wang's fine outing
Posada came after Chien- · was overshadowed · by
Ming Wang shut down Posada, who has started
Cleveland fur seven innings more games than any AL
and
outpitched
C.C. catcher in the past eight seaSabathia, who gave up a sons. He has caught at least
home run to Melky Cabrera 137 regular-season games
as .tbe Yankees snapped a each year since 2000 and
three-game losing streak.
appeared in 78 postseason
Wang {5..0) allowed four games in the span.
hits, struck out a season"It's bard tO lose a guy likf:
high nine and became ·the Jorge," said closer Mariano
AL's only iiive-game winner. Rivera, who worked the
Only one Oeveland runner ninth for his 450th ·career
reached third a:gainst the .
P112n._ ... 1.111
ri.gbt-hander, who made 1l3

i

Gelllo-..ywt-.4:30~m.

-rfcnd. Meigl, Southom · - - ·
4:30p.m.

WIN UPTO $1,000 !!!

PLAY . COVERA~l BINGO

r

,..

__

· DRAFT·
.....

--

. ~2. R11T11 - Chril Long .

';GE ·HI. 6-S- Wt. 272 • Vilglnil

·4.i'loidoni-Domm1fiB- HI. 6-1 -WI. 210- A...._.
5. Chloll- Glenn o.:.roo,
.OT • Ht. 6-1 -WI. 297 · l.SU

8, Jaguars- De- HaMil'
DE • Ht. 6-5 - Wl. .271 - Florida

Diane McVey
M.A. -CCC-A

·9.~1o-KofthR""""

0WIIor&amp;

LS- Ht. W- WI. 240 · USC

Audiologist

,

1 0 . - - Jarod '...,
LS · Ht. W- WI. 242- Tan: 11 . Bill&amp; - IAodis McKelvin
!OB- Ht. 5-10 ·WI. 190- TltJI'

435'1. Se r•..w A• 1 1t
(740) 446-7619

•12.lllonooo -Ryan Clady
1

•

~or · Hl. H • Wt. 309 • Boiee State
' 13. _,.-Jonathon-~
;118- Ht. 5-10 .- WI. 236 ·Oregon

{740) 594-3571

_JODAY'S .
NUMBER IS:

•

7

.1!6. T.ana -lluono&lt;Brown

.
.
:rr. Clloogora-- e-n

oQr • HI. 6-'1· WI. 315 V~ Tec:tl

•

.CS • Ht. 6-0 ·WI. 191 ·AriZOna

. . . 1'---

:JI.

MQI

s

'

.•

1 · - L. -**ton

;DC&lt;k;N • Wt. 2116 • U9C
•. • '
.'

B•itD:r'S

~ -tt:" . 1111.101 • 1!1. c:-una
:DT

OUft.ll:1'. DfC,

Yolli Arm's #1 Floor
Cot~erittg Dealer!

'10. Jolt- Dullln :lE · HI. N ·WI. iU · 1'..-due

,-

...~. Gil. . - ~ Pllllllpl

Male

._'HI. N • Wl. l11· Mlloml
'

Tubing

.

CoNTACT US
.
.

Rnl deuti81 • CGmmerdal •
WboleAie • llrtall

:

1-740-446-2342 ext. 33

Reqru:n Flllllily Orygett

'

no-u&amp;OOOJ

..._

741 Ul 2117

Elte Rnndolph, SpurD WriiPi

'!..

f'oiO) 446 2342, oat. !J3

lo• ~·•"'l"'llltWiilioiOI.oom

ery.n W&amp;ltln, Sp111111 Wrtlzr
(740) -.2342. oat. !J3

•

k

ztts aOmyddytribuol.oom

l..-y C1um, Sportn Writer
(1ol0) 4&lt;46-2342, oat. 33

- -----·-- - .. -

---

ASSOCIATED PRESS

5

.-

7G Pine sn.t. c.llpaftl

......,..._

$57.75 million, $30 million
of it guaranteed.
"1 was a little more
NEW
YORK
Things
relaxed
just !mowing where
' 14. Burs - Chris WIHiams
:OT • Ht. 6-6 • Wt. S15 - Vandorblll
were going so normally, so I was going and just bein~
predictably at Saturday's here to make it official,'
; 15. Cheffl- B10nden Albert
NFL draft. All six players Long said. "That solidified it
100 - Ht. 6-li · WI. 1109 - Virginia
the league invited to the fes- all. It was just breathtaking
16. C.rdlnllls- D. Rodgoro-Cromarlie
011· Ht. 6-1 • WI. 111&lt;4 • T......,._ St. tivities hit the stage .in the to walk out there and shake
first half.dozen selections.
the commissioner's hand
17. Lions - Cherll ..
.
Yawn.
.
and
hold up that jerse,r It
or. 111. tlill • Wt. st~ . Booton Go.
lben caibe the · wake-up . was a dream cbme uue. •
18.- - Joo A.cco
call: trade after trade after
Chris Long of Virginia,
QB • Ht. IHi ' WI. 236 - O..ns
trade, affecting 14 of the 31 Matt Ryan of Boston
first-round
picks.
College, Dar~en Mcfadden
.J9. Panlhani-Jell Otah
t()T • Ht. 6-6 • Wt. 322. Pill
At one point, five of seven of Altansas, Glenn Dorsey
sel~ons ~ ~n ~red. of national c!_twppion LSU
l·'ijjo11ithttlere while later, ll ~~. ank Y!l-1119!! Gho)~tgn gf
1 '
five of six. ·
·- Ohio State didn't have to
'21 . Falcons - Som BaiGor
Jake
Long
~ust
sat
back
wait long to w3lk under the
.oT • HI. 6-'1 • WI. 3011 - USC
and smiled- right from the floodlights, either. It was the
outset.
.
frrst time since the NFL
2.2. ~--,RBHt. 5-10- WI. 207 • Mra.The Michigan tackle began inviting multiple
already had signed with the prospects in 1993 and they
2 3 . - - R. U..odooihlll
fiB. Ht. 5-10. Wt. 225 - ·Miami DoiJ?hins as the top all went at the very beginoverall choice. He inked a ning of the proceedings.
24. Tltano- Chrio Johnlon
So unlike last year,
when
_RB • Ht. 5-11 · WI. 197 • Eut C,rollno five-year contract worth
.

ATHENS
l7S West Ulliolt Street

:a~--­

Allin
Relpetonlca
Relmecl

. 'iWASHINGroN ·-

OT • Ht. 6-0 • Wt. 9011 • USC

U·Ht. s-10 · Wt.197- s. Florida

s.a "

ASSOCIATED PRESS

~- ---Ells

l\ro .lpr.p#qnr

CPAP Machines

•

IIYHo rRDFE.-.:11

-11 .... - Vemon G - .
DE· Ht. 6-3· Wl.2116- Ohio'BMM

0 XL Ill, Ohio
...... (740)-1711

Ea·t~•tllld

West's 31ifts ·Cavs
over Wizards 100-97

:1. FaJccna - 'M ill Ryan
·QB • Ht. 6-5 • WI. 255 • Bo01on Co.

Am~Gan,.,.J~

- New · Mulill- Gofiliort4um.- .
Many of his compositions
have received Emmy nominations.
Syracuse has won numerous competitions
and
awards, and has toured
extensively in the United
States, Canada, Europe,
· Africa and the Middle East
as recitalist, guest soloist,
and chamber musician. As a
Fulbright Scholar he studied
in Rome, Italy, at the St.
Cecilia · Academy under
Carlo Zecchi.
Tlu:oughout the seminar,
piano teachers and other
music educators with discover valuable professional
enrichment opportunities.
Round-table diseussions and
infonnal conversations will

Cavaliers' Delonte West (13) goes to the basket
against Washington Wizards' Gilbert Arenas, back, during the
third quarter of game 4 of an NBA basketball first-round playoff game Sunday in Washington. The Cavaliers won 100-97.

1 .'Dolphins - - LDng
''OT -•Ht. 6-7 • Wt SIS -lilichlgon

Erie·--

- Nation§, HrKtl'OO

Cle~land

•

~c:rumemydollyrogio1er.eom

.

K)ng

teammates told him was a
closed fist before tumbling
to the court. James kept his
balance and stepped toward
Stevenson, who got up and
stepped toward James.
They exchanged words,
but that was it, before team- ·
mates stepped in between.
"If we was on the ·park,
so~netl:ti.'1~g definitely would

James lost his crown.
All right, so it was his burgundy headband that went
flying when LeBron James
took a shot to the noggin
from · DeShawo Stevenson,
their simmering feud nearly
boiling over. James kept his
oool, allowing the flagrant "But,"~fat~~;a~~~
foul to spart him and his that's ,
Cleveland Cavaliers.
They want
At game's end. James was James this
Notre Dame's Brady Quinn just as collected, drawing working."
of
Washington
Stevenson's take'
had to wait hours to be cho- waves
Wizards defenders before
"That's how it goes.'' he ·
sen.
"lt's great to see the green dishing to Delonte West for said. "It was a big game for
room empty,'' said defensive a .tiebreaking 3-pointer with us."
Now the Cavaliers, who
end Long, who went second 5.4 seconds left. That shot.
along with James' 34 points eliminated the Wizards in
to St. Louis.
"It's a blessing to be here, and 12 rebounds, led the each of the previous two
they only ask six guys to Cavaliers to a I 00-97 victo- postseasons, have conttol,
come," DEILB Gholston ry on Sunday an.d a 3- 1 lead with Game 5 on Wednesday
tlleir . _best-of-seven · at Cleveland .
· added. "Funny how it in
James goLhelp Sunda)'
wprk.ed. out, teams made Eastern .Conference playoff
series .
from more than just West, !
good selections." ·
"Tiiere's
been
some whose career · playoff-high
After St. Louis tO!Ik the
actw1t.Jes 21 points included five 3son of Pro Football Hall of extracurricular
Farner Howie Long, Ryan, going on outside and inside pointers. Daniel Gibson
who could solve ~e quarter- this series;" James said, "but made four 3s, and Ben
llaGk llfQblWJII In ·Ailanta;. I' Vt' '~~ ' il'bk !!2 ~~y Wallace hJIQ 1 rebound~ -.
f,ocused." ~~' ·~ .
part of remarkable- 51-31
went to the Falcons.
The Wizards were ahead edge on the boards · for
following a long-standing
tradition, Oakland went for . by a point with 3 112 min- Cleveland.
the gamebreaker in running utes left in the frrst half · One small sequence that
back Mcfadden, prompting when James drove to the epitomized things; At the
the fans to boo loudly., Many basket, and Stevenson came end of the third quarter. Joe
wanted
the
two-time from behind and swiped a Smith's three-point play folhand out, clipping the Cavs'
star with what James said " ne . _ c.•an, B1
", ..... Dnrfl. 8J

a

Volquez pitches
Reds past Giants
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
- Edinson Volquez is one
of the few Cincinnati pitchers who ha&amp;n 't had to worry
about run support this season. When he'&amp; been on the

mound, the Reds score in
bunches.
Volquez struck out a
career-high 10 in seven
innings, llrandon Phillips
homered twice and the. Reds
used a six-run ftrst inning to
rotigh up BIIIT)' Zito in a I 01 win over the San
Francisco Giants on Sunday.
It was the fourth time in
five stans by Volquez that
the Rods have backed him
with at least eight runs. Each
time, the Cincinnati righthander was won.
"I dido 't even throw one
pitch in the game and I
looked at the bo;!rd and saw
\

six runs," .Volquez said.
"When you get some runs
early you're like; 'It's easy
today. Just go out the~e and
do what you do."'
Volquez (4..{)) allowed one
run and five hits to win his
thiid consecutive start, and
Ryan Freel's two-run single
keyed the six-run ftrst
inning for Cincinnati. Freel
later doubled and scored as
the Reds won consecutive
games for the ftrst time in
more than two weeks.
Zito, winless in his first
six starts for the flfSt time in
his career, gave up eight
runs and &gt;even hits while
walking three in only three
innings . The left-hander,
who signed a-$126 million,
seven-year deal prior to last

PI

ns•- .... 81

AP photo

Cincinnati Reds' Brandon Phillips. right, is congratulated by teammate Edwin Encarnacion
after Phillips hit a solo home run off of San Francisco Giants relief pitcher Patrick Misch in
the ninth inning of a baseball game Sunday in San Francisco. Reds won 10-1.
'

�llondaj, Apnl 28, 2008

-·
. . . B2 • The Ilaily Sentinel

. www.mydllilyle ;tinel.com

Monday, April z8, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.cum

Utribune - Sentinel CLASSIFIED

~

Reds

Pro Baseball Scoreboard

--

_.,. "
_ltlew \'brtl;;
Phliadelphia
Wuhlngton

15 10
13 11
14 12

.600.542 , ·..,
.538 1 '.'7

Bcslon

--t2

9

13
11

.4803

16
16 910

c-

-.gh

,.
12
11

,,
14
15
10 15

.3-16•6&gt;

.5602
,462 4 :...
.423 5/r
,ooo 6

Nlinnooota
Detrott

.720-

10 ~5
10 16

.400 -8

11
11

.560.560 .556.500 1\
.423 ~ ~.,

12

W

LPciGB

14
12
1,
11
,,

10
l3

.583.480 2i.

14
14
15

.440 9'.,
.440 3 ',
.'23.

l
16 10

PctGB
.615.615 ~
.462 4
-.346 7

16

Seanle
1llcas

.480fi

.42S 7!4.
.1185 8~

to

12

14

9

17

Pa-

1B Brandon MOO$ from
(ll).
CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Optioned
RHP Mike MacDougal 'ID Chorlotte (IL).
Recaled AHP Ehren Wassermann from

Charlotte.
Cl£VELAND INDIANS-,flecalled LHP
Jeremy Sowers aOO OF Brad Snyder
1rnm ButtaiO (IL). Optioned SOwers and
, OF Ben Fn~ncisco to Buffalo.
NEW YORK YANKEES Recalled 18
1 ~ Duncan 'from .Scranton~W~kes­
Barre (IL). Optioned LHP Blfty Trmer tc
Scran1on/Wilke..earre.
·
, OAKLAND
ATHLETICs-Actiavted
ftHP Justin Duch&amp;cherer"fromthe,5-day
DL. Optioned LHP Lenny ·DiNardo to
Sacramento (POL).
I TEXAS RANGERs-Purchased the
·f contract of R_HP Sidney Ponson 1rOm
OklahOma (POL) . Optioned RHP Kazuo

~..;;._,'--

Fukumori to (M(Iahoma.

--·-. •

TORONTO ·BLUE JAYs-Recalled OF
A.dam lind from Svracuse (IL). Optioned

Baltimore 5, Chicago White Sox 1, 1st

~go WMe Sao&lt; 6, Bahimore 5. 2nd
1

•Sat dlij.!ll....._

N.Y.4. Atlanta S
'St. l1lliio 4, Houstbn 3

I INF Joe

1 game .

Son &lt;Diogo &amp;,-Arizona 7 , 131nnings
1111 m+- .:4. ·Aorida 3
~ia 8, Pittsburgh 4
Chiaogo ClJbs 7. WBsllington 0
~nati 10, San Fnl:nc:isco ~
LA. .O odgen; 11 . Coloiado 3

Sundo!r•-

.I

14

w

Los ""gates
Oaktanc

WLPctGB

18 7
:t2 1S
11 15

PctGB

14
15

Chicago
Clewltand
Kansas City

-.615~

L

13 13
, ' 15

New Vorl&lt;
Toronto

WLPc1GB

liWI ·+nn
lltouolon

----

Battimore
Tampa Bay

WLPc1GB

Flortcla

w

' Oetrottii, •L.A. Ar109ls 4
1 O-land 4 - N.y_'r'onkees 3

Tampa Bay 2 . - 1
Kansas City 2, Toronto 1
'Mmnesota 12, T8K85 5
Soanle 5, ~-=;· N.Y. Yankees 1 Cleveland 0

l
I

ARIZONA
DI4MONDBACKsOptioned RHP Yumeiro Petit 1o Tur:::so-n
(PCL). Recalled fiHP Max Scllerzerlrom

'

, Tucson

'

4TLANr4 BRAVEs-Purchased the
contract of SS Btent Lillibridge from
Richmond (ll) . Optioned RHP Phil
to ~K:hmond ..Designated
RHP Zach Schreiber for ass1gnment.
COLORADO ROCKIEs-Designated
F
N'
fo
·
t
IN
Jayson
1x
r asstgnmen .
Purchased the contract o1 RHP Jose
Capellan 1rom Colorado Springs (PCL).
LOS ANGELES DODGERs-Placed
3RBNomarG ,apa
k rra~~;:e1;:y~.
ecalled 38 8 1a e IJIO' m
s
Voges (PCL).
'-IILWAUKEE ·BREWER~

I Stockman

· Tampa Bay~· Boston O
Texas 10, Mrnnesota 0
C11icago White so.: 6 Balti'nofe 1
Toronto 5 -+&lt;anus ct\y 2
tOakland
Sei!He ;2
1.!ll Angels 6, Detroli2

N.Y.6, Atlanta 3
Wlllhlngton 2, ChiCago Cubs o
- r g h 5, ""lladelphia 1
f'IDrida ·s, Milwaukee 2,.10 innings

4.

St.!.- ~-~DUston 1
ArizDna 2, San 'Diogo 1
QinclmBII lO, San Francisco ,
LIUlodgen~ 3 , Colorado 2, 10 innings

......,,..a.m.

l'ltboburgh (Snell 2-1) at NY Mets
(Sontana 3-2). 7 :10p.m.
Oncinnati (AT!'OYO ~) -at St . .Louts
(Weltarneywr 2.()), 8:1Sf.m.
Houston (Sampson -..2) a1 !Arizona
(Hai9n 5-1), 9!4ll p.m .
COlorado (Morat~s 1-1) "j, San
FranciSCO (Cam 0-2). 10:15 p.m.

•
J80S
Iod

arc

. .ats:;.&lt;a-

Baltimore (D.Cabrera 2~} at Chicago
Whtte Sao&lt; (Vazquez 3-2) , 2:05p.m.
N.Y. Vanlcaes (Mussina 2-3) at CleYBtand
(Laftev 0.01. 7:05p.m. .
- RHP'DIMIBueh tc-vllo ·(PCI.).
Oakland (Gaudin 2-1) at LA Angels
PITTSBURGH ~IR"lES---'RiiiHMd
(Ganand 3-2). 10:05 p.m ·
1· RHP 'llldt Moms. lRocallod fiHP John
Van Benschotan tfmm 1ntfianapolis
(AHL) .
•. hind Spol'm na
ti ••
SA:N FRANCISCO GIANT5-Piaoed ,
, I*'F8*U.
RHP i&lt;svin Comlio ·on the 15&lt;1111' OL
A-~
BOSTON RED SOX--I'Iaoad ~ B Soan Recalled LHP Pll!riak 'M - fmnliFnlono
!Casey on the 15-&lt;laV DL Recalled OF- (PCL).
1

a

basemen~"

RubinS011 Caoo in ihe fifth,

Wang got help from reliever Joba Chamberlain, who
Pagle 81
pitohed a ped'ect eighth in his
first appearance in Cleveland
since Game 2 of last year's
save. ''You can't replace playoffs when tiny insects
him. You just hope he gets called midges swarmed him
healthy and comes back and me Yankees in the [ate
stmng as soon as he .c an."
. .
Posada was a lale sallfcll mrungs.
Rivera worlced a 1-1-3
fmm me starting lineup. He ninth, striking out two forbis
first oomplained about a tired 'seventh save tD join Thevor
3ffi1 on April 8 and didn't
Hoffman and Lee 'Smith as
catoh fer two weeks, hoping the only closers to reilch the
the rest would strengthen his 450 milestone. After. Wang
shoulder. He caught the gave up a leadoff single in
series opener on Friday and the fifth, the .Indians dido't
the last four innings on manage another hit.
!_~~day ~he _lri"t a tying,
The trio of Wang,
wu::,;-run pmch trip1e.
ChamberJain and Rivera
~osada said he felt pain in combined for New Yod.:'s
his shoulder after a throw on other shutout, 2-0 over
Saturday, and when he came Tampa Bay on April6. Wang
to the ballpilrk on 'Sunday he improved to 17-I in 23
oouldn 't even have a game of career stans against AL
catch.
Central teams.
"We have to be smart
Sabathia (1-4) dropped to
about it," he said. "It's not 1-8 in regular-seasen games
getting any better. The MRI against the Yankees. The
shows a strained muscle, but defendin~ AL Cy Young
l think it's more than that. 1 winner pttched eight strong
want to really find out what it innings, giving up just four
is."
hits - one of them a •One-&lt;!lut
Posada is expected to visit homer in the fifth inning to
famed orthopedic surgeon Cabrera, who pulled a firstOr. James Andrews.
pitch changeup.
One of the Yankees • lead"He put a good swing on it
ers, Posada apologized for and hit it out of the park,"
oot being able to play and Sabathia said with a shrug.
live up ID the fow--yeat, $52
Like the Yankees, the
million contract he signed in 'Indians played without their
November.
most durable .player.
"You want t{) play," he
Center fielder Grady
said. "You put yow- uniform Sizemore sat because of a
on and you take a lot ofpride S0re ri~t -.ankle, ending the
in playing. We have to find majors longest consecutive
out what it is and then go games streak at 3 82.
on."
Sizemore called his injury a
Posada said playing any- ''mild?sprain" and manager
where but,behind the piau: i~ __f'!ic Wedgmdoesn't ti)ink ·the
not an optton. - .. .
All-Star W go.()n the nL. _
'T m not playing first
Lociced in an October-like
base." he said. 'Tm a catch- pitching matchup, Sabathia
er. We' ve _got seven frrst gave up a leadoff single to

rn...

'

'•

!,

.

coach, - Ed Orgeron. New
Orleans gave up the No_ I 0
overall . spot to New ·
England, and its third-round
slot, and got a fifth-rounder
along with the _chance to
take Ellis.
lbcn Jacksonville moved
up from 26th overall to
eighth, where it grabbed
Florida DE Derrick Harvey.
The Jaguars gave the
Ravens four picks to get to
that spot. .
Everything moved at a
good pace after the NFL cut ·
the first round from 15 minutes per pick to 10.
frrst
round took 3 hours, 30 minutes, a s~gnifi~ improvement over the ' five-hour
marathons of previous

frutn Page 81

Heisman Trophy runner-up
to fall to the New York Jets _
at No.6.
All- American defensive
tackle Dorsey was taken
fifth overall by the Chiefs.
Dorsey patted Iris heart as
he held up a No. I Chiefs
red jersey that was so small
he, frankly, oould never fit
into it.
"1bere was a lot of emotion," he said. "I told my~lf
I was not going to cry, but
you get the tears start commg and you can't control
that."
1bc Jets wound up with Yea!J·
The Dolphins used only a
Gholston of Ohio State,
few
seconds ID hand in their
wbo must now learn to play
card.
The Rams and Falcons
in the 3-4 alignment the
didn't
take: much longer. but
Iaili prefers.
"I'm lookina forward to the Raiders used almost
aoin&amp; up against Jtike Long their entire: time, as did
.
twice a year," be said of Kansas City.
J
like
Lana
became
the
what will be a revival of
tlnt top ovlirlll pick from
lbelr Bla Tl:n rivalry.
MichiJan
aince TOm
At
sevetUh overall
HarmOn ill I'!MI. He WM
~ never
tbe batlerill&amp;
ICQOMptnled by ~everal
aild
rully 11
E1Jbt of the next 15 cb family memben -OIIIIQCI ..

n.e

•

me

ltbcnpded~ Yanlrees'
ond baseman elf 'l'iJ;t.

T

he doftllld a Oolj)biDIIIit.
were involved ill ttldet.
1ben came anOther UlDI•
N41w Otlellli movJi:l up to
Who
proudly held up a Rruri
No. 7 to Jet defemfYe !lick·
jel'lley
and pointeil to the
1e Sedrlci Ellis of Southern
California, who wu recruit· fanam the upper deck of the
cd to the ~~ehool by the hall. Chrill LOng is the secSaints' new defensive line
~

ond straiJht. defensive line-

sec-

Oevelarid's crowd had just
quieted when Cabrera drove
'Sabathia' s next pitch over the
wall in left to give New Yod.:
lthe only run· it needed. It was
Cabrera's fifth homer, and
sixth allowed already by
Sabathia in 32 innings this
season.
Sabatbia, who has had to
banle emotional o!llbursts •o n
the mound in !die past, was
able to keep his &lt;lOOI ill the
sixth.
·
Denik Jeter led off with :a
bard-bit oouble and .moved
,to llhird •o n a ·groundout. After
pitching coach Carl Willis
came Qut for a visit, a firedup sabathia struok out..M:x
ROOri.guez and 'Shelley
Duncan to end the tbmat,
puncwating both Ks by
~ and pounding Iris fist
mt0 bis glove.
Sa'bathia said he was
lll'ileasing ;pent-up frustratien.
He ~ost three of his first fowstarts.
"~ t was everything;" he
said. .
Wan~, who ltJSt Game 1 to
Sabadiia in last _year's playoffs, was peised from the
start .and only got -in nuuble
once.
Jason Michaels doubled to
open the third and moved up
on a passed baD with tw{)
outs, but Wang got Travis
Hafner to ground out and end
the inning.
Wang gave up three other
· meaningless singles to the
Indians, who came in hatting
just .251 and have struggled
_offensively aU season.
"He was amazing and so
was
~ Yankees .calchef
JoSe Molina said. "You don' t
see many 1-0 games, and this
was one_to appreciate." _

.c:.

::

-Draft

lngl,::::ra~

.,

,y'

frumr.Bt
season, was booed {Rqucot-

ly by the crowd at AT&amp;T_
Park during Iris shortest outing of the year.
Afterward, the Giants
old:oowiDdgcd they 8 0011sidering sending Zito to ibe
bullpen to wodc. his way '0llt
of the slump. The dJreHime
All-Star and 2002 AL Cy
Young winner is only die
third pitcher since 1956 to
go 0--6 in Ae__rii, ·joinillg
Oave Stewart (Texas, 19,84) ·
and Mike Maroth (Detroit,
2003)_
"It's an opllion, for sw:e,"
San Francisco manager
Bruce Bochy said "We have
to do sometbinB different,
tbere' s no .g etlmg around
that. We can't keq:t doing
what we are doillg. We have
to get this guy righC
Phillips hit S01o home I1UIIS
in the seventh and ninth, •the
fourth time.in his career he's
had two homers in one
game. -Both came off Pat
Misch, who was called up
ifrom 1lrqjle-A Fresno eadicr
in ·the day :aliter
Gianls
placed starter Kevin cama
on !the 15-day diuNed list.
Volquez,
who
wu
. uii!ld 1mln 1mas in - ·
~season
tl3dc, gave ~ that"'·

Gallla
County
OH
Websltes:
In One Week With Us
www,mydailytribwlte.,com
www.mydailysentinel.com
l.classified@=ytr~~une.oom . REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS -www.mydailyregister.com
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
Ta Place
-Qtribune
Sentinel
l\egister
ftiUr Ad,
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
r

Ofltee M,q-~

word Ads

N WRITE M ~
5u
MAds
Shouldlndude 11leae nems
To ttelp Get It ;

- .••

Display Ads

Chitty ln-Ciolumn: J.:OO P~"'·
Monday-F~ fOt' lnMf'ltlon
Sn 'NeXt 0.~ Paper
Sund8.- l.n-e:::o1ulftn: l:OD p.m.

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

O~?Arltiru

All DlliiiJ\ay: '1.2 Noon z
•ualn
o.ys PriOr To
PubU
tlo II
Su...S.y ~y: 1:00

said, "'ot bim mac["
his left knee hesitated
. And yet, thanks to :a -sud- before badly missing a 3
deniy effoclii ve Ar.enas, over West
_
·
Washington
had
a
cbanoe
itO
Arenas
was
so
"distractliaaPIIJeBl
.
win !Nhat turned uut to be a ed~ and "flustered" by thC
gem of a game, a nice way things ended, he forgol
lowed
two
ollcnsiwe · change after Oleveland's about his postgame ritual of
rebounds and gave .!the 30-poiut ~lin Game 2, throwing rus jersey into the
cavaliers an 80-73 edge.
;a nd w.-:.-... '·s .36-;;point stands to give a fan a sou~
Wizards coach .Eddie
~~
Jordan was succinct: "'We margiJl in Game 3. •
venir.
.
Amau· iDade two fl:ce
Whatever emotional' lift
didn't rebound."
throws'Wi1h.S17: 8cmnds left he might have given his
Antawn
Jami110n
ted t 0 · • -.~........, " d b teammate~. whatever excite.Washington with "23 points
ge. ...--,...... - \W.IUIW
,__ "· _...:.
two points. · After .Ames ment his mere presenc~
and I I re...,un....., ......e missed a JuqM:f - p.t (/[ 111\ght have given the crowd,
Caron But!ler ~dcd 19 .anMor-3foallitiqlllllter- Arenas was not exactly
points. But it was Ste¥enS011 Arergis • 8-fOOt -fadc:aw.ay helpful at the outset. When
who was'. atttheccnta'oftbe with 28
he sat with 3112minutes left
key _play.
:made itW-d.· ·
in the first quarter, his line
LeBron vs. DeShawn bad
And !fun ichcrc, :as West gave whole new meaning
been mainly an . off,oolll!l put iit ·~·m ~ 5I£ his nickname "Agent Zero'~
nvalry, prompted m palt cby e~ ia · 1111: ·gym, zero points, zero field-goat
Stevenson calling fames . iadudillg ~ defeln;c, attempts, zero foul shots,
even:ated, and ~ to .lhoQ:IIl ('-s} Wl5 .,mg one assist, one foul, and four
involve ~ megastar la_y-'!- .., tib die lut,$bot. ADd [ of
Washington's
fiv~
and -one-bit wonder Soulja dltiak 9
•i "fi We m:get turnovers.
Boy. James' paUay-Zm::at- !Ibis gU_y
&lt;COurt
Arenas' ·first points didn'it
ed:ason_gdissingStevenson
He
ltbc ~ oomeunti)an:verselayupin
·that w~ played at a D.C. ~ ."
·, . · " · · the third quarter, and he finclub ithis weekend.
~ ·was ·dishi!)g •t o an -ished with 10 in a secies"He' s ~orth $~00 million, ~ West, who went tG high 32 minutes.
.
and he s wnttng songs high school in nearby
"This is not my telim,~
about me," Stevenson said Maryland.
Arenas said. "This is
before ttpoff. "What does
It was strikingly similar Antawn's and Caron's
.t hat say abou~ ?;Shawn to what happened in the team."
Ste¥enson? 6allin ,
fust-mund lil:ries between
Notes: Above Stevenson's
But
bestdes
·JCning these teams in 20Q6. -That locker, there was a sheet of
outsoored lby -11 ]Jl'llnts by· time the Cavaliers elimi- blue construction papciJames, Stevenson appeared
the WtZards in Game Jordan gave his playerS
to give him some motiva- 6 when James found before the series began.
tion.
_
·
Damon Jones open for a go- Drawn by a member of
"Was tt a flagrant fool? I ahead · baseline jumper in team's basketball operations
really don' t know.~ said
closing seconds of over- department at Jordan's
Wizards center Brendan time.
behest, it's labeled 'W!ZIIrds
Haywood, ejected f~m . "Washington definitely · Climb" and includes draw.
Game } after sh~vll\S ,probably had a flashback,~ ings and phrases meant 10
James. AU I know ts we James said.
inspire. There are stick-figweren't. trying to give up a
~ven after West came ure men swimming to
layup."
through, · Arenas
had · ".500" shore, others are
James went 1-f()I'-2 at the enough time to try to tie it climbing a rock labeled
~in~ after the !oul___.__ ~e~ -~. , __
"Cleveland." There are
rna ___ ' Jl 3 on ~ tm!W!Dg
B.ut a player who btiilt a boxes
words suC.b-as
possessi_on, all part of a 13- reputation for clutch late- "Disciplined · Aggression':
0 cavaliers spun.
game performances before and
"Will
and
"That," Gilbert Arenas having two operations on. -Detmminatioo.~

Cavaliers

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

• stMt Your Ads Wtt11 A...,_.. • Include Colnplete
'G
tpU :•l..:WeAPrici•AwidALL n!zliu:u

POUCIES: Dhiov.llf~ ...v. a. rilhtiD ... ~ cw mnlil-r _. •
~ . . . . I .!

"g . . -

..,.,.,_ur...,..tt-.trwub,..._hpl

U :ar ......... cll.n d

.,. • ...,_ ea:ftds:Aill. • eun.nt~ ~ ....-.. •All . - -

-

odllony-.

":a;teat

nated

Repair------··--··---·---·------·····----··----·--·--·--770
''""""for
S.le ...- ......... -----·---····-------··-----··--110
l MDIDnl fctr Sale ............................. 750

tell me they're missing a
play maker
from _their
offense," McFadden said. "I
feel J can add to that with
niy big-play ability.~
Dorsey will be a biJilding
block for the Chiefs, Who
are revamping their roster
this offseason. Gholston
could do the same for the
Jets, who have lacl.;ed a true
pass-rushing &lt;threat since
trading . away
fohn
Abraham.
Cincinnati took USC linebacker Keith Rivers ninth,
then the P.au-iots selected
another linebacker, Jerod
Mayo of Tennessee. Buffalo
went for Troy ·CB Lcodis
McKelvin and Denver took
Boise State tackle Ryan
Clady.
Carolina, looking for a
complement to DeAngelo
Williams, se~
running back Jona
Stewart, then dealt with
Philadelphia to
Pitt tackle Jeff Otah in the 19th poeilion. The P111thcn pYe·I!P
nut year '1 fii'IWOIIniler Iii
that trade.
play."
Chi~o took Vandorbllt
McPI!ddeti Joifia a lli'Owd· taGkle Chris Wll!illllli fot lti
1!4 bac:kflelcf · In Olldmdi spotty ofl'enlllvc line. Cbrl1
where Ju tin J:lllf1as rantl.y Lon1's
teammate,
•~&amp;ned li new cotJII1lllt 1114 J!l.lardlt~~~:kle --1 Branden
Dominic
Rhodes and Albert, went I to K.anw
LaMont Jordan 111'1: on the ettf"after the Chief• trlded
roster.
up with Detroit. Two llw
"The time 1 talked to the later. tackle Oosder Cheri! us
Raiders coachina staff, they of Boston Colleae went to

OretC

act

'th

~

-

; ·.

.

.

cornerback
i

Mike

IPPI"

-·

Jenkins of South Florid&amp;.
regarded by &amp;Orne as the best
defensive back in the draft.
In all, 14 @f the 31 first~
Millen.
round seleCtions - New
The first pla_yer from ihe England foxfcited its own
former Division 1-AA went spot because of 1he Spygale
16th when Arizona selected scandal, but .had a pick
CB Dominique Rodgers- acquired last year from San
Cromartie of Tennessee Francisco - wen: involved
State. At No. 18, another in trades. The Jets finished
small oollegc guy was taken off the swapping by moving
· wben Baltimore traded up to into Green Bay's No. 30 slot
get quarterllack Joe Fiacco for Purdue tight end Dustin ,
of Delaware with a pick . Keller, bringing a chorus of
Houstoo had owned.
boos.
.After cornerback Aqib .
The Super Bowl champio
Thlib, who reportedly tested on Giants _took KcliJlY.
positive for marijuana while Phillips of Miami with the
at Kansas, was taken by final pick' of the opeoini
Tampa Bay, the falcons round Phillips was the only
moved up to 21st overall. safety seJectcd in the round.
Tiley
chose
Southern
For the first time since
California tackle Sam 1990 and only the second
Bilker, son of Arena Football time since 1967, there were
Lea$ue
commissioner no wide mceivers · taken in
David Baker, to help paotect the first round.
Ryan.
Several renowned COUeae ·
- Dallas, which came into players went in the second
SatU:i:n wi_th two flnt· round, which beaan with
«JuDd ka, uiiOCI No. 22 for Miami takina Clem.an DE
McF
'a blckfleld mate Phillip Merlina. Houaton '1
It Atkanua, Felilt JOMI, Donnie Avery Will neltt, the
Who al10 c:an return lddu. flnt wldeout clio.en, by St.
That belli! a run on l'llfilllll'l, Louia.
wllh lillnoli'
Ra1hard • On coniiOCLitlve plcb
Mendenhall aoina to toward the end of Round 2,

get

Located at 333 Page .Street.
Middleport, Ohio is pklased
to announce we are accept··
ing applications tor LPN 's to
join our friendly and 'dedicat·
ed staff. Applicant's must be
dependable, Team Players
with positive attl:udes to join
us in proyidi!!g outslandng,
Stop by and flit out on

~

the Lions, prompting some
in the audience to chant
"FIRE MILLEN" in reference ID Lions president Matt

Pltubllflh and ajloed_y Chria
Jobnaoll of &amp;at Carolina
taken by Tennea110e at 2-4.
The Cowboya then lrllded
up three apots with Seattle to

A.
celebration
of
Life .• Overbrootc.
Center,

&lt;1\!!!H!v Cll!J !!I !!!if ~nts:

around

Baltimore pbbed Rutaen
•tar runninj back Ray Rlce,
Oreen Bay
.elllllted
Loui•vllle OB Brlln Brohm,
and Miamf aot Michiaan
QB Chad.Henne.

___;:.,-~-'----

~~~~

I

ance and mileage. Phone Building during regular busi·

An Exceltant way to · earn 740-441·1393 for more info ness hours of 8:30AM until
money. The New Avon. ·
or apply at 1480 Jackson 5:00 PM , Monday through
carr Marilyn 304..a82-2645
Pike. Ga!lpolis, Ohio.
Friday.

wv.

"\IONI All Areas! To Buy or Point r~...
~---compaSel. Shlitey Spea«; 304- ny is seel&lt;ing 0 Director at
67__:_5-_1~
"-'------- Human
Resources.
BartenDer
Neededl Applicant should have at

Ellperienoe Required. sefid
Resumect to: Attn: MiKe, PO
. Box 303, Gallipolis, OH
4563. Resumes mUS1 be
racoived by Monday, May
5th 11 4pm:

Financial

nance your home

in . the Human Resource
Work a sthedule thai is
field. Applicant mus1 ha\119
~tor you
experience m administering .
andyourlorrily!
all benefit plans. AppiiOO,M
Use your custom&amp;&lt;
must have strong commuriservice akiiiS to answer

a loon.
of raq""""' tor any .

qualified line cooKs and 'interested.

please

• 4 WMehn.......... _ ........._..740
-------------····--------·----·-- 570

FEDERII.L

HIRING

POSTAL JOBS

A'!iPay $20/hr "'
C:C107tt"~o.·.., inciUdes

in!l- For~ and tree
ijOY&amp;mOment job info, caH

_,""''

Federal-

. CT.

Placed by adSouroe, not

American A.ssoc. of Labor 1• oftered wl USPS who hires.
913-59!H!226, 24/lvs. emp. _ _
H_I66_-&lt;103-2
__
582__

advance

~

payments

fee&amp; or insuranoe. C.l
Office

of

Cons

A - toll fra&amp; at 1 .
2~

calts on behalf of
non-profit Heanh and
Christian organizabons.

send

-=c::-c:c-'-·=-"-:--

IIIEI-EI

tnbound a OUibound

applications 'lor temtd, but not mn.nda1ory. tf

$17.8g.S28271hr., now hif-

tnstitution'

"' c
AftBirS ea liRE you roll-

teast 1M! years axperience

dishwashers. Pktaee BWIY resume' to CLA 8 c/o Point ·
m person or call to set up an pteasant Register 200 Main
interview. 441-9371 , S08 St. Pt. Pleasant. WV 25550
2nd Ave. Gallipolis.
POST OFFICE NOW .

- ~ Slle-------··------------··--···-11211
10 ..__, __________, __ ................................ 220

Borrow Smart. Contact

Offioe

cation

Jlent.............- ......... -...-.. GD

HN'ei'IC:::I':**
the Ohio Division

===---sldlls andstroog com·
Courtside Bar and Grll now pu1er skills. Degree preseeking

to leam ~

mortgage broker o
tender
is propert
ltoansed. (This is a
service anr'tou"""mtml
from the Ohio Vol

New Amel&gt;ty:
On·Site Physician tor

PIOJiishing Company)

amployees ana their
families!

t~l

,_.,..._ ~,,_.... ,. . , . _
aratl8tng t.tc1 NOWt.

,_I'U

Colt far JOUIIu•olwl
Job ext. 1_,

1...::;:;.::;;;,;;

S&amp;wnty Ol!ioers needed in
Help wanted at Darst Home New Hawn, WV, $7.00 - nll-~00::~---,~

"""'-

a"""' Homa. 740-992·5023

--'-----Management
Assistant
Manager positions at Zanzio
To Gol store located a1 900
2nd Ave. Hea.tth Insurance
and Dlhei'benefils a\/BIIal&gt;le.
Opportunity for advanoe·
ment, includinn ,.,._ratann
•

..,.,.....

"'"'

and franchising. To leam
mor8 mail resume to 72 N

Buy·--------··--------------···-·----'------ 0!10
to Buy· Fann SUppllea .................. l20

to

To

oo ..................-··------·-------·-·· 110

Rent....................-....................... C70
GaNipolll .•..--'···---·····--··---····--···072

lao

rooms. Large yard. COvered
deok. Mached garage. 7•o-

Call TOday' 740-446-4367.
1-600-21.-0452

EEO-MFDV

- - - - - - - www. ~r; I w t I ; .edu 367-7129.
ACCfeOrtld M.mbir Accfdtng ·_ ---'-. - - - -- Wanted:
..
Col.rncil b •• Jo;: ..,,1 Collglc
.
29 Serious P9ople to Work ana Schooll 12748.
1 Acre, Flat Lot. Specious
from nome using a "'"1'JJ- ~·
WANI'FD
284 Lg. Kit &amp; LR DR.
er. Up to $500.00 to
To Do
Den wl ~~~ce. 2 c.r

ll!BR,

Plaza Blvd.. Mn: HR.
Chilticothe, OH 4560 1. or
M/ld deliver to Eric at the $1 ,500 .00
PTIFT •
•
www.Homalnc:ome&lt;I-U.oom
at- EOE
~·Lawn-Care Service, MoMng
Seel&lt;ing help tor aomeone to
·
&amp; Trimming. Ffee Estimates
toke care of pa•onts call
!7 oo1""1 - t 333 o'
!I!M-67~454

riliiir~~~~,

s7.66 p&amp;! hour. SOiools
hours vary_Mu&lt;i have. t&gt;iQl1 •
~
schoo( diptDma or GEO.
L.--::~~-.,1
clean criminal history, pass Galllpollo c - Collogo
drug screnn and back· (Careers Close To Home) o down pavment. • bed-

ground chedt. C811 1-800275-8359 M·F 8:30 to :00.

lkutwc;t.

~wiiiRIMdtlnthi'HmtiVII...,..edltian.

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS ca11

(700~5-!15&lt;16

attached Gar1,gtt Rodney

$95,00J (700) 245-9125
------HUD_ Homo&amp;t 3 bod. only
.ooot tor ~111ings eoo~~OK A019

s11

•Bol:

·.auatlse: cta . . ~to 1M......_'"* Kowtntl Act 01 1111. •Tht.

'"~---·

Ohio Vllily

~~"'·---------------------------------~
Por18 l Acces~~~Fiea ,............- ........... 780

.,.tirna.

Em:n nv...t be~
~*-t . .-oa«fllhe.,... ~ bt'h..-n:ll' ...:1 only tt. fnt "-"'ion.

Publlll1lng ,.,
."""',
. ....
thorlghl!oedll,
rojoct or conoetq

ond Fleil-.............................1110

Graphics soc for 5q!Cift

e.:..

SI.OOfor kin)e

to

me

Bonlas$3.00!perad

1m

~•per

_..,,,....lining

waoR.

MowyouCXIII haw borders andfJI'UPhlcs
iL-'1
added ~your dassified ads
(..~

n........... l!or Sunct.ys
• 11.11 ads 11111Stbe JINPIIId"

For Sunct.p

manager.

•.

man' selected in the ojleriing
round hy St. Louis, follow- ,
ing
Nebraska's - Adam
Carriker last year.
"I knew I was in the running, but all the guys here
were great play.ers and -they
could have chosen anyone,"
Chris Long said. "It came
down to needs."
Ryan has an open course
to starting in Atlan'ta, with
Michael Vick in jail -on dogfighting chilrges, and only
journeymen &lt;;Jimi-s ~edman
and iloey Ham:ington to compete with.
' ·
"{ ·have to go down and
gain the respect of my teammates, do everything I can
do to get on the field next
year," Ryan said
Asked about replacing
Vick in Atlanta-and whether
he e.xpected to play or watch .
as a rookie, Ryan 11dded:
"I'U go down there to do all
I can tO be-successful, try to
not he distracted, try to witi.
... There's ·not a riaht or
wrona way to 4o lt. I itht to
act there and team the
offente 10 I have a chance to

•

Randy Wmn's RBI single in
Zito -gave up seveu bit»,
tbe thinl but pitdlod out of a Walked tlm:ie al1d struck oct
OOMJUt, bases-loaded jam &lt;me.
.
He rctimU 2 of tbe fihaH 4
Aftcl- finishillg 11-13 ill
be faced while his ERA rose his firl;t season with Sail
just a hair, from 1.21 to 1.23. Francisoo and going winless
"He's one -of the few - in his tir.;t six starts this sea·
pitcherS around that can son, Zito !Wizes somethin!
SIJikc himself out of trou- has to $ive. He wants to
ble.~ Cincinnati manager mmain m the Giants rota•
Dusty Baker said "Wbcn he tion but is open to wbateveigot in trouble lba! ooe 6me derision ,dJe c,qnrs mak. :
be :reaobed \back and got
"I definitely want lhe ball;
some dynamite Sbrlt 1bat rm not backing down ~
waun outstalllfu1g jOb.~
lhat," Zito said. ~aut die~
Zito got &lt;tff to a rough know what's ,best fur tiM
start and oouldn't recover, a ballclub. It feels (bad) goipa
familiar 1beme dJis season.
out here and losing for the~
He ~ave: up tWo w~ l!IId guys."
•
Notes: Volquez helped
five hits m the first mnmg
wbeo . tbe Reds batte4 himsel( with a run-scoring
around, including im RBI groundout in the third -··
«iple from catc~ _.!lui Cincinnati RF Ken 'Griffey
Balm tb11t made it 6-'0. After JL, wbo is tbrec home runs
lasting Only 32-3 innings in . shy of 600 for his carccc,
Ibis -t evioos stmtt,Zito need--- . -and LF Adam Dunn WOP:
eel 39 pitolles to get out of given the day -off by manag~
the tim. er Dusty Baker. ... San
The lteds added anodtcr francisco C Bengie Molinf
:run in lhe second when was held out 'Of the linllu_p
~y Pll.tten;on drew a for a second straight day but
leado1J walk. stole seoood is expected to play Monday
.and scored •on
Jeff .against Colorado. The
~i11gcr's single to left.
Giants are takfug a cautious
haven't
really approaoh with Molina, whO
."We
Jn"1P"'!' &amp;Jybody like that in was plagued ·by a sore lel;t
:a ~ time ·c arll in ~ . &lt;juadriceps in sprin~ train~~ JUa- said. "Zito mg. ·-- Bochy remams tied
beJpr:d 111s some. Hi: wasn't with former San Francisco
:stu~P• (the) .Zito lhlt I've skipper Felipe Alou for
~ many times. Yoil've
most wins (1,033) in me
gl)l ~ take advantage .o f majors b
_ y a foreign-boo~

�llondaj, Apnl 28, 2008

-·
. . . B2 • The Ilaily Sentinel

. www.mydllilyle ;tinel.com

Monday, April z8, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.cum

Utribune - Sentinel CLASSIFIED

~

Reds

Pro Baseball Scoreboard

--

_.,. "
_ltlew \'brtl;;
Phliadelphia
Wuhlngton

15 10
13 11
14 12

.600.542 , ·..,
.538 1 '.'7

Bcslon

--t2

9

13
11

.4803

16
16 910

c-

-.gh

,.
12
11

,,
14
15
10 15

.3-16•6&gt;

.5602
,462 4 :...
.423 5/r
,ooo 6

Nlinnooota
Detrott

.720-

10 ~5
10 16

.400 -8

11
11

.560.560 .556.500 1\
.423 ~ ~.,

12

W

LPciGB

14
12
1,
11
,,

10
l3

.583.480 2i.

14
14
15

.440 9'.,
.440 3 ',
.'23.

l
16 10

PctGB
.615.615 ~
.462 4
-.346 7

16

Seanle
1llcas

.480fi

.42S 7!4.
.1185 8~

to

12

14

9

17

Pa-

1B Brandon MOO$ from
(ll).
CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Optioned
RHP Mike MacDougal 'ID Chorlotte (IL).
Recaled AHP Ehren Wassermann from

Charlotte.
Cl£VELAND INDIANS-,flecalled LHP
Jeremy Sowers aOO OF Brad Snyder
1rnm ButtaiO (IL). Optioned SOwers and
, OF Ben Fn~ncisco to Buffalo.
NEW YORK YANKEES Recalled 18
1 ~ Duncan 'from .Scranton~W~kes­
Barre (IL). Optioned LHP Blfty Trmer tc
Scran1on/Wilke..earre.
·
, OAKLAND
ATHLETICs-Actiavted
ftHP Justin Duch&amp;cherer"fromthe,5-day
DL. Optioned LHP Lenny ·DiNardo to
Sacramento (POL).
I TEXAS RANGERs-Purchased the
·f contract of R_HP Sidney Ponson 1rOm
OklahOma (POL) . Optioned RHP Kazuo

~..;;._,'--

Fukumori to (M(Iahoma.

--·-. •

TORONTO ·BLUE JAYs-Recalled OF
A.dam lind from Svracuse (IL). Optioned

Baltimore 5, Chicago White Sox 1, 1st

~go WMe Sao&lt; 6, Bahimore 5. 2nd
1

•Sat dlij.!ll....._

N.Y.4. Atlanta S
'St. l1lliio 4, Houstbn 3

I INF Joe

1 game .

Son &lt;Diogo &amp;,-Arizona 7 , 131nnings
1111 m+- .:4. ·Aorida 3
~ia 8, Pittsburgh 4
Chiaogo ClJbs 7. WBsllington 0
~nati 10, San Fnl:nc:isco ~
LA. .O odgen; 11 . Coloiado 3

Sundo!r•-

.I

14

w

Los ""gates
Oaktanc

WLPctGB

18 7
:t2 1S
11 15

PctGB

14
15

Chicago
Clewltand
Kansas City

-.615~

L

13 13
, ' 15

New Vorl&lt;
Toronto

WLPc1GB

liWI ·+nn
lltouolon

----

Battimore
Tampa Bay

WLPc1GB

Flortcla

w

' Oetrottii, •L.A. Ar109ls 4
1 O-land 4 - N.y_'r'onkees 3

Tampa Bay 2 . - 1
Kansas City 2, Toronto 1
'Mmnesota 12, T8K85 5
Soanle 5, ~-=;· N.Y. Yankees 1 Cleveland 0

l
I

ARIZONA
DI4MONDBACKsOptioned RHP Yumeiro Petit 1o Tur:::so-n
(PCL). Recalled fiHP Max Scllerzerlrom

'

, Tucson

'

4TLANr4 BRAVEs-Purchased the
contract of SS Btent Lillibridge from
Richmond (ll) . Optioned RHP Phil
to ~K:hmond ..Designated
RHP Zach Schreiber for ass1gnment.
COLORADO ROCKIEs-Designated
F
N'
fo
·
t
IN
Jayson
1x
r asstgnmen .
Purchased the contract o1 RHP Jose
Capellan 1rom Colorado Springs (PCL).
LOS ANGELES DODGERs-Placed
3RBNomarG ,apa
k rra~~;:e1;:y~.
ecalled 38 8 1a e IJIO' m
s
Voges (PCL).
'-IILWAUKEE ·BREWER~

I Stockman

· Tampa Bay~· Boston O
Texas 10, Mrnnesota 0
C11icago White so.: 6 Balti'nofe 1
Toronto 5 -+&lt;anus ct\y 2
tOakland
Sei!He ;2
1.!ll Angels 6, Detroli2

N.Y.6, Atlanta 3
Wlllhlngton 2, ChiCago Cubs o
- r g h 5, ""lladelphia 1
f'IDrida ·s, Milwaukee 2,.10 innings

4.

St.!.- ~-~DUston 1
ArizDna 2, San 'Diogo 1
QinclmBII lO, San Francisco ,
LIUlodgen~ 3 , Colorado 2, 10 innings

......,,..a.m.

l'ltboburgh (Snell 2-1) at NY Mets
(Sontana 3-2). 7 :10p.m.
Oncinnati (AT!'OYO ~) -at St . .Louts
(Weltarneywr 2.()), 8:1Sf.m.
Houston (Sampson -..2) a1 !Arizona
(Hai9n 5-1), 9!4ll p.m .
COlorado (Morat~s 1-1) "j, San
FranciSCO (Cam 0-2). 10:15 p.m.

•
J80S
Iod

arc

. .ats:;.&lt;a-

Baltimore (D.Cabrera 2~} at Chicago
Whtte Sao&lt; (Vazquez 3-2) , 2:05p.m.
N.Y. Vanlcaes (Mussina 2-3) at CleYBtand
(Laftev 0.01. 7:05p.m. .
- RHP'DIMIBueh tc-vllo ·(PCI.).
Oakland (Gaudin 2-1) at LA Angels
PITTSBURGH ~IR"lES---'RiiiHMd
(Ganand 3-2). 10:05 p.m ·
1· RHP 'llldt Moms. lRocallod fiHP John
Van Benschotan tfmm 1ntfianapolis
(AHL) .
•. hind Spol'm na
ti ••
SA:N FRANCISCO GIANT5-Piaoed ,
, I*'F8*U.
RHP i&lt;svin Comlio ·on the 15&lt;1111' OL
A-~
BOSTON RED SOX--I'Iaoad ~ B Soan Recalled LHP Pll!riak 'M - fmnliFnlono
!Casey on the 15-&lt;laV DL Recalled OF- (PCL).
1

a

basemen~"

RubinS011 Caoo in ihe fifth,

Wang got help from reliever Joba Chamberlain, who
Pagle 81
pitohed a ped'ect eighth in his
first appearance in Cleveland
since Game 2 of last year's
save. ''You can't replace playoffs when tiny insects
him. You just hope he gets called midges swarmed him
healthy and comes back and me Yankees in the [ate
stmng as soon as he .c an."
. .
Posada was a lale sallfcll mrungs.
Rivera worlced a 1-1-3
fmm me starting lineup. He ninth, striking out two forbis
first oomplained about a tired 'seventh save tD join Thevor
3ffi1 on April 8 and didn't
Hoffman and Lee 'Smith as
catoh fer two weeks, hoping the only closers to reilch the
the rest would strengthen his 450 milestone. After. Wang
shoulder. He caught the gave up a leadoff single in
series opener on Friday and the fifth, the .Indians dido't
the last four innings on manage another hit.
!_~~day ~he _lri"t a tying,
The trio of Wang,
wu::,;-run pmch trip1e.
ChamberJain and Rivera
~osada said he felt pain in combined for New Yod.:'s
his shoulder after a throw on other shutout, 2-0 over
Saturday, and when he came Tampa Bay on April6. Wang
to the ballpilrk on 'Sunday he improved to 17-I in 23
oouldn 't even have a game of career stans against AL
catch.
Central teams.
"We have to be smart
Sabathia (1-4) dropped to
about it," he said. "It's not 1-8 in regular-seasen games
getting any better. The MRI against the Yankees. The
shows a strained muscle, but defendin~ AL Cy Young
l think it's more than that. 1 winner pttched eight strong
want to really find out what it innings, giving up just four
is."
hits - one of them a •One-&lt;!lut
Posada is expected to visit homer in the fifth inning to
famed orthopedic surgeon Cabrera, who pulled a firstOr. James Andrews.
pitch changeup.
One of the Yankees • lead"He put a good swing on it
ers, Posada apologized for and hit it out of the park,"
oot being able to play and Sabathia said with a shrug.
live up ID the fow--yeat, $52
Like the Yankees, the
million contract he signed in 'Indians played without their
November.
most durable .player.
"You want t{) play," he
Center fielder Grady
said. "You put yow- uniform Sizemore sat because of a
on and you take a lot ofpride S0re ri~t -.ankle, ending the
in playing. We have to find majors longest consecutive
out what it is and then go games streak at 3 82.
on."
Sizemore called his injury a
Posada said playing any- ''mild?sprain" and manager
where but,behind the piau: i~ __f'!ic Wedgmdoesn't ti)ink ·the
not an optton. - .. .
All-Star W go.()n the nL. _
'T m not playing first
Lociced in an October-like
base." he said. 'Tm a catch- pitching matchup, Sabathia
er. We' ve _got seven frrst gave up a leadoff single to

rn...

'

'•

!,

.

coach, - Ed Orgeron. New
Orleans gave up the No_ I 0
overall . spot to New ·
England, and its third-round
slot, and got a fifth-rounder
along with the _chance to
take Ellis.
lbcn Jacksonville moved
up from 26th overall to
eighth, where it grabbed
Florida DE Derrick Harvey.
The Jaguars gave the
Ravens four picks to get to
that spot. .
Everything moved at a
good pace after the NFL cut ·
the first round from 15 minutes per pick to 10.
frrst
round took 3 hours, 30 minutes, a s~gnifi~ improvement over the ' five-hour
marathons of previous

frutn Page 81

Heisman Trophy runner-up
to fall to the New York Jets _
at No.6.
All- American defensive
tackle Dorsey was taken
fifth overall by the Chiefs.
Dorsey patted Iris heart as
he held up a No. I Chiefs
red jersey that was so small
he, frankly, oould never fit
into it.
"1bere was a lot of emotion," he said. "I told my~lf
I was not going to cry, but
you get the tears start commg and you can't control
that."
1bc Jets wound up with Yea!J·
The Dolphins used only a
Gholston of Ohio State,
few
seconds ID hand in their
wbo must now learn to play
card.
The Rams and Falcons
in the 3-4 alignment the
didn't
take: much longer. but
Iaili prefers.
"I'm lookina forward to the Raiders used almost
aoin&amp; up against Jtike Long their entire: time, as did
.
twice a year," be said of Kansas City.
J
like
Lana
became
the
what will be a revival of
tlnt top ovlirlll pick from
lbelr Bla Tl:n rivalry.
MichiJan
aince TOm
At
sevetUh overall
HarmOn ill I'!MI. He WM
~ never
tbe batlerill&amp;
ICQOMptnled by ~everal
aild
rully 11
E1Jbt of the next 15 cb family memben -OIIIIQCI ..

n.e

•

me

ltbcnpded~ Yanlrees'
ond baseman elf 'l'iJ;t.

T

he doftllld a Oolj)biDIIIit.
were involved ill ttldet.
1ben came anOther UlDI•
N41w Otlellli movJi:l up to
Who
proudly held up a Rruri
No. 7 to Jet defemfYe !lick·
jel'lley
and pointeil to the
1e Sedrlci Ellis of Southern
California, who wu recruit· fanam the upper deck of the
cd to the ~~ehool by the hall. Chrill LOng is the secSaints' new defensive line
~

ond straiJht. defensive line-

sec-

Oevelarid's crowd had just
quieted when Cabrera drove
'Sabathia' s next pitch over the
wall in left to give New Yod.:
lthe only run· it needed. It was
Cabrera's fifth homer, and
sixth allowed already by
Sabathia in 32 innings this
season.
Sabatbia, who has had to
banle emotional o!llbursts •o n
the mound in !die past, was
able to keep his &lt;lOOI ill the
sixth.
·
Denik Jeter led off with :a
bard-bit oouble and .moved
,to llhird •o n a ·groundout. After
pitching coach Carl Willis
came Qut for a visit, a firedup sabathia struok out..M:x
ROOri.guez and 'Shelley
Duncan to end the tbmat,
puncwating both Ks by
~ and pounding Iris fist
mt0 bis glove.
Sa'bathia said he was
lll'ileasing ;pent-up frustratien.
He ~ost three of his first fowstarts.
"~ t was everything;" he
said. .
Wan~, who ltJSt Game 1 to
Sabadiia in last _year's playoffs, was peised from the
start .and only got -in nuuble
once.
Jason Michaels doubled to
open the third and moved up
on a passed baD with tw{)
outs, but Wang got Travis
Hafner to ground out and end
the inning.
Wang gave up three other
· meaningless singles to the
Indians, who came in hatting
just .251 and have struggled
_offensively aU season.
"He was amazing and so
was
~ Yankees .calchef
JoSe Molina said. "You don' t
see many 1-0 games, and this
was one_to appreciate." _

.c:.

::

-Draft

lngl,::::ra~

.,

,y'

frumr.Bt
season, was booed {Rqucot-

ly by the crowd at AT&amp;T_
Park during Iris shortest outing of the year.
Afterward, the Giants
old:oowiDdgcd they 8 0011sidering sending Zito to ibe
bullpen to wodc. his way '0llt
of the slump. The dJreHime
All-Star and 2002 AL Cy
Young winner is only die
third pitcher since 1956 to
go 0--6 in Ae__rii, ·joinillg
Oave Stewart (Texas, 19,84) ·
and Mike Maroth (Detroit,
2003)_
"It's an opllion, for sw:e,"
San Francisco manager
Bruce Bochy said "We have
to do sometbinB different,
tbere' s no .g etlmg around
that. We can't keq:t doing
what we are doillg. We have
to get this guy righC
Phillips hit S01o home I1UIIS
in the seventh and ninth, •the
fourth time.in his career he's
had two homers in one
game. -Both came off Pat
Misch, who was called up
ifrom 1lrqjle-A Fresno eadicr
in ·the day :aliter
Gianls
placed starter Kevin cama
on !the 15-day diuNed list.
Volquez,
who
wu
. uii!ld 1mln 1mas in - ·
~season
tl3dc, gave ~ that"'·

Gallla
County
OH
Websltes:
In One Week With Us
www,mydailytribwlte.,com
www.mydailysentinel.com
l.classified@=ytr~~une.oom . REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS -www.mydailyregister.com
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
Ta Place
-Qtribune
Sentinel
l\egister
ftiUr Ad,
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
r

Ofltee M,q-~

word Ads

N WRITE M ~
5u
MAds
Shouldlndude 11leae nems
To ttelp Get It ;

- .••

Display Ads

Chitty ln-Ciolumn: J.:OO P~"'·
Monday-F~ fOt' lnMf'ltlon
Sn 'NeXt 0.~ Paper
Sund8.- l.n-e:::o1ulftn: l:OD p.m.

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

O~?Arltiru

All DlliiiJ\ay: '1.2 Noon z
•ualn
o.ys PriOr To
PubU
tlo II
Su...S.y ~y: 1:00

said, "'ot bim mac["
his left knee hesitated
. And yet, thanks to :a -sud- before badly missing a 3
deniy effoclii ve Ar.enas, over West
_
·
Washington
had
a
cbanoe
itO
Arenas
was
so
"distractliaaPIIJeBl
.
win !Nhat turned uut to be a ed~ and "flustered" by thC
gem of a game, a nice way things ended, he forgol
lowed
two
ollcnsiwe · change after Oleveland's about his postgame ritual of
rebounds and gave .!the 30-poiut ~lin Game 2, throwing rus jersey into the
cavaliers an 80-73 edge.
;a nd w.-:.-... '·s .36-;;point stands to give a fan a sou~
Wizards coach .Eddie
~~
Jordan was succinct: "'We margiJl in Game 3. •
venir.
.
Amau· iDade two fl:ce
Whatever emotional' lift
didn't rebound."
throws'Wi1h.S17: 8cmnds left he might have given his
Antawn
Jami110n
ted t 0 · • -.~........, " d b teammate~. whatever excite.Washington with "23 points
ge. ...--,...... - \W.IUIW
,__ "· _...:.
two points. · After .Ames ment his mere presenc~
and I I re...,un....., ......e missed a JuqM:f - p.t (/[ 111\ght have given the crowd,
Caron But!ler ~dcd 19 .anMor-3foallitiqlllllter- Arenas was not exactly
points. But it was Ste¥enS011 Arergis • 8-fOOt -fadc:aw.ay helpful at the outset. When
who was'. atttheccnta'oftbe with 28
he sat with 3112minutes left
key _play.
:made itW-d.· ·
in the first quarter, his line
LeBron vs. DeShawn bad
And !fun ichcrc, :as West gave whole new meaning
been mainly an . off,oolll!l put iit ·~·m ~ 5I£ his nickname "Agent Zero'~
nvalry, prompted m palt cby e~ ia · 1111: ·gym, zero points, zero field-goat
Stevenson calling fames . iadudillg ~ defeln;c, attempts, zero foul shots,
even:ated, and ~ to .lhoQ:IIl ('-s} Wl5 .,mg one assist, one foul, and four
involve ~ megastar la_y-'!- .., tib die lut,$bot. ADd [ of
Washington's
fiv~
and -one-bit wonder Soulja dltiak 9
•i "fi We m:get turnovers.
Boy. James' paUay-Zm::at- !Ibis gU_y
&lt;COurt
Arenas' ·first points didn'it
ed:ason_gdissingStevenson
He
ltbc ~ oomeunti)an:verselayupin
·that w~ played at a D.C. ~ ."
·, . · " · · the third quarter, and he finclub ithis weekend.
~ ·was ·dishi!)g •t o an -ished with 10 in a secies"He' s ~orth $~00 million, ~ West, who went tG high 32 minutes.
.
and he s wnttng songs high school in nearby
"This is not my telim,~
about me," Stevenson said Maryland.
Arenas said. "This is
before ttpoff. "What does
It was strikingly similar Antawn's and Caron's
.t hat say abou~ ?;Shawn to what happened in the team."
Ste¥enson? 6allin ,
fust-mund lil:ries between
Notes: Above Stevenson's
But
bestdes
·JCning these teams in 20Q6. -That locker, there was a sheet of
outsoored lby -11 ]Jl'llnts by· time the Cavaliers elimi- blue construction papciJames, Stevenson appeared
the WtZards in Game Jordan gave his playerS
to give him some motiva- 6 when James found before the series began.
tion.
_
·
Damon Jones open for a go- Drawn by a member of
"Was tt a flagrant fool? I ahead · baseline jumper in team's basketball operations
really don' t know.~ said
closing seconds of over- department at Jordan's
Wizards center Brendan time.
behest, it's labeled 'W!ZIIrds
Haywood, ejected f~m . "Washington definitely · Climb" and includes draw.
Game } after sh~vll\S ,probably had a flashback,~ ings and phrases meant 10
James. AU I know ts we James said.
inspire. There are stick-figweren't. trying to give up a
~ven after West came ure men swimming to
layup."
through, · Arenas
had · ".500" shore, others are
James went 1-f()I'-2 at the enough time to try to tie it climbing a rock labeled
~in~ after the !oul___.__ ~e~ -~. , __
"Cleveland." There are
rna ___ ' Jl 3 on ~ tm!W!Dg
B.ut a player who btiilt a boxes
words suC.b-as
possessi_on, all part of a 13- reputation for clutch late- "Disciplined · Aggression':
0 cavaliers spun.
game performances before and
"Will
and
"That," Gilbert Arenas having two operations on. -Detmminatioo.~

Cavaliers

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

• stMt Your Ads Wtt11 A...,_.. • Include Colnplete
'G
tpU :•l..:WeAPrici•AwidALL n!zliu:u

POUCIES: Dhiov.llf~ ...v. a. rilhtiD ... ~ cw mnlil-r _. •
~ . . . . I .!

"g . . -

..,.,.,_ur...,..tt-.trwub,..._hpl

U :ar ......... cll.n d

.,. • ...,_ ea:ftds:Aill. • eun.nt~ ~ ....-.. •All . - -

-

odllony-.

":a;teat

nated

Repair------··--··---·---·------·····----··----·--·--·--770
''""""for
S.le ...- ......... -----·---····-------··-----··--110
l MDIDnl fctr Sale ............................. 750

tell me they're missing a
play maker
from _their
offense," McFadden said. "I
feel J can add to that with
niy big-play ability.~
Dorsey will be a biJilding
block for the Chiefs, Who
are revamping their roster
this offseason. Gholston
could do the same for the
Jets, who have lacl.;ed a true
pass-rushing &lt;threat since
trading . away
fohn
Abraham.
Cincinnati took USC linebacker Keith Rivers ninth,
then the P.au-iots selected
another linebacker, Jerod
Mayo of Tennessee. Buffalo
went for Troy ·CB Lcodis
McKelvin and Denver took
Boise State tackle Ryan
Clady.
Carolina, looking for a
complement to DeAngelo
Williams, se~
running back Jona
Stewart, then dealt with
Philadelphia to
Pitt tackle Jeff Otah in the 19th poeilion. The P111thcn pYe·I!P
nut year '1 fii'IWOIIniler Iii
that trade.
play."
Chi~o took Vandorbllt
McPI!ddeti Joifia a lli'Owd· taGkle Chris Wll!illllli fot lti
1!4 bac:kflelcf · In Olldmdi spotty ofl'enlllvc line. Cbrl1
where Ju tin J:lllf1as rantl.y Lon1's
teammate,
•~&amp;ned li new cotJII1lllt 1114 J!l.lardlt~~~:kle --1 Branden
Dominic
Rhodes and Albert, went I to K.anw
LaMont Jordan 111'1: on the ettf"after the Chief• trlded
roster.
up with Detroit. Two llw
"The time 1 talked to the later. tackle Oosder Cheri! us
Raiders coachina staff, they of Boston Colleae went to

OretC

act

'th

~

-

; ·.

.

.

cornerback
i

Mike

IPPI"

-·

Jenkins of South Florid&amp;.
regarded by &amp;Orne as the best
defensive back in the draft.
In all, 14 @f the 31 first~
Millen.
round seleCtions - New
The first pla_yer from ihe England foxfcited its own
former Division 1-AA went spot because of 1he Spygale
16th when Arizona selected scandal, but .had a pick
CB Dominique Rodgers- acquired last year from San
Cromartie of Tennessee Francisco - wen: involved
State. At No. 18, another in trades. The Jets finished
small oollegc guy was taken off the swapping by moving
· wben Baltimore traded up to into Green Bay's No. 30 slot
get quarterllack Joe Fiacco for Purdue tight end Dustin ,
of Delaware with a pick . Keller, bringing a chorus of
Houstoo had owned.
boos.
.After cornerback Aqib .
The Super Bowl champio
Thlib, who reportedly tested on Giants _took KcliJlY.
positive for marijuana while Phillips of Miami with the
at Kansas, was taken by final pick' of the opeoini
Tampa Bay, the falcons round Phillips was the only
moved up to 21st overall. safety seJectcd in the round.
Tiley
chose
Southern
For the first time since
California tackle Sam 1990 and only the second
Bilker, son of Arena Football time since 1967, there were
Lea$ue
commissioner no wide mceivers · taken in
David Baker, to help paotect the first round.
Ryan.
Several renowned COUeae ·
- Dallas, which came into players went in the second
SatU:i:n wi_th two flnt· round, which beaan with
«JuDd ka, uiiOCI No. 22 for Miami takina Clem.an DE
McF
'a blckfleld mate Phillip Merlina. Houaton '1
It Atkanua, Felilt JOMI, Donnie Avery Will neltt, the
Who al10 c:an return lddu. flnt wldeout clio.en, by St.
That belli! a run on l'llfilllll'l, Louia.
wllh lillnoli'
Ra1hard • On coniiOCLitlve plcb
Mendenhall aoina to toward the end of Round 2,

get

Located at 333 Page .Street.
Middleport, Ohio is pklased
to announce we are accept··
ing applications tor LPN 's to
join our friendly and 'dedicat·
ed staff. Applicant's must be
dependable, Team Players
with positive attl:udes to join
us in proyidi!!g outslandng,
Stop by and flit out on

~

the Lions, prompting some
in the audience to chant
"FIRE MILLEN" in reference ID Lions president Matt

Pltubllflh and ajloed_y Chria
Jobnaoll of &amp;at Carolina
taken by Tennea110e at 2-4.
The Cowboya then lrllded
up three apots with Seattle to

A.
celebration
of
Life .• Overbrootc.
Center,

&lt;1\!!!H!v Cll!J !!I !!!if ~nts:

around

Baltimore pbbed Rutaen
•tar runninj back Ray Rlce,
Oreen Bay
.elllllted
Loui•vllle OB Brlln Brohm,
and Miamf aot Michiaan
QB Chad.Henne.

___;:.,-~-'----

~~~~

I

ance and mileage. Phone Building during regular busi·

An Exceltant way to · earn 740-441·1393 for more info ness hours of 8:30AM until
money. The New Avon. ·
or apply at 1480 Jackson 5:00 PM , Monday through
carr Marilyn 304..a82-2645
Pike. Ga!lpolis, Ohio.
Friday.

wv.

"\IONI All Areas! To Buy or Point r~...
~---compaSel. Shlitey Spea«; 304- ny is seel&lt;ing 0 Director at
67__:_5-_1~
"-'------- Human
Resources.
BartenDer
Neededl Applicant should have at

Ellperienoe Required. sefid
Resumect to: Attn: MiKe, PO
. Box 303, Gallipolis, OH
4563. Resumes mUS1 be
racoived by Monday, May
5th 11 4pm:

Financial

nance your home

in . the Human Resource
Work a sthedule thai is
field. Applicant mus1 ha\119
~tor you
experience m administering .
andyourlorrily!
all benefit plans. AppiiOO,M
Use your custom&amp;&lt;
must have strong commuriservice akiiiS to answer

a loon.
of raq""""' tor any .

qualified line cooKs and 'interested.

please

• 4 WMehn.......... _ ........._..740
-------------····--------·----·-- 570

FEDERII.L

HIRING

POSTAL JOBS

A'!iPay $20/hr "'
C:C107tt"~o.·.., inciUdes

in!l- For~ and tree
ijOY&amp;mOment job info, caH

_,""''

Federal-

. CT.

Placed by adSouroe, not

American A.ssoc. of Labor 1• oftered wl USPS who hires.
913-59!H!226, 24/lvs. emp. _ _
H_I66_-&lt;103-2
__
582__

advance

~

payments

fee&amp; or insuranoe. C.l
Office

of

Cons

A - toll fra&amp; at 1 .
2~

calts on behalf of
non-profit Heanh and
Christian organizabons.

send

-=c::-c:c-'-·=-"-:--

IIIEI-EI

tnbound a OUibound

applications 'lor temtd, but not mn.nda1ory. tf

$17.8g.S28271hr., now hif-

tnstitution'

"' c
AftBirS ea liRE you roll-

teast 1M! years axperience

dishwashers. Pktaee BWIY resume' to CLA 8 c/o Point ·
m person or call to set up an pteasant Register 200 Main
interview. 441-9371 , S08 St. Pt. Pleasant. WV 25550
2nd Ave. Gallipolis.
POST OFFICE NOW .

- ~ Slle-------··------------··--···-11211
10 ..__, __________, __ ................................ 220

Borrow Smart. Contact

Offioe

cation

Jlent.............- ......... -...-.. GD

HN'ei'IC:::I':**
the Ohio Division

===---sldlls andstroog com·
Courtside Bar and Grll now pu1er skills. Degree preseeking

to leam ~

mortgage broker o
tender
is propert
ltoansed. (This is a
service anr'tou"""mtml
from the Ohio Vol

New Amel&gt;ty:
On·Site Physician tor

PIOJiishing Company)

amployees ana their
families!

t~l

,_.,..._ ~,,_.... ,. . , . _
aratl8tng t.tc1 NOWt.

,_I'U

Colt far JOUIIu•olwl
Job ext. 1_,

1...::;:;.::;;;,;;

S&amp;wnty Ol!ioers needed in
Help wanted at Darst Home New Hawn, WV, $7.00 - nll-~00::~---,~

"""'-

a"""' Homa. 740-992·5023

--'-----Management
Assistant
Manager positions at Zanzio
To Gol store located a1 900
2nd Ave. Hea.tth Insurance
and Dlhei'benefils a\/BIIal&gt;le.
Opportunity for advanoe·
ment, includinn ,.,._ratann
•

..,.,.....

"'"'

and franchising. To leam
mor8 mail resume to 72 N

Buy·--------··--------------···-·----'------ 0!10
to Buy· Fann SUppllea .................. l20

to

To

oo ..................-··------·-------·-·· 110

Rent....................-....................... C70
GaNipolll .•..--'···---·····--··---····--···072

lao

rooms. Large yard. COvered
deok. Mached garage. 7•o-

Call TOday' 740-446-4367.
1-600-21.-0452

EEO-MFDV

- - - - - - - www. ~r; I w t I ; .edu 367-7129.
ACCfeOrtld M.mbir Accfdtng ·_ ---'-. - - - -- Wanted:
..
Col.rncil b •• Jo;: ..,,1 Collglc
.
29 Serious P9ople to Work ana Schooll 12748.
1 Acre, Flat Lot. Specious
from nome using a "'"1'JJ- ~·
WANI'FD
284 Lg. Kit &amp; LR DR.
er. Up to $500.00 to
To Do
Den wl ~~~ce. 2 c.r

ll!BR,

Plaza Blvd.. Mn: HR.
Chilticothe, OH 4560 1. or
M/ld deliver to Eric at the $1 ,500 .00
PTIFT •
•
www.Homalnc:ome&lt;I-U.oom
at- EOE
~·Lawn-Care Service, MoMng
Seel&lt;ing help tor aomeone to
·
&amp; Trimming. Ffee Estimates
toke care of pa•onts call
!7 oo1""1 - t 333 o'
!I!M-67~454

riliiir~~~~,

s7.66 p&amp;! hour. SOiools
hours vary_Mu&lt;i have. t&gt;iQl1 •
~
schoo( diptDma or GEO.
L.--::~~-.,1
clean criminal history, pass Galllpollo c - Collogo
drug screnn and back· (Careers Close To Home) o down pavment. • bed-

ground chedt. C811 1-800275-8359 M·F 8:30 to :00.

lkutwc;t.

~wiiiRIMdtlnthi'HmtiVII...,..edltian.

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS ca11

(700~5-!15&lt;16

attached Gar1,gtt Rodney

$95,00J (700) 245-9125
------HUD_ Homo&amp;t 3 bod. only
.ooot tor ~111ings eoo~~OK A019

s11

•Bol:

·.auatlse: cta . . ~to 1M......_'"* Kowtntl Act 01 1111. •Tht.

'"~---·

Ohio Vllily

~~"'·---------------------------------~
Por18 l Acces~~~Fiea ,............- ........... 780

.,.tirna.

Em:n nv...t be~
~*-t . .-oa«fllhe.,... ~ bt'h..-n:ll' ...:1 only tt. fnt "-"'ion.

Publlll1lng ,.,
."""',
. ....
thorlghl!oedll,
rojoct or conoetq

ond Fleil-.............................1110

Graphics soc for 5q!Cift

e.:..

SI.OOfor kin)e

to

me

Bonlas$3.00!perad

1m

~•per

_..,,,....lining

waoR.

MowyouCXIII haw borders andfJI'UPhlcs
iL-'1
added ~your dassified ads
(..~

n........... l!or Sunct.ys
• 11.11 ads 11111Stbe JINPIIId"

For Sunct.p

manager.

•.

man' selected in the ojleriing
round hy St. Louis, follow- ,
ing
Nebraska's - Adam
Carriker last year.
"I knew I was in the running, but all the guys here
were great play.ers and -they
could have chosen anyone,"
Chris Long said. "It came
down to needs."
Ryan has an open course
to starting in Atlan'ta, with
Michael Vick in jail -on dogfighting chilrges, and only
journeymen &lt;;Jimi-s ~edman
and iloey Ham:ington to compete with.
' ·
"{ ·have to go down and
gain the respect of my teammates, do everything I can
do to get on the field next
year," Ryan said
Asked about replacing
Vick in Atlanta-and whether
he e.xpected to play or watch .
as a rookie, Ryan 11dded:
"I'U go down there to do all
I can tO be-successful, try to
not he distracted, try to witi.
... There's ·not a riaht or
wrona way to 4o lt. I itht to
act there and team the
offente 10 I have a chance to

•

Randy Wmn's RBI single in
Zito -gave up seveu bit»,
tbe thinl but pitdlod out of a Walked tlm:ie al1d struck oct
OOMJUt, bases-loaded jam &lt;me.
.
He rctimU 2 of tbe fihaH 4
Aftcl- finishillg 11-13 ill
be faced while his ERA rose his firl;t season with Sail
just a hair, from 1.21 to 1.23. Francisoo and going winless
"He's one -of the few - in his tir.;t six starts this sea·
pitcherS around that can son, Zito !Wizes somethin!
SIJikc himself out of trou- has to $ive. He wants to
ble.~ Cincinnati manager mmain m the Giants rota•
Dusty Baker said "Wbcn he tion but is open to wbateveigot in trouble lba! ooe 6me derision ,dJe c,qnrs mak. :
be :reaobed \back and got
"I definitely want lhe ball;
some dynamite Sbrlt 1bat rm not backing down ~
waun outstalllfu1g jOb.~
lhat," Zito said. ~aut die~
Zito got &lt;tff to a rough know what's ,best fur tiM
start and oouldn't recover, a ballclub. It feels (bad) goipa
familiar 1beme dJis season.
out here and losing for the~
He ~ave: up tWo w~ l!IId guys."
•
Notes: Volquez helped
five hits m the first mnmg
wbeo . tbe Reds batte4 himsel( with a run-scoring
around, including im RBI groundout in the third -··
«iple from catc~ _.!lui Cincinnati RF Ken 'Griffey
Balm tb11t made it 6-'0. After JL, wbo is tbrec home runs
lasting Only 32-3 innings in . shy of 600 for his carccc,
Ibis -t evioos stmtt,Zito need--- . -and LF Adam Dunn WOP:
eel 39 pitolles to get out of given the day -off by manag~
the tim. er Dusty Baker. ... San
The lteds added anodtcr francisco C Bengie Molinf
:run in lhe second when was held out 'Of the linllu_p
~y Pll.tten;on drew a for a second straight day but
leado1J walk. stole seoood is expected to play Monday
.and scored •on
Jeff .against Colorado. The
~i11gcr's single to left.
Giants are takfug a cautious
haven't
really approaoh with Molina, whO
."We
Jn"1P"'!' &amp;Jybody like that in was plagued ·by a sore lel;t
:a ~ time ·c arll in ~ . &lt;juadriceps in sprin~ train~~ JUa- said. "Zito mg. ·-- Bochy remams tied
beJpr:d 111s some. Hi: wasn't with former San Francisco
:stu~P• (the) .Zito lhlt I've skipper Felipe Alou for
~ many times. Yoil've
most wins (1,033) in me
gl)l ~ take advantage .o f majors b
_ y a foreign-boo~

�•

• L Apel21, 20111

...,....,.. 'r•

The Daily Sentinel • Plge B5

ililoelcam

MlfYOOP

NEA Crossword
Puzzle
•

BRIDGE

-

~-

-

=·

' =·

-

.

...._.

1~

. .

~

.sa--··"""*'

1 s 1 -·
S-1111i11
.......

-.

~

2!1670illlslllnfldle.!Ohic
4577il

7-•••=•r

•GilrlF
•Wnpl:l!

---Cloii!Pcire

.,,

10 5 f B

8
?t

s

• Kia ·

'

.IRQ

•IK •Q .lPI
Q 6 5

•

Deller: suoitto

Vulneuitile: Botll
his

1 NT .

S'!l'f

All pass

6peni1og lead: • 2

Fromtestweatr
to this.weal:

'the

LasO .-

. .,. studied

7

'!II .uonlllo
I!I'D~IIlfi¥11fil-l

:=......., :
...... .
:Ia....

hold 59 ;.'

dt1"

-I

•.119&gt;643

•
•

'IS 'W I

16 • J

l~~!:~!!ii!lll!!!l!!~ll!!l!i!ii!!!!l!!ii!!li!~ll!i!!!!~ii!!ii~~!!!:::l ---"' ·•

• 10 s2 2
• Al 3
., 8 7 2

...,
...,..

15 Hoo

il 0 '1 6i
•K 10 t

1-

~0.

Siqp I

-

.

• •'New I'II:Jrnl!5

$11.
54 . . _ , ...

rJ""'

DOWN

17....,..., 1-

18 - l """""'
'20
•ft 11111J lie
In ilht
·-

-

25 W"f

...

'12 U!Mnnins J ~&lt;il&gt;e
23 Dlile IIIII
.

24 T 'I d

-4 W111o1to!1

8 1~

4i~l
-·

a BniJ- '5 •wluifJ
'a

••
7

poniun

I 27 Glrioh
tight
e '2Bo1Holm

5
111 lA: I oihlil&gt; i1 'llin1 I lao
·; iJ
...... .
M ~lo

1i1 Eodll

40 i8nlncO

&lt;QM..

lhomoilo
'9 .. ....,

ll'idint

. ol Uootzu
26 Circle

"AIIun"
80 'Scurry

.rung

&gt;llll1llil

t::ll
a411 ·-Sa•••lllll
1

42

45 Grind 'loa
hill
47 -

....
•••
• hiD'ii
J2 zOologists' · - ·
10 ~
liiiiUiho
""'8'Y
-41 ~iod
DOd
33 '1'-ly
S1 ~Q _..
13 flat aliliged . !'linted
ZlliB
31 Soot
3511ini-gultlrs 53 Acljusi •
a=· ......... ·21 !Chila'twie 36 MoiNJto••'l
watch
I I J4 -...:.;
39 2,000
• IDooo- '
.,.,..
pounds

~~

•

...

"'he
T

111 " " -

-

41 .T....,

~-

-

• ?H

_..,..'PII!ying

CDI11ICi lllllf.·tram ·one bOIIII II llriok

one. ·For •.,. iftll1hme dlrjs 'itis ·.
"" will Ill&lt;* ai Diller llliua1ions for you to
store in your ·memory bank:

must-

5omelimes, -rer
...u. At
other limes, he can""'*' a -.In 1his
deal,

-'the--·- -

you ... South, i n - !10'lrump .

.West
your pian?

SO l &gt;HAD 'MAW

'TP.l&lt;E PIIOUG !!

... ::

'"
... .
O.RP ENTE~
\

i

~,

~

and1hlel! dubs·club would you play from the bOIIII
.. iha 1iroilrittc?
Suil!&gt;oae you play low. and East puts in
the nine. You win with your queen and

SERV ICE
'ftllom'U" a&amp;

_,__
....,_,.
.....
...................
•• n:rc

---··
-e

Cut* Aldo

lOUR
BUSIESS ·

ltlHE

7

,

!How~ lll£1&gt;0.1\UIRT~U£7'
:WJ6U11' or=-.----,.f"

10. Suddenly you have no guatiS. ~ the
10.forces Easi~ ace, you hM two club
tricks. Or, ~ East ,.,.,,. the 10 with 'the
)aok. .roo win wtlh your queen. ff west
later regains the laod and jii8)'B another
club, you llUl up dtonmy'S ·king.
1\ssuming West has ao least one club
honor, you get hlo1ricks in the suit

G

. .

1~

I 'V£ &amp;oT T+IE !IE

ih 1•1illle, OH
Cary Curtis- Owner
Farmerty ~ ·~ Auto PartJi'

, ..

f"L£X£S!

OeieiJrily Ciptw ~ n Clfllled tn:rn QLKMims by IBmaJs p!!Oille. llasld p!WI1I
Ea::t1ldter In tile ctrnr stan:is tor anothef

muSi-

1HE BORN LOSER

St.tlt.124

CB EBRITY CIPHER
•br Luis Campos

.-diamonds.West ta!&lt;Bs his aco and
leads a second club. What would you do
nOw'? ~ West has the ace, you mus1 pui
up !Unmy's ·king; bui ~ west has the
)a&lt;*. you
"""'"'Y~ 10. Yoo
111M&gt; a pure guess.
Now lot~ go back ·to Irick one and play
second tvind midde, pullinjj in dummy~

I leal •.,..,....,.

~

be
After 1his saquence, when Well leads a
minor-5Ult- you can be confident ihat
he is 3-3-3-4. 2-3+4, or 3-2+4 wltil .
1woioor..c:anfminors. If~ had a four·
calli major, ...; would how plcbd that
suit m ·preterenoe 1o 'the minor, since
·responder did nat kJOk 'tor .a ma;&gt;r·sult
iii.
'lbu have only 1oor 1Dp lricks: throe
lijJOdes and one club (gMon lf1e lead) .
'lou can 1J11 four diamonds and two
halris, ilui migt1l 1ooe one heart, one

I'~E

T

TodaYscJue:lequs/6 V

"SLP

Jlif'
Sl.P

GJII

-·-·--

.._... ......

~-c..
~

_._.

X f •1ft • 7 rJM lili11S1 4 f ill
llllley Hospital is
I1I!SIJTTI!!5
for a
AsSistlont for
ferry Oinit. 1\ssocilte~!:!::'!:li
raf Bl1 appuwed :p101111m
~nt or Associab5,.:1q:•ee
field or 5 ¥915 eJtjll!rieroce
•Oificles required.

GDX11BSVES."

Graph
....... 'a: .

tj

David Lewis

I'

Gdlllwie~g

J' I t

WE .I.IS]' liOT A

Seamless Gutiers
Roofing, Siding, Guttero

I

1.£T1BIR!OM Tff ··
5\'IPCAlL WE\£

lnsured&amp;-

&amp;BIC-Wfl fD,

740-653-9657

CORNER STONE
COJI!STRUCTIO~
Roofing, Sidiolg,
Soffit, Deolts,

Doors, Windows,
Plumbing.

~IBctric.

Drywall,

Remodeling, Room
Additions

Cllii·-

,tiOJ ICIN OCOilolAIAC- HolloW RuMI). 1lie bid a
TORS
.... m~•ln..,.fur ......., owlloolw:lw) 1D
...,.. po ,; 1h fur llile
pnojecl
II lhe llloraMkl •llelga
a. ..... eo.:utr 11110.•.aa.
County Ooo11111uloo..,.
ewe ··a 11n uloai« DO snc STEEL or t, CMIIIIICI .- ,
A J •llilllia•l
hal UIIE 1EQIJIF ENTS
.....
Ill·

Loc8l
740:367-GSa

FNeEatiu r

-.or

. , . . . . . . . Coo .. AS*ECII&amp;II~ llli'ahndltuponnoi·C ow l Ia ,. 1
.Ill l1C* 153.11'1 1 OF THE Jn the
..... alllce .Ill 1'litl IIEWISED
CODE
.....
Coo niJ -.y TO 1liS PROCllil ~ o - · lw ill -'ECJ. COPIES OF
....... IP'Iiueq, Olilo SEC'IIOtl 111.11'11 OF
. , . . . . 1:10 -me REVISED CODE
111r 1, . . . IIIII CAN IE OBTAINED
at 2:10 •pm 81 llllld fR)II ANY OF 1l1tE
afttce ; wei- NWI OFPiCES OF. '11IE
UEMimiENT
OF
Eowcillioo
01
pre- ADMINISTRATIVE
il1l
d iluK -.... SEIMCES.
on · ~ pre- ·Bid~llll!l'lia
parM
br - · IW:IIIWd . .. . aifiue a:

n•lc Tlie

lo I II 4 II I

I ~. piillll, U. ....
and .... llillp.- UTI
......Counlr Raid I
(II II I • Run ,._,

cau "'

(f'utllwod

-

31

-

01 tlowi 111% ai the bid
ao ft ·In tt. " - ai
the - · - Melgl
County ClooiMIIIIIIOI.. .
Bid lie
-•+Woloil br l'nlai
ai .- .urtiJ ai ilil omclill or ..... llgnlng
thiW
.
8ldl 11111111 Iii _ .

lllldn•lood•Bidfor:
..... County 'Bridgl

Cuunly Replec omont l'i'oject
'EI .... IWI,
M110 liiiCI -11111 or o:r.:lw·
::-.-....
Raid, enid ...,
JlooWUf, Oiilci 45711; ilelgl
County
~ 740- Cloolli 1111,..,1
{
-.a11 fur • s1o.oo Ttoe . . . . County

llelgl

-~ ........tund8bllw.

c:uurtt-,

4S bch bid be Second
Strwl
....... Raall - • c i+WiiWIIIJ...... PoliQUf, Dlilu 457111
Llli111011
-neiJip • bid buncl In the (4)11, 25, 21
14S {SMI'OII . . . . a: 111% a: ..
Cuunly

Raai

:1 I

.I

OFTJI.O

R&amp;lt .

...........

H UC

7~2-6971

,--••
__,
I , .,

740:367-41536
For Renoodeiingaood New HOUR BuMiooc
Cooil:

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

• Room Additions • Garages • Vmyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porohes and Decks

... -

47239 ~bel Road, Long Booom, OH

740-985-4141
Cell: 740-416-1834
25"+ ~ uperi&lt;!~ta Fru Elli_.,
'

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

:~....... )-~

((;r

T

SM

SLVS . GS Gfl
JGE SLY'S

CMCCT AEGFLS

-

Astro-

c;oT

NOW '(OU SEE +UM,
NOW '(OIJ DON'T ..

' JGYY

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ·; want 1o direcl some plays in !healer worl&lt;shops
1or people With disabilities.· • Cl1ris Bllfl&lt;e

28Yeam~ence

---·tillY',•
__.....

SLP

XBPXVBP 511

?"

•••••u • •

~

SM

Tf!E 'F,\ST TWITCH"
11lJ S.C. L.E s !

1115UmesiD:

r

GR E'IIS

PZPBTC .. IT LVR

T

J 'GYY

..lol• .Ml~l ' ' "
Cc 5

APT

'

URSEVS
:r6

r· l.

.

l

..

...."'
'

.

�•

• L Apel21, 20111

...,....,.. 'r•

The Daily Sentinel • Plge B5

ililoelcam

MlfYOOP

NEA Crossword
Puzzle
•

BRIDGE

-

~-

-

=·

' =·

-

.

...._.

1~

. .

~

.sa--··"""*'

1 s 1 -·
S-1111i11
.......

-.

~

2!1670illlslllnfldle.!Ohic
4577il

7-•••=•r

•GilrlF
•Wnpl:l!

---Cloii!Pcire

.,,

10 5 f B

8
?t

s

• Kia ·

'

.IRQ

•IK •Q .lPI
Q 6 5

•

Deller: suoitto

Vulneuitile: Botll
his

1 NT .

S'!l'f

All pass

6peni1og lead: • 2

Fromtestweatr
to this.weal:

'the

LasO .-

. .,. studied

7

'!II .uonlllo
I!I'D~IIlfi¥11fil-l

:=......., :
...... .
:Ia....

hold 59 ;.'

dt1"

-I

•.119&gt;643

•
•

'IS 'W I

16 • J

l~~!:~!!ii!lll!!!l!!~ll!!l!i!ii!!!!l!!ii!!li!~ll!i!!!!~ii!!ii~~!!!:::l ---"' ·•

• 10 s2 2
• Al 3
., 8 7 2

...,
...,..

15 Hoo

il 0 '1 6i
•K 10 t

1-

~0.

Siqp I

-

.

• •'New I'II:Jrnl!5

$11.
54 . . _ , ...

rJ""'

DOWN

17....,..., 1-

18 - l """""'
'20
•ft 11111J lie
In ilht
·-

-

25 W"f

...

'12 U!Mnnins J ~&lt;il&gt;e
23 Dlile IIIII
.

24 T 'I d

-4 W111o1to!1

8 1~

4i~l
-·

a BniJ- '5 •wluifJ
'a

••
7

poniun

I 27 Glrioh
tight
e '2Bo1Holm

5
111 lA: I oihlil&gt; i1 'llin1 I lao
·; iJ
...... .
M ~lo

1i1 Eodll

40 i8nlncO

&lt;QM..

lhomoilo
'9 .. ....,

ll'idint

. ol Uootzu
26 Circle

"AIIun"
80 'Scurry

.rung

&gt;llll1llil

t::ll
a411 ·-Sa•••lllll
1

42

45 Grind 'loa
hill
47 -

....
•••
• hiD'ii
J2 zOologists' · - ·
10 ~
liiiiUiho
""'8'Y
-41 ~iod
DOd
33 '1'-ly
S1 ~Q _..
13 flat aliliged . !'linted
ZlliB
31 Soot
3511ini-gultlrs 53 Acljusi •
a=· ......... ·21 !Chila'twie 36 MoiNJto••'l
watch
I I J4 -...:.;
39 2,000
• IDooo- '
.,.,..
pounds

~~

•

...

"'he
T

111 " " -

-

41 .T....,

~-

-

• ?H

_..,..'PII!ying

CDI11ICi lllllf.·tram ·one bOIIII II llriok

one. ·For •.,. iftll1hme dlrjs 'itis ·.
"" will Ill&lt;* ai Diller llliua1ions for you to
store in your ·memory bank:

must-

5omelimes, -rer
...u. At
other limes, he can""'*' a -.In 1his
deal,

-'the--·- -

you ... South, i n - !10'lrump .

.West
your pian?

SO l &gt;HAD 'MAW

'TP.l&lt;E PIIOUG !!

... ::

'"
... .
O.RP ENTE~
\

i

~,

~

and1hlel! dubs·club would you play from the bOIIII
.. iha 1iroilrittc?
Suil!&gt;oae you play low. and East puts in
the nine. You win with your queen and

SERV ICE
'ftllom'U" a&amp;

_,__
....,_,.
.....
...................
•• n:rc

---··
-e

Cut* Aldo

lOUR
BUSIESS ·

ltlHE

7

,

!How~ lll£1&gt;0.1\UIRT~U£7'
:WJ6U11' or=-.----,.f"

10. Suddenly you have no guatiS. ~ the
10.forces Easi~ ace, you hM two club
tricks. Or, ~ East ,.,.,,. the 10 with 'the
)aok. .roo win wtlh your queen. ff west
later regains the laod and jii8)'B another
club, you llUl up dtonmy'S ·king.
1\ssuming West has ao least one club
honor, you get hlo1ricks in the suit

G

. .

1~

I 'V£ &amp;oT T+IE !IE

ih 1•1illle, OH
Cary Curtis- Owner
Farmerty ~ ·~ Auto PartJi'

, ..

f"L£X£S!

OeieiJrily Ciptw ~ n Clfllled tn:rn QLKMims by IBmaJs p!!Oille. llasld p!WI1I
Ea::t1ldter In tile ctrnr stan:is tor anothef

muSi-

1HE BORN LOSER

St.tlt.124

CB EBRITY CIPHER
•br Luis Campos

.-diamonds.West ta!&lt;Bs his aco and
leads a second club. What would you do
nOw'? ~ West has the ace, you mus1 pui
up !Unmy's ·king; bui ~ west has the
)a&lt;*. you
"""'"'Y~ 10. Yoo
111M&gt; a pure guess.
Now lot~ go back ·to Irick one and play
second tvind midde, pullinjj in dummy~

I leal •.,..,....,.

~

be
After 1his saquence, when Well leads a
minor-5Ult- you can be confident ihat
he is 3-3-3-4. 2-3+4, or 3-2+4 wltil .
1woioor..c:anfminors. If~ had a four·
calli major, ...; would how plcbd that
suit m ·preterenoe 1o 'the minor, since
·responder did nat kJOk 'tor .a ma;&gt;r·sult
iii.
'lbu have only 1oor 1Dp lricks: throe
lijJOdes and one club (gMon lf1e lead) .
'lou can 1J11 four diamonds and two
halris, ilui migt1l 1ooe one heart, one

I'~E

T

TodaYscJue:lequs/6 V

"SLP

Jlif'
Sl.P

GJII

-·-·--

.._... ......

~-c..
~

_._.

X f •1ft • 7 rJM lili11S1 4 f ill
llllley Hospital is
I1I!SIJTTI!!5
for a
AsSistlont for
ferry Oinit. 1\ssocilte~!:!::'!:li
raf Bl1 appuwed :p101111m
~nt or Associab5,.:1q:•ee
field or 5 ¥915 eJtjll!rieroce
•Oificles required.

GDX11BSVES."

Graph
....... 'a: .

tj

David Lewis

I'

Gdlllwie~g

J' I t

WE .I.IS]' liOT A

Seamless Gutiers
Roofing, Siding, Guttero

I

1.£T1BIR!OM Tff ··
5\'IPCAlL WE\£

lnsured&amp;-

&amp;BIC-Wfl fD,

740-653-9657

CORNER STONE
COJI!STRUCTIO~
Roofing, Sidiolg,
Soffit, Deolts,

Doors, Windows,
Plumbing.

~IBctric.

Drywall,

Remodeling, Room
Additions

Cllii·-

,tiOJ ICIN OCOilolAIAC- HolloW RuMI). 1lie bid a
TORS
.... m~•ln..,.fur ......., owlloolw:lw) 1D
...,.. po ,; 1h fur llile
pnojecl
II lhe llloraMkl •llelga
a. ..... eo.:utr 11110.•.aa.
County Ooo11111uloo..,.
ewe ··a 11n uloai« DO snc STEEL or t, CMIIIIICI .- ,
A J •llilllia•l
hal UIIE 1EQIJIF ENTS
.....
Ill·

Loc8l
740:367-GSa

FNeEatiu r

-.or

. , . . . . . . . Coo .. AS*ECII&amp;II~ llli'ahndltuponnoi·C ow l Ia ,. 1
.Ill l1C* 153.11'1 1 OF THE Jn the
..... alllce .Ill 1'litl IIEWISED
CODE
.....
Coo niJ -.y TO 1liS PROCllil ~ o - · lw ill -'ECJ. COPIES OF
....... IP'Iiueq, Olilo SEC'IIOtl 111.11'11 OF
. , . . . . 1:10 -me REVISED CODE
111r 1, . . . IIIII CAN IE OBTAINED
at 2:10 •pm 81 llllld fR)II ANY OF 1l1tE
afttce ; wei- NWI OFPiCES OF. '11IE
UEMimiENT
OF
Eowcillioo
01
pre- ADMINISTRATIVE
il1l
d iluK -.... SEIMCES.
on · ~ pre- ·Bid~llll!l'lia
parM
br - · IW:IIIWd . .. . aifiue a:

n•lc Tlie

lo I II 4 II I

I ~. piillll, U. ....
and .... llillp.- UTI
......Counlr Raid I
(II II I • Run ,._,

cau "'

(f'utllwod

-

31

-

01 tlowi 111% ai the bid
ao ft ·In tt. " - ai
the - · - Melgl
County ClooiMIIIIIIOI.. .
Bid lie
-•+Woloil br l'nlai
ai .- .urtiJ ai ilil omclill or ..... llgnlng
thiW
.
8ldl 11111111 Iii _ .

lllldn•lood•Bidfor:
..... County 'Bridgl

Cuunly Replec omont l'i'oject
'EI .... IWI,
M110 liiiCI -11111 or o:r.:lw·
::-.-....
Raid, enid ...,
JlooWUf, Oiilci 45711; ilelgl
County
~ 740- Cloolli 1111,..,1
{
-.a11 fur • s1o.oo Ttoe . . . . County

llelgl

-~ ........tund8bllw.

c:uurtt-,

4S bch bid be Second
Strwl
....... Raall - • c i+WiiWIIIJ...... PoliQUf, Dlilu 457111
Llli111011
-neiJip • bid buncl In the (4)11, 25, 21
14S {SMI'OII . . . . a: 111% a: ..
Cuunly

Raai

:1 I

.I

OFTJI.O

R&amp;lt .

...........

H UC

7~2-6971

,--••
__,
I , .,

740:367-41536
For Renoodeiingaood New HOUR BuMiooc
Cooil:

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

• Room Additions • Garages • Vmyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porohes and Decks

... -

47239 ~bel Road, Long Booom, OH

740-985-4141
Cell: 740-416-1834
25"+ ~ uperi&lt;!~ta Fru Elli_.,
'

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

:~....... )-~

((;r

T

SM

SLVS . GS Gfl
JGE SLY'S

CMCCT AEGFLS

-

Astro-

c;oT

NOW '(OU SEE +UM,
NOW '(OIJ DON'T ..

' JGYY

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ·; want 1o direcl some plays in !healer worl&lt;shops
1or people With disabilities.· • Cl1ris Bllfl&lt;e

28Yeam~ence

---·tillY',•
__.....

SLP

XBPXVBP 511

?"

•••••u • •

~

SM

Tf!E 'F,\ST TWITCH"
11lJ S.C. L.E s !

1115UmesiD:

r

GR E'IIS

PZPBTC .. IT LVR

T

J 'GYY

..lol• .Ml~l ' ' "
Cc 5

APT

'

URSEVS
:r6

r· l.

.

l

..

...."'
'

.

�,,
'.
I

'

.

Pq; B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, Apri128,
zoo*
.

•'

.Is a rookie salary cap coming? ..i
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Jake Long had a .big' griri
oo his face as he slipped the
ceremonial bat of his new
on his bead. With .good
reason, because the Miami
Dalphins ·had already agreed
to pay the top draft pick at
least $30 million ·before he
ever played a down in the

,t eam

NFL.
Glenn Dorsey couldn't
stop sll!iling either after the
Kansas City · Chiefs made
him an instant millionaire-to·b e ·with the No. 5 pick of a
draft surprising only because
it went so fast
.
A lot of gc:Deritl managers
and team owners weren '.t
quite as ecstatic. They spent
the fusi day of the draft commining tens •of millions of
dollars to a group of college
stars that conld have been
used to get proven and experienced _players whose ability
to play m .the league is not in
question.
They were .more .queasy
haPI?Y·
worrymg
. NASCAR 's Kyle Busch, left,·celebr.nes with team owner Joe Gibbs .after winning the Aaron's than
whether
therr
picks
would
499 auto race at Talladega :Superspeedway in Talladega, Ala., on Sunday.
pay off or the money would
be blown. They made thein
based 00 46-yard dash times,
psychological surveys and
'
.
.
more tests than .most of the
Denny Hamlin, Busch's p~kers ever had .t o take in
Bv JENNA RrYEii
ASSOCIATED 1'R£SS
teiiiilllllite at Joe Gibbs c gc. But. predicting the
·future is still an uncertain
Racing, finished .third.
TALLADEGA, Ala.
lprint 1Cup ·l&amp;wuidll . .
"The whole race was business as evidenced in the
·A tlwTn" , $
Kyle Busch fell a lap down
crazy,"
Hamlin
said. roll call of first-round busts
over the years.
midway through the race, ·Name '
"Everyone got antsy."
Wins Pts
Will No. 3 pick Matt Ryan
and after racing his way 1. Jeff Burton
1.
1347
That showed in the wan- tum into .a player in the mold
2
.
Kyle
Buacll
2
·22
back inro contention, need- 9. Dale&amp;mhardl: Jr. 0
ing laps, which were .of Peyton ManninP, or will
•79
ed an awesome save to keep , 4 . Denqy .... cmlln
1
·99
marked by three separate be be anotber-Aldli Smith,
·102
1
himself from rqggering a ·5. Jimmie Johnson
accidents. The frrst came · selected with the same ·pick
6.'KavinHal'llicl&lt;
0
·139
massive crash.
with 14 laps to go when in 1999?
·185
7. Cllnt'Bowyer
0
'
·199
0
"Jypical Talladega," he B. Greg l!illle
Stewart, the third Joe Gibbs
Will
Darren
McFadden
be
·
9.
Tony
Stewart
o
·210
thought.
Racing driver, was stuck ~n this r.ear's Adrian Peterson,
10. Carl Edwards
3
·263
Only this time, the crash 11 . RyanN~
1
·285.
the middle of a huge pack of . .or will his ,career mirror that
. ·318
0
happened behind Busch. , 12. Juan 'Montoya
cars. Bobby Labonte got . of LaWn:nce Phillips, an illInstead of leaving Tall~ ' 3.1&lt;asey l&lt;ahne
0
-319
forced to .the bottom of the fated No. {j -pick back in
o
-329
S11perspeedway ·with a 14. Jeff Gordon
track by another car, and it 1996?
15.
David
Ragan
o
-353
smashed-up car, he drove 16. Brian Victers
set irl motion a six.,car acci0
-353
Nobody knows, of course,
into Victory Lane. The kid ·11. Martin Truex Jr.
0
· ·398
dept that ended ·stewart's and that's what eats up {lllea
~7
who couldn' t conquer 1 18. David Gilliand
day.
ple in the NFL. This 1s a
19. Matt Kenaeth
a
-438
Tallade~a fllllil.ly won at the
2a. Kurt Busch
.a
-&lt;IU .
Despite leading a race- Iel\$ue .where plays are
0
-445 · high 61 laps, be dropped .to
bariowmg track Sunday, 21 . Paul Manard
~ lcmg before .games
22.
Bobby
J..abonte
0
-452
and in this breakout season 23. Trovisi&lt;1i0pll
0-for-20 in Talladega Cup be,gm, ,players are rated off
a
-454
for Busch, it was only fit- 24. CaHy t.loan;
0
-460
every move ;they make on the
races.
-508
ti!1g that be coasted ·to the 25. Jamie McMurray o
"That's what. happens late · field, and the best teamS are
·
victory.
in these races," Stewart said run 'by control freaks who
""I'd like to say that I'm assurance it has a strong as be surveyed his datru!ged
smarter than I look, but future · even jf two-time car. ~u it was my fault, I'm
that'S" certainly not the NASCAR champion Tony sorry. But -by looking at the
case," Busch said. 'Today Stewart opts to leave the video, I don't think I did
was just due to haying a team when his contract anything wrong."
great car. Getting . a lap expires.
Lal!onte wrecked again
Although this bot start bas
down, that was like, 'Ob,
shortly
after the reyart for
typical Talladega' there. But solidified the decision to another caution, setting up a
I didn't wreck today and I sign him, team president final re-start with · five laps
was definitely happy of that, J .ID. . Gibbs said the team to go and Michael Waltrip
and I was greatly apprecia- knew it bad a superstar on leading.
tive that I was able to win its hands after watching him
But , Jimmie Johnson
today because it's certainly pace last October's test at
Waltrip out of the
moved
been a struggle for several Atlanta in his very frrst time
way,
briefly
giving Johnson
working with JGR and crew
years.
the
lead
before
be lost his
"I don't think I've ever chief Steve Addington.
"The f'mt time we got .a momentum and a Busch-led
finished one here yet without some sort of damage. glimpse of it was that test at train raced past him on the
We still had damage, but it ~tlanta in the fall, we real- outside. Busch bad Jeff
wasn't enough to keep us ized we bad sometbitJg very Gordon on his bum!ier, and
special," &lt;Gibbs .said. "You the ending was shaping up
from Victory Lane."
Busch came back from a could see it in .Steve' s eyes. for .another last-lap ,·duel:
lap down, then survived a I just think there's a lot of Four ·of the past six ·
near wreck with Jamie things that rl!4llly fit in the Talladega races ended with
McMurray for his first win package, and f!TSt and fore- a last-lap pass.
Montoya, with a huge
at Talladega. It was won most, yo.u need to have that
push
.from temporary teambehind the wheel. And
.under caution when a 12-car
L -. __ - · bas a natural talent.'
mate David Stremme - he
· accident
·out the.
to ·
a was filling in ·

·--

Busch wins at Talladega
\

' '

I

I

l

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

---

1

regiineilt everything.
Yet .even they are wrong
almost as often as they are
right ~ut ~ players
who Will s
'Jibese,
after all, are the same experts
who · chose qu.aFterbacks
Giovanni . Carmazzi and
Spergou Wynn long before
Tom Brady was picked
almost as an afterthought in
the sixth round of the 2000
draft by 'New England.
They grudgingly · pay for
performance, and .for the tof
players they pay very wei .
!But they bate more than anything banding out . millions
just to get a player into camp
·t o fmd out for sure if ·he bas
the unique makeup to play
week-to-week in a league
that doesn't tolerate failures
well.
. Even worse is that the price
for top talent has gone up way up.
Five years ago, the
Cincinnati Bengals picked up
Carson Palmer with the first
pick for $16.4 million in
gu8ranteed money, big dollilrs at the.time, a relative barwbeR looked at now.
t year, JaMarcus Russell
-who wound up playing in
just four _games -.. held out
mto the first weeks of the
·season 'before the Raiders
guaranteed him $29 million.
The average first -round
_guaranteed money, meanwhile, was nearly $11 million
last year, up from about $6
million the year Palmer was
picked.
Salaries, of course, are up
around the league, so much
so that owners will almost
certainly opt out of the .colIective bargaining agreement
with the .player's union later
this year. The group of niillionaires and billionaires
who own NFL teams .didn't
get rich giving mGney away,
and they are alarmed at the
increase to a $116 million
salary cap this year.
When a new agreement is
·negotiated - and it will lie
because the ,player's union
recognizes that both it and
the le~~gDC have a sweet thing
going - expect it to include
a salmy cap on rookie si~-

f...m:

Meigs tour to

around.

mean

--•

••

•

many years do we have left moved past .-Gordon and
to gt:ow together is really onto ·~uscb_'s b~mper with
encouraging."
Hamlin ~bind him._
This season is so perfect, · . :&amp;Dowmg H~m w~~;s
it dido 't even matter that likely to work wtth Busc~ if
Busch fell a lap down mid- be couldn't win the race
way through the race when himself, Montoya ·bided his
he missed his pit during a time as be considered llow
stop and had to circle back !O make a mn "!! ·B usch. But
to tty again on the next lap. 1t never came mto play, as
But be got .the lap back as D~ Earnhardt ' Jr. and
the "lucky dof on the next fiUille McMurray~ concaution, and 1t put him in tact, McMurray 'h it the wall ·
position If&gt; drive back to the and uon ,ofotber cars piled
front in .his Toyota.
~q&gt;arouru:l them.
Dur:Qtg that charge back to
Montoya and.Hamlin didthe front, he nearly turned n't fret over what could
sideways after contact wi~ have been.
McMurray. Both drivers ·bad
Asked what he could have
to work to stave off wreck- done, Montoya said to ask
. in§ the field.
,
Hiunl.in. ~
'The save, I didn't know
"Ask Denny, he was the
.what was bappenins." gu~ behind me," he said.
· B uscb said. "I th.o ughtl was
• Yeah, i was soingto diegoln• out 'Qf the park. tate ·the winner." Hamlin
Luckily, somehow, we got joked.
.
off each other and kept it
"He's risbt," Montoya
straisbt."
·
replied.
·
Then Juan Pablo Montoya But in all seriousness,
hooked up behind him, Hamlin ·said be was going to
pushing Busch to the front, be a player. In bis mind, he
where he was able to race planned to push Montoya
for the win.
alongside Busch then go
.Montoya finished second three-wide in a race to the
to mateh his career best on fmisb line. Joe Gibbs
an oval si9ce moving to Racing, they would have
NASCAR midway through frowned upon me push~
2006. He also was second at somebody else past Kyle,'
lnd)' last July.
Hamlin said. "But I · was
"I dido 't want to finish going to go for it myself."
second," Montoya said. "It's
All that planning was for
hard. I would think I would naught as Busch continued
have tried to make a move his white-hot start to his
coming out of four."
first season with JGR.

s.·-.·1

BY BRIAN J. REED

at

°

'

', •: ,.,,

&lt;'

)

·~

' ""

r~

- '• "' ' ' , •.' '•

•''

OPSBdenies
request
for AMP
'rehearing'

PqeAS
• .Kurtiss 1:ee iBraley, 40

·

·~

'.=*~·

BY lEnt 'SE
_,...

I

~:r

•

&lt;

1,t'l,

.• - • .., .. .,_...,. ••

,

EVl!RYl'1IING TOO YALUI!

"

'.'·'.

'

J

POMEROY
- Last
night Pomeroy · Council
discussed ways of paying
for engineering fees asso- ..
ciated with the federally
mandated overhaul of its
sewer system.
Engine¢ng fees are estimated at $75,000 and last
night council opened two
bids from IQCBI banks, both
for loans of 120 months.-The
first bid was from Farmers
Bank at 4.125 percent and
the second was · from
Peoples Bank at 4.16 percent. Both bids were tabled
for further discussion.
Clerk-Treasurer Kathy
Hysell asked council to
increase the general fund
by $8,000 to help pay a
semi-annual workers compensation
. The
total
for this

was
to the groups'
COJitcnti.on that the boand
failed to require an evalua,
tion of the impacJj of the
AMP-Ohio facility's cmbon
dioxide emissions and
· improperly concluded that
suCh Clllbon dioxide impacts
need not be factored into the'
evaluation of allemativcs. ·
1be board responded by
saying it bad approved the
certificate because of multi- ·
ple emission control technologies proposed by AMPDal R1on .... M
Ohio, including Powerspan
which it feels bas the poten.'
tial for future carbon dioxide capture and sequestration. 'The order added, "one
of the condition's in the
SJv.:noNs
PM.Bl
board's certificate requires
BY CHARLEJIE HoeFucH
AMP-'Ohio
to file an appli- HOEFI.ICHOMYDI\ILYSENTINELCOM
Annie's Mailbox
A3
cation with the boat:d if and
Calendars ·
A3 when it seeks to conduct POMEROY - A supplecarbon capture and seques- mental food program for
Classified&amp;
tration." Another condition senior c1tizens funded
of
the certificate requires ·
gli
Comics
AMP-Oitio to use a subcrit- . · throu · the United States
•
ical or sn"""'"tical boiler. Department of Agriculture
Editorials
-.----is. ~tly accepting
The company bas publiclv
1· ·
fr
indicated to the board it app tea1tons
om
Movies
Southeastern Ohio seniors ·
•
would use a su~n:ritical
b
tn'ti' all
· '9\Jituaries
boilrlr design which is said w o are nu
on y at nsa.
income eligible.
B Section to .have less """nveraii emis- and
~ports
According
to Carla Saum,
' ..
sions than the subcriticai. jrogram coordinator through
'
Weather
A6 according to the board.
the
·Hocking-Perry
1be board also noted there
was oo "commen:ially avail- ·Community Action Agency,
able tcebnology which pro- of tbe 4,000 people receiving
vides a means of sequester_ supplemental food, Meigs
· carbon at this time." And COWity bas ooly.226 seniors
mg
enrolled, the lowest of the 10
'
PI ·r I .-AMP. AI
coUnties served. The agency
I
4

:_.a

!MI!~u.u. ••.,.ICIIIML•­

BSEAQENTOMYDAILVSENTINELCOM

--I~

INDEX

n:AU.-CI-tiStUI,.SI,GIII ........BAIJ.
-lot.Wio io -·-loo.IO_Io&lt; _ _ _ _ _ G""
I

BY BEnt 5eRGENT

l "'T

.OOLUMiBUS
Yesterday afteriloon the
Ohio Power Siting Board
~ a request by "citizen
groups" for .a .rehearing 011
American
Municipal
Power-obio 's .certificate of
·environmental compatibility and public need.
These "citizen groups"
were the Natural Resources
Defense Council, the Sierra
Club
and
Ohio
Environmental Council. If
the groups choose, they
could still appeal the decision by taking the tase to the
Ohio Supreme Court within
60 days from the day of the
decision, according to Matt
·Butler of the Public Utilities
Conimission of Qhi.o.
In its official order; the
OPSB found .four "assign-

INsiDE.

I

·Pomeroy
discusses
sewer project
financing

EOTOIMN,'I'IEI!I11NB..ooM
·, '- . -

• Law You ·Can Use:
What you should~
:about being asmart

-·-·-··- _......,._....,__

I

valued :at $3,400, and several illegal
MIDDLEPORT - Pounds and modified firearms at his home. , .
pounds of marijuana valued at nearly
Woodard was not home at the time
·$50,000, over $'1 00,000 in cash,.two the search warrant was executed, but
motorcyCle&amp;", four all-terrain vebi- . arrived during the investigation and
cles, an SUV, a pickup truck, a fish- was .transported to jail, Deputy Rick ,
ing boat and trailer, a lawn mower Smith said.
Less than a mile .away,
the
.and a new safe were seized Saturday
.in one of the ~est drug seizUFe Hubbard residence, deputies. sei~
cases in recent history.
· tel 15
ds f
..
Martin Wr""·_. 60, H~sell Run approXIIDll y poun
manJua""""'""'
na, bagged in one-pound packages,
Road, and David Hubbard, 9, Jeffers $105,523 in cash, two Harley
Road, were jailed early Saturday after Davidson motorcyc;les, fQur ali-tersheriff's deputies, age~ts with rain vehicles, a Chevrolet Tahoe, · a
Alcohol, Tobacco and Flre8DDS, and · Dodge dual-wheel pickup truck, a .·
Ohio State Highway Patrol an4 a city fishing boat and trailer, a John ~
police officer .and canine investiga- lawn tractor and a new safe.
tion unit from Gallipolis executed
All items were transported to. th.e
search warrants at .their homes.
Woodard is clwgl:d with felony county sheriff's department, where
and felony they remained Monday. Beegle srud
possession of mariiuana
.
-J.Au.•
the items are believed to have been
ttaffioong in marijuana, and may face purchased from drug proceeds, and A fishing boat and trailer, several all-terrain vehicles, a truck, suv and two
Hariey Davidson 'tnotorcycles are among the items seized during a drug
federal ~s for illegal firearms.,
investigation at the David HUbbard residence near Rutland Saturday.
Sheriff Robert ~gle said Monday.
P1'1111 -laid. AS

~PigeAS

·' """'"AG--- .....
_ _..,.-.,.....
,..,• ...,.,., • .s.,..w .... ...... ...............

.._I

After securing a search warrant, officers found two pounds. of marij~Ja~~a.

BREEDOMYDIIILYSENTlNELCOIII

Tim Dahlberg .is a nationnl

'

1

$1001(, vehicles seized 'in .!lutland Township raid

• Tme'm SIDQ{.up
oo F~r Slairps..

'
•

~ I~

r

.• Maraliders•win
8 :Sba¥ II game.

sports oolumnisi for Tht
Assdciated Press. Write to

VlSlT OUR NEWEST LOCATION
ONE MILE WFST OF ATiiENS
18300LD LOGAN RD. S.E.
ON ROUTE 50/32
LANCASTER, OH
ATHENS,OH
74.0-653-2827
140-593-3219
800-710-1917
':&gt;·
"Your Friendly Outdoor Power Equipment and Trlfctor Superstore" .

•

.

SPOR1S

.: .

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

'

/1 ' '
Middleport • Pomeroy, Obi~

That doesn't
then:
won 't still be smiles on draft
day.
,
They just won't be as big
as the one~ Long and his fel·
low first-rounders wore ori
this day.

him at tda'hlbergap.org

HMC observes Latlndry
-and Linen Week, Aa

celebrate wetlands, A3

ings.
:;
· IDdianapolis Colts presi!
dent Bill Pollan said last
month that agents have dri~
vim up the costs of the ~
picks so much it has hampered the ability of weli)l
teams to improve; the ~
nomics .are such that ~
can't trade picks. If they dO
srend millions .to sign a top
p1ck, they .risk making a mi~ .
take on that pick that .coula
hurt a team for years.
. ·
Polian said that ,playel'!i
chosen in the top 1.5 ofteil
make more than 'prvven play~
ers ·!Jl their ~sitions, Whicb
by ttsel.f IDl~ht cause SOJlltl
dissension m the .p layer' s .
union.
:
If NFL owners are •reall-'!
serious .about redistri~
the wealth among players.
it's conceivable a deal rtbaf
institutes an NBA-scyle rook•
ie cap for, say, two years;
while increasing pay ·fur vet~
erans could ·be 'JlUl in place;
1b help do that, they miglii
also look at dumping mon!
money into a league fund of
$100.•8 million designed to
boost the em:nings of low~
salaried players who end uP.
with a lot of playi11g time.
. That fund last season
increased the pay of Stee~
tackle Willie Colon ·bY,
$309,534, and aiSiil paiil
bonuses to 24 other plaYers:
Not big money by first-rou:n4
standards, but big to COlon, a
fourth-round 2006 selectiOii
from Hofstra
A rookie salary cap makes
sense for a Jot of reasons, but
only if the money that woult:!
have been .paid finds its way
to other players. Merit should
be rewarded more thaq
.potential, and there's mOR!
· than enough millions to gti

·KUBOTA.• EVERYfHING
YOU WANT IN A TRACTOR

line - . a rare completion
considering his history at
the track.
.
In six previous Cup races,
Busch failed to finish four
times and wrecked out of
both events last season. His
accident in last spring's Cup
race was so hard, be cracked
· his head-and:neck restraint
while finishing 37ih. And
his wreck in the fall officialIy ended his championship
hopes.
But this year, he can't
seem to do anything wrong.
His victory was his second
Sprint Cup win of the year,
seventh spanning all three
of NASCAR's to~ series,
and gave him wms four
weekends in a row dating to
a Nationwide Series victory
in Thus earlier thili month.
. He bas victorie11 this sea·
son on a road course, an
intci'lncdiatc track, a pseudo-short track and a superspeedway.
,.
•
lt's made for an incredible
start to the season for the
sometimes bratty Busch,
who was fired from
...,... Hendrick Motorsports last
•
year despite his immenli4i
talent because the team
couldn't tolerate 'bis often
irrational temperament.
So Joe Gibbs Racing
snatched him up, and the
team couldn't be mo}:e
thrilled with its fmd. Busch,
who turns 23 next week, has
given the organization

·'

'

-·

is seeing its share of visitors
when &lt;the temperatures tum
a little wanner. Locilf ollicials
are particularly ·proud of the
park which bOasts three ballfields, a basketball court,
playground equipment, a
stage, a walking path, a
planned museum and the
new skate park. Here, boYs
play follow the leader on the
walking patty while these
Racine Tornadoes gather in
the dugout, preparing to
take the ball diamond.

,..11/pt-

88111 . .

USDA funds food progrnm for seniors

-/u

-

..
'

' ·~I

.• )/ '&lt;:•r&gt;;·_.._,. ,.._._,

*

... --,~·-;t•-.o·

. ·.t··Vt-~

~'''

, ...,

'"·'•'('-"-·'

'&lt;•I"" &gt;-.•.~-~-·:.•\,!

handles the program for deuce, (utility bill, bank stateAthens, Gallia, Hocking. ment, driver's license.) .lbe
Jackson. Lawrence, Meigs, finanCial guidelines to qualify
Morgan, Perry, Vinton and list' househol~ income per
' Washington Counties.
month as follows: 1 member,
To facilitate the process of $1 .1211, 2 members, $1,517;
enrolling Meigs County and 3 members $1,907.
seniors over 60 and income
Boxes are deliverect once
eligible, applications are a month and each one conavailable at the Meigs tains cans of juice, vegetaCounty Senior Citizens bles, fruit, meat or poultry,
Center.
cereal, evaporated .milk,
With the brief application beans, peanut}butter, pasta,
fonn, those applying are to and cheese. A" truck brings
submit a copy showing proof the boxes to the parking lot
of age (copy of driver 's at Alligator Jack's on Laurel
license, birth certificate or Cliff Road from the
any otbec document listing Regional Food Center i n
date of birth); proof of Logan and recipients are
income (pay stub, copy of responsible fQr picking them ·
Social Security cbeclc, W.2
. - AF. .fll,s, AI
form); and proof of resi-

';··

•".\:!.)'

'~{

'

,
,. ,,

,.

"

1\ '\&gt;.~

• ·~

•

l'•;f'

J:,-,

of that payment
other '55 percent
September.
Hysell reported the general fund has around
$80,000 in it but cautioned
some big expenses are on
the way. Council also transferred $8,000 from the general to the street department fund which now bas a
balance of $2,500 . The
funds were needed to make
payroll, etc.
Council also approved the
second reading of an ·
amendment to the code
enforcement
ordinance
which would allow either a
police officer or civilian to
fill the position. The ordinance currently only allows
for a police officer to be in
the position.
It was reported a mulcher
will be rented to get ci.d of
brush at Beech Grove
Cemetery.
Councilwoman
Ruth
Spaun said she was receiving complaints of pit bulls
running loose at various
locations in the village.
Shawn
_ councilman
Arnott asked of there was a
curf
. ew for young people
and Chief Mark E. Proffitt
said a II p.m. curfew was in
existence.
The meeting adjourned
into executive session once
to discuss a legal matter. It
was not clear by press time
if any. action was
after
the executive session .

taken

t .

~"'·''·'· .f''IJ.. ,''.&gt;'.1 • ·T,

' .. ; •

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="542">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9993">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="13879">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="13878">
              <text>April 28, 2008</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="4020">
      <name>braley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1372">
      <name>higginbotham</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
