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Pq; B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, Apri128,
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.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 ·

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Busch wins at Talladega
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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

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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

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OPSBdenies
request
for AMP
'rehearing'

PqeAS
• .Kurtiss 1:ee iBraley, 40

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BY lEnt 'SE
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EVl!RYl'1IING TOO YALUI!

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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

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!MI!~u.u. ••.,.ICIIIML•­

BSEAQENTOMYDAILVSENTINELCOM

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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.

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·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

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

BREEDOMYDIIILYSENTlNELCOIII

Tim Dahlberg .is a nationnl

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

• Tme'm SIDQ{.up
oo F~r Slairps..

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.• 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

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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

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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

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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-

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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,

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�,
I

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NATION • WORLD,

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2
. Tuesday, April2f}, 2008

Birthdays
Wednesday, April30 .
LETART, W.Va . .- John
E. "Jack" Ord, formerly of
l;.etait, W,Va. will observe
his 89th binhday on April
30. A card shower is
planned. His address is
Uki.n Nursing Home @I
Aateman Circle, Lakin,
W.Va., 25287.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

l

AP photo

Albertsons butcher shop employee Patricia Senneno, right,
helps Sergio Gil shop for meat at the Albertsons supennarket in Glendale, Calif., Monday, The tax rebates starting to
sho_w up in Americans' mailboxes and bank accounts wilt
likely be used for food and other basic necessities, ~tung
the~ less ot an economic stimulus than the BuSh admiriistratton hoped for.

.· ding
nebates start. Ian
.. .
bank
unf.,C,
•
.·m .
ac"'o ...,:
How will we spend? . ~: =~· 1;:n~~~~~

n

~

.

''
!

'

.

, POMEROY . -

•

•

.

Thesday, April 29
SYRACUSE - The final
public meeting on the

Don~ wait until

wedding to tell Dad
Dear Annie: My sister
and I own the house we lfve
in. Last year, we bonuwed
money, together, for renovations and repairs. The contractors were paid by personal check out of my sister's bank account where
the money was held. .
I kept rough track with
invoice data on the account's
balance. Recently, when I
approached my sister with a
plan for spendin!l the remaining money, she mformed me
that nearly $30,()()(} had vanished, unaccounted for.
Repairs stopped.
I absolutely don 't believe
the money simply disap- .
peared. How can I not ttust
my only sibljng? What
should I do' - Confused

KATlfY MITCHELl
AND MARcY SUGAR

BY

bers.

Syracuse CDBG Distress
w..r- esliMy, April 30
Gran.t application., 7 p.m.:
PORTLAND -Lebanon
Syracuse Community Center. Township Trustee meeting,
7 p.m. township garage. ·
Public urged to attend.
.

.

.

.

Celebrate

Water . Conservation
Vistrict and the Leading
€reek Watershed Group.
~ This free watershed · tour
include three unique
wetlands and end with a pic~- Those going on the tour
are to meet at the first stop
the Wilson Wetland on St&lt;Ue
Route 7 near Middleport and
Hobson, At 5 p.m. presenters from the Cooper HoUow .
Wildlife Area will tell the
story of the Wilson Wetland
311d show off the varied
wildlife there. At 6 p.m. tbe
· group will meet staff from
the Ohio Department of
Transportation and tour the
Fl\ifgrounds
Wetland
Mitigation
Area
on
~ocksprings Road, which
also has an acid mine
drainage treatment system
inoorpora~ into the wetJanet At 7 p,m, the group
will end the tour at the
Meigs SWCD Conservation
Area with a tour of thewetland enhanced there in 2007,

will

.......
In this photo. distributed by the official Chinese news agency, Xinhua, wor1&lt;ers repair thl!
damaged ratlway at the ~ite of _the trains colliding accident in east China's Shalldorlg
prov1nce on Monday. A htgh-speed passenger train jumped its tracks and slammed into
another train in eastern China on Monday, killing atleast70 people and injuring more thatt
•
bUFeau's Communist PartY
Secretary, were fired after
the crash, Xinhua said, and
tbey , face an investigatioO
by
the
Ministry ·or
Railways.
.
It was the second majOr
railway
accident , in
Shan4qng this year. 1ft
January, 18 J?OOPie died
when a tr31D . hurtling
through the ni,ght at mom
than 15.mpb slammod iato a
group1Jfaboilt IOOw~
doing track maintenance .
n~ the city of Anqiu.

in CaJifornia
otar Confused: How
estranged are you willing. to
be? lf the money truly disappeared, your sister should
not object to an investigation . .Otherwise, you can
talk to a lawyer about suing
your sister to recover it.
Decide which you V;J.lue
more -.the money or your
sister - because we don't
think you' re going to have
both, Sorry.
Dear Annie: I cringed
after reading your response
to the newspaper carrier
. who asked about sending
thank-you notes for tips.
I deliver papers and often
receive tips and small gifH
at Christmas, and send
thank-you notes to every
customer. These "tips" are
gifts for service well done
and should be acknowledged
appropria.tely.
Otherwise, the giver may
not know that you even
received their gift. Grateful in Ohio
Dear Ohio: We aren't
. against sending a thank-you
note. (Heaven forbid .) But
in general, such t.ips are
already a ''thank you" from
the client, and whenever
possible, an in-person
acknowledgement at the
time is sufficient. However,
we' re glad to know so many
newspaper and letter carriers are taking the time to do
it right. .
.
Ann~'s Mailbox is wriJten by Kathy MiJclteU and

.
.
.
·.
.
.
SUbonillld lll*o
Th1s wetland wtth a 2.2 acre pool area at the Meigs SWCD Conservatior;l Area near
Rutland will be the last stop on the tour. The picnic will be held there.

Participants can then enjoy a
cookout and picnic and have
the chance to explore the
Conservation
Area

JIMC observes Laundry and Lin~n Week

·--- --...
• FfEE JAil

,Ticlilwllall...,..

....

•10~ ~with wen.~!

• c;._,.Siir1 ..... . ..... - · -

Lt99i-21

"

Thursday, May I
TUPPERS PLAINS

Public meetin~

RUTLAND - Leading
Creek
Conservancy
District, special board meeting, personnel matters. ·
RUTLAND - Rutland
Village Council, special
meeting to ,discuss personnel, 7 p.m., eouncil's cham-

~

ill tills special

,,.

Clubs and
organizations

VFW
Tuppers Plains
Auxiliary, 7 p.m., VFW hall.

American Wetlands Month
15y exploring the wetlands of
the Leading Creek Watershed .
with a tour May 8, 5 to 8 p.m.
S]1onsored by the Meigs Soil

rn.

'I

.

Thursday, May I
RACINE - Eva Teaford
will observe her 80th birthday I} May I . Cards .may be
sent to her at P.O. Box 55,
Racine, Ohio.45771.

-

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..

:GALLIPOLIS
.
"·
National Laundry and Linen
Wc:ek was observed across
· ~ country April 21 - 26.
't1le Holzer Medical Center
(HMC) Laundry and Linen
Department participated in
a number of activities to
mark this event
The special week is
endorsed by the Association
for Linen Management
(ALM ). This organization
was established in 1939 to
provid~ a network for the
flow of information among
its members leading toward
t)leir professionhl development and the advancement
of the technologies they
~mploy.
·
.· The Laundry and Linen
Department at }{MC celelimted with the voting and
announcement
of
the
Laundry
Department
li:mployee of the Year, Tun
Doss, The honor is chosen
l)y fellow peers in the
department. 'Doss was also
recognized as Laundry
t!el!artm!!nt Employee of
'ijlEVciir tor zllU5..
Tim Doss was' nain'ed Holtllr me(ilcal

Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of th Ann . Landers
cohtmn. Please e-rnoil your
questions to anniesiiPUlil-

box.@comcasLnet, or write

to: Annie's MailboX, P.O.
Box 118190, Clticago, IL

60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by othr
CreaJors Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.
Need a great Auto
-

GBI1181''S

- -

-

.-

~rate?

}ullm~llft* .

Stay local ami wl an
Agent you ai~d)

2007 l&lt;lundry Department Employment ot~

~~~~~~j:-~e~i~~~F~~~1r0~~~~~~~~e9=~~t:l!::~~l:l_.c(~~oi .Bush, "manager- oLHolzerJAedicaL Cell_!er'!iLaundry
and
E&gt;epartmen! 27 years ago.
· He is a resident of Vmton
where he lives with his
wife, Jamie, and daughter,
i::ourtney, who is a student
at Yinton Elementary, He
enjoys hunting and fishing.
· "1 want to thank my coworkers for honoring me as
the Laundry and Linen
Pepartment Employee of
lhe Year," stated Doss.
~ The Department pro:Vides laundry and linen
Services
for
Holzer
Medical Center and all

\

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April29, 2008

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Metgs to11r to celebrate wetlands

400 in China's ~orsttrain accident in a decade,
.
·
• ·
said oae· of the trains was to get off at the Ziho railway old boy, Liu Jinhang, was
BY ANNE D'INNOCENZIO
ing die pinch thaL. they are tr;aveling loo fast.
station," one passenger sur- probably the youngest perreal;ly
being
forced
to
·
s
tep
The
crash
occurred
when
named Zhang told Xinhua. . son injured. ·He was in staAP BUSINESS WAITER
away from luxury ·o rdisae- a train headed from Beijing
"I suddenly felt ,the train, ble condition after being
tionary
purchases,"'
~d
to
the
·
c
oastal
city
of
like
a roller coaster, topple treated for a broken arm.
NEW YORK 'fax
A 38Cyear~ld woman told
rebates !lave begun drop- Janet Hoffman, managing Qingdao - site of the sail- ... to one side and all the
partner
of
libe
Nori:h
ing
oompetition
dtu-ing
the
way
to
the
·
o
ther
side,
When
Xinhua
that she and her
ping into bank accounts, but
American
retail
division
of
Olympics
in
August
it
finally
went
off
the
tracks,
daughter,
13, escaped
. m Ibis .economy, ·gas and
Aroenture.
derailed
and
hit
a
second
many
people
.fell
on
me,"
unhurt
by
scrambling
grocilries may trump a highBut department stores and passenger train just before Zhang said.
through a huge crack in the
end TV, a fancy dress or a
consumer
electronics
stores
dawn.
Nine
of
the
fu-st
Zhang,
who
was
on
the
floor of their carriage.
new sofa - making the
"meatrain
's
carriages
were
train
from
Beijing,
was
Xinhua said investigatqrs
are
unlikely
to
see
a
checks less of an economic
surable
lift,"
Hoffman
knocked
into
a
dirt
ditch,
injured
when
the
train
feU
had
ruled out terrorism as a
jump-start than the governadded . ."The amounts are Railway
.
Ministry into farmland . beside the cause of the crash. Its
ment hoped for.
not
that
significant"
spokesman
Wang
Yongping
track. She said villagers English report . said it was
The first direct deposiis
By
comparison,
previous
said
in
a
statement.
used farm tools io smash · human error, while its
&amp;om the Internal Revenue
government
stimulus
plans
News
photos
showed
restrain
windows to -pull out Chinese-language report
Service landed iB bank
attributed the crash io negliaccounts Monday, shoppers led to a lift acr.oss the entire cuers . pulling passengers trapped passengers.
retail
industry,
said
Stacy
from
a
rail
car
sitting
on
its
·
"J
saw
a
girl
who
was
trygence.
were already using tbe cash
Janiak,
vice
chairman
and
side.
Survivors
bundled
in
ing
to
help
her
boyfriend
It also said the Beijing
to play catch-up on the
HS.
retail
leader
at
Deloitte
white
bed
sheets
from
the
out
of
the
train,
but
he
was
train
was traveling 82 mph
basics, such as milk and
&amp;
Touche,
sleeper
cars
stood
or
sat
dead,"
Zhang
~aid.
at
the
time of the crash, over
other groceries.
The rebates go out as the near the wreckage. The · Shandong is one of the speed limit of 50 mph,
· Analysts say the rest will
IRS
finishes sending out its death toll cqdld rise, with 70 · China's richest provinces citing investigators.
·
probably be used to pay
regular
annual
tax
refund
people
hospitalized
in
critiwith
a
population
of
around
President
Hu
fmtao
and
down debt
.
cal condition, according to 9 3 million. a large manufac- Premier Wen Habao issued
Alicia Flaxman, a stay-at- cheeks.
ln ai'l Associated Press- Xinhua.
turing business, and thriv- directives urging an all-out
home
mother
from
AOL
Money
&amp;
Finance
poll
Security
was
tight
on
the
·
ing
port at Qingdao.
rescue effort, Xinhua said,
Seekonk. Mass .. was shopearlier
this
month,
35
percent
outskirts
of
Zibo
with
roads
A
coach
ofCh~na's
sailing
and
Vice Premier Zhang
ping at a Target store
to
the
crash
site
sealed
by
team,
Hu
Weidoog,
w.as
Dejiang
and Minister of
said
they
would
use
their
regMonday and said she would
use some of the rebate for ular tax refunds for bills and police arid other nearby seriously iojured, Dr. Zhang RaJlways Liu Zhijun were
food - cheaper items like ·credit card payments. That roads lined with paramili- Juri, head of the orthopedics immediately sent to oversee
department at tlie Zibo the rescue operation.
potatoes, not more expen- was up from 27 percent who tary and police vehicles.
said
that
a
year
ago.
A
total
of.420
people
were
Traditional
Chinese
Both the director .of the
sive meat and fish .
"My bills are double," she · . With .consumer spending burt, Xinhua said. No for- Medicine hospital, was Railway Bureau in Jinan,
the provincial capital and .
said. "I go to the supermar- · sc~hing to a halt in eigners were among the quoted as saying.
me
retail
dead.
Injured
survivors
The
doctor
said
a·3-yearnearest big city, and the
recent
months,
ket and I spend $200. I used
industry needs sooppers to included
four
French
to spend $120."
The rest of the money will splurge. 'lbat's a big chal- nationals, a coach from
probably go · for summer lenge, G~ could reach $4 a China's national sailing
clothes for her three chil- gallon i!his summer, and a team and a 3-year-old boy:
gallon of milk is now about
The injured . were scatdren, she said.
,tered at hospitals throughThe IRS aims to make '$ 4 'On average as welt
"People who were -eating out the re};ioo, and patient
800,000 payments every
steaks
last year are now eat- wards were quiet by
day for the fu-st three days
ing
hamburger
meat ·and Monday night. Ten people
of this week. No deposits
will be made Thursday, and pastli this year,~ said Burt P- were forced to sleep in the
Flickinger
managing hallway of the . packed
about 5 mill ion on Friday.
dimotor
.of
,the
consumer orthopedic surgery floor at
How you receive the
rebate depends on how you · industry ·consulting frrm Zibo Central Hospital.
One middle-aged woman
filed your taxes. Paper Stt:att;giC· Resource Group.
'
checks will go out beginning "People are going to be able at the hospital said she was
May 9. The exact tiining for to put good food on the lucky she wa.~ awake when
both- direct- deJJosit and tabfe, but in a few weeks the accident bappelr&amp;ipapen:ln:Ciis depends on lfie ihey .wili=g&lt;Hf&amp;:k. Ln'flilm"" n ~wus...liw•!r.e,J.dulil..'g_ot ·#~~~~~~~
last two digits of your Social burger meat and macaroni ." . back !;om, using the oatilRetailers . have already room, .r£3111 the ~oman,
Security number.
tried
to · grab a share of the who would nat grve .her
The rebates. which are
expected to reach. 130 mil- biUions of .dollars flowing n~e because her relat.Ives
households.
Sears d1dnot know she was hurt.
. i.ion households, range up to to
Holdings
Corp.
is
offering
The woman, who had lay$600 for individuals and
discounts
and
freebies
to
ers
of gauze wrapped
$1,200 for married couples,
shoppers
who
convert
around
her peODed . hair,
plus $300 per child for elirebate c;hecks into gift satd the craSh lasted about
gible parents.
Eric Mossack of Spring cards. Home Depot Inc. one minute.
"I crawled out of a winHill, Tenn., had his $1,200 ' launched a cartlpaign urgiog
people
to
spend
on
ecodow.
Anywhere there was
rebate in hi s checking
accolint Monday and spent friendly products like ener- space to get out, people
were trying to get out," she
· some of it on clothing from gy-saving light .bulbs..
Kroger
Co.
has
alieady
said.
Gap, Kohl's and other stores
A 12"year-old boy lay on
- his first shopping spree atlnounced that shoppers
in a few months, he said. can convert $300 rebate a bed in the ·'hallway, .cudThe rest will go to car pay- checks into a $330 Kroger dling a stuffed .toy~- .
· gift card.
."I was sleeping so I don't
,
ments.
"I'd
estimate
thai
we
had
remember
much. I don't
"We paid off something
about
100
people
indicate
even
know
how
I got here,"
we owed, and had a 1ittle
extra to spend," said they were ready to get the said the boy, who had a·brocards as soon · as they ken leg. He then fell asleep
Mossack.
could,"
Brad Casebolt, the before be,could answer any
But Bethany Blankley of
manager
of a Kroger said other questions,
Manhattan, who works in
Trains are the most popupublic relations, said she in Shar~nville, Ohio, said
would immediately put the Monday, "The interest in it lar way to travel in China,
$600 she received Monday really bas been over- and the country's overloaded rail network carried
toward · paying off credit whelming ."
who
was
L36 billion passengers last
Joyce
Gundling,
cards. ''The interest rates are
loading groceries at another year.. While accidents are
high," she said.
CinCinnati gro- rare. the governmept is trysuburban
That kind of frtgality
eery,
said
she would take ing to extend and upgmde
doesn't surprise analysts,
advantage.
the state-run rail ·network
who say shoppers are ear"llhe way groceries are and introduce more high
marking more of their
skyrocketing,
I'll probably speed trains.
money for groceries, the
end
up
spending
it here anyThe second train, which
utility hi II or credit card
way,"
she
said.
"This
way,
1
had
been headed from
payments. Besides grocery
Yantai in Shandong to
chains. they expect discount get more for mY'money."
Press
Writers
Xuzhou
in eastern Jiangsu
Associated
retailers like Wai -Mart
Martin
Cmtsinger
;
province.
was knocked off
11
Stores Inc. and off-price
clothing outlets like T.J . ....Washingwn, lisa Comwell its tracks but stayed upright.
" Most passengers were
Maxx to benefit from the in Cincinnati arui Michelle
Smith
in
Seekonk,
Mass.
still
asleep, but some were
stimulus checks.
contributed
to
this
report
standing
in the aisle waiting
"Consumers are so feeli

Tu~y.

Community Calendar

BY ANITA CHANG

I

BY mE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Some slept, some stood before
deadly derailJttent in China ·
ZIBO, China - Some
passengers were sleeping,
but others were standing in
the aisle waiting to get off
when their high-speed train
derailed, toppling into a
ditch "like a roller.coaster"
and slanuning into another
train. At least 70 people
died and more than 400
were injured.
China reacted swiftly to
its worst trnin accident in a
decade, sending top officials _and soldiers t~ Zibo,
, the Site of Mo~y s predawn, crash m eastern
China s S~andong pro~mce,_
and _sacking two railway
o~aisffi .al Xinl:i N
Agenc; ~d heav~acr~~~
were used 10 move the
·· wrecked rail cars and the
linereopenedtotrafficearly
Tuesday, about 20 hours
af1er die crdsJ'I.
Aulborilies were quoted
as saying that human error

PageA3

Holzer Clinic locations,
According to Carol Bush,
Manager of Laundry and
Linen Services at HMC , ·
over 6,000 pounds of soiled
linen were processed per
day, with over . 1.6 million
pounds ~ing process over
the year, Scrubs tbat were
pressed ' per day equaled
over 500 and over 60 dryer
loads took place daily.
Bush is very proud of her
hard working department.
"We provide a very valuable
service to the Hospital and

community," she said.
"Laundry work is very hard
.and our employees are dedicated and proud of the
work they do, providing a
service that is so vital in a
healthcare setting."
Bush,
who
is
a
Registered Linen and
Laundry Director and
Registered Environmental
Services Director through
the ALM, also .participates

Jessica Dillon

R~

&amp; !aur Insurance Agency
no Eut Mllin Street

'i

r~

·

Pomeroy, OH 45769

992-3600

lmurann· c;ruur

Or vis~ us on the web- www.reedbaur.com'
Home

Auto

Farm

Business

Stationary
Sofa

'

·~------~--~-------------

: Cincinnati gets another
. ~icada _
brood this spring
tral Ohio and parts of II
' -·&lt;:INCINNATI (AP) :Some
people
aro!)nd other states.
llris year's outbreak will
Cincinnati thought when
~y endured a cicada wak.e- be the cicada family named
llp four years ago, they Brood XIV (14), The estimat~
wouldn' t have to deal with ed 5 biUion to 7 billion that
the noisy. red-eyed bugs covered lawns and sidewalks
mostly west of 1-71 in 2004
\!gain for 17 years.
we~ &amp;om Brood X (10) .
. ~ :;::'';liffc;rent brood will be · Experts say cicadas do not
c;,merging again in a few carry diseases and do not
:Weeks, mostly east of sting or bite people. They' re
.klterstate 71, in south-cen- just a loud nuisanee,

as a facilitator and sits on
the NLM' s Educational
Affairs Committee. She is
currently working toward
providing correspondence
course for emplqyees at
HMC so that they have the
opportunity to become cer·
tified if desired.
For more informart'on
about laundry and linen•
services at Holzer Medical
Center. call (740) 446-5200.

- know-iindliiiSl:!" -

$599
Cherry Gathering
Table with
Mappa Inserts

Recliner r.hjlir

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w/4 padded chairs

$999

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I C. • '

I·-

I

I

�.PageA4

.O PINION

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, Apd 29, zooS
\

111 Coult Sill 81 •

POII7,

Ohio

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Good1ich
Publisher
Chartene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

The best political joke of
2008 was Senate Minority
Leader MilCh McConnell's, ·
R-Ky., at the WashingtOn
: Press Club Foundation's
dini!C'J in Fehnwy - about
, how die Democratic race
featuml Hillary Rodham
Clinton, a New York senator
born in Dlinois, and Barack
Obama, an Dlioois smarm
"wbo seems to have been
born in a manger."
Exelepl. the joke isn' t
valid anymore. The long, ·

oJ

u.s.

TODAY IN HISTORY

'

••
·•.

.

......

Kadt•'a

insurance. they're

b) former White House
political chief K.arl Rove
It's still likely that Obama shows McCain leading
will win the nomination. Obama in states with 261 of
Clinton's I().point victory tile 270 electoral vo~s
in l'erulsylvania closaJ· his needed lo win, while again,st
overall delegate advantage Clinton, he has 214.
..
by only IS - · down to 127
Also, Republi.c an pollster
- and cut his p0pular vote Whit Ayres told me that
lead by 215,000, down to four ifocus groups be's oon50 1,000. Those Clinton dueled .among · blue-collar
gains probably will be whites in Mi~igan and
wiped out on May 6 if be Missouri show "thciy are
wins big in Nonh Carolina open to voting for HilWy
and if s close in Indiana.
Clinton, but mere's no way
"'Obama is depending on ·in hell they are going for
arithmetic and Clinton i.s Obama. II's rulrural.
·
banking on psychology.~
"They just d0n't think
said fonuer Democratic '.e's a patriotic Amerit&lt;m.
National
Committee
f s the ftag pin, hi.s chun:b;
Executive Director M.ad: ris wife's stateD;~Cnt .t hat
Siegel. "She's boping dlat most
Americans
are
su~gates will' have an
~mean. ' A-s one woman said
epiphany, deciding be's iii one of these groups. 'I
unelectable.
don't th~ he bleeds red.
"But Sllpmlelegates also white and bl11e."~
have to be .thinking, 'if we
Ayres · also
polled
deny him the nomination Ten.nessee - a GOP-leanwhen he's ahead, it coUld ing state - for Sen. I ;amar
alienate bl~ and young Alexander (R) and found
people, lhe party's base and that Clinton would l0se . to
future, and .be dangerous McCain by .8 points, bu.t that
for the patty.
Obarua would lose by W
"Superdelegates were ere- [lOints. Twenty-five ~t
ated to be prngmatists, look ~f Democrats said tiiey
at eleotability and save .the would not vole for Obama.
party from going over .a.,.- So, after Pennsylvania,
diff. But if they take it the contest goes on. The
away from Obama. the next big test is Indiana. a
press will say dlat 'party . Republican state wit!J a
oosses' did it in 'smokie- slightly younger population
filled rooms.' To i)Onvi.nce dian Pennsylvania's and
them. she needs solid higher median inoome but
.empil'ical evidence dial he' d less . college"educated and
·take !he party over a cliff.~ . more rural . It's next to
As it happens, there is Obama's home state of
some. Although national Hl,inois, but its leading
polls show that Obama .and Democrat is Sen. {and fbrClinton both are .essential- mer Gov.) Evan Bayh, wbo
ly tied with McCain, supports Clinton.
Clinton does better Vb.an
If Obama cannot cl0se the .
Obama in crucial swing deal there, the race tike:ly
states. In Ohio, an average will go on until IUQe. At the
of recent polls show moment, 3(}-odd percent.of
McCain heating Obama by Democrats nationally tell
2.6 points. Clinton beats pollsters they will either I)Ot
McCain by 5 points .
vote or defect to McCai,n if
In Aorida. McCain beats their favorite does not get
Obama by l L 7 points but is nominated It woo 't be that
1lied with Ointon.
bad, for sure, but it weuld
1b::re ceR.ainly are states -be good for Democrats if
that Obama might win ithat someone closed the deal
Clinton probably can '.t soon to reunite the party.
Nevada,
Iowa.
even
(Monon Kondracke is
Nebmska and Nol1h DakoW execmive editor of Roll
- but the latest national Call, the newspaper of
poRing roundup assembled Capitol Hill.)

in oali.onal life for only
y~ and is rwming
Collgrt:ss slwll ~ no """ tap«ting 411
for die highest office in die
ut4111Uiunmt of rdigion, « ptolti6iti11g tlu
land. it's only natural lhat
contentious
Democratic
pri-'
votel's - and journalists
aads~ duretlf; or 411ri4ging tlu jiwhm
mary battle bas reduced - find out what die candi· of quda, or ~ prus; or tlu rigltt of tlu
Obama from a messiah - . date is ~ of, what bi~
people 11e4U116l1 U1 assnnllk, tiiUI . ~ pditUin ex&lt;Jq)t amoog his most character is. ·
ardent disciple5 - to an
t1u GoPemmmt for 4 mlrru ofgrimnu:n.
Which is why it was pcl'ordiJwy moa1al.
fec:dy appropriate for ABC
He started out lalgcly New.s inteno,gators Charlie
-The First Al-ldment to the
Constitution
unknown to die public, Gibson
and
Geo;:ge
delivering a message of S&amp;epbanopoulos 10 ask
unity and post-partisanship questions about Obama's
tbat .lbeooontJyclearlyis ~mark that small-town
Today is Tuesday, April 29, lhe I 20th day of 2008. There hungering for. He also Pennsylvanians "cling~ to
Sl""mod to oil'« the oountry lheir guns and ~ligion
are 246 days left in the fear. ·
.
.
a c11anq: to move beyond its because they are "bitter,~
Today's Highlight in History: On April 29• 1945• d~ bis10ric racial divisions. about his refusal to wear a
Wodd War 11, American soldiers liberated tbe Dachau oon- Aod be promised 10 rise
flag pin and about his assoceDIIalioo camp; the same day, Adolf HitiCI' married Eva above customary slash..and- ciation widt radicals such
Braun and desigriattld Adm. Karl Doenit.z president.
bum politics.
as former Weathennan BiD
On this date: In 1429, Joan ·o f Arc enteml the besieged
He's still a formidable Ayers and die Rev.
city of Orleans to lead a French victory over tbe English.
I&lt;
bu he•5 been brought
Jeremiah Wright.
In 1798, J,_.,
. h Haydn's oratorio "'lbe Creation~ was oroe, t
··
-,....back to ordinary dimen'lions
Obama did get lwd quesrehearsed in Vlellllll, Austria, before an invited audience.
as voters have gotten to tions, but wben Clinton was
In 1861, Maryland's Hoose of Delegates voted against know him_ and, as prima- the front -runner, she · got
secrAing from the Union.
ry
reslllts
in
New hard questions, too. She
1n 1901, Japanese Emperor Hirobito was born in Tokyo. Hampshife, New Jersey, whined at tbc time. Thea, he
In 1916, tbe Easter Rising in Dublin collapsed as Irish California, Teus, Ohio and
did. And his media claque
nationalists swreodered to British allthorities.
now Pennsylvania show, be whined even louder.
In 1946, 28 fonner Japanese officials went on trial in Tokyo can't "close the deal~ to end
The "clwacter~ questions
as war criminals; seven ended up being sentenced to dealh.
Clinton's challenge and were also
appropriate
In 1968, the counterculture musical "'Hair" opened on wrap up the nomination.
because lhey are the subBroadway foUowing limited engagements off-Broadway. ·
The Clinton campaign stanoe of the Clinton camIn 1974, 'President Nixon announced he was releasing managed to polarize the
paign's case against Obama
edited transcripts of some secretly made White House tape oontest racially _ despite - that he can't beat Sen. ·
his healed denials, Bill l,ohn McCain bec.a\l.se he
reoonli.ngs related to .Watergate.
In 1983, Harold Washington was sworn in as tbe fust .C linton
·
......__ _
did '"·~n VU&lt;UI"' to
can't cany white workingf
Chi
blac.k mayor o
cago.
dae Rev. Jesse Jackson in class voters, Hispanics,
In 1992, deadly rioting erupted in Los Angeles after a South Carolina _ and Calholics, Ohio, Aorida jury in Simi Valley, Calif., acquitted four Los Angeles · Obama has 11a4 to resort 10
maybe even Massachusetts
polioe officers of almost all state charges in the videotaped negative campaigniiUl to . and New Jersey.
beating of Rodney King.
· oounterpunch at Ointon.
AU dlilt's partly about
five years ago: The Palestinian parliament approved
He •s also now revealed JaCe, Clinton campaign offiMahmood Abbas as prime minister,
._ __... clearing
_.. ..__.. tbc final
~
as .the most li'"-ral
"" mem:ber cials acknowledge, but il'~
obstacle to the launch of a u . s . ~ ....... map to
f ... _ us Senate
and
also about class. "People
Waleed bin AoHo•'- 0 ·wo:; • •
peace . Pakistani authorities ~-·-'
.....,-~
""""""' one wbo has never, e'!er who have the luxury of
accused of playing a leading mle in lhe Sept. ll attacks.
departed from party mtbo- bope go for 0\wna.~ ooe
One year ago; A man sbot and killed two people wben be doxy to foon the kind of aide rold me. "If they are
opened fiie in a parking 10( and in the WaRt PadriWay biplldisan ooalitioo be says ooBeg~11cated ·.and buy
Center in Kansas City, Mo.; ·t he gunman, David W. _ CIOil'ectly .- that it will latte1; .at St.albucb, Iiiey 're
Logsdon, died in a shootout witb police. An elevated sec- take to solve America's .fur him.
lion . of highway that carries motonsts from the San problems.
"But if people are reaUy
Francisco-Oaldand Bay Bridge to a niiDlber of freeways
It's all about "vetting.~ kwting, facing foreciCJsllre
was destroyed after heat from an overtomed gasoline truck When somebody has been or in danger of losing a job
caused part of one overpass to crumple onto another. St.
Louis Canlinals relief pitcher Josh Hancock, 29, was killed
in ihe crash of his sport 11tility vehicle.
Today's Birthdays: Rhythm-and-blues singer Cad Oaidncr
(The Coasters) is 8(). Poet Rod McKuen is 75. Bluesman ·
Otis Rush is 74. Conductor Zubin Mehta is 72. Movie direcI was once stro~l y
futtbemJore, as "National
tor Pbillip Noyce is 58. Comedian Jerry Seinfeld is 54. Actor
, Ri.gbt to Life News~ (April
Leslie Jordan is 53. Actress Kare Mulgrew is 53. Actor inclined to vote for BaGid
issue) · ioeluded in its
Danid Day-Lewis is 51. ACtress Michelle Pfeiffer is 50. Obama for ~sident
JIOOOunt of Obama's .ac1Jual
Actress Eve Plumb is 50. Rock musician Phil Ki1lg is 48. (assuming he W()n his
votes on abo111ion,.he "voted
· Singe~" Carnie Wtlson {W'dson Phillips) is 40. Actress Uma party's nominationj based
Nat
to kill a bill dial would lhave
· Thmman is 38. Tennis player Andre Agassi is 38. Rapper on his R:!OOR1 as a coriununity organizet in Oticago
llentoff
required .an a'bol11ionist to
Mastec Pis 38. Actor Zane Quney is 23.
and
in
lbe
Dlinois
state
legnotify at least one p.arent
: Thought ·for Today: "News is histocy sbot on lhe wing."
islatulle. He's bad nittybefore perl'orming an .abor·
-Gene Fowler, American journalist (11190-1960}.
gritty stFeet experiences
1ion on a minor girl from
absent in the resumes of
another state."
most aspirants for tbe Oval homicide, wbei&gt;e abortions
Tllese are conspiracies -Offjce: ~ll_. w,mt.ed .in poor ·wereMfonnc!d.
"·. · . and....1l:!l!!'~ the wrn:d ,-. ~by,
~EDITOR
·neighbomiiods to get job · I admire iDUC!fofOtiama' s pro-a!Xli'l!ioo extremists to
· Utlen to rite- ediwr lJit! wekotM. 'lJrey siJoM/d_ .lie. ~Js training for tb~ unem- · record, including what be trans.P?rt a minor girl across
than 300 wonfs. Ail.leners an! Slibj«t to diting, lfUUt be ployed and found ways to wrote ·m "The Auilivify Of state lints from where she
· signed,· and include sddn!ss .and klep/iofte rumtber. No reach school dropouts. And Hope~ aboot the . FounderS' lives, un~owost to her
u.nsigned letters will be publ.ishd. l.mers s"-ld be in in the legislature, be got a "rejection of all forms of parents. This assumes that .a
good taste, addressing issues, not perSOlllllitres. Leners of bill passed ro mandate absolute authority, whether minor fully understands the
thanks to organizations and Uulivjduals wiU not be accept· electronic police recording tbc .Jcing. the tboocrat, 1he .consequences of that irre·
ed for publication.
of in&amp;errugations in homi- general, the oligarch, the deemable act.
cide cases. But ·then I dictatOr, ·the majority · ...
As I was researching this
learned Obama's :voting George Washingtoo declined presidential
candidate's
record on abortion.
tbe crown because of this views on .the uniLateral
I am a nonreligious pro- impulse.~
. "choice~ th~t takes anothlifer.
my
only
religion
•
But
on
abo!tion,
Obama
er's life, I beard on the
(USPS 21MIIO)
Reader Services
' being dte Constitution. And is an extremist. He bas radio what Obarua said
Ohio~~*"
I am not a sipgle-issue opposed lhe Supreme Cowt . during a Johnstown, Pa.,
Coit-=Boii Pallcy
Publllhed ..,., afteiriUOit, Uondly
vot:C!J:, having often sup- decision that finally upheld town ball meeting on
Our main COI10itlll-in afl .-ls to tlltQUVh 'Fridooy, 111 Court Stntiot.
ported
candidates who are the Partial-Binh Abortion March 29 as he was disbe............ ~ you know "' 1111 """' Pomen&gt;y, Of1io. pro-choice
because I knew Ban Act against that form cussing the oontiouing dan:
in • etcfy, Clll:the newaroom at (740) ~ p.id II f'&lt;AtMoy.
their civil liberties .a nd civil of infanticide. Most star- gers of exposure to
• • 4Thell -ild.,.,._and
11112..2156.
rights ~rds. for one diogly, for a professed HIV/AJDS infections:
twOWo tl 'i •• t
laliiHi.
example., I was a great bumanist, Obama - in the
"When it comes specifiOur ftlltln , . ._. . . .
··I'
l ionlI 1o Ttto ;c.lly
-. HICoo!tt
of
the
late
·
Sen.
lllinois
Senate
also
cally
to HIV/AIDS, the
admirer
(740)-~9Jtrwt. hiWIUJ', Ohio 45111.
Daniel Pabick Moynihan. voted against the Born most imponant prevention
(New Y~ where I live, Alive Infant Protection A~ is education, which should
has bad no 10enators of his I 'have reported on several · include .- which should
one'10.27
quality and principles of tJwse cases when, before include· abstinence educaOM...
'115M
Ellillr: Cl1811ene - · E x t. 12
since.)
the abortion was complet- tion and teaching .children,
~
A 1 . ltiii. Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Although
Moynihan
was
ed, an alive infant was sud- you !mow, . that sex is not
A ; 1 ""· a.tlt Setgettl, Ext. 13
OM'10.27
pro-abortion, he strongly denly in lhe room. It was something casual . But it
OM ,..,
"tOI.tO
opposed partiai-binh abor· disposed of as a borrifled should also include - it
s.l»o&gt;IMo ...,..... In - - . tion, which he desaibed as
. '.
Advertising
nurse who .was not neces- should also include other,
o a'* ....., oa.. Hitrii,Ext. 1s aetiptkMl
dltwc1 "' ...
- • ·sHo
"only minutes away from sarily pro-life followed the you khow, information
~ Dollr
m.ll f*li
in - 0 1" .....:-o.vto,Ext 16
infanticide," sinoe the fetus doctors' orders to put the about
contraception
• 1 n-.&lt;an:.: Judy et.t. Ext. 1o
.
'
(whom I regard as a 'h uman baby in a pail or otherwise because, look, I' ve got two
was already clearly get rid of the child.
daughters, 9 years old and 6
being)
1111 •o cllpla:s
Gel'llll'tl ............
........ -...eountr
among U$.
As a longtime columnist, years old . I am going to
Charlene Hoeflicl 1. Ext. 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
I oppose extremists on all John Leo has written of this teach them .first of all about
2'8 Weaks
'64.20
sides of issues, b;tving, for form of fatal discrimination, values and morals.
52'127.11
E-ft~.~:
instance, argued for boors these "mistakes" during an
"But if they make a mis_
• ..,....,_ ....oom
OWido ...... Counar
with and against some so- abortion, once born, citnnO( take," Obama continued, ''I
13 Weeki
'53.55
called pro-lifers who COO· be "killed or allowed to die don 't want them punished
26 Weeki
'107.10
sidercd
part of iheir mi11sion simply because they are with a baby."
'21421
52Weeka .
to commit violence, even unwanted."
Among my children and

fru

I

Ill' health
for her.~

dm:e

rnJanticide mndidate for president

. LETTERS TO THE.
..

...
'

'

The Daily Sentinel

*'•

--...

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

I

•lJ ••'I

'

....... c.,.·-

_home.....,._ .. _

-·

- --~---

----.--·j

..

-- --- - ··- ··-·- - - -- . ··---· ---··.

_.,

grandchildren are tw.o
daughters and l!hree griuiddaughters; and when i hear
anyone, including a presidential candidate, equate
having a baby as punishment, I realize with particular force the impact that the
millions of legal abortions
in this country have had on
respect for human life.
On Feb. 27, testifying
before the Wj1100nsin Sellllte · · '
Committee on Health - an·d ~
Human ·Services, were a
. nup1her of young wilnllsscs
from a pro-life organization.
Among them, 15-year-old
Mariah Smet:
"Whenever we talk about
abortion, suddenly it's · not
an unborn child anymofl:.
Instead, people use words
like 'fetus' or 'embryo' or
'bl0b of tissue.' ... After an
aboition, there is nothing
eKcept death .. . 22 percent
of all pregnancies end in
abortion, and 47 percent of
women having abonions
have had more than one."
And in a letter to the April
12 Washington Times,
Lawrence finer of the
essentially
pro-c hoice
Gutmacher Institute {whose
research is nonpah:isan ) .
said, in the interests of accuracy, that " Black women
accounted for 37 percent of
abonions performed i n the
United States in 2004'' (the
most recent year for which
data are available ).
Is
candidate Obarua
pleased those women were
oot "punished" with babies"
· (Nat Hentoff is a natiorrally renowned authority on
the First Amendment · arrd
the Bill ofRights mrd autlrm·
of IIUIIIY books. irrclt~ding
"The War on the Bill 'of
Rights arul the Gatherili~:
Resista11ce" ( Sel'en Storie.1
Press, 2004 ).

.

~' Aprii2C), 2008

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

-.mydailysentinel.com

· ----------------------------------------~------------------~----------

·Obattra is wounded, but
Clinton must prove he can't win

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740 992-2157
-.mylhllyll llllill.com

'

Time to ·stoCk up on Forever stamps

awWDp.._ s.

8'1 RaNoolJiH E. So:: r

The post office sold prices eat away at its budget·
$267,696,023 in Forever lt has been estimated that
stamps in ,Man:h, up from each penny increase in the
WASHINGTON - Watb $207,900,132 in February price of gas costs the post
a . poSial rate iJv.R.ase just and $115,303,031 in Janwuy. office $8 million a year. ·
two weeks away, Americans
Unlike the ForevCI' stamps,
Postage rates last went up
are buying 30 ·million other 41-cent' stamps will in May 2007, with a ftrst·
F!Rva- stunps a day.
. require additional
·clas~ stamp jumping 2 cents
Tbeoostofsending.afirst- wben die new rates
to'thecurrent41-centrate.
class leUa' will rise a LJnlDY effect, aDd pti)Stal officials
The first-class postal rate
to 42 a:uts on May 12, but saiddley~an addition- is .the one that most people
the Fceva- \UmpS - our- all.5 billi.oo l-«&lt;il stamps iii notice, but other prices will
Jmiysellingfo£4lcents- 31MicipDmcftbedemand , alsorise.
will mDain ~ for fuU
Also, for die first time
In the past, nusmg
. ~after the inacase.
the Postal Service' has postage rates was a oomplex
F!Rver &amp;tamps · were stamps available at dte new . process involving beanngs
iniroduocd last year and rate befme the change before the independent
since tben !IIIR than six bil- t.&amp;Us dlect,
·
Postal
Regulatory
lion have brJal liiDid, 1llitb
A set of five 42-cent Commission, a process that
· interest growing as tbe rate stamps honoring pioneering . could take nearly a year.
increase nears.
journalists went on sale last · · But under the new law
"We !mew lhe Fovever week, as ,did _a set of .folir regulating the post office
aamp would be a big bit · stamps featuring .· the that took effeot in late 2006,
&gt;with our custoDJa'li ai¥1 we American flag flying at dif~ · the agency can increase rates
continue to replenish our ferent times of day.
· with 45..days notice as long
stock ro meet demand.~ ·said
But don' t wait forever, as changes are within the
Postal Selvice Consumer · because starting May l2 the ~~ ofinflation for the previAdmcale Delores Killette. cost of Forever stamps goes. ous l~ months. The Postal
~we
introcl11ced these up •to 42 cents too.
. ·
RegtJlatory Commission cai'Stllmps .as a customer ·CODAnd eyen as ibe higl:a culated .that at 2.9 percent
v.eOience to ea~e die mmsi- rates near, die pOst office is . through January. That limitlion dwing price changes.~
see~
bjgber gasoline ' ed the first-class rate to an
•SSO(:!A"ED l'ftESS WRITER

~CINE. - Christopher S . . Higginbodtam, 28, of
~· Ohio went bome to be with tbe Lord Sanuday,

- April 26, 2008.
· lie was a 1998 graduate of Grandview Heights High
. School in Columbus, Ohio.
· · He is survived by hi.s mother, Diana Rae Higginbotham;

· his father, Stanley Leroy Higginbotham; his bl'Oibaos aild
sistec, Michael Wayne Higginbotham, Jeremy Bosley and
laden I eann Higginbotham; his grandparents, Max and
· Shirley Boring and Roxie Beatrice Stone; his ·sons, Trent,
·.Them and Brady; and many oousins, aunts, uncles,
- nephews, nieoes and many, many friends.
• · ile was preceded in death by two brot:laen, James and
. Stanley J£. and .a grandfather, Harlan Stanley Higginbodwn.
. funer.ll services will be held on Wednesday, April 30.
. ZOOS .at Anderson-McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy,
Ohio .at 12 p.m. with Pastor Tamothy Oldfield officiatin~.
. Burial will follow at Rutland Cemetery. Visi~ boors will
be two hours prior to the funeral service. In lieu of lilowers,
please make a d.onati0n in memory of Christopher. in care
' of Anderson-McDaniel funeral Home. A registry is available on-line at www.andersonmcdaniel.oom.

POMEROY- Kwtiss Lee Braley, 40, of Pomeroy, passed
away st!dclem!y Friday, April 25, 2008 at his residence. .
Born Maroh 4, 1968, in Pomeroy, Ohio he was illhe son
. of Mary Katherine Hoffman Braley and the lale Jack
. Mayruud Braley.
. He is swvived by his mother, Mary Braley, Pomeroy;
· daughter, Ashley Nicole Engle, Middleport; son, Jaoob
: ,Andrew Braley, Middleport; one granddaughter .Mariah
• Pickens; the mother of his two children, Lori &amp;t,gle,
Middleport; five brothers, Jack (Carol) Brnley, Pomeroy,
Tun (Kristil Braley, Cheshire, Sean (Raelynn) Braley,
' Middlepmt. James (Melissa) Brnl.ey, Pemeroy, and David
' :(Susan) Ballind, Albany; four nephews, six Jiieces, .and a
special friend, James Racer, Pomeroy.
·
· He was preceded in death by his father, Jack Maytllll'd .
· Bt:aley.
Funeral Services will be held at 4 p.m. Wednesdal~~ ·
30, 2008 at the Cremeens funeral Home,
me.
· Officiating will be Pastor Rick Lil:tlle. Interment ·w ill follow
: in tbe R~gs Cemetery. Pomeroy. Friends may visit
· with the family two hours prior to the service. Expressions
· of sympathy may be sent to the family by visiting www.cre,
JMeDSfunet:alhomes.com.
:

pos:f

increase of jtJSt over a penny.
Under the new law, postal
prices will be adjusted each
May, the Postal Service
said. Officials said they plan
to give 90 days notice of
future changes, twice what .
is ~uired by Law.
While the charge for the
first ounce of a first-class
letter rises to 42 cents, the
price of each added ounce
will remain 17 cents, so a
two-ounce letter will go up
a penny to 59 cents. ,
The cost· ·to mail a post
card will also go up a penny,
to 27 cents.
Other iDcmtses set ror
MayU:
• Large envelope, 2
ounces, $1 , up 3 cents.
• Money Orders up to
$500, $1.05, unchanged.
• Certified mail, $2. 70, up
5·ceots.
• First-class international
letter to Canada or Mexico,
72 cents, up 3 cents. .
• first -class international
letter to other 90untries, 94
cents, up 4 cents. ·

Mars.buying gum maker Wrigley with financing from Buffett
BY ASI· FY II. HEtER
AI' •B USINESS WRITER ·

Wrigley's
Big Red
chewing
gum is
shown with
M&amp;M'son

Chief Executive Bill Perez.
After the.· buyout is com·
pleted in six to 12 months,
Wrigley would become a subsidiaJ)' of McLean, Va.-bas'ed
Mars. Its headquarters will
stay in Chicago, where the
business has operated since it
was founded by the Wrigley
family in I S91. The Wrigley
family wilJ DO longer bold
any eqUity in the rompany.
"I have talked to some
family .members and I anticipate that they all will be very
supportive of this, because it
makes sense for really everybody," said Bill Wrigley Jr.,
the company· s executive
chairman and the fourth-gen·
eration family member to
lead the business. "It's not
just about selling out for dollars. It is more about what is
the right thing and how can
we grow going forward."
The company's name has
been synonymous with
ChiCago for decades. The gum
maker's ornate towering headquarters alol\g the Chicago
River is a favorite among
tourists for snapping pictures.
And the Chicago Cubs historic ballpMk - Wrigley
Fielcl - got its name while
the team was owned by the
Wrigley family, which sold
the franchise decades ago.

CIUCAGO -The Oracle
of Omaha is betting that the
oountry's candy jar is cecession-pmof.
With
financing from
Monday in
Warren Buffett, candy mal=
New York.
Man; Inc. on Monday said it
is buying oonfeotilliiiY Wm.
APplialo
Wrigky Jr. Co. for an estimated $23 billion in ·cash.
"lltedeal would liillliY bntnds are exactly the kiad ".of inte(ll3tional presence and
that sweeHootbcdAmcricans brands that be wants " said ~ot&gt;. .·
•
- - ' ·-·- "
&amp;v"~ m emergmg
Ullll...,.,.
.
have munched on for Jet Hollander,
a former
Under the agreement,
~: Mars owns Snickers
candy industry executive shareholders at Chicagoand M&amp;z:Ms; Wrigley's gum whri IS president of the snack based
Wrigley
would
•brands inc1m1c: Juicy Fruit, food oonsulting flim Pre- receive $80 in cash for each
Orbit, Ema and Big Red.
· share. Mars will also
Eminence ·Sttategy ~p.
"A.g ood time to buy a realIf the buyout receives regu- assume tess than $1 billion
ly great business is when you latory .and shareholder of Wrigley debt.
can .do it,~ Warren Buffett ~the combined ooJn•.
Executives said family
MASON, W.Va.- Estelle (Gress) Wmy, 87, of Mason, said on CNBC Monday, panies would . leapfrog over owned Mars first began eyeCadbwy ing Wrigley in January and
W.Va. passed away Monday, April 28, 2008 .at her residence. adding that be understands Britain's
Visitation will be Wednesday. April 30, 2008 from 6 to 8 Mars and Wrigley better than Schweppes as the world's approached the company with
p :m. with a Rosary service at .8 p.m. at lhe funeral borne. the balance sheets of most largeSt cimfection ntak'er - a their unsolicited bid in April
· Funeral will be Thursday, May 1, 2008 at 11 a.m. at St. major banks.
move that'~ already fueling II. Since then, the two sides
Buft'ett' s
Berkshire speculation' that the buyout have haggled to reach the $80· Joseph Catholic Chwcll in Mason. Complete obituary to
:·follow in Wednesday's paper. Ammgement by Foglesong IU:haway Inc. will purobase oould ' spawn a round of per share offCI'- a 28 pe1cent
a $2.11billioo minority cqui- candy ,il)dusby consolidation. premium to Wrigley's friday
'liucker Funet:al Home.
'ty inla'est in the Wrigley
"' look at it as two compa- ·closiitg pice of $61.45.
subsiclialy once tbc deal is ities that see the opportunity
Monday's announcement
based upon oonsideration .a£ ·COIIIPleted. The Omaha, to create a ti'ue globafconfec.. sent Wrigley's shares into
faotOI'S such .as risk, cost, Neb.-based company also tionary powemouse," said . ovetdrive, reaching .an allsize, reliability and environ- offemd $4.4billion of subor- Morningstar analyst Mitchell time high.
mental and operational con· · dinated debt to fund ,the deal Cawin.1'bey .be00me~No. I
fnmPageAl
"I think this is a bold move,
siderations." ln addition, the
"In temts •Of Warren in chocolate and No. 1 in but beyond that, I think this is
further, the fact that "all dte board said IGCC plants "are Bullett's sweet spot, these che~ gum with a strong the rigi:It move," said Wrigley
Components of carbon cap- not as dispatcbable as pulture may have been demon- verized coa1 plants."
Finally, the fourth "error"
strated, as the citizen groups
claim, does not address concerned dte groups' conwhether carbon sequestra- tention the board improper·
:tion has been demonstrated." . ly upheld evideiltiary rul. Another"=·" according ings that were contrary to
to the board, .came 'With die me board's Iegularions and . Qu tllioo: I often get sore The frequency with which. inflamed tendon where it qustions, wriU w MIU'dul
ilrgumeot over alternatives ltbe Ohio Rules •Gf Evidence. knees after I play basket- you jump ,is more crucial in attaches to the tibia. This is A. Silllpso11, 0.0., M.B.A.,
to coal .. The 'board claimed Tbe board ·om:ttended .the ball. Several mooths ago, 1 the dt"velopment of this helpful in many people.
Ohio University Colkge of
alternatives such as wind- groups d.id nO( present any picked up a "jtullj)er's knee~ problem. than the height of
There are also · several Osteopathic
Metliciu,
based generation and hydm- arguments on brief why the strap at the drug store. It your jumps.
other
treatments
that
can
P.O.
Box
110,
Atlae11s,
·.electric generation didn't evidentiaJ)' rulings should goes around the leg, just
Therefore,
jumper'
s
lmee
'
provide
comfort.
These
may
Ohio
457()1,
.or
viD
e-IIUiil
. have the capacity to generate be reversed, but rather . below die knee .•t bas great· is not just limited to sea· include resting the knee w retuhrqustions @j-i"
. the power need nor were maintained their objections Jy reduced my post-exercise soned athletes and N.BA when it is painful, using lym~dic~nruw~.or~; .
they able to ramp up genera- in a number of footnotes .
.
starts, but lhe average
non-prescription
anti- M~d,cal IIIJ.ormat•.on '"
"Moreover, as we noted in Jrnee pain.
tion 11,uickly. The board fdt
Could you tell me what up game participant is inflammatory m~di!;ations · _tlais cohurr11 u pro_v_i4ed _as _
·-1bc "eeftMll _groups~ fllillld to ~ nr~, tbl:_ hoard - h~ ' jllfupet'' knee is? I fuxhhis · equally vulnel-able. ·- -.-·- such as ibuprofen, asweU ai'flll-edllc-lllfonat ser.vtte
the evidence'
. explain how wiOO ani! reviewed
funny term since it's a
Patellar tendonitis is easi- stretching h\:fore you e11er- only: It does not replsce
~xcluded
by
the administra- astanding
. bydroelecnicity were oom·
joke that I can't ly diagnosed in the pbysi- cise and icing the painful tile Judg~~~ent .o( JOIU' perparable . ~atives ~iven tivelaw judges and bad deter- . jwnp more than an inch off cian's office by taking a his- knee when it is inflamed.
sonal pltySlCf!lrt,
who
the fact they could not lie mined that oon~ideration of the floor. How does this stnlj'! . tory and doing a physical
But pleaSe remember thai s~u/4 be rt!lU!d ott to .
such evidence would not
ber_:tuce
my
knee
pain?
exam.
A
history
of
pain
with
self-treatment
has. its limits. tlUignose and recomm~nd
~hl:~refemn'
g to their have changed its finding in
. di
"ty.
.
wer: The . knee cap activities such as running or If any condition that you treatl!'~nt for any medtcal
tbit:d "error" con- this case, even if the evidence (patella) is attached to the jumping is commonly the treat yourself for doe so 't coruli#on,s. PllSt co_lumns
cerned natural gas combined · bad not been ex.cluded."
Shin bone (tibia) by a strong major complaint of someKent Carson, communi- tendon .known as the pate!· one with this condition resolve completely in a few are ava1la~le onl!n~ at
cyc1e and integrated 'gasifidays, make an appointment www.fanulymedtctne·
cation combined cycle alter- cations director at AMP- ' Jar &amp;endon. This tendon coming into the doctor's
to see your family physician. ttews.org.
ilatives with lhe board say- Ohio,. said the denial was helps ro straighten out the office ..The patient may also
ing the groups raised "no "obviously good news for knee .in ooncert with .the complain. of aching and
FIUIIily Medicille® is a
· new arguments r~garding us~ and the company .con- quadriceps .muscle of ·t he stiffness m the knee that ' weekly colluntt. To submit
these issues.~ The board said tinues to move forward thigh and 1ts teodon, the gets worse when he or she
. evidence supported AMP- with its 'plans to build lhe qlilll'..;ceps tendon.
cools down after a game.
Ohio's concern over the $2 .9 billion plant.
Jumper's knee, whose priDuring the physical exam
A call to the Ohio mary symptom is pain at the your physician should be
!'risk of volatility of natural
-gas prices~ and choosing "a Environmental Council was bo&amp;tom and front of the able to reproduce your pain
p.ulveriz.ed coal" ·plant over a not immediately returned to knee, is caused by inflam- by pressing over the patellar
IGCC plant was "reasonable this office by press time.
mation and irritation of the tendon. ln some caSes,
patellar tendon where· it though, your doctor may be
attaches to the top end of the susptcious that you may
Aging is picking up boxes of tibia. That's why this disor- . have something more than
food for several of those cur- der is , called patellar ten- just simple jumper's lmee. ln
rently emulled and bringing dooitis in .doctor lingo.
that case, he or she may take
them to t.hl! Senior O:otcr.
fnmPaeeAl
f
This inflammation of the an X-ray to be sure there is
For more information or patellar tendon is very com- nothing else going on.
,r c~,f
You have already sllirted
.up or authorizing someone to request an application, mon in participants of
....: '
'
1
seniors can cOfttocl Carla active jumping sports, like the appropriate treatment
else to do the pickup.
""
•. 'Q0
&lt;
&gt;
Beth Shaver, executive Sarmr at · 1-800-385-6813, basketball and volleyball. for jumper's lmee. The strap
t.o:
~
-;
'1'
&gt; . .. ;:;
,director, said that C\llTeDtly Ext. 241, or e-mail her at You don't have to jump _that you use just below your
.,.. '"
high to get jumper's knee. knee cap, helps support the
the Meigs County Council on . carlasaum@seorfc.com.

.

:Deaths.

AMP

. Famil · · edicine

Pickup game p

rers can get jumpers knee
P•'*·

.fS.

Funds.

'}t

--··-··--~-·---

Pf'JI:FOIMN: o\R~ CtNll.t::

Rafd
fnmPageAl
he will seek forfeiture
the cash, safe and vehito the county. ·
said the marijuana
cash were found in sepanylon duffle-type bags at
~aro·s borne. The pot IS

valued at $35,000 to $40,00&gt;.
According to Beegle, the
cash was turned in for a
cashier's check for security

. reasons.
Hubbard is charged with
felony possession of marijuana. felony trafficking in marijuana, and tampering with
evidence. Both men were to
be arraigned late yeSierday.
Beegle said dte seizure

cases are the ~suit of a
year-long
investigation.
While lhe two men are not
believed to be direct accomplices, "the same investigation led to both places,"
Beegle said. Additional
arrests are expected.
Smith said seizure is the
largest cash seizure tied to a
drug investigation be bas
.:ver seen.

•

Ohio Valley Syn!phOny
"ANALE"

May SpEcial
•
Ceraenteae wltla
1 letter lacladed

..,500
s

Regular 120

MEIGS MEMORY GARDENS
454165 Elllie Ridge Rd.

St. RL 7 l'caeroy, Ohio

740-992-7440

SOOBAE
Cello
s.turday, May 3nl, 2008'
Subscribe now tor

2008-2009 ..,....
10104108, 11108108,

12106ioa, 3/21~. 5IOMI!I
Box otllcot: 428 2nd Aft.
ca.lilpolio, OH (7*1) 44W.PTS
)

�.

'

'

•

PageA6 "·.

OHIO
Law You Can Use
Ohio ntan acct•sed of plotl ing What you should know about
school attack pleads not guilty being a smart bank customer

The Daily Sentinel

BY M-R. ICRoPtl:o
ASSOCIATED PfiESS WRITER

I

l'
I

CLEVELAND - A man
pleadM not guilty Monday
to a clw:ge accQsmg him of
e-mailing
an · Indiana
teenager about conducting a
Columbine-style attack on
two schools.
Lee Bill], 33, of the
CleYeland
subwil
of
Lakewood, made no comment during the hearing
lhrough a video ]lookup
from jail . His attorney
entered the plea on a charge
of conspiracy to commit
murder.
A Cuyahoga County
Common Pleas judge set
bond a.t $250,000.
Police in Lakewood have
said they don't know how
far along the two were in the
alleged plan but said the
two were talking ·about a
Columbine-type plot, a reference to the 1999 massacre
at a subwban Denver high
school in which two students tdned 12 classmates
and a teacher before committing suicide.
· Authorities said Billi and
the teenager exchanged e-

Tu~y,

BanJcs malfe a subSianlial
mails. on April 20 and disanwiUll of tlteir ~from
cussed mass mw&amp;rs at the
a ~ry of fees, inclwfing
same time at the teen's
aUtomated teller machine
school near South Bend,
.(ATM) charges,, 110ns11.ffiInd., and at another locac~nl jimds (NSF) charges,
tion, which police haven't
and over-the-timil aiuJ late
identified.
charges on c~ cards. A
A oomputer was removed ·
little atrention to 'lktail can
from Billi's hoine in addillr:lp the average bank custion to computer disks, ·
tomer Ql!Oid many of these
-papers, books and three parcharges.
tial boxes of handgun
ammunition,
authorities
Q.: · How call I avoid
said.
ATMdlarps!
At the teen's home near
A.: The use of an ATM
downtown South Bend,
machine out affiliated with
authorities said they fouDd
your bank can oost $1.50 to
more !han 100 knives and
$3.50 per II'ansaction in
several ille~ snakes. nc
addition to a similar dlarge
teen lived m his deceasf.JJ
from your own hank. If you
grandfather's house in,a IUD- ·
only use the ATM machine
down neighborhood .scatassociated with your bank,
tered with vacant houses.
you can avoid most of these
Authorities said school
charges. You should also
officer investigating ·an
remember that these fees
unrelated ·threat at the teen's
arc assessed per transaction
school, Penn High, discovAlber than on the amount of
ered Internet postings in
the transaction, so a bigger
which the teen discussed his
ll'allsaction (for example,
support for the Columbine
• .,._ . mpking one $50 withdrawal
shooters. 1be .teen was
questioned about bis post- lBe Billi, :left, pie ails not guilty during 111e tlearing flrough a ' ralber than two $25 wilb. ings and schoo~ officials video hookl:4) from jail ma ·cl:lar!le accusing him C'l e.mailing drawals) ~ould be more
learned he hadexchauged e- an Indiana 1aenager about conducting a Cokmbine-style oost ;effective. R~~mber
mails wilb an nnidmtified a11ack 1)11 two adloal5 Molldaf in Cleveland. A Ouyrlhoga . tbal, if tbe. A'tM IS bed to
.....IOh
"" rfiDi:ID
...__ ........
set..:......
at _....,000 ·
your checking
acoount. you
person, authorities said.
·County Colini.
r-lf"'
....,,..
!ihould
enter the tr.msaclion
liild fees into your account.

a.

to
deposit
tommrow.
Checks move. through ~ ·
sy_stem. too qwcldy to allo~
· this, smce they arc ofteri
processed ekdronicall¥ lbe

same day !hey are moetved;

U a bank clears a l.arx~
check, many s~ checkS
could bouoa:, costmg you
!he fees desail:!cd above. · :

().: How cu I &amp;'fold
over-the-limit aad bite
dw'ps 08 lDy c:redit
card!
A.: Attention to detlill is
the key to !Xopei' use of
·c redit cards. Do not get
close to your credit limit, as
interest charges can put yoli
over the limit, oosung you
$25 or more per inonth ig
over-limit charges. You will
typically receive your state-:
ment I 0 to 14 days before i(
is due, so mail your pay•
meot promptly to avoid lirtC
charges.
·

~at Ohio State University. tied with Ok!lahoma ·at

Strickland's lawyers arc seven. Ohio has executed 26
still reviewing the fedrral inmateS since it l'!'Sumed
COWMBUS 'Ohio oourt decision. And •mlit.., .executions in 1'999.
officials have been less swift S0IIIC gov~ SUicklaod
Strictaand, a Democrat,
and less aggressive than has not made a ·definiFiv~ has allowed two of d!ree
leaders from some other public_stateme'nt about what execution~. since be became
states at moving to restart he believes the case melll5. ,governor m 2007, but he bas
executions after a. U.S. Ohio'.s lethal injectioa pro- yet to face .tbe volume •o f
Supreme Court decision Gedure still is being &lt;
e,hal• . capital punishment cases ·
endedaseven-monihnation- iengedin .alawsuit . ·;!:· ... , dut.laodCdoo dle&lt;desltof
alpause1olrillinginmates.
· After 1he Supreme~·o.t , lllS:.Rep»W,icanpredeoessor.
Ohio, which not 1~ ago decision came .out, thi-s ~; ·~~ AH-:a•••iJI•• afterbc..-rhad OJ)e of the nation' s what Strictian&lt;haid about ed as govemor, Sllic1dand
busiest Oeatb cl!ambers, is apply~ it to Ohio: "You talked about hili ()001 'ms
ied by .a governor who has would j ust tliink that about dne delnlh
with
said be l&amp; oot comfOl'IBble because die ·methodology is 'Die Apj ' Pia&amp;. ,
·T.liili~deadt fii5BI\Ily 111111 quite sid'i!!lf that 1he legal · 'Tiiijlur co.mt:botiiW i idl'
top law am-.eat offlrw outoome would be similar i~n be Aid in Kl!dl '1/JI11,
Who ilw said be thinks '\we as well. But I just doo't "1hb;c~110be~t·
. .• l . '.! :ia;ply. . .;P.!!I.IIIlitO malre bUI q- IIJie 4-il....SUtiblft is p
Glw. Ted Smct...land bas ti1m without having a tittle lllld I "lllve assiiiJMI4. this
the power to caocel or delay dl!epet ~sgaoding about · ~ll.'f. as gmvaDOC~
·death · zntenees, .ud 'What they :tai4."
Slricl!!!!!!! s lqal. stitf 11
AUomey Geoetal MIU:C · . - ~ dll1t With what , p:vie,nq . inf~on
Dann's dice fights.against Oilrl• ClrUt, lbe Republican r• #1M • *. :;cases 1tbal '!rill
cleath row inmates' appeals. govemor of Florida. said bMiD.IIqriDJ forward 110 be
Sinre the
Supreme . when praising the .court's 'is re.ty'·fot; the clenilenCy
Court decided April 16 to · ruling: "lusFire delayed is process.
.
·
allow Kentucky's lethal justice &amp;:uind; and 111 awful
The Obio Supreme CoUtt
iujeotion process that is sim- lot of families of the viCFims sets execution dates after
ilar to the one used in Ohio, have ,b fm waitiqg fur justice evalual:itlg motions that usnTexas and a few other·states to be dooc, aud a~ dllf-s&lt;CCT- ally come from the .attoJiDey
have already scheduled exe- lllinly an lmplxtlllt f:ac:W." generars office or
some
cutions. In MississWJ&gt;i, the Crist said · be asked his cases, large .counties. No
attorney general has peti- "lawyers \10 provide him wilb ' motions l'OIJUCsting to move
lliooed me state' s high court death warrants to ~ forw.ard wtth ID execution
1o set a .date for one inmate . signing, after which .execu- have been submitted.
And goveroors in states su!:h tion dates would follow.
Daun, a Democrat, said in
as Florida have said the exeOhio has 184 inmate~ on 2006 before he became
'cution .process should DOW death mw, many of them attomey geneml that he'd
~swne.
exhausting
their final be ·opail to a stud_y on .
Ohio has not set any exe- appeals. 'Three death·row the de.alb penalty IS .
.
oolio_n! dates yet, ~ , to.p i~ ~~like]~ ~ 'be "
"'~~e m•rte oo pu~ amongtfierii'st set ot exe- be
lie requests for quick action. cution: Clarence Caner, sure it's being applied fairly ·
The · speed .· at which Kepneth Biros and Richard across all racial and socioOhio's death-penalty cases Cooey, who lost what may eoonomic groups."
move forwiml depends on be his final .appe.allast week.
Dann bas not made any
how quicldy and fOicefully
Only
bad more exe- public statements about what
Ohio officials respond, said cutions in 2006 and 'JJXJ7 the Supreme Court decision
Doug Berman, a law profes- combined than Ohio, which means for Ohio. But the
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

a

P"""kf

on

u.s.

·!n

lew

Tm fey-Mostly cloudy.
A ctumoe of showers in &lt;the
morning. Highs in the lower
SO&amp;. West winds 5 to 10
mph. Chance of rain 40 per-

cent
1\a'OidsY aichL-Mostly
cloudy in the evening.~Then

becoming partly ~dy.
Lows· in the mid 30s. West
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Wed•esday ••• Mo stly
sunay. Not as cool with highs
in the mid 60s. Southwest
winds around 5 mph.
Wedaesdsy ni&amp;N Panly

~-n.. 'sy
cloud_y. Hi,Jhs
Saturday Fd&amp;ld and
mdie mid 70s. Lows in tbe S.Bday-Mostly cloudy
mid 50s.
with a chance of showers
~y

.
e

and thunderStorms. Lows in
the mid 40&amp;. Hi.ghs in &lt;the
Ghance of rain
t.
..
-a..w
'
y - ·· ....
Mrnby...Mostly cloudy. A
cent
· 30 percent chance of &amp;bow· Friday
llicJtt ... ers. Lows in the upper 40s.
Saturday-Cloudy with a Highs in the lower 70s.
Friday-Partly sunny in
the moming...Then beOOmiog mostly cloudy. Achanoe
or showers and thunderstorins. Highs in the upper
70s. Chance of rain 50 j]C'-

-.....,

ti)l-" . . . . al't
.

(IIYIE) - , 1.17
...., .............IE) .

Ohio

v...r ..... Carp. (NAS-

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RII.W v.111v • sae sa''· s p.m.

AitMrv.lllr .. sO..tla;;, 5p.m.'

lllligl, S&lt;M ..... u
4:311 p.m.

·

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-

Ccuily Ill So; #;em. 5 p.m.

-

'lli*&gt;nCounlr · - · 5 p.m.
· Jiwi?751

.........

idli,lp.m.

.
., lloigl ot • •

"""' 5 p.&lt;li.

f!?f

1

a

. . . . . .

a

Soulhem
senior Butch
Mamllout

swings at a
pi1l:h in the
lhild inni..
of a Tri-YalleY
Confet euce
Hodd. .
Division
baseball

game
aplllst

7

Yoiao • -· S p.m.

........, IIIWIIa•a. $p.m.

Mille!' on

lloigllll-. 5 ..1ft.

Soultlem

Monday.

won SO.

I

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otlloigl ( - &gt;.._,

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11 Mo;von, 10 a.m.

.. STEWART -

With 115

ears in die pits and a good

•

RACI!iiE - Sooriog four
runs in the first inning, tbe
Southern Tornadoes, now
ranked 15th in the state,
helped lift sophomore pitcher Michael Manuel to his
scoood win of tbe year, a
ooovincing 8-0 win over tbe
Miller Falcons Monday
nigbt in boys Hocking
Division varsity baseball
action at Star Mill Padt.
lluelltming skies and a 3:30
rain shower couldn't overoome the bellowing winds
Southern's offense would
produce.
Southern is now 10-4
overall, 5-3 in tbe Hocking
Division of the Tri-Valley
Conference. Soutbem is
now 15th overall in D-IV,
losing tougb games to D-m
and Hockiq Divisioo companion Federal Hoelting,
who moved into number 13
in the l&amp;ger state division.
Southern also lost to Class
AAA Ripley in West
V'rrginia and league-foe

bd Ill Ea8lm.

8Y Scni71 Wot:R

Eastern.

"We played pretty good

....

defense
tonight ,
and
any
time you ·
-get a pitdter
that
throw s
strikes you
bave
a
chance to
w i
n
games,~

s a i d
Southern
coach· Ryan
Iemiey. "When you make
DO errors or less and get the
ball liClOSS the plate thll
makes for a good combination. We were pretty solid

tonight"
Manuel looked
. s~g in
going the distance to pick,up
the win on tbe mound. The
fue-baller struck out six and
wa!Ud one in pitchfug a
brilliant three-hit shutout.
Ryan Estep suffered the loss
with Wilkens coming on in
relief in the fifttl. Together
they fanned three and
wa!Udtwo.
In the Southern first Chris
Holter,
up-aod-coJD,ing

.,._.,_. Lm

·Marauder win sbmk bits
five with shutout ofVIkes

&amp;owd in the stands, Friday
8Y &amp;II: RMINIU'I5
Saturday,
Digbt's action at Stylia,e ~I'SENllNELCOM
but it was
speedway produced some
H uIt o n
c( the most prolific racing
ROCKSPRINGS
with
a
ill; Ultk histoty. Danville, Ailslin Dunfee struck out
. pinch-hit
fniljam's Danny Smith lrqlt .n ilx bslas. Clay Bolin bad
home run
bis winni'18 stteat intact by two hits and two 11lDS
to lead off
+fearing 17-ye.-oldAaron scored, and the Meigs
the top of
Higgins in Fhe 410 Outlaw Marauders burball l9in
the seveotti
Jeff its fifth J17DC in a mw
that . pye_
ear mam. ·..... ·
· with a 4-0 l!lbnntout of Fhe
t
h
e
tte of Putasburg, V'mtoo ConnnFy Vikings ma
I' 5I ·
Marauders
· W_
Va.
claimed
the
excjti'18
Tri·"·"·y
.-._c-:...- Obio
'
a
3-2 win.
Late Model main after a
,....., .........,........,
Dei.OII! pitched all seven
fav!er-fO.fender battle with Di:visioo game Mooday.
Andy Bond and ROPJ Mayle. . The Maraudecs .(U-5} i~Jniqgs.
Cars from five diffemnt Jmnain in first place in .t he
In Game 2, DeLong hit
·states competed in the ' TVC Ohio with a recotd of two home runs, Hutton
c:ven.t. incll!ding oewcnmen 7-1.
homered a second ~· and
from
Dunfee earned the win, ~~ ~ 11 ~ m the
Lutz
giving up just three hits and thinf mmng 0!1 their way ·t o ·
•
ylvania.
two walks in seven innings. · 111 18-13 VJctoty. Seven
~lt was the crafty veteran Aaron
Story
Btyan players scored two runs or
lfnith who leaped past pole- DeLong, liild Ryan Jeffers .. more for Me~~· and. Jeffers
i:itter and. dash winner all bad two hits .apiece for earned the wm m relief.
4
?ap
.'1te~~li~the~~gh Meigs. Story and Jeffers On . Monday,
the
both had one RBl, as did MaraUder:&gt; only ~ one
traffic with ease until a lap Corey Hutton.
!'DI: and 11 came. m the first
15 caution for the stalled car
The Marauders were oom- mnmg_from Bolm, who led
of Josh Davis. Nier lined up ing off a three-game road off wtth a. dou~le. Jeffers
behind Smilb, but the ttip that saw them ttavel to followed With a smgle, and a
Indiana Outlaw won the Nelsonville-Yolk Friday and w~ by I?eLong pushed
drag· race into tum one. to Athens for a doublehead- Bolin to third. Hutton. thc:;n
Meanwhile, young Higgins
grounded to short to drive m
made a kamikaze move past er ~Y· ·
the eventual game-winning
Nier for second and set his
On Friday, ~ and run.
·
· -:- eyes - on :Smith -out front. J."r.. Ev ~ ~ eecb. b
two..-~
Defen&amp;i\rely, . two.
Nier was not to be denied doubles, three ·players Dunfee's three hits given up
Nier edged back by Higgins scored two runs each: and came in the first inning, but
· b
the
te Dunfee earned the WID jiS the senior still only faced
~ ~ ~~~ Meigs . defeated the four batters, the marim'um
Eric AaJIII " 'L/p:1ialo
tum to complete the Buckeyes 8-2 .
.· .
he would face in any inning Meigs senior Austin Dunfee follows through on a pitch delivered .in the seventh
inning of a
__ .DeLong .had a lfWle and
~~IDOC pm "No-Fear" two RBis in the first game
Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division baseball game against Vinton County on Monday.
1.....,
Dunfee struck out nine batters in the 4-0 shutout victory.
Cole Duncu, another with the Bulldogs on
m m

'=· · ·"'

could be the best
. ever give your mother.
'
Don t miss this opportunity to sav.1
To be published
Sunday, May 11th

·The Dally Sentinel
Happy
Motber's Day

t:.

or

(Your

Nk&gt;ther's
.Nafne)

111M'-•-.., .....

teenage

cl!arxer, blitzed by

the dlifting Nier for third

~ one lap later, as action

We love you

mommyl
Love,
Oerra. Skylar
&amp;. Pratt

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Tornadoes blank Miller
for lOth win of season

···-

Smith, Burdette
win-at Skyline
Spetdway

I
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in the pack went three
w:ide. Piketon's Adam
.S trausser put toge.l her a
ll&gt;lid run after a .race-long
tllttle with Ni!X Naber and
Ciru Mitcbell '
~ With II01IIC moisture up on
lbe high side, daredevil

¢lion Stretched three-wide
icro11 the Sbline hiJh· ·

I

Southern girls blast ~

Lady Falcons 15-1
BY Scon Wout:
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

RACINE - A quartet of
Southern gals - Breanna
tl.lb. Smith, lliggios, and
'IIylor, Sarah Eddy, Kasey
lltter ,JOde the bottom, but ·.
Thrley, and Lyodzee Tucker
~ found aome speed
- picked up a pair of hits as
enc-tier up me 1n11:t and
Southern brought out the
lllick Naber cbQae the high
clubs to pole-axe eleven hits
from ID offense that blitzed
:R ua . . arl a.D
visiting Miller 15-l Monday
night in girls varsity softball
action in Racine. Soulbern is
now 1().4 overall as Kasey
CoNTACI'US
.
also picked up her
Thrley
•
tenth
win
of the year 071 the
• 1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
•
mound.
·•
llill'-1·7404413008
Amber Toth suffered the
~-lpOf'llemydlll;•lillllel.com_
loss for Miller, giving up II
.f • . 5
· hits and 15 runs. She walked
four and struck out six .
Turley again pitched well in
yielding just two hits in an
eight-strikeout perlormance
wilh DO walks. Turley wa~;
once
again dominating in
Eric Reiielolpl..,.._
.
Southern senior Sarah Eddy, left, stretches to catch the ball for a force out at second base going the distance.
IMrt CNm, SpaiU Wrltlr
the
sets
of
hits
by
Besides
'during the second inning of a Tri-Valtey Conference Hocking Division softball game against
(7&lt;40) "*2342, • . 33
those
mentiorled
earlier,
Mlllef on MondiJY. Southefn won 15-1.
~·~19JI I .oom

.

Mull) Fill

•

__"' __ _

-

Local Stocks
•••• a

•

l;ocAL ScllmULE

_,,,_

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Rodgers
chance-o f showers and dmn- .
derstorms. Lows in the mid
50s. Higbs in the mid 70s.
Cbaoa: of rain 50 pemco1.

.

•

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Ev~Baby

cloudy. Not as cool with
lows m the mid 40s. South
winds 5 to 10 qJh.

.

Bl ·

The Daily Sen·t ·

iu; .... LzBwa,

.....

.

-.

lme,Adam,

Local Weather

I

'7 5 X

Obio not fast~ some on sched11ling executions ·
BY Stoia M1..JORS

•

·,
-

Q.: WUt., ew:dy, are
NSF dw'pilaad how c:aa
I a'faid thea!
A.: When · you , write a
attomey genenal believes the check that is retUrned by the
ruling buoyed Ohio' s lethal bank for insufficient funds,
injection procedure you will be charged $20 to
whi.dJ, like ltentuclcy's, uses $35 ("NSF charges"). If the
a · lbree-:drug regimen to merchant to whom you
sedate, paral~ and kill.
wrote the c'beck re-deposits
Dann's o
is 1Iying to i~ yop can face these
coordinate with oounty proso- charges more 1han once. To
artorsoo cases .that will begin avoid these charges, keql a
moving forward, preparing to careful running c hecking
help them with any'legal acoount ·balance,
~thatoomefromthe
Most impmtandy, rememocher Side, said Zadt Swisher, ber that you can no longer
cbief of the criminal divisioo •'float" a check today
in Dann' s office.
against money that you plan
.

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

......, .ww.... 5p.tn,

-=--

PERSPECTIVE
•

April2C), zoo8

fitside

?

Ashle y
Robie sing I e d ,
Stephanie
Cundiff
si ngled ,
a n d
Lindsey
Teaford
singled .
Southern
scored one
· run in the
fJTSt inning when Lindsay
Buzzard reached on an error
and scored on a Taylor sin·
gle. Miller tied the score 1- 1
in the third on an error and
Toth double.
The tightness of the game
dido ' t last long. Buzzard
walked to start a huge
seven-run rally. Eddy and
Thrley each doubled home
runs, then C undiff walked
and Teaford had a two-RBI
double._ Pape walked and
1\tcker followed wilh anoth-

" · · · - · , ...J

�www..Mf I

'» u

ltinel com

Pap Ba • The Daily Sentinel

Skyline
from PageBI
side. As the sbuffie for posilion panned out. Smith was
able to pull a five car-length
lead at the finish . Rounding
out tbe top ten were
Higgins. Duncan, Nier,
Adam Strausser. Nick
Nabu, Greg Mitchell Keitb
Ruter, Scon Lutz, and
Brian &amp;nson.
Afiiel' Chris Games beat
Freddie Carpenter by just
two inches last week. how
could f1llls ask for any exciteme:nt? Well. Andy
Bond, Ron May1e, Jeff
BUJdette, and Mil:.e Balzano
went two and three wide
until finally Jeff Burdette of
~urg. WV took ovci
dte lead on la,p 19, tben
played nip-and-tuck wid!
Bond to edge the Coolville
driver by just inches on the
white flag lap. Bond scooted up the track. allowing
Mayle to dive under for the
pass in rum two and challenge· Burdette going into
the final turns.
Burdette won the sprint to
the finish just ahead of
Mayle in another wild
Skyline finish.
Early in the race, Andy
Bond held off Mayle,
Games, . and
Travis
Brookover to the sixteenth
ciroilit when Jeff 8 urdette
moved into second after a
three-way dual with Mayle,
Balzano, and Fast Freddie
Carpenter. Garnes had
clipped a lire and ~etired to

lbe infield. Balzano chaJged
from 12th to foonh, while
Freddie Carpenter blasted
from last to sixth in sharing
ham chaJger of die race
honors. Rowidi.ng out the
top ten behind Burdette and
Mayle were Bond, Balzamt,
Brookover,
Carpenter,
Fritter, K-C Bun:lette, and
Dodd.
Jeremy Berwan~ suffered through a year's word!
of bad luck on opening
night. On the second night
out
it
was
"Jeremy
night" .'
'BeJWanger
BeJW;mger towed last
week's
winner
Marl&gt;
Dickson on a rope for much
of the. 20-lap :main w~th a
chaJging Jeremy Blake
lurking in · dose ·t hird.
Dickson stayed glued to
Berwanger's tail most of the
event, then made a slingshot move coming oot &lt;Jf
turn four to narrowly fall
short of his second win.
The Murray City Flyer
. asserted himself once again
as one of the top dogs in
AMRA modified racing.
· Behind ·Berwanger and
Dickson
were Je11emy
Blake, Kenny Johnson,
Dusty
Boley,
Darr011
Glover. · Jeff Wood, Jim
Fordyce, Robert Games.
and Donnie Nethin.g.
Steve BigleypuUhe.pedal
to the metal in Ed Gillian '.s
33 Auto Sales car in stopping Jeremy Blake for die
Street Stock win. Rouading
out the field behind Blak:e
was John Powell and Shane
Newman.
Bobby Lilly took the iinitial lead in the Pure Stock

main until Mike Laua

took

'Qtribune,- Sentinel CLASSIFIED

-··-=--.-,..

? .-. . . . .

over on lap foor, setting lhe
stage fm- a Lauer-LiUy batIJ)e to the finish. The two
banled si~by-&gt;Side in yet
anot:hel" exciting race. Ted
Keiser won a race-long battle with Rick VanDyne,
George Klintworth, and
Matt Holcomb for thinl
Rounding out the . top ten
behind Ted Keiser were
Rick VanDyne. George
Klintworth, Matt Holcomb,
Lovie'
Bwdette, . Eric ·
Francis, Joe Mise!, aad Dale
. Griffin.
It was an AdkilisOuistopher-Adkins BauleRoyal in dle four cyllilders
. but Portland. Ohio's Tommy
Adkiits upbeld die family
o:ame in makiRg it two in a
mw ibis season at Skyline.
1be ·elder Adkins wrnked ·
ll'llffic to ped'ection. and at
die same lime fend o!J cballenges
from
Tim
Christopher and oousin
Dennis Adkins. Rounding
out the top too wOFe
Christopher,
Dennis
A~s; S ike Rizer, Jeff
Rankin,
Oohm, Jeff
Blanton.
· George
Klintw011h, Bany Kitts, and
Ouis I ann
Skyline ClOIItinues regular
f'romPageBl
racing next Friday night in '
all
classes.
Skyline
Speedway
is
located
er double of me two-RBI
between Coolville and
variety tfor an 8-1 soore.
Ailbens, Ohio on County
Southern futlowed with
Read 53 (Bethany .Ridge
another
seven-run ~g
Road) 4..1 miles o!J SR 50.
For rnore ·infonnation visit
lhe.Styline Speedway wellsite at www.skylinespeedway.net or all 140-6624141 er 304-542-8322.

Em,

.

dassified@mydailytribune.mm

wet!sites:
--m~ilytnlbune.oom

.·_....mydailysemtinel.com
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wbcR Eddy? Turl.ey, Robie, one of the are3 S top teams
Ouvtilf .lllld Thcker swung in hopes of defending its
lbe big bats to push the sectional championship of a
Tornadoes ahead 15-1 , the · year ago.
Soul!bern goes to River
final
Va!Jey
Tuesday.
.Tolh and Griffith were the

lOne Miller bitters.

As the tournament season ·
approaches, Soutbem is
attempting to assert itself as ·

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SIICIIII. SECIIIIIT'I 111111?
No Fee u.- We Win!
1-.sB2-3345

vear

Milling: 17
old
tiimolayan cot • fomale
an..,.rs to Shasta. Ligh1

7-

-

I • lip! I
¢Southern ~enior Ashley Robie, left, prepares to throw the ball back to the pitcher after ia
fo~ce out at first 'base during a Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division softball game ~in~
Miller on Monday. Southern won 1.~1.
:·
-

in~~

Southern senior Kreig Kleski leads off at second base during the third
.Conference Hocking Division baseball game ~inst Miller on Monday, Southern won 8-0.

Blank
fmmPageBI
Tornado slugger, singled to
· lead off, then rode home on
a Kreig Kleski single that
was mishandled. Kledti
then advanced on a passed
ball and Ryan Chapman,
wbo has had a keen eye all
season long, once again
drew a walk.
·
Wes Riffle doubled home
Kl.eiiki, Butch Marnhout
had a S-3 ground-out to
~J! home Chapman, then
I
'l)ylor reached on an
error to score Riffle.
Southern led 4·0. .
Over
four · inninas,
Manuel bree~ through the
flnt four Innings in Order,
excepting a double by Jacob
Reynolds who was aunned
down as part of a 6-3'S

0

reverse double play in
which Reynolds was caught
hanging a little too far off
second base. .
Southern scored again in
the second when Anthony
Shamblin singled and after
two passt;d balls, .trotted
home aboard a Kleski donble. The smash was Kleski's
second · RBI bit of the
evening. Coach Lemley's
charges tallied another run
in the third when Riffle led
off with a single and
advanced on an error ~
rigilt prior to coming home
011 a S"3 RBI ground out by
Tayllll', the acore now 6-0.
Manuel '1 biggest scare
came in the fifth when the
. second batter of the inning
·C hris Wilkens rin&amp;led but
was thrown out stealing b)'
the Slwnblin-Kleskl comba·
nation. Cody Richardson
walked but a ground out
ended the inhlng.

Riffie reached on an error
in right, then advanced to
qnrd and on to borne on two
more errors. Southern
scored again in me sixth
when Brad Brown. walked
and scored on il 5-3 .ground
out by Chapman. That came
~r a sharp Taylor Lemley
srngle pushed the runner
into scoring 'position .to set
up the score. SHS ~ S-0.
Southern hitters were
Kleski with a double and
single, Holter a double and
single, Riffie a double and
single, two singles by
Shamblin, and Lemley . a
single.
·
Miller
hitters
were
Reynofds, Wllkeau, .and

·Green.

. frnm Page Bl

IDQre runs.

gatm:,. And . for tbrei!O
inniings
the middle of the
game
faced the minimum
as the combination of
Marauder pitching arid
fielding dido 't allow Vmton
County much of anything.
Offensively, it wasn't
quite · Game 2 against
Athens; Meigs had no hits
in the second, one each in
the tbird an~ foul'th, and
two in the fifth. But tbal
didn 't matter because of the
defense. and it didn't last.

Meigs bead roach Jeremy
.Grimm could be heard
l.lif~ ille Inning ·bigall
telling his team to score
iuns as if tbey needed them,
and his boys followed
orders. Dunfee led off with
a double to center field, and
be scored one batter later
when Story singled. Bolin
and Jeffers got back-to-back
bits after Caleb Davis
reached on a fielder's
cboioe, ·and Bolin and Davis
both scored 'b efore the
inniJI8 ended.

day

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GompetitiYo- &amp; -

Ills including ......
anoe and mileage. Pl1ooo
740-441· 1393 lof more into

-

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.

!ric ... dllplVptt ...

Meigs senior ~ron Story, right, leads off third bate as Meigs head coach Jeremy Grimm,
lett, looks on In the abtth Inning of a Tr~va11ey Conference Ohio Division baseball
against Vinton County on Monday. Meigs won·4:0.
·

nut-

--.;ng

pme

------------~--------------~--~·----------~--~---~~·------------------~'--~-,- . .

plano. Applicant
muot alrOOg CLJL!1!IlU11i.
CILiion ond llrong oornDegrM pre"""" skills.
ten'ad . bul not n•t'ldlluiy. H
interested, please MOd
......,.. to ClA 8 rJo

WO!t&lt;aOIIhadUielhatis

...

I8TYioe ekitll to ......

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non-p!1lfft -

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-Mlonlty:

CJn.Sile ~for
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--.---...
200- _
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-St. Pl. - RegisW

Nw-.y
FRII».Y l
SAllHMY OF!'?

- your..""'' lamily1
Use

Point Pleaant, WV, ~
rry is aaaldng a l:HrrN:Ior al
Human
Resources.
Applicant should ho.. at
ktast 1M yurs BICpliienoe
In lhe Human Resource
field. Appbnl
.. -

_you_ . .
aCWiiMIICJdating for yDU

"' apply at 10111 Pll&lt;o, Gallipolis. Ohio.

-lienee In

.

•

--"-"'

"""""=_I.Acc 111 ·~ ..................~.... ;;::

In the top of the seventli,
Dunfee walked his secooci
batter of the
with' one
out, but the senior struck
out the ne~ two :t o end
g3Dil;_aod give Meigs tbelr
seventh conference win in
eight games.
·
Other Marauder bitterli
included Dunfee and Joey
Unbankes. Neither tealll
committed any errors.
Meigs travels to Gallia
Academy Tuesday for a 5
p.m. game with the 81~¢
Devils.
. VCOOO
000 0
M
100 003 X

mthiil

,..., .,. ClASSIFIED INDEX .
......-......................... -.. ~

Southern
ll) River
Valley on Tuetday.
.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
992-2155 '

Streak

anyway,
IJecause
die
Marauders got four bits .in
the sixtb 'and soored three

........

........... .. ,_
_.......,.Act
.puals:cuw, limhalkln OJ
Jb: lhli!Wt:IOII "-d on
...... CDior, .eligiDn,-

gray. blue - · La8l _ ,
-4f25108 around Jaakson
Pike area near Carmichael
Equip. "''JC!l lowed ally
p e t . - . call
1804

Eric R

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Bonia s $3.00/perad

wv

25550

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1-IIC RftU
5

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3

With so many
choices, it's easy to
get·carried away
with our
Merchandise listings
in the classifieds!

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IDOWN

Dealer: South
Vulwnble· Neither ..

CE

Servici!ig Lawn
li'lll&lt;:loffi. 'MoWCili,
1llim. 'Murray.
Cndisrnan, MTD,

l'los

1 NT

HiT

M JIISS

Opening lead: . 6

!Briggs &amp; !lttatton
. JH,llCDielll
1-lntcgrity
"'-Servire

The question is:
WhoantiiiCy?

IOYcars
lst Road to left above
'Mason GolfCourse

--r-"'-

tiumof ·a&gt;lJTnniol !looo ·B irrj -WIUie, "I
win an
00 '~ topic,

argument

'ogoinll&lt;any c:w«IOII!.Poaple«now)his,

Huvey'Rood 'Muoo, wv

•lllflllo. ·~ .
"" a 'Oign al 1t1elr :18BI ._a, 111111'

......
1111111

cUn't.., irMIB IT'8:"
lbore1IRI-·a t1hobrldgo-tt is ihlpCAI&amp;ill to «now your Dppi:Mi&amp;ills.

-rts

OcaaErollly. -..1hai.IGh ff soundS,
llllier to ~ ~~Q&amp;inst

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Residential and New

-j11Ur:an-Jhoir~11fd

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1101 5
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$t&amp;:l*i Tree-

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C4RPE'- ·~;:
SER. ICE

Tiinnning

Synu;use. Ohio

.LIST !'!

Nowupnfur

&amp;Remova1

s,r;.,

"Prompt and Quality ,
Work
*Rea&lt;onable Rates
*1nsured

·' *Experienced

~

••oidl. H1he milling diaiiG'Idl 8ft)
s-a. ""' con • up a long mrd in ltrlt
lliL ·
do 11111. .t h e nonll m9rl lour tr.f! 1riDics ID
-you.
First, lllotqt, try 1o
1riDics.Butlllo 181!

-~

Electticll &amp; Plumbing
:Roofing • aun.rw.
Ylnyi~&amp;­
Patio·...t ·Pomhn.:a

1101 .,,..

' ce fBRI1Y CIPMER
. byLniil~
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1118 Dummy atlriak one dllpond&amp; oo your

011125

""II ~ ~ " - "' -r:all for

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lllnCis

T&lt;XIIy! due: C toQIIIO D

uppuriOUIL

r

l{eferences Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591-8044

IJ'Iowering &amp; Folioge
.Baskel.6, Bedding &amp;
Vegetable 'Flal.6
4 in.foliage pot
Shrubs &amp; Azalea.&lt;

-~twa-triok:..-ond

""'-·play

11111

,

_,...,_-lour
club&amp;. 'rbu'rlru-·--,-~

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lllotqt, ""' ~ .!&gt;lOY low 1rvm tho

lod
Of-,wrdB!ro4Jiylae..... !Uiup
his honor, 001 corra:tl!' against
portnef' II!' r-ting the -.;rt or nino.

5Z'IC ·U ZI« JAYZ«BVZ , "

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Y:AHBJ

dummy.

tho----~

Open M-S 9-5
Closed Sunday

f'REVIOUS SOLLITION - "TI1e·key is not tl1e 'will to win' • ei'Or)todyhls lhlt.
II is the ,.;n to prapore to win lhlt is impoftl111.' • Botmy~right

'99:!-.5776

TI!'\E, I'LL
I'IY 'SWt!ol&amp;
"" LITTLE .IT...

0
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If so, you qualify for a

--·

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...... •liool!' .....- " " - -

:fEAtiU1'S '

month subscripti.cm on your
home delivered subscriptima'!
'
--~·san you
need &amp;od.o•••
Fill out the coupoll below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo m.
.

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Clitulllla
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·····--···- .

. Texas Hetld'em

Friday. May 2nd
7:00pm
Midd~port

AmeriCan legion
$60Buy In

Pays top 5 ~ces

Doors open at 5:00
CouoessiOt IS available

Court =tw-t ..._ Court
to ..... $1 . . . . ~ ...... 1.,ciblral...,,

.....,,

_-,

bagiUUUI~.

C

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• • I a'I,
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Olulo, ttMIII: Lals num1Mr T~sFlw (25)
~,11na (U)
.., IIM'e Ruun In V.B.
JIIot1onl .. Jillion 1o

5tE. WIIDI TV SHOWS

STAilT TO TANK TID ~IRE .
~SPECIAL PR!III W' TO
'fiX" .WAArs wm.; so

7401D5129
740-41~16!111

Free Estimates

- - ·••v..·

PEDPLE Will W~TCit

{_~·

11 LocuM
Box 325

--

._

Ga'lpcu , Oiulo45631

PH:7411 4W1-

..a: 741 •• ·r•a

_ . . . , . . aii'IDIICIOf, (4) 15, 22, 21, 15) I

. . . . . llclng_

•

Po...,.

·- .-v •

ft1lo aomethiug 1hll1 • functional and
b&amp;rili!llficialt~gain.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nav. 22) - wt.t
Cllr1nOt "De atc0irjp41ehed eingullirtv can
be .:hilt 180 thrOu~ 8 ~ leltm
..tbft, end you're ju.i the peraon to put
. . . . . . gn&gt;YI). , .••

• you -

""*-

""' day.

.me

un,.,..._, 10 your IMMMdliy lh, beca~Jee
It'll be ;ust lhe tlc*8t tor returblehing your
outiook ·a nd attitude 'that you n-.y nMd
right now.
AQUARIUS ( -, 20-foO . 1O) -

,ftw 'E illln lie

-tnt bebll
· youIn prime
- eo
It will ofllr
up _,...
liM,
don't be atratd to ...,a .... mDnll'l tt
DeliiYe ft wtll PfQduol wn••¥ at
wal..-. b'tlbea lfOOd llhwta•it .

you

r ., and New il,_.llulldiJo&amp;

-·--ot-III'OIIInCiePISCES (Fob.-...,20)-E-....

c.u: MARCUM OONsi:KUCTION

pei ICfirll roe, eo don't klll:ir yourMfl' Into •
tight lttnM'IIry. i.Aiav. ample room tor

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

hi4HOII\iltU

dlrllla:~m•n• -

ano a m•

fun Ml!ll ..--..

Alll!l ( - 21-April 18) - , _ , " .

u.t ,.:N wll ~ on tan
.... , , . . . . WI'MIIn - Of ...
.
~tD
nw.rnar.
_ . . ._.....
.. _
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8trlqJ ct.rD

-·

Riebel Road. Long BOitom, OH
, .... -~

·Ait41

toUP10NUTZ

--~

:l5+ ,_-. ~ FretfiD'i s
!::::~~;~~;;;;~;;;;;~~

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

•
\

23-Sapt, ;!2) -

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22...-n. 19)- Find'
.....08tlliiiQ to do in your trpel'8
that is

&amp;

snu.:. 1'.0 .

(~ .

whD'I wotk u • team .
SAGITTARIUS (New. :23--0.C. 21) Wonctng on 110m¥tllliirg pn:llductM Ill 1he
onty thing that wit! proye to be UIMtil)ing •
so don, -.te time on ~ ac:tioW
. .. tt you~ doing kl, you'll ' - I -

740-367s0536

47239

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nlllkB all

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Cell: 740-416-1834

10:GOo'dacka.uuu.

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=-r 1lie ..., -

CcwNMn . . . . .

J

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PI ue~a are

a.n

~..tton you need will be
........... to your~. ~ly tf
fira1
wllingneel 10 .oNe
thair p.mltiua. As the o;td ~ goea,
"'ne tw1d ..,...._ tt. other.•
L - (SI!Jt, 23-0&lt;:1. 23) on
a protM:t others COAiider UMteu. ~u'll
li!l rroe out of It tt..:n yQU ~ l*ieved
,_..,... 'tbu coutd updata ·ar trwrrwiDnn It

vou

740-a7415U :

For R-..d

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ll3JJlMtiiS Al&amp;l

whoee

Additions
Loelii'CD* 7 '

..., ....... Ccwuuulr In ....... 'Couunlr
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Remodeling, Room

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jNIIIIott
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·PIOWideltee Rtiulllr
.,.... . . . . , . _ l'hsko..,y
a.pU.t
of 'fiiiDIIII Ml I W f A I illli&amp;n, Inc., an
Ba;!luot aturdt - Oltlo nul for puoilt
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,. .., • 4 ... auuurdt) f1ula .,. ...,
.... fiW a .pwlltiuti ad ' 1111 tar IWi14

......

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Roofing, Siding, ;
Soffit, Deolrs, . •
Doors, Windows, :
E19ctric, P1umb1r1Jr..

Tia8 .,etlllonar li'1IP
to ... u.l ...... 1D 1ar :1lie bulualu4 1lllibli
1'nW1t1a1- _ ,.... '1ha lhla Court gqnt

•••
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W I'1DS OF .... ..... ·County

CG

. . .&lt;COUNn',OIID a - d -

Clltulllla)

••
_____________________ •

·--·--············

•W 1tE COURT OF eel • liiDUM 13 ....

.1 * Du ww ,_ 1lie ,Nu.ER:
. , _ . Run iBiptllt 02512Jal

••

MllerclnlpGftlllt~-.
• a CIIPr ClfrowpllaiDIJ..

•

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CANCER (Juno21.Ju~22)
So&lt;o ... oo
you tmow has a 'mode at e;:e:wtion 'ttw.1
COL.IId be of enormGUI valUe to you .
&lt;Fortunately, ydu'nl amllrt ~ to pic*
up on haw to uw this peiSOI"ItJ-.uccM8·
fu6 prooeduntS.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Pmblems
you' we
iUiCl wtth
to some... · Mt Once the ~'

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTIOtl

'•JSBe

------------------------------Name ______ ••

Phone

Seamleos Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutters
lnsurrKi &amp;Bonded
740-653-9657

'

to 'do WI I Wiling

. cou;l a ly rerncN'8d, you

Wt.e Concnllle.

Gune:ing

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O«Nf. DOWN lD T+IE
COltfiiS« AND ACKOSS
T+IE FIELDA

._lilllailpCraat
Jeillt
The Daily Seotinel
Ci•d·6eltild

~ess

.,.._In llct thl!!;' . . - - 10 mMa ~
- · 11 w l l j - l o - o t o.
~==~ ~
21-.luno 20) - ft "'""'
finaly . . ,...,., ... 4 ttme tor 1llwr8
you'• 11one tor on... or • .-..t tt'll

-

when you pay for a 6 or 12·

~i:Jer's

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lC'QC' q'

..mn.1 KtMUea tt' tt. ~r ..,._.,
~ wllh • tr.h -~ roo can
...,..,;11 l111lr 1'nUr8 ..._, )1DU tMtr .wtll
wllh .allrwcl and RttelpoiN Of Wlw. N
WOIIk.-nd no ·'Pi~Y ,........ IDr • dull per~
llWRUS (rlplll 20-y 20) ct " !i#llgdat _, 1 i&amp;IB'Ihmoccur . .

Senior Discount*
I

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

1MIIIw ·t tn. ·br .arne

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ARLO•JANIS

'

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• a • · ThellailySam~

7

7

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7

.

Wi7JJt11s center Haywood says James should stop complaining~

'

of James' . bead, bJockir!g
oft' llbe All-Star's heMhand
and 11mding him spmwling
to illllc ~
been k:oocitM on his roya1
James popped up immedi&lt;I'CIII"~d ileVel1l1 times. But .ately and ~ a few ~teps
James bas always gllllen .up, toward Stevenson, wbo has
and through four ~~s. : iiUI1Ied his matchup against
be's averaging 29.5 pliints, James into a personal
11..5 rebounds and 6:5 assists. ,pldge malch~ James kqJt
Following Game 4, James !his coot but noted that iftbe
was asked if tbe Wiark play had ha~ne4 on a
can oome back. He cmlsid- dtoolyard in bis bomoto~
.ered the question, ~·ted Akron. things may 'have
-i t and dJen answered tt witb gone diffamtly.
all tbe subdety of one of 'his
The NBA fined Stevenson
ierocious slam dunks.
$25,000 for ~aking
..Do I think tbey can do · .acing •gesturesn during tbe
it?" lames said. "No.n
first quarter of :tbe game. .
Wbam1
Cavaliers .coach Mike
Stevenson's hard foul in Brown praised James for
the second quarter on keeping his composure. Not
Sunday ratcbeted up the ani- IOII!y have the Wizards been
mosity between the Waards physical with the 23-yearforward
and
James. old; but James was booed
Stevenson, who .called evCJY time be touched the
James "ovetTated" follow- ball and serenaded with

mc:n-

mucous

Haywood, ~ also gilt
tangled 'II' 'Wid! James ill
Game I, ~'t -mbel:
a player ever~ ~ f~
anotbtll" team was nymg to
butt tum.
..But the game ~
changed a 1ot," he said.
"Back~ tbe ~•. ~u
-nitely; OOul'dn ( hilve wd
· !that with tbe Dlllure 10f the:
game with the Pi~&amp;;. ~
Bad Boys, tbe Kni¢ts. Y~
would have belen fleCD .a s
flat-out sotit."
.
Oeveland 'bas WOD five
'straigbt ptayoff' 1!1"":" IIi
home against tbe Wmuds,
and die Cavaliers~ U-3 at
home in . tbe .Eu~
Conference playoffstbe~
three years. If ·t hose ~
bers weren't dalllltlllg

•

'

2008 Pride edition

•

'

Stream sweep

inside today's·Sentinel

''

asu~,A6

defi.'

eno~b

~or

.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

••

SPOIQS

Proposed ordinance addresses moblle home placement

See-,.

• ~So~Abem ·~JICS River
Wiley.

W~n,gton;

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT

there s •t'h1s: Only eight of
174 teams down 3-1 have
come back to win a series.

Middlepm:t Village Council
introduced a proposed ordinance regulating the placement of mobile homes in
the village, which will further limit the age of mobile
homes pennitted, and more
closely regulate how they
are installed.
· The ordinance, which was
given a first reading at
Monday evening 's regular
meeting, is largely inspired
by regulations ·required by
the state and federal govemc
ment, relating to flood plain

PlAY COVERALL BINGO

ST. LQUIS (AP) -

'

·~

.across illllc laDe and swiped Washingtma's '
!his qgM II1DI .::ross the lOp' aowd.
..

•

·:••

WIN UP TO $1,000 ! ! !

Encamadon
Jeads Reds to
win over-Cards
&amp;!win Encamacion had a
pair of RBI doubles and
made a standout play at
third base in the seventh
inning to pFeiierVe a onerun lead in the Cincinnati
Reds' 4-3 victory over tbe
St. Louis Cardinals on
Monday night.
Bronson Arroyo (1-3)
worked six so]jd innings
for the Reds, who · won
their frrst series opener
after losing the first nine.
Adam Dunn and Brandon
Phillips had 1111 RB'I apiece
to help Cincinnati win
three in a row for the frrst
time this .s eason and even
its record at 3-3 since Walt
Jocl:etty became general
manager.
Rick Ankiel bit his fifth
berne run for the Cardinals,
for whom !Jooketty ser-ved
as GM the previous 13 seasons before getting fired
last October. Albert 'Pujols
singled twice and walked,
extending his hitting streak
to 12 games, and bas
reached base .in ail 27 ,
games to stan the seasBn.
Alroyo allowed thFee
nms on liix bits and struck:
out six for ·his first victory
since Sept. 12 against .the
Cardinals. He had been 0-4
in eight outings since,
including an 0-3 start to the
season for the second time
· in his car~. He entered
with .a 7.56 ERA after failing to make it out of the
fourth inning while allowing eight runs in his previous start, against Houston.
Francisco
Cordero
allowed a bit in the ninth
for his founh save in faur
chances.
The Reds bunched five
hits in the second .and tlrlrd
off Todd Wellemeyer (2-1),
scoring twice · in each
inning to go ahead 4-0.
Encarnacion had an :RBI
double in each inning.
Encarnacion' s second
RBl double put the Reds
lihcad 4-0 and was a gift
after le.f t fielder ·C hris
Duncan iost his ,routine
pop fly in the lights.
Wellemeyer
allowed
only two hits in his last
three innings, striking out
five and walking two. He
. bad been 2-0 with a 1.50
ERA in 'h is first two starts
at home this seasOn.
Troy Glaus drew a basesloaded walt in tbe third,
Ankiel hit his fifth homer .
iu the fifth. and Cesar
lmuis' oppoaite-fteld UI
double in the sixth off a
lideann 2-2 delivery from
Arroyo cut the gap to 1 run.
It SUfed that way when the
Cardiuals caught a btuk in
tbe seventh as Dunn's
bases-loaded sillgle stnick
Brandon Phillips for an out
as be was running to second.
· Glaus, who left Friday
night's game,due to wate:ry
eyes after striking out
twice, wore sunglasses
· While flying out to end tbe
ftrst. Glaus, wbose eyes are
only affected during night
games at honie due to
allergies, went without
glasses while coaxing a
full-count walt in the
third.

West. whose 3-pointer .from iDg a pme ill March, came dlants of "over--Ribld" by
llbe left comer wi1h 5.4 secJOOds ~gave tbe Cavs their
two-game wshioo.
Washing1011' s p'laa from
lbe •outset was to be rough
with KiQg James, w.bo ihas

•
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•

••

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'

• T- WilL
for a tila.la"ant-two lfoul and James - will provide illllc
~IATED PRESS
ejected f'mm Game 2 lfter ~ u llbe teams IR- , . - - - -.- - - - shoving Jaines, believes it's •pare for Oame 5 on
ClEVELAND
- · time for Cleveland's super- Wednesday
.n ight
.at
Ovemited hasn't woi:ked. startostop -compllrining. ,
Quiobom Lollis Arena.
., ·mean come -on man,
Now •one of tbe Washington
With a win, tbe Cavalieni
Wu.ds is calling LeBron tbis is tbe playoffs," will close out the WIURis
fames
another
name: Haywood said full&lt;lwing for :tbe third sttaigbt year in
~·
Monday's practice. "He the postseason. something
FolloWing Olevcland's wears 23 he w.ants to be Washington's players insiSt100-97 win in Game 4 on Michael ' fOOian, I _ can cd wasn'·t possible before
Sunday, James., who bas respect that, he's a great tbe series began. TQ finally
~ two flagrant fouls player. Vou saw what Mike eliminate Cleveland, they
tn ,i(hts ~ough-and-tumble went through. Mike got ibad :to stop - •o r at least
playoff smes and !h as been fouled way WC'II'se tban this. slow down - James, but
banged around by the No one is tryiqg to hurt him other than knocking !him to
WIWII"ds,. was asked about
bod · · · to 1a ' tbe floor a few times jADd
WaShington's tough-guy evCJY
Y IS 1I}'Uig P !Y
•·-'cs
·
basketball, trymg to play winning Game 3 ·in a stun._.... .
- ha kf!l:ball and ning blowout, that hils hard'1 guess that's what they to ugh·. ...
.-uty ~-:;;-"'!L_...,.
Jy happened. ·
want to do: hun LeBron leav~ tt alone. On. Sunday, James .turned
James in this series," be
lht was only that easy.
said. '1t's not womng."
With at I~ one game to his anger from a ~t
On Monday, Wmuds ceo- go,
Washingtan
vs. foul .c ommitted against him
tter
Brendan Haywood, Oleveland Part Iiiii has fea- by DeShawn Stevenson on
countered.
tured weeks of baCk-and- tbe WlZBfds witb his best
"Awww," Haywood said, forth trash talk,. intense all:around game of the
in a whiny, . 'h igb·pitclled games loaded W!th lw:d series. In 44 minutes, . he
vwee to mock James. "'They fouls, .even dueliQg rap stars. soored 34 points wtth 12
. are uying to h1111t me."
· Haywood's retnaiks -:and -rebounds .a nd seven .assists,
Haywood, who w.as called a postgame comment from the !final one to Delonte

.

..
•

•7 •

OBITUARIES
•

management,
Mayor
Michael Gerlach said.
Building Inspector Randall
Mullins said that all mobile
homes are now subject to
state inspections.
The ordinance is an ·
amendment to a 2003 ordinance which first regulated
the placement of mobile
homes in the village. Fiscal
Officer Susan Baker said
the ordinance will also consolidate the regulations
relating to mobile homes
into one code section.
Among the changes to the
ordinance is a limit on the
age of . mobile homes that
may be moved into the vii-

!age, from eight years" to Queen and Pomeroy Police bills in the amount of
four years .old. a new Chief
Mark
Proffitt. · $28.597.56.
requirement of approval by · Wehrung did oot indicate
• Accepted the resignathe building inspector for the nature of. the issue, but tion of Kevin Klein as
any mobile home moved said it "warrants discretion'" police dispatcher, and
into the villages, and a and should be resolved approved hiring Randy
demolition pennit when the before Queen is hired. Carpenter, part-time dishomes are removed from Council Member Julie patcher, to a full-time positheir lots.
Proctor abstained from vot- tion .
Council also held the fi~t ing because Queen was not
• Excused Sandy Brown
reading on ordinances relat- present to meet with caun- from· the meeting due to a
ing to fencing in the village, cil.
.
family illness.
and setting building pennit
Wehrung also asked
• Amended a schedule for
and other permit fees.
whether the village would longevity payraises for the
In other business, council be responsible for the work- police department. '
hired. Alan Queen as a full- ing dog. that Queen used in
Also
present
were
time
police
officer. Pomeroy, and Gerlach said Council . members Jean
Councilman Craig Wehrung that was not the case.
Craig, Shawn Rice. and Rae
voted in opposition, citing a
Council also:
Moore and Fiscal Officer
pending issue between
• Approved payment of · Susan Baker.

Southern
approves
appraisal,
contracts
BY

Contract, credit
line approved
fol' proposed
sewer upgrade
planning
BY BRIAN

BEtH SERGENT

BSEAGENTDMYDAILYSENTINEL.COIII

RACINE - At its most
recent meeting the Southern
Board
Local
School
· approved an appraisal of
the old junior high school
property as well as several

TODAY'S
NUMBER IS:

contracts.

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CoHrilag Driller!

115-! Siltll SUeet
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. _As . for the appraisal,
Superintendent Tlttfr l)ecm
said tlte appraisal was
agreed upon because the
OOard wanted to get a ·feeling of the value of the property as some interested parties have · inquired about
possibly purchasing iL
Deem confirmed the district is currently negotiating
with tbe Ohio Association
of l'\!blic School Employees
and will soon enter into
contract negotiations with
the
Southern
Local
Education Association. In
the meantime, several conru.wts were approved and
scussed at the most recent
board meeting~
Amy Roush was placed
on a continuing contract;
Charlie Wolfe, Belinda
Arms., Pam Cunningham on
a two-year contract; Carla
Teaford, Jeremy Dill on a
continuing contract; Jeff
Caldwell, Nick Dettwi ller,
Dodson,
Judy
Chad
•G ilmore, Misty Rogers,
Jennifer Holt, Rachel Hupp,
Lester Manuel, Jody Norris,
Lisa
Jon
Sargent,
Schenkelberg, Brent Smith,
Marcia Weaver on a Oneyear contracL
. Alan Crisp for a threeyear · contract;
Diane
Dunfee, April King, Martie
Rose, Junie Maynard, Meg
Guinther, Ann Ohlinger for
a ftve-year rontract.
The following supplemental
contracts were
D)" onl'lpAZ
approved: Jeff Caldwell,
Boy's Varsity Basketball
Coach, $3,204.94, Title IX
Compliance
Officer,
$555.57; Alan Crisp, Girl's
Van;ity Basketball Coach,
a'.llacnoMs- u P.w~~~~~
$3,204.94,
Athletic
~$3,362.56;
Chad
fmrue's Mailbox
A3
Dodson, Marching Band,
$800.71 , Pep Band, $2,312;
Jennifer Holt, Guidance,
Classifieds
83-4 $2,311. 76; Kim Romine, 10
extended days librarian ;
Comics
Diane Dunfee, I 0 extended
Editorials .
days
consumer life science;
A4
Kathy
Miller,
Movies
As Transportation Coordinator,
Kyle Wickline,
Obituaries
As $5,000;
Boy's Reserve Basketball,
Sports
B Section $1 ,922.96.
Eber
Dale
Teaford.
Weather
A2 Pickens, Richard Hill,
Jamie Evans were approved
as volunteer football coaches for 2008-09 season.
The board approVed nonrenewal of the following

bale&amp;aars

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435'/• SeN... AYeBUe
(740) 446-7619

ATHENS

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594-3571

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REED

BREEOCIMYOAILYSENllNELCOM

opens
The Inferno, a youth center
affiliated with Freedom Center
Ministries in Middleport, will
open Thursday evening to
area teens. Church workers
have spent two years renovating the old Blue Tartan Tavern
building on the comer of
South Third Avenue and
General Hartinger Parkway.
Featuring inclustrial and "retro"
· design elements, the center
will host the church's youth
activities on Wednesday,
Friday and Saturday nights. 11
includes a fully-equipped
stage for music performances,
a snack and soft drink bar,
and video games and televisions lor viewing Christian
music videos ..Summer programs are in the works,
according to Youth Pastor
Jordan Bradford, Pictured with
Pastor Mike Bradford and
Isaac Bradford.
lrilm J. Reed/ph'

Easter coloring contest winners announced
STAFF REPORT
NEWSDMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - Winners
have been selected in the
Easter coloring contest
sponsored by The Daily
Sentinel and eight Meigs
County businesses.
The entries were judged
in the categories of ages 4 to
8 and 9 to 12 and prizes of
$15 for first, $16 for second, and $5 for third were
awarded Monday.
The participating businesses were Roller Mill
Pizia of Chester, Swisher &amp;
Lohse,
McDonalds,
Anderson "s, Main Street
Party Supplies , Brogan·
,W arner Insurance. and
IDans, of Pomeroy : and the
Bend Area Chiropractic
Center of Mason, W. Va.

PI _ _ . ,

PI

s.AJ

~

_,c:hlphoto

The Easter coloring contest winners were from the left,
front Brody Wood, Marissa Noble, Jackline Hysell ; Madison
Lisle, Brenda Davis of The Daily Sentinel staff, and Kaitlyn
Taylor; with the merchants sponsoring the winning entries,
Cheryl Thomas of Main Street Party Supplies of Pomeroy.
and Warren CalaW!IY of Roller Mill Pizza.

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
Village
Council
authorized
a
$350,000 line of credit
through the Ohio. Water
Development Authority for
preliminary work on a
planned sewer system
upgrade.
•
Council also approved' a
$138,100 contract with the
Columbus engineering firm
URS to complete pri:liminary survey work and
develop accura~ pl~ns of
the existing sewer system.
Meeting Monday night.
council approved an emergency ordinance providing
for an interim financing
loan for planning the $2.5
million projeCt. designed to
separate the village ·s saniwry and storm sewers.
The Ohio. Environmental
Protection Agency has
· approved preliminary plans
for th e project and last
month, council passed a resolution approving a ]qngterm control plan for submission to the EPA.
The
planning
loan
approved
by
co unci I
Monday night will linance
survey work and work at the
actual outfalls to measure
the amount of rain water
discharged. That work is
expected to be completed in
early fall. and the project
will then go into a final
design phase . .
The project involves. a
new system for treating and
conveying material from
the village "s combined sanitary and stonn sewers to
the outfalls in the 'Ohio
River. The project is
expected to be far more
· affordable than separating
the rwo systems.
Mike Froemmer from the
engineering firm URS said
the interim financing loan
approved Monday night
will be available to the Yillage for five year&gt;. URS
will work with the village to
secure a funding package of
grants and loans to pay off
the planning loan approved
Monday and for construction. The new system i'
expected to . be completed
no later than - ~0 14.
The village hope' to use
funds for the project for a
local match reqqired. for
Lhe Tier II downtown revitalization program. Many
cities
villages
a nd
approYed for 'the project
have used sewer and wat.er
projects for the ir !peal
match . The Middleport
Development Group has
decided to forego addition a! applications for funding
until ' such a significant
match is availab]£.

•

••
;.

I

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